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+<TITLE>
+The Project Gutenberg E-text of Wildfire, by Zane Grey
+</TITLE>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wildfire, by Zane Grey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Wildfire
+
+Author: Zane Grey
+
+Posting Date: November 19, 2008 [EBook #2066]
+Release Date: February, 2000
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILDFIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Daniel Wentzell. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+WILDFIRE
+</H1>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+by
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+ZANE GREY
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CONTENTS
+</H2>
+
+<TABLE ALIGN="center" WIDTH="80%">
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap01">&nbsp;I&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap02">&nbsp;II&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap03">&nbsp;III&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap04">&nbsp;IV&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap05">&nbsp;V&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap06">&nbsp;VI&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap07">&nbsp;VII&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap08">&nbsp;VIII&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap09">&nbsp;IX&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap10">&nbsp;X&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap11">&nbsp;XI&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap12">&nbsp;XII&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap13">&nbsp;XIII&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap14">&nbsp;XIV&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap15">&nbsp;XV&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap16">&nbsp;XVI&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap17">&nbsp;XVII&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap18">&nbsp;XVIII&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap19">&nbsp;XIX&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="10%">
+<A HREF="#chap20">&nbsp;XX&nbsp;</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+</TABLE>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER I
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+For some reason the desert scene before Lucy Bostil awoke varying
+emotions&mdash;a sweet gratitude for the fullness of her life there at the
+Ford, yet a haunting remorse that she could not be wholly content&mdash;a
+vague loneliness of soul&mdash;a thrill and a fear for the strangely calling
+future, glorious, unknown.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She longed for something to happen. It might be terrible, so long as it
+was wonderful. This day, when Lucy had stolen away on a forbidden
+horse, she was eighteen years old. The thought of her mother, who had
+died long ago on their way into this wilderness, was the one drop of
+sadness in her joy. Lucy loved everybody at Bostil's Ford and everybody
+loved her. She loved all the horses except her father's favorite racer,
+that perverse devil of a horse, the great Sage King.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was glowing and rapt with love for all she beheld from her lofty
+perch: the green-and-pink blossoming hamlet beneath her, set between
+the beauty of the gray sage expanse and the ghastliness of the barren
+heights; the swift Colorado sullenly thundering below in the abyss; the
+Indians in their bright colors, riding up the river trail; the eagle
+poised like a feather on the air, and a beneath him the grazing cattle
+making black dots on the sage; the deep velvet azure of the sky; the
+golden lights on the bare peaks and the lilac veils in the far ravines;
+the silky rustle of a canyon swallow as he shot downward in the sweep
+of the wind; the fragrance of cedar, the flowers of the spear-pointed
+mescal; the brooding silence, the beckoning range, the purple distance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whatever it was Lucy longed for, whatever was whispered by the wind and
+written in the mystery of the waste of sage and stone, she wanted it to
+happen there at Bostil's Ford. She had no desire for civilization, she
+flouted the idea of marrying the rich rancher of Durango. Bostil's
+sister, that stern but lovable woman who had brought her up and taught
+her, would never persuade her to marry against her will. Lucy imagined
+herself like a wild horse&mdash;free, proud, untamed, meant for the desert;
+and here she would live her life. The desert and her life seemed as
+one, yet in what did they resemble each other&mdash;in what of this scene
+could she read the nature of her future?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Shudderingly she rejected the red, sullen, thundering river, with its
+swift, changeful, endless, contending strife&mdash;for that was tragic. And
+she rejected the frowning mass of red rock, upreared, riven and split
+and canyoned, so grim and aloof&mdash;for that was barren. But she accepted
+the vast sloping valley of sage, rolling gray and soft and beautiful,
+down to the dim mountains and purple ramparts of the horizon. Lucy did
+not know what she yearned for, she did not know why the desert called
+to her, she did not know in what it resembled her spirit, but she did
+know that these three feelings were as one, deep in her heart. For ten
+years, every day of her life, she had watched this desert scene, and
+never had there been an hour that it was not different, yet the same.
+Ten years&mdash;and she grew up watching, feeling&mdash;till from the desert's
+thousand moods she assimilated its nature, loved her bonds, and could
+never have been happy away from the open, the color, the freedom, the
+wildness. On this birthday, when those who loved her said she had
+become her own mistress, she acknowledged the claim of the desert
+forever. And she experienced a deep, rich, strange happiness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hers always then the mutable and immutable desert, the leagues and
+leagues of slope and sage and rolling ridge, the great canyons and the
+giant cliffs, the dark river with its mystic thunder of waters, the
+pine-fringed plateaus, the endless stretch of horizon, with its lofty,
+isolated, noble monuments, and the bold ramparts with their beckoning
+beyond! Hers always the desert seasons: the shrill, icy blast, the
+intense cold, the steely skies, the fading snows; the gray old sage and
+the bleached grass under the pall of the spring sand-storms; the hot
+furnace breath of summer, with its magnificent cloud pageants in the
+sky, with the black tempests hanging here and there over the peaks,
+dark veils floating down and rainbows everywhere, and the lacy
+waterfalls upon the glistening cliffs and the thunder of the red
+floods; and the glorious golden autumn when it was always afternoon and
+time stood still! Hers always the rides in the open, with the sun at
+her back and the wind in her face! And hers surely, sooner or later,
+the nameless adventure which had its inception in the strange yearning
+of her heart and presaged its fulfilment somewhere down that trailless
+sage-slope she loved so well!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's house was a crude but picturesque structure of red stone and
+white clay and bleached cottonwoods, and it stood at the outskirts of
+the cluster of green-inclosed cabins which composed the hamlet. Bostil
+was wont to say that in all the world there could hardly be a grander
+view than the outlook down that gray sea of rolling sage, down to the
+black-fringed plateaus and the wild, blue-rimmed and gold-spired
+horizon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One morning in early spring, as was Bostil's custom, he ordered the
+racers to be brought from the corrals and turned loose on the slope. He
+loved to sit there and watch his horses graze, but ever he saw that the
+riders were close at hand, and that the horses did not get out on the
+slope of sage. He sat back and gloried in the sight. He owned bands of
+mustangs; near by was a field of them, fine and mettlesome and racy;
+yet Bostil had eyes only for the blooded favorites. Strange it was that
+not one of these was a mustang or a broken wild horse, for many of the
+riders' best mounts had been captured by them or the Indians. And it
+was Bostil's supreme ambition to own a great wild stallion. There was
+Plume, a superb mare that got her name from the way her mane swept in
+the wind when she was on the ran; and there was Two Face, like a
+coquette, sleek and glossy and running and the huge, rangy bay, Dusty
+Ben; and the black stallion Sarchedon; and lastly Sage King, the color
+of the upland sage, a racer in build, a horse splendid and proud and
+beautiful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where's Lucy?" presently asked Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he divided his love, so he divided his anxiety.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some rider had seen Lucy riding off, with her golden hair flying in the
+wind. This was an old story.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She's up on Buckles?" Bostil queried, turning sharply to the speaker.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon so," was the calm reply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil swore. He did not have a rider who could equal him in profanity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Farlane, you'd orders. Lucy's not to ride them hosses, least of all
+Buckles. He ain't safe even for a man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, he's safe fer Lucy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But didn't I say no?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boss, it's likely you did, fer you talk a lot," replied Farlane. "Lucy
+pulled my hat down over my eyes&mdash;told me to go to thunder&mdash;an' then,
+zip! she an' Buckles were dustin' it fer the sage."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She's got to keep out of the sage," growled Bostil. "It ain't safe for
+her out there.... Where's my glass? I want to take a look at the slope.
+Where's my glass?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The glass could not be found.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's makin' them dust-clouds on the sage? Antelope? ... Holley, you
+used to have eyes better 'n me. Use them, will you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A gray-haired, hawk-eyed rider, lean and worn, approached with clinking
+spurs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Down in there," said Bostil, pointing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet's a bunch of hosses," replied Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wild hosses?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I take 'em so, seein' how they throw thet dust."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Huh! I don't like it. Lucy oughtn't be ridin' round alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, boss, who could catch her up on Buckles? Lucy can ride. An'
+there's the King an' Sarch right under your nose&mdash;the only hosses on
+the sage thet could outrun Buckles."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Farlane knew how to mollify his master and long habit had made him
+proficient. Bostil's eyes flashed. He was proud of Lucy's power over a
+horse. The story Bostil first told to any stranger happening by the
+Ford was how Lucy had been born during a wild ride&mdash;almost, as it were,
+on the back of a horse. That, at least, was her fame, and the riders
+swore she was a worthy daughter of such a mother. Then, as Farlane well
+knew, a quick road to Bostil's good will was to praise one of his
+favorites.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon you spoke sense for once, Farlane," replied Bostil, with
+relief. "I wasn't thinkin' so much of danger for Lucy.... But she lets
+thet half-witted Creech go with her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, boss, you're wrong," put in Holley, earnestly. "I know the girl.
+She has no use fer Joel. But he jest runs after her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' he's harmless," added Farlane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We ain't agreed," rejoined Bostil, quickly. "What do you say, Holley?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The old rider looked thoughtful and did not speak for long.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Yes an' no," he answered, finally. "I reckon Lucy could make a
+man out of Joel. But she doesn't care fer him, an' thet settles
+thet.... An' maybe Joel's leanin' toward the bad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If she meets him again I'll rope her in the house," declared Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another clear-eyed rider drew Bostil's attention from the gray waste of
+rolling sage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, look! Look at the King! He's watchin' fer somethin'.... An'
+so's Sarch."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The two horses named were facing a ridge some few hundred yards
+distant, and their heads were aloft and ears straight forward. Sage
+King whistled shrilly and Sarchedon began to prance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boys, you'd better drive them in," said Bostil. "They'd like nothin'
+so well as gettin' out on the sage.... Hullo! what's thet shootin' up
+behind the ridge?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No more 'n Buckles with Lucy makin' him run some," replied Holley,
+with a dry laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If it ain't! ... Lord! look at him come!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's anger and anxiety might never have been. The light of the
+upland rider's joy shone in his keen gaze. The slope before him was
+open, and almost level, down to the ridge that had hidden the missing
+girl and horse. Buckles was running for the love of running, as the
+girl low down over his neck was riding for the love of riding. The Sage
+King whistled again, and shot off with graceful sweep to meet them;
+Sarchedon plunged after him; Two Face and Plume jealously trooped down,
+too, but Dusty Ben, after a toss of his head, went on grazing. The gray
+and the black met Buckles and could not turn in time to stay with him.
+A girl's gay scream pealed up the slope, and Buckles went lower and
+faster. Sarchedon was left behind. Then the gray King began to run as
+if before he had been loping. He was beautiful in action. This was
+play&mdash;a game&mdash;a race&mdash;plainly dominated by the spirit of the girl.
+Lucy's hair was a bright stream of gold in the wind. She rode bareback.
+It seemed that she was hunched low over Buckles with her knees high on
+his back&mdash;scarcely astride him at all. Yet her motion was one with the
+horse. Again that wild, gay scream pealed out&mdash;call or laugh or
+challenge. Sage King, with a fleetness that made the eyes of Bostil and
+his riders glisten, took the lead, and then sheered off to slow down,
+while Buckles thundered past. Lucy was pulling him hard, and had him
+plunging to a halt, when the rider Holley ran out to grasp his bridle.
+Buckles was snorting and his ears were laid back. He pounded the ground
+and scattered the pebbles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No use, Lucy," said Bostil. "You can't beat the King at your own game,
+even with a runnin' start."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy Bostil's eyes were blue, as keen as her father's, and now they
+flashed like his. She had a hand twisted in the horse's long mane, and
+as, lithe and supple, she slipped a knee across his broad back she
+shook a little gantleted fist at Bostil's gray racer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sage King, I hate you!" she called, as if the horse were human. "And
+I'll beat you some day!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil swore by the gods his Sage King was the swiftest horse in all
+that wild upland country of wonderful horses. He swore the great gray
+could look back over his shoulder and run away from any broken horse
+known to the riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil himself was half horse, and the half of him that was human he
+divided between love of his fleet racers and his daughter Lucy. He had
+seen years of hard riding on that wild Utah border where, in those
+days, a horse meant all the world to a man. A lucky strike of grassy
+upland and good water south of the Rio Colorado made him rich in all
+that he cared to own. The Indians, yet unspoiled by white men, were
+friendly. Bostil built a boat at the Indian crossing of the Colorado
+and the place became known as Bostil's Ford. From time to time his
+personality and his reputation and his need brought horse-hunters,
+riders, sheep-herders, and men of pioneer spirit, as well as wandering
+desert travelers, to the Ford, and the lonely, isolated hamlet slowly
+grew. North of the river it was more than two hundred miles to the
+nearest little settlement, with only a few lonely ranches on the road;
+to the west were several villages, equally distant, but cut off for two
+months at a time by the raging Colorado, flooded by melting snow up in
+the mountains. Eastward from the Ford stretched a ghastly, broken,
+unknown desert of canyons. Southward rolled the beautiful uplands, with
+valleys of sage and grass, and plateaus of pine and cedar, until this
+rich rolling gray and green range broke sharply on a purple horizon
+line of upflung rocky ramparts and walls and monuments, wild, dim, and
+mysterious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's cattle and horses were numberless, and many as were his
+riders, he always could use more. But most riders did not abide long
+with Bostil, first because some of them were of a wandering breed,
+wild-horse hunters themselves; and secondly, Bostil had two great
+faults: he seldom paid a rider in money, and he never permitted one to
+own a fleet horse. He wanted to own all the fast horses himself. And in
+those days every rider, especially a wild-horse hunter, loved his steed
+as part of himself. If there was a difference between Bostil and any
+rider of the sage, it was that, as he had more horses, so he had more
+love.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whenever Bostil could not get possession of a horse he coveted, either
+by purchase or trade, he invariably acquired a grievance toward the
+owner. This happened often, for riders were loath to part with their
+favorites. And he had made more than one enemy by his persistent
+nagging. It could not be said, however, that he sought to drive hard
+bargains. Bostil would pay any price asked for a horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Across the Colorado, in a high, red-walled canyon opening upon the
+river, lived a poor sheep-herder and horse-trader named Creech. This
+man owned a number of thoroughbreds, two of which he would not part
+with for all the gold in the uplands. These racers, Blue Roan and Peg,
+had been captured wild on the ranges by Ute Indians and broken to
+racing. They were still young and getting faster every year. Bostil
+wanted them because he coveted them and because he feared them. It
+would have been a terrible blow to him if any horse ever beat the gray.
+But Creech laughed at all offers and taunted Bostil with a boast that
+in another summer he would see a horse out in front of the King.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To complicate matters and lead rivalry into hatred young Joel Creech, a
+great horseman, but worthless in the eyes of all save his father, had
+been heard to say that some day he would force a race between the King
+and Blue Roan. And that threat had been taken in various ways. It
+alienated Bostil beyond all hope of reconciliation. It made Lucy Bostil
+laugh and look sweetly mysterious. She had no enemies and she liked
+everybody. It was even gossiped by the women of Bostil's Ford that she
+had more than liking for the idle Joel. But the husbands of these
+gossips said Lucy was only tender-hearted. Among the riders, when they
+sat around their lonely camp-fires, or lounged at the corrals of the
+Ford, there was speculation in regard to this race hinted by Joel
+Creech. There never had been a race between the King and Blue Roan, and
+there never would be, unless Joel were to ride off with Lucy. In that
+case there would be the grandest race ever run on the uplands, with the
+odds against Blue Roan only if he carried double. If Joel put Lucy up
+on the Roan and he rode Peg there would be another story. Lucy Bostil
+was a slip of a girl, born on a horse, as strong and supple as an
+Indian, and she could ride like a burr sticking in a horse's mane. With
+Blue Roan carrying her light weight she might run away from any one up
+on the King&mdash;which for Bostil would be a double tragedy, equally in the
+loss of his daughter and the beating of his best-beloved racer. But
+with Joel on Peg, such a race would end in heartbreak for all
+concerned, for the King would outrun Peg, and that would bring riders
+within gunshot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had always been a fascinating subject, this long-looked-for race. It
+grew more so when Joel's infatuation for Lucy became known. There were
+fewer riders who believed Lucy might elope with Joel than there were
+who believed Joel might steal his father's horses. But all the riders
+who loved horses and all the women who loved gossip were united in at
+least one thing, and that was that something like a race or a romance
+would soon disrupt the peaceful, sleepy tenor of Bostil's Ford.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In addition to Bostil's growing hatred for the Creeches, he had a great
+fear of Cordts, the horse-thief. A fear ever restless, ever watchful.
+Cordts hid back in the untrodden ways. He had secret friends among the
+riders of the ranges, faithful followers back in the canyon camps, gold
+for the digging, cattle by the thousand, and fast horses. He had always
+gotten what he wanted&mdash;except one thing. That was a certain horse. And
+the horse was Sage King.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cordts was a bad man, a product of the early gold-fields of California
+and Idaho, an outcast from that evil wave of wanderers retreating back
+over the trails so madly traveled westward. He became a lord over the
+free ranges. But more than all else he was a rider. He knew a horse. He
+was as much horse as Bostil. Cordts rode into this wild free-range
+country, where he had been heard to say that a horse-thief was meaner
+than a poisoned coyote. Nevertheless, he became a horse-thief. The
+passion he had conceived for the Sage King was the passion of a man for
+an unattainable woman. Cordts swore that he would never rest, that he
+would not die, till he owned the King. So there was reason for Bostil's
+great fear.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER II
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Bostil went toward the house with his daughter, turning at the door to
+call a last word to his riders about the care of his horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The house was a low, flat, wide structure, with a corridor running
+through the middle, from which doors led into the adobe-walled rooms.
+The windows were small openings high up, evidently intended for defense
+as well as light, and they had rude wooden shutters. The floor was
+clay, covered everywhere by Indian blankets. A pioneer's home it was,
+simple and crude, yet comfortable, and having the rare quality peculiar
+to desert homes it was cool in summer and warm in winter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Bostil entered with his arm round Lucy a big hound rose from the
+hearth. This room was immense, running the length of the house, and it
+contained a huge stone fireplace, where a kettle smoked fragrantly, and
+rude home-made chairs with blanket coverings, and tables to match, and
+walls covered with bridles, guns, pistols, Indian weapons and
+ornaments, and trophies of the chase. In a far corner stood a
+work-bench, with tools upon it and horse trappings under it. In the
+opposite corner a door led into the kitchen. This room was Bostil's
+famous living-room, in which many things had happened, some of which
+had helped make desert history and were never mentioned by Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's sister came in from the kitchen. She was a huge person with a
+severe yet motherly face. She had her hands on her hips, and she cast a
+rather disapproving glance at father and daughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So you're back again?" she queried, severely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure, Auntie," replied the girl, complacently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You ran off to get out of seeing Wetherby, didn't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy stared sweetly at her aunt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He was waiting for hours," went on the worthy woman. "I never saw a
+man in such a stew.... No wonder, playing fast and loose with him the
+way you do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I told him No!" flashed Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But Wetherby's not the kind to take no. And I'm not satisfied to let
+you mean it. Lucy Bostil, you don't know your mind an hour straight
+running. You've fooled enough with these riders of your Dad's. If
+you're not careful you'll marry one of them.... One of these wild
+riders! As bad as a Ute Indian! ... Wetherby is young and he idolizes
+you. In all common sense why don't you take him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't care for him," replied Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You like him as well as anybody.... John Bostil, what do you say? You
+approved of Wetherby. I heard you tell him Lucy was like an unbroken
+colt and that you'd&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure, I like Jim," interrupted Bostil; and he avoided Lucy's swift
+look.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well?" demanded his sister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Evidently Bostil found himself in a corner between two fires. He looked
+sheepish, then disgusted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad!" exclaimed Lucy, reproachfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See here, Jane," said Bostil, with an air of finality, "the girl is of
+age to-day&mdash;an' she can do what she damn pleases!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's a fine thing for you to say," retorted Aunt Jane. "Like as not
+she'll be fetching that hang-dog Joel Creech up here for you to
+support."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Auntie!" cried Lucy, her eyes blazing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, child, you torment me&mdash;worry me so," said the disappointed woman.
+"It's all for your sake.... Look at you, Lucy Bostil! A girl of
+eighteen who comes of a family! And you riding around and going around
+as you are now&mdash;in a man's clothes!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, you dear old goose, I can't ride in a woman's skirt,"
+expostulated Lucy. "Mind you, Auntie, I can RIDE!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, if I live here forever I'd never get reconciled to a Bostil
+woman in leather pants. We Bostils were somebody once, back in
+Missouri."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil laughed. "Yes, an' if I hadn't hit the trail west we'd be
+starvin' yet. Jane, you're a sentimental old fool. Let the girl alone
+an' reconcile yourself to this wilderness."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aunt Jane's eyes were wet with tears. Lucy, seeing them, ran to her and
+hugged and kissed her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Auntie, I will promise&mdash;from to-day&mdash;to have some dignity. I've been
+free as a boy in these rider clothes. As I am now the men never seem to
+regard me as a girl. Somehow that's better. I can't explain, but I like
+it. My dresses are what have caused all the trouble. I know that. But
+if I'm grown up&mdash;if it's so tremendous&mdash;then I'll wear a dress all the
+time, except just WHEN I ride. Will that do, Auntie?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Maybe you will grow up, after all," replied Aunt Jane, evidently
+surprised and pleased.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Lucy with clinking spurs ran away to her room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jane, what's this nonsense about young Joel Creech?" asked Bostil,
+gruffly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know any more than is gossiped. That I told you. Have you ever
+asked Lucy about him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I sure haven't," said Bostil, bluntly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, ask her. If she tells you at all she'll tell the truth. Lucy'd
+never sleep at night if she lied."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aunt Jane returned to her housewifely tasks, leaving Bostil
+thoughtfully stroking the hound and watching the fire. Presently Lucy
+returned&mdash;a different Lucy&mdash;one that did not rouse his rider's pride,
+but thrilled his father's heart. She had been a slim, lithe, supple,
+disheveled boy, breathing the wild spirit of the open and the horse she
+rode. She was now a girl in the graceful roundness of her slender form,
+with hair the gold of the sage at sunset, and eyes the blue of the deep
+haze of distance, and lips the sweet red of the upland rose. And all
+about her seemed different.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy&mdash;you look&mdash;like&mdash;like she used to be," said Bostil, unsteadily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My mother!" murmured Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But these two, so keen, so strong, so alive, did not abide long with
+sad memories.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, I want to ask you somethin'," said Bostil, presently. "What
+about this young Joel Creech?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy started as if suddenly recalled, then she laughed merrily. "Dad,
+you old fox, did you see him ride out after me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. I was just askin' on&mdash;on general principles."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, is there anythin' between you an' Joel?" he asked, gravely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," she replied, with her clear eyes up to his.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil thought of a bluebell. "I'm beggin' your pardon," he said,
+hastily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, you know how Joel runs after me. I've told you. I let him till
+lately. I liked him. But that wasn't why. I felt sorry for him&mdash;pitied
+him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You did? Seems an awful waste," replied Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, I don't believe Joel is&mdash;perfectly right in his mind," Lucy said,
+solemnly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Haw! haw! Fine compliments you're payin' yourself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Listen. I'm serious. I mean I've grown to see&mdash;-looking back&mdash;that a
+slow, gradual change has come over Joel since he was kicked in the head
+by a mustang. I'm sure no one else has noticed it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Goin' batty over you. That's no unusual sign round this here camp.
+Look at&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're talking about Joel Creech. Lately he has done some queer things.
+To-day, for instance. I thought I gave him the slip. But he must have
+been watching. Anyway, to my surprise he showed up on Peg. He doesn't
+often get Peg across the river. He said the feed was getting scarce
+over there. I was dying to race Buckles against Peg, but I remembered
+you wouldn't like that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I should say not," said Bostil, darkly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, Joel caught up to me&mdash;and he wasn't nice at all. He was worse
+to-day. We quarreled. I said I'd bet he'd never follow me again and he
+said he'd bet he would. Then he got sulky and hung back. I rode away,
+glad to be rid of him, and I climbed to a favorite place of mine. On my
+way home I saw Peg grazing on the rim of the creek, near that big
+spring-hole where the water's so deep and clear. And what do you think?
+There was Joel's head above the water. I remembered in our quarrel I
+had told him to go wash his dirty face. He was doing it. I had to
+laugh. When he saw me&mdash;he&mdash;then&mdash;then he&mdash;" Lucy faltered, blushing
+with anger and shame.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, what then?" demanded Bostil, quietly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He called, 'Hey, Luce&mdash;take off your clothes and come in for a swim!'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil swore.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I tell you I was mad," continued Lucy, "and just as surprised. That
+was one of the queer things. But never before had he dared to&mdash;to-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Insult you. Then what 'd you do?" interrupted Bostil, curiously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I yelled, 'I'll fix you, Joel Creech!'... His clothes were in a pile
+on the bank. At first I thought I'd throw them in the water, but when I
+got to them I thought of something better. I took up all but his shoes,
+for I remembered the ten miles of rock and cactus between him and home,
+and I climbed up on Buckles. Joel screamed and swore something fearful.
+But I didn't look back. And Peg, you know&mdash;maybe you don't know&mdash;but
+Peg is fond of me, and he followed me, straddling his bridle all the
+way in. I dropped Joel's clothes down the ridge a ways, right in the
+trail, so he can't miss them. And that's all.... Dad, was it&mdash;was it
+very bad?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bad! Why, you ought to have thrown your gun on him. At least bounced a
+rock off his head! But say, Lucy, after all, maybe you've done enough.
+I guess you never thought of it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The sun is hot to-day. Hot! An' if Joel's as crazy an' mad as you say
+he'll not have sense enough to stay in the water or shade till the
+sun's gone down. An' if he tackles that ten miles before he'll sunburn
+himself within an inch of his life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sunburn? Oh, Dad! I'm sorry," burst out Lucy, contritely. "I never
+thought of that. I'll ride back with his clothes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You will not," said Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let me send some one, then," she entreated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Girl, haven't you the nerve to play your own game? Let Creech get his
+lesson. He deserves it.... An' now, Lucy, I've two more questions to
+ask."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Only two?" she queried, archly. "Dad, don't scold me with questions."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What shall I say to Wetherby for good an' all?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy's eyes shaded dreamily, and she seemed to look beyond the room,
+out over the ranges.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell him to go back to Durango and forget the foolish girl who can
+care only for the desert and a horse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right. That is straight talk, like an Indian's. An' now the last
+question&mdash;what do you want for a birthday present?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, of course," she cried, gleefully clapping her hands. "I'd
+forgotten that. I'm eighteen!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You get that old chest of your mother's. But what from me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, will you give me anything I ask for?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, my girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anything&mdash;any HORSE?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy knew his weakness, for she had inherited it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure; any horse but the King."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How about Sarchedon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, Lucy, what'd you do with that big black devil? He's too high.
+Seventeen hands high! You couldn't mount him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pooh! Sarch KNEELS for me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Child, listen to reason. Sarch would pull your arms out of their
+sockets."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He has got an iron jaw," agreed Lucy. "Well, then&mdash;how about Dusty
+Ben?" She was tormenting her father and she did it with glee.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No&mdash;not Ben. He's the faithfulest hoss I ever owned. It wouldn't be
+fair to part with him, even to you. Old associations ... a rider's
+loyalty ... now, Lucy, you know&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, you're afraid I'd train and love Ben into beating the King. Some
+day I'll ride some horse out in front of the gray. Remember, Dad! ...
+Then give me Two Face."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure not her, Lucy. Thet mare can't be trusted. Look why we named her
+Two Face."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Buckles, then, dear generous Daddy who longs to give his grown-up girl
+ANYTHING!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, can't you be satisfied an' happy with your mustangs? You've got
+a dozen. You can have any others on the range. Buckles ain't safe for
+you to ride."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil was notably the most generous of men, the kindest of fathers. It
+was an indication of his strange obsession, in regard to horses, that
+he never would see that Lucy was teasing him. As far as horses were
+concerned he lacked a sense of humor. Anything connected with his
+horses was of intense interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd dearly love to own Plume," said Lucy, demurely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil had grown red in the face and now he was on the rack. The
+monstrous selfishness of a rider who had been supreme in his day could
+not be changed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Girl, I&mdash;I thought you hadn't no use for Plume," he stammered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I haven't&mdash;the jade! She threw me once. I've never forgiven her ....
+Dad, I'm only teasing you. Don't I know you couldn't give one of those
+racers away? You couldn't!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, I reckon you're right," Bostil burst out in immense relief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, I'll bet if Cordts gets me and holds me as ransom for the
+King&mdash;as he's threatened&mdash;you'll let him have me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, now thet ain't funny!" complained the father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dear Dad, keep your old racers! But, remember, I'm my father's
+daughter. I can love a horse, too. Oh, if I ever get the one I want to
+love! A wild horse&mdash;a desert stallion&mdash;pure Arabian&mdash;broken right by an
+Indian! If I ever get him, Dad, you look out! For I'll run away from
+Sarch and Ben&mdash;and I'll beat the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The hamlet of Bostil's Ford had a singular situation, though,
+considering the wonderful nature of that desert country, it was not
+exceptional. It lay under the protecting red bluff that only Lucy
+Bostil cared to climb. A hard-trodden road wound down through rough
+breaks in the canyon wall to the river. Bostil's house, at the head of
+the village, looked in the opposite direction, down the sage slope that
+widened like a colossal fan. There was one wide street bordered by
+cottonwoods and cabins, and a number of gardens and orchards, beginning
+to burst into green and pink and white. A brook ran out of a ravine in
+the huge bluff, and from this led irrigation ditches. The red earth
+seemed to blossom at the touch of water.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The place resembled an Indian encampment&mdash;quiet, sleepy, colorful, with
+the tiny-streams of water running everywhere, and lazy columns of blue
+wood-smoke rising. Bostil's Ford was the opposite of a busy village,
+yet its few inhabitants, as a whole, were prosperous. The wants of
+pioneers were few. Perhaps once a month the big, clumsy flatboat was
+rowed across the river with horses or cattle or sheep. And the season
+was now close at hand when for weeks, sometimes months, the river was
+unfordable. There were a score of permanent families, a host of merry,
+sturdy children, a number of idle young men, and only one girl&mdash;Lucy
+Bostil. But the village always had transient inhabitants&mdash;friendly Utes
+and Navajos in to trade, and sheep-herders with a scraggy, woolly
+flock, and travelers of the strange religious sect identified with Utah
+going on into the wilderness. Then there were always riders passing to
+and fro, and sometimes unknown ones regarded with caution.
+Horse-thieves sometimes boldly rode in, and sometimes were able to sell
+or trade. In the matter of horse-dealing Bostil's Ford was as bold as
+the thieves.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Old Brackton, a man of varied Western experience, kept the one store,
+which was tavern, trading-post, freighter's headquarters, blacksmith's
+shop, and any thing else needful. Brackton employed riders, teamsters,
+sometimes Indians, to freight supplies in once a month from Durango.
+And that was over two hundred miles away. Sometimes the supplies did
+not arrive on time&mdash;occasionally not at all. News from the outside
+world, except that elicited from the taciturn travelers marching into
+Utah, drifted in at intervals. But it was not missed. These wilderness
+spirits were the forerunners of a great, movement, and as such were
+big, strong, stern, sufficient unto themselves. Life there was made
+possible by horses. The distant future, that looked bright to
+far-seeing men, must be and could only be fulfilled through the
+endurance and faithfulness of horses. And then, from these men, horses
+received the meed due them, and the love they were truly worth. The
+Navajo was a nomad horseman, an Arab of the Painted Desert, and the Ute
+Indian was close to him. It was they who developed the white riders of
+the uplands as well as the wild-horse wrangler or hunter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton's ramshackle establishment stood down at the end of the
+village street. There was not a sawed board in all that structure, and
+some of the pine logs showed how they had been dropped from the bluff.
+Brackton, a little old gray man, with scant beard, and eyes like those
+of a bird, came briskly out to meet an incoming freighter. The wagon
+was minus a hind wheel, but the teamster had come in on three wheels
+and a pole. The sweaty, dust-caked, weary, thin-ribbed mustangs, and
+the gray-and-red-stained wagon, and the huge jumble of dusty packs,
+showed something of what the journey had been.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hi thar, Red Wilson, you air some late gettin' in," greeted old
+Brackton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Red Wilson had red eyes from fighting the flying sand, and red dust
+pasted in his scraggy beard, and as he gave his belt an upward hitch
+little red clouds flew from his gun-sheath.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yep. An' I left a wheel an' part of the load on the trail," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With him were Indians who began to unhitch the teams. Riders lounging
+in the shade greeted Wilson and inquired for news. The teamster replied
+that travel was dry, the water-holes were dry, and he was dry. And his
+reply gave both concern and amusement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One more trip out an' back&mdash;thet's all, till it rains," concluded
+Wilson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton led him inside, evidently to alleviate part of that dryness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Water and grass, next to horses, were the stock subject of all riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's got oncommon hot early," said one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, an' them northeast winds&mdash;hard this spring," said another.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No snow on the uplands."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley seen a dry spell comin'. Wal, we can drift along without
+freighters. There's grass an' water enough here, even if it doesn't
+rain."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure, but there ain't none across the river."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never was, in early season. An' if there was it'd be sheeped off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech'll be fetchin' his hosses across soon, I reckon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You bet he will. He's trainin' for the races next month."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' when air they comin' off?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You got me. Mebbe Van knows."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some one prodded a sleepy rider who lay all his splendid lithe length,
+hat over his eyes. Then he sat up and blinked, a lean-faced, gray-eyed
+fellow, half good-natured and half resentful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did somebody punch me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Naw, you got nightmare! Say, Van, when will the races come off?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Huh! An' you woke me for thet? ... Bostil says in a few weeks, soon as
+he hears from the Indians. Plans to have eight hundred Indians here,
+an' the biggest purses an' best races ever had at the Ford."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll ride the King again?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon so. But Bostil is kickin' because I'm heavier than I was,"
+replied the rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're skin an' bones at thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mebbe you'll need to work a little off, Van. Some one said Creech's
+Blue Roan was comin' fast this year."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bill, your mind ain't operatin'," replied Van, scornfully. "Didn't I
+beat Creech's hosses last year without the King turnin' a hair?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not if I recollect, you didn't. The Blue Roan wasn't runnin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then they argued, after the manner of friendly riders, but all earnest,
+an eloquent in their convictions. The prevailing opinion was that
+Creech's horse had a chance, depending upon condition and luck.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The argument shifted upon the arrival of two new-comers, leading
+mustangs and apparently talking trade. It was manifest that these
+arrivals were not loath to get the opinions of others.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Van, there's a hoss!" exclaimed one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, he ain't," replied Van.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And that diverse judgment appeared to be characteristic throughout. The
+strange thing was that Macomber, the rancher, had already traded his
+mustang and money to boot for the sorrel. The deal, whether wise or
+not, had been consummated. Brackton came out with Red Wilson, and they
+had to have their say.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, durned if some of you fellers ain't kind an' complimentary,"
+remarked Macomber, scratching his head. "But then every feller can't
+have hoss sense." Then, looking up to see Lucy Bostil coming along the
+road, he brightened as if with inspiration.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was at home among them, and the shy eyes of the younger riders,
+especially Van, were nothing if not revealing. She greeted them with a
+bright smile, and when she saw Brackton she burst out:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Mr. Brackton, the wagon's in, and did my box come? ... To-day's my
+birthday."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Deed it did, Lucy; an' many more happy ones to you!" he replied,
+delighted in her delight. "But it's too heavy for you. I'll send it
+up&mdash;or mebbe one of the boys&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Five riders in unison eagerly offered their services and looked as if
+each had spoken first. Then Macomber addressed her:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Miss Lucy, you see this here sorrel?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah! the same lazy crowd and the same old story&mdash;a horse trade!"
+laughed Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's a little difference of opinion," said Macomber, politely
+indicating the riders. "Now, Miss Lucy, we-all know you're a judge of a
+hoss. And as good as thet you tell the truth. Thet ain't in some
+hoss-traders I know.... What do you think of this mustang?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Macomber had eyes of enthusiasm for his latest acquisition, but some of
+the cock-sureness had been knocked out of him by the blunt riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Macomber, aren't you a great one to talk?" queried Lucy, severely.
+"Didn't you get around Dad and trade him an old, blind, knock-kneed bag
+of bones for a perfectly good pony&mdash;one I liked to ride?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders shouted with laughter while the rancher struggled with
+confusion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Pon my word, Miss Lucy, I'm surprised you could think thet of such an
+old friend of yours&mdash;an' your Dad's, too. I'm hopin' he doesn't side
+altogether with you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad and I never agree about a horse. He thinks he got the best of you.
+But you know, Macomber, what a horse-thief you are. Worse than Cordts!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, if I got the best of Bostil I'm willin' to be thought bad. I'm
+the first feller to take him in.... An' now, Miss Lucy, look over my
+sorrel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy Bostil did indeed have an eye for a horse. She walked straight up
+to the wild, shaggy mustang with a confidence born of intuition and
+experience, and reached a hand for his head, not slowly, nor yet
+swiftly. The mustang looked as if he was about to jump, but he did not.
+His eyes showed that he was not used to women.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's not well broken," said Lucy. "Some Navajo has beaten his head in
+breaking him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she carefully studied the mustang point by point.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's deceiving at first because he's good to look at," said Lucy. "But
+I wouldn't own him. A saddle will turn on him. He's not vicious, but
+he'll never get over his scare. He's narrow between the eyes&mdash;a bad
+sign. His ears are stiff&mdash;and too close. I don't see anything more
+wrong with him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You seen enough," declared Macomber. "An' so you wouldn't own him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You couldn't make me a present of him&mdash;even on my birthday."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, now I'm sorry, for I was thinkin' of thet," replied Macomber,
+ruefully. It was plain that the sorrel had fallen irremediably in his
+estimation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Macomber, I often tell Dad all you horse-traders get your deserts now
+and then. It's vanity and desire to beat the other man that's your
+downfall."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy went away, with Van shouldering her box, leaving Macomber trying
+to return the banter of the riders. The good-natured raillery was
+interrupted by a sharp word from one of them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look! Darn me if thet ain't a naked Indian comin'!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders whirled to see an apparently nude savage approaching, almost
+on a run.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Take a shot at thet, Bill," said another rider. "Miss Lucy might
+see&mdash;No, she's out of sight. But, mebbe some other woman is around."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hold on, Bill," called Macomber. "You never saw an Indian run like
+thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some of the riders swore, others laughed, and all suddenly became keen
+with interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure his face is white, if his body's red!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The strange figure neared them. It was indeed red up to the face, which
+seemed white in contrast. Yet only in general shape and action did it
+resemble a man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Damned if it ain't Joel Creech!" sang out Bill Stark.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The other riders accorded their wondering assent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gone crazy, sure!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I always seen it comin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Say, but ain't he wild? Foamin' at the mouth like a winded hoss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Creech was headed down the road toward the ford across which he
+had to go to reach home. He saw the curious group, slowed his pace, and
+halted. His face seemed convulsed with rage and pain and fatigue. His
+body, even to his hands, was incased in a thick, heavy coating of red
+adobe that had caked hard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"God's sake&mdash;fellers&mdash;" he panted, with eyes rolling, "take this&mdash;'dobe
+mud off me! ... I'm dyin'!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he staggered into Brackton's place. A howl went up from the riders
+and they surged after him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That evening after supper Bostil stamped in the big room, roaring with
+laughter, red in the face; and he astonished Lucy and her aunt to the
+point of consternation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now&mdash;you've&mdash;done&mdash;it&mdash;Lucy Bostil!" he roared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh dear! Oh dear!" exclaimed Aunt Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Done what?" asked Lucy, blankly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil conquered his paroxysm, and, wiping his moist red face, he eyed
+Lucy in mock solemnity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Joel!" whispered Lucy, who had a guilty conscience.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, I never heard the beat of it.... Joel's smarter in some ways
+than we thought, an' crazier in others. He had the sun figgered, but
+what'd he want to run through town for? Why, never in my life have I
+seen such tickled riders."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad!" almost screamed Lucy. "What did Joel do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I see it this way. He couldn't or wouldn't wait for sundown. An'
+he wasn't hankerin' to be burned. So he wallows in a 'dobe mud-hole an'
+covers himself thick with mud. You know that 'dobe mud! Then he starts
+home. But he hadn't figgered on the 'dobe gettin' hard, which it
+did&mdash;harder 'n rock. An' thet must have hurt more 'n sunburn. Late this
+afternoon he came runnin' down the road, yellin' thet he was dyin'. The
+boys had conniption fits. Joel ain't over-liked, you know, an' here
+they had one on him. Mebbe they didn't try hard to clean him off. But
+the fact is not for hours did they get thet 'dobe off him. They washed
+an' scrubbed an' curried him, while he yelled an' cussed. Finally they
+peeled it off, with his skin I guess. He was raw, an' they say, the
+maddest feller ever seen in Bostil's Ford!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was struggling between fear and mirth. She did not look sorry.
+"Oh! Oh! Oh, Dad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wasn't it great, Lucy?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But what&mdash;will he&mdash;do?" choked Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lord only knows. Thet worries me some. Because he never said a word
+about how he come to lose his clothes or why he had the 'dobe on him.
+An' sure I never told. Nobody knows but us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, he'll do something terrible to me!" cried Lucy, aghast at her
+premonition.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER III
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The days did not pass swiftly at Bostil's Ford. And except in winter,
+and during the spring sand-storms, the lagging time passed pleasantly.
+Lucy rode every day, sometimes with Van, and sometimes alone. She was
+not over-keen about riding with Van&mdash;first, because he was in love with
+her; and secondly, in spite of that, she could not beat him when he
+rode the King. They were training Bostil's horses for the
+much-anticipated races.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last word arrived from the Utes and Navajos that they accepted
+Bostil's invitation and would come in force, which meant, according to
+Holley and other old riders, that the Indians would attend about eight
+hundred strong.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet old chief, Hawk, is comin'," Holley informed Bostil. "He hasn't
+been here fer several years. Recollect thet bunch of colts he had?
+They're hosses, not mustangs.... So you look out, Bostil!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No rider or rancher or sheepman, in fact, no one, ever lost a chance to
+warn Bostil. Some of it was in fun, but most of it was earnest. The
+nature of events was that sooner or later a horse would beat the King.
+Bostil knew that as well as anybody, though he would not admit it.
+Holley's hint made Bostil look worried. Most of Bostil's gray hairs
+might have been traced to his years of worry about horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The day he received word from the Indians he sent for Brackton,
+Williams, Muncie, and Creech to come to his house that night. These
+men, with Bostil, had for years formed in a way a club, which gave the
+Ford distinction. Creech was no longer a friend of Bostil's, but Bostil
+had always been fair-minded, and now he did not allow his animosities
+to influence him. Holley, the veteran rider, made the sixth member of
+the club.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil had a cedar log blazing cheerily in the wide fireplace, for
+these early spring nights in the desert were cold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton was the last guest to arrive. He shuffled in without answering
+the laconic greetings accorded him, and his usually mild eyes seemed
+keen and hard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"John, I reckon you won't love me fer this here I've got to tell you,
+to-night specially," he said, seriously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You old robber, I couldn't love you anyhow," retorted Bostil. But his
+humor did not harmonize with the sudden gravity of his look. "What's
+up?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who do you suppose I jest sold whisky to?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've no idea," replied Bostil. Yet he looked as if he was perfectly
+sure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts! ... Cordts, an' four of his outfit. Two of them I didn't know.
+Bad men, judgin' from appearances, let alone company. The others was
+Hutchinson an'&mdash;Dick Sears."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"DICK SEARS!" exclaimed Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Muncie and Williams echoed Bostil. Holley appeared suddenly interested.
+Creech alone showed no surprise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But Sears is dead," added Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He was dead&mdash;we thought," replied Brackton, with a grim laugh. "But
+he's alive again. He told me he'd been in Idaho fer two years, in the
+gold-fields. Said the work was too hard, so he'd come back here.
+Laughed when he said it, the little devil! I'll bet he was thinkin' of
+thet wagon-train of mine he stole."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil gazed at his chief rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I reckon we didn't kill Sears, after all," replied Holley. "I
+wasn't never sure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lord! Cordts an' Sears in camp," ejaculated Bostil, and he began to
+pace the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, they're gone now," said Brackton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Take it easy, boss. Sit down," drawled Holley. "The King is safe, an'
+all the racers. I swear to thet. Why, Cordts couldn't chop into thet
+log-an'-wire corral if he an' his gang chopped all night! They hate
+work. Besides, Farlane is there, an' the boys."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This reassured Bostil, and he resumed his chair. But his hand shook a
+little.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did Cordts have anythin' to say?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure. He was friendly an' talkative," replied Brackton. "He came in
+just after dark. Left a man I didn't see out with the hosses. He bought
+two big packs of supplies, an' some leather stuff, an', of course,
+ammunition. Then some whisky. Had plenty of gold an' wouldn't take no
+change. Then while his men, except Sears, was carryin' out the stuff,
+he talked."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Go on. Tell me," said Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, he'd been out north of Durango an' fetched news. There's wild
+talk back there of a railroad goin' to be built some day, joinin' east
+an' west. It's interestin', but no sense to it. How could they build a
+railroad through thet country?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"North it ain't so cut up an' lumpy as here," put in Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Grandest idea ever thought of for the West," avowed Bostil. "If thet
+railroad ever starts we'll all get rich.... Go on, Brack."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then Cordts said water an' grass was peterin' out back on the trail,
+same as Red Wilson said last week. Finally he asked, 'How's my friend
+Bostil?' I told him you was well. He looked kind of thoughtful then,
+an' I knew what was comin'....'How's the King?' 'Grand' I told
+him&mdash;'grand.' 'When is them races comin' off?' I said we hadn't planned
+the time yet, but it would be soon&mdash;inside of a month or two.
+'Brackton,' he said, sharp-like, 'is Bostil goin' to pull a gun on me
+at sight?' 'Reckon he is,' I told him. 'Wal, I'm not powerful glad to
+know thet.... I hear Creech's blue hoss will race the King this time.
+How about it?' 'Sure an' certain this year. I've Creech's an' Bostil's
+word for thet.' Cordts put his hand on my shoulder. You ought to 've
+seen his eyes!...'I want to see thet race.... I'm goin' to.' 'Wal,' I
+said, 'you'll have to stop bein'&mdash;You'll need to change your bizness.'
+Then, Bostil, what do you think? Cordts was sort of eager an' wild. He
+said thet was a race he jest couldn't miss. He swore he wouldn't turn a
+trick or let a man of his gang stir a hand till after thet race, if
+you'd let him come."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A light flitted across Bostil's face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know how Cordts feels," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, it's a queer deal," went on Brackton. "Fer a long time you've
+meant to draw on Cordts when you meet. We all know thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I'll kill him!" The light left Bostil's face. His voice sounded
+differently. His mouth opened, drooped strangely at the corners, then
+shut in a grim, tense line. Bostil had killed more than one man. The
+memory, no doubt, was haunting and ghastly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts seemed to think his word was guarantee of his good faith. He
+said he'd send an Indian in here to find out if he can come to the
+races. I reckon, Bostil, thet it wouldn't hurt none to let him come.
+An' hold your gun hand fer the time he swears he'll be honest. Queer
+deal, ain't it, men? A hoss-thief turnin' honest jest to see a race!
+Beats me! Bostil, it's a cheap way to get at least a little honesty
+from Cordts. An' refusin' might rile him bad. When all's said Cordts
+ain't as bad as he could be."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll let him come," replied Bostil, breathing deep. "But it'll be hard
+to see him, rememberin' how he's robbed me, an' what he's threatened.
+An' I ain't lettin' him come to bribe a few weeks' decency from him.
+I'm doin' it for only one reason.... Because I know how he loves the
+King&mdash;how he wants to see the King run away from the field thet day!
+Thet's why!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a moment of silence, during which all turned to Creech. He
+was a stalwart man, no longer young, with a lined face, deep-set,
+troubled eyes, and white, thin beard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, if Cordts loves the King thet well, he's in fer heartbreak,"
+said Creech, with a ring in his voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Down crashed Bostil's heavy boots and fire flamed in his gaze. The
+other men laughed, and Brackton interposed:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hold on, you boy riders!" he yelled. "We ain't a-goin' to have any
+arguments like thet.... Now, Bostil, it's settled, then? You'll let
+Cordts come?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Glad to have him," replied Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good. An' now mebbe we'd better get down to the bizness of this here
+meetin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They seated themselves around the table, upon which Bostil laid an old
+and much-soiled ledger and a stub of a lead-pencil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"First well set the time," he said, with animation, "an' then pitch
+into details.... What's the date?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No one answered, and presently they all looked blankly from one to the
+other.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's April, ain't it?" queried Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That assurance was as close as they could get to the time of year.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy!" called Bostil, in a loud voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She came running in, anxious, almost alarmed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Goodness! you made us jump! What on earth is the matter?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, we want to know the date," replied Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Date! Did you have to scare Auntie and me out of our wits just for
+that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who scared you? This is important, Lucy. What's the date?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a week to-day since last Tuesday," answered Lucy, sweetly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Huh! Then it's Tuesday again," said Bostil, laboriously writing it
+down. "Now, what's the date?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't you remember?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Remember? I never knew."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad! ... Last Tuesday was my birthday&mdash;the day you DID NOT give me a
+horse!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aw, so it was," rejoined Bostil, confused at her reproach. "An' thet
+date was&mdash;let's see&mdash;April sixth.... Then this is April thirteenth.
+Much obliged, Lucy. Run back to your aunt now. This hoss talk won't
+interest you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy tossed her head. "I'll bet I'll have to straighten out the whole
+thing." Then with a laugh she disappeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Three days beginnin&mdash;say June first. June first&mdash;second, an' third.
+How about thet for the races?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everybody agreed, and Bostil laboriously wrote that down. Then they
+planned the details. Purses and prizes, largely donated by Bostil and
+Muncie, the rich members of the community, were recorded. The old rules
+were adhered to. Any rider or any Indian could enter any horse in any
+race, or as many horses as he liked in as many races. But by winning
+one race he excluded himself from the others. Bostil argued for a
+certain weight in riders, but the others ruled out this suggestion.
+Special races were arranged for the Indians, with saddles, bridles,
+blankets, guns as prizes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All this appeared of absorbing interest to Bostil. He perspired freely.
+There was a gleam in his eye, betraying excitement. When it came to
+arranging the details of the big race between the high-class racers,
+then he grew intense and harder to deal with. Many points had to go by
+vote. Muncie and Williams both had fleet horses to enter in this race;
+Holley had one; Creech had two; there were sure to be several Indians
+enter fast mustangs; and Bostil had the King and four others to choose
+from. Bostil held out stubbornly for a long race. It was well known
+that Sage King was unbeatable in a long race. If there were any chance
+to beat him it must be at short distance. The vote went against Bostil,
+much to his chagrin, and the great race was set down for two miles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But two miles! ... Two miles!" he kept repeating. "Thet's Blue Roan's
+distance. Thet's his distance. An' it ain't fair to the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His guests, excepting Creech, argued with him, explained, reasoned,
+showed him that it was fair to all concerned. Bostil finally
+acquiesced, but he was not happy. The plain fact was that he was
+frightened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the men were departing Bostil called Creech back into the
+sitting-room. Creech appeared surprised, yet it was evident that he
+would have been glad to make friends with Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What'll you take for the roan?" Bostil asked, tersely,' as if he had
+never asked that before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, didn't we thresh thet out before&mdash;an' FELL out over it?"
+queried Creech, with a deprecating spread of his hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, we can fall in again, if you'll sell or trade the hoss."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm sorry, but I can't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You need money an' hosses, don't you?" demanded Bostil, brutally. He
+had no conscience in a matter of horse-dealing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lord knows, I do," replied Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, then, here's your chance. I'll give you five hundred in gold an'
+Sarchedon to boot."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech looked as if he had not heard aright. Bostil repeated the offer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," replied Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll make it a thousand an' throw Plume in with Sarch," flashed Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" Creech turned pale and swallowed hard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Two thousand an' Dusty Ben along with the others?" This was an
+unheard-of price to pay for any horse. Creech saw that Bostil was
+desperate. It was an almost overpowering temptation. Evidently Creech
+resisted it only by applying all his mind to the thought of his
+clean-limbed, soft-eyed, noble horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil did not give Creech time to speak. "Twenty-five hundred an' Two
+Face along with the rest!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God, Bostil&mdash;stop it! I can't PART with Blue Roan. You're rich an'
+you've no heart. Thet I always knew. At least to me you never had,
+since I owned them two racers. Didn't I beg you, a little time back, to
+lend me a few hundred? To meet thet debt? An' you wouldn't, unless I'd
+sell the hosses. An' I had to lose my sheep. Now I'm a poor
+man&mdash;gettin' poorer all the time. But I won't sell or trade Blue Roan,
+not for all you've got!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech seemed to gain strength with his speech and passion with the
+strength. His eyes glinted at the hard, paling face of his rival. He
+raised a clenching fist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' by G&mdash;d, I'm goin' to win thet race!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+During that week Lucy had heard many things about Joel Creech, and some
+of them were disquieting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some rider had not only found Joel's clothes on the trail, but he had
+recognized the track of the horse Lucy rode, and at once connected her
+with the singular discovery. Coupling that with Joel's appearance in
+the village incased in a heaving armor of adobe, the riders guessed
+pretty close to the truth. For them the joke was tremendous. And Joel
+Creech was exceedingly sensitive to ridicule. The riders made life
+unbearable for him. They had fun out of it as long as Joel showed signs
+of taking the joke manfully, which was not long, and then his
+resentment won their contempt. That led to sarcasm on their part and
+bitter anger on his. It came to Lucy's ears that Joel began to act and
+talk strangely. She found out that the rider Van had knocked Joel down
+in Brackton's store and had kicked a gun out of his hand. Van laughed
+off the rumor and Brackton gave her no satisfaction. Moreover, she
+heard no other rumors. The channels of gossip had suddenly closed to
+her. Bostil, when questioned by Lucy, swore in a way that amazed her,
+and all he told her was to leave Creech alone. Finally, when Muncie
+discharged Joel, who worked now and then, Lucy realized that something
+was wrong with Joel and that she was to blame for it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She grew worried and anxious and sorry, but she held her peace, and
+determined to find out for herself what was wrong. Every day when she
+rode out into the sage she expected to meet him, or at least see him
+somewhere; nevertheless days went by and there was no sign of him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One afternoon she saw some Indians driving sheep down the river road
+toward the ford, and, acting upon impulse, she turned her horse after
+them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy seldom went down the river road. Riding down and up was merely
+work, and a horse has as little liking for it as she had. Usually it
+was a hot, dusty trip, and the great, dark, overhanging walls had a
+depressing effect, upon her. She always felt awe at the gloomy canyon
+and fear at the strange, murmuring red river. But she started down this
+afternoon in the hope of meeting Joel. She had a hazy idea of telling
+him she was sorry for what she had done, and of asking him to forget it
+and pay no more heed to the riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sheep raised a dust-cloud in the sandy wash where the road wound
+down, and Lucy hung back to let them get farther ahead. Gradually the
+tiny roar of pattering hoofs and the blended bleating and baaing died
+away. The dust-cloud, however, hung over the head of the ravine, and
+Lucy had to force Sarchedon through it. Sarchedon did not mind sand and
+dust, but he surely hated the smell of sheep. Lucy seldom put a spur to
+Sarchedon; still, she gave him a lash with her quirt, and then he went
+on obediently, if disgustedly. He carried his head like a horse that
+wondered why his mistress preferred to drive him down into an
+unpleasant hole when she might have been cutting the sweet, cool sage
+wind up on the slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The wash, with its sand and clay walls, dropped into a gulch, and there
+was an end of green growths. The road led down over solid rock.
+Gradually the rims of the gorge rose, shutting out the light and the
+cliffs. It was a winding road and one not safe to tarry on in a stormy
+season. Lucy had seen boulders weighing a ton go booming down that
+gorge during one of the sudden fierce desert storms, when a torrent of
+water and mud and stone went plunging on to the river. The ride through
+here was short, though slow. Lucy always had time to adjust her
+faculties for the overpowering contrast these lower regions presented.
+Long before she reached the end of the gorge she heard the sullen
+thunder of the river. The river was low, too, for otherwise there would
+have been a deafening roar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently she came out upon a lower branch of the canyon, into a great
+red-walled space, with the river still a thousand feet below, and the
+cliffs towering as high above her. The road led down along this rim
+where to the left all was open, across to the split and peaked wall
+opposite. The river appeared to sweep round a bold, bulging corner a
+mile above. It was a wide, swift, muddy, turbulent stream. A great bar
+of sand stretched out from the shore. Beyond it, through the mouth of
+an intersecting canyon, could be seen a clump of cottonwoods and
+willows that marked the home of the Creeches. Lucy could not see the
+shore nearest her, as it was almost directly under her. Besides, in
+this narrow road, on a spirited horse, she was not inclined to watch
+the scenery. She hurried Sarchedon down and down, under the overhanging
+brows of rock, to where the rim sloped out and failed. Here was a
+half-acre of sand, with a few scant willows, set down seemingly in a
+dent at the base of the giant, beetling cliffs. The place was light,
+though the light seemed a kind of veiled red, and to Lucy always
+ghastly. She could not have been joyous with that river moaning before
+her, even if it had been up on a level, in the clear and open day. As a
+little girl eight years old she had conceived a terror and hatred of
+this huge, jagged rent so full of red haze and purple smoke and the
+thunder of rushing waters. And she had never wholly outgrown it. The
+joy of the sun and wind, the rapture in the boundless open, the
+sweetness in the sage&mdash;these were not possible here. Something mighty
+and ponderous, heavy as those colossal cliffs, weighted down her
+spirit. The voice of the river drove out any dream. Here was the
+incessant frowning presence of destructive forces of nature. And the
+ford was associated with catastrophe&mdash;to sheep, to horses and to men.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy rode across the bar to the shore where the Indians were loading
+the sheep into an immense rude flatboat. As the sheep were frightened,
+the loading was no easy task. Their bleating could be heard above the
+roar of the river. Bostil's boatmen, Shugrue and Somers, stood
+knee-deep in the quicksand of the bar, and their efforts to keep
+free-footed were as strenuous as their handling of the sheep. Presently
+the flock was all crowded on board, the Indians followed, and then the
+boatmen slid the unwieldy craft off the sand-bar. Then, each manning a
+clumsy oar, they pulled up-stream. Along shore were whirling, slow
+eddies, and there rowing was possible. Out in that swift current it
+would have been folly to try to contend with it, let alone make
+progress. The method of crossing was to row up along the shore as far
+as a great cape of rock jutting out, and there make into the current,
+and while drifting down pull hard to reach the landing opposite.
+Heavily laden as the boat was, the chances were not wholly in favor of
+a successful crossing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy watched the slow, laborious struggle of the boatmen with the heavy
+oars until she suddenly remembered the object of her visit down to the
+ford. She appeared to be alone on her side of the river. At the landing
+opposite, however, were two men; and presently Lucy recognized Joel
+Creech and his father. A second glance showed Indians with burros,
+evidently waiting for the boat. Joel Creech jumped into a skiff and
+shoved off. The elder man, judging by his motions, seemed to be trying
+to prevent his son from leaving the shore. But Joel began to row
+up-stream, keeping close to the shore. Lucy watched him. No doubt he
+had seen her and was coming across. Either the prospect of meeting him
+or the idea of meeting him there in the place where she was never
+herself made her want to turn at once and ride back home. But her
+stubborn sense of fairness overruled that. She would hold her ground
+solely in the hope of persuading Joel to be reasonable. She saw the big
+flatboat sweep into line of sight at the same time Joel turned into the
+current. But while the larger craft drifted slowly the other way, the
+smaller one came swiftly down and across. Joel swept out of the current
+into the eddy, rowed across that, and slid the skiff up on the
+sand-bar. Then he stepped out. He was bareheaded and barefooted, but it
+was not that which made him seem a stranger to Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you lookin' fer me?" he shouted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy waved a hand for him to come up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he approached. He was a tall, lean young man, stoop-shouldered and
+bow-legged from much riding, with sallow, freckled face, a thin fuzz of
+beard, weak mouth and chin, and eyes remarkable for their small size
+and piercing quality and different color. For one was gray and the
+other was hazel. There was no scar on his face, but the irregularity of
+his features reminded one who knew that he had once been kicked in the
+face by a horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech came up hurriedly, in an eager, wild way that made Lucy suddenly
+pity him. He did not seem to remember that the stallion had an
+antipathy for him. But Lucy, if she had forgotten, would have been
+reminded by Sarchedon's action.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look out, Joel!" she called, and she gave the black's head a jerk.
+Sarchedon went up with a snort and came down pounding the sand. Quick
+as an Indian Lucy was out of the saddle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lemme your quirt," said Joel, showing his teeth like a wolf.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. I wouldn't let you hit Sarch. You beat him once, and he's never
+forgotten," replied Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The eye of the horse and the man met and clashed, and there was a
+hostile tension in their attitudes. Then Lucy dropped the bridle and
+drew Joel over to a huge drift-log, half buried in the sand. Here she
+sat down, but Joel remained standing. His gaze was now all the stranger
+for its wistfulness. Lucy was quick to catch a subtle difference in
+him, but she could not tell wherein it lay.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What'd you want?" asked Joel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've heard a lot of things, Joel," replied Lucy, trying to think of
+just what she wanted to say.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon you have," said Joel, dejectedly, and then he sat down on the
+log and dug holes in the sand with his bare feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy had never before seen him look tired, and it seemed that some of
+the healthy brown of his cheeks had thinned out. Then Lucy told him,
+guardedly, a few of the rumors she had heard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All thet you say is nothin' to what's happened," he replied, bitterly.
+"Them riders mocked the life an' soul out of me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, Joel, you shouldn't be so&mdash;so touchy," said Lucy, earnestly.
+"After all, the joke WAS on you. Why didn't you take it like a man?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But they knew you stole my clothes," he protested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Suppose they did. That wasn't much to care about. If you hadn't taken
+it so hard they'd have let up on you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mebbe I might have stood that. But they taunted me with bein'&mdash;loony
+about you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel spoke huskily. There was no doubt that he had been deeply hurt.
+Lucy saw tears in his eyes, and her first impulse was to put a hand on
+his and tell him how sorry she was. But she desisted. She did not feel
+at her ease with Joel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What'd you and Van fight about?" she asked, presently. Joel hung his
+head. "I reckon I ain't a-goin' to tell you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're ashamed of it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel's silence answered that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You said something about me?" Lucy could not resist her curiosity,
+back of which was a little heat. "It must have been&mdash;bad&mdash;else Van
+wouldn't have struck you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He hit me&mdash;he knocked me flat," passionately said Joel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you drew a gun on him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I did, an' like a fool I didn't wait till I got up. Then he kicked me!
+... Bostil's Ford will never be big enough fer me an' Van now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't talk foolish. You won't fight with Van.... Joel, maybe you
+deserved what you got. You say some&mdash;some rude things."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I only said I'd pay you back," burst out Joel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I swore I'd lay fer you&mdash;an' steal your clothes&mdash;so you'd have to run
+home naked."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was indeed something lacking in Joel, but it was not sincerity.
+His hurt had rankled deep and his voice trembled with indignation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, Joel, I don't go swimming in spring-holes," protested Lucy,
+divided between amusement and annoyance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I meant it, anyhow," said Joel, doggedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you absolutely honest? Is that all you said to provoke Van?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's all, Lucy, I swear."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She believed him, and saw the unfortunate circumstance more than ever
+her fault. "I'm sorry, Joel. I'm much to blame. I shouldn't have lost
+my temper and played that trick with your clothes.... If you'd only had
+sense enough to stay out till after dark! But no use crying over spilt
+milk. Now, if you'll do your share I'll do mine. I'll tell the boys I
+was to blame. I'll persuade them to let you alone. I'll go to Muncie&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No you won't go cryin' small fer me!" blurted out Joel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was surprised to see pride in him. "Joel, I'll not make it
+appear&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll not say one word about me to any one," he went on, with the
+blood beginning to darken his face. And now he faced her. How strange
+the blaze in his differently colored eyes! "Lucy Bostil, there's been
+thet done an' said to me which I'll never forgive. I'm no good in
+Bostil's Ford. Mebbe I never was much. But I could get a job when I
+wanted it an' credit when I needed it. Now I can't get nothin'. I'm no
+good! ... I'm no good! An' it's your fault!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Joel, what can I do?" cried Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon there's only one way you can square me," he replied, suddenly
+growing pale. But his eyes were like flint. He certainly looked to be
+in possession of all his wits.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How?" queried Lucy, sharply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can marry me. Thet'll show thet gang! An' it'll square me. Then
+I'll go back to work an' I'll stick. Thet's all, Lucy Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Manifestly he was laboring under strong suppressed agitation. That
+moment was the last of real strength and dignity ever shown by Joel
+Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, Joel, I can't marry you&mdash;even if I am to blame for your ruin,"
+said Lucy, simply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because I don't love you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon thet won't make any difference, if you don't love some one
+else."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy gazed blankly at him. He began to shake, and his eyes grew wild.
+She rose from the log.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you love anybody else?" he asked, passionately.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"None of your business!" retorted Lucy. Then, at a strange darkening of
+his face, an aspect unfamiliar to her, she grew suddenly frightened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's Van!" he said, thickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Joel, you're a fool!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That only infuriated him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So they all say. An' they got my old man believin' it, too. Mebbe I
+am.... But I'm a-goin' to kill Van!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No! No! Joel, what are you saying? I don't love Van. I don't care any
+more for him than for any other rider&mdash;or&mdash;or you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet's a lie, Lucy Bostil!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How dare you say I lie?" demanded Lucy. "I've a mind to turn my back
+on you. I'm trying to make up for my blunder and you&mdash;you insult me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You talk sweet ... but talk isn't enough. You made me no-good ....
+Will you marry me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will not!" And Lucy, with her blood up, could not keep contempt out
+of voice and look, and she did not care. That was the first time she
+had ever shown anything, approaching ridicule for Joel. The effect was
+remarkable. Like a lash upon a raw wound it made him writhe; but more
+significant to Lucy was the sudden convulsive working of his features
+and the wildness of his eyes. Then she turned her back, not from
+contempt, but to hurry away from him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He leaped after her and grasped her with rude hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let me go!" cried Lucy, standing perfectly motionless. The hard clutch
+of his fingers roused a fierce, hot anger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel did not heed her command. He was forcing her back. He talked
+incoherently. One glimpse of his face added terror to Lucy's fury.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Joel, you're out of your head!" she cried, and she began to wrench and
+writhe out of his grasp. Then ensued a short, sharp struggle. Joel
+could not hold Lucy, but he tore her blouse into shreds. It seemed to
+Lucy that he did that savagely. She broke free from him, and he lunged
+at her again. With all her strength she lashed his face with the heavy
+leather quirt. That staggered him. He almost fell.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy bounded to Sarchedon. In a rush she was up in the saddle. Joel was
+running toward her. Blood on his face! Blood on his hands! He was not
+the Joel Creech she knew.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Stop!" cried Lucy, fiercely. "I'll run you down!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The big black plunged at a touch of spur and came down quivering, ready
+to bolt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech swerved to one side. His face was lividly white except where the
+bloody welts crossed it. His jaw seemed to hang loosely, making speech
+difficult.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jest fer&mdash;thet&mdash;" he panted, hoarsely, "I'll lay fer you&mdash;an' I'll
+strip you&mdash;-an' I'll tie you on a hoss&mdash;an' I'll drive you naked
+through Bostil's Ford!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy saw the utter futility of all her good intentions. Something had
+snapped in Joel Creech's mind. And in hers kindness had given
+precedence to a fury she did not know was in her. For the second time
+she touched a spur to Sarchedon. He leaped out, flashed past Creech,
+and thundered up the road. It was all Lucy could do to break his gait
+at the first steep rise.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Three wild-horse hunters made camp one night beside a little stream in
+the Sevier Valley, five hundred miles, as a crow flies, from Bostil's
+Ford.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These hunters had a poor outfit, excepting, of course, their horses.
+They were young men, rangy in build, lean and hard from life in the
+saddle, bronzed like Indians, still-faced, and keen-eyed. Two of them
+appeared to be tired out, and lagged at the camp-fire duties. When the
+meager meal was prepared they sat, cross-legged, before a ragged
+tarpaulin, eating and drinking in silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sky in the west was rosy, slowly darkening. The valley floor
+billowed away, ridged and cut, growing gray and purple and dark. Walls
+of stone, pink with the last rays of the setting sun, inclosed the
+valley, stretching away toward a long, low, black mountain range.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The place was wild, beautiful, open, with something nameless that made
+the desert different from any other country. It was, perhaps, a
+loneliness of vast stretches of valley and stone, clear to the eye,
+even after sunset. That black mountain range, which looked close enough
+to ride to before dark, was a hundred miles distant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shades of night fell swiftly, and it was dark by the time the
+hunters finished the meal. Then the campfire had burned low. One of the
+three dragged branches of dead cedars and replenished the fire. Quickly
+it flared up, with the white flame and crackle characteristic of dry
+cedar. The night wind had risen, moaning through the gnarled, stunted
+cedars near by, and it blew the fragrant wood-smoke into the faces of
+the two hunters, who seemed too tired to move.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon a pipe would help me make up my mind," said one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Bill," replied the other, dryly, "your mind's made up, else you'd
+not say smoke."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because there ain't three pipefuls of thet precious tobacco left."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet's one apiece, then.... Lin, come an' smoke the last pipe with us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The tallest of the three, he who had brought the firewood, stood in the
+bright light of the blaze. He looked the born rider, light, lithe,
+powerful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure, I'll smoke," he replied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then, presently, he accepted the pipe tendered him, and, sitting down
+beside the fire, he composed himself to the enjoyment which his
+companions evidently considered worthy of a decision they had reached.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So this smokin' means you both want to turn back?" queried Lin, his
+sharp gaze glancing darkly bright in the glow of the fire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yep, we'll turn back. An', Lordy! the relief I feel!" replied one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We've been long comin' to it, Lin, an' thet was for your sake,"
+replied the other.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lin slowly pulled at his pipe and blew out the smoke as if reluctant to
+part with it. "Let's go on," he said, quietly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. I've had all I want of chasin' thet damn wild stallion," returned
+Bill, shortly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The other spread wide his hands and bent an expostulating look upon the
+one called Lin. "We're two hundred miles out," he said. "There's only a
+little flour left in the bag. No coffee! Only a little salt! All the
+hosses except your big Nagger are played out. We're already in strange
+country. An' you know what we've heerd of this an' all to the south.
+It's all canyons, an' somewheres down there is thet awful canyon none
+of our people ever seen. But we've heerd of it. An awful cut-up
+country."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He finished with a conviction that no one could say a word against the
+common sense of his argument. Lin was silent, as if impressed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bill raised a strong, lean, brown hand in a forcible gesture. "We can't
+ketch Wildfire!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That seemed to him, evidently, a more convincing argument than his
+comrade's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bill is sure right, if I'm wrong, which I ain't," went on the other.
+"Lin, we've trailed thet wild stallion for six weeks. Thet's the
+longest chase he ever had. He's left his old range. He's cut out his
+band, an' left them, one by one. We've tried every trick we know on
+him. An' he's too smart for us. There's a hoss! Why, Lin, we're all but
+gone to the dogs chasin' Wildfire. An' now I'm done, an' I'm glad of
+it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was another short silence, which presently Bill opened his lips
+to break.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, it makes me sick to quit. I ain't denyin' thet for a long time
+I've had hopes of ketchin' Wildfire. He's the grandest hoss I ever laid
+eyes on. I reckon no man, onless he was an Arab, ever seen as good a
+one. But now, thet's neither here nor there.... We've got to hit the
+back trail."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boys, I reckon I'll stick to Wildfire's tracks," said Lin, in the same
+quiet tone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bill swore at him, and the other hunter grew excited and concerned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin Slone, are you gone plumb crazy over thet red hoss?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I&mdash;reckon," replied Slone. The working of his throat as he swallowed
+could be plainly seen by his companions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bill looked at his ally as if to confirm some sudden understanding
+between them. They took Slone's attitude gravely and they wagged their
+heads doubtfully, as they might have done had Slone just acquainted
+them with a hopeless and deathless passion for a woman. It was
+significant of the nature of riders that they accepted his attitude and
+had consideration for his feelings. For them the situation subtly
+changed. For weeks they had been three wild-horse wranglers on a hard
+chase after a valuable stallion. They had failed to get even close to
+him. They had gone to the limit of their endurance and of the outfit,
+and it was time to turn back. But Slone had conceived that strange and
+rare longing for a horse&mdash;a passion understood, if not shared, by all
+riders. And they knew that he would catch Wildfire or die in the
+attempt. From that moment their attitude toward Slone changed as subtly
+as had come the knowledge of his feeling. The gravity and gloom left
+their faces. It seemed they might have regretted what they had said
+about the futility of catching Wildfire. They did not want Slone to see
+or feel the hopelessness of his task.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I tell you, Lin," said Bill, "your hoss Nagger's as good as when we
+started."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aw, he's better," vouchsafed the other rider. "Nagger needed to lose
+some weight. Lin, have you got an extra set of shoes for him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No full set. Only three left," replied Lin, soberly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, thet's enough. You can keep Nagger shod. An' MEBBE thet red
+stallion will get sore feet an' go lame. Then you'd stand a chance."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But Wildfire keeps travelin' the valleys&mdash;the soft ground," said Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No matter. He's leavin' the country, an' he's bound to strike
+sandstone sooner or later. Then, by gosh! mebbe he'll wear off them
+hoofs."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Say, can't he ring bells offen the rocks?" exclaimed Bill. "Oh, Lordy!
+what a hoss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boys, do you think he's leavin' the country?" inquired Slone,
+anxiously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure he is," replied Bill. "He ain't the first stallion I've chased
+off the Sevier range. An' I know. It's a stallion thet makes for new
+country, when you push him hard."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yep, Lin, he's sure leavin'," added the other comrade. "Why, he's
+traveled a bee-line for days! I'll bet he's seen us many a time.
+Wildfire's about as smart as any man. He was born wild, an' his dam was
+born wild, an' there you have it. The wildest of all wild creatures&mdash;a
+wild stallion, with the intelligence of a man! A grand hoss, Lin, but
+one thet'll be hell, if you ever ketch him. He has killed stallions all
+over the Sevier range. A wild stallion thet's a killer! I never liked
+him for thet. Could he be broke?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll break him," said Lin Slone, grimly. "It's gettin' him thet's the
+job. I've got patience to break a hoss. But patience can't catch a
+streak of lightnin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nope; you're right," replied Bill. "If you have some luck you'll get
+him&mdash;mebbe. If he wears out his feet, or if you crowd him into a narrow
+canyon, or ran him into a bad place where he can't get by you. Thet
+might happen. An' then, with Nagger, you stand a chance. Did you ever
+tire thet hoss?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not yet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' how fur did you ever run him without a break? Why, when we ketched
+thet sorrel last year I rode Nagger myself&mdash;thirty miles, most at a
+hard gallop. An' he never turned a hair!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've beat thet," replied Lin. "He could run hard fifty miles&mdash;mebbe
+more. Honestly, I never seen him tired yet. If only he was fast!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Nagger ain't so durned slow, come to think of thet," replied
+Bill, with a grunt. "He's good enough for you not to want another hoss."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, you're goin' to wear out Wildfire, an' then trap him somehow&mdash;is
+thet the plan?" asked the other comrade.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I haven't any plan. I'll just trail him, like a cougar trails a deer."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, if Wildfire gives you the slip he'll have to fly. You've got the
+best eyes for tracks of any wrangler in Utah."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone accepted the compliment with a fleeting, doubtful smile on his
+dark face. He did not reply, and no more was said by his comrades. They
+rolled with backs to the fire. Slone put on more wood, for the keen
+wind was cold and cutting; and then he lay down, his head in his
+saddle, with a goatskin under him and a saddle-blanket over him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All three were soon asleep. The wind whipped the sand and ashes and
+smoke over the sleepers. Coyotes barked from near in darkness, and from
+the valley ridge came the faint mourn of a hunting wolf. The desert
+night grew darker and colder.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stewart brothers were wild-horse hunters for the sake of trades and
+occasional sales. But Lin Slone never traded nor sold a horse he had
+captured. The excitement of the game, and the lure of the desert, and
+the love of a horse were what kept him at the profitless work. His type
+was rare in the uplands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These were the early days of the settlement of Utah, and only a few of
+the hardiest and most adventurous pioneers had penetrated the desert in
+the southern part of that vast upland. And with them came some of that
+wild breed of riders to which Slone and the Stewarts belonged. Horses
+were really more important and necessary than men; and this singular
+fact gave these lonely riders a calling.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before the Spaniards came there were no horses in the West. Those
+explorers left or lost horses all over the southwest. Many of them were
+Arabian horses of purest blood. American explorers and travelers, at
+the outset of the nineteenth century, encountered countless droves of
+wild horses all over the plains. Across the Grand Canyon, however, wild
+horses were comparatively few in number in the early days; and these
+had probably come in by way of California.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Stewarts and Slone had no established mode of catching wild horses.
+The game had not developed fast enough for that. Every chase of horse
+or drove was different; and once in many attempts they met with success.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A favorite method originated by the Stewarts was to find a water-hole
+frequented by the band of horses or the stallion wanted, and to build
+round this hole a corral with an opening for the horses to get in. Then
+the hunters would watch the trap at night, and if the horses went in to
+drink, a gate was closed across the opening. Another method of the
+Stewarts was to trail a coveted horse up on a mesa or highland, places
+which seldom had more than one trail of ascent and descent, and there
+block the escape, and cut lines of cedars, into which the quarry was
+ran till captured. Still another method, discovered by accident, was to
+shoot a horse lightly in the neck and sting him. This last, called
+creasing, was seldom successful, and for that matter in any method ten
+times as many horses were killed as captured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lin Slone helped the Stewarts in their own way, but he had no especial
+liking for their tricks. Perhaps a few remarkable captures of
+remarkable horses had spoiled Slone. He was always trying what the
+brothers claimed to be impossible. He was a fearless rider, but he had
+the fault of saving his mount, and to kill a wild horse was a tragedy
+for him. He would much rather have hunted alone, and he had been alone
+on the trail of the stallion Wildfire when the Stewarts had joined him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lin Slone awoke next morning and rolled out of his blanket at his usual
+early hour. But he was not early enough to say good-by to the Stewarts.
+They were gone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fact surprised him and somehow relieved him. They had left him more
+than his share of the outfit, and perhaps that was why they had slipped
+off before dawn. They knew him well enough to know that he would not
+have accepted it. Besides, perhaps they felt a little humiliation at
+abandoning a chase which he chose to keep up. Anyway, they were gone,
+apparently without breakfast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The morning was clear, cool, with the air dark like that before a
+storm, and in the east, over the steely wall of stone, shone a redness
+growing brighter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone looked away to the west, down the trail taken by his comrades,
+but he saw nothing moving against that cedar-dotted waste.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good-by," he said, and he spoke as if he was saying good-by to more
+than comrades.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon I won't see Sevier Village soon again&mdash;an' maybe never," he
+soliloquized.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no one to regret him, unless it was old Mother Hall, who had
+been kind to him on those rare occasions when he got out of the
+wilderness. Still, it was with regret that he gazed away across the red
+valley to the west. Slone had no home. His father and mother had been
+lost in the massacre of a wagon-train by Indians, and he had been one
+of the few saved and brought to Salt Lake. That had happened when he
+was ten years old. His life thereafter had been hard, and but for his
+sturdy Texas training he might not have survived. The last five years
+he had been a horse-hunter in the wild uplands of Nevada and Utah.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone turned his attention to the pack of supplies. The Stewarts had
+divided the flour and the parched corn equally, and unless he was
+greatly mistaken they had left him most of the coffee and all of the
+salt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now I hold that decent of Bill an' Abe," said Slone, regretfully. "But
+I could have got along without it better 'n they could."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he swiftly set about kindling a fire and getting a meal. In the
+midst of his task a sudden ruddy brightness fell around him. Lin Slone
+paused in his work to look up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun had risen over the eastern wall.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah!" he said, and drew a deep breath.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cold, steely, darkling sweep of desert had been transformed. It was
+now a world of red earth and gold rocks and purple sage, with
+everywhere the endless straggling green cedars. A breeze whipped in,
+making the fire roar softly. The sun felt warm on his cheek. And at the
+moment he heard the whistle of his horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good old Nagger!" he said. "I shore won't have to track you this
+mornin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently he went off into the cedars to find Nagger and the mustang
+that he used to carry a pack. Nagger was grazing in a little open patch
+among the trees, but the pack-horse was missing. Slone seemed to know
+in what direction to go to find the trail, for he came upon it very
+soon. The pack-horse wore hobbles, but he belonged to the class that
+could cover a great deal of ground when hobbled. Slone did not expect
+the horse to go far, considering that the grass thereabouts was good.
+But in a wild-horse country it was not safe to give any horse a chance.
+The call of his wild brethren was irresistible. Slone, however, found
+the mustang standing quietly in a clump of cedars, and, removing the
+hobbles, he mounted and rode back to camp. Nagger caught sight of him
+and came at his call.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This horse Nagger appeared as unique in his class as Slone was rare
+among riders. Nagger seemed of several colors, though black
+predominated. His coat was shaggy, almost woolly, like that of a sheep.
+He was huge, raw-boned, knotty, long of body and long of leg, with the
+head of a war charger. His build did not suggest speed. There appeared
+to be something slow and ponderous about him, similar to an elephant,
+with the same suggestion of power and endurance. Slone discarded the
+pack-saddle and bags. The latter were almost empty. He roped the
+tarpaulin on the back of the mustang, and, making a small bundle of his
+few supplies, he tied that to the tarpaulin. His blanket he used for a
+saddle-blanket on Nagger. Of the utensils left by the Stewarts he chose
+a couple of small iron pans, with long handles. The rest he left. In
+his saddle-bags he had a few extra horseshoes, some nails, bullets for
+his rifle, and a knife with a heavy blade.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not a rich outfit for a far country," he mused. Slone did not talk
+very much, and when he did he addressed Nagger and himself
+simultaneously. Evidently he expected a long chase, one from which he
+would not return, and light as his outfit was it would grow too heavy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he mounted and rode down the gradual slope, facing the valley and
+the black, bold, flat mountain to the southeast. Some few hundred yards
+from camp he halted Nagger and bent over in the saddle to scrutinize
+the ground.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The clean-cut track of a horse showed in the bare, hard sand. The
+hoof-marks were large, almost oval, perfect in shape, and manifestly
+they were beautiful to Lin Slone. He gazed at them for a long time, and
+then he looked across the dotted red valley up the vast ridgy steps,
+toward the black plateau and beyond. It was the look that an Indian
+gives to a strange country. Then Slone slipped off the saddle and knelt
+to scrutinize the horse tracks. A little sand had blown into the
+depressions, and some of it was wet and some of it was dry. He took his
+time about examining it, and he even tried gently blowing other sand
+into the tracks, to compare that with what was already there. Finally
+he stood up and addressed Nagger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon we won't have to argue with Abe an' Bill this mornin'," he
+said, with satisfaction. "Wildfire made that track yesterday, before
+sun-up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thereupon Slone remounted and put Nagger to a trot. The pack-horse
+followed with an alacrity that showed he had no desire for loneliness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As straight as a bee-line Wildfire had left a trail down into the floor
+of the valley. He had not stopped to graze, and he had not looked for
+water. Slone had hoped to find a water-hole in one of the deep washes
+in the red earth, but if there had been any water there Wildfire would
+have scented it. He had not had a drink for three days that Slone knew
+of. And Nagger had not drunk for forty hours. Slone had a canvas
+water-bag hanging over the pommel, but it was a habit of his to deny
+himself, as far as possible, till his horse could drink also. Like an
+Indian, Slone ate and drank but little.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It took four hours of steady trotting to reach the middle and bottom of
+that wide, flat valley. A network of washes cut up the whole center of
+it, and they were all as dry as bleached bone. To cross these Slone had
+only to keep Wildfire's trail. And it was proof of Nagger's quality
+that he did not have to veer from the stallion's course.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was hot down in the lowland. The heat struck up, reflected from the
+sand. But it was a March sun, and no more than pleasant to Slone. The
+wind rose, however, and blew dust and sand in the faces of horse and
+rider. Except lizards, Slone did not see any living things.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miles of low greasewood and sparse yellow sage led to the first almost
+imperceptible rise of the valley floor on that side. The distant cedars
+beckoned to Slone. He was not patient, because he was on the trail of
+Wildfire; but, nevertheless, the hours seemed short.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had no past to think about, and the future held nothing except a
+horse, and so his thoughts revolved the possibilities connected with
+this chase of Wildfire. The chase was hopeless in such country as he
+was traversing, and if Wildfire chose to roam around valleys like this
+one Slone would fail utterly. But the stallion had long ago left his
+band of horses, and then, one by one his favorite consorts, and now he
+was alone, headed with unerring instinct for wild, untrammeled ranges.
+He had been used to the pure, cold water and the succulent grass of the
+cold desert uplands. Assuredly he would not tarry in such barren lands
+as these.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For Slone an ever-present and growing fascination lay in Wildfire's
+clear, sharply defined tracks. It was as if every hoof-mark told him
+something. Once, far up the interminable ascent, he found on a
+ridge-top tracks showing where Wildfire had halted and turned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ha, Nagger!" cried Slone, exultingly. "Look there! He's begun facin'
+about. He's wonderin' if we're still after him. He's worried.... But
+we'll keep out of sight&mdash;a day behind."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Slone reached the cedars the sun was low down in the west. He
+looked back across the fifty miles of valley to the colored cliffs and
+walls. He seemed to be above them now, and the cool air, with tang of
+cedar and juniper, strengthened the impression that he had climbed high.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A mile or more ahead of him rose a gray cliff with breaks in it and a
+line of dark cedars or pinyons on the level rims. He believed these
+breaks to be the mouths of canyons, and so it turned out. Wildfire's
+trail led into the mouth of a narrow canyon with very steep and high
+walls. Nagger snorted his perception of water, and the mustang
+whistled. Wildfire's tracks led to a point under the wall where a
+spring gushed forth. There were mountain-lion and deer tracks also, as
+well as those of smaller game.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone made camp here. The mustang was tired. But Nagger, upon taking a
+long drink, rolled in the grass as if he had just begun the trip. After
+eating, Slone took his rifle and went out to look for deer. But there
+appeared to be none at hand. He came across many lion tracks and saw,
+with apprehension, where one had taken Wildfire's trail. Wildfire had
+grazed up the canyon, keeping on and on, and he was likely to go miles
+in a night. Slone reflected that as small as were his own chances of
+getting Wildfire, they were still better than those of a mountain-lion.
+Wildfire was the most cunning of all animals&mdash;a wild stallion; his
+speed and endurance were incomparable; his scent as keen as those
+animals that relied wholly upon scent to warn them of danger, and as
+for sight, it was Slone's belief that no hoofed creature, except the
+mountain-sheep used to high altitudes, could see as far as a wild horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It bothered Slone a little that he was getting into a lion country.
+Nagger showed nervousness, something unusual for him. Slone tied both
+horses with long halters and stationed them on patches of thick grass.
+Then he put a cedar stump on the fire and went to sleep. Upon awakening
+and going to the spring he was somewhat chagrined to see that deer had
+come down to drink early. Evidently they were numerous. A lion country
+was always a deer country, for the lions followed the deer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone was packed and saddled and on his way before the sun reddened the
+canyon wall. He walked the horses. From time to time he saw signs of
+Wildfire's consistent progress. The canyon narrowed and the walls grew
+lower and the grass increased. There was a decided ascent all the time.
+Slone could find no evidence that the canyon had ever been traveled by
+hunters or Indians. The day was pleasant and warm and still. Every once
+in a while a little breath of wind would bring a fragrance of cedar and
+pinyon, and a sweet hint of pine and sage. At every turn he looked
+ahead, expecting to see the green of pine and the gray of sage. Toward
+the middle of the afternoon, coming to a place where Wildfire had taken
+to a trot, he put Nagger to that gait, and by sundown had worked up to
+where the canyon was only a shallow ravine. And finally it turned once
+more, to lose itself in a level where straggling pines stood high above
+the cedars, and great, dark-green silver spruces stood above the pines.
+And here were patches of sage, fresh and pungent, and long reaches of
+bleached grass. It was the edge of a forest. Wildfire's trail went on.
+Slone came at length to a group of pines, and here he found the remains
+of a camp-fire, and some flint arrow-heads. Indians had been in there,
+probably having come from the opposite direction to Slone's. This
+encouraged him, for where Indians could hunt so could he. Soon he was
+entering a forest where cedars and pinyons and pines began to grow
+thickly. Presently he came upon a faintly defined trail, just a dim,
+dark line even to an experienced eye. But it was a trail, and Wildfire
+had taken it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone halted for the night. The air was cold. And the dampness of it
+gave him an idea there were snow-banks somewhere not far distant. The
+dew was already heavy on the grass. He hobbled the horses and put a
+bell on Nagger. A bell might frighten lions that had never heard one.
+Then he built a fire and cooked his meal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had been long since he had camped high up among the pines. The sough
+of the wind pleased him, like music. There had begun to be prospects of
+pleasant experience along with the toil of chasing Wildfire. He was
+entering new and strange and beautiful country. How far might the chase
+take him? He did not care. He was not sleepy, but even if he had been
+it developed that he must wait till the coyotes ceased their barking
+round his camp-fire. They came so close that he saw their gray shadows
+in the gloom. But presently they wearied of yelping at him and went
+away. After that the silence, broken only by the wind as it roared and
+lulled, seemed beautiful to Slone. He lost completely that sense of
+vague regret which had remained with him, and he forgot the Stewarts.
+And suddenly he felt absolutely free, alone, with nothing behind to
+remember, with wild, thrilling, nameless life before him. Just then the
+long mourn of a timber wolf wailed in with the wind. Seldom had he
+heard the cry of one of those night wanderers. There was nothing like
+it&mdash;no sound like it to fix in the lone camper's heart the great
+solitude and the wild.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER V
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In the early morning when all was gray and the big, dark pines were
+shadowy specters, Slone was awakened by the cold. His hands were so
+numb that he had difficulty starting a fire. He stood over the blaze,
+warming them. The air was nipping, clear and thin, and sweet with
+frosty fragrance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Daylight came while he was in the midst of his morning meal. A white
+frost covered the ground and crackled under his feet as he went out to
+bring in the horses. He saw fresh deer tracks. Then he went back to
+camp for his rifle. Keeping a sharp lookout for game, he continued his
+search for the horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The forest was open and park-like. There were no fallen trees or
+evidences of fire. Presently he came to a wide glade in the midst of
+which Nagger and the pack-mustang were grazing with a herd of deer. The
+size of the latter amazed Slone. The deer he had hunted back on the
+Sevier range were much smaller than these. Evidently these were mule
+deer, closely allied to the elk. They were so tame they stood facing
+him curiously, with long ears erect. It was sheer murder to kill a deer
+standing and watching like that, but Slone was out of meat and hungry
+and facing a long, hard trip. He shot a buck, which leaped
+spasmodically away, trying to follow the herd, and fell at the edge of
+the glade. Slone cut out a haunch, and then, catching the horses, he
+returned to camp, where he packed and saddled, and at once rode out on
+the dim trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The wildness of the country he was entering was evident in the fact
+that as he passed the glade where he had shot the deer a few minutes
+before, there were coyotes quarreling over the carcass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Stone could see ahead and on each side several hundred yards, and
+presently he ascertained that the forest floor was not so level as he
+had supposed. He had entered a valley or was traversing a wide, gently
+sloping pass. He went through thickets of juniper, and had to go around
+clumps of quaking aspen. The pines grew larger and farther apart.
+Cedars and pinyons had been left behind, and he had met with no silver
+spruces after leaving camp. Probably that point was the height of a
+divide. There were banks of snow in some of the hollows on the north
+side. Evidently the snow had very recently melted, and it was evident
+also that the depth of snow through here had been fully ten feet,
+judging from the mutilation of the juniper-trees where the deer,
+standing on the hard, frozen crust, had browsed upon the branches.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The quiet of the forest thrilled Slone. And the only movement was the
+occasional gray flash of a deer or coyote across a glade. No birds of
+any species crossed Stone's sight. He came, presently, upon a lion
+track in the trail, made probably a day before. Slone grew curious
+about it, seeing how it held, as he was holding, to Wildfire's tracks.
+After a mile or so he made sure the lion had been trailing the
+stallion, and for a second he felt a cold contraction of his heart.
+Already he loved Wildfire, and by virtue of all this toil of travel
+considered the wild horse his property.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No lion could ever get close to Wildfire," he soliloquized, with a
+short laugh. Of that he was absolutely certain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun rose, melting the frost, and a breath of warm air, laden with
+the scent of pine, moved heavily under the huge, yellow trees. Slone
+passed a point where the remains of an old camp-fire and a pile of deer
+antlers were further proof that Indians visited this plateau to hunt.
+From this camp broader, more deeply defined trails led away to the
+south and east. Slone kept to the east trail, in which Wildfire's
+tracks and those of the lion showed clearly. It was about the middle of
+the forenoon when the tracks of the stallion and lion left the trail to
+lead up a little draw where grass grew thick. Slone followed, reading
+the signs of Wildfire's progress, and the action of his pursuer, as
+well as if he had seen them. Here the stallion had plowed into a
+snow-bank, eating a hole two feet deep; then he had grazed around a
+little; then on and on; there his splendid tracks were deep in the soft
+earth. Slone knew what to expect when the track of the lion veered from
+those of the horse, and he followed the lion tracks. The ground was
+soft from the late melting of snow, and Nagger sunk deep. The lion left
+a plain track. Here he stole steadily along; there he left many tracks
+at a point where he might have halted to make sure of his scent. He was
+circling on the trail of the stallion, with cunning intent of ambush.
+The end of this slow, careful stalk of the lion, as told in his tracks,
+came upon the edge of a knoll where he had crouched to watch and wait.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From this perch he had made a magnificent spring&mdash;Slone estimating it
+to be forty feet&mdash;but he had missed the stallion. There were Wildfire's
+tracks again, slow and short, and then deep and sharp where in the
+impetus of fright he had sprung out of reach. A second leap of the
+lion, and then lessening bounds, and finally an abrupt turn from
+Wildfire's trail told the futility of that stalk. Slone made certain
+that Wildfire was so keen that as he grazed along he had kept to open
+ground.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire had run for a mile, then slowed down to a trot, and he had
+circled to get back to the trail he had left. Slone believed the horse
+was just so intelligent. At any rate, Wildfire struck the trail again,
+and turned at right angles to follow it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Here the forest floor appeared perfectly level. Patches of snow became
+frequent, and larger as Slone went on. At length the patches closed up,
+and soon extended as far as he could see. It was soft, affording
+difficult travel. Slone crossed hundreds of deer tracks, and the trail
+he was on eventually became a deer runway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently, far down one of the aisles between the great pines Slone saw
+what appeared to be a yellow cliff, far away. It puzzled him. And as he
+went on he received the impression that the forest dropped out of sight
+ahead. Then the trees grew thicker, obstructing his view. Presently the
+trail became soggy and he had to help his horse. The mustang floundered
+in the soft snow and earth. Cedars and pinyons appeared again, making
+travel still more laborious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All at once there came to Slone a strange consciousness of light and
+wind and space and void. On the instant his horse halted with a snort.
+Slone quickly looked up. Had he come to the end of the world? An abyss,
+a canyon, yawned beneath him, beyond all comparison in its greatness.
+His keen eye, educated to desert distance and dimension, swept down and
+across, taking in the tremendous truth, before it staggered his
+comprehension. But a second sweeping glance, slower, becoming
+intoxicated with what it beheld, saw gigantic cliff-steps and yellow
+slopes dotted with cedars, leading down to clefts filled with purple
+smoke, and these led on and on to a ragged red world of rock, bare,
+shining, bold, uplifted in mesa, dome, peak, and crag, clear and
+strange in the morning light, still and sleeping like death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This, then, was the great canyon, which had seemed like a hunter's
+fable rather than truth. Slone's sight dimmed, blurring the spectacle,
+and he found that his eyes had filled with tears. He wiped them away
+and looked again and again, until he was confounded by the vastness and
+the grandeur and the vague sadness of the scene. Nothing he had ever
+looked at had affected him like this canyon, although the Stewarts had
+tried to prepare him for it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was the horse-hunter's passion that reminded him of his pursuit. The
+deer trail led down through a break in the wall. Only a few rods of it
+could be seen. This trail was passable, even though choked with snow.
+But the depth beyond this wall seemed to fascinate Slone and hold him
+back, used as he was to desert trails. Then the clean mark of
+Wildfire's hoof brought back the old thrill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This place fits you, Wildfire," muttered Slone, dismounting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He started down, leading Nagger. The mustang followed. Slone kept to
+the wall side of the trail, fearing the horses might slip. The snow
+held firmly at first and Slone had no trouble. The gap in the rim-rock
+widened to a slope thickly grown over with cedars and pinyons and
+manzanita. This growth made the descent more laborious, yet afforded
+means at least for Slone to go down with less danger. There was no
+stopping. Once started, the horses had to keep on. Slone saw the
+impossibility of ever climbing out while that snow was there. The trail
+zigzagged down and down. Very soon the yellow wall hung tremendously
+over him, straight up. The snow became thinner and softer. The horses
+began to slip. They slid on their haunches. Fortunately the slope grew
+less steep, and Slone could see below where it reached out to
+comparatively level ground. Still, a mishap might yet occur. Slone kept
+as close to Nagger as possible, helping him whenever he could do it.
+The mustang slipped, rolled over, and then slipped past Slone, went
+down the slope to bring up in a cedar. Slone worked down to him and
+extricated him. Then the huge Nagger began to slide. Snow and loose
+rock slid with him, and so did Slone. The little avalanche stopped of
+its own accord, and then Slone dragged Nagger on down and down,
+presently to come to the end of the steep descent. Slone looked up to
+see that he had made short work of a thousand-foot slope. Here cedars
+and pinyons grew thickly enough to make a forest. The snow thinned out
+to patches, and then failed. But the going remained bad for a while as
+the horses sank deep in a soft red earth. This eventually grew more
+solid and finally dry. Slone worked out of the cedars to what appeared
+a grassy plateau inclosed by the great green-and-white slope with its
+yellow wall over hanging, and distant mesas and cliffs. Here his view
+was restricted. He was down on the first bench of the great canyon. And
+there was the deer trail, a well-worn path keeping to the edge of the
+slope. Slone came to a deep cut in the earth, and the trail headed it,
+where it began at the last descent of the slope. It was the source of a
+canyon. He could look down to see the bare, worn rock, and a hundred
+yards from where he stood the earth was washed from its rims and it
+began to show depth and something of that ragged outline which told of
+violence of flood. The trail headed many canyons like this, all running
+down across this bench, disappearing, dropping invisibly. The trail
+swung to the left under the great slope, and then presently it climbed
+to a higher bench. Here were brush and grass and huge patches of sage,
+so pungent that it stung Slone's nostrils. Then he went down again,
+this time to come to a clear brook lined by willows. Here the horses
+drank long and Slone refreshed himself. The sun had grown hot. There
+was fragrance of flowers he could not see and a low murmur of a
+waterfall that was likewise invisible. For most of the time his view
+was shut off, but occasionally he reached a point where through some
+break he saw towers gleaming red in the sun. A strange place, a place
+of silence, and smoky veils in the distance. Time passed swiftly.
+Toward the waning of the afternoon he began to climb to what appeared
+to be a saddle of land, connecting the canyon wall on the left with a
+great plateau, gold-rimmed and pine-fringed, rising more and more in
+his way as he advanced. At sunset Slone was more shut in than for
+several hours. He could tell the time was sunset by the golden light on
+the cliff wall again overhanging him. The slope was gradual up to this
+pass to the saddle, and upon coming to a spring, and the first
+pine-trees, he decided to halt for a camp. The mustang was almost
+exhausted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thereupon he hobbled the horses in the luxuriant grass round the
+spring, and then unrolled his pack. Once as dusk came stealing down,
+while he was eating his meal, Nagger whistled in fright. Slone saw a
+gray, pantherish form gliding away into the shadows. He took a quick
+shot at it, but missed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a lion country, all right," he said. And then he set about
+building a big fire on the other side of the grassy plot, so to have
+the horses between fires. He cut all the venison into thin strips, and
+spent an hour roasting them. Then he lay down to rest, and he said:
+"Wonder where Wildfire is to-night? Am I closer to him? Where's he
+headin' for?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The night was warm and still. It was black near the huge cliff, and
+overhead velvety blue, with stars of white fire. It seemed to him that
+he had become more thoughtful and observing of the aspects of his wild
+environment, and he felt a welcome consciousness of loneliness. Then
+sleep came to him and the night seemed short. In the gray dawn he arose
+refreshed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The horses were restive. Nagger snorted a welcome. Evidently they had
+passed an uneasy night. Slone found lion tracks at the spring and in
+sandy places. Presently he was on his way up to the notch between the
+great wall and the plateau. A growth of thick scrub-oak made travel
+difficult. It had not appeared far up to that saddle, but it was far.
+There were straggling pine-trees and huge rocks that obstructed his
+gaze. But once up he saw that the saddle was only a narrow ridge,
+curved to slope up on both sides.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Straight before Slone and under him opened the canyon, blazing and
+glorious along the peaks and ramparts, where the rising sun struck,
+misty and smoky and shadowy down in those mysterious depths.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It took an effort not to keep on gazing. But Slone turned to the grim
+business of his pursuit. The trail he saw leading down had been made by
+Indians. It was used probably once a year by them; and also by wild
+animals, and it was exceedingly steep and rough. Wildfire had paced to
+and fro along the narrow ridge of that saddle, making many tracks,
+before he had headed down again. Slone imagined that the great stallion
+had been daunted by the tremendous chasm, but had finally faced it,
+meaning to put this obstacle between him and his pursuers. It never
+occurred to Slone to attribute less intelligence to Wildfire than that.
+So, dismounting, Slone took Nagger's bridle and started down. The
+mustang with the pack was reluctant. He snorted and whistled and pawed
+the earth. But he would not be left alone, so he followed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The trail led down under cedars that fringed a precipice. Slone was
+aware of this without looking. He attended only to the trail and to his
+horse. Only an Indian could have picked out that course, and it was
+cruel to put a horse to it. But Nagger was powerful, sure-footed, and
+he would go anywhere that Slone led him. Gradually Slone worked down
+and away from the bulging rim-wall. It was hard, rough work, and risky
+because it could not be accomplished slowly. Brush and rocks, loose
+shale and weathered slope, long, dusty inclines of yellow earth, and
+jumbles of stone&mdash;these made bad going for miles of slow, zigzag trail
+down out of the cedars. Then the trail entered what appeared to be a
+ravine.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That ravine became a canyon. At its head it was a dry wash, full of
+gravel and rocks. It began to cut deep into the bowels of the earth. It
+shut out sight of the surrounding walls and peaks. Water appeared from
+under a cliff and, augmented by other springs, became a brook. Hot,
+dry, and barren at its beginning, this cleft became cool and shady and
+luxuriant with grass and flowers and amber moss with silver blossoms.
+The rocks had changed color from yellow to deep red. Four hours of
+turning and twisting, endlessly down and down, over boulders and banks
+and every conceivable roughness of earth and rock, finished the
+pack-mustang; and Slone mercifully left him in a long reach of canyon
+where grass and water never failed. In this place Slone halted for the
+noon hour, letting Nagger have his fill of the rich grazing. Nagger's
+three days in grassy upland, despite the continuous travel by day, had
+improved him. He looked fat, and Slone had not yet caught the horse
+resting. Nagger was iron to endure. Here Slone left all the outfit
+except what was on his saddle, and the sack containing the few pounds
+of meat and supplies, and the two utensils. This sack he tied on the
+back of his saddle, and resumed his journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently he came to a place where Wildfire had doubled on his trail
+and had turned up a side canyon. The climb out was hard on Slone, if
+not on Nagger. Once up, Slone found himself upon a wide, barren plateau
+of glaring red rock and clumps of greasewood and cactus. The plateau
+was miles wide, shut in by great walls and mesas of colored rock. The
+afternoon sun beat down fiercely. A blast of wind, as if from a
+furnace, swept across the plateau, and it was laden with red dust.
+Slone walked here, where he could have ridden. And he made several
+miles of up-and-down progress over this rough plateau. The great walls
+of the opposite side of the canyon loomed appreciably closer. What,
+Slone wondered, was at the bottom of this rent in the earth? The great
+desert river was down there, of course, but he knew nothing of it.
+Would that turn back Wildfire? Slone thought grimly how he had always
+claimed Nagger to be part fish and part bird. Wildfire was not going to
+escape.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By and by only isolated mescal plants with long, yellow-plumed spears
+broke the bare monotony of the plateau. And Slone passed from red sand
+and gravel to a red, soft shale, and from that to hard, red rock. Here
+Wildfire's tracks were lost, the first time in seven weeks. But Slone
+had his direction down that plateau with the cleavage lines of canyons
+to right and left. At times Slone found a vestige of the old Indian
+trail, and this made him doubly sure of being right. He did not need to
+have Wildfire's tracks. He let Nagger pick the way, and the horse made
+no mistake in finding the line of least resistance. But that grew
+harder and harder. This bare rock, like a file, would soon wear
+Wildfire's hoofs thin. And Slone rejoiced. Perhaps somewhere down in
+this awful chasm he and Nagger would have it out with the stallion.
+Slone began to look far ahead, beginning to believe that he might see
+Wildfire. Twice he had seen Wildfire, but only at a distance. Then he
+had resembled a running streak of fire, whence his name, which Slone
+had given him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This bare region of rock began to be cut up into gullies. It was
+necessary to head them or to climb in and out. Miles of travel really
+meant little progress straight ahead. But Slone kept on. He was hot and
+Nagger was hot, and that made hard work easier. Sometimes on the wind
+came a low thunder. Was it a storm or an avalanche slipping or falling
+water? He could not tell. The sound was significant and haunting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of one thing he was sure&mdash;that he could not have found his back-trail.
+But he divined he was never to retrace his steps on this journey. The
+stretch of broken plateau before him grew wilder and bolder of outline,
+darker in color, weirder in aspect, and progress across it grew slower,
+more dangerous. There were many places Nagger should not have been put
+to&mdash;where a slip meant a broken leg. But Slone could not turn back. And
+something besides an indomitable spirit kept him going. Again the sound
+resembling thunder assailed his ears, louder this time. The plateau
+appeared to be ending in a series of great capes or promontories. Slone
+feared he would soon come out upon a promontory from which he might see
+the impossibility of further travel. He felt relieved down in the
+gullies, where he could not see far. He climbed out of one, presently,
+from which there extended a narrow ledge with a slant too perilous for
+any horse. He stepped out upon that with far less confidence than
+Nagger. To the right was a bulge of low wall, and a few feet to the
+left a dark precipice. The trail here was faintly outlined, and it was
+six inches wide and slanting as well. It seemed endless to Slone, that
+ledge. He looked only down at his feet and listened to Nagger's steps.
+The big horse trod carefully, but naturally, and he did not slip. That
+ledge extended in a long curve, turning slowly away from the precipice,
+and ascending a little at the further end. Slone, drew a deep breath of
+relief when he led Nagger up on level rock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly a strange yet familiar sound halted Slone, as if he had been
+struck. The wild, shrill, high-pitched, piercing whistle of a stallion!
+Nagger neighed a blast in reply and pounded the rock with his iron-shod
+hoofs. With a thrill Slone looked ahead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There, some few hundred yards distant, on a promontory, stood a red
+horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My Lord! ... It's Wildfire!" breathed Slone, tensely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He could not believe his sight. He imagined he was dreaming. But as
+Nagger stamped and snorted defiance Slone looked with fixed and keen
+gaze, and knew that beautiful picture was no lie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire was as red as fire. His long mane, wild in the wind, was like
+a whipping, black-streaked flame. Silhouetted there against that canyon
+background he seemed gigantic, a demon horse, ready to plunge into
+fiery depths. He was looking back over his shoulder, his head very
+high, and every line of him was instinct with wildness. Again he sent
+out that shrill, air-splitting whistle. Slone understood it to be a
+clarion call to Nagger. If Nagger had been alone Wildfire would have
+killed him. The red stallion was a killer of horses. All over the Utah
+ranges he had left the trail of a murderer. Nagger understood this,
+too, for he whistled back in rage and terror. It took an iron arm to
+hold him. Then Wildfire plunged, apparently down, and vanished from
+Slone's sight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone hurried onward, to be blocked by a huge crack in the rocky
+plateau. This he had to head. And then another and like obstacle
+checked his haste to reach that promontory. He was forced to go more
+slowly. Wildfire had been close only as to sight. And this was the
+great canyon that dwarfed distance and magnified proximity. Climbing
+down and up, toiling on, he at last learned patience. He had seen
+Wildfire at close range. That was enough. So he plodded on, once more
+returning to careful regard of Nagger. It took an hour of work to reach
+the point where Wildfire had disappeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A promontory indeed it was, overhanging a valley a thousand feet below.
+A white torrent of a stream wound through it. There were lines of green
+cottonwoods following the winding course. Then Slone saw Wildfire
+slowly crossing the flat toward the stream. He had gone down that
+cliff, which to Slone looked perpendicular.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire appeared to be walking lame. Slone, making sure of this,
+suffered a pang. Then, when the significance of such lameness dawned
+upon him he whooped his wild joy and waved his hat. The red stallion
+must have heard, for he looked up. Then he went on again and waded into
+the stream, where he drank long. When he started to cross, the swift
+current drove him back in several places. The water wreathed white
+around him. But evidently it was not deep, and finally he crossed. From
+the other side he looked up again at Nagger and Slone, and, going on,
+he soon was out of sight in the cottonwoods.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How to get down!" muttered Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a break in the cliff wall, a bare stone slant where horses
+had gone down and come up. That was enough for Slone to know. He would
+have attempted the descent if he were sure no other horse but Wildfire
+had ever gone down there. But Slone's hair began to rise stiff on his
+head. A horse like Wildfire, and mountain sheep and Indian ponies, were
+all very different from Nagger. The chances were against Nagger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come on, old boy. If I can do it, you can," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had never seen a trail as perilous as this. He was afraid for his
+horse. A slip there meant death. The way Nagger trembled in every
+muscle showed his feelings. But he never flinched. He would follow
+Slone anywhere, providing Slone rode him or led him. And here, as
+riding was impossible, Slone went before. If the horse slipped there
+would be a double tragedy, for Nagger would knock his master off the
+cliff. Slone set his teeth and stepped down. He did not let Nagger see
+his fear. He was taking the greatest risk he had ever run.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The break in the wall led to a ledge, and the ledge dropped from step
+to step, and these had bare, slippery slants between. Nagger was
+splendid on a bad trail. He had methods peculiar to his huge build and
+great weight. He crashed down over the stone steps, both front hoofs at
+once. The slants he slid down on his haunches with his forelegs stiff
+and the iron shoes scraping. He snorted and heaved and grew wet with
+sweat. He tossed his head at some of the places. But he never hesitated
+and it was impossible for him to go slowly. Whenever Slone came to
+corrugated stretches in the trail he felt grateful. But these were few.
+The rock was like smooth red iron. Slone had never seen such hard rock.
+It took him long to realize that it was marble. His heart seemed a
+tense, painful knot in his breast, as if it could not beat, holding
+back in the strained suspense. But Nagger never jerked on the bridle.
+He never faltered. Many times he slipped, often with both front feet,
+but never with all four feet. So he did not fall. And the red wall
+began to loom above Slone. Then suddenly he seemed brought to a point
+where it was impossible to descend. It was a round bulge, slanting
+fearfully, with only a few little rough surfaces to hold a foot.
+Wildfire had left a broad, clear-swept mark at that place, and red
+hairs on some of the sharp points. He had slid down. Below was an
+offset that fortunately prevented further sliding, Slone started to
+walk down this place, but when Nagger began to slide Slone had to let
+go the bridle and jump. Both he and the horse landed safely. Luck was
+with them. And they went on, down and down, to reach the base of the
+great wall, scraped and exhausted, wet with sweat, but unhurt. As Slone
+gazed upward he felt the impossibility of believing what he knew to be
+true. He hugged and petted the horse. Then he led on to the roaring
+stream.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was green water white with foam. Slone waded in and found the water
+cool and shallow and very swift. He had to hold to Nagger to keep from
+being swept downstream. They crossed in safety. There in the sand
+showed Wildfire's tracks. And here were signs of another Indian camp,
+half a year old.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shade of the cottonwoods was pleasant. Slone found this valley
+oppressively hot. There was no wind and the sand blistered his feet
+through his boots. Wildfire held to the Indian trail that had guided
+him down into this wilderness of worn rock. And that trail crossed the
+stream at every turn of the twisting, narrow valley. Slone enjoyed
+getting into the water. He hung his gun over the pommel and let the
+water roll him. A dozen times he and Nagger forded the rushing torrent.
+Then they came to a box-like closing of the valley to canyon walls, and
+here the trail evidently followed the stream bed. There was no other
+way. Slone waded in, and stumbled, rolled, and floated ahead of the
+sturdy horse. Nagger was wet to his breast, but he did not fall. This
+gulch seemed full of a hollow rushing roar. It opened out into a wide
+valley. And Wildfire's tracks took to the left side and began to climb
+the slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Here the traveling was good, considering what had been passed. Once up
+out of the valley floor Slone saw Wildfire far ahead, high on the
+slope. He did not appear to be limping, but he was not going fast.
+Slone watched as he climbed. What and where would be the end of this
+chase?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sometimes Wildfire was plain in his sight for a moment, but usually he
+was hidden by rocks. The slope was one great talus, a jumble of
+weathered rock, fallen from what appeared a mountain of red and yellow
+wall. Here the heat of the sun fell upon him like fire. The rocks were
+so hot Slone could not touch them with bare hand. The close of the
+afternoon was approaching, and this slope was interminably long. Still,
+it was not steep, and the trail was good.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last from the height of slope Wildfire appeared, looking back and
+down. Then he was gone. Slone plodded upward. Long before he reached
+that summit be heard the dull rumble of the river. It grew to be a
+roar, yet it seemed distant. Would the great desert river stop Wildfire
+in his flight? Slone doubted it. He surmounted the ridge, to find the
+canyon opening in a tremendous gap, and to see down, far down, a
+glittering, sun-blasted slope merging into a deep, black gulch where a
+red river swept and chafed and roared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Somehow the river was what he had expected to see. A force that had cut
+and ground this canyon could have been nothing but a river like that.
+The trail led down, and Slone had no doubt that it crossed the river
+and led up out of the canyon. He wanted to stay there and gaze
+endlessly and listen. At length he began the descent. As he proceeded
+it seemed that the roar of the river lessened. He could not understand
+why this was so. It took half an hour to reach the last level, a
+ghastly, black, and iron-ribbed canyon bed, with the river splitting
+it. He had not had a glimpse of Wildfire on this side of the divide,
+but he found his tracks, and they led down off the last level, through
+a notch in the black bank of marble to a sand-bar and the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire had walked straight off the sand into the water. Slone studied
+the river and shore. The water ran slow, heavily, in sluggish eddies.
+From far up the canyon came the roar of a rapid, and from below the
+roar of another, heavier and closer. The river appeared tremendous, in
+ways Slone felt rather than realized, yet it was not swift. Studying
+the black, rough wall of rock above him, he saw marks where the river
+had been sixty feet higher than where he stood on the sand. It was low,
+then. How lucky for him that he had gotten there before flood season!
+He believed Wildfire had crossed easily, and he knew Nagger could make
+it. Then he piled and tied his supplies and weapons high on the saddle,
+to keep them dry, and looked for a place to take to the water.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire had sunk deep before reaching the edge. Manifestly he had
+lunged the last few feet. Slone found a better place, and waded in,
+urging Nagger. The big horse plunged, almost going under, and began to
+swim. Slone kept up-stream beside him. He found, presently, that the
+water was thick and made him tired, so it was necessary to grasp a
+stirrup and be towed. The river appeared only a few hundred feet wide,
+but probably it was wider than it looked. Nagger labored heavily near
+the opposite shore; still, he landed safely upon a rocky bank. There
+were patches of sand in which Wildfire's tracks showed so fresh that
+the water had not yet dried out of them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone rested his horse before attempting to climb out of that split in
+the rock. However, Wildfire had found an easy ascent. On this side of
+the canyon the bare rock did not predominate. A clear trail led up a
+dusty, gravelly slope, upon which scant greasewood and cactus appeared.
+Half an hour's climbing brought Slone to where he could see that he was
+entering a vast valley, sloping up and narrowing to a notch in the dark
+cliffs, above which towered the great red wall and about that the
+slopes of cedar and the yellow rim-rock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And scarcely a mile distant, bright in the westering sunlight, shone
+the red stallion, moving slowly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone pressed on steadily. Just before dark he came to an ideal spot to
+camp. The valley had closed up, so that the lofty walls cast shadows
+that met. A clump of cottonwoods surrounding a spring, abundance of
+rich grass, willows and flowers lining the banks, formed an oasis in
+the bare valley. Slone was tired out from the day of ceaseless toil
+down and up, and he could scarcely keep his eyes open. But he tried to
+stay awake. The dead silence of the valley, the dry fragrance, the
+dreaming walls, the advent of night low down, when up on the ramparts
+the last red rays of the sun lingered, the strange loneliness&mdash;these
+were sweet and comforting to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And that night's sleep was as a moment. He opened his eyes to see the
+crags and towers and peaks and domes, and the lofty walls of that vast,
+broken chaos of canyons across the river. They were now emerging from
+the misty gray of dawn, growing pink and lilac and purple under the
+rising sun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He arose and set about his few tasks, which, being soon finished,
+allowed him an early start.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire had grazed along no more than a mile in the lead. Slone looked
+eagerly up the narrowing canyon, but he was not rewarded by a sight of
+the stallion. As he progressed up a gradually ascending trail he became
+aware of the fact that the notch he had long looked up to was where the
+great red walls closed in and almost met. And the trail zigzagged up
+this narrow vent, so steep that only a few steps could be taken without
+rest. Slone toiled up for an hour&mdash;an age&mdash;till he was wet, burning,
+choked, with a great weight on his chest. Yet still he was only
+half-way up that awful break between the walls. Sometimes he could have
+tossed a stone down upon a part of the trail, only a few rods below,
+yet many, many weary steps of actual toil. As he got farther up the
+notch widened. What had been scarcely visible from the valley below was
+now colossal in actual dimensions. The trail was like a twisted mile of
+thread between two bulging mountain walls leaning their ledges and
+fronts over this tilted pass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone rested often. Nagger appreciated this and heaved gratefully at
+every halt. In this monotonous toil Slone forgot the zest of his
+pursuit. And when Nagger suddenly snorted in fright Slone was not
+prepared for what he saw.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Above him ran a low, red wall, around which evidently the trail led. At
+the curve, which was a promontory, scarcely a hundred feet in an
+airline above him, he saw something red moving, bobbing, coming out
+into view. It was a horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire&mdash;no farther away than the length of three lassoes!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There he stood looking down. He fulfilled all of Slone's dreams. Only
+he was bigger. But he was so magnificently proportioned that he did not
+seem heavy. His coat was shaggy and red. It was not glossy. The color
+was what made him shine. His mane was like a crest, mounting, then
+failing low. Slone had never seen so much muscle on a horse. Yet his
+outline was graceful, beautiful. The head was indeed that of the
+wildest of all wild creatures&mdash;a stallion born wild&mdash;and it was
+beautiful, savage, splendid, everything but noble. Whatever Wildfire
+was, he was a devil, a murderer&mdash;he had no noble attributes. Slone
+thought that if a horse could express hate, surely Wildfire did then.
+It was certain that he did express curiosity and fury.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone shook a gantleted fist at the stallion, as if the horse were
+human. That was a natural action for a rider of his kind. Wildfire
+turned away, showed bright against the dark background, and then
+disappeared.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+That was the last Slone saw of Wildfire for three days.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It took all of this day to climb out of the canyon. The second was a
+slow march of thirty miles into a scrub cedar and pinyon forest,
+through which the great red and yellow walls of the canyon could be
+seen. That night Slone found a water-hole in a rocky pocket and a
+little grass for Nagger. The third day's travel consisted of forty
+miles or more through level pine forest, dry and odorous, but lacking
+the freshness and beauty of the forest on the north side of the canyon.
+On this south side a strange feature was that all the water, when there
+was any, ran away from the rim. Slone camped this night at a muddy pond
+in the woods, where Wildfire's tracks showed plainly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the following day Slone rode out of the forest into a country of
+scanty cedars, bleached and stunted, and out of this to the edge of a
+plateau, from which the shimmering desert flung its vast and desolate
+distances, forbidding and menacing. This was not the desert upland
+country of Utah, but a naked and bony world of colored rock and sand&mdash;a
+painted desert of heat and wind and flying sand and waterless wastes
+and barren ranges. But it did not daunt Slone. For far down on the
+bare, billowing ridges moved a red speck, at a snail's pace, a slowly
+moving dot of color which was Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On open ground like this, Nagger, carrying two hundred and fifty
+pounds, showed his wonderful quality. He did not mind the heat nor the
+sand nor the glare nor the distance nor his burden. He did not tire. He
+was an engine of tremendous power.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone gained upon Wildfire, and toward evening of that day he reached
+to within half a mile of the stallion. And he chose to keep that far
+behind. That night he camped where there was dry grass, but no water.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next day he followed Wildfire down and down, over the endless swell of
+rolling red ridges, bare of all but bleached white grass and meager
+greasewood, always descending in the face of that painted desert of
+bold and ragged steps. Slone made fifty miles that day, and gained the
+valley bed, where a slender stream ran thin and spread over a wide
+sandy bottom. It was salty water, but it was welcome to both man and
+beast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The following day he crossed, and the tracks of Wildfire were still wet
+on the sand-bars. The stallion was slowing down. Slone saw him, limping
+along, not far in advance. There was a ten-mile stretch of level
+ground, blown hard as rock, from which the sustenance had been
+bleached, for not a spear of grass grew there. And following that was a
+tortuous passage through a weird region of clay dunes, blue and violet
+and heliotrope and lavender, all worn smooth by rain and wind. Wildfire
+favored the soft ground now. He had deviated from his straight course.
+And he was partial to washes and dips in the earth where water might
+have lodged. And he was not now scornful of a green-scummed water-hole
+with its white margin of alkali. That night Slone made camp with
+Wildfire in plain sight. The stallion stopped when his pursuers
+stopped. And he began to graze on the same stretch with Nagger. How
+strange this seemed to Slone!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Here at this camp was evidence of Indians. Wildfire had swung round to
+the north in his course. Like any pursued wild animal, he had began to
+circle. And he had pointed his nose toward the Utah he had left.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next morning Wildfire was not in sight, but he had left his tracks in
+the sand. Slone trailed him with Nagger at a trot. Toward the head of
+this sandy flat Slone came upon old corn-fields, and a broken dam where
+the water had been stored, and well-defined trails leading away to the
+right. Somewhere over there in the desert lived Indians. At this point
+Wildfire abandoned the trail he had followed for many days and cut out
+more to the north. It took all the morning hours to climb three great
+steps and benches that led up to the summit of a mesa, vast in extent.
+It turned out to be a sandy waste. The wind rose and everywhere were
+moving sheets of sand, and in the distance circular yellow dust-devils,
+rising high like waterspouts, and back down in the sun-scorched valley
+a sandstorm moved along majestically, burying the desert in its yellow
+pall.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then two more days of sand and another day of a slowly rising ground
+growing from bare to gray and gray to green, and then to the purple of
+sage and cedar&mdash;these three grinding days were toiled out with only one
+water-hole.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Wildfire was lame and in distress and Nagger was growing gaunt and
+showing strain; and Slone, haggard and black and worn, plodded miles
+and miles on foot to save his horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone felt that it would be futile to put the chase to a test of speed.
+Nagger could never head that stallion. Slone meant to go on and on,
+always pushing Wildfire, keeping him tired, wearied, and worrying him,
+till a section of the country was reached where he could drive Wildfire
+into some kind of a natural trap. The pursuit seemed endless. Wildfire
+kept to open country where he could not be surprised.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There came a morning when Slone climbed to a cedared plateau that rose
+for a whole day's travel, and then split into a labyrinthine maze of
+canyons. There were trees, grass, water. It was a high country, cool
+and wild, like the uplands he had left. For days he camped on
+Wildfire's trail, always relentlessly driving him, always watching for
+the trap he hoped to find. And the red stallion spent much of this time
+of flight in looking backward. Whenever Slone came in sight of him he
+had his head over his shoulder, watching. And on the soft ground of
+these canyons he had begun to recover from his lameness. But this did
+not worry Slone. Sooner or later Wildfire would go down into a
+high-walled wash, from which there would be no outlet; or he would
+wander into a box-canyon; or he would climb out on a mesa with no place
+to descend, unless he passed Slone; or he would get cornered on a soft,
+steep slope where his hoofs would sink deep and make him slow. The
+nature of the desert had changed. Slone had entered a wonderful region,
+the like of which he had not seen&mdash;a high plateau crisscrossed in every
+direction by narrow canyons with red walls a thousand feet high.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And one of the strange turning canyons opened into a vast valley of
+monuments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The plateau had weathered and washed away, leaving huge sections of
+stone walls, all standing isolated, different in size and shape, but
+all clean-cut, bold, with straight lines. They stood up everywhere,
+monumental, towering, many-colored, lending a singular and beautiful
+aspect to the great green-and-gray valley, billowing away to the north,
+where dim, broken battlements mounted to the clouds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The only living thing in Slone's sight was Wildfire. He shone red down
+on the green slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's heart swelled. This was the setting for that grand horse&mdash;a
+perfect wild range. But also it seemed the last place where there might
+be any chance to trap the stallion. Still that did not alter Slone's
+purpose, though it lost to him the joy of former hopes. He rode down
+the slope, out upon the billowing floor of the valley. Wildfire looked
+back to see his pursuers, and then the solemn stillness broke to a
+wild, piercing whistle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Day after day, camping where night found him, Slone followed the
+stallion, never losing sight of him till darkness had fallen. The
+valley was immense and the monuments miles apart. But they always
+seemed close together and near him. The air magnified everything. Slone
+lost track of time. The strange, solemn, lonely days and the silent,
+lonely nights, and the endless pursuit, and the wild, weird
+valley&mdash;these completed the work of years on Slone and he became
+satisfied, unthinking, almost savage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The toil and privation had worn him down and he was like iron. His
+garments hung in tatters; his boots were ripped and soleless. Long
+since his flour had been used up, and all his supplies except the salt.
+He lived on the meat of rabbits, but they were scarce, and the time
+came when there were none. Some days he did not eat. Hunger did not
+make him suffer. He killed a desert bird now and then, and once a
+wildcat crossing the valley. Eventually he felt his strength
+diminishing, and then he took to digging out the pack-rats and cooking
+them. But these, too, were scarce. At length starvation faced Slone.
+But he knew he would not starve. Many times he had been within
+rifle-shot of Wildfire. And the grim, forbidding thought grew upon him
+that he must kill the stallion. The thought seemed involuntary, but his
+mind rejected it. Nevertheless, he knew that if he could not catch the
+stallion he would kill him. That had been the end of many a desperate
+rider's pursuit of a coveted horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While Slone kept on his merciless pursuit, never letting Wildfire rest
+by day, time went on just as relentlessly. Spring gave way to early
+summer. The hot sun bleached the grass; water-holes failed out in the
+valley, and water could be found only in the canyons; and the dry winds
+began to blow the sand. It was a sandy valley, green and gray only at a
+distance, and out toward the north there were no monuments, and the
+slow heave of sand lifted toward the dim walls.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire worked away from this open valley, back to the south end,
+where the great monuments loomed, and still farther back, where they
+grew closer, till at length some of them were joined by weathered
+ridges to the walls of the surrounding plateau. For all that Slone
+could see, Wildfire was in perfect condition. But Nagger was not the
+horse he had been. Slone realized that in one way or another the
+pursuit was narrowing down to the end.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He found a water-hole at the head of a wash in a split in the walls,
+and here he let Nagger rest and graze one whole day&mdash;the first day for
+a long time that he had not kept the red stallion in sight. That day
+was marked by the good fortune of killing a rabbit, and while eating it
+his gloomy, fixed mind admitted that he was starving. He dreaded the
+next sunrise. But he could not hold it back. There, behind the dark
+monuments, standing sentinel-like, the sky lightened and reddened and
+burst into gold and pink, till out of the golden glare the sun rose
+glorious. And Slone, facing the league-long shadows of the monuments,
+rode out again into the silent, solemn day, on his hopeless quest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a change Wildfire had climbed high up a slope of talus, through a
+narrow pass, rounded over with drifting sand. And Slone gazed down into
+a huge amphitheater full of monuments, like all that strange country. A
+basin three miles across lay beneath him. Walls and weathered slants of
+rock and steep slopes of reddish-yellow sand inclosed this oval
+depression. The floor was white, and it seemed to move gently or
+radiate with heat-waves. Studying it, Slone made out that the motion
+was caused by wind in long bleached grass. He had crossed small areas
+of this grass in different parts of the region.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire's tracks led down into this basin, and presently Slone, by
+straining his eyes, made out the red spot that was the stallion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's lookin' to quit the country," soliloquized Slone, as he surveyed
+the scene.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With keen, slow gaze Slone studied the lay of wall and slope, and when
+he had circled the huge depression he made sure that Wildfire could not
+get out except by the narrow pass through which he had gone in. Slone
+sat astride Nagger in the mouth of this pass&mdash;a wash a few yards wide,
+walled by broken, rough rock on one side and an insurmountable slope on
+the other.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If this hole was only little, now," sighed Slone, as he gazed at the
+sweeping, shimmering oval floor, "I might have a chance. But down
+there&mdash;we couldn't get near him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was no water in that dry bowl. Slone reflected on the uselessness
+of keeping Wildfire down there, because Nagger could not go without
+water as long as Wildfire. For the first time Slone hesitated. It
+seemed merciless to Nagger to drive him down into this hot, windy hole.
+The wind blew from the west, and it swooped up the slope, hot, with the
+odor of dry, dead grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But that hot wind stirred Slone with an idea, and suddenly he was
+tense, excited, glowing, yet grim and hard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire, I'll make you run with your namesake in that high grass,"
+called Slone. The speech was full of bitter failure, of regret, of the
+hardness of a rider who could not give up the horse to freedom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone meant to ride down there and fire the long grass. In that wind
+there would indeed be wildfire to race with the red stallion. It would
+perhaps mean his death; at least it would chase him out of that hole,
+where to follow him would be useless.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd make you hump now to get away if I could get behind you," muttered
+Slone. He saw that if he could fire the grass on the other side the
+wind of flame would drive Wildfire straight toward him. The slopes and
+walls narrowed up to the pass, but high grass grew to within a few rods
+of where Slone stood. But it seemed impossible to get behind Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At night&mdash;then&mdash;I could get round him," said Slone, thinking hard and
+narrowing his gaze to scan the circle of wall and slope. "Why not? ...
+No wind at night. That grass would burn slow till mornin'&mdash;till the
+wind came up&mdash;an' it's been west for days."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly Slone began to pound the patient Nagger and to cry out to him
+in wild exultance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Old horse, we've got him! ... We've got him! ... We'll put a rope on
+him before this time to-morrow!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone yielded to his strange, wild joy, but it did not last long, soon
+succeeding to sober, keen thought. He rode down into the bowl a mile,
+making absolutely certain that Wildfire could not climb out on that
+side. The far end, beyond the monuments, was a sheer wall of rock. Then
+he crossed to the left side. Here the sandy slope was almost too steep
+for even him to go up. And there was grass that would burn. He returned
+to the pass assured that Wildfire had at last fallen into a trap the
+like Slone had never dreamed of. The great horse was doomed to run into
+living flame or the whirling noose of a lasso.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Slone reflected. Nagger had that very morning had his fill of good
+water&mdash;the first really satisfying drink for days. If he was rested
+that day, on the morrow he would be fit for the grueling work possibly
+in store for him. Slone unsaddled the horse and turned him loose, and
+with a snort he made down the gentle slope for the grass. Then Slone
+carried his saddle to a shady spot afforded by a slab of rock and a
+dwarf cedar, and here he composed himself to rest and watch and think
+and wait.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire was plainly in sight no more than two miles away. Gradually he
+was grazing along toward the monuments and the far end of the great
+basin. Slone believed, because the place was so large, that Wildfire
+thought there was a way out on the other side or over the slopes or
+through the walls. Never before had the far-sighted stallion made a
+mistake. Slone suddenly felt the keen, stabbing fear of an outlet
+somewhere. But it left him quickly. He had studied those slopes and
+walls. Wildfire could not get out, except by the pass he had entered,
+unless he could fly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone lay in the shade, his head propped on his saddle, and while
+gazing down into the shimmering hollow he began to plan. He calculated
+that he must be able to carry fire swiftly across the far end of the
+basin, so that he would not be absent long from the mouth of the pass.
+Fire was always a difficult matter, since he must depend only on flint
+and steel. He decided to wait till dark, build a fire with dead cedar
+sticks, and carry a bundle of them with burning ends. He felt assured
+that the wind caused by riding would keep them burning. After he had
+lighted the grass all he had to do was to hurry back to his station and
+there await developments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The day passed slowly, and it was hot. The heat-waves rose in dark,
+wavering lines and veils from the valley. The wind blew almost a gale.
+Thin, curling sheets of sand blew up over the crests of the slopes, and
+the sound it made was a soft, silken rustling, very low. The sky was a
+steely blue above and copper close over the distant walls.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That afternoon, toward the close, Slone ate the last of the meat. At
+sunset the wind died away and the air cooled. There was a strip of red
+along the wall of rock and on the tips of the monuments, and it
+lingered there for long, a strange, bright crown. Nagger was not far
+away, but Wildfire had disappeared, probably behind one of the
+monuments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When twilight fell Slone went down after Nagger and, returning with
+him, put on bridle and saddle. Then he began to search for suitable
+sticks of wood. Farther back in the pass he found stunted dead cedars,
+and from these secured enough for his purpose. He kindled a fire and
+burnt the ends of the sticks into red embers. Making a bundle of these,
+he put them under his arm, the dull, glowing ends backward, and then
+mounted his horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was just about dark when he faced down into the valley. When he
+reached level ground he kept to the edge of the left slope and put
+Nagger to a good trot. The grass and brush were scant here, and the
+color of the sand was light, so he had no difficulty in traveling.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From time to time his horse went through grass, and its dry, crackling
+rustle, showing how it would burn, was music to Slone. Gradually the
+monuments began to loom up, bold and black against the blue sky, with
+stars seemingly hanging close over them. Slone had calculated that the
+basin was smaller than it really was, in both length and breadth. This
+worried him. Wildfire might see or hear or scent him, and make a break
+back to the pass and thus escape. Slone was glad when the huge, dark
+monuments were indistinguishable from the black, frowning wall. He had
+to go slower here, because of the darkness. But at last he reached the
+slow rise of jumbled rock that evidently marked the extent of
+weathering on that side. Here he turned to the right and rode out into
+the valley. The floor was level and thickly overgrown with long, dead
+grass and dead greasewood, as dry as tinder. It was easy to account for
+the dryness; neither snow nor rain had visited that valley for many
+months. Slone whipped one of the sticks in the wind and soon had the
+smoldering end red and showering sparks. Then he dropped the stick in
+the grass, with curious intent and a strange feeling of regret.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Instantly the grass blazed with a little sputtering roar. Nagger
+snorted. "Wildfire!" exclaimed Slone. That word was a favorite one with
+riders, and now Slone used it both to call out his menace to the
+stallion and to express his feeling for that blaze, already running
+wild.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Without looking back Slone rode across the valley, dropping a glowing
+stick every quarter of a mile. When he reached the other side there
+were a dozen fires behind him, burning slowly, with white smoke rising
+lazily. Then he loped Nagger along the side back to the sandy ascent,
+and on up to the mouth of the pass. There he searched for tracks.
+Wildfire had not gone out, and Slone experienced relief and exultation.
+He took up a position in the middle of the narrowest part of the pass,
+and there, with Nagger ready for anything, he once more composed
+himself to watch and wait.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Far across the darkness of the valley, low down, twelve lines of fire,
+widely separated, crept toward one another. They appeared thin and
+slow, with only an occasional leaping flame. And some of the black
+spaces must have been monuments, blotting out the creeping snail-lines
+of red. Slone watched, strangely fascinated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you think of that?" he said, aloud, and he meant his query for
+Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he watched the lines perceptibly lengthened and brightened and pale
+shadows of smoke began to appear. Over at the left of the valley the
+two brightest fires, the first he had started, crept closer and closer
+together. They seemed long in covering distance. But not a breath of
+wind stirred, and besides they really might move swiftly, without
+looking so to Slone. When the two lines met a sudden and larger blaze
+rose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah!" said the rider, and then he watched the other lines creeping
+together. How slowly fire moved, he thought. The red stallion would
+have every chance to run between those lines, if he dared. But a wild
+horse feared nothing like fire. This one would not run the gantlet of
+flames. Nevertheless, Slone felt more and more relieved as the lines
+closed. The hours of the night dragged past until at length one long,
+continuous line of fire spread level across the valley, its bright, red
+line broken only where the monuments of stone were silhouetted against
+it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The darkness of the valley changed. The light of the moon changed. The
+radiance of the stars changed. Either the line of fire was finding
+denser fuel to consume or it was growing appreciably closer, for the
+flames began to grow, to leap, and to flare.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone strained his ears for the thud of hoofs on sand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The time seemed endless in its futility of results, but fleeting after
+it had passed; and he could tell how the hours fled by the
+ever-recurring need to replenish the little fire he kept burning in the
+pass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A broad belt of valley grew bright in the light, and behind it loomed
+the monuments, weird and dark, with columns of yellow and white smoke
+wreathing them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly Slone's sensitive ear vibrated to a thrilling sound. He leaned
+down to place his ear to the sand. Rapid, rhythmic beat of hoofs made
+him leap to his feet, reaching for his lasso with right hand and a gun
+with his left.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nagger lifted his head, sniffed the air, and snorted. Slone peered into
+the black belt of gloom that lay below him. It would be hard to see a
+horse there, unless he got high enough to be silhouetted against that
+line of fire now flaring to the sky. But he heard the beat of hoofs,
+swift, sharp, louder&mdash;louder. The night shadows were deceptive. That
+wonderful light confused him, made the place unreal. Was he dreaming?
+Or had the long chase and his privations unhinged his mind? He reached
+for Nagger. No! The big black was real, alive, quivering, pounding the
+sand. He scented an enemy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once more Slone peered down into the void or what seemed a void. But
+it, too, had changed, lightened. The whole valley was brightening.
+Great palls of curling smoke rose white and yellow, to turn back as the
+monuments met their crests, and then to roll upward, blotting out the
+stars. It was such a light as he had never seen, except in dreams. Pale
+moonlight and dimmed starlight and wan dawn all vague and strange and
+shadowy under the wild and vivid light of burning grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the pale path before Slone, that fanlike slope of sand which opened
+down into the valley, appeared a swiftly moving black object, like a
+fleeting phantom. It was a phantom horse. Slone felt that his eyes,
+deceived by his mind, saw racing images. Many a wild chase he had lived
+in dreams on some far desert. But what was that beating in his
+ears&mdash;sharp, swift, even, rhythmic? Never had his ears played him
+false. Never had he heard things in his dreams. That running object was
+a horse and he was coming like the wind. Slone felt something grip his
+heart. All the time and endurance and pain and thirst and suspense and
+longing and hopelessness&mdash;the agony of the whole endless chase&mdash;closed
+tight on his heart in that instant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The running horse halted just in the belt of light cast by the burning
+grass. There he stood sharply defined, clear as a cameo, not a hundred
+paces from Slone. It was Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone uttered an involuntary cry. Thrill on thrill shot through him.
+Delight and hope and fear and despair claimed him in swift, successive
+flashes. And then again the ruling passion of a rider held him&mdash;the
+sheer glory of a grand and unattainable horse. For Slone gave up
+Wildfire in that splendid moment. How had he ever dared to believe he
+could capture that wild stallion? Slone looked and looked, filling his
+mind, regretting nothing, sure that the moment was reward for all he
+had endured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The weird lights magnified Wildfire and showed him clearly. He seemed
+gigantic. He shone black against the fire. His head was high, his mane
+flying. Behind him the fire flared and the valley-wide column of smoke
+rolled majestically upward, and the great monuments seemed to retreat
+darkly and mysteriously as the flames advanced beyond them. It was a
+beautiful, unearthly spectacle, with its silence the strangest feature.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But suddenly Wildfire broke that silence with a whistle which to
+Slone's overstrained faculties seemed a blast as piercing as the
+splitting sound of lightning. And with the whistle Wildfire plunged up
+toward the pass. Slone yelled at the top of his lungs and fired his gun
+before he could terrorize the stallion and drive him back down the
+slope. Soon Wildfire became again a running black object, and then he
+disappeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The great line of fire had gotten beyond the monuments and now
+stretched unbroken across the valley from wall to slope. Wildfire could
+never pierce that line of flames. And now Slone saw, in the paling sky
+to the east, that dawn was at hand.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap07"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Slone looked grimly glad when simultaneously with the first red flash
+of sunrise a breeze fanned his cheek. All that was needed now was a
+west wind. And here came the assurance of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The valley appeared hazy and smoky, with slow, rolling clouds low down
+where the line of fire moved. The coming of daylight paled the blaze of
+the grass, though here and there Slone caught flickering glimpses of
+dull red flame. The wild stallion kept to the center of the valley,
+restlessly facing this way and that, but never toward the smoke. Slone
+made sure that Wildfire gradually gave ground as the line of smoke
+slowly worked toward him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Every moment the breeze freshened, grew steadier and stronger, until
+Slone saw that it began to clear the valley of the low-hanging smoke.
+There came a time when once more the blazing line extended across from
+slope to slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire was cornered, trapped. Many times Slone nervously uncoiled and
+recoiled his lasso. Presently the great chance of his life would
+come&mdash;the hardest and most important throw he would ever have with a
+rope. He did not miss often, but then he missed sometimes, and here he
+must be swift and sure. It annoyed him that his hands perspired and
+trembled and that something weighty seemed to obstruct his breathing.
+He muttered that he was pretty much worn out, not in the best of
+condition for a hard fight with a wild horse. Still he would capture
+Wildfire; his mind was unalterably set there. He anticipated that the
+stallion would make a final and desperate rush past him; and he had his
+plan of action all outlined. What worried him was the possibility of
+Wildfire doing some unforeseen feat at the very last. Slone was
+prepared for hours of strained watching, and then a desperate effort,
+and then a shock that might kill Wildfire and cripple Nagger, or a long
+race and fight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he soon discovered that he was wrong about the long watch and wait.
+The wind had grown strong and was driving the fire swiftly. The flames,
+fanned by the breeze, leaped to a formidable barrier. In less than an
+hour, though the time seemed only a few moments to the excited Slone,
+Wildfire had been driven down toward the narrowing neck of the valley,
+and he had begun to run, to and fro, back and forth. Any moment, then,
+Slone expected him to grow terrorized and to come tearing up toward the
+pass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire showed evidence of terror, but he did not attempt to make the
+pass. Instead he went at the right-hand slope of the valley and began
+to climb. The slope was steep and soft, yet the stallion climbed up and
+up. The dust flew in clouds; the gravel rolled down, and the sand
+followed in long streams. Wildfire showed his keenness by zigzagging up
+the slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Go ahead, you red devil!" yelled Slone. He was much elated. In that
+soft bank Wildfire would tire out while not hurting himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone watched the stallion in admiration and pity and exultation.
+Wildfire did not make much headway, for he slipped back almost as much
+as he gained. He attempted one place after another where he failed.
+There was a bank of clay, some few feet high, and he could not round it
+at either end or surmount it in the middle. Finally he literally pawed
+and cut a path, much as if he were digging in the sand for water. When
+he got over that he was not much better off. The slope above was
+endless and grew steeper, more difficult toward the top. Slone knew
+absolutely that no horse could climb over it. He grew apprehensive,
+however, for Wildfire might stick up there on the slope until the line
+of fire passed. The horse apparently shunned any near proximity to the
+fire, and performed prodigious efforts to escape.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He'll be ridin' an avalanche pretty soon," muttered Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Long sheets of sand and gravel slid down to spill thinly over the low
+bank. Wildfire, now sinking to his knees, worked steadily upward till
+he had reached a point halfway up the slope, at the head of a long,
+yellow bank of treacherous-looking sand. Here he was halted by a low
+bulge, which he might have surmounted had his feet been free. But he
+stood deep in the sand. For the first time he looked down at the
+sweeping fire, and then at Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly the bank of sand began to slide with him. He snorted in
+fright. The avalanche started slowly and was evidently no mere surface
+slide. It was deep. It stopped&mdash;then started again&mdash;and again stopped.
+Wildfire appeared to be sinking deeper and deeper. His struggles only
+embedded him more firmly. Then the bank of sand, with an ominous, low
+roar, began to move once more. This time it slipped swiftly. The dust
+rose in a cloud, almost obscuring the horse. Long streams of gravel
+rattled down, and waterfalls of sand waved over the steps of the slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Just as suddenly the avalanche stopped again. Slone saw, from the great
+oval hole it had left above, that it was indeed deep. That was the
+reason it did not slide readily. When the dust cleared away Slone saw
+the stallion, sunk to his flanks in the sand, utterly helpless.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a wild whoop Slone leaped off Nagger, and, a lasso in each hand,
+he ran down the long bank. The fire was perhaps a quarter of a mile
+distant, and, since the grass was thinning out, it was not coming so
+fast as it had been. The position of the stallion was half-way between
+the fire and Slone, and a hundred yards up the slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like a madman Slone climbed up through the dragging, loose sand. He was
+beside himself with a fury of excitement. He fancied his eyes were
+failing him, that it was not possible the great horse really was up
+there, helpless in the sand. Yet every huge stride Slone took brought
+him closer to a fact he could not deny. In his eagerness he slipped,
+and fell, and crawled, and leaped, until he reached the slide which
+held Wildfire prisoner.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The stallion might have been fast in quicksand, up to his body, for all
+the movement he could make. He could move only his head. He held that
+up, his eyes wild, showing the whites, his foaming mouth wide open, his
+teeth gleaming. A sound like a scream rent the air. Terrible fear and
+hate were expressed in that piercing neigh. And shaggy, wet, dusty red,
+with all of brute savageness in the look and action of his head, he
+appeared hideous.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Slone leaped within roping distance the avalanche slipped a foot or
+two, halted, slipped once more, and slowly started again with that low
+roar. He did not care whether it slipped or stopped. Like a wolf he
+leaped closer, whirling his rope. The loop hissed round his head and
+whistled as he flung it. And when fiercely he jerked back on the rope,
+the noose closed tight round Wildfire's neck.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By G&mdash;d&mdash;I&mdash;got&mdash;a rope&mdash;on him!" cried Slone, in hoarse pants.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stared, unbelieving. It was unreal, that sight&mdash;unreal like the
+slow, grinding movement of the avalanche under him. Wildfire's head
+seemed a demon head of hate. It reached out, mouth agape, to bite, to
+rend. That horrible scream could not be the scream of a horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone was a wild-horse hunter, a rider, and when that second of
+incredulity flashed by, then came the moment of triumph. No moment
+could ever equal that one, when he realized he stood there with a rope
+around that grand stallion's neck. All the days and the miles and the
+toil and the endurance and the hopelessness and the hunger were paid
+for in that moment. His heart seemed too large for his breast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I tracked&mdash;you!" he cried, savagely. "I stayed&mdash;with you! ... An' I
+got a rope&mdash;on you! An'&mdash;I'll ride you&mdash;you red devil!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The passion of the man was intense. That endless, racking pursuit had
+brought out all the hardness the desert had engendered in him. Almost
+hate, instead of love, spoke in Slone's words. He hauled on the lasso,
+pulling the stallion's head down and down. The action was the lust of
+capture as well as the rider's instinctive motive to make the horse
+fear him. Life was unquenchably wild and strong in that stallion; it
+showed in the terror which made him hideous. And man and beast somehow
+resembled each other in that moment which was inimical to noble life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The avalanche slipped with little jerks, as if treacherously loosing
+its hold for a long plunge. The line of fire below ate at the bleached
+grass and the long column of smoke curled away on the wind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone held the taut lasso with his left hand, and with the right he
+swung the other rope, catching the noose round Wildfire's nose. Then
+letting go of the first rope he hauled on the other, pulling the head
+of the stallion far down. Hand over hand Slone closed in on the horse.
+He leaped on Wildfire's head, pressed it down, and, holding it down on
+the sand with his knees, with swift fingers he tied the noose in a
+hackamore&mdash;an improvised halter. Then, just as swiftly, he bound his
+scarf tight round Wildfire's head, blindfolding him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All so easy!" exclaimed Slone, under his breath. "Lord! who would
+believe it! ... Is it a dream?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rose and let the stallion have a free head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire, I got a rope on you&mdash;an' a hackamore&mdash;an' a blinder," said
+Slone. "An' if I had a bridle I'd put that on you.... Who'd ever
+believe you'd catch yourself, draggin' in the sand?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone, finding himself failing on the sand, grew alive to the augmented
+movement of the avalanche. It had begun to slide, to heave and bulge
+and crack. Dust rose in clouds from all around. The sand appeared to
+open and let him sink to his knees. The rattle of gravel was drowned in
+a soft roar. Then he shot down swiftly, holding the lassoes, keeping
+himself erect, and riding as if in a boat. He felt the successive steps
+of the slope, and then the long incline below, and then the checking
+and rising and spreading of the avalanche as it slowed down on the
+level. All movement then was checked violently. He appeared to be half
+buried in sand. While he struggled to extricate himself the thick dust
+blew away and settled so that he could see. Wildfire lay before him, at
+the edge of the slide, and now he was not so deeply embedded as he had
+been up on the slope. He was struggling and probably soon would have
+been able to get out. The line of fire was close now, but Slone did not
+fear that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At his shrill whistle Nagger bounded toward him, obedient, but
+snorting, with ears laid back. He halted. A second whistle started him
+again. Slone finally dug himself out of the sand, pulled the lassoes
+out, and ran the length of them toward Nagger. The black showed both
+fear and fight. His eyes roiled and he half shied away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come on!" called Slone, harshly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He got a hand on the horse, pulled him round, and, mounting in a flash,
+wound both lassoes round the pommel of the saddle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Haul him out, Nagger, old boy!" cried Slone, and he dug spurs into the
+black.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One plunge of Nagger's slid the stallion out of the sand. Snorting,
+wild, blinded, Wildfire got up, shaking in every limb. He could not see
+his enemies. The blowing smoke, right in his nose, made scent
+impossible. But in the taut lassoes he sensed the direction of his
+captors. He plunged, rearing at the end of the plunge, and struck out
+viciously with his hoofs. Slone, quick with spur and bridle, swerved
+Nagger aside and Wildfire, off his balance, went down with a crash.
+Slone dragged him, stretched him out, pulled him over twice before he
+got forefeet planted. Once up, he reared again, screeching his rage,
+striking wildly with his hoofs. Slone wheeled aside and toppled him
+over again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire, it's no fair fight," he called, grimly. "But you led me a
+chase.... An' you learn right now I'm boss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again he dragged the stallion. He was ruthless. He would have to be so,
+stopping just short of maiming or killing the horse, else he would
+never break him. But Wildfire was nimble. He got to his feet and this
+time he lunged out. Nagger, powerful as he was, could not sustain the
+tremendous shock, and went down. Slone saved himself with a rider's
+supple skill, falling clear of the horse, and he leaped again into the
+saddle as Nagger pounded up. Nagger braced his huge frame and held the
+plunging stallion. But the saddle slipped a little, the cinches
+cracked. Slone eased the strain by wheeling after Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The horses had worked away from the fire, and Wildfire, free of the
+stifling smoke, began to break and lunge and pitch, plunging round
+Nagger in a circle, running blindly, but with unerring scent. Slone, by
+masterly horsemanship, easily avoided the rushes, and made a pivot of
+Nagger, round which the wild horse dashed in his frenzy. It seemed that
+he no longer tried to free himself. He lunged to kill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Steady, Nagger, old boy!" Slone kept calling. "He'll never get at
+you.... If he slips that blinder I'll kill him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The stallion was a fiend in his fury, quicker than a panther, wonderful
+on his feet, and powerful as an ox. But he was at a disadvantage. He
+could not see. And Slone, in his spoken intention to kill Wildfire
+should the scarf slip, acknowledged that he never would have a chance
+to master the stallion. Wildfire was bigger, faster, stronger than
+Slone had believed, and as for spirit, that was a grand and fearful
+thing to see.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The soft sand in the pass was plowed deep before Wildfire paused in his
+mad plunges. He was wet and heaving. His red coat seemed to blaze. His
+mane stood up and his ears lay flat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone uncoiled the lassoes from the pommel and slacked them a little.
+Wildfire stood up, striking at the air, snorting fiercely. Slone tried
+to wheel Nagger in close behind the stallion. Both horse and man
+narrowly escaped the vicious hoofs. But Slone had closed in. He took a
+desperate chance and spurred Nagger in a single leap as Wildfire reared
+again. The horses collided. Slone hauled the lassoes tight. The impact
+threw Wildfire off his balance, just as Slone had calculated, and as
+the stallion plunged down on four feet Slone spurred Nagger close
+against him. Wildfire was a little in the lead. He could only half rear
+now, for the heaving, moving Nagger, always against him, jostled him
+down, and Slone's iron arm hauled on the short ropes. When Wildfire
+turned to bite, Slone knocked the vicious nose back with a long swing
+of his fist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Up the pass the horses plunged. With a rider's wild joy Slone saw the
+long green-and-gray valley, and the isolated monuments in the distance.
+There, on that wide stretch, he would break Wildfire. How marvelously
+luck had favored him at the last!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Run, you red devil!" Slone called. "Drag us around now till you're
+done!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They left the pass and swept out upon the waste of sage. Slone
+realized, from the stinging of the sweet wind in his face, that Nagger
+was being pulled along at a tremendous pace. The faithful black could
+never have made the wind cut so. Lower the wild stallion stretched and
+swifter he ran, till it seemed to Slone that death must end that
+thunderbolt race.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap08"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Lucy Bostil had called twice to her father and he had not answered. He
+was out at the hitching-rail, with Holley, the rider, and two other
+men. If he heard Lucy he gave no sign of it. She had on her chaps and
+did not care to go any farther than the door where she stood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Somers has gone to Durango an' Shugrue is out huntin' hosses," Lucy
+heard Bostil say, gruffly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal now, I reckon I could handle the boat an' fetch Creech's hosses
+over," said Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil raised an impatient hand, as if to wave aside Holley's
+assumption.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then one of the other two men spoke up. Lucy had seen him before, but
+did not know his name.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure there ain't any need to rustle the job. The river hain't showed
+any signs of risin' yet. But Creech is worryin'. He allus is worryin'
+over them hosses. No wonder! Thet Blue Roan is sure a hoss. Yesterday
+at two miles he showed Creech he was a sight faster than last year. The
+grass is gone over there. Creech is grainin' his stock these last few
+days. An' thet's expensive."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How about the flat up the canyon?" queried Bostil. "Ain't there any
+grass there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon not. It's the dryest spell Creech ever had," replied the other.
+"An' if there was grass it wouldn't do him no good. A landslide blocked
+the only trail up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, them hosses, the racers special, ought to be brought acrost
+the river," said Holley, earnestly. He loved horses and was thinking of
+them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The boat's got to be patched up," replied Bostil, shortly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It occurred to Lucy that her father was also thinking of Creech's
+thoroughbreds, but not like Holley. She grew grave and listened
+intently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was an awkward pause. Creech's rider, whoever he was, evidently
+tried to conceal his anxiety. He flicked his boots with a quirt. The
+boots were covered with wet mud. Probably he had crossed the river very
+recently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, when will you have the hosses fetched over?" he asked,
+deliberately. "Creech'll want to know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Just as soon as the boat's mended," replied Bostil. "I'll put Shugrue
+on the job to-morrow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thanks, Bostil. Sure, thet'll be all right. Creech'll be satisfied,"
+said the rider, as if relieved. Then he mounted, and with his companion
+trotted down the lane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The lean, gray Holley bent a keen gaze upon Bostil. But Bostil did not
+notice that; he appeared preoccupied in thought.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, the dry winter an' spring here ain't any guarantee thet there
+wasn't a lot of snow up in the mountains." Holley's remark startled
+Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No&mdash;it ain't&mdash;sure," he replied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' any mornin' along now we might wake up to hear the Colorado
+boomin'," went on Holley, significantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil did not reply to that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech hain't lived over there so many years. What's he know about the
+river? An' fer that matter, who knows anythin' sure about thet
+hell-bent river?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It ain't my business thet Creech lives over there riskin' his stock
+every spring," replied Bostil, darkly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley opened his lips to speak, hesitated, looked away from Bostil,
+and finally said, "No, it sure ain't." Then he turned and walked away,
+head bent in sober thought. Bostil came toward the open door where Lucy
+stood. He looked somber. At her greeting he seemed startled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?" he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I just said, 'Hello, Dad,'" she replied, demurely. Yet she
+thoughtfully studied her father's dark face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hello yourself.... Did you know Van got throwed an' hurt?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil swore under his breath. "There ain't any riders on the range
+thet can be trusted," he said, disgustedly. "They're all the same. They
+like to get in a bunch an' jeer each other an' bet. They want MEAN
+hosses. They make good hosses buck. They haven't any use for a hoss
+thet won't buck. They all want to give a hoss a rakin' over.... Think
+of thet fool Van gettin' throwed by a two-dollar Ute mustang. An' hurt
+so he can't ride for days! With them races comin' soon! It makes me
+sick."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, weren't you a rider once?" asked Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I never was thet kind."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Van will be all right in a few days."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No matter. It's bad business. If I had any other rider who could
+handle the King I'd let Van go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can get just as much out of the King as Van can," said Lucy,
+spiritedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You!" exclaimed Bostil. But there was pride in his glance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know I can."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You never had any use for Sage King," said Bostil, as if he had been
+wronged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I love the King a little, and hate him a lot," laughed Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I might let you ride at thet, if Van ain't in shape," rejoined
+her father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wouldn't ride him in the race. But I'll keep him in fine fettle."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bet you'd like to see Sarch beat him," said Bostil, jealously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure I would," replied Lucy, teasingly. "But, Dad, I'm afraid Sarch
+never will beat him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil grunted. "See here. I don't want any weight up on the King. You
+take him out for a few days. An' ride him! Savvy thet?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Dad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Give him miles an' miles&mdash;an' then comin' home, on good trails, ride
+him for all your worth.... Now, Lucy, keep your eye open. Don't let any
+one get near you on the sage."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I won't.... Dad, do you still worry about poor Joel Creech?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not Joel. But I'd rather lose all my stock then have Cordts or Dick
+Sears get within a mile of you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A mile!" exclaimed Lucy, lightly, though a fleeting shade crossed her
+face. "Why, I'd run away from him, if I was on the King, even if he got
+within ten yards of me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A mile is close enough, my daughter," replied Bostil. "Don't ever
+forget to keep your eye open. Cordts has sworn thet if he can't steal
+the King he'll get you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh! he prefers the horse to me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Lucy, I've a sneakin' idea thet Cordts will never leave the
+uplands unless he gets you an' the King both."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And, Dad&mdash;you consented to let that horse-thief come to our races?"
+exclaimed Lucy, with heat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why not? He can't do any harm. If he or his men get uppish, the worse
+for them. Cordts gave his word not to turn a trick till after the
+races."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you trust him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. But his men might break loose, away from his sight. Especially
+thet Dick Sears. He's a bad man. So be watchful whenever you ride out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Lucy went down toward the corrals she was thinking deeply. She could
+always tell, woman-like, when her father was excited or agitated. She
+remembered the conversation between him and Creech's rider. She
+remembered the keen glance old Holley had bent upon him. And mostly she
+remembered the somber look upon his face. She did not like that. Once,
+when a little girl, she had seen it and never forgotten it, nor the
+thing that it was associated with&mdash;something tragical which had
+happened in the big room. There had been loud, angry voices of men&mdash;and
+shots&mdash;and then the men carried out a long form covered with a blanket.
+She loved her father, but there was a side to him she feared. And
+somehow related to that side was his hardness toward Creech and his
+intolerance of any rider owning a fast horse and his obsession in
+regard to his own racers. Lucy had often tantalized her father with the
+joke that if it ever came to a choice between her and his favorites
+they would come first. But was it any longer a joke? Lucy felt that she
+had left childhood behind with its fun and fancies, and she had begun
+to look at life thoughtfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sight of the corrals, however, and of the King prancing around, drove
+serious thoughts away. There were riders there, among them Farlane, and
+they all had pleasant greetings for her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Farlane, Dad says I'm to take out Sage King," announced Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" ejaculated Farlane, as he pocketed his pipe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure. And I'm to RIDE him. You know how Dad means that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, now, I'm doggoned!" added Farlane, looking worried and pleased at
+once. "I reckon, Miss Lucy, you&mdash;you wouldn't fool me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, Farlane!" returned Lucy, reproachfully. "Did I ever do a single
+thing around horses that you didn't want me to?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Farlane rubbed his chin beard somewhat dubiously. "Wal, Miss Lucy, not
+exactly while you was around the hosses. But I reckon when you onct got
+up, you've sorta forgot a few times."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the riders laughed, and Lucy joined them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm safe when I'm up, you know that," she replied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They brought out the gray, and after the manner of riders who had the
+care of a great horse and loved him, they curried and combed and rubbed
+him before saddling him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon you'd better ride Van's saddle," suggested Farlane. "Them races
+is close now, an' a strange saddle&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course. Don't change anything he's used to, except the stirrups,"
+replied Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Despite her antipathy toward Sage King, Lucy could not gaze at him
+without all a rider's glory in a horse. He was sleek, so graceful, so
+racy, so near the soft gray of the sage, so beautiful in build and
+action. Then he was the kind of a horse that did not have to be
+eternally watched. He was spirited and full of life, eager to run, but
+when Farlane called for him to stand still he obeyed. He was the kind
+of a horse that a child could have played around in safety. He never
+kicked. He never bit. He never bolted. It was splendid to see him with
+Farlane or with Bostil. He did not like Lucy very well, a fact that
+perhaps accounted for Lucy's antipathy. For that matter, he did not
+like any woman. If he had a bad trait, it came out when Van rode him,
+but all the riders, and Bostil, too, claimed that Van was to blame for
+that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thar, I reckon them stirrups is right," declared Farlane. "Now, Miss
+Lucy, hold him tight till he wears off thet edge. He needs work."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sage King would not kneel for Lucy as Sarchedon did, and he was too
+high for her to mount from the ground, so she mounted from a rock. She
+took to the road, and then the first trail into the sage, intending to
+trot him ten or fifteen miles down into the valley, and give him some
+fast, warm work on the return.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The day was early in May and promised to grow hot. There was not a
+cloud in the blue sky. The wind, laden with the breath of sage, blew
+briskly from the west. All before Lucy lay the vast valley, gray and
+dusky gray, then blue, then purple where the monuments stood, and,
+farther still, dark ramparts of rock. Lucy had a habit of dreaming
+while on horseback, a habit all the riders had tried to break, but she
+did not give it rein while she rode Sarchedon, and assuredly now, up on
+the King, she never forgot him for an instant. He shied at mockingbirds
+and pack-rats and blowing blossoms and even at butterflies; and he did
+it, Lucy thought, just because he was full of mischief. Sage King had
+been known to go steady when there had been reason to shy. He did not
+like Lucy and he chose to torment her. Finally he earned a good dig
+from a spur, and then, with swift pounding of hoofs, he plunged and
+veered and danced in the sage. Lucy kept her temper, which was what
+most riders did not do, and by patience and firmness pulled Sage King
+out of his prancing back into the trail. He was not the least
+cross-grained, and, having had his little spurt, he settled down into
+easy going.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In an hour Lucy was ten miles or more from home, and farther down in
+the valley than she had ever been. In fact, she had never before been
+down the long slope to the valley floor. How changed the horizon
+became! The monuments loomed up now, dark, sentinel-like, and strange.
+The first one, a great red rock, seemed to her some five miles away. It
+was lofty, straight-sided, with a green slope at its base. And beyond
+that the other monuments stretched out down the valley. Lucy decided to
+ride as far as the first one before turning back. Always these
+monuments had fascinated her, and this was her opportunity to ride near
+one. How lofty they were, how wonderfully colored, and how comely!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently, over the left, where the monuments were thicker, and
+gradually merged their slopes and lines and bulk into the yellow walls,
+she saw low, drifting clouds of smoke.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, what's that, I wonder?" she mused. To see smoke on the horizon
+in that direction was unusual, though out toward Durango the grassy
+benches would often burn over. And these low clouds of smoke resembled
+those she had seen before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a long way off," she added.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So she kept on, now and then gazing at the smoke. As she grew nearer to
+the first monument she was surprised, then amazed, at its height and
+surpassing size. It was mountain-high&mdash;a grand tower&mdash;smooth, worn,
+glistening, yellow and red. The trail she had followed petered out in a
+deep wash, and beyond that she crossed no more trails. The sage had
+grown meager and the greasewoods stunted and dead; and cacti appeared
+on barren places. The grass had not failed, but it was not rich grass
+such as the horses and cattle grazed upon miles back on the slope. The
+air was hot down here. The breeze was heavy and smelled of fire, and
+the sand was blowing here and there. She had a sense of the bigness,
+the openness of this valley, and then she realized its wildness and
+strangeness. These lonely, isolated monuments made the place different
+from any she had visited. They did not seem mere standing rocks. They
+seemed to retreat all the time as she approached, and they watched her.
+They interested her, made her curious. What had formed all these
+strange monuments? Here the ground was level for miles and miles, to
+slope gently up to the bases of these huge rocks. In an old book she
+had seen pictures of the Egyptian pyramids, but these appeared vaster,
+higher, and stranger, and they were sheerly perpendicular.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly Sage King halted sharply, shot up his ears, and whistled. Lucy
+was startled. That from the King meant something. Hastily, with keen
+glance she swept the foreground. A mile on, near the monument, was a
+small black spot. It seemed motionless. But the King's whistle had
+proved it to be a horse. When Lucy had covered a quarter of the
+intervening distance she could distinguish the horse and that there
+appeared some thing strange about his position. Lucy urged Sage King
+into a lope and soon drew nearer. The black horse had his head down,
+yet he did not appear to be grazing. He was as still as a statue. He
+stood just outside a clump of greasewood and cactus.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly a sound pierced the stillness. The King jumped and snorted in
+fright. For an instant Lucy's blood ran cold, for it was a horrible
+cry. Then she recognized it as the neigh of a horse in agony. She had
+heard crippled and dying horses utter that long-drawn and
+blood-curdling neigh. The black horse had not moved, so the sound could
+not have come from him. Lucy thought Sage King acted more excited than
+the occasion called for. Then remembering her father's warning, she
+reined in on top of a little knoll, perhaps a hundred yards from where
+the black horse stood, and she bent her keen gaze forward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a huge, gaunt, shaggy black horse she saw, with the saddle
+farther up on his shoulders than it should have been. He stood
+motionless, as if utterly exhausted. His forelegs were braced, so that
+he leaned slightly back. Then Lucy saw a rope. It was fast to the
+saddle and stretched down into the cactus. There was no other horse in
+sight, nor any living thing. The immense monument dominated the scene.
+It seemed stupendous to Lucy, sublime, almost frightful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She hesitated. She knew there was another horse, very likely at the
+other end of that lasso. Probably a rider had been thrown, perhaps
+killed. Certainly a horse had been hurt. Then on the moment rang out
+the same neigh of agony, only weaker and shorter. Lucy no longer feared
+an ambush. That was a cry which could not be imitated by a man or
+forced from a horse. There was probably death, certainly suffering,
+near at hand. She spurred the King on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a little slope to descend, a wash to cross, a bench to
+climb&mdash;and then she rode up to the black horse. Sage King needed harder
+treatment than Lucy had ever given him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's wrong with you?" she demanded, pulling him down. Suddenly, as
+she felt him tremble, she realized that he was frightened. "That's
+funny!" Then when she got him quiet she looked around.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The black horse was indeed huge. His mane, his shaggy flanks, were
+lathered as if he had been smeared with heavy soap-suds. He raised his
+head to look at her. Lucy, accustomed to horses all her life, saw that
+this one welcomed her arrival. But he was almost ready to drop.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Two taut lassoes stretched from the pommel of his saddle down a little
+into a depression full of brush and cactus and rocks. Then Lucy saw a
+red horse. He was down in a bad position. She heard his low, choking
+heaves. Probably he had broken legs or back. She could not bear to see
+a horse in pain. She would do what was possible, even to the extent of
+putting him out of his misery, if nothing else could be done. Yet she
+scanned the surroundings closely, and peered into the bushes and behind
+the rocks before she tried to urge Sage King closer. He refused to go
+nearer, and Lucy dismounted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The red horse was partly hidden by overbending brush. He had plunged
+into a hole full of cactus. There was a hackamore round his nose and a
+tight noose round his neck. The one round his neck was also round his
+forelegs. And both lassoes were held taut by the black horse. A torn
+and soiled rider's scarf hung limp round the red horse's nose, kept
+from falling off by the hackamore.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A wild horse, a stallion, being broken!" exclaimed Lucy, instantly
+grasping the situation. "Oh! where's the rider?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She gazed around, ran to and fro, glanced down the little slope, and
+beyond, but she did not see anything resembling the form of a man. Then
+she ran back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy took another quick look at the red stallion. She did not believe
+either his legs or back were hurt. He was just played out and tangled
+and tied in the ropes, and could not get up. The shaggy black horse
+stood there braced and indomitable. But he, likewise, was almost ready
+to drop. Looking at the condition of both horses and the saddle and
+ropes, Lucy saw what a fight there had been, and a race! Where was the
+rider? Thrown, surely, and back on the trail, perhaps dead or maimed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy went closer to the stallion so that she could almost touch him. He
+saw her. He was nearly choked. Foam and blood wheezed out with his
+heaves. She must do something quickly. And in her haste she pricked her
+arms and shoulders on the cactus.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She led the black horse closer in, letting the ropes go, slack. The
+black seemed as glad of that release as she was. What a faithful brute
+he looked! Lucy liked his eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she edged down in among the cactus and brush. The red horse no
+longer lay in a strained position. He could lift his head. Lucy saw
+that the noose still held tight round his neck. Fearlessly she jerked
+it loose. Then she backed away, but not quite out of his reach. He
+coughed and breathed slowly, with great heaves. Then he snorted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're all right now," said Lucy, soothingly. Slowly she reached a
+hand toward his head. He drew it back as far as he could. She stepped
+around, closer, and more back of him, and put a hand on him, gently,
+for an instant. Then she slipped out of the brush and, untying one
+lasso from the pommel, she returned to the horse and pulled it from
+round his legs. He was free now, except the hackamore, and that rope
+was slack. Lucy stood near him, watching him, talking to him, waiting
+for him to get up. She could not be sure he was not badly hurt till he
+stood up. At first he made no efforts to rise. He watched Lucy, less
+fearfully, she imagined. And she never made a move. She wanted him to
+see, to understand that she had not hurt him and would not hurt him. It
+began to dawn upon her that he was magnificent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Finally, with a long, slow heave he got to his feet. Lucy led him out
+of the hole to open ground. She seemed somehow confident. There
+occurred to her only one way to act.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A little horse sense, as Dad would say," she soliloquized, and then,
+when she got him out of the brush, she stood thrilled and amazed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, what a wild, beautiful horse! What a giant! He's bigger than the
+King. Oh, if Dad could see him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The red stallion did not appear to be hurt. The twitching of his
+muscles must have been caused by the cactus spikes embedded in him.
+There were drops of blood all over one side. Lucy thought she dared to
+try to pull these thorns out. She had never in her life been afraid of
+any horse. Farlane, Holley, all the riders, and her father, too, had
+tried to make her realize the danger in a horse, sooner or later. But
+Lucy could not help it; she was not afraid; she believed that the
+meanest horse was actuated by natural fear of a man; she was not a man
+and she had never handled a horse like a man. This red stallion showed
+hate of the black horse and the rope that connected them; he showed
+some spirit at the repeated blasts of Sage King. But he showed less
+fear of her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He has been a proud, wild stallion," mused Lucy. "And he's now
+broken&mdash;terribly broken&mdash;all but ruined."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she walked up to him naturally and spoke softly, and reached a
+hand for his shoulder.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Whoa, Reddy. Whoa now.... There. That's a good fellow. Why, I wouldn't
+rope you or hit you. I'm only a girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drew up, made a single effort to jump, which she prevented, and then
+he stood quivering, eying her, while she talked soothingly, and patted
+him and looked at him in the way she had found infallible with most
+horses. Lucy believed horses were like people, or easier to get along
+with. Presently she gently pulled out one of the cactus spikes. The
+horse flinched, but he stood. Lucy was slow, careful, patient, and
+dexterous. The cactus needles were loose and easily removed or brushed
+off. At length she got him free of them, and was almost as proud as she
+was glad. The horse had gradually dropped his head; he was tired and
+his spirit was broken.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, what shall I do?" she queried. "I'll take the back trail of these
+horses. They certainly hadn't been here long before I saw them. And the
+rider may be close. If not I'll take the horses home."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She slipped the noose from the stallion's head, leaving the hackamore,
+and, coiling the loose lasso, she hung it over the pommel of the
+black's saddle. Then she took up his bridle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come on," she called.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The black followed her, and the stallion, still fast to him by the
+lasso Lucy had left tied, trooped behind with bowed head. Lucy was
+elated. But Sage King did not like the matter at all. Lucy had to drop
+the black's bridle and catch the King, and then ride back to lead the
+other again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A broad trail marked the way the two horses had come, and it led off to
+the left, toward where the monuments were thickest, and where the great
+sections of wall stood, broken and battlemented. Lucy was hard put to
+it to hold Sage King, but the horses behind plodded along. The black
+horse struck Lucy as being an ugly, but a faithful and wonderful
+animal. He understood everything. Presently she tied the bridle she was
+leading him by to the end of her own lasso, and thus let him drop back
+a few yards, which lessened the King's fretting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Intent on the trail, Lucy failed to note time or distance till the
+looming and frowning monuments stood aloft before her. What weird
+effect they had! Each might have been a colossal statue left there to
+mark the work of the ages. Lucy realized that the whole vast valley had
+once been solid rock, just like the monuments, and through the millions
+of years the softer parts had eroded and weathered and blown away&mdash;gone
+with the great sea that had once been there. But the beauty, the
+solemnity, the majesty of these monuments fascinated her most. She
+passed the first one, a huge square butte, and then the second, a
+ragged, thin, double shaft, and then went between two much alike,
+reaching skyward in the shape of monstrous mittens. She watched and
+watched them, sparing a moment now and then to attend to the trail. She
+noticed that she was coming into a region of grass, and faint signs of
+water in the draws. She was getting high again, not many miles now from
+the wall of rock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All at once Sage King shied, and Lucy looked down to see a man lying on
+the ground. He lay inert. But his eyes were open&mdash;dark, staring eyes.
+They moved. And he called. But Lucy could not understand him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a flash she leaped off the King. She ran to the prostrate
+man&mdash;dropped to her knees.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" she cried. His face was ghastly. "Oh! are you&mdash;you badly hurt?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lift me&mdash;my head," he said, faintly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She raised his head. What a strained, passionate, terrible gaze he bent
+upon the horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boy, they're mine&mdash;the black an' the red!" he cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They surely must be," replied Lucy. "Oh! tell me. Are you hurt?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boy! did you catch them&mdash;fetch them back&mdash;lookin' for me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I sure did."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You caught-that red devil&mdash;an' fetched him&mdash;back to me?" went on the
+wondering, faint voice. "Boy&mdash;oh&mdash;boy!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He lifted a long, ragged arm and pulled Lucy down. The action amazed
+her equally as his passion of gratitude. He might have been injured,
+but he had an arm of iron. Lucy was powerless. She felt her face
+against his&mdash;and her breast against his. The pounding of his heart was
+like blows. The first instant she wanted to laugh, despite her pity.
+Then the powerful arm&mdash;the contact affected her as nothing ever before.
+Suppose this crippled rider had taken her for a boy&mdash;She was not a boy!
+She could not help being herself. And no man had ever put a hand on
+her. Consciousness of this brought shame and anger. She struggled so
+violently that she freed herself. And he lay back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See here&mdash;that's no way to act&mdash;to hug&mdash;a person," she cried, with
+flaming cheeks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boy, I&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm NOT a boy. I'm a girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy tore off her sombrero, which had been pulled far forward, and this
+revealed her face fully, and her hair came tumbling down. The rider
+gazed, stupefied. Then a faint tinge of red colored his ghastly cheeks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A girl! ... Why&mdash;why 'scuse me, miss. I&mdash;I took you&mdash;for a boy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He seemed so astounded, he looked so ashamed, so scared, and withal, so
+haggard and weak, that Lucy immediately recovered her equanimity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure I'm a girl. But that's no matter.... You've been thrown. Are you
+hurt?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He smiled a weak assent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Badly?" she queried. She did not like the way he lay&mdash;so limp, so
+motionless.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid so. I can't move."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh! ... What shall I do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can you&mdash;get me water?" he whispered, with dry lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy flew to her horse to get the small canteen she always carried. But
+that had been left on her saddle, and she had ridden Van's. Then she
+gazed around. The wash she had crossed several times ran near where the
+rider lay. Green grass and willows bordered it. She ran down and,
+hurrying along, searched for water. There was water in places, yet she
+had to go a long way before she found water that was drinkable. Filling
+her sombrero, she hurried back to the side of the rider. It was
+difficult to give him a drink.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thanks, miss," he said, gratefully. His voice was stronger and less
+hoarse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you any broken bones?" asked Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know. I can't feel much."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you in pain?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hardly. I feel sort of thick."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy, being an intelligent girl, born in the desert and used to its
+needs, had not often encountered a situation with which she was unable
+to cope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let me feel if you have any broken bones.... THAT arm isn't broken,
+I'm positive."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider smiled faintly again. How he stared with his strained, dark
+eyes! His face showed ghastly through the thin, soft beard and the tan.
+Lucy found his right arm badly bruised, but not broken. She made sure
+his collar-bones and shoulder-blades were intact. Broken ribs were
+harder to locate; still, as he did not feel pain from pressure, she
+concluded there were no fractures there. With her assistance he moved
+his legs, proving no broken bones there.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid it's my&mdash;spine," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you raised your head once," she replied. "If your back was&mdash;was
+broken or injured you couldn't raise your head."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So I couldn't. I guess I'm just knocked out. I was&mdash;pretty weak before
+Wildfire knocked me&mdash;off Nagger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's the red stallion's name."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, he's named already?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I named him&mdash;long ago. He's known on many a range."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think far north of here. I&mdash;trailed him&mdash;days&mdash;weeks&mdash;months. We
+crossed the great canyon&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Grand Canyon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It must be that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Grand Canyon is down there," said Lucy, pointing. "I live on
+it.... You've come a long way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hundreds of miles! ... Oh, the ground I covered that awful canyon
+country! ... But I stayed with Wildfire. An' I put a rope on him. An'
+he got away.... An' it was a boy&mdash;no&mdash;a GIRL who&mdash;saved him for me&mdash;an'
+maybe saved my life, too!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy looked away from the dark, staring eyes. A light in them confused
+her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never mind me. You say you were weak? Have you been ill?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, miss, just starved.... I starved on Wildfire's trail."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy ran to her saddle and got the biscuits out of the pockets of her
+coat, and she ran back to the rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Here. I never thought. Oh, you've had a hard time of it! I understand.
+That wonderful flame of a horse! I'd have stayed, too. My father was a
+rider once. Bostil. Did you ever hear of him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil. The name&mdash;I've heard." Then the rider lay thinking, as he
+munched a biscuit. "Yes, I remember, but it was long ago. I spent a
+night with a wagon-train, a camp of many men and women, religious
+people, working into Utah. Bostil had a boat at the crossing of the
+Fathers."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, they called the Ferry that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I remember well now. They said Bostil couldn't count his horses&mdash;that
+he was a rich man, hard on riders&mdash;an' he'd used a gun more than once."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy bowed her head. "Yes, that's my dad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider did not seem to see how he had hurt her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Here we are talking&mdash;wasting time," she said. "I must start home. You
+can't be moved. What shall I do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's for you to say, Bostil's daughter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My name's Lucy," replied the girl, blushing painfully, "I mean I'll be
+glad to do anything you think best."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're very good."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he turned his face away. Lucy looked closely at him. He was indeed
+a beggared rider. His clothes and his boots hung in tatters. He had no
+hat, no coat, no vest. His gaunt face bore traces of what might have
+been a fine, strong comeliness, but now it was only thin, worn, wan,
+pitiful, with that look which always went to a woman's heart. He had
+the look of a homeless rider. Lucy had seen a few of his wandering
+type, and his story was so plain. But he seemed to have a touch of
+pride, and this quickened her interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then I'll do what I think best for you," said Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+First she unsaddled the black Nagger. With the saddle she made a pillow
+for the rider's head, and she covered him with the saddle blanket.
+Before she had finished this task he turned his eyes upon her. And Lucy
+felt she would be haunted. Was he badly hurt, after all? It seemed
+probable. How strange he was!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll water the horses&mdash;then tie Wildfire here on a double rope.
+There's grass."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you can't lead him," replied the rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He'll follow me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That red devil!" The rider shuddered as he spoke.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy had some faint inkling of what a terrible fight that had been
+between man and horse. "Yes; when I found him he was broken. Look at
+him now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the rider did not appear to want to see the stallion. He gazed up
+at Lucy, and she saw something in his eyes that made her think of a
+child. She left him, had no trouble in watering the horses, and
+haltered Wildfire among the willows on a patch of grass. Then she
+returned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll go now," she said to the rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Home. I'll come back to-morrow, early, and bring some one to help
+you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Girl, if YOU want to help me more&mdash;bring me some bread an' meat. Don't
+tell any one. Look what a ragamuffin I am.... An' there's Wildfire. I
+don't want him seen till I'm&mdash;on my feet again. I know riders....
+That's all. If you want to be so good&mdash;come."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll come," replied Lucy, simply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank you. I owe you&mdash;a lot.... What did you say your name was?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy&mdash;Lucy Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I forgot.... Are you sure you tied Wildfire good an' tight?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I'm sure. I'll go now. I hope you'll be better to-morrow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy hesitated, with her hand on the King's bridle. She did not like to
+leave this young man lying there helpless on the desert. But what else
+could she do? What a strange adventure had befallen her! At the
+following thought that it was not yet concluded she felt a little stir
+of excitement at her pulses. She was so strangely preoccupied that she
+forgot it was necessary for her to have a step to mount Sage King. She
+realized it quickly enough when she attempted it. Then she led him off
+in the sage till she found a rock. Mounting, she turned him straight
+across country, meaning to cut out miles of travel that would have been
+necessary along her back-trail. Once she looked back. The rider was not
+visible; the black horse, Nagger, was out of sight, but Wildfire,
+blazing in the sun, watched her depart.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap09"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Lucy Bostil could not control the glow of strange excitement under
+which she labored, but she could put her mind on the riding of Sage
+King. She did not realize, however, that she was riding him under the
+stress and spell of that excitement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had headed out to make a short cut, fairly sure of her direction,
+yet she was not unaware of the fact that she would be lost till she ran
+across her trail. That might be easy to miss and time was flying. She
+put the King to a brisk trot, winding through the aisles of the sage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Soon she had left the monument region and was down on the valley floor
+again. From time to time she conquered a desire to look back. Presently
+she was surprised and very glad to ride into a trail where she saw the
+tracks she had made coming out. With much relief she turned Sage King
+into this trail, and then any anxiety she had felt left her entirely.
+But that did not mitigate her excitement. She eased the King into a
+long, swinging lope. And as he warmed to the work she was aroused also.
+It was hard to hold him in, once he got out of a trot, and after miles
+and miles of this, when she thought best to slow down he nearly pulled
+her arms off. Still she finally got him in hand. Then followed miles of
+soft and rough going, which seemed long and tedious. Beyond that was
+the home stretch up the valley, whose gradual slope could be seen only
+at a distance. Here was a straight, broad trail, not too soft nor too
+hard, and for all the years she could remember riders had tried out and
+trained their favorites on that course.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy reached down to assure herself that the cinch was tight, then she
+pulled her sombrero down hard, slackened the bridle, and let the King
+go. He simply broke his gait, he was so surprised. Lucy saw him trying
+to look back at her, as if he could not realize that this young woman
+rider had given him a free rein. Perhaps one reason he disliked her had
+been always and everlastingly that tight rein. Like the wary horse he
+was he took to a canter, to try out what his new freedom meant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Say, what's the matter with you?" called Lucy, disdainfully. "Are you
+lazy? Or don't you believe I can ride you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whereupon she dug him with her spurs. Sage King snorted. His action
+shifted marvelously. Thunder rolled from under his hoofs. And he broke
+out of that clattering roar into his fleet stride, where his hoof-beats
+were swift, regular, rhythmic.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy rode him with teeth and fists clenched, bending low. After all,
+she thought, it was no trick to ride him. In that gait he was
+dangerous, for a fall meant death; but he ran so smoothly that riding
+him was easy and certainly glorious. He went so fast that the wind
+blinded her. The trail was only a white streak in blurred gray. She
+could not get her breath; the wind seemed to whip the air away from
+her. And then she felt the lessening of the tremendous pace. Sage King
+had run himself out and the miles were behind her. Gradually her sight
+became clear, and as the hot and wet horse slowed down, satisfied with
+his wild run, Lucy realized that she was up on the slope only a few
+miles from home. Suddenly she thought she saw something dark stir
+behind a sage-bush just ahead. Before she could move a hand at the
+bridle Sage King leaped with a frantic snort. It was a swerving,
+nimble, tremendous bound. He went high. Lucy was unseated, but somehow
+clung on, and came down with him, finding the saddle. And it seemed,
+while in the air, she saw a long, snaky, whipping loop of rope shoot
+out and close just where Sage King's legs had been.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She screamed. The horse broke and ran. Lucy, righting herself, looked
+back to see Joel Creech holding a limp lasso. He had tried to rope the
+King.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The blood of her father was aroused in Lucy. She thought of the
+horse&mdash;not herself. If the King had not been so keen-sighted, so swift,
+he would have gone down with a broken leg. Lucy never in her life had
+been so furious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel shook his fist at her and yelled, "I'd 'a' got you&mdash;on any other
+hoss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not reply, though she had to fight herself to keep from pulling
+her gun and shooting at him. She guided the running horse back into the
+trail, rapidly leaving Creech out of sight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's gone crazy, that's sure," said Lucy. "And he means me harm!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She ran the King clear up to the corrals, and he was still going hard
+when she turned down the lane to the barns. Then she pulled him in.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Farlane was there to meet her. She saw no other riders and was glad.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Miss Lucy, the King sure looks good," said Farlane, as she jumped
+off and flung him the bridle. "He's just had about right, judgin'....
+Say, girl, you're all pale! Oh, say, you wasn't scared of the King,
+now?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," replied Lucy, panting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, what's up, then?" The rider spoke in an entirely different voice,
+and into his clear, hazel eyes a little dark gleam shot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Joel Creech waylaid me out in the sage&mdash;and&mdash;and tried to catch me."
+Lucy checked herself. It might not do to tell how Joel had tried to
+catch her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He did? An' you on the King!" Farlane laughed, as if relieved. "Wal,
+he's tried thet before. Miss Lucy. But when you was up on the
+gray&mdash;thet shows Joel's crazy, sure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He sure is. Farlane, I&mdash;I am mad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, cool off, Miss Lucy. It ain't nothin' to git set up about. An'
+don't tell the old man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why not?" demanded Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, because he's in a queer sort of bad mood lately. It wouldn't be
+safe. He hates them Creeches. So don't tell him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right, Farlane, I won't. Don't you tell, either," replied Lucy,
+soberly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure I'll keep mum. But if Joel doesn't watch out I'll put a crimp in
+him myself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy hurried away down the lane and entered the house without meeting
+any one. In her room she changed her clothes and lay down to rest and
+think.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Strangely enough, Lucy might never have encountered Joel Creech out in
+the sage, for all the thought she gave him. Her mind was busy with the
+crippled rider. Who was he? Where was he from? What strange passion he
+had shown over the recovery of that wonderful red horse! Lucy could not
+forget the feeling of his iron arm when he held her in a kind of
+frenzied gratitude. A wild upland rider, living only for a wild horse!
+How like Indians some of these riders! Yet this fellow had seemed
+different from most of the uncouth riders she had known. He spoke
+better. He appeared to have had some little schooling. Lucy did not
+realize that she was interested in him. She thought she was sorry for
+him and interested in the stallion. She began to compare Wildfire with
+Sage King, and if she remembered rightly Wildfire, even in his
+disheveled state, had appeared a worthy rival of the King. What would
+Bostil say at sight of that flame-colored stallion? Lucy thrilled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Later she left her room to see if the hour was opportune for her plan
+to make up a pack of supplies for the rider. Her aunt was busy in the
+kitchen, and Bostil had not come in. Lucy took advantage of the moment
+to tie up a pack and carry it to her room. Somehow the task pleased
+her. She recalled the lean face of the rider. And that recalled his
+ragged appearance. Why not pack up an outfit of clothes? Bostil had a
+stock-room full of such accessories for his men. Then Lucy, glowing
+with the thought, hurried to Bostil's stock-room, and with deft hands
+and swift judgment selected an outfit for the rider, even down to a
+comb and razor. All this she carried quickly to her room, where in her
+thoughtfulness she added a bit of glass from a broken mirror, and soap
+and a towel. Then she tied up a second pack.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil did not come home to supper, a circumstance that made Lucy's
+aunt cross. They ate alone, and, waiting awhile, were rather late in
+clearing away the table. After this Lucy had her chance in the dusk of
+early evening, and she carried both packs way out into the sage and
+left them near the trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hope a coyote doesn't come along," she said. That possibility,
+however, did not worry her as much as getting those packs up on the
+King. How in the world would she ever do it?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She hurried back to the house, stealthily keeping to the shadow of the
+cottonwoods, for she would have faced an embarrassing situation if she
+had met her father, even had he been in a good humor. And she reached
+the sitting-room unobserved. The lamps had been lighted and a log
+blazed on the hearth. She was reading when Bostil entered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hello, Lucy!" he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked tired, and Lucy knew he had been drinking, because when he
+had been he never offered to kiss her. The strange, somber shade was
+still on his face, but it brightened somewhat at sight of her. Lucy
+greeted him as always.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Farlane tells me you handled the King great&mdash;better 'n Van has worked
+him lately," said Bostil. "But don't tell him I told you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That was sweet praise from Farlane. "Oh, Dad, it could hardly be true,"
+expostulated Lucy. "Both you and Farlane are a little sore at Van now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm a lot sore," replied Bostil, gruffly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anyway, how did Farlane know how I handled Sage King?" queried Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, every hair on a hoss talks to Farlane, so Holley says.... Lucy,
+you take the King out every day for a while. Ride him now an' watch
+out! Joel Creech was in the village to-day. He sure sneaked when he
+seen me. He's up to some mischief."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy did not want to lie and she did not know what to say. Presently
+Bostil bade her good night. Lucy endeavored to read, but her mind
+continually wandered back to the adventure of the day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next morning she had difficulty in concealing her impatience, but luck
+favored her. Bostil was not in evidence, and Farlane, for once, could
+spare no more time than it took to saddle Sage King. Lucy rode out into
+the sage, pretty sure that no one watched her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had hidden the packs near the tallest bunch of greasewood along the
+trail; and when she halted behind it she had no fear of being seen from
+the corrals. She got the packs. The light one was not hard to tie back
+of the saddle, but the large one was a very different matter. She
+decided to carry it in front. There was a good-sized rock near, upon
+which she stepped, leading Sage King alongside; and after an
+exceedingly trying moment she got up, holding the pack. For a wonder
+Sage King behaved well.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she started off, holding the pack across her lap, and she tried
+the King's several gaits to see which one would lend itself more
+comfortably to the task before her. The trouble was that Sage King had
+no slow gait, even his walk was fast. And Lucy was compelled to hold
+him into that. She wanted to hurry, but that seemed out of the
+question. She tried to keep from gazing out toward the monuments,
+because they were so far away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How would she find the crippled rider? It flashed into her mind that
+she might find him dead, and this seemed horrible. But her common sense
+persuaded her that she would find him alive and better. The pack was
+hard to hold, and Sage King fretted at the monotonous walk. The hours
+dragged. The sun grew hot. And it was noon, almost, when she reached
+the point where she cut off the trail to the left. Thereafter, with the
+monuments standing ever higher, and the distance perceptibly lessening,
+the minutes passed less tediously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At length she reached the zone of lofty rocks, and found them
+different, how, she could not tell. She rode down among them, and was
+glad when she saw the huge mittens&mdash;her landmarks. At last she espied
+the green-bordered wash and the few cedar-trees. Then a horse blazed
+red against the sage and another shone black. That sight made Lucy
+thrill. She rode on, eager now, but moved by the strangeness of the
+experience.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before she got quite close to the cedars she saw a man. He took a few
+slow steps out of the shade. His back was bent. Lucy recognized the
+rider, and in her gladness to see him on his feet she cried out. Then,
+when Sage King reached the spot, Lucy rolled the pack off to the ground.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, that was a job!" she cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider looked up with eyes that seemed keener, less staring than she
+remembered. "You came? ... I was afraid you wouldn't," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure I came.... You're better&mdash;not badly hurt?" she said, gravely,
+"I&mdash;I'm so glad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've got a crimp in my back, that's all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was quick to see that after the first glance at her he was all
+eyes for Sage King. She laughed. How like a rider! She watched him,
+knowing that presently he would realize what a horse she was riding.
+She slipped off and threw the bridle, and then, swiftly untying the
+second pack, she laid it down.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider, with slow, painful steps and bent back, approached Sage King
+and put a lean, strong, brown hand on him, and touched him as if he
+wished to feel if he were real. Then he whistled softly. When he turned
+to Lucy his eyes shone with a beautiful light.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's Sage King, Bostil's favorite," said Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sage King! ... He looks it.... But never a wild horse?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A fine horse," replied the rider. "Of course he can run?" This last
+held a note of a rider's jealousy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy laughed. "Run! ... The King is Bostil's favorite. He can run away
+from any horse in the uplands."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bet you Wildfire can beat him," replied the rider, with a dark
+glance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come on!" cried Lucy, daringly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then the rider and girl looked more earnestly at each other. He smiled
+in a way that changed his face&mdash;brightened out the set hardness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon I'll have to crawl," he said, ruefully. "But maybe I can ride
+in a few days&mdash;if you'll come back again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His remark brought to Lucy the idea that of course she would hardly see
+this rider again after to-day. Even if he went to the Ford, which event
+was unlikely, he would not remain there long. The sensation of
+blankness puzzled her, and she felt an unfamiliar confusion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I&mdash;I've brought you&mdash;some things," she said, pointing to the larger
+pack.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Grub, you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was all I asked you for, miss," he said, somewhat stiffly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, but&mdash;I&mdash;I thought&mdash;" Lucy became unaccountably embarrassed.
+Suppose this strange rider would be offended. "Your clothes were&mdash;so
+torn.... And no wonder you were thrown&mdash;in those boots! ... So I
+thought I'd&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You thought I needed clothes as bad as grub," he said, bitterly. "I
+reckon that's so."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His look, more than his tone, cut Lucy; and involuntarily she touched
+his arm. "Oh, you won't refuse to take them! Please don't!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At her touch a warmth came into his face. "Take them? I should smile I
+will."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He tried to reach down to lift the pack, but as it was obviously
+painful for him to bend, Lucy intercepted him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you've had no breakfast," she protested. "Why not eat before you
+open that pack?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nope. I'm not hungry.... Maybe I'll eat a little, after I dress up."
+He started to walk away, then turned. "Miss Bostil, have you been so
+good to every wanderin' rider you happened to run across?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good!" she exclaimed, flushing. She dropped her eyes before his.
+"Nonsense. ... Anyway, you're the first wandering rider I ever
+met&mdash;like this."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, you're good," he replied, with emotion. Then he walked away with
+slow, stiff steps and disappeared behind the willows in the little
+hollow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy uncoiled the rope on her saddle and haltered Sage King on the best
+grass near at hand. Then she opened the pack of supplies, thinking the
+while that she must not tarry here long.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But on the King I can run back like the wind," she mused.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The pack contained dried fruits and meat and staples, also an
+assortment of good things to eat that were of a perishable nature,
+already much the worse for the long ride. She spread all this out in
+the shade of a cedar. The utensils were few&mdash;two cups, two pans, and a
+tiny pot. She gathered wood, and arranged it for a fire, so that the
+rider could start as soon as he came back. He seemed long in coming.
+Lucy waited, yet still he did not return. Finally she thought of the
+red stallion, and started off down the wash to take a look at him. He
+was grazing. He had lost some of the dirt and dust and the bedraggled
+appearance. When he caught sight of her he lifted his head high and
+whistled. How wild he looked! And his whistle was shrill, clear,
+strong. Both the other horses answered it. Lucy went on closer to
+Wildfire. She was fascinated now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If he doesn't know me!" she cried. Never had she been so pleased. She
+had expected every sign of savageness on his part, and certainly had
+not intended to go near him. But Wildfire did not show fear or hate in
+his recognition. Lucy went directly to him and got a hand on him.
+Wildfire reared a little and shook a little, but this disappeared
+presently under her touch. He held his head very high and watched her
+with wonderful eyes. Gradually she drew his head down. Standing before
+him, she carefully and slowly changed the set of the hackamore, which
+had made a welt on his nose. It seemed to have been her good fortune
+that every significant move she had made around this stallion had been
+to mitigate his pain. Lucy believed he knew this as well as she knew
+it. Her theory, an often disputed one, was that horses were as
+intelligent as human beings and had just the same fears, likes, and
+dislikes. Lucy knew she was safe when she untied the lasso from the
+strong root where she had fastened it, and led the stallion down the
+wash to a pool of water. And she stood beside him with a hand on his
+shoulder while he bent his head to sniff at the water. He tasted it,
+plainly with disgust. It was stagnant water, full of vermin. But
+finally he drank. Lucy led him up the wash to another likely place, and
+tied him securely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When she got back to the camp in the cedars the rider was there, on his
+knees, kindling the fire. His clean-shaved face and new apparel made
+him vastly different. He was young, and, had he not been so gaunt, he
+would have been fine-looking, Lucy thought.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire remembered me," Lucy burst out. "He wasn't a bit scary. Let
+me handle him. Followed me to water."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's taken to you," replied the rider, seriously. "I've heard of the
+like, but not so quick. Was he in a bad fix when you got to him
+yesterday?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy explained briefly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aha! ... If that red devil has any love in him I'll never get it. I
+wish I could have done so much for him. But always when he sees me
+he'll remember."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy saw that the rider was in difficulties. He could not bend his
+back, and evidently it pained him to try. His brow was moist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let me do that," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thanks. It took about all my strength to get into this new outfit," he
+said, relinquishing, his place to Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When she looked up from her task, presently, he was sitting in the
+shade of the cedar, watching her. He had the expression of a man who
+hardly believed what he saw.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did you have any trouble gettin' away, without tellin'&mdash;about me?" he
+asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. But I sure had a job with those packs," she replied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must be a wonder with a horse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As far as vanity was concerned Lucy had only one weakness&mdash;and he had
+touched upon it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, Dad and Holley and Farlane argue much about me. Still, I guess
+they all agree I can ride."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley an' Farlane are riders?" he questioned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Dad's right-hand men."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your dad hires many riders, I supposed?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure I never heard of him turning any rider down, at least not without
+a try."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wonder if he would give me a job?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy glanced up quickly. The idea surprised her&mdash;pleased her. "In a
+minute," she replied. "And he'd be grand to you. You see, he'd have an
+eye for Wildfire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider nodded his head as if he understood how that would be.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And of course you'd never sell nor trade Wildfire?" went on Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider's smile was sad, but it was conclusive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then you'd better stay away from Bostil," returned Lucy, shortly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He remained silent, and Lucy, busy about the campfire, did not speak
+again till the simple fare was ready. Then she spread a tarpaulin in
+the shade.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm pretty hungry myself," she said. "But I don't suppose I know what
+hunger is."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"After a while a fellow loses the feelin' of hunger," he replied. "I
+reckon it'll come back quick.... This all looks good."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So they began to eat. Lucy's excitement, her sense of the unreality of
+this adventure, in no wise impaired her appetite. She seemed acutely
+sensitive to the perceptions of the moment. The shade of the cedars was
+cool. And out on the desert she could see the dark smoky veils of heat
+lifting. The breeze carried a dry odor of sand and grass. She heard
+bees humming by. And all around the great isolated monuments stood up,
+red tops against the blue sky. It was a silent, dreaming, impressive
+place, where she felt unlike herself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I mustn't stay long," she said, suddenly remembering.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will you come back&mdash;again?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The question startled Lucy. "Why&mdash;I&mdash;I don't know.... Won't you ride in
+to the Ford just as soon as you're able?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon not."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it's the only place where there's people in hundreds of miles.
+Surely you won't try to go back the way you came?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When Wildfire left that country I left it. We can't back."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then you've no people&mdash;no one you care for?" she asked, in sweet
+seriousness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's no one. I'm an orphan. My people were lost in an Indian
+massacre&mdash;with a wagon-train crossin' Wyomin'. A few escaped, an' I was
+one of the youngsters. I had a tough time, like a stray dog, till I
+grew up. An' then I took to the desert."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I see. I&mdash;I'm sorry," replied Lucy. "But that's not very different
+from my dad's story, of his early years.... What will you do now?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll stay here till my back straightens out.... Will you ride out
+again?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," replied Lucy, without looking at him; and she wondered if it
+were really she who was speaking.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he asked her about the Ford, and Bostil, and the ranches and
+villages north, and the riders and horses. Lucy told him everything she
+knew and could think of, and, lastly, after waxing eloquent on the
+horses of the uplands, particularly Bostil's, she gave him a graphic
+account of Cordts and Dick Sears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Horse-thieves!" exclaimed the rider, darkly. There was a grimness as
+well as fear in his tone. "I've heard of Sears, but not Cordts. Where
+does this band hang out?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No one knows. Holley says they hide up in the canyon country. None of
+the riders have ever tried to track them far. It would be useless.
+Holley says there are plateaus of rich grass and great forests. The Ute
+Indians say that much, too. But we know little about the wild country."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aren't there any hunters at Bostil's Ford?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wild-horse hunters, you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. Bear an' deer hunters."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's none. And I suppose that's why we're not familiar with the
+wild canyon country. I'd like to ride in there sometime and camp. But
+our people don't go in for that. They love the open ranges. No one I
+know, except a half-witted boy, ever rode down among these monuments.
+And how wonderful a place! It can't be more than twenty miles from
+home.... I must be going soon. I'm forgetting Sage King. Did I tell you
+I was training him for the races?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, you didn't. What races? Tell me," he replied, with keen interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Lucy told him about the great passion of her father&mdash;about the
+long, time-honored custom of free-for-all races, and the great races
+that had been run in the past; about the Creeches and their swift
+horses; about the rivalry and speculation and betting; and lastly about
+the races to be run in a few weeks&mdash;races so wonderful in prospect that
+even the horse-thief, Cordts, had begged to be allowed to attend.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going to see the King beat Creech's roan," shouted the rider, with
+red in his cheeks and a flash in his eye.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His enthusiasm warmed Lucy's interest, yet it made her thoughtful.
+Ideas flashed into her mind. If the rider attended the races he would
+have that fleet stallion with him. He could not be separated from the
+horse that had cost him so dearly. What would Bostil and Holley and
+Farlane say at sight of Wildfire? Suppose Wildfire was to enter the
+races! It was probable that he could run away from the whole
+field&mdash;even beat the King. Lucy thrilled and thrilled. What a surprise
+it would be! She had the rider's true love of seeing the unheralded
+horse win over the favorite. She had for years wanted to see a
+horse&mdash;and ride a horse&mdash;out in front of Sage King. Then suddenly all
+these flashing ideas coruscated seemingly into a gleam&mdash;a leaping,
+radiant, wonderful thought. Irresistibly it burst from her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let ME ride your Wildfire in the great race?" she cried, breathlessly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His response was instantaneous&mdash;a smile that was keen and sweet and
+strong, and a proffered hand. Impulsively Lucy clasped that hand with
+both hers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't mean it," she said. "Oh, it's what Auntie would call one of
+my wild dreams! ... And I'm growing up&mdash;they say.... But&mdash; Oh, if I
+could ride Wildfire against the field in that race.... If I ONLY COULD!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was on fire with the hope, flushing, tingling. She was unconscious
+of her effect upon the rider, who gazed at her with a new-born light in
+his eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can ride him. I reckon I'd like to see that race just as much as
+Bostil or Cordts or any man.... An' see here, girl, Wildfire can beat
+this gray racer of your father's."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" cried Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire can beat the King," repeated the rider, intensely. "The tame
+horse doesn't step on this earth that can run with Wildfire. He's a
+stallion. He has been a killer of horses. It's in him to KILL. If he
+ran a race it would be that instinct in him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How can we plan it?" went on Lucy, impulsively. She had forgotten to
+withdraw her hands from his. "It must be a surprise&mdash;a complete
+surprise. If you came to the Ford we couldn't keep it secret. And Dad
+or Farlane would prevent me, somehow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's easy. Ride out here as often as you can. Bring a light saddle an'
+let me put you up on Wildfire. You'll run him, train him, get him in
+shape. Then the day of the races or the night before I'll go in an'
+hide out in the sage till you come or send for Wildfire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, it'll be glorious," she cried, with eyes like stars. "I know just
+where to have you hide. A pile of rocks near the racecourse. There's a
+spring and good grass. I could ride out to you just before the big
+race, and we'd come back, with me on Wildfire. The crowd always stays
+down at the end of the racecourse. Only the starters stay out there....
+Oh, I can see Bostil when that red stallion runs into sight!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, is it settled?" queried the rider, strangely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was startled into self-consciousness by his tone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How strangely he must have felt. And his eyes were piercing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean&mdash;that I ride Wildfire?" she replied, shyly. "Yes, if you'll
+let me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll be proud."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're very good.... And do you think Wildfire can beat the King?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How do you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've seen both horses."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it will be a grand race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon so. It's likely to be the grandest ever seen. But Wildfire
+will win because he's run wild all his life&mdash;an' run to kill other
+horses.... The only question is&mdash;CAN you ride him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. I never saw the horse I couldn't ride. Bostil says there are some
+I can't ride. Farlane says not. Only two horses have thrown me, the
+King and Sarchedon. But that was before they knew me. And I was sort of
+wild. I can make your Wildfire love me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"THAT'S the last part of it I'd ever doubt," replied the rider. "It's
+settled, then. I'll camp here. I'll be well in a few days. Then I'll
+take Wildfire in hand. You will ride out whenever you have a chance,
+without bein' seen. An' the two of us will train the stallion to upset
+that race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes&mdash;then&mdash;it's settled."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy's gaze was impelled and held by the rider's. Why was he so pale?
+But then he had been injured&mdash;weakened. This compact between them had
+somehow changed their relation. She seemed to have known him long.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's your name?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin Slone," replied the rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she released her hands. "I must ride in now. If this isn't a dream
+I'll come back soon." She led Sage King to a rock and mounted him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's good to see you up there," said Slone. "An' that splendid horse!
+... He knows what he is. It'll break Bostil's heart to see that horse
+beat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad'll feel bad, but it'll do him good," replied Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That was the old rider's ruthless spirit speaking out of his daughter's
+lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone went close to the King and, putting a hand on the pommel, he
+looked up at Lucy. "Maybe&mdash;it is&mdash;a dream&mdash;an' you won't come back," he
+said, with unsteady voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then I'll come in dreams," she flashed. "Be careful of yourself....
+Good-by."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And at a touch the impatient King was off. From far up the slope near a
+monument Lucy looked back. Slone was watching her. She waved a
+gauntleted hand&mdash;and then looked back no more.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap10"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER X
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Two weeks slipped by on the wings of time and opportunity and
+achievement, all colored so wonderfully for Lucy, all spelling that
+adventure for which she had yearned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was riding down into the sage toward the monuments with a whole
+day before her. Bostil kept more and more to himself, a circumstance
+that worried her, though she thought little about it. Van had taken up
+the training of the King; and Lucy had deliberately quarreled with him
+so that she would be free to ride where she listed. Farlane nagged her
+occasionally about her rides into the sage, insisting that she must not
+go so far and stay so long. And after Van's return to work he made her
+ride Sarchedon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Things had happened at the Ford which would have concerned Lucy greatly
+had she not been over-excited about her own affairs. Some one had
+ambushed Bostil in the cottonwoods near his house and had shot at him,
+narrowly missing him. Bostil had sworn he recognized the shot as having
+come from a rifle, and that he knew to whom it belonged. The riders did
+not believe this, and said some boy, shooting at a rabbit or coyote,
+had been afraid to confess he had nearly hit Bostil. The riders all
+said Bostil was not wholly himself of late. The river was still low.
+The boat had not been repaired. And Creech's horses were still on the
+other side.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These things concerned Lucy, yet they only came and went swiftly
+through her mind. She was obsessed by things intimately concerning
+herself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I oughtn't to go," she said, aloud. But she did not even check
+Sarchedon's long swing, his rocking-chair lope. She had said a hundred
+times that she ought not go again out to the monuments. For Lin Slone
+had fallen despairingly, terribly in love with her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was not this, she averred, but the monuments and the beautiful
+Wildfire that had woven a spell round her she could not break. She had
+ridden Wildfire all through that strange region of monuments and now
+they claimed something of her. Just as wonderful was Wildfire's love
+for her. The great stallion hated Slone and loved Lucy. Of all the
+remarkable circumstances she had seen or heard about a horse, this fact
+was the most striking. She could do anything with him. All that
+savageness and wildness disappeared when she approached him. He came at
+her call. He whistled at sight of her. He sent out a ringing blast of
+disapproval when she rode away. Every day he tried to bite or kick
+Slone, but he was meek under Lucy's touch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But this morning there came to Lucy the first vague doubt of herself.
+Once entering her mind, that doubt became clear. And then she vowed she
+liked Slone as she might a brother. And something within her accused
+her own conviction. The conviction was her real self, and the
+accusation was some other girl lately born in her. Lucy did not like
+this new person. She was afraid of her. She would not think of her
+unless she had to.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I never cared for him&mdash;that way," she said, aloud. "I don't&mdash;I
+couldn't&mdash;ever&mdash;I&mdash;I&mdash;love Lin Slone!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The spoken thought&mdash;the sound of the words played havoc with Lucy's
+self-conscious calmness. She burned. She trembled. She was in a rage
+with herself. She spurred Sarchedon into a run and tore through the
+sage, down into the valley, running him harder than she should have run
+him. Then she checked him, and, penitent, petted him out of all
+proportion to her thoughtlessness. The violent exercise only heated her
+blood and, if anything, increased this sudden and new torment. Why had
+she discarded her boy's rider outfit and chaps for a riding-habit made
+by her aunt, and one she had scorned to wear? Some awful, accusing
+voice thundered in Lucy's burning ears that she had done this because
+she was ashamed to face Lin Slone any more in that costume&mdash;she wanted
+to appear different in his eyes, to look like a girl. If that shameful
+suspicion was a fact why was it&mdash;-what did it mean? She could not tell,
+yet she was afraid of the truth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All of a sudden Lin Slone stood out clearer in her mental vision&mdash;the
+finest type of a rider she had ever known&mdash;a strong, lithe, magnificent
+horseman, whose gentleness showed his love for horses, whose roughness
+showed his power&mdash;a strange, intense, lonely man in whom she had
+brought out pride, gratitude, kindness, passion, and despair. She felt
+her heart swell at the realization that she had changed him, made him
+kinder, made him divide his love as did her father, made him human,
+hopeful, longing for a future unfettered by the toils of desert
+allurement. She could not control her pride. She must like him very
+much. She confessed that, honestly, without a qualm. It was only
+bewildering moments of strange agitation and uncertainty that bothered
+her. She had refused to be concerned by them until they had finally
+impinged upon her peace of mind. Then they accused her; now she accused
+herself. She ought not go to meet Lin Slone any more.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But then&mdash;the race!" she murmured. "I couldn't give that up.... And
+oh! I'm afraid the harm is done! What can I do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After the race&mdash;what then? To be sure, all of Bostil's Ford would know
+she had been meeting Slone out in the sage, training his horse. What
+would people say?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad will simply be radiant, IF he can buy Wildfire&mdash;and a fiend if he
+can't," she muttered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy saw that her own impulsiveness had amounted to daring. She had
+gone too far. She excused that&mdash;for she had a rider's blood&mdash;she was
+Bostil's girl. But she had, in her wildness and joy and spirit, spent
+many hours alone with a rider, to his undoing. She could not excuse
+that. She was ashamed. What would he say when she told him she could
+see him no more? The thought made her weak. He would accept and go his
+way&mdash;back to that lonely desert, with only a horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire doesn't love him!" she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the scarlet fired her neck and cheek and temple. That leap of blood
+seemed to release a riot of emotions. What had been a torment became a
+torture. She turned Sarchedon homeward, but scarcely had faced that way
+when she wheeled him again. She rode slowly and she rode swiftly. The
+former was hateful because it held her back&mdash;from what she no longer
+dared think; the latter was fearful because it hurried her on swiftly,
+irresistibly to her fate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lin Slone had changed his camp and had chosen a pass high up where the
+great walls had began to break into sections. Here there was intimacy
+with the sheer cliffs of red and yellow. Wide avenues between the walls
+opened on all points of the compass, and that one to the north appeared
+to be a gateway down into the valley of monuments. The monuments
+trooped down into the valley to spread out and grow isolated in the
+distance. Slone's camp was in a clump of cedars surrounding a spring.
+There was grass and white sage where rabbits darted in and out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy did not approach this camp from that roundabout trail which she
+had made upon the first occasion of her visiting Slone. He had found an
+opening in the wall, and by riding this way into the pass Lucy cut off
+miles. In fact, the camp was not over fifteen miles from Bostil's Ford.
+It was so close that Lucy was worried lest some horse-tracker should
+stumble on the trail and follow her up into the pass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This morning she espied Slone at his outlook on a high rock that had
+fallen from the great walls. She always looked to see if he was there,
+and she always saw him. The days she had not come, which were few, he
+had spent watching for her there. His tasks were not many, and he said
+he had nothing to do but wait for her. Lucy had a persistent and
+remorseful, yet sweet memory of Slone at his lonely lookout. Here was a
+fine, strong, splendid young man who had nothing to do but watch for
+her&mdash;a waste of precious hours!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She waved her hand from afar, and he waved in reply. Then as she
+reached the cedared part of the pass Slone was no longer visible. She
+put Sarchedon to a run up the hard, wind-swept sand, and reached the
+camp before Slone had climbed down from his perch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy dismounted reluctantly. What would he say about the riding-habit
+that she wore? She felt very curious to learn, and shyer than ever
+before, and altogether different. The skirt made her more of a girl, it
+seemed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hello, Lin!" she called. There was nothing in her usual greeting to
+betray the state of her mind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good mornin'&mdash;Lucy," he replied, very slowly. He was looking at her,
+she thought, with different eyes. And he seemed changed, too, though he
+had long been well, and his tall, lithe rider's form, his lean, strong
+face, and his dark eyes were admirable in her sight. Only this morning,
+all because she had worn a girl's riding-skirt instead of boy's chaps,
+everything seemed different. Perhaps her aunt had been right, after
+all, and now things were natural.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone gazed so long at her that Lucy could not keep silent. She laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How do you like&mdash;me&mdash;in this?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I like you much better," Slone said, bluntly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Auntie made this&mdash;and she's been trying to get me to ride in it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It changes you, Lucy.... But can you ride as well?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid not.... What's Wildfire going to think of me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He'll like you better, too.... Lucy, how's the King comin' on?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, I'll tell you, if I wasn't as crazy about Wildfire as you are,
+I'd say he'll have to kill himself to beat the King," replied Lucy,
+with gravity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sometimes I doubt, too," said Slone. "But I only have to look at
+Wildfire to get back my nerve.... Lucy, that will be the grandest race
+ever run!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," sighed Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's wrong? Don't you want Wildfire to win?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes and no. But I'm going to beat the King, anyway.... Bring on your
+Wildfire!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy unsaddled Sarchedon and turned him loose to graze while Slone went
+out after Wildfire. And presently it appeared that Lucy might have some
+little time to wait. Wildfire had lately been trusted to hobbles, which
+fact made it likely that he had strayed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy gazed about her at the great looming red walls and out through the
+avenues to the gray desert beyond. This adventure of hers would soon
+have an end, for the day of the races was not far distant, and after
+that it was obvious she would not have occasion to meet Slone. To think
+of never coming to the pass again gave Lucy a pang. Unconsciously she
+meant that she would never ride up here again, because Slone would not
+be here. A wind always blew through the pass, and that was why the sand
+was so clean and hard. To-day it was a pleasant wind, not hot, nor
+laden with dust, and somehow musical in the cedars. The blue smoke from
+Slone's fire curled away and floated out of sight. It was lonely, with
+the haunting presence of the broken walls ever manifest. But the
+loneliness seemed full of content. She no longer wondered at Slone's
+desert life. That might be well for a young man, during those years
+when adventure and daring called him, but she doubted that it would be
+well for all of a man's life. And only a little of it ought to be known
+by a woman. She saw how the wildness and loneliness and brooding of
+such a life would prevent a woman's development. Yet she loved it all
+and wanted to live near it, so that when the need pressed her she could
+ride out into the great open stretches and see the dark monuments grow
+nearer and nearer, till she was under them, in the silent and colored
+shadows.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone returned presently with Wildfire. The stallion shone like a flame
+in the sunlight. His fear and hatred of Slone showed in the way he
+obeyed. Slone had mastered him, and must always keep the upper hand of
+him. It had from the first been a fight between man and beast, and Lucy
+believed it would always be so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Wildfire was a different horse when he saw Lucy. Day by day
+evidently Slone loved him more and tried harder to win a little of what
+Wildfire showed at sight of Lucy. Still Slone was proud of Lucy's
+control over the stallion. He was just as much heart and soul bent on
+winning the great race as Lucy was. She had ridden Wildfire bareback at
+first, and then they had broken him to the saddle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was serious business, that training of Wildfire, and Slone had
+peculiar ideas regarding it. Lucy rode him up and down the pass until
+he was warm. Then Slone got on Sarchedon. Wildfire always snorted and
+showed fight at sight of Sage King or Nagger, and the stallion
+Sarchedon infuriated him because Sarchedon showed fight, too. Slone
+started out ahead of Lucy, and then they raced down the long pass. The
+course was hard-packed sand. Fast as Sarchedon was, and matchless as a
+horseman as was Slone, the race was over almost as soon as it began.
+Wildfire ran indeed like fire before the wind. He wanted to run, and
+the other horse made him fierce. Like a burr Lucy stuck low over his
+neck, a part of the horse, and so light he would not have known he was
+carrying her but for the repeated calls in his ears. Lucy never spurred
+him. She absolutely refused to use spurs on him. This day she ran away
+from Slone, and, turning at the end of the two-mile course they had
+marked out, she loped Wildfire back. Slone turned with her, and they
+were soon in camp. Lucy did not jump off. She was in a transport. Every
+race kindled a mounting fire in her. She was scarlet of face, out of
+breath, her hair flying. And she lay on Wildfire's neck and hugged him
+and caressed him and talked to him in low tones of love.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone dismounted and got Sarchedon out of the way, then crossed to
+where Lucy still fondled Wildfire. He paused a moment to look at her,
+but when she saw him he started again, and came close up to her as she
+sat the saddle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You went past me like a bullet," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, can't he run!" murmured Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Could he beat the King to-day?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had asked that question every day, more than once.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, he could&mdash;to-day. I know it," replied Lucy. "Oh&mdash;I get so&mdash;so
+excited. I&mdash;I make a fool of myself&mdash;over him. But to ride him&mdash;going
+like that&mdash;Lin! it's just glorious!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You sure can ride him," replied Slone. "I can't see a fault
+anywhere&mdash;in him&mdash;or in your handling him. He never breaks. He goes
+hard, but he saves something. He gets mad&mdash;fierce&mdash;all the time, yet he
+WANTS to go your way. Lucy, I never saw the like of it. Somehow you an'
+Wildfire make a combination. You can't be beat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do I ride him&mdash;well?" she asked, softly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I could never ride him so well."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Lin&mdash;you just want to please me. Why, Van couldn't ride with you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't care, Lucy," replied Slone, stoutly. "You rode this horse
+perfect. I've found fault with you on the King, on your mustangs, an'
+on this black horse Sarch. But on Wildfire! You grow there."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What will Dad say, and Farlane, and Holley, and Van? Oh, I'll crow
+over Van," said Lucy. "I'm crazy to ride Wildfire out before all the
+Indians and ranchers and riders, before the races, just to show him
+off, to make them stare."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, Lucy. The best plan is to surprise them all. Enter your horse for
+the race, but don't show up till all the riders are at the start."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, that'll be best.... And, Lin, only five days more&mdash;five days!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her words made Slone thoughtful, and Lucy, seeing that, straightway
+grew thoughtful, too.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure&mdash;only five days more," repeated Slone, slowly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His tone convinced Lucy that he meant to speak again as he had spoken
+once before, precipitating the only quarrel they had ever had.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Does ANY ONE at Bostil's Ford know you meet me out here?" he asked,
+suddenly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Only Auntie. I told her the other day. She had been watching me. She
+thought things. So I told her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What did she say?" went on Slone, curiously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She was mad," replied Lucy. "She scolded me. She said.... But, anyway,
+I coaxed her not to tell on me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I want to know what she said," spoke up the rider, deliberately.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy blushed, and it was a consciousness of confusion as well as
+Slone's tone that made her half-angry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She said when I was found out there'd be a&mdash;a great fuss at the Ford.
+There would be talk. Auntie said I'm now a grown-up girl.... Oh, she
+carried on! ... Bostil would likely shoot you. And if he didn't some of
+the riders would.... Oh, Lin, it was perfectly ridiculous the way
+Auntie talked."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon not," replied Slone. "I'm afraid I've done wrong to let you
+come out here.... But I never thought. I'm not used to girls.
+I'll&mdash;I'll deserve what I get for lettin' you came."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's my own business," declared Lucy, spiritedly. "And I guess they'd
+better let you alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone shook his head mournfully. He was getting one of those gloomy
+spells that Lucy hated. Nevertheless, she felt a stir of her pulses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, there won't be any doubt about my stand&mdash;when I meet Bostil,"
+said Slone. Some thought had animated him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you mean?" Lucy trembled a little.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a sternness about Slone, a dignity that seemed new. "I'll ask
+him to&mdash;to let you marry me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy stared aghast. Slone appeared in dead earnest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nonsense!" she exclaimed, shortly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon the possibility is&mdash;that," replied Slone, bitterly, "but my
+motive isn't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is. Why, you've known me only a few days.... Dad would be mad. Like
+as not he'd knock you down.... I tell you, Lin, my dad is&mdash;is pretty
+rough. And just at this time of the races.... And if Wildfire beats the
+King! ... Whew!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"WHEN Wildfire beats the King, not IF," corrected Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad will be dangerous," warned Lucy. "Please don't&mdash;-don't ask him
+that. Then everybody would know I&mdash;I&mdash;you&mdash;-you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's it. I want everybody at your home to know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it's a little place," flashed Lucy. "Every one knows me. I'm the
+only girl. There have been&mdash;other fellows who.... And oh! I don't want
+you made fun of!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy turned away her head without answering. Something deep within her
+was softening her anger. She must fight to keep angry; and that was
+easy enough, she thought, if she could only keep in mind Slone's
+opposition to her. Strangely, she discovered that it had been sweet to
+find him always governed by her desire or will.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Maybe you misunderstand," he began, presently. And his voice was not
+steady. "I don't forget I'm only&mdash;a beggarly rider. I couldn't have
+gone into the Ford at all&mdash;I was such a ragamuffin&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't talk like that!" interrupted Lucy, impatiently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Listen," he replied. "My askin' Bostil for you doesn't mean I've any
+hope. ... It's just I want him an' everybody to know that I asked."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But Dad&mdash;everybody will think that YOU think there's
+reason&mdash;why&mdash;I&mdash;why, you OUGHT to ask," burst out Lucy, with scarlet
+face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure, that's it," he replied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But there's no reason. None! Not a reason under the sun," retorted
+Lucy, hotly. "I found you out here. I did you a&mdash;a little service. We
+planned to race Wildfire. And I came out to ride him.... That's all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's dark, steady gaze disconcerted Lucy. "But, no one knows me, and
+we've been alone in secret."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not altogether&mdash;that. I&mdash;I told Auntie," faltered Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, just lately."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin Slone, I'll never forgive you if you ask Dad that," declared Lucy,
+with startling force.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon that's not so important."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!&mdash;so you don't care." Lucy felt herself indeed in a mood not
+comprehensible to her. Her blood raced. She wanted to be furious with
+Slone, but somehow she could not wholly be so. There was something
+about him that made her feel small and thoughtless and selfish. Slone
+had hurt her pride. But the thing that she feared and resented and
+could not understand was the strange gladness Slone's declaration
+roused in her. She tried to control her temper so she could think. Two
+emotions contended within her&mdash;one of intense annoyance at the thought
+of embarrassment surely to follow Slone's action, and the other a
+vague, disturbing element, all sweet and furious and inexplicable. She
+must try to dissuade him from approaching her father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please don't go to Dad." She put a hand on Slone's arm as he stood
+close up to Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon I will," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin!" In that word there was the subtle, nameless charm of an intimacy
+she had never granted him until that moment. He seemed drawn as if by
+invisible wires. He put a shaking hand on hers and crushed her
+gauntleted fingers. And Lucy, in the current now of her woman's need to
+be placated if not obeyed, pressed her small hand to his. How strange
+to what lengths a little submission to her feeling had carried her!
+Every spoken word, every movement, seemed to exact more from her. She
+did not know herself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin! ... Promise not to&mdash;speak to Dad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No." His voice rang.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't give me away&mdash;don't tell my Dad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?" he queried, incredulously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy did not understand what. But his amazed voice, his wide-open eyes
+of bewilderment, seemed to aid her into piercing the maze of her own
+mind. A hundred thoughts whirled together, and all around them was
+wrapped the warm, strong feeling of his hand on hers. What did she mean
+that he would tell her father? There seemed to be a deep, hidden self
+in her. Up out of these depths came a whisper, like a ray of light, and
+it said to her that there was more hope for Lin Slone than he had ever
+had in one of his wildest dreams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, if you tell Dad&mdash;then he'll know&mdash;and there WON'T be any hope for
+you!" cried Lucy, honestly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If Slone caught the significance of her words he did not believe it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm goin' to Bostil after the race an' ask him. That's settled,"
+declared Slone, stubbornly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At this Lucy utterly lost her temper. "Oh! you&mdash;you fool!" she cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone drew back suddenly as if struck, and a spot of dark blood leaped
+to his lean face. "No! It seems to me the right way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Right or wrong there's no sense in it&mdash;because&mdash;because. Oh! can't you
+see?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I see more than I used to," he replied. "I was a fool over a horse.
+An' now I'm a fool over a girl.... I wish you'd never found me that
+day!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy whirled in the saddle and made Wildfire jump. She quieted him,
+and, leaping off, threw the bridle to Slone. "I won't ride your horse
+in the race!" she declared with sudden passion. She felt herself
+shaking all over.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy Bostil, I wish I was as sure of Heaven as I am you'll be up on
+Wildfire in that race," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I won't ride your horse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"MY horse. Oh, I see.... But you'll ride Wildfire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I won't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone suddenly turned white, and his eyes flashed dark fire. "You won't
+be able to help ridin' him any more than I could help it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A lot you know about me, Lin Slone!" returned Lucy, with scorn. "I can
+be as&mdash;as bull-headed as you, any day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone evidently controlled his temper, though his face remained white.
+He even smiled at her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are Bostil's daughter," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are blood an' bone, heart an' soul a rider, if any girl ever was.
+You're a wonder with a horse&mdash;as good as any man I ever saw. You love
+Wildfire. An' look&mdash;how strange! That wild stallion&mdash;that killer of
+horses, why he follows you, he whistles for you, he runs like lightnin'
+for you; he LOVES you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had attacked Lucy in her one weak point. She felt a force rending
+her. She dared not look at Wildfire. Yes&mdash;all, that was true Slone had
+said. How desperately hard to think of forfeiting the great race she
+knew she could win!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never! I'll never ride your Wildfire AGAIN!" she said, very, low.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"MINE! ... So that's the trouble. Well, Wildfire won't be mine when you
+ride the race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you mean?" demanded Lucy. "You'll sell him to Bostil.... Bah!
+you couldn't ..."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sell Wildfire!&mdash;after what it cost me to catch an' break him? ... Not
+for all your father's lands an' horses an' money!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's voice rolled out with deep, ringing scorn. And Lucy, her temper
+quelled, began to feel the rider's strength, his mastery of the
+situation, and something vague, yet splendid about him that hurt her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone strode toward her. Lucy backed against the cedar-tree and could
+go no farther. How white he was now! Lucy's heart gave a great, fearful
+leap, for she imagined Slone intended to take her in his arms. But he
+did not.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When you ride&mdash;Wildfire in that&mdash;race he'll be&mdash;YOURS!" said Slone,
+huskily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How can that be?" questioned Lucy, in astonishment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I give him to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You&mdash;give&mdash;Wildfire&mdash;to me?" gasped Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Right now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider's white face and dark eyes showed the strain of great and
+passionate sacrifice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin Slone! ... I can't&mdash;understand you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've got to ride Wildfire in that race. You've got to beat the
+King.... So I give Wildfire to you. An' now you can't help but ride
+him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why&mdash;why do you give him&mdash;to me?" faltered Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All her pride and temper had vanished, and she seemed lost in blankness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because you love Wildfire. An' Wildfire loves you.... If that isn't
+reason enough&mdash;then ... because I love him&mdash;as no rider ever loved a
+horse.... An' I love you as no man ever loved a girl!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had never before spoken words of love to Lucy. She dropped her
+head. She knew of his infatuation. But he had always been shy except
+once when he had been bold, and that had caused a quarrel. With a
+strange pain at her breast Lucy wondered why Slone had not spoken that
+way before? It made as great a change in her as if she had been born
+again. It released something. A bolt shot back in her heart. She knew
+she was quivering like a leaf, with no power to control her muscles.
+She knew if she looked up then Slone might see the depths of her soul.
+Even with her hands shutting out the light she thought the desert
+around had changed and become all mellow gold and blue and white,
+radiant as the moonlight of dreams&mdash;and that the monuments soared above
+them grandly, and were beautiful and noble, like the revelations of
+love and joy to her. And suddenly she found herself sitting at the foot
+of the cedar, weeping, with tear-wet hands over her face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's nothin' to&mdash;-to cry about," Slone was saying. "But I'm sorry
+if I hurt you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will&mdash;you&mdash;please&mdash;fetch Sarch?" asked Lucy, tremulously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While Slone went for the horse and saddled him Lucy composed herself
+outwardly. And she had two very strong desires&mdash;one to tell Slone
+something, and the other to run. She decided she would do both together.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone brought Sarchedon. Lucy put on her gauntlets, and, mounting the
+horse, she took a moment to arrange her skirts before she looked down
+at Slone. He was now pale, rather than white, and instead of fire in
+his eyes there was sadness. Lucy felt the swelling and pounding of her
+heart&mdash;and a long, delicious shuddering thrill that ran over her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, I won't take Wildfire," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, you will. You can't refuse. Remember he's grown to look to you.
+It wouldn't be right by the horse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But he's all you have in the world," she protested. Yet she knew any
+protestations would be in vain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. I have good old faithful Nagger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Would you go try to hunt another wild stallion&mdash;like Wildfire?" asked
+Lucy, curiously. She was playing with the wonderful sweet consciousness
+of her power to render happiness when she chose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No more horse-huntin' for me," declared Slone. "An' as for findin' one
+like Wildfire&mdash;that'd never be."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Suppose I won't accept him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How could you refuse? Not for me but for Wildfire's sake! ... But if
+you could be mean an' refuse, why, Wildfire can go back to the desert."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" exclaimed Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon so."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy paused a moment. How dry her tongue seemed! And her breathing was
+labored! An unreal shimmering gleam shone on all about her. Even the
+red stallion appeared enveloped in a glow. And the looming monuments
+looked down upon her, paternal, old, and wise, bright with the color of
+happiness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire ought to have several more days' training&mdash;then a day of
+rest&mdash;and then the race," said Lucy, turning again to look at Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A smile was beginning to change the hardness of his face. "Yes, Lucy,"
+he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And I'll HAVE to ride him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You sure will&mdash;if he's ever to beat the King."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy's eyes flashed blue. She saw the crowd&mdash;the curious, friendly
+Indians&mdash;the eager riders&mdash;the spirited horses&mdash;the face of her
+father&mdash;and last the race itself, such a race as had never been ran, so
+swift, so fierce, so wonderful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then Lin," began Lucy, with a slowly heaving breast, "if I accept
+Wildfire will you keep him for me&mdash;until ... and if I accept him, and
+tell you why, will you promise to say&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't ask me again!" interrupted Slone, hastily. "I WILL speak to
+Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wait, will you ... promise not to say a word&mdash;a single word to
+ME&mdash;till after the race?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A word&mdash;to you! What about?" he queried, wonderingly. Something in his
+eyes made Lucy think of the dawn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"About&mdash;the&mdash;Because&mdash;Why, I'm&mdash;I'll accept your horse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," he replied, swiftly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy settled herself in the saddle and, shortening the bridle, she got
+ready to spur Sarchedon into a bolt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, I'll accept Wildfire because I love you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sarchedon leaped forward. Lucy did not see Slone's face nor hear him
+speak. Then she was tearing through the sage, out past the whistling
+Wildfire, with the wind sweet in her face. She did not look back.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap11"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+All through May there was an idea, dark and sinister, growing in
+Bostil's mind. Fiercely at first he had rejected it as utterly unworthy
+of the man he was. But it returned. It would not be denied. It was
+fostered by singular and unforeseen circumstances. The meetings with
+Creech, the strange, sneaking actions of young Joel Creech, and
+especially the gossip of riders about the improvement in Creech's swift
+horse&mdash;these things appeared to loom larger and larger and to augment
+in Bostil's mind the monstrous idea which he could not shake off. So he
+became brooding and gloomy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It appeared to be an indication of his intense preoccupation of mind
+that he seemed unaware of Lucy's long trips down into the sage. But
+Bostil had observed them long before Holley and other riders had
+approached him with the information.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let her alone," he growled to his men. "I gave her orders to train the
+King. An' after Van got well mebbe Lucy just had a habit of ridin' down
+there. She can take care of herself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To himself, when alone, Bostil muttered: "Wonder what the kid has
+looked up now? Some mischief, I'll bet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nevertheless, he did not speak to her on the subject. Deep in his heart
+he knew he feared his keen-eyed daughter, and during these days he was
+glad she was not in evidence at the hours when he could not very well
+keep entirely to himself. Bostil was afraid Lucy might divine what he
+had on his mind. There was no one else he cared for. Holley, that old
+hawk-eyed rider, might see through him, but Bostil knew Holley would be
+loyal, whatever he saw.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Toward the end of the month, when Somers returned from horse-hunting,
+Bostil put him and Shugrue to work upon the big flatboat down at the
+crossing. Bostil himself went down, and he walked&mdash;a fact apt to be
+considered unusual if it had been noticed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Put in new planks," was his order to the men. "An' pour hot tar in the
+cracks. Then when the tar dries shove her in ... but I'll tell you
+when."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Every morning young Creech rowed over to see if the boat was ready to
+take the trip across to bring his father's horses back. The third
+morning of work on the boat Bostil met Joel down there. Joel seemed
+eager to speak to Bostil. He certainly was a wild-looking youth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, my ole man is losin' sleep waitin' to git the hosses over," he
+said, frankly. "Feed's almost gone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That'll be all right, Joel," replied Bostil. "You see, the river ain't
+begun to raise yet.... How're the hosses comin' on?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Grand, sir&mdash;grand!" exclaimed the simple Joel. "Peg is runnin' faster
+than last year, but Blue Roan is leavin' her a mile. Dad's goin' to bet
+all he has. The roan can't lose this year."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil felt like a bull bayed at by a hound. Blue Roan was a young
+horse, and every season he had grown bigger and faster. The King had
+reached the limit of his speed. That was great, Bostil knew, and enough
+to win over any horse in the uplands, providing the luck of the race
+fell even. Luck, however, was a fickle thing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was advisin' Dad to swim the hosses over," declared Joel,
+deliberately.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! You was? ... An' why?" rejoined Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel's simplicity and frankness vanished, and with them his
+rationality. He looked queer. His contrasting eyes shot little
+malignant gleams. He muttered incoherently, and moved back toward the
+skiff, making violent gestures, and his muttering grew to shouting,
+though still incoherent. He got in the boat and started to row back
+over the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure he's got a screw loose," observed Somers. Shugrue tapped his
+grizzled head significantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil made no comment. He strode away from his men down to the river
+shore, and, finding a seat on a stone, he studied the slow eddying red
+current of the river and he listened. If any man knew the strange and
+remorseless Colorado, that man was Bostil. He never made any mistakes
+in anticipating what the river was going to do.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now he listened, as if indeed the sullen, low roar, the murmuring
+hollow gurgle, the sudden strange splash, were spoken words meant for
+his ears alone. The river was low. It seemed tired out. It was a dirty
+red in color, and it swirled and flowed along lingeringly. At times the
+current was almost imperceptible; and then again it moved at varying
+speed. It seemed a petulant, waiting, yet inevitable stream, with some
+remorseless end before it. It had a thousand voices, but not the one
+Bostil listened to hear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He plodded gloomily up the trail, resting in the quiet, dark places of
+the canyon, loath to climb out into the clear light of day. And once in
+the village, Bostil shook himself as if to cast off an evil,
+ever-present, pressing spell.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The races were now only a few days off. Piutes and Navajos were camped
+out on the sage, and hourly the number grew as more came in. They were
+building cedar sunshades. Columns of blue smoke curled up here and
+there. Mustangs and ponies grazed everywhere, and a line of Indians
+extended along the racecourse, where trials were being held. The
+village was full of riders, horse-traders and hunters, and ranchers.
+Work on the ranges had practically stopped for the time being, and in
+another day or so every inhabitant of the country would be in Bostil's
+Ford.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil walked into the village, grimly conscious that the presence of
+the Indians and riders and horses, the action and color and bustle, the
+near approach of the great race-day&mdash;these things that in former years
+had brought him keen delight and speculation&mdash;had somehow lost their
+tang. He had changed. Something was wrong in him. But he must go among
+these visitors and welcome them as of old; he who had always been the
+life of these racing-days must be outwardly the same. And the task was
+all the harder because of the pleasure shown by old friends among the
+Indians and the riders at meeting him. Bostil knew he had been a
+cunning horse-trader, but he had likewise been a good friend. Many were
+the riders and Indians who owed much to him. So everywhere he was
+hailed and besieged, until finally the old excitement of betting and
+bantering took hold of him and he forgot his brooding.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton's place, as always, was a headquarters for all visitors.
+Macomber had just come in full of enthusiasm and pride over the horse
+he had entered, and he had money to wager. Two Navajo chiefs, called by
+white men Old Horse and Silver, were there for the first time in years.
+They were ready to gamble horse against horse. Cal Blinn and his riders
+of Durango had arrived; likewise Colson, Sticks, and Burthwait, old
+friends and rivals of Bostil's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a while Brackton's was merry. There was some drinking and much
+betting. It was characteristic of Bostil that he would give any odds
+asked on the King in a race; and, furthermore, he would take any end of
+wagers on other horses. As far as his own horses were concerned he bet
+shrewdly, but in races where his horses did not figure he seemed to
+find fun in the betting, whether or not he won.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fact remained, however, that there were only two wagers against the
+King, and both were put up by Indians. Macomber was betting on second
+or third place for his horse in the big race. No odds of Bostil's
+tempted him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Say, where's Wetherby?" rolled out Bostil. "He'll back his hoss."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wetherby's ridin' over to-morrow," replied Macomber. "But you gotta
+bet him two to one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See hyar, Bostil," spoke up old Cal Blinn, "you jest wait till I git
+an eye on the King's runnin'. Mebbe I'll go you even money."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' as fer me, Bostil," said Colson, "I ain't set up yit which hoss
+I'll race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Burthwait, an old rider, came forward to Brackton's desk and entered a
+wager against the field that made all the men gasp.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By George! pard, you ain't a-limpin' along!" ejaculated Bostil,
+admiringly, and he put a hand on the other's shoulder.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, I've a grand hoss," replied Burthwait. "He's four years old, I
+guess, fer he was born wild, an' you never seen him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wild hoss? ... Huh!" growled Bostil. "You must think he can run."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, Bostil, a streak of lightnin' ain't anywheres with him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I'm glad to hear it," said Bostil, gruffly. "Brack, how many
+hosses entered now for the big race?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The lean, gray Brackton bent earnestly over his soiled ledger, while
+the riders and horsemen round him grew silent to listen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thar's the Sage King by Bostil," replied Brackton. "Blue Roan an' Peg,
+by Creech; Whitefoot, by Macomber; Rocks, by Holley; Hoss-shoes, by
+Blinn; Bay Charley, by Burthwait. Then thar's the two mustangs entered
+by Old Hoss an' Silver&mdash;an' last&mdash;Wildfire, by Lucy Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's thet last?" queried Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire, by Lucy Bostil," repeated Brackton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Has the girl gone an' entered a hoss?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She sure has. She came in to-day, regular an' business-like, writ her
+name an' her hoss's&mdash;here 'tis&mdash;an' put up the entrance money."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I'll be d&mdash;d!" exclaimed Bostil. He was astonished and pleased.
+"She said she'd do it. But I didn't take no stock in her talk.... An'
+the hoss's name?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Huh! ... Wildfire. Mebbe thet girl can't think of names for hosses!
+What's this hoss she calls Wildfire?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She sure didn't say," replied Brackton. "Holley an' Van an' some more
+of the boys was here. They joked her a little. You oughter seen the
+look Lucy give them. But fer once she seemed mum. She jest walked away
+mysterious like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy's got a pony off some Indian, I reckon," returned Bostil, and he
+laughed. "Then thet makes ten hosses entered so far?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Right. An' there's sure to be one more. I guess the track's wide
+enough for twelve."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Brack, there'll likely be one hoss out in front an' some
+stretched out behind," replied Bostil, dryly. "The track's sure wide
+enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Won't thet be a grand race!" exclaimed an enthusiastic rider. "Wisht I
+had about a million to bet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, I 'most forgot," went on Brackton, "Cordts sent word by the
+Piutes who come to-day thet he'd be here sure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's face subtly changed. The light seemed to leave it. He did not
+reply to Brackton&mdash;did not show that he heard the comment on all sides.
+Public opinion was against Bostil's permission to allow Cordts and his
+horse-thieves to attend the races. Bostil appeared grave, regretful.
+Yet it was known by all that in the strangeness and perversity of his
+rider's nature he wanted Cordts to see the King win that race. It was
+his rider's vanity and defiance in the teeth of a great horse-thief.
+But no good would come of Cordts's presence&mdash;that much was manifest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a moment of silence. All these men, if they did not fear
+Bostil, were sometimes uneasy when near him. Some who were more
+reckless than discreet liked to irritate him. That, too, was a rider's
+weakness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When's Creech's hosses comin' over?" asked Colson, with sudden
+interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I reckon&mdash;soon," replied Bostil, constrainedly, and he turned
+away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By the time he got home all the excitement of the past hour had left
+him and gloom again abided in his mind. He avoided his daughter and
+forgot the fact of her entering a horse in the race. He ate supper
+alone, without speaking to his sister. Then in the dusk he went out to
+the corrals and called the King to the fence. There was love between
+master and horse. Bostil talked low, like a woman, to Sage King. And
+the hard old rider's heart was full and a lump swelled in his throat,
+for contact with the King reminded him that other men loved other
+horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil returned to the house and went to his room, where he sat
+thinking in the dark. By and by all was quiet. Then seemingly with a
+wrench he bestirred himself and did what for him was a strange action.
+Removing his boots, he put on a pair of moccasins. He slipped out of
+the house; he kept to the flagstone of the walk; he took to the sage
+till out of the village, and then he sheered round to the river trail.
+With the step and sureness and the eyes of an Indian he went down
+through that pitch-black canyon to the river and the ford.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The river seemed absolutely the same as during the day. He peered
+through the dark opaqueness of gloom. It moved there, the river he
+knew, shadowy, mysterious, murmuring. Bostil went down to the edge of
+the water, and, sitting there, he listened. Yes&mdash;the voices of the
+stream were the same. But after a long time he imagined there was among
+them an infinitely low voice, as if from a great distance. He imagined
+this; he doubted; he made sure; and then all seemed fancy again. His
+mind held only one idea and was riveted round it. He strained his
+hearing, so long, so intently, that at last he knew he had heard what
+he was longing for. Then in the gloom he took to the trail, and
+returned home as he had left, stealthily, like an Indian.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Bostil did not sleep nor rest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next morning early he rode down to the river. Somers and Shugrue had
+finished the boat and were waiting. Other men were there, curious and
+eager. Joel Creech, barefooted and ragged, with hollow eyes and strange
+actions, paced the sands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The boat was lying bottom up. Bostil examined the new planking and the
+seams. Then he straightened his form.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Turn her over," he ordered. "Shove her in. An' let her soak up to-day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The men seemed glad and relieved. Joel Creech heard and he came near to
+Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll&mdash;you'll fetch Dad's hosses over?" he queried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure. To-morrow," replied Bostil, cheerily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel smiled, and that smile showed what might have been possible for
+him under kinder conditions of life. "Now, Bostil, I'm sorry fer what I
+said," blurted Joel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shut up. Go tell your old man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel ran down to his skiff and, leaping in, began to row vigorously
+across. Bostil watched while the workmen turned the boat over and slid
+it off the sand-bar and tied it securely to the mooring. Bostil
+observed that not a man there saw anything unusual about the river.
+But, for that matter, there was nothing to see. The river was the same.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night when all was quiet in and around the village Bostil emerged
+from his house and took to his stealthy stalk down toward the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The moment he got out into the night oppression left him. How
+interminable the hours had been! Suspense, doubt, anxiety, fear no
+longer burdened him. The night was dark, with only a few stars, and the
+air was cool. A soft wind blew across his heated face. A neighbor's
+dog, baying dismally, startled Bostil. He halted to listen, then stole
+on under the cottonwoods, through the sage, down the trail, into the
+jet-black canyon. Yet he found his way as if it had been light. In the
+darkness of his room he had been a slave to his indecision; now in the
+darkness of the looming cliffs he was free, resolved, immutable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The distance seemed short. He passed out of the narrow canyon, skirted
+the gorge over the river, and hurried down into the shadowy
+amphitheater under the looming walls.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The boat lay at the mooring, one end resting lightly the sand-bar. With
+strong, nervous clutch Bostil felt the knots of the cables. Then he
+peered into the opaque gloom of that strange and huge V-shaped split
+between the great canyon walls. Bostil's mind had begun to relax from
+the single idea. Was he alone? Except for the low murmur of the river
+there was dead silence&mdash;a silence like no other&mdash;a silence which seemed
+held under imprisoning walls. Yet Bostil peered long into the shadows.
+Then he looked up. The ragged ramparts far above frowned bold and black
+at a few cold stars, and the blue of its sky was without the usual
+velvety brightness. How far it was up to that corrugated rim! All of a
+sudden Bostil hated this vast ebony pit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He strode down to the water and, sitting upon the stone he had occupied
+so often, he listened. He turned his ear up-stream, then down-stream,
+and to the side, and again up-stream and listened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The river seemed the same.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was slow, heavy, listless, eddying, lingering, moving&mdash;the same
+apparently as for days past. It splashed very softly and murmured low
+and gurgled faintly. It gave forth fitful little swishes and musical
+tinkles and lapping sounds. It was flowing water, yet the proof was
+there of tardiness. Now it was almost still, and then again it moved
+on. It was a river of mystery telling a lie with its low music. As
+Bostil listened all those soft, watery sounds merged into what seemed a
+moaning, and that moaning held a roar so low as to be only
+distinguishable to the ear trained by years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No&mdash;the river was not the same. For the voice of its soft moaning
+showed to Bostil its meaning. It called from the far north&mdash;the north
+of great ice-clad peaks beginning to glisten under the nearing sun; of
+vast snow-filled canyons dripping and melting; of the crystal brooks
+suddenly colored and roiled and filled bank-full along the mountain
+meadows; of many brooks plunging down and down, rolling the rocks, to
+pour their volume into the growing turbid streams on the slopes. It was
+the voice of all that widely separated water spilled suddenly with
+magical power into the desert river to make it a mighty, thundering
+torrent, red and defiled, terrible in its increasing onslaught into the
+canyon, deep, ponderous, but swift&mdash;the Colorado in flood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And as Bostil heard that voice he trembled. What was the thing he meant
+to do? A thousand thoughts assailed him in answer and none were clear.
+A chill passed over him. Suddenly he felt that the cold stole up from
+his feet. They were both in the water. He pulled them out and, bending
+down, watched the dim, dark line of water. It moved up and up, inch by
+inch, swiftly. The river was on the rise!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil leaped up. He seemed possessed of devils. A rippling hot gash of
+blood fired his every vein and tremor after tremor shook him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By G&mdash;-d! I had it right&mdash;she's risin'!" he exclaimed, hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stared in fascinated certainty at the river. All about it and
+pertaining to it had changed. The murmur and moan changed to a low,
+sullen roar. The music was gone. The current chafed at its rock-bound
+confines. Here was an uneasy, tormented, driven river! The light from
+the stars shone on dark, glancing, restless waters, uneven and strange.
+And while Bostil watched, whether it was a short time or long, the
+remorseless, destructive nature of the river showed itself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil began to pace the sands. He thought of those beautiful
+race-horses across the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not too late!" he muttered. "I can get the boat over an'
+back&mdash;yet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He knew that on the morrow the Colorado in flood would bar those
+horses, imprison them in a barren canyon, shut them in to starve.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It'd be hellish! ... Bostil, you can't do it. You ain't thet kind of a
+man.... Bostil poison a water-hole where hosses loved to drink, or burn
+over grass! ... What would Lucy think of you? ... No, Bostil, you've
+let spite rule bad. Hurry now and save them hosses!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He strode down to the boat. It swung clear now, and there was water
+between it and the shore. Bostil laid hold of the cables. As he did so
+he thought of Creech and a blackness enfolded him. He forgot Creech's
+horses. Something gripped him, burned him&mdash;some hard and bitter feeling
+which he thought was hate of Creech. Again the wave of fire ran over
+him, and his huge hands strained on the cables. The fiend of that
+fiendish river had entered his soul. He meant ruin to a man. He meant
+more than ruin. He meant to destroy what his enemy, his rival loved.
+The darkness all about him, the gloom and sinister shadow of the
+canyon, the sullen increasing roar of the' river&mdash;these lent their
+influence to the deed, encouraged him, drove him onward, fought and
+strangled the resistance in his heart. As he brooded all the motives
+for the deed grew like that remorseless river. Had not his enemy's son
+shot at him from ambush? Was not his very life at stake? A terrible
+blow must be dealt Creech, one that would crush him or else lend him
+manhood enough to come forth with a gun. Bostil, in his torment,
+divined that Creech would know who had ruined him. They would meet
+then, as Bostil had tried more than once to bring about a meeting.
+Bostil saw into his soul, and it was a gulf like this canyon pit where
+the dark and sullen river raged. He shrank at what he saw, but the
+furies of passion held him fast. His hands tore at the cables. Then he
+fell to pacing to and fro in the gloom. Every moment the river changed
+its voice. In an hour flood would be down. Too late, then! Bostil again
+remembered the sleek, slim, racy thoroughbreds&mdash;Blue Roan, a wild horse
+he had longed to own, and Peg, a mare that had no equal in the uplands.
+Where did Bostil's hate of a man stand in comparison with love of a
+horse? He began to sweat and the sweat burned him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How soon'll Creech hear the river an' know what's comin'?" muttered
+Bostil, darkly. And that question showed him how he was lost. All this
+strife of doubt and fear and horror were of no use. He meant to doom
+Creech's horses. The thing had been unalterable from the inception of
+the insidious, hateful idea. It was irresistible. He grew strong, hard,
+fierce, and implacable. He found himself. He strode back to the cables.
+The knots, having dragged in the water, were soaking wet and swollen.
+He could not untie them. Then he cut one strand after another. The boat
+swung out beyond his reach.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Instinctively Bostil reached to pull it back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God! ... It's goin'!" he whispered. "What have I done?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He&mdash;Bostil&mdash;who had made this Crossing of the Fathers more famous as
+Bostil's Ford&mdash;he&mdash;to cut the boat adrift! The thing was inconceivable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The roar of the river rose weird and mournful and incessant, with few
+breaks, and these were marked by strange ripping and splashing sounds
+made as the bulges of water broke on the surface. Twenty feet out the
+boat floated, turning a little as it drifted. It seemed loath to leave.
+It held on the shore eddy. Hungrily, spitefully the little, heavy waves
+lapped it. Bostil watched it with dilating eyes. There! the current
+caught one end and the water rose in a hollow splash over the corner.
+An invisible hand, like a mighty giant's, seemed to swing the boat out.
+It had been dark; now it was opaque, now shadowy, now dim. How swift
+this cursed river! Was there any way in which Bostil could recover his
+boat? The river answered him with hollow, deep mockery. Despair seized
+upon him. And the vague shape of the boat, spectral and instinct with
+meaning, passed from Bostil's strained gaze.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So help me God, I've done it!" he groaned, hoarsely. And he staggered
+back and sat down. Mind and heart and soul were suddenly and
+exquisitely acute to the shame of his act. Remorse seized upon his
+vitals. He suffered physical agony, as if a wolf gnawed him internally.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To hell with Creech an' his hosses, but where do I come in as a man?"
+he whispered. And he sat there, arms tight around his knees, locked
+both mentally and physically into inaction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rising water broke the spell and drove him back. The river was
+creeping no longer. It swelled. And the roar likewise swelled. Bostil
+hurried across the flat to get to the rocky trail before he was cut
+off, and the last few rods he waded in water up to his knees.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll leave no trail there," he muttered, with a hard laugh. It sounded
+ghastly to him, like the laugh of the river.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And there at the foot of the rocky trail he halted to watch and listen.
+The old memorable boom came to his ears. The flood was coming. For
+twenty-three years he had heard the vanguard boom of the Colorado in
+flood. But never like this, for in the sound he heard the strife and
+passion of his blood, and realized himself a human counterpart of that
+remorseless river. The moments passed and each one saw a swelling of
+the volume of sound. The sullen roar just below him was gradually lost
+in a distant roar. A steady wind now blew through the canyon. The great
+walls seemed to gape wider to prepare for the torrent. Bostil backed
+slowly up the trail as foot by foot the water rose. The floor of the
+amphitheater was now a lake of choppy, angry waves. The willows bent
+and seethed in the edge of the current. Beyond ran an uneven, bulging
+mass that resembled some gray, heavy moving monster. In the gloom
+Bostil could see how the river turned a corner of wall and slanted away
+from it toward the center, where it rose higher. Black objects that
+must have been driftwood appeared on this crest. They showed an
+instant, then flashed out of sight. The boom grew steadier, closer,
+louder, and the reverberations, like low detonations of thunder, were
+less noticeable because all sounds were being swallowed up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A harder breeze puffed into Bostil's face. It brought a tremendous
+thunder, as if all the colossal walls were falling in avalanche. Bostil
+knew the crest of the flood had turned the corner above and would soon
+reach him. He watched. He listened, but sound had ceased. His ears
+seemed ringing and they hurt. All his body felt cold, and he backed up
+and up, with dead feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shadows of the canyon lightened. A river-wide froth, like a
+curtain, moved down, spreading mushroom-wise before it, a rolling,
+heaving maelstrom. Bostil ran to escape the great wave that surged into
+the amphitheater, up and up the rocky trail. When he turned again he
+seemed to look down into hell. Murky depths, streaked by pale gleams,
+and black, sinister, changing forms yawned beneath them. He watched
+with fixed eyes until once more the feeling of filled ears left him and
+an awful thundering boom assured him of actualities. It was only the
+Colorado in flood.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap12"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Bostil slept that night, but his sleep was troubled, and a strange,
+dreadful roar seemed to run through it, like a mournful wind over a
+dark desert. He was awakened early by a voice at his window. He
+listened. There came a rap on the wood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil! ... Bostil!" It was Holley's voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil rolled off the bed. He had slept without removing any apparel
+except his boots.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Hawk, what d'ye mean wakin' a man at this unholy hour?" growled
+Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley's face appeared above the rude sill. It was pale and grave, with
+the hawk eyes like glass. "It ain't so awful early," he said. "Listen,
+boss."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil halted in the act of pulling on a boot. He looked at his man
+while he listened. The still air outside seemed filled with low boom,
+like thunder at a distance. Bostil tried to look astounded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hell! ... It's the Colorado! She's boomin'!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon it's hell all right&mdash;for Creech," replied Holley. "Boss, why
+didn't you fetch them hosses over?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's face darkened. He was a bad man to oppose&mdash;to question at
+times. "Holley, you're sure powerful anxious about Creech. Are you his
+friend?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Naw! I've little use fer Creech," replied Holley. "An' you know thet.
+But I hold for his hosses as I would any man's."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! An' what's your kick?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothin'&mdash;except you could have fetched them over before the flood come
+down. That's all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The old horse-trader and his right-hand rider looked at each other for
+a moment in silence. They understood each other. Then Bostil returned
+to the task of pulling on wet boots and Holley went away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil opened his door and stepped outside. The eastern ramparts of the
+desert were bright red with the rising sun. With the night behind him
+and the morning cool and bright and beautiful, Bostil did not suffer a
+pang nor feel a regret. He walked around under the cottonwoods where
+the mocking-birds were singing. The shrill, screeching bray of a burro
+split the morning stillness, and with that the sounds of the awakening
+village drowned that sullen, dreadful boom of the river. Bostil went in
+to breakfast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He encountered Lucy in the kitchen, and he did not avoid her. He could
+tell from her smiling greeting that he seemed to her his old self
+again. Lucy wore an apron and she had her sleeves rolled up, showing
+round, strong, brown arms. Somehow to Bostil she seemed different. She
+had been pretty, but now she was more than that. She was radiant. Her
+blue eyes danced. She looked excited. She had been telling her aunt
+something, and that worthy woman appeared at once shocked and
+delighted. But Bostil's entrance had caused a mysterious break in
+everything that had been going on, except the preparation of the
+morning meal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now I rode in on some confab or other, that's sure," said Bostil,
+good-naturedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You sure did, Dad," replied Lucy, with a bright smile.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, let me sit in the game," he rejoined.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, you can't even ante," said Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jane, what's this kid up to?" asked Bostil, turning to his sister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The good Lord only knows!" replied Aunt Jane, with a sigh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kid? ... See here, Dad, I'm eighteen long ago. I'm grown up. I can do
+as I please, go where I like, and anything.... Why, Dad, I could
+get&mdash;married."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Haw! haw!" laughed Bostil. "Jane, hear the girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hear her, Bostil," sighed Aunt Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Lucy, I'd just like to see you fetch some fool love-sick rider
+around when I'm feelin' good," said Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy laughed, but there was a roguish, daring flash in her eyes. "Dad,
+you do seem to have all the young fellows scared. Some day maybe one
+will ride along&mdash;a rider like you used to be&mdash;that nobody could
+bluff.... And he can have me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! ... Lucy, are you in fun?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy tossed her bright head, but did not answer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jane, what's got into her?" asked Bostil, appealing to his sister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, she's in fun, of course," declared Aunt Jane. "Still, at that,
+there's some sense in what she says. Come to your breakfast, now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil took his seat at the table, glad that he could once more be
+amiable with his women-folk. "Lucy, to-morrow'll be the biggest day
+Bostil's Ford ever seen," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It sure will be, Dad. The biggest SURPRISING day the Ford ever had,"
+replied Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Surprisin'?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Dad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who's goin' to get surprised?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Everybody."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil said to himself that he had been used to Lucy's banter, but
+during his moody spell of days past he had forgotten how to take her or
+else she was different.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Brackton tells me you've entered a hoss against the field."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's an open race, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Open as the desert, Lucy," he replied. "What's this hoss Wildfire
+you've entered?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wouldn't you like to know?" taunted Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If he's as good as his name you might be in at the finish.... But,
+Lucy, my dear, talkin' good sense now&mdash;you ain't a-goin' to go up on
+some unbroken mustang in this big race?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, I'm going to ride a horse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, Lucy, ain't it a risk you'll be takin'&mdash;all for fun?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fun! ... I'm in dead earnest."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil liked the look of her then. She had paled a little; her eyes
+blazed; she was intense. His question had brought out her earnestness,
+and straightway Bostil became thoughtful. If Lucy had been a boy she
+would have been the greatest rider on the uplands; and even girl as she
+was, superbly mounted, she would have been dangerous in any race.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I ain't afraid of your handlin' of a hoss," he said, soberly.
+"An' as long as you're in earnest I won't stop you. But, Lucy, no
+bettin'. I won't let you gamble."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not even with you?" she coaxed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil stared at the girl. What had gotten into her? "What'll you bet?"
+he, queried, with blunt curiosity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, I'll go you a hundred dollars in gold that I finish
+one&mdash;two&mdash;three."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil threw back his head to laugh heartily. What a chip of the old
+block she was! "Child, there's some fast hosses that'll be back of the
+King. You'd be throwin' away money."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Blue fire shone in his daughter's eyes. She meant business, all right,
+and Bostil thrilled with pride in her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, I'll bet you two hundred, even, that I beat the King!" she
+flashed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, of all the nerve!" ejaculated Bostil. "No, I won't take you up.
+Reckon I never before turned down an even bet. Understand, Lucy, ridin'
+in the race is enough for you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right, Dad," replied Lucy, obediently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At that juncture Bostil suddenly shoved back his plate and turned his
+face to the open door. "Don't I hear a runnin' hoss?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aunt Jane stopped the noise she was making, and Lucy darted to the
+door. Then Bostil heard the sharp, rhythmic hoof-beats he recognized.
+They shortened to clatter and pound&mdash;then ceased somewhere out in front
+of the house.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's the King with Van up," said Lucy, from the door. "Dad, Van's
+jumped off&mdash;he's coming in ... he's running. Something has happened....
+There are other horses coming&mdash;riders&mdash;Indians."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil knew what was coming and prepared himself. Rapid footsteps
+sounded without.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hello, Miss Lucy! Where's Bostil?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A lean, supple rider appeared before the door. It was Van, greatly
+excited.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come in, boy," said Bostil. "What're you flustered about?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Van strode in, spurs jangling, cap in hand. "Boss, there's&mdash;a
+sixty-foot raise&mdash;in the river!" Van panted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, wheeling toward her father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Van, I reckon I knowed thet," replied Bostil. "Mebbe I'm gettin'
+old, but I can still hear.... Listen."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy tiptoed to the door and turned her head sidewise and slowly bowed
+it till she stiffened. Outside were, sounds of birds and horses and
+men, but when a lull came it quickly filled with a sullen, low boom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Highest flood we&mdash;ever seen," said Van.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've been down?" queried Bostil, sharply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not to the river," replied Van. "I went as far as&mdash;where the gulch
+opens&mdash;on the bluff. There was a string of Navajos goin' down. An' some
+comin' up. I stayed there watchin' the flood, an' pretty soon Somers
+come up the trail with Blakesley an' Brack an' some riders.... An'
+Somers hollered out, 'The boat's gone!'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gone!" exclaimed Bostil, his loud cry showing consternation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Dad! Oh, Van!" cried Lucy, with eyes wide and lips parted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure she's gone. An' the whole place down there&mdash;where the willows was
+an' the sand-bar&mdash;it was deep under water."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What will become of Creech's horses?" asked Lucy, breathlessly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God! ain't it a shame!" went on Bostil, and he could have laughed
+aloud at his hypocrisy. He felt Lucy's blue eyes riveted upon his face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet's what we all was sayin'," went on Van. "While we was watchin'
+the awful flood an' listenin' to the deep bum&mdash;bum&mdash;bum of rollin'
+rocks some one seen Creech an' two Piutes leadin' the hosses up thet
+trail where the slide was. We counted the hosses&mdash;nine. An' we saw the
+roan shine blue in the sunlight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Piutes with Creech!" exclaimed Bostil, the deep gloom in his eyes
+lighting. "By all thet's lucky! Mebbe them Indians can climb the hosses
+out of thet hole an' find water an' grass enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mebbe," replied Van, doubtfully. "Sure them Piutes could if there's a
+chance. But there ain't any grass."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It won't take much grass travelin' by night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So lots of the boys say. But the Navajos they shook their heads. An'
+Farlane an' Holley, why, they jest held up their hands."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"With them Indians Creech has a chance to get his hosses out," declared
+Bostil. He was sure of his sincerity, but he was not certain that his
+sincerity was not the birth of a strange, sudden hope. And then he was
+able to meet the eyes of his daughter. That was his supreme test.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Dad, why, why didn't you hurry Creech's horses over?" said Lucy,
+with her tears falling.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Something tight within Bostil's breast seemed to ease and lessen. "Why
+didn't I? ... Wal, Lucy, I reckon I wasn't in no hurry to oblige
+Creech. I'm sorry now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It won't be so terrible if he doesn't lose the horses," murmured Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where's young Joel Creech?" asked Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He stayed on this side last night," replied Van. "Fact is, Joel's the
+one who first knew the flood was on. Some one said he said he slept in
+the canyon last night. Anyway, he's ravin' crazy now. An' if he doesn't
+do harm to some one or hisself I'll miss my guess."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh!" grunted Bostil. "Right you are."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, can't anything be done to help Creech now?" appealed Lucy, going
+close to her father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil put his arm around her and felt immeasurably relieved to have
+the golden head press close to his shoulder. "Child, we can't fly
+acrost the river. Now don't you cry about Creech's hosses. They ain't
+starved yet. It's hard luck. But mebbe it'll turn out so Creech'll lose
+only the race. An', Lucy, it was a dead sure bet he'd have lost thet
+anyway."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil fondled his daughter a moment, the first time in many a day, and
+then he turned to his rider at the door. "Van, how's the King?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wild to run, Bostil, jest plumb wild. There won't be any hoss with the
+ghost of a show to-morrow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy raised her drooping head. "Is THAT so, Van Sickle? ... Listen
+here. If you and Sage King don't get more wild running to-morrow than
+you ever had I'll never ride again!" With this retort Lucy left the
+room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Van stared at the door and then at Bostil. "What'd I say, Bostil?" he
+asked, plaintively. "I'm always r'ilin' her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cheer up, Van. You didn't say much. Lucy is fiery these days. She's
+got a hoss somewhere an' she's goin' to ride him in the race. She
+offered to bet on him&mdash;against the King! It certainly beat me all
+hollow. But see here, Van. I've a hunch there's a dark hoss goin' to
+show up in this race. So don't underrate Lucy an' her mount, whatever
+he is. She calls him Wildfire. Ever see him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I sure haven't. Fact is, I haven't seen Lucy for days an' days. As for
+the hunch you gave, I'll say I was figurin' Lucy for some real race.
+Bostil, she doesn't MAKE a hoss run. He'll run jest to please her. An'
+Lucy's lighter 'n a feather. Why, Bostil, if she happened to ride out
+there on Blue Roan or some other hoss as fast I'd&mdash;I'd jest wilt."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil uttered a laugh full of pride in his daughter. "Wal, she won't
+show up on Blue Roan," he replied, with grim gruffness. "Thet's sure as
+death.... Come on out now. I want a look at the King."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil went into the village. All day long he was so busy with a
+thousand and one things referred to him, put on him, undertaken by him,
+that he had no time to think. Back in his mind, however, there was a
+burden of which he was vaguely conscious all the time. He worked late
+into the night and slept late the next morning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Never in his life had Bostil been gloomy or retrospective on the day of
+a race. In the press of matters he had only a word for Lucy, but that
+earned a saucy, dauntless look. He was glad when he was able to join
+the procession of villagers, visitors, and Indians moving out toward
+the sage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The racecourse lay at the foot of the slope, and now the gray and
+purple sage was dotted with more horses and Indians, more moving things
+and colors, than Bostil had ever seen there before. It was a spectacle
+that stirred him. Many fires sent up blue columns of smoke from before
+the hastily built brush huts where the Indians cooked and ate. Blankets
+shone bright in the sun; burros grazed and brayed; horses whistled
+piercingly across the slope; Indians lolled before the huts or talked
+in groups, sitting and lounging on their ponies; down in the valley,
+here and there, were Indians racing, and others were chasing the wiry
+mustangs. Beyond this gay and colorful spectacle stretched the valley,
+merging into the desert marked so strikingly and beautifully by the
+monuments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil was among the last to ride down to the high bench that
+overlooked the home end of the racecourse. He calculated that there
+were a thousand Indians and whites congregated at that point, which was
+the best vantage-ground to see the finish of a race. And the occasion
+of his arrival, for all the gaiety, was one of dignity and importance.
+If Bostil reveled in anything it was in an hour like this. His
+liberality made this event a great race-day. The thoroughbreds were all
+there, blanketed, in charge of watchful riders. In the center of the
+brow of this long bench lay a huge, flat rock which had been Bostil's
+seat in the watching of many a race. Here were assembled his neighbors
+and visitors actively interested in the races, and also the important
+Indians of both tribes, all waiting for him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Bostil dismounted, throwing the bridle to a rider, he saw a face
+that suddenly froze the thrilling delight of the moment. A tall, gaunt
+man with cavernous black eyes and huge, drooping black mustache fronted
+him and seemed waiting. Cordts! Bostil had forgotten. Instinctively
+Bostil stood on guard. For years he had prepared himself for the moment
+when he would come face to face with this noted horse-thief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, how are you?" said Cordts. He appeared pleasant, and certainly
+grateful for being permitted to come there. From his left hand hung a
+belt containing two heavy guns.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hello, Cordts," replied Bostil, slowly unbending. Then he met the
+other's proffered hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've bet heavy on the King," said Cordts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the moment there could have been no other way to Bostil's good
+graces, and this remark made the gruff old rider's hard face relax.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I was hopin' you'd back some other hoss, so I could take your
+money," replied Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cordts held out the belt and guns to Bostil. "I want to enjoy this
+race," he said, with a smile that somehow hinted of the years he had
+packed those guns day and night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts, I don't want to take your guns," replied Bostil, bluntly.
+"I've taken your word an' that's enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thanks, Bostil. All the same, as I'm your guest I won't pack them,"
+returned Cordts, and he hung the belt on the horn of Bostil's saddle.
+"Some of my men are with me. They were all right till they got outside
+of Brackton's whisky. But now I won't answer for them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, you're square to say thet," replied Bostil. "An' I'll run this
+race an' answer for everybody."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil recognized Hutchinson and Dick Sears, but the others of Cordts's
+gang he did not know. They were a hard-looking lot. Hutchinson was a
+spare, stoop-shouldered, red-faced, squinty-eyed rider, branded all
+over with the marks of a bad man. And Dick Sears looked his notoriety.
+He was a little knot of muscle, short and bow-legged, rough in
+appearance as cactus. He wore a ragged slouch-hat pulled low down. His
+face and stubby beard were dust-colored, and his eyes seemed sullen,
+watchful. He made Bostil think of a dusty, scaly, hard, desert
+rattlesnake. Bostil eyed this right-hand man of Cordts's and certainly
+felt no fear of him, though Sears had the fame of swift and deadly
+skill with a gun. Bostil felt that he was neither afraid nor loath to
+face Sears in gun-play, and he gazed at the little horse-thief in a
+manner that no one could mistake. Sears was not drunk, neither was he
+wholly free from the unsteadiness caused by the bottle. Assuredly he
+had no fear of Bostil and eyed him insolently. Bostil turned away to
+the group of his riders and friends, and he asked for his daughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy's over there," said Farlane, pointing to a merry crowd.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil waved a hand to her, and Lucy, evidently mistaking his action,
+came forward, leading one of her ponies. She wore a gray blouse with a
+red scarf, and a skirt over overalls and boots. She looked pale, but
+she was smiling, and there was a dark gleam of excitement in her blue
+eyes. She did not have on her sombrero. She wore her hair in a braid,
+and had a red band tight above her forehead. Bostil took her in all at
+a glance. She meant business and she looked dangerous. Bostil knew once
+she slipped out of that skirt she could ride with any rider there. He
+saw that she had become the center toward which all eyes shifted. It
+pleased him. She was his, like her mother, and as beautiful and
+thoroughbred as any rider could wish his daughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, where's your hoss?" he asked, curiously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never you mind, Dad. I'll be there at the finish," she replied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Red's your color for to-day, then?" he questioned, as he put a big
+hand on the bright-banded head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She nodded archly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, I never thought you'd flaunt red in your old Dad's face. Red,
+when the color of the King is like the sage out yonder. You've gone
+back on the King."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, Dad, I never was for Sage King, else I wouldn't wear red to-day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Child, you sure mean to run in this race&mdash;the big one?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure and certain."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, the only bitter drop in my cup to-day will be seein' you get
+beat. But if you ran second I'll give you a present thet'll make the
+purse look sick."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even the Indian chiefs were smiling. Old Horse, the Navajo, beamed
+benignly upon this daughter of the friend of the Indians. Silver, his
+brother chieftain, nodded as if he understood Bostil's pride and
+regret. Some of the young riders showed their hearts in their eyes.
+Farlane tried to look mysterious, to pretend he was in Lucy's
+confidence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, if you are really goin' to race I'll withdraw my hoss so you can
+win," said Wetherby, gallantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's sonorous laugh rolled down the slope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Miss Lucy, I sure hate to run a hoss against yours," said old Cal
+Blinn. Then Colson, Sticks, Burthwait, the other principals, paid
+laughing compliments to the bright-haired girl.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil enjoyed this hugely until he caught the strange intensity of
+regard in the cavernous eyes of Cordts. That gave him a shock. Cordts
+had long wanted this girl as much probably as he wanted Sage King.
+There were dark and terrible stories that stained the name of Cordts.
+Bostil regretted his impulse in granting the horse-thief permission to
+attend the races. Sight of Lucy's fair, sweet face might inflame this
+Cordts&mdash;this Kentuckian who had boasted of his love of horses and
+women. Behind Cordts hung the little dust-colored Sears, like a coiled
+snake, ready to strike. Bostil felt stir in him a long-dormant fire&mdash;a
+stealing along his veins, a passion he hated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, go back to the women till you're ready to come out on your
+hoss," he said. "An' mind you, be careful to-day!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He gave her a meaning glance, which she understood perfectly, he saw,
+and then he turned to start the day's sport.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Indian races run in twos and threes, and on up to a number that
+crowded the racecourse; the betting and yelling and running; the wild
+and plunging mustangs; the heat and dust and pounding of hoofs; the
+excited betting; the surprises and defeats and victories, the trial
+tests of the principals, jealously keeping off to themselves in the
+sage; the endless moving, colorful procession, gaudy and swift and
+thrilling&mdash;all these Bostil loved tremendously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But they were as nothing to what they gradually worked up to&mdash;the
+climax&mdash;the great race.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was afternoon when all was ready for this race, and the sage was
+bright gray in the westering sun. Everybody was resting, waiting. The
+tense quiet of the riders seemed to settle upon the whole assemblage.
+Only the thoroughbreds were restless. They quivered and stamped and
+tossed their small, fine heads. They knew what was going to happen.
+They wanted to run. Blacks, bays, and whites were the predominating
+colors; and the horses and mustangs were alike in those points of race
+and speed and spirit that proclaimed them thoroughbreds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil himself took the covering off his favorite. Sage King was on
+edge. He stood out strikingly in contrast with the other horses. His
+sage-gray body was as sleek and shiny as satin. He had been trained to
+the hour. He tossed his head as he champed the bit, and every moment
+his muscles rippled under his fine skin. Proud, mettlesome, beautiful!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sage King was the favorite in the betting, the Indians, who were ardent
+gamblers, plunging heavily on him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil saddled the horse and was long at the task.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Van stood watching. He was pale and nervous. Bostil saw this.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Van," he said, "it's your race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider reached a quick hand for bridle and horn, and when his foot
+touched the stirrup Sage King was in the air. He came down,
+springy-quick, graceful, and then he pranced into line with the other
+horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil waved his hand. Then the troop of riders and racers headed for
+the starting-point, two miles up the valley. Macomber and Blinn, with a
+rider and a Navajo, were up there as the official starters of the day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's eyes glistened. He put a friendly hand on Cordts's shoulder,
+an action which showed the stress of the moment. Most of the men
+crowded around Bostil. Sears and Hutchinson hung close to Cordts. And
+Holley, keeping near his employer, had keen eyes for other things than
+horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly he touched Bostil and pointed down the slope. "There's Lucy,"
+he said. "She's ridin' out to join the bunch."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy! Where? I'd forgotten my girl! ... Where?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There," repeated Holly, and he pointed. Others of the group spoke up,
+having seen Lucy riding down.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She's on a red hoss," said one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Pears all-fired big to me&mdash;her hoss," said another. "Who's got a
+glass?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil had the only field-glass there and he was using it. Across the
+round, magnified field of vision moved a giant red horse, his mane
+waving like a flame. Lucy rode him. They were moving from a jumble of
+broken rocks a mile down the slope. She had kept her horse hidden
+there. Bostil felt an added stir in his pulse-beat. Certainly he had
+never seen a horse like this one. But the distance was long, the glass
+not perfect; he could not trust his sight. Suddenly that sight dimmed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, I can't make out nothin'," he complained. "Take the glass.
+Give me a line on Lucy's mount."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boss, I don't need the glass to see that she's up on a HOSS," replied
+Holley, as he took the glass. He leveled it, adjusted it to his eyes,
+and then looked long. Bostil grew impatient. Lucy was rapidly
+overhauling the troop of racers on her way to the post. Nothing ever
+hurried or excited Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, can't you see any better 'n me?" queried Bostil, eagerly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come on, Holl, give us a tip before she gits to the post," spoke up a
+rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cordts showed intense eagerness, and all the group were excited. Lucy's
+advent, on an unknown horse that even her father could not disparage,
+was the last and unexpected addition to the suspense. They all knew
+that if the horse was fast Lucy would be dangerous.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley at last spoke: "She's up on a wild stallion. He's red, like
+fire. He's mighty big&mdash;strong. Looks as if he didn't want to go near
+the bunch. Lord! what action! ... Bostil, I'd say&mdash;a great hoss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a moment's intense silence in the group round Bostil. Holley
+was never known to mistake a horse or to be extravagant in judgment or
+praise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A wild stallion!" echoed Bostil. "A-huh! An' she calls him Wildfire.
+Where'd she get him? ... Gimme thet glass."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But all Bostil could make out was a blur. His eyes were wet. He
+realized now that his first sight of Lucy on the strange horse had been
+clear and strong, and it was that which had dimmed his eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, you use the glass&mdash;an' tell me what comes off," said Bostil,
+as he wiped his eyes with his scarf. He was relieved to find that his
+sight was clearing. "My God! if I couldn't see this finish!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then everybody watched the close, dark mass of horses and riders down
+the valley. And all waited for Holley to speak. "They're linin' up,"
+began the rider. "Havin' some muss, too, it 'pears.... Bostil, thet red
+hoss is raisin' hell! He wants to fight. There! he's up in the air....
+Boys, he's a devil&mdash;a hoss-killer like all them wild stallions.... He's
+plungin' at the King&mdash;strikin'! There! Lucy's got him down. She's
+handlin' him.... Now they've got the King on the other side. Thet's
+better. But Lucy's hoss won't stand. Anyway, it's a runnin' start....
+Van's got the best position. Foxy Van! ... He'll be leadin' before the
+rest know the race's on.... Them Indian mustangs are behavin'
+scandalous. Guess the red stallion scared 'em. Now they're all lined up
+back of the post.... Ah! gun-smoke! They move.... It looks like a go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Holley was silent, strained, in watching. So were all the watchers
+silent. Bostil saw far down the valley a moving, dark line of horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"THEY'RE OFF! THEY'RE OFF!" called Holley, thrillingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil uttered a deep and booming yell, which rose above the shouts of
+the men round him and was heard even in the din of Indian cries. Then
+as quickly as the yells had risen they ceased.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley stood up on the rock with leveled glass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mac's dropped the flag. It's a sure go. Now! ... Van's out there
+front&mdash;inside. The King's got his stride. Boss, the King's stretchin'
+out! ... Look! Look! see thet red hoss leap! ... Bostil, he's runnin'
+down the King! I knowed it. He's like lightnin'. He's pushin' the King
+over&mdash;off the course! See him plunge! Lord! Lucy can't pull him! She
+goes up&mdash;down&mdash;tossed&mdash;but she sticks like a burr. Good, Lucy! Hang on!
+... My Gawd, Bostil, the King's thrown! He's down! ... He comes up, off
+the course. The others flash by.... Van's out of the race! ... An',
+Bostil&mdash;an', gentlemen, there ain't anythin' more to this race but a
+red hoss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's heart gave a great leap and then seemed to stand still. He was
+half cold, half hot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What a horrible, sickening disappointment. Bostil rolled out a cursing
+query. Holley's answer was short and sharp. The King was out! Bostil
+raved. He could not see. He could not believe. After all the weeks of
+preparation, of excitement, of suspense&mdash;only this! There was no race.
+The King was out! The thing did not seem possible. A thousand thoughts
+flitted through Bostil's mind. Rage, impotent rage, possessed him. He
+cursed Van, he swore he would kill that red stallion. And some one
+shook him hard. Some one's incisive words cut into his thick, throbbing
+ears: "Luck of the game! The King ain't beat! He's only out!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then the rider's habit of mind asserted itself and Bostil began to
+recover. For the King to fall was hard luck. But he had not lost the
+race! Anguish and pride battled for mastery over him. Even if the King
+were out it was a Bostil who would win the great race.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He ain't beat!" muttered Bostil. "It ain't fair! He's run off the
+track by a wild stallion!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His dimmed sight grew clear and sharp. And with a gasp he saw the
+moving, dark line take shape as horses. A bright horse was in the lead.
+Brighter and larger he grew. Swiftly and more swiftly he came on. The
+bright color changed to red. Bostil heard Holley calling and Cordts
+calling&mdash;and other voices, but he did not distinguish what was said.
+The line of horses began to bob, to bunch. The race looked close,
+despite what Holley had said. The Indians were beginning to lean
+forward, here and there uttering a short, sharp yell. Everything within
+Bostil grew together in one great, throbbing, tingling mass. His
+rider's eye, keen once more, caught a gleam of gold above the red, and
+that gold was Lucy's hair. Bostil forgot the King.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Holley bawled into his ear, "They're half-way!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The race was beautiful. Bostil strained his eyes. He gloried in what he
+saw&mdash;Lucy low over the neck of that red stallion. He could see plainer
+now. They were coming closer. How swiftly! What a splendid race! But it
+was too swift&mdash;it would not last. The Indians began to yell, drowning
+the hoarse shouts of the riders. Out of the tail of his eye Bostil saw
+Cordts and Sears and Hutchinson. They were acting like crazy men.
+Strange that horse-thieves should care! The million thrills within
+Bostil coalesced into one great shudder of rapture. He grew wet with
+sweat. His stentorian voice took up the call for Lucy to win.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Three-quarters!" bowled Holley into Bostil's ear. "An' Lucy's give
+thet wild hoss free rein! Look, Bostil! You never in your life seen a
+hoss ran like thet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil never had. His heart swelled. Something shook him. Was that his
+girl&mdash;that tight little gray burr half hidden in the huge stallion's
+flaming mane? The distance had been close between Lucy and the bunched
+riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But it lengthened. How it widened! That flame of a horse was running
+away from the others. And now they were close&mdash;coming into the home
+stretch. A deafening roar from the onlookers engulfed all other sounds.
+A straining, stamping, arm-flinging horde surrounded Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil saw Lucy's golden hair whipping out from the flame-streaked
+mane. And then he could only see that red brute of a horse. Wildfire
+before the wind! Bostil thought of the leaping prairie flame,
+storm-driven.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On came the red stallion&mdash;on&mdash;on! What a tremendous stride! What a
+marvelous recovery! What ease! What savage action!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He flashed past, low, pointed, long, going faster every magnificent
+stride&mdash;winner by a dozen lengths.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap13"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire ran on down the valley far beyond the yelling crowd lined
+along the slope. Bostil was deaf to the throng; he watched the stallion
+till Lucy forced him to stop and turn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Bostil whirled to see where Van was with the King. Most of the
+crowd surged down to surround the racers, and the yells gave way to the
+buzz of many voices. Some of the ranchers and riders remained near
+Bostil, all apparently talking at once. Bostil gathered that Holley's
+Whitefoot had ran second, and the Navajo's mustang third. It was Holley
+himself who verified what Bostil had heard. The old rider's hawk eyes
+were warm with delight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boss, he run second!" Holley kept repeating.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil had the heart to shake hands with Holley and say he was glad,
+when it was on his lips to blurt out there had been no race. Then
+Bostil's nerves tingled at sight of Van trotting the King up the course
+toward the slope. Bostil watched with searching eyes. Sage King did not
+appear to be injured. Van rode straight up the slope and leaped off. He
+was white and shaking.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The King's glossy hide was dirty with dust and bits of cactus and
+brush. He was not even hot. There did not appear to be a bruise or mark
+on him. He whinnied and rubbed his face against Bostil, and then,
+flinching, he swept up his head, ears high. Both fear and fire shone in
+his eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Van, get it out of your system," said Bostil, kindly. He was a
+harder loser before a race was run than after he had lost it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet red hoss run in on the King before the start an' scared the race
+out of him," replied Van, swiftly. "We had a hunch, you know, but at
+thet Lucy's hoss was a surprise. I'll say, sir, thet Lucy rode her wild
+hoss an' handled him. Twice she pulled him off the King. He meant to
+kill the King! ... Ask any of the boys.... We got started. I took the
+lead, sir. The King was in the lead. I never looked back till I heard
+Lucy scream. She couldn't pull Wildfire. He was rushin' the King&mdash;meant
+to kill him. An' Sage King wanted to fight. If I could only have kept
+him runnin'! Thet would have been a race! ... But Wildfire got in
+closer an' closer. He crowded us. He bit at the King's flank an'
+shoulder an' neck. Lucy pulled till I yelled she'd throw the hoss an'
+kill us both. Then Wildfire jumped for us. Runnin' an' strikin' with
+both feet at once! Bostil, thet hoss's hell! Then he hit us an' down we
+went. I had a bad spill. But the King's not hurt an' thet's a blessed
+wonder."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No race, Van! It was hard luck. Take him home," said Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Van's story of the accident vindicated Bostil's doubts. A new horse had
+appeared on the scene, wild and swift and grand, but Sage King was
+still unbeaten in a fair race. There would come a reckoning, Bostil
+grimly muttered. Who owned this Wildfire?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley might as well have read his mind. "Reckon this feller ridin' up
+will take down the prize money," remarked Holley, and he pointed to a
+man who rode a huge, shaggy, black horse and was leading Lucy's pony.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh!" exclaimed Bostil. "A strange rider."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' here comes Lucy coaxin' the stallion back," added Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A wild stallion never clear broke!" ejaculated Cordts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the men looked and all had some remark of praise for Lucy and her
+mount.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil gazed with a strange, irresistible attraction. Never had he
+expected to live to see a wild stallion like this one, to say nothing
+of his daughter mounted on him, with the record of having put Sage King
+out of the race!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A thousand pairs of eyes watched Wildfire. He pranced out there beyond
+the crowd of men and horses. He did not want to come closer. Yet he did
+not seem to fight his rider. Lucy hung low over his neck, apparently
+exhausted, and she was patting him and caressing him. There were horses
+and Indians on each side of the race track, and between these lines
+Lucy appeared reluctant to come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil strode down and, waving and yelling for everybody to move back
+to the slope, he cleared the way and then stood out in front alone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ride up, now," he called to Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was then Bostil discovered that Lucy did not wear a spur and she had
+neither quirt nor whip. She turned Wildfire and he came prancing on,
+head and mane and tail erect. His action was beautiful, springy, and
+every few steps, as Lucy touched him, he jumped with marvelous ease and
+swiftness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil became all eyes. He did not see his daughter as she paraded the
+winner before the applauding throng. And Bostil recorded in his mind
+that which he would never forget&mdash;a wild stallion, with unbroken
+spirit; a giant of a horse, glistening red, with mane like
+dark-striped, wind-blown flame, all muscle, all grace, all power; a
+neck long and slender and arching to the small, savagely beautiful
+head; the jaws open, and the thin-skinned, pink-colored nostrils that
+proved the Arabian blood; the slanting shoulders and the deep, broad
+chest, the powerful legs and knees not too high nor too low, the
+symmetrical dark hoofs that rang on the little stones&mdash;all these marks
+so significant of speed and endurance. A stallion with a wonderful
+physical perfection that matched the savage, ruthless spirit of the
+desert killer of horses!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy waved her hand, and the strange rider to whom Holley had called
+attention strode out of the crowd toward Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's gaze took in the splendid build of this lithe rider, the
+clean-cut face, the dark eye. This fellow had a shiny, coiled lasso in
+hand. He advanced toward Wildfire. The stallion snorted and plunged. If
+ever Bostil saw hate expressed by a horse he saw it then. But he seemed
+to be tractable to the control of the girl. Bostil swiftly grasped the
+strange situation. Lucy had won the love of the savage stallion. That
+always had been the secret of her power. And she had hated Sage King
+because he alone had somehow taken a dislike to her. Horses were as
+queer as people, thought Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rider walked straight up to the trembling Wildfire. When Wildfire
+plunged and reared up and up the rider leaped for the bridle and with
+an iron arm pulled the horse down. Wildfire tried again, almost lifting
+the rider, but a stinging cut from the lasso made him come to a stand.
+Plainly the rider held the mastery.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad!" called Lucy, faintly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil went forward, close, while the rider held Wildfire. Lucy was as
+wan-faced as a flower by moonlight. Her eyes were dark with emotions,
+fear predominating. Then for Bostil the half of his heart that was
+human reasserted itself. Lucy was only a girl now, and weakening. Her
+fear, her pitiful little smile, as if she dared not hope for her
+father's approval yet could not help it, touched Bostil to the quick,
+and he opened his arms. Lucy slid down into them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, girl, you've won the King's race an' double-crossed your poor
+old dad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Dad, I never knew&mdash;I never dreamed Wildfire&mdash;would jump the King,"
+Lucy faltered. "I couldn't hold him. He was terrible.... It made me
+sick.... Daddy, tell me Van wasn't hurt&mdash;or the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The hoss's all right an' so's Van," replied Bostil. "Don't cry, Lucy.
+It was a fool trick you pulled off, but you did it great. By Gad! you
+sure was ridin' thet red devil.... An' say, it's all right with me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy did not faint then, but she came near it. Bostil put her down and
+led her through the lines of admiring Indians and applauding riders,
+and left her with the women.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he turned again he was in time to see the strange rider mount
+Wildfire. It was a swift and hazardous mount, the stallion being in the
+air. When he came down he tore the turf and sent it flying, and when he
+shot up again he was doubled in a red knot, bristling with fiery hair,
+a furious wild beast, mad to throw the rider. Bostil never heard as
+wild a scream uttered by a horse. Likewise he had never seen so
+incomparable a horseman as this stranger. Indians and riders alike
+thrilled at a sight which was after their own hearts. The rider had
+hooked his long spurs under the horse and now appeared a part of him.
+He could not be dislodged. This was not a bucking mustang, but a
+fierce, powerful, fighting stallion. No doubt, thought Bostil, this
+fight took place every time the rider mounted his horse. It was the
+sort of thing riders loved. Most of them would not own a horse that
+would not pitch. Bostil presently decided, however, that in the case of
+this red stallion no rider in his right senses would care for such a
+fight, simply because of the extraordinary strengths, activity, and
+ferocity of the stallion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders were all betting the horse would throw the stranger. And
+Bostil, seeing the gathering might of Wildfire's momentum, agreed with
+them. No horseman could stick on that horse. Suddenly Wildfire tripped
+in the sage, and went sprawling in the dust, throwing his rider ahead.
+Both man and beast were quick to rise, but the rider had a foot in the
+stirrup before Wildfire was under way. Then the horse plunged, ran
+free, came circling back, and slowly gave way to the rider's control.
+Those few moments of frenzied activity had brought out the foam and the
+sweat&mdash;Wildfire was wet. The man pulled him in before Bostil and
+dismounted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sometimes I ride him, then sometimes I don't," he said, with a smile.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil held out his hand. He liked this rider. He would have liked the
+frank face, less hard than that of most riders, and the fine, dark
+eyes, straight and steady, even if their possessor had not come with
+the open sesame to Bostil's regard&mdash;a grand, wild horse, and the nerve
+to ride him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, you rode him longer 'n any of us figgered," said Bostil, heartily
+shaking the man's hand. "I'm Bostil. Glad to meet you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My name's Slone&mdash;Lin Slone," replied the rider, frankly. "I'm a
+wild-horse hunter an' hail from Utah."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Utah? How'd you ever get over? Wal, you've got a grand hoss&mdash;an' you
+put a grand rider up on him in the race.... My girl Lucy&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil hesitated. His mind was running swiftly. Back of his thoughts
+gathered the desire and the determination to get possession of this
+horse Wildfire. He had forgotten what he might have said to this
+stranger under different circumstances. He looked keenly into Slone's
+face and saw no fear, no subterfuge. The young man was honest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, I chased this wild horse days an' weeks an' months, hundreds
+of miles&mdash;across the canyon an' the river&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" interrupted Bostil, blankly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. I'll tell you how later.... Out here somewhere I caught Wildfire,
+broke him as much as he'll ever be broken. He played me out an' got
+away. Your girl rode along&mdash;saved my horse&mdash;an' saved my life, too. I
+was in bad shape for days. But I got well&mdash;an'&mdash;an' then she wanted me
+to let her run Wildfire in the big race. I couldn't refuse.... An' it
+would have been a great race but for the unlucky accident to Sage King.
+I'm sorry, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone, it jarred me some, thet disappointment. But it's over," replied
+Bostil. "An' so thet's how Lucy found her hoss. She sure was
+mysterious.... Wal, wal." Bostil became aware of others behind him.
+"Holley, shake hands with Slone, hoss-wrangler out of Utah.... You,
+too, Cal Blinn.... An' Macomber&mdash;an' Wetherby, meet my friend
+here&mdash;young Slone.... An', Cordts, shake hands with a feller thet owns
+a grand hoss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil laughed as he introduced the horse-thief to Slone. The others
+laughed, too, even Cordts joining in. There was much of the old rider
+daredevil spirit left in Bostil, and it interested and amused him to
+see Cordts and Slone meet. Assuredly Slone had heard of the noted
+stealer of horses. The advantage was certainly on Cordts's side, for he
+was good-natured and pleasant while Slone stiffened, paling slightly as
+he faced about to acknowledge the introduction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Howdy, Slone," drawled Cordts, with hand outstretched. "I sure am glad
+to meet yuh. I'd like to trade the Sage King for this red stallion!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A roar of laughter greeted this sally, all but Bostil and Slone joining
+in. The joke was on Bostil, and he showed it. Slone did not even smile.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Howdy, Cordts," he replied. "I'm glad to meet you&mdash;so I'll know you
+when I see you again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, we're all good fellers to-day," interposed Bostil. "An' now let's
+ride home an' eat. Slone, you come with me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The group slowly mounted the slope where the horses waited. Macomber,
+Wetherby, Burthwait, Blinn&mdash;all Bostil's friends proffered their
+felicitations to the young rider, and all were evidently prepossessed
+with him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun was low in the west; purple shades were blotting out the gold
+lights down the valley; the day of the great races was almost done.
+Indians were still scattered here and there in groups; others were
+turning out the mustangs; and the majority were riding and walking with
+the crowd toward the village.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil observed that Cordts had hurried ahead of the group and now
+appeared to be saying something emphatic to Dick Sears and Hutchinson.
+Bostil heard Cordts curse. Probably he was arraigning the sullen Sears.
+Cordts had acted first rate&mdash;had lived up to his word, as Bostil
+thought he would do. Cordts and Hutchinson mounted their horses and
+rode off, somewhat to the left of the scattered crowd. But Sears
+remained behind. Bostil thought this strange and put it down to the
+surliness of the fellow, who had lost on the races. Bostil, wishing
+Sears would get out of his sight, resolved never to make another
+blunder like inviting horse-thieves to a race.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the horses except Wildfire stood in a bunch back on the bench.
+Sears appeared to be fussing with the straps on his saddle. And Bostil
+could not keep his glance from wandering back to gloat over Wildfire's
+savage grace and striking size.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly there came a halt in the conversation of the men, a curse in
+Holley's deep voice, a violent split in the group. Bostil wheeled to
+see Sears in a menacing position with two guns leveled low.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't holler!" he called. "An' don't move!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What 'n the h&mdash;l now, Sears?" demanded Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bore you if you move&mdash;thet's what!" replied Sears. His eyes,
+bold, steely, with a glint that Bostil knew, vibrated as he held in
+sight all points before him. A vicious little sand-rattlesnake about to
+strike!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, turn yer back!" ordered Sears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The old rider, who stood foremost of the group' instantly obeyed, with
+hands up. He took no chances here, for he alone packed a gun. With
+swift steps Sears moved, pulled Holley's gun, flung it aside into the
+sage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sears, it ain't a hold-up!" expostulated Bostil. The act seemed too
+bold, too wild even for Dick Sears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ain't it?" scoffed Sears, malignantly. "Bostil, I was after the King.
+But I reckon I'll git the hoss thet beat him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's face turned dark-blood color and his neck swelled. "By Gawd,
+Sears! You ain't a-goin' to steal this boy's hoss!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shut up!" hissed the horse-thief. He pushed a gun close to Bostil.
+"I've always laid fer you! I'm achin' to bore you now. I would but fer
+scarin' this hoss. If you yap again I'll KILL YOU, anyhow, an' take a
+chance!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the terrible hate and evil and cruelty and deadliness of his kind
+burned in his eyes and stung in his voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sears, if it's my horse you want you needn't kill Bostil," spoke up
+Slone. The contrast of his cool, quiet voice eased the terrible strain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lead him round hyar!" snapped Sears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire appeared more shy of the horses back of him than of the men.
+Slone was able to lead him, however, to within several paces of Sears.
+Then Slone dropped the reins. He still held a lasso which was loosely
+coiled, and the loop dropped in front of him as he backed away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sears sheathed the left-hand gun. Keeping the group covered with the
+other, he moved backward, reaching for the hanging reins. Wildfire
+snorted, appeared about to jump. But Sears got the reins. Bostil,
+standing like a stone, his companions also motionless, could not help
+but admire the daring of this upland horse-thief. How was he to mount
+that wild stallion? Sears was noted for two qualities&mdash;his nerve before
+men and his skill with horses. Assuredly he would not risk an ordinary
+mount. Wildfire began to suspect Sears&mdash;to look at him instead of the
+other horses. Then quick as a cat Sears vaulted into the saddle.
+Wildfire snorted and lifted his forefeet in a lunge that meant he would
+bolt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sears in vaulting up had swung the gun aloft. He swept it down, but
+waveringly, for Wildfire had begun to rear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil saw how fatal that single instant would have been for Sears if
+he or Holley had a gun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Something whistled. Bostil saw the leap of Slone's lasso&mdash;the curling,
+snaky dart of the noose which flew up to snap around Sears. The rope
+sung taut. Sears was swept bodily clean from the saddle, to hit the
+ground in sodden impact.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Almost swifter than Bostil's sight was the action of Slone&mdash;flashing
+by&mdash;in the air&mdash;himself on the plunging horse. Sears shot once, twice.
+Then Wildfire bolted as his rider whipped the lasso round the horn.
+Sears, half rising, was jerked ten feet. An awful shriek was throttled
+in his throat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A streak of dust on the slope&mdash;a tearing, parting line in the sage!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil stood amazed. The red stallion made short plunges. Slone reached
+low for the tripping reins. When he straightened up in the saddle
+Wildfire broke wildly into a run.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was characteristic of Holley that at this thrilling, tragic instant
+he walked over into the sage to pick up his gun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Throwed a gun on me, got the drop, an' pitched mine away!" muttered
+Holley, in disgust. The way he spoke meant that he was disgraced.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My Gawd! I was scared thet Sears would get the hoss!" rolled out
+Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley thought of his gun; Bostil thought of the splendid horse. The
+thoughts were characteristic of these riders. The other men, however,
+recovering from a horror-broken silence, burst out in acclaim of
+Slone's feat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dick Sears's finish! Roped by a boy rider!" exclaimed Cal Blinn,
+fervidly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, that rider is worthy of his horse," said Wetherby. "I think
+Sears would have bored you. I saw his finger pressing&mdash;pressing on the
+trigger. Men like Sears can't help but pull at that stage."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet was the quickest trick I ever seen," declared Macomber.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They watched Wildfire run down the slope, out into the valley, with a
+streak of rising dust out behind. They all saw when there ceased to be
+that peculiar rising of dust. Wildfire appeared to shoot ahead at
+greater speed. Then he slowed up. The rider turned him and faced back
+toward the group, coming at a stiff gallop. Soon Wildfire breasted the
+slope, and halted, snorting, shaking before the men. The lasso was
+still trailing out behind, limp and sagging. There was no weight upon
+it now.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil strode slowly ahead. He sympathized with the tension that held
+Slone; he knew why the rider's face was gray, why his lips only moved
+mutely, why there was horror in the dark, strained eyes, why the lean,
+strong hands, slowly taking up the lasso, now shook like leaves in the
+wind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was only dust on the lasso. But Bostil knew&mdash;they all knew that
+none the less it had dealt a terrible death to the horse-thief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Somehow Bostil could not find words for what he wanted to say. He put a
+hand on the red stallion&mdash;patted his shoulder. Then he gripped Slone
+close and hard. He was thinking how he would have gloried in a son like
+this young, wild rider. Then he again faced his comrades.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fellers, do you think Cordts was in on thet trick?" he queried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nope. Cordts was on the square," replied Holley. "But he must have
+seen it comin' an' left Sears to his fate. It sure was a fittin' last
+ride for a hoss-thief."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil sent Holley and Farlane on ahead to find Cordts and Hutchinson,
+with their comrades, to tell them the fate of Sears, and to warn them
+to leave before the news got to the riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun was setting golden and red over the broken battlements of the
+canyons to the west. The heat of the day blew away on a breeze that
+bent the tips of the sage-brush. A wild song drifted back from the
+riders to the fore. And the procession of Indians moved along, their
+gay trappings and bright colors beautiful in the fading sunset light.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Bostil and, his guests arrived at the corrals, Holley, with
+Farlane and other riders, were waiting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boss," said Holley, "Cordts an' his outfit never rid in. They was last
+seen by some Navajos headin' for the canyon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet's good!" ejaculated Bostil, in relief. "Wal boys, look after the
+hosses. ... Slone, just turn Wildfire over to the boys with
+instructions, an' feel safe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Farlane scratched his head and looked dubious. "I'm wonderin' how safe
+it'll be fer us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll look after him," said Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil nodded as if he had expected Slone to refuse to let any rider
+put the stallion away for the night. Wildfire would not go into the
+barn, and Slone led him into one of the high-barred corrals. Bostil
+waited, talking with his friends, until Slone returned, and then they
+went toward the house.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon we couldn't get inside Brack's place now," remarked Bostil.
+"But in a case like this I can scare up a drink." Lights from the
+windows shone bright through the darkness under the cottonwoods. Bostil
+halted at the door, as if suddenly remembering, and he whispered,
+huskily: "Let's keep the women from learnin' about Sears&mdash;to-night,
+anyway."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he led the way through the big door into the huge living-room.
+There were hanging-lights on the walls and blazing sticks on the
+hearth. Lucy came running in to meet them. It did not escape Bostil's
+keen eyes that she was dressed in her best white dress. He had never
+seen her look so sweet and pretty, and, for that matter, so strange.
+The flush, the darkness of her eyes, the added something in her face,
+tender, thoughtful, strong&mdash;these were new. Bostil pondered while she
+welcomed his guests. Slone, who had hung back, was last in turn. Lucy
+greeted him as she had the others. Slone met her with awkward
+constraint. The gray had not left his face. Lucy looked up at him
+again, and differently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What&mdash;what has happened?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It annoyed Bostil that Slone and all the men suddenly looked blank.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, nothin'," replied Slone, slowly, "'cept I'm fagged out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy, or any other girl, could have seen that he, was evading the
+truth. She flashed a look from Slone to her father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Until to-day we never had a big race that something dreadful didn't
+happen," said Lucy. "This was my day&mdash;my race. And, oh! I wanted it to
+pass without&mdash;without&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Lucy dear," replied Bostil, as she faltered. "Nothin' came off
+thet'd make you feel bad. Young Slone had a scare about his hoss.
+Wildfire's safe out there in the corral, an' he'll be guarded like the
+King an' Sarch. Slone needs a drink an' somethin' to eat, same as all
+of us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy's color returned and her smile, but Bostil noted that, while she
+was serving them and brightly responsive to compliments, she gave more
+than one steady glance at Slone. She was deep, thought Bostil, and it
+angered him a little that she showed interest in what concerned this
+strange rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then they had dinner, with twelve at table. The wives of Bostil's three
+friends had been helping Aunt Jane prepare the feast, and they added to
+the merriment. Bostil was not much given to social intercourse&mdash;he
+would have preferred to be with his horses and riders&mdash;but this night
+he outdid himself as host, amazed his sister Jane, who evidently
+thought he drank too much, and delighted Lucy. Bostil's outward
+appearance and his speech and action never reflected all the workings
+of his mind. No one would ever know the depth of his bitter
+disappointment at the outcome of the race. With Creech's Blue Roan out
+of the way, another horse, swifter and more dangerous, had come along
+to spoil the King's chance. Bostil felt a subtly increasing
+covetousness in regard to Wildfire, and this colored all his talk and
+action. The upland country, vast and rangy, was for Bostil too small to
+hold Sage King and Wildfire unless they both belonged to him. And when
+old Cal Blinn gave a ringing toast to Lucy, hoping to live to see her
+up on Wildfire in the grand race that must be run with the King, Bostil
+felt stir in him the birth of a subtle, bitter fear. At first he mocked
+it. He&mdash;Bostil&mdash;afraid to race! It was a lie of the excited mind. He
+repudiated it. Insidiously it returned. He drowned it down&mdash;smothered
+it with passion. Then the ghost of it remained, hauntingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After dinner Bostil with the men went down to Brackton's, where Slone
+and the winners of the day received their prizes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, it's more money than I ever had in my whole life!" exclaimed
+Slone, gazing incredulously at the gold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil was amused and pleased, and back of both amusement and pleasure
+was the old inventive, driving passion to gain his own ends.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil was abnormally generous in many ways; monstrously selfish in one
+way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone, I seen you didn't drink none," he said, curiously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No; I don't like liquor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you gamble?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I like a little bet&mdash;on a race," replied Slone, frankly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, thet ain't gamblin'. These fool riders of mine will bet on the
+switchin' of a hoss's tail." He drew Slone a little aside from the
+others, who were interested in Brackton's delivery of the different
+prizes. "Slone, how'd you like to ride for me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone appeared surprised. "Why, I never rode for any one," he replied,
+slowly. "I can't stand to be tied down. I'm a horse-hunter, you know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil eyed the young man, wondering what he knew about the
+difficulties of the job offered. It was no news to Bostil that he was
+at once the best and the worst man to ride for in all the uplands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure, I know. But thet doesn't make no difference," went on Bostil,
+persuasively. "If we got along&mdash;wal, you'd save some of thet yellow
+coin you're jinglin'. A roamin' rider never builds no corral!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank you, Bostil," replied Slone, earnestly. "I'll think it over. It
+would seem kind of tame now to go back to wild-horse wranglin', after
+I've caught Wildfire. I'll think it over. Maybe I'll do it, if you're
+sure I'm good enough with rope an' horse."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, by Gawd!" blurted out Bostil. "Holley says he'd rather you
+throwed a gun on him than a rope! So would I. An' as for your handlin'
+a hoss, I never seen no better."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone appeared embarrassed and kept studying the gold coins in his
+palm. Some one touched Bostil, who, turning, saw Brackton at his elbow.
+The other men were now bantering with the Indians.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come now while I've got a minnit," said Brackton, taking up a lantern.
+"I've somethin' to show you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil followed Brackton, and Slone came along. The old man opened a
+door into a small room, half full of stores and track. The lantern only
+dimly lighted the place.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look thar!" And Brackton flashed the light upon a man lying prostrate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil recognized the pale face of Joel Creech. "Brack! ... What's
+this? Is he dead?" Bostil sustained a strange, incomprehensible shock.
+Sight of a dead man had never before shocked him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nope, he ain't dead, which if he was might be good for this
+community," replied Brackton. "He's only fallen in a fit. Fust off I
+reckoned he was drunk. But it ain't thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, what do you want to show him to me for?" demanded Bostil, gruffly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckoned you oughter see him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' why, Brackton?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton set down the lantern and, pushing Slone outside, said: "Jest a
+minnit, son," and then he closed the door. "Joel's been on my hands
+since the flood cut him off from home," said Brackton. "An' he's been
+some trial. But nobody else would have done nothin' for him, so I had
+to. I reckon I felt sorry for him. He cried like a baby thet had lost
+its mother. Then he gets wild-lookin' an' raved around. When I wasn't
+busy I kept an eye on him. But some of the time I couldn't, an' he
+stole drinks, which made him wuss. An' when I seen he was tryin' to
+sneak one of my guns, I up an' gets suspicious. Once he said, 'My dad's
+hosses are goin' to starve, an' I'm goin' to kill somebody!' He was out
+of his head an' dangerous. Wal, I was worried some, but all I could do
+was lock up my guns. Last night I caught him confabin' with some men
+out in the dark, behind the store. They all skedaddled except Joel, but
+I recognized Cordts. I didn't like this, nuther. Joel was surly an'
+ugly. An' when one of the riders called him he said: 'Thet boat NEVER
+DRIFTED OFF. Fer the night of the flood I went down there myself an'
+tied the ropes. They never come untied. Somebody cut them&mdash;jest before
+the flood&mdash;to make sure my dad's hosses couldn't be crossed. Somebody
+figgered the river an' the flood. An' if my dad's hosses starve I'm
+goin' to kill somebody!'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton took up the lantern and placed a hand on the door ready to go
+out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then a rider punched Joel&mdash;I never seen who&mdash;an' Joel had a fit. I
+dragged him in here. An' as you see, he ain't come to yet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Brackton, the boy's crazy," said Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So I reckon. An' I'm afeared he'll burn us out&mdash;he's crazy on fires,
+anyway&mdash;or do somethin' like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's sure a problem. Wal, we'll see," replied Bostil, soberly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And they went out to find Slone waiting. Then Bostil called his guests,
+and with Slone also accompanying him, went home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil threw off the recurring gloom, and he was good-natured when Lucy
+came to his room to say good night. He knew she had come to say more
+than that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hello, daughter!" he said. "Aren't you ashamed to come facin' your
+poor old dad?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy eyed him dubiously. "No, I'm not ashamed. But I'm still a
+little&mdash;afraid."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm harmless, child. I'm a broken man. When you put Sage King out of
+the race you broke me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, that isn't funny. You make me an&mdash;angry when you hint I did
+something underhand."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, you didn't consult ME."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought it would be fun to surprise you all. Why, you're always
+delighted with a surprise in a race, unless it beats you.... Then, it
+was my great and only chance to get out in front of the King. Oh, how
+grand it'd have been! Dad, I'd have run away from him the same as the
+others!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, you wouldn't," declared Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad, Wildfire can beat the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never, girl! Knockin' a good-tempered hoss off his pins ain't beatin'
+him in a runnin'-race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then father and daughter fought over the old score, the one doggedly,
+imperturbably, the other spiritedly, with flashing eyes. It was
+different this time, however, for it ended in Lucy saying Bostil would
+never risk another race. That stung Bostil, and it cost him an effort
+to control his temper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let thet go now. Tell me all about how you saved Wildfire, an' Slone,
+too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy readily began the narrative, and she had scarcely started before
+Bostil found himself intensely interested. Soon he became absorbed.
+That was the most thrilling and moving kind of romance to him, like his
+rider's dreams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, you're sure a game kid," he said, fervidly, when she had ended.
+"I reckon I don't blame Slone for fallin' in love with you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who said THAT!" inquired Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nobody. But it's true&mdash;ain't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She looked up with eyes as true as ever they were, yet a little sad, he
+thought, a little wistful and wondering, as if a strange and grave
+thing confronted her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Dad&mdash;it's&mdash;it's true," she answered, haltingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, you didn't need to tell me, but I'm glad you did."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil meant to ask her then if she in any sense returned the rider's
+love, but unaccountably he could not put the question. The girl was as
+true as ever&mdash;as good as gold. Bostil feared a secret that might hurt
+him. Just as sure as life was there and death but a step away, some
+rider, sooner or later, would win this girl's love. Bostil knew that,
+hated it, feared it. Yet he would never give his girl to a beggarly
+rider. Such a man as Wetherby ought to win Lucy's hand. And Bostil did
+not want to know too much at present; he did not want his
+swift-mounting animosity roused so soon. Still he was curious, and,
+wanting to get the drift of Lucy's mind, he took to his old habit of
+teasing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Another moonstruck rider!" he said. "Your eyes are sure full moons,
+Lucy. I'd be ashamed to trifle with these poor fellers."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're a heartless flirt&mdash;same as your mother was before she met ME."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not. And I don't believe mother was, either," replied Lucy. It was
+easy to strike fire from her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, you did dead wrong to ride out there day after day meetin' Slone,
+because&mdash;young woman&mdash;if he ever has the nerve to ask me for you I'll
+beat him up bad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then you'd be a brute!" retorted Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, mebbe," returned Bostil, secretly delighted and surprised at
+Lucy's failure to see through him. But she was looking inward. He
+wondered what hid there deep in her. "But I can't stand for the nerve
+of thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He&mdash;he means to&mdash;to ask you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The h&mdash;&mdash;.... A-huh!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy did not catch the slip of tongue. She was flushing now. "He said
+he'd never have let me meet him out there alone&mdash;unless&mdash;he&mdash;he loved
+me&mdash;and as our neighbors and the riders would learn of it&mdash;and talk&mdash;he
+wanted you and them to know he'd asked to&mdash;to marry me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, he's a square young man!" ejaculated Bostil, involuntarily. It
+was hard for Bostil to hide his sincerity and impulsiveness; much
+harder than to hide unworthy attributes. Then he got back on the other
+track. "That'll make me treat him decent, so when he rides up to ask
+for you I'll let him off with, 'No!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy dropped her head. Bostil would have given all he had, except his
+horses, to feel sure she did not care for Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dad&mdash;I said&mdash;'No'&mdash;for myself," she murmured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This time Bostil did not withhold the profane word of surprise. "... So
+he's asked you, then? Wal, wal! When?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To-day&mdash;out there in the rocks where he waited with Wildfire for me.
+He&mdash;he&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy slipped into her father's arms, and her slender form shook. Bostil
+instinctively felt what she then needed was her mother. Her mother was
+dead, and he was only a rough, old, hard rider. He did not know what to
+do&mdash;to say. His heart softened and he clasped her close. It hurt him
+keenly to realize that he might have been a better, kinder father if it
+were not for the fear that she would find him out. But that proved he
+loved her, craved her respect and affection.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, little girl, tell me," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He&mdash;he broke his word to me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! Thet's too bad. An' how did he?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He&mdash;he&mdash;" Lucy seemed to catch her tongue.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil was positive she had meant to tell him something and suddenly
+changed her mind. Subtly the child vanished&mdash;a woman remained. Lucy sat
+up self-possessed once more. Some powerfully impelling thought had
+transformed her. Bostil's keen sense gathered that what she would not
+tell was not hers to reveal. For herself, she was the soul of
+simplicity and frankness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Days ago I told him I cared for him," she went on. "But I forbade him
+to speak of it to me. He promised. I wanted to wait till after the
+race&mdash;till after I had found courage to confess to you. He broke his
+word.... Today when he put me up on Wildfire he&mdash;he suddenly lost his
+head."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The slow scarlet welled into Lucy's face and her eyes grew shamed, but
+bravely she kept facing her father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He&mdash;he pulled me off&mdash;he hugged me&mdash;he k-kissed me.... Oh, it was
+dreadful&mdash;shameful! ... Then I gave him back&mdash;some&mdash;something he had
+given me. And I told him I&mdash;I hated him&mdash;and I told him, 'No!'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you rode his hoss in the race," said Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy bowed her head at that. "I&mdash;I couldn't resist!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil stroked the bright head. What a quandary for a thick-skulled old
+horseman! "Wal, it seems to me Slone didn't act so bad, considerin'.
+You'd told him you cared for him. If it wasn't for thet! ... I remember
+I did much the same to your mother. She raised the devil, but I never
+seen as she cared any less for me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll never forgive him," Lucy cried, passionately. "I hate him. A man
+who breaks his word in one thing will do it in another."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil sadly realized that his little girl had reached womanhood and
+love, and with them the sweet, bitter pangs of life. He realized also
+that here was a crisis when a word&mdash;an unjust or lying word from him
+would forever ruin any hope that might still exist for Slone. Bostil
+realized this acutely, but the realization was not even a temptation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, listen. I'm bound to confess your new rider is sure swift. An',
+Lucy, to-day if he hadn't been as swift with a rope as he is in
+love&mdash;wal, your old daddy might be dead!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She grew as white as her dress. "Oh, Dad! I KNEW something had
+happened," she cried, reaching for him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Bostil told her how Dick Sears had menaced him&mdash;how Slone had
+foiled the horse-thief. He told the story bluntly, but eloquently, with
+all a rider's praise. Lucy rose with hands pressed against her breast.
+When had Bostil seen eyes like those&mdash;dark, shining, wonderful? Ah! he
+remembered her mother's once&mdash;only once, as a girl.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Lucy kissed him and without a word fled from the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil stared after her. "D&mdash;n me!" he swore, as he threw a boot
+against the wall. "I reckon I'll never let her marry Slone, but I just
+had to tell her what I think of him!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap14"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Slone lay wide awake under an open window, watching the stars glimmer
+through the rustling foliage of the cottonwoods. Somewhere a lonesome
+hound bayed. Very faintly came the silvery tinkle of running water.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For five days Slone had been a guest of Bostil's, and the whole five
+days had been torment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the morning of the day after the races Lucy had confronted him.
+Would he ever forget her eyes&mdash;her voice? "Bless you for saving my
+dad!" she had said. "It was brave.... But don't let dad fool you. Don't
+believe in his kindness. Above all, don't ride for him! He only wants
+Wildfire, and if he doesn't get him he'll hate you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That speech of Lucy's had made the succeeding days hard for Slone.
+Bostil loaded him with gifts and kindnesses, and never ceased
+importuning him to accept his offers. But for Lucy, Slone would have
+accepted. It was she who cast the first doubt of Bostil into his mind.
+Lucy averred that her father was splendid and good in every way except
+in what pertained to fast horses; there he was impossible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The great stallion that Slone had nearly sacrificed his life to catch
+was like a thorn in the rider's flesh. Slone lay there in the darkness,
+restless, hot, rolling from side to side, or staring out at the
+star-studded sky&mdash;miserably unhappy all on account of that horse.
+Almost he hated him. What pride he had felt in Wildfire! How he had
+gloried in the gift of the stallion to Lucy! Then, on the morning of
+the race had come that unexpected, incomprehensible and wild act of
+which he had been guilty. Yet not to save his life, his soul, could he
+regret it! Was it he who had been responsible, or an unknown savage
+within him? He had kept his word to Lucy, when day after day he had
+burned with love until that fatal moment when the touch of her, as he
+lifted her to Wildfire's saddle, had made a madman out of him. He had
+swept her into his arms and held her breast to his, her face before
+him, and he had kissed the sweet, parting lips till he was blind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he had learned what a little fury she was. Then he learned how he
+had fallen, what he had forfeited. In his amaze at himself, in his
+humility and shame, he had not been able to say a word in his own
+defense. She did not know yet that his act had been ungovernable and
+that he had not known what he was doing till too late. And she had
+finished with: "I'll ride Wildfire in the race&mdash;but I won't have
+him&mdash;and I won't have YOU! NO!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had the steel and hardness of her father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For Slone, the watching of that race was a blend of rapture and
+despair. He lived over in mind all the time between the race and this
+hour when he lay there sleepless and full of remorse. His mind was like
+a racecourse with many races; and predominating in it was that swift,
+strange, stinging race of his memory of Lucy Bostil's looks and actions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What an utter fool he was to believe she had meant those tender words
+when, out there under the looming monuments, she had accepted Wildfire!
+She had been an impulsive child. Her scorn and fury that morning of the
+race had left nothing for him except footless fancies. She had mistaken
+love of Wildfire for love of him. No, his case was hopeless with Lucy,
+and if it had not been so Bostil would have made it hopeless. Yet there
+were things Slone could not fathom&mdash;the wilful, contradictory, proud
+and cold and unaccountably sweet looks and actions of the girl. They
+haunted Slone. They made him conscious he had a mind and tortured him
+with his development. But he had no experience with girls to compare
+with what was happening now. It seemed that accepted fact and
+remembered scorn and cold certainty were somehow at variance with
+hitherto unknown intuitions and instincts. Lucy avoided him, if by
+chance she encountered him alone. When Bostil or Aunt Jane or any one
+else was present Lucy was kind, pleasant, agreeable. What made her
+flush red at sight of him and then, pale? Why did she often at table or
+in the big living-room softly brush against him when it seemed she
+could have avoided that? Many times he had felt some inconceivable
+drawing power, and looked up to find her eyes upon him, strange eyes
+full of mystery, that were suddenly averted. Was there any meaning
+attachable to the fact that his room was kept so tidy and neat, that
+every day something was added to its comfort or color, that he found
+fresh flowers whenever he returned, or a book, or fruit, or a dainty
+morsel to eat, and once a bunch of Indian paint-brush, wild flowers of
+the desert that Lucy knew he loved? Most of all, it was Lucy's eyes
+which haunted Slone&mdash;eyes that had changed, darkened, lost their
+audacious flash, and yet seemed all the sweeter. The glances he caught,
+which he fancied were stolen&mdash;and then derided his fancy&mdash;thrilled him
+to his heart. Thus Slone had spent waking hours by day and night, mad
+with love and remorse, tormented one hour by imagined grounds for hope
+and resigned to despair the next.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Upon the sixth morning of his stay at Bostil's Slone rose with
+something of his former will reasserting itself. He could not remain in
+Bostil's home any longer unless he accepted Bostil's offer, and this
+was not to be thought of. With a wrench Slone threw off the softening
+indecision and hurried out to find Bostil while the determination was
+hot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil was in the corral with Wildfire. This was the second time Slone
+had found him there. Wildfire appeared to regard Bostil with a much
+better favor than he did his master. As Slone noted this a little heat
+stole along his veins. That was gall to a rider.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I like your hoss," said Bostil, with gruff frankness. But a tinge of
+red showed under his beard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, I'm sorry I can't take you up on the job," rejoined Slone,
+swiftly. "It's been hard for me to decide. You've been good to me. I'm
+grateful. But it's time I was tellin' you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why can't you?" demanded Bostil, straightening up with a glint in his
+big eyes. It was the first time he had asked Slone that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can't ride for you," replied Slone, briefly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anythin' to do with Lucy?" queried Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How so?" returned Slone, conscious of more heat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, you was sweet on her an' she wouldn't have you," replied Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone felt the blood swell and boil in his veins. This Bostil could say
+as harsh and hard things as repute gave him credit for.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I AM sweet on Lucy, an' she won't have me," said Slone, steadily.
+"I asked her to let me come to you an' tell you I wanted to marry her.
+But she wouldn't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, it's just as good you didn't come, because I might...." Bostil
+broke off his speech and began again. "You don't lack nerve, Slone.
+What'd you have to offer Lucy?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothin' except&mdash;But that doesn't matter," replied Slone, cut to the
+quick by Bostil's scorn. "I'm glad you know, an' so much for that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil turned to look at Wildfire once more, and he looked long. When
+he faced around again he was another man. Slone felt the powerful
+driving passion of this old horse-trader.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone, I'll give you pick of a hundred mustangs an' a thousand dollars
+for Wildfire!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So he unmasked his power in the face of a beggarly rider! Though it
+struck Slone like a thunderbolt, he felt amused. But he did not show
+that. Bostil had only one possession, among all his uncounted wealth,
+that could win Wildfire from his owner.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Slone, briefly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll double it," returned Bostil, just as briefly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Save your breath, Bostil," flashed Slone. "You don't know me. But let
+me tell you&mdash;you CAN'T BUY my horse!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The great veins swelled and churned in Bostil's bull neck; a thick and
+ugly contortion worked in his face; his eyes reflected a sick rage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone saw that two passions shook Bostil&mdash;one, a bitter, terrible
+disappointment, and the other, the passion of a man who could not brook
+being crossed. It appeared to Slone that the best thing he could do was
+to get away quickly, and to this end he led Wildfire out of the corral
+to the stable courtyard, and there quickly saddled him. Then he went
+into another corral for his other horse, Nagger, and, bringing him out,
+returned to find Bostil had followed as far as the court. The old man's
+rage apparently had passed or had been smothered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See here," he began, in thick voice, "don't be a d&mdash;- fool an' ruin
+your chance in life. I'll&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, my one chance was ruined&mdash;an' you know who did it," replied
+Slone, as he gathered Nagger's rope and Wildfire's bridle together.
+"I've no hard feelin's.... But I can't sell you my horse. An' I can't
+ride for you&mdash;because&mdash;well, because it would breed trouble."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' what kind?" queried Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley and Farlane and Van, with several other riders, had come up and
+were standing open-mouthed. Slone gathered from their manner and
+expression that anything might happen with Bostil in such a mood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We'd be racin' the King an' Wildfire, wouldn't we?" replied Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' supposin' we would?" returned Bostil, ominously. His huge frame
+vibrated with a slight start.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire would run off with your favorite&mdash;an' you wouldn't like
+that," answered Slone. It was his rider's hot blood that prompted him
+to launch this taunt. He could not help it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You wild-hoss chaser," roared Bostil, "your Wildfire may be a bloody
+killer, but he can't beat the King in a race!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Excuse ME, Bostil, but Wildfire did beat the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This was only adding fuel to the fire. Slone saw Holley making signs
+that must have meant silence would be best. But Slone's blood was up.
+Bostil had rubbed him the wrong way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're a lair!" declared Bostil, with a tremendous stride forward.
+Slone saw then how dangerous the man really was. "It was no race. Your
+wild hoss knocked the King off the track."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sage King had the lead, didn't he? Why didn't he keep it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil was like a furious, intractable child whose favorite precious
+treasure had been broken; and he burst out into a torrent of incoherent
+speech, apparently reasons why this and that were so. Slone did not
+make out what Bostil meant and he did not care. When Bostil got out of
+breath Slone said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're both wastin' talk. An' I'm not wantin' you to call me a liar
+twice. ... Put your rider up on the King an' come on, right now. I'll&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone, shut up an' chase yourself," interrupted Holley
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You go to h&mdash;l!" returned Slone, coolly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a moment's silence, in which Slone took Holley's measure. The
+hawk-eyed old rider may have been square, but he was then thinking only
+of Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What am I up, against here?" demanded Slone. "Am I goin' to be shot
+because I'm takin' my own part? Holley, you an' the rest of your pards
+are all afraid of this old devil. But I'm not&mdash;an' you stay out of
+this."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, son, you needn't git riled," replied Holley, placatingly. "I was
+only tryin' to stave off talk you might be sorry for."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sorry for nothin'! I'm goin' to make this great horse-trader, this
+rich an' mighty rancher, this judge of grand horses, this BOSTIL! ...
+I'm goin' to make him race the King or take water!" Then Slone turned
+to Bostil. That worthy evidently had been stunned by the rider who
+dared call him to his face. "Come on! Fetch the King! Let your own
+riders judge the race!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil struggled both to control himself and to speak. "Naw! I ain't
+goin' to see thet red hoss-killer jump the King again!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bah! you're afraid. You know there'd be no girl on his back. You know
+he can outrun the King an' that's why you want to buy him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone caught his breath then. He realized suddenly, at Bostil's paling
+face, that perhaps he had dared too much. Yet, maybe the truth flung
+into this hard old rider's teeth was what he needed more than anything
+else. Slone divined, rather than saw, that he had done an unprecedented
+thing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll go now, Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone nodded a good-by to the riders, and, turning away, he led the two
+horses down the lane toward the house. It scarcely needed sight of Lucy
+under the cottonwoods to still his anger and rouse his regret. Lucy saw
+him coming, and, as usual, started to avoid meeting him, when sight of
+the horses, or something else, caused her to come toward him instead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone halted. Both Wildfire and Nagger whinnied at sight of the girl.
+Lucy took one flashing glance at them, at Slone, and then she evidently
+guessed what was amiss.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, I've done it now&mdash;played hob, sure," said Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?" she cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I called your dad&mdash;called him good an' hard&mdash;an' he&mdash;he&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin! Oh, don't say Dad." Lucy's face whitened and she put a swift hand
+upon his arm&mdash;a touch that thrilled him. "Lin! there's blood&mdash;on your
+face. Don't&mdash;don't tell me Dad hit you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I should say not," declared Slone, quickly lifting his hand to his
+face. "Must be from my cut, that blood. I barked my hand holdin'
+Wildfire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh! I&mdash;I was sick with&mdash;with&mdash;" Lucy faltered and broke off, and then
+drew back quickly, as if suddenly conscious of her actions and words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Slone began to relate everything that had been said, and before he
+concluded his story his heart gave a wild throb at the telltale face
+and eyes of the girl.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You said that to Dad!" she cried, in amaze and fear and admiration.
+"Oh, Dad richly deserved it! But I wish you hadn't. Oh, I wish you
+hadn't!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?" asked Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But she did not answer that. "Where are you going?" she questioned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come to think of that, I don't know," replied Slone, blankly. "I
+started back to fetch my things out of my room. That's as far as my
+muddled thoughts got."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your things? ... Oh!" Suddenly she grew intensely white. The little
+freckles that had been so indistinct stood out markedly, and it was as
+if she had never had any tan. One brown hand went to her breast, the
+other fluttered to his arm again. "You mean to&mdash;to go away&mdash;for good."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure. What else can I do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin! ... Oh, there comes Dad! He mustn't see me. I must run.... Lin,
+don't leave Bostil's Ford&mdash;don't go&mdash;DON'T!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she flew round the corner of the house, to disappear. Slone stood
+there transfixed and thrilling. Even Bostil's heavy tread did not break
+the trance, and a meeting would have been unavoidable had not Bostil
+turned down the path that led to the back of the house. Slone, with a
+start collecting his thoughts, hurried into the little room that had
+been his and gathered up his few belongings. He was careful to leave
+behind the gifts of guns, blankets, gloves, and other rider's
+belongings which Bostil had presented to him. Thus laden, he went
+outside and, tingling with emotions utterly sweet and bewildering, he
+led the horses down into the village.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone went down to Brackton's, and put the horses into a large,
+high-fenced pasture adjoining Brackton's house. Slone felt reasonably
+sure his horses would be safe there, but he meant to keep a mighty
+close watch on them. And old Brackton, as if he read Slone's mind, said
+this: "Keep your eye on thet daffy boy, Joel Creech. He hangs round my
+place, sleeps out somewheres, an' he's crazy about hosses."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone did not need any warning like that, nor any information to make
+him curious regarding young Creech. Lucy had seen to that, and, in
+fact, Slone was anxious to meet this half-witted fellow who had so
+grievously offended and threatened Lucy. That morning, however, Creech
+did not put in an appearance. The village had nearly returned to its
+normal state now, and the sleepy tenor of its way. The Indians, had
+been the last to go, but now none remained. The days were hot while the
+sun stayed high, and only the riders braved its heat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The morning, however, did not pass without an interesting incident.
+Brackton approached Slone with an offer that he take charge of the
+freighting between the Ford and Durango. "What would I do with
+Wildfire?" was Slone's questioning reply, and Brackton held up his
+hands. A later incident earned more of Slone's attention. He had
+observed a man in Brackton's store, and it chanced that this man heard
+Slone's reply to Brackton's offer, and he said: "You'll sure need to
+corral thet red stallion. Grandest hoss I ever seen!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That praise won Slone, and he engaged in conversation with the man, who
+said his name was Vorhees. It developed soon that Vorhees owned a
+little house, a corral, and a patch of ground on a likely site up under
+the bluff, and he was anxious to sell cheap because he had a fine
+opportunity at Durango, where his people lived. What interested Slone
+most was the man's remark that he had a corral which could not be
+broken into. The price he asked was ridiculously low if the property
+was worth anything. An idea flashed across Slone's mind. He went up to
+Vorhees's place and was much pleased with everything, especially the
+corral, which had been built by a man who feared horse-thieves as much
+as Bostil. The view from the door of the little cabin was magnificent
+beyond compare. Slone remembered Lucy's last words. They rang like
+bells in his ears. "Don't go&mdash;don't!" They were enough to chain him to
+Bostil's Ford until the crack of doom. He dared not dream of what they
+meant. He only listened to their music as they pealed over and over in
+his ears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Vorhees, are you serious?" he asked. "The money you ask is little
+enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's enough an' to spare," replied the man. "An' I'd take it as a
+favor of you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, I'll go you," said Slone, and he laughed a little irrationally.
+"Only you needn't tell right away that I bought you out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The deal was consummated, leaving Slone still with half of the money
+that had been his prize in the race. He felt elated. He was rich. He
+owned two horses&mdash;one the grandest in all the uplands, the other the
+faithfulest&mdash;and he owned a neat little cabin where it was a joy to sit
+and look out, and a corral which would let him sleep at night, and he
+had money to put into supplies and furnishings, and a garden. After he
+drank out of the spring that bubbled from under the bluff he told
+himself it alone was worth the money.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Looks right down on Bostil's place," Slone soliloquized, with glee.
+"Won't he just be mad! An' Lucy! ... Whatever's she goin' to think?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The more Slone looked around and thought, the more he became convinced
+that good fortune had knocked at his door at last. And when he returned
+to Brackton's he was in an exultant mood. The old storekeeper gave him
+a nudge and pointed underhand to a young man of ragged aspect sitting
+gloomily on a box. Slone recognized Joel Creech. The fellow surely made
+a pathetic sight, and Slone pitied him. He looked needy and hungry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Say," said Slone, impulsively, "want to help me carry some grub an'
+stuff?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Howdy!" replied Creech, raising his head. "Sure do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone sustained the queerest shock of his life when he met the gaze of
+those contrasting eyes. Yet he did not believe that his strange feeling
+came from sight of different-colored eyes. There was an instinct or
+portent in that meeting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He purchased a bill of goods from Brackton, and, with Creech helping,
+carried it up to the cabin under the bluff. Three trips were needed to
+pack up all the supplies, and meanwhile Creech had but few words to
+say, and these of no moment. Slone offered him money, which he refused.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll help you fix up, an' eat a bite," he said. "Nice up hyar."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He seemed rational enough and certainly responded to kindness. Slone
+found that Vorhees had left the cabin so clean there was little
+cleaning to do. An open fireplace of stone required some repair and
+there was wood to cut.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Joel, you start a fire while I go down after my horses," said Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Creech nodded and Slone left him there. It was not easy to catch
+Wildfire, nor any easier to get him into the new corral; but at last
+Slone saw him safely there. And the bars and locks on the gate might
+have defied any effort to open or break them quickly. Creech was
+standing in the doorway, watching the horses, and somehow Slone saw, or
+imagined he saw, that Creech wore a different aspect.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Grand wild hoss! He did what Blue was a-goin' to do&mdash;beat thet there
+d&mdash;d Bostil's King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech wagged his head. He was gloomy and strange. His eyes were
+unpleasant to look into. His face changed. And he mumbled. Slone pitied
+him the more, but wished to see the last of him. Creech stayed on,
+however, and grew stranger and more talkative during the meal. He
+repeated things often&mdash;talked disconnectedly, and gave other
+indications that he was not wholly right in his mind. Yet Slone
+suspected that Creech's want of balance consisted only in what
+concerned horses and the Bostils. And Slone, wanting to learn all he
+could, encouraged Creech to talk about his father and the racers and
+the river and boat, and finally Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone became convinced that, whether young Creech was half crazy or
+not, he knew his father's horses were doomed, and that the boat at the
+ferry had been cut adrift. Slone could not understand why he was
+convinced, but he was. Finally Creech told how he had gone down to the
+river only a day before; how he had found the flood still raging, but
+much lower; how he had worked round the cliffs and had pulled up the
+rope cables to find they had been cut.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You see, Bostil cut them when he didn't need to," continued Creech,
+shrewdly. "But he didn't know the flood was comin' down so quick. He
+was afeared we'd come across an' git the boat thet night. An' he meant
+to take away them cut cables. But he hadn't no time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil?" queried Slone, as he gazed hard at Creech. The fellow had
+told that rationally enough. Slone wondered if Bostil could have been
+so base. No! and yet&mdash;when it came to horses Bostil was scarcely human.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's query served to send Creech off on another tangent which wound
+up in dark, mysterious threats. Then Slone caught the name of Lucy. It
+abruptly killed his sympathy for Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's the girl got to do with it?" he demanded, angrily. "If you want
+to talk to me don't use her name."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll use her name when I want," shouted Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not to me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, to you, mister. I ain't carin' a d&mdash;n fer you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You crazy loon!" exclaimed Slone, with impatience and disgust added to
+anger. "What's the use of being decent to you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech crouched low, his hands digging like claws into the table, as if
+he were making ready to spring. At that instant he was hideous.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Crazy, am I?" he yelled. "Mebbe not d&mdash;n crazy! I kin tell you're gone
+on Lucy Bostil! I seen you with her out there in the rocks the mornin'
+of the race. I seen what you did to her. An' I'm a-goin' to tell it!
+... An' I'm a-goin' to ketch Lucy Bostil an' strip her naked, an' when
+I git through with her I'll tie her on a hoss an' fire the grass! By
+Gawd! I am!" Livid and wild, he breathed hard as he got up, facing
+Slone malignantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Crazy or not, here goes!" muttered Slone, grimly; and, leaping up,
+with one blow he knocked Creech half out of the door, and then kicked
+him the rest of the way. "Go on and have a fit!" cried Slone. "I'm
+liable to kill you if you don't have one!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech got up and ran down the path, turning twice on the way. Then he
+disappeared among the trees.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone sat down. "Lost my temper again!" he said. "This has been a day.
+Guess I'd better cool off right now an' stay here.... That poor devil!
+Maybe he's not so crazy. But he's wilder than an Indian. I must warn
+Lucy.... Lord! I wonder if Bostil could have held back repairin' that
+boat, an' then cut it loose? I wonder? Yesterday I'd have sworn never.
+To-day&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone drove the conclusion of that thought out of his consciousness
+before he wholly admitted it. Then he set to work cutting the long
+grass from the wet and shady nooks under the bluff where the spring
+made the ground rich. He carried an armful down to the corral. Nagger
+was roaming around outside, picking grass for himself. Wildfire snorted
+as always when he saw Slone, and Slone as always, when time permitted,
+tried to coax the stallion to him. He had never succeeded, nor did he
+this time. When he left the bundle of grass on the ground and went
+outside Wildfire readily came for it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're that tame, anyhow, you hungry red devil," said Slone,
+jealously. Wildfire would take a bunch of grass from Lucy Bostil's
+hand. Slone's feelings had undergone some reaction, though he still
+loved the horse. But it was love mixed with bitterness. More than ever
+he made up his mind that Lucy should have Wildfire. Then he walked
+around his place, planning the work he meant to start at once.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Several days slipped by with Slone scarcely realizing how they flew.
+Unaccustomed labor tired him so that he went to bed early and slept
+like a log. If it had not been for the ever-present worry and suspense
+and longing, in regard to Lucy, he would have been happier than ever he
+could remember. Almost at once he had become attached to his little
+home, and the more he labored to make it productive and comfortable the
+stronger grew his attachment. Practical toil was not conducive to
+daydreaming, so Slone felt a loss of something vague and sweet. Many
+times he caught himself watching with eager eyes for a glimpse of Lucy
+Bostil down there among the cottonwoods. Still, he never saw her, and,
+in fact, he saw so few villagers that the place began to have a
+loneliness which endeared it to him the more. Then the view down the
+gray valley to the purple monuments was always thrillingly memorable to
+Slone. It was out there Lucy had saved his horse and his life. His keen
+desert gaze could make out even at that distance the great, dark
+monument, gold-crowned, in the shadow of which he had heard Lucy speak
+words that had transformed life for him. He would ride out there some
+day. The spell of those looming grand shafts of colored rock was still
+strong upon him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One morning Slone had a visitor&mdash;old Brackton. Slone's cordiality died
+on his lips before it was half uttered. Brackton's former friendliness
+was not in evidence. Indeed, he looked at Slone with curiosity and
+disfavor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Howdy, Slone! I jest wanted to see what you was doin' up hyar," he
+said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone spread his hands and explained in few words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So you took over the place, hey? We all figgered thet. But Vorhees was
+mum. Fact is, he was sure mysterious." Brackton sat down and eyed Slone
+with interest. "Folks are talkin' a lot about you," he said, bluntly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is that so?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You 'pear to be a pretty mysterious kind of a feller, Slone. I kind of
+took a shine to you at first, an' thet's why I come up hyar to tell you
+it'd be wise fer you to vamoose."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What!" exclaimed Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton repeated substantially what he had said, then, pausing an
+instant, continued: "I've no call to give you a hunch, but I'll do it
+jest because I did like you fust off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The old man seemed fussy and nervous and patronizing and disparaging
+all at once.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What'd you beat up thet poor Joel Creech fer?" demanded Brackton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He got what he deserved," replied Slone, and the memory, coming on the
+head of this strange attitude of Brackton's, roused Slone's temper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Joel tells some queer things about you&mdash;fer instance, how you
+took advantage of little Lucy Bostil, grabbin' her an' maulin' her the
+way Joel seen you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"D&mdash;n the loon!" muttered Slone, rising to pace the path.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Joel's a bit off, but he's not loony all the time. He's seen you
+an' he's tellin' it. When Bostil hears it you'd better be acrost the
+canyon!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone felt the hot, sick rush of blood to his face, and humiliation and
+rage overtook him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Joel's down at my house. He had fits after you beat him, an' he 'ain't
+got over them yet. But he could blab to the riders. Van Sickle's
+lookin' fer you. An' to-day when I was alone with Joel he told me some
+more queer things about you. I shut him up quick. But I ain't
+guaranteein' I can keep him shut up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bet you I shut him up," declared Slone. "What more did the fool
+say?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone, hev you been round these hyar parts&mdash;-down among the
+monuments&mdash;fer any considerable time?" queried Brackton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I have&mdash;several weeks out there, an' about ten days or so around
+the Ford."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where was you the night of the flood?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shrewd scrutiny of the old man, the suspicion, angered Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If it's any of your mix, I was out on the slope among the rocks. I
+heard that flood comin' down long before it got here," replied Slone,
+deliberately.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton averted his gaze, and abruptly rose as if the occasion was
+ended. "Wal, take my hunch an' leave!" he said, turning away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Brackton, if you mean well, I'm much obliged," returned Slone, slowly,
+ponderingly. "But I'll not take the hunch."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Suit yourself," added Brackton, coldly, and he went away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone watched him go down the path and disappear in the lane of
+cottonwoods.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll be darned!" muttered Slone. "Funny old man. Maybe Creech's not
+the only loony one hereabouts."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone tried to laugh off the effect of the interview, but it persisted
+and worried him all day. After supper he decided to walk down into the
+village, and would have done so but for the fact that he saw a man
+climbing his path. When he recognized the rider Holley he sensed
+trouble, and straightway he became gloomy. Bostil's right-hand man
+could not call on him for any friendly reason. Holley came up slowly,
+awkwardly, after the manner of a rider unused to walking. Slone had
+built a little porch on the front of his cabin and a bench, which he
+had covered with goatskins. It struck him a little strangely that he
+should bend over to rearrange these skins just as Holley approached the
+porch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Howdy, son!" was the rider's drawled remark. "Sure makes&mdash;me&mdash;puff to
+climb&mdash;up this mountain."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone turned instantly, surprised at the friendly tone, doubting his
+own ears, and wanting to verify them. He was the more surprised to see
+Holley unmistakably amiable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hello, Holley! How are you?" he replied. "Have a seat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I'm right spry fer an old bird. But I can't climb wuth a d&mdash;n
+.... Say, this here beats Bostil's view."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, it's fine," replied Slone, rather awkwardly, as he sat down on
+the porch step. What could Holley want with him? This old rider was
+above curiosity or gossip.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone, you ain't holdin' it ag'in me&mdash;thet I tried to shut you up the
+other day?" he drawled, with dry frankness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, no, Holley, I'm not. I saw your point. You were right. But Bostil
+made me mad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure! He'd make anybody mad. I've seen riders bite themselves, they
+was so mad at Bostil. You called him, an' you sure tickled all the
+boys. But you hurt yourself, fer Bostil owns an' runs this here Ford."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So I've discovered," replied Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You got yourself in bad right off, fer Bostil has turned the riders
+ag'in you, an' this here punchin' of Creech has turned the village
+folks ag'in you. What'd pitch into him fer?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone caught the kindly interest and intent of the rider, and it warmed
+him as Brackton's disapproval had alienated him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I reckon I'd better tell you," drawled Holley, as Slone
+hesitated, "thet Lucy wants to know IF you beat up Joel an' WHY you
+did."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley! Did she ask you to find out?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She sure did. The girl's worried these days, Slone.... You see, you
+haven't been around, an' you don't know what's comin' off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Brackton was here to-day an' he told me a good deal. I'm worried,
+too," said Slone, dejectedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet hoss of yours, Wildfire, he's enough to make you hated in
+Bostil's camp, even if you hadn't made a fool of yourself, which you
+sure have."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone dropped his head as admission.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What Creech swears he seen you do to Miss Lucy, out there among the
+rocks, where you was hid with Wildfire&mdash;is there any truth in thet?"
+asked Holley, earnestly. "Tell me, Slone. Folks believe it. An' it's
+hurt you at the Ford. Bostil hasn't heard it yet, an' Lucy she doesn't
+know. But I'm figgerin' thet you punched Joel because he throwed it in
+your face."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He did, an' I lambasted him," replied Slone, with force.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You did right. But what I want to know, is it true what Joel seen?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's true, Holley. But what I did isn't so bad&mdash;so bad as he'd make it
+look."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I knowed thet. I knowed fer a long time how Lucy cares fer you,"
+returned the old rider, kindly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone raised his head swiftly, incredulously. "Holley! You can't be
+serious."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I am. I've been sort of a big brother to Lucy Bostil for eighteen
+years. I carried her in these here hands when she weighed no more 'n my
+spurs. I taught her how to ride&mdash;what she knows about hosses. An' she
+knows more 'n her dad. I taught her to shoot. I know her better 'n
+anybody. An' lately she's been different. She's worried an' unhappy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But Holley, all that&mdash;it doesn't seem&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon not," went on Holley, as Slone halted. "I think she cares fer
+you. An' I'm your friend, Slone. You're goin' to buck up ag'in some
+hell round here sooner or later. An' you'll need a friend."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thanks&mdash;Holley," replied Slone, unsteadily. He thrilled under the iron
+grasp of the rider's hard hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've got another friend you can gamble on," said Holley,
+significantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Another! Who?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy Bostil. An' don't you fergit thet. I'll bet she'll raise more
+trouble than Bostil when she hears what Joel Creech is tellin'. Fer
+she's bound to hear it. Van Sickle swears he's a-goin' to tell her an'
+then beat you up with a quirt."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He is, is he?" snapped Slone, darkly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've a hunch Lucy's guessed why you punched Joel. But she wants to
+know fer sure. Now, Slone, I'll tell her why."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, don't!" said Slone, involuntarily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, it'll be better comin' from you an' me. Take my word fer thet.
+I'll prepare Lucy. An' she's as good a scrapper as Bostil, any day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It all scares me," replied Slone. He did feel panicky, and that was
+from thoughts of what shame might befall Lucy. The cold sweat oozed out
+of every pore. What might not Bostil do? "Holley, I love the girl. So
+I&mdash;I didn't insult her. Bostil will never understand. An' what's he
+goin' to do when he finds out?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, let's hope you won't git any wuss'n you give Joel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let Bostil beat me!" ejaculated Slone. "I think I'm
+willin&mdash;now&mdash;the&mdash;way I feel. But I've a temper, and Bostil rubs me the
+wrong way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wall leave your gun home, an' fight Bostil. You're pretty husky. Sure
+he'll lick you, but mebbe you could give the old cuss a black eye."
+Holley laughed as if the idea gave him infinite pleasure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fight Bostil? ... Lucy would hate me!" cried Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nix! You don't know thet kid. If the old man goes after you Lucy'll
+care more fer you. She's jest like him in some ways." Holley pulled out
+a stubby black pipe and, filling and lighting it, he appeared to grow
+more thoughtful. "It wasn't only Lucy thet sent me up here to see you.
+Bostil had been pesterin' me fer days. But I kept fightin' shy of it
+till Lucy got hold of me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil sent you? Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon you can guess. He can't sleep, thinkin' about your red hoss.
+None of us ever seen Bostil have sich a bad case. He raised Sage King.
+But he's always been crazy fer a great wild stallion. An' here you come
+along&mdash;an' your hoss jumps the King&mdash;an' there's trouble generally."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, do you think Wildfire can beat Sage King?" asked Slone,
+eagerly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon I do. Lucy says so, an' I'll back her any day. But, son, I
+ain't paradin' what I think. I'd git in bad myself. Farlane an' the
+other boys, they're with Bostil. Van he's to blame fer thet. He's
+takin' a dislike to you, right off. An' what he tells Bostil an' the
+boys about thet race don't agree with what Lucy tells me. Lucy says
+Wildfire ran fiery an' cranky at the start. He wanted to run round an'
+kill the King instead of racin'. So he was three lengths behind when
+Macomber dropped the flag. Lucy says the King got into his stride. She
+knows. An' there Wildfire comes from behind an' climbs all over the
+King! ... Van tells a different story."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It came off just as Lucy told you," declared Slone. "I saw every move."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, thet's neither here nor there. What you're up ag'in is this.
+Bostil is sore since you called him. But he holds himself in because he
+hasn't given up hope of gittin' Wildfire. An', Slone, you're sure wise,
+ain't you, thet if Bostil doesn't buy him you can't stay on here?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm wise. But I won't sell Wildfire," replied Slone, doggedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I'd never wasted my breath tellin' you all this if I hadn't
+figgered about Lucy. You've got her to think of."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone turned on Holley passionately. "You keep hintin' there's a hope
+for me, when I know there's none!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're only a boy," replied Holley. "Son, where there's life there's
+hope. I ain't a-goin' to tell you agin thet I know Lucy Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone could not stand nor walk nor keep still. He was shaking from head
+to foot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire's not mine to sell. He's Lucy's!" confessed Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The devil you say!" ejaculated Holley, and he nearly dropped his pipe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I gave Wildfire to her. She accepted him. It was DONE. Then&mdash;then I
+lost my head an' made her mad.... An'&mdash;she said she'd ride him in the
+race, but wouldn't keep him. But he IS hers."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oho! I see. Slone, I was goin' to advise you to sell Wildfire&mdash;all on
+account of Lucy. You're young an' you'd have a big start in life if you
+would. But Lucy's your girl an' you give her the hoss.... Thet settles
+thet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I go away from here an' leave Wildfire for Lucy&mdash;do you think she
+could keep him? Wouldn't Bostil take him from her?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, son, if he tried thet on Lucy she'd jump Wildfire an' hit your
+trail an' hang on to it till she found you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What'll you tell Bostil?" asked Slone, half beside himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm consarned if I know," replied Holley. "Mebbe I'll think of some
+idee. I'll go back now. An' say, son, I reckon you'd better hang close
+to home. If you meet Bostil down in the village you two'd clash sure.
+I'll come up soon, but it'll be after dark."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, all this is&mdash;is good of you," said Slone. "I&mdash;I'll&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shut up, son," interrupted the rider, dryly. "Thet's your only
+weakness, so far as I can see. You say too much."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley started down then, his long, clinking spurs digging into the
+steep path. He left Slone a prey to deep thoughts at once anxious and
+dreamy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next day Slone worked hard all day, looking forward to nightfall,
+expecting that Holley would come up. He tried to resist the sweet and
+tantalizing anticipation of a message from Lucy, but in vain. The rider
+had immeasurably uplifted Slone's hope that Lucy, at least, cared for
+him. Not for a moment all day could Slone drive away the hope. At
+twilight he was too eager to eat&mdash;too obsessed to see the magnificent
+sunset. But Holley did not come, and Slone went to bed late, half sick
+with disappointment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day was worse. Slone found work irksome, yet he held to it. On
+the third day he rested and dreamed, and grew doubtful again, and then
+moody. On the fourth day Slone found he needed supplies that he must
+obtain from the store. He did not forget Holley's warning, but he
+disregarded it, thinking there would scarcely be a chance of meeting
+Bostil at midday.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were horses standing, bridles down, before Brackton's place, and
+riders lounging at the rail and step. Some of these men had been
+pleasant to Slone on earlier occasions. This day they seemed not to see
+him. Slone was tingling all over when he went into the store. Some
+deviltry was afoot! He had an angry thought that these riders could not
+have minds of their own. Just inside the door Slone encountered
+Wetherby, the young rancher from Durango. Slone spoke, but Wetherby
+only replied with an insolent stare. Slone did not glance at the man to
+whom Wetherby was talking. Only a few people were inside the store, and
+Brackton was waiting upon them. Slone stood back a little in the
+shadow. Brackton had observed his entrance, but did not greet him. Then
+Slone absolutely knew that for him the good will of Bostil's Ford was a
+thing of the past.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently Brackton was at leisure, but he showed no disposition to
+attend to Slone's wants. Then Slone walked up to the counter and asked
+for supplies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you got the money?" asked Brackton, as if addressing one he would
+not trust.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," replied Slone, growing red under an insult that he knew Wetherby
+had heard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton handed out the supplies and received the money, without a
+word. He held his head down. It was a singular action for a man used to
+dealing fairly with every one. Slone felt outraged. He hurried out of
+the place, with shame burning him, with his own eyes downcast, and in
+his hurry he bumped square into a burly form. Slone recoiled&mdash;looked
+up. Bostil! The old rider was eying him with cool speculation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, are you drunk?" he queried, without any particular expression.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet the query was to Slone like a blow. It brought his head up with a
+jerk, his glance steady and keen on Bostil's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, you know I don't drink," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! I know a lot about you, Slone.... I heard you bought Vorhees's
+place, up on the bench."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did he tell you it was mortgaged to me for more'n it's worth?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, he didn't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did he make over any papers to you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, if it interests you I'll show you papers thet proves the
+property's mine."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone suffered a pang. The little home had grown dearer and dearer to
+him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right, Bostil. If it's yours&mdash;it's yours," he said, calmly enough.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon I'd drove you out before this if I hadn't felt we could make
+a deal."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We can't agree on any deal, Bostil," replied Slone, steadily. It was
+not what Bostil said, but the way he said it, the subtle meaning and
+power behind it, that gave Slone a sense of menace and peril. These he
+had been used to for years; he could meet them. But he was handicapped
+here because it seemed that, though he could meet Bostil face to face,
+he could not fight him. For he was Lucy's father. Slone's position, the
+impotence of it, rendered him less able to control his temper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why can't we?" demanded Bostil. "If you wasn't so touchy we could. An'
+let me say, young feller, thet there's more reason now thet you DO make
+a deal with me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Deal? What about?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"About your red hoss."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire! ... No deals, Bostil," returned Slone, and made as if to
+pass him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The big hand that forced Slone back was far from gentle, and again he
+felt the quick rush of blood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mebbe I can tell you somethin' thet'll make you sell Wildfire," said
+Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not if you talked yourself dumb!" flashed Slone. There was no use to
+try to keep cool with this Bostil, if he talked horses. "I'll race
+Wildfire against the King. But no more."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Race! Wal, we don't run races around here without stakes," replied
+Bostil, with deep scorn. "An' what can you bet? Thet little dab of
+prize money is gone, an' wouldn't be enough to meet me. You're a
+strange one in these parts. I've pride an' reputation to uphold. You
+brag of racin' with me&mdash;an' you a beggarly rider! ... You wouldn't have
+them clothes an' boots if my girl hadn't fetched them to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders behind Bostil laughed. Wetherby's face was there in the
+door, not amused, but hard with scorn and something else. Slone felt a
+sickening, terrible gust of passion. It fairly shook him. And as the
+wave subsided the quick cooling of skin and body pained him like a burn
+made with ice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Bostil, I'm what you say," responded Slone, and his voice seemed
+to fill his ears. "But you're dead wrong when you say I've nothin' to
+bet on a race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' what'll you bet?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My life an' my horse!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders suddenly grew silent and intense. Bostil vibrated to that.
+He turned white. He more than any rider on the uplands must have felt
+the nature of that offer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ag'in what?" he demanded, hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"YOUR DAUGHTER LUCY!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One instant the surprise held Bostil mute and motionless. Then he
+seemed to expand. His huge bulk jerked into motion and he bellowed like
+a mad bull.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone saw the blow coming, made no move to avoid it. The big fist took
+him square on the mouth and chin and laid him flat on the ground. Sight
+failed Slone for a little, and likewise ability to move. But he did not
+lose consciousness. His head seemed to have been burst into rays and
+red mist that blurred his eyes. Then these cleared away, leaving
+intense pain. He started to get up, his brain in a whirl. Where was his
+gun? He had left it at home. But for that he would have killed Bostil.
+He had already killed one man. The thing was a burning flash&mdash;then all
+over! He could do it again. But Bostil was Lucy's father!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone gathered up the packages of supplies, and without looking at the
+men he hurried away. He seemed possessed of a fury to turn and run
+back. Some force, like an invisible hand, withheld him. When he reached
+the cabin he shut himself in, and lay on his bunk, forgetting that the
+place did not belong to him, alive only to the mystery of his trouble,
+smarting with the shame of the assault upon him. It was dark before he
+composed himself and went out, and then he had not the desire to eat.
+He made no move to open the supplies of food, did not even make a
+light. But he went out to take grass and water to the horses. When he
+returned to the cabin a man was standing at the porch. Slone recognized
+Holley's shape and then his voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Son, you raised the devil to-day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, don't you go back on me!" cried Slone. "I was driven!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't talk so loud," whispered the rider in return. "I've only a
+minnit. ... Here&mdash;a letter from Lucy.... An', son, don't git the idee
+thet I'll go back on you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone took the letter with trembling fingers. All the fury and gloom
+instantly fled. Lucy had written him! He could not speak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Son, I'm double-crossin' the boss, right this minnit!" whispered
+Holley, hoarsely. "An' the same time I'm playin' Lucy's game. If Bostil
+finds out he'll kill me. I mustn't be ketched up here. But I won't lose
+track of you&mdash;wherever you go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley slipped away stealthily in the dusk, leaving Slone with a
+throbbing heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wherever you go!" he echoed. "Ah! I forgot! I can't stay here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy's letter made his fingers tingle&mdash;made them so hasty and awkward
+that he had difficulty in kindling blaze enough to see to read. The
+letter was short, written in lead-pencil on the torn leaf of a ledger.
+Slone could not read rapidly&mdash;those years on the desert had seen to
+that&mdash;and his haste to learn what Lucy said bewildered him. At first
+all the words blurred:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come at once to the bench in the cottonwoods. I'll meet you there. My
+heart is breaking. It's a lie&mdash;a lie&mdash;what they say. I'll swear you
+were with me the night the boat was cut adrift. I KNOW you didn't do
+that. I know who.... Oh, come! I will stick to you. I will run off with
+you. I love you!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap15"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+Slone's heart leaped to his throat, and its beating choked his
+utterances of rapture and amaze and dread. But rapture dominated the
+other emotions. He could scarcely control the impulse to run to meet
+Lucy, without a single cautious thought.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He put the precious letter inside his blouse, where it seemed to warm
+his breast. He buckled on his gun-belt, and, extinguishing the light,
+he hurried out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A crescent moon had just tipped the bluff. The village lanes and cabins
+and trees lay silver in the moon-light. A lonesome coyote barked in the
+distance. All else was still. The air was cool, sweet, fragrant. There
+appeared to be a glamour of light, of silence, of beauty over the
+desert.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone kept under the dark lee of the bluff and worked around so that he
+could be above the village, where there was little danger of meeting
+any one. Yet presently he had to go out of the shadow into the
+moon-blanched lane. Swift and silent as an Indian he went along,
+keeping in the shade of what trees there were, until he came to the
+grove of cottonwoods. The grove was a black mystery lanced by silver
+rays. He slipped in among the trees, halting every few steps to listen.
+The action, the realization had helped to make him cool, to steel him,
+though never before in his life had he been so exalted. The pursuit and
+capture of Wildfire, at one time the desire of his heart, were as
+nothing to this. Love had called him&mdash;and life&mdash;and he knew death hung
+in the balance. If Bostil found him seeking Lucy there would be blood
+spilled. Slone quaked at the thought, for the cold and ghastly
+oppression following the death he had meted out to Sears came to him at
+times. But such thoughts were fleeting; only one thought really held
+his mind&mdash;and the one was that Lucy loved him, had sent strange, wild,
+passionate words to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He found the narrow path, its white crossed by slowly moving black bars
+of shadow, and stealthily he followed this, keen of eye and ear,
+stopping at every rustle. He well knew the bench Lucy had mentioned. It
+was in a remote corner of the grove, under big trees near the spring.
+Once Slone thought he had a glimpse of white. Perhaps it was only
+moonlight. He slipped on and on, and when beyond the branching paths
+that led toward the house he breathed freer. The grove appeared
+deserted. At last he crossed the runway from the spring, smelled the
+cool, wet moss and watercress, and saw the big cottonwood, looming dark
+above the other trees. A patch of moonlight brightened a little glade
+just at the edge of dense shade cast by the cottonwood. Here the bench
+stood. It was empty!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's rapture vanished. He was suddenly chilled. She was not there!
+She might have been intercepted. He would not see her. The
+disappointment, the sudden relaxation, was horrible. Then a white,
+slender shape flashed from beside the black tree-trunk and flew toward
+him. It was noiseless, like a specter, and swift as the wind. Was he
+dreaming? He felt so strange. Then&mdash;the white shape reached him and he
+knew.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy leaped into his arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin! Lin! Oh, I'm so&mdash;so glad to see you!" she whispered. She seemed
+breathless, keen, new to him, not in the least afraid nor shy. Slone
+could only hold her. He could not have spoken, even if she had given
+him a chance. "I know everything&mdash;what they accuse you of&mdash;how the
+riders treated you&mdash;how my dad struck you. Oh! ... He's a brute! I hate
+him for that. Why didn't you keep out of his way? ... Van saw it all.
+Oh, I hate him, too! He said you lay still&mdash;where you fell! ... Dear
+Lin, that blow may have hurt you dreadfully&mdash;shamed you because you
+couldn't strike back at my dad&mdash;but it reached me, too. It hurt me. It
+woke my heart.... Where&mdash;where did he hit you? Oh, I've seen him hit
+men! His terrible fists!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, never mind," whispered Slone. "I'd stood to be shot just for
+this."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He felt her hands softly on his face, feeling around tenderly till they
+found the swollen bruise on mouth and chin.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah! ... He struck you. And I&mdash;I'll kiss you," she whispered. "If
+kisses will make it well&mdash;it'll be well!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She seemed strange, wild, passionate in her tenderness. She lifted her
+face and kissed him softly again and again and again, till the touch
+that had been exquisitely painful to his bruised lips became rapture.
+Then she leaned back in his arms, her hands on his shoulders,
+white-faced, dark-eyed, and laughed up in his face, lovingly, daringly,
+as if she defied the world to change what she had done.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy! Lucy! ... He can beat me&mdash;again!" said Slone, low and hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you love me you'll keep out of his way," replied the girl.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I love you? ... My God! ... I've felt my heart die a thousand times
+since that mornin'&mdash;when&mdash;when you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, I didn't know," she interrupted, with sweet, grave earnestness.
+"I know now!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Slone could not but know, too, looking at her; and the sweetness,
+the eloquence, the noble abandon of her avowal sounded to the depths of
+him. His dread, his resignation, his shame, all sped forever in the
+deep, full breath of relief with which he cast off that burden. He
+tasted the nectar of happiness, the first time in his life. He lifted
+his head&mdash;never, he knew, to lower it again. He would be true to what
+she had made him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come in the shade," he whispered, and with his arm round her he led
+her to the great tree-trunk. "Is it safe for you here? An' how long can
+you stay?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I had it out with Dad&mdash;left him licked once in his life," she replied.
+"Then I went to my room, fastened the door, and slipped out of my
+window. I can stay out as long as I want. No one will know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's heart throbbed. She was his. The clasp of her hands on his, the
+gleam of her eyes, the white, daring flash of her face in the shadow of
+the moon&mdash;these told him she was his. How it had come about was beyond
+him, but he realized the truth. What a girl! This was the same nerve
+which she showed when she had run Wildfire out in front of the fleetest
+horses in the uplands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell me, then," he began, quietly, with keen gaze roving under the
+trees and eyes strained tight, "tell me what's come off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't you know?" she queried, in amaze.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Only that for some reason I'm done in Bostil's Ford. It can't be
+because I punched Joel Creech. I felt it before I met Bostil at the
+store. He taunted me. We had bitter words. He told before all of them
+how the outfit I wore you gave me. An' then I dared him to race the
+King. My horse an' my life against YOU!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I know," she whispered, softly. "It's all over town.... Oh, Lin!
+it was a grand bet! And Bostil four-flushed, as the riders say. For
+days a race between Wildfire and the King had been in the air. There'll
+never be peace in Bostil's Ford again till that race is run."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, Lucy, could Bostil's wantin' Wildfire an' hatin' me because I
+won't sell&mdash;could that ruin me here at the Ford?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It could. But, Lin, there's more. Oh, I hate to tell you!" she
+whispered, passionately. "I thought you'd know.... Joel Creech swore
+you cut the ropes on the ferry-boat and sent it adrift."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The loon!" ejaculated Slone, and he laughed low in both anger and
+ridicule. "Lucy, that's only a fool's talk."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's crazy. Oh, if I ever get him in front of me again when I'm on
+Sarch&mdash;I'll&mdash;I'll...." She ended with a little gasp and leaned a moment
+against Slone. He felt her heart beat&mdash;felt the strong clasp of her
+hands. She was indeed Bostil's flesh and blood, and there was that in
+her dangerous to arouse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, the folks here are queer," she resumed, more calmly. "For long
+years Dad has ruled them. They see with his eyes and talk with his
+voice. Joel Creech swore you cut those cables. Swore he trailed you.
+Brackton believed him. Van believed him. They told my father. And
+he&mdash;my dad&mdash;God forgive him! he jumped at that. The village as one
+person now believes you sent the boat adrift so Creech's horses could
+not cross and you could win the race."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, if it wasn't so&mdash;so funny I'd be mad as&mdash;as&mdash;" burst out Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It isn't funny. It's terrible.... I know who cut those cables. ..
+Holley knows.... DAD knows&mdash;an', oh, Lin&mdash;I&mdash;hate&mdash;I hate my own
+father!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God!" gasped Slone, as the full signification burst upon him. Then
+his next thought was for Lucy. "Listen, dear&mdash;you mustn't say that," he
+entreated. "He's your father. He's a good man every way except when
+he's after horses. Then he's half horse. I understand him. I feel sorry
+for him.... An' if he's throwed the blame on me, all right. I'll stand
+it. What do I care? I was queered, anyhow, because I wouldn't part with
+my horse. It can't matter so much if people think I did that just to
+help win a race. But if they knew your&mdash;your father did it, an' if
+Creech's horses starve, why it'd be a disgrace for him&mdash;an' you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin Slone&mdash;you'll accept the blame!" she whispered, with wide, dark
+eyes on him, hands at his shoulders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure I will," replied Slone. "I can't be any worse off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're better than all of them&mdash;my rider!" she cried, full-voiced and
+tremulous. "Lin, you make me love you so&mdash;it&mdash;it hurts!" And she seemed
+about to fling herself into his arms again. There was a strangeness
+about her&mdash;a glory. "But you'll not take the shame of that act. For I
+won't let you. I'll tell my father I was with you when the boat was cut
+loose. He'll believe me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, an' he'll KILL me!" groaned Slone. "Good Lord! Lucy, don't do
+that!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will! An' he'll not kill you. Lin, Dad took a great fancy to you. I
+know that. He thinks he hates you. But in his heart he doesn't. If he
+got hold of Wildfire&mdash;why, he'd never be able to do enough for you. He
+never could make it up. What do you think? I told him you hugged and
+kissed me shamefully that day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Lucy! you didn't?" implored Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I sure did. And what do you think? He said he once did the same to my
+mother! ... No, Lin, Dad'd never kill you for anything except a fury
+about horses. All the fights he ever had were over horse deals. The two
+men&mdash;he&mdash;he&mdash;" Lucy faltered and her shudder was illuminating to Slone.
+"Both of them&mdash;fights over horse trades!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, if I'm ever unlucky enough to meet Bostil again I'll be deaf an'
+dumb. An' now you promise me you won't tell him you were with me that
+night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, if the occasion comes, I will&mdash;I couldn't help it," replied Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then fight shy of the occasion," he rejoined, earnestly. "For that
+would be the end of Lin Slone!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then&mdash;what on earth can&mdash;we do?" Lucy said, with sudden break of
+spirit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think we must wait. You wrote in your letter you'd stick to
+me&mdash;you'd&mdash;" He could not get the words out, the thought so overcame
+him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If it comes to a finish, I'll go with you," Lucy returned, with
+passion rising again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh! to ride off with you, Lucy&mdash;to have you all to myself&mdash;I daren't
+think of it. But that's only selfish."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Maybe it's not so selfish as you believe. If you left the
+Ford&mdash;now&mdash;it'd break my heart. I'd never get over it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy! You love me&mdash;that well?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then their lips met again and their hands locked, and they stood
+silent, straining toward each other. He held the slight form, so
+pliant, so responsive, so alive, close to him, and her face lay hidden
+on his breast; and he looked out over her head into the quivering
+moonlit shadows. The night was as still as one away on the desert far
+from the abode of men. It was more beautiful than any dream of a night
+in which he had wandered far into strange lands where wild horses were
+and forests lay black under moon-silvered peaks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We'll run&mdash;then&mdash;if it comes to a finish," said Slone, huskily. "But
+I'll wait. I'll stick it out here. I'll take what comes. So&mdash;maybe I'll
+not disgrace you more."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I told Van I&mdash;I gloried in being hugged by you that day," she replied,
+and her little defiant laugh told what she thought of the alleged
+disgrace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You torment him," remonstrated Slone. "You set him against us. It
+would be better to keep still."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But my blood is up!" she said, and she pounded his shoulder with her
+fist. "I'll fight&mdash;I'll fight! ... I couldn't avoid Van. It was Holley
+who told me Van was threatening you. And when I met Van he told me how
+everybody said you insulted me&mdash;had been worse than a drunken
+rider&mdash;and that he'd beat you half to death. So I told Van Joel Creech
+might have seen us&mdash;I didn't doubt that&mdash;but he didn't see that I liked
+being hugged."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What did Van say then?" asked Slone, all aglow with his wonderful joy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He wilted. He slunk away.... And so I'll tell them all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, Lucy, you've always been so&mdash;so truthful."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, to say you liked being hugged that day was&mdash;was a story, wasn't
+it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was what made me so furious," she admitted, shyly. "I was
+surprised when you grabbed me off Wildfire. And my heart
+beat&mdash;beat&mdash;beat so when you hugged me. And when you kissed me I&mdash;I was
+petrified. I knew I liked it then&mdash;and I was furious with myself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone drew a long, deep breath of utter enchantment. "You'll take back
+Wildfire?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Lin&mdash;don't&mdash;ask&mdash;me," she implored.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Take him back&mdash;an' me with him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then I will. But no one must know that yet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They drew apart then.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' now you must go," said Slone, reluctantly. "Listen. I forgot to
+warn you about Joel Creech. Don't ever let him near you. He's crazy an'
+he means evil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I know, Lin! I'll watch. But I'm not afraid of him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's strong, Lucy. I saw him lift bags that were hefty for me....
+Lucy, do you ride these days?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Every day. If I couldn't ride I couldn't live."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid," said Slone, nervously. "There's Creech an' Cordts&mdash;both
+have threatened you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid of Cordts," replied Lucy, with a shiver. "You should have
+seen him look at me race-day. It made me hot with anger, yet weak, too,
+somehow. But Dad says I'm never in any danger if I watch out. And I do.
+Who could catch me on Sarch?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Any horse can be tripped in the sage. You told me how Joel tried to
+rope Sage King. Did you ever tell your dad that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I forgot. But then I'm glad I didn't. Dad would shoot for that,
+quicker than if Joel tried to rope him.... Don't worry, Lin, I always
+pack a gun."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But can you use it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy laughed. "Do you think I can only ride?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone remembered that Holley had said he had taught Lucy how to shoot
+as well as ride. "You'll be watchful&mdash;careful," he said, earnestly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Lin, you need to be that more than I.... What will you do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll stay up at the little cabin I thought I owned till to-day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Didn't you buy it?" asked Lucy, quickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought I did. But ... never mind. Maybe I won't get put out just
+yet. An' when will I see you again?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Here, every night. Wait till I come," she replied. "Good night, Lin."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll&mdash;wait!" he exclaimed, with a catch in his voice. "Oh, my luck!
+... I'll wait, Lucy, every day&mdash;hopin' an' prayin' that this trouble
+will lighten. An' I'll wait at night&mdash;for you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He kissed her good-by and watched the slight form glide away, flit to
+and fro, white in the dark patches, grow indistinct and vanish. He was
+left alone in the silent grove.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone stole back to the cabin and lay sleepless and tranced, watching
+the stars, till late that night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the next day he did scarcely anything but watch and look after his
+horses and watch and drag the hours out and dream despite his dread.
+But no one visited him. The cabin was left to him that day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had been a hot day, with great thunderhead, black and creamy white
+clouds rolling down from the canyon country. No rain had fallen at the
+Ford, though storms near by had cooled the air. At sunset Slone saw a
+rainbow bending down, ruddy and gold, connecting the purple of cloud
+with the purple of horizon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Out beyond the valley the clouds were broken, showing rifts of blue,
+and they rolled low, burying the heads of the monuments, creating a
+wild and strange spectacle. Twilight followed, and appeared to rise to
+meet the darkening clouds. And at last the gold on the shafts faded;
+the monuments faded; and the valley grew dark.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone took advantage of the hour before moonrise to steal down into the
+grove, there to wait for Lucy. She came so quickly he scarcely felt
+that he waited at all; and then the time spent with her, sweet,
+fleeting, precious, left him stronger to wait for her again, to hold
+himself in, to cease his brooding, to learn faith in something deeper
+than he could fathom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day he tried to work, but found idle waiting made the time fly
+swifter because in it he could dream. In the dark of the rustling
+cottonwoods he met Lucy, as eager to see him as he was to see her,
+tender, loving, remorseful&mdash;a hundred sweet and bewildering things all
+so new, so unbelievable to Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night he learned that Bostil had started for Durango with some of
+his riders. This trip surprised Slone and relieved him likewise, for
+Durango was over two hundred miles distant, and a journey there even
+for the hard riders was a matter of days.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He left no orders for me," Lucy said, "except to behave myself.... Is
+this behaving?" she whispered, and nestled close to Slone, audacious,
+tormenting as she had been before this dark cloud of trouble. "But he
+left orders for Holley to ride with me and look after me. Isn't that
+funny? Poor old Holley! He hates to doublecross Dad, he says."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad Holley's to look after you," replied Slone. "Yesterday I saw
+you tearin' down into the sage on Sarch. I wondered what you'd do,
+Lucy, if Cordts or that loon Creech should get hold of you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd fight!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, child, that's nonsense. You couldn't fight either of them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Couldn't I? Well, I just could. I'd&mdash;I'd shoot Cordts. And I'd whip
+Joel Creech with my quirt. And if he kept after me I'd let Sarch run
+him down. Sarch hates him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're a brave sweetheart," mused Slone. "Suppose you were caught an'
+couldn't get away. Would you leave a trail somehow?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I sure would."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, I'm a wild-horse hunter," he went on, thoughtfully, as if
+speaking to himself. "I never failed on a trail. I could track you over
+bare rock."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin, I'll leave a trail, so never fear," she replied. "But don't
+borrow trouble. You're always afraid for me. Look at the bright side.
+Dad seems to have forgotten you. Maybe it all isn't so bad as we
+thought. Oh, I hope so! ... How is my horse, Wildfire? I want to ride
+him again. I can hardly keep from going after him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And so they whispered while the moments swiftly passed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was early during the afternoon of the next day that Slone, hearing
+the clip-clop of unshod ponies, went outside to look. One part of the
+lane he could see plainly, and into it stalked Joel Creech, leading the
+leanest and gauntest ponies Slone had ever seen. A man as lean and
+gaunt as the ponies stalked behind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sight shocked Slone. Joel Creech and his father! Slone had no
+proof, because he had never seen the elder Creech, yet strangely he
+felt convinced of it. And grim ideas began to flash into his mind.
+Creech would hear who was accused of cutting the boat adrift. What
+would he say? If he believed, as all the villagers believed, then
+Bostil's Ford would become an unhealthy place for Lin Slone. Where were
+the great race-horses&mdash;Blue Roan and Peg&mdash;and the other thoroughbreds?
+A pang shot through Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, not lost&mdash;not starved?" he muttered. "That would be hell!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet he believed just this had happened. How strange he had never
+considered such an event as the return of Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd better look him up before he looks me," said Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It took but an instant to strap on his belt and gun. Then Slone strode
+down his path, out into the lane toward Brackton's. Whatever before
+boded ill to Slone had been nothing to what menaced him now. He would
+have a man to face&mdash;a man whom repute called just, but stern.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before Slone reached the vicinity of the store he saw riders come out
+to meet the Creech party. It so happened there were more riders than
+usually frequented Brackton's at that hour. The old storekeeper came
+stumbling out and raised his hands. The riders could be heard,
+loud-voiced and excited. Slone drew nearer, and the nearer he got the
+swifter he strode. Instinct told him that he was making the right move.
+He would face this man whom he was accused of ruining. The poor
+mustangs hung their heads dejectedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bags of bones," some rider loudly said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then Slone drew close to the excited group. Brackton held the
+center; he was gesticulating; his thin voice rose piercingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech! Whar's Peg an' the Roan? Gawd Almighty, man! You ain't meanin'
+them cayuses thar are all you've got left of thet grand bunch of
+hosses?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was scarcely a sound. All the riders were still. Slone fastened
+his eyes on Creech. He saw a gaunt, haggard face almost black with
+dust&mdash;worn and sad&mdash;with big eyes of terrible gloom. He saw an unkempt,
+ragged form that had been wet and muddy, and was now dust-caked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech stood silent in a dignity of despair that wrung Slone's heart.
+His silence was an answer. It was Joel Creech who broke the suspense.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Didn't I tell you-all what'd happen?" he shrilled. "PARCHED AN'
+STARVED!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aw no!" chorused the riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brackton shook all over. Tears dimmed his eyes&mdash;tears that he had no
+shame for. "So help me Gawd&mdash;I'm sorry!" was his broken exclamation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had forgotten himself and possible revelation concerning him. But
+when Holley appeared close to him with a significant warning look,
+Slone grew keen once more on his own account. He felt a hot flame
+inside him&mdash;a deep and burning anger at the man who might have saved
+Creech's horses. And he, like Brackton, felt sorrow for Creech, and a
+rider's sense of loss, of pain. These horses&mdash;these dumb
+brutes&mdash;faithful and sometimes devoted, had to suffer an agonizing
+death because of the selfishness of men.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon we'd all like to hear what come off, Creech, if you don't
+feel too bad to tell us," said Brackton.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gimme a drink," replied Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, d&mdash;n my old head!" exclaimed Brackton. "I'm gittin' old. Come on
+in. All of you! We're glad to see Creech home."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders filed in after Brackton and the Creeches. Holley stayed
+close beside Slone, both of them in the background.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I heerd the flood comin' thet night," said Creech to his silent and
+tense-faced listeners. "I heerd it miles up the canyon. 'Peared a
+bigger roar than any flood before. As it happened, I was alone, an' it
+took time to git the hosses up. If there'd been an Indian with me&mdash;or
+even Joel&mdash;mebbe&mdash;" His voice quavered slightly, broke, and then he
+resumed. "Even when I got the hosses over to the landin' it wasn't too
+late&mdash;if only some one had heerd me an' come down. I yelled an' shot.
+Nobody heerd. The river was risin' fast. An' thet roar had begun to
+make my hair raise. It seemed like years the time I waited there....
+Then the flood came down&mdash;black an' windy an' awful. I had hell gittin'
+the hosses back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Next mornin' two Piutes come down. They had lost mustangs up on the
+rocks. All the feed on my place was gone. There wasn't nothin' to do
+but try to git out. The Piutes said there wasn't no chance north&mdash;no
+water&mdash;no grass&mdash;an' so I decided to go south, if we could climb over
+thet last slide. Peg broke her leg there, an'&mdash;I&mdash;I had to shoot her.
+But we climbed out with the rest of the bunch. I left it then to the
+Piutes. We traveled five days west to head the canyons. No grass an'
+only a little water, salt at thet. Blue Roan was game if ever I seen a
+game hoss. Then the Piutes took to workin' in an' out an' around, not
+to git out, but to find a little grazin'. I never knowed the earth was
+so barren. One by one them hosses went down.... An' at last, I
+couldn't&mdash;I couldn't see Blue Roan starvin'&mdash;dyin' right before my
+eyes&mdash;an' I shot him, too.... An' what hurts me most now is thet I
+didn't have the nerve to kill him fust off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a long pause in Creech's narrative.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Them Piutes will git paid if ever I can pay them. I'd parched myself
+but for them.... We circled an' crossed them red cliffs an' then the
+strip of red sand, an' worked down into the canyon. Under the wall was
+a long stretch of beach&mdash;sandy&mdash;an' at the head of this we found
+Bostil's boat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal,&mdash;!" burst out the profane Brackton. "Bostil's boat! ... Say,
+'ain't Joel told you yet about thet boat?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, Joel 'ain't said a word about the boat," replied Creech. "What
+about it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was cut loose jest before the flood."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Manifestly Brackton expected this to be staggering to Creech. But he
+did not even show surprise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's a rider here named Slone&mdash;a wild-hoss wrangler," went on
+Brackton, "an' Joel swears this Slone cut the boat loose so's he'd have
+a better chance to win the race. Joel swears he tracked this feller
+Slone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For Slone the moment was fraught with many emotions, but not one of
+them was fear. He did not need the sudden force of Holley's strong
+hand, pushing him forward. Slone broke into the group and faced Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not true. I never cut that boat loose," he declared ringingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who're you?" queried Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My name's Slone. I rode in here with a wild horse, an' he won a race.
+Then I was blamed for this trick."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech's steady, gloomy eyes seemed to pierce Slone through. They were
+terrible eyes to look into, yet they held no menace for him. "An' Joel
+accused you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So they say. I fought with him&mdash;struck him for an insult to a girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come round hyar, Joel," called Creech, sternly. His big, scaly, black
+hand closed on the boy's shoulder. Joel cringed under it. "Son, you've
+lied. What for?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel showed abject fear of his father. "He's gone on Lucy&mdash;an' I seen
+him with her," muttered the boy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' you lied to hurt Slone?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel would not reply to this in speech, though that was scarcely needed
+to show he had lied. He seemed to have no sense of guilt. Creech eyed
+him pityingly and then pushed him back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Men, my son has done this rider dirt," said Creech. "You-all see thet.
+Slone never cut the boat loose.... An' say, you-all seem to think
+cuttin' thet boat loose was the crime.... No! Thet wasn't the crime.
+The crime was keepin' the boat out of the water fer days when my hosses
+could have been crossed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone stepped back, forgotten, it seemed to him. Both joy and sorrow
+swayed him. He had been exonerated. But this hard and gloomy Creech&mdash;he
+knew things. And Slone thought of Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who did cut thet thar boat loose?" demanded Brackton, incredulously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech gave him a strange glance. "As I was sayin', we come on the boat
+fast at the head of the long stretch. I seen the cables had been cut.
+An' I seen more'n thet.... Wal, the river was high an' swift. But this
+was a long stretch with good landin' way below on the other side. We
+got the boat in, an' by rowin' hard an' driftin' we got acrost, leadin'
+the hosses. We had five when we took to the river. Two went down on the
+way over. We climbed out then. The Piutes went to find some Navajos an'
+get hosses. An' I headed fer the Ford&mdash;made camp twice. An' Joel seen
+me comin' out a ways."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech, was there anythin' left in thet boat?" began Brackton, with
+intense but pondering curiosity. "Anythin' on the ropes&mdash;or so&mdash;thet
+might give an idee who cut her loose?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech made no reply to that. The gloom burned darker in his eyes. He
+seemed a man with a secret. He trusted no one there. These men were all
+friends of his, but friends under strange conditions. His silence was
+tragic, and all about the man breathed vengeance.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap16"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+No moon showed that night, and few stars twinkled between the
+slow-moving clouds. The air was thick and oppressive, full of the day's
+heat that had not blown away. A dry storm moved in dry majesty across
+the horizon, and the sheets and ropes of lightning, blazing white
+behind the black monuments, gave weird and beautiful grandeur to the
+desert.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy Bostil had to evade her aunt to get out of the house, and the
+window, that had not been the means of exit since Bostil left, once
+more came into use. Aunt Jane had grown suspicious of late, and Lucy,
+much as she wanted to trust her with her secret, dared not do it. For
+some reason unknown to Lucy, Holley had also been hard to manage,
+particularly to-day. Lucy certainly did not want Holley to accompany
+her on her nightly rendezvous with Slone. She changed her light gown to
+the darker and thicker riding-habit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a longed-for, all-satisfying flavor in this night
+adventure&mdash;something that had not all to do with love. The stealth, the
+outwitting of guardians, the darkness, the silence, the risk&mdash;all these
+called to some deep, undeveloped instinct in her, and thrilled along
+her veins, cool, keen, exciting. She had the blood in her of the
+greatest adventurer of his day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy feared she was a little late. Allaying the suspicions of Aunt Jane
+and changing her dress had taken time. Lucy burned with less cautious
+steps. Still she had only used caution in the grove because she had
+promised Slone to do so. This night she forgot or disregarded it. And
+the shadows were thick&mdash;darker than at any other time when she had
+undertaken this venture. She had always been a little afraid of the
+dark&mdash;a fact that made her contemptuous of herself. Nevertheless, she
+did not peer into the deeper pits of gloom. She knew her way and could
+slip swiftly along with only a rustle of leaves she touched.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly she imagined she heard a step and she halted, still as a
+tree-trunk. There was no reason to be afraid of a step. It had been a
+surprise to her that she had never encountered a rider walking and
+smoking under the trees. Listening, she assured herself she had been
+mistaken, and then went on. But she looked back. Did she see a
+shadow&mdash;darker than others&mdash;moving? It was only her imagination. Yet
+she sustained a slight chill. The air seemed more oppressive, or else
+there was some intangible and strange thing hovering in it. She went
+on&mdash;reached the lane that divided the grove. But she did not cross at
+once. It was lighter in this lane; she could see quite far.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As she stood there, listening, keenly responsive to all the influences
+of the night, she received an impression that did not have its origin
+in sight nor sound. And only the leaves touched her&mdash;and only their dry
+fragrance came to her. But she felt a presence&mdash;a strange, indefinable
+presence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Lucy was brave, and this feeling, whatever it might be, angered
+her. She entered the lane and stole swiftly along toward the end of the
+grove. Paths crossed the lane at right angles, and at these points she
+went swifter. It would be something to tell Slone&mdash;she had been
+frightened. But thought of him drove away her fear and nervousness, and
+her anger with herself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she came to a wider path. She scarcely noted it and passed on.
+Then came a quick rustle&mdash;a swift shadow. Between two steps&mdash;as her
+heart leaped&mdash;violent arms swept her off the ground. A hard hand was
+clapped over her mouth. She was being carried swiftly through the gloom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy tried to struggle. She could scarcely move a muscle. Iron arms
+wrapped her in coils that crushed her. She tried to scream, but her
+lips were tight-pressed. Her nostrils were almost closed between two
+hard fingers that smelled of horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whoever had her, she was helpless. Lucy's fury admitted of reason. Then
+both succumbed to a paralyzing horror. Cordts had got her! She knew it.
+She grew limp as a rag and her senses dulled. She almost fainted. The
+sickening paralysis of her faculties lingered. But she felt her body
+released&mdash;she was placed upon her feet&mdash;she was shaken by a rough hand.
+She swayed, and but for that hand might have fallen. She could see a
+tall, dark form over her, and horses, and the gloomy gray open of the
+sage slope. The hand left her face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't yap, girl!" This command in a hard, low voice pierced her ears.
+She saw the glint of a gun held before her. Instinctive fear revived
+her old faculties. The horrible sick weakness, the dimness, the shaking
+internal collapse all left her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll&mdash;be&mdash;quiet!" she faltered. She knew what her father had always
+feared had come to pass. And though she had been told to put no value
+on her life, in that event, she could not run. All in an instant&mdash;when
+life had been so sweet&mdash;she could not face pain or death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man moved back a step. He was tall, gaunt, ragged. But not like
+Cordts! Never would she forget Cordts. She peered up at him. In the dim
+light of the few stars she recognized Joel Creech's father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, thank God!" she whispered, in the shock of blessed relief. "I
+thought&mdash;you were&mdash;Cordts!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Keep quiet," he whispered back, sternly, and with rough hand he shook
+her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy awoke to realities. Something evil menaced her, even though this
+man was not Cordts. Her mind could not grasp it. She was
+amazed&mdash;stunned. She struggled to speak, yet to keep within that
+warning command.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What&mdash;on earth&mdash;does this&mdash;mean?" she gasped, very low. She had no
+sense of fear of Creech. Once, when he and her father had been friends,
+she had been a favorite of Creech's. When a little girl she had ridden
+his knee many times. Between Creech and Cordts there was immeasurable
+distance. Yet she had been violently seized and carried out into the
+sage and menaced.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech leaned down. His gaunt face, lighted by terrible eyes, made her
+recoil. "Bostil ruined me&mdash;an' killed my hosses," he whispered, grimly.
+"An' I'm takin' you away. An' I'll hold you in ransom for the King an'
+Sarchedon&mdash;an' all his racers!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, in startling surprise that yet held a pang. "Oh,
+Creech! ... Then you mean me no harm!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man straightened up and stood a moment, darkly silent, as if her
+query had presented a new aspect of the case. "Lucy Bostil, I'm a
+broken man an' wild an' full of hate. But God knows I never thought of
+thet&mdash;of harm to you.... No, child, I won't harm you. But you must obey
+an' go quietly, for there's a devil in me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where will you take me?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Down in the canyons, where no one can track me," he said. "It'll be
+hard goin' fer you, child, an' hard fare.... But I'm strikin' at
+Bostil's heart as he has broken mine. I'll send him word. An' I'll tell
+him if he won't give his hosses thet I'll sell you to Cordts."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Creech&mdash;but you wouldn't!" she whispered, and her hand went to his
+brawny arm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, in thet case I'd make as poor a blackguard as anythin' else I've
+been," he said, forlornly. "But I'm figgerin' Bostil will give up his
+hosses fer you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech, I'm afraid he won't. You'd better give me up. Let me go back.
+I'll never tell. I don't blame you. I think you're square. My dad
+is.... But, oh, don't make ME suffer! You used to&mdash;to care for me, when
+I was little."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet ain't no use," he replied. "Don't talk no more.... Git up hyar
+now an' ride in front of me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He led her to a lean mustang. Lucy swung into the saddle. She thought
+how singular a coincidence it was that she had worn a riding-habit. It
+was dark and thick, and comfortable for riding. Suppose she had worn
+the flimsy dress, in which she had met Slone every night save this one?
+Thought of Slone gave her a pang. He would wait and wait and wait. He
+would go back to his cabin, not knowing what had befallen her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly Lucy noticed another man, near at hand, holding two mustangs.
+He mounted, rode before her, and then she recognized Joel Creech.
+Assurance of this brought back something of the dread. But the father
+could control the son!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ride on," said Creech, hitting her horse from behind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Lucy found herself riding single file, with two men and a
+pack-horse, out upon the windy, dark sage slope. They faced the
+direction of the monuments, looming now and then so weirdly black and
+grand against the broad flare of lightning-blazed sky.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ever since Lucy had reached her teens there had been predictions that
+she would be kidnapped, and now the thing had come to pass. She was in
+danger, she knew, but in infinitely less than had any other wild
+character of the uplands been her captor. She believed, if she went
+quietly and obediently with Creech, that she would be, at least, safe
+from harm. It was hard luck for Bostil, she thought, but no worse than
+he deserved. Retribution had overtaken him. How terribly hard he would
+take the loss of his horses! Lucy wondered if he really ever would part
+with the King, even to save her from privation and peril. Bostil was
+more likely to trail her with his riders and to kill the Creeches than
+to concede their demands. Perhaps, though, that threat to sell her to
+Cordts would frighten the hard old man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The horses trotted and swung up over the slope, turning gradually,
+evidently to make a wide detour round the Ford, until Lucy's back was
+toward the monuments. Before her stretched the bleak, barren, dark
+desert, and through the opaque gloom she could see nothing. Lucy knew
+she was headed for the north, toward the wild canyons, unknown to the
+riders. Cordts and his gang hid in there. What might not happen if the
+Creeches fell in with Cordts? Lucy's confidence sustained a check.
+Still, she remembered the Creeches were like Indians. And what would
+Slone do? He would ride out on her trail. Lucy shivered for the
+Creeches if Slone ever caught up with them, and remembering his
+wild-horse-hunter's skill at tracking, and the fleet and tireless
+Wildfire, she grew convinced that Creech could not long hold her
+captive. For Slone would be wary. He would give no sign of his pursuit.
+He would steal upon the Creeches in the dark and&mdash; Lucy shivered again.
+What an awful fate had been that of Dick Sears!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So as she rode on Lucy's mind was full. She was used to riding, and in
+the motion of a horse there was something in harmony with her blood.
+Even now, with worry and dread and plotting strong upon her, habit had
+such power over her that riding made the hours fleet. She was surprised
+to be halted, to see dimly low, dark mounds of rock ahead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Git off," said Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where are we?" asked Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon hyar's the rocks. An' you sleep some, fer you'll need it." He
+spread a blanket, laid her saddle at the head of it, and dropped
+another blanket. "What I want to know is&mdash;shall I tie you up or not?"
+asked Creech. "If I do you'll git sore. An' this'll be the toughest
+trip you ever made."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean will I try to get away from you&mdash;or not?" queried Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jest thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy pondered. She divined some fineness of feeling in this coarse man.
+He wanted to spare her not only pain, but the necessity of watchful
+eyes on her every moment. Lucy did not like to promise not to try to
+escape, if opportunity presented. Still, she reasoned, that once deep
+in the canyons, where she would be in another day, she would be worse
+off if she did get away. The memory of Cordts's cavernous, hungry eyes
+upon her was not a small factor in Lucy's decision.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech, if I give my word not to try to get away, would you believe
+me?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech was slow in replying. "Reckon I would," he said, finally.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right, I'll give it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' thet's sense. Now you lay down."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy did as she was bidden and pulled the blanket over her. The place
+was gloomy and still. She heard the sound of mustangs' teeth on grass,
+and the soft footfalls of the men. Presently these sounds ceased. A
+cold wind blew over her face and rustled in the sage near her.
+Gradually the chill passed away, and a stealing warmth took its place.
+Her eyes grew tired. What had happened to her? With eyes closed she
+thought it was all a dream. Then the feeling of the hard saddle as a
+pillow under her head told her she was indeed far from her comfortable
+little room. What would poor Aunt Jane do in the morning when she
+discovered who was missing? What would Holley do? When would Bostil
+return? It might be soon and it might be days. And Slone&mdash;Lucy felt
+sorriest for him. For he loved her best. She thrilled at thought of
+Slone on that grand horse&mdash;on her Wildfire. And with her mind running
+on and on, seemingly making sleep impossible, the thoughts at last
+became dreams. Lucy awakened at dawn. One hand ached with cold, for it
+had been outside the blanket. Her hard bed had cramped her muscles. She
+heard the crackling of fire and smelled cedar smoke. In the gray of
+morning she saw the Creeches round a camp-fire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy got up then. Both men saw her, but made no comment. In that cold,
+gray dawn she felt her predicament more gravely. Her hair was damp. She
+had ridden nearly all night without a hat. She had absolutely nothing
+of her own except what was on her body. But Lucy thanked her lucky
+stars that she had worn the thick riding-suit and her boots, for
+otherwise, in a summer dress, her condition would soon have been
+miserable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come an' eat," said Creech. "You have sense&mdash;an' eat if it sticks in
+your throat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil had always contended in his arguments with riders that a man
+should eat heartily on the start of a trip so that the finish might
+find him strong. And Lucy ate, though the coarse fare sickened her.
+Once she looked curiously at Joel Creech. She felt his eyes upon her,
+but instantly he averted them. He had grown more haggard and sullen
+than ever before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Creeches did not loiter over the camp tasks. Lucy was left to
+herself. The place appeared to be a kind of depression from which the
+desert rolled away to a bulge against the rosy east, and the rocks
+behind rose broken and yellow, fringed with cedars.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Git the hosses in, if you want to," Creech called to her, and then as
+Lucy started off to where the mustangs grazed she heard him curse his
+son. "Come back hyar! Leave the girl alone or I'll rap you one!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy drove three of the mustangs into camp, where Creech began to
+saddle them. The remaining one, the pack animal, Lucy found among the
+scrub cedars at the base of the low cliffs. When she drove him in
+Creech was talking hard to Joel, who had mounted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When you come back, work up this canyon till you git up. It heads on
+the pine plateau. I can't miss seein' you, or any one, long before you
+git up on top. An' you needn't come without Bostil's hosses. You know
+what to tell Bostil if he threatens you, or refuses to send his hosses,
+or turns his riders on my trail. Thet's all. Now git!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel Creech rode away toward the rise in the rolling, barren desert.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' now we'll go on," said Creech to Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he had gotten all in readiness he ordered Lucy to follow closely
+in his tracks. He entered a narrow cleft in the low cliffs which wound
+in and out, and was thick with sage and cedars. Lucy, riding close to
+the cedars, conceived the idea of plucking the little green berries and
+dropping them on parts of the trail where their tracks would not show.
+Warily she filled the pockets of her jacket.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech led the way without looking back, and did not seem to care where
+the horses stepped. The time had not yet come, Lucy concluded, when he
+was ready to hide his trail. Presently the narrow cleft opened into a
+low-walled canyon, full of debris from the rotting cliffs, and this in
+turn opened into a main canyon with mounting yellow crags. It appeared
+to lead north. Far in the distance above rims and crags rose in a long,
+black line like a horizon of dark cloud.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech crossed this wide canyon and entered one of the many breaks in
+the wall. This one was full of splintered rock and weathered shale&mdash;the
+hardest kind of travel for both man and beast. Lucy was nothing if not
+considerate of a horse, and here she began to help her animal in all
+the ways a good rider knows. Much as this taxed her attention, she
+remembered to drop some of the cedar berries upon hard ground or rocks.
+And she knew she was leaving a trail for Slone's keen eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That day was the swiftest and the most strenuous in all Lucy Bostil's
+experience in the open. At sunset, when Creech halted in a niche in a
+gorge between lowering cliffs, Lucy fell off her horse and lay still
+and spent on the grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech had a glance of sympathy and admiration for her, but he did not
+say anything about the long day's ride. Lucy never in her life before
+appreciated rest nor the softness of grass nor the relief at the end of
+a ride. She lay still with a throbbing, burning ache in all her body.
+Creech, after he had turned the horses loose, brought her a drink of
+cold water from the brook she heard somewhere near by.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How&mdash;far&mdash;did&mdash;we&mdash;come?" she whispered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By the way round I reckon nigh on to sixty miles," he replied. "But we
+ain't half thet far from where we camped last night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he set to work at camp tasks. Lucy shook her head when he brought
+her food, but he insisted, and she had to force it down. Creech
+appeared rough but kind. After she had become used to the hard, gaunt,
+black face she saw sadness and thought in it. One thing Lucy had
+noticed was that Creech never failed to spare a horse, if it was
+possible. He would climb on foot over bad places.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Night soon mantled the gorge in blackness thick as pitch. Lucy could
+not tell whether her eyes were open or shut, so far as what she saw was
+concerned. Her eyes seemed filled, however, with a thousand pictures of
+the wild and tortuous canyons and gorges through which she had ridden
+that day. The ache in her limbs and the fever in her blood would not
+let her sleep. It seemed that these were forever to be a part of her.
+For twelve hours she had ridden and walked with scarce a thought of the
+nature of the wild country, yet once she lay down to rest her mind was
+an endless hurrying procession of pictures&mdash;narrow red clefts choked
+with green growths&mdash;yellow gorges and weathered slides&mdash;dusty,
+treacherous divides connecting canyons&mdash;jumbles of ruined cliffs and
+piles of shale&mdash;miles and miles and endless winding miles yellow, low,
+beetling walls. And through it all she had left a trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next day Creech climbed out of that low-walled canyon, and Lucy saw a
+wild, rocky country cut by gorges, green and bare, or yellow and
+cedared. The long, black-fringed line she had noticed the day before
+loomed closer; overhanging this crisscrossed region of canyons. Every
+half-hour Creech would lead them downward and presently climb out
+again. There were sand and hard ground and thick turf and acres and
+acres of bare rock where even a shod horse would not leave a track.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the going was not so hard&mdash;there was not so much travel on foot for
+Lucy&mdash;and she finished that day in better condition than the first one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next day Creech proceeded with care and caution. Many times he left the
+direct route, bidding Lucy wait for him, and he would ride to the rims
+of canyons or the tops of ridges of cedar forests, and from these
+vantage-points he would survey the country. Lucy gathered after a while
+that he was apprehensive of what might be encountered, and particularly
+so of what might be feared in pursuit. Lucy thought this strange,
+because it was out of the question for any one to be so soon on
+Creech's trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These peculiar actions of Creech were more noticeable on the third day,
+and Lucy grew apprehensive herself. She could not divine why. But when
+Creech halted on a high crest that gave a sweeping vision of the broken
+table-land they had traversed Lucy made out for herself faint moving
+specks miles behind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon you see thet," said Creech
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Horses," replied Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He nodded his head gloomily, and seemed pondering a serious question.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is some one trailing us?" asked Lucy, and she could not keep the
+tremor out of her voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I should smile! Fer two days&mdash;an' it sure beats me. They've never
+had a sight of us. But they keep comin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They! Who?" she asked, swiftly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hate to tell you, but I reckon I ought. Thet's Cordts an' two of his
+gang."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh&mdash;don't tell me so!" cried Lucy, suddenly terrified. Mention of
+Cordts had not always had power to frighten her, but this time she had
+a return of that shaking fear which had overcome her in the grove the
+night she was captured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts all right," replied Creech. "I knowed thet before I seen him.
+Fer two mornin's back I seen his hoss grazin in thet wide canyon. But I
+thought I'd slipped by. Some one seen us. Or they seen our trail.
+Anyway, he's after us. What beats me is how he sticks to thet trail.
+Cordts never was no tracker. An' since Dick Sears is dead there ain't a
+tracker in Cordts's outfit. An' I always could hide my tracks.... Beats
+me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech, I've been leaving a trail," confessed Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she told him how she had been dropping cedar berries and bits of
+cedar leaves along the bare and stony course they had traversed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I'm&mdash;" Creech stifled an oath. Then he laughed, but gruffly. "You
+air a cute one. But I reckon you didn't promise not to do thet.... An'
+now if Cordts gits you there'll be only yourself to blame."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, frantically looking back. The moving specks were
+plainly in sight. "How can he know he's trailing me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet I can't say. Mebbe he doesn't know. His hosses air fresh, though,
+an' if I can't shake him he'll find out soon enough who he's trailin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Go on! We must shake him. I'll never do THAT again! ... For God's
+sake, Creech, don't let him get me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Creech led down off the high open land into canyons again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The day ended, and the night seemed a black blank to Lucy. Another
+sunrise found Creech leading on, sparing neither Lucy nor the horses.
+He kept on a steady walk or trot, and he picked out ground less likely
+to leave any tracks. Like an old deer he doubled on his trail. He
+traveled down stream-beds where the water left no trail. That day the
+mustangs began to fail. The others were wearing out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The canyons ran like the ribs of a wash-board. And they grew deep and
+verdant, with looming, towered walls. That night Lucy felt lost in an
+abyss. The dreaming silence kept her awake many moments while sleep had
+already seized upon her eyelids. And then she dreamed of Cordts
+capturing her, of carrying her miles deeper into these wild and purple
+cliffs, of Slone in pursuit on the stallion Wildfire, and of a savage
+fight. And she awoke terrified and cold in the blackness of the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the next day Creech traveled west. This seemed to Lucy to be far to
+the left of the direction taken before. And Lucy, in spite of her utter
+weariness, and the necessity of caring for herself and her horse, could
+not but wonder at the wild and frowning canyon. It was only a tributary
+of the great canyon, she supposed, but it was different, strange,
+impressive, yet intimate, because all about it was overpowering, near
+at hand, even the beetling crags. And at every turn it seemed
+impossible to go farther over that narrow and rock-bestrewn floor. Yet
+Creech found a way on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then came hours of climbing such slopes and benches and ledges as Lucy
+had not yet encountered. The grasping spikes of dead cedar tore her
+dress to shreds, and many a scratch burned her flesh. About the middle
+of the afternoon Creech led up over the last declivity, a yellow slope
+of cedar, to a flat upland covered with pine and high bleached grass.
+They rested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We've fooled Cordts, you can be sure of thet," said Creech. "You're a
+game kid, an', by Gawd! if I had this job to do over I'd never tackle
+it again!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, you're sure we've lost him?" implored Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure as I am of death. An' we'll make surer in crossin' this bench.
+It's miles to the other side where I'm to keep watch fer Joel. An' we
+won't leave a track all the way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But this grass?" questioned Lucy. "It'll show our tracks."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look at the lanes an' trails between. All pine mats thick an' soft an'
+springy. Only an Indian could follow us hyar on Wild Hoss Bench."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy gazed before her under the pines. It was a beautiful forest, with
+trees standing far apart, yet not so far but that their foliage
+intermingled. A dry fragrance, thick as a heavy perfume, blew into her
+face. She could not help but think of fire&mdash;how it would race through
+here, and that recalled Joel Creech's horrible threat. Lucy shuddered
+and put away the memory. "I can't go&mdash;any farther&mdash;to-day," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech looked at her compassionately. Then Lucy became conscious that
+of late he had softened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll have to come," he said. "There's no water on this side, short
+of thet canyon-bed. An' acrost there's water close under the wall."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So they set out into the forest. And Lucy found that after all she
+could go on. The horses walked and on the soft, springy ground did not
+jar her. Deer and wild turkey abounded there and showed little alarm at
+sight of the travelers. And before long Lucy felt that she would become
+intoxicated by the dry odor. It was so strong, so thick, so
+penetrating. Yet, though she felt she would reel under its influence,
+it revived her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The afternoon passed; the sun set off through the pines, a
+black-streaked, golden flare; twilight shortly changed to night. The
+trees looked spectral in the gloom, and the forest appeared to grow
+thicker. Wolves murmured, and there were wild cries of cat and owl.
+Lucy fell asleep on her horse. At last, sometime late in the night,
+when Creech lifted her from the saddle and laid her down, she stretched
+out on the soft mat of pine needles and knew no more.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not awaken until the afternoon of the next day. The site where
+Creech had made his final camp overlooked the wildest of all that wild
+upland country. The pines had scattered and trooped around a beautiful
+park of grass that ended abruptly upon bare rock. Yellow crags towered
+above the rim, and under them a yawning narrow gorge, overshadowed from
+above, blue in its depths, split the end of the great plateau and
+opened out sheer into the head of the canyon, which, according to
+Creech, stretched away through that wilderness of red stone and green
+clefts. When Lucy's fascinated gaze looked afar she was stunned at the
+vast, billowy, bare surfaces. Every green cleft was a short canyon
+running parallel with this central and longer one. The dips and breaks
+showed how all these canyons were connected. They led the gaze away,
+descending gradually to the dim purple of distance&mdash;the bare, rolling
+desert upland.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy did nothing but gaze. She was unable to walk or eat that day.
+Creech hung around her with a remorse he apparently felt, yet could not
+put into words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you expect Joel to come up this big canyon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon I do&mdash;some day," replied Creech. "An' I wish he'd hurry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Does he know the way?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nope. But he's good at findin' places. An' I told him to stick to the
+main canyon. Would you believe you could ride offer this rim, straight
+down thar fer fifty miles, an' never git off your hoss?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, I wouldn't believe it possible."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, it's so. I've done it. An' I didn't want to come up thet way
+because I'd had to leave tracks."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you think we're safe&mdash;from Cordts now?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon so. He's no tracker."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But suppose he does trail us?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I reckon I've a shade the best of Cordts at gun-play, any day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy regarded the man in surprise. "Oh, it's so&mdash;strange!" she said.
+"You'd fight for me. Yet you dragged me for days over these awful
+rocks! ... Look at me, Creech. Do I look much like Lucy Bostil?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech hung his head. "Wal, I reckoned I wasn't a blackguard, but I AM."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You used to care for me when I was little. I remember how I used to
+take rides on your knee."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, I never thought of thet when I ketched you. You was only a means
+to an end. Bostil hated me. He ruined me. I give up to revenge. An' I
+could only git thet through you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Creech, I'm not defending Dad. He's&mdash;he's no good where horses are
+concerned. I know he wronged you. Then why didn't you wait and meet him
+like a man instead of dragging me to this misery?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I never thought of thet, either. I wished I had." He grew
+gloomier then and relapsed into silent watching.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy felt better next day, and offered to help Creech at the few camp
+duties. He would not let her. There was nothing to do but rest and
+wait, and the idleness appeared to be harder on Creech than on Lucy. He
+had always been exceedingly active. Lucy divined that every hour his
+remorse grew keener, and she did all she could think of to make it so.
+Creech made her a rude brush by gathering small roots and binding them
+tightly and cutting the ends square. And Lucy, after the manner of an
+Indian, got the tangles out of her hair. That day Creech seemed to want
+to hear Lucy's voice, and so they often fell into conversation. Once he
+said, thoughtfully:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm tryin' to remember somethin' I heerd at the Ford. I meant to ask
+you&mdash;" Suddenly he turned to her with animation. He who had been so
+gloomy and lusterless and dead showed a bright eagerness. "I heerd you
+beat the King on a red hoss&mdash;a wild hoss! ... Thet must have been a
+joke&mdash;like one of Joel's."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. It's true. An' Dad nearly had a fit!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal!" Creech simply blazed with excitement. "I ain't wonderin' if he
+did. His own girl! Lucy, come to remember, you always said you'd beat
+thet gray racer.... Fer the Lord's sake tell me all about it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy warmed to him because, broken as he was, he could be genuinely
+glad some horse but his own had won a race. Bostil could never have
+been like that. So Lucy told him about the race&mdash;and then she had to
+tell about Wildfire, and then about Slone. But at first all of Creech's
+interest centered round Wildfire and the race that had not really been
+run. He asked a hundred questions. He was as pleased as a boy listening
+to a good story. He praised Lucy again and again. He crowed over
+Bostil's discomfiture. And when Lucy told him that Slone had dared her
+father to race, had offered to bet Wildfire and his own life against
+her hand, then Creech was beside himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This hyar Slone&mdash;he CALLED Bostil's hand!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's a wild-horse hunter. And HE can trail us!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Trail us! Slone? Say, Lucy, are you in love with him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy uttered a strange little broken sound, half laugh, half sob. "Love
+him! Ah!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' your Dad's ag'in him! Sure Bostil'll hate any rider with a fast
+hoss. Why didn't the darn fool sell his stallion to your father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He gave Wildfire to me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd have done the same. Wal, now, when you git back home what's comin'
+of it all?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy shook her head sorrowfully. "God only knows. Dad will never own
+Wildfire, and he'll never let me marry Slone. And when you take the
+King away from him to ransom me&mdash;then my life will be hell, for if Dad
+sacrifices Sage King, afterward he'll hate me as the cause of his loss."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can sure see the sense of all that," replied Creech, soberly. And he
+pondered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy saw through this man as if he had been an inch of crystal water.
+He was no villain, and just now in his simplicity, in his plodding
+thought of sympathy for her he was lovable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's one hell of a muss, if you'll excuse my talk," said Creech. "An'
+I don't like the looks of what I 'pear to be throwin' in your way....
+But see hyar, Lucy, if Bostil didn't give up&mdash;or, say, he gits the King
+back, thet wouldn't make your chance with Slone any brighter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet race will have to be ran!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What good will that do?" cried Lucy, with tears in her eyes. "I don't
+want to lose Dad. I&mdash;I&mdash;love him&mdash;mean as he is. And it'll kill me to
+lose Lin. Because Wildfire can beat Sage King, and that means Dad will
+be forever against him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Couldn't this wild-horse feller LET the King win thet race?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, he could, but he wouldn't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can't you be sweet round him&mdash;fetch him over to thet?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I could, but I won't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech might have been plotting the happiness of his own daughter, he
+was so deeply in earnest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, mebbe you don't love each other so much, after all.... Fast
+hosses mean much to a man in this hyar country. I know, fer I lost
+mine! ... But they ain't all.... I reckon you young folks don't love so
+much, after all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But&mdash;we&mdash;do!" cried Lucy, with a passionate sob. All this talk had
+unnerved her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then the only way is fer Slone to lie to Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lie!" exclaimed Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet's it. Fetch about a race, somehow&mdash;one Bostil can't see&mdash;an' then
+lie an' say the King run Wildfire off his legs."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly it occurred to Lucy that one significance of this idea of
+Creech's had not dawned upon him. "You forget that soon my father will
+no longer own Sage King or Sarchedon or Dusty Ben&mdash;or any racer. He
+loses them or me, I thought. That's what I am here for."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech's aspect changed. The eagerness and sympathy fled from his face,
+leaving it once more hard and stern. He got up and stood a tall, dark,
+and gloomy man, brooding over his loss, as he watched the canyon.
+Still, there was in him then a struggle that Lucy felt. Presently he
+bent over and put his big hand on her head. It seemed gentle and tender
+compared with former contacts, and it made Lucy thrill. She could not
+see his face. What did he mean? She divined something startling, and
+sat there trembling in suspense.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil won't lose his only girl&mdash;or his favorite hoss! ... Lucy, I
+never had no girl. But it seems I'm rememberin' them rides you used to
+have on my knee when you was little!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he strode away toward the forest. Lucy watched him with a full
+heart, and as she thought of his overcoming the evil in him when her
+father had yielded to it, she suffered poignant shame. This Creech was
+not a bad man. He was going to let her go, and he was going to return
+Bostil's horses when they came. Lucy resolved with a passionate
+determination that her father must make ample restitution for the loss
+Creech had endured. She meant to tell Creech so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Upon his return, however, he seemed so strange and forbidding again
+that her heart failed her. Had he reconsidered his generous thought?
+Lucy almost believed so. These old horse-traders were incomprehensible
+in any relation concerning horses. Recalling Creech's intense interest
+in Wildfire and in the inevitable race to be run between him and Sage
+King, Lucy almost believed that Creech would sacrifice his vengeance
+just to see the red stallion beat the gray. If Creech kept the King in
+ransom for Lucy he would have to stay deeply hidden in the wild breaks
+of the canyon country or leave the uplands. For Bostil would never let
+that deed go unreckoned with. Like Bostil, old Creech was half horse
+and half human. The human side had warmed to remorse. He had regretted
+Lucy's plight; he wanted her to be safe at home again and to find
+happiness; he remembered what she had been to him when she was a little
+girl. Creech's other side was more complex.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before the evening meal ended Lucy divined that Creech was dark and
+troubled because he had resigned himself to a sacrifice harder than it
+had seemed in the first flush of noble feeling. But she doubted him no
+more. She was safe. The King would be returned. She would compel her
+father to pay Creech horse for horse. And perhaps the lesson to Bostil
+would be worth all the pain of effort and distress of mind that it had
+cost her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night as she lay awake listening to the roar of the wind in the
+pines a strange premonition&mdash;like a mysterious voice&mdash;-came to her with
+the assurance that Slone was on her trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the following day Creech appeared to have cast off the brooding
+mood. Still, he was not talkative. He applied himself to constant
+watching from the rim.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy began to feel rested. That long trip with Creech had made her thin
+and hard and strong. She spent the hours under the shade of a cedar on
+the rim that protected her from sun and wind. The wind, particularly,
+was hard to stand. It blew a gale out of the west, a dry, odorous,
+steady rush that roared through the pine-tops and flattened the long,
+white grass. This day Creech had to build up a barrier of rock round
+his camp-fire, to keep it from blowing away. And there was a constant
+danger of firing the grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once Lucy asked Creech what would happen in that case.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I reckon the grass would burn back even ag'in thet wind," replied
+Creech. "I'd hate to see fire in the woods now before the rains come.
+It's been the longest, dryest spell I ever lived through. But fer thet
+my hosses&mdash; This hyar's a west wind, an' it's blowin' harder every day.
+It'll fetch the rains."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Next day about noon, when both wind and heat were high, Lucy was
+awakened from a doze. Creech was standing near her. When he turned his
+long gaze away from the canyon he was smiling. It was a smile at once
+triumphant and sad.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Joel's comin' with the hosses!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy jumped up, trembling and agitated. "Oh! ... Where? Where?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech pointed carefully with bent hand, like an Indian, and Lucy
+either could not get the direction or see far enough.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Right down along the base of thet red wall. A line of hosses. Jest
+like a few crawlin' ants' ... An' now they're creepin' out of sight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I can't see them!" cried Lucy. "Are you SURE?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Positive an' sartin," he replied. "Joel's comin'. He'll be up hyar
+before long. I reckon we'd jest as well let him come. Fer there's water
+an' grass hyar. An' down below grass is scarce."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed an age to Lucy, waiting there, until she did see horses
+zigzagging the ridges below. They disappeared, and then it was another
+age before they reappeared close under the bulge of wall. She thrilled
+at sight of Sage King and Sarchedon. She got only a glimpse of them.
+They must pass round under her to climb a split in the wall, and up a
+long draw that reached level ground back in the forest. But they were
+near, and Lucy tried to wait. Creech showed eagerness at first, and
+then went on with his camp-fire duties. While in camp he always cooked
+a midday meal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy saw the horses first. She screamed out. Creech jumped up in alarm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel Creech, mounted on Sage King, and leading Sarchedon, was coming at
+a gallop. The other horses were following.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's his hurry?" demanded Lucy. "After climbing out of that canyon
+Joel ought not to push the horses."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He'll git it from me if there's no reason," growled Creech. "Them
+hosses is wet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look at Sarch! He's wild. He always hated Joel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, Lucy, I reckon I ain't likin' this hyar. Look at Joel!" muttered
+Creech, and he strode out to meet his son.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy ran out too, and beyond him. She saw only Sage King. He saw her,
+recognized her, and, whistled even while Joel was pulling him in. For
+once the King showed he was glad to see Lucy. He had been having rough
+treatment. But he was not winded&mdash;only hot and wet. She assured herself
+of that, then ran to quiet the plunging Sarch. He came down at once,
+and pushed his big nose almost into her face. She hugged his great, hot
+neck. He was quivering all over. Lucy heard the other horses pounding
+up; she recognized Two Face's high whinny, like a squeal; and in her
+delight she was about to run to them when Creech's harsh voice arrested
+her. And sight of Joel's face suddenly made her weak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What'd you say?" demanded Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd a good reason to run the hosses up-hill&mdash;thet's what!" snapped
+Joel. He was frothing at the mouth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Out with it!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts an' Hutch!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?" roared Creech, grasping the pale Joel and shaking him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts an' Hutch rode in behind me down at thet cross canyon. They
+seen me. An' they're after me hard!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech gave close and keen scrutiny to the strange face of his son.
+Then he wheeled away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Help me pack. An' you, too, Lucy. We've got to rustle out of hyar."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy fought a sick faintness that threatened to make her useless. But
+she tried to help, and presently action made her stronger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Creeches made short work of that breaking of camp. But when it came
+to getting the horses there appeared danger of delay. Sarchedon had led
+Dusty Ben and Two Face off in the grass. When Joel went for them they
+galloped away toward the woods. Joel ran back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Son, you're a smart hossman!" exclaimed Creech, in disgust.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shall I git on the King an' ketch them?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. Hold the King." Creech went out after Plume, but the excited and
+wary horse eluded him. Then Creech gave up, caught his own mustangs,
+and hurried into camp.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy, if Cordts gits after Sarch an' the others it'll be as well fer
+us," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Soon they were riding into the forest, Creech leading, Lucy in the
+center, and Joel coming behind on the King. Two unsaddled mustangs
+carrying the packs were driven in front. Creech limited the gait to the
+best that the pack-horses could do. They made fast time. The level
+forest floor, hard and springy, afforded the best kind of going.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A cold dread had once more clutched Lucy's heart. What would be the end
+of this flight? The way Creech looked back increased her dread. How
+horrible it would be if Cordts accomplished what he had always
+threatened&mdash;to run off with both her and the King! Lucy lost her
+confidence in Creech. She did not glance again at Joel. Once had been
+enough. She rode on with heavy heart. Anxiety and dread and conjecture
+and a gradual sinking of spirit weighed her down. Yet she never had a
+clearer perception of outside things. The forest loomed thicker and
+darker. The sky was seen only through a green, crisscross of foliage
+waving in the roaring gale. This strong wind was like a blast in Lucy's
+face, and its keen dryness cracked her lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When they rode out of the forest, down a gentle slope of wind-swept
+grass, to an opening into a canyon Lucy was surprised to recognize the
+place. How quickly the ride through the forest had been made!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech dismounted. "Git off, Lucy. You, Joel, hurry an' hand me the
+little pack.... Now I'll take Lucy an' the King down in hyar. You go
+thet way with the hosses an' make as if you was hidin' your trail, but
+don't. Do you savvy?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel shook his head. He looked sullen, somber, strange. His father
+repeated what he had said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're wantin' Cordts to split on the trail?" asked Joel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure. He'll ketch up with you sometime. But you needn't be afeared if
+he does."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I ain't a-goin' to do thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why not?" Creech demanded, slowly, with a rising voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm a-goin' with you. What d'ye mean, Dad, by this move? You'll be
+headin' back fer the Ford. An' we'd git safer if we go the other way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech evidently controlled his temper by an effort. "I'm takin' Lucy
+an' the King back to Bostil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel echoed those words, slowly divining them. "Takin' them BOTH! The
+girl.... An' givin' up the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, both of them. I've changed my mind, Joel. Now&mdash;you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Creech never finished what he meant to say. Joel Creech was
+suddenly seized by a horrible madness. It was then, perhaps, that the
+final thread which linked his mind to rationality stretched and
+snapped. His face turned green. His strange eyes protruded. His jaw
+worked. He frothed at the mouth. He leaped, apparently to get near his
+father, but he missed his direction. Then, as if sight had come back,
+he wheeled and made strange gestures, all the while cursing
+incoherently. The father's shocked face began to show disgust. Then
+part of Joel's ranting became intelligible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shut up!" suddenly roared Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, I won't!" shrieked Joel, wagging his head in spent passion. "An'
+you ain't a-goin' to take thet girl home.... I'll take her with me....
+An' you take the hosses home!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're crazy!" hoarsely shouted Creech, his face going black. "They
+allus said so. But I never believed thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' if I'm crazy, thet girl made me.... You know what I'm a-goin' to
+do? ... I'll strip her naked&mdash;an' I'll&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy saw old Creech lunge and strike. She heard the sodden blow. Joel
+went down. But he scrambled up with his eyes and mouth resembling those
+of a mad hound Lucy once had seen. The fact that he reached twice for
+his gun and could not find it proved the breaking connection of nerve
+and sense. Creech jumped and grappled with Joel. There was a wrestling,
+strained struggle. Creech's hair stood up and his face had a kind of
+sick fury, and he continued to curse and command. They fought for the
+possession of the gun. But Joel seemed to have superhuman strength. His
+hold on the gun could not be broken. Moreover, he kept straining to
+point the gun at his father. Lucy screamed. Creech yelled hoarsely. But
+the boy was beyond reason or help, and he was beyond over powering!
+Lucy saw him bend his arm in spite of the desperate hold upon it and
+fire the gun. Creech's hoarse entreaties ceased as his hold on Joel
+broke. He staggered. His arms went up with a tragic, terrible gesture.
+He fell. Joel stood over him, shaking and livid, but he showed only the
+vaguest realization of the deed. His actions were instinctive. He was
+the animal that had clawed himself free. Further proof of his
+aberration stood out in the action of sheathing his gun; he made the
+motion to do so, but he only dropped it in the grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sight of that dropped gun broke Lucy's spell of horror, which had kept
+her silent but for one scream. Suddenly her blood leaped like fire in
+her veins. She measured the distance to Sage King. Joel was turning.
+Then Lucy darted at the King, reached him, and, leaping, was half up on
+him when he snorted and jumped, not breaking her hold, but keeping her
+from getting up. Then iron hands clutched her and threw her, like an
+empty sack, to the grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joel Creech did not say a word. His distorted face had the deriding
+scorn of a superior being. Lucy lay flat on her back, watching him. Her
+mind worked swiftly. She would have to fight for her body and her life.
+Her terror had fled with her horror. She was not now afraid of this
+demented boy. She meant to fight, calculating like a cunning Indian,
+wild as a trapped wildcat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy lay perfectly still, for she knew she had been thrown near the
+spot where the gun lay. If she got her hands on that gun she would kill
+Joel. It would be the action of an instant. She watched Joel while he
+watched her. And she saw that he had his foot on the rope round Sage
+King's neck. The King never liked a rope. He was nervous. He tossed his
+head to get rid of it. Creech, watching Lucy all the while, reached for
+the rope, pulled the King closer and closer, and untied the knot. The
+King stood then, bridle down and quiet. Instead of a saddle he wore a
+blanket strapped round him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed that Lucy located the gun without turning her eyes away from
+Joel's. She gathered all her force&mdash;rolled over swiftly&mdash;again&mdash;got her
+hands on the gun just as Creech leaped like a panther upon her. His
+weight crushed her flat&mdash;his strength made her hand-hold like that of a
+child. He threw the gun aside. Lucy lay face down, unable to move her
+body while he stood over her. Then he struck her, not a stunning blow,
+but just the hard rap a cruel rider gives to a horse that wants its own
+way. Under that blow Lucy's spirit rose to a height of terrible
+passion. Still she did not lose her cunning; the blow increased it.
+That blow showed Joel to be crazy. She might outwit a crazy man, where
+a man merely wicked might master her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech tried to turn her. Lucy resisted. And she was strong. Resistance
+infuriated Creech. He cuffed her sharply. This action only made him
+worse. Then with hands like steel claws he tore away her blouse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shock of his hands on her bare flesh momentarily weakened Lucy, and
+Creech dragged at her until she lay seemingly helpless before him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Lucy saw that at the sight of her like this something had come
+between Joel Creech's mad motives and their execution. Once he had
+loved her&mdash;desired her. He looked vague. He stroked her shoulder. His
+strange eyes softened, then blazed with a different light. Lucy divined
+that she was lost unless she could recall his insane fury. She must
+begin that terrible fight in which now the best she could hope for was
+to make him kill her quickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swift and vicious as a cat she fastened her teeth in his arm. She bit
+deep and held on. Creech howled like a dog. He beat her. He jerked and
+wrestled. Then he lifted her, and the swing of her body tore the flesh
+loose from his arm and broke her hold. Lucy half rose, crawled, plunged
+for the gun. She got it, too, only to have Creech kick it out of her
+hand. The pain of that brutal kick was severe, but when he cut her
+across the bare back with the rope she shrieked out. Supple and quick,
+she leaped up and ran. In vain! With a few bounds he had her again,
+tripped her up. Lucy fell over the dead body of the father. Yet even
+that did not shake her desperate nerve. All the ferocity of a
+desert-bred savage culminated in her, fighting for death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech leaned down, swinging the coiled rope. He meant to do more than
+lash her with it. Lucy's hands flashed up, closed tight in his long
+hair. Then with a bellow he jerked up and lifted her sheer off the
+ground. There was an instant in which Lucy felt herself swung and torn;
+she saw everything as a whirling blur; she felt an agony in her wrists
+at which Creech was clawing. When he broke her hold there were handfuls
+of hair in Lucy's fists.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She fell again and had not the strength to rise. But Creech was raging,
+and little of his broken speech was intelligible. He knelt with a sharp
+knee pressing her down. He cut the rope. Nimbly, like a rider in
+moments of needful swiftness, he noosed one end of the rope round her
+ankle, then the end of the other piece round her wrist. He might have
+been tying up an unbroken mustang. Rising, he retained hold on both
+ropes. He moved back, sliding them through his hands. Then with a quick
+move he caught up Sage King's bridle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech paused a moment, darkly triumphant. A hideous success showed in
+his strange eyes. A long-cherished mad vengeance had reached its
+fruition. Then he led the horse near to Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Warily he reached down. He did not know Lucy's strength was spent. He
+feared she might yet escape. With hard, quick grasp he caught her,
+lifted her, threw her over the King's back. He forced her down.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy's resistance was her only salvation, because it kept him on the
+track of his old threat. She resisted all she could. He pulled her arms
+down round the King's neck and tied them close. Then he pulled hard on
+the rope on her ankle and tied that to her other ankle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy realized that she was bound fast. Creech had made good most of his
+threat. And now in her mind the hope of the death she had sought
+changed to the hope of life that was possible. Whatever power she had
+ever had over the King was in her voice. If only Creech would slip the
+bridle or cut the reins&mdash;if only Sage King could be free to run!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy could turn her face far enough to see Creech. Like a fiend he was
+reveling in his work. Suddenly he picked up the gun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look a-hyar!" he called, hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With eyes on her, grinning horribly, he walked a few paces to where the
+long grass had not been trampled or pressed down. The wind, whipping up
+out of the canyon, was still blowing hard. Creech put the gun down in
+the grass and fired.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sage King plunged. But he was not gun-shy. He steadied down with a
+pounding of heavy hoofs. Then Lucy could see again. A thin streak of
+yellow smoke rose&mdash;a little snaky flame&mdash;a slight crackling hiss! Then
+as the wind caught the blaze there came a rushing, low roar. Fire, like
+magic, raced and spread before the wind toward the forest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy had forgotten that Creech had meant to drive her into fire. The
+sudden horror of it almost caused collapse. Commotion within&mdash;cold and
+quake and nausea and agony&mdash;deadened her hearing and darkened her
+sight. But Creech's hard hands quickened her. She could see him then,
+though not clearly. His face seemed inhuman, misshapen, gray. His hands
+pulled at her arms&mdash;a last precaution to see that she was tightly
+bound. Then with the deft fingers of a rider he slipped Sage King's
+bridle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy could not trust her sight. What made the King stand so still? His
+ears went up&mdash;stiff&mdash;pointed!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Creech stepped back and laid a violent hand on Lucy's garments. She
+bent&mdash;twisted her neck to watch him. But her sight grew no clearer.
+Still she saw he meant to strip her naked. He braced himself for a
+strong, ripping pull. His yellow teeth showed deep in his lip. His
+contrasting eyes were alight with insane joy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he never pulled. Something attracted his attention. He looked. He
+saw something. The beast in him became human&mdash;the madness changed to
+rationality&mdash;the devil to a craven! His ashen lips uttered a low,
+terrible cry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy felt the King trembling in every muscle. She knew that was flight.
+She expected his loud snort, and was prepared for it when it rang out.
+In a second he would bolt. She knew that. She thrilled. She tried to
+call to him, but her lips were weak. Creech seemed paralyzed. The King
+shifted his position, and Lucy's last glimpse of Creech was one she
+would never forget. It was as if Creech faced burning hell!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then the King whistled and reared. Lucy heard swift, dull, throbbing
+beats. Beats of a fast horse's hoofs on the run! She felt a surging
+thrill of joy. She could not think. All of her blood and bone and
+muscle seemed to throb. Suddenly the air split to a high-pitched, wild,
+whistling blast. It pierced to Lucy's mind. She knew that whistle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire!" she screamed, with bursting heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The King gave a mighty convulsive bound of terror. He, too, knew that
+whistle. And in that one great bound he launched out into a run.
+Straight across the line of burning grass! Lucy felt the sting of
+flame. Smoke blinded and choked her. Then clear, dry, keen wind sung in
+her ears and whipped her hair. The light about her darkened. The King
+had headed into the pines. The heavy roar of the gale overhead struck
+Lucy with new and torturing dread. Sage King once in his life was
+running away, bridleless, and behind him there was fire on the wings of
+the wind.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap17"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+For the first time in his experience Bostil found that horse-trading
+palled upon him. This trip to Durango was a failure. Something was
+wrong. There was a voice constantly calling into his inner ear&mdash;a voice
+to which he refused to listen. And during the five days of the return
+trip the strange mood grew upon him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The last day he and his riders covered over fifty miles and reached the
+Ford late at night. No one expected them, and only the men on duty at
+the corrals knew of the return. Bostil, much relieved to get home, went
+to bed and at once fell asleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He awakened at a late hour for him. When he dressed and went out to the
+kitchen he found that his sister had learned of his return and had
+breakfast waiting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where's the girl?" asked Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not up yet," replied Aunt Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy and I had a tiff last night and she went to her room in a temper."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothin' new about thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley and I have had our troubles holding her in. Don't you forget
+that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil laughed. "Wal, call her an' tell her I'm home."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aunt Jane did as she was bidden. Bostil finished his breakfast. But
+Lucy did not come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil began to feel something strange, and, going to Lucy's door, he
+knocked. There was no reply. Bostil pushed open the door. Lucy was not
+in evidence, and her room was not as tidy as usual. He saw her white
+dress thrown upon the bed she had not slept in. Bostil gazed around
+with a queer contraction of the heart. That sense of something amiss
+grew stronger. Then he saw a chair before the open window. That window
+was rather high, and Lucy had placed a chair before it so that she
+could look out or get out. Bostil stretched his neck, looked out, and
+in the red earth beneath the window he saw fresh tracks of Lucy's
+boots. Then he roared for Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She came running, and between Bostil's furious questions and her own
+excited answers there was nothing arrived at. But presently she spied
+the white dress, and then she ran to Lucy's closet. From there she
+turned a white face to Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She put on her riding-clothes!" gasped Aunt Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Supposin' she did! Where is she?" demanded Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"SHE'S RUN OFF WITH SLONE!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil could not have been shocked or hurt any more acutely by a
+knife-thrust. He glared at his sister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! So thet's the way you watch her!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Watch her? It wasn't possible. She's&mdash;well, she's as smart as you
+are.... Oh, I knew she'd do it! She was wild in love with him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil strode out of the room and the house. He went through the grove
+and directly up the path to Slone's cabin. It was empty, just as Bostil
+expected to find it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The bars of the corral were down. Both Slone's horses were gone.
+Presently Bostil saw the black horse Nagger down in Brackton's pasture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were riders in front of Brackton's. All spoke at once to Bostil,
+and he only yelled for Brackton. The old man came hurriedly out,
+alarmed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where's this Slone?" demanded Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone!" ejaculated Brackton. "I'm blessed if I know. Ain't he home?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. An' he's left his black hoss in your field."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, by golly, thet's news to me.... Bostil, there's been strange
+doin's lately." Brackton seemed at a loss for words. "Mebbe Slone got
+out because of somethin' thet come off last night.... Now, Joel Creech
+an'&mdash;an'&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil waited to hear no more. What did he care about the idiot Creech?
+He strode down the lane to the corrals. Farlane, Van, and other riders
+were there, leisurely as usual. Then Holley appeared, coming out of the
+barn. He, too, was easy, cool, natural, lazy. None of these riders knew
+what was amiss. But instantly a change passed over them. It came
+because Bostil pulled a gun. "Holley, I've a mind to bore you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The old hawk-eyed rider did not flinch or turn a shade off color. "What
+fer?" he queried. But his customary drawl was wanting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I left you to watch Lucy.... An' she's gone!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley showed genuine surprise and distress. The other riders echoed
+Bostil's last word. Bostil lowered the gun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I reckon what saves you is you're the only tracker thet'd have a show
+to find this cussed Slone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley now showed no sign of surprise, but the other riders were
+astounded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy's run off with Slone," added Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, if she's gone, an' if he's gone, it's a cinch," replied Holley,
+throwing up his hands. "Boss, she double-crossed me same as you! ...
+She promised faithful to stay in the house."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Promises nothin'!" roared Bostil. "She's in love with this wild-hoss
+wrangler! She met him last night!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I couldn't help thet," retorted Holley. "An' I trusted the girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil tossed his hands. He struggled with his rage. He had no fear
+that Lucy would not soon be found. But the opposition to his will made
+him furious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Van left the group of riders and came close to Bostil. "It ain't an
+hour back thet I seen Slone ride off alone on his red hoss."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What of thet?" demanded Bostil. "Sure she was waitin' somewheres.
+They'd have too much sense to go together.... Saddle up, you boys, an'
+we'll&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Say, Bostil, I happen to know Slone didn't see Lucy last night,"
+interrupted Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! Wal, you'd better talk out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I trusted Lucy," said Holley. "But all the same, knowin' she was in
+love, I jest wanted to see if any girl in love could keep her word....
+So about dark I went down the grove an' watched fer Slone. Pretty soon
+I seen him. He sneaked along the upper end an' I follered. He went to
+thet bench up by the biggest cottonwood. An' he waited a long time. But
+Lucy didn't come. He must have waited till midnight. Then he left. I
+watched him go back&mdash;seen him go up to his cabin."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, if she didn't meet him, where was she? She wasn't in her room."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil gazed at Holley and the other riders, then back to Holley. What
+was the matter with this old rider? Bostil had never seen Holley seem
+so strange. The whole affair began to loom strangely, darkly. Some
+portent quickened Bostil's lumbering pulse. It seemed that Holley's
+mind must have found an obstacle to thought. Suddenly the old rider's
+face changed&mdash;the bronze was blotted out&mdash;a grayness came, and then a
+dead white.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, mebbe you 'ain't been told yet thet&mdash;thet Creech rode in
+yesterday.... He lost all his racers! He had to shoot both Peg an'
+Roan!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's thought suffered a sudden, blank halt. Then, with realization,
+came the shock for which he had long been prepared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A-huh! Is thet so? ... Wal, an' what did he say?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley laughed a grim, significant laugh that curdled Bostil's blood.
+"Creech said a lot! But let thet go now.... Come with me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley started with rapid strides down the lane. Bostil followed. And
+he heard the riders coming behind. A dark and gloomy thought settled
+upon Bostil. He could not check that, but he held back impatience and
+passion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley went straight to Lucy's window. He got down on his knees to
+scrutinize the tracks.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Made more 'n twelve hours ago," he said, swiftly. "She had on her
+boots, but no spurs.... Now let's see where she went."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley began to trail Lucy's progress through the grove, silently
+pointing now and then to a track. He went swifter, till Bostil had to
+hurry. The other men came whispering after them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley was as keen as a hound on scent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She stopped there," he said, "mebbe to listen. Looks like she wanted
+to cross the lane, but she didn't: here she got to goin' faster."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley reached an intersecting path and suddenly halted stock-still,
+pointing at a big track in the dust.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God! ... Bostil, look at thet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One riving pang tore through Bostil&mdash;and then he was suddenly his old
+self, facing the truth of danger to one he loved. He saw beside the big
+track a faint imprint of Lucy's small foot. That was the last sign of
+her progress and it told a story.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil, thet ain't Slone's track," said Holley, ringingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure it ain't. Thet's the track of a big man," replied Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The other riders, circling round with bent heads, all said one way or
+another that Slone could not have made the trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' whoever he was grabbed Lucy up&mdash;made off with her?" asked Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Plain as if we seen it done!" exclaimed Holley. There was fire in the
+clear, hawk eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts!" cried Bostil, hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mebbe&mdash;mebbe. But thet ain't my idee.... Come on."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley went so fast he almost ran, and he got ahead of Bostil. Finally
+several hundred yards out in the sage he halted, and again dropped to
+his knees. Bostil and the riders hurried on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Keep back; don't stamp round so close," ordered Holley. Then like a
+man searching for lost gold in sand and grass he searched the ground.
+To Bostil it seemed a long time before he got through. When he arose
+there was a dark and deadly certainty in his face, by which Bostil knew
+the worst had befallen Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Four mustangs an' two men last night," said Holley, rapidly. "Here's
+where Lucy was set down on her feet. Here's where she mounted.... An'
+here's the tracks of a third man&mdash;tracks made this mornin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil straightened up and faced Holley as if ready to take a
+death-blow. "I'm reckonin' them last is Slone's tracks."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I know them," replied Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An'&mdash;them&mdash;other tracks? Who made them?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"CREECH AN' HIS SON!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil felt swept away by a dark, whirling flame. And when it passed he
+lay in his barn, in the shade of the loft, prostrate on the fragrant
+hay. His strength with his passion was spent. A dull ache remained. The
+fight was gone from him. His spirit was broken. And he looked down into
+that dark abyss which was his own soul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By and by the riders came for him, got him up, and led him out. He
+shook them off and stood breathing slowly. The air felt refreshing; it
+cooled his hot, tired brain. It did not surprise him to see Joel Creech
+there, cringing behind Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil lifted a hand for some one to speak. And Holley came a step
+forward. His face was haggard, but its white tenseness was gone. He
+seemed as if he were reluctant to speak, to inflict more pain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil," he began, huskily, "you're to send the King&mdash;an' Sarch&mdash;an'
+Ben an' Two Face an' Plume to ransom Lucy! ... If you won't&mdash;then
+Creech'll sell her to Cordts!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What a strange look came into the faces of the riders! Did, they think
+he cared more for horseflesh than for his own flesh and blood?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Send the King&mdash;an' all he wants.... An' send word fer Creech to come
+back to the Ford.... Tell him I said&mdash;my sin found me out!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil watched Joel Creech ride the King out upon the slope, driving
+the others ahead. Sage King wanted to run. Sarchedon was wild and
+unruly. They passed out of sight. Then Bostil turned to his silent
+riders.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Boys, seein' the King go thet way wasn't nothin'.... But what
+crucifies me is&mdash;WILL THET FETCH HER BACK?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"God only knows!" replied Holley. "Mebbe not&mdash;I reckon not! ... But,
+Bostil, you forget Slone is out there on Lucy's trail. Out there ahead
+of Joel! Slone he's a wild-hoss hunter&mdash;the keenest I ever seen. Do you
+think Creech can shake him on a trail? He'll kill Creech, an' he'll lay
+fer Joel goin' back&mdash;an' he'll kill him.... An' I'll bet my all he'll
+ride in here with Lucy an' the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, you ain't figurin' on thet red hoss of Slone's ridin' down the
+King?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley laughed as if Bostil's query was the strangest thing of all that
+poignant day. "Naw. Slone'll lay fer Joel an' rope him like he roped
+Dick Sears."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holley, I reckon you see&mdash;clearer 'n me," said Bostil, plaintively.
+"'Pears as if I never had a hard knock before. Fer my nerve's broke. I
+can't hope.... Lucy's gone! ... Ain't there anythin' to do but wait?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thet's all. Jest wait. If we went out on Joel's trail we'd queer the
+chance of Creech's bein' honest. An' we'd queer Slone's game. I'd hate
+to have him trailin' me."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap18"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+On the day that old Creech repudiated his son, Slone with immeasurable
+relief left Brackton's without even a word to the rejoicing Holley, and
+plodded up the path to his cabin.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After the first flush of elation had passed he found a peculiar mood
+settling down upon him. It was as if all was not so well as he had
+impulsively conceived. He began to ponder over this strange depression,
+to think back. What had happened to dash the cup from his lips? Did he
+regret being freed from guilt in the simple minds of the
+villagers&mdash;regret it because suspicion would fall upon Lucy's father?
+No; he was sorry for the girl, but not for Bostil. It was not this new
+aspect of the situation at the Ford that oppressed him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He trailed his vague feelings back to a subtle shock he had sustained
+in a last look at Creech's dark, somber face. It had been the face of a
+Nemesis. All about Creech breathed silent, revengeful force. Slone
+worked out in his plodding thought why that fact should oppress him;
+and it was because in striking Bostil old Creech must strike through
+Bostil's horses and his daughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone divined it&mdash;divined it by the subtle, intuitive power of his love
+for Lucy. He did not reconsider what had been his supposition before
+Creech's return&mdash;that Creech would kill Bostil. Death would be no
+revenge. Creech had it in him to steal the King and starve him or to do
+the same and worse with Lucy. So Slone imagined, remembering Creech's
+face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before twilight set in Slone saw the Creeches riding out of the lane
+into the sage, evidently leaving the Ford. This occasioned Slone great
+relief, but only for a moment. What the Creeches appeared to be doing
+might not be significant. And he knew if they had stayed in the village
+that he would have watched them as closely as if he thought they were
+trying to steal Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He got his evening meal, cared for his horses, and just as darkness
+came on he slipped down into the grove for his rendezvous with Lucy.
+Always this made his heart beat and his nerves thrill, but to-night he
+was excited. The grove seemed full of moving shadows, all of which he
+fancied were Lucy. Reaching the big cottonwood, he tried to compose
+himself on the bench to wait. But composure seemed unattainable. The
+night was still, only the crickets and the soft rustle of leaves
+breaking a dead silence. Slone had the ears of a wild horse in that he
+imagined sounds he did not really hear. Many a lonely night while he
+lay watching and waiting in the dark, ambushing a water-hole where wild
+horses drank, he had heard soft treads that were only the substance of
+dreams. That was why, on this night when he was overstrained, he
+fancied he saw Lucy coming, a silent, moving shadow, when in reality
+she did not come. That was why he thought he heard very stealthy steps.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited. Lucy did not come. She had never failed before and he knew
+she would come. Waiting became hard. He wanted to go back toward the
+house&mdash;to intercept her on the way. Still he kept to his post,
+watchful, listening, his heart full. And he tried to reason away his
+strange dread, his sense of a need of hurry. For a time he succeeded by
+dreaming of Lucy's sweetness, of her courage, of what a wonderful girl
+she was. Hours and hours he had passed in such dreams. One dream in
+particular always fascinated him, and it was one in which he saw the
+girl riding Wildfire, winning a great race for her life. Another, just
+as fascinating, but so haunting that he always dispelled it, was a
+dream where Lucy, alone and in peril, fought with Cordts or Joel Creech
+for more than her life. These vague dreams were Slone's acceptance of
+the blood and spirit in Lucy. She was Bostil's daughter. She had no
+sense of fear. She would fight. And though Slone always thrilled with
+pride, he also trembled with dread.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At length even wilder dreams of Lucy's rare moments, when she let
+herself go, like a desert whirlwind, to envelop him in all her
+sweetness, could not avail to keep Slone patient. He began to pace to
+and fro under the big tree. He waited and waited. What could have
+detained her? Slone inwardly laughed at the idea that either Holley or
+Aunt Jane could keep his girl indoors when she wanted to come out to
+meet him. Yet Lucy had always said something might prevent. There was
+no reason for Slone to be concerned. He was mistaking his thrills and
+excitement and love and disappointment for something in which there was
+no reality. Yet he could not help it. The longer he waited the more
+shadows glided beneath the cottonwoods, the more faint, nameless sounds
+he heard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited long after he became convinced she would not come. Upon his
+return through the grove he reached a point where the unreal and
+imaginative perceptions were suddenly and stunningly broken. He did
+hear a step. He kept on, as before, and in the deep shadow he turned.
+He saw a man just faintly outlined. One of the riders had been watching
+him&mdash;had followed him! Slone had always expected this. So had Lucy. And
+now it had happened. But Lucy had been too clever. She had not come.
+She had found out or suspected the spy and she had outwitted him. Slone
+had reason to be prouder of Lucy, and he went back to his cabin free
+from further anxiety.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before he went to sleep, however, he heard the clatter of a number of
+horses in the lane. He could tell they were tired horses. Riders
+returning, he thought, and instantly corrected that, for riders seldom
+came in at night. And then it occurred to him that it might be Bostil's
+return. But then it might be the Creeches. Slone had an uneasy return
+of puzzling thoughts. These, however, did not hinder drowsiness, and,
+deciding that the first thing in the morning he would trail the
+Creeches, just to see where they had gone, he fell asleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the morning the bright, broad day, with its dispelling reality, made
+Slone regard himself differently. Things that oppressed him in the dark
+of night vanished in the light of the sun. Still, he was curious about
+the Creeches, and after he had done his morning's work he strolled out
+to take up their trail. It was not hard to follow in the lane, for no
+other horses had gone in that direction since the Creeches had left.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once up on the wide, windy slope the reach and color and fragrance
+seemed to call to Slone irresistibly, and he fell to trailing these
+tracks just for the love of a skill long unused. Half a mile out the
+road turned toward Durango. But the Creeches did not continue on that
+road. They entered the sage. Instantly Slone became curious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He followed the tracks to a pile of rocks where the Creeches had made a
+greasewood fire and had cooked a meal. This was strange&mdash;within a mile
+of the Ford, where Brackton and others would have housed them. What was
+stranger was the fact that the trail started south from there and swung
+round toward the village.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's heart began to thump. But he forced himself to think only of
+these tracks and not any significance they might have. He trailed the
+men down to a bench on the slope, a few hundred yards from Bostil's
+grove, and here a trampled space marked where a halt had been made and
+a wait.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And here Slone could no longer restrain conjecture and dread. He
+searched and searched. He got on his knees. He crawled through the sage
+all around the trampled space. Suddenly his heart seemed to receive a
+stab. He had found prints of Lucy's boots in the soft earth! And he
+leaped up, wild and fierce, needing to know no more.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He ran back to his cabin. He never thought of Bostil, of Holley, of
+anything except the story revealed in those little boot-tracks. He
+packed a saddle-bag with meat and biscuits, filled a canvas
+water-bottle, and, taking them and his rifle, he hurried out to the
+corral. First he took Nagger down to Brackton's pasture and let him in.
+Then returning, he went at the fiery stallion as he had not gone in
+many a day, roped him, saddled him, mounted him, and rode off with a
+hard, grim certainty that in Wildfire was Lucy's salvation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Four hours later Slone halted on the crest of a ridge, in the cover of
+sparse cedars, and surveyed a vast, gray, barren basin yawning and
+reaching out to a rugged, broken plateau.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He expected to find Joel Creech returning on the back-trail, and he had
+taken the precaution to ride on one side of the tracks he was
+following. He did not want Joel to cross his trail. Slone had long ago
+solved the meaning of the Creeches' flight. They would use Lucy to
+ransom Bostil's horses, and more than likely they would not let her go
+back. That they had her was enough for Slone. He was grim and
+implacable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The eyes of the wild-horse hunter had not searched that basin long
+before they picked out a dot which was not a rock or a cedar, but a
+horse. Slone watched it grow, and, hidden himself, he held his post
+until he knew the rider was Joel Creech. Slone drew his own horse back
+and tied him to a sage-bush amidst some scant grass. Then he returned
+to watch. It appeared Creech was climbing the ridge below Slone, and
+some distance away. It was a desperate chance Joel ran then, for Slone
+had set out to kill him. It was certain that if Joel had happened to
+ride near instead of far, Slone could not have helped but kill him. As
+it was, he desisted because he realized that Joel would acquaint Bostil
+with the abducting of Lucy, and it might be that this would be well.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone was shaking when young Creech passed up and out of sight over the
+ridge&mdash;shaking with the deadly grip of passion such as he had never
+known. He waited, slowly gaining control, and at length went back for
+Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he rode boldly forth on the trail. He calculated that old Creech
+would take Lucy to some wild retreat in the canyons and there wait for
+Joel and the horses. Creech had almost certainly gone on and would be
+unaware of a pursuer so closely on his trail. Slone took the direction
+of the trail, and he saw a low, dark notch in the rocky wall in the
+distance. After that he paid no more attention to choosing good ground
+for Wildfire than he did to the trail. The stallion was more tractable
+than Slone had ever found him. He loved the open. He smelled the sage
+and the wild. He settled down into his long, easy, swinging lope which
+seemed to eat up the miles. Slone was obsessed with thoughts centering
+round Lucy, and time and distance were scarcely significant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun had dipped full red in a golden west when Slone reached the
+wall of rocks and the cleft where Creech's tracks and Lucy's, too,
+marked the camp. Slone did not even dismount. Riding on into the cleft,
+he wound at length into a canyon and out of that into a larger one,
+where he found that Lucy had remembered to leave a trail, and down this
+to a break in a high wall, and through it to another winding, canyon.
+The sun set, but Slone kept on as long as he could see the trail, and
+after that, until an intersecting canyon made it wise for him to halt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were rich grass and sweet water for his horse. He himself was not
+hungry, but he ate; he was not sleepy, but he slept. And daylight found
+him urging Wildfire in pursuit. On the rocky places Slone found the
+cedar berries Lucy had dropped. He welcomed sight of them, but he did
+not need them. This man Creech could never hide a trail from him, Slone
+thought grimly, and it suited him to follow that trail at a rapid trot.
+If he lost the tracks for a distance he went right on, and he knew
+where to look for them ahead. There was a vast difference between the
+cunning of Creech and the cunning of a wild horse. And there was an
+equal difference between the going and staying powers of Creech's
+mustangs and Wildfire. Yes, Slone divined that Lucy's salvation would
+be Wildfire, her horse. The trail grew rougher, steeper, harder, but
+the stallion kept his eagerness and his pace. On many an open length of
+canyon or height of wild upland Slone gazed ahead hoping to see
+Creech's mustangs. He hoped for that even when he knew he was still too
+far behind. And then, suddenly, in the open, sandy flat of an
+intersecting canyon he came abruptly on a fresh trail of three horses,
+one of them shod.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The surprise stunned him. For a moment he gazed stupidly at these
+strange tracks. Who had made them? Had Creech met allies? Was that
+likely when the man had no friends? Pondering the thing, Slone went
+slowly on, realizing that a new and disturbing feature confronted him.
+Then when these new tracks met the trail that Creech had left Slone
+found that these strangers were as interested in Creech's tracks as he
+was. Slone found their boot-marks in the sand&mdash;the hand-prints where
+some one had knelt to scrutinize Creech's trail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone led his horse and walked on, more and more disturbed in mind.
+When he came to a larger, bare, flat canyon bottom, where the rock had
+been washed clear of sand, he found no more cedar berries. They had
+been picked up. At the other extreme edge of this stony ground he found
+crumpled bits of cedar and cedar berries scattered in one spot, as if
+thrown there by some one who read their meaning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This discovery unnerved Slone. It meant so much. And if Slone had any
+hope or reason to doubt that these strangers had taken up the trail for
+good, the next few miles dispelled it. They were trailing Creech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly Slone gave a wild start, which made Wildfire plunge.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"CORDTS!" whispered Slone and the cold sweat oozed out of every pore.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These canyons were the hiding-places of the horse-thief. He and two of
+his men had chanced upon Creech's trail; and perhaps their guess at its
+meaning was like Slone's. If they had not guessed they would soon
+learn. It magnified Slone's task a thousandfold. He had a moment of
+bitter, almost hopeless realization before a more desperate spirit
+awoke in him. He had only more men to kill&mdash;that was all. These upland
+riders did not pack rifles, of that Slone was sure. And the sooner he
+came up with Cordts the better. It was then he let Wildfire choose his
+gait and the trail. Sunset, twilight, dusk, and darkness came with
+Slone keeping on and on. As long as there were no intersecting canyons
+or clefts or slopes by which Creech might have swerved from his course,
+just so long Slone would travel. And it was late in the night when he
+had to halt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Early next day the trail led up out of the red and broken gulches to
+the cedared uplands. Slone saw a black-rimmed, looming plateau in the
+distance. All these winding canyons, and the necks of the high ridges
+between, must run up to that great table-land.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That day he lost two of the horse tracks. He did not mark the change
+for a long time after there had been a split in the party that had been
+trailing Creech. Then it was too late for him to go back to
+investigate, even if that had been wise. He kept on, pondering, trying
+to decide whether or not he had been discovered and was now in danger
+of ambush ahead and pursuit from behind. He thought that possibly
+Cordts had split his party, one to trail along after Creech, the others
+to work around to head him off. Undoubtedly Cordts knew this broken
+canyon country and could tell where Creech was going, and knew how to
+intercept him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The uncertainty wore heavily upon Slone. He grew desperate. He had no
+time to steal along cautiously. He must be the first to get to Creech.
+So he held to the trail and went as rapidly as the nature of the ground
+would permit, expecting to be shot at from any clump of cedars. The
+trail led down again into a narrow canyon with low walls. Slone put all
+his keenness on what lay before him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire's sudden break and upflinging of head and his snort preceded
+the crack of a rifle. Slone knew he had been shot at, although he
+neither felt nor heard the bullet. He had no chance to see where the
+shot came from, for Wildfire bolted, and needed as much holding and
+guiding as Slone could give. He ran a mile. Then Slone was able to look
+about him. Had he been shot at from above or behind? He could not tell.
+It did not matter, so long as the danger was not in front. He kept a
+sharp lookout, and presently along the right canyon rim, five hundred
+feet above him, he saw a bay horse, and a rider with a rifle. He had
+been wrong, then, about these riders and their weapons. Slone did not
+see any wisdom in halting to shoot up at this pursuer, and he spurred
+Wildfire just as a sharp crack sounded above. The bullet thudded into
+the earth a few feet behind him. And then over bad ground, with the
+stallion almost unmanageable, Slone ran a gantlet of shots. Evidently
+the man on the rim had smooth ground to ride over, for he easily kept
+abreast of Slone. But he could not get the range. Fortunately for
+Slone, broken ramparts above checked the tricks of that pursuer, and
+Slone saw no more of him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It afforded him great relief to find that Creech's trail turned into a
+canyon on the left; and here, with the sun already low, Slone began to
+watch the clumps of cedars and the jumbles of rock. But he was not
+ambushed. Darkness set in, and, being tired out, he was about to halt
+for the night when he caught the flicker of a campfire. The stallion
+saw it, too, but did not snort. Slone dismounted and, leading him, went
+cautiously forward on foot, rifle in hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The canyon widened at a point where two breaks occurred, and the
+less-restricted space was thick with cedar and pinyon. Slone could tell
+by the presence of these trees and also by a keener atmosphere that he
+was slowly getting to a higher attitude. This camp-fire must belong to
+Cordts or the one man who had gone on ahead. And Slone advanced boldly.
+He did not have to make up his mind what to do.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he was amazed to see several dark forms moving to and fro before
+the bright camp-fire, and he checked himself abruptly. Considering a
+moment, Slone thought he had better have a look at these fellows. So he
+tied Wildfire and, taking to the darker side of the canyon, he stole
+cautiously forward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The distance was considerable, as he had calculated. Soon, however, he
+made out the shadowy outlines of horses feeding in the open. He hugged
+the canyon wall for fear they might see him. As luck would have it the
+night breeze was in his favor. Stealthily he stole on, in the deep
+shadow of the wall, and under the cedars, until he came to a point
+opposite the camp-fire, and then he turned toward it. He went slowly,
+carefully, noiselessly, and at last he crawled through the narrow
+aisles between thick sage-brush. Another clump of cedars loomed up, and
+he saw the flickering of firelight upon the pale-green foliage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He heard gruff voices before he raised himself to look, and by this he
+gauged his distance. He was close enough&mdash;almost too close. But as he
+crouched in dark shade and there were no horses near, he did not fear
+discovery.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he peered out from his covert the first thing to strike and hold
+his rapid glance was the slight figure of a girl. Slone stifled a gasp
+in his throat. He thought he recognized Lucy. Stunned, he crouched down
+again with his hands clenched round his rifle. And there he remained
+for a long moment of agony before reason asserted itself over emotion.
+Had he really seen Lucy? He had heard of a girl now and then in the
+camps of these men, especially Cordts. Maybe Creech had fallen in with
+comrades. No, he could not have had any comrades there but
+horse-thieves, and Creech was above that. If Creech was there he had
+been held up by Cordts; if Lucy only was with the gang, Creech had been
+killed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had to force himself to look again. The girl had changed her
+position. But the light shone upon the men. Creech was not one of the
+three, nor Cordts, nor any man Slone had seen before. They were not
+honest men, judging from their hard, evil looks. Slone was nonplussed
+and he was losing self-control. Again he lowered himself and waited. He
+caught the word "Durango" and "hosses" and "fer enough in," the meaning
+of which was, vague. Then the girl laughed. And Slone found himself
+trembling with joy. Beyond any doubt that laugh could not have been
+Lucy's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone stole back as he had come, reached the shadow of the wall, and
+drew away until he felt it safe to walk quickly. When he reached the
+place where he expected to find Wildfire he did not see him. Slone
+looked and looked. Perhaps he had misjudged distance and place in the
+gloom. Still, he never made mistakes of that nature. He searched around
+till he found the cedar stump to which he had tied the lasso. In the
+gloom he could not see it, and when he reached out he did not feel it.
+Wildfire was gone! Slone sank down, overcome. He cursed what must have
+been carelessness, though he knew he never was careless with a horse.
+What had happened? He did not know. But Wildfire was gone&mdash;and that
+meant Lucy's doom and his! Slone shook with cold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then, as he leaned against the stump, wet and shaking, familiar sound
+met his ears. It was made by the teeth of a grazing horse&mdash;a slight,
+keen, tearing cut. Wildfire was close at hand! With a sweep Slone
+circled the stump and he found the knot of the lasso. He had missed it.
+He began to gather in the long rope, and soon felt the horse. In the
+black gloom against the wall Slone could not distinguish Wildfire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Whew!" he muttered, wiping the sweat off his face. "Good Lord! ... All
+for nothin'."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It did not take Slone long to decide to lead the horse and work up the
+canyon past the campers. He must get ahead of them, and once there he
+had no fear of them, either by night or day. He really had no hopes of
+getting by undiscovered, and all he wished for was to get far enough so
+that he could not be intercepted. The grazing horses would scent
+Wildfire or he would scent them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a wonder Wildfire allowed himself to be led as well as if he had
+been old, faithful Nagger. Slone could not keep close in to the wall
+for very long, on account of the cedars, but he managed to stay in the
+outer edge of shadow cast by the wall. Wildfire winded the horses,
+halted, threw up his head. But for some reason beyond Slone the horse
+did not snort or whistle. As he knew Wildfire he could have believed
+him intelligent enough and hateful enough to betray his master.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was one of the other horses that whistled an alarm. This came at a
+point almost even with the camp-fire. Slone, holding Wildfire down, had
+no time to get into a stirrup, but leaped to the saddle and let the
+horse go. There were hoarse yells and then streaks of fire and shots.
+Slone heard the whizz of heavy bullets, and he feared for Wildfire. But
+the horse drew swiftly away into the darkness. Slone could not see
+whether the ground was smooth or broken, and he left that to Wildfire.
+Luck favored them, and presently Slone pulled him in to a safe gait,
+and regretted only that he had not had a chance to take a shot at that
+camp.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone walked the horse for an hour, and then decided that he could well
+risk a halt for the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before dawn he was up, warming his chilled body by violent movements,
+and forcing himself to eat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The rim of the west wall changed from gray to pink. A mocking-bird
+burst into song. A coyote sneaked away from the light of day. Out in
+the open Slone found the trail made by Creech's mustangs and by the
+horse of Cordts's man. The latter could not be very far ahead. In less
+than an hour Slone came to a clump of cedars where this man had camped.
+An hour behind him!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This canyon was open, with a level and narrow floor divided by a deep
+wash. Slone put Wildfire to a gallop. The narrow wash was no obstacle
+to Wildfire; he did not have to be urged or checked. It was not long
+before Slone saw a horseman a quarter of a mile ahead, and he was
+discovered almost at the same time. This fellow showed both surprise
+and fear. He ran his horse. But in comparison with Wildfire that horse
+seemed sluggish. Slone would have caught up with him very soon but for
+a change in the lay of the land. The canyon split up and all of its
+gorges and ravines and washes headed upon the pine-fringed plateau, now
+only a few miles distant. The gait of the horses had to be reduced to a
+trot, and then a walk. The man Slone was after left Creech's trail and
+took to a side cleft. Slone, convinced he would soon overhaul him, and
+then return to take up Creech's trail, kept on in pursuit. Then Slone
+was compelled to climb. Wildfire was so superior to the other's horse,
+and Slone was so keen at choosing ground and short cuts, that he would
+have been right upon him but for a split in the rock which suddenly
+yawned across his path. It was impassable. After a quick glance Slone
+abandoned the direct pursuit, and, turning along this gulch, he gained
+a point where the horse-thief would pass under the base of the
+rim-wall, and here Slone would have him within easy rifle shot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the man, intent on getting out of the canyon, rode into the trap,
+approaching to within a hundred yards of Slone, who suddenly showed
+himself on foot, rifle in hand. The deep gulch was a barrier to Slone's
+further progress, but his rifle dominated the situation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hold on!" he called, warningly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hold on yerself!" yelled the other, aghast, as he halted his horse. He
+gazed down and evidently was quick to take in the facts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone had meant to kill this man without even a word, yet now when the
+moment had come a feeling almost of sickness clouded his resolve. But
+he leveled the rifle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I got it on you," he called.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon you hev. But see hyar&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can hit you anywhere."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I'll take yer word fer thet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right. Now talk fast.... Are you one of Cordts's gang?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why are you alone?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We split down hyar."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did you know I was on this trail?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nope. I didn't sure, or you'd never ketched me, red hoss or no."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who were you trailin'?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ole Creech an' the girl he kidnapped."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone felt the leap of his blood and the jerk it gave the rifle as his
+tense finger trembled on the trigger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Girl.... What girl?" he called, hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bostil's girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why did Cordts split on the trail?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He an' Hutch went round fer some more of the gang, an' to head off
+Joel Creech when he comes in with Bostil's hosses."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone was amazed to find how the horse thieves had calculated; yet, on
+second thought, the situation, once the Creeches had been recognized,
+appeared simple enough.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What was your game?" he demanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was follerin' Creech jest to find out where he'd hole up with the
+girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's Cordts's game&mdash;AFTER he heads Joel Creech?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then he's goin' fer the girl."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone scarcely needed to be told all this, but the deliberate words
+from the lips of one of Cordts's gang bore a raw, brutal proof of
+Lucy's peril. And yet Slone could not bring himself to kill this man in
+cold blood. He tried, but in vain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you got a gun?" called Slone, hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ride back the other way! ... If you don't lose me I'll kill you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man stared. Slone saw the color return to his pale face. Then he
+turned his horse and rode back out of sight. Slone heard him rolling
+the stones down the long, rough slope; and when he felt sure the
+horse-thief had gotten a fair start he went back to mount Wildfire in
+pursuit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This trailer of Lucy never got back to Lucy's trail&mdash;never got away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Slone, when that day's hard, deadly pursuit ended, found himself
+lost in the canyons. How bitterly he cursed both his weakness in not
+shooting the man at sight, and his strength in following him with
+implacable purpose! For to be fair, to give the horse-thief a chance
+for his life, Slone had lost Lucy's trail. The fact nearly distracted
+him. He spent a sleepless night of torture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All next day, like a wild man, he rode and climbed and descended,
+spurred by one purpose, pursued by suspense and dread. That night he
+tied Wildfire near water and grass and fell into the sleep of
+exhaustion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Morning came. But with it no hope. He had been desperate. And now he
+was in a frightful state. It seemed that days and days had passed, and
+nights that were hideous with futile nightmares.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rode down into a canyon with sloping walls, and broken, like all of
+these canyons under the great plateau. Every canyon resembled another.
+The upland was one vast network. The world seemed a labyrinth of
+canyons among which he was hopelessly lost. What would&mdash;what had become
+of Lucy? Every thought in his whirling brain led back to that&mdash;and it
+was terrible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then&mdash;he was gazing transfixed down upon the familiar tracks left by
+Creech's mustangs. Days old, but still unfollowed!
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap19"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+That track led up the narrowing canyon to its head at the base of the
+plateau.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone, mindful of his horse, climbed on foot, halting at the zigzag
+turns to rest. A long, gradually ascending trail mounted the last
+slope, which when close at hand was not so precipitous as it appeared
+from below. Up there the wind, sucked out of the canyons, swooped and
+twisted hard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last Slone led Wildfire over the rim and halted for another
+breathing-spell. Before him was a beautiful, gently sloping stretch of
+waving grass leading up to the dark pine forest from which came a roar
+of wind. Beneath Slone the wild and whorled canyon breaks extended,
+wonderful in thousands of denuded surfaces, gold and red and yellow,
+with the smoky depths between.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire sniffed the wind and snorted. Slone turned, instantly alert.
+The wild horse had given an alarm. Like a flash Slone leaped into the
+saddle. A faint cry, away from the wind, startled Slone. It was like a
+cry he had heard in dreams. How overstrained his perceptions! He was
+not really sure of anything, yet on the instant he was tense.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Straggling cedars on his left almost wholly obstructed Slone's view.
+Wildfire's ears and nose were pointed that way. Slone trotted him down
+toward the edge of this cedar clump so that he could see beyond. Before
+he reached it, however, he saw something blue, moving, waving, lifting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Smoke!" muttered Slone. And he thought more of the danger of fire on
+that windy height than he did of another peril to himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire was hard to hold as he rounded the edge of the cedars.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone saw a line of leaping flame, a line of sweeping smoke, the grass
+on fire ... horses!&mdash;a man!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire whistled his ringing blast of hate and menace, his desert
+challenge to another stallion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man whirled to look.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone saw Joel Creech&mdash;and Sage King&mdash;and Lucy, half naked, bound on
+his back!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joy, agony, terror in lightning-swift turns, paralyzed Slone. But
+Wildfire lunged out on the run.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sage King reared in fright, came down to plunge away, and with a
+magnificent leap cleared the line of fire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone, more from habit than thought, sat close in the saddle. A few of
+Wildfire's lengthening strides, quickened Slone's blood. Then Creech
+moved, also awaking from a stupefying surprise, and he snatched up a
+gun and fired. Slone saw the spurts of red, the puffs of white. But he
+heard nothing. The torrent of his changed blood, burning and terrible,
+filled his ears with hate and death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He guided the running stallion. In a few tremendous strides Wildfire
+struck Creech, and Slone had one glimpse of an awful face. The impact
+was terrific. Creech went hurtling through the air, limp and broken, to
+go down upon a rock, his skull cracking like a melon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The horse leaped over the body and the stone, and beyond he leaped the
+line of burning grass.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone saw the King running into the forest. He saw poor Lucy's white
+body swinging with the horse's motion. One glance showed the great gray
+to be running wild. Then the hate and passion cleared away, leaving
+suspense and terror.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire reached the pines. There down the open aisles between the
+black trees ran the fleet gray racer. Wildfire saw him and snorted. The
+King was a hundred yards to the fore.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire&mdash;it's come&mdash;the race&mdash;the race!" called Slone. But he could
+not hear his own call. There was a roar overhead, heavy, almost
+deafening. The wind! the wind! Yet that roar did not deaden a strange,
+shrieking crack somewhere behind. Wildfire leaped in fright. Slone
+turned. Fire had run up a pine-tree, which exploded as if the trunk
+were powder!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"MY GOD! A RACE WITH FIRE! ... LUCY! LUCY!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In that poignant cry Slone uttered his realization of the strange fate
+that had waited for the inevitable race between Wildfire and the King;
+he uttered his despairing love for Lucy, and his acceptance of death
+for her and himself. No horse could outrun wind-driven fire in a dry
+pine forest. Slone had no hope of that. How perfectly fate and time and
+place and horses, himself and his sweetheart, had met! Slone damned
+Joel Creech's insane soul to everlasting torment. To think&mdash;to think
+his idiotic and wild threat had come true&mdash;and come true with a gale in
+the pine-tops! Slone grew old at the thought, and the fact seemed to be
+a dream. But the dry, pine-scented air made breathing hard; the gray
+racer, carrying that slender, half-naked form, white in the forest
+shade, lengthened into his fleet and beautiful stride; the motion of
+Wildfire, so easy, so smooth, so swift, and the fierce reach of his
+head shooting forward&mdash;all these proved that it was no dream.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Tense questions pierced the dark chaos of Slone's mind&mdash;what could he
+do? Run the King down! Make 'him kill Lucy! Save her from horrible
+death by fire!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The red horse had not gained a yard on the gray. Slone, keen to judge
+distance, saw this, and for the first time he doubted Wildfire's power
+to ran down the King. Not with such a lead! It was hopeless&mdash;so
+hopeless&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned to look back. He saw no fire, no smoke&mdash;only the dark trunks,
+and the massed green foliage in violent agitation against the blue sky.
+That revived a faint hope. If he could get a few miles ahead, before
+the fire began to leap across the pine-crests, then it might be
+possible to run out of the forest if it were not wide.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then a stronger hope grew. It seemed that foot by foot Wildfire was
+gaining on the King. Slone studied the level forest floor sliding
+toward him. He lost his hope&mdash;then regained it again, and then he
+spurred the horse. Wildfire hated that as he hated Slone. But
+apparently he did not quicken his strides. And Slone could not tell if
+he lengthened them. He was not running near his limit but, after the
+nature of such a horse, left to choose his gait, running slowly, but
+rising toward his swiftest and fiercest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's rider's blood never thrilled to that race, for his blood had
+curdled. The sickness within rose to his mind. And that flashed up
+whenever he dared to look forward at Lucy's white form. Slone could not
+bear this sight; it almost made him reel, yet he was driven to look. He
+saw that the King carried no saddle, so with Lucy on him he was light.
+He ought to run all day with only that weight. Wildfire carried a heavy
+saddle, a pack, a water bag, and a rifle. Slone untied the pack and let
+it drop. He almost threw aside the water-bag, but something withheld
+his hand, and also he kept his rifle. What were a few more pounds to
+this desert stallion in his last run? Slone knew it was Wildfire's
+greatest and last race.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Suddenly Slone's ears rang with a terrible on-coming roar. For an
+instant the unknown sound stiffened him, robbed him of strength. Only
+the horn of the saddle, hooking into him, held him on. Then the years
+of his desert life answered to a call more than human.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had to race against fire. He must beat the flame to the girl he
+loved. There were miles of dry forest, like powder. Fire backed by a
+heavy gale could rage through dry pine faster than any horse could run.
+He might fail to save Lucy. Fate had given him a bitter ride. But he
+swore a grim oath that he would beat the flame. The intense and
+abnormal rider's passion in him, like Bostil's, dammed up, but never
+fully controlled, burst within him, and suddenly he awoke to a wild and
+terrible violence of heart and soul. He had accepted death; he had no
+fear. All that he wanted to do, the last thing he wanted to do, was to
+ride down the King and kill Lucy mercifully. How he would have gloried
+to burn there in the forest, and for a million years in the dark
+beyond, to save the girl!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He goaded the horse. Then he looked back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Through the aisles of the forest he saw a strange, streaky, murky
+something moving, alive, shifting up and down, never an instant the
+same. It must have been the wind&mdash;the heat before the fire. He seemed
+to see through it, but there was nothing beyond, only opaque, dim,
+mustering clouds. Hot puffs shot forward into his face. His eyes
+smarted and stung. His ears hurt and were growing deaf. The tumult was
+the rear of avalanches, of maelstroms, of rushing seas, of the wreck of
+the uplands and the ruin of the earth. It grew to be so great a roar
+that he no longer heard. There was only silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he turned to face ahead. The stallion stretched low on a dead run;
+the tips of the pines were bending before the wind; and Wildfire, the
+terrible thing for which his horse was named, was leaping through the
+forest. But there was no sound.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ahead of Slone, down the aisles, low under the trees spreading over the
+running King, floated swiftly some medium, like a transparent veil. It
+was neither smoke nor air. It carried faint pin points of light,
+sparks, that resembled atoms of dust floating in sunlight. It was a
+wave of heat driven before the storm of fire. Slone did not feel pain,
+but he seemed to be drying up, parching. And Lucy must be suffering
+now. He goaded the stallion, raking his flanks. Wildfire answered with
+a scream and a greater speed. All except Lucy and Sage King and
+Wildfire seemed so strange and unreal&mdash;the swift rush between the
+pines, now growing ghostly in the dimming light, the sense of a
+pursuing, overpowering force, and yet absolute silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone fought the desire to look back. But he could not resist it. Some
+horrible fascination compelled him. All behind had changed. A hot wind,
+like a blast from a furnace, blew light, stinging particles into his
+face. The fire was racing in the tree-tops, while below all was yet
+clear. A lashing, leaping flame engulfed the canopy of pines. It was
+white, seething, inconceivably swift, with a thousand flashing tongues.
+It traveled ahead of smoke. It was so thin he could see the branches
+through it, and the fiery clouds behind. It swept onward, a sublime and
+an appalling spectacle. Slone could not think of what it looked like.
+It was fire, liberated, freed from the bowels of the earth, tremendous,
+devouring. This, then, was the meaning of fire. This, then, was the
+horrible fate to befall Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But no! He thought he must be insane not to be overcome in spirit. Yet
+he was not. He would beat the flame to Lucy. He felt the loss of
+something, some kind of a sensation which he ought to have had. Still
+he rode that race to kill his sweetheart better than any race he had
+ever before ridden. He kept his seat; he dodged the snags; he pulled
+the maddened horse the shortest way, he kept the King running straight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No horse had ever run so magnificent a race! Wildfire was outracing
+wind and fire, and he was overhauling the most noted racer of the
+uplands against a tremendous handicap. But now he was no longer racing
+to kill the King; he was running in terror. For miles he held that
+long, swift, wonderful stride without a break. He was running to his
+death, whether or not he distanced the fire. Nothing could stop him now
+but a bursting heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone untied his lasso and coiled the noose. Almost within reach of the
+King! One throw&mdash;one sudden swerve&mdash;and the King would go down. Lucy
+would know only a stunning shock. Slone's heart broke. Could he kill
+her&mdash;crush that dear golden head? He could not, yet he must! He saw a
+long, curved, red welt on Lucy's white shoulders. What was that? Had a
+branch lashed her? Slone could not see her face. She could not have
+been dead or in a faint, for she was riding the King, bound as she was!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Closer and closer drew Wildfire. He seemed to go faster and faster as
+that wind of flame gained upon them. The air was too thick to breathe.
+It had an irresistible weight. It pushed horses and riders onward in
+their flight&mdash;straws on the crest of a cyclone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again Slone looked back and again the spectacle was different. There
+was a white and golden fury of flame above, beautiful and blinding; and
+below, farther back, an inferno of glowing fire, black-streaked, with
+trembling, exploding puffs and streams of yellow smoke. The aisles
+between the burning pines were smoky, murky caverns, moving and weird.
+Slone saw fire shoot from the tree-tops down the trunks, and he saw
+fire shoot up the trunks, like trains of powder. They exploded like
+huge rockets. And along the forest floor leaped the little flames. His
+eyes burned and blurred till all merged into a wide, pursuing storm too
+awful for the gaze of man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wildfire was running down the King. The great gray had not lessened his
+speed, but he was breaking. Slone felt a ghastly triumph when he began
+to whirl the noose of the lasso round his head. Already he was within
+range. But he held back his throw which meant the end of all. And as he
+hesitated Wildfire suddenly whistled one shrieking blast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone looked. Ahead there was light through the forest! Slone saw a
+white, open space of grass. A park? No&mdash;the end of the forest!
+Wildfire, like a demon, hurtled onward, with his smoothness of action
+gone, beginning to break, within a length of the King.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A cry escaped Slone&mdash;a cry as silent as if there had been no deafening
+roar&mdash;as wild as the race, and as terrible as the ruthless fire. It was
+the cry of life&mdash;instead of death. Both Sage King and Wildfire would
+beat the flame.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then, with the open just ahead, Slone felt a wave of hot wind rolling
+over him. He saw the lashing tongues of flame above him in the pines.
+The storm had caught him. It forged ahead. He was riding under a canopy
+of fire. Burning pine cones, like torches, dropped all around him. He
+had a terrible blank sense of weight, of suffocation, of the air
+turning to fire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Wildfire, with his nose at Sage King's flank, flashed out of the
+pines into the open. Slone saw a grassy wide reach inclining gently
+toward a dark break in the ground with crags rising sheer above it, and
+to the right a great open space.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone felt that clear air as the breath of deliverance. His reeling
+sense righted. There&mdash;the King ran, blindly going to his death.
+Wildfire was breaking fast. His momentum carried him. He was almost
+done.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone roped the King, and holding hard, waited for the end. They ran
+on, breaking, breaking. Slone thought he would have to throw the King,
+for they were perilously near the deep cleft in the rim. But Sage King
+went to his knees.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone leaped off just as Wildfire fell. How the blade flashed that
+released Lucy! She was wet from the horse's sweat and foam. She slid
+off into Slone's arms, and he called her name. Could she hear above
+that roar back there in the forest? The pieces of rope hung to her
+wrists and Slone saw dark bruises, raw and bloody. She fell against
+him. Was she dead? His heart contracted. How white the face! No; he saw
+her breast heave against his! And he cried aloud, incoherently in his
+joy. She was alive. She was not badly hurt. She stirred. She plucked at
+him with nerveless hands. She pressed close to him. He heard a
+smothered voice, yet so full, so wonderful!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Put&mdash;your&mdash;coat&mdash;on me!" came somehow to his ears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone started violently. Abashed, shamed to realize he had forgotten
+she was half nude, he blindly tore off his coat, blindly folded it
+around her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lin! Lin!" she cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy&mdash;Oh! are y-you&mdash;" he replied, huskily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not hurt. I'm all right."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But that wretch, Joel. He&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He'd killed his father&mdash;just a&mdash;minute&mdash;before you came. I fought him!
+Oh! ... But I'm all right.... Did you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire ran him down&mdash;smashed him.... Lucy! this can't be true....
+Yet I feel you! Thank God!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With her free hand Lucy returned his clasp. She seemed to be strong. It
+was a precious moment for Slone, in which he was uplifted beyond all
+dreams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let me loose&mdash;a second," she said. "I want to&mdash;get in your coat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed as he released her. She laughed! And Slone thrilled with
+unutterable sweetness at that laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he turned away he felt a swift wind, then a strange impact from an
+invisible force that staggered him, then the rend of flesh. After that
+came the heavy report of a gun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone fell. He knew he had been shot. Following the rending of his
+flesh came a hot agony. It was in his shoulder, high up, and the dark,
+swift fear for his life was checked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy stood staring down at him, unable to comprehend, slowly paling.
+Her hands clasped the coat round her. Slone saw her, saw the edge of
+streaming clouds of smoke above her, saw on the cliff beyond the gorge
+two men, one with a smoking gun half leveled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If Slone had been inattentive to his surroundings before, the sight of
+Cordts electrified him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lucy! drop down! quick!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, what's happened? You&mdash;you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've been shot. Drop down, I tell you. Get behind the horse an' pull
+my rifle."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shot!" exclaimed Lucy, blankly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes&mdash;Yes.... My God! Lucy, he's goin' to shoot again!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was then Lucy Bostil saw Cordts across the gulch. He was not fifty
+yards distant, plainly recognizable, tall, gaunt, sardonic. He held the
+half-leveled gun ready as if waiting. He had waited there in ambush.
+The clouds of smoke rolled up above him, hiding the crags.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"CORDTS!" Bostil's blood spoke in the girl's thrilling cry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hunch down, Lucy!" cried Slone. "Pull my rifle.... I'm only
+winged&mdash;not hurt. Hurry! He's goin'&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another heavy report interrupted Slone. The bullet missed, but Slone
+made a pretense, a convulsive flop, as if struck.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Get the rifle! Quick!" he called.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Lucy misunderstood his ruse to deceive Cordts. She thought he had
+been hit again. She ran to the fallen Wildfire and jerked the rifle
+from its sheath.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cordts had begun to climb round a ledge, evidently a short cut to get
+down and across. Hutchinson saw the rifle and yelled to Cordts. The
+horse-thief halted, his dark face gleaming toward Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Lucy rose the coat fell from her nude shoulders. And Slone,
+watching, suddenly lost his agony of terror for her and uttered a
+pealing cry of defiance and of rapture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She swept up the rifle. It wavered. Hutchinson was above, and Cordts,
+reaching up, yelled for help. Hutchinson was reluctant. But the
+stronger force dominated. He leaned down&mdash;clasped Cordts's outstretched
+hands, and pulled. Hutchinson bawled out hoarsely. Cordts turned what
+seemed a paler face. He had difficulty on the slight footing. He was
+slow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone tried to call to Lucy to shoot low, but his lips had drawn tight
+after his one yell. Slone saw her white, rounded shoulders bent, with
+cold, white face pressed against the rifle, with slim arms quivering
+and growing tense, with the tangled golden hair blowing out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then she shot.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone's glance shifted. He did not see the bullet strike up dust. The
+figures of the men remained the same&mdash;Hutchinson straining, Cordts....
+No, Cordts was not the same! A strange change seemed manifest in his
+long form. It did not seem instinct with effort. Yet it moved.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hutchinson also was acting strangely, yelling, heaving, wrestling. But
+he could not help Cordts. He lifted violently, raised Cordts a little,
+and then appeared to be in peril of losing his balance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cordts leaned against the cliff. Then it dawned upon Slone that Lucy
+had hit the horse-thief. Hard hit! He would not&mdash;he could not let go of
+Hutchinson. His was a death clutch. The burly Hutchinson slipped from
+his knee-hold, and as he moved Cordts swayed, his feet left the ledge,
+he hung, upheld only by the tottering comrade.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What a harsh and terrible cry from Hutchinson! He made one last
+convulsive effort and it doomed him. Slowly he lost his balance.
+Cordts's dark, evil, haunting face swung round. Both men became lax and
+plunged, and separated. The dust rose from the rough steps. Then the
+dark forms shot down&mdash;Cordts falling sheer and straight, Hutchinson
+headlong, with waving arms&mdash;down and down, vanishing in the depths. No
+sound came up. A little column of yellow dust curled from the fatal
+ledge and, catching the wind above, streamed away into the drifting
+clouds of smoke.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap20"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+A darkness, like the streaming clouds overhead, seemed to blot out
+Slone's sight, and then passed away, leaving it clearer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was bending over him, binding a scarf round his shoulder and under
+his arm. "Lin! It's nothing!" she was saying, earnestly. "Never touched
+a bone!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone sat up. The smoke was clearing away. Little curves of burning
+grass were working down along the rim. He put out a hand to grasp Lucy,
+remembering in a flash. He pointed to the ledge across the chasm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They're&mdash;gone!" cried Lucy, with a strange and deep note in her voice.
+She shook violently. But she did not look away from Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wildfire! The King!" he added, hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Both where they dropped. Oh, I'm afraid to&mdash;to look.... And, Lin, I
+saw Sarch, Two Face, and Ben and Plume go down there."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had her back to the chasm where the trail led down, and she pointed
+without looking.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone got up, a little unsteady on his feet and conscious of a dull
+pain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sarch will go straight home, and the others will follow him," said
+Lucy. "They got away here where Joel came up the trail. The fire chased
+them out of the woods. Sarch will go home. And that'll fetch the
+riders."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We won't need them if only Wildfire and the King&mdash;" Slone broke off
+and grimly, with a catch in his breath, turned to the horses.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How strange that Slone should run toward the King while Lucy ran to
+Wildfire!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sage King was a beaten, broken horse, but he would live to run another
+race.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lucy was kneeling beside Wildfire, sobbing and crying: "Wildfire!
+Wildfire!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All of Wildfire was white except where he was red, and that red was not
+now his glossy, flaming skin. A terrible muscular convulsion as of
+internal collapse grew slower and slower. Yet choked, blinded, dying,
+killed on his feet, Wildfire heard Lucy's voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Lin! Oh, Lin!" moaned Lucy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While they knelt there the violent convulsions changed to slow heaves.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He run the King down&mdash;carryin' weight&mdash;with a long lead to overcome!"
+Slone muttered, and he put a shaking hand on the horse's wet neck.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, he beat the King!" cried Lucy. "But you mustn't&mdash;you CAN'T tell
+Dad!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What CAN we tell him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I know. Old Creech told me what to say!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A change, both of body and spirit, seemed to pass over the great
+stallion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"WILDFIRE! WILDFIRE!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the rider called to his horse, with a low and piercing cry. But
+Wildfire did not hear.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The morning sun glanced brightly over the rippling sage which rolled
+away from the Ford like a gray sea.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil sat on his porch, a stricken man. He faced the blue haze of the
+north, where days before all that he had loved had vanished. Every day,
+from sunrise till sunset, he had been there, waiting and watching. His
+riders were grouped near him, silent, awed by his agony, awaiting
+orders that never came.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From behind a ridge puffed up a thin cloud of dust. Bostil saw it and
+gave a start. Above the sage appeared a bobbing, black object&mdash;the head
+of a horse. Then the big black body followed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sarch!" exclaimed Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With spurs clinking the riders ran and trooped behind him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"More hosses back," said Holley, quietly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thar's Plume!" exclaimed Farlane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' Two Face!" added Van.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dusty Ben!" said another.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"RIDERLESS!" finished Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then all were intensely quiet, watching the racers come trotting in
+single file down the ridge. Sarchedon's shrill neigh, like a
+whistle-blast, pealed in from the sage. From, fields and corrals
+clamored the answer attended by the clattering of hundreds of hoofs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sarchedon and his followers broke from trot to canter&mdash;canter to
+gallop&mdash;and soon were cracking their hard hoofs on the stony court.
+Like a swarm of bees the riders swooped down upon the racers, caught
+them, and led them up to Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On Sarchedon's neck showed a dry, dust-caked stain of reddish tinge.
+Holley, the old hawk-eyed rider, had precedence in the examination.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, thet's a bullet-mark, plain as day," said Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who shot him?" demanded Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley shook his gray head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He smells of smoke," put in Farlane, who had knelt at the black's
+legs. "He's been runnin' fire. See thet! Fetlocks all singed!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All the riders looked, and then with grave, questioning eyes at one
+another.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reckon thar's been hell!" muttered Holley, darkly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some of the riders led the horses away toward the corrals. Bostil
+wheeled to face the north again. His brow was lowering; his cheek was
+pale and sunken; his jaw was set.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders came and went, but Bostil kept his vigil. The hours passed.
+Afternoon came and wore on. The sun lost its brightness and burned red.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again dust-clouds, now like reddened smoke, puffed over the ridge. A
+horse carrying a dark, thick figure appeared above the sage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil leaped up. "Is thet a gray hoss&mdash;or am&mdash;I blind?" he called,
+unsteadily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders dared not answer. They must be sure. They gazed through
+narrow slits of eyelids; and the silence grew intense.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley shaded the hawk eyes with his hand. "Gray he is&mdash;Bostil&mdash;gray as
+the sage.... AN' SO HELP ME GOD IF HE AIN'T THE KING!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, it's the King!" cried the riders, excitedly. "Sure! I reckon! No
+mistake about thet! It's the King!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil shook his huge frame, and he rubbed his eyes as if they had
+become dim, and he stared again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who's thet up on him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone. I never seen his like on a hoss," replied Holley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' what's&mdash;he packin'?" queried Bostil, huskily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Plain to all keen eyes was the glint of Lucy Bostil's golden hair. But
+only Holley had courage to speak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's Lucy! I seen thet long ago."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A strange, fleeting light of joy died out of Bostil's face. The change
+once more silenced his riders. They watched the King trotting in from
+the sage. His head drooped. He seemed grayer than ever and he limped.
+But he was Sage King, splendid as of old, all the more gladdening to
+the riders' eyes because he had been lost. He came on, quickening a
+little to the clamoring welcome from the corrals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley put out a swift hand. "Bostil&mdash;the girl's alive&mdash;she's smilin'!"
+he called, and the cool voice was strangely different.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The riders waited for Bostil. Slone rode into the courtyard. He was
+white and weary, reeling in the saddle. A bloody scarf was bound round
+his shoulder. He held Lucy in his arms. She had on his coat. A wan
+smile lighted her haggard face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil, cursing deep, like muttering thunder, strode out. "Lucy! You
+ain't bad hurt?" he implored, in a voice no one had ever heard before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm&mdash;all right&mdash;Dad," she said, and slipped down into his arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He kissed the pale face and held her up like a child, and then,
+carrying her to the door of the house, he roared for Aunt Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he reappeared the crowd of riders scattered from around Slone. But
+it seemed that Bostil saw only the King. The horse was caked with dusty
+lather, scratched and disheveled, weary and broken, yet he was still
+beautiful. He raised his drooping head and reached for his master with
+a look as soft and dark and eloquent as a woman's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No rider there but felt Bostil's passion of doubt and hope. Had the
+King been beaten? Bostil's glory and pride were battling with love.
+Mighty as that was, it did not at once overcome his fear of defeat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slowly the gaze of Bostil moved away from Sage King and roved out to
+the sage and back, as if he expected to see another horse. But no other
+horse was in sight. At last his hard eyes rested upon the white-faced
+Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Been some&mdash;hard ridin'?" he queried, haltingly. All there knew that
+had not been the question upon his lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pretty hard&mdash;yes," replied Slone. He was weary, yet tight-lipped,
+intense.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now&mdash;them Creeches?" slowly continued Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dead."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A murmur ran through the listening riders, and they drew closer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Both of them?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Joel killed his father, fightin' to get Lucy.... An' I
+ran&mdash;Wildfire over Joel&mdash;smashed him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wal, I'm sorry for the old man," replied Bostil, gruffly. "I meant to
+make up to him.... But thet fool boy! ... An' Slone&mdash;you're all bloody."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stepped forward and pulled the scarf aside. He was curious and
+kindly, as if it was beyond him to be otherwise. Yet that dark cold
+something, almost sullen clung round him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Been bored, eh? Wal, it ain't low, an' thet's good. Who shot you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cordts."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"CORDTS!" Bostil leaned forward in sudden, fierce eagerness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Cordts.... His outfit run across Creech's trail an' we bunched. I
+can't tell now.... But we had&mdash;hell! An' Cordts is dead&mdash;so's
+Hutch&mdash;an' that other pard of his.... Bostil, they'll never haunt your
+sleep again!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone finished with a strange sternness that seemed almost bitter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil raised both his huge fists. The blood was bulging his thick
+neck. It was another kind of passion that obsessed him. Only some
+violent check to his emotion prevented him from embracing Slone. The
+huge fists unclenched and the big fingers worked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean to tell me you did fer Cordts an' Hutch what you did fer
+Sears?" he boomed out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They're dead&mdash;gone, Bostil&mdash;honest to God!" replied Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Holley thrust a quivering, brown hand into Bostil's face. "What did I
+tell you?" he shouted. "Didn't I say wait?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil threw away all that deep fury of passion, and there seemed only
+a resistless and speechless admiration left. Then ensued a moment of
+silence. The riders watched Slone's weary face as it drooped, and
+Bostil, as he loomed over him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where's the red stallion?" queried Bostil. That was the question hard
+to get out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone raised eyes dark with pain, yet they flashed as he looked
+straight up into Bostil's face. "Wildfire's dead!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"DEAD!" ejaculated Bostil.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another moment of strained exciting suspense.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shot?" he went on.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What killed him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The King, sir! ... Killed him on his feet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil's heavy jaw bulged and quivered. His hand shook as he laid it on
+Sage King's mane&mdash;the first touch since the return of his favorite.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Slone&mdash;what&mdash;is it?" he said, brokenly, with voice strangely softened.
+His face became transfigured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sage King killed Wildfire on his feet.... A grand race, Bostil! ...
+But Wildfire's dead&mdash;an' here's the King! Ask me no more. I want to
+forget."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil put his arm around the young man's shoulder. "Slone, if I don't
+know what you feel fer the loss of thet grand hoss, no rider on earth
+knows! ... Go in the house. Boys, take him in&mdash;all of you&mdash;an' look
+after him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bostil wanted to be alone, to welcome the King, to lead him back to the
+home corral, perhaps to hide from all eyes the change and the uplift
+that would forever keep him from wronging another man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The late rains came and like magic, in a few days, the sage grew green
+and lustrous and fresh, the gray turning to purple.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Every morning the sun rose white and hot in a blue and cloudless sky.
+And then soon the horizon line showed creamy clouds that rose and
+spread and darkened. Every afternoon storms hung along the ramparts and
+rainbows curved down beautiful and ethereal. The dim blackness of the
+storm-clouds was split to the blinding zigzag of lightning, and the
+thunder rolled and boomed, like the Colorado in flood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The wind was fragrant, sage-laden, no longer dry and hot, but cool in
+the shade.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slone and Lucy never rode down so far as the stately monuments, though
+these held memories as hauntingly sweet as others were poignantly
+bitter. Lucy never rode the King again. But Slone rode him, learned to
+love him. And Lucy did not race any more. When Slone tried to stir in
+her the old spirit all the response he got was a wistful shake of head
+or a laugh that hid the truth or an excuse that the strain on her
+ankles from Joel Creech's lasso had never mended. The girl was
+unutterably happy, but it was possible that she would never race a
+horse again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She rode Sarchedon, and she liked to trot or lope along beside Slone
+while they linked hands and watched the distance. But her glance
+shunned the north, that distance which held the wild canyons and the
+broken battlements and the long, black, pine-fringed plateau.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Won't you ever ride with me, out to the old camp, where I used to wait
+for you?" asked Slone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Some day," she said, softly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When&mdash;when we come back from Durango," she replied, with averted eyes
+and scarlet cheek. And Slone was silent, for that planned trip to
+Durango, with its wonderful gift to be, made his heart swell.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And so on this rainbow day, with storms all around them, and blue sky
+above, they rode only as far as the valley. But from there, before they
+turned to go back, the monuments appeared close, and they loomed
+grandly with the background of purple bank and creamy cloud and shafts
+of golden lightning. They seemed like sentinels&mdash;guardians of a great
+and beautiful love born under their lofty heights, in the lonely
+silence of day, in the star-thrown shadow of night. They were like that
+love. And they held Lucy and Slone, calling every day, giving a
+nameless and tranquil content, binding them true to love, true to the
+sage and the open, true to that wild upland home.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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diff --git a/2066.txt b/2066.txt
new file mode 100644
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+++ b/2066.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Wildfire, by Zane Grey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Wildfire
+
+Author: Zane Grey
+
+Posting Date: November 19, 2008 [EBook #2066]
+Release Date: February, 2000
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WILDFIRE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Daniel Wentzell. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+WILDFIRE
+
+
+by
+
+ZANE GREY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+For some reason the desert scene before Lucy Bostil awoke varying
+emotions--a sweet gratitude for the fullness of her life there at the
+Ford, yet a haunting remorse that she could not be wholly content--a
+vague loneliness of soul--a thrill and a fear for the strangely calling
+future, glorious, unknown.
+
+She longed for something to happen. It might be terrible, so long as it
+was wonderful. This day, when Lucy had stolen away on a forbidden
+horse, she was eighteen years old. The thought of her mother, who had
+died long ago on their way into this wilderness, was the one drop of
+sadness in her joy. Lucy loved everybody at Bostil's Ford and everybody
+loved her. She loved all the horses except her father's favorite racer,
+that perverse devil of a horse, the great Sage King.
+
+Lucy was glowing and rapt with love for all she beheld from her lofty
+perch: the green-and-pink blossoming hamlet beneath her, set between
+the beauty of the gray sage expanse and the ghastliness of the barren
+heights; the swift Colorado sullenly thundering below in the abyss; the
+Indians in their bright colors, riding up the river trail; the eagle
+poised like a feather on the air, and a beneath him the grazing cattle
+making black dots on the sage; the deep velvet azure of the sky; the
+golden lights on the bare peaks and the lilac veils in the far ravines;
+the silky rustle of a canyon swallow as he shot downward in the sweep
+of the wind; the fragrance of cedar, the flowers of the spear-pointed
+mescal; the brooding silence, the beckoning range, the purple distance.
+
+Whatever it was Lucy longed for, whatever was whispered by the wind and
+written in the mystery of the waste of sage and stone, she wanted it to
+happen there at Bostil's Ford. She had no desire for civilization, she
+flouted the idea of marrying the rich rancher of Durango. Bostil's
+sister, that stern but lovable woman who had brought her up and taught
+her, would never persuade her to marry against her will. Lucy imagined
+herself like a wild horse--free, proud, untamed, meant for the desert;
+and here she would live her life. The desert and her life seemed as
+one, yet in what did they resemble each other--in what of this scene
+could she read the nature of her future?
+
+Shudderingly she rejected the red, sullen, thundering river, with its
+swift, changeful, endless, contending strife--for that was tragic. And
+she rejected the frowning mass of red rock, upreared, riven and split
+and canyoned, so grim and aloof--for that was barren. But she accepted
+the vast sloping valley of sage, rolling gray and soft and beautiful,
+down to the dim mountains and purple ramparts of the horizon. Lucy did
+not know what she yearned for, she did not know why the desert called
+to her, she did not know in what it resembled her spirit, but she did
+know that these three feelings were as one, deep in her heart. For ten
+years, every day of her life, she had watched this desert scene, and
+never had there been an hour that it was not different, yet the same.
+Ten years--and she grew up watching, feeling--till from the desert's
+thousand moods she assimilated its nature, loved her bonds, and could
+never have been happy away from the open, the color, the freedom, the
+wildness. On this birthday, when those who loved her said she had
+become her own mistress, she acknowledged the claim of the desert
+forever. And she experienced a deep, rich, strange happiness.
+
+Hers always then the mutable and immutable desert, the leagues and
+leagues of slope and sage and rolling ridge, the great canyons and the
+giant cliffs, the dark river with its mystic thunder of waters, the
+pine-fringed plateaus, the endless stretch of horizon, with its lofty,
+isolated, noble monuments, and the bold ramparts with their beckoning
+beyond! Hers always the desert seasons: the shrill, icy blast, the
+intense cold, the steely skies, the fading snows; the gray old sage and
+the bleached grass under the pall of the spring sand-storms; the hot
+furnace breath of summer, with its magnificent cloud pageants in the
+sky, with the black tempests hanging here and there over the peaks,
+dark veils floating down and rainbows everywhere, and the lacy
+waterfalls upon the glistening cliffs and the thunder of the red
+floods; and the glorious golden autumn when it was always afternoon and
+time stood still! Hers always the rides in the open, with the sun at
+her back and the wind in her face! And hers surely, sooner or later,
+the nameless adventure which had its inception in the strange yearning
+of her heart and presaged its fulfilment somewhere down that trailless
+sage-slope she loved so well!
+
+Bostil's house was a crude but picturesque structure of red stone and
+white clay and bleached cottonwoods, and it stood at the outskirts of
+the cluster of green-inclosed cabins which composed the hamlet. Bostil
+was wont to say that in all the world there could hardly be a grander
+view than the outlook down that gray sea of rolling sage, down to the
+black-fringed plateaus and the wild, blue-rimmed and gold-spired
+horizon.
+
+One morning in early spring, as was Bostil's custom, he ordered the
+racers to be brought from the corrals and turned loose on the slope. He
+loved to sit there and watch his horses graze, but ever he saw that the
+riders were close at hand, and that the horses did not get out on the
+slope of sage. He sat back and gloried in the sight. He owned bands of
+mustangs; near by was a field of them, fine and mettlesome and racy;
+yet Bostil had eyes only for the blooded favorites. Strange it was that
+not one of these was a mustang or a broken wild horse, for many of the
+riders' best mounts had been captured by them or the Indians. And it
+was Bostil's supreme ambition to own a great wild stallion. There was
+Plume, a superb mare that got her name from the way her mane swept in
+the wind when she was on the ran; and there was Two Face, like a
+coquette, sleek and glossy and running and the huge, rangy bay, Dusty
+Ben; and the black stallion Sarchedon; and lastly Sage King, the color
+of the upland sage, a racer in build, a horse splendid and proud and
+beautiful.
+
+"Where's Lucy?" presently asked Bostil.
+
+As he divided his love, so he divided his anxiety.
+
+Some rider had seen Lucy riding off, with her golden hair flying in the
+wind. This was an old story.
+
+"She's up on Buckles?" Bostil queried, turning sharply to the speaker.
+
+"Reckon so," was the calm reply.
+
+Bostil swore. He did not have a rider who could equal him in profanity.
+
+"Farlane, you'd orders. Lucy's not to ride them hosses, least of all
+Buckles. He ain't safe even for a man."
+
+"Wal, he's safe fer Lucy."
+
+"But didn't I say no?"
+
+"Boss, it's likely you did, fer you talk a lot," replied Farlane. "Lucy
+pulled my hat down over my eyes--told me to go to thunder--an' then,
+zip! she an' Buckles were dustin' it fer the sage."
+
+"She's got to keep out of the sage," growled Bostil. "It ain't safe for
+her out there.... Where's my glass? I want to take a look at the slope.
+Where's my glass?"
+
+The glass could not be found.
+
+"What's makin' them dust-clouds on the sage? Antelope? ... Holley, you
+used to have eyes better 'n me. Use them, will you?"
+
+A gray-haired, hawk-eyed rider, lean and worn, approached with clinking
+spurs.
+
+"Down in there," said Bostil, pointing.
+
+"Thet's a bunch of hosses," replied Holley.
+
+"Wild hosses?"
+
+"I take 'em so, seein' how they throw thet dust."
+
+"Huh! I don't like it. Lucy oughtn't be ridin' round alone."
+
+"Wal, boss, who could catch her up on Buckles? Lucy can ride. An'
+there's the King an' Sarch right under your nose--the only hosses on
+the sage thet could outrun Buckles."
+
+Farlane knew how to mollify his master and long habit had made him
+proficient. Bostil's eyes flashed. He was proud of Lucy's power over a
+horse. The story Bostil first told to any stranger happening by the
+Ford was how Lucy had been born during a wild ride--almost, as it were,
+on the back of a horse. That, at least, was her fame, and the riders
+swore she was a worthy daughter of such a mother. Then, as Farlane well
+knew, a quick road to Bostil's good will was to praise one of his
+favorites.
+
+"Reckon you spoke sense for once, Farlane," replied Bostil, with
+relief. "I wasn't thinkin' so much of danger for Lucy.... But she lets
+thet half-witted Creech go with her."
+
+"No, boss, you're wrong," put in Holley, earnestly. "I know the girl.
+She has no use fer Joel. But he jest runs after her."
+
+"An' he's harmless," added Farlane.
+
+"We ain't agreed," rejoined Bostil, quickly. "What do you say, Holley?"
+
+The old rider looked thoughtful and did not speak for long.
+
+"Wal, Yes an' no," he answered, finally. "I reckon Lucy could make a
+man out of Joel. But she doesn't care fer him, an' thet settles
+thet.... An' maybe Joel's leanin' toward the bad."
+
+"If she meets him again I'll rope her in the house," declared Bostil.
+
+Another clear-eyed rider drew Bostil's attention from the gray waste of
+rolling sage.
+
+"Bostil, look! Look at the King! He's watchin' fer somethin'.... An'
+so's Sarch."
+
+The two horses named were facing a ridge some few hundred yards
+distant, and their heads were aloft and ears straight forward. Sage
+King whistled shrilly and Sarchedon began to prance.
+
+"Boys, you'd better drive them in," said Bostil. "They'd like nothin'
+so well as gettin' out on the sage.... Hullo! what's thet shootin' up
+behind the ridge?"
+
+"No more 'n Buckles with Lucy makin' him run some," replied Holley,
+with a dry laugh.
+
+"If it ain't! ... Lord! look at him come!"
+
+Bostil's anger and anxiety might never have been. The light of the
+upland rider's joy shone in his keen gaze. The slope before him was
+open, and almost level, down to the ridge that had hidden the missing
+girl and horse. Buckles was running for the love of running, as the
+girl low down over his neck was riding for the love of riding. The Sage
+King whistled again, and shot off with graceful sweep to meet them;
+Sarchedon plunged after him; Two Face and Plume jealously trooped down,
+too, but Dusty Ben, after a toss of his head, went on grazing. The gray
+and the black met Buckles and could not turn in time to stay with him.
+A girl's gay scream pealed up the slope, and Buckles went lower and
+faster. Sarchedon was left behind. Then the gray King began to run as
+if before he had been loping. He was beautiful in action. This was
+play--a game--a race--plainly dominated by the spirit of the girl.
+Lucy's hair was a bright stream of gold in the wind. She rode bareback.
+It seemed that she was hunched low over Buckles with her knees high on
+his back--scarcely astride him at all. Yet her motion was one with the
+horse. Again that wild, gay scream pealed out--call or laugh or
+challenge. Sage King, with a fleetness that made the eyes of Bostil and
+his riders glisten, took the lead, and then sheered off to slow down,
+while Buckles thundered past. Lucy was pulling him hard, and had him
+plunging to a halt, when the rider Holley ran out to grasp his bridle.
+Buckles was snorting and his ears were laid back. He pounded the ground
+and scattered the pebbles.
+
+"No use, Lucy," said Bostil. "You can't beat the King at your own game,
+even with a runnin' start."
+
+Lucy Bostil's eyes were blue, as keen as her father's, and now they
+flashed like his. She had a hand twisted in the horse's long mane, and
+as, lithe and supple, she slipped a knee across his broad back she
+shook a little gantleted fist at Bostil's gray racer.
+
+"Sage King, I hate you!" she called, as if the horse were human. "And
+I'll beat you some day!"
+
+Bostil swore by the gods his Sage King was the swiftest horse in all
+that wild upland country of wonderful horses. He swore the great gray
+could look back over his shoulder and run away from any broken horse
+known to the riders.
+
+Bostil himself was half horse, and the half of him that was human he
+divided between love of his fleet racers and his daughter Lucy. He had
+seen years of hard riding on that wild Utah border where, in those
+days, a horse meant all the world to a man. A lucky strike of grassy
+upland and good water south of the Rio Colorado made him rich in all
+that he cared to own. The Indians, yet unspoiled by white men, were
+friendly. Bostil built a boat at the Indian crossing of the Colorado
+and the place became known as Bostil's Ford. From time to time his
+personality and his reputation and his need brought horse-hunters,
+riders, sheep-herders, and men of pioneer spirit, as well as wandering
+desert travelers, to the Ford, and the lonely, isolated hamlet slowly
+grew. North of the river it was more than two hundred miles to the
+nearest little settlement, with only a few lonely ranches on the road;
+to the west were several villages, equally distant, but cut off for two
+months at a time by the raging Colorado, flooded by melting snow up in
+the mountains. Eastward from the Ford stretched a ghastly, broken,
+unknown desert of canyons. Southward rolled the beautiful uplands, with
+valleys of sage and grass, and plateaus of pine and cedar, until this
+rich rolling gray and green range broke sharply on a purple horizon
+line of upflung rocky ramparts and walls and monuments, wild, dim, and
+mysterious.
+
+Bostil's cattle and horses were numberless, and many as were his
+riders, he always could use more. But most riders did not abide long
+with Bostil, first because some of them were of a wandering breed,
+wild-horse hunters themselves; and secondly, Bostil had two great
+faults: he seldom paid a rider in money, and he never permitted one to
+own a fleet horse. He wanted to own all the fast horses himself. And in
+those days every rider, especially a wild-horse hunter, loved his steed
+as part of himself. If there was a difference between Bostil and any
+rider of the sage, it was that, as he had more horses, so he had more
+love.
+
+Whenever Bostil could not get possession of a horse he coveted, either
+by purchase or trade, he invariably acquired a grievance toward the
+owner. This happened often, for riders were loath to part with their
+favorites. And he had made more than one enemy by his persistent
+nagging. It could not be said, however, that he sought to drive hard
+bargains. Bostil would pay any price asked for a horse.
+
+Across the Colorado, in a high, red-walled canyon opening upon the
+river, lived a poor sheep-herder and horse-trader named Creech. This
+man owned a number of thoroughbreds, two of which he would not part
+with for all the gold in the uplands. These racers, Blue Roan and Peg,
+had been captured wild on the ranges by Ute Indians and broken to
+racing. They were still young and getting faster every year. Bostil
+wanted them because he coveted them and because he feared them. It
+would have been a terrible blow to him if any horse ever beat the gray.
+But Creech laughed at all offers and taunted Bostil with a boast that
+in another summer he would see a horse out in front of the King.
+
+To complicate matters and lead rivalry into hatred young Joel Creech, a
+great horseman, but worthless in the eyes of all save his father, had
+been heard to say that some day he would force a race between the King
+and Blue Roan. And that threat had been taken in various ways. It
+alienated Bostil beyond all hope of reconciliation. It made Lucy Bostil
+laugh and look sweetly mysterious. She had no enemies and she liked
+everybody. It was even gossiped by the women of Bostil's Ford that she
+had more than liking for the idle Joel. But the husbands of these
+gossips said Lucy was only tender-hearted. Among the riders, when they
+sat around their lonely camp-fires, or lounged at the corrals of the
+Ford, there was speculation in regard to this race hinted by Joel
+Creech. There never had been a race between the King and Blue Roan, and
+there never would be, unless Joel were to ride off with Lucy. In that
+case there would be the grandest race ever run on the uplands, with the
+odds against Blue Roan only if he carried double. If Joel put Lucy up
+on the Roan and he rode Peg there would be another story. Lucy Bostil
+was a slip of a girl, born on a horse, as strong and supple as an
+Indian, and she could ride like a burr sticking in a horse's mane. With
+Blue Roan carrying her light weight she might run away from any one up
+on the King--which for Bostil would be a double tragedy, equally in the
+loss of his daughter and the beating of his best-beloved racer. But
+with Joel on Peg, such a race would end in heartbreak for all
+concerned, for the King would outrun Peg, and that would bring riders
+within gunshot.
+
+It had always been a fascinating subject, this long-looked-for race. It
+grew more so when Joel's infatuation for Lucy became known. There were
+fewer riders who believed Lucy might elope with Joel than there were
+who believed Joel might steal his father's horses. But all the riders
+who loved horses and all the women who loved gossip were united in at
+least one thing, and that was that something like a race or a romance
+would soon disrupt the peaceful, sleepy tenor of Bostil's Ford.
+
+In addition to Bostil's growing hatred for the Creeches, he had a great
+fear of Cordts, the horse-thief. A fear ever restless, ever watchful.
+Cordts hid back in the untrodden ways. He had secret friends among the
+riders of the ranges, faithful followers back in the canyon camps, gold
+for the digging, cattle by the thousand, and fast horses. He had always
+gotten what he wanted--except one thing. That was a certain horse. And
+the horse was Sage King.
+
+Cordts was a bad man, a product of the early gold-fields of California
+and Idaho, an outcast from that evil wave of wanderers retreating back
+over the trails so madly traveled westward. He became a lord over the
+free ranges. But more than all else he was a rider. He knew a horse. He
+was as much horse as Bostil. Cordts rode into this wild free-range
+country, where he had been heard to say that a horse-thief was meaner
+than a poisoned coyote. Nevertheless, he became a horse-thief. The
+passion he had conceived for the Sage King was the passion of a man for
+an unattainable woman. Cordts swore that he would never rest, that he
+would not die, till he owned the King. So there was reason for Bostil's
+great fear.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Bostil went toward the house with his daughter, turning at the door to
+call a last word to his riders about the care of his horses.
+
+The house was a low, flat, wide structure, with a corridor running
+through the middle, from which doors led into the adobe-walled rooms.
+The windows were small openings high up, evidently intended for defense
+as well as light, and they had rude wooden shutters. The floor was
+clay, covered everywhere by Indian blankets. A pioneer's home it was,
+simple and crude, yet comfortable, and having the rare quality peculiar
+to desert homes it was cool in summer and warm in winter.
+
+As Bostil entered with his arm round Lucy a big hound rose from the
+hearth. This room was immense, running the length of the house, and it
+contained a huge stone fireplace, where a kettle smoked fragrantly, and
+rude home-made chairs with blanket coverings, and tables to match, and
+walls covered with bridles, guns, pistols, Indian weapons and
+ornaments, and trophies of the chase. In a far corner stood a
+work-bench, with tools upon it and horse trappings under it. In the
+opposite corner a door led into the kitchen. This room was Bostil's
+famous living-room, in which many things had happened, some of which
+had helped make desert history and were never mentioned by Bostil.
+
+Bostil's sister came in from the kitchen. She was a huge person with a
+severe yet motherly face. She had her hands on her hips, and she cast a
+rather disapproving glance at father and daughter.
+
+"So you're back again?" she queried, severely.
+
+"Sure, Auntie," replied the girl, complacently.
+
+"You ran off to get out of seeing Wetherby, didn't you?"
+
+Lucy stared sweetly at her aunt.
+
+"He was waiting for hours," went on the worthy woman. "I never saw a
+man in such a stew.... No wonder, playing fast and loose with him the
+way you do."
+
+"I told him No!" flashed Lucy.
+
+"But Wetherby's not the kind to take no. And I'm not satisfied to let
+you mean it. Lucy Bostil, you don't know your mind an hour straight
+running. You've fooled enough with these riders of your Dad's. If
+you're not careful you'll marry one of them.... One of these wild
+riders! As bad as a Ute Indian! ... Wetherby is young and he idolizes
+you. In all common sense why don't you take him?"
+
+"I don't care for him," replied Lucy.
+
+"You like him as well as anybody.... John Bostil, what do you say? You
+approved of Wetherby. I heard you tell him Lucy was like an unbroken
+colt and that you'd--"
+
+"Sure, I like Jim," interrupted Bostil; and he avoided Lucy's swift
+look.
+
+"Well?" demanded his sister.
+
+Evidently Bostil found himself in a corner between two fires. He looked
+sheepish, then disgusted.
+
+"Dad!" exclaimed Lucy, reproachfully.
+
+"See here, Jane," said Bostil, with an air of finality, "the girl is of
+age to-day--an' she can do what she damn pleases!"
+
+"That's a fine thing for you to say," retorted Aunt Jane. "Like as not
+she'll be fetching that hang-dog Joel Creech up here for you to
+support."
+
+"Auntie!" cried Lucy, her eyes blazing.
+
+"Oh, child, you torment me--worry me so," said the disappointed woman.
+"It's all for your sake.... Look at you, Lucy Bostil! A girl of
+eighteen who comes of a family! And you riding around and going around
+as you are now--in a man's clothes!"
+
+"But, you dear old goose, I can't ride in a woman's skirt,"
+expostulated Lucy. "Mind you, Auntie, I can RIDE!"
+
+"Lucy, if I live here forever I'd never get reconciled to a Bostil
+woman in leather pants. We Bostils were somebody once, back in
+Missouri."
+
+Bostil laughed. "Yes, an' if I hadn't hit the trail west we'd be
+starvin' yet. Jane, you're a sentimental old fool. Let the girl alone
+an' reconcile yourself to this wilderness."
+
+Aunt Jane's eyes were wet with tears. Lucy, seeing them, ran to her and
+hugged and kissed her.
+
+"Auntie, I will promise--from to-day--to have some dignity. I've been
+free as a boy in these rider clothes. As I am now the men never seem to
+regard me as a girl. Somehow that's better. I can't explain, but I like
+it. My dresses are what have caused all the trouble. I know that. But
+if I'm grown up--if it's so tremendous--then I'll wear a dress all the
+time, except just WHEN I ride. Will that do, Auntie?"
+
+"Maybe you will grow up, after all," replied Aunt Jane, evidently
+surprised and pleased.
+
+Then Lucy with clinking spurs ran away to her room.
+
+"Jane, what's this nonsense about young Joel Creech?" asked Bostil,
+gruffly.
+
+"I don't know any more than is gossiped. That I told you. Have you ever
+asked Lucy about him?"
+
+"I sure haven't," said Bostil, bluntly.
+
+"Well, ask her. If she tells you at all she'll tell the truth. Lucy'd
+never sleep at night if she lied."
+
+Aunt Jane returned to her housewifely tasks, leaving Bostil
+thoughtfully stroking the hound and watching the fire. Presently Lucy
+returned--a different Lucy--one that did not rouse his rider's pride,
+but thrilled his father's heart. She had been a slim, lithe, supple,
+disheveled boy, breathing the wild spirit of the open and the horse she
+rode. She was now a girl in the graceful roundness of her slender form,
+with hair the gold of the sage at sunset, and eyes the blue of the deep
+haze of distance, and lips the sweet red of the upland rose. And all
+about her seemed different.
+
+"Lucy--you look--like--like she used to be," said Bostil, unsteadily.
+
+"My mother!" murmured Lucy.
+
+But these two, so keen, so strong, so alive, did not abide long with
+sad memories.
+
+"Lucy, I want to ask you somethin'," said Bostil, presently. "What
+about this young Joel Creech?"
+
+Lucy started as if suddenly recalled, then she laughed merrily. "Dad,
+you old fox, did you see him ride out after me?"
+
+"No. I was just askin' on--on general principles."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Lucy, is there anythin' between you an' Joel?" he asked, gravely.
+
+"No," she replied, with her clear eyes up to his.
+
+Bostil thought of a bluebell. "I'm beggin' your pardon," he said,
+hastily.
+
+"Dad, you know how Joel runs after me. I've told you. I let him till
+lately. I liked him. But that wasn't why. I felt sorry for him--pitied
+him."
+
+"You did? Seems an awful waste," replied Bostil.
+
+"Dad, I don't believe Joel is--perfectly right in his mind," Lucy said,
+solemnly.
+
+"Haw! haw! Fine compliments you're payin' yourself."
+
+"Listen. I'm serious. I mean I've grown to see---looking back--that a
+slow, gradual change has come over Joel since he was kicked in the head
+by a mustang. I'm sure no one else has noticed it."
+
+"Goin' batty over you. That's no unusual sign round this here camp.
+Look at--"
+
+"We're talking about Joel Creech. Lately he has done some queer things.
+To-day, for instance. I thought I gave him the slip. But he must have
+been watching. Anyway, to my surprise he showed up on Peg. He doesn't
+often get Peg across the river. He said the feed was getting scarce
+over there. I was dying to race Buckles against Peg, but I remembered
+you wouldn't like that."
+
+"I should say not," said Bostil, darkly.
+
+"Well, Joel caught up to me--and he wasn't nice at all. He was worse
+to-day. We quarreled. I said I'd bet he'd never follow me again and he
+said he'd bet he would. Then he got sulky and hung back. I rode away,
+glad to be rid of him, and I climbed to a favorite place of mine. On my
+way home I saw Peg grazing on the rim of the creek, near that big
+spring-hole where the water's so deep and clear. And what do you think?
+There was Joel's head above the water. I remembered in our quarrel I
+had told him to go wash his dirty face. He was doing it. I had to
+laugh. When he saw me--he--then--then he--" Lucy faltered, blushing
+with anger and shame.
+
+"Well, what then?" demanded Bostil, quietly.
+
+"He called, 'Hey, Luce--take off your clothes and come in for a swim!'"
+
+Bostil swore.
+
+"I tell you I was mad," continued Lucy, "and just as surprised. That
+was one of the queer things. But never before had he dared to--to-"
+
+"Insult you. Then what 'd you do?" interrupted Bostil, curiously.
+
+"I yelled, 'I'll fix you, Joel Creech!'... His clothes were in a pile
+on the bank. At first I thought I'd throw them in the water, but when I
+got to them I thought of something better. I took up all but his shoes,
+for I remembered the ten miles of rock and cactus between him and home,
+and I climbed up on Buckles. Joel screamed and swore something fearful.
+But I didn't look back. And Peg, you know--maybe you don't know--but
+Peg is fond of me, and he followed me, straddling his bridle all the
+way in. I dropped Joel's clothes down the ridge a ways, right in the
+trail, so he can't miss them. And that's all.... Dad, was it--was it
+very bad?"
+
+"Bad! Why, you ought to have thrown your gun on him. At least bounced a
+rock off his head! But say, Lucy, after all, maybe you've done enough.
+I guess you never thought of it."
+
+"What?"
+
+"The sun is hot to-day. Hot! An' if Joel's as crazy an' mad as you say
+he'll not have sense enough to stay in the water or shade till the
+sun's gone down. An' if he tackles that ten miles before he'll sunburn
+himself within an inch of his life."
+
+"Sunburn? Oh, Dad! I'm sorry," burst out Lucy, contritely. "I never
+thought of that. I'll ride back with his clothes."
+
+"You will not," said Bostil.
+
+"Let me send some one, then," she entreated.
+
+"Girl, haven't you the nerve to play your own game? Let Creech get his
+lesson. He deserves it.... An' now, Lucy, I've two more questions to
+ask."
+
+"Only two?" she queried, archly. "Dad, don't scold me with questions."
+
+"What shall I say to Wetherby for good an' all?"
+
+Lucy's eyes shaded dreamily, and she seemed to look beyond the room,
+out over the ranges.
+
+"Tell him to go back to Durango and forget the foolish girl who can
+care only for the desert and a horse."
+
+"All right. That is straight talk, like an Indian's. An' now the last
+question--what do you want for a birthday present?"
+
+"Oh, of course," she cried, gleefully clapping her hands. "I'd
+forgotten that. I'm eighteen!"
+
+"You get that old chest of your mother's. But what from me?"
+
+"Dad, will you give me anything I ask for?"
+
+"Yes, my girl."
+
+"Anything--any HORSE?"
+
+Lucy knew his weakness, for she had inherited it.
+
+"Sure; any horse but the King."
+
+"How about Sarchedon?"
+
+"Why, Lucy, what'd you do with that big black devil? He's too high.
+Seventeen hands high! You couldn't mount him."
+
+"Pooh! Sarch KNEELS for me."
+
+"Child, listen to reason. Sarch would pull your arms out of their
+sockets."
+
+"He has got an iron jaw," agreed Lucy. "Well, then--how about Dusty
+Ben?" She was tormenting her father and she did it with glee.
+
+"No--not Ben. He's the faithfulest hoss I ever owned. It wouldn't be
+fair to part with him, even to you. Old associations ... a rider's
+loyalty ... now, Lucy, you know--"
+
+"Dad, you're afraid I'd train and love Ben into beating the King. Some
+day I'll ride some horse out in front of the gray. Remember, Dad! ...
+Then give me Two Face."
+
+"Sure not her, Lucy. Thet mare can't be trusted. Look why we named her
+Two Face."
+
+"Buckles, then, dear generous Daddy who longs to give his grown-up girl
+ANYTHING!"
+
+"Lucy, can't you be satisfied an' happy with your mustangs? You've got
+a dozen. You can have any others on the range. Buckles ain't safe for
+you to ride."
+
+Bostil was notably the most generous of men, the kindest of fathers. It
+was an indication of his strange obsession, in regard to horses, that
+he never would see that Lucy was teasing him. As far as horses were
+concerned he lacked a sense of humor. Anything connected with his
+horses was of intense interest.
+
+"I'd dearly love to own Plume," said Lucy, demurely.
+
+Bostil had grown red in the face and now he was on the rack. The
+monstrous selfishness of a rider who had been supreme in his day could
+not be changed.
+
+"Girl, I--I thought you hadn't no use for Plume," he stammered.
+
+"I haven't--the jade! She threw me once. I've never forgiven her ....
+Dad, I'm only teasing you. Don't I know you couldn't give one of those
+racers away? You couldn't!"
+
+"Lucy, I reckon you're right," Bostil burst out in immense relief.
+
+"Dad, I'll bet if Cordts gets me and holds me as ransom for the
+King--as he's threatened--you'll let him have me!"
+
+"Lucy, now thet ain't funny!" complained the father.
+
+"Dear Dad, keep your old racers! But, remember, I'm my father's
+daughter. I can love a horse, too. Oh, if I ever get the one I want to
+love! A wild horse--a desert stallion--pure Arabian--broken right by an
+Indian! If I ever get him, Dad, you look out! For I'll run away from
+Sarch and Ben--and I'll beat the King!"
+
+The hamlet of Bostil's Ford had a singular situation, though,
+considering the wonderful nature of that desert country, it was not
+exceptional. It lay under the protecting red bluff that only Lucy
+Bostil cared to climb. A hard-trodden road wound down through rough
+breaks in the canyon wall to the river. Bostil's house, at the head of
+the village, looked in the opposite direction, down the sage slope that
+widened like a colossal fan. There was one wide street bordered by
+cottonwoods and cabins, and a number of gardens and orchards, beginning
+to burst into green and pink and white. A brook ran out of a ravine in
+the huge bluff, and from this led irrigation ditches. The red earth
+seemed to blossom at the touch of water.
+
+The place resembled an Indian encampment--quiet, sleepy, colorful, with
+the tiny-streams of water running everywhere, and lazy columns of blue
+wood-smoke rising. Bostil's Ford was the opposite of a busy village,
+yet its few inhabitants, as a whole, were prosperous. The wants of
+pioneers were few. Perhaps once a month the big, clumsy flatboat was
+rowed across the river with horses or cattle or sheep. And the season
+was now close at hand when for weeks, sometimes months, the river was
+unfordable. There were a score of permanent families, a host of merry,
+sturdy children, a number of idle young men, and only one girl--Lucy
+Bostil. But the village always had transient inhabitants--friendly Utes
+and Navajos in to trade, and sheep-herders with a scraggy, woolly
+flock, and travelers of the strange religious sect identified with Utah
+going on into the wilderness. Then there were always riders passing to
+and fro, and sometimes unknown ones regarded with caution.
+Horse-thieves sometimes boldly rode in, and sometimes were able to sell
+or trade. In the matter of horse-dealing Bostil's Ford was as bold as
+the thieves.
+
+Old Brackton, a man of varied Western experience, kept the one store,
+which was tavern, trading-post, freighter's headquarters, blacksmith's
+shop, and any thing else needful. Brackton employed riders, teamsters,
+sometimes Indians, to freight supplies in once a month from Durango.
+And that was over two hundred miles away. Sometimes the supplies did
+not arrive on time--occasionally not at all. News from the outside
+world, except that elicited from the taciturn travelers marching into
+Utah, drifted in at intervals. But it was not missed. These wilderness
+spirits were the forerunners of a great, movement, and as such were
+big, strong, stern, sufficient unto themselves. Life there was made
+possible by horses. The distant future, that looked bright to
+far-seeing men, must be and could only be fulfilled through the
+endurance and faithfulness of horses. And then, from these men, horses
+received the meed due them, and the love they were truly worth. The
+Navajo was a nomad horseman, an Arab of the Painted Desert, and the Ute
+Indian was close to him. It was they who developed the white riders of
+the uplands as well as the wild-horse wrangler or hunter.
+
+Brackton's ramshackle establishment stood down at the end of the
+village street. There was not a sawed board in all that structure, and
+some of the pine logs showed how they had been dropped from the bluff.
+Brackton, a little old gray man, with scant beard, and eyes like those
+of a bird, came briskly out to meet an incoming freighter. The wagon
+was minus a hind wheel, but the teamster had come in on three wheels
+and a pole. The sweaty, dust-caked, weary, thin-ribbed mustangs, and
+the gray-and-red-stained wagon, and the huge jumble of dusty packs,
+showed something of what the journey had been.
+
+"Hi thar, Red Wilson, you air some late gettin' in," greeted old
+Brackton.
+
+Red Wilson had red eyes from fighting the flying sand, and red dust
+pasted in his scraggy beard, and as he gave his belt an upward hitch
+little red clouds flew from his gun-sheath.
+
+"Yep. An' I left a wheel an' part of the load on the trail," he said.
+
+With him were Indians who began to unhitch the teams. Riders lounging
+in the shade greeted Wilson and inquired for news. The teamster replied
+that travel was dry, the water-holes were dry, and he was dry. And his
+reply gave both concern and amusement.
+
+"One more trip out an' back--thet's all, till it rains," concluded
+Wilson.
+
+Brackton led him inside, evidently to alleviate part of that dryness.
+
+Water and grass, next to horses, were the stock subject of all riders.
+
+"It's got oncommon hot early," said one.
+
+"Yes, an' them northeast winds--hard this spring," said another.
+
+"No snow on the uplands."
+
+"Holley seen a dry spell comin'. Wal, we can drift along without
+freighters. There's grass an' water enough here, even if it doesn't
+rain."
+
+"Sure, but there ain't none across the river."
+
+"Never was, in early season. An' if there was it'd be sheeped off."
+
+"Creech'll be fetchin' his hosses across soon, I reckon."
+
+"You bet he will. He's trainin' for the races next month."
+
+"An' when air they comin' off?"
+
+"You got me. Mebbe Van knows."
+
+Some one prodded a sleepy rider who lay all his splendid lithe length,
+hat over his eyes. Then he sat up and blinked, a lean-faced, gray-eyed
+fellow, half good-natured and half resentful.
+
+"Did somebody punch me?"
+
+"Naw, you got nightmare! Say, Van, when will the races come off?"
+
+"Huh! An' you woke me for thet? ... Bostil says in a few weeks, soon as
+he hears from the Indians. Plans to have eight hundred Indians here,
+an' the biggest purses an' best races ever had at the Ford."
+
+"You'll ride the King again?"
+
+"Reckon so. But Bostil is kickin' because I'm heavier than I was,"
+replied the rider.
+
+"You're skin an' bones at thet."
+
+"Mebbe you'll need to work a little off, Van. Some one said Creech's
+Blue Roan was comin' fast this year."
+
+"Bill, your mind ain't operatin'," replied Van, scornfully. "Didn't I
+beat Creech's hosses last year without the King turnin' a hair?"
+
+"Not if I recollect, you didn't. The Blue Roan wasn't runnin'."
+
+Then they argued, after the manner of friendly riders, but all earnest,
+an eloquent in their convictions. The prevailing opinion was that
+Creech's horse had a chance, depending upon condition and luck.
+
+The argument shifted upon the arrival of two new-comers, leading
+mustangs and apparently talking trade. It was manifest that these
+arrivals were not loath to get the opinions of others.
+
+"Van, there's a hoss!" exclaimed one.
+
+"No, he ain't," replied Van.
+
+And that diverse judgment appeared to be characteristic throughout. The
+strange thing was that Macomber, the rancher, had already traded his
+mustang and money to boot for the sorrel. The deal, whether wise or
+not, had been consummated. Brackton came out with Red Wilson, and they
+had to have their say.
+
+"Wal, durned if some of you fellers ain't kind an' complimentary,"
+remarked Macomber, scratching his head. "But then every feller can't
+have hoss sense." Then, looking up to see Lucy Bostil coming along the
+road, he brightened as if with inspiration.
+
+Lucy was at home among them, and the shy eyes of the younger riders,
+especially Van, were nothing if not revealing. She greeted them with a
+bright smile, and when she saw Brackton she burst out:
+
+"Oh, Mr. Brackton, the wagon's in, and did my box come? ... To-day's my
+birthday."
+
+"'Deed it did, Lucy; an' many more happy ones to you!" he replied,
+delighted in her delight. "But it's too heavy for you. I'll send it
+up--or mebbe one of the boys--"
+
+Five riders in unison eagerly offered their services and looked as if
+each had spoken first. Then Macomber addressed her:
+
+"Miss Lucy, you see this here sorrel?"
+
+"Ah! the same lazy crowd and the same old story--a horse trade!"
+laughed Lucy.
+
+"There's a little difference of opinion," said Macomber, politely
+indicating the riders. "Now, Miss Lucy, we-all know you're a judge of a
+hoss. And as good as thet you tell the truth. Thet ain't in some
+hoss-traders I know.... What do you think of this mustang?"
+
+Macomber had eyes of enthusiasm for his latest acquisition, but some of
+the cock-sureness had been knocked out of him by the blunt riders.
+
+"Macomber, aren't you a great one to talk?" queried Lucy, severely.
+"Didn't you get around Dad and trade him an old, blind, knock-kneed bag
+of bones for a perfectly good pony--one I liked to ride?"
+
+The riders shouted with laughter while the rancher struggled with
+confusion.
+
+"'Pon my word, Miss Lucy, I'm surprised you could think thet of such an
+old friend of yours--an' your Dad's, too. I'm hopin' he doesn't side
+altogether with you."
+
+"Dad and I never agree about a horse. He thinks he got the best of you.
+But you know, Macomber, what a horse-thief you are. Worse than Cordts!"
+
+"Wal, if I got the best of Bostil I'm willin' to be thought bad. I'm
+the first feller to take him in.... An' now, Miss Lucy, look over my
+sorrel."
+
+Lucy Bostil did indeed have an eye for a horse. She walked straight up
+to the wild, shaggy mustang with a confidence born of intuition and
+experience, and reached a hand for his head, not slowly, nor yet
+swiftly. The mustang looked as if he was about to jump, but he did not.
+His eyes showed that he was not used to women.
+
+"He's not well broken," said Lucy. "Some Navajo has beaten his head in
+breaking him."
+
+Then she carefully studied the mustang point by point.
+
+"He's deceiving at first because he's good to look at," said Lucy. "But
+I wouldn't own him. A saddle will turn on him. He's not vicious, but
+he'll never get over his scare. He's narrow between the eyes--a bad
+sign. His ears are stiff--and too close. I don't see anything more
+wrong with him."
+
+"You seen enough," declared Macomber. "An' so you wouldn't own him?"
+
+"You couldn't make me a present of him--even on my birthday."
+
+"Wal, now I'm sorry, for I was thinkin' of thet," replied Macomber,
+ruefully. It was plain that the sorrel had fallen irremediably in his
+estimation.
+
+"Macomber, I often tell Dad all you horse-traders get your deserts now
+and then. It's vanity and desire to beat the other man that's your
+downfall."
+
+Lucy went away, with Van shouldering her box, leaving Macomber trying
+to return the banter of the riders. The good-natured raillery was
+interrupted by a sharp word from one of them.
+
+"Look! Darn me if thet ain't a naked Indian comin'!"
+
+The riders whirled to see an apparently nude savage approaching, almost
+on a run.
+
+"Take a shot at thet, Bill," said another rider. "Miss Lucy might
+see--No, she's out of sight. But, mebbe some other woman is around."
+
+"Hold on, Bill," called Macomber. "You never saw an Indian run like
+thet."
+
+Some of the riders swore, others laughed, and all suddenly became keen
+with interest.
+
+"Sure his face is white, if his body's red!"
+
+The strange figure neared them. It was indeed red up to the face, which
+seemed white in contrast. Yet only in general shape and action did it
+resemble a man.
+
+"Damned if it ain't Joel Creech!" sang out Bill Stark.
+
+The other riders accorded their wondering assent.
+
+"Gone crazy, sure!"
+
+"I always seen it comin'."
+
+"Say, but ain't he wild? Foamin' at the mouth like a winded hoss!"
+
+Young Creech was headed down the road toward the ford across which he
+had to go to reach home. He saw the curious group, slowed his pace, and
+halted. His face seemed convulsed with rage and pain and fatigue. His
+body, even to his hands, was incased in a thick, heavy coating of red
+adobe that had caked hard.
+
+"God's sake--fellers--" he panted, with eyes rolling, "take this--'dobe
+mud off me! ... I'm dyin'!"
+
+Then he staggered into Brackton's place. A howl went up from the riders
+and they surged after him.
+
+That evening after supper Bostil stamped in the big room, roaring with
+laughter, red in the face; and he astonished Lucy and her aunt to the
+point of consternation.
+
+"Now--you've--done--it--Lucy Bostil!" he roared.
+
+"Oh dear! Oh dear!" exclaimed Aunt Jane.
+
+"Done what?" asked Lucy, blankly.
+
+Bostil conquered his paroxysm, and, wiping his moist red face, he eyed
+Lucy in mock solemnity.
+
+"Joel!" whispered Lucy, who had a guilty conscience.
+
+"Lucy, I never heard the beat of it.... Joel's smarter in some ways
+than we thought, an' crazier in others. He had the sun figgered, but
+what'd he want to run through town for? Why, never in my life have I
+seen such tickled riders."
+
+"Dad!" almost screamed Lucy. "What did Joel do?"
+
+"Wal, I see it this way. He couldn't or wouldn't wait for sundown. An'
+he wasn't hankerin' to be burned. So he wallows in a 'dobe mud-hole an'
+covers himself thick with mud. You know that 'dobe mud! Then he starts
+home. But he hadn't figgered on the 'dobe gettin' hard, which it
+did--harder 'n rock. An' thet must have hurt more 'n sunburn. Late this
+afternoon he came runnin' down the road, yellin' thet he was dyin'. The
+boys had conniption fits. Joel ain't over-liked, you know, an' here
+they had one on him. Mebbe they didn't try hard to clean him off. But
+the fact is not for hours did they get thet 'dobe off him. They washed
+an' scrubbed an' curried him, while he yelled an' cussed. Finally they
+peeled it off, with his skin I guess. He was raw, an' they say, the
+maddest feller ever seen in Bostil's Ford!"
+
+Lucy was struggling between fear and mirth. She did not look sorry.
+"Oh! Oh! Oh, Dad!"
+
+"Wasn't it great, Lucy?"
+
+"But what--will he--do?" choked Lucy.
+
+"Lord only knows. Thet worries me some. Because he never said a word
+about how he come to lose his clothes or why he had the 'dobe on him.
+An' sure I never told. Nobody knows but us."
+
+"Dad, he'll do something terrible to me!" cried Lucy, aghast at her
+premonition.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+The days did not pass swiftly at Bostil's Ford. And except in winter,
+and during the spring sand-storms, the lagging time passed pleasantly.
+Lucy rode every day, sometimes with Van, and sometimes alone. She was
+not over-keen about riding with Van--first, because he was in love with
+her; and secondly, in spite of that, she could not beat him when he
+rode the King. They were training Bostil's horses for the
+much-anticipated races.
+
+At last word arrived from the Utes and Navajos that they accepted
+Bostil's invitation and would come in force, which meant, according to
+Holley and other old riders, that the Indians would attend about eight
+hundred strong.
+
+"Thet old chief, Hawk, is comin'," Holley informed Bostil. "He hasn't
+been here fer several years. Recollect thet bunch of colts he had?
+They're hosses, not mustangs.... So you look out, Bostil!"
+
+No rider or rancher or sheepman, in fact, no one, ever lost a chance to
+warn Bostil. Some of it was in fun, but most of it was earnest. The
+nature of events was that sooner or later a horse would beat the King.
+Bostil knew that as well as anybody, though he would not admit it.
+Holley's hint made Bostil look worried. Most of Bostil's gray hairs
+might have been traced to his years of worry about horses.
+
+The day he received word from the Indians he sent for Brackton,
+Williams, Muncie, and Creech to come to his house that night. These
+men, with Bostil, had for years formed in a way a club, which gave the
+Ford distinction. Creech was no longer a friend of Bostil's, but Bostil
+had always been fair-minded, and now he did not allow his animosities
+to influence him. Holley, the veteran rider, made the sixth member of
+the club.
+
+Bostil had a cedar log blazing cheerily in the wide fireplace, for
+these early spring nights in the desert were cold.
+
+Brackton was the last guest to arrive. He shuffled in without answering
+the laconic greetings accorded him, and his usually mild eyes seemed
+keen and hard.
+
+"John, I reckon you won't love me fer this here I've got to tell you,
+to-night specially," he said, seriously.
+
+"You old robber, I couldn't love you anyhow," retorted Bostil. But his
+humor did not harmonize with the sudden gravity of his look. "What's
+up?"
+
+"Who do you suppose I jest sold whisky to?"
+
+"I've no idea," replied Bostil. Yet he looked as if he was perfectly
+sure.
+
+"Cordts! ... Cordts, an' four of his outfit. Two of them I didn't know.
+Bad men, judgin' from appearances, let alone company. The others was
+Hutchinson an'--Dick Sears."
+
+"DICK SEARS!" exclaimed Bostil.
+
+Muncie and Williams echoed Bostil. Holley appeared suddenly interested.
+Creech alone showed no surprise.
+
+"But Sears is dead," added Bostil.
+
+"He was dead--we thought," replied Brackton, with a grim laugh. "But
+he's alive again. He told me he'd been in Idaho fer two years, in the
+gold-fields. Said the work was too hard, so he'd come back here.
+Laughed when he said it, the little devil! I'll bet he was thinkin' of
+thet wagon-train of mine he stole."
+
+Bostil gazed at his chief rider.
+
+"Wal, I reckon we didn't kill Sears, after all," replied Holley. "I
+wasn't never sure."
+
+"Lord! Cordts an' Sears in camp," ejaculated Bostil, and he began to
+pace the room.
+
+"No, they're gone now," said Brackton.
+
+"Take it easy, boss. Sit down," drawled Holley. "The King is safe, an'
+all the racers. I swear to thet. Why, Cordts couldn't chop into thet
+log-an'-wire corral if he an' his gang chopped all night! They hate
+work. Besides, Farlane is there, an' the boys."
+
+This reassured Bostil, and he resumed his chair. But his hand shook a
+little.
+
+"Did Cordts have anythin' to say?" he asked.
+
+"Sure. He was friendly an' talkative," replied Brackton. "He came in
+just after dark. Left a man I didn't see out with the hosses. He bought
+two big packs of supplies, an' some leather stuff, an', of course,
+ammunition. Then some whisky. Had plenty of gold an' wouldn't take no
+change. Then while his men, except Sears, was carryin' out the stuff,
+he talked."
+
+"Go on. Tell me," said Bostil.
+
+"Wal, he'd been out north of Durango an' fetched news. There's wild
+talk back there of a railroad goin' to be built some day, joinin' east
+an' west. It's interestin', but no sense to it. How could they build a
+railroad through thet country?"
+
+"North it ain't so cut up an' lumpy as here," put in Holley.
+
+"Grandest idea ever thought of for the West," avowed Bostil. "If thet
+railroad ever starts we'll all get rich.... Go on, Brack."
+
+"Then Cordts said water an' grass was peterin' out back on the trail,
+same as Red Wilson said last week. Finally he asked, 'How's my friend
+Bostil?' I told him you was well. He looked kind of thoughtful then,
+an' I knew what was comin'....'How's the King?' 'Grand' I told
+him--'grand.' 'When is them races comin' off?' I said we hadn't planned
+the time yet, but it would be soon--inside of a month or two.
+'Brackton,' he said, sharp-like, 'is Bostil goin' to pull a gun on me
+at sight?' 'Reckon he is,' I told him. 'Wal, I'm not powerful glad to
+know thet.... I hear Creech's blue hoss will race the King this time.
+How about it?' 'Sure an' certain this year. I've Creech's an' Bostil's
+word for thet.' Cordts put his hand on my shoulder. You ought to 've
+seen his eyes!...'I want to see thet race.... I'm goin' to.' 'Wal,' I
+said, 'you'll have to stop bein'--You'll need to change your bizness.'
+Then, Bostil, what do you think? Cordts was sort of eager an' wild. He
+said thet was a race he jest couldn't miss. He swore he wouldn't turn a
+trick or let a man of his gang stir a hand till after thet race, if
+you'd let him come."
+
+A light flitted across Bostil's face.
+
+"I know how Cordts feels," he said.
+
+"Wal, it's a queer deal," went on Brackton. "Fer a long time you've
+meant to draw on Cordts when you meet. We all know thet."
+
+"Yes, I'll kill him!" The light left Bostil's face. His voice sounded
+differently. His mouth opened, drooped strangely at the corners, then
+shut in a grim, tense line. Bostil had killed more than one man. The
+memory, no doubt, was haunting and ghastly.
+
+"Cordts seemed to think his word was guarantee of his good faith. He
+said he'd send an Indian in here to find out if he can come to the
+races. I reckon, Bostil, thet it wouldn't hurt none to let him come.
+An' hold your gun hand fer the time he swears he'll be honest. Queer
+deal, ain't it, men? A hoss-thief turnin' honest jest to see a race!
+Beats me! Bostil, it's a cheap way to get at least a little honesty
+from Cordts. An' refusin' might rile him bad. When all's said Cordts
+ain't as bad as he could be."
+
+"I'll let him come," replied Bostil, breathing deep. "But it'll be hard
+to see him, rememberin' how he's robbed me, an' what he's threatened.
+An' I ain't lettin' him come to bribe a few weeks' decency from him.
+I'm doin' it for only one reason.... Because I know how he loves the
+King--how he wants to see the King run away from the field thet day!
+Thet's why!"
+
+There was a moment of silence, during which all turned to Creech. He
+was a stalwart man, no longer young, with a lined face, deep-set,
+troubled eyes, and white, thin beard.
+
+"Bostil, if Cordts loves the King thet well, he's in fer heartbreak,"
+said Creech, with a ring in his voice.
+
+Down crashed Bostil's heavy boots and fire flamed in his gaze. The
+other men laughed, and Brackton interposed:
+
+"Hold on, you boy riders!" he yelled. "We ain't a-goin' to have any
+arguments like thet.... Now, Bostil, it's settled, then? You'll let
+Cordts come?"
+
+"Glad to have him," replied Bostil.
+
+"Good. An' now mebbe we'd better get down to the bizness of this here
+meetin'."
+
+They seated themselves around the table, upon which Bostil laid an old
+and much-soiled ledger and a stub of a lead-pencil.
+
+"First well set the time," he said, with animation, "an' then pitch
+into details.... What's the date?"
+
+No one answered, and presently they all looked blankly from one to the
+other.
+
+"It's April, ain't it?" queried Holley.
+
+That assurance was as close as they could get to the time of year.
+
+"Lucy!" called Bostil, in a loud voice.
+
+She came running in, anxious, almost alarmed.
+
+"Goodness! you made us jump! What on earth is the matter?"
+
+"Lucy, we want to know the date," replied Bostil.
+
+"Date! Did you have to scare Auntie and me out of our wits just for
+that?"
+
+"Who scared you? This is important, Lucy. What's the date?"
+
+"It's a week to-day since last Tuesday," answered Lucy, sweetly.
+
+"Huh! Then it's Tuesday again," said Bostil, laboriously writing it
+down. "Now, what's the date?"
+
+"Don't you remember?"
+
+"Remember? I never knew."
+
+"Dad! ... Last Tuesday was my birthday--the day you DID NOT give me a
+horse!"
+
+"Aw, so it was," rejoined Bostil, confused at her reproach. "An' thet
+date was--let's see--April sixth.... Then this is April thirteenth.
+Much obliged, Lucy. Run back to your aunt now. This hoss talk won't
+interest you."
+
+Lucy tossed her head. "I'll bet I'll have to straighten out the whole
+thing." Then with a laugh she disappeared.
+
+"Three days beginnin--say June first. June first--second, an' third.
+How about thet for the races?"
+
+Everybody agreed, and Bostil laboriously wrote that down. Then they
+planned the details. Purses and prizes, largely donated by Bostil and
+Muncie, the rich members of the community, were recorded. The old rules
+were adhered to. Any rider or any Indian could enter any horse in any
+race, or as many horses as he liked in as many races. But by winning
+one race he excluded himself from the others. Bostil argued for a
+certain weight in riders, but the others ruled out this suggestion.
+Special races were arranged for the Indians, with saddles, bridles,
+blankets, guns as prizes.
+
+All this appeared of absorbing interest to Bostil. He perspired freely.
+There was a gleam in his eye, betraying excitement. When it came to
+arranging the details of the big race between the high-class racers,
+then he grew intense and harder to deal with. Many points had to go by
+vote. Muncie and Williams both had fleet horses to enter in this race;
+Holley had one; Creech had two; there were sure to be several Indians
+enter fast mustangs; and Bostil had the King and four others to choose
+from. Bostil held out stubbornly for a long race. It was well known
+that Sage King was unbeatable in a long race. If there were any chance
+to beat him it must be at short distance. The vote went against Bostil,
+much to his chagrin, and the great race was set down for two miles.
+
+"But two miles! ... Two miles!" he kept repeating. "Thet's Blue Roan's
+distance. Thet's his distance. An' it ain't fair to the King!"
+
+His guests, excepting Creech, argued with him, explained, reasoned,
+showed him that it was fair to all concerned. Bostil finally
+acquiesced, but he was not happy. The plain fact was that he was
+frightened.
+
+When the men were departing Bostil called Creech back into the
+sitting-room. Creech appeared surprised, yet it was evident that he
+would have been glad to make friends with Bostil.
+
+"What'll you take for the roan?" Bostil asked, tersely,' as if he had
+never asked that before.
+
+"Bostil, didn't we thresh thet out before--an' FELL out over it?"
+queried Creech, with a deprecating spread of his hands.
+
+"Wal, we can fall in again, if you'll sell or trade the hoss."
+
+"I'm sorry, but I can't."
+
+"You need money an' hosses, don't you?" demanded Bostil, brutally. He
+had no conscience in a matter of horse-dealing.
+
+"Lord knows, I do," replied Creech.
+
+"Wal, then, here's your chance. I'll give you five hundred in gold an'
+Sarchedon to boot."
+
+Creech looked as if he had not heard aright. Bostil repeated the offer.
+
+"No," replied Creech.
+
+"I'll make it a thousand an' throw Plume in with Sarch," flashed Bostil.
+
+"No!" Creech turned pale and swallowed hard.
+
+"Two thousand an' Dusty Ben along with the others?" This was an
+unheard-of price to pay for any horse. Creech saw that Bostil was
+desperate. It was an almost overpowering temptation. Evidently Creech
+resisted it only by applying all his mind to the thought of his
+clean-limbed, soft-eyed, noble horse.
+
+Bostil did not give Creech time to speak. "Twenty-five hundred an' Two
+Face along with the rest!"
+
+"My God, Bostil--stop it! I can't PART with Blue Roan. You're rich an'
+you've no heart. Thet I always knew. At least to me you never had,
+since I owned them two racers. Didn't I beg you, a little time back, to
+lend me a few hundred? To meet thet debt? An' you wouldn't, unless I'd
+sell the hosses. An' I had to lose my sheep. Now I'm a poor
+man--gettin' poorer all the time. But I won't sell or trade Blue Roan,
+not for all you've got!"
+
+Creech seemed to gain strength with his speech and passion with the
+strength. His eyes glinted at the hard, paling face of his rival. He
+raised a clenching fist.
+
+"An' by G--d, I'm goin' to win thet race!"
+
+During that week Lucy had heard many things about Joel Creech, and some
+of them were disquieting.
+
+Some rider had not only found Joel's clothes on the trail, but he had
+recognized the track of the horse Lucy rode, and at once connected her
+with the singular discovery. Coupling that with Joel's appearance in
+the village incased in a heaving armor of adobe, the riders guessed
+pretty close to the truth. For them the joke was tremendous. And Joel
+Creech was exceedingly sensitive to ridicule. The riders made life
+unbearable for him. They had fun out of it as long as Joel showed signs
+of taking the joke manfully, which was not long, and then his
+resentment won their contempt. That led to sarcasm on their part and
+bitter anger on his. It came to Lucy's ears that Joel began to act and
+talk strangely. She found out that the rider Van had knocked Joel down
+in Brackton's store and had kicked a gun out of his hand. Van laughed
+off the rumor and Brackton gave her no satisfaction. Moreover, she
+heard no other rumors. The channels of gossip had suddenly closed to
+her. Bostil, when questioned by Lucy, swore in a way that amazed her,
+and all he told her was to leave Creech alone. Finally, when Muncie
+discharged Joel, who worked now and then, Lucy realized that something
+was wrong with Joel and that she was to blame for it.
+
+She grew worried and anxious and sorry, but she held her peace, and
+determined to find out for herself what was wrong. Every day when she
+rode out into the sage she expected to meet him, or at least see him
+somewhere; nevertheless days went by and there was no sign of him.
+
+One afternoon she saw some Indians driving sheep down the river road
+toward the ford, and, acting upon impulse, she turned her horse after
+them.
+
+Lucy seldom went down the river road. Riding down and up was merely
+work, and a horse has as little liking for it as she had. Usually it
+was a hot, dusty trip, and the great, dark, overhanging walls had a
+depressing effect, upon her. She always felt awe at the gloomy canyon
+and fear at the strange, murmuring red river. But she started down this
+afternoon in the hope of meeting Joel. She had a hazy idea of telling
+him she was sorry for what she had done, and of asking him to forget it
+and pay no more heed to the riders.
+
+The sheep raised a dust-cloud in the sandy wash where the road wound
+down, and Lucy hung back to let them get farther ahead. Gradually the
+tiny roar of pattering hoofs and the blended bleating and baaing died
+away. The dust-cloud, however, hung over the head of the ravine, and
+Lucy had to force Sarchedon through it. Sarchedon did not mind sand and
+dust, but he surely hated the smell of sheep. Lucy seldom put a spur to
+Sarchedon; still, she gave him a lash with her quirt, and then he went
+on obediently, if disgustedly. He carried his head like a horse that
+wondered why his mistress preferred to drive him down into an
+unpleasant hole when she might have been cutting the sweet, cool sage
+wind up on the slope.
+
+The wash, with its sand and clay walls, dropped into a gulch, and there
+was an end of green growths. The road led down over solid rock.
+Gradually the rims of the gorge rose, shutting out the light and the
+cliffs. It was a winding road and one not safe to tarry on in a stormy
+season. Lucy had seen boulders weighing a ton go booming down that
+gorge during one of the sudden fierce desert storms, when a torrent of
+water and mud and stone went plunging on to the river. The ride through
+here was short, though slow. Lucy always had time to adjust her
+faculties for the overpowering contrast these lower regions presented.
+Long before she reached the end of the gorge she heard the sullen
+thunder of the river. The river was low, too, for otherwise there would
+have been a deafening roar.
+
+Presently she came out upon a lower branch of the canyon, into a great
+red-walled space, with the river still a thousand feet below, and the
+cliffs towering as high above her. The road led down along this rim
+where to the left all was open, across to the split and peaked wall
+opposite. The river appeared to sweep round a bold, bulging corner a
+mile above. It was a wide, swift, muddy, turbulent stream. A great bar
+of sand stretched out from the shore. Beyond it, through the mouth of
+an intersecting canyon, could be seen a clump of cottonwoods and
+willows that marked the home of the Creeches. Lucy could not see the
+shore nearest her, as it was almost directly under her. Besides, in
+this narrow road, on a spirited horse, she was not inclined to watch
+the scenery. She hurried Sarchedon down and down, under the overhanging
+brows of rock, to where the rim sloped out and failed. Here was a
+half-acre of sand, with a few scant willows, set down seemingly in a
+dent at the base of the giant, beetling cliffs. The place was light,
+though the light seemed a kind of veiled red, and to Lucy always
+ghastly. She could not have been joyous with that river moaning before
+her, even if it had been up on a level, in the clear and open day. As a
+little girl eight years old she had conceived a terror and hatred of
+this huge, jagged rent so full of red haze and purple smoke and the
+thunder of rushing waters. And she had never wholly outgrown it. The
+joy of the sun and wind, the rapture in the boundless open, the
+sweetness in the sage--these were not possible here. Something mighty
+and ponderous, heavy as those colossal cliffs, weighted down her
+spirit. The voice of the river drove out any dream. Here was the
+incessant frowning presence of destructive forces of nature. And the
+ford was associated with catastrophe--to sheep, to horses and to men.
+
+Lucy rode across the bar to the shore where the Indians were loading
+the sheep into an immense rude flatboat. As the sheep were frightened,
+the loading was no easy task. Their bleating could be heard above the
+roar of the river. Bostil's boatmen, Shugrue and Somers, stood
+knee-deep in the quicksand of the bar, and their efforts to keep
+free-footed were as strenuous as their handling of the sheep. Presently
+the flock was all crowded on board, the Indians followed, and then the
+boatmen slid the unwieldy craft off the sand-bar. Then, each manning a
+clumsy oar, they pulled up-stream. Along shore were whirling, slow
+eddies, and there rowing was possible. Out in that swift current it
+would have been folly to try to contend with it, let alone make
+progress. The method of crossing was to row up along the shore as far
+as a great cape of rock jutting out, and there make into the current,
+and while drifting down pull hard to reach the landing opposite.
+Heavily laden as the boat was, the chances were not wholly in favor of
+a successful crossing.
+
+Lucy watched the slow, laborious struggle of the boatmen with the heavy
+oars until she suddenly remembered the object of her visit down to the
+ford. She appeared to be alone on her side of the river. At the landing
+opposite, however, were two men; and presently Lucy recognized Joel
+Creech and his father. A second glance showed Indians with burros,
+evidently waiting for the boat. Joel Creech jumped into a skiff and
+shoved off. The elder man, judging by his motions, seemed to be trying
+to prevent his son from leaving the shore. But Joel began to row
+up-stream, keeping close to the shore. Lucy watched him. No doubt he
+had seen her and was coming across. Either the prospect of meeting him
+or the idea of meeting him there in the place where she was never
+herself made her want to turn at once and ride back home. But her
+stubborn sense of fairness overruled that. She would hold her ground
+solely in the hope of persuading Joel to be reasonable. She saw the big
+flatboat sweep into line of sight at the same time Joel turned into the
+current. But while the larger craft drifted slowly the other way, the
+smaller one came swiftly down and across. Joel swept out of the current
+into the eddy, rowed across that, and slid the skiff up on the
+sand-bar. Then he stepped out. He was bareheaded and barefooted, but it
+was not that which made him seem a stranger to Lucy.
+
+"Are you lookin' fer me?" he shouted.
+
+Lucy waved a hand for him to come up.
+
+Then he approached. He was a tall, lean young man, stoop-shouldered and
+bow-legged from much riding, with sallow, freckled face, a thin fuzz of
+beard, weak mouth and chin, and eyes remarkable for their small size
+and piercing quality and different color. For one was gray and the
+other was hazel. There was no scar on his face, but the irregularity of
+his features reminded one who knew that he had once been kicked in the
+face by a horse.
+
+Creech came up hurriedly, in an eager, wild way that made Lucy suddenly
+pity him. He did not seem to remember that the stallion had an
+antipathy for him. But Lucy, if she had forgotten, would have been
+reminded by Sarchedon's action.
+
+"Look out, Joel!" she called, and she gave the black's head a jerk.
+Sarchedon went up with a snort and came down pounding the sand. Quick
+as an Indian Lucy was out of the saddle.
+
+"Lemme your quirt," said Joel, showing his teeth like a wolf.
+
+"No. I wouldn't let you hit Sarch. You beat him once, and he's never
+forgotten," replied Lucy.
+
+The eye of the horse and the man met and clashed, and there was a
+hostile tension in their attitudes. Then Lucy dropped the bridle and
+drew Joel over to a huge drift-log, half buried in the sand. Here she
+sat down, but Joel remained standing. His gaze was now all the stranger
+for its wistfulness. Lucy was quick to catch a subtle difference in
+him, but she could not tell wherein it lay.
+
+"What'd you want?" asked Joel.
+
+"I've heard a lot of things, Joel," replied Lucy, trying to think of
+just what she wanted to say.
+
+"Reckon you have," said Joel, dejectedly, and then he sat down on the
+log and dug holes in the sand with his bare feet.
+
+Lucy had never before seen him look tired, and it seemed that some of
+the healthy brown of his cheeks had thinned out. Then Lucy told him,
+guardedly, a few of the rumors she had heard.
+
+"All thet you say is nothin' to what's happened," he replied, bitterly.
+"Them riders mocked the life an' soul out of me."
+
+"But, Joel, you shouldn't be so--so touchy," said Lucy, earnestly.
+"After all, the joke WAS on you. Why didn't you take it like a man?"
+
+"But they knew you stole my clothes," he protested.
+
+"Suppose they did. That wasn't much to care about. If you hadn't taken
+it so hard they'd have let up on you."
+
+"Mebbe I might have stood that. But they taunted me with bein'--loony
+about you."
+
+Joel spoke huskily. There was no doubt that he had been deeply hurt.
+Lucy saw tears in his eyes, and her first impulse was to put a hand on
+his and tell him how sorry she was. But she desisted. She did not feel
+at her ease with Joel.
+
+"What'd you and Van fight about?" she asked, presently. Joel hung his
+head. "I reckon I ain't a-goin' to tell you."
+
+"You're ashamed of it?"
+
+Joel's silence answered that.
+
+"You said something about me?" Lucy could not resist her curiosity,
+back of which was a little heat. "It must have been--bad--else Van
+wouldn't have struck you."
+
+"He hit me--he knocked me flat," passionately said Joel.
+
+"And you drew a gun on him?"
+
+"I did, an' like a fool I didn't wait till I got up. Then he kicked me!
+... Bostil's Ford will never be big enough fer me an' Van now."
+
+"Don't talk foolish. You won't fight with Van.... Joel, maybe you
+deserved what you got. You say some--some rude things."
+
+"I only said I'd pay you back," burst out Joel.
+
+"How?"
+
+"I swore I'd lay fer you--an' steal your clothes--so you'd have to run
+home naked."
+
+There was indeed something lacking in Joel, but it was not sincerity.
+His hurt had rankled deep and his voice trembled with indignation.
+
+"But, Joel, I don't go swimming in spring-holes," protested Lucy,
+divided between amusement and annoyance.
+
+"I meant it, anyhow," said Joel, doggedly.
+
+"Are you absolutely honest? Is that all you said to provoke Van?"
+
+"It's all, Lucy, I swear."
+
+She believed him, and saw the unfortunate circumstance more than ever
+her fault. "I'm sorry, Joel. I'm much to blame. I shouldn't have lost
+my temper and played that trick with your clothes.... If you'd only had
+sense enough to stay out till after dark! But no use crying over spilt
+milk. Now, if you'll do your share I'll do mine. I'll tell the boys I
+was to blame. I'll persuade them to let you alone. I'll go to Muncie--"
+
+"No you won't go cryin' small fer me!" blurted out Joel.
+
+Lucy was surprised to see pride in him. "Joel, I'll not make it
+appear--"
+
+"You'll not say one word about me to any one," he went on, with the
+blood beginning to darken his face. And now he faced her. How strange
+the blaze in his differently colored eyes! "Lucy Bostil, there's been
+thet done an' said to me which I'll never forgive. I'm no good in
+Bostil's Ford. Mebbe I never was much. But I could get a job when I
+wanted it an' credit when I needed it. Now I can't get nothin'. I'm no
+good! ... I'm no good! An' it's your fault!"
+
+"Oh, Joel, what can I do?" cried Lucy.
+
+"I reckon there's only one way you can square me," he replied, suddenly
+growing pale. But his eyes were like flint. He certainly looked to be
+in possession of all his wits.
+
+"How?" queried Lucy, sharply.
+
+"You can marry me. Thet'll show thet gang! An' it'll square me. Then
+I'll go back to work an' I'll stick. Thet's all, Lucy Bostil."
+
+Manifestly he was laboring under strong suppressed agitation. That
+moment was the last of real strength and dignity ever shown by Joel
+Creech.
+
+"But, Joel, I can't marry you--even if I am to blame for your ruin,"
+said Lucy, simply.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because I don't love you."
+
+"I reckon thet won't make any difference, if you don't love some one
+else."
+
+Lucy gazed blankly at him. He began to shake, and his eyes grew wild.
+She rose from the log.
+
+"Do you love anybody else?" he asked, passionately.
+
+"None of your business!" retorted Lucy. Then, at a strange darkening of
+his face, an aspect unfamiliar to her, she grew suddenly frightened.
+
+"It's Van!" he said, thickly.
+
+"Joel, you're a fool!"
+
+That only infuriated him.
+
+"So they all say. An' they got my old man believin' it, too. Mebbe I
+am.... But I'm a-goin' to kill Van!"
+
+"No! No! Joel, what are you saying? I don't love Van. I don't care any
+more for him than for any other rider--or--or you."
+
+"Thet's a lie, Lucy Bostil!"
+
+"How dare you say I lie?" demanded Lucy. "I've a mind to turn my back
+on you. I'm trying to make up for my blunder and you--you insult me!"
+
+"You talk sweet ... but talk isn't enough. You made me no-good ....
+Will you marry me?"
+
+"I will not!" And Lucy, with her blood up, could not keep contempt out
+of voice and look, and she did not care. That was the first time she
+had ever shown anything, approaching ridicule for Joel. The effect was
+remarkable. Like a lash upon a raw wound it made him writhe; but more
+significant to Lucy was the sudden convulsive working of his features
+and the wildness of his eyes. Then she turned her back, not from
+contempt, but to hurry away from him.
+
+He leaped after her and grasped her with rude hands.
+
+"Let me go!" cried Lucy, standing perfectly motionless. The hard clutch
+of his fingers roused a fierce, hot anger.
+
+Joel did not heed her command. He was forcing her back. He talked
+incoherently. One glimpse of his face added terror to Lucy's fury.
+
+"Joel, you're out of your head!" she cried, and she began to wrench and
+writhe out of his grasp. Then ensued a short, sharp struggle. Joel
+could not hold Lucy, but he tore her blouse into shreds. It seemed to
+Lucy that he did that savagely. She broke free from him, and he lunged
+at her again. With all her strength she lashed his face with the heavy
+leather quirt. That staggered him. He almost fell.
+
+Lucy bounded to Sarchedon. In a rush she was up in the saddle. Joel was
+running toward her. Blood on his face! Blood on his hands! He was not
+the Joel Creech she knew.
+
+"Stop!" cried Lucy, fiercely. "I'll run you down!"
+
+The big black plunged at a touch of spur and came down quivering, ready
+to bolt.
+
+Creech swerved to one side. His face was lividly white except where the
+bloody welts crossed it. His jaw seemed to hang loosely, making speech
+difficult.
+
+"Jest fer--thet--" he panted, hoarsely, "I'll lay fer you--an' I'll
+strip you---an' I'll tie you on a hoss--an' I'll drive you naked
+through Bostil's Ford!"
+
+Lucy saw the utter futility of all her good intentions. Something had
+snapped in Joel Creech's mind. And in hers kindness had given
+precedence to a fury she did not know was in her. For the second time
+she touched a spur to Sarchedon. He leaped out, flashed past Creech,
+and thundered up the road. It was all Lucy could do to break his gait
+at the first steep rise.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Three wild-horse hunters made camp one night beside a little stream in
+the Sevier Valley, five hundred miles, as a crow flies, from Bostil's
+Ford.
+
+These hunters had a poor outfit, excepting, of course, their horses.
+They were young men, rangy in build, lean and hard from life in the
+saddle, bronzed like Indians, still-faced, and keen-eyed. Two of them
+appeared to be tired out, and lagged at the camp-fire duties. When the
+meager meal was prepared they sat, cross-legged, before a ragged
+tarpaulin, eating and drinking in silence.
+
+The sky in the west was rosy, slowly darkening. The valley floor
+billowed away, ridged and cut, growing gray and purple and dark. Walls
+of stone, pink with the last rays of the setting sun, inclosed the
+valley, stretching away toward a long, low, black mountain range.
+
+The place was wild, beautiful, open, with something nameless that made
+the desert different from any other country. It was, perhaps, a
+loneliness of vast stretches of valley and stone, clear to the eye,
+even after sunset. That black mountain range, which looked close enough
+to ride to before dark, was a hundred miles distant.
+
+The shades of night fell swiftly, and it was dark by the time the
+hunters finished the meal. Then the campfire had burned low. One of the
+three dragged branches of dead cedars and replenished the fire. Quickly
+it flared up, with the white flame and crackle characteristic of dry
+cedar. The night wind had risen, moaning through the gnarled, stunted
+cedars near by, and it blew the fragrant wood-smoke into the faces of
+the two hunters, who seemed too tired to move.
+
+"I reckon a pipe would help me make up my mind," said one.
+
+"Wal, Bill," replied the other, dryly, "your mind's made up, else you'd
+not say smoke."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because there ain't three pipefuls of thet precious tobacco left."
+
+"Thet's one apiece, then.... Lin, come an' smoke the last pipe with us."
+
+The tallest of the three, he who had brought the firewood, stood in the
+bright light of the blaze. He looked the born rider, light, lithe,
+powerful.
+
+"Sure, I'll smoke," he replied.
+
+Then, presently, he accepted the pipe tendered him, and, sitting down
+beside the fire, he composed himself to the enjoyment which his
+companions evidently considered worthy of a decision they had reached.
+
+"So this smokin' means you both want to turn back?" queried Lin, his
+sharp gaze glancing darkly bright in the glow of the fire.
+
+"Yep, we'll turn back. An', Lordy! the relief I feel!" replied one.
+
+"We've been long comin' to it, Lin, an' thet was for your sake,"
+replied the other.
+
+Lin slowly pulled at his pipe and blew out the smoke as if reluctant to
+part with it. "Let's go on," he said, quietly.
+
+"No. I've had all I want of chasin' thet damn wild stallion," returned
+Bill, shortly.
+
+The other spread wide his hands and bent an expostulating look upon the
+one called Lin. "We're two hundred miles out," he said. "There's only a
+little flour left in the bag. No coffee! Only a little salt! All the
+hosses except your big Nagger are played out. We're already in strange
+country. An' you know what we've heerd of this an' all to the south.
+It's all canyons, an' somewheres down there is thet awful canyon none
+of our people ever seen. But we've heerd of it. An awful cut-up
+country."
+
+He finished with a conviction that no one could say a word against the
+common sense of his argument. Lin was silent, as if impressed.
+
+Bill raised a strong, lean, brown hand in a forcible gesture. "We can't
+ketch Wildfire!"
+
+That seemed to him, evidently, a more convincing argument than his
+comrade's.
+
+"Bill is sure right, if I'm wrong, which I ain't," went on the other.
+"Lin, we've trailed thet wild stallion for six weeks. Thet's the
+longest chase he ever had. He's left his old range. He's cut out his
+band, an' left them, one by one. We've tried every trick we know on
+him. An' he's too smart for us. There's a hoss! Why, Lin, we're all but
+gone to the dogs chasin' Wildfire. An' now I'm done, an' I'm glad of
+it."
+
+There was another short silence, which presently Bill opened his lips
+to break.
+
+"Lin, it makes me sick to quit. I ain't denyin' thet for a long time
+I've had hopes of ketchin' Wildfire. He's the grandest hoss I ever laid
+eyes on. I reckon no man, onless he was an Arab, ever seen as good a
+one. But now, thet's neither here nor there.... We've got to hit the
+back trail."
+
+"Boys, I reckon I'll stick to Wildfire's tracks," said Lin, in the same
+quiet tone.
+
+Bill swore at him, and the other hunter grew excited and concerned.
+
+"Lin Slone, are you gone plumb crazy over thet red hoss?"
+
+"I--reckon," replied Slone. The working of his throat as he swallowed
+could be plainly seen by his companions.
+
+Bill looked at his ally as if to confirm some sudden understanding
+between them. They took Slone's attitude gravely and they wagged their
+heads doubtfully, as they might have done had Slone just acquainted
+them with a hopeless and deathless passion for a woman. It was
+significant of the nature of riders that they accepted his attitude and
+had consideration for his feelings. For them the situation subtly
+changed. For weeks they had been three wild-horse wranglers on a hard
+chase after a valuable stallion. They had failed to get even close to
+him. They had gone to the limit of their endurance and of the outfit,
+and it was time to turn back. But Slone had conceived that strange and
+rare longing for a horse--a passion understood, if not shared, by all
+riders. And they knew that he would catch Wildfire or die in the
+attempt. From that moment their attitude toward Slone changed as subtly
+as had come the knowledge of his feeling. The gravity and gloom left
+their faces. It seemed they might have regretted what they had said
+about the futility of catching Wildfire. They did not want Slone to see
+or feel the hopelessness of his task.
+
+"I tell you, Lin," said Bill, "your hoss Nagger's as good as when we
+started."
+
+"Aw, he's better," vouchsafed the other rider. "Nagger needed to lose
+some weight. Lin, have you got an extra set of shoes for him?"
+
+"No full set. Only three left," replied Lin, soberly.
+
+"Wal, thet's enough. You can keep Nagger shod. An' MEBBE thet red
+stallion will get sore feet an' go lame. Then you'd stand a chance."
+
+"But Wildfire keeps travelin' the valleys--the soft ground," said Slone.
+
+"No matter. He's leavin' the country, an' he's bound to strike
+sandstone sooner or later. Then, by gosh! mebbe he'll wear off them
+hoofs."
+
+"Say, can't he ring bells offen the rocks?" exclaimed Bill. "Oh, Lordy!
+what a hoss!"
+
+"Boys, do you think he's leavin' the country?" inquired Slone,
+anxiously.
+
+"Sure he is," replied Bill. "He ain't the first stallion I've chased
+off the Sevier range. An' I know. It's a stallion thet makes for new
+country, when you push him hard."
+
+"Yep, Lin, he's sure leavin'," added the other comrade. "Why, he's
+traveled a bee-line for days! I'll bet he's seen us many a time.
+Wildfire's about as smart as any man. He was born wild, an' his dam was
+born wild, an' there you have it. The wildest of all wild creatures--a
+wild stallion, with the intelligence of a man! A grand hoss, Lin, but
+one thet'll be hell, if you ever ketch him. He has killed stallions all
+over the Sevier range. A wild stallion thet's a killer! I never liked
+him for thet. Could he be broke?"
+
+"I'll break him," said Lin Slone, grimly. "It's gettin' him thet's the
+job. I've got patience to break a hoss. But patience can't catch a
+streak of lightnin'."
+
+"Nope; you're right," replied Bill. "If you have some luck you'll get
+him--mebbe. If he wears out his feet, or if you crowd him into a narrow
+canyon, or ran him into a bad place where he can't get by you. Thet
+might happen. An' then, with Nagger, you stand a chance. Did you ever
+tire thet hoss?"
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"An' how fur did you ever run him without a break? Why, when we ketched
+thet sorrel last year I rode Nagger myself--thirty miles, most at a
+hard gallop. An' he never turned a hair!"
+
+"I've beat thet," replied Lin. "He could run hard fifty miles--mebbe
+more. Honestly, I never seen him tired yet. If only he was fast!"
+
+"Wal, Nagger ain't so durned slow, come to think of thet," replied
+Bill, with a grunt. "He's good enough for you not to want another hoss."
+
+"Lin, you're goin' to wear out Wildfire, an' then trap him somehow--is
+thet the plan?" asked the other comrade.
+
+"I haven't any plan. I'll just trail him, like a cougar trails a deer."
+
+"Lin, if Wildfire gives you the slip he'll have to fly. You've got the
+best eyes for tracks of any wrangler in Utah."
+
+Slone accepted the compliment with a fleeting, doubtful smile on his
+dark face. He did not reply, and no more was said by his comrades. They
+rolled with backs to the fire. Slone put on more wood, for the keen
+wind was cold and cutting; and then he lay down, his head in his
+saddle, with a goatskin under him and a saddle-blanket over him.
+
+All three were soon asleep. The wind whipped the sand and ashes and
+smoke over the sleepers. Coyotes barked from near in darkness, and from
+the valley ridge came the faint mourn of a hunting wolf. The desert
+night grew darker and colder.
+
+The Stewart brothers were wild-horse hunters for the sake of trades and
+occasional sales. But Lin Slone never traded nor sold a horse he had
+captured. The excitement of the game, and the lure of the desert, and
+the love of a horse were what kept him at the profitless work. His type
+was rare in the uplands.
+
+These were the early days of the settlement of Utah, and only a few of
+the hardiest and most adventurous pioneers had penetrated the desert in
+the southern part of that vast upland. And with them came some of that
+wild breed of riders to which Slone and the Stewarts belonged. Horses
+were really more important and necessary than men; and this singular
+fact gave these lonely riders a calling.
+
+Before the Spaniards came there were no horses in the West. Those
+explorers left or lost horses all over the southwest. Many of them were
+Arabian horses of purest blood. American explorers and travelers, at
+the outset of the nineteenth century, encountered countless droves of
+wild horses all over the plains. Across the Grand Canyon, however, wild
+horses were comparatively few in number in the early days; and these
+had probably come in by way of California.
+
+The Stewarts and Slone had no established mode of catching wild horses.
+The game had not developed fast enough for that. Every chase of horse
+or drove was different; and once in many attempts they met with success.
+
+A favorite method originated by the Stewarts was to find a water-hole
+frequented by the band of horses or the stallion wanted, and to build
+round this hole a corral with an opening for the horses to get in. Then
+the hunters would watch the trap at night, and if the horses went in to
+drink, a gate was closed across the opening. Another method of the
+Stewarts was to trail a coveted horse up on a mesa or highland, places
+which seldom had more than one trail of ascent and descent, and there
+block the escape, and cut lines of cedars, into which the quarry was
+ran till captured. Still another method, discovered by accident, was to
+shoot a horse lightly in the neck and sting him. This last, called
+creasing, was seldom successful, and for that matter in any method ten
+times as many horses were killed as captured.
+
+Lin Slone helped the Stewarts in their own way, but he had no especial
+liking for their tricks. Perhaps a few remarkable captures of
+remarkable horses had spoiled Slone. He was always trying what the
+brothers claimed to be impossible. He was a fearless rider, but he had
+the fault of saving his mount, and to kill a wild horse was a tragedy
+for him. He would much rather have hunted alone, and he had been alone
+on the trail of the stallion Wildfire when the Stewarts had joined him.
+
+Lin Slone awoke next morning and rolled out of his blanket at his usual
+early hour. But he was not early enough to say good-by to the Stewarts.
+They were gone.
+
+The fact surprised him and somehow relieved him. They had left him more
+than his share of the outfit, and perhaps that was why they had slipped
+off before dawn. They knew him well enough to know that he would not
+have accepted it. Besides, perhaps they felt a little humiliation at
+abandoning a chase which he chose to keep up. Anyway, they were gone,
+apparently without breakfast.
+
+The morning was clear, cool, with the air dark like that before a
+storm, and in the east, over the steely wall of stone, shone a redness
+growing brighter.
+
+Slone looked away to the west, down the trail taken by his comrades,
+but he saw nothing moving against that cedar-dotted waste.
+
+"Good-by," he said, and he spoke as if he was saying good-by to more
+than comrades.
+
+"I reckon I won't see Sevier Village soon again--an' maybe never," he
+soliloquized.
+
+There was no one to regret him, unless it was old Mother Hall, who had
+been kind to him on those rare occasions when he got out of the
+wilderness. Still, it was with regret that he gazed away across the red
+valley to the west. Slone had no home. His father and mother had been
+lost in the massacre of a wagon-train by Indians, and he had been one
+of the few saved and brought to Salt Lake. That had happened when he
+was ten years old. His life thereafter had been hard, and but for his
+sturdy Texas training he might not have survived. The last five years
+he had been a horse-hunter in the wild uplands of Nevada and Utah.
+
+Slone turned his attention to the pack of supplies. The Stewarts had
+divided the flour and the parched corn equally, and unless he was
+greatly mistaken they had left him most of the coffee and all of the
+salt.
+
+"Now I hold that decent of Bill an' Abe," said Slone, regretfully. "But
+I could have got along without it better 'n they could."
+
+Then he swiftly set about kindling a fire and getting a meal. In the
+midst of his task a sudden ruddy brightness fell around him. Lin Slone
+paused in his work to look up.
+
+The sun had risen over the eastern wall.
+
+"Ah!" he said, and drew a deep breath.
+
+The cold, steely, darkling sweep of desert had been transformed. It was
+now a world of red earth and gold rocks and purple sage, with
+everywhere the endless straggling green cedars. A breeze whipped in,
+making the fire roar softly. The sun felt warm on his cheek. And at the
+moment he heard the whistle of his horse.
+
+"Good old Nagger!" he said. "I shore won't have to track you this
+mornin'."
+
+Presently he went off into the cedars to find Nagger and the mustang
+that he used to carry a pack. Nagger was grazing in a little open patch
+among the trees, but the pack-horse was missing. Slone seemed to know
+in what direction to go to find the trail, for he came upon it very
+soon. The pack-horse wore hobbles, but he belonged to the class that
+could cover a great deal of ground when hobbled. Slone did not expect
+the horse to go far, considering that the grass thereabouts was good.
+But in a wild-horse country it was not safe to give any horse a chance.
+The call of his wild brethren was irresistible. Slone, however, found
+the mustang standing quietly in a clump of cedars, and, removing the
+hobbles, he mounted and rode back to camp. Nagger caught sight of him
+and came at his call.
+
+This horse Nagger appeared as unique in his class as Slone was rare
+among riders. Nagger seemed of several colors, though black
+predominated. His coat was shaggy, almost woolly, like that of a sheep.
+He was huge, raw-boned, knotty, long of body and long of leg, with the
+head of a war charger. His build did not suggest speed. There appeared
+to be something slow and ponderous about him, similar to an elephant,
+with the same suggestion of power and endurance. Slone discarded the
+pack-saddle and bags. The latter were almost empty. He roped the
+tarpaulin on the back of the mustang, and, making a small bundle of his
+few supplies, he tied that to the tarpaulin. His blanket he used for a
+saddle-blanket on Nagger. Of the utensils left by the Stewarts he chose
+a couple of small iron pans, with long handles. The rest he left. In
+his saddle-bags he had a few extra horseshoes, some nails, bullets for
+his rifle, and a knife with a heavy blade.
+
+"Not a rich outfit for a far country," he mused. Slone did not talk
+very much, and when he did he addressed Nagger and himself
+simultaneously. Evidently he expected a long chase, one from which he
+would not return, and light as his outfit was it would grow too heavy.
+
+Then he mounted and rode down the gradual slope, facing the valley and
+the black, bold, flat mountain to the southeast. Some few hundred yards
+from camp he halted Nagger and bent over in the saddle to scrutinize
+the ground.
+
+The clean-cut track of a horse showed in the bare, hard sand. The
+hoof-marks were large, almost oval, perfect in shape, and manifestly
+they were beautiful to Lin Slone. He gazed at them for a long time, and
+then he looked across the dotted red valley up the vast ridgy steps,
+toward the black plateau and beyond. It was the look that an Indian
+gives to a strange country. Then Slone slipped off the saddle and knelt
+to scrutinize the horse tracks. A little sand had blown into the
+depressions, and some of it was wet and some of it was dry. He took his
+time about examining it, and he even tried gently blowing other sand
+into the tracks, to compare that with what was already there. Finally
+he stood up and addressed Nagger.
+
+"Reckon we won't have to argue with Abe an' Bill this mornin'," he
+said, with satisfaction. "Wildfire made that track yesterday, before
+sun-up."
+
+Thereupon Slone remounted and put Nagger to a trot. The pack-horse
+followed with an alacrity that showed he had no desire for loneliness.
+
+As straight as a bee-line Wildfire had left a trail down into the floor
+of the valley. He had not stopped to graze, and he had not looked for
+water. Slone had hoped to find a water-hole in one of the deep washes
+in the red earth, but if there had been any water there Wildfire would
+have scented it. He had not had a drink for three days that Slone knew
+of. And Nagger had not drunk for forty hours. Slone had a canvas
+water-bag hanging over the pommel, but it was a habit of his to deny
+himself, as far as possible, till his horse could drink also. Like an
+Indian, Slone ate and drank but little.
+
+It took four hours of steady trotting to reach the middle and bottom of
+that wide, flat valley. A network of washes cut up the whole center of
+it, and they were all as dry as bleached bone. To cross these Slone had
+only to keep Wildfire's trail. And it was proof of Nagger's quality
+that he did not have to veer from the stallion's course.
+
+It was hot down in the lowland. The heat struck up, reflected from the
+sand. But it was a March sun, and no more than pleasant to Slone. The
+wind rose, however, and blew dust and sand in the faces of horse and
+rider. Except lizards, Slone did not see any living things.
+
+Miles of low greasewood and sparse yellow sage led to the first almost
+imperceptible rise of the valley floor on that side. The distant cedars
+beckoned to Slone. He was not patient, because he was on the trail of
+Wildfire; but, nevertheless, the hours seemed short.
+
+Slone had no past to think about, and the future held nothing except a
+horse, and so his thoughts revolved the possibilities connected with
+this chase of Wildfire. The chase was hopeless in such country as he
+was traversing, and if Wildfire chose to roam around valleys like this
+one Slone would fail utterly. But the stallion had long ago left his
+band of horses, and then, one by one his favorite consorts, and now he
+was alone, headed with unerring instinct for wild, untrammeled ranges.
+He had been used to the pure, cold water and the succulent grass of the
+cold desert uplands. Assuredly he would not tarry in such barren lands
+as these.
+
+For Slone an ever-present and growing fascination lay in Wildfire's
+clear, sharply defined tracks. It was as if every hoof-mark told him
+something. Once, far up the interminable ascent, he found on a
+ridge-top tracks showing where Wildfire had halted and turned.
+
+"Ha, Nagger!" cried Slone, exultingly. "Look there! He's begun facin'
+about. He's wonderin' if we're still after him. He's worried.... But
+we'll keep out of sight--a day behind."
+
+When Slone reached the cedars the sun was low down in the west. He
+looked back across the fifty miles of valley to the colored cliffs and
+walls. He seemed to be above them now, and the cool air, with tang of
+cedar and juniper, strengthened the impression that he had climbed high.
+
+A mile or more ahead of him rose a gray cliff with breaks in it and a
+line of dark cedars or pinyons on the level rims. He believed these
+breaks to be the mouths of canyons, and so it turned out. Wildfire's
+trail led into the mouth of a narrow canyon with very steep and high
+walls. Nagger snorted his perception of water, and the mustang
+whistled. Wildfire's tracks led to a point under the wall where a
+spring gushed forth. There were mountain-lion and deer tracks also, as
+well as those of smaller game.
+
+Slone made camp here. The mustang was tired. But Nagger, upon taking a
+long drink, rolled in the grass as if he had just begun the trip. After
+eating, Slone took his rifle and went out to look for deer. But there
+appeared to be none at hand. He came across many lion tracks and saw,
+with apprehension, where one had taken Wildfire's trail. Wildfire had
+grazed up the canyon, keeping on and on, and he was likely to go miles
+in a night. Slone reflected that as small as were his own chances of
+getting Wildfire, they were still better than those of a mountain-lion.
+Wildfire was the most cunning of all animals--a wild stallion; his
+speed and endurance were incomparable; his scent as keen as those
+animals that relied wholly upon scent to warn them of danger, and as
+for sight, it was Slone's belief that no hoofed creature, except the
+mountain-sheep used to high altitudes, could see as far as a wild horse.
+
+It bothered Slone a little that he was getting into a lion country.
+Nagger showed nervousness, something unusual for him. Slone tied both
+horses with long halters and stationed them on patches of thick grass.
+Then he put a cedar stump on the fire and went to sleep. Upon awakening
+and going to the spring he was somewhat chagrined to see that deer had
+come down to drink early. Evidently they were numerous. A lion country
+was always a deer country, for the lions followed the deer.
+
+Slone was packed and saddled and on his way before the sun reddened the
+canyon wall. He walked the horses. From time to time he saw signs of
+Wildfire's consistent progress. The canyon narrowed and the walls grew
+lower and the grass increased. There was a decided ascent all the time.
+Slone could find no evidence that the canyon had ever been traveled by
+hunters or Indians. The day was pleasant and warm and still. Every once
+in a while a little breath of wind would bring a fragrance of cedar and
+pinyon, and a sweet hint of pine and sage. At every turn he looked
+ahead, expecting to see the green of pine and the gray of sage. Toward
+the middle of the afternoon, coming to a place where Wildfire had taken
+to a trot, he put Nagger to that gait, and by sundown had worked up to
+where the canyon was only a shallow ravine. And finally it turned once
+more, to lose itself in a level where straggling pines stood high above
+the cedars, and great, dark-green silver spruces stood above the pines.
+And here were patches of sage, fresh and pungent, and long reaches of
+bleached grass. It was the edge of a forest. Wildfire's trail went on.
+Slone came at length to a group of pines, and here he found the remains
+of a camp-fire, and some flint arrow-heads. Indians had been in there,
+probably having come from the opposite direction to Slone's. This
+encouraged him, for where Indians could hunt so could he. Soon he was
+entering a forest where cedars and pinyons and pines began to grow
+thickly. Presently he came upon a faintly defined trail, just a dim,
+dark line even to an experienced eye. But it was a trail, and Wildfire
+had taken it.
+
+Slone halted for the night. The air was cold. And the dampness of it
+gave him an idea there were snow-banks somewhere not far distant. The
+dew was already heavy on the grass. He hobbled the horses and put a
+bell on Nagger. A bell might frighten lions that had never heard one.
+Then he built a fire and cooked his meal.
+
+It had been long since he had camped high up among the pines. The sough
+of the wind pleased him, like music. There had begun to be prospects of
+pleasant experience along with the toil of chasing Wildfire. He was
+entering new and strange and beautiful country. How far might the chase
+take him? He did not care. He was not sleepy, but even if he had been
+it developed that he must wait till the coyotes ceased their barking
+round his camp-fire. They came so close that he saw their gray shadows
+in the gloom. But presently they wearied of yelping at him and went
+away. After that the silence, broken only by the wind as it roared and
+lulled, seemed beautiful to Slone. He lost completely that sense of
+vague regret which had remained with him, and he forgot the Stewarts.
+And suddenly he felt absolutely free, alone, with nothing behind to
+remember, with wild, thrilling, nameless life before him. Just then the
+long mourn of a timber wolf wailed in with the wind. Seldom had he
+heard the cry of one of those night wanderers. There was nothing like
+it--no sound like it to fix in the lone camper's heart the great
+solitude and the wild.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+In the early morning when all was gray and the big, dark pines were
+shadowy specters, Slone was awakened by the cold. His hands were so
+numb that he had difficulty starting a fire. He stood over the blaze,
+warming them. The air was nipping, clear and thin, and sweet with
+frosty fragrance.
+
+Daylight came while he was in the midst of his morning meal. A white
+frost covered the ground and crackled under his feet as he went out to
+bring in the horses. He saw fresh deer tracks. Then he went back to
+camp for his rifle. Keeping a sharp lookout for game, he continued his
+search for the horses.
+
+The forest was open and park-like. There were no fallen trees or
+evidences of fire. Presently he came to a wide glade in the midst of
+which Nagger and the pack-mustang were grazing with a herd of deer. The
+size of the latter amazed Slone. The deer he had hunted back on the
+Sevier range were much smaller than these. Evidently these were mule
+deer, closely allied to the elk. They were so tame they stood facing
+him curiously, with long ears erect. It was sheer murder to kill a deer
+standing and watching like that, but Slone was out of meat and hungry
+and facing a long, hard trip. He shot a buck, which leaped
+spasmodically away, trying to follow the herd, and fell at the edge of
+the glade. Slone cut out a haunch, and then, catching the horses, he
+returned to camp, where he packed and saddled, and at once rode out on
+the dim trail.
+
+The wildness of the country he was entering was evident in the fact
+that as he passed the glade where he had shot the deer a few minutes
+before, there were coyotes quarreling over the carcass.
+
+Stone could see ahead and on each side several hundred yards, and
+presently he ascertained that the forest floor was not so level as he
+had supposed. He had entered a valley or was traversing a wide, gently
+sloping pass. He went through thickets of juniper, and had to go around
+clumps of quaking aspen. The pines grew larger and farther apart.
+Cedars and pinyons had been left behind, and he had met with no silver
+spruces after leaving camp. Probably that point was the height of a
+divide. There were banks of snow in some of the hollows on the north
+side. Evidently the snow had very recently melted, and it was evident
+also that the depth of snow through here had been fully ten feet,
+judging from the mutilation of the juniper-trees where the deer,
+standing on the hard, frozen crust, had browsed upon the branches.
+
+The quiet of the forest thrilled Slone. And the only movement was the
+occasional gray flash of a deer or coyote across a glade. No birds of
+any species crossed Stone's sight. He came, presently, upon a lion
+track in the trail, made probably a day before. Slone grew curious
+about it, seeing how it held, as he was holding, to Wildfire's tracks.
+After a mile or so he made sure the lion had been trailing the
+stallion, and for a second he felt a cold contraction of his heart.
+Already he loved Wildfire, and by virtue of all this toil of travel
+considered the wild horse his property.
+
+"No lion could ever get close to Wildfire," he soliloquized, with a
+short laugh. Of that he was absolutely certain.
+
+The sun rose, melting the frost, and a breath of warm air, laden with
+the scent of pine, moved heavily under the huge, yellow trees. Slone
+passed a point where the remains of an old camp-fire and a pile of deer
+antlers were further proof that Indians visited this plateau to hunt.
+From this camp broader, more deeply defined trails led away to the
+south and east. Slone kept to the east trail, in which Wildfire's
+tracks and those of the lion showed clearly. It was about the middle of
+the forenoon when the tracks of the stallion and lion left the trail to
+lead up a little draw where grass grew thick. Slone followed, reading
+the signs of Wildfire's progress, and the action of his pursuer, as
+well as if he had seen them. Here the stallion had plowed into a
+snow-bank, eating a hole two feet deep; then he had grazed around a
+little; then on and on; there his splendid tracks were deep in the soft
+earth. Slone knew what to expect when the track of the lion veered from
+those of the horse, and he followed the lion tracks. The ground was
+soft from the late melting of snow, and Nagger sunk deep. The lion left
+a plain track. Here he stole steadily along; there he left many tracks
+at a point where he might have halted to make sure of his scent. He was
+circling on the trail of the stallion, with cunning intent of ambush.
+The end of this slow, careful stalk of the lion, as told in his tracks,
+came upon the edge of a knoll where he had crouched to watch and wait.
+
+From this perch he had made a magnificent spring--Slone estimating it
+to be forty feet--but he had missed the stallion. There were Wildfire's
+tracks again, slow and short, and then deep and sharp where in the
+impetus of fright he had sprung out of reach. A second leap of the
+lion, and then lessening bounds, and finally an abrupt turn from
+Wildfire's trail told the futility of that stalk. Slone made certain
+that Wildfire was so keen that as he grazed along he had kept to open
+ground.
+
+Wildfire had run for a mile, then slowed down to a trot, and he had
+circled to get back to the trail he had left. Slone believed the horse
+was just so intelligent. At any rate, Wildfire struck the trail again,
+and turned at right angles to follow it.
+
+Here the forest floor appeared perfectly level. Patches of snow became
+frequent, and larger as Slone went on. At length the patches closed up,
+and soon extended as far as he could see. It was soft, affording
+difficult travel. Slone crossed hundreds of deer tracks, and the trail
+he was on eventually became a deer runway.
+
+Presently, far down one of the aisles between the great pines Slone saw
+what appeared to be a yellow cliff, far away. It puzzled him. And as he
+went on he received the impression that the forest dropped out of sight
+ahead. Then the trees grew thicker, obstructing his view. Presently the
+trail became soggy and he had to help his horse. The mustang floundered
+in the soft snow and earth. Cedars and pinyons appeared again, making
+travel still more laborious.
+
+All at once there came to Slone a strange consciousness of light and
+wind and space and void. On the instant his horse halted with a snort.
+Slone quickly looked up. Had he come to the end of the world? An abyss,
+a canyon, yawned beneath him, beyond all comparison in its greatness.
+His keen eye, educated to desert distance and dimension, swept down and
+across, taking in the tremendous truth, before it staggered his
+comprehension. But a second sweeping glance, slower, becoming
+intoxicated with what it beheld, saw gigantic cliff-steps and yellow
+slopes dotted with cedars, leading down to clefts filled with purple
+smoke, and these led on and on to a ragged red world of rock, bare,
+shining, bold, uplifted in mesa, dome, peak, and crag, clear and
+strange in the morning light, still and sleeping like death.
+
+This, then, was the great canyon, which had seemed like a hunter's
+fable rather than truth. Slone's sight dimmed, blurring the spectacle,
+and he found that his eyes had filled with tears. He wiped them away
+and looked again and again, until he was confounded by the vastness and
+the grandeur and the vague sadness of the scene. Nothing he had ever
+looked at had affected him like this canyon, although the Stewarts had
+tried to prepare him for it.
+
+It was the horse-hunter's passion that reminded him of his pursuit. The
+deer trail led down through a break in the wall. Only a few rods of it
+could be seen. This trail was passable, even though choked with snow.
+But the depth beyond this wall seemed to fascinate Slone and hold him
+back, used as he was to desert trails. Then the clean mark of
+Wildfire's hoof brought back the old thrill.
+
+"This place fits you, Wildfire," muttered Slone, dismounting.
+
+He started down, leading Nagger. The mustang followed. Slone kept to
+the wall side of the trail, fearing the horses might slip. The snow
+held firmly at first and Slone had no trouble. The gap in the rim-rock
+widened to a slope thickly grown over with cedars and pinyons and
+manzanita. This growth made the descent more laborious, yet afforded
+means at least for Slone to go down with less danger. There was no
+stopping. Once started, the horses had to keep on. Slone saw the
+impossibility of ever climbing out while that snow was there. The trail
+zigzagged down and down. Very soon the yellow wall hung tremendously
+over him, straight up. The snow became thinner and softer. The horses
+began to slip. They slid on their haunches. Fortunately the slope grew
+less steep, and Slone could see below where it reached out to
+comparatively level ground. Still, a mishap might yet occur. Slone kept
+as close to Nagger as possible, helping him whenever he could do it.
+The mustang slipped, rolled over, and then slipped past Slone, went
+down the slope to bring up in a cedar. Slone worked down to him and
+extricated him. Then the huge Nagger began to slide. Snow and loose
+rock slid with him, and so did Slone. The little avalanche stopped of
+its own accord, and then Slone dragged Nagger on down and down,
+presently to come to the end of the steep descent. Slone looked up to
+see that he had made short work of a thousand-foot slope. Here cedars
+and pinyons grew thickly enough to make a forest. The snow thinned out
+to patches, and then failed. But the going remained bad for a while as
+the horses sank deep in a soft red earth. This eventually grew more
+solid and finally dry. Slone worked out of the cedars to what appeared
+a grassy plateau inclosed by the great green-and-white slope with its
+yellow wall over hanging, and distant mesas and cliffs. Here his view
+was restricted. He was down on the first bench of the great canyon. And
+there was the deer trail, a well-worn path keeping to the edge of the
+slope. Slone came to a deep cut in the earth, and the trail headed it,
+where it began at the last descent of the slope. It was the source of a
+canyon. He could look down to see the bare, worn rock, and a hundred
+yards from where he stood the earth was washed from its rims and it
+began to show depth and something of that ragged outline which told of
+violence of flood. The trail headed many canyons like this, all running
+down across this bench, disappearing, dropping invisibly. The trail
+swung to the left under the great slope, and then presently it climbed
+to a higher bench. Here were brush and grass and huge patches of sage,
+so pungent that it stung Slone's nostrils. Then he went down again,
+this time to come to a clear brook lined by willows. Here the horses
+drank long and Slone refreshed himself. The sun had grown hot. There
+was fragrance of flowers he could not see and a low murmur of a
+waterfall that was likewise invisible. For most of the time his view
+was shut off, but occasionally he reached a point where through some
+break he saw towers gleaming red in the sun. A strange place, a place
+of silence, and smoky veils in the distance. Time passed swiftly.
+Toward the waning of the afternoon he began to climb to what appeared
+to be a saddle of land, connecting the canyon wall on the left with a
+great plateau, gold-rimmed and pine-fringed, rising more and more in
+his way as he advanced. At sunset Slone was more shut in than for
+several hours. He could tell the time was sunset by the golden light on
+the cliff wall again overhanging him. The slope was gradual up to this
+pass to the saddle, and upon coming to a spring, and the first
+pine-trees, he decided to halt for a camp. The mustang was almost
+exhausted.
+
+Thereupon he hobbled the horses in the luxuriant grass round the
+spring, and then unrolled his pack. Once as dusk came stealing down,
+while he was eating his meal, Nagger whistled in fright. Slone saw a
+gray, pantherish form gliding away into the shadows. He took a quick
+shot at it, but missed.
+
+"It's a lion country, all right," he said. And then he set about
+building a big fire on the other side of the grassy plot, so to have
+the horses between fires. He cut all the venison into thin strips, and
+spent an hour roasting them. Then he lay down to rest, and he said:
+"Wonder where Wildfire is to-night? Am I closer to him? Where's he
+headin' for?"
+
+The night was warm and still. It was black near the huge cliff, and
+overhead velvety blue, with stars of white fire. It seemed to him that
+he had become more thoughtful and observing of the aspects of his wild
+environment, and he felt a welcome consciousness of loneliness. Then
+sleep came to him and the night seemed short. In the gray dawn he arose
+refreshed.
+
+The horses were restive. Nagger snorted a welcome. Evidently they had
+passed an uneasy night. Slone found lion tracks at the spring and in
+sandy places. Presently he was on his way up to the notch between the
+great wall and the plateau. A growth of thick scrub-oak made travel
+difficult. It had not appeared far up to that saddle, but it was far.
+There were straggling pine-trees and huge rocks that obstructed his
+gaze. But once up he saw that the saddle was only a narrow ridge,
+curved to slope up on both sides.
+
+Straight before Slone and under him opened the canyon, blazing and
+glorious along the peaks and ramparts, where the rising sun struck,
+misty and smoky and shadowy down in those mysterious depths.
+
+It took an effort not to keep on gazing. But Slone turned to the grim
+business of his pursuit. The trail he saw leading down had been made by
+Indians. It was used probably once a year by them; and also by wild
+animals, and it was exceedingly steep and rough. Wildfire had paced to
+and fro along the narrow ridge of that saddle, making many tracks,
+before he had headed down again. Slone imagined that the great stallion
+had been daunted by the tremendous chasm, but had finally faced it,
+meaning to put this obstacle between him and his pursuers. It never
+occurred to Slone to attribute less intelligence to Wildfire than that.
+So, dismounting, Slone took Nagger's bridle and started down. The
+mustang with the pack was reluctant. He snorted and whistled and pawed
+the earth. But he would not be left alone, so he followed.
+
+The trail led down under cedars that fringed a precipice. Slone was
+aware of this without looking. He attended only to the trail and to his
+horse. Only an Indian could have picked out that course, and it was
+cruel to put a horse to it. But Nagger was powerful, sure-footed, and
+he would go anywhere that Slone led him. Gradually Slone worked down
+and away from the bulging rim-wall. It was hard, rough work, and risky
+because it could not be accomplished slowly. Brush and rocks, loose
+shale and weathered slope, long, dusty inclines of yellow earth, and
+jumbles of stone--these made bad going for miles of slow, zigzag trail
+down out of the cedars. Then the trail entered what appeared to be a
+ravine.
+
+That ravine became a canyon. At its head it was a dry wash, full of
+gravel and rocks. It began to cut deep into the bowels of the earth. It
+shut out sight of the surrounding walls and peaks. Water appeared from
+under a cliff and, augmented by other springs, became a brook. Hot,
+dry, and barren at its beginning, this cleft became cool and shady and
+luxuriant with grass and flowers and amber moss with silver blossoms.
+The rocks had changed color from yellow to deep red. Four hours of
+turning and twisting, endlessly down and down, over boulders and banks
+and every conceivable roughness of earth and rock, finished the
+pack-mustang; and Slone mercifully left him in a long reach of canyon
+where grass and water never failed. In this place Slone halted for the
+noon hour, letting Nagger have his fill of the rich grazing. Nagger's
+three days in grassy upland, despite the continuous travel by day, had
+improved him. He looked fat, and Slone had not yet caught the horse
+resting. Nagger was iron to endure. Here Slone left all the outfit
+except what was on his saddle, and the sack containing the few pounds
+of meat and supplies, and the two utensils. This sack he tied on the
+back of his saddle, and resumed his journey.
+
+Presently he came to a place where Wildfire had doubled on his trail
+and had turned up a side canyon. The climb out was hard on Slone, if
+not on Nagger. Once up, Slone found himself upon a wide, barren plateau
+of glaring red rock and clumps of greasewood and cactus. The plateau
+was miles wide, shut in by great walls and mesas of colored rock. The
+afternoon sun beat down fiercely. A blast of wind, as if from a
+furnace, swept across the plateau, and it was laden with red dust.
+Slone walked here, where he could have ridden. And he made several
+miles of up-and-down progress over this rough plateau. The great walls
+of the opposite side of the canyon loomed appreciably closer. What,
+Slone wondered, was at the bottom of this rent in the earth? The great
+desert river was down there, of course, but he knew nothing of it.
+Would that turn back Wildfire? Slone thought grimly how he had always
+claimed Nagger to be part fish and part bird. Wildfire was not going to
+escape.
+
+By and by only isolated mescal plants with long, yellow-plumed spears
+broke the bare monotony of the plateau. And Slone passed from red sand
+and gravel to a red, soft shale, and from that to hard, red rock. Here
+Wildfire's tracks were lost, the first time in seven weeks. But Slone
+had his direction down that plateau with the cleavage lines of canyons
+to right and left. At times Slone found a vestige of the old Indian
+trail, and this made him doubly sure of being right. He did not need to
+have Wildfire's tracks. He let Nagger pick the way, and the horse made
+no mistake in finding the line of least resistance. But that grew
+harder and harder. This bare rock, like a file, would soon wear
+Wildfire's hoofs thin. And Slone rejoiced. Perhaps somewhere down in
+this awful chasm he and Nagger would have it out with the stallion.
+Slone began to look far ahead, beginning to believe that he might see
+Wildfire. Twice he had seen Wildfire, but only at a distance. Then he
+had resembled a running streak of fire, whence his name, which Slone
+had given him.
+
+This bare region of rock began to be cut up into gullies. It was
+necessary to head them or to climb in and out. Miles of travel really
+meant little progress straight ahead. But Slone kept on. He was hot and
+Nagger was hot, and that made hard work easier. Sometimes on the wind
+came a low thunder. Was it a storm or an avalanche slipping or falling
+water? He could not tell. The sound was significant and haunting.
+
+Of one thing he was sure--that he could not have found his back-trail.
+But he divined he was never to retrace his steps on this journey. The
+stretch of broken plateau before him grew wilder and bolder of outline,
+darker in color, weirder in aspect, and progress across it grew slower,
+more dangerous. There were many places Nagger should not have been put
+to--where a slip meant a broken leg. But Slone could not turn back. And
+something besides an indomitable spirit kept him going. Again the sound
+resembling thunder assailed his ears, louder this time. The plateau
+appeared to be ending in a series of great capes or promontories. Slone
+feared he would soon come out upon a promontory from which he might see
+the impossibility of further travel. He felt relieved down in the
+gullies, where he could not see far. He climbed out of one, presently,
+from which there extended a narrow ledge with a slant too perilous for
+any horse. He stepped out upon that with far less confidence than
+Nagger. To the right was a bulge of low wall, and a few feet to the
+left a dark precipice. The trail here was faintly outlined, and it was
+six inches wide and slanting as well. It seemed endless to Slone, that
+ledge. He looked only down at his feet and listened to Nagger's steps.
+The big horse trod carefully, but naturally, and he did not slip. That
+ledge extended in a long curve, turning slowly away from the precipice,
+and ascending a little at the further end. Slone, drew a deep breath of
+relief when he led Nagger up on level rock.
+
+Suddenly a strange yet familiar sound halted Slone, as if he had been
+struck. The wild, shrill, high-pitched, piercing whistle of a stallion!
+Nagger neighed a blast in reply and pounded the rock with his iron-shod
+hoofs. With a thrill Slone looked ahead.
+
+There, some few hundred yards distant, on a promontory, stood a red
+horse.
+
+"My Lord! ... It's Wildfire!" breathed Slone, tensely.
+
+He could not believe his sight. He imagined he was dreaming. But as
+Nagger stamped and snorted defiance Slone looked with fixed and keen
+gaze, and knew that beautiful picture was no lie.
+
+Wildfire was as red as fire. His long mane, wild in the wind, was like
+a whipping, black-streaked flame. Silhouetted there against that canyon
+background he seemed gigantic, a demon horse, ready to plunge into
+fiery depths. He was looking back over his shoulder, his head very
+high, and every line of him was instinct with wildness. Again he sent
+out that shrill, air-splitting whistle. Slone understood it to be a
+clarion call to Nagger. If Nagger had been alone Wildfire would have
+killed him. The red stallion was a killer of horses. All over the Utah
+ranges he had left the trail of a murderer. Nagger understood this,
+too, for he whistled back in rage and terror. It took an iron arm to
+hold him. Then Wildfire plunged, apparently down, and vanished from
+Slone's sight.
+
+Slone hurried onward, to be blocked by a huge crack in the rocky
+plateau. This he had to head. And then another and like obstacle
+checked his haste to reach that promontory. He was forced to go more
+slowly. Wildfire had been close only as to sight. And this was the
+great canyon that dwarfed distance and magnified proximity. Climbing
+down and up, toiling on, he at last learned patience. He had seen
+Wildfire at close range. That was enough. So he plodded on, once more
+returning to careful regard of Nagger. It took an hour of work to reach
+the point where Wildfire had disappeared.
+
+A promontory indeed it was, overhanging a valley a thousand feet below.
+A white torrent of a stream wound through it. There were lines of green
+cottonwoods following the winding course. Then Slone saw Wildfire
+slowly crossing the flat toward the stream. He had gone down that
+cliff, which to Slone looked perpendicular.
+
+Wildfire appeared to be walking lame. Slone, making sure of this,
+suffered a pang. Then, when the significance of such lameness dawned
+upon him he whooped his wild joy and waved his hat. The red stallion
+must have heard, for he looked up. Then he went on again and waded into
+the stream, where he drank long. When he started to cross, the swift
+current drove him back in several places. The water wreathed white
+around him. But evidently it was not deep, and finally he crossed. From
+the other side he looked up again at Nagger and Slone, and, going on,
+he soon was out of sight in the cottonwoods.
+
+"How to get down!" muttered Slone.
+
+There was a break in the cliff wall, a bare stone slant where horses
+had gone down and come up. That was enough for Slone to know. He would
+have attempted the descent if he were sure no other horse but Wildfire
+had ever gone down there. But Slone's hair began to rise stiff on his
+head. A horse like Wildfire, and mountain sheep and Indian ponies, were
+all very different from Nagger. The chances were against Nagger.
+
+"Come on, old boy. If I can do it, you can," he said.
+
+Slone had never seen a trail as perilous as this. He was afraid for his
+horse. A slip there meant death. The way Nagger trembled in every
+muscle showed his feelings. But he never flinched. He would follow
+Slone anywhere, providing Slone rode him or led him. And here, as
+riding was impossible, Slone went before. If the horse slipped there
+would be a double tragedy, for Nagger would knock his master off the
+cliff. Slone set his teeth and stepped down. He did not let Nagger see
+his fear. He was taking the greatest risk he had ever run.
+
+The break in the wall led to a ledge, and the ledge dropped from step
+to step, and these had bare, slippery slants between. Nagger was
+splendid on a bad trail. He had methods peculiar to his huge build and
+great weight. He crashed down over the stone steps, both front hoofs at
+once. The slants he slid down on his haunches with his forelegs stiff
+and the iron shoes scraping. He snorted and heaved and grew wet with
+sweat. He tossed his head at some of the places. But he never hesitated
+and it was impossible for him to go slowly. Whenever Slone came to
+corrugated stretches in the trail he felt grateful. But these were few.
+The rock was like smooth red iron. Slone had never seen such hard rock.
+It took him long to realize that it was marble. His heart seemed a
+tense, painful knot in his breast, as if it could not beat, holding
+back in the strained suspense. But Nagger never jerked on the bridle.
+He never faltered. Many times he slipped, often with both front feet,
+but never with all four feet. So he did not fall. And the red wall
+began to loom above Slone. Then suddenly he seemed brought to a point
+where it was impossible to descend. It was a round bulge, slanting
+fearfully, with only a few little rough surfaces to hold a foot.
+Wildfire had left a broad, clear-swept mark at that place, and red
+hairs on some of the sharp points. He had slid down. Below was an
+offset that fortunately prevented further sliding, Slone started to
+walk down this place, but when Nagger began to slide Slone had to let
+go the bridle and jump. Both he and the horse landed safely. Luck was
+with them. And they went on, down and down, to reach the base of the
+great wall, scraped and exhausted, wet with sweat, but unhurt. As Slone
+gazed upward he felt the impossibility of believing what he knew to be
+true. He hugged and petted the horse. Then he led on to the roaring
+stream.
+
+It was green water white with foam. Slone waded in and found the water
+cool and shallow and very swift. He had to hold to Nagger to keep from
+being swept downstream. They crossed in safety. There in the sand
+showed Wildfire's tracks. And here were signs of another Indian camp,
+half a year old.
+
+The shade of the cottonwoods was pleasant. Slone found this valley
+oppressively hot. There was no wind and the sand blistered his feet
+through his boots. Wildfire held to the Indian trail that had guided
+him down into this wilderness of worn rock. And that trail crossed the
+stream at every turn of the twisting, narrow valley. Slone enjoyed
+getting into the water. He hung his gun over the pommel and let the
+water roll him. A dozen times he and Nagger forded the rushing torrent.
+Then they came to a box-like closing of the valley to canyon walls, and
+here the trail evidently followed the stream bed. There was no other
+way. Slone waded in, and stumbled, rolled, and floated ahead of the
+sturdy horse. Nagger was wet to his breast, but he did not fall. This
+gulch seemed full of a hollow rushing roar. It opened out into a wide
+valley. And Wildfire's tracks took to the left side and began to climb
+the slope.
+
+Here the traveling was good, considering what had been passed. Once up
+out of the valley floor Slone saw Wildfire far ahead, high on the
+slope. He did not appear to be limping, but he was not going fast.
+Slone watched as he climbed. What and where would be the end of this
+chase?
+
+Sometimes Wildfire was plain in his sight for a moment, but usually he
+was hidden by rocks. The slope was one great talus, a jumble of
+weathered rock, fallen from what appeared a mountain of red and yellow
+wall. Here the heat of the sun fell upon him like fire. The rocks were
+so hot Slone could not touch them with bare hand. The close of the
+afternoon was approaching, and this slope was interminably long. Still,
+it was not steep, and the trail was good.
+
+At last from the height of slope Wildfire appeared, looking back and
+down. Then he was gone. Slone plodded upward. Long before he reached
+that summit be heard the dull rumble of the river. It grew to be a
+roar, yet it seemed distant. Would the great desert river stop Wildfire
+in his flight? Slone doubted it. He surmounted the ridge, to find the
+canyon opening in a tremendous gap, and to see down, far down, a
+glittering, sun-blasted slope merging into a deep, black gulch where a
+red river swept and chafed and roared.
+
+Somehow the river was what he had expected to see. A force that had cut
+and ground this canyon could have been nothing but a river like that.
+The trail led down, and Slone had no doubt that it crossed the river
+and led up out of the canyon. He wanted to stay there and gaze
+endlessly and listen. At length he began the descent. As he proceeded
+it seemed that the roar of the river lessened. He could not understand
+why this was so. It took half an hour to reach the last level, a
+ghastly, black, and iron-ribbed canyon bed, with the river splitting
+it. He had not had a glimpse of Wildfire on this side of the divide,
+but he found his tracks, and they led down off the last level, through
+a notch in the black bank of marble to a sand-bar and the river.
+
+Wildfire had walked straight off the sand into the water. Slone studied
+the river and shore. The water ran slow, heavily, in sluggish eddies.
+From far up the canyon came the roar of a rapid, and from below the
+roar of another, heavier and closer. The river appeared tremendous, in
+ways Slone felt rather than realized, yet it was not swift. Studying
+the black, rough wall of rock above him, he saw marks where the river
+had been sixty feet higher than where he stood on the sand. It was low,
+then. How lucky for him that he had gotten there before flood season!
+He believed Wildfire had crossed easily, and he knew Nagger could make
+it. Then he piled and tied his supplies and weapons high on the saddle,
+to keep them dry, and looked for a place to take to the water.
+
+Wildfire had sunk deep before reaching the edge. Manifestly he had
+lunged the last few feet. Slone found a better place, and waded in,
+urging Nagger. The big horse plunged, almost going under, and began to
+swim. Slone kept up-stream beside him. He found, presently, that the
+water was thick and made him tired, so it was necessary to grasp a
+stirrup and be towed. The river appeared only a few hundred feet wide,
+but probably it was wider than it looked. Nagger labored heavily near
+the opposite shore; still, he landed safely upon a rocky bank. There
+were patches of sand in which Wildfire's tracks showed so fresh that
+the water had not yet dried out of them.
+
+Slone rested his horse before attempting to climb out of that split in
+the rock. However, Wildfire had found an easy ascent. On this side of
+the canyon the bare rock did not predominate. A clear trail led up a
+dusty, gravelly slope, upon which scant greasewood and cactus appeared.
+Half an hour's climbing brought Slone to where he could see that he was
+entering a vast valley, sloping up and narrowing to a notch in the dark
+cliffs, above which towered the great red wall and about that the
+slopes of cedar and the yellow rim-rock.
+
+And scarcely a mile distant, bright in the westering sunlight, shone
+the red stallion, moving slowly.
+
+Slone pressed on steadily. Just before dark he came to an ideal spot to
+camp. The valley had closed up, so that the lofty walls cast shadows
+that met. A clump of cottonwoods surrounding a spring, abundance of
+rich grass, willows and flowers lining the banks, formed an oasis in
+the bare valley. Slone was tired out from the day of ceaseless toil
+down and up, and he could scarcely keep his eyes open. But he tried to
+stay awake. The dead silence of the valley, the dry fragrance, the
+dreaming walls, the advent of night low down, when up on the ramparts
+the last red rays of the sun lingered, the strange loneliness--these
+were sweet and comforting to him.
+
+And that night's sleep was as a moment. He opened his eyes to see the
+crags and towers and peaks and domes, and the lofty walls of that vast,
+broken chaos of canyons across the river. They were now emerging from
+the misty gray of dawn, growing pink and lilac and purple under the
+rising sun.
+
+He arose and set about his few tasks, which, being soon finished,
+allowed him an early start.
+
+Wildfire had grazed along no more than a mile in the lead. Slone looked
+eagerly up the narrowing canyon, but he was not rewarded by a sight of
+the stallion. As he progressed up a gradually ascending trail he became
+aware of the fact that the notch he had long looked up to was where the
+great red walls closed in and almost met. And the trail zigzagged up
+this narrow vent, so steep that only a few steps could be taken without
+rest. Slone toiled up for an hour--an age--till he was wet, burning,
+choked, with a great weight on his chest. Yet still he was only
+half-way up that awful break between the walls. Sometimes he could have
+tossed a stone down upon a part of the trail, only a few rods below,
+yet many, many weary steps of actual toil. As he got farther up the
+notch widened. What had been scarcely visible from the valley below was
+now colossal in actual dimensions. The trail was like a twisted mile of
+thread between two bulging mountain walls leaning their ledges and
+fronts over this tilted pass.
+
+Slone rested often. Nagger appreciated this and heaved gratefully at
+every halt. In this monotonous toil Slone forgot the zest of his
+pursuit. And when Nagger suddenly snorted in fright Slone was not
+prepared for what he saw.
+
+Above him ran a low, red wall, around which evidently the trail led. At
+the curve, which was a promontory, scarcely a hundred feet in an
+airline above him, he saw something red moving, bobbing, coming out
+into view. It was a horse.
+
+Wildfire--no farther away than the length of three lassoes!
+
+There he stood looking down. He fulfilled all of Slone's dreams. Only
+he was bigger. But he was so magnificently proportioned that he did not
+seem heavy. His coat was shaggy and red. It was not glossy. The color
+was what made him shine. His mane was like a crest, mounting, then
+failing low. Slone had never seen so much muscle on a horse. Yet his
+outline was graceful, beautiful. The head was indeed that of the
+wildest of all wild creatures--a stallion born wild--and it was
+beautiful, savage, splendid, everything but noble. Whatever Wildfire
+was, he was a devil, a murderer--he had no noble attributes. Slone
+thought that if a horse could express hate, surely Wildfire did then.
+It was certain that he did express curiosity and fury.
+
+Slone shook a gantleted fist at the stallion, as if the horse were
+human. That was a natural action for a rider of his kind. Wildfire
+turned away, showed bright against the dark background, and then
+disappeared.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+That was the last Slone saw of Wildfire for three days.
+
+It took all of this day to climb out of the canyon. The second was a
+slow march of thirty miles into a scrub cedar and pinyon forest,
+through which the great red and yellow walls of the canyon could be
+seen. That night Slone found a water-hole in a rocky pocket and a
+little grass for Nagger. The third day's travel consisted of forty
+miles or more through level pine forest, dry and odorous, but lacking
+the freshness and beauty of the forest on the north side of the canyon.
+On this south side a strange feature was that all the water, when there
+was any, ran away from the rim. Slone camped this night at a muddy pond
+in the woods, where Wildfire's tracks showed plainly.
+
+On the following day Slone rode out of the forest into a country of
+scanty cedars, bleached and stunted, and out of this to the edge of a
+plateau, from which the shimmering desert flung its vast and desolate
+distances, forbidding and menacing. This was not the desert upland
+country of Utah, but a naked and bony world of colored rock and sand--a
+painted desert of heat and wind and flying sand and waterless wastes
+and barren ranges. But it did not daunt Slone. For far down on the
+bare, billowing ridges moved a red speck, at a snail's pace, a slowly
+moving dot of color which was Wildfire.
+
+On open ground like this, Nagger, carrying two hundred and fifty
+pounds, showed his wonderful quality. He did not mind the heat nor the
+sand nor the glare nor the distance nor his burden. He did not tire. He
+was an engine of tremendous power.
+
+Slone gained upon Wildfire, and toward evening of that day he reached
+to within half a mile of the stallion. And he chose to keep that far
+behind. That night he camped where there was dry grass, but no water.
+
+Next day he followed Wildfire down and down, over the endless swell of
+rolling red ridges, bare of all but bleached white grass and meager
+greasewood, always descending in the face of that painted desert of
+bold and ragged steps. Slone made fifty miles that day, and gained the
+valley bed, where a slender stream ran thin and spread over a wide
+sandy bottom. It was salty water, but it was welcome to both man and
+beast.
+
+The following day he crossed, and the tracks of Wildfire were still wet
+on the sand-bars. The stallion was slowing down. Slone saw him, limping
+along, not far in advance. There was a ten-mile stretch of level
+ground, blown hard as rock, from which the sustenance had been
+bleached, for not a spear of grass grew there. And following that was a
+tortuous passage through a weird region of clay dunes, blue and violet
+and heliotrope and lavender, all worn smooth by rain and wind. Wildfire
+favored the soft ground now. He had deviated from his straight course.
+And he was partial to washes and dips in the earth where water might
+have lodged. And he was not now scornful of a green-scummed water-hole
+with its white margin of alkali. That night Slone made camp with
+Wildfire in plain sight. The stallion stopped when his pursuers
+stopped. And he began to graze on the same stretch with Nagger. How
+strange this seemed to Slone!
+
+Here at this camp was evidence of Indians. Wildfire had swung round to
+the north in his course. Like any pursued wild animal, he had began to
+circle. And he had pointed his nose toward the Utah he had left.
+
+Next morning Wildfire was not in sight, but he had left his tracks in
+the sand. Slone trailed him with Nagger at a trot. Toward the head of
+this sandy flat Slone came upon old corn-fields, and a broken dam where
+the water had been stored, and well-defined trails leading away to the
+right. Somewhere over there in the desert lived Indians. At this point
+Wildfire abandoned the trail he had followed for many days and cut out
+more to the north. It took all the morning hours to climb three great
+steps and benches that led up to the summit of a mesa, vast in extent.
+It turned out to be a sandy waste. The wind rose and everywhere were
+moving sheets of sand, and in the distance circular yellow dust-devils,
+rising high like waterspouts, and back down in the sun-scorched valley
+a sandstorm moved along majestically, burying the desert in its yellow
+pall.
+
+Then two more days of sand and another day of a slowly rising ground
+growing from bare to gray and gray to green, and then to the purple of
+sage and cedar--these three grinding days were toiled out with only one
+water-hole.
+
+And Wildfire was lame and in distress and Nagger was growing gaunt and
+showing strain; and Slone, haggard and black and worn, plodded miles
+and miles on foot to save his horse.
+
+Slone felt that it would be futile to put the chase to a test of speed.
+Nagger could never head that stallion. Slone meant to go on and on,
+always pushing Wildfire, keeping him tired, wearied, and worrying him,
+till a section of the country was reached where he could drive Wildfire
+into some kind of a natural trap. The pursuit seemed endless. Wildfire
+kept to open country where he could not be surprised.
+
+There came a morning when Slone climbed to a cedared plateau that rose
+for a whole day's travel, and then split into a labyrinthine maze of
+canyons. There were trees, grass, water. It was a high country, cool
+and wild, like the uplands he had left. For days he camped on
+Wildfire's trail, always relentlessly driving him, always watching for
+the trap he hoped to find. And the red stallion spent much of this time
+of flight in looking backward. Whenever Slone came in sight of him he
+had his head over his shoulder, watching. And on the soft ground of
+these canyons he had begun to recover from his lameness. But this did
+not worry Slone. Sooner or later Wildfire would go down into a
+high-walled wash, from which there would be no outlet; or he would
+wander into a box-canyon; or he would climb out on a mesa with no place
+to descend, unless he passed Slone; or he would get cornered on a soft,
+steep slope where his hoofs would sink deep and make him slow. The
+nature of the desert had changed. Slone had entered a wonderful region,
+the like of which he had not seen--a high plateau crisscrossed in every
+direction by narrow canyons with red walls a thousand feet high.
+
+And one of the strange turning canyons opened into a vast valley of
+monuments.
+
+The plateau had weathered and washed away, leaving huge sections of
+stone walls, all standing isolated, different in size and shape, but
+all clean-cut, bold, with straight lines. They stood up everywhere,
+monumental, towering, many-colored, lending a singular and beautiful
+aspect to the great green-and-gray valley, billowing away to the north,
+where dim, broken battlements mounted to the clouds.
+
+The only living thing in Slone's sight was Wildfire. He shone red down
+on the green slope.
+
+Slone's heart swelled. This was the setting for that grand horse--a
+perfect wild range. But also it seemed the last place where there might
+be any chance to trap the stallion. Still that did not alter Slone's
+purpose, though it lost to him the joy of former hopes. He rode down
+the slope, out upon the billowing floor of the valley. Wildfire looked
+back to see his pursuers, and then the solemn stillness broke to a
+wild, piercing whistle.
+
+Day after day, camping where night found him, Slone followed the
+stallion, never losing sight of him till darkness had fallen. The
+valley was immense and the monuments miles apart. But they always
+seemed close together and near him. The air magnified everything. Slone
+lost track of time. The strange, solemn, lonely days and the silent,
+lonely nights, and the endless pursuit, and the wild, weird
+valley--these completed the work of years on Slone and he became
+satisfied, unthinking, almost savage.
+
+The toil and privation had worn him down and he was like iron. His
+garments hung in tatters; his boots were ripped and soleless. Long
+since his flour had been used up, and all his supplies except the salt.
+He lived on the meat of rabbits, but they were scarce, and the time
+came when there were none. Some days he did not eat. Hunger did not
+make him suffer. He killed a desert bird now and then, and once a
+wildcat crossing the valley. Eventually he felt his strength
+diminishing, and then he took to digging out the pack-rats and cooking
+them. But these, too, were scarce. At length starvation faced Slone.
+But he knew he would not starve. Many times he had been within
+rifle-shot of Wildfire. And the grim, forbidding thought grew upon him
+that he must kill the stallion. The thought seemed involuntary, but his
+mind rejected it. Nevertheless, he knew that if he could not catch the
+stallion he would kill him. That had been the end of many a desperate
+rider's pursuit of a coveted horse.
+
+While Slone kept on his merciless pursuit, never letting Wildfire rest
+by day, time went on just as relentlessly. Spring gave way to early
+summer. The hot sun bleached the grass; water-holes failed out in the
+valley, and water could be found only in the canyons; and the dry winds
+began to blow the sand. It was a sandy valley, green and gray only at a
+distance, and out toward the north there were no monuments, and the
+slow heave of sand lifted toward the dim walls.
+
+Wildfire worked away from this open valley, back to the south end,
+where the great monuments loomed, and still farther back, where they
+grew closer, till at length some of them were joined by weathered
+ridges to the walls of the surrounding plateau. For all that Slone
+could see, Wildfire was in perfect condition. But Nagger was not the
+horse he had been. Slone realized that in one way or another the
+pursuit was narrowing down to the end.
+
+He found a water-hole at the head of a wash in a split in the walls,
+and here he let Nagger rest and graze one whole day--the first day for
+a long time that he had not kept the red stallion in sight. That day
+was marked by the good fortune of killing a rabbit, and while eating it
+his gloomy, fixed mind admitted that he was starving. He dreaded the
+next sunrise. But he could not hold it back. There, behind the dark
+monuments, standing sentinel-like, the sky lightened and reddened and
+burst into gold and pink, till out of the golden glare the sun rose
+glorious. And Slone, facing the league-long shadows of the monuments,
+rode out again into the silent, solemn day, on his hopeless quest.
+
+For a change Wildfire had climbed high up a slope of talus, through a
+narrow pass, rounded over with drifting sand. And Slone gazed down into
+a huge amphitheater full of monuments, like all that strange country. A
+basin three miles across lay beneath him. Walls and weathered slants of
+rock and steep slopes of reddish-yellow sand inclosed this oval
+depression. The floor was white, and it seemed to move gently or
+radiate with heat-waves. Studying it, Slone made out that the motion
+was caused by wind in long bleached grass. He had crossed small areas
+of this grass in different parts of the region.
+
+Wildfire's tracks led down into this basin, and presently Slone, by
+straining his eyes, made out the red spot that was the stallion.
+
+"He's lookin' to quit the country," soliloquized Slone, as he surveyed
+the scene.
+
+With keen, slow gaze Slone studied the lay of wall and slope, and when
+he had circled the huge depression he made sure that Wildfire could not
+get out except by the narrow pass through which he had gone in. Slone
+sat astride Nagger in the mouth of this pass--a wash a few yards wide,
+walled by broken, rough rock on one side and an insurmountable slope on
+the other.
+
+"If this hole was only little, now," sighed Slone, as he gazed at the
+sweeping, shimmering oval floor, "I might have a chance. But down
+there--we couldn't get near him."
+
+There was no water in that dry bowl. Slone reflected on the uselessness
+of keeping Wildfire down there, because Nagger could not go without
+water as long as Wildfire. For the first time Slone hesitated. It
+seemed merciless to Nagger to drive him down into this hot, windy hole.
+The wind blew from the west, and it swooped up the slope, hot, with the
+odor of dry, dead grass.
+
+But that hot wind stirred Slone with an idea, and suddenly he was
+tense, excited, glowing, yet grim and hard.
+
+"Wildfire, I'll make you run with your namesake in that high grass,"
+called Slone. The speech was full of bitter failure, of regret, of the
+hardness of a rider who could not give up the horse to freedom.
+
+Slone meant to ride down there and fire the long grass. In that wind
+there would indeed be wildfire to race with the red stallion. It would
+perhaps mean his death; at least it would chase him out of that hole,
+where to follow him would be useless.
+
+"I'd make you hump now to get away if I could get behind you," muttered
+Slone. He saw that if he could fire the grass on the other side the
+wind of flame would drive Wildfire straight toward him. The slopes and
+walls narrowed up to the pass, but high grass grew to within a few rods
+of where Slone stood. But it seemed impossible to get behind Wildfire.
+
+"At night--then--I could get round him," said Slone, thinking hard and
+narrowing his gaze to scan the circle of wall and slope. "Why not? ...
+No wind at night. That grass would burn slow till mornin'--till the
+wind came up--an' it's been west for days."
+
+Suddenly Slone began to pound the patient Nagger and to cry out to him
+in wild exultance.
+
+"Old horse, we've got him! ... We've got him! ... We'll put a rope on
+him before this time to-morrow!"
+
+Slone yielded to his strange, wild joy, but it did not last long, soon
+succeeding to sober, keen thought. He rode down into the bowl a mile,
+making absolutely certain that Wildfire could not climb out on that
+side. The far end, beyond the monuments, was a sheer wall of rock. Then
+he crossed to the left side. Here the sandy slope was almost too steep
+for even him to go up. And there was grass that would burn. He returned
+to the pass assured that Wildfire had at last fallen into a trap the
+like Slone had never dreamed of. The great horse was doomed to run into
+living flame or the whirling noose of a lasso.
+
+Then Slone reflected. Nagger had that very morning had his fill of good
+water--the first really satisfying drink for days. If he was rested
+that day, on the morrow he would be fit for the grueling work possibly
+in store for him. Slone unsaddled the horse and turned him loose, and
+with a snort he made down the gentle slope for the grass. Then Slone
+carried his saddle to a shady spot afforded by a slab of rock and a
+dwarf cedar, and here he composed himself to rest and watch and think
+and wait.
+
+Wildfire was plainly in sight no more than two miles away. Gradually he
+was grazing along toward the monuments and the far end of the great
+basin. Slone believed, because the place was so large, that Wildfire
+thought there was a way out on the other side or over the slopes or
+through the walls. Never before had the far-sighted stallion made a
+mistake. Slone suddenly felt the keen, stabbing fear of an outlet
+somewhere. But it left him quickly. He had studied those slopes and
+walls. Wildfire could not get out, except by the pass he had entered,
+unless he could fly.
+
+Slone lay in the shade, his head propped on his saddle, and while
+gazing down into the shimmering hollow he began to plan. He calculated
+that he must be able to carry fire swiftly across the far end of the
+basin, so that he would not be absent long from the mouth of the pass.
+Fire was always a difficult matter, since he must depend only on flint
+and steel. He decided to wait till dark, build a fire with dead cedar
+sticks, and carry a bundle of them with burning ends. He felt assured
+that the wind caused by riding would keep them burning. After he had
+lighted the grass all he had to do was to hurry back to his station and
+there await developments.
+
+The day passed slowly, and it was hot. The heat-waves rose in dark,
+wavering lines and veils from the valley. The wind blew almost a gale.
+Thin, curling sheets of sand blew up over the crests of the slopes, and
+the sound it made was a soft, silken rustling, very low. The sky was a
+steely blue above and copper close over the distant walls.
+
+That afternoon, toward the close, Slone ate the last of the meat. At
+sunset the wind died away and the air cooled. There was a strip of red
+along the wall of rock and on the tips of the monuments, and it
+lingered there for long, a strange, bright crown. Nagger was not far
+away, but Wildfire had disappeared, probably behind one of the
+monuments.
+
+When twilight fell Slone went down after Nagger and, returning with
+him, put on bridle and saddle. Then he began to search for suitable
+sticks of wood. Farther back in the pass he found stunted dead cedars,
+and from these secured enough for his purpose. He kindled a fire and
+burnt the ends of the sticks into red embers. Making a bundle of these,
+he put them under his arm, the dull, glowing ends backward, and then
+mounted his horse.
+
+It was just about dark when he faced down into the valley. When he
+reached level ground he kept to the edge of the left slope and put
+Nagger to a good trot. The grass and brush were scant here, and the
+color of the sand was light, so he had no difficulty in traveling.
+
+From time to time his horse went through grass, and its dry, crackling
+rustle, showing how it would burn, was music to Slone. Gradually the
+monuments began to loom up, bold and black against the blue sky, with
+stars seemingly hanging close over them. Slone had calculated that the
+basin was smaller than it really was, in both length and breadth. This
+worried him. Wildfire might see or hear or scent him, and make a break
+back to the pass and thus escape. Slone was glad when the huge, dark
+monuments were indistinguishable from the black, frowning wall. He had
+to go slower here, because of the darkness. But at last he reached the
+slow rise of jumbled rock that evidently marked the extent of
+weathering on that side. Here he turned to the right and rode out into
+the valley. The floor was level and thickly overgrown with long, dead
+grass and dead greasewood, as dry as tinder. It was easy to account for
+the dryness; neither snow nor rain had visited that valley for many
+months. Slone whipped one of the sticks in the wind and soon had the
+smoldering end red and showering sparks. Then he dropped the stick in
+the grass, with curious intent and a strange feeling of regret.
+
+Instantly the grass blazed with a little sputtering roar. Nagger
+snorted. "Wildfire!" exclaimed Slone. That word was a favorite one with
+riders, and now Slone used it both to call out his menace to the
+stallion and to express his feeling for that blaze, already running
+wild.
+
+Without looking back Slone rode across the valley, dropping a glowing
+stick every quarter of a mile. When he reached the other side there
+were a dozen fires behind him, burning slowly, with white smoke rising
+lazily. Then he loped Nagger along the side back to the sandy ascent,
+and on up to the mouth of the pass. There he searched for tracks.
+Wildfire had not gone out, and Slone experienced relief and exultation.
+He took up a position in the middle of the narrowest part of the pass,
+and there, with Nagger ready for anything, he once more composed
+himself to watch and wait.
+
+Far across the darkness of the valley, low down, twelve lines of fire,
+widely separated, crept toward one another. They appeared thin and
+slow, with only an occasional leaping flame. And some of the black
+spaces must have been monuments, blotting out the creeping snail-lines
+of red. Slone watched, strangely fascinated.
+
+"What do you think of that?" he said, aloud, and he meant his query for
+Wildfire.
+
+As he watched the lines perceptibly lengthened and brightened and pale
+shadows of smoke began to appear. Over at the left of the valley the
+two brightest fires, the first he had started, crept closer and closer
+together. They seemed long in covering distance. But not a breath of
+wind stirred, and besides they really might move swiftly, without
+looking so to Slone. When the two lines met a sudden and larger blaze
+rose.
+
+"Ah!" said the rider, and then he watched the other lines creeping
+together. How slowly fire moved, he thought. The red stallion would
+have every chance to run between those lines, if he dared. But a wild
+horse feared nothing like fire. This one would not run the gantlet of
+flames. Nevertheless, Slone felt more and more relieved as the lines
+closed. The hours of the night dragged past until at length one long,
+continuous line of fire spread level across the valley, its bright, red
+line broken only where the monuments of stone were silhouetted against
+it.
+
+The darkness of the valley changed. The light of the moon changed. The
+radiance of the stars changed. Either the line of fire was finding
+denser fuel to consume or it was growing appreciably closer, for the
+flames began to grow, to leap, and to flare.
+
+Slone strained his ears for the thud of hoofs on sand.
+
+The time seemed endless in its futility of results, but fleeting after
+it had passed; and he could tell how the hours fled by the
+ever-recurring need to replenish the little fire he kept burning in the
+pass.
+
+A broad belt of valley grew bright in the light, and behind it loomed
+the monuments, weird and dark, with columns of yellow and white smoke
+wreathing them.
+
+Suddenly Slone's sensitive ear vibrated to a thrilling sound. He leaned
+down to place his ear to the sand. Rapid, rhythmic beat of hoofs made
+him leap to his feet, reaching for his lasso with right hand and a gun
+with his left.
+
+Nagger lifted his head, sniffed the air, and snorted. Slone peered into
+the black belt of gloom that lay below him. It would be hard to see a
+horse there, unless he got high enough to be silhouetted against that
+line of fire now flaring to the sky. But he heard the beat of hoofs,
+swift, sharp, louder--louder. The night shadows were deceptive. That
+wonderful light confused him, made the place unreal. Was he dreaming?
+Or had the long chase and his privations unhinged his mind? He reached
+for Nagger. No! The big black was real, alive, quivering, pounding the
+sand. He scented an enemy.
+
+Once more Slone peered down into the void or what seemed a void. But
+it, too, had changed, lightened. The whole valley was brightening.
+Great palls of curling smoke rose white and yellow, to turn back as the
+monuments met their crests, and then to roll upward, blotting out the
+stars. It was such a light as he had never seen, except in dreams. Pale
+moonlight and dimmed starlight and wan dawn all vague and strange and
+shadowy under the wild and vivid light of burning grass.
+
+In the pale path before Slone, that fanlike slope of sand which opened
+down into the valley, appeared a swiftly moving black object, like a
+fleeting phantom. It was a phantom horse. Slone felt that his eyes,
+deceived by his mind, saw racing images. Many a wild chase he had lived
+in dreams on some far desert. But what was that beating in his
+ears--sharp, swift, even, rhythmic? Never had his ears played him
+false. Never had he heard things in his dreams. That running object was
+a horse and he was coming like the wind. Slone felt something grip his
+heart. All the time and endurance and pain and thirst and suspense and
+longing and hopelessness--the agony of the whole endless chase--closed
+tight on his heart in that instant.
+
+The running horse halted just in the belt of light cast by the burning
+grass. There he stood sharply defined, clear as a cameo, not a hundred
+paces from Slone. It was Wildfire.
+
+Slone uttered an involuntary cry. Thrill on thrill shot through him.
+Delight and hope and fear and despair claimed him in swift, successive
+flashes. And then again the ruling passion of a rider held him--the
+sheer glory of a grand and unattainable horse. For Slone gave up
+Wildfire in that splendid moment. How had he ever dared to believe he
+could capture that wild stallion? Slone looked and looked, filling his
+mind, regretting nothing, sure that the moment was reward for all he
+had endured.
+
+The weird lights magnified Wildfire and showed him clearly. He seemed
+gigantic. He shone black against the fire. His head was high, his mane
+flying. Behind him the fire flared and the valley-wide column of smoke
+rolled majestically upward, and the great monuments seemed to retreat
+darkly and mysteriously as the flames advanced beyond them. It was a
+beautiful, unearthly spectacle, with its silence the strangest feature.
+
+But suddenly Wildfire broke that silence with a whistle which to
+Slone's overstrained faculties seemed a blast as piercing as the
+splitting sound of lightning. And with the whistle Wildfire plunged up
+toward the pass. Slone yelled at the top of his lungs and fired his gun
+before he could terrorize the stallion and drive him back down the
+slope. Soon Wildfire became again a running black object, and then he
+disappeared.
+
+The great line of fire had gotten beyond the monuments and now
+stretched unbroken across the valley from wall to slope. Wildfire could
+never pierce that line of flames. And now Slone saw, in the paling sky
+to the east, that dawn was at hand.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Slone looked grimly glad when simultaneously with the first red flash
+of sunrise a breeze fanned his cheek. All that was needed now was a
+west wind. And here came the assurance of it.
+
+The valley appeared hazy and smoky, with slow, rolling clouds low down
+where the line of fire moved. The coming of daylight paled the blaze of
+the grass, though here and there Slone caught flickering glimpses of
+dull red flame. The wild stallion kept to the center of the valley,
+restlessly facing this way and that, but never toward the smoke. Slone
+made sure that Wildfire gradually gave ground as the line of smoke
+slowly worked toward him.
+
+Every moment the breeze freshened, grew steadier and stronger, until
+Slone saw that it began to clear the valley of the low-hanging smoke.
+There came a time when once more the blazing line extended across from
+slope to slope.
+
+Wildfire was cornered, trapped. Many times Slone nervously uncoiled and
+recoiled his lasso. Presently the great chance of his life would
+come--the hardest and most important throw he would ever have with a
+rope. He did not miss often, but then he missed sometimes, and here he
+must be swift and sure. It annoyed him that his hands perspired and
+trembled and that something weighty seemed to obstruct his breathing.
+He muttered that he was pretty much worn out, not in the best of
+condition for a hard fight with a wild horse. Still he would capture
+Wildfire; his mind was unalterably set there. He anticipated that the
+stallion would make a final and desperate rush past him; and he had his
+plan of action all outlined. What worried him was the possibility of
+Wildfire doing some unforeseen feat at the very last. Slone was
+prepared for hours of strained watching, and then a desperate effort,
+and then a shock that might kill Wildfire and cripple Nagger, or a long
+race and fight.
+
+But he soon discovered that he was wrong about the long watch and wait.
+The wind had grown strong and was driving the fire swiftly. The flames,
+fanned by the breeze, leaped to a formidable barrier. In less than an
+hour, though the time seemed only a few moments to the excited Slone,
+Wildfire had been driven down toward the narrowing neck of the valley,
+and he had begun to run, to and fro, back and forth. Any moment, then,
+Slone expected him to grow terrorized and to come tearing up toward the
+pass.
+
+Wildfire showed evidence of terror, but he did not attempt to make the
+pass. Instead he went at the right-hand slope of the valley and began
+to climb. The slope was steep and soft, yet the stallion climbed up and
+up. The dust flew in clouds; the gravel rolled down, and the sand
+followed in long streams. Wildfire showed his keenness by zigzagging up
+the slope.
+
+"Go ahead, you red devil!" yelled Slone. He was much elated. In that
+soft bank Wildfire would tire out while not hurting himself.
+
+Slone watched the stallion in admiration and pity and exultation.
+Wildfire did not make much headway, for he slipped back almost as much
+as he gained. He attempted one place after another where he failed.
+There was a bank of clay, some few feet high, and he could not round it
+at either end or surmount it in the middle. Finally he literally pawed
+and cut a path, much as if he were digging in the sand for water. When
+he got over that he was not much better off. The slope above was
+endless and grew steeper, more difficult toward the top. Slone knew
+absolutely that no horse could climb over it. He grew apprehensive,
+however, for Wildfire might stick up there on the slope until the line
+of fire passed. The horse apparently shunned any near proximity to the
+fire, and performed prodigious efforts to escape.
+
+"He'll be ridin' an avalanche pretty soon," muttered Slone.
+
+Long sheets of sand and gravel slid down to spill thinly over the low
+bank. Wildfire, now sinking to his knees, worked steadily upward till
+he had reached a point halfway up the slope, at the head of a long,
+yellow bank of treacherous-looking sand. Here he was halted by a low
+bulge, which he might have surmounted had his feet been free. But he
+stood deep in the sand. For the first time he looked down at the
+sweeping fire, and then at Slone.
+
+Suddenly the bank of sand began to slide with him. He snorted in
+fright. The avalanche started slowly and was evidently no mere surface
+slide. It was deep. It stopped--then started again--and again stopped.
+Wildfire appeared to be sinking deeper and deeper. His struggles only
+embedded him more firmly. Then the bank of sand, with an ominous, low
+roar, began to move once more. This time it slipped swiftly. The dust
+rose in a cloud, almost obscuring the horse. Long streams of gravel
+rattled down, and waterfalls of sand waved over the steps of the slope.
+
+Just as suddenly the avalanche stopped again. Slone saw, from the great
+oval hole it had left above, that it was indeed deep. That was the
+reason it did not slide readily. When the dust cleared away Slone saw
+the stallion, sunk to his flanks in the sand, utterly helpless.
+
+With a wild whoop Slone leaped off Nagger, and, a lasso in each hand,
+he ran down the long bank. The fire was perhaps a quarter of a mile
+distant, and, since the grass was thinning out, it was not coming so
+fast as it had been. The position of the stallion was half-way between
+the fire and Slone, and a hundred yards up the slope.
+
+Like a madman Slone climbed up through the dragging, loose sand. He was
+beside himself with a fury of excitement. He fancied his eyes were
+failing him, that it was not possible the great horse really was up
+there, helpless in the sand. Yet every huge stride Slone took brought
+him closer to a fact he could not deny. In his eagerness he slipped,
+and fell, and crawled, and leaped, until he reached the slide which
+held Wildfire prisoner.
+
+The stallion might have been fast in quicksand, up to his body, for all
+the movement he could make. He could move only his head. He held that
+up, his eyes wild, showing the whites, his foaming mouth wide open, his
+teeth gleaming. A sound like a scream rent the air. Terrible fear and
+hate were expressed in that piercing neigh. And shaggy, wet, dusty red,
+with all of brute savageness in the look and action of his head, he
+appeared hideous.
+
+As Slone leaped within roping distance the avalanche slipped a foot or
+two, halted, slipped once more, and slowly started again with that low
+roar. He did not care whether it slipped or stopped. Like a wolf he
+leaped closer, whirling his rope. The loop hissed round his head and
+whistled as he flung it. And when fiercely he jerked back on the rope,
+the noose closed tight round Wildfire's neck.
+
+"By G--d--I--got--a rope--on him!" cried Slone, in hoarse pants.
+
+He stared, unbelieving. It was unreal, that sight--unreal like the
+slow, grinding movement of the avalanche under him. Wildfire's head
+seemed a demon head of hate. It reached out, mouth agape, to bite, to
+rend. That horrible scream could not be the scream of a horse.
+
+Slone was a wild-horse hunter, a rider, and when that second of
+incredulity flashed by, then came the moment of triumph. No moment
+could ever equal that one, when he realized he stood there with a rope
+around that grand stallion's neck. All the days and the miles and the
+toil and the endurance and the hopelessness and the hunger were paid
+for in that moment. His heart seemed too large for his breast.
+
+"I tracked--you!" he cried, savagely. "I stayed--with you! ... An' I
+got a rope--on you! An'--I'll ride you--you red devil!"
+
+The passion of the man was intense. That endless, racking pursuit had
+brought out all the hardness the desert had engendered in him. Almost
+hate, instead of love, spoke in Slone's words. He hauled on the lasso,
+pulling the stallion's head down and down. The action was the lust of
+capture as well as the rider's instinctive motive to make the horse
+fear him. Life was unquenchably wild and strong in that stallion; it
+showed in the terror which made him hideous. And man and beast somehow
+resembled each other in that moment which was inimical to noble life.
+
+The avalanche slipped with little jerks, as if treacherously loosing
+its hold for a long plunge. The line of fire below ate at the bleached
+grass and the long column of smoke curled away on the wind.
+
+Slone held the taut lasso with his left hand, and with the right he
+swung the other rope, catching the noose round Wildfire's nose. Then
+letting go of the first rope he hauled on the other, pulling the head
+of the stallion far down. Hand over hand Slone closed in on the horse.
+He leaped on Wildfire's head, pressed it down, and, holding it down on
+the sand with his knees, with swift fingers he tied the noose in a
+hackamore--an improvised halter. Then, just as swiftly, he bound his
+scarf tight round Wildfire's head, blindfolding him.
+
+"All so easy!" exclaimed Slone, under his breath. "Lord! who would
+believe it! ... Is it a dream?"
+
+He rose and let the stallion have a free head.
+
+"Wildfire, I got a rope on you--an' a hackamore--an' a blinder," said
+Slone. "An' if I had a bridle I'd put that on you.... Who'd ever
+believe you'd catch yourself, draggin' in the sand?"
+
+Slone, finding himself failing on the sand, grew alive to the augmented
+movement of the avalanche. It had begun to slide, to heave and bulge
+and crack. Dust rose in clouds from all around. The sand appeared to
+open and let him sink to his knees. The rattle of gravel was drowned in
+a soft roar. Then he shot down swiftly, holding the lassoes, keeping
+himself erect, and riding as if in a boat. He felt the successive steps
+of the slope, and then the long incline below, and then the checking
+and rising and spreading of the avalanche as it slowed down on the
+level. All movement then was checked violently. He appeared to be half
+buried in sand. While he struggled to extricate himself the thick dust
+blew away and settled so that he could see. Wildfire lay before him, at
+the edge of the slide, and now he was not so deeply embedded as he had
+been up on the slope. He was struggling and probably soon would have
+been able to get out. The line of fire was close now, but Slone did not
+fear that.
+
+At his shrill whistle Nagger bounded toward him, obedient, but
+snorting, with ears laid back. He halted. A second whistle started him
+again. Slone finally dug himself out of the sand, pulled the lassoes
+out, and ran the length of them toward Nagger. The black showed both
+fear and fight. His eyes roiled and he half shied away.
+
+"Come on!" called Slone, harshly.
+
+He got a hand on the horse, pulled him round, and, mounting in a flash,
+wound both lassoes round the pommel of the saddle.
+
+"Haul him out, Nagger, old boy!" cried Slone, and he dug spurs into the
+black.
+
+One plunge of Nagger's slid the stallion out of the sand. Snorting,
+wild, blinded, Wildfire got up, shaking in every limb. He could not see
+his enemies. The blowing smoke, right in his nose, made scent
+impossible. But in the taut lassoes he sensed the direction of his
+captors. He plunged, rearing at the end of the plunge, and struck out
+viciously with his hoofs. Slone, quick with spur and bridle, swerved
+Nagger aside and Wildfire, off his balance, went down with a crash.
+Slone dragged him, stretched him out, pulled him over twice before he
+got forefeet planted. Once up, he reared again, screeching his rage,
+striking wildly with his hoofs. Slone wheeled aside and toppled him
+over again.
+
+"Wildfire, it's no fair fight," he called, grimly. "But you led me a
+chase.... An' you learn right now I'm boss!"
+
+Again he dragged the stallion. He was ruthless. He would have to be so,
+stopping just short of maiming or killing the horse, else he would
+never break him. But Wildfire was nimble. He got to his feet and this
+time he lunged out. Nagger, powerful as he was, could not sustain the
+tremendous shock, and went down. Slone saved himself with a rider's
+supple skill, falling clear of the horse, and he leaped again into the
+saddle as Nagger pounded up. Nagger braced his huge frame and held the
+plunging stallion. But the saddle slipped a little, the cinches
+cracked. Slone eased the strain by wheeling after Wildfire.
+
+The horses had worked away from the fire, and Wildfire, free of the
+stifling smoke, began to break and lunge and pitch, plunging round
+Nagger in a circle, running blindly, but with unerring scent. Slone, by
+masterly horsemanship, easily avoided the rushes, and made a pivot of
+Nagger, round which the wild horse dashed in his frenzy. It seemed that
+he no longer tried to free himself. He lunged to kill.
+
+"Steady, Nagger, old boy!" Slone kept calling. "He'll never get at
+you.... If he slips that blinder I'll kill him!"
+
+The stallion was a fiend in his fury, quicker than a panther, wonderful
+on his feet, and powerful as an ox. But he was at a disadvantage. He
+could not see. And Slone, in his spoken intention to kill Wildfire
+should the scarf slip, acknowledged that he never would have a chance
+to master the stallion. Wildfire was bigger, faster, stronger than
+Slone had believed, and as for spirit, that was a grand and fearful
+thing to see.
+
+The soft sand in the pass was plowed deep before Wildfire paused in his
+mad plunges. He was wet and heaving. His red coat seemed to blaze. His
+mane stood up and his ears lay flat.
+
+Slone uncoiled the lassoes from the pommel and slacked them a little.
+Wildfire stood up, striking at the air, snorting fiercely. Slone tried
+to wheel Nagger in close behind the stallion. Both horse and man
+narrowly escaped the vicious hoofs. But Slone had closed in. He took a
+desperate chance and spurred Nagger in a single leap as Wildfire reared
+again. The horses collided. Slone hauled the lassoes tight. The impact
+threw Wildfire off his balance, just as Slone had calculated, and as
+the stallion plunged down on four feet Slone spurred Nagger close
+against him. Wildfire was a little in the lead. He could only half rear
+now, for the heaving, moving Nagger, always against him, jostled him
+down, and Slone's iron arm hauled on the short ropes. When Wildfire
+turned to bite, Slone knocked the vicious nose back with a long swing
+of his fist.
+
+Up the pass the horses plunged. With a rider's wild joy Slone saw the
+long green-and-gray valley, and the isolated monuments in the distance.
+There, on that wide stretch, he would break Wildfire. How marvelously
+luck had favored him at the last!
+
+"Run, you red devil!" Slone called. "Drag us around now till you're
+done!"
+
+They left the pass and swept out upon the waste of sage. Slone
+realized, from the stinging of the sweet wind in his face, that Nagger
+was being pulled along at a tremendous pace. The faithful black could
+never have made the wind cut so. Lower the wild stallion stretched and
+swifter he ran, till it seemed to Slone that death must end that
+thunderbolt race.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Lucy Bostil had called twice to her father and he had not answered. He
+was out at the hitching-rail, with Holley, the rider, and two other
+men. If he heard Lucy he gave no sign of it. She had on her chaps and
+did not care to go any farther than the door where she stood.
+
+"Somers has gone to Durango an' Shugrue is out huntin' hosses," Lucy
+heard Bostil say, gruffly.
+
+"Wal now, I reckon I could handle the boat an' fetch Creech's hosses
+over," said Holley.
+
+Bostil raised an impatient hand, as if to wave aside Holley's
+assumption.
+
+Then one of the other two men spoke up. Lucy had seen him before, but
+did not know his name.
+
+"Sure there ain't any need to rustle the job. The river hain't showed
+any signs of risin' yet. But Creech is worryin'. He allus is worryin'
+over them hosses. No wonder! Thet Blue Roan is sure a hoss. Yesterday
+at two miles he showed Creech he was a sight faster than last year. The
+grass is gone over there. Creech is grainin' his stock these last few
+days. An' thet's expensive."
+
+"How about the flat up the canyon?" queried Bostil. "Ain't there any
+grass there?"
+
+"Reckon not. It's the dryest spell Creech ever had," replied the other.
+"An' if there was grass it wouldn't do him no good. A landslide blocked
+the only trail up."
+
+"Bostil, them hosses, the racers special, ought to be brought acrost
+the river," said Holley, earnestly. He loved horses and was thinking of
+them.
+
+"The boat's got to be patched up," replied Bostil, shortly.
+
+It occurred to Lucy that her father was also thinking of Creech's
+thoroughbreds, but not like Holley. She grew grave and listened
+intently.
+
+There was an awkward pause. Creech's rider, whoever he was, evidently
+tried to conceal his anxiety. He flicked his boots with a quirt. The
+boots were covered with wet mud. Probably he had crossed the river very
+recently.
+
+"Wal, when will you have the hosses fetched over?" he asked,
+deliberately. "Creech'll want to know."
+
+"Just as soon as the boat's mended," replied Bostil. "I'll put Shugrue
+on the job to-morrow."
+
+"Thanks, Bostil. Sure, thet'll be all right. Creech'll be satisfied,"
+said the rider, as if relieved. Then he mounted, and with his companion
+trotted down the lane.
+
+The lean, gray Holley bent a keen gaze upon Bostil. But Bostil did not
+notice that; he appeared preoccupied in thought.
+
+"Bostil, the dry winter an' spring here ain't any guarantee thet there
+wasn't a lot of snow up in the mountains." Holley's remark startled
+Bostil.
+
+"No--it ain't--sure," he replied.
+
+"An' any mornin' along now we might wake up to hear the Colorado
+boomin'," went on Holley, significantly.
+
+Bostil did not reply to that.
+
+"Creech hain't lived over there so many years. What's he know about the
+river? An' fer that matter, who knows anythin' sure about thet
+hell-bent river?"
+
+"It ain't my business thet Creech lives over there riskin' his stock
+every spring," replied Bostil, darkly.
+
+Holley opened his lips to speak, hesitated, looked away from Bostil,
+and finally said, "No, it sure ain't." Then he turned and walked away,
+head bent in sober thought. Bostil came toward the open door where Lucy
+stood. He looked somber. At her greeting he seemed startled.
+
+"What?" he said.
+
+"I just said, 'Hello, Dad,'" she replied, demurely. Yet she
+thoughtfully studied her father's dark face.
+
+"Hello yourself.... Did you know Van got throwed an' hurt?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Bostil swore under his breath. "There ain't any riders on the range
+thet can be trusted," he said, disgustedly. "They're all the same. They
+like to get in a bunch an' jeer each other an' bet. They want MEAN
+hosses. They make good hosses buck. They haven't any use for a hoss
+thet won't buck. They all want to give a hoss a rakin' over.... Think
+of thet fool Van gettin' throwed by a two-dollar Ute mustang. An' hurt
+so he can't ride for days! With them races comin' soon! It makes me
+sick."
+
+"Dad, weren't you a rider once?" asked Lucy.
+
+"I never was thet kind."
+
+"Van will be all right in a few days."
+
+"No matter. It's bad business. If I had any other rider who could
+handle the King I'd let Van go."
+
+"I can get just as much out of the King as Van can," said Lucy,
+spiritedly.
+
+"You!" exclaimed Bostil. But there was pride in his glance.
+
+"I know I can."
+
+"You never had any use for Sage King," said Bostil, as if he had been
+wronged.
+
+"I love the King a little, and hate him a lot," laughed Lucy.
+
+"Wal, I might let you ride at thet, if Van ain't in shape," rejoined
+her father.
+
+"I wouldn't ride him in the race. But I'll keep him in fine fettle."
+
+"I'll bet you'd like to see Sarch beat him," said Bostil, jealously.
+
+"Sure I would," replied Lucy, teasingly. "But, Dad, I'm afraid Sarch
+never will beat him."
+
+Bostil grunted. "See here. I don't want any weight up on the King. You
+take him out for a few days. An' ride him! Savvy thet?"
+
+"Yes, Dad."
+
+"Give him miles an' miles--an' then comin' home, on good trails, ride
+him for all your worth.... Now, Lucy, keep your eye open. Don't let any
+one get near you on the sage."
+
+"I won't.... Dad, do you still worry about poor Joel Creech?"
+
+"Not Joel. But I'd rather lose all my stock then have Cordts or Dick
+Sears get within a mile of you."
+
+"A mile!" exclaimed Lucy, lightly, though a fleeting shade crossed her
+face. "Why, I'd run away from him, if I was on the King, even if he got
+within ten yards of me."
+
+"A mile is close enough, my daughter," replied Bostil. "Don't ever
+forget to keep your eye open. Cordts has sworn thet if he can't steal
+the King he'll get you."
+
+"Oh! he prefers the horse to me."
+
+"Wal, Lucy, I've a sneakin' idea thet Cordts will never leave the
+uplands unless he gets you an' the King both."
+
+"And, Dad--you consented to let that horse-thief come to our races?"
+exclaimed Lucy, with heat.
+
+"Why not? He can't do any harm. If he or his men get uppish, the worse
+for them. Cordts gave his word not to turn a trick till after the
+races."
+
+"Do you trust him?"
+
+"Yes. But his men might break loose, away from his sight. Especially
+thet Dick Sears. He's a bad man. So be watchful whenever you ride out."
+
+As Lucy went down toward the corrals she was thinking deeply. She could
+always tell, woman-like, when her father was excited or agitated. She
+remembered the conversation between him and Creech's rider. She
+remembered the keen glance old Holley had bent upon him. And mostly she
+remembered the somber look upon his face. She did not like that. Once,
+when a little girl, she had seen it and never forgotten it, nor the
+thing that it was associated with--something tragical which had
+happened in the big room. There had been loud, angry voices of men--and
+shots--and then the men carried out a long form covered with a blanket.
+She loved her father, but there was a side to him she feared. And
+somehow related to that side was his hardness toward Creech and his
+intolerance of any rider owning a fast horse and his obsession in
+regard to his own racers. Lucy had often tantalized her father with the
+joke that if it ever came to a choice between her and his favorites
+they would come first. But was it any longer a joke? Lucy felt that she
+had left childhood behind with its fun and fancies, and she had begun
+to look at life thoughtfully.
+
+Sight of the corrals, however, and of the King prancing around, drove
+serious thoughts away. There were riders there, among them Farlane, and
+they all had pleasant greetings for her.
+
+"Farlane, Dad says I'm to take out Sage King," announced Lucy.
+
+"No!" ejaculated Farlane, as he pocketed his pipe.
+
+"Sure. And I'm to RIDE him. You know how Dad means that."
+
+"Wal, now, I'm doggoned!" added Farlane, looking worried and pleased at
+once. "I reckon, Miss Lucy, you--you wouldn't fool me?"
+
+"Why, Farlane!" returned Lucy, reproachfully. "Did I ever do a single
+thing around horses that you didn't want me to?"
+
+Farlane rubbed his chin beard somewhat dubiously. "Wal, Miss Lucy, not
+exactly while you was around the hosses. But I reckon when you onct got
+up, you've sorta forgot a few times."
+
+All the riders laughed, and Lucy joined them.
+
+"I'm safe when I'm up, you know that," she replied.
+
+They brought out the gray, and after the manner of riders who had the
+care of a great horse and loved him, they curried and combed and rubbed
+him before saddling him.
+
+"Reckon you'd better ride Van's saddle," suggested Farlane. "Them races
+is close now, an' a strange saddle--"
+
+"Of course. Don't change anything he's used to, except the stirrups,"
+replied Lucy.
+
+Despite her antipathy toward Sage King, Lucy could not gaze at him
+without all a rider's glory in a horse. He was sleek, so graceful, so
+racy, so near the soft gray of the sage, so beautiful in build and
+action. Then he was the kind of a horse that did not have to be
+eternally watched. He was spirited and full of life, eager to run, but
+when Farlane called for him to stand still he obeyed. He was the kind
+of a horse that a child could have played around in safety. He never
+kicked. He never bit. He never bolted. It was splendid to see him with
+Farlane or with Bostil. He did not like Lucy very well, a fact that
+perhaps accounted for Lucy's antipathy. For that matter, he did not
+like any woman. If he had a bad trait, it came out when Van rode him,
+but all the riders, and Bostil, too, claimed that Van was to blame for
+that.
+
+"Thar, I reckon them stirrups is right," declared Farlane. "Now, Miss
+Lucy, hold him tight till he wears off thet edge. He needs work."
+
+Sage King would not kneel for Lucy as Sarchedon did, and he was too
+high for her to mount from the ground, so she mounted from a rock. She
+took to the road, and then the first trail into the sage, intending to
+trot him ten or fifteen miles down into the valley, and give him some
+fast, warm work on the return.
+
+The day was early in May and promised to grow hot. There was not a
+cloud in the blue sky. The wind, laden with the breath of sage, blew
+briskly from the west. All before Lucy lay the vast valley, gray and
+dusky gray, then blue, then purple where the monuments stood, and,
+farther still, dark ramparts of rock. Lucy had a habit of dreaming
+while on horseback, a habit all the riders had tried to break, but she
+did not give it rein while she rode Sarchedon, and assuredly now, up on
+the King, she never forgot him for an instant. He shied at mockingbirds
+and pack-rats and blowing blossoms and even at butterflies; and he did
+it, Lucy thought, just because he was full of mischief. Sage King had
+been known to go steady when there had been reason to shy. He did not
+like Lucy and he chose to torment her. Finally he earned a good dig
+from a spur, and then, with swift pounding of hoofs, he plunged and
+veered and danced in the sage. Lucy kept her temper, which was what
+most riders did not do, and by patience and firmness pulled Sage King
+out of his prancing back into the trail. He was not the least
+cross-grained, and, having had his little spurt, he settled down into
+easy going.
+
+In an hour Lucy was ten miles or more from home, and farther down in
+the valley than she had ever been. In fact, she had never before been
+down the long slope to the valley floor. How changed the horizon
+became! The monuments loomed up now, dark, sentinel-like, and strange.
+The first one, a great red rock, seemed to her some five miles away. It
+was lofty, straight-sided, with a green slope at its base. And beyond
+that the other monuments stretched out down the valley. Lucy decided to
+ride as far as the first one before turning back. Always these
+monuments had fascinated her, and this was her opportunity to ride near
+one. How lofty they were, how wonderfully colored, and how comely!
+
+Presently, over the left, where the monuments were thicker, and
+gradually merged their slopes and lines and bulk into the yellow walls,
+she saw low, drifting clouds of smoke.
+
+"Well, what's that, I wonder?" she mused. To see smoke on the horizon
+in that direction was unusual, though out toward Durango the grassy
+benches would often burn over. And these low clouds of smoke resembled
+those she had seen before.
+
+"It's a long way off," she added.
+
+So she kept on, now and then gazing at the smoke. As she grew nearer to
+the first monument she was surprised, then amazed, at its height and
+surpassing size. It was mountain-high--a grand tower--smooth, worn,
+glistening, yellow and red. The trail she had followed petered out in a
+deep wash, and beyond that she crossed no more trails. The sage had
+grown meager and the greasewoods stunted and dead; and cacti appeared
+on barren places. The grass had not failed, but it was not rich grass
+such as the horses and cattle grazed upon miles back on the slope. The
+air was hot down here. The breeze was heavy and smelled of fire, and
+the sand was blowing here and there. She had a sense of the bigness,
+the openness of this valley, and then she realized its wildness and
+strangeness. These lonely, isolated monuments made the place different
+from any she had visited. They did not seem mere standing rocks. They
+seemed to retreat all the time as she approached, and they watched her.
+They interested her, made her curious. What had formed all these
+strange monuments? Here the ground was level for miles and miles, to
+slope gently up to the bases of these huge rocks. In an old book she
+had seen pictures of the Egyptian pyramids, but these appeared vaster,
+higher, and stranger, and they were sheerly perpendicular.
+
+Suddenly Sage King halted sharply, shot up his ears, and whistled. Lucy
+was startled. That from the King meant something. Hastily, with keen
+glance she swept the foreground. A mile on, near the monument, was a
+small black spot. It seemed motionless. But the King's whistle had
+proved it to be a horse. When Lucy had covered a quarter of the
+intervening distance she could distinguish the horse and that there
+appeared some thing strange about his position. Lucy urged Sage King
+into a lope and soon drew nearer. The black horse had his head down,
+yet he did not appear to be grazing. He was as still as a statue. He
+stood just outside a clump of greasewood and cactus.
+
+Suddenly a sound pierced the stillness. The King jumped and snorted in
+fright. For an instant Lucy's blood ran cold, for it was a horrible
+cry. Then she recognized it as the neigh of a horse in agony. She had
+heard crippled and dying horses utter that long-drawn and
+blood-curdling neigh. The black horse had not moved, so the sound could
+not have come from him. Lucy thought Sage King acted more excited than
+the occasion called for. Then remembering her father's warning, she
+reined in on top of a little knoll, perhaps a hundred yards from where
+the black horse stood, and she bent her keen gaze forward.
+
+It was a huge, gaunt, shaggy black horse she saw, with the saddle
+farther up on his shoulders than it should have been. He stood
+motionless, as if utterly exhausted. His forelegs were braced, so that
+he leaned slightly back. Then Lucy saw a rope. It was fast to the
+saddle and stretched down into the cactus. There was no other horse in
+sight, nor any living thing. The immense monument dominated the scene.
+It seemed stupendous to Lucy, sublime, almost frightful.
+
+She hesitated. She knew there was another horse, very likely at the
+other end of that lasso. Probably a rider had been thrown, perhaps
+killed. Certainly a horse had been hurt. Then on the moment rang out
+the same neigh of agony, only weaker and shorter. Lucy no longer feared
+an ambush. That was a cry which could not be imitated by a man or
+forced from a horse. There was probably death, certainly suffering,
+near at hand. She spurred the King on.
+
+There was a little slope to descend, a wash to cross, a bench to
+climb--and then she rode up to the black horse. Sage King needed harder
+treatment than Lucy had ever given him.
+
+"What's wrong with you?" she demanded, pulling him down. Suddenly, as
+she felt him tremble, she realized that he was frightened. "That's
+funny!" Then when she got him quiet she looked around.
+
+The black horse was indeed huge. His mane, his shaggy flanks, were
+lathered as if he had been smeared with heavy soap-suds. He raised his
+head to look at her. Lucy, accustomed to horses all her life, saw that
+this one welcomed her arrival. But he was almost ready to drop.
+
+Two taut lassoes stretched from the pommel of his saddle down a little
+into a depression full of brush and cactus and rocks. Then Lucy saw a
+red horse. He was down in a bad position. She heard his low, choking
+heaves. Probably he had broken legs or back. She could not bear to see
+a horse in pain. She would do what was possible, even to the extent of
+putting him out of his misery, if nothing else could be done. Yet she
+scanned the surroundings closely, and peered into the bushes and behind
+the rocks before she tried to urge Sage King closer. He refused to go
+nearer, and Lucy dismounted.
+
+The red horse was partly hidden by overbending brush. He had plunged
+into a hole full of cactus. There was a hackamore round his nose and a
+tight noose round his neck. The one round his neck was also round his
+forelegs. And both lassoes were held taut by the black horse. A torn
+and soiled rider's scarf hung limp round the red horse's nose, kept
+from falling off by the hackamore.
+
+"A wild horse, a stallion, being broken!" exclaimed Lucy, instantly
+grasping the situation. "Oh! where's the rider?"
+
+She gazed around, ran to and fro, glanced down the little slope, and
+beyond, but she did not see anything resembling the form of a man. Then
+she ran back.
+
+Lucy took another quick look at the red stallion. She did not believe
+either his legs or back were hurt. He was just played out and tangled
+and tied in the ropes, and could not get up. The shaggy black horse
+stood there braced and indomitable. But he, likewise, was almost ready
+to drop. Looking at the condition of both horses and the saddle and
+ropes, Lucy saw what a fight there had been, and a race! Where was the
+rider? Thrown, surely, and back on the trail, perhaps dead or maimed.
+
+Lucy went closer to the stallion so that she could almost touch him. He
+saw her. He was nearly choked. Foam and blood wheezed out with his
+heaves. She must do something quickly. And in her haste she pricked her
+arms and shoulders on the cactus.
+
+She led the black horse closer in, letting the ropes go, slack. The
+black seemed as glad of that release as she was. What a faithful brute
+he looked! Lucy liked his eyes.
+
+Then she edged down in among the cactus and brush. The red horse no
+longer lay in a strained position. He could lift his head. Lucy saw
+that the noose still held tight round his neck. Fearlessly she jerked
+it loose. Then she backed away, but not quite out of his reach. He
+coughed and breathed slowly, with great heaves. Then he snorted.
+
+"You're all right now," said Lucy, soothingly. Slowly she reached a
+hand toward his head. He drew it back as far as he could. She stepped
+around, closer, and more back of him, and put a hand on him, gently,
+for an instant. Then she slipped out of the brush and, untying one
+lasso from the pommel, she returned to the horse and pulled it from
+round his legs. He was free now, except the hackamore, and that rope
+was slack. Lucy stood near him, watching him, talking to him, waiting
+for him to get up. She could not be sure he was not badly hurt till he
+stood up. At first he made no efforts to rise. He watched Lucy, less
+fearfully, she imagined. And she never made a move. She wanted him to
+see, to understand that she had not hurt him and would not hurt him. It
+began to dawn upon her that he was magnificent.
+
+Finally, with a long, slow heave he got to his feet. Lucy led him out
+of the hole to open ground. She seemed somehow confident. There
+occurred to her only one way to act.
+
+"A little horse sense, as Dad would say," she soliloquized, and then,
+when she got him out of the brush, she stood thrilled and amazed.
+
+"Oh, what a wild, beautiful horse! What a giant! He's bigger than the
+King. Oh, if Dad could see him!"
+
+The red stallion did not appear to be hurt. The twitching of his
+muscles must have been caused by the cactus spikes embedded in him.
+There were drops of blood all over one side. Lucy thought she dared to
+try to pull these thorns out. She had never in her life been afraid of
+any horse. Farlane, Holley, all the riders, and her father, too, had
+tried to make her realize the danger in a horse, sooner or later. But
+Lucy could not help it; she was not afraid; she believed that the
+meanest horse was actuated by natural fear of a man; she was not a man
+and she had never handled a horse like a man. This red stallion showed
+hate of the black horse and the rope that connected them; he showed
+some spirit at the repeated blasts of Sage King. But he showed less
+fear of her.
+
+"He has been a proud, wild stallion," mused Lucy. "And he's now
+broken--terribly broken--all but ruined."
+
+Then she walked up to him naturally and spoke softly, and reached a
+hand for his shoulder.
+
+"Whoa, Reddy. Whoa now.... There. That's a good fellow. Why, I wouldn't
+rope you or hit you. I'm only a girl."
+
+He drew up, made a single effort to jump, which she prevented, and then
+he stood quivering, eying her, while she talked soothingly, and patted
+him and looked at him in the way she had found infallible with most
+horses. Lucy believed horses were like people, or easier to get along
+with. Presently she gently pulled out one of the cactus spikes. The
+horse flinched, but he stood. Lucy was slow, careful, patient, and
+dexterous. The cactus needles were loose and easily removed or brushed
+off. At length she got him free of them, and was almost as proud as she
+was glad. The horse had gradually dropped his head; he was tired and
+his spirit was broken.
+
+"Now, what shall I do?" she queried. "I'll take the back trail of these
+horses. They certainly hadn't been here long before I saw them. And the
+rider may be close. If not I'll take the horses home."
+
+She slipped the noose from the stallion's head, leaving the hackamore,
+and, coiling the loose lasso, she hung it over the pommel of the
+black's saddle. Then she took up his bridle.
+
+"Come on," she called.
+
+The black followed her, and the stallion, still fast to him by the
+lasso Lucy had left tied, trooped behind with bowed head. Lucy was
+elated. But Sage King did not like the matter at all. Lucy had to drop
+the black's bridle and catch the King, and then ride back to lead the
+other again.
+
+A broad trail marked the way the two horses had come, and it led off to
+the left, toward where the monuments were thickest, and where the great
+sections of wall stood, broken and battlemented. Lucy was hard put to
+it to hold Sage King, but the horses behind plodded along. The black
+horse struck Lucy as being an ugly, but a faithful and wonderful
+animal. He understood everything. Presently she tied the bridle she was
+leading him by to the end of her own lasso, and thus let him drop back
+a few yards, which lessened the King's fretting.
+
+Intent on the trail, Lucy failed to note time or distance till the
+looming and frowning monuments stood aloft before her. What weird
+effect they had! Each might have been a colossal statue left there to
+mark the work of the ages. Lucy realized that the whole vast valley had
+once been solid rock, just like the monuments, and through the millions
+of years the softer parts had eroded and weathered and blown away--gone
+with the great sea that had once been there. But the beauty, the
+solemnity, the majesty of these monuments fascinated her most. She
+passed the first one, a huge square butte, and then the second, a
+ragged, thin, double shaft, and then went between two much alike,
+reaching skyward in the shape of monstrous mittens. She watched and
+watched them, sparing a moment now and then to attend to the trail. She
+noticed that she was coming into a region of grass, and faint signs of
+water in the draws. She was getting high again, not many miles now from
+the wall of rock.
+
+All at once Sage King shied, and Lucy looked down to see a man lying on
+the ground. He lay inert. But his eyes were open--dark, staring eyes.
+They moved. And he called. But Lucy could not understand him.
+
+In a flash she leaped off the King. She ran to the prostrate
+man--dropped to her knees.
+
+"Oh!" she cried. His face was ghastly. "Oh! are you--you badly hurt?"
+
+"Lift me--my head," he said, faintly.
+
+She raised his head. What a strained, passionate, terrible gaze he bent
+upon the horses.
+
+"Boy, they're mine--the black an' the red!" he cried.
+
+"They surely must be," replied Lucy. "Oh! tell me. Are you hurt?"
+
+"Boy! did you catch them--fetch them back--lookin' for me?"
+
+"I sure did."
+
+"You caught-that red devil--an' fetched him--back to me?" went on the
+wondering, faint voice. "Boy--oh--boy!"
+
+He lifted a long, ragged arm and pulled Lucy down. The action amazed
+her equally as his passion of gratitude. He might have been injured,
+but he had an arm of iron. Lucy was powerless. She felt her face
+against his--and her breast against his. The pounding of his heart was
+like blows. The first instant she wanted to laugh, despite her pity.
+Then the powerful arm--the contact affected her as nothing ever before.
+Suppose this crippled rider had taken her for a boy--She was not a boy!
+She could not help being herself. And no man had ever put a hand on
+her. Consciousness of this brought shame and anger. She struggled so
+violently that she freed herself. And he lay back.
+
+"See here--that's no way to act--to hug--a person," she cried, with
+flaming cheeks.
+
+"Boy, I--"
+
+"I'm NOT a boy. I'm a girl."
+
+"What!"
+
+Lucy tore off her sombrero, which had been pulled far forward, and this
+revealed her face fully, and her hair came tumbling down. The rider
+gazed, stupefied. Then a faint tinge of red colored his ghastly cheeks.
+
+"A girl! ... Why--why 'scuse me, miss. I--I took you--for a boy."
+
+He seemed so astounded, he looked so ashamed, so scared, and withal, so
+haggard and weak, that Lucy immediately recovered her equanimity.
+
+"Sure I'm a girl. But that's no matter.... You've been thrown. Are you
+hurt?"
+
+He smiled a weak assent.
+
+"Badly?" she queried. She did not like the way he lay--so limp, so
+motionless.
+
+"I'm afraid so. I can't move."
+
+"Oh! ... What shall I do?"
+
+"Can you--get me water?" he whispered, with dry lips.
+
+Lucy flew to her horse to get the small canteen she always carried. But
+that had been left on her saddle, and she had ridden Van's. Then she
+gazed around. The wash she had crossed several times ran near where the
+rider lay. Green grass and willows bordered it. She ran down and,
+hurrying along, searched for water. There was water in places, yet she
+had to go a long way before she found water that was drinkable. Filling
+her sombrero, she hurried back to the side of the rider. It was
+difficult to give him a drink.
+
+"Thanks, miss," he said, gratefully. His voice was stronger and less
+hoarse.
+
+"Have you any broken bones?" asked Lucy.
+
+"I don't know. I can't feel much."
+
+"Are you in pain?"
+
+"Hardly. I feel sort of thick."
+
+Lucy, being an intelligent girl, born in the desert and used to its
+needs, had not often encountered a situation with which she was unable
+to cope.
+
+"Let me feel if you have any broken bones.... THAT arm isn't broken,
+I'm positive."
+
+The rider smiled faintly again. How he stared with his strained, dark
+eyes! His face showed ghastly through the thin, soft beard and the tan.
+Lucy found his right arm badly bruised, but not broken. She made sure
+his collar-bones and shoulder-blades were intact. Broken ribs were
+harder to locate; still, as he did not feel pain from pressure, she
+concluded there were no fractures there. With her assistance he moved
+his legs, proving no broken bones there.
+
+"I'm afraid it's my--spine," he said.
+
+"But you raised your head once," she replied. "If your back was--was
+broken or injured you couldn't raise your head."
+
+"So I couldn't. I guess I'm just knocked out. I was--pretty weak before
+Wildfire knocked me--off Nagger."
+
+"Wildfire?"
+
+"That's the red stallion's name."
+
+"Oh, he's named already?"
+
+"I named him--long ago. He's known on many a range."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"I think far north of here. I--trailed him--days--weeks--months. We
+crossed the great canyon--"
+
+"The Grand Canyon?"
+
+"It must be that."
+
+"The Grand Canyon is down there," said Lucy, pointing. "I live on
+it.... You've come a long way."
+
+"Hundreds of miles! ... Oh, the ground I covered that awful canyon
+country! ... But I stayed with Wildfire. An' I put a rope on him. An'
+he got away.... An' it was a boy--no--a GIRL who--saved him for me--an'
+maybe saved my life, too!"
+
+Lucy looked away from the dark, staring eyes. A light in them confused
+her.
+
+"Never mind me. You say you were weak? Have you been ill?"
+
+"No, miss, just starved.... I starved on Wildfire's trail."
+
+Lucy ran to her saddle and got the biscuits out of the pockets of her
+coat, and she ran back to the rider.
+
+"Here. I never thought. Oh, you've had a hard time of it! I understand.
+That wonderful flame of a horse! I'd have stayed, too. My father was a
+rider once. Bostil. Did you ever hear of him?"
+
+"Bostil. The name--I've heard." Then the rider lay thinking, as he
+munched a biscuit. "Yes, I remember, but it was long ago. I spent a
+night with a wagon-train, a camp of many men and women, religious
+people, working into Utah. Bostil had a boat at the crossing of the
+Fathers."
+
+"Yes, they called the Ferry that."
+
+"I remember well now. They said Bostil couldn't count his horses--that
+he was a rich man, hard on riders--an' he'd used a gun more than once."
+
+Lucy bowed her head. "Yes, that's my dad."
+
+The rider did not seem to see how he had hurt her.
+
+"Here we are talking--wasting time," she said. "I must start home. You
+can't be moved. What shall I do?"
+
+"That's for you to say, Bostil's daughter."
+
+"My name's Lucy," replied the girl, blushing painfully, "I mean I'll be
+glad to do anything you think best."
+
+"You're very good."
+
+Then he turned his face away. Lucy looked closely at him. He was indeed
+a beggared rider. His clothes and his boots hung in tatters. He had no
+hat, no coat, no vest. His gaunt face bore traces of what might have
+been a fine, strong comeliness, but now it was only thin, worn, wan,
+pitiful, with that look which always went to a woman's heart. He had
+the look of a homeless rider. Lucy had seen a few of his wandering
+type, and his story was so plain. But he seemed to have a touch of
+pride, and this quickened her interest.
+
+"Then I'll do what I think best for you," said Lucy.
+
+First she unsaddled the black Nagger. With the saddle she made a pillow
+for the rider's head, and she covered him with the saddle blanket.
+Before she had finished this task he turned his eyes upon her. And Lucy
+felt she would be haunted. Was he badly hurt, after all? It seemed
+probable. How strange he was!
+
+"I'll water the horses--then tie Wildfire here on a double rope.
+There's grass."
+
+"But you can't lead him," replied the rider.
+
+"He'll follow me."
+
+"That red devil!" The rider shuddered as he spoke.
+
+Lucy had some faint inkling of what a terrible fight that had been
+between man and horse. "Yes; when I found him he was broken. Look at
+him now."
+
+But the rider did not appear to want to see the stallion. He gazed up
+at Lucy, and she saw something in his eyes that made her think of a
+child. She left him, had no trouble in watering the horses, and
+haltered Wildfire among the willows on a patch of grass. Then she
+returned.
+
+"I'll go now," she said to the rider.
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Home. I'll come back to-morrow, early, and bring some one to help
+you--"
+
+"Girl, if YOU want to help me more--bring me some bread an' meat. Don't
+tell any one. Look what a ragamuffin I am.... An' there's Wildfire. I
+don't want him seen till I'm--on my feet again. I know riders....
+That's all. If you want to be so good--come."
+
+"I'll come," replied Lucy, simply.
+
+"Thank you. I owe you--a lot.... What did you say your name was?"
+
+"Lucy--Lucy Bostil."
+
+"Oh, I forgot.... Are you sure you tied Wildfire good an' tight?"
+
+"Yes, I'm sure. I'll go now. I hope you'll be better to-morrow."
+
+Lucy hesitated, with her hand on the King's bridle. She did not like to
+leave this young man lying there helpless on the desert. But what else
+could she do? What a strange adventure had befallen her! At the
+following thought that it was not yet concluded she felt a little stir
+of excitement at her pulses. She was so strangely preoccupied that she
+forgot it was necessary for her to have a step to mount Sage King. She
+realized it quickly enough when she attempted it. Then she led him off
+in the sage till she found a rock. Mounting, she turned him straight
+across country, meaning to cut out miles of travel that would have been
+necessary along her back-trail. Once she looked back. The rider was not
+visible; the black horse, Nagger, was out of sight, but Wildfire,
+blazing in the sun, watched her depart.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Lucy Bostil could not control the glow of strange excitement under
+which she labored, but she could put her mind on the riding of Sage
+King. She did not realize, however, that she was riding him under the
+stress and spell of that excitement.
+
+She had headed out to make a short cut, fairly sure of her direction,
+yet she was not unaware of the fact that she would be lost till she ran
+across her trail. That might be easy to miss and time was flying. She
+put the King to a brisk trot, winding through the aisles of the sage.
+
+Soon she had left the monument region and was down on the valley floor
+again. From time to time she conquered a desire to look back. Presently
+she was surprised and very glad to ride into a trail where she saw the
+tracks she had made coming out. With much relief she turned Sage King
+into this trail, and then any anxiety she had felt left her entirely.
+But that did not mitigate her excitement. She eased the King into a
+long, swinging lope. And as he warmed to the work she was aroused also.
+It was hard to hold him in, once he got out of a trot, and after miles
+and miles of this, when she thought best to slow down he nearly pulled
+her arms off. Still she finally got him in hand. Then followed miles of
+soft and rough going, which seemed long and tedious. Beyond that was
+the home stretch up the valley, whose gradual slope could be seen only
+at a distance. Here was a straight, broad trail, not too soft nor too
+hard, and for all the years she could remember riders had tried out and
+trained their favorites on that course.
+
+Lucy reached down to assure herself that the cinch was tight, then she
+pulled her sombrero down hard, slackened the bridle, and let the King
+go. He simply broke his gait, he was so surprised. Lucy saw him trying
+to look back at her, as if he could not realize that this young woman
+rider had given him a free rein. Perhaps one reason he disliked her had
+been always and everlastingly that tight rein. Like the wary horse he
+was he took to a canter, to try out what his new freedom meant.
+
+"Say, what's the matter with you?" called Lucy, disdainfully. "Are you
+lazy? Or don't you believe I can ride you?"
+
+Whereupon she dug him with her spurs. Sage King snorted. His action
+shifted marvelously. Thunder rolled from under his hoofs. And he broke
+out of that clattering roar into his fleet stride, where his hoof-beats
+were swift, regular, rhythmic.
+
+Lucy rode him with teeth and fists clenched, bending low. After all,
+she thought, it was no trick to ride him. In that gait he was
+dangerous, for a fall meant death; but he ran so smoothly that riding
+him was easy and certainly glorious. He went so fast that the wind
+blinded her. The trail was only a white streak in blurred gray. She
+could not get her breath; the wind seemed to whip the air away from
+her. And then she felt the lessening of the tremendous pace. Sage King
+had run himself out and the miles were behind her. Gradually her sight
+became clear, and as the hot and wet horse slowed down, satisfied with
+his wild run, Lucy realized that she was up on the slope only a few
+miles from home. Suddenly she thought she saw something dark stir
+behind a sage-bush just ahead. Before she could move a hand at the
+bridle Sage King leaped with a frantic snort. It was a swerving,
+nimble, tremendous bound. He went high. Lucy was unseated, but somehow
+clung on, and came down with him, finding the saddle. And it seemed,
+while in the air, she saw a long, snaky, whipping loop of rope shoot
+out and close just where Sage King's legs had been.
+
+She screamed. The horse broke and ran. Lucy, righting herself, looked
+back to see Joel Creech holding a limp lasso. He had tried to rope the
+King.
+
+The blood of her father was aroused in Lucy. She thought of the
+horse--not herself. If the King had not been so keen-sighted, so swift,
+he would have gone down with a broken leg. Lucy never in her life had
+been so furious.
+
+Joel shook his fist at her and yelled, "I'd 'a' got you--on any other
+hoss!"
+
+She did not reply, though she had to fight herself to keep from pulling
+her gun and shooting at him. She guided the running horse back into the
+trail, rapidly leaving Creech out of sight.
+
+"He's gone crazy, that's sure," said Lucy. "And he means me harm!"
+
+She ran the King clear up to the corrals, and he was still going hard
+when she turned down the lane to the barns. Then she pulled him in.
+
+Farlane was there to meet her. She saw no other riders and was glad.
+
+"Wal, Miss Lucy, the King sure looks good," said Farlane, as she jumped
+off and flung him the bridle. "He's just had about right, judgin'....
+Say, girl, you're all pale! Oh, say, you wasn't scared of the King,
+now?"
+
+"No," replied Lucy, panting.
+
+"Wal, what's up, then?" The rider spoke in an entirely different voice,
+and into his clear, hazel eyes a little dark gleam shot.
+
+"Joel Creech waylaid me out in the sage--and--and tried to catch me."
+Lucy checked herself. It might not do to tell how Joel had tried to
+catch her.
+
+"He did? An' you on the King!" Farlane laughed, as if relieved. "Wal,
+he's tried thet before. Miss Lucy. But when you was up on the
+gray--thet shows Joel's crazy, sure."
+
+"He sure is. Farlane, I--I am mad!"
+
+"Wal, cool off, Miss Lucy. It ain't nothin' to git set up about. An'
+don't tell the old man."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Lucy.
+
+"Wal, because he's in a queer sort of bad mood lately. It wouldn't be
+safe. He hates them Creeches. So don't tell him."
+
+"All right, Farlane, I won't. Don't you tell, either," replied Lucy,
+soberly.
+
+"Sure I'll keep mum. But if Joel doesn't watch out I'll put a crimp in
+him myself."
+
+Lucy hurried away down the lane and entered the house without meeting
+any one. In her room she changed her clothes and lay down to rest and
+think.
+
+Strangely enough, Lucy might never have encountered Joel Creech out in
+the sage, for all the thought she gave him. Her mind was busy with the
+crippled rider. Who was he? Where was he from? What strange passion he
+had shown over the recovery of that wonderful red horse! Lucy could not
+forget the feeling of his iron arm when he held her in a kind of
+frenzied gratitude. A wild upland rider, living only for a wild horse!
+How like Indians some of these riders! Yet this fellow had seemed
+different from most of the uncouth riders she had known. He spoke
+better. He appeared to have had some little schooling. Lucy did not
+realize that she was interested in him. She thought she was sorry for
+him and interested in the stallion. She began to compare Wildfire with
+Sage King, and if she remembered rightly Wildfire, even in his
+disheveled state, had appeared a worthy rival of the King. What would
+Bostil say at sight of that flame-colored stallion? Lucy thrilled.
+
+Later she left her room to see if the hour was opportune for her plan
+to make up a pack of supplies for the rider. Her aunt was busy in the
+kitchen, and Bostil had not come in. Lucy took advantage of the moment
+to tie up a pack and carry it to her room. Somehow the task pleased
+her. She recalled the lean face of the rider. And that recalled his
+ragged appearance. Why not pack up an outfit of clothes? Bostil had a
+stock-room full of such accessories for his men. Then Lucy, glowing
+with the thought, hurried to Bostil's stock-room, and with deft hands
+and swift judgment selected an outfit for the rider, even down to a
+comb and razor. All this she carried quickly to her room, where in her
+thoughtfulness she added a bit of glass from a broken mirror, and soap
+and a towel. Then she tied up a second pack.
+
+Bostil did not come home to supper, a circumstance that made Lucy's
+aunt cross. They ate alone, and, waiting awhile, were rather late in
+clearing away the table. After this Lucy had her chance in the dusk of
+early evening, and she carried both packs way out into the sage and
+left them near the trail.
+
+"Hope a coyote doesn't come along," she said. That possibility,
+however, did not worry her as much as getting those packs up on the
+King. How in the world would she ever do it?
+
+She hurried back to the house, stealthily keeping to the shadow of the
+cottonwoods, for she would have faced an embarrassing situation if she
+had met her father, even had he been in a good humor. And she reached
+the sitting-room unobserved. The lamps had been lighted and a log
+blazed on the hearth. She was reading when Bostil entered.
+
+"Hello, Lucy!" he said.
+
+He looked tired, and Lucy knew he had been drinking, because when he
+had been he never offered to kiss her. The strange, somber shade was
+still on his face, but it brightened somewhat at sight of her. Lucy
+greeted him as always.
+
+"Farlane tells me you handled the King great--better 'n Van has worked
+him lately," said Bostil. "But don't tell him I told you."
+
+That was sweet praise from Farlane. "Oh, Dad, it could hardly be true,"
+expostulated Lucy. "Both you and Farlane are a little sore at Van now."
+
+"I'm a lot sore," replied Bostil, gruffly.
+
+"Anyway, how did Farlane know how I handled Sage King?" queried Lucy.
+
+"Wal, every hair on a hoss talks to Farlane, so Holley says.... Lucy,
+you take the King out every day for a while. Ride him now an' watch
+out! Joel Creech was in the village to-day. He sure sneaked when he
+seen me. He's up to some mischief."
+
+Lucy did not want to lie and she did not know what to say. Presently
+Bostil bade her good night. Lucy endeavored to read, but her mind
+continually wandered back to the adventure of the day.
+
+Next morning she had difficulty in concealing her impatience, but luck
+favored her. Bostil was not in evidence, and Farlane, for once, could
+spare no more time than it took to saddle Sage King. Lucy rode out into
+the sage, pretty sure that no one watched her.
+
+She had hidden the packs near the tallest bunch of greasewood along the
+trail; and when she halted behind it she had no fear of being seen from
+the corrals. She got the packs. The light one was not hard to tie back
+of the saddle, but the large one was a very different matter. She
+decided to carry it in front. There was a good-sized rock near, upon
+which she stepped, leading Sage King alongside; and after an
+exceedingly trying moment she got up, holding the pack. For a wonder
+Sage King behaved well.
+
+Then she started off, holding the pack across her lap, and she tried
+the King's several gaits to see which one would lend itself more
+comfortably to the task before her. The trouble was that Sage King had
+no slow gait, even his walk was fast. And Lucy was compelled to hold
+him into that. She wanted to hurry, but that seemed out of the
+question. She tried to keep from gazing out toward the monuments,
+because they were so far away.
+
+How would she find the crippled rider? It flashed into her mind that
+she might find him dead, and this seemed horrible. But her common sense
+persuaded her that she would find him alive and better. The pack was
+hard to hold, and Sage King fretted at the monotonous walk. The hours
+dragged. The sun grew hot. And it was noon, almost, when she reached
+the point where she cut off the trail to the left. Thereafter, with the
+monuments standing ever higher, and the distance perceptibly lessening,
+the minutes passed less tediously.
+
+At length she reached the zone of lofty rocks, and found them
+different, how, she could not tell. She rode down among them, and was
+glad when she saw the huge mittens--her landmarks. At last she espied
+the green-bordered wash and the few cedar-trees. Then a horse blazed
+red against the sage and another shone black. That sight made Lucy
+thrill. She rode on, eager now, but moved by the strangeness of the
+experience.
+
+Before she got quite close to the cedars she saw a man. He took a few
+slow steps out of the shade. His back was bent. Lucy recognized the
+rider, and in her gladness to see him on his feet she cried out. Then,
+when Sage King reached the spot, Lucy rolled the pack off to the ground.
+
+"Oh, that was a job!" she cried.
+
+The rider looked up with eyes that seemed keener, less staring than she
+remembered. "You came? ... I was afraid you wouldn't," he said.
+
+"Sure I came.... You're better--not badly hurt?" she said, gravely,
+"I--I'm so glad."
+
+"I've got a crimp in my back, that's all."
+
+Lucy was quick to see that after the first glance at her he was all
+eyes for Sage King. She laughed. How like a rider! She watched him,
+knowing that presently he would realize what a horse she was riding.
+She slipped off and threw the bridle, and then, swiftly untying the
+second pack, she laid it down.
+
+The rider, with slow, painful steps and bent back, approached Sage King
+and put a lean, strong, brown hand on him, and touched him as if he
+wished to feel if he were real. Then he whistled softly. When he turned
+to Lucy his eyes shone with a beautiful light.
+
+"It's Sage King, Bostil's favorite," said Lucy.
+
+"Sage King! ... He looks it.... But never a wild horse?"
+
+"No."
+
+"A fine horse," replied the rider. "Of course he can run?" This last
+held a note of a rider's jealousy.
+
+Lucy laughed. "Run! ... The King is Bostil's favorite. He can run away
+from any horse in the uplands."
+
+"I'll bet you Wildfire can beat him," replied the rider, with a dark
+glance.
+
+"Come on!" cried Lucy, daringly.
+
+Then the rider and girl looked more earnestly at each other. He smiled
+in a way that changed his face--brightened out the set hardness.
+
+"I reckon I'll have to crawl," he said, ruefully. "But maybe I can ride
+in a few days--if you'll come back again."
+
+His remark brought to Lucy the idea that of course she would hardly see
+this rider again after to-day. Even if he went to the Ford, which event
+was unlikely, he would not remain there long. The sensation of
+blankness puzzled her, and she felt an unfamiliar confusion.
+
+"I--I've brought you--some things," she said, pointing to the larger
+pack.
+
+"Grub, you mean?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That was all I asked you for, miss," he said, somewhat stiffly.
+
+"Yes, but--I--I thought--" Lucy became unaccountably embarrassed.
+Suppose this strange rider would be offended. "Your clothes were--so
+torn.... And no wonder you were thrown--in those boots! ... So I
+thought I'd--"
+
+"You thought I needed clothes as bad as grub," he said, bitterly. "I
+reckon that's so."
+
+His look, more than his tone, cut Lucy; and involuntarily she touched
+his arm. "Oh, you won't refuse to take them! Please don't!"
+
+At her touch a warmth came into his face. "Take them? I should smile I
+will."
+
+He tried to reach down to lift the pack, but as it was obviously
+painful for him to bend, Lucy intercepted him.
+
+"But you've had no breakfast," she protested. "Why not eat before you
+open that pack?"
+
+"Nope. I'm not hungry.... Maybe I'll eat a little, after I dress up."
+He started to walk away, then turned. "Miss Bostil, have you been so
+good to every wanderin' rider you happened to run across?"
+
+"Good!" she exclaimed, flushing. She dropped her eyes before his.
+"Nonsense. ... Anyway, you're the first wandering rider I ever
+met--like this."
+
+"Well, you're good," he replied, with emotion. Then he walked away with
+slow, stiff steps and disappeared behind the willows in the little
+hollow.
+
+Lucy uncoiled the rope on her saddle and haltered Sage King on the best
+grass near at hand. Then she opened the pack of supplies, thinking the
+while that she must not tarry here long.
+
+"But on the King I can run back like the wind," she mused.
+
+The pack contained dried fruits and meat and staples, also an
+assortment of good things to eat that were of a perishable nature,
+already much the worse for the long ride. She spread all this out in
+the shade of a cedar. The utensils were few--two cups, two pans, and a
+tiny pot. She gathered wood, and arranged it for a fire, so that the
+rider could start as soon as he came back. He seemed long in coming.
+Lucy waited, yet still he did not return. Finally she thought of the
+red stallion, and started off down the wash to take a look at him. He
+was grazing. He had lost some of the dirt and dust and the bedraggled
+appearance. When he caught sight of her he lifted his head high and
+whistled. How wild he looked! And his whistle was shrill, clear,
+strong. Both the other horses answered it. Lucy went on closer to
+Wildfire. She was fascinated now.
+
+"If he doesn't know me!" she cried. Never had she been so pleased. She
+had expected every sign of savageness on his part, and certainly had
+not intended to go near him. But Wildfire did not show fear or hate in
+his recognition. Lucy went directly to him and got a hand on him.
+Wildfire reared a little and shook a little, but this disappeared
+presently under her touch. He held his head very high and watched her
+with wonderful eyes. Gradually she drew his head down. Standing before
+him, she carefully and slowly changed the set of the hackamore, which
+had made a welt on his nose. It seemed to have been her good fortune
+that every significant move she had made around this stallion had been
+to mitigate his pain. Lucy believed he knew this as well as she knew
+it. Her theory, an often disputed one, was that horses were as
+intelligent as human beings and had just the same fears, likes, and
+dislikes. Lucy knew she was safe when she untied the lasso from the
+strong root where she had fastened it, and led the stallion down the
+wash to a pool of water. And she stood beside him with a hand on his
+shoulder while he bent his head to sniff at the water. He tasted it,
+plainly with disgust. It was stagnant water, full of vermin. But
+finally he drank. Lucy led him up the wash to another likely place, and
+tied him securely.
+
+When she got back to the camp in the cedars the rider was there, on his
+knees, kindling the fire. His clean-shaved face and new apparel made
+him vastly different. He was young, and, had he not been so gaunt, he
+would have been fine-looking, Lucy thought.
+
+"Wildfire remembered me," Lucy burst out. "He wasn't a bit scary. Let
+me handle him. Followed me to water."
+
+"He's taken to you," replied the rider, seriously. "I've heard of the
+like, but not so quick. Was he in a bad fix when you got to him
+yesterday?"
+
+Lucy explained briefly.
+
+"Aha! ... If that red devil has any love in him I'll never get it. I
+wish I could have done so much for him. But always when he sees me
+he'll remember."
+
+Lucy saw that the rider was in difficulties. He could not bend his
+back, and evidently it pained him to try. His brow was moist.
+
+"Let me do that," she said.
+
+"Thanks. It took about all my strength to get into this new outfit," he
+said, relinquishing, his place to Lucy.
+
+When she looked up from her task, presently, he was sitting in the
+shade of the cedar, watching her. He had the expression of a man who
+hardly believed what he saw.
+
+"Did you have any trouble gettin' away, without tellin'--about me?" he
+asked.
+
+"No. But I sure had a job with those packs," she replied.
+
+"You must be a wonder with a horse."
+
+As far as vanity was concerned Lucy had only one weakness--and he had
+touched upon it.
+
+"Well, Dad and Holley and Farlane argue much about me. Still, I guess
+they all agree I can ride."
+
+"Holley an' Farlane are riders?" he questioned.
+
+"Yes, Dad's right-hand men."
+
+"Your dad hires many riders, I supposed?"
+
+"Sure I never heard of him turning any rider down, at least not without
+a try."
+
+"I wonder if he would give me a job?"
+
+Lucy glanced up quickly. The idea surprised her--pleased her. "In a
+minute," she replied. "And he'd be grand to you. You see, he'd have an
+eye for Wildfire."
+
+The rider nodded his head as if he understood how that would be.
+
+"And of course you'd never sell nor trade Wildfire?" went on Lucy.
+
+The rider's smile was sad, but it was conclusive.
+
+"Then you'd better stay away from Bostil," returned Lucy, shortly.
+
+He remained silent, and Lucy, busy about the campfire, did not speak
+again till the simple fare was ready. Then she spread a tarpaulin in
+the shade.
+
+"I'm pretty hungry myself," she said. "But I don't suppose I know what
+hunger is."
+
+"After a while a fellow loses the feelin' of hunger," he replied. "I
+reckon it'll come back quick.... This all looks good."
+
+So they began to eat. Lucy's excitement, her sense of the unreality of
+this adventure, in no wise impaired her appetite. She seemed acutely
+sensitive to the perceptions of the moment. The shade of the cedars was
+cool. And out on the desert she could see the dark smoky veils of heat
+lifting. The breeze carried a dry odor of sand and grass. She heard
+bees humming by. And all around the great isolated monuments stood up,
+red tops against the blue sky. It was a silent, dreaming, impressive
+place, where she felt unlike herself.
+
+"I mustn't stay long," she said, suddenly remembering.
+
+"Will you come back--again?" he asked.
+
+The question startled Lucy. "Why--I--I don't know.... Won't you ride in
+to the Ford just as soon as you're able?"
+
+"I reckon not."
+
+"But it's the only place where there's people in hundreds of miles.
+Surely you won't try to go back the way you came?"
+
+"When Wildfire left that country I left it. We can't back."
+
+"Then you've no people--no one you care for?" she asked, in sweet
+seriousness.
+
+"There's no one. I'm an orphan. My people were lost in an Indian
+massacre--with a wagon-train crossin' Wyomin'. A few escaped, an' I was
+one of the youngsters. I had a tough time, like a stray dog, till I
+grew up. An' then I took to the desert."
+
+"Oh, I see. I--I'm sorry," replied Lucy. "But that's not very different
+from my dad's story, of his early years.... What will you do now?"
+
+"I'll stay here till my back straightens out.... Will you ride out
+again?"
+
+"Yes," replied Lucy, without looking at him; and she wondered if it
+were really she who was speaking.
+
+Then he asked her about the Ford, and Bostil, and the ranches and
+villages north, and the riders and horses. Lucy told him everything she
+knew and could think of, and, lastly, after waxing eloquent on the
+horses of the uplands, particularly Bostil's, she gave him a graphic
+account of Cordts and Dick Sears.
+
+"Horse-thieves!" exclaimed the rider, darkly. There was a grimness as
+well as fear in his tone. "I've heard of Sears, but not Cordts. Where
+does this band hang out?"
+
+"No one knows. Holley says they hide up in the canyon country. None of
+the riders have ever tried to track them far. It would be useless.
+Holley says there are plateaus of rich grass and great forests. The Ute
+Indians say that much, too. But we know little about the wild country."
+
+"Aren't there any hunters at Bostil's Ford?"
+
+"Wild-horse hunters, you mean?"
+
+"No. Bear an' deer hunters."
+
+"There's none. And I suppose that's why we're not familiar with the
+wild canyon country. I'd like to ride in there sometime and camp. But
+our people don't go in for that. They love the open ranges. No one I
+know, except a half-witted boy, ever rode down among these monuments.
+And how wonderful a place! It can't be more than twenty miles from
+home.... I must be going soon. I'm forgetting Sage King. Did I tell you
+I was training him for the races?"
+
+"No, you didn't. What races? Tell me," he replied, with keen interest.
+
+Then Lucy told him about the great passion of her father--about the
+long, time-honored custom of free-for-all races, and the great races
+that had been run in the past; about the Creeches and their swift
+horses; about the rivalry and speculation and betting; and lastly about
+the races to be run in a few weeks--races so wonderful in prospect that
+even the horse-thief, Cordts, had begged to be allowed to attend.
+
+"I'm going to see the King beat Creech's roan," shouted the rider, with
+red in his cheeks and a flash in his eye.
+
+His enthusiasm warmed Lucy's interest, yet it made her thoughtful.
+Ideas flashed into her mind. If the rider attended the races he would
+have that fleet stallion with him. He could not be separated from the
+horse that had cost him so dearly. What would Bostil and Holley and
+Farlane say at sight of Wildfire? Suppose Wildfire was to enter the
+races! It was probable that he could run away from the whole
+field--even beat the King. Lucy thrilled and thrilled. What a surprise
+it would be! She had the rider's true love of seeing the unheralded
+horse win over the favorite. She had for years wanted to see a
+horse--and ride a horse--out in front of Sage King. Then suddenly all
+these flashing ideas coruscated seemingly into a gleam--a leaping,
+radiant, wonderful thought. Irresistibly it burst from her.
+
+"Let ME ride your Wildfire in the great race?" she cried, breathlessly.
+
+His response was instantaneous--a smile that was keen and sweet and
+strong, and a proffered hand. Impulsively Lucy clasped that hand with
+both hers.
+
+"You don't mean it," she said. "Oh, it's what Auntie would call one of
+my wild dreams! ... And I'm growing up--they say.... But-- Oh, if I
+could ride Wildfire against the field in that race.... If I ONLY COULD!"
+
+She was on fire with the hope, flushing, tingling. She was unconscious
+of her effect upon the rider, who gazed at her with a new-born light in
+his eyes.
+
+"You can ride him. I reckon I'd like to see that race just as much as
+Bostil or Cordts or any man.... An' see here, girl, Wildfire can beat
+this gray racer of your father's."
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy.
+
+"Wildfire can beat the King," repeated the rider, intensely. "The tame
+horse doesn't step on this earth that can run with Wildfire. He's a
+stallion. He has been a killer of horses. It's in him to KILL. If he
+ran a race it would be that instinct in him."
+
+"How can we plan it?" went on Lucy, impulsively. She had forgotten to
+withdraw her hands from his. "It must be a surprise--a complete
+surprise. If you came to the Ford we couldn't keep it secret. And Dad
+or Farlane would prevent me, somehow."
+
+"It's easy. Ride out here as often as you can. Bring a light saddle an'
+let me put you up on Wildfire. You'll run him, train him, get him in
+shape. Then the day of the races or the night before I'll go in an'
+hide out in the sage till you come or send for Wildfire."
+
+"Oh, it'll be glorious," she cried, with eyes like stars. "I know just
+where to have you hide. A pile of rocks near the racecourse. There's a
+spring and good grass. I could ride out to you just before the big
+race, and we'd come back, with me on Wildfire. The crowd always stays
+down at the end of the racecourse. Only the starters stay out there....
+Oh, I can see Bostil when that red stallion runs into sight!"
+
+"Well, is it settled?" queried the rider, strangely.
+
+Lucy was startled into self-consciousness by his tone.
+
+How strangely he must have felt. And his eyes were piercing.
+
+"You mean--that I ride Wildfire?" she replied, shyly. "Yes, if you'll
+let me."
+
+"I'll be proud."
+
+"You're very good.... And do you think Wildfire can beat the King?"
+
+"I know it."
+
+"How do you?"
+
+"I've seen both horses."
+
+"But it will be a grand race."
+
+"I reckon so. It's likely to be the grandest ever seen. But Wildfire
+will win because he's run wild all his life--an' run to kill other
+horses.... The only question is--CAN you ride him?"
+
+"Yes. I never saw the horse I couldn't ride. Bostil says there are some
+I can't ride. Farlane says not. Only two horses have thrown me, the
+King and Sarchedon. But that was before they knew me. And I was sort of
+wild. I can make your Wildfire love me."
+
+"THAT'S the last part of it I'd ever doubt," replied the rider. "It's
+settled, then. I'll camp here. I'll be well in a few days. Then I'll
+take Wildfire in hand. You will ride out whenever you have a chance,
+without bein' seen. An' the two of us will train the stallion to upset
+that race."
+
+"Yes--then--it's settled."
+
+Lucy's gaze was impelled and held by the rider's. Why was he so pale?
+But then he had been injured--weakened. This compact between them had
+somehow changed their relation. She seemed to have known him long.
+
+"What's your name?" she asked.
+
+"Lin Slone," replied the rider.
+
+Then she released her hands. "I must ride in now. If this isn't a dream
+I'll come back soon." She led Sage King to a rock and mounted him.
+
+"It's good to see you up there," said Slone. "An' that splendid horse!
+... He knows what he is. It'll break Bostil's heart to see that horse
+beat."
+
+"Dad'll feel bad, but it'll do him good," replied Lucy.
+
+That was the old rider's ruthless spirit speaking out of his daughter's
+lips.
+
+Slone went close to the King and, putting a hand on the pommel, he
+looked up at Lucy. "Maybe--it is--a dream--an' you won't come back," he
+said, with unsteady voice.
+
+"Then I'll come in dreams," she flashed. "Be careful of yourself....
+Good-by."
+
+And at a touch the impatient King was off. From far up the slope near a
+monument Lucy looked back. Slone was watching her. She waved a
+gauntleted hand--and then looked back no more.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Two weeks slipped by on the wings of time and opportunity and
+achievement, all colored so wonderfully for Lucy, all spelling that
+adventure for which she had yearned.
+
+Lucy was riding down into the sage toward the monuments with a whole
+day before her. Bostil kept more and more to himself, a circumstance
+that worried her, though she thought little about it. Van had taken up
+the training of the King; and Lucy had deliberately quarreled with him
+so that she would be free to ride where she listed. Farlane nagged her
+occasionally about her rides into the sage, insisting that she must not
+go so far and stay so long. And after Van's return to work he made her
+ride Sarchedon.
+
+Things had happened at the Ford which would have concerned Lucy greatly
+had she not been over-excited about her own affairs. Some one had
+ambushed Bostil in the cottonwoods near his house and had shot at him,
+narrowly missing him. Bostil had sworn he recognized the shot as having
+come from a rifle, and that he knew to whom it belonged. The riders did
+not believe this, and said some boy, shooting at a rabbit or coyote,
+had been afraid to confess he had nearly hit Bostil. The riders all
+said Bostil was not wholly himself of late. The river was still low.
+The boat had not been repaired. And Creech's horses were still on the
+other side.
+
+These things concerned Lucy, yet they only came and went swiftly
+through her mind. She was obsessed by things intimately concerning
+herself.
+
+"Oh, I oughtn't to go," she said, aloud. But she did not even check
+Sarchedon's long swing, his rocking-chair lope. She had said a hundred
+times that she ought not go again out to the monuments. For Lin Slone
+had fallen despairingly, terribly in love with her.
+
+It was not this, she averred, but the monuments and the beautiful
+Wildfire that had woven a spell round her she could not break. She had
+ridden Wildfire all through that strange region of monuments and now
+they claimed something of her. Just as wonderful was Wildfire's love
+for her. The great stallion hated Slone and loved Lucy. Of all the
+remarkable circumstances she had seen or heard about a horse, this fact
+was the most striking. She could do anything with him. All that
+savageness and wildness disappeared when she approached him. He came at
+her call. He whistled at sight of her. He sent out a ringing blast of
+disapproval when she rode away. Every day he tried to bite or kick
+Slone, but he was meek under Lucy's touch.
+
+But this morning there came to Lucy the first vague doubt of herself.
+Once entering her mind, that doubt became clear. And then she vowed she
+liked Slone as she might a brother. And something within her accused
+her own conviction. The conviction was her real self, and the
+accusation was some other girl lately born in her. Lucy did not like
+this new person. She was afraid of her. She would not think of her
+unless she had to.
+
+"I never cared for him--that way," she said, aloud. "I don't--I
+couldn't--ever--I--I--love Lin Slone!"
+
+The spoken thought--the sound of the words played havoc with Lucy's
+self-conscious calmness. She burned. She trembled. She was in a rage
+with herself. She spurred Sarchedon into a run and tore through the
+sage, down into the valley, running him harder than she should have run
+him. Then she checked him, and, penitent, petted him out of all
+proportion to her thoughtlessness. The violent exercise only heated her
+blood and, if anything, increased this sudden and new torment. Why had
+she discarded her boy's rider outfit and chaps for a riding-habit made
+by her aunt, and one she had scorned to wear? Some awful, accusing
+voice thundered in Lucy's burning ears that she had done this because
+she was ashamed to face Lin Slone any more in that costume--she wanted
+to appear different in his eyes, to look like a girl. If that shameful
+suspicion was a fact why was it---what did it mean? She could not tell,
+yet she was afraid of the truth.
+
+All of a sudden Lin Slone stood out clearer in her mental vision--the
+finest type of a rider she had ever known--a strong, lithe, magnificent
+horseman, whose gentleness showed his love for horses, whose roughness
+showed his power--a strange, intense, lonely man in whom she had
+brought out pride, gratitude, kindness, passion, and despair. She felt
+her heart swell at the realization that she had changed him, made him
+kinder, made him divide his love as did her father, made him human,
+hopeful, longing for a future unfettered by the toils of desert
+allurement. She could not control her pride. She must like him very
+much. She confessed that, honestly, without a qualm. It was only
+bewildering moments of strange agitation and uncertainty that bothered
+her. She had refused to be concerned by them until they had finally
+impinged upon her peace of mind. Then they accused her; now she accused
+herself. She ought not go to meet Lin Slone any more.
+
+"But then--the race!" she murmured. "I couldn't give that up.... And
+oh! I'm afraid the harm is done! What can I do?"
+
+After the race--what then? To be sure, all of Bostil's Ford would know
+she had been meeting Slone out in the sage, training his horse. What
+would people say?
+
+"Dad will simply be radiant, IF he can buy Wildfire--and a fiend if he
+can't," she muttered.
+
+Lucy saw that her own impulsiveness had amounted to daring. She had
+gone too far. She excused that--for she had a rider's blood--she was
+Bostil's girl. But she had, in her wildness and joy and spirit, spent
+many hours alone with a rider, to his undoing. She could not excuse
+that. She was ashamed. What would he say when she told him she could
+see him no more? The thought made her weak. He would accept and go his
+way--back to that lonely desert, with only a horse.
+
+"Wildfire doesn't love him!" she said.
+
+And the scarlet fired her neck and cheek and temple. That leap of blood
+seemed to release a riot of emotions. What had been a torment became a
+torture. She turned Sarchedon homeward, but scarcely had faced that way
+when she wheeled him again. She rode slowly and she rode swiftly. The
+former was hateful because it held her back--from what she no longer
+dared think; the latter was fearful because it hurried her on swiftly,
+irresistibly to her fate.
+
+Lin Slone had changed his camp and had chosen a pass high up where the
+great walls had began to break into sections. Here there was intimacy
+with the sheer cliffs of red and yellow. Wide avenues between the walls
+opened on all points of the compass, and that one to the north appeared
+to be a gateway down into the valley of monuments. The monuments
+trooped down into the valley to spread out and grow isolated in the
+distance. Slone's camp was in a clump of cedars surrounding a spring.
+There was grass and white sage where rabbits darted in and out.
+
+Lucy did not approach this camp from that roundabout trail which she
+had made upon the first occasion of her visiting Slone. He had found an
+opening in the wall, and by riding this way into the pass Lucy cut off
+miles. In fact, the camp was not over fifteen miles from Bostil's Ford.
+It was so close that Lucy was worried lest some horse-tracker should
+stumble on the trail and follow her up into the pass.
+
+This morning she espied Slone at his outlook on a high rock that had
+fallen from the great walls. She always looked to see if he was there,
+and she always saw him. The days she had not come, which were few, he
+had spent watching for her there. His tasks were not many, and he said
+he had nothing to do but wait for her. Lucy had a persistent and
+remorseful, yet sweet memory of Slone at his lonely lookout. Here was a
+fine, strong, splendid young man who had nothing to do but watch for
+her--a waste of precious hours!
+
+She waved her hand from afar, and he waved in reply. Then as she
+reached the cedared part of the pass Slone was no longer visible. She
+put Sarchedon to a run up the hard, wind-swept sand, and reached the
+camp before Slone had climbed down from his perch.
+
+Lucy dismounted reluctantly. What would he say about the riding-habit
+that she wore? She felt very curious to learn, and shyer than ever
+before, and altogether different. The skirt made her more of a girl, it
+seemed.
+
+"Hello, Lin!" she called. There was nothing in her usual greeting to
+betray the state of her mind.
+
+"Good mornin'--Lucy," he replied, very slowly. He was looking at her,
+she thought, with different eyes. And he seemed changed, too, though he
+had long been well, and his tall, lithe rider's form, his lean, strong
+face, and his dark eyes were admirable in her sight. Only this morning,
+all because she had worn a girl's riding-skirt instead of boy's chaps,
+everything seemed different. Perhaps her aunt had been right, after
+all, and now things were natural.
+
+Slone gazed so long at her that Lucy could not keep silent. She laughed.
+
+"How do you like--me--in this?"
+
+"I like you much better," Slone said, bluntly.
+
+"Auntie made this--and she's been trying to get me to ride in it."
+
+"It changes you, Lucy.... But can you ride as well?"
+
+"I'm afraid not.... What's Wildfire going to think of me?"
+
+"He'll like you better, too.... Lucy, how's the King comin' on?"
+
+"Lin, I'll tell you, if I wasn't as crazy about Wildfire as you are,
+I'd say he'll have to kill himself to beat the King," replied Lucy,
+with gravity.
+
+"Sometimes I doubt, too," said Slone. "But I only have to look at
+Wildfire to get back my nerve.... Lucy, that will be the grandest race
+ever run!"
+
+"Yes," sighed Lucy.
+
+"What's wrong? Don't you want Wildfire to win?"
+
+"Yes and no. But I'm going to beat the King, anyway.... Bring on your
+Wildfire!"
+
+Lucy unsaddled Sarchedon and turned him loose to graze while Slone went
+out after Wildfire. And presently it appeared that Lucy might have some
+little time to wait. Wildfire had lately been trusted to hobbles, which
+fact made it likely that he had strayed.
+
+Lucy gazed about her at the great looming red walls and out through the
+avenues to the gray desert beyond. This adventure of hers would soon
+have an end, for the day of the races was not far distant, and after
+that it was obvious she would not have occasion to meet Slone. To think
+of never coming to the pass again gave Lucy a pang. Unconsciously she
+meant that she would never ride up here again, because Slone would not
+be here. A wind always blew through the pass, and that was why the sand
+was so clean and hard. To-day it was a pleasant wind, not hot, nor
+laden with dust, and somehow musical in the cedars. The blue smoke from
+Slone's fire curled away and floated out of sight. It was lonely, with
+the haunting presence of the broken walls ever manifest. But the
+loneliness seemed full of content. She no longer wondered at Slone's
+desert life. That might be well for a young man, during those years
+when adventure and daring called him, but she doubted that it would be
+well for all of a man's life. And only a little of it ought to be known
+by a woman. She saw how the wildness and loneliness and brooding of
+such a life would prevent a woman's development. Yet she loved it all
+and wanted to live near it, so that when the need pressed her she could
+ride out into the great open stretches and see the dark monuments grow
+nearer and nearer, till she was under them, in the silent and colored
+shadows.
+
+Slone returned presently with Wildfire. The stallion shone like a flame
+in the sunlight. His fear and hatred of Slone showed in the way he
+obeyed. Slone had mastered him, and must always keep the upper hand of
+him. It had from the first been a fight between man and beast, and Lucy
+believed it would always be so.
+
+But Wildfire was a different horse when he saw Lucy. Day by day
+evidently Slone loved him more and tried harder to win a little of what
+Wildfire showed at sight of Lucy. Still Slone was proud of Lucy's
+control over the stallion. He was just as much heart and soul bent on
+winning the great race as Lucy was. She had ridden Wildfire bareback at
+first, and then they had broken him to the saddle.
+
+It was serious business, that training of Wildfire, and Slone had
+peculiar ideas regarding it. Lucy rode him up and down the pass until
+he was warm. Then Slone got on Sarchedon. Wildfire always snorted and
+showed fight at sight of Sage King or Nagger, and the stallion
+Sarchedon infuriated him because Sarchedon showed fight, too. Slone
+started out ahead of Lucy, and then they raced down the long pass. The
+course was hard-packed sand. Fast as Sarchedon was, and matchless as a
+horseman as was Slone, the race was over almost as soon as it began.
+Wildfire ran indeed like fire before the wind. He wanted to run, and
+the other horse made him fierce. Like a burr Lucy stuck low over his
+neck, a part of the horse, and so light he would not have known he was
+carrying her but for the repeated calls in his ears. Lucy never spurred
+him. She absolutely refused to use spurs on him. This day she ran away
+from Slone, and, turning at the end of the two-mile course they had
+marked out, she loped Wildfire back. Slone turned with her, and they
+were soon in camp. Lucy did not jump off. She was in a transport. Every
+race kindled a mounting fire in her. She was scarlet of face, out of
+breath, her hair flying. And she lay on Wildfire's neck and hugged him
+and caressed him and talked to him in low tones of love.
+
+Slone dismounted and got Sarchedon out of the way, then crossed to
+where Lucy still fondled Wildfire. He paused a moment to look at her,
+but when she saw him he started again, and came close up to her as she
+sat the saddle.
+
+"You went past me like a bullet," he said.
+
+"Oh, can't he run!" murmured Lucy.
+
+"Could he beat the King to-day?"
+
+Slone had asked that question every day, more than once.
+
+"Yes, he could--to-day. I know it," replied Lucy. "Oh--I get so--so
+excited. I--I make a fool of myself--over him. But to ride him--going
+like that--Lin! it's just glorious!"
+
+"You sure can ride him," replied Slone. "I can't see a fault
+anywhere--in him--or in your handling him. He never breaks. He goes
+hard, but he saves something. He gets mad--fierce--all the time, yet he
+WANTS to go your way. Lucy, I never saw the like of it. Somehow you an'
+Wildfire make a combination. You can't be beat."
+
+"Do I ride him--well?" she asked, softly.
+
+"I could never ride him so well."
+
+"Oh, Lin--you just want to please me. Why, Van couldn't ride with you."
+
+"I don't care, Lucy," replied Slone, stoutly. "You rode this horse
+perfect. I've found fault with you on the King, on your mustangs, an'
+on this black horse Sarch. But on Wildfire! You grow there."
+
+"What will Dad say, and Farlane, and Holley, and Van? Oh, I'll crow
+over Van," said Lucy. "I'm crazy to ride Wildfire out before all the
+Indians and ranchers and riders, before the races, just to show him
+off, to make them stare."
+
+"No, Lucy. The best plan is to surprise them all. Enter your horse for
+the race, but don't show up till all the riders are at the start."
+
+"Yes, that'll be best.... And, Lin, only five days more--five days!"
+
+Her words made Slone thoughtful, and Lucy, seeing that, straightway
+grew thoughtful, too.
+
+"Sure--only five days more," repeated Slone, slowly.
+
+His tone convinced Lucy that he meant to speak again as he had spoken
+once before, precipitating the only quarrel they had ever had.
+
+"Does ANY ONE at Bostil's Ford know you meet me out here?" he asked,
+suddenly.
+
+"Only Auntie. I told her the other day. She had been watching me. She
+thought things. So I told her."
+
+"What did she say?" went on Slone, curiously.
+
+"She was mad," replied Lucy. "She scolded me. She said.... But, anyway,
+I coaxed her not to tell on me."
+
+"I want to know what she said," spoke up the rider, deliberately.
+
+Lucy blushed, and it was a consciousness of confusion as well as
+Slone's tone that made her half-angry.
+
+"She said when I was found out there'd be a--a great fuss at the Ford.
+There would be talk. Auntie said I'm now a grown-up girl.... Oh, she
+carried on! ... Bostil would likely shoot you. And if he didn't some of
+the riders would.... Oh, Lin, it was perfectly ridiculous the way
+Auntie talked."
+
+"I reckon not," replied Slone. "I'm afraid I've done wrong to let you
+come out here.... But I never thought. I'm not used to girls.
+I'll--I'll deserve what I get for lettin' you came."
+
+"It's my own business," declared Lucy, spiritedly. "And I guess they'd
+better let you alone."
+
+Slone shook his head mournfully. He was getting one of those gloomy
+spells that Lucy hated. Nevertheless, she felt a stir of her pulses.
+
+"Lucy, there won't be any doubt about my stand--when I meet Bostil,"
+said Slone. Some thought had animated him.
+
+"What do you mean?" Lucy trembled a little.
+
+There was a sternness about Slone, a dignity that seemed new. "I'll ask
+him to--to let you marry me."
+
+Lucy stared aghast. Slone appeared in dead earnest.
+
+"Nonsense!" she exclaimed, shortly.
+
+"I reckon the possibility is--that," replied Slone, bitterly, "but my
+motive isn't."
+
+"It is. Why, you've known me only a few days.... Dad would be mad. Like
+as not he'd knock you down.... I tell you, Lin, my dad is--is pretty
+rough. And just at this time of the races.... And if Wildfire beats the
+King! ... Whew!"
+
+"WHEN Wildfire beats the King, not IF," corrected Slone.
+
+"Dad will be dangerous," warned Lucy. "Please don't---don't ask him
+that. Then everybody would know I--I--you---you--"
+
+"That's it. I want everybody at your home to know."
+
+"But it's a little place," flashed Lucy. "Every one knows me. I'm the
+only girl. There have been--other fellows who.... And oh! I don't want
+you made fun of!"
+
+"Why?" he asked.
+
+Lucy turned away her head without answering. Something deep within her
+was softening her anger. She must fight to keep angry; and that was
+easy enough, she thought, if she could only keep in mind Slone's
+opposition to her. Strangely, she discovered that it had been sweet to
+find him always governed by her desire or will.
+
+"Maybe you misunderstand," he began, presently. And his voice was not
+steady. "I don't forget I'm only--a beggarly rider. I couldn't have
+gone into the Ford at all--I was such a ragamuffin--"
+
+"Don't talk like that!" interrupted Lucy, impatiently.
+
+"Listen," he replied. "My askin' Bostil for you doesn't mean I've any
+hope. ... It's just I want him an' everybody to know that I asked."
+
+"But Dad--everybody will think that YOU think there's
+reason--why--I--why, you OUGHT to ask," burst out Lucy, with scarlet
+face.
+
+"Sure, that's it," he replied.
+
+"But there's no reason. None! Not a reason under the sun," retorted
+Lucy, hotly. "I found you out here. I did you a--a little service. We
+planned to race Wildfire. And I came out to ride him.... That's all."
+
+Slone's dark, steady gaze disconcerted Lucy. "But, no one knows me, and
+we've been alone in secret."
+
+"It's not altogether--that. I--I told Auntie," faltered Lucy.
+
+"Yes, just lately."
+
+"Lin Slone, I'll never forgive you if you ask Dad that," declared Lucy,
+with startling force.
+
+"I reckon that's not so important."
+
+"Oh!--so you don't care." Lucy felt herself indeed in a mood not
+comprehensible to her. Her blood raced. She wanted to be furious with
+Slone, but somehow she could not wholly be so. There was something
+about him that made her feel small and thoughtless and selfish. Slone
+had hurt her pride. But the thing that she feared and resented and
+could not understand was the strange gladness Slone's declaration
+roused in her. She tried to control her temper so she could think. Two
+emotions contended within her--one of intense annoyance at the thought
+of embarrassment surely to follow Slone's action, and the other a
+vague, disturbing element, all sweet and furious and inexplicable. She
+must try to dissuade him from approaching her father.
+
+"Please don't go to Dad." She put a hand on Slone's arm as he stood
+close up to Wildfire.
+
+"I reckon I will," he said.
+
+"Lin!" In that word there was the subtle, nameless charm of an intimacy
+she had never granted him until that moment. He seemed drawn as if by
+invisible wires. He put a shaking hand on hers and crushed her
+gauntleted fingers. And Lucy, in the current now of her woman's need to
+be placated if not obeyed, pressed her small hand to his. How strange
+to what lengths a little submission to her feeling had carried her!
+Every spoken word, every movement, seemed to exact more from her. She
+did not know herself.
+
+"Lin! ... Promise not to--speak to Dad!"
+
+"No." His voice rang.
+
+"Don't give me away--don't tell my Dad!"
+
+"What?" he queried, incredulously.
+
+Lucy did not understand what. But his amazed voice, his wide-open eyes
+of bewilderment, seemed to aid her into piercing the maze of her own
+mind. A hundred thoughts whirled together, and all around them was
+wrapped the warm, strong feeling of his hand on hers. What did she mean
+that he would tell her father? There seemed to be a deep, hidden self
+in her. Up out of these depths came a whisper, like a ray of light, and
+it said to her that there was more hope for Lin Slone than he had ever
+had in one of his wildest dreams.
+
+"Lin, if you tell Dad--then he'll know--and there WON'T be any hope for
+you!" cried Lucy, honestly.
+
+If Slone caught the significance of her words he did not believe it.
+
+"I'm goin' to Bostil after the race an' ask him. That's settled,"
+declared Slone, stubbornly.
+
+At this Lucy utterly lost her temper. "Oh! you--you fool!" she cried.
+
+Slone drew back suddenly as if struck, and a spot of dark blood leaped
+to his lean face. "No! It seems to me the right way."
+
+"Right or wrong there's no sense in it--because--because. Oh! can't you
+see?"
+
+"I see more than I used to," he replied. "I was a fool over a horse.
+An' now I'm a fool over a girl.... I wish you'd never found me that
+day!"
+
+Lucy whirled in the saddle and made Wildfire jump. She quieted him,
+and, leaping off, threw the bridle to Slone. "I won't ride your horse
+in the race!" she declared with sudden passion. She felt herself
+shaking all over.
+
+"Lucy Bostil, I wish I was as sure of Heaven as I am you'll be up on
+Wildfire in that race," he said.
+
+"I won't ride your horse."
+
+"MY horse. Oh, I see.... But you'll ride Wildfire."
+
+"I won't."
+
+Slone suddenly turned white, and his eyes flashed dark fire. "You won't
+be able to help ridin' him any more than I could help it."
+
+"A lot you know about me, Lin Slone!" returned Lucy, with scorn. "I can
+be as--as bull-headed as you, any day."
+
+Slone evidently controlled his temper, though his face remained white.
+He even smiled at her.
+
+"You are Bostil's daughter," he said.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You are blood an' bone, heart an' soul a rider, if any girl ever was.
+You're a wonder with a horse--as good as any man I ever saw. You love
+Wildfire. An' look--how strange! That wild stallion--that killer of
+horses, why he follows you, he whistles for you, he runs like lightnin'
+for you; he LOVES you."
+
+Slone had attacked Lucy in her one weak point. She felt a force rending
+her. She dared not look at Wildfire. Yes--all, that was true Slone had
+said. How desperately hard to think of forfeiting the great race she
+knew she could win!
+
+"Never! I'll never ride your Wildfire AGAIN!" she said, very, low.
+
+"MINE! ... So that's the trouble. Well, Wildfire won't be mine when you
+ride the race."
+
+"What do you mean?" demanded Lucy. "You'll sell him to Bostil.... Bah!
+you couldn't ..."
+
+"Sell Wildfire!--after what it cost me to catch an' break him? ... Not
+for all your father's lands an' horses an' money!"
+
+Slone's voice rolled out with deep, ringing scorn. And Lucy, her temper
+quelled, began to feel the rider's strength, his mastery of the
+situation, and something vague, yet splendid about him that hurt her.
+
+Slone strode toward her. Lucy backed against the cedar-tree and could
+go no farther. How white he was now! Lucy's heart gave a great, fearful
+leap, for she imagined Slone intended to take her in his arms. But he
+did not.
+
+"When you ride--Wildfire in that--race he'll be--YOURS!" said Slone,
+huskily.
+
+"How can that be?" questioned Lucy, in astonishment.
+
+"I give him to you."
+
+"You--give--Wildfire--to me?" gasped Lucy.
+
+"Yes. Right now."
+
+The rider's white face and dark eyes showed the strain of great and
+passionate sacrifice.
+
+"Lin Slone! ... I can't--understand you."
+
+"You've got to ride Wildfire in that race. You've got to beat the
+King.... So I give Wildfire to you. An' now you can't help but ride
+him."
+
+"Why--why do you give him--to me?" faltered Lucy.
+
+All her pride and temper had vanished, and she seemed lost in blankness.
+
+"Because you love Wildfire. An' Wildfire loves you.... If that isn't
+reason enough--then ... because I love him--as no rider ever loved a
+horse.... An' I love you as no man ever loved a girl!"
+
+Slone had never before spoken words of love to Lucy. She dropped her
+head. She knew of his infatuation. But he had always been shy except
+once when he had been bold, and that had caused a quarrel. With a
+strange pain at her breast Lucy wondered why Slone had not spoken that
+way before? It made as great a change in her as if she had been born
+again. It released something. A bolt shot back in her heart. She knew
+she was quivering like a leaf, with no power to control her muscles.
+She knew if she looked up then Slone might see the depths of her soul.
+Even with her hands shutting out the light she thought the desert
+around had changed and become all mellow gold and blue and white,
+radiant as the moonlight of dreams--and that the monuments soared above
+them grandly, and were beautiful and noble, like the revelations of
+love and joy to her. And suddenly she found herself sitting at the foot
+of the cedar, weeping, with tear-wet hands over her face.
+
+"There's nothin' to---to cry about," Slone was saying. "But I'm sorry
+if I hurt you."
+
+"Will--you--please--fetch Sarch?" asked Lucy, tremulously.
+
+While Slone went for the horse and saddled him Lucy composed herself
+outwardly. And she had two very strong desires--one to tell Slone
+something, and the other to run. She decided she would do both together.
+
+Slone brought Sarchedon. Lucy put on her gauntlets, and, mounting the
+horse, she took a moment to arrange her skirts before she looked down
+at Slone. He was now pale, rather than white, and instead of fire in
+his eyes there was sadness. Lucy felt the swelling and pounding of her
+heart--and a long, delicious shuddering thrill that ran over her.
+
+"Lin, I won't take Wildfire," she said.
+
+"Yes, you will. You can't refuse. Remember he's grown to look to you.
+It wouldn't be right by the horse."
+
+"But he's all you have in the world," she protested. Yet she knew any
+protestations would be in vain.
+
+"No. I have good old faithful Nagger."
+
+"Would you go try to hunt another wild stallion--like Wildfire?" asked
+Lucy, curiously. She was playing with the wonderful sweet consciousness
+of her power to render happiness when she chose.
+
+"No more horse-huntin' for me," declared Slone. "An' as for findin' one
+like Wildfire--that'd never be."
+
+"Suppose I won't accept him?"
+
+"How could you refuse? Not for me but for Wildfire's sake! ... But if
+you could be mean an' refuse, why, Wildfire can go back to the desert."
+
+"No!" exclaimed Lucy.
+
+"I reckon so."
+
+Lucy paused a moment. How dry her tongue seemed! And her breathing was
+labored! An unreal shimmering gleam shone on all about her. Even the
+red stallion appeared enveloped in a glow. And the looming monuments
+looked down upon her, paternal, old, and wise, bright with the color of
+happiness.
+
+"Wildfire ought to have several more days' training--then a day of
+rest--and then the race," said Lucy, turning again to look at Slone.
+
+A smile was beginning to change the hardness of his face. "Yes, Lucy,"
+he said.
+
+"And I'll HAVE to ride him?"
+
+"You sure will--if he's ever to beat the King."
+
+Lucy's eyes flashed blue. She saw the crowd--the curious, friendly
+Indians--the eager riders--the spirited horses--the face of her
+father--and last the race itself, such a race as had never been ran, so
+swift, so fierce, so wonderful.
+
+"Then Lin," began Lucy, with a slowly heaving breast, "if I accept
+Wildfire will you keep him for me--until ... and if I accept him, and
+tell you why, will you promise to say--"
+
+"Don't ask me again!" interrupted Slone, hastily. "I WILL speak to
+Bostil."
+
+"Wait, will you ... promise not to say a word--a single word to
+ME--till after the race?"
+
+"A word--to you! What about?" he queried, wonderingly. Something in his
+eyes made Lucy think of the dawn.
+
+"About--the--Because--Why, I'm--I'll accept your horse."
+
+"Yes," he replied, swiftly.
+
+Lucy settled herself in the saddle and, shortening the bridle, she got
+ready to spur Sarchedon into a bolt.
+
+"Lin, I'll accept Wildfire because I love you."
+
+Sarchedon leaped forward. Lucy did not see Slone's face nor hear him
+speak. Then she was tearing through the sage, out past the whistling
+Wildfire, with the wind sweet in her face. She did not look back.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+All through May there was an idea, dark and sinister, growing in
+Bostil's mind. Fiercely at first he had rejected it as utterly unworthy
+of the man he was. But it returned. It would not be denied. It was
+fostered by singular and unforeseen circumstances. The meetings with
+Creech, the strange, sneaking actions of young Joel Creech, and
+especially the gossip of riders about the improvement in Creech's swift
+horse--these things appeared to loom larger and larger and to augment
+in Bostil's mind the monstrous idea which he could not shake off. So he
+became brooding and gloomy.
+
+It appeared to be an indication of his intense preoccupation of mind
+that he seemed unaware of Lucy's long trips down into the sage. But
+Bostil had observed them long before Holley and other riders had
+approached him with the information.
+
+"Let her alone," he growled to his men. "I gave her orders to train the
+King. An' after Van got well mebbe Lucy just had a habit of ridin' down
+there. She can take care of herself."
+
+To himself, when alone, Bostil muttered: "Wonder what the kid has
+looked up now? Some mischief, I'll bet!"
+
+Nevertheless, he did not speak to her on the subject. Deep in his heart
+he knew he feared his keen-eyed daughter, and during these days he was
+glad she was not in evidence at the hours when he could not very well
+keep entirely to himself. Bostil was afraid Lucy might divine what he
+had on his mind. There was no one else he cared for. Holley, that old
+hawk-eyed rider, might see through him, but Bostil knew Holley would be
+loyal, whatever he saw.
+
+Toward the end of the month, when Somers returned from horse-hunting,
+Bostil put him and Shugrue to work upon the big flatboat down at the
+crossing. Bostil himself went down, and he walked--a fact apt to be
+considered unusual if it had been noticed.
+
+"Put in new planks," was his order to the men. "An' pour hot tar in the
+cracks. Then when the tar dries shove her in ... but I'll tell you
+when."
+
+Every morning young Creech rowed over to see if the boat was ready to
+take the trip across to bring his father's horses back. The third
+morning of work on the boat Bostil met Joel down there. Joel seemed
+eager to speak to Bostil. He certainly was a wild-looking youth.
+
+"Bostil, my ole man is losin' sleep waitin' to git the hosses over," he
+said, frankly. "Feed's almost gone."
+
+"That'll be all right, Joel," replied Bostil. "You see, the river ain't
+begun to raise yet.... How're the hosses comin' on?"
+
+"Grand, sir--grand!" exclaimed the simple Joel. "Peg is runnin' faster
+than last year, but Blue Roan is leavin' her a mile. Dad's goin' to bet
+all he has. The roan can't lose this year."
+
+Bostil felt like a bull bayed at by a hound. Blue Roan was a young
+horse, and every season he had grown bigger and faster. The King had
+reached the limit of his speed. That was great, Bostil knew, and enough
+to win over any horse in the uplands, providing the luck of the race
+fell even. Luck, however, was a fickle thing.
+
+"I was advisin' Dad to swim the hosses over," declared Joel,
+deliberately.
+
+"A-huh! You was? ... An' why?" rejoined Bostil.
+
+Joel's simplicity and frankness vanished, and with them his
+rationality. He looked queer. His contrasting eyes shot little
+malignant gleams. He muttered incoherently, and moved back toward the
+skiff, making violent gestures, and his muttering grew to shouting,
+though still incoherent. He got in the boat and started to row back
+over the river.
+
+"Sure he's got a screw loose," observed Somers. Shugrue tapped his
+grizzled head significantly.
+
+Bostil made no comment. He strode away from his men down to the river
+shore, and, finding a seat on a stone, he studied the slow eddying red
+current of the river and he listened. If any man knew the strange and
+remorseless Colorado, that man was Bostil. He never made any mistakes
+in anticipating what the river was going to do.
+
+And now he listened, as if indeed the sullen, low roar, the murmuring
+hollow gurgle, the sudden strange splash, were spoken words meant for
+his ears alone. The river was low. It seemed tired out. It was a dirty
+red in color, and it swirled and flowed along lingeringly. At times the
+current was almost imperceptible; and then again it moved at varying
+speed. It seemed a petulant, waiting, yet inevitable stream, with some
+remorseless end before it. It had a thousand voices, but not the one
+Bostil listened to hear.
+
+He plodded gloomily up the trail, resting in the quiet, dark places of
+the canyon, loath to climb out into the clear light of day. And once in
+the village, Bostil shook himself as if to cast off an evil,
+ever-present, pressing spell.
+
+The races were now only a few days off. Piutes and Navajos were camped
+out on the sage, and hourly the number grew as more came in. They were
+building cedar sunshades. Columns of blue smoke curled up here and
+there. Mustangs and ponies grazed everywhere, and a line of Indians
+extended along the racecourse, where trials were being held. The
+village was full of riders, horse-traders and hunters, and ranchers.
+Work on the ranges had practically stopped for the time being, and in
+another day or so every inhabitant of the country would be in Bostil's
+Ford.
+
+Bostil walked into the village, grimly conscious that the presence of
+the Indians and riders and horses, the action and color and bustle, the
+near approach of the great race-day--these things that in former years
+had brought him keen delight and speculation--had somehow lost their
+tang. He had changed. Something was wrong in him. But he must go among
+these visitors and welcome them as of old; he who had always been the
+life of these racing-days must be outwardly the same. And the task was
+all the harder because of the pleasure shown by old friends among the
+Indians and the riders at meeting him. Bostil knew he had been a
+cunning horse-trader, but he had likewise been a good friend. Many were
+the riders and Indians who owed much to him. So everywhere he was
+hailed and besieged, until finally the old excitement of betting and
+bantering took hold of him and he forgot his brooding.
+
+Brackton's place, as always, was a headquarters for all visitors.
+Macomber had just come in full of enthusiasm and pride over the horse
+he had entered, and he had money to wager. Two Navajo chiefs, called by
+white men Old Horse and Silver, were there for the first time in years.
+They were ready to gamble horse against horse. Cal Blinn and his riders
+of Durango had arrived; likewise Colson, Sticks, and Burthwait, old
+friends and rivals of Bostil's.
+
+For a while Brackton's was merry. There was some drinking and much
+betting. It was characteristic of Bostil that he would give any odds
+asked on the King in a race; and, furthermore, he would take any end of
+wagers on other horses. As far as his own horses were concerned he bet
+shrewdly, but in races where his horses did not figure he seemed to
+find fun in the betting, whether or not he won.
+
+The fact remained, however, that there were only two wagers against the
+King, and both were put up by Indians. Macomber was betting on second
+or third place for his horse in the big race. No odds of Bostil's
+tempted him.
+
+"Say, where's Wetherby?" rolled out Bostil. "He'll back his hoss."
+
+"Wetherby's ridin' over to-morrow," replied Macomber. "But you gotta
+bet him two to one."
+
+"See hyar, Bostil," spoke up old Cal Blinn, "you jest wait till I git
+an eye on the King's runnin'. Mebbe I'll go you even money."
+
+"An' as fer me, Bostil," said Colson, "I ain't set up yit which hoss
+I'll race."
+
+Burthwait, an old rider, came forward to Brackton's desk and entered a
+wager against the field that made all the men gasp.
+
+"By George! pard, you ain't a-limpin' along!" ejaculated Bostil,
+admiringly, and he put a hand on the other's shoulder.
+
+"Bostil, I've a grand hoss," replied Burthwait. "He's four years old, I
+guess, fer he was born wild, an' you never seen him."
+
+"Wild hoss? ... Huh!" growled Bostil. "You must think he can run."
+
+"Why, Bostil, a streak of lightnin' ain't anywheres with him."
+
+"Wal, I'm glad to hear it," said Bostil, gruffly. "Brack, how many
+hosses entered now for the big race?"
+
+The lean, gray Brackton bent earnestly over his soiled ledger, while
+the riders and horsemen round him grew silent to listen.
+
+"Thar's the Sage King by Bostil," replied Brackton. "Blue Roan an' Peg,
+by Creech; Whitefoot, by Macomber; Rocks, by Holley; Hoss-shoes, by
+Blinn; Bay Charley, by Burthwait. Then thar's the two mustangs entered
+by Old Hoss an' Silver--an' last--Wildfire, by Lucy Bostil."
+
+"What's thet last?" queried Bostil.
+
+"Wildfire, by Lucy Bostil," repeated Brackton.
+
+"Has the girl gone an' entered a hoss?"
+
+"She sure has. She came in to-day, regular an' business-like, writ her
+name an' her hoss's--here 'tis--an' put up the entrance money."
+
+"Wal, I'll be d--d!" exclaimed Bostil. He was astonished and pleased.
+"She said she'd do it. But I didn't take no stock in her talk.... An'
+the hoss's name?"
+
+"Wildfire."
+
+"Huh! ... Wildfire. Mebbe thet girl can't think of names for hosses!
+What's this hoss she calls Wildfire?"
+
+"She sure didn't say," replied Brackton. "Holley an' Van an' some more
+of the boys was here. They joked her a little. You oughter seen the
+look Lucy give them. But fer once she seemed mum. She jest walked away
+mysterious like."
+
+"Lucy's got a pony off some Indian, I reckon," returned Bostil, and he
+laughed. "Then thet makes ten hosses entered so far?"
+
+"Right. An' there's sure to be one more. I guess the track's wide
+enough for twelve."
+
+"Wal, Brack, there'll likely be one hoss out in front an' some
+stretched out behind," replied Bostil, dryly. "The track's sure wide
+enough."
+
+"Won't thet be a grand race!" exclaimed an enthusiastic rider. "Wisht I
+had about a million to bet!"
+
+"Bostil, I 'most forgot," went on Brackton, "Cordts sent word by the
+Piutes who come to-day thet he'd be here sure."
+
+Bostil's face subtly changed. The light seemed to leave it. He did not
+reply to Brackton--did not show that he heard the comment on all sides.
+Public opinion was against Bostil's permission to allow Cordts and his
+horse-thieves to attend the races. Bostil appeared grave, regretful.
+Yet it was known by all that in the strangeness and perversity of his
+rider's nature he wanted Cordts to see the King win that race. It was
+his rider's vanity and defiance in the teeth of a great horse-thief.
+But no good would come of Cordts's presence--that much was manifest.
+
+There was a moment of silence. All these men, if they did not fear
+Bostil, were sometimes uneasy when near him. Some who were more
+reckless than discreet liked to irritate him. That, too, was a rider's
+weakness.
+
+"When's Creech's hosses comin' over?" asked Colson, with sudden
+interest.
+
+"Wal, I reckon--soon," replied Bostil, constrainedly, and he turned
+away.
+
+By the time he got home all the excitement of the past hour had left
+him and gloom again abided in his mind. He avoided his daughter and
+forgot the fact of her entering a horse in the race. He ate supper
+alone, without speaking to his sister. Then in the dusk he went out to
+the corrals and called the King to the fence. There was love between
+master and horse. Bostil talked low, like a woman, to Sage King. And
+the hard old rider's heart was full and a lump swelled in his throat,
+for contact with the King reminded him that other men loved other
+horses.
+
+Bostil returned to the house and went to his room, where he sat
+thinking in the dark. By and by all was quiet. Then seemingly with a
+wrench he bestirred himself and did what for him was a strange action.
+Removing his boots, he put on a pair of moccasins. He slipped out of
+the house; he kept to the flagstone of the walk; he took to the sage
+till out of the village, and then he sheered round to the river trail.
+With the step and sureness and the eyes of an Indian he went down
+through that pitch-black canyon to the river and the ford.
+
+The river seemed absolutely the same as during the day. He peered
+through the dark opaqueness of gloom. It moved there, the river he
+knew, shadowy, mysterious, murmuring. Bostil went down to the edge of
+the water, and, sitting there, he listened. Yes--the voices of the
+stream were the same. But after a long time he imagined there was among
+them an infinitely low voice, as if from a great distance. He imagined
+this; he doubted; he made sure; and then all seemed fancy again. His
+mind held only one idea and was riveted round it. He strained his
+hearing, so long, so intently, that at last he knew he had heard what
+he was longing for. Then in the gloom he took to the trail, and
+returned home as he had left, stealthily, like an Indian.
+
+But Bostil did not sleep nor rest.
+
+Next morning early he rode down to the river. Somers and Shugrue had
+finished the boat and were waiting. Other men were there, curious and
+eager. Joel Creech, barefooted and ragged, with hollow eyes and strange
+actions, paced the sands.
+
+The boat was lying bottom up. Bostil examined the new planking and the
+seams. Then he straightened his form.
+
+"Turn her over," he ordered. "Shove her in. An' let her soak up to-day."
+
+The men seemed glad and relieved. Joel Creech heard and he came near to
+Bostil.
+
+"You'll--you'll fetch Dad's hosses over?" he queried.
+
+"Sure. To-morrow," replied Bostil, cheerily.
+
+Joel smiled, and that smile showed what might have been possible for
+him under kinder conditions of life. "Now, Bostil, I'm sorry fer what I
+said," blurted Joel.
+
+"Shut up. Go tell your old man."
+
+Joel ran down to his skiff and, leaping in, began to row vigorously
+across. Bostil watched while the workmen turned the boat over and slid
+it off the sand-bar and tied it securely to the mooring. Bostil
+observed that not a man there saw anything unusual about the river.
+But, for that matter, there was nothing to see. The river was the same.
+
+That night when all was quiet in and around the village Bostil emerged
+from his house and took to his stealthy stalk down toward the river.
+
+The moment he got out into the night oppression left him. How
+interminable the hours had been! Suspense, doubt, anxiety, fear no
+longer burdened him. The night was dark, with only a few stars, and the
+air was cool. A soft wind blew across his heated face. A neighbor's
+dog, baying dismally, startled Bostil. He halted to listen, then stole
+on under the cottonwoods, through the sage, down the trail, into the
+jet-black canyon. Yet he found his way as if it had been light. In the
+darkness of his room he had been a slave to his indecision; now in the
+darkness of the looming cliffs he was free, resolved, immutable.
+
+The distance seemed short. He passed out of the narrow canyon, skirted
+the gorge over the river, and hurried down into the shadowy
+amphitheater under the looming walls.
+
+The boat lay at the mooring, one end resting lightly the sand-bar. With
+strong, nervous clutch Bostil felt the knots of the cables. Then he
+peered into the opaque gloom of that strange and huge V-shaped split
+between the great canyon walls. Bostil's mind had begun to relax from
+the single idea. Was he alone? Except for the low murmur of the river
+there was dead silence--a silence like no other--a silence which seemed
+held under imprisoning walls. Yet Bostil peered long into the shadows.
+Then he looked up. The ragged ramparts far above frowned bold and black
+at a few cold stars, and the blue of its sky was without the usual
+velvety brightness. How far it was up to that corrugated rim! All of a
+sudden Bostil hated this vast ebony pit.
+
+He strode down to the water and, sitting upon the stone he had occupied
+so often, he listened. He turned his ear up-stream, then down-stream,
+and to the side, and again up-stream and listened.
+
+The river seemed the same.
+
+It was slow, heavy, listless, eddying, lingering, moving--the same
+apparently as for days past. It splashed very softly and murmured low
+and gurgled faintly. It gave forth fitful little swishes and musical
+tinkles and lapping sounds. It was flowing water, yet the proof was
+there of tardiness. Now it was almost still, and then again it moved
+on. It was a river of mystery telling a lie with its low music. As
+Bostil listened all those soft, watery sounds merged into what seemed a
+moaning, and that moaning held a roar so low as to be only
+distinguishable to the ear trained by years.
+
+No--the river was not the same. For the voice of its soft moaning
+showed to Bostil its meaning. It called from the far north--the north
+of great ice-clad peaks beginning to glisten under the nearing sun; of
+vast snow-filled canyons dripping and melting; of the crystal brooks
+suddenly colored and roiled and filled bank-full along the mountain
+meadows; of many brooks plunging down and down, rolling the rocks, to
+pour their volume into the growing turbid streams on the slopes. It was
+the voice of all that widely separated water spilled suddenly with
+magical power into the desert river to make it a mighty, thundering
+torrent, red and defiled, terrible in its increasing onslaught into the
+canyon, deep, ponderous, but swift--the Colorado in flood.
+
+And as Bostil heard that voice he trembled. What was the thing he meant
+to do? A thousand thoughts assailed him in answer and none were clear.
+A chill passed over him. Suddenly he felt that the cold stole up from
+his feet. They were both in the water. He pulled them out and, bending
+down, watched the dim, dark line of water. It moved up and up, inch by
+inch, swiftly. The river was on the rise!
+
+Bostil leaped up. He seemed possessed of devils. A rippling hot gash of
+blood fired his every vein and tremor after tremor shook him.
+
+"By G---d! I had it right--she's risin'!" he exclaimed, hoarsely.
+
+He stared in fascinated certainty at the river. All about it and
+pertaining to it had changed. The murmur and moan changed to a low,
+sullen roar. The music was gone. The current chafed at its rock-bound
+confines. Here was an uneasy, tormented, driven river! The light from
+the stars shone on dark, glancing, restless waters, uneven and strange.
+And while Bostil watched, whether it was a short time or long, the
+remorseless, destructive nature of the river showed itself.
+
+Bostil began to pace the sands. He thought of those beautiful
+race-horses across the river.
+
+"It's not too late!" he muttered. "I can get the boat over an'
+back--yet!"
+
+He knew that on the morrow the Colorado in flood would bar those
+horses, imprison them in a barren canyon, shut them in to starve.
+
+"It'd be hellish! ... Bostil, you can't do it. You ain't thet kind of a
+man.... Bostil poison a water-hole where hosses loved to drink, or burn
+over grass! ... What would Lucy think of you? ... No, Bostil, you've
+let spite rule bad. Hurry now and save them hosses!"
+
+He strode down to the boat. It swung clear now, and there was water
+between it and the shore. Bostil laid hold of the cables. As he did so
+he thought of Creech and a blackness enfolded him. He forgot Creech's
+horses. Something gripped him, burned him--some hard and bitter feeling
+which he thought was hate of Creech. Again the wave of fire ran over
+him, and his huge hands strained on the cables. The fiend of that
+fiendish river had entered his soul. He meant ruin to a man. He meant
+more than ruin. He meant to destroy what his enemy, his rival loved.
+The darkness all about him, the gloom and sinister shadow of the
+canyon, the sullen increasing roar of the' river--these lent their
+influence to the deed, encouraged him, drove him onward, fought and
+strangled the resistance in his heart. As he brooded all the motives
+for the deed grew like that remorseless river. Had not his enemy's son
+shot at him from ambush? Was not his very life at stake? A terrible
+blow must be dealt Creech, one that would crush him or else lend him
+manhood enough to come forth with a gun. Bostil, in his torment,
+divined that Creech would know who had ruined him. They would meet
+then, as Bostil had tried more than once to bring about a meeting.
+Bostil saw into his soul, and it was a gulf like this canyon pit where
+the dark and sullen river raged. He shrank at what he saw, but the
+furies of passion held him fast. His hands tore at the cables. Then he
+fell to pacing to and fro in the gloom. Every moment the river changed
+its voice. In an hour flood would be down. Too late, then! Bostil again
+remembered the sleek, slim, racy thoroughbreds--Blue Roan, a wild horse
+he had longed to own, and Peg, a mare that had no equal in the uplands.
+Where did Bostil's hate of a man stand in comparison with love of a
+horse? He began to sweat and the sweat burned him.
+
+"How soon'll Creech hear the river an' know what's comin'?" muttered
+Bostil, darkly. And that question showed him how he was lost. All this
+strife of doubt and fear and horror were of no use. He meant to doom
+Creech's horses. The thing had been unalterable from the inception of
+the insidious, hateful idea. It was irresistible. He grew strong, hard,
+fierce, and implacable. He found himself. He strode back to the cables.
+The knots, having dragged in the water, were soaking wet and swollen.
+He could not untie them. Then he cut one strand after another. The boat
+swung out beyond his reach.
+
+Instinctively Bostil reached to pull it back.
+
+"My God! ... It's goin'!" he whispered. "What have I done?"
+
+He--Bostil--who had made this Crossing of the Fathers more famous as
+Bostil's Ford--he--to cut the boat adrift! The thing was inconceivable.
+
+The roar of the river rose weird and mournful and incessant, with few
+breaks, and these were marked by strange ripping and splashing sounds
+made as the bulges of water broke on the surface. Twenty feet out the
+boat floated, turning a little as it drifted. It seemed loath to leave.
+It held on the shore eddy. Hungrily, spitefully the little, heavy waves
+lapped it. Bostil watched it with dilating eyes. There! the current
+caught one end and the water rose in a hollow splash over the corner.
+An invisible hand, like a mighty giant's, seemed to swing the boat out.
+It had been dark; now it was opaque, now shadowy, now dim. How swift
+this cursed river! Was there any way in which Bostil could recover his
+boat? The river answered him with hollow, deep mockery. Despair seized
+upon him. And the vague shape of the boat, spectral and instinct with
+meaning, passed from Bostil's strained gaze.
+
+"So help me God, I've done it!" he groaned, hoarsely. And he staggered
+back and sat down. Mind and heart and soul were suddenly and
+exquisitely acute to the shame of his act. Remorse seized upon his
+vitals. He suffered physical agony, as if a wolf gnawed him internally.
+
+"To hell with Creech an' his hosses, but where do I come in as a man?"
+he whispered. And he sat there, arms tight around his knees, locked
+both mentally and physically into inaction.
+
+The rising water broke the spell and drove him back. The river was
+creeping no longer. It swelled. And the roar likewise swelled. Bostil
+hurried across the flat to get to the rocky trail before he was cut
+off, and the last few rods he waded in water up to his knees.
+
+"I'll leave no trail there," he muttered, with a hard laugh. It sounded
+ghastly to him, like the laugh of the river.
+
+And there at the foot of the rocky trail he halted to watch and listen.
+The old memorable boom came to his ears. The flood was coming. For
+twenty-three years he had heard the vanguard boom of the Colorado in
+flood. But never like this, for in the sound he heard the strife and
+passion of his blood, and realized himself a human counterpart of that
+remorseless river. The moments passed and each one saw a swelling of
+the volume of sound. The sullen roar just below him was gradually lost
+in a distant roar. A steady wind now blew through the canyon. The great
+walls seemed to gape wider to prepare for the torrent. Bostil backed
+slowly up the trail as foot by foot the water rose. The floor of the
+amphitheater was now a lake of choppy, angry waves. The willows bent
+and seethed in the edge of the current. Beyond ran an uneven, bulging
+mass that resembled some gray, heavy moving monster. In the gloom
+Bostil could see how the river turned a corner of wall and slanted away
+from it toward the center, where it rose higher. Black objects that
+must have been driftwood appeared on this crest. They showed an
+instant, then flashed out of sight. The boom grew steadier, closer,
+louder, and the reverberations, like low detonations of thunder, were
+less noticeable because all sounds were being swallowed up.
+
+A harder breeze puffed into Bostil's face. It brought a tremendous
+thunder, as if all the colossal walls were falling in avalanche. Bostil
+knew the crest of the flood had turned the corner above and would soon
+reach him. He watched. He listened, but sound had ceased. His ears
+seemed ringing and they hurt. All his body felt cold, and he backed up
+and up, with dead feet.
+
+The shadows of the canyon lightened. A river-wide froth, like a
+curtain, moved down, spreading mushroom-wise before it, a rolling,
+heaving maelstrom. Bostil ran to escape the great wave that surged into
+the amphitheater, up and up the rocky trail. When he turned again he
+seemed to look down into hell. Murky depths, streaked by pale gleams,
+and black, sinister, changing forms yawned beneath them. He watched
+with fixed eyes until once more the feeling of filled ears left him and
+an awful thundering boom assured him of actualities. It was only the
+Colorado in flood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+Bostil slept that night, but his sleep was troubled, and a strange,
+dreadful roar seemed to run through it, like a mournful wind over a
+dark desert. He was awakened early by a voice at his window. He
+listened. There came a rap on the wood.
+
+"Bostil! ... Bostil!" It was Holley's voice.
+
+Bostil rolled off the bed. He had slept without removing any apparel
+except his boots.
+
+"Wal, Hawk, what d'ye mean wakin' a man at this unholy hour?" growled
+Bostil.
+
+Holley's face appeared above the rude sill. It was pale and grave, with
+the hawk eyes like glass. "It ain't so awful early," he said. "Listen,
+boss."
+
+Bostil halted in the act of pulling on a boot. He looked at his man
+while he listened. The still air outside seemed filled with low boom,
+like thunder at a distance. Bostil tried to look astounded.
+
+"Hell! ... It's the Colorado! She's boomin'!"
+
+"Reckon it's hell all right--for Creech," replied Holley. "Boss, why
+didn't you fetch them hosses over?"
+
+Bostil's face darkened. He was a bad man to oppose--to question at
+times. "Holley, you're sure powerful anxious about Creech. Are you his
+friend?"
+
+"Naw! I've little use fer Creech," replied Holley. "An' you know thet.
+But I hold for his hosses as I would any man's."
+
+"A-huh! An' what's your kick?"
+
+"Nothin'--except you could have fetched them over before the flood come
+down. That's all."
+
+The old horse-trader and his right-hand rider looked at each other for
+a moment in silence. They understood each other. Then Bostil returned
+to the task of pulling on wet boots and Holley went away.
+
+Bostil opened his door and stepped outside. The eastern ramparts of the
+desert were bright red with the rising sun. With the night behind him
+and the morning cool and bright and beautiful, Bostil did not suffer a
+pang nor feel a regret. He walked around under the cottonwoods where
+the mocking-birds were singing. The shrill, screeching bray of a burro
+split the morning stillness, and with that the sounds of the awakening
+village drowned that sullen, dreadful boom of the river. Bostil went in
+to breakfast.
+
+He encountered Lucy in the kitchen, and he did not avoid her. He could
+tell from her smiling greeting that he seemed to her his old self
+again. Lucy wore an apron and she had her sleeves rolled up, showing
+round, strong, brown arms. Somehow to Bostil she seemed different. She
+had been pretty, but now she was more than that. She was radiant. Her
+blue eyes danced. She looked excited. She had been telling her aunt
+something, and that worthy woman appeared at once shocked and
+delighted. But Bostil's entrance had caused a mysterious break in
+everything that had been going on, except the preparation of the
+morning meal.
+
+"Now I rode in on some confab or other, that's sure," said Bostil,
+good-naturedly.
+
+"You sure did, Dad," replied Lucy, with a bright smile.
+
+"Wal, let me sit in the game," he rejoined.
+
+"Dad, you can't even ante," said Lucy.
+
+"Jane, what's this kid up to?" asked Bostil, turning to his sister.
+
+"The good Lord only knows!" replied Aunt Jane, with a sigh.
+
+"Kid? ... See here, Dad, I'm eighteen long ago. I'm grown up. I can do
+as I please, go where I like, and anything.... Why, Dad, I could
+get--married."
+
+"Haw! haw!" laughed Bostil. "Jane, hear the girl."
+
+"I hear her, Bostil," sighed Aunt Jane.
+
+"Wal, Lucy, I'd just like to see you fetch some fool love-sick rider
+around when I'm feelin' good," said Bostil.
+
+Lucy laughed, but there was a roguish, daring flash in her eyes. "Dad,
+you do seem to have all the young fellows scared. Some day maybe one
+will ride along--a rider like you used to be--that nobody could
+bluff.... And he can have me!"
+
+"A-huh! ... Lucy, are you in fun?"
+
+Lucy tossed her bright head, but did not answer.
+
+"Jane, what's got into her?" asked Bostil, appealing to his sister.
+
+"Bostil, she's in fun, of course," declared Aunt Jane. "Still, at that,
+there's some sense in what she says. Come to your breakfast, now."
+
+Bostil took his seat at the table, glad that he could once more be
+amiable with his women-folk. "Lucy, to-morrow'll be the biggest day
+Bostil's Ford ever seen," he said.
+
+"It sure will be, Dad. The biggest SURPRISING day the Ford ever had,"
+replied Lucy.
+
+"Surprisin'?"
+
+"Yes, Dad."
+
+"Who's goin' to get surprised?"
+
+"Everybody."
+
+Bostil said to himself that he had been used to Lucy's banter, but
+during his moody spell of days past he had forgotten how to take her or
+else she was different.
+
+"Brackton tells me you've entered a hoss against the field."
+
+"It's an open race, isn't it?"
+
+"Open as the desert, Lucy," he replied. "What's this hoss Wildfire
+you've entered?"
+
+"Wouldn't you like to know?" taunted Lucy.
+
+"If he's as good as his name you might be in at the finish.... But,
+Lucy, my dear, talkin' good sense now--you ain't a-goin' to go up on
+some unbroken mustang in this big race?"
+
+"Dad, I'm going to ride a horse."
+
+"But, Lucy, ain't it a risk you'll be takin'--all for fun?"
+
+"Fun! ... I'm in dead earnest."
+
+Bostil liked the look of her then. She had paled a little; her eyes
+blazed; she was intense. His question had brought out her earnestness,
+and straightway Bostil became thoughtful. If Lucy had been a boy she
+would have been the greatest rider on the uplands; and even girl as she
+was, superbly mounted, she would have been dangerous in any race.
+
+"Wal, I ain't afraid of your handlin' of a hoss," he said, soberly.
+"An' as long as you're in earnest I won't stop you. But, Lucy, no
+bettin'. I won't let you gamble."
+
+"Not even with you?" she coaxed.
+
+Bostil stared at the girl. What had gotten into her? "What'll you bet?"
+he, queried, with blunt curiosity.
+
+"Dad, I'll go you a hundred dollars in gold that I finish
+one--two--three."
+
+Bostil threw back his head to laugh heartily. What a chip of the old
+block she was! "Child, there's some fast hosses that'll be back of the
+King. You'd be throwin' away money."
+
+Blue fire shone in his daughter's eyes. She meant business, all right,
+and Bostil thrilled with pride in her.
+
+"Dad, I'll bet you two hundred, even, that I beat the King!" she
+flashed.
+
+"Wal, of all the nerve!" ejaculated Bostil. "No, I won't take you up.
+Reckon I never before turned down an even bet. Understand, Lucy, ridin'
+in the race is enough for you."
+
+"All right, Dad," replied Lucy, obediently.
+
+At that juncture Bostil suddenly shoved back his plate and turned his
+face to the open door. "Don't I hear a runnin' hoss?"
+
+Aunt Jane stopped the noise she was making, and Lucy darted to the
+door. Then Bostil heard the sharp, rhythmic hoof-beats he recognized.
+They shortened to clatter and pound--then ceased somewhere out in front
+of the house.
+
+"It's the King with Van up," said Lucy, from the door. "Dad, Van's
+jumped off--he's coming in ... he's running. Something has happened....
+There are other horses coming--riders--Indians."
+
+Bostil knew what was coming and prepared himself. Rapid footsteps
+sounded without.
+
+"Hello, Miss Lucy! Where's Bostil?"
+
+A lean, supple rider appeared before the door. It was Van, greatly
+excited.
+
+"Come in, boy," said Bostil. "What're you flustered about?"
+
+Van strode in, spurs jangling, cap in hand. "Boss, there's--a
+sixty-foot raise--in the river!" Van panted.
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, wheeling toward her father.
+
+"Wal, Van, I reckon I knowed thet," replied Bostil. "Mebbe I'm gettin'
+old, but I can still hear.... Listen."
+
+Lucy tiptoed to the door and turned her head sidewise and slowly bowed
+it till she stiffened. Outside were, sounds of birds and horses and
+men, but when a lull came it quickly filled with a sullen, low boom.
+
+"Highest flood we--ever seen," said Van.
+
+"You've been down?" queried Bostil, sharply.
+
+"Not to the river," replied Van. "I went as far as--where the gulch
+opens--on the bluff. There was a string of Navajos goin' down. An' some
+comin' up. I stayed there watchin' the flood, an' pretty soon Somers
+come up the trail with Blakesley an' Brack an' some riders.... An'
+Somers hollered out, 'The boat's gone!'"
+
+"Gone!" exclaimed Bostil, his loud cry showing consternation.
+
+"Oh, Dad! Oh, Van!" cried Lucy, with eyes wide and lips parted.
+
+"Sure she's gone. An' the whole place down there--where the willows was
+an' the sand-bar--it was deep under water."
+
+"What will become of Creech's horses?" asked Lucy, breathlessly.
+
+"My God! ain't it a shame!" went on Bostil, and he could have laughed
+aloud at his hypocrisy. He felt Lucy's blue eyes riveted upon his face.
+
+"Thet's what we all was sayin'," went on Van. "While we was watchin'
+the awful flood an' listenin' to the deep bum--bum--bum of rollin'
+rocks some one seen Creech an' two Piutes leadin' the hosses up thet
+trail where the slide was. We counted the hosses--nine. An' we saw the
+roan shine blue in the sunlight."
+
+"Piutes with Creech!" exclaimed Bostil, the deep gloom in his eyes
+lighting. "By all thet's lucky! Mebbe them Indians can climb the hosses
+out of thet hole an' find water an' grass enough."
+
+"Mebbe," replied Van, doubtfully. "Sure them Piutes could if there's a
+chance. But there ain't any grass."
+
+"It won't take much grass travelin' by night."
+
+"So lots of the boys say. But the Navajos they shook their heads. An'
+Farlane an' Holley, why, they jest held up their hands."
+
+"With them Indians Creech has a chance to get his hosses out," declared
+Bostil. He was sure of his sincerity, but he was not certain that his
+sincerity was not the birth of a strange, sudden hope. And then he was
+able to meet the eyes of his daughter. That was his supreme test.
+
+"Oh, Dad, why, why didn't you hurry Creech's horses over?" said Lucy,
+with her tears falling.
+
+Something tight within Bostil's breast seemed to ease and lessen. "Why
+didn't I? ... Wal, Lucy, I reckon I wasn't in no hurry to oblige
+Creech. I'm sorry now."
+
+"It won't be so terrible if he doesn't lose the horses," murmured Lucy.
+
+"Where's young Joel Creech?" asked Bostil.
+
+"He stayed on this side last night," replied Van. "Fact is, Joel's the
+one who first knew the flood was on. Some one said he said he slept in
+the canyon last night. Anyway, he's ravin' crazy now. An' if he doesn't
+do harm to some one or hisself I'll miss my guess."
+
+"A-huh!" grunted Bostil. "Right you are."
+
+"Dad, can't anything be done to help Creech now?" appealed Lucy, going
+close to her father.
+
+Bostil put his arm around her and felt immeasurably relieved to have
+the golden head press close to his shoulder. "Child, we can't fly
+acrost the river. Now don't you cry about Creech's hosses. They ain't
+starved yet. It's hard luck. But mebbe it'll turn out so Creech'll lose
+only the race. An', Lucy, it was a dead sure bet he'd have lost thet
+anyway."
+
+Bostil fondled his daughter a moment, the first time in many a day, and
+then he turned to his rider at the door. "Van, how's the King?"
+
+"Wild to run, Bostil, jest plumb wild. There won't be any hoss with the
+ghost of a show to-morrow."
+
+Lucy raised her drooping head. "Is THAT so, Van Sickle? ... Listen
+here. If you and Sage King don't get more wild running to-morrow than
+you ever had I'll never ride again!" With this retort Lucy left the
+room.
+
+Van stared at the door and then at Bostil. "What'd I say, Bostil?" he
+asked, plaintively. "I'm always r'ilin' her."
+
+"Cheer up, Van. You didn't say much. Lucy is fiery these days. She's
+got a hoss somewhere an' she's goin' to ride him in the race. She
+offered to bet on him--against the King! It certainly beat me all
+hollow. But see here, Van. I've a hunch there's a dark hoss goin' to
+show up in this race. So don't underrate Lucy an' her mount, whatever
+he is. She calls him Wildfire. Ever see him?"
+
+"I sure haven't. Fact is, I haven't seen Lucy for days an' days. As for
+the hunch you gave, I'll say I was figurin' Lucy for some real race.
+Bostil, she doesn't MAKE a hoss run. He'll run jest to please her. An'
+Lucy's lighter 'n a feather. Why, Bostil, if she happened to ride out
+there on Blue Roan or some other hoss as fast I'd--I'd jest wilt."
+
+Bostil uttered a laugh full of pride in his daughter. "Wal, she won't
+show up on Blue Roan," he replied, with grim gruffness. "Thet's sure as
+death.... Come on out now. I want a look at the King."
+
+Bostil went into the village. All day long he was so busy with a
+thousand and one things referred to him, put on him, undertaken by him,
+that he had no time to think. Back in his mind, however, there was a
+burden of which he was vaguely conscious all the time. He worked late
+into the night and slept late the next morning.
+
+Never in his life had Bostil been gloomy or retrospective on the day of
+a race. In the press of matters he had only a word for Lucy, but that
+earned a saucy, dauntless look. He was glad when he was able to join
+the procession of villagers, visitors, and Indians moving out toward
+the sage.
+
+The racecourse lay at the foot of the slope, and now the gray and
+purple sage was dotted with more horses and Indians, more moving things
+and colors, than Bostil had ever seen there before. It was a spectacle
+that stirred him. Many fires sent up blue columns of smoke from before
+the hastily built brush huts where the Indians cooked and ate. Blankets
+shone bright in the sun; burros grazed and brayed; horses whistled
+piercingly across the slope; Indians lolled before the huts or talked
+in groups, sitting and lounging on their ponies; down in the valley,
+here and there, were Indians racing, and others were chasing the wiry
+mustangs. Beyond this gay and colorful spectacle stretched the valley,
+merging into the desert marked so strikingly and beautifully by the
+monuments.
+
+Bostil was among the last to ride down to the high bench that
+overlooked the home end of the racecourse. He calculated that there
+were a thousand Indians and whites congregated at that point, which was
+the best vantage-ground to see the finish of a race. And the occasion
+of his arrival, for all the gaiety, was one of dignity and importance.
+If Bostil reveled in anything it was in an hour like this. His
+liberality made this event a great race-day. The thoroughbreds were all
+there, blanketed, in charge of watchful riders. In the center of the
+brow of this long bench lay a huge, flat rock which had been Bostil's
+seat in the watching of many a race. Here were assembled his neighbors
+and visitors actively interested in the races, and also the important
+Indians of both tribes, all waiting for him.
+
+As Bostil dismounted, throwing the bridle to a rider, he saw a face
+that suddenly froze the thrilling delight of the moment. A tall, gaunt
+man with cavernous black eyes and huge, drooping black mustache fronted
+him and seemed waiting. Cordts! Bostil had forgotten. Instinctively
+Bostil stood on guard. For years he had prepared himself for the moment
+when he would come face to face with this noted horse-thief.
+
+"Bostil, how are you?" said Cordts. He appeared pleasant, and certainly
+grateful for being permitted to come there. From his left hand hung a
+belt containing two heavy guns.
+
+"Hello, Cordts," replied Bostil, slowly unbending. Then he met the
+other's proffered hand.
+
+"I've bet heavy on the King," said Cordts.
+
+For the moment there could have been no other way to Bostil's good
+graces, and this remark made the gruff old rider's hard face relax.
+
+"Wal, I was hopin' you'd back some other hoss, so I could take your
+money," replied Bostil.
+
+Cordts held out the belt and guns to Bostil. "I want to enjoy this
+race," he said, with a smile that somehow hinted of the years he had
+packed those guns day and night.
+
+"Cordts, I don't want to take your guns," replied Bostil, bluntly.
+"I've taken your word an' that's enough."
+
+"Thanks, Bostil. All the same, as I'm your guest I won't pack them,"
+returned Cordts, and he hung the belt on the horn of Bostil's saddle.
+"Some of my men are with me. They were all right till they got outside
+of Brackton's whisky. But now I won't answer for them."
+
+"Wal, you're square to say thet," replied Bostil. "An' I'll run this
+race an' answer for everybody."
+
+Bostil recognized Hutchinson and Dick Sears, but the others of Cordts's
+gang he did not know. They were a hard-looking lot. Hutchinson was a
+spare, stoop-shouldered, red-faced, squinty-eyed rider, branded all
+over with the marks of a bad man. And Dick Sears looked his notoriety.
+He was a little knot of muscle, short and bow-legged, rough in
+appearance as cactus. He wore a ragged slouch-hat pulled low down. His
+face and stubby beard were dust-colored, and his eyes seemed sullen,
+watchful. He made Bostil think of a dusty, scaly, hard, desert
+rattlesnake. Bostil eyed this right-hand man of Cordts's and certainly
+felt no fear of him, though Sears had the fame of swift and deadly
+skill with a gun. Bostil felt that he was neither afraid nor loath to
+face Sears in gun-play, and he gazed at the little horse-thief in a
+manner that no one could mistake. Sears was not drunk, neither was he
+wholly free from the unsteadiness caused by the bottle. Assuredly he
+had no fear of Bostil and eyed him insolently. Bostil turned away to
+the group of his riders and friends, and he asked for his daughter.
+
+"Lucy's over there," said Farlane, pointing to a merry crowd.
+
+Bostil waved a hand to her, and Lucy, evidently mistaking his action,
+came forward, leading one of her ponies. She wore a gray blouse with a
+red scarf, and a skirt over overalls and boots. She looked pale, but
+she was smiling, and there was a dark gleam of excitement in her blue
+eyes. She did not have on her sombrero. She wore her hair in a braid,
+and had a red band tight above her forehead. Bostil took her in all at
+a glance. She meant business and she looked dangerous. Bostil knew once
+she slipped out of that skirt she could ride with any rider there. He
+saw that she had become the center toward which all eyes shifted. It
+pleased him. She was his, like her mother, and as beautiful and
+thoroughbred as any rider could wish his daughter.
+
+"Lucy, where's your hoss?" he asked, curiously.
+
+"Never you mind, Dad. I'll be there at the finish," she replied.
+
+"Red's your color for to-day, then?" he questioned, as he put a big
+hand on the bright-banded head.
+
+She nodded archly.
+
+"Lucy, I never thought you'd flaunt red in your old Dad's face. Red,
+when the color of the King is like the sage out yonder. You've gone
+back on the King."
+
+"No, Dad, I never was for Sage King, else I wouldn't wear red to-day."
+
+"Child, you sure mean to run in this race--the big one?"
+
+"Sure and certain."
+
+"Wal, the only bitter drop in my cup to-day will be seein' you get
+beat. But if you ran second I'll give you a present thet'll make the
+purse look sick."
+
+Even the Indian chiefs were smiling. Old Horse, the Navajo, beamed
+benignly upon this daughter of the friend of the Indians. Silver, his
+brother chieftain, nodded as if he understood Bostil's pride and
+regret. Some of the young riders showed their hearts in their eyes.
+Farlane tried to look mysterious, to pretend he was in Lucy's
+confidence.
+
+"Lucy, if you are really goin' to race I'll withdraw my hoss so you can
+win," said Wetherby, gallantly.
+
+Bostil's sonorous laugh rolled down the slope.
+
+"Miss Lucy, I sure hate to run a hoss against yours," said old Cal
+Blinn. Then Colson, Sticks, Burthwait, the other principals, paid
+laughing compliments to the bright-haired girl.
+
+Bostil enjoyed this hugely until he caught the strange intensity of
+regard in the cavernous eyes of Cordts. That gave him a shock. Cordts
+had long wanted this girl as much probably as he wanted Sage King.
+There were dark and terrible stories that stained the name of Cordts.
+Bostil regretted his impulse in granting the horse-thief permission to
+attend the races. Sight of Lucy's fair, sweet face might inflame this
+Cordts--this Kentuckian who had boasted of his love of horses and
+women. Behind Cordts hung the little dust-colored Sears, like a coiled
+snake, ready to strike. Bostil felt stir in him a long-dormant fire--a
+stealing along his veins, a passion he hated.
+
+"Lucy, go back to the women till you're ready to come out on your
+hoss," he said. "An' mind you, be careful to-day!"
+
+He gave her a meaning glance, which she understood perfectly, he saw,
+and then he turned to start the day's sport.
+
+The Indian races run in twos and threes, and on up to a number that
+crowded the racecourse; the betting and yelling and running; the wild
+and plunging mustangs; the heat and dust and pounding of hoofs; the
+excited betting; the surprises and defeats and victories, the trial
+tests of the principals, jealously keeping off to themselves in the
+sage; the endless moving, colorful procession, gaudy and swift and
+thrilling--all these Bostil loved tremendously.
+
+But they were as nothing to what they gradually worked up to--the
+climax--the great race.
+
+It was afternoon when all was ready for this race, and the sage was
+bright gray in the westering sun. Everybody was resting, waiting. The
+tense quiet of the riders seemed to settle upon the whole assemblage.
+Only the thoroughbreds were restless. They quivered and stamped and
+tossed their small, fine heads. They knew what was going to happen.
+They wanted to run. Blacks, bays, and whites were the predominating
+colors; and the horses and mustangs were alike in those points of race
+and speed and spirit that proclaimed them thoroughbreds.
+
+Bostil himself took the covering off his favorite. Sage King was on
+edge. He stood out strikingly in contrast with the other horses. His
+sage-gray body was as sleek and shiny as satin. He had been trained to
+the hour. He tossed his head as he champed the bit, and every moment
+his muscles rippled under his fine skin. Proud, mettlesome, beautiful!
+
+Sage King was the favorite in the betting, the Indians, who were ardent
+gamblers, plunging heavily on him.
+
+Bostil saddled the horse and was long at the task.
+
+Van stood watching. He was pale and nervous. Bostil saw this.
+
+"Van," he said, "it's your race."
+
+The rider reached a quick hand for bridle and horn, and when his foot
+touched the stirrup Sage King was in the air. He came down,
+springy-quick, graceful, and then he pranced into line with the other
+horses.
+
+Bostil waved his hand. Then the troop of riders and racers headed for
+the starting-point, two miles up the valley. Macomber and Blinn, with a
+rider and a Navajo, were up there as the official starters of the day.
+
+Bostil's eyes glistened. He put a friendly hand on Cordts's shoulder,
+an action which showed the stress of the moment. Most of the men
+crowded around Bostil. Sears and Hutchinson hung close to Cordts. And
+Holley, keeping near his employer, had keen eyes for other things than
+horses.
+
+Suddenly he touched Bostil and pointed down the slope. "There's Lucy,"
+he said. "She's ridin' out to join the bunch."
+
+"Lucy! Where? I'd forgotten my girl! ... Where?"
+
+"There," repeated Holly, and he pointed. Others of the group spoke up,
+having seen Lucy riding down.
+
+"She's on a red hoss," said one.
+
+"'Pears all-fired big to me--her hoss," said another. "Who's got a
+glass?"
+
+Bostil had the only field-glass there and he was using it. Across the
+round, magnified field of vision moved a giant red horse, his mane
+waving like a flame. Lucy rode him. They were moving from a jumble of
+broken rocks a mile down the slope. She had kept her horse hidden
+there. Bostil felt an added stir in his pulse-beat. Certainly he had
+never seen a horse like this one. But the distance was long, the glass
+not perfect; he could not trust his sight. Suddenly that sight dimmed.
+
+"Holley, I can't make out nothin'," he complained. "Take the glass.
+Give me a line on Lucy's mount."
+
+"Boss, I don't need the glass to see that she's up on a HOSS," replied
+Holley, as he took the glass. He leveled it, adjusted it to his eyes,
+and then looked long. Bostil grew impatient. Lucy was rapidly
+overhauling the troop of racers on her way to the post. Nothing ever
+hurried or excited Holley.
+
+"Wal, can't you see any better 'n me?" queried Bostil, eagerly.
+
+"Come on, Holl, give us a tip before she gits to the post," spoke up a
+rider.
+
+Cordts showed intense eagerness, and all the group were excited. Lucy's
+advent, on an unknown horse that even her father could not disparage,
+was the last and unexpected addition to the suspense. They all knew
+that if the horse was fast Lucy would be dangerous.
+
+Holley at last spoke: "She's up on a wild stallion. He's red, like
+fire. He's mighty big--strong. Looks as if he didn't want to go near
+the bunch. Lord! what action! ... Bostil, I'd say--a great hoss!"
+
+There was a moment's intense silence in the group round Bostil. Holley
+was never known to mistake a horse or to be extravagant in judgment or
+praise.
+
+"A wild stallion!" echoed Bostil. "A-huh! An' she calls him Wildfire.
+Where'd she get him? ... Gimme thet glass."
+
+But all Bostil could make out was a blur. His eyes were wet. He
+realized now that his first sight of Lucy on the strange horse had been
+clear and strong, and it was that which had dimmed his eyes.
+
+"Holley, you use the glass--an' tell me what comes off," said Bostil,
+as he wiped his eyes with his scarf. He was relieved to find that his
+sight was clearing. "My God! if I couldn't see this finish!"
+
+Then everybody watched the close, dark mass of horses and riders down
+the valley. And all waited for Holley to speak. "They're linin' up,"
+began the rider. "Havin' some muss, too, it 'pears.... Bostil, thet red
+hoss is raisin' hell! He wants to fight. There! he's up in the air....
+Boys, he's a devil--a hoss-killer like all them wild stallions.... He's
+plungin' at the King--strikin'! There! Lucy's got him down. She's
+handlin' him.... Now they've got the King on the other side. Thet's
+better. But Lucy's hoss won't stand. Anyway, it's a runnin' start....
+Van's got the best position. Foxy Van! ... He'll be leadin' before the
+rest know the race's on.... Them Indian mustangs are behavin'
+scandalous. Guess the red stallion scared 'em. Now they're all lined up
+back of the post.... Ah! gun-smoke! They move.... It looks like a go."
+
+Then Holley was silent, strained, in watching. So were all the watchers
+silent. Bostil saw far down the valley a moving, dark line of horses.
+
+"THEY'RE OFF! THEY'RE OFF!" called Holley, thrillingly.
+
+Bostil uttered a deep and booming yell, which rose above the shouts of
+the men round him and was heard even in the din of Indian cries. Then
+as quickly as the yells had risen they ceased.
+
+Holley stood up on the rock with leveled glass.
+
+"Mac's dropped the flag. It's a sure go. Now! ... Van's out there
+front--inside. The King's got his stride. Boss, the King's stretchin'
+out! ... Look! Look! see thet red hoss leap! ... Bostil, he's runnin'
+down the King! I knowed it. He's like lightnin'. He's pushin' the King
+over--off the course! See him plunge! Lord! Lucy can't pull him! She
+goes up--down--tossed--but she sticks like a burr. Good, Lucy! Hang on!
+... My Gawd, Bostil, the King's thrown! He's down! ... He comes up, off
+the course. The others flash by.... Van's out of the race! ... An',
+Bostil--an', gentlemen, there ain't anythin' more to this race but a
+red hoss!"
+
+Bostil's heart gave a great leap and then seemed to stand still. He was
+half cold, half hot.
+
+What a horrible, sickening disappointment. Bostil rolled out a cursing
+query. Holley's answer was short and sharp. The King was out! Bostil
+raved. He could not see. He could not believe. After all the weeks of
+preparation, of excitement, of suspense--only this! There was no race.
+The King was out! The thing did not seem possible. A thousand thoughts
+flitted through Bostil's mind. Rage, impotent rage, possessed him. He
+cursed Van, he swore he would kill that red stallion. And some one
+shook him hard. Some one's incisive words cut into his thick, throbbing
+ears: "Luck of the game! The King ain't beat! He's only out!"
+
+Then the rider's habit of mind asserted itself and Bostil began to
+recover. For the King to fall was hard luck. But he had not lost the
+race! Anguish and pride battled for mastery over him. Even if the King
+were out it was a Bostil who would win the great race.
+
+"He ain't beat!" muttered Bostil. "It ain't fair! He's run off the
+track by a wild stallion!"
+
+His dimmed sight grew clear and sharp. And with a gasp he saw the
+moving, dark line take shape as horses. A bright horse was in the lead.
+Brighter and larger he grew. Swiftly and more swiftly he came on. The
+bright color changed to red. Bostil heard Holley calling and Cordts
+calling--and other voices, but he did not distinguish what was said.
+The line of horses began to bob, to bunch. The race looked close,
+despite what Holley had said. The Indians were beginning to lean
+forward, here and there uttering a short, sharp yell. Everything within
+Bostil grew together in one great, throbbing, tingling mass. His
+rider's eye, keen once more, caught a gleam of gold above the red, and
+that gold was Lucy's hair. Bostil forgot the King.
+
+Then Holley bawled into his ear, "They're half-way!"
+
+The race was beautiful. Bostil strained his eyes. He gloried in what he
+saw--Lucy low over the neck of that red stallion. He could see plainer
+now. They were coming closer. How swiftly! What a splendid race! But it
+was too swift--it would not last. The Indians began to yell, drowning
+the hoarse shouts of the riders. Out of the tail of his eye Bostil saw
+Cordts and Sears and Hutchinson. They were acting like crazy men.
+Strange that horse-thieves should care! The million thrills within
+Bostil coalesced into one great shudder of rapture. He grew wet with
+sweat. His stentorian voice took up the call for Lucy to win.
+
+"Three-quarters!" bowled Holley into Bostil's ear. "An' Lucy's give
+thet wild hoss free rein! Look, Bostil! You never in your life seen a
+hoss ran like thet!"
+
+Bostil never had. His heart swelled. Something shook him. Was that his
+girl--that tight little gray burr half hidden in the huge stallion's
+flaming mane? The distance had been close between Lucy and the bunched
+riders.
+
+But it lengthened. How it widened! That flame of a horse was running
+away from the others. And now they were close--coming into the home
+stretch. A deafening roar from the onlookers engulfed all other sounds.
+A straining, stamping, arm-flinging horde surrounded Bostil.
+
+Bostil saw Lucy's golden hair whipping out from the flame-streaked
+mane. And then he could only see that red brute of a horse. Wildfire
+before the wind! Bostil thought of the leaping prairie flame,
+storm-driven.
+
+On came the red stallion--on--on! What a tremendous stride! What a
+marvelous recovery! What ease! What savage action!
+
+He flashed past, low, pointed, long, going faster every magnificent
+stride--winner by a dozen lengths.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+Wildfire ran on down the valley far beyond the yelling crowd lined
+along the slope. Bostil was deaf to the throng; he watched the stallion
+till Lucy forced him to stop and turn.
+
+Then Bostil whirled to see where Van was with the King. Most of the
+crowd surged down to surround the racers, and the yells gave way to the
+buzz of many voices. Some of the ranchers and riders remained near
+Bostil, all apparently talking at once. Bostil gathered that Holley's
+Whitefoot had ran second, and the Navajo's mustang third. It was Holley
+himself who verified what Bostil had heard. The old rider's hawk eyes
+were warm with delight.
+
+"Boss, he run second!" Holley kept repeating.
+
+Bostil had the heart to shake hands with Holley and say he was glad,
+when it was on his lips to blurt out there had been no race. Then
+Bostil's nerves tingled at sight of Van trotting the King up the course
+toward the slope. Bostil watched with searching eyes. Sage King did not
+appear to be injured. Van rode straight up the slope and leaped off. He
+was white and shaking.
+
+The King's glossy hide was dirty with dust and bits of cactus and
+brush. He was not even hot. There did not appear to be a bruise or mark
+on him. He whinnied and rubbed his face against Bostil, and then,
+flinching, he swept up his head, ears high. Both fear and fire shone in
+his eyes.
+
+"Wal, Van, get it out of your system," said Bostil, kindly. He was a
+harder loser before a race was run than after he had lost it.
+
+"Thet red hoss run in on the King before the start an' scared the race
+out of him," replied Van, swiftly. "We had a hunch, you know, but at
+thet Lucy's hoss was a surprise. I'll say, sir, thet Lucy rode her wild
+hoss an' handled him. Twice she pulled him off the King. He meant to
+kill the King! ... Ask any of the boys.... We got started. I took the
+lead, sir. The King was in the lead. I never looked back till I heard
+Lucy scream. She couldn't pull Wildfire. He was rushin' the King--meant
+to kill him. An' Sage King wanted to fight. If I could only have kept
+him runnin'! Thet would have been a race! ... But Wildfire got in
+closer an' closer. He crowded us. He bit at the King's flank an'
+shoulder an' neck. Lucy pulled till I yelled she'd throw the hoss an'
+kill us both. Then Wildfire jumped for us. Runnin' an' strikin' with
+both feet at once! Bostil, thet hoss's hell! Then he hit us an' down we
+went. I had a bad spill. But the King's not hurt an' thet's a blessed
+wonder."
+
+"No race, Van! It was hard luck. Take him home," said Bostil.
+
+Van's story of the accident vindicated Bostil's doubts. A new horse had
+appeared on the scene, wild and swift and grand, but Sage King was
+still unbeaten in a fair race. There would come a reckoning, Bostil
+grimly muttered. Who owned this Wildfire?
+
+Holley might as well have read his mind. "Reckon this feller ridin' up
+will take down the prize money," remarked Holley, and he pointed to a
+man who rode a huge, shaggy, black horse and was leading Lucy's pony.
+
+"A-huh!" exclaimed Bostil. "A strange rider."
+
+"An' here comes Lucy coaxin' the stallion back," added Holley.
+
+"A wild stallion never clear broke!" ejaculated Cordts.
+
+All the men looked and all had some remark of praise for Lucy and her
+mount.
+
+Bostil gazed with a strange, irresistible attraction. Never had he
+expected to live to see a wild stallion like this one, to say nothing
+of his daughter mounted on him, with the record of having put Sage King
+out of the race!
+
+A thousand pairs of eyes watched Wildfire. He pranced out there beyond
+the crowd of men and horses. He did not want to come closer. Yet he did
+not seem to fight his rider. Lucy hung low over his neck, apparently
+exhausted, and she was patting him and caressing him. There were horses
+and Indians on each side of the race track, and between these lines
+Lucy appeared reluctant to come.
+
+Bostil strode down and, waving and yelling for everybody to move back
+to the slope, he cleared the way and then stood out in front alone.
+
+"Ride up, now," he called to Lucy.
+
+It was then Bostil discovered that Lucy did not wear a spur and she had
+neither quirt nor whip. She turned Wildfire and he came prancing on,
+head and mane and tail erect. His action was beautiful, springy, and
+every few steps, as Lucy touched him, he jumped with marvelous ease and
+swiftness.
+
+Bostil became all eyes. He did not see his daughter as she paraded the
+winner before the applauding throng. And Bostil recorded in his mind
+that which he would never forget--a wild stallion, with unbroken
+spirit; a giant of a horse, glistening red, with mane like
+dark-striped, wind-blown flame, all muscle, all grace, all power; a
+neck long and slender and arching to the small, savagely beautiful
+head; the jaws open, and the thin-skinned, pink-colored nostrils that
+proved the Arabian blood; the slanting shoulders and the deep, broad
+chest, the powerful legs and knees not too high nor too low, the
+symmetrical dark hoofs that rang on the little stones--all these marks
+so significant of speed and endurance. A stallion with a wonderful
+physical perfection that matched the savage, ruthless spirit of the
+desert killer of horses!
+
+Lucy waved her hand, and the strange rider to whom Holley had called
+attention strode out of the crowd toward Wildfire.
+
+Bostil's gaze took in the splendid build of this lithe rider, the
+clean-cut face, the dark eye. This fellow had a shiny, coiled lasso in
+hand. He advanced toward Wildfire. The stallion snorted and plunged. If
+ever Bostil saw hate expressed by a horse he saw it then. But he seemed
+to be tractable to the control of the girl. Bostil swiftly grasped the
+strange situation. Lucy had won the love of the savage stallion. That
+always had been the secret of her power. And she had hated Sage King
+because he alone had somehow taken a dislike to her. Horses were as
+queer as people, thought Bostil.
+
+The rider walked straight up to the trembling Wildfire. When Wildfire
+plunged and reared up and up the rider leaped for the bridle and with
+an iron arm pulled the horse down. Wildfire tried again, almost lifting
+the rider, but a stinging cut from the lasso made him come to a stand.
+Plainly the rider held the mastery.
+
+"Dad!" called Lucy, faintly.
+
+Bostil went forward, close, while the rider held Wildfire. Lucy was as
+wan-faced as a flower by moonlight. Her eyes were dark with emotions,
+fear predominating. Then for Bostil the half of his heart that was
+human reasserted itself. Lucy was only a girl now, and weakening. Her
+fear, her pitiful little smile, as if she dared not hope for her
+father's approval yet could not help it, touched Bostil to the quick,
+and he opened his arms. Lucy slid down into them.
+
+"Lucy, girl, you've won the King's race an' double-crossed your poor
+old dad!"
+
+"Oh, Dad, I never knew--I never dreamed Wildfire--would jump the King,"
+Lucy faltered. "I couldn't hold him. He was terrible.... It made me
+sick.... Daddy, tell me Van wasn't hurt--or the King!"
+
+"The hoss's all right an' so's Van," replied Bostil. "Don't cry, Lucy.
+It was a fool trick you pulled off, but you did it great. By Gad! you
+sure was ridin' thet red devil.... An' say, it's all right with me!"
+
+Lucy did not faint then, but she came near it. Bostil put her down and
+led her through the lines of admiring Indians and applauding riders,
+and left her with the women.
+
+When he turned again he was in time to see the strange rider mount
+Wildfire. It was a swift and hazardous mount, the stallion being in the
+air. When he came down he tore the turf and sent it flying, and when he
+shot up again he was doubled in a red knot, bristling with fiery hair,
+a furious wild beast, mad to throw the rider. Bostil never heard as
+wild a scream uttered by a horse. Likewise he had never seen so
+incomparable a horseman as this stranger. Indians and riders alike
+thrilled at a sight which was after their own hearts. The rider had
+hooked his long spurs under the horse and now appeared a part of him.
+He could not be dislodged. This was not a bucking mustang, but a
+fierce, powerful, fighting stallion. No doubt, thought Bostil, this
+fight took place every time the rider mounted his horse. It was the
+sort of thing riders loved. Most of them would not own a horse that
+would not pitch. Bostil presently decided, however, that in the case of
+this red stallion no rider in his right senses would care for such a
+fight, simply because of the extraordinary strengths, activity, and
+ferocity of the stallion.
+
+The riders were all betting the horse would throw the stranger. And
+Bostil, seeing the gathering might of Wildfire's momentum, agreed with
+them. No horseman could stick on that horse. Suddenly Wildfire tripped
+in the sage, and went sprawling in the dust, throwing his rider ahead.
+Both man and beast were quick to rise, but the rider had a foot in the
+stirrup before Wildfire was under way. Then the horse plunged, ran
+free, came circling back, and slowly gave way to the rider's control.
+Those few moments of frenzied activity had brought out the foam and the
+sweat--Wildfire was wet. The man pulled him in before Bostil and
+dismounted.
+
+"Sometimes I ride him, then sometimes I don't," he said, with a smile.
+
+Bostil held out his hand. He liked this rider. He would have liked the
+frank face, less hard than that of most riders, and the fine, dark
+eyes, straight and steady, even if their possessor had not come with
+the open sesame to Bostil's regard--a grand, wild horse, and the nerve
+to ride him.
+
+"Wal, you rode him longer 'n any of us figgered," said Bostil, heartily
+shaking the man's hand. "I'm Bostil. Glad to meet you."
+
+"My name's Slone--Lin Slone," replied the rider, frankly. "I'm a
+wild-horse hunter an' hail from Utah."
+
+"Utah? How'd you ever get over? Wal, you've got a grand hoss--an' you
+put a grand rider up on him in the race.... My girl Lucy--"
+
+Bostil hesitated. His mind was running swiftly. Back of his thoughts
+gathered the desire and the determination to get possession of this
+horse Wildfire. He had forgotten what he might have said to this
+stranger under different circumstances. He looked keenly into Slone's
+face and saw no fear, no subterfuge. The young man was honest.
+
+"Bostil, I chased this wild horse days an' weeks an' months, hundreds
+of miles--across the canyon an' the river--"
+
+"No!" interrupted Bostil, blankly.
+
+"Yes. I'll tell you how later.... Out here somewhere I caught Wildfire,
+broke him as much as he'll ever be broken. He played me out an' got
+away. Your girl rode along--saved my horse--an' saved my life, too. I
+was in bad shape for days. But I got well--an'--an' then she wanted me
+to let her run Wildfire in the big race. I couldn't refuse.... An' it
+would have been a great race but for the unlucky accident to Sage King.
+I'm sorry, sir."
+
+"Slone, it jarred me some, thet disappointment. But it's over," replied
+Bostil. "An' so thet's how Lucy found her hoss. She sure was
+mysterious.... Wal, wal." Bostil became aware of others behind him.
+"Holley, shake hands with Slone, hoss-wrangler out of Utah.... You,
+too, Cal Blinn.... An' Macomber--an' Wetherby, meet my friend
+here--young Slone.... An', Cordts, shake hands with a feller thet owns
+a grand hoss!"
+
+Bostil laughed as he introduced the horse-thief to Slone. The others
+laughed, too, even Cordts joining in. There was much of the old rider
+daredevil spirit left in Bostil, and it interested and amused him to
+see Cordts and Slone meet. Assuredly Slone had heard of the noted
+stealer of horses. The advantage was certainly on Cordts's side, for he
+was good-natured and pleasant while Slone stiffened, paling slightly as
+he faced about to acknowledge the introduction.
+
+"Howdy, Slone," drawled Cordts, with hand outstretched. "I sure am glad
+to meet yuh. I'd like to trade the Sage King for this red stallion!"
+
+A roar of laughter greeted this sally, all but Bostil and Slone joining
+in. The joke was on Bostil, and he showed it. Slone did not even smile.
+
+"Howdy, Cordts," he replied. "I'm glad to meet you--so I'll know you
+when I see you again."
+
+"Wal, we're all good fellers to-day," interposed Bostil. "An' now let's
+ride home an' eat. Slone, you come with me."
+
+The group slowly mounted the slope where the horses waited. Macomber,
+Wetherby, Burthwait, Blinn--all Bostil's friends proffered their
+felicitations to the young rider, and all were evidently prepossessed
+with him.
+
+The sun was low in the west; purple shades were blotting out the gold
+lights down the valley; the day of the great races was almost done.
+Indians were still scattered here and there in groups; others were
+turning out the mustangs; and the majority were riding and walking with
+the crowd toward the village.
+
+Bostil observed that Cordts had hurried ahead of the group and now
+appeared to be saying something emphatic to Dick Sears and Hutchinson.
+Bostil heard Cordts curse. Probably he was arraigning the sullen Sears.
+Cordts had acted first rate--had lived up to his word, as Bostil
+thought he would do. Cordts and Hutchinson mounted their horses and
+rode off, somewhat to the left of the scattered crowd. But Sears
+remained behind. Bostil thought this strange and put it down to the
+surliness of the fellow, who had lost on the races. Bostil, wishing
+Sears would get out of his sight, resolved never to make another
+blunder like inviting horse-thieves to a race.
+
+All the horses except Wildfire stood in a bunch back on the bench.
+Sears appeared to be fussing with the straps on his saddle. And Bostil
+could not keep his glance from wandering back to gloat over Wildfire's
+savage grace and striking size.
+
+Suddenly there came a halt in the conversation of the men, a curse in
+Holley's deep voice, a violent split in the group. Bostil wheeled to
+see Sears in a menacing position with two guns leveled low.
+
+"Don't holler!" he called. "An' don't move!"
+
+"What 'n the h--l now, Sears?" demanded Bostil.
+
+"I'll bore you if you move--thet's what!" replied Sears. His eyes,
+bold, steely, with a glint that Bostil knew, vibrated as he held in
+sight all points before him. A vicious little sand-rattlesnake about to
+strike!
+
+"Holley, turn yer back!" ordered Sears.
+
+The old rider, who stood foremost of the group' instantly obeyed, with
+hands up. He took no chances here, for he alone packed a gun. With
+swift steps Sears moved, pulled Holley's gun, flung it aside into the
+sage.
+
+"Sears, it ain't a hold-up!" expostulated Bostil. The act seemed too
+bold, too wild even for Dick Sears.
+
+"Ain't it?" scoffed Sears, malignantly. "Bostil, I was after the King.
+But I reckon I'll git the hoss thet beat him!"
+
+Bostil's face turned dark-blood color and his neck swelled. "By Gawd,
+Sears! You ain't a-goin' to steal this boy's hoss!"
+
+"Shut up!" hissed the horse-thief. He pushed a gun close to Bostil.
+"I've always laid fer you! I'm achin' to bore you now. I would but fer
+scarin' this hoss. If you yap again I'll KILL YOU, anyhow, an' take a
+chance!"
+
+All the terrible hate and evil and cruelty and deadliness of his kind
+burned in his eyes and stung in his voice.
+
+"Sears, if it's my horse you want you needn't kill Bostil," spoke up
+Slone. The contrast of his cool, quiet voice eased the terrible strain.
+
+"Lead him round hyar!" snapped Sears.
+
+Wildfire appeared more shy of the horses back of him than of the men.
+Slone was able to lead him, however, to within several paces of Sears.
+Then Slone dropped the reins. He still held a lasso which was loosely
+coiled, and the loop dropped in front of him as he backed away.
+
+Sears sheathed the left-hand gun. Keeping the group covered with the
+other, he moved backward, reaching for the hanging reins. Wildfire
+snorted, appeared about to jump. But Sears got the reins. Bostil,
+standing like a stone, his companions also motionless, could not help
+but admire the daring of this upland horse-thief. How was he to mount
+that wild stallion? Sears was noted for two qualities--his nerve before
+men and his skill with horses. Assuredly he would not risk an ordinary
+mount. Wildfire began to suspect Sears--to look at him instead of the
+other horses. Then quick as a cat Sears vaulted into the saddle.
+Wildfire snorted and lifted his forefeet in a lunge that meant he would
+bolt.
+
+Sears in vaulting up had swung the gun aloft. He swept it down, but
+waveringly, for Wildfire had begun to rear.
+
+Bostil saw how fatal that single instant would have been for Sears if
+he or Holley had a gun.
+
+Something whistled. Bostil saw the leap of Slone's lasso--the curling,
+snaky dart of the noose which flew up to snap around Sears. The rope
+sung taut. Sears was swept bodily clean from the saddle, to hit the
+ground in sodden impact.
+
+Almost swifter than Bostil's sight was the action of Slone--flashing
+by--in the air--himself on the plunging horse. Sears shot once, twice.
+Then Wildfire bolted as his rider whipped the lasso round the horn.
+Sears, half rising, was jerked ten feet. An awful shriek was throttled
+in his throat.
+
+A streak of dust on the slope--a tearing, parting line in the sage!
+
+Bostil stood amazed. The red stallion made short plunges. Slone reached
+low for the tripping reins. When he straightened up in the saddle
+Wildfire broke wildly into a run.
+
+It was characteristic of Holley that at this thrilling, tragic instant
+he walked over into the sage to pick up his gun.
+
+"Throwed a gun on me, got the drop, an' pitched mine away!" muttered
+Holley, in disgust. The way he spoke meant that he was disgraced.
+
+"My Gawd! I was scared thet Sears would get the hoss!" rolled out
+Bostil.
+
+Holley thought of his gun; Bostil thought of the splendid horse. The
+thoughts were characteristic of these riders. The other men, however,
+recovering from a horror-broken silence, burst out in acclaim of
+Slone's feat.
+
+"Dick Sears's finish! Roped by a boy rider!" exclaimed Cal Blinn,
+fervidly.
+
+"Bostil, that rider is worthy of his horse," said Wetherby. "I think
+Sears would have bored you. I saw his finger pressing--pressing on the
+trigger. Men like Sears can't help but pull at that stage."
+
+"Thet was the quickest trick I ever seen," declared Macomber.
+
+They watched Wildfire run down the slope, out into the valley, with a
+streak of rising dust out behind. They all saw when there ceased to be
+that peculiar rising of dust. Wildfire appeared to shoot ahead at
+greater speed. Then he slowed up. The rider turned him and faced back
+toward the group, coming at a stiff gallop. Soon Wildfire breasted the
+slope, and halted, snorting, shaking before the men. The lasso was
+still trailing out behind, limp and sagging. There was no weight upon
+it now.
+
+Bostil strode slowly ahead. He sympathized with the tension that held
+Slone; he knew why the rider's face was gray, why his lips only moved
+mutely, why there was horror in the dark, strained eyes, why the lean,
+strong hands, slowly taking up the lasso, now shook like leaves in the
+wind.
+
+There was only dust on the lasso. But Bostil knew--they all knew that
+none the less it had dealt a terrible death to the horse-thief.
+
+Somehow Bostil could not find words for what he wanted to say. He put a
+hand on the red stallion--patted his shoulder. Then he gripped Slone
+close and hard. He was thinking how he would have gloried in a son like
+this young, wild rider. Then he again faced his comrades.
+
+"Fellers, do you think Cordts was in on thet trick?" he queried.
+
+"Nope. Cordts was on the square," replied Holley. "But he must have
+seen it comin' an' left Sears to his fate. It sure was a fittin' last
+ride for a hoss-thief."
+
+Bostil sent Holley and Farlane on ahead to find Cordts and Hutchinson,
+with their comrades, to tell them the fate of Sears, and to warn them
+to leave before the news got to the riders.
+
+The sun was setting golden and red over the broken battlements of the
+canyons to the west. The heat of the day blew away on a breeze that
+bent the tips of the sage-brush. A wild song drifted back from the
+riders to the fore. And the procession of Indians moved along, their
+gay trappings and bright colors beautiful in the fading sunset light.
+
+When Bostil and, his guests arrived at the corrals, Holley, with
+Farlane and other riders, were waiting.
+
+"Boss," said Holley, "Cordts an' his outfit never rid in. They was last
+seen by some Navajos headin' for the canyon."
+
+"Thet's good!" ejaculated Bostil, in relief. "Wal boys, look after the
+hosses. ... Slone, just turn Wildfire over to the boys with
+instructions, an' feel safe."
+
+Farlane scratched his head and looked dubious. "I'm wonderin' how safe
+it'll be fer us."
+
+"I'll look after him," said Slone.
+
+Bostil nodded as if he had expected Slone to refuse to let any rider
+put the stallion away for the night. Wildfire would not go into the
+barn, and Slone led him into one of the high-barred corrals. Bostil
+waited, talking with his friends, until Slone returned, and then they
+went toward the house.
+
+"I reckon we couldn't get inside Brack's place now," remarked Bostil.
+"But in a case like this I can scare up a drink." Lights from the
+windows shone bright through the darkness under the cottonwoods. Bostil
+halted at the door, as if suddenly remembering, and he whispered,
+huskily: "Let's keep the women from learnin' about Sears--to-night,
+anyway."
+
+Then he led the way through the big door into the huge living-room.
+There were hanging-lights on the walls and blazing sticks on the
+hearth. Lucy came running in to meet them. It did not escape Bostil's
+keen eyes that she was dressed in her best white dress. He had never
+seen her look so sweet and pretty, and, for that matter, so strange.
+The flush, the darkness of her eyes, the added something in her face,
+tender, thoughtful, strong--these were new. Bostil pondered while she
+welcomed his guests. Slone, who had hung back, was last in turn. Lucy
+greeted him as she had the others. Slone met her with awkward
+constraint. The gray had not left his face. Lucy looked up at him
+again, and differently.
+
+"What--what has happened?" she asked.
+
+It annoyed Bostil that Slone and all the men suddenly looked blank.
+
+"Why, nothin'," replied Slone, slowly, "'cept I'm fagged out."
+
+Lucy, or any other girl, could have seen that he, was evading the
+truth. She flashed a look from Slone to her father.
+
+"Until to-day we never had a big race that something dreadful didn't
+happen," said Lucy. "This was my day--my race. And, oh! I wanted it to
+pass without--without--"
+
+"Wal, Lucy dear," replied Bostil, as she faltered. "Nothin' came off
+thet'd make you feel bad. Young Slone had a scare about his hoss.
+Wildfire's safe out there in the corral, an' he'll be guarded like the
+King an' Sarch. Slone needs a drink an' somethin' to eat, same as all
+of us."
+
+Lucy's color returned and her smile, but Bostil noted that, while she
+was serving them and brightly responsive to compliments, she gave more
+than one steady glance at Slone. She was deep, thought Bostil, and it
+angered him a little that she showed interest in what concerned this
+strange rider.
+
+Then they had dinner, with twelve at table. The wives of Bostil's three
+friends had been helping Aunt Jane prepare the feast, and they added to
+the merriment. Bostil was not much given to social intercourse--he
+would have preferred to be with his horses and riders--but this night
+he outdid himself as host, amazed his sister Jane, who evidently
+thought he drank too much, and delighted Lucy. Bostil's outward
+appearance and his speech and action never reflected all the workings
+of his mind. No one would ever know the depth of his bitter
+disappointment at the outcome of the race. With Creech's Blue Roan out
+of the way, another horse, swifter and more dangerous, had come along
+to spoil the King's chance. Bostil felt a subtly increasing
+covetousness in regard to Wildfire, and this colored all his talk and
+action. The upland country, vast and rangy, was for Bostil too small to
+hold Sage King and Wildfire unless they both belonged to him. And when
+old Cal Blinn gave a ringing toast to Lucy, hoping to live to see her
+up on Wildfire in the grand race that must be run with the King, Bostil
+felt stir in him the birth of a subtle, bitter fear. At first he mocked
+it. He--Bostil--afraid to race! It was a lie of the excited mind. He
+repudiated it. Insidiously it returned. He drowned it down--smothered
+it with passion. Then the ghost of it remained, hauntingly.
+
+After dinner Bostil with the men went down to Brackton's, where Slone
+and the winners of the day received their prizes.
+
+"Why, it's more money than I ever had in my whole life!" exclaimed
+Slone, gazing incredulously at the gold.
+
+Bostil was amused and pleased, and back of both amusement and pleasure
+was the old inventive, driving passion to gain his own ends.
+
+Bostil was abnormally generous in many ways; monstrously selfish in one
+way.
+
+"Slone, I seen you didn't drink none," he said, curiously.
+
+"No; I don't like liquor."
+
+"Do you gamble?"
+
+"I like a little bet--on a race," replied Slone, frankly.
+
+"Wal, thet ain't gamblin'. These fool riders of mine will bet on the
+switchin' of a hoss's tail." He drew Slone a little aside from the
+others, who were interested in Brackton's delivery of the different
+prizes. "Slone, how'd you like to ride for me?"
+
+Slone appeared surprised. "Why, I never rode for any one," he replied,
+slowly. "I can't stand to be tied down. I'm a horse-hunter, you know."
+
+Bostil eyed the young man, wondering what he knew about the
+difficulties of the job offered. It was no news to Bostil that he was
+at once the best and the worst man to ride for in all the uplands.
+
+"Sure, I know. But thet doesn't make no difference," went on Bostil,
+persuasively. "If we got along--wal, you'd save some of thet yellow
+coin you're jinglin'. A roamin' rider never builds no corral!"
+
+"Thank you, Bostil," replied Slone, earnestly. "I'll think it over. It
+would seem kind of tame now to go back to wild-horse wranglin', after
+I've caught Wildfire. I'll think it over. Maybe I'll do it, if you're
+sure I'm good enough with rope an' horse."
+
+"Wal, by Gawd!" blurted out Bostil. "Holley says he'd rather you
+throwed a gun on him than a rope! So would I. An' as for your handlin'
+a hoss, I never seen no better."
+
+Slone appeared embarrassed and kept studying the gold coins in his
+palm. Some one touched Bostil, who, turning, saw Brackton at his elbow.
+The other men were now bantering with the Indians.
+
+"Come now while I've got a minnit," said Brackton, taking up a lantern.
+"I've somethin' to show you."
+
+Bostil followed Brackton, and Slone came along. The old man opened a
+door into a small room, half full of stores and track. The lantern only
+dimly lighted the place.
+
+"Look thar!" And Brackton flashed the light upon a man lying prostrate.
+
+Bostil recognized the pale face of Joel Creech. "Brack! ... What's
+this? Is he dead?" Bostil sustained a strange, incomprehensible shock.
+Sight of a dead man had never before shocked him.
+
+"Nope, he ain't dead, which if he was might be good for this
+community," replied Brackton. "He's only fallen in a fit. Fust off I
+reckoned he was drunk. But it ain't thet."
+
+"Wal, what do you want to show him to me for?" demanded Bostil, gruffly.
+
+"I reckoned you oughter see him."
+
+"An' why, Brackton?"
+
+Brackton set down the lantern and, pushing Slone outside, said: "Jest a
+minnit, son," and then he closed the door. "Joel's been on my hands
+since the flood cut him off from home," said Brackton. "An' he's been
+some trial. But nobody else would have done nothin' for him, so I had
+to. I reckon I felt sorry for him. He cried like a baby thet had lost
+its mother. Then he gets wild-lookin' an' raved around. When I wasn't
+busy I kept an eye on him. But some of the time I couldn't, an' he
+stole drinks, which made him wuss. An' when I seen he was tryin' to
+sneak one of my guns, I up an' gets suspicious. Once he said, 'My dad's
+hosses are goin' to starve, an' I'm goin' to kill somebody!' He was out
+of his head an' dangerous. Wal, I was worried some, but all I could do
+was lock up my guns. Last night I caught him confabin' with some men
+out in the dark, behind the store. They all skedaddled except Joel, but
+I recognized Cordts. I didn't like this, nuther. Joel was surly an'
+ugly. An' when one of the riders called him he said: 'Thet boat NEVER
+DRIFTED OFF. Fer the night of the flood I went down there myself an'
+tied the ropes. They never come untied. Somebody cut them--jest before
+the flood--to make sure my dad's hosses couldn't be crossed. Somebody
+figgered the river an' the flood. An' if my dad's hosses starve I'm
+goin' to kill somebody!'"
+
+Brackton took up the lantern and placed a hand on the door ready to go
+out.
+
+"Then a rider punched Joel--I never seen who--an' Joel had a fit. I
+dragged him in here. An' as you see, he ain't come to yet."
+
+"Wal, Brackton, the boy's crazy," said Bostil.
+
+"So I reckon. An' I'm afeared he'll burn us out--he's crazy on fires,
+anyway--or do somethin' like."
+
+"He's sure a problem. Wal, we'll see," replied Bostil, soberly.
+
+And they went out to find Slone waiting. Then Bostil called his guests,
+and with Slone also accompanying him, went home.
+
+Bostil threw off the recurring gloom, and he was good-natured when Lucy
+came to his room to say good night. He knew she had come to say more
+than that.
+
+"Hello, daughter!" he said. "Aren't you ashamed to come facin' your
+poor old dad?"
+
+Lucy eyed him dubiously. "No, I'm not ashamed. But I'm still a
+little--afraid."
+
+"I'm harmless, child. I'm a broken man. When you put Sage King out of
+the race you broke me."
+
+"Dad, that isn't funny. You make me an--angry when you hint I did
+something underhand."
+
+"Wal, you didn't consult ME."
+
+"I thought it would be fun to surprise you all. Why, you're always
+delighted with a surprise in a race, unless it beats you.... Then, it
+was my great and only chance to get out in front of the King. Oh, how
+grand it'd have been! Dad, I'd have run away from him the same as the
+others!"
+
+"No, you wouldn't," declared Bostil.
+
+"Dad, Wildfire can beat the King!"
+
+"Never, girl! Knockin' a good-tempered hoss off his pins ain't beatin'
+him in a runnin'-race."
+
+Then father and daughter fought over the old score, the one doggedly,
+imperturbably, the other spiritedly, with flashing eyes. It was
+different this time, however, for it ended in Lucy saying Bostil would
+never risk another race. That stung Bostil, and it cost him an effort
+to control his temper.
+
+"Let thet go now. Tell me all about how you saved Wildfire, an' Slone,
+too."
+
+Lucy readily began the narrative, and she had scarcely started before
+Bostil found himself intensely interested. Soon he became absorbed.
+That was the most thrilling and moving kind of romance to him, like his
+rider's dreams.
+
+"Lucy, you're sure a game kid," he said, fervidly, when she had ended.
+"I reckon I don't blame Slone for fallin' in love with you."
+
+"Who said THAT!" inquired Lucy.
+
+"Nobody. But it's true--ain't it?"
+
+She looked up with eyes as true as ever they were, yet a little sad, he
+thought, a little wistful and wondering, as if a strange and grave
+thing confronted her.
+
+"Yes, Dad--it's--it's true," she answered, haltingly.
+
+"Wal, you didn't need to tell me, but I'm glad you did."
+
+Bostil meant to ask her then if she in any sense returned the rider's
+love, but unaccountably he could not put the question. The girl was as
+true as ever--as good as gold. Bostil feared a secret that might hurt
+him. Just as sure as life was there and death but a step away, some
+rider, sooner or later, would win this girl's love. Bostil knew that,
+hated it, feared it. Yet he would never give his girl to a beggarly
+rider. Such a man as Wetherby ought to win Lucy's hand. And Bostil did
+not want to know too much at present; he did not want his
+swift-mounting animosity roused so soon. Still he was curious, and,
+wanting to get the drift of Lucy's mind, he took to his old habit of
+teasing.
+
+"Another moonstruck rider!" he said. "Your eyes are sure full moons,
+Lucy. I'd be ashamed to trifle with these poor fellers."
+
+"Dad!"
+
+"You're a heartless flirt--same as your mother was before she met ME."
+
+"I'm not. And I don't believe mother was, either," replied Lucy. It was
+easy to strike fire from her.
+
+"Wal, you did dead wrong to ride out there day after day meetin' Slone,
+because--young woman--if he ever has the nerve to ask me for you I'll
+beat him up bad."
+
+"Then you'd be a brute!" retorted Lucy.
+
+"Wal, mebbe," returned Bostil, secretly delighted and surprised at
+Lucy's failure to see through him. But she was looking inward. He
+wondered what hid there deep in her. "But I can't stand for the nerve
+of thet."
+
+"He--he means to--to ask you."
+
+"The h----.... A-huh!"
+
+Lucy did not catch the slip of tongue. She was flushing now. "He said
+he'd never have let me meet him out there alone--unless--he--he loved
+me--and as our neighbors and the riders would learn of it--and talk--he
+wanted you and them to know he'd asked to--to marry me."
+
+"Wal, he's a square young man!" ejaculated Bostil, involuntarily. It
+was hard for Bostil to hide his sincerity and impulsiveness; much
+harder than to hide unworthy attributes. Then he got back on the other
+track. "That'll make me treat him decent, so when he rides up to ask
+for you I'll let him off with, 'No!"
+
+Lucy dropped her head. Bostil would have given all he had, except his
+horses, to feel sure she did not care for Slone.
+
+"Dad--I said--'No'--for myself," she murmured.
+
+This time Bostil did not withhold the profane word of surprise. "... So
+he's asked you, then? Wal, wal! When?"
+
+"To-day--out there in the rocks where he waited with Wildfire for me.
+He--he--"
+
+Lucy slipped into her father's arms, and her slender form shook. Bostil
+instinctively felt what she then needed was her mother. Her mother was
+dead, and he was only a rough, old, hard rider. He did not know what to
+do--to say. His heart softened and he clasped her close. It hurt him
+keenly to realize that he might have been a better, kinder father if it
+were not for the fear that she would find him out. But that proved he
+loved her, craved her respect and affection.
+
+"Wal, little girl, tell me," he said.
+
+"He--he broke his word to me."
+
+"A-huh! Thet's too bad. An' how did he?"
+
+"He--he--" Lucy seemed to catch her tongue.
+
+Bostil was positive she had meant to tell him something and suddenly
+changed her mind. Subtly the child vanished--a woman remained. Lucy sat
+up self-possessed once more. Some powerfully impelling thought had
+transformed her. Bostil's keen sense gathered that what she would not
+tell was not hers to reveal. For herself, she was the soul of
+simplicity and frankness.
+
+"Days ago I told him I cared for him," she went on. "But I forbade him
+to speak of it to me. He promised. I wanted to wait till after the
+race--till after I had found courage to confess to you. He broke his
+word.... Today when he put me up on Wildfire he--he suddenly lost his
+head."
+
+The slow scarlet welled into Lucy's face and her eyes grew shamed, but
+bravely she kept facing her father.
+
+"He--he pulled me off--he hugged me--he k-kissed me.... Oh, it was
+dreadful--shameful! ... Then I gave him back--some--something he had
+given me. And I told him I--I hated him--and I told him, 'No!'"
+
+"But you rode his hoss in the race," said Bostil.
+
+Lucy bowed her head at that. "I--I couldn't resist!"
+
+Bostil stroked the bright head. What a quandary for a thick-skulled old
+horseman! "Wal, it seems to me Slone didn't act so bad, considerin'.
+You'd told him you cared for him. If it wasn't for thet! ... I remember
+I did much the same to your mother. She raised the devil, but I never
+seen as she cared any less for me."
+
+"I'll never forgive him," Lucy cried, passionately. "I hate him. A man
+who breaks his word in one thing will do it in another."
+
+Bostil sadly realized that his little girl had reached womanhood and
+love, and with them the sweet, bitter pangs of life. He realized also
+that here was a crisis when a word--an unjust or lying word from him
+would forever ruin any hope that might still exist for Slone. Bostil
+realized this acutely, but the realization was not even a temptation.
+
+"Wal, listen. I'm bound to confess your new rider is sure swift. An',
+Lucy, to-day if he hadn't been as swift with a rope as he is in
+love--wal, your old daddy might be dead!"
+
+She grew as white as her dress. "Oh, Dad! I KNEW something had
+happened," she cried, reaching for him.
+
+Then Bostil told her how Dick Sears had menaced him--how Slone had
+foiled the horse-thief. He told the story bluntly, but eloquently, with
+all a rider's praise. Lucy rose with hands pressed against her breast.
+When had Bostil seen eyes like those--dark, shining, wonderful? Ah! he
+remembered her mother's once--only once, as a girl.
+
+Then Lucy kissed him and without a word fled from the room.
+
+Bostil stared after her. "D--n me!" he swore, as he threw a boot
+against the wall. "I reckon I'll never let her marry Slone, but I just
+had to tell her what I think of him!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Slone lay wide awake under an open window, watching the stars glimmer
+through the rustling foliage of the cottonwoods. Somewhere a lonesome
+hound bayed. Very faintly came the silvery tinkle of running water.
+
+For five days Slone had been a guest of Bostil's, and the whole five
+days had been torment.
+
+On the morning of the day after the races Lucy had confronted him.
+Would he ever forget her eyes--her voice? "Bless you for saving my
+dad!" she had said. "It was brave.... But don't let dad fool you. Don't
+believe in his kindness. Above all, don't ride for him! He only wants
+Wildfire, and if he doesn't get him he'll hate you!"
+
+That speech of Lucy's had made the succeeding days hard for Slone.
+Bostil loaded him with gifts and kindnesses, and never ceased
+importuning him to accept his offers. But for Lucy, Slone would have
+accepted. It was she who cast the first doubt of Bostil into his mind.
+Lucy averred that her father was splendid and good in every way except
+in what pertained to fast horses; there he was impossible.
+
+The great stallion that Slone had nearly sacrificed his life to catch
+was like a thorn in the rider's flesh. Slone lay there in the darkness,
+restless, hot, rolling from side to side, or staring out at the
+star-studded sky--miserably unhappy all on account of that horse.
+Almost he hated him. What pride he had felt in Wildfire! How he had
+gloried in the gift of the stallion to Lucy! Then, on the morning of
+the race had come that unexpected, incomprehensible and wild act of
+which he had been guilty. Yet not to save his life, his soul, could he
+regret it! Was it he who had been responsible, or an unknown savage
+within him? He had kept his word to Lucy, when day after day he had
+burned with love until that fatal moment when the touch of her, as he
+lifted her to Wildfire's saddle, had made a madman out of him. He had
+swept her into his arms and held her breast to his, her face before
+him, and he had kissed the sweet, parting lips till he was blind.
+
+Then he had learned what a little fury she was. Then he learned how he
+had fallen, what he had forfeited. In his amaze at himself, in his
+humility and shame, he had not been able to say a word in his own
+defense. She did not know yet that his act had been ungovernable and
+that he had not known what he was doing till too late. And she had
+finished with: "I'll ride Wildfire in the race--but I won't have
+him--and I won't have YOU! NO!"
+
+She had the steel and hardness of her father.
+
+For Slone, the watching of that race was a blend of rapture and
+despair. He lived over in mind all the time between the race and this
+hour when he lay there sleepless and full of remorse. His mind was like
+a racecourse with many races; and predominating in it was that swift,
+strange, stinging race of his memory of Lucy Bostil's looks and actions.
+
+What an utter fool he was to believe she had meant those tender words
+when, out there under the looming monuments, she had accepted Wildfire!
+She had been an impulsive child. Her scorn and fury that morning of the
+race had left nothing for him except footless fancies. She had mistaken
+love of Wildfire for love of him. No, his case was hopeless with Lucy,
+and if it had not been so Bostil would have made it hopeless. Yet there
+were things Slone could not fathom--the wilful, contradictory, proud
+and cold and unaccountably sweet looks and actions of the girl. They
+haunted Slone. They made him conscious he had a mind and tortured him
+with his development. But he had no experience with girls to compare
+with what was happening now. It seemed that accepted fact and
+remembered scorn and cold certainty were somehow at variance with
+hitherto unknown intuitions and instincts. Lucy avoided him, if by
+chance she encountered him alone. When Bostil or Aunt Jane or any one
+else was present Lucy was kind, pleasant, agreeable. What made her
+flush red at sight of him and then, pale? Why did she often at table or
+in the big living-room softly brush against him when it seemed she
+could have avoided that? Many times he had felt some inconceivable
+drawing power, and looked up to find her eyes upon him, strange eyes
+full of mystery, that were suddenly averted. Was there any meaning
+attachable to the fact that his room was kept so tidy and neat, that
+every day something was added to its comfort or color, that he found
+fresh flowers whenever he returned, or a book, or fruit, or a dainty
+morsel to eat, and once a bunch of Indian paint-brush, wild flowers of
+the desert that Lucy knew he loved? Most of all, it was Lucy's eyes
+which haunted Slone--eyes that had changed, darkened, lost their
+audacious flash, and yet seemed all the sweeter. The glances he caught,
+which he fancied were stolen--and then derided his fancy--thrilled him
+to his heart. Thus Slone had spent waking hours by day and night, mad
+with love and remorse, tormented one hour by imagined grounds for hope
+and resigned to despair the next.
+
+Upon the sixth morning of his stay at Bostil's Slone rose with
+something of his former will reasserting itself. He could not remain in
+Bostil's home any longer unless he accepted Bostil's offer, and this
+was not to be thought of. With a wrench Slone threw off the softening
+indecision and hurried out to find Bostil while the determination was
+hot.
+
+Bostil was in the corral with Wildfire. This was the second time Slone
+had found him there. Wildfire appeared to regard Bostil with a much
+better favor than he did his master. As Slone noted this a little heat
+stole along his veins. That was gall to a rider.
+
+"I like your hoss," said Bostil, with gruff frankness. But a tinge of
+red showed under his beard.
+
+"Bostil, I'm sorry I can't take you up on the job," rejoined Slone,
+swiftly. "It's been hard for me to decide. You've been good to me. I'm
+grateful. But it's time I was tellin' you."
+
+"Why can't you?" demanded Bostil, straightening up with a glint in his
+big eyes. It was the first time he had asked Slone that.
+
+"I can't ride for you," replied Slone, briefly.
+
+"Anythin' to do with Lucy?" queried Bostil.
+
+"How so?" returned Slone, conscious of more heat.
+
+"Wal, you was sweet on her an' she wouldn't have you," replied Bostil.
+
+Slone felt the blood swell and boil in his veins. This Bostil could say
+as harsh and hard things as repute gave him credit for.
+
+"Yes, I AM sweet on Lucy, an' she won't have me," said Slone, steadily.
+"I asked her to let me come to you an' tell you I wanted to marry her.
+But she wouldn't."
+
+"Wal, it's just as good you didn't come, because I might...." Bostil
+broke off his speech and began again. "You don't lack nerve, Slone.
+What'd you have to offer Lucy?"
+
+"Nothin' except--But that doesn't matter," replied Slone, cut to the
+quick by Bostil's scorn. "I'm glad you know, an' so much for that."
+
+Bostil turned to look at Wildfire once more, and he looked long. When
+he faced around again he was another man. Slone felt the powerful
+driving passion of this old horse-trader.
+
+"Slone, I'll give you pick of a hundred mustangs an' a thousand dollars
+for Wildfire!"
+
+So he unmasked his power in the face of a beggarly rider! Though it
+struck Slone like a thunderbolt, he felt amused. But he did not show
+that. Bostil had only one possession, among all his uncounted wealth,
+that could win Wildfire from his owner.
+
+"No," said Slone, briefly.
+
+"I'll double it," returned Bostil, just as briefly.
+
+"No!"
+
+"I'll--"
+
+"Save your breath, Bostil," flashed Slone. "You don't know me. But let
+me tell you--you CAN'T BUY my horse!"
+
+The great veins swelled and churned in Bostil's bull neck; a thick and
+ugly contortion worked in his face; his eyes reflected a sick rage.
+
+Slone saw that two passions shook Bostil--one, a bitter, terrible
+disappointment, and the other, the passion of a man who could not brook
+being crossed. It appeared to Slone that the best thing he could do was
+to get away quickly, and to this end he led Wildfire out of the corral
+to the stable courtyard, and there quickly saddled him. Then he went
+into another corral for his other horse, Nagger, and, bringing him out,
+returned to find Bostil had followed as far as the court. The old man's
+rage apparently had passed or had been smothered.
+
+"See here," he began, in thick voice, "don't be a d--- fool an' ruin
+your chance in life. I'll--"
+
+"Bostil, my one chance was ruined--an' you know who did it," replied
+Slone, as he gathered Nagger's rope and Wildfire's bridle together.
+"I've no hard feelin's.... But I can't sell you my horse. An' I can't
+ride for you--because--well, because it would breed trouble."
+
+"An' what kind?" queried Bostil.
+
+Holley and Farlane and Van, with several other riders, had come up and
+were standing open-mouthed. Slone gathered from their manner and
+expression that anything might happen with Bostil in such a mood.
+
+"We'd be racin' the King an' Wildfire, wouldn't we?" replied Slone.
+
+"An' supposin' we would?" returned Bostil, ominously. His huge frame
+vibrated with a slight start.
+
+"Wildfire would run off with your favorite--an' you wouldn't like
+that," answered Slone. It was his rider's hot blood that prompted him
+to launch this taunt. He could not help it.
+
+"You wild-hoss chaser," roared Bostil, "your Wildfire may be a bloody
+killer, but he can't beat the King in a race!"
+
+"Excuse ME, Bostil, but Wildfire did beat the King!"
+
+This was only adding fuel to the fire. Slone saw Holley making signs
+that must have meant silence would be best. But Slone's blood was up.
+Bostil had rubbed him the wrong way.
+
+"You're a lair!" declared Bostil, with a tremendous stride forward.
+Slone saw then how dangerous the man really was. "It was no race. Your
+wild hoss knocked the King off the track."
+
+"Sage King had the lead, didn't he? Why didn't he keep it?"
+
+Bostil was like a furious, intractable child whose favorite precious
+treasure had been broken; and he burst out into a torrent of incoherent
+speech, apparently reasons why this and that were so. Slone did not
+make out what Bostil meant and he did not care. When Bostil got out of
+breath Slone said:
+
+"We're both wastin' talk. An' I'm not wantin' you to call me a liar
+twice. ... Put your rider up on the King an' come on, right now. I'll--"
+
+"Slone, shut up an' chase yourself," interrupted Holley
+
+"You go to h--l!" returned Slone, coolly.
+
+There was a moment's silence, in which Slone took Holley's measure. The
+hawk-eyed old rider may have been square, but he was then thinking only
+of Bostil.
+
+"What am I up, against here?" demanded Slone. "Am I goin' to be shot
+because I'm takin' my own part? Holley, you an' the rest of your pards
+are all afraid of this old devil. But I'm not--an' you stay out of
+this."
+
+"Wal, son, you needn't git riled," replied Holley, placatingly. "I was
+only tryin' to stave off talk you might be sorry for."
+
+"Sorry for nothin'! I'm goin' to make this great horse-trader, this
+rich an' mighty rancher, this judge of grand horses, this BOSTIL! ...
+I'm goin' to make him race the King or take water!" Then Slone turned
+to Bostil. That worthy evidently had been stunned by the rider who
+dared call him to his face. "Come on! Fetch the King! Let your own
+riders judge the race!"
+
+Bostil struggled both to control himself and to speak. "Naw! I ain't
+goin' to see thet red hoss-killer jump the King again!"
+
+"Bah! you're afraid. You know there'd be no girl on his back. You know
+he can outrun the King an' that's why you want to buy him."
+
+Slone caught his breath then. He realized suddenly, at Bostil's paling
+face, that perhaps he had dared too much. Yet, maybe the truth flung
+into this hard old rider's teeth was what he needed more than anything
+else. Slone divined, rather than saw, that he had done an unprecedented
+thing.
+
+"I'll go now, Bostil."
+
+Slone nodded a good-by to the riders, and, turning away, he led the two
+horses down the lane toward the house. It scarcely needed sight of Lucy
+under the cottonwoods to still his anger and rouse his regret. Lucy saw
+him coming, and, as usual, started to avoid meeting him, when sight of
+the horses, or something else, caused her to come toward him instead.
+
+Slone halted. Both Wildfire and Nagger whinnied at sight of the girl.
+Lucy took one flashing glance at them, at Slone, and then she evidently
+guessed what was amiss.
+
+"Lucy, I've done it now--played hob, sure," said Slone.
+
+"What?" she cried.
+
+"I called your dad--called him good an' hard--an' he--he--"
+
+"Lin! Oh, don't say Dad." Lucy's face whitened and she put a swift hand
+upon his arm--a touch that thrilled him. "Lin! there's blood--on your
+face. Don't--don't tell me Dad hit you?"
+
+"I should say not," declared Slone, quickly lifting his hand to his
+face. "Must be from my cut, that blood. I barked my hand holdin'
+Wildfire."
+
+"Oh! I--I was sick with--with--" Lucy faltered and broke off, and then
+drew back quickly, as if suddenly conscious of her actions and words.
+
+Then Slone began to relate everything that had been said, and before he
+concluded his story his heart gave a wild throb at the telltale face
+and eyes of the girl.
+
+"You said that to Dad!" she cried, in amaze and fear and admiration.
+"Oh, Dad richly deserved it! But I wish you hadn't. Oh, I wish you
+hadn't!"
+
+"Why?" asked Slone.
+
+But she did not answer that. "Where are you going?" she questioned.
+
+"Come to think of that, I don't know," replied Slone, blankly. "I
+started back to fetch my things out of my room. That's as far as my
+muddled thoughts got."
+
+"Your things? ... Oh!" Suddenly she grew intensely white. The little
+freckles that had been so indistinct stood out markedly, and it was as
+if she had never had any tan. One brown hand went to her breast, the
+other fluttered to his arm again. "You mean to--to go away--for good."
+
+"Sure. What else can I do?"
+
+"Lin! ... Oh, there comes Dad! He mustn't see me. I must run.... Lin,
+don't leave Bostil's Ford--don't go--DON'T!"
+
+Then she flew round the corner of the house, to disappear. Slone stood
+there transfixed and thrilling. Even Bostil's heavy tread did not break
+the trance, and a meeting would have been unavoidable had not Bostil
+turned down the path that led to the back of the house. Slone, with a
+start collecting his thoughts, hurried into the little room that had
+been his and gathered up his few belongings. He was careful to leave
+behind the gifts of guns, blankets, gloves, and other rider's
+belongings which Bostil had presented to him. Thus laden, he went
+outside and, tingling with emotions utterly sweet and bewildering, he
+led the horses down into the village.
+
+Slone went down to Brackton's, and put the horses into a large,
+high-fenced pasture adjoining Brackton's house. Slone felt reasonably
+sure his horses would be safe there, but he meant to keep a mighty
+close watch on them. And old Brackton, as if he read Slone's mind, said
+this: "Keep your eye on thet daffy boy, Joel Creech. He hangs round my
+place, sleeps out somewheres, an' he's crazy about hosses."
+
+Slone did not need any warning like that, nor any information to make
+him curious regarding young Creech. Lucy had seen to that, and, in
+fact, Slone was anxious to meet this half-witted fellow who had so
+grievously offended and threatened Lucy. That morning, however, Creech
+did not put in an appearance. The village had nearly returned to its
+normal state now, and the sleepy tenor of its way. The Indians, had
+been the last to go, but now none remained. The days were hot while the
+sun stayed high, and only the riders braved its heat.
+
+The morning, however, did not pass without an interesting incident.
+Brackton approached Slone with an offer that he take charge of the
+freighting between the Ford and Durango. "What would I do with
+Wildfire?" was Slone's questioning reply, and Brackton held up his
+hands. A later incident earned more of Slone's attention. He had
+observed a man in Brackton's store, and it chanced that this man heard
+Slone's reply to Brackton's offer, and he said: "You'll sure need to
+corral thet red stallion. Grandest hoss I ever seen!"
+
+That praise won Slone, and he engaged in conversation with the man, who
+said his name was Vorhees. It developed soon that Vorhees owned a
+little house, a corral, and a patch of ground on a likely site up under
+the bluff, and he was anxious to sell cheap because he had a fine
+opportunity at Durango, where his people lived. What interested Slone
+most was the man's remark that he had a corral which could not be
+broken into. The price he asked was ridiculously low if the property
+was worth anything. An idea flashed across Slone's mind. He went up to
+Vorhees's place and was much pleased with everything, especially the
+corral, which had been built by a man who feared horse-thieves as much
+as Bostil. The view from the door of the little cabin was magnificent
+beyond compare. Slone remembered Lucy's last words. They rang like
+bells in his ears. "Don't go--don't!" They were enough to chain him to
+Bostil's Ford until the crack of doom. He dared not dream of what they
+meant. He only listened to their music as they pealed over and over in
+his ears.
+
+"Vorhees, are you serious?" he asked. "The money you ask is little
+enough."
+
+"It's enough an' to spare," replied the man. "An' I'd take it as a
+favor of you."
+
+"Well, I'll go you," said Slone, and he laughed a little irrationally.
+"Only you needn't tell right away that I bought you out."
+
+The deal was consummated, leaving Slone still with half of the money
+that had been his prize in the race. He felt elated. He was rich. He
+owned two horses--one the grandest in all the uplands, the other the
+faithfulest--and he owned a neat little cabin where it was a joy to sit
+and look out, and a corral which would let him sleep at night, and he
+had money to put into supplies and furnishings, and a garden. After he
+drank out of the spring that bubbled from under the bluff he told
+himself it alone was worth the money.
+
+"Looks right down on Bostil's place," Slone soliloquized, with glee.
+"Won't he just be mad! An' Lucy! ... Whatever's she goin' to think?"
+
+The more Slone looked around and thought, the more he became convinced
+that good fortune had knocked at his door at last. And when he returned
+to Brackton's he was in an exultant mood. The old storekeeper gave him
+a nudge and pointed underhand to a young man of ragged aspect sitting
+gloomily on a box. Slone recognized Joel Creech. The fellow surely made
+a pathetic sight, and Slone pitied him. He looked needy and hungry.
+
+"Say," said Slone, impulsively, "want to help me carry some grub an'
+stuff?"
+
+"Howdy!" replied Creech, raising his head. "Sure do."
+
+Slone sustained the queerest shock of his life when he met the gaze of
+those contrasting eyes. Yet he did not believe that his strange feeling
+came from sight of different-colored eyes. There was an instinct or
+portent in that meeting.
+
+He purchased a bill of goods from Brackton, and, with Creech helping,
+carried it up to the cabin under the bluff. Three trips were needed to
+pack up all the supplies, and meanwhile Creech had but few words to
+say, and these of no moment. Slone offered him money, which he refused.
+
+"I'll help you fix up, an' eat a bite," he said. "Nice up hyar."
+
+He seemed rational enough and certainly responded to kindness. Slone
+found that Vorhees had left the cabin so clean there was little
+cleaning to do. An open fireplace of stone required some repair and
+there was wood to cut.
+
+"Joel, you start a fire while I go down after my horses," said Slone.
+
+Young Creech nodded and Slone left him there. It was not easy to catch
+Wildfire, nor any easier to get him into the new corral; but at last
+Slone saw him safely there. And the bars and locks on the gate might
+have defied any effort to open or break them quickly. Creech was
+standing in the doorway, watching the horses, and somehow Slone saw, or
+imagined he saw, that Creech wore a different aspect.
+
+"Grand wild hoss! He did what Blue was a-goin' to do--beat thet there
+d--d Bostil's King!"
+
+Creech wagged his head. He was gloomy and strange. His eyes were
+unpleasant to look into. His face changed. And he mumbled. Slone pitied
+him the more, but wished to see the last of him. Creech stayed on,
+however, and grew stranger and more talkative during the meal. He
+repeated things often--talked disconnectedly, and gave other
+indications that he was not wholly right in his mind. Yet Slone
+suspected that Creech's want of balance consisted only in what
+concerned horses and the Bostils. And Slone, wanting to learn all he
+could, encouraged Creech to talk about his father and the racers and
+the river and boat, and finally Bostil.
+
+Slone became convinced that, whether young Creech was half crazy or
+not, he knew his father's horses were doomed, and that the boat at the
+ferry had been cut adrift. Slone could not understand why he was
+convinced, but he was. Finally Creech told how he had gone down to the
+river only a day before; how he had found the flood still raging, but
+much lower; how he had worked round the cliffs and had pulled up the
+rope cables to find they had been cut.
+
+"You see, Bostil cut them when he didn't need to," continued Creech,
+shrewdly. "But he didn't know the flood was comin' down so quick. He
+was afeared we'd come across an' git the boat thet night. An' he meant
+to take away them cut cables. But he hadn't no time."
+
+"Bostil?" queried Slone, as he gazed hard at Creech. The fellow had
+told that rationally enough. Slone wondered if Bostil could have been
+so base. No! and yet--when it came to horses Bostil was scarcely human.
+
+Slone's query served to send Creech off on another tangent which wound
+up in dark, mysterious threats. Then Slone caught the name of Lucy. It
+abruptly killed his sympathy for Creech.
+
+"What's the girl got to do with it?" he demanded, angrily. "If you want
+to talk to me don't use her name."
+
+"I'll use her name when I want," shouted Creech.
+
+"Not to me!"
+
+"Yes, to you, mister. I ain't carin' a d--n fer you!"
+
+"You crazy loon!" exclaimed Slone, with impatience and disgust added to
+anger. "What's the use of being decent to you?"
+
+Creech crouched low, his hands digging like claws into the table, as if
+he were making ready to spring. At that instant he was hideous.
+
+"Crazy, am I?" he yelled. "Mebbe not d--n crazy! I kin tell you're gone
+on Lucy Bostil! I seen you with her out there in the rocks the mornin'
+of the race. I seen what you did to her. An' I'm a-goin' to tell it!
+... An' I'm a-goin' to ketch Lucy Bostil an' strip her naked, an' when
+I git through with her I'll tie her on a hoss an' fire the grass! By
+Gawd! I am!" Livid and wild, he breathed hard as he got up, facing
+Slone malignantly.
+
+"Crazy or not, here goes!" muttered Slone, grimly; and, leaping up,
+with one blow he knocked Creech half out of the door, and then kicked
+him the rest of the way. "Go on and have a fit!" cried Slone. "I'm
+liable to kill you if you don't have one!"
+
+Creech got up and ran down the path, turning twice on the way. Then he
+disappeared among the trees.
+
+Slone sat down. "Lost my temper again!" he said. "This has been a day.
+Guess I'd better cool off right now an' stay here.... That poor devil!
+Maybe he's not so crazy. But he's wilder than an Indian. I must warn
+Lucy.... Lord! I wonder if Bostil could have held back repairin' that
+boat, an' then cut it loose? I wonder? Yesterday I'd have sworn never.
+To-day--"
+
+Slone drove the conclusion of that thought out of his consciousness
+before he wholly admitted it. Then he set to work cutting the long
+grass from the wet and shady nooks under the bluff where the spring
+made the ground rich. He carried an armful down to the corral. Nagger
+was roaming around outside, picking grass for himself. Wildfire snorted
+as always when he saw Slone, and Slone as always, when time permitted,
+tried to coax the stallion to him. He had never succeeded, nor did he
+this time. When he left the bundle of grass on the ground and went
+outside Wildfire readily came for it.
+
+"You're that tame, anyhow, you hungry red devil," said Slone,
+jealously. Wildfire would take a bunch of grass from Lucy Bostil's
+hand. Slone's feelings had undergone some reaction, though he still
+loved the horse. But it was love mixed with bitterness. More than ever
+he made up his mind that Lucy should have Wildfire. Then he walked
+around his place, planning the work he meant to start at once.
+
+Several days slipped by with Slone scarcely realizing how they flew.
+Unaccustomed labor tired him so that he went to bed early and slept
+like a log. If it had not been for the ever-present worry and suspense
+and longing, in regard to Lucy, he would have been happier than ever he
+could remember. Almost at once he had become attached to his little
+home, and the more he labored to make it productive and comfortable the
+stronger grew his attachment. Practical toil was not conducive to
+daydreaming, so Slone felt a loss of something vague and sweet. Many
+times he caught himself watching with eager eyes for a glimpse of Lucy
+Bostil down there among the cottonwoods. Still, he never saw her, and,
+in fact, he saw so few villagers that the place began to have a
+loneliness which endeared it to him the more. Then the view down the
+gray valley to the purple monuments was always thrillingly memorable to
+Slone. It was out there Lucy had saved his horse and his life. His keen
+desert gaze could make out even at that distance the great, dark
+monument, gold-crowned, in the shadow of which he had heard Lucy speak
+words that had transformed life for him. He would ride out there some
+day. The spell of those looming grand shafts of colored rock was still
+strong upon him.
+
+One morning Slone had a visitor--old Brackton. Slone's cordiality died
+on his lips before it was half uttered. Brackton's former friendliness
+was not in evidence. Indeed, he looked at Slone with curiosity and
+disfavor.
+
+"Howdy, Slone! I jest wanted to see what you was doin' up hyar," he
+said.
+
+Slone spread his hands and explained in few words.
+
+"So you took over the place, hey? We all figgered thet. But Vorhees was
+mum. Fact is, he was sure mysterious." Brackton sat down and eyed Slone
+with interest. "Folks are talkin' a lot about you," he said, bluntly.
+
+"Is that so?"
+
+"You 'pear to be a pretty mysterious kind of a feller, Slone. I kind of
+took a shine to you at first, an' thet's why I come up hyar to tell you
+it'd be wise fer you to vamoose."
+
+"What!" exclaimed Slone.
+
+Brackton repeated substantially what he had said, then, pausing an
+instant, continued: "I've no call to give you a hunch, but I'll do it
+jest because I did like you fust off."
+
+The old man seemed fussy and nervous and patronizing and disparaging
+all at once.
+
+"What'd you beat up thet poor Joel Creech fer?" demanded Brackton.
+
+"He got what he deserved," replied Slone, and the memory, coming on the
+head of this strange attitude of Brackton's, roused Slone's temper.
+
+"Wal, Joel tells some queer things about you--fer instance, how you
+took advantage of little Lucy Bostil, grabbin' her an' maulin' her the
+way Joel seen you."
+
+"D--n the loon!" muttered Slone, rising to pace the path.
+
+"Wal, Joel's a bit off, but he's not loony all the time. He's seen you
+an' he's tellin' it. When Bostil hears it you'd better be acrost the
+canyon!"
+
+Slone felt the hot, sick rush of blood to his face, and humiliation and
+rage overtook him.
+
+"Joel's down at my house. He had fits after you beat him, an' he 'ain't
+got over them yet. But he could blab to the riders. Van Sickle's
+lookin' fer you. An' to-day when I was alone with Joel he told me some
+more queer things about you. I shut him up quick. But I ain't
+guaranteein' I can keep him shut up."
+
+"I'll bet you I shut him up," declared Slone. "What more did the fool
+say?"
+
+"Slone, hev you been round these hyar parts---down among the
+monuments--fer any considerable time?" queried Brackton.
+
+"Yes, I have--several weeks out there, an' about ten days or so around
+the Ford."
+
+"Where was you the night of the flood?"
+
+The shrewd scrutiny of the old man, the suspicion, angered Slone.
+
+"If it's any of your mix, I was out on the slope among the rocks. I
+heard that flood comin' down long before it got here," replied Slone,
+deliberately.
+
+Brackton averted his gaze, and abruptly rose as if the occasion was
+ended. "Wal, take my hunch an' leave!" he said, turning away.
+
+"Brackton, if you mean well, I'm much obliged," returned Slone, slowly,
+ponderingly. "But I'll not take the hunch."
+
+"Suit yourself," added Brackton, coldly, and he went away.
+
+Slone watched him go down the path and disappear in the lane of
+cottonwoods.
+
+"I'll be darned!" muttered Slone. "Funny old man. Maybe Creech's not
+the only loony one hereabouts."
+
+Slone tried to laugh off the effect of the interview, but it persisted
+and worried him all day. After supper he decided to walk down into the
+village, and would have done so but for the fact that he saw a man
+climbing his path. When he recognized the rider Holley he sensed
+trouble, and straightway he became gloomy. Bostil's right-hand man
+could not call on him for any friendly reason. Holley came up slowly,
+awkwardly, after the manner of a rider unused to walking. Slone had
+built a little porch on the front of his cabin and a bench, which he
+had covered with goatskins. It struck him a little strangely that he
+should bend over to rearrange these skins just as Holley approached the
+porch.
+
+"Howdy, son!" was the rider's drawled remark. "Sure makes--me--puff to
+climb--up this mountain."
+
+Slone turned instantly, surprised at the friendly tone, doubting his
+own ears, and wanting to verify them. He was the more surprised to see
+Holley unmistakably amiable.
+
+"Hello, Holley! How are you?" he replied. "Have a seat."
+
+"Wal, I'm right spry fer an old bird. But I can't climb wuth a d--n
+.... Say, this here beats Bostil's view."
+
+"Yes, it's fine," replied Slone, rather awkwardly, as he sat down on
+the porch step. What could Holley want with him? This old rider was
+above curiosity or gossip.
+
+"Slone, you ain't holdin' it ag'in me--thet I tried to shut you up the
+other day?" he drawled, with dry frankness.
+
+"Why, no, Holley, I'm not. I saw your point. You were right. But Bostil
+made me mad."
+
+"Sure! He'd make anybody mad. I've seen riders bite themselves, they
+was so mad at Bostil. You called him, an' you sure tickled all the
+boys. But you hurt yourself, fer Bostil owns an' runs this here Ford."
+
+"So I've discovered," replied Slone.
+
+"You got yourself in bad right off, fer Bostil has turned the riders
+ag'in you, an' this here punchin' of Creech has turned the village
+folks ag'in you. What'd pitch into him fer?"
+
+Slone caught the kindly interest and intent of the rider, and it warmed
+him as Brackton's disapproval had alienated him.
+
+"Wal, I reckon I'd better tell you," drawled Holley, as Slone
+hesitated, "thet Lucy wants to know IF you beat up Joel an' WHY you
+did."
+
+"Holley! Did she ask you to find out?"
+
+"She sure did. The girl's worried these days, Slone.... You see, you
+haven't been around, an' you don't know what's comin' off."
+
+"Brackton was here to-day an' he told me a good deal. I'm worried,
+too," said Slone, dejectedly.
+
+"Thet hoss of yours, Wildfire, he's enough to make you hated in
+Bostil's camp, even if you hadn't made a fool of yourself, which you
+sure have."
+
+Slone dropped his head as admission.
+
+"What Creech swears he seen you do to Miss Lucy, out there among the
+rocks, where you was hid with Wildfire--is there any truth in thet?"
+asked Holley, earnestly. "Tell me, Slone. Folks believe it. An' it's
+hurt you at the Ford. Bostil hasn't heard it yet, an' Lucy she doesn't
+know. But I'm figgerin' thet you punched Joel because he throwed it in
+your face."
+
+"He did, an' I lambasted him," replied Slone, with force.
+
+"You did right. But what I want to know, is it true what Joel seen?"
+
+"It's true, Holley. But what I did isn't so bad--so bad as he'd make it
+look."
+
+"Wal, I knowed thet. I knowed fer a long time how Lucy cares fer you,"
+returned the old rider, kindly.
+
+Slone raised his head swiftly, incredulously. "Holley! You can't be
+serious."
+
+"Wal, I am. I've been sort of a big brother to Lucy Bostil for eighteen
+years. I carried her in these here hands when she weighed no more 'n my
+spurs. I taught her how to ride--what she knows about hosses. An' she
+knows more 'n her dad. I taught her to shoot. I know her better 'n
+anybody. An' lately she's been different. She's worried an' unhappy."
+
+"But Holley, all that--it doesn't seem--"
+
+"I reckon not," went on Holley, as Slone halted. "I think she cares fer
+you. An' I'm your friend, Slone. You're goin' to buck up ag'in some
+hell round here sooner or later. An' you'll need a friend."
+
+"Thanks--Holley," replied Slone, unsteadily. He thrilled under the iron
+grasp of the rider's hard hand.
+
+"You've got another friend you can gamble on," said Holley,
+significantly.
+
+"Another! Who?"
+
+"Lucy Bostil. An' don't you fergit thet. I'll bet she'll raise more
+trouble than Bostil when she hears what Joel Creech is tellin'. Fer
+she's bound to hear it. Van Sickle swears he's a-goin' to tell her an'
+then beat you up with a quirt."
+
+"He is, is he?" snapped Slone, darkly.
+
+"I've a hunch Lucy's guessed why you punched Joel. But she wants to
+know fer sure. Now, Slone, I'll tell her why."
+
+"Oh, don't!" said Slone, involuntarily.
+
+"Wal, it'll be better comin' from you an' me. Take my word fer thet.
+I'll prepare Lucy. An' she's as good a scrapper as Bostil, any day."
+
+"It all scares me," replied Slone. He did feel panicky, and that was
+from thoughts of what shame might befall Lucy. The cold sweat oozed out
+of every pore. What might not Bostil do? "Holley, I love the girl. So
+I--I didn't insult her. Bostil will never understand. An' what's he
+goin' to do when he finds out?"
+
+"Wal, let's hope you won't git any wuss'n you give Joel."
+
+"Let Bostil beat me!" ejaculated Slone. "I think I'm
+willin--now--the--way I feel. But I've a temper, and Bostil rubs me the
+wrong way."
+
+"Wall leave your gun home, an' fight Bostil. You're pretty husky. Sure
+he'll lick you, but mebbe you could give the old cuss a black eye."
+Holley laughed as if the idea gave him infinite pleasure.
+
+"Fight Bostil? ... Lucy would hate me!" cried Slone.
+
+"Nix! You don't know thet kid. If the old man goes after you Lucy'll
+care more fer you. She's jest like him in some ways." Holley pulled out
+a stubby black pipe and, filling and lighting it, he appeared to grow
+more thoughtful. "It wasn't only Lucy thet sent me up here to see you.
+Bostil had been pesterin' me fer days. But I kept fightin' shy of it
+till Lucy got hold of me."
+
+"Bostil sent you? Why?"
+
+"Reckon you can guess. He can't sleep, thinkin' about your red hoss.
+None of us ever seen Bostil have sich a bad case. He raised Sage King.
+But he's always been crazy fer a great wild stallion. An' here you come
+along--an' your hoss jumps the King--an' there's trouble generally."
+
+"Holley, do you think Wildfire can beat Sage King?" asked Slone,
+eagerly.
+
+"Reckon I do. Lucy says so, an' I'll back her any day. But, son, I
+ain't paradin' what I think. I'd git in bad myself. Farlane an' the
+other boys, they're with Bostil. Van he's to blame fer thet. He's
+takin' a dislike to you, right off. An' what he tells Bostil an' the
+boys about thet race don't agree with what Lucy tells me. Lucy says
+Wildfire ran fiery an' cranky at the start. He wanted to run round an'
+kill the King instead of racin'. So he was three lengths behind when
+Macomber dropped the flag. Lucy says the King got into his stride. She
+knows. An' there Wildfire comes from behind an' climbs all over the
+King! ... Van tells a different story."
+
+"It came off just as Lucy told you," declared Slone. "I saw every move."
+
+"Wal, thet's neither here nor there. What you're up ag'in is this.
+Bostil is sore since you called him. But he holds himself in because he
+hasn't given up hope of gittin' Wildfire. An', Slone, you're sure wise,
+ain't you, thet if Bostil doesn't buy him you can't stay on here?"
+
+"I'm wise. But I won't sell Wildfire," replied Slone, doggedly.
+
+"Wal, I'd never wasted my breath tellin' you all this if I hadn't
+figgered about Lucy. You've got her to think of."
+
+Slone turned on Holley passionately. "You keep hintin' there's a hope
+for me, when I know there's none!"
+
+"You're only a boy," replied Holley. "Son, where there's life there's
+hope. I ain't a-goin' to tell you agin thet I know Lucy Bostil."
+
+Slone could not stand nor walk nor keep still. He was shaking from head
+to foot.
+
+"Wildfire's not mine to sell. He's Lucy's!" confessed Slone.
+
+"The devil you say!" ejaculated Holley, and he nearly dropped his pipe.
+
+"I gave Wildfire to her. She accepted him. It was DONE. Then--then I
+lost my head an' made her mad.... An'--she said she'd ride him in the
+race, but wouldn't keep him. But he IS hers."
+
+"Oho! I see. Slone, I was goin' to advise you to sell Wildfire--all on
+account of Lucy. You're young an' you'd have a big start in life if you
+would. But Lucy's your girl an' you give her the hoss.... Thet settles
+thet!"
+
+"If I go away from here an' leave Wildfire for Lucy--do you think she
+could keep him? Wouldn't Bostil take him from her?"
+
+"Wal, son, if he tried thet on Lucy she'd jump Wildfire an' hit your
+trail an' hang on to it till she found you."
+
+"What'll you tell Bostil?" asked Slone, half beside himself.
+
+"I'm consarned if I know," replied Holley. "Mebbe I'll think of some
+idee. I'll go back now. An' say, son, I reckon you'd better hang close
+to home. If you meet Bostil down in the village you two'd clash sure.
+I'll come up soon, but it'll be after dark."
+
+"Holley, all this is--is good of you," said Slone. "I--I'll--"
+
+"Shut up, son," interrupted the rider, dryly. "Thet's your only
+weakness, so far as I can see. You say too much."
+
+Holley started down then, his long, clinking spurs digging into the
+steep path. He left Slone a prey to deep thoughts at once anxious and
+dreamy.
+
+Next day Slone worked hard all day, looking forward to nightfall,
+expecting that Holley would come up. He tried to resist the sweet and
+tantalizing anticipation of a message from Lucy, but in vain. The rider
+had immeasurably uplifted Slone's hope that Lucy, at least, cared for
+him. Not for a moment all day could Slone drive away the hope. At
+twilight he was too eager to eat--too obsessed to see the magnificent
+sunset. But Holley did not come, and Slone went to bed late, half sick
+with disappointment.
+
+The next day was worse. Slone found work irksome, yet he held to it. On
+the third day he rested and dreamed, and grew doubtful again, and then
+moody. On the fourth day Slone found he needed supplies that he must
+obtain from the store. He did not forget Holley's warning, but he
+disregarded it, thinking there would scarcely be a chance of meeting
+Bostil at midday.
+
+There were horses standing, bridles down, before Brackton's place, and
+riders lounging at the rail and step. Some of these men had been
+pleasant to Slone on earlier occasions. This day they seemed not to see
+him. Slone was tingling all over when he went into the store. Some
+deviltry was afoot! He had an angry thought that these riders could not
+have minds of their own. Just inside the door Slone encountered
+Wetherby, the young rancher from Durango. Slone spoke, but Wetherby
+only replied with an insolent stare. Slone did not glance at the man to
+whom Wetherby was talking. Only a few people were inside the store, and
+Brackton was waiting upon them. Slone stood back a little in the
+shadow. Brackton had observed his entrance, but did not greet him. Then
+Slone absolutely knew that for him the good will of Bostil's Ford was a
+thing of the past.
+
+Presently Brackton was at leisure, but he showed no disposition to
+attend to Slone's wants. Then Slone walked up to the counter and asked
+for supplies.
+
+"Have you got the money?" asked Brackton, as if addressing one he would
+not trust.
+
+"Yes," replied Slone, growing red under an insult that he knew Wetherby
+had heard.
+
+Brackton handed out the supplies and received the money, without a
+word. He held his head down. It was a singular action for a man used to
+dealing fairly with every one. Slone felt outraged. He hurried out of
+the place, with shame burning him, with his own eyes downcast, and in
+his hurry he bumped square into a burly form. Slone recoiled--looked
+up. Bostil! The old rider was eying him with cool speculation.
+
+"Wal, are you drunk?" he queried, without any particular expression.
+
+Yet the query was to Slone like a blow. It brought his head up with a
+jerk, his glance steady and keen on Bostil's.
+
+"Bostil, you know I don't drink," he said.
+
+"A-huh! I know a lot about you, Slone.... I heard you bought Vorhees's
+place, up on the bench."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Did he tell you it was mortgaged to me for more'n it's worth?"
+
+"No, he didn't."
+
+"Did he make over any papers to you?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Wal, if it interests you I'll show you papers thet proves the
+property's mine."
+
+Slone suffered a pang. The little home had grown dearer and dearer to
+him.
+
+"All right, Bostil. If it's yours--it's yours," he said, calmly enough.
+
+"I reckon I'd drove you out before this if I hadn't felt we could make
+a deal."
+
+"We can't agree on any deal, Bostil," replied Slone, steadily. It was
+not what Bostil said, but the way he said it, the subtle meaning and
+power behind it, that gave Slone a sense of menace and peril. These he
+had been used to for years; he could meet them. But he was handicapped
+here because it seemed that, though he could meet Bostil face to face,
+he could not fight him. For he was Lucy's father. Slone's position, the
+impotence of it, rendered him less able to control his temper.
+
+"Why can't we?" demanded Bostil. "If you wasn't so touchy we could. An'
+let me say, young feller, thet there's more reason now thet you DO make
+a deal with me."
+
+"Deal? What about?"
+
+"About your red hoss."
+
+"Wildfire! ... No deals, Bostil," returned Slone, and made as if to
+pass him.
+
+The big hand that forced Slone back was far from gentle, and again he
+felt the quick rush of blood.
+
+"Mebbe I can tell you somethin' thet'll make you sell Wildfire," said
+Bostil.
+
+"Not if you talked yourself dumb!" flashed Slone. There was no use to
+try to keep cool with this Bostil, if he talked horses. "I'll race
+Wildfire against the King. But no more."
+
+"Race! Wal, we don't run races around here without stakes," replied
+Bostil, with deep scorn. "An' what can you bet? Thet little dab of
+prize money is gone, an' wouldn't be enough to meet me. You're a
+strange one in these parts. I've pride an' reputation to uphold. You
+brag of racin' with me--an' you a beggarly rider! ... You wouldn't have
+them clothes an' boots if my girl hadn't fetched them to you."
+
+The riders behind Bostil laughed. Wetherby's face was there in the
+door, not amused, but hard with scorn and something else. Slone felt a
+sickening, terrible gust of passion. It fairly shook him. And as the
+wave subsided the quick cooling of skin and body pained him like a burn
+made with ice.
+
+"Yes, Bostil, I'm what you say," responded Slone, and his voice seemed
+to fill his ears. "But you're dead wrong when you say I've nothin' to
+bet on a race."
+
+"An' what'll you bet?"
+
+"My life an' my horse!"
+
+The riders suddenly grew silent and intense. Bostil vibrated to that.
+He turned white. He more than any rider on the uplands must have felt
+the nature of that offer.
+
+"Ag'in what?" he demanded, hoarsely.
+
+"YOUR DAUGHTER LUCY!"
+
+One instant the surprise held Bostil mute and motionless. Then he
+seemed to expand. His huge bulk jerked into motion and he bellowed like
+a mad bull.
+
+Slone saw the blow coming, made no move to avoid it. The big fist took
+him square on the mouth and chin and laid him flat on the ground. Sight
+failed Slone for a little, and likewise ability to move. But he did not
+lose consciousness. His head seemed to have been burst into rays and
+red mist that blurred his eyes. Then these cleared away, leaving
+intense pain. He started to get up, his brain in a whirl. Where was his
+gun? He had left it at home. But for that he would have killed Bostil.
+He had already killed one man. The thing was a burning flash--then all
+over! He could do it again. But Bostil was Lucy's father!
+
+Slone gathered up the packages of supplies, and without looking at the
+men he hurried away. He seemed possessed of a fury to turn and run
+back. Some force, like an invisible hand, withheld him. When he reached
+the cabin he shut himself in, and lay on his bunk, forgetting that the
+place did not belong to him, alive only to the mystery of his trouble,
+smarting with the shame of the assault upon him. It was dark before he
+composed himself and went out, and then he had not the desire to eat.
+He made no move to open the supplies of food, did not even make a
+light. But he went out to take grass and water to the horses. When he
+returned to the cabin a man was standing at the porch. Slone recognized
+Holley's shape and then his voice.
+
+"Son, you raised the devil to-day."
+
+"Holley, don't you go back on me!" cried Slone. "I was driven!"
+
+"Don't talk so loud," whispered the rider in return. "I've only a
+minnit. ... Here--a letter from Lucy.... An', son, don't git the idee
+thet I'll go back on you."
+
+Slone took the letter with trembling fingers. All the fury and gloom
+instantly fled. Lucy had written him! He could not speak.
+
+"Son, I'm double-crossin' the boss, right this minnit!" whispered
+Holley, hoarsely. "An' the same time I'm playin' Lucy's game. If Bostil
+finds out he'll kill me. I mustn't be ketched up here. But I won't lose
+track of you--wherever you go."
+
+Holley slipped away stealthily in the dusk, leaving Slone with a
+throbbing heart.
+
+"Wherever you go!" he echoed. "Ah! I forgot! I can't stay here."
+
+Lucy's letter made his fingers tingle--made them so hasty and awkward
+that he had difficulty in kindling blaze enough to see to read. The
+letter was short, written in lead-pencil on the torn leaf of a ledger.
+Slone could not read rapidly--those years on the desert had seen to
+that--and his haste to learn what Lucy said bewildered him. At first
+all the words blurred:
+
+"Come at once to the bench in the cottonwoods. I'll meet you there. My
+heart is breaking. It's a lie--a lie--what they say. I'll swear you
+were with me the night the boat was cut adrift. I KNOW you didn't do
+that. I know who.... Oh, come! I will stick to you. I will run off with
+you. I love you!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+Slone's heart leaped to his throat, and its beating choked his
+utterances of rapture and amaze and dread. But rapture dominated the
+other emotions. He could scarcely control the impulse to run to meet
+Lucy, without a single cautious thought.
+
+He put the precious letter inside his blouse, where it seemed to warm
+his breast. He buckled on his gun-belt, and, extinguishing the light,
+he hurried out.
+
+A crescent moon had just tipped the bluff. The village lanes and cabins
+and trees lay silver in the moon-light. A lonesome coyote barked in the
+distance. All else was still. The air was cool, sweet, fragrant. There
+appeared to be a glamour of light, of silence, of beauty over the
+desert.
+
+Slone kept under the dark lee of the bluff and worked around so that he
+could be above the village, where there was little danger of meeting
+any one. Yet presently he had to go out of the shadow into the
+moon-blanched lane. Swift and silent as an Indian he went along,
+keeping in the shade of what trees there were, until he came to the
+grove of cottonwoods. The grove was a black mystery lanced by silver
+rays. He slipped in among the trees, halting every few steps to listen.
+The action, the realization had helped to make him cool, to steel him,
+though never before in his life had he been so exalted. The pursuit and
+capture of Wildfire, at one time the desire of his heart, were as
+nothing to this. Love had called him--and life--and he knew death hung
+in the balance. If Bostil found him seeking Lucy there would be blood
+spilled. Slone quaked at the thought, for the cold and ghastly
+oppression following the death he had meted out to Sears came to him at
+times. But such thoughts were fleeting; only one thought really held
+his mind--and the one was that Lucy loved him, had sent strange, wild,
+passionate words to him.
+
+He found the narrow path, its white crossed by slowly moving black bars
+of shadow, and stealthily he followed this, keen of eye and ear,
+stopping at every rustle. He well knew the bench Lucy had mentioned. It
+was in a remote corner of the grove, under big trees near the spring.
+Once Slone thought he had a glimpse of white. Perhaps it was only
+moonlight. He slipped on and on, and when beyond the branching paths
+that led toward the house he breathed freer. The grove appeared
+deserted. At last he crossed the runway from the spring, smelled the
+cool, wet moss and watercress, and saw the big cottonwood, looming dark
+above the other trees. A patch of moonlight brightened a little glade
+just at the edge of dense shade cast by the cottonwood. Here the bench
+stood. It was empty!
+
+Slone's rapture vanished. He was suddenly chilled. She was not there!
+She might have been intercepted. He would not see her. The
+disappointment, the sudden relaxation, was horrible. Then a white,
+slender shape flashed from beside the black tree-trunk and flew toward
+him. It was noiseless, like a specter, and swift as the wind. Was he
+dreaming? He felt so strange. Then--the white shape reached him and he
+knew.
+
+Lucy leaped into his arms.
+
+"Lin! Lin! Oh, I'm so--so glad to see you!" she whispered. She seemed
+breathless, keen, new to him, not in the least afraid nor shy. Slone
+could only hold her. He could not have spoken, even if she had given
+him a chance. "I know everything--what they accuse you of--how the
+riders treated you--how my dad struck you. Oh! ... He's a brute! I hate
+him for that. Why didn't you keep out of his way? ... Van saw it all.
+Oh, I hate him, too! He said you lay still--where you fell! ... Dear
+Lin, that blow may have hurt you dreadfully--shamed you because you
+couldn't strike back at my dad--but it reached me, too. It hurt me. It
+woke my heart.... Where--where did he hit you? Oh, I've seen him hit
+men! His terrible fists!"
+
+"Lucy, never mind," whispered Slone. "I'd stood to be shot just for
+this."
+
+He felt her hands softly on his face, feeling around tenderly till they
+found the swollen bruise on mouth and chin.
+
+"Ah! ... He struck you. And I--I'll kiss you," she whispered. "If
+kisses will make it well--it'll be well!"
+
+She seemed strange, wild, passionate in her tenderness. She lifted her
+face and kissed him softly again and again and again, till the touch
+that had been exquisitely painful to his bruised lips became rapture.
+Then she leaned back in his arms, her hands on his shoulders,
+white-faced, dark-eyed, and laughed up in his face, lovingly, daringly,
+as if she defied the world to change what she had done.
+
+"Lucy! Lucy! ... He can beat me--again!" said Slone, low and hoarsely.
+
+"If you love me you'll keep out of his way," replied the girl.
+
+"If I love you? ... My God! ... I've felt my heart die a thousand times
+since that mornin'--when--when you--"
+
+"Lin, I didn't know," she interrupted, with sweet, grave earnestness.
+"I know now!"
+
+And Slone could not but know, too, looking at her; and the sweetness,
+the eloquence, the noble abandon of her avowal sounded to the depths of
+him. His dread, his resignation, his shame, all sped forever in the
+deep, full breath of relief with which he cast off that burden. He
+tasted the nectar of happiness, the first time in his life. He lifted
+his head--never, he knew, to lower it again. He would be true to what
+she had made him.
+
+"Come in the shade," he whispered, and with his arm round her he led
+her to the great tree-trunk. "Is it safe for you here? An' how long can
+you stay?"
+
+"I had it out with Dad--left him licked once in his life," she replied.
+"Then I went to my room, fastened the door, and slipped out of my
+window. I can stay out as long as I want. No one will know."
+
+Slone's heart throbbed. She was his. The clasp of her hands on his, the
+gleam of her eyes, the white, daring flash of her face in the shadow of
+the moon--these told him she was his. How it had come about was beyond
+him, but he realized the truth. What a girl! This was the same nerve
+which she showed when she had run Wildfire out in front of the fleetest
+horses in the uplands.
+
+"Tell me, then," he began, quietly, with keen gaze roving under the
+trees and eyes strained tight, "tell me what's come off."
+
+"Don't you know?" she queried, in amaze.
+
+"Only that for some reason I'm done in Bostil's Ford. It can't be
+because I punched Joel Creech. I felt it before I met Bostil at the
+store. He taunted me. We had bitter words. He told before all of them
+how the outfit I wore you gave me. An' then I dared him to race the
+King. My horse an' my life against YOU!"
+
+"Yes, I know," she whispered, softly. "It's all over town.... Oh, Lin!
+it was a grand bet! And Bostil four-flushed, as the riders say. For
+days a race between Wildfire and the King had been in the air. There'll
+never be peace in Bostil's Ford again till that race is run."
+
+"But, Lucy, could Bostil's wantin' Wildfire an' hatin' me because I
+won't sell--could that ruin me here at the Ford?"
+
+"It could. But, Lin, there's more. Oh, I hate to tell you!" she
+whispered, passionately. "I thought you'd know.... Joel Creech swore
+you cut the ropes on the ferry-boat and sent it adrift."
+
+"The loon!" ejaculated Slone, and he laughed low in both anger and
+ridicule. "Lucy, that's only a fool's talk."
+
+"He's crazy. Oh, if I ever get him in front of me again when I'm on
+Sarch--I'll--I'll...." She ended with a little gasp and leaned a moment
+against Slone. He felt her heart beat--felt the strong clasp of her
+hands. She was indeed Bostil's flesh and blood, and there was that in
+her dangerous to arouse.
+
+"Lin, the folks here are queer," she resumed, more calmly. "For long
+years Dad has ruled them. They see with his eyes and talk with his
+voice. Joel Creech swore you cut those cables. Swore he trailed you.
+Brackton believed him. Van believed him. They told my father. And
+he--my dad--God forgive him! he jumped at that. The village as one
+person now believes you sent the boat adrift so Creech's horses could
+not cross and you could win the race."
+
+"Lucy, if it wasn't so--so funny I'd be mad as--as--" burst out Slone.
+
+"It isn't funny. It's terrible.... I know who cut those cables. ..
+Holley knows.... DAD knows--an', oh, Lin--I--hate--I hate my own
+father!"
+
+"My God!" gasped Slone, as the full signification burst upon him. Then
+his next thought was for Lucy. "Listen, dear--you mustn't say that," he
+entreated. "He's your father. He's a good man every way except when
+he's after horses. Then he's half horse. I understand him. I feel sorry
+for him.... An' if he's throwed the blame on me, all right. I'll stand
+it. What do I care? I was queered, anyhow, because I wouldn't part with
+my horse. It can't matter so much if people think I did that just to
+help win a race. But if they knew your--your father did it, an' if
+Creech's horses starve, why it'd be a disgrace for him--an' you."
+
+"Lin Slone--you'll accept the blame!" she whispered, with wide, dark
+eyes on him, hands at his shoulders.
+
+"Sure I will," replied Slone. "I can't be any worse off."
+
+"You're better than all of them--my rider!" she cried, full-voiced and
+tremulous. "Lin, you make me love you so--it--it hurts!" And she seemed
+about to fling herself into his arms again. There was a strangeness
+about her--a glory. "But you'll not take the shame of that act. For I
+won't let you. I'll tell my father I was with you when the boat was cut
+loose. He'll believe me."
+
+"Yes, an' he'll KILL me!" groaned Slone. "Good Lord! Lucy, don't do
+that!"
+
+"I will! An' he'll not kill you. Lin, Dad took a great fancy to you. I
+know that. He thinks he hates you. But in his heart he doesn't. If he
+got hold of Wildfire--why, he'd never be able to do enough for you. He
+never could make it up. What do you think? I told him you hugged and
+kissed me shamefully that day."
+
+"Oh, Lucy! you didn't?" implored Slone.
+
+"I sure did. And what do you think? He said he once did the same to my
+mother! ... No, Lin, Dad'd never kill you for anything except a fury
+about horses. All the fights he ever had were over horse deals. The two
+men--he--he--" Lucy faltered and her shudder was illuminating to Slone.
+"Both of them--fights over horse trades!"
+
+"Lucy, if I'm ever unlucky enough to meet Bostil again I'll be deaf an'
+dumb. An' now you promise me you won't tell him you were with me that
+night."
+
+"Lin, if the occasion comes, I will--I couldn't help it," replied Lucy.
+
+"Then fight shy of the occasion," he rejoined, earnestly. "For that
+would be the end of Lin Slone!"
+
+"Then--what on earth can--we do?" Lucy said, with sudden break of
+spirit.
+
+"I think we must wait. You wrote in your letter you'd stick to
+me--you'd--" He could not get the words out, the thought so overcame
+him.
+
+"If it comes to a finish, I'll go with you," Lucy returned, with
+passion rising again.
+
+"Oh! to ride off with you, Lucy--to have you all to myself--I daren't
+think of it. But that's only selfish."
+
+"Maybe it's not so selfish as you believe. If you left the
+Ford--now--it'd break my heart. I'd never get over it."
+
+"Lucy! You love me--that well?"
+
+Then their lips met again and their hands locked, and they stood
+silent, straining toward each other. He held the slight form, so
+pliant, so responsive, so alive, close to him, and her face lay hidden
+on his breast; and he looked out over her head into the quivering
+moonlit shadows. The night was as still as one away on the desert far
+from the abode of men. It was more beautiful than any dream of a night
+in which he had wandered far into strange lands where wild horses were
+and forests lay black under moon-silvered peaks.
+
+"We'll run--then--if it comes to a finish," said Slone, huskily. "But
+I'll wait. I'll stick it out here. I'll take what comes. So--maybe I'll
+not disgrace you more."
+
+"I told Van I--I gloried in being hugged by you that day," she replied,
+and her little defiant laugh told what she thought of the alleged
+disgrace.
+
+"You torment him," remonstrated Slone. "You set him against us. It
+would be better to keep still."
+
+"But my blood is up!" she said, and she pounded his shoulder with her
+fist. "I'll fight--I'll fight! ... I couldn't avoid Van. It was Holley
+who told me Van was threatening you. And when I met Van he told me how
+everybody said you insulted me--had been worse than a drunken
+rider--and that he'd beat you half to death. So I told Van Joel Creech
+might have seen us--I didn't doubt that--but he didn't see that I liked
+being hugged."
+
+"What did Van say then?" asked Slone, all aglow with his wonderful joy.
+
+"He wilted. He slunk away.... And so I'll tell them all."
+
+"But, Lucy, you've always been so--so truthful."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Well, to say you liked being hugged that day was--was a story, wasn't
+it?"
+
+"That was what made me so furious," she admitted, shyly. "I was
+surprised when you grabbed me off Wildfire. And my heart
+beat--beat--beat so when you hugged me. And when you kissed me I--I was
+petrified. I knew I liked it then--and I was furious with myself."
+
+Slone drew a long, deep breath of utter enchantment. "You'll take back
+Wildfire?"
+
+"Oh, Lin--don't--ask--me," she implored.
+
+"Take him back--an' me with him."
+
+"Then I will. But no one must know that yet."
+
+They drew apart then.
+
+"An' now you must go," said Slone, reluctantly. "Listen. I forgot to
+warn you about Joel Creech. Don't ever let him near you. He's crazy an'
+he means evil."
+
+"Oh, I know, Lin! I'll watch. But I'm not afraid of him."
+
+"He's strong, Lucy. I saw him lift bags that were hefty for me....
+Lucy, do you ride these days?"
+
+"Every day. If I couldn't ride I couldn't live."
+
+"I'm afraid," said Slone, nervously. "There's Creech an' Cordts--both
+have threatened you."
+
+"I'm afraid of Cordts," replied Lucy, with a shiver. "You should have
+seen him look at me race-day. It made me hot with anger, yet weak, too,
+somehow. But Dad says I'm never in any danger if I watch out. And I do.
+Who could catch me on Sarch?"
+
+"Any horse can be tripped in the sage. You told me how Joel tried to
+rope Sage King. Did you ever tell your dad that?"
+
+"I forgot. But then I'm glad I didn't. Dad would shoot for that,
+quicker than if Joel tried to rope him.... Don't worry, Lin, I always
+pack a gun."
+
+"But can you use it?"
+
+Lucy laughed. "Do you think I can only ride?"
+
+Slone remembered that Holley had said he had taught Lucy how to shoot
+as well as ride. "You'll be watchful--careful," he said, earnestly.
+
+"Oh, Lin, you need to be that more than I.... What will you do?"
+
+"I'll stay up at the little cabin I thought I owned till to-day."
+
+"Didn't you buy it?" asked Lucy, quickly.
+
+"I thought I did. But ... never mind. Maybe I won't get put out just
+yet. An' when will I see you again?"
+
+"Here, every night. Wait till I come," she replied. "Good night, Lin."
+
+"I'll--wait!" he exclaimed, with a catch in his voice. "Oh, my luck!
+... I'll wait, Lucy, every day--hopin' an' prayin' that this trouble
+will lighten. An' I'll wait at night--for you!"
+
+He kissed her good-by and watched the slight form glide away, flit to
+and fro, white in the dark patches, grow indistinct and vanish. He was
+left alone in the silent grove.
+
+Slone stole back to the cabin and lay sleepless and tranced, watching
+the stars, till late that night.
+
+All the next day he did scarcely anything but watch and look after his
+horses and watch and drag the hours out and dream despite his dread.
+But no one visited him. The cabin was left to him that day.
+
+It had been a hot day, with great thunderhead, black and creamy white
+clouds rolling down from the canyon country. No rain had fallen at the
+Ford, though storms near by had cooled the air. At sunset Slone saw a
+rainbow bending down, ruddy and gold, connecting the purple of cloud
+with the purple of horizon.
+
+Out beyond the valley the clouds were broken, showing rifts of blue,
+and they rolled low, burying the heads of the monuments, creating a
+wild and strange spectacle. Twilight followed, and appeared to rise to
+meet the darkening clouds. And at last the gold on the shafts faded;
+the monuments faded; and the valley grew dark.
+
+Slone took advantage of the hour before moonrise to steal down into the
+grove, there to wait for Lucy. She came so quickly he scarcely felt
+that he waited at all; and then the time spent with her, sweet,
+fleeting, precious, left him stronger to wait for her again, to hold
+himself in, to cease his brooding, to learn faith in something deeper
+than he could fathom.
+
+The next day he tried to work, but found idle waiting made the time fly
+swifter because in it he could dream. In the dark of the rustling
+cottonwoods he met Lucy, as eager to see him as he was to see her,
+tender, loving, remorseful--a hundred sweet and bewildering things all
+so new, so unbelievable to Slone.
+
+That night he learned that Bostil had started for Durango with some of
+his riders. This trip surprised Slone and relieved him likewise, for
+Durango was over two hundred miles distant, and a journey there even
+for the hard riders was a matter of days.
+
+"He left no orders for me," Lucy said, "except to behave myself.... Is
+this behaving?" she whispered, and nestled close to Slone, audacious,
+tormenting as she had been before this dark cloud of trouble. "But he
+left orders for Holley to ride with me and look after me. Isn't that
+funny? Poor old Holley! He hates to doublecross Dad, he says."
+
+"I'm glad Holley's to look after you," replied Slone. "Yesterday I saw
+you tearin' down into the sage on Sarch. I wondered what you'd do,
+Lucy, if Cordts or that loon Creech should get hold of you?"
+
+"I'd fight!"
+
+"But, child, that's nonsense. You couldn't fight either of them."
+
+"Couldn't I? Well, I just could. I'd--I'd shoot Cordts. And I'd whip
+Joel Creech with my quirt. And if he kept after me I'd let Sarch run
+him down. Sarch hates him."
+
+"You're a brave sweetheart," mused Slone. "Suppose you were caught an'
+couldn't get away. Would you leave a trail somehow?"
+
+"I sure would."
+
+"Lucy, I'm a wild-horse hunter," he went on, thoughtfully, as if
+speaking to himself. "I never failed on a trail. I could track you over
+bare rock."
+
+"Lin, I'll leave a trail, so never fear," she replied. "But don't
+borrow trouble. You're always afraid for me. Look at the bright side.
+Dad seems to have forgotten you. Maybe it all isn't so bad as we
+thought. Oh, I hope so! ... How is my horse, Wildfire? I want to ride
+him again. I can hardly keep from going after him."
+
+And so they whispered while the moments swiftly passed.
+
+It was early during the afternoon of the next day that Slone, hearing
+the clip-clop of unshod ponies, went outside to look. One part of the
+lane he could see plainly, and into it stalked Joel Creech, leading the
+leanest and gauntest ponies Slone had ever seen. A man as lean and
+gaunt as the ponies stalked behind.
+
+The sight shocked Slone. Joel Creech and his father! Slone had no
+proof, because he had never seen the elder Creech, yet strangely he
+felt convinced of it. And grim ideas began to flash into his mind.
+Creech would hear who was accused of cutting the boat adrift. What
+would he say? If he believed, as all the villagers believed, then
+Bostil's Ford would become an unhealthy place for Lin Slone. Where were
+the great race-horses--Blue Roan and Peg--and the other thoroughbreds?
+A pang shot through Slone.
+
+"Oh, not lost--not starved?" he muttered. "That would be hell!"
+
+Yet he believed just this had happened. How strange he had never
+considered such an event as the return of Creech.
+
+"I'd better look him up before he looks me," said Slone.
+
+It took but an instant to strap on his belt and gun. Then Slone strode
+down his path, out into the lane toward Brackton's. Whatever before
+boded ill to Slone had been nothing to what menaced him now. He would
+have a man to face--a man whom repute called just, but stern.
+
+Before Slone reached the vicinity of the store he saw riders come out
+to meet the Creech party. It so happened there were more riders than
+usually frequented Brackton's at that hour. The old storekeeper came
+stumbling out and raised his hands. The riders could be heard,
+loud-voiced and excited. Slone drew nearer, and the nearer he got the
+swifter he strode. Instinct told him that he was making the right move.
+He would face this man whom he was accused of ruining. The poor
+mustangs hung their heads dejectedly.
+
+"Bags of bones," some rider loudly said.
+
+And then Slone drew close to the excited group. Brackton held the
+center; he was gesticulating; his thin voice rose piercingly.
+
+"Creech! Whar's Peg an' the Roan? Gawd Almighty, man! You ain't meanin'
+them cayuses thar are all you've got left of thet grand bunch of
+hosses?"
+
+There was scarcely a sound. All the riders were still. Slone fastened
+his eyes on Creech. He saw a gaunt, haggard face almost black with
+dust--worn and sad--with big eyes of terrible gloom. He saw an unkempt,
+ragged form that had been wet and muddy, and was now dust-caked.
+
+Creech stood silent in a dignity of despair that wrung Slone's heart.
+His silence was an answer. It was Joel Creech who broke the suspense.
+
+"Didn't I tell you-all what'd happen?" he shrilled. "PARCHED AN'
+STARVED!"
+
+"Aw no!" chorused the riders.
+
+Brackton shook all over. Tears dimmed his eyes--tears that he had no
+shame for. "So help me Gawd--I'm sorry!" was his broken exclamation.
+
+Slone had forgotten himself and possible revelation concerning him. But
+when Holley appeared close to him with a significant warning look,
+Slone grew keen once more on his own account. He felt a hot flame
+inside him--a deep and burning anger at the man who might have saved
+Creech's horses. And he, like Brackton, felt sorrow for Creech, and a
+rider's sense of loss, of pain. These horses--these dumb
+brutes--faithful and sometimes devoted, had to suffer an agonizing
+death because of the selfishness of men.
+
+"I reckon we'd all like to hear what come off, Creech, if you don't
+feel too bad to tell us," said Brackton.
+
+"Gimme a drink," replied Creech.
+
+"Wal, d--n my old head!" exclaimed Brackton. "I'm gittin' old. Come on
+in. All of you! We're glad to see Creech home."
+
+The riders filed in after Brackton and the Creeches. Holley stayed
+close beside Slone, both of them in the background.
+
+"I heerd the flood comin' thet night," said Creech to his silent and
+tense-faced listeners. "I heerd it miles up the canyon. 'Peared a
+bigger roar than any flood before. As it happened, I was alone, an' it
+took time to git the hosses up. If there'd been an Indian with me--or
+even Joel--mebbe--" His voice quavered slightly, broke, and then he
+resumed. "Even when I got the hosses over to the landin' it wasn't too
+late--if only some one had heerd me an' come down. I yelled an' shot.
+Nobody heerd. The river was risin' fast. An' thet roar had begun to
+make my hair raise. It seemed like years the time I waited there....
+Then the flood came down--black an' windy an' awful. I had hell gittin'
+the hosses back.
+
+"Next mornin' two Piutes come down. They had lost mustangs up on the
+rocks. All the feed on my place was gone. There wasn't nothin' to do
+but try to git out. The Piutes said there wasn't no chance north--no
+water--no grass--an' so I decided to go south, if we could climb over
+thet last slide. Peg broke her leg there, an'--I--I had to shoot her.
+But we climbed out with the rest of the bunch. I left it then to the
+Piutes. We traveled five days west to head the canyons. No grass an'
+only a little water, salt at thet. Blue Roan was game if ever I seen a
+game hoss. Then the Piutes took to workin' in an' out an' around, not
+to git out, but to find a little grazin'. I never knowed the earth was
+so barren. One by one them hosses went down.... An' at last, I
+couldn't--I couldn't see Blue Roan starvin'--dyin' right before my
+eyes--an' I shot him, too.... An' what hurts me most now is thet I
+didn't have the nerve to kill him fust off."
+
+There was a long pause in Creech's narrative.
+
+"Them Piutes will git paid if ever I can pay them. I'd parched myself
+but for them.... We circled an' crossed them red cliffs an' then the
+strip of red sand, an' worked down into the canyon. Under the wall was
+a long stretch of beach--sandy--an' at the head of this we found
+Bostil's boat."
+
+"Wal,--!" burst out the profane Brackton. "Bostil's boat! ... Say,
+'ain't Joel told you yet about thet boat?"
+
+"No, Joel 'ain't said a word about the boat," replied Creech. "What
+about it?"
+
+"It was cut loose jest before the flood."
+
+Manifestly Brackton expected this to be staggering to Creech. But he
+did not even show surprise.
+
+"There's a rider here named Slone--a wild-hoss wrangler," went on
+Brackton, "an' Joel swears this Slone cut the boat loose so's he'd have
+a better chance to win the race. Joel swears he tracked this feller
+Slone."
+
+For Slone the moment was fraught with many emotions, but not one of
+them was fear. He did not need the sudden force of Holley's strong
+hand, pushing him forward. Slone broke into the group and faced Creech.
+
+"It's not true. I never cut that boat loose," he declared ringingly.
+
+"Who're you?" queried Creech.
+
+"My name's Slone. I rode in here with a wild horse, an' he won a race.
+Then I was blamed for this trick."
+
+Creech's steady, gloomy eyes seemed to pierce Slone through. They were
+terrible eyes to look into, yet they held no menace for him. "An' Joel
+accused you?"
+
+"So they say. I fought with him--struck him for an insult to a girl."
+
+"Come round hyar, Joel," called Creech, sternly. His big, scaly, black
+hand closed on the boy's shoulder. Joel cringed under it. "Son, you've
+lied. What for?"
+
+Joel showed abject fear of his father. "He's gone on Lucy--an' I seen
+him with her," muttered the boy.
+
+"An' you lied to hurt Slone?"
+
+Joel would not reply to this in speech, though that was scarcely needed
+to show he had lied. He seemed to have no sense of guilt. Creech eyed
+him pityingly and then pushed him back.
+
+"Men, my son has done this rider dirt," said Creech. "You-all see thet.
+Slone never cut the boat loose.... An' say, you-all seem to think
+cuttin' thet boat loose was the crime.... No! Thet wasn't the crime.
+The crime was keepin' the boat out of the water fer days when my hosses
+could have been crossed."
+
+Slone stepped back, forgotten, it seemed to him. Both joy and sorrow
+swayed him. He had been exonerated. But this hard and gloomy Creech--he
+knew things. And Slone thought of Lucy.
+
+"Who did cut thet thar boat loose?" demanded Brackton, incredulously.
+
+Creech gave him a strange glance. "As I was sayin', we come on the boat
+fast at the head of the long stretch. I seen the cables had been cut.
+An' I seen more'n thet.... Wal, the river was high an' swift. But this
+was a long stretch with good landin' way below on the other side. We
+got the boat in, an' by rowin' hard an' driftin' we got acrost, leadin'
+the hosses. We had five when we took to the river. Two went down on the
+way over. We climbed out then. The Piutes went to find some Navajos an'
+get hosses. An' I headed fer the Ford--made camp twice. An' Joel seen
+me comin' out a ways."
+
+"Creech, was there anythin' left in thet boat?" began Brackton, with
+intense but pondering curiosity. "Anythin' on the ropes--or so--thet
+might give an idee who cut her loose?"
+
+Creech made no reply to that. The gloom burned darker in his eyes. He
+seemed a man with a secret. He trusted no one there. These men were all
+friends of his, but friends under strange conditions. His silence was
+tragic, and all about the man breathed vengeance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+No moon showed that night, and few stars twinkled between the
+slow-moving clouds. The air was thick and oppressive, full of the day's
+heat that had not blown away. A dry storm moved in dry majesty across
+the horizon, and the sheets and ropes of lightning, blazing white
+behind the black monuments, gave weird and beautiful grandeur to the
+desert.
+
+Lucy Bostil had to evade her aunt to get out of the house, and the
+window, that had not been the means of exit since Bostil left, once
+more came into use. Aunt Jane had grown suspicious of late, and Lucy,
+much as she wanted to trust her with her secret, dared not do it. For
+some reason unknown to Lucy, Holley had also been hard to manage,
+particularly to-day. Lucy certainly did not want Holley to accompany
+her on her nightly rendezvous with Slone. She changed her light gown to
+the darker and thicker riding-habit.
+
+There was a longed-for, all-satisfying flavor in this night
+adventure--something that had not all to do with love. The stealth, the
+outwitting of guardians, the darkness, the silence, the risk--all these
+called to some deep, undeveloped instinct in her, and thrilled along
+her veins, cool, keen, exciting. She had the blood in her of the
+greatest adventurer of his day.
+
+Lucy feared she was a little late. Allaying the suspicions of Aunt Jane
+and changing her dress had taken time. Lucy burned with less cautious
+steps. Still she had only used caution in the grove because she had
+promised Slone to do so. This night she forgot or disregarded it. And
+the shadows were thick--darker than at any other time when she had
+undertaken this venture. She had always been a little afraid of the
+dark--a fact that made her contemptuous of herself. Nevertheless, she
+did not peer into the deeper pits of gloom. She knew her way and could
+slip swiftly along with only a rustle of leaves she touched.
+
+Suddenly she imagined she heard a step and she halted, still as a
+tree-trunk. There was no reason to be afraid of a step. It had been a
+surprise to her that she had never encountered a rider walking and
+smoking under the trees. Listening, she assured herself she had been
+mistaken, and then went on. But she looked back. Did she see a
+shadow--darker than others--moving? It was only her imagination. Yet
+she sustained a slight chill. The air seemed more oppressive, or else
+there was some intangible and strange thing hovering in it. She went
+on--reached the lane that divided the grove. But she did not cross at
+once. It was lighter in this lane; she could see quite far.
+
+As she stood there, listening, keenly responsive to all the influences
+of the night, she received an impression that did not have its origin
+in sight nor sound. And only the leaves touched her--and only their dry
+fragrance came to her. But she felt a presence--a strange, indefinable
+presence.
+
+But Lucy was brave, and this feeling, whatever it might be, angered
+her. She entered the lane and stole swiftly along toward the end of the
+grove. Paths crossed the lane at right angles, and at these points she
+went swifter. It would be something to tell Slone--she had been
+frightened. But thought of him drove away her fear and nervousness, and
+her anger with herself.
+
+Then she came to a wider path. She scarcely noted it and passed on.
+Then came a quick rustle--a swift shadow. Between two steps--as her
+heart leaped--violent arms swept her off the ground. A hard hand was
+clapped over her mouth. She was being carried swiftly through the gloom.
+
+Lucy tried to struggle. She could scarcely move a muscle. Iron arms
+wrapped her in coils that crushed her. She tried to scream, but her
+lips were tight-pressed. Her nostrils were almost closed between two
+hard fingers that smelled of horse.
+
+Whoever had her, she was helpless. Lucy's fury admitted of reason. Then
+both succumbed to a paralyzing horror. Cordts had got her! She knew it.
+She grew limp as a rag and her senses dulled. She almost fainted. The
+sickening paralysis of her faculties lingered. But she felt her body
+released--she was placed upon her feet--she was shaken by a rough hand.
+She swayed, and but for that hand might have fallen. She could see a
+tall, dark form over her, and horses, and the gloomy gray open of the
+sage slope. The hand left her face.
+
+"Don't yap, girl!" This command in a hard, low voice pierced her ears.
+She saw the glint of a gun held before her. Instinctive fear revived
+her old faculties. The horrible sick weakness, the dimness, the shaking
+internal collapse all left her.
+
+"I'll--be--quiet!" she faltered. She knew what her father had always
+feared had come to pass. And though she had been told to put no value
+on her life, in that event, she could not run. All in an instant--when
+life had been so sweet--she could not face pain or death.
+
+The man moved back a step. He was tall, gaunt, ragged. But not like
+Cordts! Never would she forget Cordts. She peered up at him. In the dim
+light of the few stars she recognized Joel Creech's father.
+
+"Oh, thank God!" she whispered, in the shock of blessed relief. "I
+thought--you were--Cordts!"
+
+"Keep quiet," he whispered back, sternly, and with rough hand he shook
+her.
+
+Lucy awoke to realities. Something evil menaced her, even though this
+man was not Cordts. Her mind could not grasp it. She was
+amazed--stunned. She struggled to speak, yet to keep within that
+warning command.
+
+"What--on earth--does this--mean?" she gasped, very low. She had no
+sense of fear of Creech. Once, when he and her father had been friends,
+she had been a favorite of Creech's. When a little girl she had ridden
+his knee many times. Between Creech and Cordts there was immeasurable
+distance. Yet she had been violently seized and carried out into the
+sage and menaced.
+
+Creech leaned down. His gaunt face, lighted by terrible eyes, made her
+recoil. "Bostil ruined me--an' killed my hosses," he whispered, grimly.
+"An' I'm takin' you away. An' I'll hold you in ransom for the King an'
+Sarchedon--an' all his racers!"
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, in startling surprise that yet held a pang. "Oh,
+Creech! ... Then you mean me no harm!"
+
+The man straightened up and stood a moment, darkly silent, as if her
+query had presented a new aspect of the case. "Lucy Bostil, I'm a
+broken man an' wild an' full of hate. But God knows I never thought of
+thet--of harm to you.... No, child, I won't harm you. But you must obey
+an' go quietly, for there's a devil in me."
+
+"Where will you take me?" she asked.
+
+"Down in the canyons, where no one can track me," he said. "It'll be
+hard goin' fer you, child, an' hard fare.... But I'm strikin' at
+Bostil's heart as he has broken mine. I'll send him word. An' I'll tell
+him if he won't give his hosses thet I'll sell you to Cordts."
+
+"Oh, Creech--but you wouldn't!" she whispered, and her hand went to his
+brawny arm.
+
+"Lucy, in thet case I'd make as poor a blackguard as anythin' else I've
+been," he said, forlornly. "But I'm figgerin' Bostil will give up his
+hosses fer you."
+
+"Creech, I'm afraid he won't. You'd better give me up. Let me go back.
+I'll never tell. I don't blame you. I think you're square. My dad
+is.... But, oh, don't make ME suffer! You used to--to care for me, when
+I was little."
+
+"Thet ain't no use," he replied. "Don't talk no more.... Git up hyar
+now an' ride in front of me."
+
+He led her to a lean mustang. Lucy swung into the saddle. She thought
+how singular a coincidence it was that she had worn a riding-habit. It
+was dark and thick, and comfortable for riding. Suppose she had worn
+the flimsy dress, in which she had met Slone every night save this one?
+Thought of Slone gave her a pang. He would wait and wait and wait. He
+would go back to his cabin, not knowing what had befallen her.
+
+Suddenly Lucy noticed another man, near at hand, holding two mustangs.
+He mounted, rode before her, and then she recognized Joel Creech.
+Assurance of this brought back something of the dread. But the father
+could control the son!
+
+"Ride on," said Creech, hitting her horse from behind.
+
+And Lucy found herself riding single file, with two men and a
+pack-horse, out upon the windy, dark sage slope. They faced the
+direction of the monuments, looming now and then so weirdly black and
+grand against the broad flare of lightning-blazed sky.
+
+Ever since Lucy had reached her teens there had been predictions that
+she would be kidnapped, and now the thing had come to pass. She was in
+danger, she knew, but in infinitely less than had any other wild
+character of the uplands been her captor. She believed, if she went
+quietly and obediently with Creech, that she would be, at least, safe
+from harm. It was hard luck for Bostil, she thought, but no worse than
+he deserved. Retribution had overtaken him. How terribly hard he would
+take the loss of his horses! Lucy wondered if he really ever would part
+with the King, even to save her from privation and peril. Bostil was
+more likely to trail her with his riders and to kill the Creeches than
+to concede their demands. Perhaps, though, that threat to sell her to
+Cordts would frighten the hard old man.
+
+The horses trotted and swung up over the slope, turning gradually,
+evidently to make a wide detour round the Ford, until Lucy's back was
+toward the monuments. Before her stretched the bleak, barren, dark
+desert, and through the opaque gloom she could see nothing. Lucy knew
+she was headed for the north, toward the wild canyons, unknown to the
+riders. Cordts and his gang hid in there. What might not happen if the
+Creeches fell in with Cordts? Lucy's confidence sustained a check.
+Still, she remembered the Creeches were like Indians. And what would
+Slone do? He would ride out on her trail. Lucy shivered for the
+Creeches if Slone ever caught up with them, and remembering his
+wild-horse-hunter's skill at tracking, and the fleet and tireless
+Wildfire, she grew convinced that Creech could not long hold her
+captive. For Slone would be wary. He would give no sign of his pursuit.
+He would steal upon the Creeches in the dark and-- Lucy shivered again.
+What an awful fate had been that of Dick Sears!
+
+So as she rode on Lucy's mind was full. She was used to riding, and in
+the motion of a horse there was something in harmony with her blood.
+Even now, with worry and dread and plotting strong upon her, habit had
+such power over her that riding made the hours fleet. She was surprised
+to be halted, to see dimly low, dark mounds of rock ahead.
+
+"Git off," said Creech.
+
+"Where are we?" asked Lucy.
+
+"Reckon hyar's the rocks. An' you sleep some, fer you'll need it." He
+spread a blanket, laid her saddle at the head of it, and dropped
+another blanket. "What I want to know is--shall I tie you up or not?"
+asked Creech. "If I do you'll git sore. An' this'll be the toughest
+trip you ever made."
+
+"You mean will I try to get away from you--or not?" queried Lucy.
+
+"Jest thet."
+
+Lucy pondered. She divined some fineness of feeling in this coarse man.
+He wanted to spare her not only pain, but the necessity of watchful
+eyes on her every moment. Lucy did not like to promise not to try to
+escape, if opportunity presented. Still, she reasoned, that once deep
+in the canyons, where she would be in another day, she would be worse
+off if she did get away. The memory of Cordts's cavernous, hungry eyes
+upon her was not a small factor in Lucy's decision.
+
+"Creech, if I give my word not to try to get away, would you believe
+me?" she asked.
+
+Creech was slow in replying. "Reckon I would," he said, finally.
+
+"All right, I'll give it."
+
+"An' thet's sense. Now you lay down."
+
+Lucy did as she was bidden and pulled the blanket over her. The place
+was gloomy and still. She heard the sound of mustangs' teeth on grass,
+and the soft footfalls of the men. Presently these sounds ceased. A
+cold wind blew over her face and rustled in the sage near her.
+Gradually the chill passed away, and a stealing warmth took its place.
+Her eyes grew tired. What had happened to her? With eyes closed she
+thought it was all a dream. Then the feeling of the hard saddle as a
+pillow under her head told her she was indeed far from her comfortable
+little room. What would poor Aunt Jane do in the morning when she
+discovered who was missing? What would Holley do? When would Bostil
+return? It might be soon and it might be days. And Slone--Lucy felt
+sorriest for him. For he loved her best. She thrilled at thought of
+Slone on that grand horse--on her Wildfire. And with her mind running
+on and on, seemingly making sleep impossible, the thoughts at last
+became dreams. Lucy awakened at dawn. One hand ached with cold, for it
+had been outside the blanket. Her hard bed had cramped her muscles. She
+heard the crackling of fire and smelled cedar smoke. In the gray of
+morning she saw the Creeches round a camp-fire.
+
+Lucy got up then. Both men saw her, but made no comment. In that cold,
+gray dawn she felt her predicament more gravely. Her hair was damp. She
+had ridden nearly all night without a hat. She had absolutely nothing
+of her own except what was on her body. But Lucy thanked her lucky
+stars that she had worn the thick riding-suit and her boots, for
+otherwise, in a summer dress, her condition would soon have been
+miserable.
+
+"Come an' eat," said Creech. "You have sense--an' eat if it sticks in
+your throat."
+
+Bostil had always contended in his arguments with riders that a man
+should eat heartily on the start of a trip so that the finish might
+find him strong. And Lucy ate, though the coarse fare sickened her.
+Once she looked curiously at Joel Creech. She felt his eyes upon her,
+but instantly he averted them. He had grown more haggard and sullen
+than ever before.
+
+The Creeches did not loiter over the camp tasks. Lucy was left to
+herself. The place appeared to be a kind of depression from which the
+desert rolled away to a bulge against the rosy east, and the rocks
+behind rose broken and yellow, fringed with cedars.
+
+"Git the hosses in, if you want to," Creech called to her, and then as
+Lucy started off to where the mustangs grazed she heard him curse his
+son. "Come back hyar! Leave the girl alone or I'll rap you one!"
+
+Lucy drove three of the mustangs into camp, where Creech began to
+saddle them. The remaining one, the pack animal, Lucy found among the
+scrub cedars at the base of the low cliffs. When she drove him in
+Creech was talking hard to Joel, who had mounted.
+
+"When you come back, work up this canyon till you git up. It heads on
+the pine plateau. I can't miss seein' you, or any one, long before you
+git up on top. An' you needn't come without Bostil's hosses. You know
+what to tell Bostil if he threatens you, or refuses to send his hosses,
+or turns his riders on my trail. Thet's all. Now git!"
+
+Joel Creech rode away toward the rise in the rolling, barren desert.
+
+"An' now we'll go on," said Creech to Lucy.
+
+When he had gotten all in readiness he ordered Lucy to follow closely
+in his tracks. He entered a narrow cleft in the low cliffs which wound
+in and out, and was thick with sage and cedars. Lucy, riding close to
+the cedars, conceived the idea of plucking the little green berries and
+dropping them on parts of the trail where their tracks would not show.
+Warily she filled the pockets of her jacket.
+
+Creech led the way without looking back, and did not seem to care where
+the horses stepped. The time had not yet come, Lucy concluded, when he
+was ready to hide his trail. Presently the narrow cleft opened into a
+low-walled canyon, full of debris from the rotting cliffs, and this in
+turn opened into a main canyon with mounting yellow crags. It appeared
+to lead north. Far in the distance above rims and crags rose in a long,
+black line like a horizon of dark cloud.
+
+Creech crossed this wide canyon and entered one of the many breaks in
+the wall. This one was full of splintered rock and weathered shale--the
+hardest kind of travel for both man and beast. Lucy was nothing if not
+considerate of a horse, and here she began to help her animal in all
+the ways a good rider knows. Much as this taxed her attention, she
+remembered to drop some of the cedar berries upon hard ground or rocks.
+And she knew she was leaving a trail for Slone's keen eyes.
+
+That day was the swiftest and the most strenuous in all Lucy Bostil's
+experience in the open. At sunset, when Creech halted in a niche in a
+gorge between lowering cliffs, Lucy fell off her horse and lay still
+and spent on the grass.
+
+Creech had a glance of sympathy and admiration for her, but he did not
+say anything about the long day's ride. Lucy never in her life before
+appreciated rest nor the softness of grass nor the relief at the end of
+a ride. She lay still with a throbbing, burning ache in all her body.
+Creech, after he had turned the horses loose, brought her a drink of
+cold water from the brook she heard somewhere near by.
+
+"How--far--did--we--come?" she whispered.
+
+"By the way round I reckon nigh on to sixty miles," he replied. "But we
+ain't half thet far from where we camped last night."
+
+Then he set to work at camp tasks. Lucy shook her head when he brought
+her food, but he insisted, and she had to force it down. Creech
+appeared rough but kind. After she had become used to the hard, gaunt,
+black face she saw sadness and thought in it. One thing Lucy had
+noticed was that Creech never failed to spare a horse, if it was
+possible. He would climb on foot over bad places.
+
+Night soon mantled the gorge in blackness thick as pitch. Lucy could
+not tell whether her eyes were open or shut, so far as what she saw was
+concerned. Her eyes seemed filled, however, with a thousand pictures of
+the wild and tortuous canyons and gorges through which she had ridden
+that day. The ache in her limbs and the fever in her blood would not
+let her sleep. It seemed that these were forever to be a part of her.
+For twelve hours she had ridden and walked with scarce a thought of the
+nature of the wild country, yet once she lay down to rest her mind was
+an endless hurrying procession of pictures--narrow red clefts choked
+with green growths--yellow gorges and weathered slides--dusty,
+treacherous divides connecting canyons--jumbles of ruined cliffs and
+piles of shale--miles and miles and endless winding miles yellow, low,
+beetling walls. And through it all she had left a trail.
+
+Next day Creech climbed out of that low-walled canyon, and Lucy saw a
+wild, rocky country cut by gorges, green and bare, or yellow and
+cedared. The long, black-fringed line she had noticed the day before
+loomed closer; overhanging this crisscrossed region of canyons. Every
+half-hour Creech would lead them downward and presently climb out
+again. There were sand and hard ground and thick turf and acres and
+acres of bare rock where even a shod horse would not leave a track.
+
+But the going was not so hard--there was not so much travel on foot for
+Lucy--and she finished that day in better condition than the first one.
+
+Next day Creech proceeded with care and caution. Many times he left the
+direct route, bidding Lucy wait for him, and he would ride to the rims
+of canyons or the tops of ridges of cedar forests, and from these
+vantage-points he would survey the country. Lucy gathered after a while
+that he was apprehensive of what might be encountered, and particularly
+so of what might be feared in pursuit. Lucy thought this strange,
+because it was out of the question for any one to be so soon on
+Creech's trail.
+
+These peculiar actions of Creech were more noticeable on the third day,
+and Lucy grew apprehensive herself. She could not divine why. But when
+Creech halted on a high crest that gave a sweeping vision of the broken
+table-land they had traversed Lucy made out for herself faint moving
+specks miles behind.
+
+"I reckon you see thet," said Creech
+
+"Horses," replied Lucy.
+
+He nodded his head gloomily, and seemed pondering a serious question.
+
+"Is some one trailing us?" asked Lucy, and she could not keep the
+tremor out of her voice.
+
+"Wal, I should smile! Fer two days--an' it sure beats me. They've never
+had a sight of us. But they keep comin'."
+
+"They! Who?" she asked, swiftly.
+
+"I hate to tell you, but I reckon I ought. Thet's Cordts an' two of his
+gang."
+
+"Oh--don't tell me so!" cried Lucy, suddenly terrified. Mention of
+Cordts had not always had power to frighten her, but this time she had
+a return of that shaking fear which had overcome her in the grove the
+night she was captured.
+
+"Cordts all right," replied Creech. "I knowed thet before I seen him.
+Fer two mornin's back I seen his hoss grazin in thet wide canyon. But I
+thought I'd slipped by. Some one seen us. Or they seen our trail.
+Anyway, he's after us. What beats me is how he sticks to thet trail.
+Cordts never was no tracker. An' since Dick Sears is dead there ain't a
+tracker in Cordts's outfit. An' I always could hide my tracks.... Beats
+me!"
+
+"Creech, I've been leaving a trail," confessed Lucy.
+
+"What!"
+
+Then she told him how she had been dropping cedar berries and bits of
+cedar leaves along the bare and stony course they had traversed.
+
+"Wal, I'm--" Creech stifled an oath. Then he laughed, but gruffly. "You
+air a cute one. But I reckon you didn't promise not to do thet.... An'
+now if Cordts gits you there'll be only yourself to blame."
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, frantically looking back. The moving specks were
+plainly in sight. "How can he know he's trailing me?"
+
+"Thet I can't say. Mebbe he doesn't know. His hosses air fresh, though,
+an' if I can't shake him he'll find out soon enough who he's trailin'."
+
+"Go on! We must shake him. I'll never do THAT again! ... For God's
+sake, Creech, don't let him get me!"
+
+And Creech led down off the high open land into canyons again.
+
+The day ended, and the night seemed a black blank to Lucy. Another
+sunrise found Creech leading on, sparing neither Lucy nor the horses.
+He kept on a steady walk or trot, and he picked out ground less likely
+to leave any tracks. Like an old deer he doubled on his trail. He
+traveled down stream-beds where the water left no trail. That day the
+mustangs began to fail. The others were wearing out.
+
+The canyons ran like the ribs of a wash-board. And they grew deep and
+verdant, with looming, towered walls. That night Lucy felt lost in an
+abyss. The dreaming silence kept her awake many moments while sleep had
+already seized upon her eyelids. And then she dreamed of Cordts
+capturing her, of carrying her miles deeper into these wild and purple
+cliffs, of Slone in pursuit on the stallion Wildfire, and of a savage
+fight. And she awoke terrified and cold in the blackness of the night.
+
+On the next day Creech traveled west. This seemed to Lucy to be far to
+the left of the direction taken before. And Lucy, in spite of her utter
+weariness, and the necessity of caring for herself and her horse, could
+not but wonder at the wild and frowning canyon. It was only a tributary
+of the great canyon, she supposed, but it was different, strange,
+impressive, yet intimate, because all about it was overpowering, near
+at hand, even the beetling crags. And at every turn it seemed
+impossible to go farther over that narrow and rock-bestrewn floor. Yet
+Creech found a way on.
+
+Then came hours of climbing such slopes and benches and ledges as Lucy
+had not yet encountered. The grasping spikes of dead cedar tore her
+dress to shreds, and many a scratch burned her flesh. About the middle
+of the afternoon Creech led up over the last declivity, a yellow slope
+of cedar, to a flat upland covered with pine and high bleached grass.
+They rested.
+
+"We've fooled Cordts, you can be sure of thet," said Creech. "You're a
+game kid, an', by Gawd! if I had this job to do over I'd never tackle
+it again!"
+
+"Oh, you're sure we've lost him?" implored Lucy.
+
+"Sure as I am of death. An' we'll make surer in crossin' this bench.
+It's miles to the other side where I'm to keep watch fer Joel. An' we
+won't leave a track all the way."
+
+"But this grass?" questioned Lucy. "It'll show our tracks."
+
+"Look at the lanes an' trails between. All pine mats thick an' soft an'
+springy. Only an Indian could follow us hyar on Wild Hoss Bench."
+
+Lucy gazed before her under the pines. It was a beautiful forest, with
+trees standing far apart, yet not so far but that their foliage
+intermingled. A dry fragrance, thick as a heavy perfume, blew into her
+face. She could not help but think of fire--how it would race through
+here, and that recalled Joel Creech's horrible threat. Lucy shuddered
+and put away the memory. "I can't go--any farther--to-day," she said.
+
+Creech looked at her compassionately. Then Lucy became conscious that
+of late he had softened.
+
+"You'll have to come," he said. "There's no water on this side, short
+of thet canyon-bed. An' acrost there's water close under the wall."
+
+So they set out into the forest. And Lucy found that after all she
+could go on. The horses walked and on the soft, springy ground did not
+jar her. Deer and wild turkey abounded there and showed little alarm at
+sight of the travelers. And before long Lucy felt that she would become
+intoxicated by the dry odor. It was so strong, so thick, so
+penetrating. Yet, though she felt she would reel under its influence,
+it revived her.
+
+The afternoon passed; the sun set off through the pines, a
+black-streaked, golden flare; twilight shortly changed to night. The
+trees looked spectral in the gloom, and the forest appeared to grow
+thicker. Wolves murmured, and there were wild cries of cat and owl.
+Lucy fell asleep on her horse. At last, sometime late in the night,
+when Creech lifted her from the saddle and laid her down, she stretched
+out on the soft mat of pine needles and knew no more.
+
+She did not awaken until the afternoon of the next day. The site where
+Creech had made his final camp overlooked the wildest of all that wild
+upland country. The pines had scattered and trooped around a beautiful
+park of grass that ended abruptly upon bare rock. Yellow crags towered
+above the rim, and under them a yawning narrow gorge, overshadowed from
+above, blue in its depths, split the end of the great plateau and
+opened out sheer into the head of the canyon, which, according to
+Creech, stretched away through that wilderness of red stone and green
+clefts. When Lucy's fascinated gaze looked afar she was stunned at the
+vast, billowy, bare surfaces. Every green cleft was a short canyon
+running parallel with this central and longer one. The dips and breaks
+showed how all these canyons were connected. They led the gaze away,
+descending gradually to the dim purple of distance--the bare, rolling
+desert upland.
+
+Lucy did nothing but gaze. She was unable to walk or eat that day.
+Creech hung around her with a remorse he apparently felt, yet could not
+put into words.
+
+"Do you expect Joel to come up this big canyon?"
+
+"I reckon I do--some day," replied Creech. "An' I wish he'd hurry."
+
+"Does he know the way?"
+
+"Nope. But he's good at findin' places. An' I told him to stick to the
+main canyon. Would you believe you could ride offer this rim, straight
+down thar fer fifty miles, an' never git off your hoss?"
+
+"No, I wouldn't believe it possible."
+
+"Wal, it's so. I've done it. An' I didn't want to come up thet way
+because I'd had to leave tracks."
+
+"Do you think we're safe--from Cordts now?" she asked.
+
+"I reckon so. He's no tracker."
+
+"But suppose he does trail us?"
+
+"Wal, I reckon I've a shade the best of Cordts at gun-play, any day."
+
+Lucy regarded the man in surprise. "Oh, it's so--strange!" she said.
+"You'd fight for me. Yet you dragged me for days over these awful
+rocks! ... Look at me, Creech. Do I look much like Lucy Bostil?"
+
+Creech hung his head. "Wal, I reckoned I wasn't a blackguard, but I AM."
+
+"You used to care for me when I was little. I remember how I used to
+take rides on your knee."
+
+"Lucy, I never thought of thet when I ketched you. You was only a means
+to an end. Bostil hated me. He ruined me. I give up to revenge. An' I
+could only git thet through you."
+
+"Creech, I'm not defending Dad. He's--he's no good where horses are
+concerned. I know he wronged you. Then why didn't you wait and meet him
+like a man instead of dragging me to this misery?"
+
+"Wal, I never thought of thet, either. I wished I had." He grew
+gloomier then and relapsed into silent watching.
+
+Lucy felt better next day, and offered to help Creech at the few camp
+duties. He would not let her. There was nothing to do but rest and
+wait, and the idleness appeared to be harder on Creech than on Lucy. He
+had always been exceedingly active. Lucy divined that every hour his
+remorse grew keener, and she did all she could think of to make it so.
+Creech made her a rude brush by gathering small roots and binding them
+tightly and cutting the ends square. And Lucy, after the manner of an
+Indian, got the tangles out of her hair. That day Creech seemed to want
+to hear Lucy's voice, and so they often fell into conversation. Once he
+said, thoughtfully:
+
+"I'm tryin' to remember somethin' I heerd at the Ford. I meant to ask
+you--" Suddenly he turned to her with animation. He who had been so
+gloomy and lusterless and dead showed a bright eagerness. "I heerd you
+beat the King on a red hoss--a wild hoss! ... Thet must have been a
+joke--like one of Joel's."
+
+"No. It's true. An' Dad nearly had a fit!"
+
+"Wal!" Creech simply blazed with excitement. "I ain't wonderin' if he
+did. His own girl! Lucy, come to remember, you always said you'd beat
+thet gray racer.... Fer the Lord's sake tell me all about it."
+
+Lucy warmed to him because, broken as he was, he could be genuinely
+glad some horse but his own had won a race. Bostil could never have
+been like that. So Lucy told him about the race--and then she had to
+tell about Wildfire, and then about Slone. But at first all of Creech's
+interest centered round Wildfire and the race that had not really been
+run. He asked a hundred questions. He was as pleased as a boy listening
+to a good story. He praised Lucy again and again. He crowed over
+Bostil's discomfiture. And when Lucy told him that Slone had dared her
+father to race, had offered to bet Wildfire and his own life against
+her hand, then Creech was beside himself.
+
+"This hyar Slone--he CALLED Bostil's hand!"
+
+"He's a wild-horse hunter. And HE can trail us!"
+
+"Trail us! Slone? Say, Lucy, are you in love with him?"
+
+Lucy uttered a strange little broken sound, half laugh, half sob. "Love
+him! Ah!"
+
+"An' your Dad's ag'in him! Sure Bostil'll hate any rider with a fast
+hoss. Why didn't the darn fool sell his stallion to your father?"
+
+"He gave Wildfire to me."
+
+"I'd have done the same. Wal, now, when you git back home what's comin'
+of it all?"
+
+Lucy shook her head sorrowfully. "God only knows. Dad will never own
+Wildfire, and he'll never let me marry Slone. And when you take the
+King away from him to ransom me--then my life will be hell, for if Dad
+sacrifices Sage King, afterward he'll hate me as the cause of his loss."
+
+"I can sure see the sense of all that," replied Creech, soberly. And he
+pondered.
+
+Lucy saw through this man as if he had been an inch of crystal water.
+He was no villain, and just now in his simplicity, in his plodding
+thought of sympathy for her he was lovable.
+
+"It's one hell of a muss, if you'll excuse my talk," said Creech. "An'
+I don't like the looks of what I 'pear to be throwin' in your way....
+But see hyar, Lucy, if Bostil didn't give up--or, say, he gits the King
+back, thet wouldn't make your chance with Slone any brighter."
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Thet race will have to be ran!"
+
+"What good will that do?" cried Lucy, with tears in her eyes. "I don't
+want to lose Dad. I--I--love him--mean as he is. And it'll kill me to
+lose Lin. Because Wildfire can beat Sage King, and that means Dad will
+be forever against him."
+
+"Couldn't this wild-horse feller LET the King win thet race?"
+
+"Oh, he could, but he wouldn't."
+
+"Can't you be sweet round him--fetch him over to thet?"
+
+"Oh, I could, but I won't."
+
+Creech might have been plotting the happiness of his own daughter, he
+was so deeply in earnest.
+
+"Wal, mebbe you don't love each other so much, after all.... Fast
+hosses mean much to a man in this hyar country. I know, fer I lost
+mine! ... But they ain't all.... I reckon you young folks don't love so
+much, after all."
+
+"But--we--do!" cried Lucy, with a passionate sob. All this talk had
+unnerved her.
+
+"Then the only way is fer Slone to lie to Bostil."
+
+"Lie!" exclaimed Lucy.
+
+"Thet's it. Fetch about a race, somehow--one Bostil can't see--an' then
+lie an' say the King run Wildfire off his legs."
+
+Suddenly it occurred to Lucy that one significance of this idea of
+Creech's had not dawned upon him. "You forget that soon my father will
+no longer own Sage King or Sarchedon or Dusty Ben--or any racer. He
+loses them or me, I thought. That's what I am here for."
+
+Creech's aspect changed. The eagerness and sympathy fled from his face,
+leaving it once more hard and stern. He got up and stood a tall, dark,
+and gloomy man, brooding over his loss, as he watched the canyon.
+Still, there was in him then a struggle that Lucy felt. Presently he
+bent over and put his big hand on her head. It seemed gentle and tender
+compared with former contacts, and it made Lucy thrill. She could not
+see his face. What did he mean? She divined something startling, and
+sat there trembling in suspense.
+
+"Bostil won't lose his only girl--or his favorite hoss! ... Lucy, I
+never had no girl. But it seems I'm rememberin' them rides you used to
+have on my knee when you was little!"
+
+Then he strode away toward the forest. Lucy watched him with a full
+heart, and as she thought of his overcoming the evil in him when her
+father had yielded to it, she suffered poignant shame. This Creech was
+not a bad man. He was going to let her go, and he was going to return
+Bostil's horses when they came. Lucy resolved with a passionate
+determination that her father must make ample restitution for the loss
+Creech had endured. She meant to tell Creech so.
+
+Upon his return, however, he seemed so strange and forbidding again
+that her heart failed her. Had he reconsidered his generous thought?
+Lucy almost believed so. These old horse-traders were incomprehensible
+in any relation concerning horses. Recalling Creech's intense interest
+in Wildfire and in the inevitable race to be run between him and Sage
+King, Lucy almost believed that Creech would sacrifice his vengeance
+just to see the red stallion beat the gray. If Creech kept the King in
+ransom for Lucy he would have to stay deeply hidden in the wild breaks
+of the canyon country or leave the uplands. For Bostil would never let
+that deed go unreckoned with. Like Bostil, old Creech was half horse
+and half human. The human side had warmed to remorse. He had regretted
+Lucy's plight; he wanted her to be safe at home again and to find
+happiness; he remembered what she had been to him when she was a little
+girl. Creech's other side was more complex.
+
+Before the evening meal ended Lucy divined that Creech was dark and
+troubled because he had resigned himself to a sacrifice harder than it
+had seemed in the first flush of noble feeling. But she doubted him no
+more. She was safe. The King would be returned. She would compel her
+father to pay Creech horse for horse. And perhaps the lesson to Bostil
+would be worth all the pain of effort and distress of mind that it had
+cost her.
+
+That night as she lay awake listening to the roar of the wind in the
+pines a strange premonition--like a mysterious voice---came to her with
+the assurance that Slone was on her trail.
+
+On the following day Creech appeared to have cast off the brooding
+mood. Still, he was not talkative. He applied himself to constant
+watching from the rim.
+
+Lucy began to feel rested. That long trip with Creech had made her thin
+and hard and strong. She spent the hours under the shade of a cedar on
+the rim that protected her from sun and wind. The wind, particularly,
+was hard to stand. It blew a gale out of the west, a dry, odorous,
+steady rush that roared through the pine-tops and flattened the long,
+white grass. This day Creech had to build up a barrier of rock round
+his camp-fire, to keep it from blowing away. And there was a constant
+danger of firing the grass.
+
+Once Lucy asked Creech what would happen in that case.
+
+"Wal, I reckon the grass would burn back even ag'in thet wind," replied
+Creech. "I'd hate to see fire in the woods now before the rains come.
+It's been the longest, dryest spell I ever lived through. But fer thet
+my hosses-- This hyar's a west wind, an' it's blowin' harder every day.
+It'll fetch the rains."
+
+Next day about noon, when both wind and heat were high, Lucy was
+awakened from a doze. Creech was standing near her. When he turned his
+long gaze away from the canyon he was smiling. It was a smile at once
+triumphant and sad.
+
+"Joel's comin' with the hosses!"
+
+Lucy jumped up, trembling and agitated. "Oh! ... Where? Where?"
+
+Creech pointed carefully with bent hand, like an Indian, and Lucy
+either could not get the direction or see far enough.
+
+"Right down along the base of thet red wall. A line of hosses. Jest
+like a few crawlin' ants' ... An' now they're creepin' out of sight."
+
+"Oh, I can't see them!" cried Lucy. "Are you SURE?"
+
+"Positive an' sartin," he replied. "Joel's comin'. He'll be up hyar
+before long. I reckon we'd jest as well let him come. Fer there's water
+an' grass hyar. An' down below grass is scarce."
+
+It seemed an age to Lucy, waiting there, until she did see horses
+zigzagging the ridges below. They disappeared, and then it was another
+age before they reappeared close under the bulge of wall. She thrilled
+at sight of Sage King and Sarchedon. She got only a glimpse of them.
+They must pass round under her to climb a split in the wall, and up a
+long draw that reached level ground back in the forest. But they were
+near, and Lucy tried to wait. Creech showed eagerness at first, and
+then went on with his camp-fire duties. While in camp he always cooked
+a midday meal.
+
+Lucy saw the horses first. She screamed out. Creech jumped up in alarm.
+
+Joel Creech, mounted on Sage King, and leading Sarchedon, was coming at
+a gallop. The other horses were following.
+
+"What's his hurry?" demanded Lucy. "After climbing out of that canyon
+Joel ought not to push the horses."
+
+"He'll git it from me if there's no reason," growled Creech. "Them
+hosses is wet."
+
+"Look at Sarch! He's wild. He always hated Joel."
+
+"Wal, Lucy, I reckon I ain't likin' this hyar. Look at Joel!" muttered
+Creech, and he strode out to meet his son.
+
+Lucy ran out too, and beyond him. She saw only Sage King. He saw her,
+recognized her, and, whistled even while Joel was pulling him in. For
+once the King showed he was glad to see Lucy. He had been having rough
+treatment. But he was not winded--only hot and wet. She assured herself
+of that, then ran to quiet the plunging Sarch. He came down at once,
+and pushed his big nose almost into her face. She hugged his great, hot
+neck. He was quivering all over. Lucy heard the other horses pounding
+up; she recognized Two Face's high whinny, like a squeal; and in her
+delight she was about to run to them when Creech's harsh voice arrested
+her. And sight of Joel's face suddenly made her weak.
+
+"What'd you say?" demanded Creech.
+
+"I'd a good reason to run the hosses up-hill--thet's what!" snapped
+Joel. He was frothing at the mouth.
+
+"Out with it!"
+
+"Cordts an' Hutch!"
+
+"What?" roared Creech, grasping the pale Joel and shaking him.
+
+"Cordts an' Hutch rode in behind me down at thet cross canyon. They
+seen me. An' they're after me hard!"
+
+Creech gave close and keen scrutiny to the strange face of his son.
+Then he wheeled away.
+
+"Help me pack. An' you, too, Lucy. We've got to rustle out of hyar."
+
+Lucy fought a sick faintness that threatened to make her useless. But
+she tried to help, and presently action made her stronger.
+
+The Creeches made short work of that breaking of camp. But when it came
+to getting the horses there appeared danger of delay. Sarchedon had led
+Dusty Ben and Two Face off in the grass. When Joel went for them they
+galloped away toward the woods. Joel ran back.
+
+"Son, you're a smart hossman!" exclaimed Creech, in disgust.
+
+"Shall I git on the King an' ketch them?"
+
+"No. Hold the King." Creech went out after Plume, but the excited and
+wary horse eluded him. Then Creech gave up, caught his own mustangs,
+and hurried into camp.
+
+"Lucy, if Cordts gits after Sarch an' the others it'll be as well fer
+us," he said.
+
+Soon they were riding into the forest, Creech leading, Lucy in the
+center, and Joel coming behind on the King. Two unsaddled mustangs
+carrying the packs were driven in front. Creech limited the gait to the
+best that the pack-horses could do. They made fast time. The level
+forest floor, hard and springy, afforded the best kind of going.
+
+A cold dread had once more clutched Lucy's heart. What would be the end
+of this flight? The way Creech looked back increased her dread. How
+horrible it would be if Cordts accomplished what he had always
+threatened--to run off with both her and the King! Lucy lost her
+confidence in Creech. She did not glance again at Joel. Once had been
+enough. She rode on with heavy heart. Anxiety and dread and conjecture
+and a gradual sinking of spirit weighed her down. Yet she never had a
+clearer perception of outside things. The forest loomed thicker and
+darker. The sky was seen only through a green, crisscross of foliage
+waving in the roaring gale. This strong wind was like a blast in Lucy's
+face, and its keen dryness cracked her lips.
+
+When they rode out of the forest, down a gentle slope of wind-swept
+grass, to an opening into a canyon Lucy was surprised to recognize the
+place. How quickly the ride through the forest had been made!
+
+Creech dismounted. "Git off, Lucy. You, Joel, hurry an' hand me the
+little pack.... Now I'll take Lucy an' the King down in hyar. You go
+thet way with the hosses an' make as if you was hidin' your trail, but
+don't. Do you savvy?"
+
+Joel shook his head. He looked sullen, somber, strange. His father
+repeated what he had said.
+
+"You're wantin' Cordts to split on the trail?" asked Joel.
+
+"Sure. He'll ketch up with you sometime. But you needn't be afeared if
+he does."
+
+"I ain't a-goin' to do thet."
+
+"Why not?" Creech demanded, slowly, with a rising voice.
+
+"I'm a-goin' with you. What d'ye mean, Dad, by this move? You'll be
+headin' back fer the Ford. An' we'd git safer if we go the other way."
+
+Creech evidently controlled his temper by an effort. "I'm takin' Lucy
+an' the King back to Bostil."
+
+Joel echoed those words, slowly divining them. "Takin' them BOTH! The
+girl.... An' givin' up the King!"
+
+"Yes, both of them. I've changed my mind, Joel. Now--you--"
+
+But Creech never finished what he meant to say. Joel Creech was
+suddenly seized by a horrible madness. It was then, perhaps, that the
+final thread which linked his mind to rationality stretched and
+snapped. His face turned green. His strange eyes protruded. His jaw
+worked. He frothed at the mouth. He leaped, apparently to get near his
+father, but he missed his direction. Then, as if sight had come back,
+he wheeled and made strange gestures, all the while cursing
+incoherently. The father's shocked face began to show disgust. Then
+part of Joel's ranting became intelligible.
+
+"Shut up!" suddenly roared Creech.
+
+"No, I won't!" shrieked Joel, wagging his head in spent passion. "An'
+you ain't a-goin' to take thet girl home.... I'll take her with me....
+An' you take the hosses home!"
+
+"You're crazy!" hoarsely shouted Creech, his face going black. "They
+allus said so. But I never believed thet."
+
+"An' if I'm crazy, thet girl made me.... You know what I'm a-goin' to
+do? ... I'll strip her naked--an' I'll--"
+
+Lucy saw old Creech lunge and strike. She heard the sodden blow. Joel
+went down. But he scrambled up with his eyes and mouth resembling those
+of a mad hound Lucy once had seen. The fact that he reached twice for
+his gun and could not find it proved the breaking connection of nerve
+and sense. Creech jumped and grappled with Joel. There was a wrestling,
+strained struggle. Creech's hair stood up and his face had a kind of
+sick fury, and he continued to curse and command. They fought for the
+possession of the gun. But Joel seemed to have superhuman strength. His
+hold on the gun could not be broken. Moreover, he kept straining to
+point the gun at his father. Lucy screamed. Creech yelled hoarsely. But
+the boy was beyond reason or help, and he was beyond over powering!
+Lucy saw him bend his arm in spite of the desperate hold upon it and
+fire the gun. Creech's hoarse entreaties ceased as his hold on Joel
+broke. He staggered. His arms went up with a tragic, terrible gesture.
+He fell. Joel stood over him, shaking and livid, but he showed only the
+vaguest realization of the deed. His actions were instinctive. He was
+the animal that had clawed himself free. Further proof of his
+aberration stood out in the action of sheathing his gun; he made the
+motion to do so, but he only dropped it in the grass.
+
+Sight of that dropped gun broke Lucy's spell of horror, which had kept
+her silent but for one scream. Suddenly her blood leaped like fire in
+her veins. She measured the distance to Sage King. Joel was turning.
+Then Lucy darted at the King, reached him, and, leaping, was half up on
+him when he snorted and jumped, not breaking her hold, but keeping her
+from getting up. Then iron hands clutched her and threw her, like an
+empty sack, to the grass.
+
+Joel Creech did not say a word. His distorted face had the deriding
+scorn of a superior being. Lucy lay flat on her back, watching him. Her
+mind worked swiftly. She would have to fight for her body and her life.
+Her terror had fled with her horror. She was not now afraid of this
+demented boy. She meant to fight, calculating like a cunning Indian,
+wild as a trapped wildcat.
+
+Lucy lay perfectly still, for she knew she had been thrown near the
+spot where the gun lay. If she got her hands on that gun she would kill
+Joel. It would be the action of an instant. She watched Joel while he
+watched her. And she saw that he had his foot on the rope round Sage
+King's neck. The King never liked a rope. He was nervous. He tossed his
+head to get rid of it. Creech, watching Lucy all the while, reached for
+the rope, pulled the King closer and closer, and untied the knot. The
+King stood then, bridle down and quiet. Instead of a saddle he wore a
+blanket strapped round him.
+
+It seemed that Lucy located the gun without turning her eyes away from
+Joel's. She gathered all her force--rolled over swiftly--again--got her
+hands on the gun just as Creech leaped like a panther upon her. His
+weight crushed her flat--his strength made her hand-hold like that of a
+child. He threw the gun aside. Lucy lay face down, unable to move her
+body while he stood over her. Then he struck her, not a stunning blow,
+but just the hard rap a cruel rider gives to a horse that wants its own
+way. Under that blow Lucy's spirit rose to a height of terrible
+passion. Still she did not lose her cunning; the blow increased it.
+That blow showed Joel to be crazy. She might outwit a crazy man, where
+a man merely wicked might master her.
+
+Creech tried to turn her. Lucy resisted. And she was strong. Resistance
+infuriated Creech. He cuffed her sharply. This action only made him
+worse. Then with hands like steel claws he tore away her blouse.
+
+The shock of his hands on her bare flesh momentarily weakened Lucy, and
+Creech dragged at her until she lay seemingly helpless before him.
+
+And Lucy saw that at the sight of her like this something had come
+between Joel Creech's mad motives and their execution. Once he had
+loved her--desired her. He looked vague. He stroked her shoulder. His
+strange eyes softened, then blazed with a different light. Lucy divined
+that she was lost unless she could recall his insane fury. She must
+begin that terrible fight in which now the best she could hope for was
+to make him kill her quickly.
+
+Swift and vicious as a cat she fastened her teeth in his arm. She bit
+deep and held on. Creech howled like a dog. He beat her. He jerked and
+wrestled. Then he lifted her, and the swing of her body tore the flesh
+loose from his arm and broke her hold. Lucy half rose, crawled, plunged
+for the gun. She got it, too, only to have Creech kick it out of her
+hand. The pain of that brutal kick was severe, but when he cut her
+across the bare back with the rope she shrieked out. Supple and quick,
+she leaped up and ran. In vain! With a few bounds he had her again,
+tripped her up. Lucy fell over the dead body of the father. Yet even
+that did not shake her desperate nerve. All the ferocity of a
+desert-bred savage culminated in her, fighting for death.
+
+Creech leaned down, swinging the coiled rope. He meant to do more than
+lash her with it. Lucy's hands flashed up, closed tight in his long
+hair. Then with a bellow he jerked up and lifted her sheer off the
+ground. There was an instant in which Lucy felt herself swung and torn;
+she saw everything as a whirling blur; she felt an agony in her wrists
+at which Creech was clawing. When he broke her hold there were handfuls
+of hair in Lucy's fists.
+
+She fell again and had not the strength to rise. But Creech was raging,
+and little of his broken speech was intelligible. He knelt with a sharp
+knee pressing her down. He cut the rope. Nimbly, like a rider in
+moments of needful swiftness, he noosed one end of the rope round her
+ankle, then the end of the other piece round her wrist. He might have
+been tying up an unbroken mustang. Rising, he retained hold on both
+ropes. He moved back, sliding them through his hands. Then with a quick
+move he caught up Sage King's bridle.
+
+Creech paused a moment, darkly triumphant. A hideous success showed in
+his strange eyes. A long-cherished mad vengeance had reached its
+fruition. Then he led the horse near to Lucy.
+
+Warily he reached down. He did not know Lucy's strength was spent. He
+feared she might yet escape. With hard, quick grasp he caught her,
+lifted her, threw her over the King's back. He forced her down.
+
+Lucy's resistance was her only salvation, because it kept him on the
+track of his old threat. She resisted all she could. He pulled her arms
+down round the King's neck and tied them close. Then he pulled hard on
+the rope on her ankle and tied that to her other ankle.
+
+Lucy realized that she was bound fast. Creech had made good most of his
+threat. And now in her mind the hope of the death she had sought
+changed to the hope of life that was possible. Whatever power she had
+ever had over the King was in her voice. If only Creech would slip the
+bridle or cut the reins--if only Sage King could be free to run!
+
+Lucy could turn her face far enough to see Creech. Like a fiend he was
+reveling in his work. Suddenly he picked up the gun.
+
+"Look a-hyar!" he called, hoarsely.
+
+With eyes on her, grinning horribly, he walked a few paces to where the
+long grass had not been trampled or pressed down. The wind, whipping up
+out of the canyon, was still blowing hard. Creech put the gun down in
+the grass and fired.
+
+Sage King plunged. But he was not gun-shy. He steadied down with a
+pounding of heavy hoofs. Then Lucy could see again. A thin streak of
+yellow smoke rose--a little snaky flame--a slight crackling hiss! Then
+as the wind caught the blaze there came a rushing, low roar. Fire, like
+magic, raced and spread before the wind toward the forest.
+
+Lucy had forgotten that Creech had meant to drive her into fire. The
+sudden horror of it almost caused collapse. Commotion within--cold and
+quake and nausea and agony--deadened her hearing and darkened her
+sight. But Creech's hard hands quickened her. She could see him then,
+though not clearly. His face seemed inhuman, misshapen, gray. His hands
+pulled at her arms--a last precaution to see that she was tightly
+bound. Then with the deft fingers of a rider he slipped Sage King's
+bridle.
+
+Lucy could not trust her sight. What made the King stand so still? His
+ears went up--stiff--pointed!
+
+Creech stepped back and laid a violent hand on Lucy's garments. She
+bent--twisted her neck to watch him. But her sight grew no clearer.
+Still she saw he meant to strip her naked. He braced himself for a
+strong, ripping pull. His yellow teeth showed deep in his lip. His
+contrasting eyes were alight with insane joy.
+
+But he never pulled. Something attracted his attention. He looked. He
+saw something. The beast in him became human--the madness changed to
+rationality--the devil to a craven! His ashen lips uttered a low,
+terrible cry.
+
+Lucy felt the King trembling in every muscle. She knew that was flight.
+She expected his loud snort, and was prepared for it when it rang out.
+In a second he would bolt. She knew that. She thrilled. She tried to
+call to him, but her lips were weak. Creech seemed paralyzed. The King
+shifted his position, and Lucy's last glimpse of Creech was one she
+would never forget. It was as if Creech faced burning hell!
+
+Then the King whistled and reared. Lucy heard swift, dull, throbbing
+beats. Beats of a fast horse's hoofs on the run! She felt a surging
+thrill of joy. She could not think. All of her blood and bone and
+muscle seemed to throb. Suddenly the air split to a high-pitched, wild,
+whistling blast. It pierced to Lucy's mind. She knew that whistle.
+
+"Wildfire!" she screamed, with bursting heart.
+
+The King gave a mighty convulsive bound of terror. He, too, knew that
+whistle. And in that one great bound he launched out into a run.
+Straight across the line of burning grass! Lucy felt the sting of
+flame. Smoke blinded and choked her. Then clear, dry, keen wind sung in
+her ears and whipped her hair. The light about her darkened. The King
+had headed into the pines. The heavy roar of the gale overhead struck
+Lucy with new and torturing dread. Sage King once in his life was
+running away, bridleless, and behind him there was fire on the wings of
+the wind.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+For the first time in his experience Bostil found that horse-trading
+palled upon him. This trip to Durango was a failure. Something was
+wrong. There was a voice constantly calling into his inner ear--a voice
+to which he refused to listen. And during the five days of the return
+trip the strange mood grew upon him.
+
+The last day he and his riders covered over fifty miles and reached the
+Ford late at night. No one expected them, and only the men on duty at
+the corrals knew of the return. Bostil, much relieved to get home, went
+to bed and at once fell asleep.
+
+He awakened at a late hour for him. When he dressed and went out to the
+kitchen he found that his sister had learned of his return and had
+breakfast waiting.
+
+"Where's the girl?" asked Bostil.
+
+"Not up yet," replied Aunt Jane.
+
+"What!"
+
+"Lucy and I had a tiff last night and she went to her room in a temper."
+
+"Nothin' new about thet."
+
+"Holley and I have had our troubles holding her in. Don't you forget
+that."
+
+Bostil laughed. "Wal, call her an' tell her I'm home."
+
+Aunt Jane did as she was bidden. Bostil finished his breakfast. But
+Lucy did not come.
+
+Bostil began to feel something strange, and, going to Lucy's door, he
+knocked. There was no reply. Bostil pushed open the door. Lucy was not
+in evidence, and her room was not as tidy as usual. He saw her white
+dress thrown upon the bed she had not slept in. Bostil gazed around
+with a queer contraction of the heart. That sense of something amiss
+grew stronger. Then he saw a chair before the open window. That window
+was rather high, and Lucy had placed a chair before it so that she
+could look out or get out. Bostil stretched his neck, looked out, and
+in the red earth beneath the window he saw fresh tracks of Lucy's
+boots. Then he roared for Jane.
+
+She came running, and between Bostil's furious questions and her own
+excited answers there was nothing arrived at. But presently she spied
+the white dress, and then she ran to Lucy's closet. From there she
+turned a white face to Bostil.
+
+"She put on her riding-clothes!" gasped Aunt Jane.
+
+"Supposin' she did! Where is she?" demanded Bostil.
+
+"SHE'S RUN OFF WITH SLONE!"
+
+Bostil could not have been shocked or hurt any more acutely by a
+knife-thrust. He glared at his sister.
+
+"A-huh! So thet's the way you watch her!"
+
+"Watch her? It wasn't possible. She's--well, she's as smart as you
+are.... Oh, I knew she'd do it! She was wild in love with him!"
+
+Bostil strode out of the room and the house. He went through the grove
+and directly up the path to Slone's cabin. It was empty, just as Bostil
+expected to find it.
+
+The bars of the corral were down. Both Slone's horses were gone.
+Presently Bostil saw the black horse Nagger down in Brackton's pasture.
+
+There were riders in front of Brackton's. All spoke at once to Bostil,
+and he only yelled for Brackton. The old man came hurriedly out,
+alarmed.
+
+"Where's this Slone?" demanded Bostil.
+
+"Slone!" ejaculated Brackton. "I'm blessed if I know. Ain't he home?"
+
+"No. An' he's left his black hoss in your field."
+
+"Wal, by golly, thet's news to me.... Bostil, there's been strange
+doin's lately." Brackton seemed at a loss for words. "Mebbe Slone got
+out because of somethin' thet come off last night.... Now, Joel Creech
+an'--an'--"
+
+Bostil waited to hear no more. What did he care about the idiot Creech?
+He strode down the lane to the corrals. Farlane, Van, and other riders
+were there, leisurely as usual. Then Holley appeared, coming out of the
+barn. He, too, was easy, cool, natural, lazy. None of these riders knew
+what was amiss. But instantly a change passed over them. It came
+because Bostil pulled a gun. "Holley, I've a mind to bore you!"
+
+The old hawk-eyed rider did not flinch or turn a shade off color. "What
+fer?" he queried. But his customary drawl was wanting.
+
+"I left you to watch Lucy.... An' she's gone!"
+
+Holley showed genuine surprise and distress. The other riders echoed
+Bostil's last word. Bostil lowered the gun.
+
+"I reckon what saves you is you're the only tracker thet'd have a show
+to find this cussed Slone."
+
+Holley now showed no sign of surprise, but the other riders were
+astounded.
+
+"Lucy's run off with Slone," added Bostil.
+
+"Wal, if she's gone, an' if he's gone, it's a cinch," replied Holley,
+throwing up his hands. "Boss, she double-crossed me same as you! ...
+She promised faithful to stay in the house."
+
+"Promises nothin'!" roared Bostil. "She's in love with this wild-hoss
+wrangler! She met him last night!"
+
+"I couldn't help thet," retorted Holley. "An' I trusted the girl."
+
+Bostil tossed his hands. He struggled with his rage. He had no fear
+that Lucy would not soon be found. But the opposition to his will made
+him furious.
+
+Van left the group of riders and came close to Bostil. "It ain't an
+hour back thet I seen Slone ride off alone on his red hoss."
+
+"What of thet?" demanded Bostil. "Sure she was waitin' somewheres.
+They'd have too much sense to go together.... Saddle up, you boys, an'
+we'll--"
+
+"Say, Bostil, I happen to know Slone didn't see Lucy last night,"
+interrupted Holley.
+
+"A-huh! Wal, you'd better talk out."
+
+"I trusted Lucy," said Holley. "But all the same, knowin' she was in
+love, I jest wanted to see if any girl in love could keep her word....
+So about dark I went down the grove an' watched fer Slone. Pretty soon
+I seen him. He sneaked along the upper end an' I follered. He went to
+thet bench up by the biggest cottonwood. An' he waited a long time. But
+Lucy didn't come. He must have waited till midnight. Then he left. I
+watched him go back--seen him go up to his cabin."
+
+"Wal, if she didn't meet him, where was she? She wasn't in her room."
+
+Bostil gazed at Holley and the other riders, then back to Holley. What
+was the matter with this old rider? Bostil had never seen Holley seem
+so strange. The whole affair began to loom strangely, darkly. Some
+portent quickened Bostil's lumbering pulse. It seemed that Holley's
+mind must have found an obstacle to thought. Suddenly the old rider's
+face changed--the bronze was blotted out--a grayness came, and then a
+dead white.
+
+"Bostil, mebbe you 'ain't been told yet thet--thet Creech rode in
+yesterday.... He lost all his racers! He had to shoot both Peg an'
+Roan!"
+
+Bostil's thought suffered a sudden, blank halt. Then, with realization,
+came the shock for which he had long been prepared.
+
+"A-huh! Is thet so? ... Wal, an' what did he say?"
+
+Holley laughed a grim, significant laugh that curdled Bostil's blood.
+"Creech said a lot! But let thet go now.... Come with me."
+
+Holley started with rapid strides down the lane. Bostil followed. And
+he heard the riders coming behind. A dark and gloomy thought settled
+upon Bostil. He could not check that, but he held back impatience and
+passion.
+
+Holley went straight to Lucy's window. He got down on his knees to
+scrutinize the tracks.
+
+"Made more 'n twelve hours ago," he said, swiftly. "She had on her
+boots, but no spurs.... Now let's see where she went."
+
+Holley began to trail Lucy's progress through the grove, silently
+pointing now and then to a track. He went swifter, till Bostil had to
+hurry. The other men came whispering after them.
+
+Holley was as keen as a hound on scent.
+
+"She stopped there," he said, "mebbe to listen. Looks like she wanted
+to cross the lane, but she didn't: here she got to goin' faster."
+
+Holley reached an intersecting path and suddenly halted stock-still,
+pointing at a big track in the dust.
+
+"My God! ... Bostil, look at thet!"
+
+One riving pang tore through Bostil--and then he was suddenly his old
+self, facing the truth of danger to one he loved. He saw beside the big
+track a faint imprint of Lucy's small foot. That was the last sign of
+her progress and it told a story.
+
+"Bostil, thet ain't Slone's track," said Holley, ringingly.
+
+"Sure it ain't. Thet's the track of a big man," replied Bostil.
+
+The other riders, circling round with bent heads, all said one way or
+another that Slone could not have made the trail.
+
+"An' whoever he was grabbed Lucy up--made off with her?" asked Bostil.
+
+"Plain as if we seen it done!" exclaimed Holley. There was fire in the
+clear, hawk eyes.
+
+"Cordts!" cried Bostil, hoarsely.
+
+"Mebbe--mebbe. But thet ain't my idee.... Come on."
+
+Holley went so fast he almost ran, and he got ahead of Bostil. Finally
+several hundred yards out in the sage he halted, and again dropped to
+his knees. Bostil and the riders hurried on.
+
+"Keep back; don't stamp round so close," ordered Holley. Then like a
+man searching for lost gold in sand and grass he searched the ground.
+To Bostil it seemed a long time before he got through. When he arose
+there was a dark and deadly certainty in his face, by which Bostil knew
+the worst had befallen Lucy.
+
+"Four mustangs an' two men last night," said Holley, rapidly. "Here's
+where Lucy was set down on her feet. Here's where she mounted.... An'
+here's the tracks of a third man--tracks made this mornin'."
+
+Bostil straightened up and faced Holley as if ready to take a
+death-blow. "I'm reckonin' them last is Slone's tracks."
+
+"Yes, I know them," replied Holley.
+
+"An'--them--other tracks? Who made them?"
+
+"CREECH AN' HIS SON!"
+
+Bostil felt swept away by a dark, whirling flame. And when it passed he
+lay in his barn, in the shade of the loft, prostrate on the fragrant
+hay. His strength with his passion was spent. A dull ache remained. The
+fight was gone from him. His spirit was broken. And he looked down into
+that dark abyss which was his own soul.
+
+By and by the riders came for him, got him up, and led him out. He
+shook them off and stood breathing slowly. The air felt refreshing; it
+cooled his hot, tired brain. It did not surprise him to see Joel Creech
+there, cringing behind Holley.
+
+Bostil lifted a hand for some one to speak. And Holley came a step
+forward. His face was haggard, but its white tenseness was gone. He
+seemed as if he were reluctant to speak, to inflict more pain.
+
+"Bostil," he began, huskily, "you're to send the King--an' Sarch--an'
+Ben an' Two Face an' Plume to ransom Lucy! ... If you won't--then
+Creech'll sell her to Cordts!"
+
+What a strange look came into the faces of the riders! Did, they think
+he cared more for horseflesh than for his own flesh and blood?
+
+"Send the King--an' all he wants.... An' send word fer Creech to come
+back to the Ford.... Tell him I said--my sin found me out!"
+
+Bostil watched Joel Creech ride the King out upon the slope, driving
+the others ahead. Sage King wanted to run. Sarchedon was wild and
+unruly. They passed out of sight. Then Bostil turned to his silent
+riders.
+
+"Boys, seein' the King go thet way wasn't nothin'.... But what
+crucifies me is--WILL THET FETCH HER BACK?"
+
+"God only knows!" replied Holley. "Mebbe not--I reckon not! ... But,
+Bostil, you forget Slone is out there on Lucy's trail. Out there ahead
+of Joel! Slone he's a wild-hoss hunter--the keenest I ever seen. Do you
+think Creech can shake him on a trail? He'll kill Creech, an' he'll lay
+fer Joel goin' back--an' he'll kill him.... An' I'll bet my all he'll
+ride in here with Lucy an' the King!"
+
+"Holley, you ain't figurin' on thet red hoss of Slone's ridin' down the
+King?"
+
+Holley laughed as if Bostil's query was the strangest thing of all that
+poignant day. "Naw. Slone'll lay fer Joel an' rope him like he roped
+Dick Sears."
+
+"Holley, I reckon you see--clearer 'n me," said Bostil, plaintively.
+"'Pears as if I never had a hard knock before. Fer my nerve's broke. I
+can't hope.... Lucy's gone! ... Ain't there anythin' to do but wait?"
+
+"Thet's all. Jest wait. If we went out on Joel's trail we'd queer the
+chance of Creech's bein' honest. An' we'd queer Slone's game. I'd hate
+to have him trailin' me."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+On the day that old Creech repudiated his son, Slone with immeasurable
+relief left Brackton's without even a word to the rejoicing Holley, and
+plodded up the path to his cabin.
+
+After the first flush of elation had passed he found a peculiar mood
+settling down upon him. It was as if all was not so well as he had
+impulsively conceived. He began to ponder over this strange depression,
+to think back. What had happened to dash the cup from his lips? Did he
+regret being freed from guilt in the simple minds of the
+villagers--regret it because suspicion would fall upon Lucy's father?
+No; he was sorry for the girl, but not for Bostil. It was not this new
+aspect of the situation at the Ford that oppressed him.
+
+He trailed his vague feelings back to a subtle shock he had sustained
+in a last look at Creech's dark, somber face. It had been the face of a
+Nemesis. All about Creech breathed silent, revengeful force. Slone
+worked out in his plodding thought why that fact should oppress him;
+and it was because in striking Bostil old Creech must strike through
+Bostil's horses and his daughter.
+
+Slone divined it--divined it by the subtle, intuitive power of his love
+for Lucy. He did not reconsider what had been his supposition before
+Creech's return--that Creech would kill Bostil. Death would be no
+revenge. Creech had it in him to steal the King and starve him or to do
+the same and worse with Lucy. So Slone imagined, remembering Creech's
+face.
+
+Before twilight set in Slone saw the Creeches riding out of the lane
+into the sage, evidently leaving the Ford. This occasioned Slone great
+relief, but only for a moment. What the Creeches appeared to be doing
+might not be significant. And he knew if they had stayed in the village
+that he would have watched them as closely as if he thought they were
+trying to steal Wildfire.
+
+He got his evening meal, cared for his horses, and just as darkness
+came on he slipped down into the grove for his rendezvous with Lucy.
+Always this made his heart beat and his nerves thrill, but to-night he
+was excited. The grove seemed full of moving shadows, all of which he
+fancied were Lucy. Reaching the big cottonwood, he tried to compose
+himself on the bench to wait. But composure seemed unattainable. The
+night was still, only the crickets and the soft rustle of leaves
+breaking a dead silence. Slone had the ears of a wild horse in that he
+imagined sounds he did not really hear. Many a lonely night while he
+lay watching and waiting in the dark, ambushing a water-hole where wild
+horses drank, he had heard soft treads that were only the substance of
+dreams. That was why, on this night when he was overstrained, he
+fancied he saw Lucy coming, a silent, moving shadow, when in reality
+she did not come. That was why he thought he heard very stealthy steps.
+
+He waited. Lucy did not come. She had never failed before and he knew
+she would come. Waiting became hard. He wanted to go back toward the
+house--to intercept her on the way. Still he kept to his post,
+watchful, listening, his heart full. And he tried to reason away his
+strange dread, his sense of a need of hurry. For a time he succeeded by
+dreaming of Lucy's sweetness, of her courage, of what a wonderful girl
+she was. Hours and hours he had passed in such dreams. One dream in
+particular always fascinated him, and it was one in which he saw the
+girl riding Wildfire, winning a great race for her life. Another, just
+as fascinating, but so haunting that he always dispelled it, was a
+dream where Lucy, alone and in peril, fought with Cordts or Joel Creech
+for more than her life. These vague dreams were Slone's acceptance of
+the blood and spirit in Lucy. She was Bostil's daughter. She had no
+sense of fear. She would fight. And though Slone always thrilled with
+pride, he also trembled with dread.
+
+At length even wilder dreams of Lucy's rare moments, when she let
+herself go, like a desert whirlwind, to envelop him in all her
+sweetness, could not avail to keep Slone patient. He began to pace to
+and fro under the big tree. He waited and waited. What could have
+detained her? Slone inwardly laughed at the idea that either Holley or
+Aunt Jane could keep his girl indoors when she wanted to come out to
+meet him. Yet Lucy had always said something might prevent. There was
+no reason for Slone to be concerned. He was mistaking his thrills and
+excitement and love and disappointment for something in which there was
+no reality. Yet he could not help it. The longer he waited the more
+shadows glided beneath the cottonwoods, the more faint, nameless sounds
+he heard.
+
+He waited long after he became convinced she would not come. Upon his
+return through the grove he reached a point where the unreal and
+imaginative perceptions were suddenly and stunningly broken. He did
+hear a step. He kept on, as before, and in the deep shadow he turned.
+He saw a man just faintly outlined. One of the riders had been watching
+him--had followed him! Slone had always expected this. So had Lucy. And
+now it had happened. But Lucy had been too clever. She had not come.
+She had found out or suspected the spy and she had outwitted him. Slone
+had reason to be prouder of Lucy, and he went back to his cabin free
+from further anxiety.
+
+Before he went to sleep, however, he heard the clatter of a number of
+horses in the lane. He could tell they were tired horses. Riders
+returning, he thought, and instantly corrected that, for riders seldom
+came in at night. And then it occurred to him that it might be Bostil's
+return. But then it might be the Creeches. Slone had an uneasy return
+of puzzling thoughts. These, however, did not hinder drowsiness, and,
+deciding that the first thing in the morning he would trail the
+Creeches, just to see where they had gone, he fell asleep.
+
+In the morning the bright, broad day, with its dispelling reality, made
+Slone regard himself differently. Things that oppressed him in the dark
+of night vanished in the light of the sun. Still, he was curious about
+the Creeches, and after he had done his morning's work he strolled out
+to take up their trail. It was not hard to follow in the lane, for no
+other horses had gone in that direction since the Creeches had left.
+
+Once up on the wide, windy slope the reach and color and fragrance
+seemed to call to Slone irresistibly, and he fell to trailing these
+tracks just for the love of a skill long unused. Half a mile out the
+road turned toward Durango. But the Creeches did not continue on that
+road. They entered the sage. Instantly Slone became curious.
+
+He followed the tracks to a pile of rocks where the Creeches had made a
+greasewood fire and had cooked a meal. This was strange--within a mile
+of the Ford, where Brackton and others would have housed them. What was
+stranger was the fact that the trail started south from there and swung
+round toward the village.
+
+Slone's heart began to thump. But he forced himself to think only of
+these tracks and not any significance they might have. He trailed the
+men down to a bench on the slope, a few hundred yards from Bostil's
+grove, and here a trampled space marked where a halt had been made and
+a wait.
+
+And here Slone could no longer restrain conjecture and dread. He
+searched and searched. He got on his knees. He crawled through the sage
+all around the trampled space. Suddenly his heart seemed to receive a
+stab. He had found prints of Lucy's boots in the soft earth! And he
+leaped up, wild and fierce, needing to know no more.
+
+He ran back to his cabin. He never thought of Bostil, of Holley, of
+anything except the story revealed in those little boot-tracks. He
+packed a saddle-bag with meat and biscuits, filled a canvas
+water-bottle, and, taking them and his rifle, he hurried out to the
+corral. First he took Nagger down to Brackton's pasture and let him in.
+Then returning, he went at the fiery stallion as he had not gone in
+many a day, roped him, saddled him, mounted him, and rode off with a
+hard, grim certainty that in Wildfire was Lucy's salvation.
+
+Four hours later Slone halted on the crest of a ridge, in the cover of
+sparse cedars, and surveyed a vast, gray, barren basin yawning and
+reaching out to a rugged, broken plateau.
+
+He expected to find Joel Creech returning on the back-trail, and he had
+taken the precaution to ride on one side of the tracks he was
+following. He did not want Joel to cross his trail. Slone had long ago
+solved the meaning of the Creeches' flight. They would use Lucy to
+ransom Bostil's horses, and more than likely they would not let her go
+back. That they had her was enough for Slone. He was grim and
+implacable.
+
+The eyes of the wild-horse hunter had not searched that basin long
+before they picked out a dot which was not a rock or a cedar, but a
+horse. Slone watched it grow, and, hidden himself, he held his post
+until he knew the rider was Joel Creech. Slone drew his own horse back
+and tied him to a sage-bush amidst some scant grass. Then he returned
+to watch. It appeared Creech was climbing the ridge below Slone, and
+some distance away. It was a desperate chance Joel ran then, for Slone
+had set out to kill him. It was certain that if Joel had happened to
+ride near instead of far, Slone could not have helped but kill him. As
+it was, he desisted because he realized that Joel would acquaint Bostil
+with the abducting of Lucy, and it might be that this would be well.
+
+Slone was shaking when young Creech passed up and out of sight over the
+ridge--shaking with the deadly grip of passion such as he had never
+known. He waited, slowly gaining control, and at length went back for
+Wildfire.
+
+Then he rode boldly forth on the trail. He calculated that old Creech
+would take Lucy to some wild retreat in the canyons and there wait for
+Joel and the horses. Creech had almost certainly gone on and would be
+unaware of a pursuer so closely on his trail. Slone took the direction
+of the trail, and he saw a low, dark notch in the rocky wall in the
+distance. After that he paid no more attention to choosing good ground
+for Wildfire than he did to the trail. The stallion was more tractable
+than Slone had ever found him. He loved the open. He smelled the sage
+and the wild. He settled down into his long, easy, swinging lope which
+seemed to eat up the miles. Slone was obsessed with thoughts centering
+round Lucy, and time and distance were scarcely significant.
+
+The sun had dipped full red in a golden west when Slone reached the
+wall of rocks and the cleft where Creech's tracks and Lucy's, too,
+marked the camp. Slone did not even dismount. Riding on into the cleft,
+he wound at length into a canyon and out of that into a larger one,
+where he found that Lucy had remembered to leave a trail, and down this
+to a break in a high wall, and through it to another winding, canyon.
+The sun set, but Slone kept on as long as he could see the trail, and
+after that, until an intersecting canyon made it wise for him to halt.
+
+There were rich grass and sweet water for his horse. He himself was not
+hungry, but he ate; he was not sleepy, but he slept. And daylight found
+him urging Wildfire in pursuit. On the rocky places Slone found the
+cedar berries Lucy had dropped. He welcomed sight of them, but he did
+not need them. This man Creech could never hide a trail from him, Slone
+thought grimly, and it suited him to follow that trail at a rapid trot.
+If he lost the tracks for a distance he went right on, and he knew
+where to look for them ahead. There was a vast difference between the
+cunning of Creech and the cunning of a wild horse. And there was an
+equal difference between the going and staying powers of Creech's
+mustangs and Wildfire. Yes, Slone divined that Lucy's salvation would
+be Wildfire, her horse. The trail grew rougher, steeper, harder, but
+the stallion kept his eagerness and his pace. On many an open length of
+canyon or height of wild upland Slone gazed ahead hoping to see
+Creech's mustangs. He hoped for that even when he knew he was still too
+far behind. And then, suddenly, in the open, sandy flat of an
+intersecting canyon he came abruptly on a fresh trail of three horses,
+one of them shod.
+
+The surprise stunned him. For a moment he gazed stupidly at these
+strange tracks. Who had made them? Had Creech met allies? Was that
+likely when the man had no friends? Pondering the thing, Slone went
+slowly on, realizing that a new and disturbing feature confronted him.
+Then when these new tracks met the trail that Creech had left Slone
+found that these strangers were as interested in Creech's tracks as he
+was. Slone found their boot-marks in the sand--the hand-prints where
+some one had knelt to scrutinize Creech's trail.
+
+Slone led his horse and walked on, more and more disturbed in mind.
+When he came to a larger, bare, flat canyon bottom, where the rock had
+been washed clear of sand, he found no more cedar berries. They had
+been picked up. At the other extreme edge of this stony ground he found
+crumpled bits of cedar and cedar berries scattered in one spot, as if
+thrown there by some one who read their meaning.
+
+This discovery unnerved Slone. It meant so much. And if Slone had any
+hope or reason to doubt that these strangers had taken up the trail for
+good, the next few miles dispelled it. They were trailing Creech.
+
+Suddenly Slone gave a wild start, which made Wildfire plunge.
+
+"CORDTS!" whispered Slone and the cold sweat oozed out of every pore.
+
+These canyons were the hiding-places of the horse-thief. He and two of
+his men had chanced upon Creech's trail; and perhaps their guess at its
+meaning was like Slone's. If they had not guessed they would soon
+learn. It magnified Slone's task a thousandfold. He had a moment of
+bitter, almost hopeless realization before a more desperate spirit
+awoke in him. He had only more men to kill--that was all. These upland
+riders did not pack rifles, of that Slone was sure. And the sooner he
+came up with Cordts the better. It was then he let Wildfire choose his
+gait and the trail. Sunset, twilight, dusk, and darkness came with
+Slone keeping on and on. As long as there were no intersecting canyons
+or clefts or slopes by which Creech might have swerved from his course,
+just so long Slone would travel. And it was late in the night when he
+had to halt.
+
+Early next day the trail led up out of the red and broken gulches to
+the cedared uplands. Slone saw a black-rimmed, looming plateau in the
+distance. All these winding canyons, and the necks of the high ridges
+between, must run up to that great table-land.
+
+That day he lost two of the horse tracks. He did not mark the change
+for a long time after there had been a split in the party that had been
+trailing Creech. Then it was too late for him to go back to
+investigate, even if that had been wise. He kept on, pondering, trying
+to decide whether or not he had been discovered and was now in danger
+of ambush ahead and pursuit from behind. He thought that possibly
+Cordts had split his party, one to trail along after Creech, the others
+to work around to head him off. Undoubtedly Cordts knew this broken
+canyon country and could tell where Creech was going, and knew how to
+intercept him.
+
+The uncertainty wore heavily upon Slone. He grew desperate. He had no
+time to steal along cautiously. He must be the first to get to Creech.
+So he held to the trail and went as rapidly as the nature of the ground
+would permit, expecting to be shot at from any clump of cedars. The
+trail led down again into a narrow canyon with low walls. Slone put all
+his keenness on what lay before him.
+
+Wildfire's sudden break and upflinging of head and his snort preceded
+the crack of a rifle. Slone knew he had been shot at, although he
+neither felt nor heard the bullet. He had no chance to see where the
+shot came from, for Wildfire bolted, and needed as much holding and
+guiding as Slone could give. He ran a mile. Then Slone was able to look
+about him. Had he been shot at from above or behind? He could not tell.
+It did not matter, so long as the danger was not in front. He kept a
+sharp lookout, and presently along the right canyon rim, five hundred
+feet above him, he saw a bay horse, and a rider with a rifle. He had
+been wrong, then, about these riders and their weapons. Slone did not
+see any wisdom in halting to shoot up at this pursuer, and he spurred
+Wildfire just as a sharp crack sounded above. The bullet thudded into
+the earth a few feet behind him. And then over bad ground, with the
+stallion almost unmanageable, Slone ran a gantlet of shots. Evidently
+the man on the rim had smooth ground to ride over, for he easily kept
+abreast of Slone. But he could not get the range. Fortunately for
+Slone, broken ramparts above checked the tricks of that pursuer, and
+Slone saw no more of him.
+
+It afforded him great relief to find that Creech's trail turned into a
+canyon on the left; and here, with the sun already low, Slone began to
+watch the clumps of cedars and the jumbles of rock. But he was not
+ambushed. Darkness set in, and, being tired out, he was about to halt
+for the night when he caught the flicker of a campfire. The stallion
+saw it, too, but did not snort. Slone dismounted and, leading him, went
+cautiously forward on foot, rifle in hand.
+
+The canyon widened at a point where two breaks occurred, and the
+less-restricted space was thick with cedar and pinyon. Slone could tell
+by the presence of these trees and also by a keener atmosphere that he
+was slowly getting to a higher attitude. This camp-fire must belong to
+Cordts or the one man who had gone on ahead. And Slone advanced boldly.
+He did not have to make up his mind what to do.
+
+But he was amazed to see several dark forms moving to and fro before
+the bright camp-fire, and he checked himself abruptly. Considering a
+moment, Slone thought he had better have a look at these fellows. So he
+tied Wildfire and, taking to the darker side of the canyon, he stole
+cautiously forward.
+
+The distance was considerable, as he had calculated. Soon, however, he
+made out the shadowy outlines of horses feeding in the open. He hugged
+the canyon wall for fear they might see him. As luck would have it the
+night breeze was in his favor. Stealthily he stole on, in the deep
+shadow of the wall, and under the cedars, until he came to a point
+opposite the camp-fire, and then he turned toward it. He went slowly,
+carefully, noiselessly, and at last he crawled through the narrow
+aisles between thick sage-brush. Another clump of cedars loomed up, and
+he saw the flickering of firelight upon the pale-green foliage.
+
+He heard gruff voices before he raised himself to look, and by this he
+gauged his distance. He was close enough--almost too close. But as he
+crouched in dark shade and there were no horses near, he did not fear
+discovery.
+
+When he peered out from his covert the first thing to strike and hold
+his rapid glance was the slight figure of a girl. Slone stifled a gasp
+in his throat. He thought he recognized Lucy. Stunned, he crouched down
+again with his hands clenched round his rifle. And there he remained
+for a long moment of agony before reason asserted itself over emotion.
+Had he really seen Lucy? He had heard of a girl now and then in the
+camps of these men, especially Cordts. Maybe Creech had fallen in with
+comrades. No, he could not have had any comrades there but
+horse-thieves, and Creech was above that. If Creech was there he had
+been held up by Cordts; if Lucy only was with the gang, Creech had been
+killed.
+
+Slone had to force himself to look again. The girl had changed her
+position. But the light shone upon the men. Creech was not one of the
+three, nor Cordts, nor any man Slone had seen before. They were not
+honest men, judging from their hard, evil looks. Slone was nonplussed
+and he was losing self-control. Again he lowered himself and waited. He
+caught the word "Durango" and "hosses" and "fer enough in," the meaning
+of which was, vague. Then the girl laughed. And Slone found himself
+trembling with joy. Beyond any doubt that laugh could not have been
+Lucy's.
+
+Slone stole back as he had come, reached the shadow of the wall, and
+drew away until he felt it safe to walk quickly. When he reached the
+place where he expected to find Wildfire he did not see him. Slone
+looked and looked. Perhaps he had misjudged distance and place in the
+gloom. Still, he never made mistakes of that nature. He searched around
+till he found the cedar stump to which he had tied the lasso. In the
+gloom he could not see it, and when he reached out he did not feel it.
+Wildfire was gone! Slone sank down, overcome. He cursed what must have
+been carelessness, though he knew he never was careless with a horse.
+What had happened? He did not know. But Wildfire was gone--and that
+meant Lucy's doom and his! Slone shook with cold.
+
+Then, as he leaned against the stump, wet and shaking, familiar sound
+met his ears. It was made by the teeth of a grazing horse--a slight,
+keen, tearing cut. Wildfire was close at hand! With a sweep Slone
+circled the stump and he found the knot of the lasso. He had missed it.
+He began to gather in the long rope, and soon felt the horse. In the
+black gloom against the wall Slone could not distinguish Wildfire.
+
+"Whew!" he muttered, wiping the sweat off his face. "Good Lord! ... All
+for nothin'."
+
+It did not take Slone long to decide to lead the horse and work up the
+canyon past the campers. He must get ahead of them, and once there he
+had no fear of them, either by night or day. He really had no hopes of
+getting by undiscovered, and all he wished for was to get far enough so
+that he could not be intercepted. The grazing horses would scent
+Wildfire or he would scent them.
+
+For a wonder Wildfire allowed himself to be led as well as if he had
+been old, faithful Nagger. Slone could not keep close in to the wall
+for very long, on account of the cedars, but he managed to stay in the
+outer edge of shadow cast by the wall. Wildfire winded the horses,
+halted, threw up his head. But for some reason beyond Slone the horse
+did not snort or whistle. As he knew Wildfire he could have believed
+him intelligent enough and hateful enough to betray his master.
+
+It was one of the other horses that whistled an alarm. This came at a
+point almost even with the camp-fire. Slone, holding Wildfire down, had
+no time to get into a stirrup, but leaped to the saddle and let the
+horse go. There were hoarse yells and then streaks of fire and shots.
+Slone heard the whizz of heavy bullets, and he feared for Wildfire. But
+the horse drew swiftly away into the darkness. Slone could not see
+whether the ground was smooth or broken, and he left that to Wildfire.
+Luck favored them, and presently Slone pulled him in to a safe gait,
+and regretted only that he had not had a chance to take a shot at that
+camp.
+
+Slone walked the horse for an hour, and then decided that he could well
+risk a halt for the night.
+
+Before dawn he was up, warming his chilled body by violent movements,
+and forcing himself to eat.
+
+The rim of the west wall changed from gray to pink. A mocking-bird
+burst into song. A coyote sneaked away from the light of day. Out in
+the open Slone found the trail made by Creech's mustangs and by the
+horse of Cordts's man. The latter could not be very far ahead. In less
+than an hour Slone came to a clump of cedars where this man had camped.
+An hour behind him!
+
+This canyon was open, with a level and narrow floor divided by a deep
+wash. Slone put Wildfire to a gallop. The narrow wash was no obstacle
+to Wildfire; he did not have to be urged or checked. It was not long
+before Slone saw a horseman a quarter of a mile ahead, and he was
+discovered almost at the same time. This fellow showed both surprise
+and fear. He ran his horse. But in comparison with Wildfire that horse
+seemed sluggish. Slone would have caught up with him very soon but for
+a change in the lay of the land. The canyon split up and all of its
+gorges and ravines and washes headed upon the pine-fringed plateau, now
+only a few miles distant. The gait of the horses had to be reduced to a
+trot, and then a walk. The man Slone was after left Creech's trail and
+took to a side cleft. Slone, convinced he would soon overhaul him, and
+then return to take up Creech's trail, kept on in pursuit. Then Slone
+was compelled to climb. Wildfire was so superior to the other's horse,
+and Slone was so keen at choosing ground and short cuts, that he would
+have been right upon him but for a split in the rock which suddenly
+yawned across his path. It was impassable. After a quick glance Slone
+abandoned the direct pursuit, and, turning along this gulch, he gained
+a point where the horse-thief would pass under the base of the
+rim-wall, and here Slone would have him within easy rifle shot.
+
+And the man, intent on getting out of the canyon, rode into the trap,
+approaching to within a hundred yards of Slone, who suddenly showed
+himself on foot, rifle in hand. The deep gulch was a barrier to Slone's
+further progress, but his rifle dominated the situation.
+
+"Hold on!" he called, warningly.
+
+"Hold on yerself!" yelled the other, aghast, as he halted his horse. He
+gazed down and evidently was quick to take in the facts.
+
+Slone had meant to kill this man without even a word, yet now when the
+moment had come a feeling almost of sickness clouded his resolve. But
+he leveled the rifle.
+
+"I got it on you," he called.
+
+"Reckon you hev. But see hyar--"
+
+"I can hit you anywhere."
+
+"Wal, I'll take yer word fer thet."
+
+"All right. Now talk fast.... Are you one of Cordts's gang?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Why are you alone?"
+
+"We split down hyar."
+
+"Did you know I was on this trail?"
+
+"Nope. I didn't sure, or you'd never ketched me, red hoss or no."
+
+"Who were you trailin'?"
+
+"Ole Creech an' the girl he kidnapped."
+
+Slone felt the leap of his blood and the jerk it gave the rifle as his
+tense finger trembled on the trigger.
+
+"Girl.... What girl?" he called, hoarsely.
+
+"Bostil's girl."
+
+"Why did Cordts split on the trail?"
+
+"He an' Hutch went round fer some more of the gang, an' to head off
+Joel Creech when he comes in with Bostil's hosses."
+
+Slone was amazed to find how the horse thieves had calculated; yet, on
+second thought, the situation, once the Creeches had been recognized,
+appeared simple enough.
+
+"What was your game?" he demanded.
+
+"I was follerin' Creech jest to find out where he'd hole up with the
+girl."
+
+"What's Cordts's game--AFTER he heads Joel Creech?"
+
+"Then he's goin' fer the girl."
+
+Slone scarcely needed to be told all this, but the deliberate words
+from the lips of one of Cordts's gang bore a raw, brutal proof of
+Lucy's peril. And yet Slone could not bring himself to kill this man in
+cold blood. He tried, but in vain.
+
+"Have you got a gun?" called Slone, hoarsely.
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Ride back the other way! ... If you don't lose me I'll kill you!"
+
+The man stared. Slone saw the color return to his pale face. Then he
+turned his horse and rode back out of sight. Slone heard him rolling
+the stones down the long, rough slope; and when he felt sure the
+horse-thief had gotten a fair start he went back to mount Wildfire in
+pursuit.
+
+This trailer of Lucy never got back to Lucy's trail--never got away.
+
+But Slone, when that day's hard, deadly pursuit ended, found himself
+lost in the canyons. How bitterly he cursed both his weakness in not
+shooting the man at sight, and his strength in following him with
+implacable purpose! For to be fair, to give the horse-thief a chance
+for his life, Slone had lost Lucy's trail. The fact nearly distracted
+him. He spent a sleepless night of torture.
+
+All next day, like a wild man, he rode and climbed and descended,
+spurred by one purpose, pursued by suspense and dread. That night he
+tied Wildfire near water and grass and fell into the sleep of
+exhaustion.
+
+Morning came. But with it no hope. He had been desperate. And now he
+was in a frightful state. It seemed that days and days had passed, and
+nights that were hideous with futile nightmares.
+
+He rode down into a canyon with sloping walls, and broken, like all of
+these canyons under the great plateau. Every canyon resembled another.
+The upland was one vast network. The world seemed a labyrinth of
+canyons among which he was hopelessly lost. What would--what had become
+of Lucy? Every thought in his whirling brain led back to that--and it
+was terrible.
+
+Then--he was gazing transfixed down upon the familiar tracks left by
+Creech's mustangs. Days old, but still unfollowed!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+That track led up the narrowing canyon to its head at the base of the
+plateau.
+
+Slone, mindful of his horse, climbed on foot, halting at the zigzag
+turns to rest. A long, gradually ascending trail mounted the last
+slope, which when close at hand was not so precipitous as it appeared
+from below. Up there the wind, sucked out of the canyons, swooped and
+twisted hard.
+
+At last Slone led Wildfire over the rim and halted for another
+breathing-spell. Before him was a beautiful, gently sloping stretch of
+waving grass leading up to the dark pine forest from which came a roar
+of wind. Beneath Slone the wild and whorled canyon breaks extended,
+wonderful in thousands of denuded surfaces, gold and red and yellow,
+with the smoky depths between.
+
+Wildfire sniffed the wind and snorted. Slone turned, instantly alert.
+The wild horse had given an alarm. Like a flash Slone leaped into the
+saddle. A faint cry, away from the wind, startled Slone. It was like a
+cry he had heard in dreams. How overstrained his perceptions! He was
+not really sure of anything, yet on the instant he was tense.
+
+Straggling cedars on his left almost wholly obstructed Slone's view.
+Wildfire's ears and nose were pointed that way. Slone trotted him down
+toward the edge of this cedar clump so that he could see beyond. Before
+he reached it, however, he saw something blue, moving, waving, lifting.
+
+"Smoke!" muttered Slone. And he thought more of the danger of fire on
+that windy height than he did of another peril to himself.
+
+Wildfire was hard to hold as he rounded the edge of the cedars.
+
+Slone saw a line of leaping flame, a line of sweeping smoke, the grass
+on fire ... horses!--a man!
+
+Wildfire whistled his ringing blast of hate and menace, his desert
+challenge to another stallion.
+
+The man whirled to look.
+
+Slone saw Joel Creech--and Sage King--and Lucy, half naked, bound on
+his back!
+
+Joy, agony, terror in lightning-swift turns, paralyzed Slone. But
+Wildfire lunged out on the run.
+
+Sage King reared in fright, came down to plunge away, and with a
+magnificent leap cleared the line of fire.
+
+Slone, more from habit than thought, sat close in the saddle. A few of
+Wildfire's lengthening strides, quickened Slone's blood. Then Creech
+moved, also awaking from a stupefying surprise, and he snatched up a
+gun and fired. Slone saw the spurts of red, the puffs of white. But he
+heard nothing. The torrent of his changed blood, burning and terrible,
+filled his ears with hate and death.
+
+He guided the running stallion. In a few tremendous strides Wildfire
+struck Creech, and Slone had one glimpse of an awful face. The impact
+was terrific. Creech went hurtling through the air, limp and broken, to
+go down upon a rock, his skull cracking like a melon.
+
+The horse leaped over the body and the stone, and beyond he leaped the
+line of burning grass.
+
+Slone saw the King running into the forest. He saw poor Lucy's white
+body swinging with the horse's motion. One glance showed the great gray
+to be running wild. Then the hate and passion cleared away, leaving
+suspense and terror.
+
+Wildfire reached the pines. There down the open aisles between the
+black trees ran the fleet gray racer. Wildfire saw him and snorted. The
+King was a hundred yards to the fore.
+
+"Wildfire--it's come--the race--the race!" called Slone. But he could
+not hear his own call. There was a roar overhead, heavy, almost
+deafening. The wind! the wind! Yet that roar did not deaden a strange,
+shrieking crack somewhere behind. Wildfire leaped in fright. Slone
+turned. Fire had run up a pine-tree, which exploded as if the trunk
+were powder!
+
+"MY GOD! A RACE WITH FIRE! ... LUCY! LUCY!"
+
+In that poignant cry Slone uttered his realization of the strange fate
+that had waited for the inevitable race between Wildfire and the King;
+he uttered his despairing love for Lucy, and his acceptance of death
+for her and himself. No horse could outrun wind-driven fire in a dry
+pine forest. Slone had no hope of that. How perfectly fate and time and
+place and horses, himself and his sweetheart, had met! Slone damned
+Joel Creech's insane soul to everlasting torment. To think--to think
+his idiotic and wild threat had come true--and come true with a gale in
+the pine-tops! Slone grew old at the thought, and the fact seemed to be
+a dream. But the dry, pine-scented air made breathing hard; the gray
+racer, carrying that slender, half-naked form, white in the forest
+shade, lengthened into his fleet and beautiful stride; the motion of
+Wildfire, so easy, so smooth, so swift, and the fierce reach of his
+head shooting forward--all these proved that it was no dream.
+
+Tense questions pierced the dark chaos of Slone's mind--what could he
+do? Run the King down! Make 'him kill Lucy! Save her from horrible
+death by fire!
+
+The red horse had not gained a yard on the gray. Slone, keen to judge
+distance, saw this, and for the first time he doubted Wildfire's power
+to ran down the King. Not with such a lead! It was hopeless--so
+hopeless--
+
+He turned to look back. He saw no fire, no smoke--only the dark trunks,
+and the massed green foliage in violent agitation against the blue sky.
+That revived a faint hope. If he could get a few miles ahead, before
+the fire began to leap across the pine-crests, then it might be
+possible to run out of the forest if it were not wide.
+
+Then a stronger hope grew. It seemed that foot by foot Wildfire was
+gaining on the King. Slone studied the level forest floor sliding
+toward him. He lost his hope--then regained it again, and then he
+spurred the horse. Wildfire hated that as he hated Slone. But
+apparently he did not quicken his strides. And Slone could not tell if
+he lengthened them. He was not running near his limit but, after the
+nature of such a horse, left to choose his gait, running slowly, but
+rising toward his swiftest and fiercest.
+
+Slone's rider's blood never thrilled to that race, for his blood had
+curdled. The sickness within rose to his mind. And that flashed up
+whenever he dared to look forward at Lucy's white form. Slone could not
+bear this sight; it almost made him reel, yet he was driven to look. He
+saw that the King carried no saddle, so with Lucy on him he was light.
+He ought to run all day with only that weight. Wildfire carried a heavy
+saddle, a pack, a water bag, and a rifle. Slone untied the pack and let
+it drop. He almost threw aside the water-bag, but something withheld
+his hand, and also he kept his rifle. What were a few more pounds to
+this desert stallion in his last run? Slone knew it was Wildfire's
+greatest and last race.
+
+Suddenly Slone's ears rang with a terrible on-coming roar. For an
+instant the unknown sound stiffened him, robbed him of strength. Only
+the horn of the saddle, hooking into him, held him on. Then the years
+of his desert life answered to a call more than human.
+
+He had to race against fire. He must beat the flame to the girl he
+loved. There were miles of dry forest, like powder. Fire backed by a
+heavy gale could rage through dry pine faster than any horse could run.
+He might fail to save Lucy. Fate had given him a bitter ride. But he
+swore a grim oath that he would beat the flame. The intense and
+abnormal rider's passion in him, like Bostil's, dammed up, but never
+fully controlled, burst within him, and suddenly he awoke to a wild and
+terrible violence of heart and soul. He had accepted death; he had no
+fear. All that he wanted to do, the last thing he wanted to do, was to
+ride down the King and kill Lucy mercifully. How he would have gloried
+to burn there in the forest, and for a million years in the dark
+beyond, to save the girl!
+
+He goaded the horse. Then he looked back.
+
+Through the aisles of the forest he saw a strange, streaky, murky
+something moving, alive, shifting up and down, never an instant the
+same. It must have been the wind--the heat before the fire. He seemed
+to see through it, but there was nothing beyond, only opaque, dim,
+mustering clouds. Hot puffs shot forward into his face. His eyes
+smarted and stung. His ears hurt and were growing deaf. The tumult was
+the rear of avalanches, of maelstroms, of rushing seas, of the wreck of
+the uplands and the ruin of the earth. It grew to be so great a roar
+that he no longer heard. There was only silence.
+
+And he turned to face ahead. The stallion stretched low on a dead run;
+the tips of the pines were bending before the wind; and Wildfire, the
+terrible thing for which his horse was named, was leaping through the
+forest. But there was no sound.
+
+Ahead of Slone, down the aisles, low under the trees spreading over the
+running King, floated swiftly some medium, like a transparent veil. It
+was neither smoke nor air. It carried faint pin points of light,
+sparks, that resembled atoms of dust floating in sunlight. It was a
+wave of heat driven before the storm of fire. Slone did not feel pain,
+but he seemed to be drying up, parching. And Lucy must be suffering
+now. He goaded the stallion, raking his flanks. Wildfire answered with
+a scream and a greater speed. All except Lucy and Sage King and
+Wildfire seemed so strange and unreal--the swift rush between the
+pines, now growing ghostly in the dimming light, the sense of a
+pursuing, overpowering force, and yet absolute silence.
+
+Slone fought the desire to look back. But he could not resist it. Some
+horrible fascination compelled him. All behind had changed. A hot wind,
+like a blast from a furnace, blew light, stinging particles into his
+face. The fire was racing in the tree-tops, while below all was yet
+clear. A lashing, leaping flame engulfed the canopy of pines. It was
+white, seething, inconceivably swift, with a thousand flashing tongues.
+It traveled ahead of smoke. It was so thin he could see the branches
+through it, and the fiery clouds behind. It swept onward, a sublime and
+an appalling spectacle. Slone could not think of what it looked like.
+It was fire, liberated, freed from the bowels of the earth, tremendous,
+devouring. This, then, was the meaning of fire. This, then, was the
+horrible fate to befall Lucy.
+
+But no! He thought he must be insane not to be overcome in spirit. Yet
+he was not. He would beat the flame to Lucy. He felt the loss of
+something, some kind of a sensation which he ought to have had. Still
+he rode that race to kill his sweetheart better than any race he had
+ever before ridden. He kept his seat; he dodged the snags; he pulled
+the maddened horse the shortest way, he kept the King running straight.
+
+No horse had ever run so magnificent a race! Wildfire was outracing
+wind and fire, and he was overhauling the most noted racer of the
+uplands against a tremendous handicap. But now he was no longer racing
+to kill the King; he was running in terror. For miles he held that
+long, swift, wonderful stride without a break. He was running to his
+death, whether or not he distanced the fire. Nothing could stop him now
+but a bursting heart.
+
+Slone untied his lasso and coiled the noose. Almost within reach of the
+King! One throw--one sudden swerve--and the King would go down. Lucy
+would know only a stunning shock. Slone's heart broke. Could he kill
+her--crush that dear golden head? He could not, yet he must! He saw a
+long, curved, red welt on Lucy's white shoulders. What was that? Had a
+branch lashed her? Slone could not see her face. She could not have
+been dead or in a faint, for she was riding the King, bound as she was!
+
+Closer and closer drew Wildfire. He seemed to go faster and faster as
+that wind of flame gained upon them. The air was too thick to breathe.
+It had an irresistible weight. It pushed horses and riders onward in
+their flight--straws on the crest of a cyclone.
+
+Again Slone looked back and again the spectacle was different. There
+was a white and golden fury of flame above, beautiful and blinding; and
+below, farther back, an inferno of glowing fire, black-streaked, with
+trembling, exploding puffs and streams of yellow smoke. The aisles
+between the burning pines were smoky, murky caverns, moving and weird.
+Slone saw fire shoot from the tree-tops down the trunks, and he saw
+fire shoot up the trunks, like trains of powder. They exploded like
+huge rockets. And along the forest floor leaped the little flames. His
+eyes burned and blurred till all merged into a wide, pursuing storm too
+awful for the gaze of man.
+
+Wildfire was running down the King. The great gray had not lessened his
+speed, but he was breaking. Slone felt a ghastly triumph when he began
+to whirl the noose of the lasso round his head. Already he was within
+range. But he held back his throw which meant the end of all. And as he
+hesitated Wildfire suddenly whistled one shrieking blast.
+
+Slone looked. Ahead there was light through the forest! Slone saw a
+white, open space of grass. A park? No--the end of the forest!
+Wildfire, like a demon, hurtled onward, with his smoothness of action
+gone, beginning to break, within a length of the King.
+
+A cry escaped Slone--a cry as silent as if there had been no deafening
+roar--as wild as the race, and as terrible as the ruthless fire. It was
+the cry of life--instead of death. Both Sage King and Wildfire would
+beat the flame.
+
+Then, with the open just ahead, Slone felt a wave of hot wind rolling
+over him. He saw the lashing tongues of flame above him in the pines.
+The storm had caught him. It forged ahead. He was riding under a canopy
+of fire. Burning pine cones, like torches, dropped all around him. He
+had a terrible blank sense of weight, of suffocation, of the air
+turning to fire.
+
+Then Wildfire, with his nose at Sage King's flank, flashed out of the
+pines into the open. Slone saw a grassy wide reach inclining gently
+toward a dark break in the ground with crags rising sheer above it, and
+to the right a great open space.
+
+Slone felt that clear air as the breath of deliverance. His reeling
+sense righted. There--the King ran, blindly going to his death.
+Wildfire was breaking fast. His momentum carried him. He was almost
+done.
+
+Slone roped the King, and holding hard, waited for the end. They ran
+on, breaking, breaking. Slone thought he would have to throw the King,
+for they were perilously near the deep cleft in the rim. But Sage King
+went to his knees.
+
+Slone leaped off just as Wildfire fell. How the blade flashed that
+released Lucy! She was wet from the horse's sweat and foam. She slid
+off into Slone's arms, and he called her name. Could she hear above
+that roar back there in the forest? The pieces of rope hung to her
+wrists and Slone saw dark bruises, raw and bloody. She fell against
+him. Was she dead? His heart contracted. How white the face! No; he saw
+her breast heave against his! And he cried aloud, incoherently in his
+joy. She was alive. She was not badly hurt. She stirred. She plucked at
+him with nerveless hands. She pressed close to him. He heard a
+smothered voice, yet so full, so wonderful!
+
+"Put--your--coat--on me!" came somehow to his ears.
+
+Slone started violently. Abashed, shamed to realize he had forgotten
+she was half nude, he blindly tore off his coat, blindly folded it
+around her.
+
+"Lin! Lin!" she cried.
+
+"Lucy--Oh! are y-you--" he replied, huskily.
+
+"I'm not hurt. I'm all right."
+
+"But that wretch, Joel. He--"
+
+"He'd killed his father--just a--minute--before you came. I fought him!
+Oh! ... But I'm all right.... Did you--"
+
+"Wildfire ran him down--smashed him.... Lucy! this can't be true....
+Yet I feel you! Thank God!"
+
+With her free hand Lucy returned his clasp. She seemed to be strong. It
+was a precious moment for Slone, in which he was uplifted beyond all
+dreams.
+
+"Let me loose--a second," she said. "I want to--get in your coat."
+
+She laughed as he released her. She laughed! And Slone thrilled with
+unutterable sweetness at that laugh.
+
+As he turned away he felt a swift wind, then a strange impact from an
+invisible force that staggered him, then the rend of flesh. After that
+came the heavy report of a gun.
+
+Slone fell. He knew he had been shot. Following the rending of his
+flesh came a hot agony. It was in his shoulder, high up, and the dark,
+swift fear for his life was checked.
+
+Lucy stood staring down at him, unable to comprehend, slowly paling.
+Her hands clasped the coat round her. Slone saw her, saw the edge of
+streaming clouds of smoke above her, saw on the cliff beyond the gorge
+two men, one with a smoking gun half leveled.
+
+If Slone had been inattentive to his surroundings before, the sight of
+Cordts electrified him.
+
+"Lucy! drop down! quick!"
+
+"Oh, what's happened? You--you--"
+
+"I've been shot. Drop down, I tell you. Get behind the horse an' pull
+my rifle."
+
+"Shot!" exclaimed Lucy, blankly.
+
+"Yes--Yes.... My God! Lucy, he's goin' to shoot again!"
+
+It was then Lucy Bostil saw Cordts across the gulch. He was not fifty
+yards distant, plainly recognizable, tall, gaunt, sardonic. He held the
+half-leveled gun ready as if waiting. He had waited there in ambush.
+The clouds of smoke rolled up above him, hiding the crags.
+
+"CORDTS!" Bostil's blood spoke in the girl's thrilling cry.
+
+"Hunch down, Lucy!" cried Slone. "Pull my rifle.... I'm only
+winged--not hurt. Hurry! He's goin'--"
+
+Another heavy report interrupted Slone. The bullet missed, but Slone
+made a pretense, a convulsive flop, as if struck.
+
+"Get the rifle! Quick!" he called.
+
+But Lucy misunderstood his ruse to deceive Cordts. She thought he had
+been hit again. She ran to the fallen Wildfire and jerked the rifle
+from its sheath.
+
+Cordts had begun to climb round a ledge, evidently a short cut to get
+down and across. Hutchinson saw the rifle and yelled to Cordts. The
+horse-thief halted, his dark face gleaming toward Lucy.
+
+When Lucy rose the coat fell from her nude shoulders. And Slone,
+watching, suddenly lost his agony of terror for her and uttered a
+pealing cry of defiance and of rapture.
+
+She swept up the rifle. It wavered. Hutchinson was above, and Cordts,
+reaching up, yelled for help. Hutchinson was reluctant. But the
+stronger force dominated. He leaned down--clasped Cordts's outstretched
+hands, and pulled. Hutchinson bawled out hoarsely. Cordts turned what
+seemed a paler face. He had difficulty on the slight footing. He was
+slow.
+
+Slone tried to call to Lucy to shoot low, but his lips had drawn tight
+after his one yell. Slone saw her white, rounded shoulders bent, with
+cold, white face pressed against the rifle, with slim arms quivering
+and growing tense, with the tangled golden hair blowing out.
+
+Then she shot.
+
+Slone's glance shifted. He did not see the bullet strike up dust. The
+figures of the men remained the same--Hutchinson straining, Cordts....
+No, Cordts was not the same! A strange change seemed manifest in his
+long form. It did not seem instinct with effort. Yet it moved.
+
+Hutchinson also was acting strangely, yelling, heaving, wrestling. But
+he could not help Cordts. He lifted violently, raised Cordts a little,
+and then appeared to be in peril of losing his balance.
+
+Cordts leaned against the cliff. Then it dawned upon Slone that Lucy
+had hit the horse-thief. Hard hit! He would not--he could not let go of
+Hutchinson. His was a death clutch. The burly Hutchinson slipped from
+his knee-hold, and as he moved Cordts swayed, his feet left the ledge,
+he hung, upheld only by the tottering comrade.
+
+What a harsh and terrible cry from Hutchinson! He made one last
+convulsive effort and it doomed him. Slowly he lost his balance.
+Cordts's dark, evil, haunting face swung round. Both men became lax and
+plunged, and separated. The dust rose from the rough steps. Then the
+dark forms shot down--Cordts falling sheer and straight, Hutchinson
+headlong, with waving arms--down and down, vanishing in the depths. No
+sound came up. A little column of yellow dust curled from the fatal
+ledge and, catching the wind above, streamed away into the drifting
+clouds of smoke.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+A darkness, like the streaming clouds overhead, seemed to blot out
+Slone's sight, and then passed away, leaving it clearer.
+
+Lucy was bending over him, binding a scarf round his shoulder and under
+his arm. "Lin! It's nothing!" she was saying, earnestly. "Never touched
+a bone!"
+
+Slone sat up. The smoke was clearing away. Little curves of burning
+grass were working down along the rim. He put out a hand to grasp Lucy,
+remembering in a flash. He pointed to the ledge across the chasm.
+
+"They're--gone!" cried Lucy, with a strange and deep note in her voice.
+She shook violently. But she did not look away from Slone.
+
+"Wildfire! The King!" he added, hoarsely.
+
+"Both where they dropped. Oh, I'm afraid to--to look.... And, Lin, I
+saw Sarch, Two Face, and Ben and Plume go down there."
+
+She had her back to the chasm where the trail led down, and she pointed
+without looking.
+
+Slone got up, a little unsteady on his feet and conscious of a dull
+pain.
+
+"Sarch will go straight home, and the others will follow him," said
+Lucy. "They got away here where Joel came up the trail. The fire chased
+them out of the woods. Sarch will go home. And that'll fetch the
+riders."
+
+"We won't need them if only Wildfire and the King--" Slone broke off
+and grimly, with a catch in his breath, turned to the horses.
+
+How strange that Slone should run toward the King while Lucy ran to
+Wildfire!
+
+Sage King was a beaten, broken horse, but he would live to run another
+race.
+
+Lucy was kneeling beside Wildfire, sobbing and crying: "Wildfire!
+Wildfire!"
+
+All of Wildfire was white except where he was red, and that red was not
+now his glossy, flaming skin. A terrible muscular convulsion as of
+internal collapse grew slower and slower. Yet choked, blinded, dying,
+killed on his feet, Wildfire heard Lucy's voice.
+
+"Oh, Lin! Oh, Lin!" moaned Lucy.
+
+While they knelt there the violent convulsions changed to slow heaves.
+
+"He run the King down--carryin' weight--with a long lead to overcome!"
+Slone muttered, and he put a shaking hand on the horse's wet neck.
+
+"Oh, he beat the King!" cried Lucy. "But you mustn't--you CAN'T tell
+Dad!"
+
+"What CAN we tell him?"
+
+"Oh, I know. Old Creech told me what to say!"
+
+A change, both of body and spirit, seemed to pass over the great
+stallion.
+
+"WILDFIRE! WILDFIRE!"
+
+Again the rider called to his horse, with a low and piercing cry. But
+Wildfire did not hear.
+
+
+The morning sun glanced brightly over the rippling sage which rolled
+away from the Ford like a gray sea.
+
+Bostil sat on his porch, a stricken man. He faced the blue haze of the
+north, where days before all that he had loved had vanished. Every day,
+from sunrise till sunset, he had been there, waiting and watching. His
+riders were grouped near him, silent, awed by his agony, awaiting
+orders that never came.
+
+From behind a ridge puffed up a thin cloud of dust. Bostil saw it and
+gave a start. Above the sage appeared a bobbing, black object--the head
+of a horse. Then the big black body followed.
+
+"Sarch!" exclaimed Bostil.
+
+With spurs clinking the riders ran and trooped behind him.
+
+"More hosses back," said Holley, quietly.
+
+"Thar's Plume!" exclaimed Farlane.
+
+"An' Two Face!" added Van.
+
+"Dusty Ben!" said another.
+
+"RIDERLESS!" finished Bostil.
+
+Then all were intensely quiet, watching the racers come trotting in
+single file down the ridge. Sarchedon's shrill neigh, like a
+whistle-blast, pealed in from the sage. From, fields and corrals
+clamored the answer attended by the clattering of hundreds of hoofs.
+
+Sarchedon and his followers broke from trot to canter--canter to
+gallop--and soon were cracking their hard hoofs on the stony court.
+Like a swarm of bees the riders swooped down upon the racers, caught
+them, and led them up to Bostil.
+
+On Sarchedon's neck showed a dry, dust-caked stain of reddish tinge.
+Holley, the old hawk-eyed rider, had precedence in the examination.
+
+"Wal, thet's a bullet-mark, plain as day," said Holley.
+
+"Who shot him?" demanded Bostil.
+
+Holley shook his gray head.
+
+"He smells of smoke," put in Farlane, who had knelt at the black's
+legs. "He's been runnin' fire. See thet! Fetlocks all singed!"
+
+All the riders looked, and then with grave, questioning eyes at one
+another.
+
+"Reckon thar's been hell!" muttered Holley, darkly.
+
+Some of the riders led the horses away toward the corrals. Bostil
+wheeled to face the north again. His brow was lowering; his cheek was
+pale and sunken; his jaw was set.
+
+The riders came and went, but Bostil kept his vigil. The hours passed.
+Afternoon came and wore on. The sun lost its brightness and burned red.
+
+Again dust-clouds, now like reddened smoke, puffed over the ridge. A
+horse carrying a dark, thick figure appeared above the sage.
+
+Bostil leaped up. "Is thet a gray hoss--or am--I blind?" he called,
+unsteadily.
+
+The riders dared not answer. They must be sure. They gazed through
+narrow slits of eyelids; and the silence grew intense.
+
+Holley shaded the hawk eyes with his hand. "Gray he is--Bostil--gray as
+the sage.... AN' SO HELP ME GOD IF HE AIN'T THE KING!"
+
+"Yes, it's the King!" cried the riders, excitedly. "Sure! I reckon! No
+mistake about thet! It's the King!"
+
+Bostil shook his huge frame, and he rubbed his eyes as if they had
+become dim, and he stared again.
+
+"Who's thet up on him?"
+
+"Slone. I never seen his like on a hoss," replied Holley.
+
+"An' what's--he packin'?" queried Bostil, huskily.
+
+Plain to all keen eyes was the glint of Lucy Bostil's golden hair. But
+only Holley had courage to speak.
+
+"It's Lucy! I seen thet long ago."
+
+A strange, fleeting light of joy died out of Bostil's face. The change
+once more silenced his riders. They watched the King trotting in from
+the sage. His head drooped. He seemed grayer than ever and he limped.
+But he was Sage King, splendid as of old, all the more gladdening to
+the riders' eyes because he had been lost. He came on, quickening a
+little to the clamoring welcome from the corrals.
+
+Holley put out a swift hand. "Bostil--the girl's alive--she's smilin'!"
+he called, and the cool voice was strangely different.
+
+The riders waited for Bostil. Slone rode into the courtyard. He was
+white and weary, reeling in the saddle. A bloody scarf was bound round
+his shoulder. He held Lucy in his arms. She had on his coat. A wan
+smile lighted her haggard face.
+
+Bostil, cursing deep, like muttering thunder, strode out. "Lucy! You
+ain't bad hurt?" he implored, in a voice no one had ever heard before.
+
+"I'm--all right--Dad," she said, and slipped down into his arms.
+
+He kissed the pale face and held her up like a child, and then,
+carrying her to the door of the house, he roared for Aunt Jane.
+
+When he reappeared the crowd of riders scattered from around Slone. But
+it seemed that Bostil saw only the King. The horse was caked with dusty
+lather, scratched and disheveled, weary and broken, yet he was still
+beautiful. He raised his drooping head and reached for his master with
+a look as soft and dark and eloquent as a woman's.
+
+No rider there but felt Bostil's passion of doubt and hope. Had the
+King been beaten? Bostil's glory and pride were battling with love.
+Mighty as that was, it did not at once overcome his fear of defeat.
+
+Slowly the gaze of Bostil moved away from Sage King and roved out to
+the sage and back, as if he expected to see another horse. But no other
+horse was in sight. At last his hard eyes rested upon the white-faced
+Slone.
+
+"Been some--hard ridin'?" he queried, haltingly. All there knew that
+had not been the question upon his lips.
+
+"Pretty hard--yes," replied Slone. He was weary, yet tight-lipped,
+intense.
+
+"Now--them Creeches?" slowly continued Bostil.
+
+"Dead."
+
+A murmur ran through the listening riders, and they drew closer.
+
+"Both of them?"
+
+"Yes. Joel killed his father, fightin' to get Lucy.... An' I
+ran--Wildfire over Joel--smashed him!"
+
+"Wal, I'm sorry for the old man," replied Bostil, gruffly. "I meant to
+make up to him.... But thet fool boy! ... An' Slone--you're all bloody."
+
+He stepped forward and pulled the scarf aside. He was curious and
+kindly, as if it was beyond him to be otherwise. Yet that dark cold
+something, almost sullen clung round him.
+
+"Been bored, eh? Wal, it ain't low, an' thet's good. Who shot you?"
+
+"Cordts."
+
+"CORDTS!" Bostil leaned forward in sudden, fierce eagerness.
+
+"Yes, Cordts.... His outfit run across Creech's trail an' we bunched. I
+can't tell now.... But we had--hell! An' Cordts is dead--so's
+Hutch--an' that other pard of his.... Bostil, they'll never haunt your
+sleep again!"
+
+Slone finished with a strange sternness that seemed almost bitter.
+
+Bostil raised both his huge fists. The blood was bulging his thick
+neck. It was another kind of passion that obsessed him. Only some
+violent check to his emotion prevented him from embracing Slone. The
+huge fists unclenched and the big fingers worked.
+
+"You mean to tell me you did fer Cordts an' Hutch what you did fer
+Sears?" he boomed out.
+
+"They're dead--gone, Bostil--honest to God!" replied Slone.
+
+Holley thrust a quivering, brown hand into Bostil's face. "What did I
+tell you?" he shouted. "Didn't I say wait?"
+
+Bostil threw away all that deep fury of passion, and there seemed only
+a resistless and speechless admiration left. Then ensued a moment of
+silence. The riders watched Slone's weary face as it drooped, and
+Bostil, as he loomed over him.
+
+"Where's the red stallion?" queried Bostil. That was the question hard
+to get out.
+
+Slone raised eyes dark with pain, yet they flashed as he looked
+straight up into Bostil's face. "Wildfire's dead!"
+
+"DEAD!" ejaculated Bostil.
+
+Another moment of strained exciting suspense.
+
+"Shot?" he went on.
+
+"No."
+
+"What killed him?"
+
+"The King, sir! ... Killed him on his feet!"
+
+Bostil's heavy jaw bulged and quivered. His hand shook as he laid it on
+Sage King's mane--the first touch since the return of his favorite.
+
+"Slone--what--is it?" he said, brokenly, with voice strangely softened.
+His face became transfigured.
+
+"Sage King killed Wildfire on his feet.... A grand race, Bostil! ...
+But Wildfire's dead--an' here's the King! Ask me no more. I want to
+forget."
+
+Bostil put his arm around the young man's shoulder. "Slone, if I don't
+know what you feel fer the loss of thet grand hoss, no rider on earth
+knows! ... Go in the house. Boys, take him in--all of you--an' look
+after him."
+
+Bostil wanted to be alone, to welcome the King, to lead him back to the
+home corral, perhaps to hide from all eyes the change and the uplift
+that would forever keep him from wronging another man.
+
+The late rains came and like magic, in a few days, the sage grew green
+and lustrous and fresh, the gray turning to purple.
+
+Every morning the sun rose white and hot in a blue and cloudless sky.
+And then soon the horizon line showed creamy clouds that rose and
+spread and darkened. Every afternoon storms hung along the ramparts and
+rainbows curved down beautiful and ethereal. The dim blackness of the
+storm-clouds was split to the blinding zigzag of lightning, and the
+thunder rolled and boomed, like the Colorado in flood.
+
+The wind was fragrant, sage-laden, no longer dry and hot, but cool in
+the shade.
+
+Slone and Lucy never rode down so far as the stately monuments, though
+these held memories as hauntingly sweet as others were poignantly
+bitter. Lucy never rode the King again. But Slone rode him, learned to
+love him. And Lucy did not race any more. When Slone tried to stir in
+her the old spirit all the response he got was a wistful shake of head
+or a laugh that hid the truth or an excuse that the strain on her
+ankles from Joel Creech's lasso had never mended. The girl was
+unutterably happy, but it was possible that she would never race a
+horse again.
+
+She rode Sarchedon, and she liked to trot or lope along beside Slone
+while they linked hands and watched the distance. But her glance
+shunned the north, that distance which held the wild canyons and the
+broken battlements and the long, black, pine-fringed plateau.
+
+"Won't you ever ride with me, out to the old camp, where I used to wait
+for you?" asked Slone.
+
+"Some day," she said, softly.
+
+"When?"
+
+"When--when we come back from Durango," she replied, with averted eyes
+and scarlet cheek. And Slone was silent, for that planned trip to
+Durango, with its wonderful gift to be, made his heart swell.
+
+And so on this rainbow day, with storms all around them, and blue sky
+above, they rode only as far as the valley. But from there, before they
+turned to go back, the monuments appeared close, and they loomed
+grandly with the background of purple bank and creamy cloud and shafts
+of golden lightning. They seemed like sentinels--guardians of a great
+and beautiful love born under their lofty heights, in the lonely
+silence of day, in the star-thrown shadow of night. They were like that
+love. And they held Lucy and Slone, calling every day, giving a
+nameless and tranquil content, binding them true to love, true to the
+sage and the open, true to that wild upland home.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Wildfire, by Zane Grey
+
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+*****The Project Gutenberg Etext of Wildfire, by Zane Grey******
+#12 in our series by Zane Grey
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+Etext scanned by Daniel Wentzell of Leesburg, Georgia.
+
+
+
+
+
+WILDFIRE
+
+by ZANE GREY
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+For some reason the desert scene before Lucy Bostil awoke varying emotions--a
+sweet gratitude for the fullness of her life there at the Ford, yet a haunting
+remorse that she could not be wholly content--a vague loneliness of soul--a
+thrill and a fear for the strangely calling future, glorious, unknown.
+
+She longed for something to happen. It might be terrible, so long as it was
+wonderful. This day, when Lucy had stolen away on a forbidden horse, she was
+eighteen years old. The thought of her mother, who had died long ago on their
+way into this wilderness, was the one drop of sadness in her joy. Lucy loved
+everybody at Bostil's Ford and everybody loved her. She loved all the horses
+except her father's favorite racer, that perverse devil of a horse, the great
+Sage King.
+
+Lucy was glowing and rapt with love for all she beheld from her lofty perch:
+the green-and-pink blossoming hamlet beneath her, set between the beauty of
+the gray sage expanse and the ghastliness of the barren heights; the swift
+Colorado sullenly thundering below in the abyss; the Indians in their bright
+colors, riding up the river trail; the eagle poised like a feather on the air,
+and a beneath him the grazing cattle making black dots on the sage; the deep
+velvet azure of the sky; the golden lights on the bare peaks and the lilac
+veils in the far ravines; the silky rustle of a canyon swallow as he shot
+downward in the sweep of the wind; the fragrance of cedar, the flowers of the
+spear-pointed mescal; the brooding silence, the beckoning range, the purple
+distance.
+
+Whatever it was Lucy longed for, whatever was whispered by the wind and
+written in the mystery of the waste of sage and stone, she wanted it to happen
+there at Bostil's Ford. She had no desire for civilization, she flouted the
+idea of marrying the rich rancher of Durango. Bostil's sister, that stern but
+lovable woman who had brought her up and taught her, would never persuade her
+to marry against her will. Lucy imagined herself like a wild horse--free,
+proud, untamed, meant for the desert; and here she would live her life. The
+desert and her life seemed as one, yet in what did they resemble each
+other--in what of this scene could she read the nature of her future?
+
+Shudderingly she rejected the red, sullen, thundering river, with its swift,
+changeful, endless, contending strife--for that was tragic. And she rejected
+the frowning mass of red rock, upreared, riven and split and canyoned, so grim
+and aloof--for that was barren. But she accepted the vast sloping valley of
+sage, rolling gray and soft and beautiful, down to the dim mountains and
+purple ramparts of the horizon. Lucy did not know what she yearned for, she
+did not know why the desert called to her, she did not know in what it
+resembled her spirit, but she did know that these three feelings were as one,
+deep in her heart. For ten years, every day of her life, she had watched this
+desert scene, and never had there been an hour that it was not different, yet
+the same. Ten years--and she grew up watching, feeling--till from the desert's
+thousand moods she assimilated its nature, loved her bonds, and could never
+have been happy away from the open, the color, the freedom, the wildness. On
+this birthday, when those who loved her said she had become her own mistress,
+she acknowledged the claim of the desert forever. And she experienced a deep,
+rich, strange happiness.
+
+Hers always then the mutable and immutable desert, the leagues and leagues of
+slope and sage and rolling ridge, the great canyons and the giant cliffs, the
+dark river with its mystic thunder of waters, the pine-fringed plateaus, the
+endless stretch of horizon, with its lofty, isolated, noble monuments, and the
+bold ramparts with their beckoning beyond! Hers always the desert seasons: the
+shrill, icy blast, the intense cold, the steely skies, the fading snows; the
+gray old sage and the bleached grass under the pall of the spring sand-storms;
+the hot furnace breath of summer, with its magnificent cloud pageants in the
+sky, with the black tempests hanging here and there over the peaks, dark veils
+floating down and rainbows everywhere, and the lacy waterfalls upon the
+glistening cliffs and the thunder of the red floods; and the glorious golden
+autumn when it was always afternoon and time stood still! Hers always the
+rides in the open, with the sun at her back and the wind in her face! And hers
+surely, sooner or later, the nameless adventure which had its inception in the
+strange yearning of her heart and presaged its fulfilment somewhere down that
+trailless sage-slope she loved so well!
+
+Bostil's house was a crude but picturesque structure of red stone and white
+clay and bleached cottonwoods, and it stood at the outskirts of the cluster of
+green-inclosed cabins which composed the hamlet. Bostil was wont to say that
+in all the world there could hardly be a grander view than the outlook down
+that gray sea of rolling sage, down to the black-fringed plateaus and the
+wild, blue-rimmed and gold-spired horizon.
+
+One morning in early spring, as was Bostil's custom, he ordered the racers to
+be brought from the corrals and turned loose on the slope. He loved to sit
+there and watch his horses graze, but ever he saw that the riders were close
+at hand, and that the horses did not get out on the slope of sage. He sat back
+and gloried in the sight. He owned bands of mustangs; near by was a field of
+them, fine and mettlesome and racy; yet Bostil had eyes only for the blooded
+favorites. Strange it was that not one of these was a mustang or a broken wild
+horse, for many of the riders' best mounts had been captured by them or the
+Indians. And it was Bostil's supreme ambition to own a great wild stallion.
+There was Plume, a superb mare that got her name from the way her mane swept
+in the wind when she was on the ran; and there was Two Face, like a coquette,
+sleek and glossy and running and the huge, rangy bay, Dusty Ben; and the black
+stallion Sarchedon; and lastly Sage King, the color of the upland sage, a
+racer in build, a horse splendid and proud and beautiful.
+
+"Where's Lucy?" presently asked Bostil.
+
+As he divided his love, so he divided his anxiety.
+
+Some rider had seen Lucy riding off, with her golden hair flying in the wind.
+This was an old story.
+
+"She's up on Buckles?" Bostil queried, turning sharply to the speaker.
+
+"Reckon so," was the calm reply.
+
+Bostil swore. He did not have a rider who could equal him in profanity.
+
+"Farlane, you'd orders. Lucy's not to ride them hosses, least of all Buckles.
+He ain't safe even for a man."
+
+"Wal, he's safe fer Lucy."
+
+"But didn't I say no?"
+
+"Boss, it's likely you did, fer you talk a lot," replied Farlane. "Lucy pulled
+my hat down over my eyes--told me to go to thunder--an' then, zip! she an'
+Buckles were dustin' it fer the sage."
+
+"She's got to keep out of the sage," growled Bostil. "It ain't safe for her
+out there. . . . Where's my glass? I want to take a look at the slope. Where's
+my glass?"
+
+The glass could not be found.
+
+"What's makin' them dust-clouds on the sage? Antelope? . . . Holley, you used
+to have eyes better 'n me. Use them, will you?"
+
+A gray-haired, hawk-eyed rider, lean and worn, approached with clinking spurs.
+
+"Down in there," said Bostil, pointing.
+
+"Thet's a bunch of hosses," replied Holley.
+
+"Wild hosses?"
+
+"I take 'em so, seein' how they throw thet dust."
+
+"Huh! I don't like it. Lucy oughtn't be ridin' round alone."
+
+"Wal, boss, who could catch her up on Buckles? Lucy can ride. An' there's the
+King an' Sarch right under your nose--the only hosses on the sage thet could
+outrun Buckles."
+
+Farlane knew how to mollify his master and long habit had made him proficient.
+Bostil's eyes flashed. He was proud of Lucy's power over a horse. The story
+Bostil first told to any stranger happening by the Ford was how Lucy had been
+born during a wild ride--almost, as it were, on the back of a horse. That, at
+least, was her fame, and the riders swore she was a worthy daughter of such a
+mother. Then, as Farlane well knew, a quick road to Bostil's good will was to
+praise one of his favorites.
+
+"Reckon you spoke sense for once, Farlane," replied Bostil, with relief. "I
+wasn't thinkin' so much of danger for Lucy. . . . But she lets thet
+half-witted Creech go with her."
+
+"No, boss, you're wrong," put in Holley, earnestly. "I know the girl. She has
+no use fer Joel. But he jest runs after her."
+
+"An' he's harmless," added Farlane.
+
+"We ain't agreed," rejoined Bostil, quickly. "What do you say, Holley?"
+
+The old rider looked thoughtful and did not speak for long.
+
+"Wal, Yes an' no," he answered, finally. "I reckon Lucy could make a man out
+of Joel. But she doesn't care fer him, an' thet settles thet. . . . An' maybe
+Joel's leanin' toward the bad."
+
+"If she meets him again I'll rope her in the house," declared Bostil.
+
+Another clear-eyed rider drew Bostil's attention from the gray waste of
+rolling sage.
+
+"Bostil, look! Look at the King! He's watchin' fer somethin'. . . . An' so's
+Sarch."
+
+The two horses named were facing a ridge some few hundred yards distant, and
+their heads were aloft and ears straight forward. Sage King whistled shrilly
+and Sarchedon began to prance.
+
+"Boys, you'd better drive them in," said Bostil. "They'd like nothin' so well
+as gettin' out on the sage. . . . Hullo! what's thet shootin' up behind the
+ridge?"
+
+"No more 'n Buckles with Lucy makin' him run some," replied Holley, with a
+dry laugh.
+
+"If it ain't! . . . Lord! look at him come!"
+
+Bostil's anger and anxiety might never have been. The light of the upland
+rider's joy shone in his keen gaze. The slope before him was open, and almost
+level, down to the ridge that had hidden the missing girl and horse. Buckles
+was running for the love of running, as the girl low down over his neck was
+riding for the love of riding. The Sage King whistled again, and shot off with
+graceful sweep to meet them; Sarchedon plunged after him; Two Face and Plume
+jealously trooped down, too, but Dusty Ben, after a toss of his head, went on
+grazing. The gray and the black met Buckles and could not turn in time to stay
+with him. A girl's gay scream pealed up the slope, and Buckles went lower and
+faster. Sarchedon was left behind. Then the gray King began to run as if
+before he had been loping. He was beautiful in action. This was play--a
+game--a race--plainly dominated by the spirit of the girl. Lucy's hair was a
+bright stream of gold in the wind. She rode bareback. It seemed that she was
+hunched low over Buckles with her knees high on his back--scarcely astride
+him at all. Yet her motion was one with the horse. Again that wild, gay scream
+pealed out--call or laugh or challenge. Sage King, with a fleetness that made
+the eyes of Bostil and his riders glisten, took the lead, and then sheered off
+to slow down, while Buckles thundered past. Lucy was pulling him hard, and had
+him plunging to a halt, when the rider Holley ran out to grasp his bridle.
+Buckles was snorting and his ears were laid back. He pounded the ground and
+scattered the pebbles.
+
+"No use, Lucy," said Bostil. "You can't beat the King at your own game, even
+with a runnin' start."
+
+Lucy Bostil's eyes were blue, as keen as her father's, and now they flashed
+like his. She had a hand twisted in the horse's long mane, and as, lithe and
+supple, she slipped a knee across his broad back she shook a little gantleted
+fist at Bostil's gray racer.
+
+"Sage King, I hate you!" she called, as if the horse were human. "And I'll
+beat you some day!"
+
+Bostil swore by the gods his Sage King was the swiftest horse in all that wild
+upland country of wonderful horses. He swore the great gray could look back
+over his shoulder and run away from any broken horse known to the riders.
+
+Bostil himself was half horse, and the half of him that was human he divided
+between love of his fleet racers and his daughter Lucy. He had seen years of
+hard riding on that wild Utah border where, in those days, a horse meant all
+the world to a man. A lucky strike of grassy upland and good water south of
+the Rio Colorado made him rich in all that he cared to own. The Indians, yet
+unspoiled by white men, were friendly. Bostil built a boat at the Indian
+crossing of the Colorado and the place became known as Bostil's Ford. From
+time to time his personality and his reputation and his need brought
+horse-hunters, riders, sheep-herders, and men of pioneer spirit, as well as
+wandering desert travelers, to the Ford, and the lonely, isolated hamlet
+slowly grew. North of the river it was more than two hundred miles to the
+nearest little settlement, with only a few lonely ranches on the road; to the
+west were several villages, equally distant, but cut off for two months at a
+time by the raging Colorado, flooded by melting snow up in the mountains.
+Eastward from the Ford stretched a ghastly, broken, unknown desert of canyons.
+Southward rolled the beautiful uplands, with valleys of sage and grass, and
+plateaus of pine and cedar, until this rich rolling gray and green range broke
+sharply on a purple horizon line of upflung rocky ramparts and walls and
+monuments, wild, dim, and mysterious.
+
+Bostil's cattle and horses were numberless, and many as were his riders, he
+always could use more. But most riders did not abide long with Bostil, first
+because some of them were of a wandering breed, wild-horse hunters themselves;
+and secondly, Bostil had two great faults: he seldom paid a rider in money,
+and he never permitted one to own a fleet horse. He wanted to own all the fast
+horses himself. And in those days every rider, especially a wild-horse hunter,
+loved his steed as part of himself. If there was a difference between Bostil
+and any rider of the sage, it was that, as he had more horses, so he had more
+love.
+
+Whenever Bostil could not get possession of a horse he coveted, either by
+purchase or trade, he invariably acquired a grievance toward the owner. This
+happened often, for riders were loath to part with their favorites. And he had
+made more than one enemy by his persistent nagging. It could not be said,
+however, that he sought to drive hard bargains. Bostil would pay any price
+asked for a horse.
+
+Across the Colorado, in a high, red-walled canyon opening upon the river,
+lived a poor sheep-herder and horse-trader named Creech. This man owned a
+number of thoroughbreds, two of which he would not part with for all the gold
+in the uplands. These racers, Blue Roan and Peg, had been captured wild on the
+ranges by Ute Indians and broken to racing. They were still young and getting
+faster every year. Bostil wanted them because he coveted them and because he
+feared them. It would have been a terrible blow to him if any horse ever beat
+the gray. But Creech laughed at all offers and taunted Bostil with a boast
+that in another summer he would see a horse out in front of the King.
+
+To complicate matters and lead rivalry into hatred young Joel Creech, a great
+horseman, but worthless in the eyes of all save his father, had been heard to
+say that some day he would force a race between the King and Blue Roan. And
+that threat had been taken in various ways. It alienated Bostil beyond all
+hope of reconciliation. It made Lucy Bostil laugh and look sweetly mysterious.
+She had no enemies and she liked everybody. It was even gossiped by the women
+of Bostil's Ford that she had more than liking for the idle Joel. But the
+husbands of these gossips said Lucy was only tender-hearted. Among the riders,
+when they sat around their lonely camp-fires, or lounged at the corrals of the
+Ford, there was speculation in regard to this race hinted by Joel Creech.
+There never had been a race between the King and Blue Roan, and there never
+would be, unless Joel were to ride off with Lucy. In that case there would be
+the grandest race ever run on the uplands, with the odds against Blue Roan
+only if he carried double. If Joel put Lucy up on the Roan and he rode Peg
+there would be another story. Lucy Bostil was a slip of a girl, born on a
+horse, as strong and supple as an Indian, and she could ride like a burr
+sticking in a horse's mane. With Blue Roan carrying her light weight she might
+run away from any one up on the King--which for Bostil would be a double
+tragedy, equally in the loss of his daughter and the beating of his
+best-beloved racer. But with Joel on Peg, such a race would end in heartbreak
+for all concerned, for the King would outrun Peg, and that would bring riders
+within gunshot.
+
+It had always been a fascinating subject, this long-looked-for race. It grew
+more so when Joel's infatuation for Lucy became known. There were fewer riders
+who believed Lucy might elope with Joel than there were who believed Joel
+might steal his father's horses. But all the riders who loved horses and all
+the women who loved gossip were united in at least one thing, and that was
+that something like a race or a romance would soon disrupt the peaceful,
+sleepy tenor of Bostil's Ford.
+
+In addition to Bostil's growing hatred for the Creeches, he had a great fear
+of Cordts, the horse-thief. A fear ever restless, ever watchful. Cordts hid
+back in the untrodden ways. He had secret friends among the riders of the
+ranges, faithful followers back in the canyon camps, gold for the digging,
+cattle by the thousand, and fast horses. He had always gotten what he wanted
+--except one thing. That was a certain horse. And the horse was Sage King.
+
+Cordts was a bad man, a product of the early gold-fields of California and
+Idaho, an outcast from that evil wave of wanderers retreating back over the
+trails so madly traveled westward. He became a lord over the free ranges. But
+more than all else he was a rider. He knew a horse. He was as much horse as
+Bostil. Cordts rode into this wild free-range country, where he had been
+heard to say that a horse-thief was meaner than a poisoned coyote.
+Nevertheless, he became a horse-thief. The passion he had conceived for the
+Sage King was the passion of a man for an unattainable woman. Cordts swore
+that he would never rest, that he would not die, till he owned the King. So
+there was reason for Bostil's great fear.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Bostil went toward the house with his daughter, turning at the door to call a
+last word to his riders about the care of his horses.
+
+The house was a low, flat, wide structure, with a corridor running through the
+middle, from which doors led into the adobe-walled rooms. The windows were
+small openings high up, evidently intended for defense as well as light, and
+they had rude wooden shutters. The floor was clay, covered everywhere by
+Indian blankets. A pioneer's home it was, simple and crude, yet comfortable,
+and having the rare quality peculiar to desert homes it was cool in summer and
+warm in winter.
+
+As Bostil entered with his arm round Lucy a big hound rose from the hearth.
+This room was immense, running the length of the house, and it contained a
+huge stone fireplace, where a kettle smoked fragrantly, and rude home-made
+chairs with blanket coverings, and tables to match, and walls covered with
+bridles, guns, pistols, Indian weapons and ornaments, and trophies of the
+chase. In a far corner stood a work-bench, with tools upon it and horse
+trappings under it. In the opposite corner a door led into the kitchen. This
+room was Bostil's famous living-room, in which many things had happened, some
+of which had helped make desert history and were never mentioned by Bostil.
+
+Bostil's sister came in from the kitchen. She was a huge person with a severe
+yet motherly face. She had her hands on her hips, and she cast a rather
+disapproving glance at father and daughter.
+
+"So you're back again?" she queried, severely.
+
+"Sure, Auntie," replied the girl, complacently.
+
+"You ran off to get out of seeing Wetherby, didn't you?"
+
+Lucy stared sweetly at her aunt.
+
+"He was waiting for hours," went on the worthy woman. "I never saw a man in
+such a stew. . . . No wonder, playing fast and loose with him the way you do."
+
+"I told him No!" flashed Lucy.
+
+"But Wetherby's not the kind to take no. And I'm not satisfied to let you mean
+it. Lucy Bostil, you don't know your mind an hour straight running. You've
+fooled enough with these riders of your Dad's. If you're not careful you'll
+marry one of them. . . . One of these wild riders! As bad as a Ute
+Indian! . . . Wetherby is young and he idolizes you. In all common sense
+why don't you take him?"
+
+"I don't care for him," replied Lucy.
+
+"You like him as well as anybody. . . . John Bostil, what do you say? You
+approved of Wetherby. I heard you tell him Lucy was like an unbroken colt and
+that you'd--"
+
+"Sure, I like Jim," interrupted Bostil; and he avoided Lucy's swift look.
+
+"Well?" demanded his sister.
+
+Evidently Bostil found himself in a corner between two fires. He looked
+sheepish, then disgusted.
+
+"Dad!" exclaimed Lucy, reproachfully.
+
+"See here, Jane," said Bostil, with an air of finality, "the girl is of age
+to-day--an' she can do what she damn pleases!"
+
+"That's a fine thing for you to say," retorted Aunt Jane. "Like as not she'll
+be fetching that hang-dog Joel Creech up here for you to support."
+
+"Auntie!" cried Lucy, her eyes blazing.
+
+"Oh, child, you torment me--worry me so," said the disappointed woman. "It's
+all for your sake. . . . Look at you, Lucy Bostil! A girl of eighteen who
+comes of a family! And you riding around and going around as you are now--in a
+man's clothes!"
+
+"But, you dear old goose, I can't ride in a woman's skirt," expostulated Lucy.
+"Mind you, Auntie, I can RIDE!"
+
+"Lucy, if I live here forever I'd never get reconciled to a Bostil woman in
+leather pants. We Bostils were somebody once, back in Missouri."
+
+Bostil laughed. "Yes, an' if I hadn't hit the trail west we'd be starvin' yet.
+Jane, you're a sentimental old fool. Let the girl alone an' reconcile yourself
+to this wilderness."
+
+Aunt Jane's eyes were wet with tears. Lucy, seeing them, ran to her and hugged
+and kissed her.
+
+"Auntie, I will promise--from to-day--to have some dignity. I've been free as
+a boy in these rider clothes. As I am now the men never seem to regard me as a
+girl. Somehow that's better. I can't explain, but I like it. My dresses are
+what have caused all the trouble. I know that. But if I'm grown up--if it's so
+tremendous--then I'll wear a dress all the time, except just WHEN I ride.
+Will that do, Auntie?"
+
+"Maybe you will grow up, after all," replied Aunt Jane, evidently surprised
+and pleased.
+
+Then Lucy with clinking spurs ran away to her room.
+
+"Jane, what's this nonsense about young Joel Creech?" asked Bostil, gruffly.
+
+"I don't know any more than is gossiped. That I told you. Have you ever asked
+Lucy about him?"
+
+"I sure haven't," said Bostil, bluntly.
+
+"Well, ask her. If she tells you at all she'll tell the truth. Lucy'd never
+sleep at night if she lied."
+
+Aunt Jane returned to her housewifely tasks, leaving Bostil thoughtfully
+stroking the hound and watching the fire. Presently Lucy returned--a different
+Lucy--one that did not rouse his rider's pride, but thrilled his father's
+heart. She had been a slim, lithe, supple, disheveled boy, breathing the wild
+spirit of the open and the horse she rode. She was now a girl in the graceful
+roundness of her slender form, with hair the gold of the sage at sunset, and
+eyes the blue of the deep haze of distance, and lips the sweet red of the
+upland rose. And all about her seemed different.
+
+"Lucy--you look--like--like she used to be," said Bostil, unsteadily.
+
+"My mother!" murmured Lucy.
+
+But these two, so keen, so strong, so alive, did not abide long with sad
+memories.
+
+"Lucy, I want to ask you somethin'," said Bostil, presently. "What about this
+young Joel Creech?"
+
+Lucy started as if suddenly recalled, then she laughed merrily. "Dad, you old
+fox, did you see him ride out after me?"
+
+"No. I was just askin' on--on general principles."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Lucy, is there anythin' between you an' Joel?" he asked, gravely.
+
+"No," she replied, with her clear eyes up to his.
+
+Bostil thought of a bluebell. "I'm beggin' your pardon," he said, hastily.
+
+"Dad, you know how Joel runs after me. I've told you. I let him till lately. I
+liked him. But that wasn't why. I felt sorry for him--pitied him."
+
+"You did? Seems an awful waste," replied Bostil.
+
+"Dad, I don't believe Joel is--perfectly right in his mind," Lucy said,
+solemnly.
+
+"Haw! haw! Fine compliments you're payin' yourself."
+
+"Listen. I'm serious. I mean I've grown to see---looking back--that a slow,
+gradual change has come over Joel since he was kicked in the head by a
+mustang. I'm sure no one else has noticed it."
+
+"Goin' batty over you. That's no unusual sign round this here camp. Look at--"
+
+"We're talking about Joel Creech. Lately he has done some queer things.
+To-day, for instance. I thought I gave him the slip. But he must have been
+watching. Anyway, to my surprise he showed up on Peg. He doesn't often get Peg
+across the river. He said the feed was getting scarce over there. I was dying
+to race Buckles against Peg, but I remembered you wouldn't like that."
+
+"I should say not," said Bostil, darkly.
+
+"Well, Joel caught up to me--and he wasn't nice at all. He was worse to-day.
+We quarreled. I said I'd bet he'd never follow me again and he said he'd bet
+he would. Then he got sulky and hung back. I rode away, glad to be rid of him,
+and I climbed to a favorite place of mine. On my way home I saw Peg grazing on
+the rim of the creek, near that big spring-hole where the water's so deep and
+clear. And what do you think? There was Joel's head above the water. I
+remembered in our quarrel I had told him to go wash his dirty face. He was
+doing it. I had to laugh. When he saw me--he--then--then he--" Lucy faltered,
+blushing with anger and shame.
+
+"Well, what then?" demanded Bostil, quietly.
+
+"He called, 'Hey, Luce--take off your clothes and come in for a swim!'"
+
+Bostil swore.
+
+"I tell you I was mad," continued Lucy, "and just as surprised. That was one
+of the queer things. But never before had he dared to--to-"
+
+"Insult you. Then what 'd you do?" interrupted Bostil, curiously.
+
+"I yelled, 'I'll fix you, Joel Creech!'. . . His clothes were in a pile on the
+bank. At first I thought I'd throw them in the water, but when I got to them I
+thought of something better. I took up all but his shoes, for I remembered the
+ten miles of rock and cactus between him and home, and I climbed up on
+Buckles. Joel screamed and swore something fearful. But I didn't look back.
+And Peg, you know--maybe you don't know--but Peg is fond of me, and he
+followed me, straddling his bridle all the way in. I dropped Joel's clothes
+down the ridge a ways, right in the trail, so he can't miss them. And that's
+all. . . . Dad, was it--was it very bad?"
+
+"Bad! Why, you ought to have thrown your gun on him. At least bounced a rock
+off his head! But say, Lucy, after all, maybe you've done enough. I guess you
+never thought of it."
+
+"What?"
+
+"The sun is hot to-day. Hot! An' if Joel's as crazy an' mad as you say he'll
+not have sense enough to stay in the water or shade till the sun's gone down.
+An' if he tackles that ten miles before he'll sunburn himself within an inch
+of his life."
+
+"Sunburn? Oh, Dad! I'm sorry," burst out Lucy, contritely. "I never thought of
+that. I'll ride back with his clothes."
+
+"You will not," said Bostil.
+
+"Let me send some one, then," she entreated.
+
+"Girl, haven't you the nerve to play your own game? Let Creech get his lesson.
+He deserves it. . . . An' now, Lucy, I've two more questions to ask."
+
+"Only two?" she queried, archly. "Dad, don't scold me with questions."
+
+"What shall I say to Wetherby for good an' all?"
+
+Lucy's eyes shaded dreamily, and she seemed to look beyond the room, out over
+the ranges.
+
+"Tell him to go back to Durango and forget the foolish girl who can care only
+for the desert and a horse."
+
+"All right. That is straight talk, like an Indian's. An' now the last
+question--what do you want for a birthday present?"
+
+"Oh, of course," she cried, gleefully clapping her hands. "I'd forgotten
+that. I'm eighteen!"
+
+"You get that old chest of your mother's. But what from me?"
+
+"Dad, will you give me anything I ask for?"
+
+"Yes, my girl."
+
+"Anything--any HORSE?"
+
+Lucy knew his weakness, for she had inherited it.
+
+"Sure; any horse but the King."
+
+"How about Sarchedon?"
+
+"Why, Lucy, what'd you do with that big black devil? He's too high. Seventeen
+hands high! You couldn't mount him."
+
+"Pooh! Sarch KNEELS for me."
+
+"Child, listen to reason. Sarch would pull your arms out of their sockets."
+
+"He has got an iron jaw," agreed Lucy. "Well, then--how about Dusty Ben?" She
+was tormenting her father and she did it with glee.
+
+"No--not Ben. He's the faithfulest hoss I ever owned. It wouldn't be fair to
+part with him, even to you. Old associations . . . a rider's loyalty . . .
+now, Lucy, you know--"
+
+"Dad, you're afraid I'd train and love Ben into beating the King. Some day
+I'll ride some horse out in front of the gray. Remember, Dad! . . . Then give
+me Two Face."
+
+"Sure not her, Lucy. Thet mare can't be trusted. Look why we named her Two
+Face."
+
+"Buckles, then, dear generous Daddy who longs to give his grown-up girl
+ANYTHING!"
+
+"Lucy, can't you be satisfied an' happy with your mustangs? You've got a
+dozen. You can have any others on the range. Buckles ain't safe for you to
+ride."
+
+Bostil was notably the most generous of men, the kindest of fathers. It was an
+indication of his strange obsession, in regard to horses, that he never would
+see that Lucy was teasing him. As far as horses were concerned he lacked a
+sense of humor. Anything connected with his horses was of intense interest.
+
+"I'd dearly love to own Plume," said Lucy, demurely.
+
+Bostil had grown red in the face and now he was on the rack. The monstrous
+selfishness of a rider who had been supreme in his day could not be changed.
+
+"Girl, I--I thought you hadn't no use for Plume," he stammered.
+
+"I haven't--the jade! She threw me once. I've never forgiven her . . . . Dad,
+I'm only teasing you. Don't I know you couldn't give one of those racers away?
+You couldn't!"
+
+"Lucy, I reckon you're right," Bostil burst out in immense relief.
+
+"Dad, I'll bet if Cordts gets me and holds me as ransom for the King--as he's
+threatened--you'll let him have me!"
+
+"Lucy, now thet ain't funny!" complained the father.
+
+"Dear Dad, keep your old racers! But, remember, I'm my father's daughter. I
+can love a horse, too. Oh, if I ever get the one I want to love! A wild
+horse--a desert stallion--pure Arabian--broken right by an Indian! If I ever
+get him, Dad, you look out! For I'll run away from Sarch and Ben--and I'll
+beat the King!"
+
+The hamlet of Bostil's Ford had a singular situation, though, considering the
+wonderful nature of that desert country, it was not exceptional. It lay under
+the protecting red bluff that only Lucy Bostil cared to climb. A hard-trodden
+road wound down through rough breaks in the canyon wall to the river. Bostil's
+house, at the head of the village, looked in the opposite direction, down the
+sage slope that widened like a colossal fan. There was one wide street
+bordered by cottonwoods and cabins, and a number of gardens and orchards,
+beginning to burst into green and pink and white. A brook ran out of a ravine
+in the huge bluff, and from this led irrigation ditches. The red earth seemed
+to blossom at the touch of water.
+
+The place resembled an Indian encampment--quiet, sleepy, colorful, with the
+tiny-streams of water running everywhere, and lazy columns of blue wood-smoke
+rising. Bostil's Ford was the opposite of a busy village, yet its few
+inhabitants, as a whole, were prosperous. The wants of pioneers were few.
+Perhaps once a month the big, clumsy flatboat was rowed across the river with
+horses or cattle or sheep. And the season was now close at hand when for
+weeks, sometimes months, the river was unfordable. There were a score of
+permanent families, a host of merry, sturdy children, a number of idle young
+men, and only one girl--Lucy Bostil. But the village always had transient
+inhabitants--friendly Utes and Navajos in to trade, and sheep-herders with a
+scraggy, woolly flock, and travelers of the strange religious sect identified
+with Utah going on into the wilderness. Then there were always riders passing
+to and fro, and sometimes unknown ones regarded with caution. Horse-thieves
+sometimes boldly rode in, and sometimes were able to sell or trade. In the
+matter of horse-dealing Bostil's Ford was as bold as the thieves.
+
+Old Brackton, a man of varied Western experience, kept the one store, which
+was tavern, trading-post, freighter's headquarters, blacksmith's shop, and any
+thing else needful. Brackton employed riders, teamsters, sometimes Indians, to
+freight supplies in once a month from Durango. And that was over two hundred
+miles away. Sometimes the supplies did not arrive on time--occasionally not at
+all. News from the outside world, except that elicited from the taciturn
+travelers marching into Utah, drifted in at intervals. But it was not missed.
+These wilderness spirits were the forerunners of a great, movement, and as
+such were big, strong, stern, sufficient unto themselves. Life there was made
+possible by horses. The distant future, that looked bright to far-seeing men,
+must be and could only be fulfilled through the endurance and faithfulness of
+horses. And then, from these men, horses received the meed due them, and the
+love they were truly worth. The Navajo was a nomad horseman, an Arab of the
+Painted Desert, and the Ute Indian was close to him. It was they who developed
+the white riders of the uplands as well as the wild-horse wrangler or hunter.
+
+Brackton's ramshackle establishment stood down at the end of the village
+street. There was not a sawed board in all that structure, and some of the
+pine logs showed how they had been dropped from the bluff. Brackton, a little
+old gray man, with scant beard, and eyes like those of a bird, came briskly
+out to meet an incoming freighter. The wagon was minus a hind wheel, but the
+teamster had come in on three wheels and a pole. The sweaty, dust-caked,
+weary, thin-ribbed mustangs, and the gray-and-red-stained wagon, and the huge
+jumble of dusty packs, showed something of what the journey had been.
+
+"Hi thar, Red Wilson, you air some late gettin' in," greeted old Brackton.
+
+Red Wilson had red eyes from fighting the flying sand, and red dust pasted in
+his scraggy beard, and as he gave his belt an upward hitch little red clouds
+flew from his gun-sheath.
+
+"Yep. An' I left a wheel an' part of the load on the trail," he said.
+
+With him were Indians who began to unhitch the teams. Riders lounging in the
+shade greeted Wilson and inquired for news. The teamster replied that travel
+was dry, the water-holes were dry, and he was dry. And his reply gave both
+concern and amusement.
+
+"One more trip out an' back--thet's all, till it rains," concluded Wilson.
+
+Brackton led him inside, evidently to alleviate part of that dryness.
+
+Water and grass, next to horses, were the stock subject of all riders.
+
+"It's got oncommon hot early," said one.
+
+"Yes, an' them northeast winds--hard this spring," said another.
+
+"No snow on the uplands."
+
+"Holley seen a dry spell comin'. Wal, we can drift along without freighters.
+There's grass an' water enough here, even if it doesn't rain."
+
+"Sure, but there ain't none across the river."
+
+"Never was, in early season. An' if there was it'd be sheeped off."
+
+"Creech'll be fetchin' his hosses across soon, I reckon."
+
+"You bet he will. He's trainin' for the races next month."
+
+"An' when air they comin' off?"
+
+"You got me. Mebbe Van knows."
+
+Some one prodded a sleepy rider who lay all his splendid lithe length, hat
+over his eyes. Then he sat up and blinked, a lean-faced, gray-eyed fellow,
+half good-natured and half resentful.
+
+"Did somebody punch me?"
+
+"Naw, you got nightmare! Say, Van, when will the races come off?"
+
+"Huh! An, you woke me for thet? . . . Bostil says in a few weeks, soon as he
+hears from the Indians. Plans to have eight hundred Indians here, an' the
+biggest purses an' best races ever had at the Ford."
+
+"You'll ride the King again?"
+
+"Reckon so. But Bostil is kickin' because I'm heavier than I was," replied the
+rider.
+
+"You're skin an' bones at thet."
+
+"Mebbe you'll need to work a little off, Van. Some one said Creech's Blue Roan
+was comin' fast this year."
+
+"Bill, your mind ain't operatin'," replied Van, scornfully. "Didn't I beat
+Creech's hosses last year without the King turnin' a hair?"
+
+"Not if I recollect, you didn't. The Blue Roan wasn't runnin'."
+
+Then they argued, after the manner of friendly riders, but all earnest, an
+eloquent in their convictions. The prevailing opinion was that Creech's horse
+had a chance, depending upon condition and luck.
+
+The argument shifted upon the arrival of two new-comers, leading mustangs and
+apparently talking trade. It was manifest that these arrivals were not loath
+to get the opinions of others.
+
+"Van, there's a hoss!" exclaimed one.
+
+"No, he ain't," replied Van.
+
+And that diverse judgment appeared to be characteristic throughout. The
+strange thing was that Macomber, the rancher, had already traded his mustang
+and money to boot for the sorrel. The deal, whether wise or not, had been
+consummated. Brackton came out with Red Wilson, and they had to have their
+say.
+
+"Wal, durned if some of you fellers ain't kind an' complimentary," remarked
+Macomber, scratching his head. "But then every feller can't have hoss sense."
+Then, looking up to see Lucy Bostil coming along the road, he brightened as if
+with inspiration.
+
+Lucy was at home among them, and the shy eyes of the younger riders,
+especially Van, were nothing if not revealing. She greeted them with a bright
+smile, and when she saw Brackton she burst out:
+
+"Oh, Mr. Brackton, the wagon's in, and did my box come? . . . To-day's my
+birthday."
+
+"'Deed it did, Lucy; an' many more happy ones to you!" he replied, delighted
+in her delight. "But it's too heavy for you. I'll send it up--or mebbe one of
+the boys--"
+
+Five riders in unison eagerly offered their services and looked as if each had
+spoken first. Then Macomber addressed her:
+
+"Miss Lucy, you see this here sorrel?"
+
+"Ah! the same lazy crowd and the same old story--a horse trade!" laughed Lucy.
+
+"There's a little difference of opinion," said Macomber, politely indicating
+the riders. "Now, Miss Lucy, we-all know you're a judge of a hoss. And as good
+as thet you tell the truth. Thet ain't in some hoss-traders I know. . . . What
+do you think of this mustang?"
+
+Macomber had eyes of enthusiasm for his latest acquisition, but some of the
+cock-sureness had been knocked out of him by the blunt riders.
+
+"Macomber, aren't you a great one to talk?" queried Lucy, severely. "Didn't
+you get around Dad and trade him an old, blind, knock-kneed bag of bones for a
+perfectly good pony--one I liked to ride?"
+
+The riders shouted with laughter while the rancher struggled with confusion.
+
+"'Pon my word, Miss Lucy, I'm surprised you could think thet of such an old
+friend of yours--an' your Dad's, too. I'm hopin' he doesn't side altogether
+with you."
+
+"Dad and I never agree about a horse. He thinks he got the best of you. But
+you know, Macomber, what a horse-thief you are. Worse than Cordts!"
+
+"Wal, if I got the best of Bostil I'm willin' to be thought bad. I'm the first
+feller to take him in. . . . An' now, Miss Lucy, look over my sorrel."
+
+Lucy Bostil did indeed have an eye for a horse. She walked straight up to the
+wild, shaggy mustang with a confidence born of intuition and experience, and
+reached a hand for his head, not slowly, nor yet swiftly. The mustang looked
+as if he was about to jump, but he did not. His eyes showed that he was not
+used to women.
+
+"He's not well broken," said Lucy. "Some Navajo has beaten his head in
+breaking him."
+
+Then she carefully studied the mustang point by point.
+
+"He's deceiving at first because he's good to look at," said Lucy. "But I
+wouldn't own him. A saddle will turn on him. He's not vicious, but he'll never
+get over his scare. He's narrow between the eyes--a bad sign. His ears are
+stiff--and too close. I don't see anything more wrong with him."
+
+"You seen enough," declared Macomber. "An' so you wouldn't own him?"
+
+"You couldn't make me a present of him--even on my birthday."
+
+"Wal, now I'm sorry, for I was thinkin' of thet," replied Macomber, ruefully.
+It was plain that the sorrel had fallen irremediably in his estimation.
+
+"Macomber, I often tell Dad all you horse-traders get your deserts now and
+then. It's vanity and desire to beat the other man that's your downfall."
+
+Lucy went away, with Van shouldering her box, leaving Macomber trying to
+return the banter of the riders. The good-natured raillery was interrupted by
+a sharp word from one of them.
+
+"Look! Darn me if thet ain't a naked Indian comin'!"
+
+The riders whirled to see an apparently nude savage approaching, almost on a
+run.
+
+"Take a shot at thet, Bill," said another rider. "Miss Lucy might see--No,
+she's out of sight. But, mebbe some other woman is around."
+
+"Hold on, Bill," called Macomber. "You never saw an Indian run like thet."
+
+Some of the riders swore, others laughed, and all suddenly became keen with
+interest.
+
+"Sure his face is white, if his body's red!"
+
+The strange figure neared them. It was indeed red up to the face, which seemed
+white in contrast. Yet only in general shape and action did it resemble a man.
+
+"Damned if it ain't Joel Creech!" sang out Bill Stark.
+
+The other riders accorded their wondering assent.
+
+"Gone crazy, sure!"
+
+"I always seen it comin'."
+
+"Say, but ain't he wild? Foamin' at the mouth like a winded hoss!"
+
+Young Creech was headed down the road toward the ford across which he had to
+go to reach home. He saw the curious group, slowed his pace, and halted. His
+face seemed convulsed with rage and pain and fatigue. His body, even to his
+hands, was incased in a thick, heavy coating of red adobe that had caked hard.
+
+"God's sake--fellers--" he panted, with eyes rolling, "take this--'dobe mud
+off me! . . . I'm dyin'!"
+
+Then he staggered into Brackton's place. A howl went up from the riders and
+they surged after him.
+
+That evening after supper Bostil stamped in the big room, roaring with
+laughter, red in the face; and he astonished Lucy and her aunt to the point of
+consternation.
+
+"Now--you've--done--it--Lucy Bostil!" he roared.
+
+"Oh dear! Oh dear!" exclaimed Aunt Jane.
+
+"Done what?" asked Lucy, blankly.
+
+Bostil conquered his paroxysm, and, wiping his moist red face, he eyed Lucy in
+mock solemnity.
+
+"Joel!" whispered Lucy, who had a guilty conscience.
+
+"Lucy, I never heard the beat of it. . . . Joel's smarter in some ways than we
+thought, an' crazier in others. He had the sun figgered, but what'd he want to
+run through town for? Why, never in my life have I seen such tickled riders."
+
+"Dad!" almost screamed Lucy. "What did Joel do?"
+
+"Wal, I see it this way. He couldn't or wouldn't wait for sundown. An' he
+wasn't hankerin' to be burned. So he wallows in a 'dobe mud-hole an' covers
+himself thick with mud. You know that 'dobe mud! Then he starts home. But he
+hadn't figgered on the 'dobe gettin' hard, which it did--harder 'n rock. An'
+thet must have hurt more 'n sunburn. Late this afternoon he came runnin' down
+the road, yellin' thet he was dyin'. The boys had conniption fits. Joel ain't
+over-liked, you know, an' here they had one on him. Mebbe they didn't try hard
+to clean him off. But the fact is not for hours did they get thet 'dobe off
+him. They washed an' scrubbed an' curried him, while he yelled an' cussed.
+Finally they peeled it off, with his skin I guess. He was raw, an' they say,
+the maddest feller ever seen in Bostil's Ford!"
+
+Lucy was struggling between fear and mirth. She did not look sorry. "Oh! Oh!
+Oh, Dad!"
+
+"Wasn't it great, Lucy?"
+
+"But what--will he--do?" choked Lucy.
+
+"Lord only knows. Thet worries me some. Because he never said a word about how
+he come to lose his clothes or why he had the 'dobe on him. An' sure I never
+told. Nobody knows but us."
+
+"Dad, he'll do something terrible to me!" cried Lucy, aghast at her premonition
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+The days did not pass swiftly at Bostil's Ford. And except in winter, and
+during the spring sand-storms, the lagging time passed pleasantly. Lucy rode
+every day, sometimes with Van, and sometimes alone. She was not over-keen
+about riding with Van--first, because he was in love with her; and secondly,
+in spite of that, she could not beat him when he rode the King. They were
+training Bostil's horses for the much-anticipated races.
+
+At last word arrived from the Utes and Navajos that they accepted Bostil's
+invitation and would come in force, which meant, according to Holley and other
+old riders, that the Indians would attend about eight hundred strong.
+
+"Thet old chief, Hawk, is comin'," Holley informed Bostil. "He hasn't been
+here fer several years. Recollect thet bunch of colts he had? They're bosses,
+not mustangs. . . . So you look out, Bostil!"
+
+No rider or rancher or sheepman, in fact, no one, ever lost a chance to warn
+Bostil. Some of it was in fun, but most of it was earnest. The nature of
+events was that sooner or later a horse would beat the King. Bostil knew that
+as well as anybody, though he would not admit it. Holley's hint made Bostil
+look worried. Most of Bostil's gray hairs might have been traced to his years
+of worry about horses.
+
+The day he received word from the Indians he sent for Brackton, Williams,
+Muncie, and Creech to come to his house that night. These men, with Bostil,
+had for years formed in a way a club, which gave the Ford distinction. Creech
+was no longer a friend of Bostil's, but Bostil had always been fair-minded,
+and now he did not allow his animosities to influence him. Holley, the veteran
+rider, made the sixth member of the club.
+
+Bostil had a cedar log blazing cheerily in the wide fireplace, for these early
+spring nights in the desert were cold.
+
+Brackton was the last guest to arrive. He shuffled in without answering the
+laconic greetings accorded him, and his usually mild eyes seemed keen and
+hard.
+
+"John, I reckon you won't love me fer this here I've got to tell you, to-night
+specially," he said, seriously.
+
+"You old robber, I couldn't love you anyhow," retorted Bostil. But his humor
+did not harmonize with the sudden gravity of his look. "What's up?"
+
+"Who do you suppose I jest sold whisky to?"
+
+"I've no idea," replied Bostil. Yet he looked as if he was perfectly sure.
+
+"Cordts! . . . Cordts, an' four of his outfit. Two of them I didn't know. Bad
+men, judgin' from appearances, let alone company. The others was Hutchinson
+an'--Dick Sears."
+
+"DICK SEARS!" exclaimed Bostil.
+
+Muncie and Williams echoed Bostil. Holley appeared suddenly interested. Creech
+alone showed no surprise.
+
+"But Sears is dead," added Bostil.
+
+"He was dead--we thought," replied Brackton, with a grim laugh. "But he's
+alive again. He told me he'd been in Idaho fer two years, in the gold-fields.
+Said the work was too hard, so he'd come back here. Laughed when he said it,
+the little devil! I'll bet he was thinkin' of thet wagon-train of mine he
+stole."
+
+Bostil gazed at his chief rider.
+
+"Wal, I reckon we didn't kill Sears, after all," replied Holley. "I wasn't
+never sure."
+
+"Lord! Cordts an' Sears in camp," ejaculated Bostil, and he began to pace the
+room.
+
+"No, they're gone now," said Brackton.
+
+"Take it easy, boss. Sit down," drawled Holley. "The King is safe, an' all the
+racers. I swear to thet. Why, Cordts couldn't chop into thet log-an'-wire
+corral if he an' his gang chopped all night! They hate work. Besides, Farlane
+is there, an' the boys."
+
+This reassured Bostil, and he resumed his chair. But his hand shook a little.
+
+"Did Cordts have anythin' to say?" he asked.
+
+"Sure. He was friendly an' talkative," replied Brackton. "He came in just
+after dark. Left a man I didn't see out with the hosses. He bought two big
+packs of supplies, an' some leather stuff, an', of course, ammunition. Then
+some whisky. Had plenty of gold an' wouldn't take no change. Then while his
+men, except Sears, was carryin' out the stuff, he talked."
+
+"Go on. Tell me," said Bostil.
+
+"Wal, he'd been out north of Durango an' fetched news. There's wild talk back
+there of a railroad goin' to be built some day, joinin' east an' west. It's
+interestin', but no sense to it. How could they build a railroad through thet
+country?"
+
+"North it ain't so cut up an' lumpy as here," put in Holley.
+
+"Grandest idea ever thought of for the West," avowed Bostil. "If thet railroad
+ever starts we'll all get rich. . . . Go on, Brack."
+
+"Then Cordts said water an' grass was peterin' out back on the trail, same as
+Red Wilson said last week. Finally he asked, 'How's my friend Bostil?' I told
+him you was well. He looked kind of thoughtful then, an' I knew what was
+comin'. . . .'How's the King?' 'Grand' I told him--'grand.' 'When is them
+races comin' off?' I said we hadn't planned the time yet, but it would be
+soon--inside of a month or two. 'Brackton,' he said, sharp-like, 'is Bostil
+goin' to pull a gun on me at sight?' 'Reckon he is,' I told him. 'Wal, I'm not
+powerful glad to know thet. . . . I hear Creech's blue hoss will race the King
+this time. How about it?' 'Sure an' certain this year. I've Creech's an'
+Bostil's word for thet.' Cordts put his hand on my shoulder. You ought to 've
+seen his eyes!. . .'I want to see thet race. . . . I'm goin' to.' 'Wal,' I
+said, 'you'll have to stop bein'--You'll need to change your bizness.' Then,
+Bostil, what do you think? Cordts was sort of eager an' wild. He said thet was
+a race he jest couldn't miss. He swore he wouldn't turn a trick or let a man
+of his gang stir a hand till after thet race, if you'd let him come."
+
+A light flitted across Bostil's face.
+
+"I know how Cordts feels," he said.
+
+"Wal, it's a queer deal," went on Brackton. "Fer a long time you've meant to
+draw on Cordts when you meet. We all know thet."
+
+"Yes, I'll kill him!" The light left Bostil's face. His voice sounded
+differently. His mouth opened, drooped strangely at the corners, then shut in
+a grim, tense line. Bostil had killed more than one man. The memory, no doubt,
+was haunting and ghastly.
+
+"Cordts seemed to think his word was guarantee of his good faith. He said he'd
+send an Indian in here to find out if he can come to the races. I reckon,
+Bostil, thet it wouldn't hurt none to let him come. An' hold your gun hand fer
+the time he swears he'll be honest. Queer deal, ain't it, men? A hoss-thief
+turnin' honest jest to see a race! Beats me! Bostil, it's a cheap way to get
+at least a little honesty from Cordts. An' refusin' might rile him bad. When
+all's said Cordts ain't as bad as he could be."
+
+"I'll let him come," replied Bostil, breathing deep. "But it'll be hard to see
+him, rememberin' how he's robbed me, an' what he's threatened. An' I ain't
+lettin' him come to bribe a few weeks' decency from him. I'm doin' it for only
+one reason. . . . Because I know how he loves the King--how he wants to see
+the King run away from the field thet day! Thet's why!"
+
+There was a moment of silence, during which all turned to Creech. He was a
+stalwart man, no longer young, with a lined face, deep-set, troubled eyes, and
+white, thin beard.
+
+"Bostil, if Cordts loves the King thet well, he's in fer heartbreak," said
+Creech, with a ring in his voice.
+
+Down crashed Bostil's heavy boots and fire flamed in his gaze. The other men
+laughed, and Brackton interposed:
+
+"Hold on, you boy riders!" he yelled. "We ain't a-goin' to have any arguments
+like thet. . . . Now, Bostil, it's settled, then? You'll let Cordts come?"
+
+"Glad to have him," replied Bostil.
+
+"Good. An' now mebbe we'd better get down to the bizness of this here
+meetin'."
+
+They seated themselves around the table, upon which Bostil laid an old and
+much-soiled ledger and a stub of a lead-pencil.
+
+"First well set the time," he said, with animation, "an' then pitch into
+details. . . . What's the date?"
+
+No one answered, and presently they all looked blankly from one to the other.
+
+"It's April, ain't it?" queried Holley.
+
+That assurance was as close as they could get to the time of year.
+
+"Lucy!" called Bostil, in a loud voice.
+
+She came running in, anxious, almost alarmed.
+
+"Goodness! you made us jump! What on earth is the matter?"
+
+"Lucy, we want to know the date," replied Bostil.
+
+"Date! Did you have to scare Auntie and me out of our wits just for that?"
+
+"Who scared you? This is important, Lucy. What's the date?"
+
+"It's a week to-day since last Tuesday," answered Lucy, sweetly.
+
+"Huh! Then it's Tuesday again," said Bostil, laboriously writing it down.
+"Now, what's the date?"
+
+"Don't you remember?"
+
+"Remember? I never knew."
+
+"Dad! . . . Last Tuesday was my birthday--the day you DID NOT give me a
+horse!"
+
+"Aw, so it was," rejoined Bostil, confused at her reproach. "An' thet date
+was--let's see--April sixth. . . . Then this is April thirteenth. Much
+obliged, Lucy. Run back to your aunt now. This hoss talk won't interest you."
+
+Lucy tossed her head. "I'll bet I'll have to straighten out the whole thing."
+Then with a laugh she disappeared.
+
+"Three days beginnin--say June first. June first--second, an' third. How about
+thet for the races?"
+
+Everybody agreed, and Bostil laboriously wrote that down. Then they planned
+the details. Purses and prizes, largely donated by Bostil and Muncie, the rich
+members of the community, were recorded. The old rules were adhered to. Any
+rider or any Indian could enter any horse in any race, or as many horses as he
+liked in as many races. But by winning one race he excluded himself from the
+others. Bostil argued for a certain weight in riders, but the others ruled out
+this suggestion. Special races were arranged for the Indians, with saddles,
+bridles, blankets, guns as prizes.
+
+All this appeared of absorbing interest to Bostil. He perspired freely. There
+was a gleam in his eye, betraying excitement. When it came to arranging the
+details of the big race between the high-class racers, then he grew intense
+and harder to deal with. Many points had to go by vote. Muncie and Williams
+both had fleet horses to enter in this race; Holley had one; Creech had two;
+there were sure to be several Indians enter fast mustangs; and Bostil had the
+King and four others to choose from. Bostil held out stubbornly for a long
+race. It was well known that Sage King was unbeatable in a long race. If there
+were any chance to beat him it must be at short distance. The vote went
+against Bostil, much to his chagrin, and the great race was set down for two
+miles.
+
+"But two miles! . . . Two miles!" he kept repeating. "Thet's Blue Roan's
+distance. Thet's his distance. An' it ain't fair to the King!"
+
+His guests, excepting Creech, argued with him, explained, reasoned, showed him
+that it was fair to all concerned. Bostil finally acquiesced, but he was not
+happy. The plain fact was that he was frightened.
+
+When the men were departing Bostil called Creech back into the sitting-room.
+Creech appeared surprised, yet it was evident that he would have been glad to
+make friends with Bostil.
+
+"What'll you take for the roan?" Bostil asked, tersely,' as if he had never
+asked that before.
+
+"Bostil, didn't we thresh thet out before--an' FELL out over it?" queried
+Creech, with a deprecating spread of his hands.
+
+"Wal, we can fall in again, if you'll sell or trade the hoss."
+
+"I'm sorry, but I can't."
+
+"You need money an' hosses, don't you?" demanded Bostil, brutally. He had no
+conscience in a matter of horse-dealing.
+
+"Lord knows, I do," replied Creech.
+
+"Wal, then, here's your chance. I'll give you five hundred in gold an'
+Sarchedon to boot."
+
+Creech looked as if he had not heard aright. Bostil repeated the offer.
+
+"No," replied Creech.
+
+"I'll make it a thousand an' throw Plume in with Sarch," flashed Bostil.
+
+"No!" Creech turned pale and swallowed hard.
+
+"Two thousand an' Dusty Ben along with the others?" This was an unheard-of
+price to pay for any horse. Creech saw that Bostil was desperate. It was an
+almost overpowering temptation. Evidently Creech resisted it only by applying
+all his mind to the thought of his clean-limbed, soft-eyed, noble horse.
+
+Bostil did not give Creech time to speak. "Twenty-five hundred an' Two Face
+along with the rest!"
+
+"My God, Bostil--stop it! I can't PART with Blue Roan. You're rich an' you've
+no heart. Thet I always knew. At least to me you never had, since I owned them
+two racers. Didn't I beg you, a little time back, to lend me a few hundred? To
+meet thet debt? An' you wouldn't, unless I'd sell the hosses. An' I had to
+lose my sheep. Now I'm a poor man--gettin' poorer all the time. But I won't
+sell or trade Blue Roan, not for all you've got!"
+
+Creech seemed to gain strength with his speech and passion with the strength.
+His eyes glinted at the hard, paling face of his rival. He raised a clenching
+fist.
+
+"An' by G--d, I'm goin' to win thet race!"
+
+During that week Lucy had heard many things about Joel Creech, and some of
+them were disquieting.
+
+Some rider had not only found Joel's clothes on the trail, but he had
+recognized the track of the horse Lucy rode, and at once connected her with
+the singular discovery. Coupling that with Joel's appearance in the village
+incased in a heaving armor of adobe, the riders guessed pretty close to the
+truth. For them the joke was tremendous. And Joel Creech was exceedingly
+sensitive to ridicule. The riders made life unbearable for him. They had fun
+out of it as long as Joel showed signs of taking the joke manfully, which was
+not long, and then his resentment won their contempt. That led to sarcasm on
+their part and bitter anger on his. It came to Lucy's ears that Joel began to
+act and talk strangely. She found out that the rider Van had knocked Joel down
+in Brackton's store and had kicked a gun out of his hand. Van laughed off the
+rumor and Brackton gave her no satisfaction. Moreover, she heard no other
+rumors. The channels of gossip had suddenly closed to her. Bostil, when
+questioned by Lucy, swore in a way that amazed her, and all he told her was to
+leave Creech alone. Finally, when Muncie discharged Joel, who worked now and
+then, Lucy realized that something was wrong with Joel and that she was to
+blame for it.
+
+She grew worried and anxious and sorry, but she held her peace, and determined
+to find out for herself what was wrong. Every day when she rode out into the
+sage she expected to meet him, or at least see him somewhere; nevertheless
+days went by and there was no sign of him.
+
+One afternoon she saw some Indians driving sheep down the river road toward
+the ford, and, acting upon impulse, she turned her horse after them.
+
+Lucy seldom went down the river road. Riding down and up was merely work, and
+a horse has as little liking for it as she had. Usually it was a hot, dusty
+trip, and the great, dark, overhanging walls had a depressing effect, upon
+her. She always felt awe at the gloomy canyon and fear at the strange,
+murmuring red river. But she started down this afternoon in the hope of
+meeting Joel. She had a hazy idea of telling him she was sorry for what she
+had done, and of asking him to forget it and pay no more heed to the riders.
+
+The sheep raised a dust-cloud in the sandy wash where the road wound down, and
+Lucy hung back to let them get farther ahead. Gradually the tiny roar of
+pattering hoofs and the blended bleating and baaing died away. The dust-cloud,
+however, hung over the head of the ravine, and Lucy had to force Sarchedon
+through it. Sarchedon did not mind sand and dust, but he surely hated the
+smell of sheep. Lucy seldom put a spur to Sarchedon; still, she gave him a
+lash with her quirt, and then he went on obediently, if disgustedly. He
+carried his head like a horse that wondered why his mistress preferred to
+drive him down into an unpleasant hole when she might have been cutting the
+sweet, cool sage wind up on the slope.
+
+The wash, with its sand and clay walls, dropped into a gulch, and there was an
+end of green growths. The road led down over solid rock. Gradually the rims of
+the gorge rose, shutting out the light and the cliffs. It was a winding road
+and one not safe to tarry on in a stormy season. Lucy had seen boulders
+weighing a ton go booming down that gorge during one of the sudden fierce
+desert storms, when a torrent of water and mud and stone went plunging on to
+the river. The ride through here was short, though slow. Lucy always had time
+to adjust her faculties for the overpowering contrast these lower regions
+presented. Long before she reached the end of the gorge she heard the sullen
+thunder of the river. The river was low, too, for otherwise there would have
+been a deafening roar.
+
+Presently she came out upon a lower branch of the canyon, into a great
+red-walled space, with the river still a thousand feet below, and the cliffs
+towering as high above her. The road led down along this rim where to the left
+all was open, across to the split and peaked wall opposite. The river appeared
+to sweep round a bold, bulging corner a mile above. It was a wide, swift,
+muddy, turbulent stream. A great bar of sand stretched out from the shore.
+Beyond it, through the mouth of an intersecting canyon, could be seen a clump
+of cottonwoods and willows that marked the home of the Creeches. Lucy could
+not see the shore nearest her, as it was almost directly under her. Besides,
+in this narrow road, on a spirited horse, she was not inclined to watch the
+scenery. She hurried Sarchedon down and down, under the overhanging brows of
+rock, to where the rim sloped out and failed. Here was a half-acre of sand,
+with a few scant willows, set down seemingly in a dent at the base of the
+giant, beetling cliffs. The place was light, though the light seemed a kind of
+veiled red, and to Lucy always ghastly. She could not have been joyous with
+that river moaning before her, even if it had been up on a level, in the clear
+and open day. As a little girl eight years old she had conceived a terror and
+hatred of this huge, jagged rent so full of red haze and purple smoke and the
+thunder of rushing waters. And she had never wholly outgrown it. The joy of
+the sun and wind, the rapture in the boundless open, the sweetness in the
+sage--these were not possible here. Something mighty and ponderous, heavy as
+those colossal cliffs, weighted down her spirit. The voice of the river drove
+out any dream. Here was the incessant frowning presence of destructive forces
+of nature. And the ford was associated with catastrophe--to sheep, to horses
+and to men.
+
+Lucy rode across the bar to the shore where the Indians were loading the sheep
+into an immense rude flatboat. As the sheep were frightened, the loading was
+no easy task. Their bleating could be heard above the roar of the river.
+Bostil's boatmen, Shugrue and Somers, stood knee-deep in the quicksand of the
+bar, and their efforts to keep free-footed were as strenuous as their handling
+of the sheep. Presently the flock was all crowded on board, the Indians
+followed, and then the boatmen slid the unwieldy craft off the sand-bar. Then,
+each manning a clumsy oar, they pulled up-stream. Along shore were whirling,
+slow eddies, and there rowing was possible. Out in that swift current it would
+have been folly to try to contend with it, let alone make progress. The method
+of crossing was to row up along the shore as far as a great cape of rock
+jutting out, and there make into the current, and while drifting down pull
+hard to reach the landing opposite. Heavily laden as the boat was, the chances
+were not wholly in favor of a successful crossing.
+
+Lucy watched the slow, laborious struggle of the boatmen with the heavy oars
+until she suddenly remembered the object of her visit down to the ford. She
+appeared to be alone on her side of the river. At the landing opposite,
+however, were two men; and presently Lucy recognized Joel Creech and his
+father. A second glance showed Indians with burros, evidently waiting for the
+boat. Joel Creech jumped into a skiff and shoved off. The elder man, judging
+by his motions, seemed to be trying to prevent his son from leaving the shore.
+But Joel began to row up-stream, keeping close to the shore. Lucy watched him.
+No doubt he had seen her and was coming across. Either the prospect of meeting
+him or the idea of meeting him there in the place where she was never herself
+made her want to turn at once and ride back home. But her stubborn sense of
+fairness overruled that. She would hold her ground solely in the hope of
+persuading Joel to be reasonable. She saw the big flatboat sweep into line of
+sight at the same time Joel turned into the current. But while the larger
+craft drifted slowly the other way, the smaller one came swiftly down and
+across. Joel swept out of the current into the eddy, rowed across that, and
+slid the skiff up on the sand-bar. Then he stepped out. He was bareheaded and
+barefooted, but it was not that which made him seem a stranger to Lucy.
+
+"Are you lookin' fer me?" he shouted.
+
+Lucy waved a hand for him to come up.
+
+Then he approached. He was a tall, lean young man, stoop-shouldered and
+bow-legged from much riding, with sallow, freckled face, a thin fuzz of beard,
+weak mouth and chin, and eyes remarkable for their small size and piercing
+quality and different color. For one was gray and the other was hazel. There
+was no scar on his face, but the irregularity of his features reminded one who
+knew that he had once been kicked in the face by a horse.
+
+Creech came up hurriedly, in an eager, wild way that made Lucy suddenly pity
+him. He did not seem to remember that the stallion had an antipathy for him.
+But Lucy, if she had forgotten, would have been reminded by Sarchedon's
+action.
+
+"Look out, Joel!" she called, and she gave the black's head a jerk. Sarchedon
+went up with a snort and came down pounding the sand. Quick as an Indian Lucy
+was out of the saddle.
+
+"Lemme your quirt," said Joel, showing his teeth like a wolf.
+
+"No. I wouldn't let you hit Sarch. You beat him once, and he's never
+forgotten," replied Lucy.
+
+The eye of the horse and the man met and clashed, and there was a hostile
+tension in their attitudes. Then Lucy dropped the bridle and drew Joel over to
+a huge drift-log, half buried in the sand. Here she sat down, but Joel
+remained standing. His gaze was now all the stranger for its wistfulness. Lucy
+was quick to catch a subtle difference in him, but she could not tell wherein
+it lay.
+
+"What'd you want?" asked Joel.
+
+"I've heard a lot of things, Joel," replied Lucy, trying to think of just what
+she wanted to say.
+
+"Reckon you have," said Joel, dejectedly, and then he sat down on the log and
+dug holes in the sand with his bare feet.
+
+Lucy had never before seen him look tired, and it seemed that some of the
+healthy brown of his cheeks had thinned out. Then Lucy told him, guardedly, a
+few of the rumors she had heard.
+
+"All thet you say is nothin' to what's happened," he replied, bitterly. "Them
+riders mocked the life an' soul out of me."
+
+"But, Joel, you shouldn't be so--so touchy," said Lucy, earnestly. "After all,
+the joke WAS on you. Why didn't you take it like a man?"
+
+"But they knew you stole my clothes," he protested.
+
+"Suppose they did. That wasn't much to care about. If you hadn't taken it so
+hard they'd have let up on you."
+
+"Mebbe I might have stood that. But they taunted me with bein'--loony about
+you."
+
+Joel spoke huskily. There was no doubt that he had been deeply hurt. Lucy saw
+tears in his eyes, and her first impulse was to put a hand on his and tell him
+how sorry she was. But she desisted. She did not feel at her ease with Joel.
+
+"What'd you and Van fight about?" she asked, presently. Joel hung his head. "I
+reckon I ain't a-goin' to tell you."
+
+"You're ashamed of it?"
+
+Joel's silence answered that.
+
+"You said something about me?" Lucy could not resist her curiosity, back of
+which was a little heat. "It must have been--bad--else Van wouldn't have
+struck you."
+
+"He hit me--he knocked me flat," passionately said Joel.
+
+"And you drew a gun on him?"
+
+"I did, an' like a fool I didn't wait till I got up. Then he kicked me! . . .
+Bostil's Ford will never be big enough fer me an' Van now."
+
+"Don't talk foolish. You won't fight with Van. . . . Joel, maybe you deserved
+what you got. You say some--some rude things."
+
+"I only said I'd pay you back," burst out Joel.
+
+"How?"
+
+"I swore I'd lay fer you--an' steal your clothes--so you'd have to run home
+naked."
+
+There was indeed something lacking in Joel, but it was not sincerity. His hurt
+had rankled deep and his voice trembled with indignation.
+
+"But, Joel, I don't go swimming in spring-holes," protested Lucy, divided
+between amusement and annoyance.
+
+"I meant it, anyhow," said Joel, doggedly.
+
+"Are you absolutely honest? Is that all you said to provoke Van?"
+
+"It's all, Lucy, I swear."
+
+She believed him, and saw the unfortunate circumstance more than ever her
+fault. "I'm sorry, Joel. I'm much to blame. I shouldn't have lost my temper
+and played that trick with your clothes. . . . If you'd only had sense enough
+to stay out till after dark! But no use crying over spilt milk. Now, if you'll
+do your share I'll do mine. I'll tell the boys I was to blame. I'll persuade
+them to let you alone. I'll go to Muncie--"
+
+"No you won't go cryin' small fer me!" blurted out Joel.
+
+Lucy was surprised to see pride in him. "Joel, I'll not make it appear--"
+
+"You'll not say one word about me to any one," he went on, with the blood
+beginning to darken his face. And now he faced her. How strange the blaze in
+his differently colored eyes! "Lucy Bostil, there's been thet done an' said to
+me which I'll never forgive. I'm no good in Bostil's Ford. Mebbe I never was
+much. But I could get a job when I wanted it an' credit when I needed it. Now
+I can't get nothin'. I'm no good! . . . I'm no good! An' it's your fault!"
+
+"Oh, Joel, what can I do?" cried Lucy.
+
+"I reckon there's only one way you can square me," he replied, suddenly
+growing pale. But his eyes were like flint. He certainly looked to be in
+possession of all his wits.
+
+"How?" queried Lucy, sharply.
+
+"You can marry me. Thet'll show thet gang! An' it'll square me. Then I'll go
+back to work an' I'll stick. Thet's all, Lucy Bostil."
+
+Manifestly he was laboring under strong suppressed agitation. That moment was
+the last of real strength and dignity ever shown by Joel Creech.
+
+"But, Joel, I can't marry you--even if I am to blame for your ruin," said
+Lucy, simply.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because I don't love you."
+
+"I reckon thet won't make any difference, if you don't love some one else."
+
+Lucy gazed blankly at him. He began to shake, and his eyes grew wild. She rose
+from the log.
+
+"Do you love anybody else?" he asked, passionately.
+
+"None of your business!" retorted Lucy. Then, at a strange darkening of his
+face, an aspect unfamiliar to her, she grew suddenly frightened.
+
+"It's Van!" he said, thickly.
+
+"Joel, you're a fool!"
+
+That only infuriated him.
+
+"So they all say. An' they got my old man believin' it, too. Mebbe I am. . . .
+But I'm a-goin' to kill Van!"
+
+"No! No! Joel, what are you saying? I don't love Van. I don't care any more
+for him than for any other rider--or--or you."
+
+"Thet's a lie, Lucy Bostil!"
+
+"How dare you say I lie?" demanded Lucy. "I've a mind to turn my back on you.
+I'm trying to make up for my blunder and you--you insult me!"
+
+"You talk sweet . . . but talk isn't enough. You made me no-good . . . . Will
+you marry me?"
+
+"I will not!" And Lucy, with her blood up, could not keep contempt out of
+voice and look, and she did not care. That was the first time she had ever
+shown anything, approaching ridicule for Joel. The effect was remarkable. Like
+a lash upon a raw wound it made him writhe; but more significant to Lucy was
+the sudden convulsive working of his features and the wildness of his eyes.
+Then she turned her back, not from contempt, but to hurry away from him.
+
+He leaped after her and grasped her with rude hands.
+
+"Let me go!" cried Lucy, standing perfectly motionless. The hard clutch of his
+fingers roused a fierce, hot anger.
+
+Joel did not heed her command. He was forcing her back. He talked
+incoherently. One glimpse of his face added terror to Lucy's fury.
+
+"Joel, you're out of your head!" she cried, and she began to wrench and writhe
+out of his grasp. Then ensued a short, sharp struggle. Joel could not hold
+Lucy, but he tore her blouse into shreds. It seemed to Lucy that he did that
+savagely. She broke free from him, and he lunged at her again. With all her
+strength she lashed his face with the heavy leather quirt. That staggered him.
+He almost fell.
+
+Lucy bounded to Sarchedon. In a rush she was up in the saddle. Joel was
+running toward her. Blood on his face! Blood on his hands! He was not the Joel
+Creech she knew.
+
+"Stop!" cried Lucy, fiercely. "I'll run you down!"
+
+The big black plunged at a touch of spur and came down quivering, ready to
+bolt.
+
+Creech swerved to one side. His face was lividly white except where the bloody
+welts crossed it. His jaw seemed to hang loosely, making speech difficult.
+
+"Jest fer--thet--" he panted, hoarsely, "I'll lay fer you--an' I'll strip
+you---an' I'll tie you on a hoss--an' I'll drive you naked through Bostil's
+Ford!"
+
+Lucy saw the utter futility of all her good intentions. Something had snapped
+in Joel Creech's mind. And in hers kindness had given precedence to a fury she
+did not know was in her. For the second time she touched a spur to Sarchedon.
+He leaped out, flashed past Creech, and thundered up the road. It was all Lucy
+could do to break his gait at the first steep rise.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Three wild-horse hunters made camp one night beside a little stream in the
+Sevier Valley, five hundred miles, as a crow flies, from Bostil's Ford.
+
+These hunters had a poor outfit, excepting, of course, their horses. They were
+young men, rangy in build, lean and hard from life in the saddle, bronzed like
+Indians, still-faced, and keen-eyed. Two of them appeared to be tired out, and
+lagged at the camp-fire duties. When the meager meal was prepared they sat,
+cross-legged, before a ragged tarpaulin, eating and drinking in silence.
+
+The sky in the west was rosy, slowly darkening. The valley floor billowed
+away, ridged and cut, growing gray and purple and dark. Walls of stone, pink
+with the last rays of the setting sun, inclosed the valley, stretching away
+toward a long, low, black mountain range.
+
+The place was wild, beautiful, open, with something nameless that made the
+desert different from any other country. It was, perhaps, a loneliness of vast
+stretches of valley and stone, clear to the eye, even after sunset. That black
+mountain range, which looked close enough to ride to before dark, was a
+hundred miles distant.
+
+The shades of night fell swiftly, and it was dark by the time the hunters
+finished the meal. Then the campfire had burned low. One of the three dragged
+branches of dead cedars and replenished the fire. Quickly it flared up, with
+the white flame and crackle characteristic of dry cedar. The night wind had
+risen, moaning through the gnarled, stunted cedars near by, and it blew the
+fragrant wood-smoke into the faces of the two hunters, who seemed too tired to
+move.
+
+"I reckon a pipe would help me make up my mind," said one.
+
+"Wal, Bill," replied the other, dryly, "your mind's made up, else you'd not
+say smoke."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because there ain't three pipefuls of thet precious tobacco left."
+
+"Thet's one apiece, then. . . . Lin, come an' smoke the last pipe with us."
+
+The tallest of the three, he who had brought the firewood, stood in the bright
+light of the blaze. He looked the born rider, light, lithe, powerful.
+
+"Sure, I'll smoke," he replied.
+
+Then, presently, he accepted the pipe tendered him, and, sitting down beside
+the fire, he composed himself to the enjoyment which his companions evidently
+considered worthy of a decision they had reached.
+
+"So this smokin' means you both want to turn back?" queried Lin, his sharp
+gaze glancing darkly bright in the glow of the fire.
+
+"Yep, we'll turn back. An', Lordy! the relief I feel!" replied one.
+
+"We've been long comin' to it, Lin, an' thet was for your sake," replied the
+other.
+
+Lin slowly pulled at his pipe and blew out the smoke as if reluctant to part
+with it. "Let's go on," he said, quietly.
+
+"No. I've had all I want of chasin' thet damn wild stallion," returned Bill,
+shortly.
+
+The other spread wide his hands and bent an expostulating look upon the one
+called Lin. "We're two hundred miles out," he said. "There's only a little
+flour left in the bag. No coffee! Only a little salt! All the hosses except
+your big Nagger are played out. We're already in strange country. An' you know
+what we've heerd of this an' all to the south. It's all canyons, an'
+somewheres down there is thet awful canyon none of our people ever seen. But
+we've heerd of it. An awful cut-up country."
+
+He finished with a conviction that no one could say a word against the common
+sense of his argument. Lin was silent, as if impressed.
+
+Bill raised a strong, lean, brown hand in a forcible gesture. "We can't ketch
+Wildfire!"
+
+That seemed to him, evidently, a more convincing argument than his comrade's.
+
+"Bill is sure right, if I'm wrong, which I ain't," went on the other. "Lin,
+we've trailed thet wild stallion for six weeks. Thet's the longest chase he
+ever had. He's left his old range. He's cut out his band, an' left them, one
+by one. We've tried every trick we know on him. An' he's too smart for us.
+There's a hoss! Why, Lin, we're all but gone to the dogs chasin' Wildfire. An'
+now I'm done, an' I'm glad of it."
+
+There was another short silence, which presently Bill opened his lips to
+break.
+
+"Lin, it makes me sick to quit. I ain't denyin' thet for a long time I've had
+hopes of ketchin' Wildfire. He's the grandest hoss I ever laid eyes on. I
+reckon no man, onless he was an Arab, ever seen as good a one. But now, thet's
+neither here nor there. . . . We've got to hit the back trail."
+
+"Boys, I reckon I'll stick to Wildfire's tracks," said Lin, in the same quiet
+tone.
+
+Bill swore at him, and the other hunter grew excited and concerned.
+
+"Lin Slone, are you gone plumb crazy over thet red hoss?"
+
+"I--reckon," replied Slone. The working of his throat as he swallowed could be
+plainly seen by his companions.
+
+Bill looked at his ally as if to confirm some sudden understanding between
+them. They took Slone's attitude gravely and they wagged their heads
+doubtfully, as they might have done had Slone just acquainted them with a
+hopeless and deathless passion for a woman. It was significant of the nature
+of riders that they accepted his attitude and had consideration for his
+feelings. For them the situation subtly changed. For weeks they had been three
+wild-horse wranglers on a hard chase after a valuable stallion. They had
+failed to get even close to him. They had gone to the limit of their endurance
+and of the outfit, and it was time to turn back. But Slone had conceived that
+strange and rare longing for a horse--a passion understood, if not shared, by
+all riders. And they knew that he would catch Wildfire or die in the attempt.
+From that moment their attitude toward Slone changed as subtly as had come the
+knowledge of his feeling. The gravity and gloom left their faces. It seemed
+they might have regretted what they had said about the futility of catching
+Wildfire. They did not want Slone to see or feel the hopelessness of his task.
+
+"I tell you, Lin," said Bill, "your hoss Nagger's as good as when we started."
+
+"Aw, he's better," vouchsafed the other rider. "Nagger needed to lose some
+weight. Lin, have you got an extra set of shoes for him?"
+
+"No full set. Only three left," replied Lin, soberly.
+
+"Wal, thet's enough. You can keep Nagger shod. An' MEBBE thet red stallion
+will get sore feet an' go lame. Then you'd stand a chance."
+
+"But Wildfire keeps travelin' the valleys--the soft ground," said Slone.
+
+"No matter. He's leavin' the country, an' he's bound to strike sandstone
+sooner or later. Then, by gosh! mebbe he'll wear off them hoofs."
+
+"Say, can't he ring bells offen the rocks?" exclaimed Bill. "Oh, Lordy! what a
+hoss!"
+
+"Boys, do you think he's leavin' the country?" inquired Slone, anxiously.
+
+"Sure he is," replied Bill. "He ain't the first stallion I've chased off the
+Sevier range. An' I know. It's a stallion thet makes for new country, when you
+push him hard."
+
+"Yep, Lin, he's sure leavin'," added the other comrade. "Why, he's traveled a
+bee-line for days! I'll bet he's seen us many a time. Wildfire's about as
+smart as any man. He was born wild, an' his dam was born wild, an' there you
+have it. The wildest of all wild creatures--a wild stallion, with the
+intelligence of a man! A grand hoss, Lin, but one thet'll be hell, if you ever
+ketch him. He has killed stallions all over the Sevier range. A wild stallion
+thet's a killer! I never liked him for thet. Could he be broke?"
+
+"I'll break him," said Lin Slone, grimly. "It's gettin' him thet's the job.
+I've got patience to break a hoss. But patience can't catch a streak of
+lightnin'."
+
+"Nope; you're right," replied Bill. "If you have some luck you'll get
+him--mebbe. If he wears out his feet, or if you crowd him into a narrow
+canyon, or ran him into a bad place where he can't get by you. Thet might
+happen. An' then, with Nagger, you stand a chance. Did you ever tire thet
+hoss?"
+
+"Not yet."
+
+"An' how fur did you ever run him without a break? Why, when we ketched thet
+sorrel last year I rode Nagger myself--thirty miles, most at a hard gallop.
+An' he never turned a hair!"
+
+"I've beat thet," replied Lin. "He could run hard fifty miles--mebbe more.
+Honestly, I never seen him tired yet. If only he was fast!"
+
+"Wal, Nagger ain't so durned slow, come to think of thet," replied Bill, with
+a grunt. "He's good enough for you not to want another hoss."
+
+"Lin, you're goin' to wear out Wildfire, an' then trap him somehow--is thet
+the plan?" asked the other comrade.
+
+"I haven't any plan. I'll just trail him, like a cougar trails a deer."
+
+"Lin, if Wildfire gives you the slip he'll have to fly. You've got the best
+eyes for tracks of any wrangler in Utah."
+
+Slone accepted the compliment with a fleeting, doubtful smile on his dark
+face. He did not reply, and no more was said by his comrades. They rolled with
+backs to the fire. Slone put on more wood, for the keen wind was cold and
+cutting; and then he lay down, his head in his saddle, with a goatskin under
+him and a saddle-blanket over him.
+
+All three were soon asleep. The wind whipped the sand and ashes and smoke over
+the sleepers. Coyotes barked from near in darkness, and from the valley ridge
+came the faint mourn of a hunting wolf. The desert night grew darker and
+colder.
+
+The Stewart brothers were wild-horse hunters for the sake of trades and
+occasional sales. But Lin Slone never traded nor sold a horse he had captured.
+The excitement of the game, and the lure of the desert, and the love of a
+horse were what kept him at the profitless work. His type was rare in the
+uplands.
+
+These were the early days of the settlement of Utah, and only a few of the
+hardiest and most adventurous pioneers had penetrated the desert in the
+southern part of that vast upland. And with them came some of that wild breed
+of riders to which Slone and the Stewarts belonged. Horses were really more
+important and necessary than men; and this singular fact gave these lonely
+riders a calling.
+
+Before the Spaniards came there were no horses in the West. Those explorers
+left or lost horses all over the southwest. Many of them were Arabian horses
+of purest blood. American explorers and travelers, at the outset of the
+nineteenth century, encountered countless droves of wild horses all over the
+plains. Across the Grand Canyon, however, wild horses were comparatively few
+in number in the early days; and these had probably come in by way of
+California.
+
+The Stewarts and Slone had no established mode of catching wild horses. The
+game had not developed fast enough for that. Every chase of horse or drove was
+different; and once in many attempts they met with success.
+
+A favorite method originated by the Stewarts was to find a water-hole
+frequented by the band of horses or the stallion wanted, and to build round
+this hole a corral with an opening for the horses to get in. Then the hunters
+would watch the trap at night, and if the horses went in to drink, a gate was
+closed across the opening. Another method of the Stewarts was to trail a
+coveted horse up on a mesa or highland, places which seldom had more than one
+trail of ascent and descent, and there block the escape, and cut lines of
+cedars, into which the quarry was ran till captured. Still another method,
+discovered by accident, was to shoot a horse lightly in the neck and sting
+him. This last, called creasing, was seldom successful, and for that matter in
+any method ten times as many horses were killed as captured.
+
+Lin Slone helped the Stewarts in their own way, but he had no especial liking
+for their tricks. Perhaps a few remarkable captures of remarkable horses had
+spoiled Slone. He was always trying what the brothers claimed to be
+impossible. He was a fearless rider, but he had the fault of saving his mount,
+and to kill a wild horse was a tragedy for him. He would much rather have
+hunted alone, and he had been alone on the trail of the stallion Wildfire when
+the Stewarts had joined him.
+
+Lin Slone awoke next morning and rolled out of his blanket at his usual early
+hour. But he was not early enough to say good-by to the Stewarts. They were
+gone.
+
+The fact surprised him and somehow relieved him. They had left him more than
+his share of the outfit, and perhaps that was why they had slipped off before
+dawn. They knew him well enough to know that he would not have accepted it.
+Besides, perhaps they felt a little humiliation at abandoning a chase which he
+chose to keep up. Anyway, they were gone, apparently without breakfast.
+
+The morning was clear, cool, with the air dark like that before a storm, and
+in the east, over the steely wall of stone, shone a redness growing brighter.
+
+Slone looked away to the west, down the trail taken by his comrades, but he
+saw nothing moving against that cedar-dotted waste.
+
+"Good-by," he said, and he spoke as if he was saying good-by to more than
+comrades.
+
+"I reckon I won't see Sevier Village soon again--an' maybe never," he
+soliloquized.
+
+There was no one to regret him, unless it was old Mother Hall, who had been
+kind to him on those rare occasions when he got out of the wilderness. Still,
+it was with regret that he gazed away across the red valley to the west. Slone
+had no home. His father and mother had been lost in the massacre of a
+wagon-train by Indians, and he had been one of the few saved and brought to
+Salt Lake. That had happened when he was ten years old. His life thereafter
+had been hard, and but for his sturdy Texas training he might not have
+survived. The last five years he had been a horse-hunter in the wild uplands
+of Nevada and Utah.
+
+Slone turned his attention to the pack of supplies. The Stewarts had divided
+the flour and the parched corn equally, and unless he was greatly mistaken
+they had left him most of the coffee and all of the salt.
+
+"Now I hold that decent of Bill an' Abe," said Slone, regretfully. "But I
+could have got along without it better 'n they could."
+
+Then he swiftly set about kindling a fire and getting a meal. In the midst of
+his task a sudden ruddy brightness fell around him. Lin Slone paused in his
+work to look up.
+
+The sun had risen over the eastern wall.
+
+"Ah!" he said, and drew a deep breath.
+
+The cold, steely, darkling sweep of desert had been transformed. It was now a
+world of red earth and gold rocks and purple sage, with everywhere the endless
+straggling green cedars. A breeze whipped in, making the fire roar softly. The
+sun felt warm on his cheek. And at the moment he heard the whistle of his
+horse.
+
+"Good old Nagger!" he said. "I shore won't have to track you this mornin'."
+
+Presently he went off into the cedars to find Nagger and the mustang that he
+used to carry a pack. Nagger was grazing in a little open patch among the
+trees, but the pack-horse was missing. Slone seemed to know in what direction
+to go to find the trail, for he came upon it very soon. The pack-horse wore
+hobbles, but he belonged to the class that could cover a great deal of ground
+when hobbled. Slone did not expect the horse to go far, considering that the
+grass thereabouts was good. But in a wild-horse country it was not safe to
+give any horse a chance. The call of his wild brethren was irresistible.
+Slone, however, found the mustang standing quietly in a clump of cedars, and,
+removing the hobbles, he mounted and rode back to camp. Nagger caught sight of
+him and came at his call.
+
+This horse Nagger appeared as unique in his class as Slone was rare among
+riders. Nagger seemed of several colors, though black predominated. His coat
+was shaggy, almost woolly, like that of a sheep. He was huge, raw-boned,
+knotty, long of body and long of leg, with the head of a war charger. His
+build did not suggest speed. There appeared to be something slow and ponderous
+about him, similar to an elephant, with the same suggestion of power and
+endurance. Slone discarded the pack-saddle and bags. The latter were almost
+empty. He roped the tarpaulin on the back of the mustang, and, making a small
+bundle of his few supplies, he tied that to the tarpaulin. His blanket he used
+for a saddle-blanket on Nagger. Of the utensils left by the Stewarts he chose
+a couple of small iron pans, with long handles. The rest he left. In his
+saddle-bags he had a few extra horseshoes, some nails, bullets for his
+rifle, and a knife with a heavy blade.
+
+"Not a rich outfit for a far country," he mused. Slone did not talk very much,
+and when he did he addressed Nagger and himself simultaneously. Evidently he
+expected a long chase, one from which he would not return, and light as his
+outfit was it would grow too heavy.
+
+Then he mounted and rode down the gradual slope, facing the valley and the
+black, bold, flat mountain to the southeast. Some few hundred yards from camp
+he halted Nagger and bent over in the saddle to scrutinize the ground.
+
+The clean-cut track of a horse showed in the bare, hard sand. The hoof-marks
+were large, almost oval, perfect in shape, and manifestly they were beautiful
+to Lin Slone. He gazed at them for a long time, and then he looked across the
+dotted red valley up the vast ridgy steps, toward the black plateau and
+beyond. It was the look that an Indian gives to a strange country. Then Slone
+slipped off the saddle and knelt to scrutinize the horse tracks. A little sand
+had blown into the depressions, and some of it was wet and some of it was dry.
+He took his time about examining it, and he even tried gently blowing other
+sand into the tracks, to compare that with what was already there. Finally he
+stood up and addressed Nagger.
+
+"Reckon we won't have to argue with Abe an' Bill this mornin'," he said, with
+satisfaction. "Wildfire made that track yesterday, before sun-up."
+
+Thereupon Slone remounted and put Nagger to a trot. The pack-horse followed
+with an alacrity that showed he had no desire for loneliness.
+
+As straight as a bee-line Wildfire had left a trail down into the floor of the
+valley. He had not stopped to graze, and he had not looked for water. Slone
+had hoped to find a water-hole in one of the deep washes in the red earth, but
+if there had been any water there Wildfire would have scented it. He had not
+had a drink for three days that Slone knew of. And Nagger had not drunk for
+forty hours. Slone had a canvas water-bag hanging over the pommel, but it was
+a habit of his to deny himself, as far as possible, till his horse could drink
+also. Like an Indian, Slone ate and drank but little.
+
+It took four hours of steady trotting to reach the middle and bottom of that
+wide, flat valley. A network of washes cut up the whole center of it, and they
+were all as dry as bleached bone. To cross these Slone had only to keep
+Wildfire's trail. And it was proof of Nagger's quality that he did not have to
+veer from the stallion's course.
+
+It was hot down in the lowland. The heat struck up, reflected from the sand.
+But it was a March sun, and no more than pleasant to Slone. The wind rose,
+however, and blew dust and sand in the faces of horse and rider. Except
+lizards, Slone did not see any living things.
+
+Miles of low greasewood and sparse yellow sage led to the first almost
+imperceptible rise of the valley floor on that side. The distant cedars
+beckoned to Slone. He was not patient, because he was on the trail of
+Wildfire; but, nevertheless, the hours seemed short.
+
+Slone had no past to think about, and the future held nothing except a horse,
+and so his thoughts revolved the possibilities connected with this chase of
+Wildfire. The chase was hopeless in such country as he was traversing, and if
+Wildfire chose to roam around valleys like this one Slone would fail utterly.
+But the stallion had long ago left his band of horses, and then, one by one
+his favorite consorts, and now he was alone, headed with unerring instinct for
+wild, untrammeled ranges. He had been used to the pure, cold water and the
+succulent grass of the cold desert uplands. Assuredly he would not tarry in
+such barren lands as these.
+
+For Slone an ever-present and growing fascination lay in Wildfire's clear,
+sharply defined tracks. It was as if every hoof-mark told him something. Once,
+far up the interminable ascent, he found on a ridge-top tracks showing where
+Wildfire had halted and turned.
+
+"Ha, Nagger!" cried Slone, exultingly. "Look there! He's begun facin' about.
+He's wonderin' if we're still after him. He's worried. . . . But we'll keep
+out of sight--a day behind."
+
+When Slone reached the cedars the sun was low down in the west. He looked back
+across the fifty miles of valley to the colored cliffs and walls. He seemed to
+be above them now, and the cool air, with tang of cedar and juniper,
+strengthened the impression that he had climbed high.
+
+A mile or more ahead of him rose a gray cliff with breaks in it and a line of
+dark cedars or pinyons on the level rims. He believed these breaks to be the
+mouths of canyons, and so it turned out. Wildfire's trail led into the mouth
+of a narrow canyon with very steep and high walls. Nagger snorted his
+perception of water, and the mustang whistled. Wildfire's tracks led to a
+point under the wall where a spring gushed forth. There were mountain-lion and
+deer tracks also, as well as those of smaller game.
+
+Slone made camp here. The mustang was tired. But Nagger, upon taking a long
+drink, rolled in the grass as if he had just begun the trip. After eating,
+Slone took his rifle and went out to look for deer. But there appeared to be
+none at hand. He came across many lion tracks and saw, with apprehension,
+where one had taken Wildfire's trail. Wildfire had grazed up the canyon,
+keeping on and on, and he was likely to go miles in a night. Slone reflected
+that as small as were his own chances of getting Wildfire, they were still
+better than those of a mountain-lion. Wildfire was the most cunning of all
+animals--a wild stallion; his speed and endurance were incomparable; his scent
+as keen as those animals that relied wholly upon scent to warn them of danger,
+and as for sight, it was Slone's belief that no hoofed creature, except the
+mountain-sheep used to high altitudes, could see as far as a wild horse.
+
+It bothered Slone a little that he was getting into a lion country. Nagger
+showed nervousness, something unusual for him. Slone tied both horses with
+long halters and stationed them on patches of thick grass. Then he put a cedar
+stump on the fire and went to sleep. Upon awakening and going to the spring he
+was somewhat chagrined to see that deer had come down to drink early.
+Evidently they were numerous. A lion country was always a deer country, for
+the lions followed the deer.
+
+Slone was packed and saddled and on his way before the sun reddened the canyon
+wall. He walked the horses. From time to time he saw signs of Wildfire's
+consistent progress. The canyon narrowed and the walls grew lower and the
+grass increased. There was a decided ascent all the time. Slone could find no
+evidence that the canyon had ever been traveled by hunters or Indians. The day
+was pleasant and warm and still. Every once in a while a little breath of wind
+would bring a fragrance of cedar and pinyon, and a sweet hint of pine and
+sage. At every turn he looked ahead, expecting to see the green of pine and
+the gray of sage. Toward the middle of the afternoon, coming to a place where
+Wildfire had taken to a trot, he put Nagger to that gait, and by sundown had
+worked up to where the canyon was only a shallow ravine. And finally it turned
+once more, to lose itself in a level where straggling pines stood high above
+the cedars, and great, dark-green silver spruces stood above the pines. And
+here were patches of sage, fresh and pungent, and long reaches of bleached
+grass. It was the edge of a forest. Wildfire's trail went on. Slone came at
+length to a group of pines, and here he found the remains of a camp-fire, and
+some flint arrow-heads. Indians had been in there, probably having come from
+the opposite direction to Slone's. This encouraged him, for where Indians
+could hunt so could he. Soon he was entering a forest where cedars and pinyons
+and pines began to grow thickly. Presently he came upon a faintly defined
+trail, just a dim, dark line even to an experienced eye. But it was a trail,
+and Wildfire had taken it.
+
+Slone halted for the night. The air was cold. And the dampness of it gave him
+an idea there were snow-banks somewhere not far distant. The dew was already
+heavy on the grass. He hobbled the horses and put a bell on Nagger. A bell
+might frighten lions that had never heard one. Then he built a fire and cooked
+his meal.
+
+It had been long since he had camped high up among the pines. The sough of the
+wind pleased him, like music. There had begun to be prospects of pleasant
+experience along with the toil of chasing Wildfire. He was entering new and
+strange and beautiful country. How far might the chase take him? He did not
+care. He was not sleepy, but even if he had been it developed that he must
+wait till the coyotes ceased their barking round his camp-fire. They came so
+close that he saw their gray shadows in the gloom. But presently they wearied
+of yelping at him and went away. After that the silence, broken only by the
+wind as it roared and lulled, seemed beautiful to Slone. He lost completely
+that sense of vague regret which had remained with him, and he forgot the
+Stewarts. And suddenly he felt absolutely free, alone, with nothing behind to
+remember, with wild, thrilling, nameless life before him. Just then the long
+mourn of a timber wolf wailed in with the wind. Seldom had he heard the cry of
+one of those night wanderers. There was nothing like it--no sound like it to
+fix in the lone camper's heart the great solitude and the wild.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+In the early morning when all was gray and the big, dark pines were shadowy
+specters, Slone was awakened by the cold. His hands were so numb that he had
+difficulty starting a fire. He stood over the blaze, warming them. The air was
+nipping, clear and thin, and sweet with frosty fragrance.
+
+Daylight came while he was in the midst of his morning meal. A white frost
+covered the ground and crackled under his feet as he went out to bring in the
+horses. He saw fresh deer tracks. Then he went back to camp for his rifle.
+Keeping a sharp lookout for game, he continued his search for the horses.
+
+The forest was open and park-like. There were no fallen trees or evidences of
+fire. Presently he came to a wide glade in the midst of which Nagger and the
+pack-mustang were grazing with a herd of deer. The size of the latter amazed
+Slone. The deer he had hunted back on the Sevier range were much smaller than
+these. Evidently these were mule deer, closely allied to the elk. They were so
+tame they stood facing him curiously, with long ears erect. It was sheer
+murder to kill a deer standing and watching like that, but Slone was out of
+meat and hungry and facing a long, hard trip. He shot a buck, which leaped
+spasmodically away, trying to follow the herd, and fell at the edge of the
+glade. Slone cut out a haunch, and then, catching the horses, he returned to
+camp, where he packed and saddled, and at once rode out on the dim trail.
+
+The wildness of the country he was entering was evident in the fact that as he
+passed the glade where he had shot the deer a few minutes before, there were
+coyotes quarreling over the carcass.
+
+Stone could see ahead and on each side several hundred yards, and presently he
+ascertained that the forest floor was not so level as he had supposed. He had
+entered a valley or was traversing a wide, gently sloping pass. He went
+through thickets of juniper, and had to go around clumps of quaking aspen. The
+pines grew larger and farther apart. Cedars and pinyons had been left behind,
+and he had met with no silver spruces after leaving camp. Probably that point
+was the height of a divide. There were banks of snow in some of the hollows on
+the north side. Evidently the snow had very recently melted, and it was
+evident also that the depth of snow through here had been fully ten feet,
+judging from the mutilation of the juniper-trees where the deer, standing on
+the hard, frozen crust, had browsed upon the branches.
+
+The quiet of the forest thrilled Slone. And the only movement was the
+occasional gray flash of a deer or coyote across a glade. No birds of any
+species crossed Stone's sight. He came, presently, upon a lion track in the
+trail, made probably a day before. Slone grew curious about it, seeing how it
+held, as he was holding, to Wildfire's tracks. After a mile or so he made sure
+the lion had been trailing the stallion, and for a second he felt a cold
+contraction of his heart. Already he loved Wildfire, and by virtue of all this
+toil of travel considered the wild horse his property.
+
+"No lion could ever get close to Wildfire," he soliloquized, with a short
+laugh. Of that he was absolutely certain.
+
+The sun rose, melting the frost, and a breath of warm air, laden with the
+scent of pine, moved heavily under the huge, yellow trees. Slone passed a
+point where the remains of an old camp-fire and a pile of deer antlers were
+further proof that Indians visited this plateau to hunt. From this camp
+broader, more deeply defined trails led away to the south and east. Slone kept
+to the east trail, in which Wildfire's tracks and those of the lion showed
+clearly. It was about the middle of the forenoon when the tracks of the
+stallion and lion left the trail to lead up a little draw where grass grew
+thick. Slone followed, reading the signs of Wildfire's progress, and the
+action of his pursuer, as well as if he had seen them. Here the stallion had
+plowed into a snow-bank, eating a hole two feet deep; then he had grazed
+around a little; then on and on; there his splendid tracks were deep in the
+soft earth. Slone knew what to expect when the track of the lion veered from
+those of the horse, and he followed the lion tracks. The ground was soft from
+the late melting of snow, and Nagger sunk deep. The lion left a plain track.
+Here he stole steadily along; there he left many tracks at a point where he
+might have halted to make sure of his scent. He was circling on the trail of
+the stallion, with cunning intent of ambush. The end of this slow, careful
+stalk of the lion, as told in his tracks, came upon the edge of a knoll where
+he had crouched to watch and wait.
+
+From this perch he had made a magnificent spring--Slone estimating it to be
+forty feet--but he had missed the stallion. There were Wildfire's tracks again,
+slow and short, and then deep and sharp where in the impetus of fright he had
+sprung out of reach. A second leap of the lion, and then lessening bounds, and
+finally an abrupt turn from Wildfire's trail told the futility of that stalk.
+Slone made certain that Wildfire was so keen that as he grazed along he had
+kept to open ground.
+
+Wildfire had run for a mile, then slowed down to a trot, and he had circled to
+get back to the trail he had left. Slone believed the horse was just so
+intelligent. At any rate, Wildfire struck the trail again, and turned at right
+angles to follow it.
+
+Here the forest floor appeared perfectly level. Patches of snow became
+frequent, and larger as Slone went on. At length the patches closed up, and
+soon extended as far as he could see. It was soft, affording difficult travel.
+Slone crossed hundreds of deer tracks, and the trail he was on eventually
+became a deer runway.
+
+Presently, far down one of the aisles between the great pines Slone saw what
+appeared to be a yellow cliff, far away. It puzzled him. And as he went on he
+received the impression that the forest dropped out of sight ahead. Then the
+trees grew thicker, obstructing his view. Presently the trail became soggy and
+he had to help his horse. The mustang floundered in the soft snow and earth.
+Cedars and pinyons appeared again, making travel still more laborious.
+
+All at once there came to Slone a strange consciousness of light and wind and
+space and void. On the instant his horse halted with a snort. Slone quickly
+looked up. Had he come to the end of the world? An abyss, a canyon, yawned
+beneath him, beyond all comparison in its greatness. His keen eye, educated to
+desert distance and dimension, swept down and across, taking in the tremendous
+truth, before it staggered his comprehension. But a second sweeping glance,
+slower, becoming intoxicated with what it beheld, saw gigantic cliff-steps and
+yellow slopes dotted with cedars, leading down to clefts filled with purple
+smoke, and these led on and on to a ragged red world of rock, bare, shining,
+bold, uplifted in mesa, dome, peak, and crag, clear and strange in the morning
+light, still and sleeping like death.
+
+This, then, was the great canyon, which had seemed like a hunter's fable
+rather than truth. Slone's sight dimmed, blurring the spectacle, and he found
+that his eyes had filled with tears. He wiped them away and looked again and
+again, until he was confounded by the vastness and the grandeur and the vague
+sadness of the scene. Nothing he had ever looked at had affected him like this
+canyon, although the Stewarts had tried to prepare him for it.
+
+It was the horse-hunter's passion that reminded him of his pursuit. The deer
+trail led down through a break in the wall. Only a few rods of it could be
+seen. This trail was passable, even though choked with snow. But the depth
+beyond this wall seemed to fascinate Slone and hold him back, used as he was
+to desert trails. Then the clean mark of Wildfire's hoof brought back the old
+thrill.
+
+"This place fits you, Wildfire," muttered Slone, dismounting.
+
+He started down, leading Nagger. The mustang followed. Slone kept to the wall
+side of the trail, fearing the horses might slip. The snow held firmly at
+first and Slone had no trouble. The gap in the rim-rock widened to a slope
+thickly grown over with cedars and pinyons and manzanita. This growth made the
+descent more laborious, yet afforded means at least for Slone to go down with
+less danger. There was no stopping. Once started, the horses had to keep on.
+Slone saw the impossibility of ever climbing out while that snow was there.
+The trail zigzagged down and down. Very soon the yellow wall hung tremendously
+over him, straight up. The snow became thinner and softer. The horses began to
+slip. They slid on their haunches. Fortunately the slope grew less steep, and
+Slone could see below where it reached out to comparatively level ground.
+Still, a mishap might yet occur. Slone kept as close to Nagger as possible,
+helping him whenever he could do it. The mustang slipped, rolled over, and
+then slipped past Slone, went down the slope to bring up in a cedar. Slone
+worked down to him and extricated him. Then the huge Nagger began to slide.
+Snow and loose rock slid with him, and so did Slone. The little avalanche
+stopped of its own accord, and then Slone dragged Nagger on down and down,
+presently to come to the end of the steep descent. Slone looked up to see that
+he had made short work of a thousand-foot slope. Here cedars and pinyons grew
+thickly enough to make a forest. The snow thinned out to patches, and then
+failed. But the going remained bad for a while as the horses sank deep in a
+soft red earth. This eventually grew more solid and finally dry. Slone worked
+out of the cedars to what appeared a grassy plateau inclosed by the great
+green-and-white slope with its yellow wall over hanging, and distant mesas and
+cliffs. Here his view was restricted. He was down on the first bench of the
+great canyon. And there was the deer trail, a well-worn path keeping to the
+edge of the slope. Slone came to a deep cut in the earth, and the trail headed
+it, where it began at the last descent of the slope. It was the source of a
+canyon. He could look down to see the bare, worn rock, and a hundred yards
+from where he stood the earth was washed from its rims and it began to show
+depth and something of that ragged outline which told of violence of flood.
+The trail headed many canyons like this, all running down across this bench,
+disappearing, dropping invisibly. The trail swung to the left under the great
+slope, and then presently it climbed to a higher bench. Here were brush and
+grass and huge patches of sage, so pungent that it stung Slone's nostrils.
+Then he went down again, this time to come to a clear brook lined by willows.
+Here the horses drank long and Slone refreshed himself. The sun had grown hot.
+There was fragrance of flowers he could not see and a low murmur of a
+waterfall that was likewise invisible. For most of the time his view was shut
+off, but occasionally he reached a point where through some break he saw
+towers gleaming red in the sun. A strange place, a place of silence, and smoky
+veils in the distance. Time passed swiftly. Toward the waning of the afternoon
+he began to climb to what appeared to be a saddle of land, connecting the
+canyon wall on the left with a great plateau, gold-rimmed and pine-fringed,
+rising more and more in his way as he advanced. At sunset Slone was more shut
+in than for several hours. He could tell the time was sunset by the golden
+light on the cliff wall again overhanging him. The slope was gradual up to
+this pass to the saddle, and upon coming to a spring, and the first
+pine-trees, he decided to halt for a camp. The mustang was almost exhausted.
+
+Thereupon he hobbled the horses in the luxuriant grass round the spring, and
+then unrolled his pack. Once as dusk came stealing down, while he was eating
+his meal, Nagger whistled in fright. Slone saw a gray, pantherish form gliding
+away into the shadows. He took a quick shot at it, but missed.
+
+"It's a lion country, all right," he said. And then he set about building a
+big fire on the other side of the grassy plot, so to have the horses between
+fires. He cut all the venison into thin strips, and spent an hour roasting
+them. Then he lay down to rest, and he said: "Wonder where Wildfire is
+to-night? Am I closer to him? Where's he headin' for?"
+
+The night was warm and still. It was black near the huge cliff, and overhead
+velvety blue, with stars of white fire. It seemed to him that he had become
+more thoughtful and observing of the aspects of his wild environment, and he
+felt a welcome consciousness of loneliness. Then sleep came to him and the
+night seemed short. In the gray dawn he arose refreshed.
+
+The horses were restive. Nagger snorted a welcome. Evidently they had passed
+an uneasy night. Slone found lion tracks at the spring and in sandy places.
+Presently he was on his way up to the notch between the great wall and the
+plateau. A growth of thick scrub-oak made travel difficult. It had not
+appeared far up to that saddle, but it was far. There were straggling
+pine-trees and huge rocks that obstructed his gaze. But once up he saw that
+the saddle was only a narrow ridge, curved to slope up on both sides.
+
+Straight before Slone and under him opened the canyon, blazing and glorious
+along the peaks and ramparts, where the rising sun struck, misty and smoky and
+shadowy down in those mysterious depths.
+
+It took an effort not to keep on gazing. But Slone turned to the grim business
+of his pursuit. The trail he saw leading down had been made by Indians. It was
+used probably once a year by them; and also by wild animals, and it was
+exceedingly steep and rough. Wildfire had paced to and fro along the narrow
+ridge of that saddle, making many tracks, before he had headed down again.
+Slone imagined that the great stallion had been daunted by the tremendous
+chasm, but had finally faced it, meaning to put this obstacle between him and
+his pursuers. It never occurred to Slone to attribute less intelligence to
+Wildfire than that. So, dismounting, Slone took Nagger's bridle and started
+down. The mustang with the pack was reluctant. He snorted and whistled and
+pawed the earth. But he would not be left alone, so he followed.
+
+The trail led down under cedars that fringed a precipice. Slone was aware of
+this without looking. He attended only to the trail and to his horse. Only an
+Indian could have picked out that course, and it was cruel to put a horse to
+it. But Nagger was powerful, sure-footed, and he would go anywhere that Slone
+led him. Gradually Slone worked down and away from the bulging rim-wall. It
+was hard, rough work, and risky because it could not be accomplished slowly.
+Brush and rocks, loose shale and weathered slope, long, dusty inclines of
+yellow earth, and jumbles of stone--these made bad going for miles of slow,
+zigzag trail down out of the cedars. Then the trail entered what appeared to
+be a ravine.
+
+That ravine became a canyon. At its head it was a dry wash, full of gravel and
+rocks. It began to cut deep into the bowels of the earth. It shut out sight of
+the surrounding walls and peaks. Water appeared from under a cliff and,
+augmented by other springs, became a brook. Hot, dry, and barren at its
+beginning, this cleft became cool and shady and luxuriant with grass and
+flowers and amber moss with silver blossoms. The rocks had changed color from
+yellow to deep red. Four hours of turning and twisting, endlessly down and
+down, over boulders and banks and every conceivable roughness of earth and
+rock, finished the pack-mustang; and Slone mercifully left him in a long reach
+of canyon where grass and water never failed. In this place Slone halted for
+the noon hour, letting Nagger have his fill of the rich grazing. Nagger's
+three days in grassy upland, despite the continuous travel by day, had
+improved him. He looked fat, and Slone had not yet caught the horse resting.
+Nagger was iron to endure. Here Slone left all the outfit except what was on
+his saddle, and the sack containing the few pounds of meat and supplies, and
+the two utensils. This sack he tied on the back of his saddle, and resumed his
+journey.
+
+Presently he came to a place where Wildfire had doubled on his trail and had
+turned up a side canyon. The climb out was hard on Slone, if not on Nagger.
+Once up, Slone found himself upon a wide, barren plateau of glaring red rock
+and clumps of greasewood and cactus. The plateau was miles wide, shut in by
+great walls and mesas of colored rock. The afternoon sun beat down fiercely. A
+blast of wind, as if from a furnace, swept across the plateau, and it was
+laden with red dust. Slone walked here, where he could have ridden. And he
+made several miles of up-and-down progress over this rough plateau. The great
+walls of the opposite side of the canyon loomed appreciably closer. What,
+Slone wondered, was at the bottom of this rent in the earth? The great desert
+river was down there, of course, but he knew nothing of it. Would that turn
+back Wildfire? Slone thought grimly how he had always claimed Nagger to be
+part fish and part bird. Wildfire was not going to escape.
+
+By and by only isolated mescal plants with long, yellow-plumed spears broke
+the bare monotony of the plateau. And Slone passed from red sand and gravel to
+a red, soft shale, and from that to hard, red rock. Here Wildfire's tracks
+were lost, the first time in seven weeks. But Slone had his direction down
+that plateau with the cleavage lines of canyons to right and left. At times
+Slone found a vestige of the old Indian trail, and this made him doubly sure
+of being right. He did not need to have Wildfire's tracks. He let Nagger pick
+the way, and the horse made no mistake in finding the line of least
+resistance. But that grew harder and harder. This bare rock, like a file,
+would soon wear Wildfire's hoofs thin. And Slone rejoiced. Perhaps somewhere
+down in this awful chasm he and Nagger would have it out with the stallion.
+Slone began to look far ahead, beginning to believe that he might see
+Wildfire. Twice he had seen Wildfire, but only at a distance. Then he had
+resembled a running streak of fire, whence his name, which Slone had given
+him.
+
+This bare region of rock began to be cut up into gullies. It was necessary to
+head them or to climb in and out. Miles of travel really meant little progress
+straight ahead. But Slone kept on. He was hot and Nagger was hot, and that
+made hard work easier. Sometimes on the wind came a low thunder. Was it a
+storm or an avalanche slipping or falling water? He could not tell. The sound
+was significant and haunting.
+
+Of one thing he was sure--that he could not have found his back-trail. But he
+divined he was never to retrace his steps on this journey. The stretch of
+broken plateau before him grew wilder and bolder of outline, darker in color,
+weirder in aspect, and progress across it grew slower, more dangerous. There
+were many places Nagger should not have been put to--where a slip meant a
+broken leg. But Slone could not turn back. And something besides an
+indomitable spirit kept him going. Again the sound resembling thunder assailed
+his ears, louder this time. The plateau appeared to be ending in a series of
+great capes or promontories. Slone feared he would soon come out upon a
+promontory from which he might see the impossibility of further travel. He
+felt relieved down in the gullies, where he could not see far. He climbed out
+of one, presently, from which there extended a narrow ledge with a slant too
+perilous for any horse. He stepped out upon that with far less confidence than
+Nagger. To the right was a bulge of low wall, and a few feet to the left a
+dark precipice. The trail here was faintly outlined, and it was six inches
+wide and slanting as well. It seemed endless to Slone, that ledge. He looked
+only down at his feet and listened to Nagger's steps. The big horse trod
+carefully, but naturally, and he did not slip. That ledge extended in a long
+curve, turning slowly away from the precipice, and ascending a little at the
+further end. Slone, drew a deep breath of relief when he led Nagger up on
+level rock.
+
+Suddenly a strange yet familiar sound halted Slone, as if he had been struck.
+The wild, shrill, high-pitched, piercing whistle of a stallion! Nagger neighed
+a blast in reply and pounded the rock with his iron-shod hoofs. With a thrill
+Slone looked ahead.
+
+There, some few hundred yards distant, on a promontory, stood a red horse.
+
+"My Lord! . . . It's Wildfire!" breathed Slone, tensely.
+
+He could not believe his sight. He imagined he was dreaming. But as Nagger
+stamped and snorted defiance Slone looked with fixed and keen gaze, and knew
+that beautiful picture was no lie.
+
+Wildfire was as red as fire. His long mane, wild in the wind, was like a
+whipping, black-streaked flame. Silhouetted there against that canyon
+background he seemed gigantic, a demon horse, ready to plunge into fiery
+depths. He was looking back over his shoulder, his head very high, and every
+line of him was instinct with wildness. Again he sent out that shrill,
+air-splitting whistle. Slone understood it to be a clarion call to Nagger. If
+Nagger had been alone Wildfire would have killed him. The red stallion was a
+killer of horses. All over the Utah ranges he had left the trail of a
+murderer. Nagger understood this, too, for he whistled back in rage and
+terror. It took an iron arm to hold him. Then Wildfire plunged, apparently
+down, and vanished from Slone's sight.
+
+Slone hurried onward, to be blocked by a huge crack in the rocky plateau. This
+he had to head. And then another and like obstacle checked his haste to reach
+that promontory. He was forced to go more slowly. Wildfire had been close only
+as to sight. And this was the great canyon that dwarfed distance and magnified
+proximity. Climbing down and up, toiling on, he at last learned patience. He
+had seen Wildfire at close range. That was enough. So he plodded on, once more
+returning to careful regard of Nagger. It took an hour of work to reach the
+point where Wildfire had disappeared.
+
+A promontory indeed it was, overhanging a valley a thousand feet below. A
+white torrent of a stream wound through it. There were lines of green
+cottonwoods following the winding course. Then Slone saw Wildfire slowly
+crossing the flat toward the stream. He had gone down that cliff, which to
+Slone looked perpendicular.
+
+Wildfire appeared to be walking lame. Slone, making sure of this, suffered a
+pang. Then, when the significance of such lameness dawned upon him he whooped
+his wild joy and waved his hat. The red stallion must have heard, for he
+looked up. Then he went on again and waded into the stream, where he drank
+long. When he started to cross, the swift current drove him back in several
+places. The water wreathed white around him. But evidently it was not deep,
+and finally he crossed. From the other side he looked up again at Nagger and
+Slone, and, going on, he soon was out of sight in the cottonwoods.
+
+"How to get down!" muttered Slone.
+
+There was a break in the cliff wall, a bare stone slant where horses had gone
+down and come up. That was enough for Slone to know. He would have attempted
+the descent if he were sure no other horse but Wildfire had ever gone down
+there. But Slone's hair began to rise stiff on his head. A horse like
+Wildfire, and mountain sheep and Indian ponies, were all very different from
+Nagger. The chances were against Nagger.
+
+"Come on, old boy. If I can do it, you can," he said.
+
+Slone had never seen a trail as perilous as this. He was afraid for his horse.
+A slip there meant death. The way Nagger trembled in every muscle showed his
+feelings. But he never flinched. He would follow Slone anywhere, providing
+Slone rode him or led him. And here, as riding was impossible, Slone went
+before. If the horse slipped there would be a double tragedy, for Nagger would
+knock his master off the cliff. Slone set his teeth and stepped down. He did
+not let Nagger see his fear. He was taking the greatest risk he had ever run.
+
+The break in the wall led to a ledge, and the ledge dropped from step to step,
+and these had bare, slippery slants between. Nagger was splendid on a bad
+trail. He had methods peculiar to his huge build and great weight. He crashed
+down over the stone steps, both front hoofs at once. The slants he slid down
+on his haunches with his forelegs stiff and the iron shoes scraping. He
+snorted and heaved and grew wet with sweat. He tossed his head at some of the
+places. But he never hesitated and it was impossible for him to go slowly.
+Whenever Slone came to corrugated stretches in the trail he felt grateful. But
+these were few. The rock was like smooth red iron. Slone had never seen such
+hard rock. It took him long to realize that it was marble. His heart seemed a
+tense, painful knot in his breast, as if it could not beat, holding back in
+the strained suspense. But Nagger never jerked on the bridle. He never
+faltered. Many times he slipped, often with both front feet, but never with
+all four feet. So he did not fall. And the red wall began to loom above Slone.
+Then suddenly he seemed brought to a point where it was impossible to descend.
+It was a round bulge, slanting fearfully, with only a few little rough
+surfaces to hold a foot. Wildfire had left a broad, clear-swept mark at that
+place, and red hairs on some of the sharp points. He had slid down. Below was
+an offset that fortunately prevented further sliding, Slone started to walk
+down this place, but when Nagger began to slide Slone had to let go the bridle
+and jump. Both he and the horse landed safely. Luck was with them. And they
+went on, down and down, to reach the base of the great wall, scraped and
+exhausted, wet with sweat, but unhurt. As Slone gazed upward he felt the
+impossibility of believing what he knew to be true. He hugged and petted the
+horse. Then he led on to the roaring stream.
+
+It was green water white with foam. Slone waded in and found the water cool
+and shallow and very swift. He had to hold to Nagger to keep from being swept
+downstream. They crossed in safety. There in the sand showed Wildfire's
+tracks. And here were signs of another Indian camp, half a year old.
+
+The shade of the cottonwoods was pleasant. Slone found this valley
+oppressively hot. There was no wind and the sand blistered his feet through
+his boots. Wildfire held to the Indian trail that had guided him down into
+this wilderness of worn rock. And that trail crossed the stream at every turn
+of the twisting, narrow valley. Slone enjoyed getting into the water. He hung
+his gun over the pommel and let the water roll him. A dozen times he and
+Nagger forded the rushing torrent. Then they came to a box-like closing of the
+valley to canyon walls, and here the trail evidently followed the stream bed.
+There was no other way. Slone waded in, and stumbled, rolled, and floated
+ahead of the sturdy horse. Nagger was wet to his breast, but he did not fall.
+This gulch seemed full of a hollow rushing roar. It opened out into a wide
+valley. And Wildfire's tracks took to the left side and began to climb the
+slope.
+
+Here the traveling was good, considering what had been passed. Once up out of
+the valley floor Slone saw Wildfire far ahead, high on the slope. He did not
+appear to be limping, but he was not going fast. Slone watched as he climbed.
+What and where would be the end of this chase?
+
+Sometimes Wildfire was plain in his sight for a moment, but usually he was
+hidden by rocks. The slope was one great talus, a jumble of weathered rock,
+fallen from what appeared a mountain of red and yellow wall. Here the heat of
+the sun fell upon him like fire. The rocks were so hot Slone could not touch
+them with bare hand. The close of the afternoon was approaching, and this
+slope was interminably long. Still, it was not steep, and the trail was good.
+
+At last from the height of slope Wildfire appeared, looking back and down.
+Then he was gone. Slone plodded upward. Long before he reached that summit be
+heard the dull rumble of the river. It grew to be a roar, yet it seemed
+distant. Would the great desert river stop Wildfire in his flight? Slone
+doubted it. He surmounted the ridge, to find the canyon opening in a
+tremendous gap, and to see down, far down, a glittering, sun-blasted slope
+merging into a deep, black gulch where a red river swept and chafed and
+roared.
+
+Somehow the river was what he had expected to see. A force that had cut and
+ground this canyon could have been nothing but a river like that. The trail
+led down, and Slone had no doubt that it crossed the river and led up out of
+the canyon. He wanted to stay there and gaze endlessly and listen. At length
+he began the descent. As he proceeded it seemed that the roar of the river
+lessened. He could not understand why this was so. It took half an hour to
+reach the last level, a ghastly, black, and iron-ribbed canyon bed, with the
+river splitting it. He had not had a glimpse of Wildfire on this side of the
+divide, but he found his tracks, and they led down off the last level, through
+a notch in the black bank of marble to a sand-bar and the river.
+
+Wildfire had walked straight off the sand into the water. Slone studied the
+river and shore. The water ran slow, heavily, in sluggish eddies. From far up
+the canyon came the roar of a rapid, and from below the roar of another,
+heavier and closer. The river appeared tremendous, in ways Slone felt rather
+than realized, yet it was not swift. Studying the black, rough wall of rock
+above him, he saw marks where the river had been sixty feet higher than where
+he stood on the sand. It was low, then. How lucky for him that he had gotten
+there before flood season! He believed Wildfire had crossed easily, and he
+knew Nagger could make it. Then he piled and tied his supplies and weapons
+high on the saddle, to keep them dry, and looked for a place to take to the
+water.
+
+Wildfire had sunk deep before reaching the edge. Manifestly he had lunged the
+last few feet. Slone found a better place, and waded in, urging Nagger. The
+big horse plunged, almost going under, and began to swim. Slone kept up-stream
+beside him. He found, presently, that the water was thick and made him tired,
+so it was necessary to grasp a stirrup and be towed. The river appeared only a
+few hundred feet wide, but probably it was wider than it looked. Nagger
+labored heavily near the opposite shore; still, he landed safely upon a rocky
+bank. There were patches of sand in which Wildfire's tracks showed so fresh
+that the water had not yet dried out of them.
+
+Slone rested his horse before attempting to climb out of that split in the
+rock. However, Wildfire had found an easy ascent. On this side of the canyon
+the bare rock did not predominate. A clear trail led up a dusty, gravelly
+slope, upon which scant greasewood and cactus appeared. Half an hour's
+climbing brought Slone to where he could see that he was entering a vast
+valley, sloping up and narrowing to a notch in the dark cliffs, above which
+towered the great red wall and about that the slopes of cedar and the yellow
+rim-rock.
+
+And scarcely a mile distant, bright in the westering sunlight, shone the red
+stallion, moving slowly.
+
+Slone pressed on steadily. Just before dark he came to an ideal spot to camp.
+The valley had closed up, so that the lofty walls cast shadows that met. A
+clump of cottonwoods surrounding a spring, abundance of rich grass, willows
+and flowers lining the banks, formed an oasis in the bare valley. Slone was
+tired out from the day of ceaseless toil down and up, and he could scarcely
+keep his eyes open. But he tried to stay awake. The dead silence of the
+valley, the dry fragrance, the dreaming walls, the advent of night low down,
+when up on the ramparts the last red rays of the sun lingered, the strange
+loneliness--these were sweet and comforting to him.
+
+And that night's sleep was as a moment. He opened his eyes to see the crags
+and towers and peaks and domes, and the lofty walls of that vast, broken chaos
+of canyons across the river. They were now emerging from the misty gray of
+dawn, growing pink and lilac and purple under the rising sun.
+
+He arose and set about his few tasks, which, being soon finished, allowed him
+an early start.
+
+Wildfire had grazed along no more than a mile in the lead. Slone looked
+eagerly up the narrowing canyon, but he was not rewarded by a sight of the
+stallion. As he progressed up a gradually ascending trail he became aware of
+the fact that the notch he had long looked up to was where the great red walls
+closed in and almost met. And the trail zigzagged up this narrow vent, so
+steep that only a few steps could be taken without rest. Slone toiled up for
+an hour--an age--till he was wet, burning, choked, with a great weight on his
+chest. Yet still he was only half-way up that awful break between the walls.
+Sometimes he could have tossed a stone down upon a part of the trail, only a
+few rods below, yet many, many weary steps of actual toil. As he got farther
+up the notch widened. What had been scarcely visible from the valley below was
+now colossal in actual dimensions. The trail was like a twisted mile of thread
+between two bulging mountain walls leaning their ledges and fronts over this
+tilted pass.
+
+Slone rested often. Nagger appreciated this and heaved gratefully at every
+halt. In this monotonous toil Slone forgot the zest of his pursuit. And when
+Nagger suddenly snorted in fright Slone was not prepared for what he saw.
+
+Above him ran a low, red wall, around which evidently the trail led. At the
+curve, which was a promontory, scarcely a hundred feet in an airline above
+him, he saw something red moving, bobbing, coming out into view. It was a
+horse.
+
+Wildfire--no farther away than the length of three lassoes!
+
+There he stood looking down. He fulfilled all of Slone's dreams. Only he was
+bigger. But he was so magnificently proportioned that he did not seem heavy.
+His coat was shaggy and red. It was not glossy. The color was what made him
+shine. His mane was like a crest, mounting, then failing low. Slone had never
+seen so much muscle on a horse. Yet his outline was graceful, beautiful. The
+head was indeed that of the wildest of all wild creatures--a stallion born
+wild--and it was beautiful, savage, splendid, everything but noble. Whatever
+Wildfire was, he was a devil, a murderer--he had no noble attributes. Slone
+thought that if a horse could express hate, surely Wildfire did then. It was
+certain that he did express curiosity and fury.
+
+Slone shook a gantleted fist at the stallion, as if the horse were human. That
+was a natural action for a rider of his kind. Wildfire turned away, showed
+bright against the dark background, and then disappeared.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+That was the last Slone saw of Wildfire for three days.
+
+It took all of this day to climb out of the canyon. The second was a slow
+march of thirty miles into a scrub cedar and pinyon forest, through which the
+great red and yellow walls of the canyon could be seen. That night Slone found
+a water-hole in a rocky pocket and a little grass for Nagger. The third day's
+travel consisted of forty miles or more through level pine forest, dry and
+odorous, but lacking the freshness and beauty of the forest on the north side
+of the canyon. On this south side a strange feature was that all the water,
+when there was any, ran away from the rim. Slone camped this night at a muddy
+pond in the woods, where Wildfire's tracks showed plainly.
+
+On the following day Slone rode out of the forest into a country of scanty
+cedars, bleached and stunted, and out of this to the edge of a plateau, from
+which the shimmering desert flung its vast and desolate distances, forbidding
+and menacing. This was not the desert upland country of Utah, but a naked and
+bony world of colored rock and sand--a painted desert of heat and wind and
+flying sand and waterless wastes and barren ranges. But it did not daunt
+Slone. For far down on the bare, billowing ridges moved a red speck, at a
+snail's pace, a slowly moving dot of color which was Wildfire.
+
+On open ground like this, Nagger, carrying two hundred and fifty pounds,
+showed his wonderful quality. He did not mind the heat nor the sand nor the
+glare nor the distance nor his burden. He did not tire. He was an engine of
+tremendous power.
+
+Slone gained upon Wildfire, and toward evening of that day he reached to
+within half a mile of the stallion. And he chose to keep that far behind. That
+night he camped where there was dry grass, but no water.
+
+Next day he followed Wildfire down and down, over the endless swell of rolling
+red ridges, bare of all but bleached white grass and meager greasewood, always
+descending in the face of that painted desert of bold and ragged steps. Slone
+made fifty miles that day, and gained the valley bed, where a slender stream
+ran thin and spread over a wide sandy bottom. It was salty water, but it was
+welcome to both man and beast.
+
+The following day he crossed, and the tracks of Wildfire were still wet on the
+sand-bars. The stallion was slowing down. Slone saw him, limping along, not
+far in advance. There was a ten-mile stretch of level ground, blown hard as
+rock, from which the sustenance had been bleached, for not a spear of grass
+grew there. And following that was a tortuous passage through a weird region
+of clay dunes, blue and violet and heliotrope and lavender, all worn smooth by
+rain and wind. Wildfire favored the soft ground now. He had deviated from his
+straight course. And he was partial to washes and dips in the earth where
+water might have lodged. And he was not now scornful of a green-scummed
+water-hole with its white margin of alkali. That night Slone made camp with
+Wildfire in plain sight. The stallion stopped when his pursuers stopped. And
+he began to graze on the same stretch with Nagger. How strange this seemed to
+Slone!
+
+Here at this camp was evidence of Indians. Wildfire had swung round to the
+north in his course. Like any pursued wild animal, he had began to circle. And
+he had pointed his nose toward the Utah he had left.
+
+Next morning Wildfire was not in sight, but he had left his tracks in the
+sand. Slone trailed him with Nagger at a trot. Toward the head of this sandy
+flat Slone came upon old corn-fields, and a broken dam where the water had
+been stored, and well-defined trails leading away to the right. Somewhere over
+there in the desert lived Indians. At this point Wildfire abandoned the trail
+he had followed for many days and cut out more to the north. It took all the
+morning hours to climb three great steps and benches that led up to the summit
+of a mesa, vast in extent. It turned out to be a sandy waste. The wind rose
+and everywhere were moving sheets of sand, and in the distance circular yellow
+dust-devils, rising high like waterspouts, and back down in the sun-scorched
+valley a sandstorm moved along majestically, burying the desert in its yellow
+pall.
+
+Then two more days of sand and another day of a slowly rising ground growing
+from bare to gray and gray to green, and then to the purple of sage and
+cedar--these three grinding days were toiled out with only one water-hole.
+
+And Wildfire was lame and in distress and Nagger was growing gaunt and showing
+strain; and Slone, haggard and black and worn, plodded miles and miles on foot
+to save his horse.
+
+Slone felt that it would be futile to put the chase to a test of speed. Nagger
+could never head that stallion. Slone meant to go on and on, always pushing
+Wildfire, keeping him tired, wearied, and worrying him, till a section of the
+country was reached where he could drive Wildfire into some kind of a natural
+trap. The pursuit seemed endless. Wildfire kept to open country where he could
+not be surprised.
+
+There came a morning when Slone climbed to a cedared plateau that rose for a
+whole day's travel, and then split into a labyrinthine maze of canyons. There
+were trees, grass, water. It was a high country, cool and wild, like the
+uplands he had left. For days he camped on Wildfire's trail, always
+relentlessly driving him, always watching for the trap he hoped to find. And
+the red stallion spent much of this time of flight in looking backward.
+Whenever Slone came in sight of him he had his head over his shoulder,
+watching. And on the soft ground of these canyons he had begun to recover from
+his lameness. But this did not worry Slone. Sooner or later Wildfire would go
+down into a high-walled wash, from which there would be no outlet; or he would
+wander into a box-canyon; or he would climb out on a mesa with no place to
+descend, unless he passed Slone; or he would get cornered on a soft, steep
+slope where his hoofs would sink deep and make him slow. The nature of the
+desert had changed. Slone had entered a wonderful region, the like of which he
+had not seen--a high plateau crisscrossed in every direction by narrow canyons
+with red walls a thousand feet high.
+
+And one of the strange turning canyons opened into a vast valley of monuments.
+
+The plateau had weathered and washed away, leaving huge sections of stone
+walls, all standing isolated, different in size and shape, but all clean-cut,
+bold, with straight lines. They stood up everywhere, monumental, towering,
+many-colored, lending a singular and beautiful aspect to the great
+green-and-gray valley, billowing away to the north, where dim, broken
+battlements mounted to the clouds.
+
+The only living thing in Slone's sight was Wildfire. He shone red down on the
+green slope.
+
+Slone's heart swelled. This was the setting for that grand horse--a perfect
+wild range. But also it seemed the last place where there might be any chance
+to trap the stallion. Still that did not alter Slone's purpose, though it lost
+to him the joy of former hopes. He rode down the slope, out upon the billowing
+floor of the valley. Wildfire looked back to see his pursuers, and then the
+solemn stillness broke to a wild, piercing whistle.
+
+Day after day, camping where night found him, Slone followed the stallion,
+never losing sight of him till darkness had fallen. The valley was immense and
+the monuments miles apart. But they always seemed close together and near him.
+The air magnified everything. Slone lost track of time. The strange, solemn,
+lonely days and the silent, lonely nights, and the endless pursuit, and the
+wild, weird valley--these completed the work of years on Slone and he became
+satisfied, unthinking, almost savage.
+
+The toil and privation had worn him down and he was like iron. His garments
+hung in tatters; his boots were ripped and soleless. Long since his flour had
+been used up, and all his supplies except the salt. He lived on the meat of
+rabbits, but they were scarce, and the time came when there were none. Some
+days he did not eat. Hunger did not make him suffer. He killed a desert bird
+now and then, and once a wildcat crossing the valley. Eventually he felt his
+strength diminishing, and then he took to digging out the pack-rats and
+cooking them. But these, too, were scarce. At length starvation faced Slone.
+But he knew he would not starve. Many times he had been within rifle-shot of
+Wildfire. And the grim, forbidding thought grew upon him that he must kill the
+stallion. The thought seemed involuntary, but his mind rejected it.
+Nevertheless, he knew that if he could not catch the stallion he would kill
+him. That had been the end of many a desperate rider's pursuit of a coveted
+horse.
+
+While Slone kept on his merciless pursuit, never letting Wildfire rest by day,
+time went on just as relentlessly. Spring gave way to early summer. The hot
+sun bleached the grass; water-holes failed out in the valley, and water could
+be found only in the canyons; and the dry winds began to blow the sand. It was
+a sandy valley, green and gray only at a distance, and out toward the north
+there were no monuments, and the slow heave of sand lifted toward the dim
+walls.
+
+Wildfire worked away from this open valley, back to the south end, where the
+great monuments loomed, and still farther back, where they grew closer, till
+at length some of them were joined by weathered ridges to the walls of the
+surrounding plateau. For all that Slone could see, Wildfire was in perfect
+condition. But Nagger was not the horse he had been. Slone realized that in
+one way or another the pursuit was narrowing down to the end.
+
+He found a water-hole at the head of a wash in a split in the walls, and here
+he let Nagger rest and graze one whole day--the first day for a long time that
+he had not kept the red stallion in sight. That day was marked by the good
+fortune of killing a rabbit, and while eating it his gloomy, fixed mind
+admitted that he was starving. He dreaded the next sunrise. But he could not
+hold it back. There, behind the dark monuments, standing sentinel-like, the
+sky lightened and reddened and burst into gold and pink, till out of the
+golden glare the sun rose glorious. And Slone, facing the league-long shadows
+of the monuments, rode out again into the silent, solemn day, on his hopeless
+quest.
+
+For a change Wildfire had climbed high up a slope of talus, through a narrow
+pass, rounded over with drifting sand. And Slone gazed down into a huge
+amphitheater full of monuments, like all that strange country. A basin three
+miles across lay beneath him. Walls and weathered slants of rock and steep
+slopes of reddish-yellow sand inclosed this oval depression. The floor was
+white, and it seemed to move gently or radiate with heat-waves. Studying it,
+Slone made out that the motion was caused by wind in long bleached grass. He
+had crossed small areas of this grass in different parts of the region.
+
+Wildfire's tracks led down into this basin, and presently Slone, by straining
+his eyes, made out the red spot that was the stallion.
+
+"He's lookin' to quit the country," soliloquized Slone, as he surveyed the
+scene.
+
+With keen, slow gaze Slone studied the lay of wall and slope, and when he had
+circled the huge depression he made sure that Wildfire could not get out
+except by the narrow pass through which he had gone in. Slone sat astride
+Nagger in the mouth of this pass--a wash a few yards wide, walled by broken,
+rough rock on one side and an insurmountable slope on the other.
+
+"If this hole was only little, now," sighed Slone, as he gazed at the
+sweeping, shimmering oval floor, "I might have a chance. But down there--we
+couldn't get near him."
+
+There was no water in that dry bowl. Slone reflected on the uselessness of
+keeping Wildfire down there, because Nagger could not go without water as long
+as Wildfire. For the first time Slone hesitated. It seemed merciless to Nagger
+to drive him down into this hot, windy hole. The wind blew from the west, and
+it swooped up the slope, hot, with the odor of dry, dead grass.
+
+But that hot wind stirred Slone with an idea, and suddenly he was tense,
+excited, glowing, yet grim and hard.
+
+"Wildfire, I'll make you run with your namesake in that high grass," called
+Slone. The speech was full of bitter failure, of regret, of the hardness of a
+rider who could not give up the horse to freedom.
+
+Slone meant to ride down there and fire the long grass. In that wind there
+would indeed be wildfire to race with the red stallion. It would perhaps mean
+his death; at least it would chase him out of that hole, where to follow him
+would be useless.
+
+"I'd make you hump now to get away if I could get behind you," muttered Slone.
+He saw that if he could fire the grass on the other side the wind of flame
+would drive Wildfire straight toward him. The slopes and walls narrowed up to
+the pass, but high grass grew to within a few rods of where Slone stood. But
+it seemed impossible to get behind Wildfire.
+
+"At night--then--I could get round him," said Slone, thinking hard and
+narrowing his gaze to scan the circle of wall and slope. "Why not? . . . No
+wind at night. That grass would burn slow till mornin'--till the wind came
+up--an' it's been west for days."
+
+Suddenly Slone began to pound the patient Nagger and to cry out to him in wild
+exultance.
+
+"Old horse, we've got him! . . . We've got him! . . . We'll put a rope on him
+before this time to-morrow!"
+
+Slone yielded to his strange, wild joy, but it did not last long, soon
+succeeding to sober, keen thought. He rode down into the bowl a mile, making
+absolutely certain that Wildfire could not climb out on that side. The far
+end, beyond the monuments, was a sheer wall of rock. Then he crossed to the
+left side. Here the sandy slope was almost too steep for even him to go up.
+And there was grass that would burn. He returned to the pass assured that
+Wildfire had at last fallen into a trap the like Slone had never dreamed of.
+The great horse was doomed to run into living flame or the whirling noose of a
+lasso.
+
+Then Slone reflected. Nagger had that very morning had his fill of good
+water--the first really satisfying drink for days. If he was rested that day,
+on the morrow he would be fit for the grueling work possibly in store for him.
+Slone unsaddled the horse and turned him loose, and with a snort he made down
+the gentle slope for the grass. Then Slone carried his saddle to a shady spot
+afforded by a slab of rock and a dwarf cedar, and here he composed himself to
+rest and watch and think and wait.
+
+Wildfire was plainly in sight no more than two miles away. Gradually he was
+grazing along toward the monuments and the far end of the great basin. Slone
+believed, because the place was so large, that Wildfire thought there was a
+way out on the other side or over the slopes or through the walls. Never
+before had the far-sighted stallion made a mistake. Slone suddenly felt the
+keen, stabbing fear of an outlet somewhere. But it left him quickly. He had
+studied those slopes and walls. Wildfire could not get out, except by the pass
+he had entered, unless he could fly.
+
+Slone lay in the shade, his head propped on his saddle, and while gazing down
+into the shimmering hollow he began to plan. He calculated that he must be
+able to carry fire swiftly across the far end of the basin, so that he would
+not be absent long from the mouth of the pass. Fire was always a difficult
+matter, since he must depend only on flint and steel. He decided to wait till
+dark, build a fire with dead cedar sticks, and carry a bundle of them with
+burning ends. He felt assured that the wind caused by riding would keep them
+burning. After he had lighted the grass all he had to do was to hurry back to
+his station and there await developments.
+
+The day passed slowly, and it was hot. The heat-waves rose in dark, wavering
+lines and veils from the valley. The wind blew almost a gale. Thin, curling
+sheets of sand blew up over the crests of the slopes, and the sound it made
+was a soft, silken rustling, very low. The sky was a steely blue above and
+copper close over the distant walls.
+
+That afternoon, toward the close, Slone ate the last of the meat. At sunset
+the wind died away and the air cooled. There was a strip of red along the wall
+of rock and on the tips of the monuments, and it lingered there for long, a
+strange, bright crown. Nagger was not far away, but Wildfire had disappeared,
+probably behind one of the monuments.
+
+When twilight fell Slone went down after Nagger and, returning with him, put
+on bridle and saddle. Then he began to search for suitable sticks of wood.
+Farther back in the pass he found stunted dead cedars, and from these secured
+enough for his purpose. He kindled a fire and burnt the ends of the sticks
+into red embers. Making a bundle of these, he put them under his arm, the
+dull, glowing ends backward, and then mounted his horse.
+
+It was just about dark when he faced down into the valley. When he reached
+level ground he kept to the edge of the left slope and put Nagger to a good
+trot. The grass and brush were scant here, and the color of the sand was
+light, so he had no difficulty in traveling.
+
+From time to time his horse went through grass, and its dry, crackling rustle,
+showing how it would burn, was music to Slone. Gradually the monuments began
+to loom up, bold and black against the blue sky, with stars seemingly hanging
+close over them. Slone had calculated that the basin was smaller than it
+really was, in both length and breadth. This worried him. Wildfire might see
+or hear or scent him, and make a break back to the pass and thus escape. Slone
+was glad when the huge, dark monuments were indistinguishable from the black,
+frowning wall. He had to go slower here, because of the darkness. But at last
+he reached the slow rise of jumbled rock that evidently marked the extent of
+weathering on that side. Here he turned to the right and rode out into the
+valley. The floor was level and thickly overgrown with long, dead grass and
+dead greasewood, as dry as tinder. It was easy to account for the dryness;
+neither snow nor rain had visited that valley for many months. Slone whipped
+one of the sticks in the wind and soon had the smoldering end red and
+showering sparks. Then he dropped the stick in the grass, with curious intent
+and a strange feeling of regret.
+
+Instantly the grass blazed with a little sputtering roar. Nagger snorted.
+"Wildfire!" exclaimed Slone. That word was a favorite one with riders, and now
+Slone used it both to call out his menace to the stallion and to express his
+feeling for that blaze, already running wild.
+
+Without looking back Slone rode across the valley, dropping a glowing stick
+every quarter of a mile. When he reached the other side there were a dozen
+fires behind him, burning slowly, with white smoke rising lazily. Then he
+loped Nagger along the side back to the sandy ascent, and on up to the mouth
+of the pass. There he searched for tracks. Wildfire had not gone out, and
+Slone experienced relief and exultation. He took up a position in the middle
+of the narrowest part of the pass, and there, with Nagger ready for anything,
+he once more composed himself to watch and wait.
+
+Far across the darkness of the valley, low down, twelve lines of fire, widely
+separated, crept toward one another. They appeared thin and slow, with only an
+occasional leaping flame. And some of the black spaces must have been
+monuments, blotting out the creeping snail-lines of red. Slone watched,
+strangely fascinated.
+
+"What do you think of that?" he said, aloud, and he meant his query for
+Wildfire.
+
+As he watched the lines perceptibly lengthened and brightened and pale shadows
+of smoke began to appear. Over at the left of the valley the two brightest
+fires, the first he had started, crept closer and closer together. They seemed
+long in covering distance. But not a breath of wind stirred, and besides they
+really might move swiftly, without looking so to Slone. When the two lines met
+a sudden and larger blaze rose.
+
+"Ah!" said the rider, and then he watched the other lines creeping together.
+How slowly fire moved, he thought. The red stallion would have every chance to
+run between those lines, if he dared. But a wild horse feared nothing like
+fire. This one would not run the gantlet of flames. Nevertheless, Slone felt
+more and more relieved as the lines closed. The hours of the night dragged
+past until at length one long, continuous line of fire spread level across the
+valley, its bright, red line broken only where the monuments of stone were
+silhouetted against it.
+
+The darkness of the valley changed. The light of the moon changed. The
+radiance of the stars changed. Either the line of fire was finding denser fuel
+to consume or it was growing appreciably closer, for the flames began to grow,
+to leap, and to flare.
+
+Slone strained his ears for the thud of hoofs on sand.
+
+The time seemed endless in its futility of results, but fleeting after it had
+passed; and he could tell how the hours fled by the ever-recurring need to
+replenish the little fire he kept burning in the pass.
+
+A broad belt of valley grew bright in the light, and behind it loomed the
+monuments, weird and dark, with columns of yellow and white smoke wreathing
+them.
+
+Suddenly Slone's sensitive ear vibrated to a thrilling sound. He leaned down
+to place his ear to the sand. Rapid, rhythmic beat of hoofs made him leap to
+his feet, reaching for his lasso with right hand and a gun with his left.
+
+Nagger lifted his head, sniffed the air, and snorted. Slone peered into the
+black belt of gloom that lay below him. It would be hard to see a horse there,
+unless he got high enough to be silhouetted against that line of fire now
+flaring to the sky. But he heard the beat of hoofs, swift, sharp,
+louder--louder. The night shadows were deceptive. That wonderful light
+confused him, made the place unreal. Was he dreaming? Or had the long chase
+and his privations unhinged his mind? He reached for Nagger. No! The big black
+was real, alive, quivering, pounding the sand. He scented an enemy.
+
+Once more Slone peered down into the void or what seemed a void. But it, too,
+had changed, lightened. The whole valley was brightening. Great palls of
+curling smoke rose white and yellow, to turn back as the monuments met their
+crests, and then to roll upward, blotting out the stars. It was such a light
+as he had never seen, except in dreams. Pale moonlight and dimmed starlight
+and wan dawn all vague and strange and shadowy under the wild and vivid light
+of burning grass.
+
+In the pale path before Slone, that fanlike slope of sand which opened down
+into the valley, appeared a swiftly moving black object, like a fleeting
+phantom. It was a phantom horse. Slone felt that his eyes, deceived by his
+mind, saw racing images. Many a wild chase he had lived in dreams on some far
+desert. But what was that beating in his ears--sharp, swift, even, rhythmic?
+Never had his ears played him false. Never had he heard things in his dreams.
+That running object was a horse and he was coming like the wind. Slone felt
+something grip his heart. All the time and endurance and pain and thirst and
+suspense and longing and hopelessness--the agony of the whole endless chase--
+closed tight on his heart in that instant.
+
+The running horse halted just in the belt of light cast by the burning grass.
+There he stood sharply defined, clear as a cameo, not a hundred paces from
+Slone. It was Wildfire.
+
+Slone uttered an involuntary cry. Thrill on thrill shot through him. Delight
+and hope and fear and despair claimed him in swift, successive flashes. And
+then again the ruling passion of a rider held him--the sheer glory of a grand
+and unattainable horse. For Slone gave up Wildfire in that splendid moment.
+How had he ever dared to believe he could capture that wild stallion? Slone
+looked and looked, filling his mind, regretting nothing, sure that the moment
+was reward for all he had endured.
+
+The weird lights magnified Wildfire and showed him clearly. He seemed
+gigantic. He shone black against the fire. His head was high, his mane flying.
+Behind him the fire flared and the valley-wide column of smoke rolled
+majestically upward, and the great monuments seemed to retreat darkly and
+mysteriously as the flames advanced beyond them. It was a beautiful, unearthly
+spectacle, with its silence the strangest feature.
+
+But suddenly Wildfire broke that silence with a whistle which to Slone's
+overstrained faculties seemed a blast as piercing as the splitting sound of
+lightning. And with the whistle Wildfire plunged up toward the pass. Slone
+yelled at the top of his lungs and fired his gun before he could terrorize the
+stallion and drive him back down the slope. Soon Wildfire became again a
+running black object, and then he disappeared.
+
+The great line of fire had gotten beyond the monuments and now stretched
+unbroken across the valley from wall to slope. Wildfire could never pierce
+that line of flames. And now Slone saw, in the paling sky to the east, that
+dawn was at hand.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Slone looked grimly glad when simultaneously with the first red flash of
+sunrise a breeze fanned his cheek. All that was needed now was a west wind.
+And here came the assurance of it.
+
+The valley appeared hazy and smoky, with slow, rolling clouds low down where
+the line of fire moved. The coming of daylight paled the blaze of the grass,
+though here and there Slone caught flickering glimpses of dull red flame. The
+wild stallion kept to the center of the valley, restlessly facing this way and
+that, but never toward the smoke. Slone made sure that Wildfire gradually gave
+ground as the line of smoke slowly worked toward him.
+
+Every moment the breeze freshened, grew steadier and stronger, until Slone saw
+that it began to clear the valley of the low-hanging smoke. There came a time
+when once more the blazing line extended across from slope to slope.
+
+Wildfire was cornered, trapped. Many times Slone nervously uncoiled and
+recoiled his lasso. Presently the great chance of his life would come--the
+hardest and most important throw he would ever have with a rope. He did not
+miss often, but then he missed sometimes, and here he must be swift and sure.
+It annoyed him that his hands perspired and trembled and that something
+weighty seemed to obstruct his breathing. He muttered that he was pretty much
+worn out, not in the best of condition for a hard fight with a wild horse.
+Still he would capture Wildfire; his mind was unalterably set there. He
+anticipated that the stallion would make a final and desperate rush past him;
+and he had his plan of action all outlined. What worried him was the
+possibility of Wildfire doing some unforeseen feat at the very last. Slone was
+prepared for hours of strained watching, and then a desperate effort, and then
+a shock that might kill Wildfire and cripple Nagger, or a long race and fight.
+
+But he soon discovered that he was wrong about the long watch and wait. The
+wind had grown strong and was driving the fire swiftly. The flames, fanned by
+the breeze, leaped to a formidable barrier. In less than an hour, though the
+time seemed only a few moments to the excited Slone, Wildfire had been driven
+down toward the narrowing neck of the valley, and he had begun to run, to and
+fro, back and forth. Any moment, then, Slone expected him to grow terrorized
+and to come tearing up toward the pass.
+
+Wildfire showed evidence of terror, but he did not attempt to make the pass.
+Instead he went at the right-hand slope of the valley and began to climb. The
+slope was steep and soft, yet the stallion climbed up and up. The dust flew in
+clouds; the gravel rolled down, and the sand followed in long streams.
+Wildfire showed his keenness by zigzagging up the slope.
+
+"Go ahead, you red devil!" yelled Slone. He was much elated. In that soft bank
+Wildfire would tire out while not hurting himself.
+
+Slone watched the stallion in admiration and pity and exultation. Wildfire did
+not make much headway, for he slipped back almost as much as he gained. He
+attempted one place after another where he failed. There was a bank of clay,
+some few feet high, and he could not round it at either end or surmount it in
+the middle. Finally he literally pawed and cut a path, much as if he were
+digging in the sand for water. When he got over that he was not much better
+off. The slope above was endless and grew steeper, more difficult toward the
+top. Slone knew absolutely that no horse could climb over it. He grew
+apprehensive, however, for Wildfire might stick up there on the slope until
+the line of fire passed. The horse apparently shunned any near proximity to
+the fire, and performed prodigious efforts to escape.
+
+"He'll be ridin' an avalanche pretty soon," muttered Slone.
+
+Long sheets of sand and gravel slid down to spill thinly over the low bank.
+Wildfire, now sinking to his knees, worked steadily upward till he had reached
+a point halfway up the slope, at the head of a long, yellow bank of
+treacherous-looking sand. Here he was halted by a low bulge, which he might
+have surmounted had his feet been free. But he stood deep in the sand. For the
+first time he looked down at the sweeping fire, and then at Slone.
+
+Suddenly the bank of sand began to slide with him. He snorted in fright. The
+avalanche started slowly and was evidently no mere surface slide. It was deep.
+It stopped--then started again--and again stopped. Wildfire appeared to be
+sinking deeper and deeper. His struggles only embedded him more firmly. Then
+the bank of sand, with an ominous, low roar, began to move once more. This
+time it slipped swiftly. The dust rose in a cloud, almost obscuring the horse.
+Long streams of gravel rattled down, and waterfalls of sand waved over the
+steps of the slope.
+
+Just as suddenly the avalanche stopped again. Slone saw, from the great oval
+hole it had left above, that it was indeed deep. That was the reason it did
+not slide readily. When the dust cleared away Slone saw the stallion, sunk to
+his flanks in the sand, utterly helpless.
+
+With a wild whoop Slone leaped off Nagger, and, a lasso in each hand, he ran
+down the long bank. The fire was perhaps a quarter of a mile distant, and,
+since the grass was thinning out, it was not coming so fast as it had been.
+The position of the stallion was half-way between the fire and Slone, and a
+hundred yards up the slope.
+
+Like a madman Slone climbed up through the dragging, loose sand. He was beside
+himself with a fury of excitement. He fancied his eyes were failing him, that
+it was not possible the great horse really was up there, helpless in the sand.
+Yet every huge stride Slone took brought him closer to a fact he could not
+deny. In his eagerness he slipped, and fell, and crawled, and leaped, until he
+reached the slide which held Wildfire prisoner.
+
+The stallion might have been fast in quicksand, up to his body, for all the
+movement he could make. He could move only his head. He held that up, his eyes
+wild, showing the whites, his foaming mouth wide open, his teeth gleaming. A
+sound like a scream rent the air. Terrible fear and hate were expressed in
+that piercing neigh. And shaggy, wet, dusty red, with all of brute savageness
+in the look and action of his head, he appeared hideous.
+
+As Slone leaped within roping distance the avalanche slipped a foot or two,
+halted, slipped once more, and slowly started again with that low roar. He did
+not care whether it slipped or stopped. Like a wolf he leaped closer, whirling
+his rope. The loop hissed round his head and whistled as he flung it. And when
+fiercely he jerked back on the rope, the noose closed tight round Wildfire's
+neck.
+
+"By G--d--I--got--a rope--on him!" cried Slone, in hoarse pants.
+
+He stared, unbelieving. It was unreal, that sight--unreal like the slow,
+grinding movement of the avalanche under him. Wildfire's head seemed a demon
+head of hate. It reached out, mouth agape, to bite, to rend. That horrible
+scream could not be the scream of a horse.
+
+Slone was a wild-horse hunter, a rider, and when that second of incredulity
+flashed by, then came the moment of triumph. No moment could ever equal that
+one, when he realized he stood there with a rope around that grand stallion's
+neck. All the days and the miles and the toil and the endurance and the
+hopelessness and the hunger were paid for in that moment. His heart seemed too
+large for his breast.
+
+"I tracked--you!" he cried, savagely. "I stayed--with you! . . . An' I got a
+rope--on you! An'--I'll ride you--you red devil!"
+
+The passion of the man was intense. That endless, racking pursuit had brought
+out all the hardness the desert had engendered in him. Almost hate, instead of
+love, spoke in Slone's words. He hauled on the lasso, pulling the stallion's
+head down and down. The action was the lust of capture as well as the rider's
+instinctive motive to make the horse fear him. Life was unquenchably wild and
+strong in that stallion; it showed in the terror which made him hideous. And
+man and beast somehow resembled each other in that moment which was inimical
+to noble life.
+
+The avalanche slipped with little jerks, as if treacherously loosing its hold
+for a long plunge. The line of fire below ate at the bleached grass and the
+long column of smoke curled away on the wind.
+
+Slone held the taut lasso with his left hand, and with the right he swung the
+other rope, catching the noose round Wildfire's nose. Then letting go of the
+first rope he hauled on the other, pulling the head of the stallion far down.
+Hand over hand Slone closed in on the horse. He leaped on Wildfire's head,
+pressed it down, and, holding it down on the sand with his knees, with swift
+fingers he tied the noose in a hackamore--an improvised halter. Then, just as
+swiftly, he bound his scarf tight round Wildfire's head, blindfolding him.
+
+"All so easy!" exclaimed Slone, under his breath. "Lord! who would believe it!
+. . . Is it a dream?"
+
+He rose and let the stallion have a free head.
+
+"Wildfire, I got a rope on you--an' a hackamore--an' a blinder," said Slone.
+"An' if I had a bridle I'd put that on you. . . . Who'd ever believe you'd
+catch yourself, draggin' in the sand?"
+
+Slone, finding himself failing on the sand, grew alive to the augmented
+movement of the avalanche. It had begun to slide, to heave and bulge and
+crack. Dust rose in clouds from all around. The sand appeared to open and let
+him sink to his knees. The rattle of gravel was drowned in a soft roar. Then
+he shot down swiftly, holding the lassoes, keeping himself erect, and riding
+as if in a boat. He felt the successive steps of the slope, and then the long
+incline below, and then the checking and rising and spreading of the avalanche
+as it slowed down on the level. All movement then was checked violently. He
+appeared to be half buried in sand. While he struggled to extricate himself
+the thick dust blew away and settled so that he could see. Wildfire lay before
+him, at the edge of the slide, and now he was not so deeply embedded as he had
+been up on the slope. He was struggling and probably soon would have been able
+to get out. The line of fire was close now, but Slone did not fear that.
+
+At his shrill whistle Nagger bounded toward him, obedient, but snorting, with
+ears laid back. He halted. A second whistle started him again. Slone finally
+dug himself out of the sand, pulled the lassoes out, and ran the length of
+them toward Nagger. The black showed both fear and fight. His eyes roiled and
+he half shied away.
+
+"Come on!" called Slone, harshly.
+
+He got a hand on the horse, pulled him round, and, mounting in a flash, wound
+both lassoes round the pommel of the saddle.
+
+"Haul him out, Nagger, old boy!" cried Slone, and he dug spurs into the black.
+
+One plunge of Nagger's slid the stallion out of the sand. Snorting, wild,
+blinded, Wildfire got up, shaking in every limb. He could not see his enemies.
+The blowing smoke, right in his nose, made scent impossible. But in the taut
+lassoes he sensed the direction of his captors. He plunged, rearing at the end
+of the plunge, and struck out viciously with his hoofs. Slone, quick with spur
+and bridle, swerved Nagger aside and Wildfire, off his balance, went down with
+a crash. Slone dragged him, stretched him out, pulled him over twice before he
+got forefeet planted. Once up, he reared again, screeching his rage, striking
+wildly with his hoofs. Slone wheeled aside and toppled him over again.
+
+"Wildfire, it's no fair fight," he called, grimly. "But you led me a chase. .
+. . An' you learn right now I'm boss!"
+
+Again he dragged the stallion. He was ruthless. He would have to be so,
+stopping just short of maiming or killing the horse, else he would never break
+him. But Wildfire was nimble. He got to his feet and this time he lunged out.
+Nagger, powerful as he was, could not sustain the tremendous shock, and went
+down. Slone saved himself with a rider's supple skill, falling clear of the
+horse, and he leaped again into the saddle as Nagger pounded up. Nagger braced
+his huge frame and held the plunging stallion. But the saddle slipped a
+little, the cinches cracked. Slone eased the strain by wheeling after
+Wildfire.
+
+The horses had worked away from the fire, and Wildfire, free of the stifling
+smoke, began to break and lunge and pitch, plunging round Nagger in a circle,
+running blindly, but with unerring scent. Slone, by masterly horsemanship,
+easily avoided the rushes, and made a pivot of Nagger, round which the wild
+horse dashed in his frenzy. It seemed that he no longer tried to free himself.
+He lunged to kill.
+
+"Steady, Nagger, old boy!" Slone kept calling. "He'll never get at you. . . .
+If he slips that blinder I'll kill him!"
+
+The stallion was a fiend in his fury, quicker than a panther, wonderful on his
+feet, and powerful as an ox. But he was at a disadvantage. He could not see.
+And Slone, in his spoken intention to kill Wildfire should the scarf slip,
+acknowledged that he never would have a chance to master the stallion.
+Wildfire was bigger, faster, stronger than Slone had believed, and as for
+spirit, that was a grand and fearful thing to see.
+
+The soft sand in the pass was plowed deep before Wildfire paused in his mad
+plunges. He was wet and heaving. His red coat seemed to blaze. His mane stood
+up and his ears lay flat.
+
+Slone uncoiled the lassoes from the pommel and slacked them a little. Wildfire
+stood up, striking at the air, snorting fiercely. Slone tried to wheel Nagger
+in close behind the stallion. Both horse and man narrowly escaped the vicious
+hoofs. But Slone had closed in. He took a desperate chance and spurred Nagger
+in a single leap as Wildfire reared again. The horses collided. Slone hauled
+the lassoes tight. The impact threw Wildfire off his balance, just as Slone
+had calculated, and as the stallion plunged down on four feet Slone spurred
+Nagger close against him. Wildfire was a little in the lead. He could only
+half rear now, for the heaving, moving Nagger, always against him, jostled him
+down, and Slone's iron arm hauled on the short ropes. When Wildfire turned to
+bite, Slone knocked the vicious nose back with a long swing of his fist.
+
+Up the pass the horses plunged. With a rider's wild joy Slone saw the long
+green-and-gray valley, and the isolated monuments in the distance. There, on
+that wide stretch, he would break Wildfire. How marvelously luck had favored
+him at the last!
+
+"Run, you red devil!" Slone called. "Drag us around now till you're done!"
+
+They left the pass and swept out upon the waste of sage. Slone realized, from
+the stinging of the sweet wind in his face, that Nagger was being pulled along
+at a tremendous pace. The faithful black could never have made the wind cut
+so. Lower the wild stallion stretched and swifter he ran, till it seemed to
+Slone that death must end that thunderbolt race.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Lucy Bostil had called twice to her father and he had not answered. He was out
+at the hitching-rail, with Holley, the rider, and two other men. If he heard
+Lucy he gave no sign of it. She had on her chaps and did not care to go any
+farther than the door where she stood.
+
+"Somers has gone to Durango an' Shugrue is out huntin' hosses," Lucy heard
+Bostil say, gruffly.
+
+"Wal now, I reckon I could handle the boat an' fetch Creech's hosses over,"
+said Holley.
+
+Bostil raised an impatient hand, as if to wave aside Holley's assumption.
+
+Then one of the other two men spoke up. Lucy had seen him before, but did not
+know his name.
+
+"Sure there ain't any need to rustle the job. The river hain't showed any
+signs of risin' yet. But Creech is worryin'. He allus is worryin' over them
+hosses. No wonder! Thet Blue Roan is sure a hoss. Yesterday at two miles he
+showed Creech he was a sight faster than last year. The grass is gone over
+there. Creech is grainin' his stock these last few days. An' thet's
+expensive."
+
+"How about the flat up the canyon?" queried Bostil. "Ain't there any grass
+there?"
+
+"Reckon not. It's the dryest spell Creech ever had," replied the other. "An'
+if there was grass it wouldn't do him no good. A landslide blocked the only
+trail up."
+
+"Bostil, them hosses, the racers special, ought to be brought acrost the
+river," said Holley, earnestly. He loved horses and was thinking of them.
+
+"The boat's got to be patched up," replied Bostil, shortly.
+
+It occurred to Lucy that her father was also thinking of Creech's
+thoroughbreds, but not like Holley. She grew grave and listened intently.
+
+There was an awkward pause. Creech's rider, whoever he was, evidently tried to
+conceal his anxiety. He flicked his boots with a quirt. The boots were covered
+with wet mud. Probably he had crossed the river very recently.
+
+"Wal, when will you have the hosses fetched over?" he asked, deliberately.
+"Creech'll want to know."
+
+"Just as soon as the boat's mended," replied Bostil. "I'll put Shugrue on the
+job to-morrow."
+
+"Thanks, Bostil. Sure, thet'll be all right. Creech'll be satisfied," said the
+rider, as if relieved. Then he mounted, and with his companion trotted down
+the lane.
+
+The lean, gray Holley bent a keen gaze upon Bostil. But Bostil did not notice
+that; he appeared preoccupied in thought.
+
+"Bostil, the dry winter an' spring here ain't any guarantee thet there wasn't
+a lot of snow up in the mountains." Holley's remark startled Bostil.
+
+"No--it ain't--sure," he replied.
+
+"An' any mornin' along now we might wake up to hear the Colorado boomin',"
+went on Holley, significantly.
+
+Bostil did not reply to that.
+
+"Creech hain't lived over there so many years. What's he know about the river?
+An' fer that matter, who knows anythin' sure about thet hell-bent river?"
+
+"It ain't my business thet Creech lives over there riskin' his stock every
+spring," replied Bostil, darkly.
+
+Holley opened his lips to speak, hesitated, looked away from Bostil, and
+finally said, "No, it sure ain't." Then he turned and walked away, head bent
+in sober thought. Bostil came toward the open door where Lucy stood. He looked
+somber. At her greeting he seemed startled.
+
+"What?" he said.
+
+"I just said, 'Hello, Dad,'" she replied, demurely. Yet she thoughtfully
+studied her father's dark face.
+
+"Hello yourself. . . . Did you know Van got throwed an' hurt?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Bostil swore under his breath. "There ain't any riders on the range thet can
+be trusted," he said, disgustedly. "They're all the same. They like to get in
+a bunch an' jeer each other an' bet. They want MEAN hosses. They make good
+hosses buck. They haven't any use for a hoss thet won't buck. They all want to
+give a hoss a rakin' over. . . . Think of thet fool Van gettin' throwed by a
+two-dollar Ute mustang. An' hurt so he can't ride for days! With them races
+comin' soon! It makes me sick."
+
+"Dad, weren't you a rider once?" asked Lucy.
+
+"I never was thet kind."
+
+"Van will be all right in a few days."
+
+"No matter. It's bad business. If I had any other rider who could handle the
+King I'd let Van go."
+
+"I can get just as much out of the King as Van can," said Lucy, spiritedly.
+
+"You!" exclaimed Bostil. But there was pride in his glance.
+
+"I know I can."
+
+"You never had any use for Sage King," said Bostil, as if he had been wronged.
+
+"I love the King a little, and hate him a lot," laughed Lucy.
+
+"Wal, I might let you ride at thet, if Van ain't in shape," rejoined her
+father.
+
+"I wouldn't ride him in the race. But I'll keep him in fine fettle."
+
+"I'll bet you'd like to see Sarch beat him," said Bostil, jealously.
+
+"Sure I would," replied Lucy, teasingly. "But, Dad, I'm afraid Sarch never
+will beat him."
+
+Bostil grunted. "See here. I don't want any weight up on the King. You take
+him out for a few days. An' ride him! Savvy thet?"
+
+"Yes, Dad."
+
+"Give him miles an' miles--an' then comin' home, on good trails, ride him for
+all your worth. . . . Now, Lucy, keep your eye open. Don't let any one get
+near you on the sage."
+
+"I won't. . . . Dad, do you still worry about poor Joel Creech?"
+
+"Not Joel. But I'd rather lose all my stock then have Cordts or Dick Sears get
+within a mile of you."
+
+"A mile!" exclaimed Lucy, lightly, though a fleeting shade crossed her face.
+"Why, I'd run away from him, if I was on the King, even if he got within ten
+yards of me."
+
+"A mile is close enough, my daughter," replied Bostil. "Don't ever forget to
+keep your eye open. Cordts has sworn thet if he can't steal the King he'll get
+you."
+
+"Oh! he prefers the horse to me."
+
+"Wal, Lucy, I've a sneakin' idea thet Cordts will never leave the uplands
+unless he gets you an' the King both."
+
+"And, Dad--you consented to let that horse-thief come to our races?" exclaimed
+Lucy, with heat.
+
+"Why not? He can't do any harm. If he or his men get uppish, the worse for
+them. Cordts gave his word not to turn a trick till after the races."
+
+"Do you trust him?"
+
+"Yes. But his men might break loose, away from his sight. Especially thet Dick
+Sears. He's a bad man. So be watchful whenever you ride out."
+
+As Lucy went down toward the corrals she was thinking deeply. She could always
+tell, woman-like, when her father was excited or agitated. She remembered the
+conversation between him and Creech's rider. She remembered the keen glance
+old Holley had bent upon him. And mostly she remembered the somber look upon
+his face. She did not like that. Once, when a little girl, she had seen it and
+never forgotten it, nor the thing that it was associated with--something
+tragical which had happened in the big room. There had been loud, angry voices
+of men--and shots--and then the men carried out a long form covered with a
+blanket. She loved her father, but there was a side to him she feared. And
+somehow related to that side was his hardness toward Creech and his
+intolerance of any rider owning a fast horse and his obsession in regard to
+his own racers. Lucy had often tantalized her father with the joke that if it
+ever came to a choice between her and his favorites they would come first. But
+was it any longer a joke? Lucy felt that she had left childhood behind with
+its fun and fancies, and she had begun to look at life thoughtfully.
+
+Sight of the corrals, however, and of the King prancing around, drove serious
+thoughts away. There were riders there, among them Farlane, and they all had
+pleasant greetings for her.
+
+"Farlane, Dad says I'm to take out Sage King," announced Lucy.
+
+"No!" ejaculated Farlane, as he pocketed his pipe.
+
+"Sure. And I'm to RIDE him. You know how Dad means that."
+
+"Wal, now, I'm doggoned!" added Farlane, looking worried and pleased at once.
+"I reckon, Miss Lucy, you--you wouldn't fool me?"
+
+"Why, Farlane!" returned Lucy, reproachfully. "Did I ever do a single thing
+around horses that you didn't want me to?"
+
+Farlane rubbed his chin beard somewhat dubiously. "Wal, Miss Lucy, not exactly
+while you was around the hosses. But I reckon when you onct got up, you've
+sorta forgot a few times."
+
+All the riders laughed, and Lucy joined them.
+
+"I'm safe when I'm up, you know that," she replied.
+
+They brought out the gray, and after the manner of riders who had the care of
+a great horse and loved him, they curried and combed and rubbed him before
+saddling him.
+
+"Reckon you'd better ride Van's saddle," suggested Farlane. "Them races is
+close now, an' a strange saddle--"
+
+"Of course. Don't change anything he's used to, except the stirrups," replied
+Lucy.
+
+Despite her antipathy toward Sage King, Lucy could not gaze at him without all
+a rider's glory in a horse. He was sleek, so graceful, so racy, so near the
+soft gray of the sage, so beautiful in build and action. Then he was the kind
+of a horse that did not have to be eternally watched. He was spirited and full
+of life, eager to run, but when Farlane called for him to stand still he
+obeyed. He was the kind of a horse that a child could have played around in
+safety. He never kicked. He never bit. He never bolted. It was splendid to see
+him with Farlane or with Bostil. He did not like Lucy very well, a fact that
+perhaps accounted for Lucy's antipathy. For that matter, he did not like any
+woman. If he had a bad trait, it came out when Van rode him, but all the
+riders, and Bostil, too, claimed that Van was to blame for that.
+
+"Thar, I reckon them stirrups is right," declared Farlane. "Now, Miss Lucy,
+hold him tight till he wears off thet edge. He needs work."
+
+Sage King would not kneel for Lucy as Sarchedon did, and he was too high for
+her to mount from the ground, so she mounted from a rock. She took to the
+road, and then the first trail into the sage, intending to trot him ten or
+fifteen miles down into the valley, and give him some fast, warm work on the
+return.
+
+The day was early in May and promised to grow hot. There was not a cloud in
+the blue sky. The wind, laden with the breath of sage, blew briskly from the
+west. All before Lucy lay the vast valley, gray and dusky gray, then blue,
+then purple where the monuments stood, and, farther still, dark ramparts of
+rock. Lucy had a habit of dreaming while on horseback, a habit all the riders
+had tried to break, but she did not give it rein while she rode Sarchedon, and
+assuredly now, up on the King, she never forgot him for an instant. He shied
+at mockingbirds and pack-rats and blowing blossoms and even at butterflies;
+and he did it, Lucy thought, just because he was full of mischief. Sage King
+had been known to go steady when there had been reason to shy. He did not like
+Lucy and he chose to torment her. Finally he earned a good dig from a spur,
+and then, with swift pounding of hoofs, he plunged and veered and danced in
+the sage. Lucy kept her temper, which was what most riders did not do, and by
+patience and firmness pulled Sage King out of his prancing back into the
+trail. He was not the least cross-grained, and, having had his little spurt,
+he settled down into easy going.
+
+In an hour Lucy was ten miles or more from home, and farther down in the
+valley than she had ever been. In fact, she had never before been down the
+long slope to the valley floor. How changed the horizon became! The monuments
+loomed up now, dark, sentinel-like, and strange. The first one, a great red
+rock, seemed to her some five miles away. It was lofty, straight-sided, with a
+green slope at its base. And beyond that the other monuments stretched out
+down the valley. Lucy decided to ride as far as the first one before turning
+back. Always these monuments had fascinated her, and this was her opportunity
+to ride near one. How lofty they were, how wonderfully colored, and how
+comely!
+
+Presently, over the left, where the monuments were thicker, and gradually
+merged their slopes and lines and bulk into the yellow walls, she saw low,
+drifting clouds of smoke.
+
+"Well, what's that, I wonder?" she mused. To see smoke on the horizon in that
+direction was unusual, though out toward Durango the grassy benches would
+often burn over. And these low clouds of smoke resembled those she had seen
+before.
+
+"It's a long way off," she added.
+
+So she kept on, now and then gazing at the smoke. As she grew nearer to the
+first monument she was surprised, then amazed, at its height and surpassing
+size. It was mountain-high--a grand tower--smooth, worn, glistening, yellow
+and red. The trail she had followed petered out in a deep wash, and beyond
+that she crossed no more trails. The sage had grown meager and the greasewoods
+stunted and dead; and cacti appeared on barren places. The grass had not
+failed, but it was not rich grass such as the horses and cattle grazed upon
+miles back on the slope. The air was hot down here. The breeze was heavy and
+smelled of fire, and the sand was blowing here and there. She had a sense of
+the bigness, the openness of this valley, and then she realized its wildness
+and strangeness. These lonely, isolated monuments made the place different
+from any she had visited. They did not seem mere standing rocks. They seemed
+to retreat all the time as she approached, and they watched her. They
+interested her, made her curious. What had formed all these strange monuments?
+Here the ground was level for miles and miles, to slope gently up to the bases
+of these huge rocks. In an old book she had seen pictures of the Egyptian
+pyramids, but these appeared vaster, higher, and stranger, and they were
+sheerly perpendicular.
+
+Suddenly Sage King halted sharply, shot up his ears, and whistled. Lucy was
+startled. That from the King meant something. Hastily, with keen glance she
+swept the foreground. A mile on, near the monument, was a small black spot. It
+seemed motionless. But the King's whistle had proved it to be a horse. When
+Lucy had covered a quarter of the intervening distance she could distinguish
+the horse and that there appeared some thing strange about his position. Lucy
+urged Sage King into a lope and soon drew nearer. The black horse had his head
+down, yet he did not appear to be grazing. He was as still as a statue. He
+stood just outside a clump of greasewood and cactus.
+
+Suddenly a sound pierced the stillness. The King jumped and snorted in fright.
+For an instant Lucy's blood ran cold, for it was a horrible cry. Then she
+recognized it as the neigh of a horse in agony. She had heard crippled and
+dying horses utter that long-drawn and blood-curdling neigh. The black horse
+had not moved, so the sound could not have come from him. Lucy thought Sage
+King acted more excited than the occasion called for. Then remembering her
+father's warning, she reined in on top of a little knoll, perhaps a hundred
+yards from where the black horse stood, and she bent her keen gaze forward.
+
+It was a huge, gaunt, shaggy black horse she saw, with the saddle farther up
+on his shoulders than it should have been. He stood motionless, as if utterly
+exhausted. His forelegs were braced, so that he leaned slightly back. Then
+Lucy saw a rope. It was fast to the saddle and stretched down into the cactus.
+There was no other horse in sight, nor any living thing. The immense monument
+dominated the scene. It seemed stupendous to Lucy, sublime, almost frightful.
+
+She hesitated. She knew there was another horse, very likely at the other end
+of that lasso. Probably a rider had been thrown, perhaps killed. Certainly a
+horse had been hurt. Then on the moment rang out the same neigh of agony, only
+weaker and shorter. Lucy no longer feared an ambush. That was a cry which
+could not be imitated by a man or forced from a horse. There was probably
+death, certainly suffering, near at hand. She spurred the King on.
+
+There was a little slope to descend, a wash to cross, a bench to climb--and
+then she rode up to the black horse. Sage King needed harder treatment than
+Lucy had ever given him.
+
+"What's wrong with you?" she demanded, pulling him down. Suddenly, as she felt
+him tremble, she realized that he was frightened. "That's funny!" Then when
+she got him quiet she looked around.
+
+The black horse was indeed huge. His mane, his shaggy flanks, were lathered as
+if he had been smeared with heavy soap-suds. He raised his head to look at
+her. Lucy, accustomed to horses all her life, saw that this one welcomed her
+arrival. But he was almost ready to drop.
+
+Two taut lassoes stretched from the pommel of his saddle down a little into a
+depression full of brush and cactus and rocks. Then Lucy saw a red horse. He
+was down in a bad position. She heard his low, choking heaves. Probably he had
+broken legs or back. She could not bear to see a horse in pain. She would do
+what was possible, even to the extent of putting him out of his misery, if
+nothing else could be done. Yet she scanned the surroundings closely, and
+peered into the bushes and behind the rocks before she tried to urge Sage King
+closer. He refused to go nearer, and Lucy dismounted.
+
+The red horse was partly hidden by overbending brush. He had plunged into a
+hole full of cactus. There was a hackamore round his nose and a tight noose
+round his neck. The one round his neck was also round his forelegs. And both
+lassoes were held taut by the black horse. A torn and soiled rider's scarf
+hung limp round the red horse's nose, kept from falling off by the hackamore.
+
+"A wild horse, a stallion, being broken!" exclaimed Lucy, instantly grasping
+the situation. "Oh! where's the rider?"
+
+She gazed around, ran to and fro, glanced down the little slope, and beyond,
+but she did not see anything resembling the form of a man. Then she ran back.
+
+Lucy took another quick look at the red stallion. She did not believe either
+his legs or back were hurt. He was just played out and tangled and tied in the
+ropes, and could not get up. The shaggy black horse stood there braced and
+indomitable. But he, likewise, was almost ready to drop. Looking at the
+condition of both horses and the saddle and ropes, Lucy saw what a fight there
+had been, and a race! Where was the rider? Thrown, surely, and back on the
+trail, perhaps dead or maimed.
+
+Lucy went closer to the stallion so that she could almost touch him. He saw
+her. He was nearly choked. Foam and blood wheezed out with his heaves. She
+must do something quickly. And in her haste she pricked her arms and shoulders
+on the cactus.
+
+She led the black horse closer in, letting the ropes go, slack. The black
+seemed as glad of that release as she was. What a faithful brute he looked!
+Lucy liked his eyes.
+
+Then she edged down in among the cactus and brush. The red horse no longer lay
+in a strained position. He could lift his head. Lucy saw that the noose still
+held tight round his neck. Fearlessly she jerked it loose. Then she backed
+away, but not quite out of his reach. He coughed and breathed slowly, with
+great heaves. Then he snorted.
+
+"You're all right now," said Lucy, soothingly. Slowly she reached a hand
+toward his head. He drew it back as far as he could. She stepped around,
+closer, and more back of him, and put a hand on him, gently, for an instant.
+Then she slipped out of the brush and, untying one lasso from the pommel, she
+returned to the horse and pulled it from round his legs. He was free now,
+except the hackamore, and that rope was slack. Lucy stood near him, watching
+him, talking to him, waiting for him to get up. She could not be sure he was
+not badly hurt till he stood up. At first he made no efforts to rise. He
+watched Lucy, less fearfully, she imagined. And she never made a move. She
+wanted him to see, to understand that she had not hurt him and would not hurt
+him. It began to dawn upon her that he was magnificent.
+
+Finally, with a long, slow heave he got to his feet. Lucy led him out of the
+hole to open ground. She seemed somehow confident. There occurred to her only
+one way to act.
+
+"A little horse sense, as Dad would say," she soliloquized, and then, when she
+got him out of the brush, she stood thrilled and amazed.
+
+"Oh, what a wild, beautiful horse! What a giant! He's bigger than the King.
+Oh, if Dad could see him!"
+
+The red stallion did not appear to be hurt. The twitching of his muscles must
+have been caused by the cactus spikes embedded in him. There were drops of
+blood all over one side. Lucy thought she dared to try to pull these thorns
+out. She had never in her life been afraid of any horse. Farlane, Holley, all
+the riders, and her father, too, had tried to make her realize the danger in a
+horse, sooner or later. But Lucy could not help it; she was not afraid; she
+believed that the meanest horse was actuated by natural fear of a man; she was
+not a man and she had never handled a horse like a man. This red stallion
+showed hate of the black horse and the rope that connected them; he showed
+some spirit at the repeated blasts of Sage King. But he showed less fear of
+her.
+
+"He has been a proud, wild stallion," mused Lucy. "And he's now
+broken--terribly broken--all but ruined."
+
+Then she walked up to him naturally and spoke softly, and reached a hand for
+his shoulder.
+
+"Whoa, Reddy. Whoa now. . . . There. That's a good fellow. Why, I wouldn't
+rope you or hit you. I'm only a girl."
+
+He drew up, made a single effort to jump, which she prevented, and then he
+stood quivering, eying her, while she talked soothingly, and patted him and
+looked at him in the way she had found infallible with most horses. Lucy
+believed horses were like people, or easier to get along with. Presently she
+gently pulled out one of the cactus spikes. The horse flinched, but he stood.
+Lucy was slow, careful, patient, and dexterous. The cactus needles were loose
+and easily removed or brushed off. At length she got him free of them, and was
+almost as proud as she was glad. The horse had gradually dropped his head; he
+was tired and his spirit was broken.
+
+"Now, what shall I do?" she queried. "I'll take the back trail of these
+horses. They certainly hadn't been here long before I saw them. And the rider
+may be close. If not I'll take the horses home."
+
+She slipped the noose from the stallion's head, leaving the hackamore, and,
+coiling the loose lasso, she hung it over the pommel of the black's saddle.
+Then she took up his bridle.
+
+"Come on," she called.
+
+The black followed her, and the stallion, still fast to him by the lasso Lucy
+had left tied, trooped behind with bowed head. Lucy was elated. But Sage King
+did not like the matter at all. Lucy had to drop the black's bridle and catch
+the King, and then ride back to lead the other again.
+
+A broad trail marked the way the two horses had come, and it led off to the
+left, toward where the monuments were thickest, and where the great sections
+of wall stood, broken and battlemented. Lucy was hard put to it to hold Sage
+King, but the horses behind plodded along. The black horse struck Lucy as
+being an ugly, but a faithful and wonderful animal. He understood everything.
+Presently she tied the bridle she was leading him by to the end of her own
+lasso, and thus let him drop back a few yards, which lessened the King's
+fretting.
+
+Intent on the trail, Lucy failed to note time or distance till the looming and
+frowning monuments stood aloft before her. What weird effect they had! Each
+might have been a colossal statue left there to mark the work of the ages.
+Lucy realized that the whole vast valley had once been solid rock, just like
+the monuments, and through the millions of years the softer parts had eroded
+and weathered and blown away--gone with the great sea that had once been
+there. But the beauty, the solemnity, the majesty of these monuments
+fascinated her most. She passed the first one, a huge square butte, and then
+the second, a ragged, thin, double shaft, and then went between two much
+alike, reaching skyward in the shape of monstrous mittens. She watched and
+watched them, sparing a moment now and then to attend to the trail. She
+noticed that she was coming into a region of grass, and faint signs of water
+in the draws. She was getting high again, not many miles now from the wall of
+rock.
+
+All at once Sage King shied, and Lucy looked down to see a man lying on the
+ground. He lay inert. But his eyes were open--dark, staring eyes. They moved.
+And he called. But Lucy could not understand him.
+
+In a flash she leaped off the King. She ran to the prostrate man--dropped to
+her knees.
+
+"Oh!" she cried. His face was ghastly. "Oh! are you--you badly hurt?"
+
+"Lift me--my head," he said, faintly.
+
+She raised his head. What a strained, passionate, terrible gaze he bent upon
+the horses.
+
+"Boy, they're mine--the black an' the red!" he cried.
+
+"They surely must be," replied Lucy. "Oh! tell me. Are you hurt?"
+
+"Boy! did you catch them--fetch them back--lookin' for me?"
+
+"I sure did."
+
+"You caught-that red devil--an' fetched him--back to me?" went on the
+wondering, faint voice. "Boy--oh--boy!"
+
+He lifted a long, ragged arm and pulled Lucy down. The action amazed her
+equally as his passion of gratitude. He might have been injured, but he had an
+arm of iron. Lucy was powerless. She felt her face against his--and her breast
+against his. The pounding of his heart was like blows. The first instant she
+wanted to laugh, despite her pity. Then the powerful arm--the contact affected
+her as nothing ever before. Suppose this crippled rider had taken her for a
+boy--She was not a boy! She could not help being herself. And no man had ever
+put a hand on her. Consciousness of this brought shame and anger. She
+struggled so violently that she freed herself. And he lay back.
+
+"See here--that's no way to act--to hug--a person," she cried, with flaming
+cheeks.
+
+"Boy, I--"
+
+"I'm NOT a boy. I'm a girl."
+
+"What!"
+
+Lucy tore off her sombrero, which had been pulled far forward, and this
+revealed her face fully, and her hair came tumbling down. The rider gazed,
+stupefied. Then a faint tinge of red colored his ghastly cheeks.
+
+"A girl! . . . Why--why 'scuse me, miss. I--I took you--for a boy."
+
+He seemed so astounded, he looked so ashamed, so scared, and withal, so
+haggard and weak, that Lucy immediately recovered her equanimity.
+
+"Sure I'm a girl. But that's no matter. . . . You've been thrown. Are you
+hurt?"
+
+He smiled a weak assent.
+
+"Badly?" she queried. She did not like the way he lay--so limp, so motionless.
+
+"I'm afraid so. I can't move."
+
+"Oh! . . . What shall I do?"
+
+"Can you--get me water?" he whispered, with dry lips.
+
+Lucy flew to her horse to get the small canteen she always carried. But that
+had been left on her saddle, and she had ridden Van's. Then she gazed around.
+The wash she had crossed several times ran near where the rider lay. Green
+grass and willows bordered it. She ran down and, hurrying along, searched for
+water. There was water in places, yet she had to go a long way before she
+found water that was drinkable. Filling her sombrero, she hurried back to the
+side of the rider. It was difficult to give him a drink.
+
+"Thanks, miss," he said, gratefully. His voice was stronger and less hoarse.
+
+"Have you any broken bones?" asked Lucy.
+
+"I don't know. I can't feel much."
+
+"Are you in pain?"
+
+"Hardly. I feel sort of thick."
+
+Lucy, being an intelligent girl, born in the desert and used to its needs, had
+not often encountered a situation with which she was unable to cope.
+
+"Let me feel if you have any broken bones. . . . THAT arm isn't broken, I'm
+positive."
+
+The rider smiled faintly again. How he stared with his strained, dark eyes!
+His face showed ghastly through the thin, soft beard and the tan. Lucy found
+his right arm badly bruised, but not broken. She made sure his collar-bones
+and shoulder-blades were intact. Broken ribs were harder to locate; still, as
+he did not feel pain from pressure, she concluded there were no fractures
+there. With her assistance he moved his legs, proving no broken bones there.
+
+"I'm afraid it's my--spine," he said.
+
+"But you raised your head once," she replied. "If your back was--was broken
+or injured you couldn't raise your head."
+
+"So I couldn't. I guess I'm just knocked out. I was--pretty weak before
+Wildfire knocked me--off Nagger."
+
+"Wildfire?"
+
+"That's the red stallion's name."
+
+"Oh, he's named already?"
+
+"I named him--long ago. He's known on many a range."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"I think far north of here. I--trailed him--days--weeks--months. We crossed
+the great canyon--"
+
+"The Grand Canyon?"
+
+"It must be that."
+
+"The Grand Canyon is down there," said Lucy, pointing. "I live on it. . . .
+You've come a long way."
+
+"Hundreds of miles! . . . Oh, the ground I covered that awful canyon country!
+. . . But I stayed with Wildfire. An' I put a rope on him. An' he got away. .
+. . An' it was a boy--no--a GIRL who--saved him for me--an' maybe saved my
+life, too!"
+
+Lucy looked away from the dark, staring eyes. A light in them confused her.
+
+"Never mind me. You say you were weak? Have you been ill?"
+
+"No, miss, just starved. . . . I starved on Wildfire's trail."
+
+Lucy ran to her saddle and got the biscuits out of the pockets of her coat,
+and she ran back to the rider.
+
+"Here. I never thought. Oh, you've had a hard time of it! I understand. That
+wonderful flame of a horse! I'd have stayed, too. My father was a rider once.
+Bostil. Did you ever hear of him?"
+
+"Bostil. The name--I've heard." Then the rider lay thinking, as he munched a
+biscuit. "Yes, I remember, but it was long ago. I spent a night with a
+wagon-train, a camp of many men and women, religious people, working into
+Utah. Bostil had a boat at the crossing of the Fathers."
+
+"Yes, they called the Ferry that."
+
+"I remember well now. They said Bostil couldn't count his horses--that he was
+a rich man, hard on riders--an' he'd used a gun more than once."
+
+Lucy bowed her head. "Yes, that's my dad."
+
+The rider did not seem to see how he had hurt her.
+
+"Here we are talking--wasting time," she said. "I must start home. You can't
+be moved. What shall I do?"
+
+"That's for you to say, Bostil's daughter."
+
+"My name's Lucy," replied the girl, blushing painfully, "I mean I'll be glad
+to do anything you think best."
+
+"You're very good."
+
+Then he turned his face away. Lucy looked closely at him. He was indeed a
+beggared rider. His clothes and his boots hung in tatters. He had no hat, no
+coat, no vest. His gaunt face bore traces of what might have been a fine,
+strong comeliness, but now it was only thin, worn, wan, pitiful, with that
+look which always went to a woman's heart. He had the look of a homeless
+rider. Lucy had seen a few of his wandering type, and his story was so plain.
+But he seemed to have a touch of pride, and this quickened her interest.
+
+"Then I'll do what I think best for you," said Lucy.
+
+First she unsaddled the black Nagger. With the saddle she made a pillow for
+the rider's head, and she covered him with the saddle blanket. Before she had
+finished this task he turned his eyes upon her. And Lucy felt she would be
+haunted. Was he badly hurt, after all? It seemed probable. How strange he was!
+
+"I'll water the horses--then tie Wildfire here on a double rope. There's
+grass."
+
+"But you can't lead him," replied the rider.
+
+"He'll follow me."
+
+"That red devil!" The rider shuddered as he spoke.
+
+Lucy had some faint inkling of what a terrible fight that had been between man
+and horse. "Yes; when I found him he was broken. Look at him now."
+
+But the rider did not appear to want to see the stallion. He gazed up at Lucy,
+and she saw something in his eyes that made her think of a child. She left
+him, had no trouble in watering the horses, and haltered Wildfire among the
+willows on a patch of grass. Then she returned.
+
+"I'll go now," she said to the rider.
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Home. I'll come back to-morrow, early, and bring some one to help you--"
+
+"Girl, if YOU want to help me more--bring me some bread an' meat. Don't tell
+any one. Look what a ragamuffin I am. . . . An' there's Wildfire. I don't want
+him seen till I'm--on my feet again. I know riders. . . . That's all. If you
+want to be so good--come."
+
+"I'll come," replied Lucy, simply.
+
+"Thank you. I owe you--a lot. . . . What did you say your name was?"
+
+"Lucy--Lucy Bostil."
+
+"Oh, I forgot. . . . Are you sure you tied Wildfire good an' tight?"
+
+"Yes, I'm sure. I'll go now. I hope you'll be better to-morrow."
+
+Lucy hesitated, with her hand on the King's bridle. She did not like to leave
+this young man lying there helpless on the desert. But what else could she do?
+What a strange adventure had befallen her! At the following thought that it
+was not yet concluded she felt a little stir of excitement at her pulses. She
+was so strangely preoccupied that she forgot it was necessary for her to have
+a step to mount Sage King. She realized it quickly enough when she attempted
+it. Then she led him off in the sage till she found a rock. Mounting, she
+turned him straight across country, meaning to cut out miles of travel that
+would have been necessary along her back-trail. Once she looked back. The
+rider was not visible; the black horse, Nagger, was out of sight, but
+Wildfire, blazing in the sun, watched her depart.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Lucy Bostil could not control the glow of strange excitement under which she
+labored, but she could put her mind on the riding of Sage King. She did not
+realize, however, that she was riding him under the stress and spell of that
+excitement.
+
+She had headed out to make a short cut, fairly sure of her direction, yet she
+was not unaware of the fact that she would be lost till she ran across her
+trail. That might be easy to miss and time was flying. She put the King to a
+brisk trot, winding through the aisles of the sage.
+
+Soon she had left the monument region and was down on the valley floor again.
+From time to time she conquered a desire to look back. Presently she was
+surprised and very glad to ride into a trail where she saw the tracks she had
+made coming out. With much relief she turned Sage King into this trail, and
+then any anxiety she had felt left her entirely. But that did not mitigate her
+excitement. She eased the King into a long, swinging lope. And as he warmed to
+the work she was aroused also. It was hard to hold him in, once he got out of
+a trot, and after miles and miles of this, when she thought best to slow down
+he nearly pulled her arms off. Still she finally got him in hand. Then
+followed miles of soft and rough going, which seemed long and tedious. Beyond
+that was the home stretch up the valley, whose gradual slope could be seen
+only at a distance. Here was a straight, broad trail, not too soft nor too
+hard, and for all the years she could remember riders had tried out and
+trained their favorites on that course.
+
+Lucy reached down to assure herself that the cinch was tight, then she pulled
+her sombrero down hard, slackened the bridle, and let the King go. He simply
+broke his gait, he was so surprised. Lucy saw him trying to look back at her,
+as if he could not realize that this young woman rider had given him a free
+rein. Perhaps one reason he disliked her had been always and everlastingly
+that tight rein. Like the wary horse he was he took to a canter, to try out
+what his new freedom meant.
+
+"Say, what's the matter with you?" called Lucy, disdainfully. "Are you lazy?
+Or don't you believe I can ride you?"
+
+Whereupon she dug him with her spurs. Sage King snorted. His action shifted
+marvelously. Thunder rolled from under his hoofs. And he broke out of that
+clattering roar into his fleet stride, where his hoof-beats were swift,
+regular, rhythmic.
+
+Lucy rode him with teeth and fists clenched, bending low. After all, she
+thought, it was no trick to ride him. In that gait he was dangerous, for a
+fall meant death; but he ran so smoothly that riding him was easy and
+certainly glorious. He went so fast that the wind blinded her. The trail was
+only a white streak in blurred gray. She could not get her breath; the wind
+seemed to whip the air away from her. And then she felt the lessening of the
+tremendous pace. Sage King had run himself out and the miles were behind her.
+Gradually her sight became clear, and as the hot and wet horse slowed down,
+satisfied with his wild run, Lucy realized that she was up on the slope only a
+few miles from home. Suddenly she thought she saw something dark stir behind a
+sage-bush just ahead. Before she could move a hand at the bridle Sage King
+leaped with a frantic snort. It was a swerving, nimble, tremendous bound. He
+went high. Lucy was unseated, but somehow clung on, and came down with him,
+finding the saddle. And it seemed, while in the air, she saw a long, snaky,
+whipping loop of rope shoot out and close just where Sage King's legs had
+been.
+
+She screamed. The horse broke and ran. Lucy, righting herself, looked back to
+see Joel Creech holding a limp lasso. He had tried to rope the King.
+
+The blood of her father was aroused in Lucy. She thought of the horse--not
+herself. If the King had not been so keen-sighted, so swift, he would have
+gone down with a broken leg. Lucy never in her life had been so furious.
+
+Joel shook his fist at her and yelled, "I'd 'a' got you--on any other hoss!"
+
+She did not reply, though she had to fight herself to keep from pulling her
+gun and shooting at him. She guided the running horse back into the trail,
+rapidly leaving Creech out of sight.
+
+"He's gone crazy, that's sure," said Lucy. "And he means me harm!"
+
+She ran the King clear up to the corrals, and he was still going hard when she
+turned down the lane to the barns. Then she pulled him in.
+
+Farlane was there to meet her. She saw no other riders and was glad.
+
+"Wal, Miss Lucy, the King sure looks good," said Farlane, as she jumped off
+and flung him the bridle. "He's just had about right, judgin'. . . . Say,
+girl, you're all pale! Oh, say, you wasn't scared of the King, now?"
+
+"No," replied Lucy, panting.
+
+"Wal, what's up, then?" The rider spoke in an entirely different voice, and
+into his clear, hazel eyes a little dark gleam shot.
+
+"Joel Creech waylaid me out in the sage--and--and tried to catch me." Lucy
+checked herself. It might not do to tell how Joel had tried to catch her.
+
+"He did? An' you on the King!" Farlane laughed, as if relieved. "Wal, he's
+tried thet before. Miss Lucy. But when you was up on the gray--thet shows
+Joel's crazy, sure."
+
+"He sure is. Farlane, I--I am mad!"
+
+"Wal, cool off, Miss Lucy. It ain't nothin' to git set up about. An' don't
+tell the old man."
+
+"Why not?" demanded Lucy.
+
+"Wal, because he's in a queer sort of bad mood lately. It wouldn't be safe. He
+hates them Creeches. So don't tell him."
+
+"All right, Farlane, I won't. Don't you tell, either," replied Lucy, soberly.
+
+"Sure I'll keep mum. But if Joel doesn't watch out I'll put a crimp in him
+myself."
+
+Lucy hurried away down the lane and entered the house without meeting any one.
+In her room she changed her clothes and lay down to rest and think.
+
+Strangely enough, Lucy might never have encountered Joel Creech out in the
+sage, for all the thought she gave him. Her mind was busy with the crippled
+rider. Who was he? Where was he from? What strange passion he had shown over
+the recovery of that wonderful red horse! Lucy could not forget the feeling of
+his iron arm when he held her in a kind of frenzied gratitude. A wild upland
+rider, living only for a wild horse! How like Indians some of these riders!
+Yet this fellow had seemed different from most of the uncouth riders she had
+known. He spoke better. He appeared to have had some little schooling. Lucy
+did not realize that she was interested in him. She thought she was sorry for
+him and interested in the stallion. She began to compare Wildfire with Sage
+King, and if she remembered rightly Wildfire, even in his disheveled state,
+had appeared a worthy rival of the King. What would Bostil say at sight of
+that flame-colored stallion? Lucy thrilled.
+
+Later she left her room to see if the hour was opportune for her plan to make
+up a pack of supplies for the rider. Her aunt was busy in the kitchen, and
+Bostil had not come in. Lucy took advantage of the moment to tie up a pack and
+carry it to her room. Somehow the task pleased her. She recalled the lean face
+of the rider. And that recalled his ragged appearance. Why not pack up an
+outfit of clothes? Bostil had a stock-room full of such accessories for his
+men. Then Lucy, glowing with the thought, hurried to Bostil's stock-room, and
+with deft hands and swift judgment selected an outfit for the rider, even down
+to a comb and razor. All this she carried quickly to her room, where in her
+thoughtfulness she added a bit of glass from a broken mirror, and soap and a
+towel. Then she tied up a second pack.
+
+Bostil did not come home to supper, a circumstance that made Lucy's aunt
+cross. They ate alone, and, waiting awhile, were rather late in clearing away
+the table. After this Lucy had her chance in the dusk of early evening, and
+she carried both packs way out into the sage and left them near the trail.
+
+"Hope a coyote doesn't come along," she said. That possibility, however, did
+not worry her as much as getting those packs up on the King. How in the world
+would she ever do it?
+
+She hurried back to the house, stealthily keeping to the shadow of the
+cottonwoods, for she would have faced an embarrassing situation if she had met
+her father, even had he been in a good humor. And she reached the sitting-room
+unobserved. The lamps had been lighted and a log blazed on the hearth. She was
+reading when Bostil entered.
+
+"Hello, Lucy!" he said.
+
+He looked tired, and Lucy knew he had been drinking, because when he had been
+he never offered to kiss her. The strange, somber shade was still on his face,
+but it brightened somewhat at sight of her. Lucy greeted him as always.
+
+"Farlane tells me you handled the King great--better 'n Van has worked him
+lately," said Bostil. "But don't tell him I told you."
+
+That was sweet praise from Farlane. "Oh, Dad, it could hardly be true,"
+expostulated Lucy. "Both you and Farlane are a little sore at Van now."
+
+"I'm a lot sore," replied Bostil, gruffly.
+
+"Anyway, how did Farlane know how I handled Sage King?" queried Lucy.
+
+"Wal, every hair on a hoss talks to Farlane, so Holley says. . . . Lucy, you
+take the King out every day for a while. Ride him now an' watch out! Joel
+Creech was in the village to-day. He sure sneaked when he seen me. He's up to
+some mischief."
+
+Lucy did not want to lie and she did not know what to say. Presently Bostil
+bade her good night. Lucy endeavored to read, but her mind continually
+wandered back to the adventure of the day.
+
+Next morning she had difficulty in concealing her impatience, but luck favored
+her. Bostil was not in evidence, and Farlane, for once, could spare no more
+time than it took to saddle Sage King. Lucy rode out into the sage, pretty
+sure that no one watched her.
+
+She had hidden the packs near the tallest bunch of greasewood along the trail;
+and when she halted behind it she had no fear of being seen from the corrals.
+She got the packs. The light one was not hard to tie back of the saddle, but
+the large one was a very different matter. She decided to carry it in front.
+There was a good-sized rock near, upon which she stepped, leading Sage King
+alongside; and after an exceedingly trying moment she got up, holding the
+pack. For a wonder Sage King behaved well.
+
+Then she started off, holding the pack across her lap, and she tried the
+King's several gaits to see which one would lend itself more comfortably to
+the task before her. The trouble was that Sage King had no slow gait, even his
+walk was fast. And Lucy was compelled to hold him into that. She wanted to
+hurry, but that seemed out of the question. She tried to keep from gazing out
+toward the monuments, because they were so far away.
+
+How would she find the crippled rider? It flashed into her mind that she might
+find him dead, and this seemed horrible. But her common sense persuaded her
+that she would find him alive and better. The pack was hard to hold, and Sage
+King fretted at the monotonous walk. The hours dragged. The sun grew hot. And
+it was noon, almost, when she reached the point where she cut off the trail to
+the left. Thereafter, with the monuments standing ever higher, and the
+distance perceptibly lessening, the minutes passed less tediously.
+
+At length she reached the zone of lofty rocks, and found them different, how,
+she could not tell. She rode down among them, and was glad when she saw the
+huge mittens--her landmarks. At last she espied the green-bordered wash and
+the few cedar-trees. Then a horse blazed red against the sage and another
+shone black. That sight made Lucy thrill. She rode on, eager now, but moved by
+the strangeness of the experience.
+
+Before she got quite close to the cedars she saw a man. He took a few slow
+steps out of the shade. His back was bent. Lucy recognized the rider, and in
+her gladness to see him on his feet she cried out. Then, when Sage King
+reached the spot, Lucy rolled the pack off to the ground.
+
+"Oh, that was a job!" she cried.
+
+The rider looked up with eyes that seemed keener, less staring than she
+remembered. "You came? . . . I was afraid you wouldn't," he said.
+
+"Sure I came. . . . You're better--not badly hurt?" she said, gravely, "I--I'm
+so glad."
+
+"I've got a crimp in my back, that's all."
+
+Lucy was quick to see that after the first glance at her he was all eyes for
+Sage King. She laughed. How like a rider! She watched him, knowing that
+presently he would realize what a horse she was riding. She slipped off and
+threw the bridle, and then, swiftly untying the second pack, she laid it down.
+
+The rider, with slow, painful steps and bent back, approached Sage King and
+put a lean, strong, brown hand on him, and touched him as if he wished to feel
+if he were real. Then he whistled softly. When he turned to Lucy his eyes
+shone with a beautiful light.
+
+"It's Sage King, Bostil's favorite," said Lucy.
+
+"Sage King! . . . He looks it. . . . But never a wild horse?"
+
+"No."
+
+"A fine horse," replied the rider. "Of course he can run?" This last held a
+note of a rider's jealousy.
+
+Lucy laughed. "Run! . . . The King is Bostil's favorite. He can run away from
+any horse in the uplands."
+
+"I'll bet you Wildfire can beat him," replied the rider, with a dark glance.
+
+"Come on!" cried Lucy, daringly.
+
+Then the rider and girl looked more earnestly at each other. He smiled in a
+way that changed his face--brightened out the set hardness.
+
+"I reckon I'll have to crawl," he said, ruefully. "But maybe I can ride in a
+few days--if you'll come back again."
+
+His remark brought to Lucy the idea that of course she would hardly see this
+rider again after to-day. Even if he went to the Ford, which event was
+unlikely, he would not remain there long. The sensation of blankness puzzled
+her, and she felt an unfamiliar confusion.
+
+"I--I've brought you--some things," she said, pointing to the larger pack.
+
+"Grub, you mean?"
+
+"No."
+
+"That was all I asked you for, miss," he said, somewhat stiffly.
+
+"Yes, but--I--I thought--" Lucy became unaccountably embarrassed. Suppose this
+strange rider would be offended. "Your clothes were--so torn. . . . And no
+wonder you were thrown--in those boots! . . . So I thought I'd--"
+
+"You thought I needed clothes as bad as grub," he said, bitterly. "I reckon
+that's so."
+
+His look, more than his tone, cut Lucy; and involuntarily she touched his arm.
+"Oh, you won't refuse to take them! Please don't!"
+
+At her touch a warmth came into his face. "Take them? I should smile I will."
+
+He tried to reach down to lift the pack, but as it was obviously painful for
+him to bend, Lucy intercepted him.
+
+"But you've had no breakfast," she protested. "Why not eat before you open
+that pack?"
+
+"Nope. I'm not hungry. . . . Maybe I'll eat a little, after I dress up." He
+started to walk away, then turned. "Miss Bostil, have you been so good to
+every wanderin' rider you happened to run across?"
+
+"Good!" she exclaimed, flushing. She dropped her eyes before his. "Nonsense.
+. . . Anyway, you're the first wandering rider I ever met--like this."
+
+"Well, you're good," he replied, with emotion. Then he walked away with slow,
+stiff steps and disappeared behind the willows in the little hollow.
+
+Lucy uncoiled the rope on her saddle and haltered Sage King on the best grass
+near at hand. Then she opened the pack of supplies, thinking the while that
+she must not tarry here long.
+
+"But on the King I can run back like the wind," she mused.
+
+The pack contained dried fruits and meat and staples, also an assortment of
+good things to eat that were of a perishable nature, already much the worse
+for the long ride. She spread all this out in the shade of a cedar. The
+utensils were few--two cups, two pans, and a tiny pot. She gathered wood, and
+arranged it for a fire, so that the rider could start as soon as he came back.
+He seemed long in coming. Lucy waited, yet still he did not return. Finally
+she thought of the red stallion, and started off down the wash to take a look
+at him. He was grazing. He had lost some of the dirt and dust and the
+bedraggled appearance. When he caught sight of her he lifted his head high and
+whistled. How wild he looked! And his whistle was shrill, clear, strong. Both
+the other horses answered it. Lucy went on closer to Wildfire. She was
+fascinated now.
+
+"If he doesn't know me!" she cried. Never had she been so pleased. She had
+expected every sign of savageness on his part, and certainly had not intended
+to go near him. But Wildfire did not show fear or hate in his recognition.
+Lucy went directly to him and got a hand on him. Wildfire reared a little and
+shook a little, but this disappeared presently under her touch. He held his
+head very high and watched her with wonderful eyes. Gradually she drew his
+head down. Standing before him, she carefully and slowly changed the set of
+the hackamore, which had made a welt on his nose. It seemed to have been her
+good fortune that every significant move she had made around this stallion had
+been to mitigate his pain. Lucy believed he knew this as well as she knew it.
+Her theory, an often disputed one, was that horses were as intelligent as
+human beings and had just the same fears, likes, and dislikes. Lucy knew she
+was safe when she untied the lasso from the strong root where she had fastened
+it, and led the stallion down the wash to a pool of water. And she stood
+beside him with a hand on his shoulder while he bent his head to sniff at the
+water. He tasted it, plainly with disgust. It was stagnant water, full of
+vermin. But finally he drank. Lucy led him up the wash to another likely
+place, and tied him securely.
+
+When she got back to the camp in the cedars the rider was there, on his knees,
+kindling the fire. His clean-shaved face and new apparel made him vastly
+different. He was young, and, had he not been so gaunt, he would have been
+fine-looking, Lucy thought.
+
+"Wildfire remembered me," Lucy burst out. "He wasn't a bit scary. Let me
+handle him. Followed me to water."
+
+"He's taken to you," replied the rider, seriously. "I've heard of the like,
+but not so quick. Was he in a bad fix when you got to him yesterday?"
+
+Lucy explained briefly.
+
+"Aha! . . . If that red devil has any love in him I'll never get it. I wish I
+could have done so much for him. But always when he sees me he'll remember."
+
+Lucy saw that the rider was in difficulties. He could not bend his back, and
+evidently it pained him to try. His brow was moist.
+
+"Let me do that," she said.
+
+"Thanks. It took about all my strength to get into this new outfit," he said,
+relinquishing, his place to Lucy.
+
+When she looked up from her task, presently, he was sitting in the shade of
+the cedar, watching her. He had the expression of a man who hardly believed
+what he saw.
+
+"Did you have any trouble gettin' away, without tellin'--about me?" he asked.
+
+"No. But I sure had a job with those packs," she replied.
+
+"You must be a wonder with a horse."
+
+As far as vanity was concerned Lucy had only one weakness--and he had touched
+upon it.
+
+"Well, Dad and Holley and Farlane argue much about me. Still, I guess they all
+agree I can ride."
+
+"Holley an' Farlane are riders?" he questioned.
+
+"Yes, Dad's right-hand men."
+
+"Your dad hires many riders, I supposed?"
+
+"Sure I never heard of him turning any rider down, at least not without a
+try."
+
+"I wonder if he would give me a job?"
+
+Lucy glanced up quickly. The idea surprised her--pleased her. "In a minute,"
+she replied. "And he'd be grand to you. You see, he'd have an eye for
+Wildfire."
+
+The rider nodded his head as if he understood how that would be.
+
+"And of course you'd never sell nor trade Wildfire?" went on Lucy.
+
+The rider's smile was sad, but it was conclusive.
+
+"Then you'd better stay away from Bostil," returned Lucy, shortly.
+
+He remained silent, and Lucy, busy about the campfire, did not speak again
+till the simple fare was ready. Then she spread a tarpaulin in the shade.
+
+"I'm pretty hungry myself," she said. "But I don't suppose I know what hunger
+is."
+
+"After a while a fellow loses the feelin' of hunger," he replied. "I reckon
+it'll come back quick. . . . This all looks good."
+
+So they began to eat. Lucy's excitement, her sense of the unreality of this
+adventure, in no wise impaired her appetite. She seemed acutely sensitive to
+the perceptions of the moment. The shade of the cedars was cool. And out on
+the desert she could see the dark smoky veils of heat lifting. The breeze
+carried a dry odor of sand and grass. She heard bees humming by. And all
+around the great isolated monuments stood up, red tops against the blue sky.
+It was a silent, dreaming, impressive place, where she felt unlike herself.
+
+"I mustn't stay long," she said, suddenly remembering.
+
+"Will you come back--again?" he asked.
+
+The question startled Lucy. "Why--I--I don't know. . . . Won't you ride in to
+the Ford just as soon as you're able?"
+
+"I reckon not."
+
+"But it's the only place where there's people in hundreds of miles. Surely you
+won't try to go back the way you came?"
+
+"When Wildfire left that country I left it. We can't back."
+
+"Then you've no people--no one you care for?" she asked, in sweet seriousness.
+
+"There's no one. I'm an orphan. My people were lost in an Indian
+massacre--with a wagon-train crossin' Wyomin'. A few escaped, an' I was one of
+the youngsters. I had a tough time, like a stray dog, till I grew up. An' then
+I took to the desert."
+
+"Oh, I see. I--I'm sorry," replied Lucy. "But that's not very different from
+my dad's story, of his early years. . . . What will you do now?"
+
+"I'll stay here till my back straightens out. . . . Will you ride out again?"
+
+"Yes," replied Lucy, without looking at him; and she wondered if it were
+really she who was speaking.
+
+Then he asked her about the Ford, and Bostil, and the ranches and villages
+north, and the riders and horses. Lucy told him everything she knew and could
+think of, and, lastly, after waxing eloquent on the horses of the uplands,
+particularly Bostil's, she gave him a graphic account of Cordts and Dick
+Sears.
+
+"Horse-thieves!" exclaimed the rider, darkly. There was a grimness as well as
+fear in his tone. "I've heard of Sears, but not Cordts. Where does this band
+hang out?"
+
+"No one knows. Holley says they hide up in the canyon country. None of the
+riders have ever tried to track them far. It would be useless. Holley says
+there are plateaus of rich grass and great forests. The Ute Indians say that
+much, too. But we know little about the wild country."
+
+"Aren't there any hunters at Bostil's Ford?"
+
+"Wild-horse hunters, you mean?"
+
+"No. Bear an' deer hunters."
+
+"There's none. And I suppose that's why we're not familiar with the wild
+canyon country. I'd like to ride in there sometime and camp. But our people
+don't go in for that. They love the open ranges. No one I know, except a
+half-witted boy, ever rode down among these monuments. And how wonderful a
+place! It can't be more than twenty miles from home. . . . I must be going
+soon. I'm forgetting Sage King. Did I tell you I was training him for the
+races?"
+
+"No, you didn't. What races? Tell me," he replied, with keen interest.
+
+Then Lucy told him about the great passion of her father--about the long,
+time-honored custom of free-for-all races, and the great races that had been
+run in the past; about the Creeches and their swift horses; about the rivalry
+and speculation and betting; and lastly about the races to be run in a few
+weeks--races so wonderful in prospect that even the horse-thief, Cordts, had
+begged to be allowed to attend.
+
+"I'm going to see the King beat Creech's roan," shouted the rider, with red in
+his cheeks and a flash in his eye.
+
+His enthusiasm warmed Lucy's interest, yet it made her thoughtful. Ideas
+flashed into her mind. If the rider attended the races he would have that
+fleet stallion with him. He could not be separated from the horse that had
+cost him so dearly. What would Bostil and Holley and Farlane say at sight of
+Wildfire? Suppose Wildfire was to enter the races! It was probable that he
+could run away from the whole field--even beat the King. Lucy thrilled and
+thrilled. What a surprise it would be! She had the rider's true love of seeing
+the unheralded horse win over the favorite. She had for years wanted to see a
+horse--and ride a horse--out in front of Sage King. Then suddenly all these
+flashing ideas coruscated seemingly into a gleam--a leaping, radiant,
+wonderful thought. Irresistibly it burst from her.
+
+"Let ME ride your Wildfire in the great race?" she cried, breathlessly.
+
+His response was instantaneous--a smile that was keen and sweet and strong,
+and a proffered hand. Impulsively Lucy clasped that hand with both hers.
+
+"You don't mean it," she said. "Oh, it's what Auntie would call one of my wild
+dreams! . . . And I'm growing up--they say. . . . But-- Oh, if I could ride
+Wildfire against the field in that race. . . . If I ONLY COULD!"
+
+She was on fire with the hope, flushing, tingling. She was unconscious of her
+effect upon the rider, who gazed at her with a new-born light in his eyes.
+
+"You can ride him. I reckon I'd like to see that race just as much as Bostil
+or Cordts or any man. . . . An' see here, girl, Wildfire can beat this gray
+racer of your father's."
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy.
+
+"Wildfire can beat the King," repeated the rider, intensely. "The tame horse
+doesn't step on this earth that can run with Wildfire. He's a stallion. He has
+been a killer of horses. It's in him to KILL. If he ran a race it would be
+that instinct in him."
+
+"How can we plan it?" went on Lucy, impulsively. She had forgotten to withdraw
+her hands from his. "It must be a surprise--a complete surprise. If you came
+to the Ford we couldn't keep it secret. And Dad or Farlane would prevent me,
+somehow."
+
+"It's easy. Ride out here as often as you can. Bring a light saddle an' let me
+put you up on Wildfire. You'll run him, train him, get him in shape. Then the
+day of the races or the night before I'll go in an' hide out in the sage till
+you come or send for Wildfire."
+
+"Oh, it'll be glorious," she cried, with eyes like stars. "I know just where
+to have you hide. A pile of rocks near the racecourse. There's a spring and
+good grass. I could ride out to you just before the big race, and we'd come
+back, with me on Wildfire. The crowd always stays down at the end of the
+racecourse. Only the starters stay out there. . . . Oh, I can see Bostil when
+that red stallion runs into sight!"
+
+"Well, is it settled?" queried the rider, strangely.
+
+Lucy was startled into self-consciousness by his tone.
+
+How strangely he must have felt. And his eyes were piercing.
+
+"You mean--that I ride Wildfire?" she replied, shyly. "Yes, if you'll let me."
+
+"I'll be proud."
+
+"You're very good. . . . And do you think Wildfire can beat the King?"
+
+"I know it."
+
+"How do you?"
+
+"I've seen both horses."
+
+"But it will be a grand race."
+
+"I reckon so. It's likely to be the grandest ever seen. But Wildfire will win
+because he's run wild all his life--an' run to kill other horses. . . . The
+only question is--CAN you ride him?"
+
+"Yes. I never saw the horse I couldn't ride. Bostil says there are some I
+can't ride. Farlane says not. Only two horses have thrown me, the King and
+Sarchedon. But that was before they knew me. And I was sort of wild. I can
+make your Wildfire love me."
+
+"THAT'S the last part of it I'd ever doubt," replied the rider. "It's settled,
+then. I'll camp here. I'll be well in a few days. Then I'll take Wildfire in
+hand. You will ride out whenever you have a chance, without bein' seen. An'
+the two of us will train the stallion to upset that race."
+
+"Yes--then--it's settled."
+
+Lucy's gaze was impelled and held by the rider's. Why was he so pale? But then
+he had been injured--weakened. This compact between them had somehow changed
+their relation. She seemed to have known him long.
+
+"What's your name?" she asked.
+
+"Lin Slone," replied the rider.
+
+Then she released her hands. "I must ride in now. If this isn't a dream I'll
+come back soon." She led Sage King to a rock and mounted him.
+
+"It's good to see you up there," said Slone. "An' that splendid horse! . . .
+He knows what he is. It'll break Bostil's heart to see that horse beat."
+
+"Dad'll feel bad, but it'll do him good," replied Lucy.
+
+That was the old rider's ruthless spirit speaking out of his daughter's lips.
+
+Slone went close to the King and, putting a hand on the pommel, he looked up
+at Lucy. "Maybe--it is--a dream--an' you won't come back," he said, with
+unsteady voice.
+
+"Then I'll come in dreams," she flashed. "Be careful of yourself. . . .
+Good-by."
+
+And at a touch the impatient King was off. From far up the slope near a
+monument Lucy looked back. Slone was watching her. She waved a gauntleted
+hand--and then looked back no more.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Two weeks slipped by on the wings of time and opportunity and achievement, all
+colored so wonderfully for Lucy, all spelling that adventure for which she had
+yearned.
+
+Lucy was riding down into the sage toward the monuments with a whole day
+before her. Bostil kept more and more to himself, a circumstance that worried
+her, though she thought little about it. Van had taken up the training of the
+King; and Lucy had deliberately quarreled with him so that she would be free
+to ride where she listed. Farlane nagged her occasionally about her rides into
+the sage, insisting that she must not go so far and stay so long. And after
+Van's return to work he made her ride Sarchedon.
+
+Things had happened at the Ford which would have concerned Lucy greatly had
+she not been over-excited about her own affairs. Some one had ambushed Bostil
+in the cottonwoods near his house and had shot at him, narrowly missing him.
+Bostil had sworn he recognized the shot as having come from a rifle, and that
+he knew to whom it belonged. The riders did not believe this, and said some
+boy, shooting at a rabbit or coyote, had been afraid to confess he had nearly
+hit Bostil. The riders all said Bostil was not wholly himself of late. The
+river was still low. The boat had not been repaired. And Creech's horses were
+still on the other side.
+
+These things concerned Lucy, yet they only came and went swiftly through her
+mind. She was obsessed by things intimately concerning herself.
+
+"Oh, I oughtn't to go," she said, aloud. But she did not even check
+Sarchedon's long swing, his rocking-chair lope. She had said a hundred times
+that she ought not go again out to the monuments. For Lin Slone had fallen
+despairingly, terribly in love with her.
+
+It was not this, she averred, but the monuments and the beautiful Wildfire
+that had woven a spell round her she could not break. She had ridden Wildfire
+all through that strange region of monuments and now they claimed something of
+her. Just as wonderful was Wildfire's love for her. The great stallion hated
+Slone and loved Lucy. Of all the remarkable circumstances she had seen or
+heard about a horse, this fact was the most striking. She could do anything
+with him. All that savageness and wildness disappeared when she approached
+him. He came at her call. He whistled at sight of her. He sent out a ringing
+blast of disapproval when she rode away. Every day he tried to bite or kick
+Slone, but he was meek under Lucy's touch.
+
+But this morning there came to Lucy the first vague doubt of herself. Once
+entering her mind, that doubt became clear. And then she vowed she liked Slone
+as she might a brother. And something within her accused her own conviction.
+The conviction was her real self, and the accusation was some other girl
+lately born in her. Lucy did not like this new person. She was afraid of her.
+She would not think of her unless she had to.
+
+"I never cared for him--that way," she said, aloud. "I don't--I
+couldn't--ever--I--I--love Lin Slone!"
+
+The spoken thought--the sound of the words played havoc with Lucy's
+self-conscious calmness. She burned. She trembled. She was in a rage with
+herself. She spurred Sarchedon into a run and tore through the sage, down into
+the valley, running him harder than she should have run him. Then she checked
+him, and, penitent, petted him out of all proportion to her thoughtlessness.
+The violent exercise only heated her blood and, if anything, increased this
+sudden and new torment. Why had she discarded her boy's rider outfit and chaps
+for a riding-habit made by her aunt, and one she had scorned to wear? Some
+awful, accusing voice thundered in Lucy's burning ears that she had done this
+because she was ashamed to face Lin Slone any more in that costume--she wanted
+to appear different in his eyes, to look like a girl. If that shameful
+suspicion was a fact why was it---what did it mean? She could not tell, yet
+she was afraid of the truth.
+
+All of a sudden Lin Slone stood out clearer in her mental vision--the finest
+type of a rider she had ever known--a strong, lithe, magnificent horseman,
+whose gentleness showed his love for horses, whose roughness showed his
+power--a strange, intense, lonely man in whom she had brought out pride,
+gratitude, kindness, passion, and despair. She felt her heart swell at the
+realization that she had changed him, made him kinder, made him divide his
+love as did her father, made him human, hopeful, longing for a future
+unfettered by the toils of desert allurement. She could not control her pride.
+She must like him very much. She confessed that, honestly, without a qualm. It
+was only bewildering moments of strange agitation and uncertainty that
+bothered her. She had refused to be concerned by them until they had finally
+impinged upon her peace of mind. Then they accused her; now she accused
+herself. She ought not go to meet Lin Slone any more.
+
+"But then--the race!" she murmured. "I couldn't give that up. . . . And oh!
+I'm afraid the harm is done! What can I do?"
+
+After the race--what then? To be sure, all of Bostil's Ford would know she had
+been meeting Slone out in the sage, training his horse. What would people say?
+
+"Dad will simply be radiant, IF he can buy Wildfire--and a fiend if he can't,"
+she muttered.
+
+Lucy saw that her own impulsiveness had amounted to daring. She had gone too
+far. She excused that--for she had a rider's blood--she was Bostil's girl. But
+she had, in her wildness and joy and spirit, spent many hours alone with a
+rider, to his undoing. She could not excuse that. She was ashamed. What would
+he say when she told him she could see him no more? The thought made her weak.
+He would accept and go his way--back to that lonely desert, with only a horse.
+
+"Wildfire doesn't love him!" she said.
+
+And the scarlet fired her neck and cheek and temple. That leap of blood seemed
+to release a riot of emotions. What had been a torment became a torture. She
+turned Sarchedon homeward, but scarcely had faced that way when she wheeled
+him again. She rode slowly and she rode swiftly. The former was hateful
+because it held her back--from what she no longer dared think; the latter was
+fearful because it hurried her on swiftly, irresistibly to her fate.
+
+Lin Slone had changed his camp and had chosen a pass high up where the great
+walls had began to break into sections. Here there was intimacy with the sheer
+cliffs of red and yellow. Wide avenues between the walls opened on all points
+of the compass, and that one to the north appeared to be a gateway down into
+the valley of monuments. The monuments trooped down into the valley to spread
+out and grow isolated in the distance. Slone's camp was in a clump of cedars
+surrounding a spring. There was grass and white sage where rabbits darted in
+and out.
+
+Lucy did not approach this camp from that roundabout trail which she had made
+upon the first occasion of her visiting Slone. He had found an opening in the
+wall, and by riding this way into the pass Lucy cut off miles. In fact, the
+camp was not over fifteen miles from Bostil's Ford. It was so close that Lucy
+was worried lest some horse-tracker should stumble on the trail and follow her
+up into the pass.
+
+This morning she espied Slone at his outlook on a high rock that had fallen
+from the great walls. She always looked to see if he was there, and she always
+saw him. The days she had not come, which were few, he had spent watching for
+her there. His tasks were not many, and he said he had nothing to do but wait
+for her. Lucy had a persistent and remorseful, yet sweet memory of Slone at
+his lonely lookout. Here was a fine, strong, splendid young man who had
+nothing to do but watch for her--a waste of precious hours!
+
+She waved her hand from afar, and he waved in reply. Then as she reached the
+cedared part of the pass Slone was no longer visible. She put Sarchedon to a
+run up the hard, wind-swept sand, and reached the camp before Slone had
+climbed down from his perch.
+
+Lucy dismounted reluctantly. What would he say about the riding-habit that she
+wore? She felt very curious to learn, and shyer than ever before, and
+altogether different. The skirt made her more of a girl, it seemed.
+
+"Hello, Lin!" she called. There was nothing in her usual greeting to betray
+the state of her mind.
+
+"Good mornin'--Lucy," he replied, very slowly. He was looking at her, she
+thought, with different eyes. And he seemed changed, too, though he had long
+been well, and his tall, lithe rider's form, his lean, strong face, and his
+dark eyes were admirable in her sight. Only this morning, all because she had
+worn a girl's riding-skirt instead of boy's chaps, everything seemed
+different. Perhaps her aunt had been right, after all, and now things were
+natural.
+
+Slone gazed so long at her that Lucy could not keep silent. She laughed.
+
+"How do you like--me--in this?"
+
+"I like you much better," Slone said, bluntly.
+
+"Auntie made this--and she's been trying to get me to ride in it."
+
+"It changes you, Lucy. . . . But can you ride as well?"
+
+"I'm afraid not. . . . What's Wildfire going to think of me?"
+
+"He'll like you better, too. . . . Lucy, how's the King comin' on?"
+
+"Lin, I'll tell you, if I wasn't as crazy about Wildfire as you are, I'd say
+he'll have to kill himself to beat the King," replied Lucy, with gravity.
+
+"Sometimes I doubt, too," said Slone. "But I only have to look at Wildfire to
+get back my nerve. . . . Lucy, that will be the grandest race ever run!"
+
+"Yes," sighed Lucy.
+
+"What's wrong? Don't you want Wildfire to win?"
+
+"Yes and no. But I'm going to beat the King, anyway. . . . Bring on your
+Wildfire!"
+
+Lucy unsaddled Sarchedon and turned him loose to graze while Slone went out
+after Wildfire. And presently it appeared that Lucy might have some little
+time to wait. Wildfire had lately been trusted to hobbles, which fact made it
+likely that he had strayed.
+
+Lucy gazed about her at the great looming red walls and out through the
+avenues to the gray desert beyond. This adventure of hers would soon have an
+end, for the day of the races was not far distant, and after that it was
+obvious she would not have occasion to meet Slone. To think of never coming to
+the pass again gave Lucy a pang. Unconsciously she meant that she would never
+ride up here again, because Slone would not be here. A wind always blew
+through the pass, and that was why the sand was so clean and hard. To-day it
+was a pleasant wind, not hot, nor laden with dust, and somehow musical in the
+cedars. The blue smoke from Slone's fire curled away and floated out of sight.
+It was lonely, with the haunting presence of the broken walls ever manifest.
+But the loneliness seemed full of content. She no longer wondered at Slone's
+desert life. That might be well for a young man, during those years when
+adventure and daring called him, but she doubted that it would be well for all
+of a man's life. And only a little of it ought to be known by a woman. She saw
+how the wildness and loneliness and brooding of such a life would prevent a
+woman's development. Yet she loved it all and wanted to live near it, so that
+when the need pressed her she could ride out into the great open stretches and
+see the dark monuments grow nearer and nearer, till she was under them, in the
+silent and colored shadows.
+
+Slone returned presently with Wildfire. The stallion shone like a flame in the
+sunlight. His fear and hatred of Slone showed in the way he obeyed. Slone had
+mastered him, and must always keep the upper hand of him. It had from the
+first been a fight between man and beast, and Lucy believed it would always be
+so.
+
+But Wildfire was a different horse when he saw Lucy. Day by day evidently
+Slone loved him more and tried harder to win a little of what Wildfire showed
+at sight of Lucy. Still Slone was proud of Lucy's control over the stallion.
+He was just as much heart and soul bent on winning the great race as Lucy was.
+She had ridden Wildfire bareback at first, and then they had broken him to the
+saddle.
+
+It was serious business, that training of Wildfire, and Slone had peculiar
+ideas regarding it. Lucy rode him up and down the pass until he was warm. Then
+Slone got on Sarchedon. Wildfire always snorted and showed fight at sight of
+Sage King or Nagger, and the stallion Sarchedon infuriated him because
+Sarchedon showed fight, too. Slone started out ahead of Lucy, and then they
+raced down the long pass. The course was hard-packed sand. Fast as Sarchedon
+was, and matchless as a horseman as was Slone, the race was over almost as
+soon as it began. Wildfire ran indeed like fire before the wind. He wanted to
+run, and the other horse made him fierce. Like a burr Lucy stuck low over his
+neck, a part of the horse, and so light he would not have known he was
+carrying her but for the repeated calls in his ears. Lucy never spurred him.
+She absolutely refused to use spurs on him. This day she ran away from Slone,
+and, turning at the end of the two-mile course they had marked out, she loped
+Wildfire back. Slone turned with her, and they were soon in camp. Lucy did not
+jump off. She was in a transport. Every race kindled a mounting fire in her.
+She was scarlet of face, out of breath, her hair flying. And she lay on
+Wildfire's neck and hugged him and caressed him and talked to him in low tones
+of love.
+
+Slone dismounted and got Sarchedon out of the way, then crossed to where Lucy
+still fondled Wildfire. He paused a moment to look at her, but when she saw
+him he started again, and came close up to her as she sat the saddle.
+
+"You went past me like a bullet," he said.
+
+"Oh, can't he run!" murmured Lucy.
+
+"Could he beat the King to-day?"
+
+Slone had asked that question every day, more than once.
+
+"Yes, he could--to-day. I know it," replied Lucy. "Oh--I get so--so excited.
+I--I make a fool of myself--over him. But to ride him--going like that--Lin!
+it's just glorious!"
+
+"You sure can ride him," replied Slone. "I can't see a fault anywhere--in
+him--or in your handling him. He never breaks. He goes hard, but he saves
+something. He gets mad--fierce--all the time, yet he WANTS to go your way.
+Lucy, I never saw the like of it. Somehow you an' Wildfire make a combination.
+You can't be beat."
+
+"Do I ride him--well?" she asked, softly.
+
+"I could never ride him so well."
+
+"Oh, Lin--you just want to please me. Why, Van couldn't ride with you."
+
+"I don't care, Lucy," replied Slone, stoutly. "You rode this horse perfect.
+I've found fault with you on the King, on your mustangs, an' on this black
+horse Sarch. But on Wildfire! You grow there."
+
+"What will Dad say, and Farlane, and Holley, and Van? Oh, I'll crow over Van,"
+said Lucy. "I'm crazy to ride Wildfire out before all the Indians and ranchers
+and riders, before the races, just to show him off, to make them stare."
+
+"No, Lucy. The best plan is to surprise them all. Enter your horse for the
+race, but don't show up till all the riders are at the start."
+
+"Yes, that'll be best. . . . And, Lin, only five days more--five days!"
+
+Her words made Slone thoughtful, and Lucy, seeing that, straightway grew
+thoughtful, too.
+
+"Sure--only five days more," repeated Slone, slowly.
+
+His tone convinced Lucy that he meant to speak again as he had spoken once
+before, precipitating the only quarrel they had ever had.
+
+"Does ANY ONE at Bostil's Ford know you meet me out here?" he asked, suddenly.
+
+"Only Auntie. I told her the other day. She had been watching me. She thought
+things. So I told her."
+
+"What did she say?" went on Slone, curiously.
+
+"She was mad," replied Lucy. "She scolded me. She said. . . . But, anyway, I
+coaxed her not to tell on me."
+
+"I want to know what she said," spoke up the rider, deliberately.
+
+Lucy blushed, and it was a consciousness of confusion as well as Slone's tone
+that made her half-angry.
+
+"She said when I was found out there'd be a--a great fuss at the Ford. There
+would be talk. Auntie said I'm now a grown-up girl. . . . Oh, she carried on!
+. . . Bostil would likely shoot you. And if he didn't some of the riders
+would. . . . Oh, Lin, it was perfectly ridiculous the way Auntie talked."
+
+"I reckon not," replied Slone. "I'm afraid I've done wrong to let you come out
+here. . . . But I never thought. I'm not used to girls. I'll--I'll deserve
+what I get for lettin' you came."
+
+"It's my own business," declared Lucy, spiritedly. "And I guess they'd better
+let you alone."
+
+Slone shook his head mournfully. He was getting one of those gloomy spells
+that Lucy hated. Nevertheless, she felt a stir of her pulses.
+
+"Lucy, there won't be any doubt about my stand--when I meet Bostil," said
+Slone. Some thought had animated him.
+
+"What do you mean?" Lucy trembled a little.
+
+There was a sternness about Slone, a dignity that seemed new. "I'll ask him
+to--to let you marry me."
+
+Lucy stared aghast. Slone appeared in dead earnest.
+
+"Nonsense!" she exclaimed, shortly.
+
+"I reckon the possibility is--that," replied Slone, bitterly, "but my motive
+isn't."
+
+"It is. Why, you've known me only a few days. . . . Dad would be mad. Like
+as not he'd knock you down. . . . I tell you, Lin, my dad is--is pretty
+rough. And just at this time of the races. . . . And if Wildfire beats
+the King! . . . Whew!"
+
+"WHEN Wildfire beats the King, not IF," corrected Slone.
+
+"Dad will be dangerous," warned Lucy. "Please don't---don't ask him that. Then
+everybody would know I--I--you---you--"
+
+"That's it. I want everybody at your home to know."
+
+"But it's a little place," flashed Lucy. "Every one knows me. I'm the only
+girl. There have been--other fellows who. . . . And oh! I don't want you made
+fun of!"
+
+"Why?" he asked.
+
+Lucy turned away her head without answering. Something deep within her was
+softening her anger. She must fight to keep angry; and that was easy enough,
+she thought, if she could only keep in mind Slone's opposition to her.
+Strangely, she discovered that it had been sweet to find him always governed
+by her desire or will.
+
+"Maybe you misunderstand," he began, presently. And his voice was not steady.
+"I don't forget I'm only--a beggarly rider. I couldn't have gone into the Ford
+at all--I was such a ragamuffin--"
+
+"Don't talk like that!" interrupted Lucy, impatiently.
+
+"Listen," he replied. "My askin' Bostil for you doesn't mean I've any hope.
+. . . It's just I want him an' everybody to know that I asked."
+
+"But Dad--everybody will think that YOU think there's reason--why--I--why,
+you OUGHT to ask," burst out Lucy, with scarlet face.
+
+"Sure, that's it," he replied.
+
+"But there's no reason. None! Not a reason under the sun," retorted Lucy,
+hotly. "I found you out here. I did you a--a little service. We planned to
+race Wildfire. And I came out to ride him. . . . That's all."
+
+Slone's dark, steady gaze disconcerted Lucy. "But, no one knows me, and we've
+been alone in secret."
+
+"It's not altogether--that. I--I told Auntie," faltered Lucy.
+
+"Yes, just lately."
+
+"Lin Slone, I'll never forgive you if you ask Dad that," declared Lucy, with
+startling force.
+
+"I reckon that's not so important."
+
+"Oh!--so you don't care." Lucy felt herself indeed in a mood not
+comprehensible to her. Her blood raced. She wanted to be furious with Slone,
+but somehow she could not wholly be so. There was something about him that
+made her feel small and thoughtless and selfish. Slone had hurt her pride. But
+the thing that she feared and resented and could not understand was the
+strange gladness Slone's declaration roused in her. She tried to control her
+temper so she could think. Two emotions contended within her--one of intense
+annoyance at the thought of embarrassment surely to follow Slone's action, and
+the other a vague, disturbing element, all sweet and furious and inexplicable.
+She must try to dissuade him from approaching her father.
+
+"Please don't go to Dad." She put a hand on Slone's arm as he stood close up
+to Wildfire.
+
+"I reckon I will," he said.
+
+"Lin!" In that word there was the subtle, nameless charm of an intimacy she
+had never granted him until that moment. He seemed drawn as if by invisible
+wires. He put a shaking hand on hers and crushed her gauntleted fingers. And
+Lucy, in the current now of her woman's need to be placated if not obeyed,
+pressed her small hand to his. How strange to what lengths a little submission
+to her feeling had carried her! Every spoken word, every movement, seemed to
+exact more from her. She did not know herself.
+
+"Lin! . . . Promise not to--speak to Dad!"
+
+"No." His voice rang.
+
+"Don't give me away--don't tell my Dad!"
+
+"What?" he queried, incredulously.
+
+Lucy did not understand what. But his amazed voice, his wide-open eyes of
+bewilderment, seemed to aid her into piercing the maze of her own mind. A
+hundred thoughts whirled together, and all around them was wrapped the warm,
+strong feeling of his hand on hers. What did she mean that he would tell her
+father? There seemed to be a deep, hidden self in her. Up out of these depths
+came a whisper, like a ray of light, and it said to her that there was more
+hope for Lin Slone than he had ever had in one of his wildest dreams.
+
+"Lin, if you tell Dad--then he'll know--and there WON'T be any hope for you!"
+cried Lucy, honestly.
+
+If Slone caught the significance of her words he did not believe it.
+
+"I'm goin' to Bostil after the race an' ask him. That's settled," declared
+Slone, stubbornly.
+
+At this Lucy utterly lost her temper. "Oh! you--you fool!" she cried.
+
+Slone drew back suddenly as if struck, and a spot of dark blood leaped to his
+lean face. "No! It seems to me the right way."
+
+"Right or wrong there's no sense in it--because--because. Oh! can't you see?"
+
+"I see more than I used to," he replied. "I was a fool over a horse. An' now
+I'm a fool over a girl. . . . I wish you'd never found me that day!"
+
+Lucy whirled in the saddle and made Wildfire jump. She quieted him, and,
+leaping off, threw the bridle to Slone. "I won't ride your horse in the race!"
+she declared with sudden passion. She felt herself shaking all over.
+
+"Lucy Bostil, I wish I was as sure of Heaven as I am you'll be up on Wildfire
+in that race," he said.
+
+"I won't ride your horse."
+
+"MY horse. Oh, I see. . . . But you'll ride Wildfire."
+
+"I won't."
+
+Slone suddenly turned white, and his eyes flashed dark fire. "You won't be
+able to help ridin' him any more than I could help it."
+
+"A lot you know about me, Lin Slone!" returned Lucy, with scorn. "I can be
+as--as bull-headed as you, any day."
+
+Slone evidently controlled his temper, though his face remained white. He even
+smiled at her.
+
+"You are Bostil's daughter," he said.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You are blood an' bone, heart an' soul a rider, if any girl ever was. You're
+a wonder with a horse--as good as any man I ever saw. You love Wildfire. An'
+look--how strange! That wild stallion--that killer of horses, why he follows
+you, he whistles for you, he runs like lightnin' for you; he LOVES you."
+
+Slone had attacked Lucy in her one weak point. She felt a force rending her.
+She dared not look at Wildfire. Yes--all, that was true Slone had said. How
+desperately hard to think of forfeiting the great race she knew she could win!
+
+"Never! I'll never ride your Wildfire AGAIN!" she said, very, low.
+
+"MINE! . . . So that's the trouble. Well, Wildfire won't be mine when you ride
+the race."
+
+"What do you mean?" demanded Lucy. "You'll sell him to Bostil. . . . Bah! you
+couldn't . . ."
+
+"Sell Wildfire!--after what it cost me to catch an' break him? . . . Not for
+all your father's lands an' horses an' money!"
+
+Slone's voice rolled out with deep, ringing scorn. And Lucy, her temper
+quelled, began to feel the rider's strength, his mastery of the situation, and
+something vague, yet splendid about him that hurt her.
+
+Slone strode toward her. Lucy backed against the cedar-tree and could go no
+farther. How white he was now! Lucy's heart gave a great, fearful leap, for
+she imagined Slone intended to take her in his arms. But he did not.
+
+"When you ride--Wildfire in that--race he'll be--YOURS!" said Slone, huskily.
+
+"How can that be?" questioned Lucy, in astonishment.
+
+"I give him to you."
+
+"You--give--Wildfire--to me?" gasped Lucy.
+
+"Yes. Right now."
+
+The rider's white face and dark eyes showed the strain of great and passionate
+sacrifice.
+
+"Lin Slone! . . . I can't--understand you."
+
+"You've got to ride Wildfire in that race. You've got to beat the King. . . .
+So I give Wildfire to you. An' now you can't help but ride him."
+
+"Why--why do you give him--to me?" faltered Lucy.
+
+All her pride and temper had vanished, and she seemed lost in blankness.
+
+"Because you love Wildfire. An' Wildfire loves you. . . . If that isn't reason
+enough--then . . . because I love him--as no rider ever loved a horse. . . .
+An' I love you as no man ever loved a girl!"
+
+Slone had never before spoken words of love to Lucy. She dropped her head. She
+knew of his infatuation. But he had always been shy except once when he had
+been bold, and that had caused a quarrel. With a strange pain at her breast
+Lucy wondered why Slone had not spoken that way before? It made as great a
+change in her as if she had been born again. It released something. A bolt
+shot back in her heart. She knew she was quivering like a leaf, with no power
+to control her muscles. She knew if she looked up then Slone might see the
+depths of her soul. Even with her hands shutting out the light she thought the
+desert around had changed and become all mellow gold and blue and white,
+radiant as the moonlight of dreams--and that the monuments soared above them
+grandly, and were beautiful and noble, like the revelations of love and joy to
+her. And suddenly she found herself sitting at the foot of the cedar, weeping,
+with tear-wet hands over her face.
+
+"There's nothin' to---to cry about," Slone was saying. "But I'm sorry if I
+hurt you."
+
+"Will--you--please--fetch Sarch?" asked Lucy, tremulously.
+
+While Slone went for the horse and saddled him Lucy composed herself
+outwardly. And she had two very strong desires--one to tell Slone something,
+and the other to run. She decided she would do both together.
+
+Slone brought Sarchedon. Lucy put on her gauntlets, and, mounting the horse,
+she took a moment to arrange her skirts before she looked down at Slone. He
+was now pale, rather than white, and instead of fire in his eyes there was
+sadness. Lucy felt the swelling and pounding of her heart--and a long,
+delicious shuddering thrill that ran over her.
+
+"Lin, I won't take Wildfire," she said.
+
+"Yes, you will. You can't refuse. Remember he's grown to look to you. It
+wouldn't be right by the horse."
+
+"But he's all you have in the world," she protested. Yet she knew any
+protestations would be in vain.
+
+"No. I have good old faithful Nagger."
+
+"Would you go try to hunt another wild stallion--like Wildfire?" asked Lucy,
+curiously. She was playing with the wonderful sweet consciousness of her power
+to render happiness when she chose.
+
+"No more horse-huntin' for me," declared Slone. "An' as for findin' one like
+Wildfire--that'd never be."
+
+"Suppose I won't accept him?"
+
+"How could you refuse? Not for me but for Wildfire's sake! . . . But if you
+could be mean an' refuse, why, Wildfire can go back to the desert."
+
+"No!" exclaimed Lucy.
+
+"I reckon so."
+
+Lucy paused a moment. How dry her tongue seemed! And her breathing was
+labored! An unreal shimmering gleam shone on all about her. Even the red
+stallion appeared enveloped in a glow. And the looming monuments looked down
+upon her, paternal, old, and wise, bright with the color of happiness.
+
+"Wildfire ought to have several more days' training--then a day of rest--and
+then the race," said Lucy, turning again to look at Slone.
+
+A smile was beginning to change the hardness of his face. "Yes, Lucy," he
+said.
+
+"And I'll HAVE to ride him?"
+
+"You sure will--if he's ever to beat the King."
+
+Lucy's eyes flashed blue. She saw the crowd--the curious, friendly
+Indians--the eager riders--the spirited horses--the face of her father--and
+last the race itself, such a race as had never been ran, so swift, so fierce,
+so wonderful.
+
+"Then Lin," began Lucy, with a slowly heaving breast, "if I accept Wildfire
+will you keep him for me--until . . . and if I accept him, and tell you why,
+will you promise to say--"
+
+"Don't ask me again!" interrupted Slone, hastily. "I WILL speak to Bostil."
+
+"Wait, will you . . . promise not to say a word--a single word to ME--till
+after the race?"
+
+"A word--to you! What about?" he queried, wonderingly. Something in his eyes
+made Lucy think of the dawn.
+
+"About--the--Because--Why, I'm--I'll accept your horse."
+
+"Yes," he replied, swiftly.
+
+Lucy settled herself in the saddle and, shortening the bridle, she got ready
+to spur Sarchedon into a bolt.
+
+"Lin, I'll accept Wildfire because I love you."
+
+Sarchedon leaped forward. Lucy did not see Slone's face nor hear him speak.
+Then she was tearing through the sage, out past the whistling Wildfire, with
+the wind sweet in her face. She did not look back.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+All through May there was an idea, dark and sinister, growing in Bostil's
+mind. Fiercely at first he had rejected it as utterly unworthy of the man he
+was. But it returned. It would not be denied. It was fostered by singular and
+unforeseen circumstances. The meetings with Creech, the strange, sneaking
+actions of young Joel Creech, and especially the gossip of riders about the
+improvement in Creech's swift horse--these things appeared to loom larger and
+larger and to augment in Bostil's mind the monstrous idea which he could not
+shake off. So he became brooding and gloomy.
+
+It appeared to be an indication of his intense preoccupation of mind that he
+seemed unaware of Lucy's long trips down into the sage. But Bostil had
+observed them long before Holley and other riders had approached him with the
+information.
+
+"Let her alone," he growled to his men. "I gave her orders to train the King.
+An' after Van got well mebbe Lucy just had a habit of ridin' down there. She
+can take care of herself."
+
+To himself, when alone, Bostil muttered: "Wonder what the kid has looked up
+now? Some mischief, I'll bet!"
+
+Nevertheless, he did not speak to her on the subject. Deep in his heart he
+knew he feared his keen-eyed daughter, and during these days he was glad she
+was not in evidence at the hours when he could not very well keep entirely to
+himself. Bostil was afraid Lucy might divine what he had on his mind. There
+was no one else he cared for. Holley, that old hawk-eyed rider, might see
+through him, but Bostil knew Holley would be loyal, whatever he saw.
+
+Toward the end of the month, when Somers returned from horse-hunting, Bostil
+put him and Shugrue to work upon the big flatboat down at the crossing. Bostil
+himself went down, and he walked--a fact apt to be considered unusual if it
+had been noticed.
+
+"Put in new planks," was his order to the men. "An' pour hot tar in the
+cracks. Then when the tar dries shove her in . . . but I'll tell you when."
+
+Every morning young Creech rowed over to see if the boat was ready to take the
+trip across to bring his father's horses back. The third morning of work on
+the boat Bostil met Joel down there. Joel seemed eager to speak to Bostil. He
+certainly was a wild-looking youth.
+
+"Bostil, my ole man is losin' sleep waitin' to git the hosses over," he said,
+frankly. "Feed's almost gone."
+
+"That'll be all right, Joel," replied Bostil. "You see, the river ain't begun
+to raise yet. . . . How're the hosses comin' on?"
+
+"Grand, sir--grand!" exclaimed the simple Joel. "Peg is runnin' faster than
+last year, but Blue Roan is leavin' her a mile. Dad's goin' to bet all he has.
+The roan can't lose this year."
+
+Bostil felt like a bull bayed at by a hound. Blue Roan was a young horse, and
+every season he had grown bigger and faster. The King had reached the limit of
+his speed. That was great, Bostil knew, and enough to win over any horse in
+the uplands, providing the luck of the race fell even. Luck, however, was a
+fickle thing.
+
+"I was advisin' Dad to swim the hosses over," declared Joel, deliberately.
+
+"A-huh! You was? . . . An' why?" rejoined Bostil.
+
+Joel's simplicity and frankness vanished, and with them his rationality. He
+looked queer. His contrasting eyes shot little malignant gleams. He muttered
+incoherently, and moved back toward the skiff, making violent gestures, and
+his muttering grew to shouting, though still incoherent. He got in the boat
+and started to row back over the river.
+
+"Sure he's got a screw loose," observed Somers. Shugrue tapped his grizzled
+head significantly.
+
+Bostil made no comment. He strode away from his men down to the river shore,
+and, finding a seat on a stone, he studied the slow eddying red current of the
+river and he listened. If any man knew the strange and remorseless Colorado,
+that man was Bostil. He never made any mistakes in anticipating what the river
+was going to do.
+
+And now he listened, as if indeed the sullen, low roar, the murmuring hollow
+gurgle, the sudden strange splash, were spoken words meant for his ears alone.
+The river was low. It seemed tired out. It was a dirty red in color, and it
+swirled and flowed along lingeringly. At times the current was almost
+imperceptible; and then again it moved at varying speed. It seemed a petulant,
+waiting, yet inevitable stream, with some remorseless end before it. It had a
+thousand voices, but not the one Bostil listened to hear.
+
+He plodded gloomily up the trail, resting in the quiet, dark places of the
+canyon, loath to climb out into the clear light of day. And once in the
+village, Bostil shook himself as if to cast off an evil, ever-present,
+pressing spell.
+
+The races were now only a few days off. Piutes and Navajos were camped out on
+the sage, and hourly the number grew as more came in. They were building cedar
+sunshades. Columns of blue smoke curled up here and there. Mustangs and ponies
+grazed everywhere, and a line of Indians extended along the racecourse, where
+trials were being held. The village was full of riders, horse-traders and
+hunters, and ranchers. Work on the ranges had practically stopped for the time
+being, and in another day or so every inhabitant of the country would be in
+Bostil's Ford.
+
+Bostil walked into the village, grimly conscious that the presence of the
+Indians and riders and horses, the action and color and bustle, the near
+approach of the great race-day--these things that in former years had brought
+him keen delight and speculation--had somehow lost their tang. He had changed.
+Something was wrong in him. But he must go among these visitors and welcome
+them as of old; he who had always been the life of these racing-days must be
+outwardly the same. And the task was all the harder because of the pleasure
+shown by old friends among the Indians and the riders at meeting him. Bostil
+knew he had been a cunning horse-trader, but he had likewise been a good
+friend. Many were the riders and Indians who owed much to him. So everywhere
+he was hailed and besieged, until finally the old excitement of betting and
+bantering took hold of him and he forgot his brooding.
+
+Brackton's place, as always, was a headquarters for all visitors. Macomber had
+just come in full of enthusiasm and pride over the horse he had entered, and
+he had money to wager. Two Navajo chiefs, called by white men Old Horse and
+Silver, were there for the first time in years. They were ready to gamble
+horse against horse. Cal Blinn and his riders of Durango had arrived; likewise
+Colson, Sticks, and Burthwait, old friends and rivals of Bostil's.
+
+For a while Brackton's was merry. There was some drinking and much betting. It
+was characteristic of Bostil that he would give any odds asked on the King in
+a race; and, furthermore, he would take any end of wagers on other horses. As
+far as his own horses were concerned he bet shrewdly, but in races where his
+horses did not figure he seemed to find fun in the betting, whether or not he
+won.
+
+The fact remained, however, that there were only two wagers against the King,
+and both were put up by Indians. Macomber was betting on second or third place
+for his horse in the big race. No odds of Bostil's tempted him.
+
+"Say, where's Wetherby?" rolled out Bostil. "He'll back his hoss."
+
+"Wetherby's ridin' over to-morrow," replied Macomber. "But you gotta bet him
+two to one."
+
+"See hyar, Bostil," spoke up old Cal Blinn, "you jest wait till I git an eye
+on the King's runnin'. Mebbe I'll go you even money."
+
+"An' as fer me, Bostil," said Colson, "I ain't set up yit which hoss I'll
+race."
+
+Burthwait, an old rider, came forward to Brackton's desk and entered a wager
+against the field that made all the men gasp.
+
+"By George! pard, you ain't a-limpin' along!" ejaculated Bostil, admiringly,
+and he put a hand on the other's shoulder.
+
+"Bostil, I've a grand hoss," replied Burthwait. "He's four years old, I guess,
+fer he was born wild, an' you never seen him."
+
+"Wild hoss? . . . Huh!" growled Bostil. "You must think he can run."
+
+"Why, Bostil, a streak of lightnin' ain't anywheres with him."
+
+"Wal, I'm glad to hear it," said Bostil, gruffly. "Brack, how many hosses
+entered now for the big race?"
+
+The lean, gray Brackton bent earnestly over his soiled ledger, while the
+riders and horsemen round him grew silent to listen.
+
+"Thar's the Sage King by Bostil," replied Brackton. "Blue Roan an' Peg, by
+Creech; Whitefoot, by Macomber; Rocks, by Holley; Hoss-shoes, by Blinn; Bay
+Charley, by Burthwait. Then thar's the two mustangs entered by Old Hoss an'
+Silver--an' last--Wildfire, by Lucy Bostil."
+
+"What's thet last?" queried Bostil.
+
+"Wildfire, by Lucy Bostil," repeated Brackton.
+
+"Has the girl gone an' entered a hoss?"
+
+"She sure has. She came in to-day, regular an' business-like, writ her name
+an' her hoss's--here 'tis--an' put up the entrance money."
+
+"Wal, I'll be d--d!" exclaimed Bostil. He was astonished and pleased. "She
+said she'd do it. But I didn't take no stock in her talk. . . . An' the hoss's
+name?"
+
+"Wildfire."
+
+"Huh! . . . Wildfire. Mebbe thet girl can't think of names for hosses! What's
+this hoss she calls Wildfire?"
+
+"She sure didn't say," replied Brackton. "Holley an' Van an' some more of the
+boys was here. They joked her a little. You oughter seen the look Lucy give
+them. But fer once she seemed mum. She jest walked away mysterious like."
+
+"Lucy's got a pony off some Indian, I reckon," returned Bostil, and he
+laughed. "Then thet makes ten hosses entered so far?"
+
+"Right. An' there's sure to be one more. I guess the track's wide enough for
+twelve."
+
+"Wal, Brack, there'll likely be one hoss out in front an' some stretched out
+behind," replied Bostil, dryly. "The track's sure wide enough."
+
+"Won't thet be a grand race!" exclaimed an enthusiastic rider. "Wisht I had
+about a million to bet!"
+
+"Bostil, I 'most forgot," went on Brackton, "Cordts sent word by the Piutes
+who come to-day thet he'd be here sure."
+
+Bostil's face subtly changed. The light seemed to leave it. He did not reply
+to Brackton--did not show that he heard the comment on all sides. Public
+opinion was against Bostil's permission to allow Cordts and his horse-thieves
+to attend the races. Bostil appeared grave, regretful. Yet it was known by all
+that in the strangeness and perversity of his rider's nature he wanted Cordts
+to see the King win that race. It was his rider's vanity and defiance in the
+teeth of a great horse-thief. But no good would come of Cordts's presence
+--that much was manifest.
+
+There was a moment of silence. All these men, if they did not fear Bostil,
+were sometimes uneasy when near him. Some who were more reckless than discreet
+liked to irritate him. That, too, was a rider's weakness.
+
+"When's Creech's hosses comin' over?" asked Colson, with sudden interest.
+
+"Wal, I reckon--soon," replied Bostil, constrainedly, and he turned away.
+
+By the time he got home all the excitement of the past hour had left him and
+gloom again abided in his mind. He avoided his daughter and forgot the fact of
+her entering a horse in the race. He ate supper alone, without speaking to his
+sister. Then in the dusk he went out to the corrals and called the King to the
+fence. There was love between master and horse. Bostil talked low, like a
+woman, to Sage King. And the hard old rider's heart was full and a lump
+swelled in his throat, for contact with the King reminded him that other men
+loved other horses.
+
+Bostil returned to the house and went to his room, where he sat thinking in
+the dark. By and by all was quiet. Then seemingly with a wrench he bestirred
+himself and did what for him was a strange action. Removing his boots, he put
+on a pair of moccasins. He slipped out of the house; he kept to the flagstone
+of the walk; he took to the sage till out of the village, and then he sheered
+round to the river trail. With the step and sureness and the eyes of an Indian
+he went down through that pitch-black canyon to the river and the ford.
+
+The river seemed absolutely the same as during the day. He peered through the
+dark opaqueness of gloom. It moved there, the river he knew, shadowy,
+mysterious, murmuring. Bostil went down to the edge of the water, and, sitting
+there, he listened. Yes--the voices of the stream were the same. But after a
+long time he imagined there was among them an infinitely low voice, as if from
+a great distance. He imagined this; he doubted; he made sure; and then all
+seemed fancy again. His mind held only one idea and was riveted round it. He
+strained his hearing, so long, so intently, that at last he knew he had heard
+what he was longing for. Then in the gloom he took to the trail, and returned
+home as he had left, stealthily, like an Indian.
+
+But Bostil did not sleep nor rest.
+
+Next morning early he rode down to the river. Somers and Shugrue had finished
+the boat and were waiting. Other men were there, curious and eager. Joel
+Creech, barefooted and ragged, with hollow eyes and strange actions, paced the
+sands.
+
+The boat was lying bottom up. Bostil examined the new planking and the seams.
+Then he straightened his form.
+
+"Turn her over," he ordered. "Shove her in. An' let her soak up to-day."
+
+The men seemed glad and relieved. Joel Creech heard and he came near to
+Bostil.
+
+"You'll--you'll fetch Dad's hosses over?" he queried.
+
+"Sure. To-morrow," replied Bostil, cheerily.
+
+Joel smiled, and that smile showed what might have been possible for him under
+kinder conditions of life. "Now, Bostil, I'm sorry fer what I said," blurted
+Joel.
+
+"Shut up. Go tell your old man."
+
+Joel ran down to his skiff and, leaping in, began to row vigorously across.
+Bostil watched while the workmen turned the boat over and slid it off the
+sand-bar and tied it securely to the mooring. Bostil observed that not a man
+there saw anything unusual about the river. But, for that matter, there was
+nothing to see. The river was the same.
+
+That night when all was quiet in and around the village Bostil emerged from
+his house and took to his stealthy stalk down toward the river.
+
+The moment he got out into the night oppression left him. How interminable the
+hours had been! Suspense, doubt, anxiety, fear no longer burdened him. The
+night was dark, with only a few stars, and the air was cool. A soft wind blew
+across his heated face. A neighbor's dog, baying dismally, startled Bostil. He
+halted to listen, then stole on under the cottonwoods, through the sage, down
+the trail, into the jet-black canyon. Yet he found his way as if it had been
+light. In the darkness of his room he had been a slave to his indecision; now
+in the darkness of the looming cliffs he was free, resolved, immutable.
+
+The distance seemed short. He passed out of the narrow canyon, skirted the
+gorge over the river, and hurried down into the shadowy amphitheater under the
+looming walls.
+
+The boat lay at the mooring, one end resting lightly the sand-bar. With
+strong, nervous clutch Bostil felt the knots of the cables. Then he peered
+into the opaque gloom of that strange and huge V-shaped split between the
+great canyon walls. Bostil's mind had begun to relax from the single idea. Was
+he alone? Except for the low murmur of the river there was dead silence--a
+silence like no other--a silence which seemed held under imprisoning walls.
+Yet Bostil peered long into the shadows. Then he looked up. The ragged
+ramparts far above frowned bold and black at a few cold stars, and the blue of
+its sky was without the usual velvety brightness. How far it was up to that
+corrugated rim! All of a sudden Bostil hated this vast ebony pit.
+
+He strode down to the water and, sitting upon the stone he had occupied so
+often, he listened. He turned his ear up-stream, then down-stream, and to the
+side, and again up-stream and listened.
+
+The river seemed the same.
+
+It was slow, heavy, listless, eddying, lingering, moving--the same apparently
+as for days past. It splashed very softly and murmured low and gurgled
+faintly. It gave forth fitful little swishes and musical tinkles and lapping
+sounds. It was flowing water, yet the proof was there of tardiness. Now it was
+almost still, and then again it moved on. It was a river of mystery telling a
+lie with its low music. As Bostil listened all those soft, watery sounds
+merged into what seemed a moaning, and that moaning held a roar so low as to
+be only distinguishable to the ear trained by years.
+
+No--the river was not the same. For the voice of its soft moaning showed to
+Bostil its meaning. It called from the far north--the north of great ice-clad
+peaks beginning to glisten under the nearing sun; of vast snow-filled canyons
+dripping and melting; of the crystal brooks suddenly colored and roiled and
+filled bank-full along the mountain meadows; of many brooks plunging down and
+down, rolling the rocks, to pour their volume into the growing turbid streams
+on the slopes. It was the voice of all that widely separated water spilled
+suddenly with magical power into the desert river to make it a mighty,
+thundering torrent, red and defiled, terrible in its increasing onslaught into
+the canyon, deep, ponderous, but swift--the Colorado in flood.
+
+And as Bostil heard that voice he trembled. What was the thing he meant to do?
+A thousand thoughts assailed him in answer and none were clear. A chill passed
+over him. Suddenly he felt that the cold stole up from his feet. They were
+both in the water. He pulled them out and, bending down, watched the dim, dark
+line of water. It moved up and up, inch by inch, swiftly. The river was on the
+rise!
+
+Bostil leaped up. He seemed possessed of devils. A rippling hot gash of blood
+fired his every vein and tremor after tremor shook him.
+
+"By G---d! I had it right--she's risin'!" he exclaimed, hoarsely.
+
+He stared in fascinated certainty at the river. All about it and pertaining to
+it had changed. The murmur and moan changed to a low, sullen roar. The music
+was gone. The current chafed at its rock-bound confines. Here was an uneasy,
+tormented, driven river! The light from the stars shone on dark, glancing,
+restless waters, uneven and strange. And while Bostil watched, whether it was
+a short time or long, the remorseless, destructive nature of the river showed
+itself.
+
+Bostil began to pace the sands. He thought of those beautiful race-horses
+across the river.
+
+"It's not too late!" he muttered. "I can get the boat over an' back--yet!"
+
+He knew that on the morrow the Colorado in flood would bar those horses,
+imprison them in a barren canyon, shut them in to starve.
+
+"It'd be hellish! . . . Bostil, you can't do it. You ain't thet kind of a man
+. . . . Bostil poison a water-hole where hosses loved to drink, or burn over
+grass! . . . What would Lucy think of you? . . . No, Bostil, you've let spite
+rule bad. Hurry now and save them hosses!"
+
+He strode down to the boat. It swung clear now, and there was water between it
+and the shore. Bostil laid hold of the cables. As he did so he thought of
+Creech and a blackness enfolded him. He forgot Creech's horses. Something
+gripped him, burned him--some hard and bitter feeling which he thought was
+hate of Creech. Again the wave of fire ran over him, and his huge hands
+strained on the cables. The fiend of that fiendish river had entered his soul.
+He meant ruin to a man. He meant more than ruin. He meant to destroy what his
+enemy, his rival loved. The darkness all about him, the gloom and sinister
+shadow of the canyon, the sullen increasing roar of the' river--these lent
+their influence to the deed, encouraged him, drove him onward, fought and
+strangled the resistance in his heart. As he brooded all the motives for the
+deed grew like that remorseless river. Had not his enemy's son shot at him
+from ambush? Was not his very life at stake? A terrible blow must be dealt
+Creech, one that would crush him or else lend him manhood enough to come forth
+with a gun. Bostil, in his torment, divined that Creech would know who had
+ruined him. They would meet then, as Bostil had tried more than once to bring
+about a meeting. Bostil saw into his soul, and it was a gulf like this canyon
+pit where the dark and sullen river raged. He shrank at what he saw, but the
+furies of passion held him fast. His hands tore at the cables. Then he fell to
+pacing to and fro in the gloom. Every moment the river changed its voice. In
+an hour flood would be down. Too late, then! Bostil again remembered the
+sleek, slim, racy thoroughbreds--Blue Roan, a wild horse he had longed to own,
+and Peg, a mare that had no equal in the uplands. Where did Bostil's hate of a
+man stand in comparison with love of a horse? He began to sweat and the sweat
+burned him.
+
+"How soon'll Creech hear the river an' know what's comin'?" muttered Bostil,
+darkly. And that question showed him how he was lost. All this strife of doubt
+and fear and horror were of no use. He meant to doom Creech's horses. The
+thing had been unalterable from the inception of the insidious, hateful idea.
+It was irresistible. He grew strong, hard, fierce, and implacable. He found
+himself. He strode back to the cables. The knots, having dragged in the water,
+were soaking wet and swollen. He could not untie them. Then he cut one strand
+after another. The boat swung out beyond his reach.
+
+Instinctively Bostil reached to pull it back.
+
+"My God! . . . It's goin'!" he whispered. "What have I done?"
+
+He--Bostil--who had made this Crossing of the Fathers more famous as Bostil's
+Ford--he--to cut the boat adrift! The thing was inconceivable.
+
+The roar of the river rose weird and mournful and incessant, with few breaks,
+and these were marked by strange ripping and splashing sounds made as the
+bulges of water broke on the surface. Twenty feet out the boat floated,
+turning a little as it drifted. It seemed loath to leave. It held on the shore
+eddy. Hungrily, spitefully the little, heavy waves lapped it. Bostil watched
+it with dilating eyes. There! the current caught one end and the water rose in
+a hollow splash over the corner. An invisible hand, like a mighty giant's,
+seemed to swing the boat out. It had been dark; now it was opaque, now
+shadowy, now dim. How swift this cursed river! Was there any way in which
+Bostil could recover his boat? The river answered him with hollow, deep
+mockery. Despair seized upon him. And the vague shape of the boat, spectral
+and instinct with meaning, passed from Bostil's strained gaze.
+
+"So help me God, I've done it!" he groaned, hoarsely. And he staggered back
+and sat down. Mind and heart and soul were suddenly and exquisitely acute to
+the shame of his act. Remorse seized upon his vitals. He suffered physical
+agony, as if a wolf gnawed him internally.
+
+"To hell with Creech an' his hosses, but where do I come in as a man?" he
+whispered. And he sat there, arms tight around his knees, locked both mentally
+and physically into inaction.
+
+The rising water broke the spell and drove him back. The river was creeping no
+longer. It swelled. And the roar likewise swelled. Bostil hurried across the
+flat to get to the rocky trail before he was cut off, and the last few rods he
+waded in water up to his knees.
+
+"I'll leave no trail there," he muttered, with a hard laugh. It sounded
+ghastly to him, like the laugh of the river.
+
+And there at the foot of the rocky trail he halted to watch and listen. The
+old memorable boom came to his ears. The flood was coming. For twenty-three
+years he had heard the vanguard boom of the Colorado in flood. But never like
+this, for in the sound he heard the strife and passion of his blood, and
+realized himself a human counterpart of that remorseless river. The moments
+passed and each one saw a swelling of the volume of sound. The sullen roar
+just below him was gradually lost in a distant roar. A steady wind now blew
+through the canyon. The great walls seemed to gape wider to prepare for the
+torrent. Bostil backed slowly up the trail as foot by foot the water rose. The
+floor of the amphitheater was now a lake of choppy, angry waves. The willows
+bent and seethed in the edge of the current. Beyond ran an uneven, bulging
+mass that resembled some gray, heavy moving monster. In the gloom Bostil could
+see how the river turned a corner of wall and slanted away from it toward the
+center, where it rose higher. Black objects that must have been driftwood
+appeared on this crest. They showed an instant, then flashed out of sight. The
+boom grew steadier, closer, louder, and the reverberations, like low
+detonations of thunder, were less noticeable because all sounds were being
+swallowed up.
+
+A harder breeze puffed into Bostil's face. It brought a tremendous thunder, as
+if all the colossal walls were falling in avalanche. Bostil knew the crest of
+the flood had turned the corner above and would soon reach him. He watched. He
+listened, but sound had ceased. His ears seemed ringing and they hurt. All his
+body felt cold, and he backed up and up, with dead feet.
+
+The shadows of the canyon lightened. A river-wide froth, like a curtain, moved
+down, spreading mushroom-wise before it, a rolling, heaving maelstrom. Bostil
+ran to escape the great wave that surged into the amphitheater, up and up the
+rocky trail. When he turned again he seemed to look down into hell. Murky
+depths, streaked by pale gleams, and black, sinister, changing forms yawned
+beneath them. He watched with fixed eyes until once more the feeling of filled
+ears left him and an awful thundering boom assured him of actualities. It was
+only the Colorado in flood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+Bostil slept that night, but his sleep was troubled, and a strange, dreadful
+roar seemed to run through it, like a mournful wind over a dark desert. He was
+awakened early by a voice at his window. He listened. There came a rap on the
+wood.
+
+"Bostil! . . . Bostil!" It was Holley's voice.
+
+Bostil rolled off the bed. He had slept without removing any apparel except
+his boots.
+
+"Wal, Hawk, what d'ye mean wakin' a man at this unholy hour?" growled Bostil.
+
+Holley's face appeared above the rude sill. It was pale and grave, with the
+hawk eyes like glass. "It ain't so awful early," he said. "Listen, boss."
+
+Bostil halted in the act of pulling on a boot. He looked at his man while he
+listened. The still air outside seemed filled with low boom, like thunder at a
+distance. Bostil tried to look astounded.
+
+"Hell! . . . It's the Colorado! She's boomin'!"
+
+"Reckon it's hell all right--for Creech," replied Holley. "Boss, why didn't
+you fetch them hosses over?"
+
+Bostil's face darkened. He was a bad man to oppose--to question at times.
+"Holley, you're sure powerful anxious about Creech. Are you his friend?"
+
+"Naw! I've little use fer Creech," replied Holley. "An' you know thet. But I
+hold for his hosses as I would any man's."
+
+"A-huh! An' what's your kick?"
+
+"Nothin'--except you could have fetched them over before the flood come down.
+That's all."
+
+The old horse-trader and his right-hand rider looked at each other for a
+moment in silence. They understood each other. Then Bostil returned to the
+task of pulling on wet boots and Holley went away.
+
+Bostil opened his door and stepped outside. The eastern ramparts of the desert
+were bright red with the rising sun. With the night behind him and the morning
+cool and bright and beautiful, Bostil did not suffer a pang nor feel a regret.
+He walked around under the cottonwoods where the mocking-birds were singing.
+The shrill, screeching bray of a burro split the morning stillness, and with
+that the sounds of the awakening village drowned that sullen, dreadful boom of
+the river. Bostil went in to breakfast.
+
+He encountered Lucy in the kitchen, and he did not avoid her. He could tell
+from her smiling greeting that he seemed to her his old self again. Lucy wore
+an apron and she had her sleeves rolled up, showing round, strong, brown arms.
+Somehow to Bostil she seemed different. She had been pretty, but now she was
+more than that. She was radiant. Her blue eyes danced. She looked excited. She
+had been telling her aunt something, and that worthy woman appeared at once
+shocked and delighted. But Bostil's entrance had caused a mysterious break in
+everything that had been going on, except the preparation of the morning meal.
+
+"Now I rode in on some confab or other, that's sure," said Bostil,
+good-naturedly.
+
+"You sure did, Dad," replied Lucy, with a bright smile.
+
+"Wal, let me sit in the game," he rejoined.
+
+"Dad, you can't even ante," said Lucy.
+
+"Jane, what's this kid up to?" asked Bostil, turning to his sister.
+
+"The good Lord only knows!" replied Aunt Jane, with a sigh.
+
+"Kid? . . . See here, Dad, I'm eighteen long ago. I'm grown up. I can do as I
+please, go where I like, and anything. . . . Why, Dad, I could get--married."
+
+"Haw! haw!" laughed Bostil. "Jane, hear the girl."
+
+"I hear her, Bostil," sighed Aunt Jane.
+
+"Wal, Lucy, I'd just like to see you fetch some fool love-sick rider around
+when I'm feelin' good," said Bostil.
+
+Lucy laughed, but there was a roguish, daring flash in her eyes. "Dad, you do
+seem to have all the young fellows scared. Some day maybe one will ride
+along--a rider like you used to be--that nobody could bluff. . . . And he can
+have me!"
+
+"A-huh! . . . Lucy, are you in fun?"
+
+Lucy tossed her bright head, but did not answer.
+
+"Jane, what's got into her?" asked Bostil, appealing to his sister.
+
+"Bostil, she's in fun, of course," declared Aunt Jane. "Still, at that,
+there's some sense in what she says. Come to your breakfast, now."
+
+Bostil took his seat at the table, glad that he could once more be amiable
+with his women-folk. "Lucy, to-morrow'll be the biggest day Bostil's Ford ever
+seen," he said.
+
+"It sure will be, Dad. The biggest SURPRISING day the Ford ever had," replied
+Lucy.
+
+"Surprisin'?"
+
+"Yes, Dad."
+
+"Who's goin' to get surprised?"
+
+"Everybody."
+
+Bostil said to himself that he had been used to Lucy's banter, but during his
+moody spell of days past he had forgotten how to take her or else she was
+different.
+
+"Brackton tells me you've entered a hoss against the field."
+
+"It's an open race, isn't it?"
+
+"Open as the desert, Lucy," he replied. "What's this hoss Wildfire you've
+entered?"
+
+"Wouldn't you like to know?" taunted Lucy.
+
+"If he's as good as his name you might be in at the finish. . . . But, Lucy,
+my dear, talkin' good sense now--you ain't a-goin' to go up on some unbroken
+mustang in this big race?"
+
+"Dad, I'm going to ride a horse."
+
+"But, Lucy, ain't it a risk you'll be takin'--all for fun?"
+
+"Fun! ... I'm in dead earnest."
+
+Bostil liked the look of her then. She had paled a little; her eyes blazed;
+she was intense. His question had brought out her earnestness, and straightway
+Bostil became thoughtful. If Lucy had been a boy she would have been the
+greatest rider on the uplands; and even girl as she was, superbly mounted, she
+would have been dangerous in any race.
+
+"Wal, I ain't afraid of your handlin' of a hoss," he said, soberly. "An' as
+long as you're in earnest I won't stop you. But, Lucy, no bettin'. I won't let
+you gamble."
+
+"Not even with you?" she coaxed.
+
+Bostil stared at the girl. What had gotten into her? "What'll you bet?" he,
+queried, with blunt curiosity.
+
+"Dad, I'll go you a hundred dollars in gold that I finish one--two--three."
+
+Bostil threw back his head to laugh heartily. What a chip of the old block she
+was! "Child, there's some fast hosses that'll be back of the King. You'd be
+throwin' away money."
+
+Blue fire shone in his daughter's eyes. She meant business, all right, and
+Bostil thrilled with pride in her.
+
+"Dad, I'll bet you two hundred, even, that I beat the King!" she flashed.
+
+"Wal, of all the nerve!" ejaculated Bostil. "No, I won't take you up. Reckon I
+never before turned down an even bet. Understand, Lucy, ridin' in the race is
+enough for you."
+
+"All right, Dad," replied Lucy, obediently.
+
+At that juncture Bostil suddenly shoved back his plate and turned his face to
+the open door. "Don't I hear a runnin' hoss?"
+
+Aunt Jane stopped the noise she was making, and Lucy darted to the door. Then
+Bostil heard the sharp, rhythmic hoof-beats he recognized. They shortened to
+clatter and pound--then ceased somewhere out in front of the house.
+
+"It's the King with Van up," said Lucy, from the door. "Dad, Van's jumped
+off--he's coming in . . . he's running. Something has happened. . . . There
+are other horses coming--riders--Indians."
+
+Bostil knew what was coming and prepared himself. Rapid footsteps sounded
+without.
+
+"Hello, Miss Lucy! Where's Bostil?"
+
+A lean, supple rider appeared before the door. It was Van, greatly excited.
+
+"Come in, boy," said Bostil. "What're you flustered about?"
+
+Van strode in, spurs jangling, cap in hand. "Boss, there's--a sixty-foot
+raise--in the river!" Van panted.
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, wheeling toward her father.
+
+"Wal, Van, I reckon I knowed thet," replied Bostil. "Mebbe I'm gettin' old,
+but I can still hear. . . . Listen."
+
+Lucy tiptoed to the door and turned her head sidewise and slowly bowed it till
+she stiffened. Outside were, sounds of birds and horses and men, but when a
+lull came it quickly filled with a sullen, low boom.
+
+"Highest flood we--ever seen," said Van.
+
+"You've been down?" queried Bostil, sharply.
+
+"Not to the river," replied Van. "I went as far as--where the gulch opens--on
+the bluff. There was a string of Navajos goin' down. An' some comin' up. I
+stayed there watchin' the flood, an' pretty soon Somers come up the trail with
+Blakesley an' Brack an' some riders. . . . An' Somers hollered out, 'The
+boat's gone!'"
+
+"Gone!" exclaimed Bostil, his loud cry showing consternation.
+
+"Oh, Dad! Oh, Van!" cried Lucy, with eyes wide and lips parted.
+
+"Sure she's gone. An' the whole place down there--where the willows was an'
+the sand-bar--it was deep under water."
+
+"What will become of Creech's horses?" asked Lucy, breathlessly.
+
+"My God! ain't it a shame!" went on Bostil, and he could have laughed aloud at
+his hypocrisy. He felt Lucy's blue eyes riveted upon his face.
+
+"Thet's what we all was sayin'," went on Van. "While we was watchin' the awful
+flood an' listenin' to the deep bum--bum--bum of rollin' rocks some one seen
+Creech an' two Piutes leadin' the hosses up thet trail where the slide was. We
+counted the hosses--nine. An' we saw the roan shine blue in the sunlight."
+
+"Piutes with Creech!" exclaimed Bostil, the deep gloom in his eyes lighting.
+"By all thet's lucky! Mebbe them Indians can climb the hosses out of thet hole
+an' find water an' grass enough."
+
+"Mebbe," replied Van, doubtfully. "Sure them Piutes could if there's a chance.
+But there ain't any grass."
+
+"It won't take much grass travelin' by night."
+
+"So lots of the boys say. But the Navajos they shook their heads. An' Farlane
+an' Holley, why, they jest held up their hands."
+
+"With them Indians Creech has a chance to get his hosses out," declared
+Bostil. He was sure of his sincerity, but he was not certain that his
+sincerity was not the birth of a strange, sudden hope. And then he was able to
+meet the eyes of his daughter. That was his supreme test.
+
+"Oh, Dad, why, why didn't you hurry Creech's horses over?" said Lucy, with her
+tears falling.
+
+Something tight within Bostil's breast seemed to ease and lessen. "Why didn't
+I? . . . Wal, Lucy, I reckon I wasn't in no hurry to oblige Creech. I'm sorry
+now."
+
+"It won't be so terrible if he doesn't lose the horses," murmured Lucy.
+
+"Where's young Joel Creech?" asked Bostil.
+
+"He stayed on this side last night," replied Van. "Fact is, Joel's the one who
+first knew the flood was on. Some one said he said he slept in the canyon last
+night. Anyway, he's ravin' crazy now. An' if he doesn't do harm to some one or
+hisself I'll miss my guess."
+
+"A-huh!" grunted Bostil. "Right you are."
+
+"Dad, can't anything be done to help Creech now?" appealed Lucy, going close
+to her father.
+
+Bostil put his arm around her and felt immeasurably relieved to have the
+golden head press close to his shoulder. "Child, we can't fly acrost the
+river. Now don't you cry about Creech's hosses. They ain't starved yet. It's
+hard luck. But mebbe it'll turn out so Creech'll lose only the race. An',
+Lucy, it was a dead sure bet he'd have lost thet anyway."
+
+Bostil fondled his daughter a moment, the first time in many a day, and then
+he turned to his rider at the door. "Van, how's the King?"
+
+"Wild to run, Bostil, jest plumb wild. There won't be any hoss with the ghost
+of a show to-morrow."
+
+Lucy raised her drooping head. "Is THAT so, Van Sickle? . . . Listen here. If
+you and Sage King don't get more wild running to-morrow than you ever had I'll
+never ride again!" With this retort Lucy left the room.
+
+Van stared at the door and then at Bostil. "What'd I say, Bostil?" he asked,
+plaintively. "I'm always r'ilin' her."
+
+"Cheer up, Van. You didn't say much. Lucy is fiery these days. She's got a
+hoss somewhere an' she's goin' to ride him in the race. She offered to bet on
+him--against the King! It certainly beat me all hollow. But see here, Van.
+I've a hunch there's a dark hoss goin' to show up in this race. So don't
+underrate Lucy an' her mount, whatever he is. She calls him Wildfire. Ever see
+him?"
+
+"I sure haven't. Fact is, I haven't seen Lucy for days an' days. As for the
+hunch you gave, I'll say I was figurin' Lucy for some real race. Bostil, she
+doesn't MAKE a hoss run. He'll run jest to please her. An' Lucy's lighter 'n a
+feather. Why, Bostil, if she happened to ride out there on Blue Roan or some
+other hoss as fast I'd--I'd jest wilt."
+
+Bostil uttered a laugh full of pride in his daughter. "Wal, she won't show up
+on Blue Roan," he replied, with grim gruffness. "Thet's sure as death. . . .
+Come on out now. I want a look at the King."
+
+Bostil went into the village. All day long he was so busy with a thousand and
+one things referred to him, put on him, undertaken by him, that he had no time
+to think. Back in his mind, however, there was a burden of which he was
+vaguely conscious all the time. He worked late into the night and slept late
+the next morning.
+
+Never in his life had Bostil been gloomy or retrospective on the day of a
+race. In the press of matters he had only a word for Lucy, but that earned a
+saucy, dauntless look. He was glad when he was able to join the procession of
+villagers, visitors, and Indians moving out toward the sage.
+
+The racecourse lay at the foot of the slope, and now the gray and purple sage
+was dotted with more horses and Indians, more moving things and colors, than
+Bostil had ever seen there before. It was a spectacle that stirred him. Many
+fires sent up blue columns of smoke from before the hastily built brush huts
+where the Indians cooked and ate. Blankets shone bright in the sun; burros
+grazed and brayed; horses whistled piercingly across the slope; Indians lolled
+before the huts or talked in groups, sitting and lounging on their ponies;
+down in the valley, here and there, were Indians racing, and others were
+chasing the wiry mustangs. Beyond this gay and colorful spectacle stretched
+the valley, merging into the desert marked so strikingly and beautifully by
+the monuments.
+
+Bostil was among the last to ride down to the high bench that overlooked the
+home end of the racecourse. He calculated that there were a thousand Indians
+and whites congregated at that point, which was the best vantage-ground to see
+the finish of a race. And the occasion of his arrival, for all the gaiety, was
+one of dignity and importance. If Bostil reveled in anything it was in an hour
+like this. His liberality made this event a great race-day. The thoroughbreds
+were all there, blanketed, in charge of watchful riders. In the center of the
+brow of this long bench lay a huge, flat rock which had been Bostil's seat in
+the watching of many a race. Here were assembled his neighbors and visitors
+actively interested in the races, and also the important Indians of both
+tribes, all waiting for him.
+
+As Bostil dismounted, throwing the bridle to a rider, he saw a face that
+suddenly froze the thrilling delight of the moment. A tall, gaunt man with
+cavernous black eyes and huge, drooping black mustache fronted him and seemed
+waiting. Cordts! Bostil had forgotten. Instinctively Bostil stood on guard.
+For years he had prepared himself for the moment when he would come face to
+face with this noted horse-thief.
+
+"Bostil, how are you?" said Cordts. He appeared pleasant, and certainly
+grateful for being permitted to come there. From his left hand hung a belt
+containing two heavy guns.
+
+"Hello, Cordts," replied Bostil, slowly unbending. Then he met the other's
+proffered hand.
+
+"I've bet heavy on the King," said Cordts.
+
+For the moment there could have been no other way to Bostil's good graces, and
+this remark made the gruff old rider's hard face relax.
+
+"Wal, I was hopin' you'd back some other hoss, so I could take your money,"
+replied Bostil.
+
+Cordts held out the belt and guns to Bostil. "I want to enjoy this race," he
+said, with a smile that somehow hinted of the years he had packed those guns
+day and night.
+
+"Cordts, I don't want to take your guns," replied Bostil, bluntly. "I've taken
+your word an' that's enough."
+
+"Thanks, Bostil. All the same, as I'm your guest I won't pack them," returned
+Cordts, and he hung the belt on the horn of Bostil's saddle. "Some of my men
+are with me. They were all right till they got outside of Brackton's whisky.
+But now I won't answer for them."
+
+"Wal, you're square to say thet," replied Bostil. "An' I'll run this race an'
+answer for everybody."
+
+Bostil recognized Hutchinson and Dick Sears, but the others of Cordts's gang
+he did not know. They were a hard-looking lot. Hutchinson was a spare,
+stoop-shouldered, red-faced, squinty-eyed rider, branded all over with the
+marks of a bad man. And Dick Sears looked his notoriety. He was a little knot
+of muscle, short and bow-legged, rough in appearance as cactus. He wore a
+ragged slouch-hat pulled low down. His face and stubby beard were
+dust-colored, and his eyes seemed sullen, watchful. He made Bostil think of a
+dusty, scaly, hard, desert rattlesnake. Bostil eyed this right-hand man of
+Cordts's and certainly felt no fear of him, though Sears had the fame of swift
+and deadly skill with a gun. Bostil felt that he was neither afraid nor loath
+to face Sears in gun-play, and he gazed at the little horse-thief in a manner
+that no one could mistake. Sears was not drunk, neither was he wholly free
+from the unsteadiness caused by the bottle. Assuredly he had no fear of Bostil
+and eyed him insolently. Bostil turned away to the group of his riders and
+friends, and he asked for his daughter.
+
+"Lucy's over there," said Farlane, pointing to a merry crowd.
+
+Bostil waved a hand to her, and Lucy, evidently mistaking his action, came
+forward, leading one of her ponies. She wore a gray blouse with a red scarf,
+and a skirt over overalls and boots. She looked pale, but she was smiling, and
+there was a dark gleam of excitement in her blue eyes. She did not have on her
+sombrero. She wore her hair in a braid, and had a red band tight above her
+forehead. Bostil took her in all at a glance. She meant business and she
+looked dangerous. Bostil knew once she slipped out of that skirt she could
+ride with any rider there. He saw that she had become the center toward which
+all eyes shifted. It pleased him. She was his, like her mother, and as
+beautiful and thoroughbred as any rider could wish his daughter.
+
+"Lucy, where's your hoss?" he asked, curiously.
+
+"Never you mind, Dad. I'll be there at the finish," she replied.
+
+"Red's your color for to-day, then?" he questioned, as he put a big hand on
+the bright-banded head.
+
+She nodded archly.
+
+"Lucy, I never thought you'd flaunt red in your old Dad's face. Red, when the
+color of the King is like the sage out yonder. You've gone back on the King."
+
+"No, Dad, I never was for Sage King, else I wouldn't wear red to-day."
+
+"Child, you sure mean to run in this race--the big one?"
+
+"Sure and certain."
+
+"Wal, the only bitter drop in my cup to-day will be seein' you get beat. But
+if you ran second I'll give you a present thet'll make the purse look sick."
+
+Even the Indian chiefs were smiling. Old Horse, the Navajo, beamed benignly
+upon this daughter of the friend of the Indians. Silver, his brother
+chieftain, nodded as if he understood Bostil's pride and regret. Some of the
+young riders showed their hearts in their eyes. Farlane tried to look
+mysterious, to pretend he was in Lucy's confidence.
+
+"Lucy, if you are really goin' to race I'll withdraw my hoss so you can win,"
+said Wetherby, gallantly.
+
+Bostil's sonorous laugh rolled down the slope.
+
+"Miss Lucy, I sure hate to run a hoss against yours," said old Cal Blinn. Then
+Colson, Sticks, Burthwait, the other principals, paid laughing compliments to
+the bright-haired girl.
+
+Bostil enjoyed this hugely until he caught the strange intensity of regard in
+the cavernous eyes of Cordts. That gave him a shock. Cordts had long wanted
+this girl as much probably as he wanted Sage King. There were dark and
+terrible stories that stained the name of Cordts. Bostil regretted his impulse
+in granting the horse-thief permission to attend the races. Sight of Lucy's
+fair, sweet face might inflame this Cordts--this Kentuckian who had boasted of
+his love of horses and women. Behind Cordts hung the little dust-colored
+Sears, like a coiled snake, ready to strike. Bostil felt stir in him a
+long-dormant fire--a stealing along his veins, a passion he hated.
+
+"Lucy, go back to the women till you're ready to come out on your hoss," he
+said. "An' mind you, be careful to-day!"
+
+He gave her a meaning glance, which she understood perfectly, he saw, and then
+he turned to start the day's sport.
+
+The Indian races run in twos and threes, and on up to a number that crowded
+the racecourse; the betting and yelling and running; the wild and plunging
+mustangs; the heat and dust and pounding of hoofs; the excited betting; the
+surprises and defeats and victories, the trial tests of the principals,
+jealously keeping off to themselves in the sage; the endless moving, colorful
+procession, gaudy and swift and thrilling--all these Bostil loved
+tremendously.
+
+But they were as nothing to what they gradually worked up to--the climax--the
+great race.
+
+It was afternoon when all was ready for this race, and the sage was bright
+gray in the westering sun. Everybody was resting, waiting. The tense quiet of
+the riders seemed to settle upon the whole assemblage. Only the thoroughbreds
+were restless. They quivered and stamped and tossed their small, fine heads.
+They knew what was going to happen. They wanted to run. Blacks, bays, and
+whites were the predominating colors; and the horses and mustangs were alike
+in those points of race and speed and spirit that proclaimed them
+thoroughbreds.
+
+Bostil himself took the covering off his favorite. Sage King was on edge. He
+stood out strikingly in contrast with the other horses. His sage-gray body was
+as sleek and shiny as satin. He had been trained to the hour. He tossed his
+head as he champed the bit, and every moment his muscles rippled under his
+fine skin. Proud, mettlesome, beautiful!
+
+Sage King was the favorite in the betting, the Indians, who were ardent
+gamblers, plunging heavily on him.
+
+Bostil saddled the horse and was long at the task.
+
+Van stood watching. He was pale and nervous. Bostil saw this.
+
+"Van," he said, "it's your race."
+
+The rider reached a quick hand for bridle and horn, and when his foot touched
+the stirrup Sage King was in the air. He came down, springy-quick, graceful,
+and then he pranced into line with the other horses.
+
+Bostil waved his hand. Then the troop of riders and racers headed for the
+starting-point, two miles up the valley. Macomber and Blinn, with a rider and
+a Navajo, were up there as the official starters of the day.
+
+Bostil's eyes glistened. He put a friendly hand on Cordts's shoulder, an
+action which showed the stress of the moment. Most of the men crowded around
+Bostil. Sears and Hutchinson hung close to Cordts. And Holley, keeping near
+his employer, had keen eyes for other things than horses.
+
+Suddenly he touched Bostil and pointed down the slope. "There's Lucy," he
+said. "She's ridin' out to join the bunch."
+
+"Lucy! Where? I'd forgotten my girl! . . . Where?"
+
+"There," repeated Holly, and he pointed. Others of the group spoke up, having
+seen Lucy riding down.
+
+"She's on a red hoss," said one.
+
+"'Pears all-fired big to me--her hoss," said another. "Who's got a glass?"
+
+Bostil had the only field-glass there and he was using it. Across the round,
+magnified field of vision moved a giant red horse, his mane waving like a
+flame. Lucy rode him. They were moving from a jumble of broken rocks a mile
+down the slope. She had kept her horse hidden there. Bostil felt an added stir
+in his pulse-beat. Certainly he had never seen a horse like this one. But the
+distance was long, the glass not perfect; he could not trust his sight.
+Suddenly that sight dimmed.
+
+"Holley, I can't make out nothin'," he complained. "Take the glass. Give me a
+line on Lucy's mount."
+
+"Boss, I don't need the glass to see that she's up on a HOSS," replied Holley,
+as he took the glass. He leveled it, adjusted it to his eyes, and then looked
+long. Bostil grew impatient. Lucy was rapidly overhauling the troop of racers
+on her way to the post. Nothing ever hurried or excited Holley.
+
+"Wal, can't you see any better 'n me?" queried Bostil, eagerly.
+
+"Come on, Holl, give us a tip before she gits to the post," spoke up a rider.
+
+Cordts showed intense eagerness, and all the group were excited. Lucy's
+advent, on an unknown horse that even her father could not disparage, was the
+last and unexpected addition to the suspense. They all knew that if the horse
+was fast Lucy would be dangerous.
+
+Holley at last spoke: "She's up on a wild stallion. He's red, like fire. He's
+mighty big--strong. Looks as if he didn't want to go near the bunch. Lord!
+what action! . . . Bostil, I'd say--a great hoss!"
+
+There was a moment's intense silence in the group round Bostil. Holley was
+never known to mistake a horse or to be extravagant in judgment or praise.
+
+"A wild stallion!" echoed Bostil. "A-huh! An' she calls him Wildfire. Where'd
+she get him? . . . Gimme thet glass."
+
+But all Bostil could make out was a blur. His eyes were wet. He realized now
+that his first sight of Lucy on the strange horse had been clear and strong,
+and it was that which had dimmed his eyes.
+
+"Holley, you use the glass--an' tell me what comes off," said Bostil, as he
+wiped his eyes with his scarf. He was relieved to find that his sight was
+clearing. "My God! if I couldn't see this finish!"
+
+Then everybody watched the close, dark mass of horses and riders down the
+valley. And all waited for Holley to speak. "They're linin' up," began the
+rider. "Havin' some muss, too, it 'pears. . . . Bostil, thet red hoss is
+raisin' hell! He wants to fight. There! he's up in the air. . . . Boys, he's a
+devil--a hoss-killer like all them wild stallions. . . . He's plungin' at the
+King--strikin'! There! Lucy's got him down. She's handlin' him. . . . Now
+they've got the King on the other side. Thet's better. But Lucy's hoss won't
+stand. Anyway, it's a runnin' start. . . . Van's got the best position. Foxy
+Van! . . . He'll be leadin' before the rest know the race's on.. . . Them
+Indian mustangs are behavin' scandalous. Guess the red stallion scared 'em.
+Now they're all lined up back of the post. . . . Ah! gun-smoke! They move.
+. . . It looks like a go."
+
+Then Holley was silent, strained, in watching. So were all the watchers
+silent. Bostil saw far down the valley a moving, dark line of horses.
+
+"THEY'RE OFF! THEY'RE OFF!" called Holley, thrillingly.
+
+Bostil uttered a deep and booming yell, which rose above the shouts of the men
+round him and was heard even in the din of Indian cries. Then as quickly as
+the yells had risen they ceased.
+
+Holley stood up on the rock with leveled glass.
+
+"Mac's dropped the flag. It's a sure go. Now! . . . Van's out there
+front--inside. The King's got his stride. Boss, the King's stretchin' out! . .
+. Look! Look! see thet red hoss leap! . . . Bostil, he's runnin' down the
+King! I knowed it. He's like lightnin'. He's pushin' the King over--off the
+course! See him plunge! Lord! Lucy can't pull him! She goes
+up--down--tossed--but she sticks like a burr. Good, Lucy! Hang on! . . . My
+Gawd, Bostil, the King's thrown! He's down! . . . He comes up, off the course.
+The others flash by. . . . Van's out of the race! . . . An', Bostil--an',
+gentlemen, there ain't anythin' more to this race but a red hoss!"
+
+Bostil's heart gave a great leap and then seemed to stand still. He was half
+cold, half hot.
+
+What a horrible, sickening disappointment. Bostil rolled out a cursing query.
+Holley's answer was short and sharp. The King was out! Bostil raved. He could
+not see. He could not believe. After all the weeks of preparation, of
+excitement, of suspense--only this! There was no race. The King was out! The
+thing did not seem possible. A thousand thoughts flitted through Bostil's
+mind. Rage, impotent rage, possessed him. He cursed Van, he swore he would
+kill that red stallion. And some one shook him hard. Some one's incisive words
+cut into his thick, throbbing ears: "Luck of the game! The King ain't beat!
+He's only out!"
+
+Then the rider's habit of mind asserted itself and Bostil began to recover.
+For the King to fall was hard luck. But he had not lost the race! Anguish and
+pride battled for mastery over him. Even if the King were out it was a Bostil
+who would win the great race.
+
+"He ain't beat!" muttered Bostil. "It ain't fair! He's run off the track by a
+wild stallion!"
+
+His dimmed sight grew clear and sharp. And with a gasp he saw the moving, dark
+line take shape as horses. A bright horse was in the lead. Brighter and larger
+he grew. Swiftly and more swiftly he came on. The bright color changed to red.
+Bostil heard Holley calling and Cordts calling--and other voices, but he did
+not distinguish what was said. The line of horses began to bob, to bunch. The
+race looked close, despite what Holley had said. The Indians were beginning to
+lean forward, here and there uttering a short, sharp yell. Everything within
+Bostil grew together in one great, throbbing, tingling mass. His rider's eye,
+keen once more, caught a gleam of gold above the red, and that gold was Lucy's
+hair. Bostil forgot the King.
+
+Then Holley bawled into his ear, "They're half-way!"
+
+The race was beautiful. Bostil strained his eyes. He gloried in what he
+saw--Lucy low over the neck of that red stallion. He could see plainer now.
+They were coming closer. How swiftly! What a splendid race! But it was too
+swift--it would not last. The Indians began to yell, drowning the hoarse
+shouts of the riders. Out of the tail of his eye Bostil saw Cordts and Sears
+and Hutchinson. They were acting like crazy men. Strange that horse-thieves
+should care! The million thrills within Bostil coalesced into one great
+shudder of rapture. He grew wet with sweat. His stentorian voice took up the
+call for Lucy to win.
+
+"Three-quarters!" bowled Holley into Bostil's ear. "An' Lucy's give thet wild
+hoss free rein! Look, Bostil! You never in your life seen a hoss ran like
+thet!"
+
+Bostil never had. His heart swelled. Something shook him. Was that his
+girl--that tight little gray burr half hidden in the huge stallion's flaming
+mane? The distance had been close between Lucy and the bunched riders.
+
+But it lengthened. How it widened! That flame of a horse was running away from
+the others. And now they were close--coming into the home stretch. A deafening
+roar from the onlookers engulfed all other sounds. A straining, stamping,
+arm-flinging horde surrounded Bostil.
+
+Bostil saw Lucy's golden hair whipping out from the flame-streaked mane. And
+then he could only see that red brute of a horse. Wildfire before the wind!
+Bostil thought of the leaping prairie flame, storm-driven.
+
+On came the red stallion--on--on! What a tremendous stride! What a marvelous
+recovery! What ease! What savage action!
+
+He flashed past, low, pointed, long, going faster every magnificent
+stride--winner by a dozen lengths.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+Wildfire ran on down the valley far beyond the yelling crowd lined along the
+slope. Bostil was deaf to the throng; he watched the stallion till Lucy forced
+him to stop and turn.
+
+Then Bostil whirled to see where Van was with the King. Most of the crowd
+surged down to surround the racers, and the yells gave way to the buzz of many
+voices. Some of the ranchers and riders remained near Bostil, all apparently
+talking at once. Bostil gathered that Holley's Whitefoot had ran second, and
+the Navajo's mustang third. It was Holley himself who verified what Bostil had
+heard. The old rider's hawk eyes were warm with delight.
+
+"Boss, he run second!" Holley kept repeating.
+
+Bostil had the heart to shake hands with Holley and say he was glad, when it
+was on his lips to blurt out there had been no race. Then Bostil's nerves
+tingled at sight of Van trotting the King up the course toward the slope.
+Bostil watched with searching eyes. Sage King did not appear to be injured.
+Van rode straight up the slope and leaped off. He was white and shaking.
+
+The King's glossy hide was dirty with dust and bits of cactus and brush. He
+was not even hot. There did not appear to be a bruise or mark on him. He
+whinnied and rubbed his face against Bostil, and then, flinching, he swept up
+his head, ears high. Both fear and fire shone in his eyes.
+
+"Wal, Van, get it out of your system," said Bostil, kindly. He was a harder
+loser before a race was run than after he had lost it.
+
+"Thet red hoss run in on the King before the start an' scared the race out of
+him," replied Van, swiftly. "We had a hunch, you know, but at thet Lucy's hoss
+was a surprise. I'll say, sir, thet Lucy rode her wild hoss an' handled him.
+Twice she pulled him off the King. He meant to kill the King! . . . Ask any of
+the boys. . . . We got started. I took the lead, sir. The King was in the
+lead. I never looked back till I heard Lucy scream. She couldn't pull
+Wildfire. He was rushin' the King--meant to kill him. An' Sage King wanted to
+fight. If I could only have kept him runnin'! Thet would have been a race!
+. . . But Wildfire got in closer an' closer. He crowded us. He bit at the
+King's flank an' shoulder an' neck. Lucy pulled till I yelled she'd throw
+the hoss an' kill us both. Then Wildfire jumped for us. Runnin' an' strikin'
+with both feet at once! Bostil, thet hoss's hell! Then he hit us an' down
+we went. I had a bad spill. But the King's not hurt an' thet's a blessed
+wonder."
+
+"No race, Van! It was hard luck. Take him home," said Bostil.
+
+Van's story of the accident vindicated Bostil's doubts. A new horse had
+appeared on the scene, wild and swift and grand, but Sage King was still
+unbeaten in a fair race. There would come a reckoning, Bostil grimly muttered.
+Who owned this Wildfire?
+
+Holley might as well have read his mind. "Reckon this feller ridin' up will
+take down the prize money," remarked Holley, and he pointed to a man who rode
+a huge, shaggy, black horse and was leading Lucy's pony.
+
+"A-huh!" exclaimed Bostil. "A strange rider."
+
+"An' here comes Lucy coaxin' the stallion back," added Holley.
+
+"A wild stallion never clear broke!" ejaculated Cordts.
+
+All the men looked and all had some remark of praise for Lucy and her mount.
+
+Bostil gazed with a strange, irresistible attraction. Never had he expected to
+live to see a wild stallion like this one, to say nothing of his daughter
+mounted on him, with the record of having put Sage King out of the race!
+
+A thousand pairs of eyes watched Wildfire. He pranced out there beyond the
+crowd of men and horses. He did not want to come closer. Yet he did not seem
+to fight his rider. Lucy hung low over his neck, apparently exhausted, and she
+was patting him and caressing him. There were horses and Indians on each side
+of the race track, and between these lines Lucy appeared reluctant to come.
+
+Bostil strode down and, waving and yelling for everybody to move back to the
+slope, he cleared the way and then stood out in front alone.
+
+"Ride up, now," he called to Lucy.
+
+It was then Bostil discovered that Lucy did not wear a spur and she had
+neither quirt nor whip. She turned Wildfire and he came prancing on, head and
+mane and tail erect. His action was beautiful, springy, and every few steps,
+as Lucy touched him, he jumped with marvelous ease and swiftness.
+
+Bostil became all eyes. He did not see his daughter as she paraded the winner
+before the applauding throng. And Bostil recorded in his mind that which he
+would never forget--a wild stallion, with unbroken spirit; a giant of a horse,
+glistening red, with mane like dark-striped, wind-blown flame, all muscle, all
+grace, all power; a neck long and slender and arching to the small, savagely
+beautiful head; the jaws open, and the thin-skinned, pink-colored nostrils
+that proved the Arabian blood; the slanting shoulders and the deep, broad
+chest, the powerful legs and knees not too high nor too low, the symmetrical
+dark hoofs that rang on the little stones--all these marks so significant of
+speed and endurance. A stallion with a wonderful physical perfection that
+matched the savage, ruthless spirit of the desert killer of horses!
+
+Lucy waved her hand, and the strange rider to whom Holley had called attention
+strode out of the crowd toward Wildfire.
+
+Bostil's gaze took in the splendid build of this lithe rider, the clean-cut
+face, the dark eye. This fellow had a shiny, coiled lasso in hand. He advanced
+toward Wildfire. The stallion snorted and plunged. If ever Bostil saw hate
+expressed by a horse he saw it then. But he seemed to be tractable to the
+control of the girl. Bostil swiftly grasped the strange situation. Lucy had
+won the love of the savage stallion. That always had been the secret of her
+power. And she had hated Sage King because he alone had somehow taken a
+dislike to her. Horses were as queer as people, thought Bostil.
+
+The rider walked straight up to the trembling Wildfire. When Wildfire plunged
+and reared up and up the rider leaped for the bridle and with an iron arm
+pulled the horse down. Wildfire tried again, almost lifting the rider, but a
+stinging cut from the lasso made him come to a stand. Plainly the rider held
+the mastery.
+
+"Dad!" called Lucy, faintly.
+
+Bostil went forward, close, while the rider held Wildfire. Lucy was as
+wan-faced as a flower by moonlight. Her eyes were dark with emotions, fear
+predominating. Then for Bostil the half of his heart that was human reasserted
+itself. Lucy was only a girl now, and weakening. Her fear, her pitiful little
+smile, as if she dared not hope for her father's approval yet could not help
+it, touched Bostil to the quick, and he opened his arms. Lucy slid down into
+them.
+
+"Lucy, girl, you've won the King's race an' double-crossed your poor old dad!"
+
+"Oh, Dad, I never knew--I never dreamed Wildfire--would jump the King," Lucy
+faltered. "I couldn't hold him. He was terrible. . . . It made me sick. . . .
+Daddy, tell me Van wasn't hurt--or the King!"
+
+"The hoss's all right an' so's Van," replied Bostil. "Don't cry, Lucy. It was
+a fool trick you pulled off, but you did it great. By Gad! you sure was ridin'
+thet red devil. . . . An' say, it's all right with me!"
+
+Lucy did not faint then, but she came near it. Bostil put her down and led her
+through the lines of admiring Indians and applauding riders, and left her with
+the women.
+
+When he turned again he was in time to see the strange rider mount Wildfire.
+It was a swift and hazardous mount, the stallion being in the air. When he
+came down he tore the turf and sent it flying, and when he shot up again he
+was doubled in a red knot, bristling with fiery hair, a furious wild beast,
+mad to throw the rider. Bostil never heard as wild a scream uttered by a
+horse. Likewise he had never seen so incomparable a horseman as this stranger.
+Indians and riders alike thrilled at a sight which was after their own hearts.
+The rider had hooked his long spurs under the horse and now appeared a part of
+him. He could not be dislodged. This was not a bucking mustang, but a fierce,
+powerful, fighting stallion. No doubt, thought Bostil, this fight took place
+every time the rider mounted his horse. It was the sort of thing riders loved.
+Most of them would not own a horse that would not pitch. Bostil presently
+decided, however, that in the case of this red stallion no rider in his right
+senses would care for such a fight, simply because of the extraordinary
+strengths, activity, and ferocity of the stallion.
+
+The riders were all betting the horse would throw the stranger. And Bostil,
+seeing the gathering might of Wildfire's momentum, agreed with them. No
+horseman could stick on that horse. Suddenly Wildfire tripped in the sage, and
+went sprawling in the dust, throwing his rider ahead. Both man and beast were
+quick to rise, but the rider had a foot in the stirrup before Wildfire was
+under way. Then the horse plunged, ran free, came circling back, and slowly
+gave way to the rider's control. Those few moments of frenzied activity had
+brought out the foam and the sweat--Wildfire was wet. The man pulled him in
+before Bostil and dismounted.
+
+"Sometimes I ride him, then sometimes I don't," he said, with a smile.
+
+Bostil held out his hand. He liked this rider. He would have liked the frank
+face, less hard than that of most riders, and the fine, dark eyes, straight
+and steady, even if their possessor had not come with the open sesame to
+Bostil's regard--a grand, wild horse, and the nerve to ride him.
+
+"Wal, you rode him longer 'n any of us figgered," said Bostil, heartily
+shaking the man's hand. "I'm Bostil. Glad to meet you."
+
+"My name's Slone--Lin Slone," replied the rider, frankly. "I'm a wild-horse
+hunter an' hail from Utah."
+
+"Utah? How'd you ever get over? Wal, you've got a grand hoss--an' you put a
+grand rider up on him in the race. . . . My girl Lucy--"
+
+Bostil hesitated. His mind was running swiftly. Back of his thoughts gathered
+the desire and the determination to get possession of this horse Wildfire. He
+had forgotten what he might have said to this stranger under different
+circumstances. He looked keenly into Slone's face and saw no fear, no
+subterfuge. The young man was honest.
+
+"Bostil, I chased this wild horse days an' weeks an' months, hundreds of
+miles--across the canyon an' the river--"
+
+"No!" interrupted Bostil, blankly.
+
+"Yes. I'll tell you how later. . . . Out here somewhere I caught Wildfire,
+broke him as much as he'll ever be broken. He played me out an' got away. Your
+girl rode along--saved my horse--an' saved my life, too. I was in bad shape
+for days. But I got well--an'--an' then she wanted me to let her run Wildfire
+in the big race. I couldn't refuse. . . . An' it would have been a great race
+but for the unlucky accident to Sage King. I'm sorry, sir."
+
+"Slone, it jarred me some, thet disappointment. But it's over," replied
+Bostil. "An' so thet's how Lucy found her hoss. She sure was mysterious. . . .
+Wal, wal." Bostil became aware of others behind him. "Holley, shake hands with
+Slone, hoss-wrangler out of Utah. . . . You, too, Cal Blinn. . . . An'
+Macomber--an' Wetherby, meet my friend here--young Slone. . . . An', Cordts,
+shake hands with a feller thet owns a grand hoss!"
+
+Bostil laughed as he introduced the horse-thief to Slone. The others laughed,
+too, even Cordts joining in. There was much of the old rider daredevil spirit
+left in Bostil, and it interested and amused him to see Cordts and Slone meet.
+Assuredly Slone had heard of the noted stealer of horses. The advantage was
+certainly on Cordts's side, for he was good-natured and pleasant while Slone
+stiffened, paling slightly as he faced about to acknowledge the introduction.
+
+"Howdy, Slone," drawled Cordts, with hand outstretched. "I sure am glad to
+meet yuh. I'd like to trade the Sage King for this red stallion!"
+
+A roar of laughter greeted this sally, all but Bostil and Slone joining in.
+The joke was on Bostil, and he showed it. Slone did not even smile.
+
+"Howdy, Cordts," he replied. "I'm glad to meet you--so I'll know you when I
+see you again."
+
+"Wal, we're all good fellers to-day," interposed Bostil. "An' now let's ride
+home an' eat. Slone, you come with me."
+
+The group slowly mounted the slope where the horses waited. Macomber,
+Wetherby, Burthwait, Blinn--all Bostil's friends proffered their felicitations
+to the young rider, and all were evidently prepossessed with him.
+
+The sun was low in the west; purple shades were blotting out the gold lights
+down the valley; the day of the great races was almost done. Indians were
+still scattered here and there in groups; others were turning out the
+mustangs; and the majority were riding and walking with the crowd toward the
+village.
+
+Bostil observed that Cordts had hurried ahead of the group and now appeared to
+be saying something emphatic to Dick Sears and Hutchinson. Bostil heard Cordts
+curse. Probably he was arraigning the sullen Sears. Cordts had acted first
+rate--had lived up to his word, as Bostil thought he would do. Cordts and
+Hutchinson mounted their horses and rode off, somewhat to the left of the
+scattered crowd. But Sears remained behind. Bostil thought this strange and
+put it down to the surliness of the fellow, who had lost on the races. Bostil,
+wishing Sears would get out of his sight, resolved never to make another
+blunder like inviting horse-thieves to a race.
+
+All the horses except Wildfire stood in a bunch back on the bench. Sears
+appeared to be fussing with the straps on his saddle. And Bostil could not
+keep his glance from wandering back to gloat over Wildfire's savage grace and
+striking size.
+
+Suddenly there came a halt in the conversation of the men, a curse in Holley's
+deep voice, a violent split in the group. Bostil wheeled to see Sears in a
+menacing position with two guns leveled low.
+
+"Don't holler!" he called. "An' don't move!"
+
+"What 'n the h--l now, Sears?" demanded Bostil.
+
+"I'll bore you if you move--thet's what!" replied Sears. His eyes, bold,
+steely, with a glint that Bostil knew, vibrated as he held in sight all points
+before him. A vicious little sand-rattlesnake about to strike!
+
+"Holley, turn yer back!" ordered Sears.
+
+The old rider, who stood foremost of the group' instantly obeyed, with hands
+up. He took no chances here, for he alone packed a gun. With swift steps Sears
+moved, pulled Holley's gun, flung it aside into the sage.
+
+"Sears, it ain't a hold-up!" expostulated Bostil. The act seemed too bold, too
+wild even for Dick Sears.
+
+"Ain't it?" scoffed Sears, malignantly. "Bostil, I was after the King. But I
+reckon I'll git the hoss thet beat him!"
+
+Bostil's face turned dark-blood color and his neck swelled. "By Gawd, Sears!
+You ain't a-goin' to steal this boy's hoss!"
+
+"Shut up!" hissed the horse-thief. He pushed a gun close to Bostil. "I've
+always laid fer you! I'm achin' to bore you now. I would but fer scarin' this
+hoss. If you yap again I'll KILL YOU, anyhow, an' take a chance!"
+
+All the terrible hate and evil and cruelty and deadliness of his kind burned
+in his eyes and stung in his voice.
+
+"Sears, if it's my horse you want you needn't kill Bostil," spoke up Slone.
+The contrast of his cool, quiet voice eased the terrible strain.
+
+"Lead him round hyar!" snapped Sears.
+
+Wildfire appeared more shy of the horses back of him than of the men. Slone
+was able to lead him, however, to within several paces of Sears. Then Slone
+dropped the reins. He still held a lasso which was loosely coiled, and the
+loop dropped in front of him as he backed away.
+
+Sears sheathed the left-hand gun. Keeping the group covered with the other, he
+moved backward, reaching for the hanging reins. Wildfire snorted, appeared
+about to jump. But Sears got the reins. Bostil, standing like a stone, his
+companions also motionless, could not help but admire the daring of this
+upland horse-thief. How was he to mount that wild stallion? Sears was noted
+for two qualities--his nerve before men and his skill with horses. Assuredly
+he would not risk an ordinary mount. Wildfire began to suspect Sears--to look
+at him instead of the other horses. Then quick as a cat Sears vaulted into the
+saddle. Wildfire snorted and lifted his forefeet in a lunge that meant he
+would bolt.
+
+Sears in vaulting up had swung the gun aloft. He swept it down, but
+waveringly, for Wildfire had begun to rear.
+
+Bostil saw how fatal that single instant would have been for Sears if he or
+Holley had a gun.
+
+Something whistled. Bostil saw the leap of Slone's lasso--the curling, snaky
+dart of the noose which flew up to snap around Sears. The rope sung taut.
+Sears was swept bodily clean from the saddle, to hit the ground in sodden
+impact.
+
+Almost swifter than Bostil's sight was the action of Slone--flashing by--in
+the air--himself on the plunging horse. Sears shot once, twice. Then Wildfire
+bolted as his rider whipped the lasso round the horn. Sears, half rising, was
+jerked ten feet. An awful shriek was throttled in his throat.
+
+A streak of dust on the slope--a tearing, parting line in the sage!
+
+Bostil stood amazed. The red stallion made short plunges. Slone reached low
+for the tripping reins. When he straightened up in the saddle Wildfire broke
+wildly into a run.
+
+It was characteristic of Holley that at this thrilling, tragic instant he
+walked over into the sage to pick up his gun.
+
+"Throwed a gun on me, got the drop, an' pitched mine away!" muttered Holley,
+in disgust. The way he spoke meant that he was disgraced.
+
+"My Gawd! I was scared thet Sears would get the hoss!" rolled out Bostil.
+
+Holley thought of his gun; Bostil thought of the splendid horse. The thoughts
+were characteristic of these riders. The other men, however, recovering from a
+horror-broken silence, burst out in acclaim of Slone's feat.
+
+"Dick Sears's finish! Roped by a boy rider!" exclaimed Cal Blinn, fervidly.
+
+"Bostil, that rider is worthy of his horse," said Wetherby. "I think Sears
+would have bored you. I saw his finger pressing--pressing on the trigger. Men
+like Sears can't help but pull at that stage."
+
+"Thet was the quickest trick I ever seen," declared Macomber.
+
+They watched Wildfire run down the slope, out into the valley, with a streak
+of rising dust out behind. They all saw when there ceased to be that peculiar
+rising of dust. Wildfire appeared to shoot ahead at greater speed. Then he
+slowed up. The rider turned him and faced back toward the group, coming at a
+stiff gallop. Soon Wildfire breasted the slope, and halted, snorting, shaking
+before the men. The lasso was still trailing out behind, limp and sagging.
+There was no weight upon it now.
+
+Bostil strode slowly ahead. He sympathized with the tension that held Slone;
+he knew why the rider's face was gray, why his lips only moved mutely, why
+there was horror in the dark, strained eyes, why the lean, strong hands,
+slowly taking up the lasso, now shook like leaves in the wind.
+
+There was only dust on the lasso. But Bostil knew--they all knew that none the
+less it had dealt a terrible death to the horse-thief.
+
+Somehow Bostil could not find words for what he wanted to say. He put a hand
+on the red stallion--patted his shoulder. Then he gripped Slone close and
+hard. He was thinking how he would have gloried in a son like this young, wild
+rider. Then he again faced his comrades.
+
+"Fellers, do you think Cordts was in on thet trick?" he queried.
+
+"Nope. Cordts was on the square," replied Holley. "But he must have seen it
+comin' an' left Sears to his fate. It sure was a fittin' last ride for a
+hoss-thief."
+
+Bostil sent Holley and Farlane on ahead to find Cordts and Hutchinson, with
+their comrades, to tell them the fate of Sears, and to warn them to leave
+before the news got to the riders.
+
+The sun was setting golden and red over the broken battlements of the canyons
+to the west. The heat of the day blew away on a breeze that bent the tips of
+the sage-brush. A wild song drifted back from the riders to the fore. And the
+procession of Indians moved along, their gay trappings and bright colors
+beautiful in the fading sunset light.
+
+When Bostil and, his guests arrived at the corrals, Holley, with Farlane and
+other riders, were waiting.
+
+"Boss," said Holley, "Cordts an' his outfit never rid in. They was last seen
+by some Navajos headin' for the canyon."
+
+"Thet's good!" ejaculated Bostil, in relief. "Wal boys, look after the hosses.
+. . . Slone, just turn Wildfire over to the boys with instructions, an' feel
+safe."
+
+Farlane scratched his head and looked dubious. "I'm wonderin' how safe it'll
+be fer us."
+
+"I'll look after him," said Slone.
+
+Bostil nodded as if he had expected Slone to refuse to let any rider put the
+stallion away for the night. Wildfire would not go into the barn, and Slone
+led him into one of the high-barred corrals. Bostil waited, talking with his
+friends, until Slone returned, and then they went toward the house.
+
+"I reckon we couldn't get inside Brack's place now," remarked Bostil. "But in
+a case like this I can scare up a drink." Lights from the windows shone bright
+through the darkness under the cottonwoods. Bostil halted at the door, as if
+suddenly remembering, and he whispered, huskily: "Let's keep the women from
+learnin' about Sears--to-night, anyway."
+
+Then he led the way through the big door into the huge living-room. There were
+hanging-lights on the walls and blazing sticks on the hearth. Lucy came
+running in to meet them. It did not escape Bostil's keen eyes that she was
+dressed in her best white dress. He had never seen her look so sweet and
+pretty, and, for that matter, so strange. The flush, the darkness of her eyes,
+the added something in her face, tender, thoughtful, strong--these were new.
+Bostil pondered while she welcomed his guests. Slone, who had hung back, was
+last in turn. Lucy greeted him as she had the others. Slone met her with
+awkward constraint. The gray had not left his face. Lucy looked up at him
+again, and differently.
+
+"What--what has happened?" she asked.
+
+It annoyed Bostil that Slone and all the men suddenly looked blank.
+
+"Why, nothin'," replied Slone, slowly, "'cept I'm fagged out."
+
+Lucy, or any other girl, could have seen that he, was evading the truth. She
+flashed a look from Slone to her father.
+
+"Until to-day we never had a big race that something dreadful didn't happen,"
+said Lucy. "This was my day--my race. And, oh! I wanted it to pass
+without--without--"
+
+"Wal, Lucy dear," replied Bostil, as she faltered. "Nothin' came off thet'd
+make you feel bad. Young Slone had a scare about his hoss. Wildfire's safe out
+there in the corral, an' he'll be guarded like the King an' Sarch. Slone needs
+a drink an' somethin' to eat, same as all of us."
+
+Lucy's color returned and her smile, but Bostil noted that, while she was
+serving them and brightly responsive to compliments, she gave more than one
+steady glance at Slone. She was deep, thought Bostil, and it angered him a
+little that she showed interest in what concerned this strange rider.
+
+Then they had dinner, with twelve at table. The wives of Bostil's three
+friends had been helping Aunt Jane prepare the feast, and they added to the
+merriment. Bostil was not much given to social intercourse--he would have
+preferred to be with his horses and riders--but this night he outdid himself
+as host, amazed his sister Jane, who evidently thought he drank too much, and
+delighted Lucy. Bostil's outward appearance and his speech and action never
+reflected all the workings of his mind. No one would ever know the depth of
+his bitter disappointment at the outcome of the race. With Creech's Blue Roan
+out of the way, another horse, swifter and more dangerous, had come along to
+spoil the King's chance. Bostil felt a subtly increasing covetousness in
+regard to Wildfire, and this colored all his talk and action. The upland
+country, vast and rangy, was for Bostil too small to hold Sage King and
+Wildfire unless they both belonged to him. And when old Cal Blinn gave a
+ringing toast to Lucy, hoping to live to see her up on Wildfire in the grand
+race that must be run with the King, Bostil felt stir in him the birth of a
+subtle, bitter fear. At first he mocked it. He--Bostil--afraid to race! It was
+a lie of the excited mind. He repudiated it. Insidiously it returned. He
+drowned it down--smothered it with passion. Then the ghost of it remained,
+hauntingly.
+
+After dinner Bostil with the men went down to Brackton's, where Slone and the
+winners of the day received their prizes.
+
+"Why, it's more money than I ever had in my whole life!" exclaimed Slone,
+gazing incredulously at the gold.
+
+Bostil was amused and pleased, and back of both amusement and pleasure was the
+old inventive, driving passion to gain his own ends.
+
+Bostil was abnormally generous in many ways; monstrously selfish in one way.
+
+"Slone, I seen you didn't drink none," he said, curiously.
+
+"No; I don't like liquor."
+
+"Do you gamble?"
+
+"I like a little bet--on a race," replied Slone, frankly.
+
+"Wal, thet ain't gamblin'. These fool riders of mine will bet on the switchin'
+of a hoss's tail." He drew Slone a little aside from the others, who were
+interested in Brackton's delivery of the different prizes. "Slone, how'd you
+like to ride for me?"
+
+Slone appeared surprised. "Why, I never rode for any one," he replied, slowly.
+"I can't stand to be tied down. I'm a horse-hunter, you know."
+
+Bostil eyed the young man, wondering what he knew about the difficulties of
+the job offered. It was no news to Bostil that he was at once the best and the
+worst man to ride for in all the uplands.
+
+"Sure, I know. But thet doesn't make no difference," went on Bostil,
+persuasively. "If we got along--wal, you'd save some of thet yellow coin
+you're jinglin'. A roamin' rider never builds no corral!"
+
+"Thank you, Bostil," replied Slone, earnestly. "I'll think it over. It would
+seem kind of tame now to go back to wild-horse wranglin', after I've caught
+Wildfire. I'll think it over. Maybe I'll do it, if you're sure I'm good enough
+with rope an' horse."
+
+"Wal, by Gawd!" blurted out Bostil. "Holley says he'd rather you throwed a gun
+on him than a rope! So would I. An' as for your handlin' a hoss, I never seen
+no better."
+
+Slone appeared embarrassed and kept studying the gold coins in his palm. Some
+one touched Bostil, who, turning, saw Brackton at his elbow. The other men
+were now bantering with the Indians.
+
+"Come now while I've got a minnit," said Brackton, taking up a lantern. "I've
+somethin' to show you."
+
+Bostil followed Brackton, and Slone came along. The old man opened a door into
+a small room, half full of stores and track. The lantern only dimly lighted
+the place.
+
+"Look thar!" And Brackton flashed the light upon a man lying prostrate.
+
+Bostil recognized the pale face of Joel Creech. "Brack! . . . What's this? Is
+he dead?" Bostil sustained a strange, incomprehensible shock. Sight of a dead
+man had never before shocked him.
+
+"Nope, he ain't dead, which if he was might be good for this community,"
+replied Brackton. "He's only fallen in a fit. Fust off I reckoned he was
+drunk. But it ain't thet."
+
+"Wal, what do you want to show him to me for?" demanded Bostil, gruffly.
+
+"I reckoned you oughter see him."
+
+"An' why, Brackton?"
+
+Brackton set down the lantern and, pushing Slone outside, said: "Jest a
+minnit, son," and then he closed the door. "Joel's been on my hands since the
+flood cut him off from home," said Brackton. "An' he's been some trial. But
+nobody else would have done nothin' for him, so I had to. I reckon I felt
+sorry for him. He cried like a baby thet had lost its mother. Then he gets
+wild-lookin' an' raved around. When I wasn't busy I kept an eye on him. But
+some of the time I couldn't, an' he stole drinks, which made him wuss. An'
+when I seen he was tryin' to sneak one of my guns, I up an' gets suspicious.
+Once he said, 'My dad's hosses are goin' to starve, an' I'm goin' to kill
+somebody!' He was out of his head an' dangerous. Wal, I was worried some, but
+all I could do was lock up my guns. Last night I caught him confabin' with
+some men out in the dark, behind the store. They all skedaddled except Joel,
+but I recognized Cordts. I didn't like this, nuther. Joel was surly an' ugly.
+An' when one of the riders called him he said: 'Thet boat NEVER DRIFTED OFF.
+Fer the night of the flood I went down there myself an' tied the ropes. They
+never come untied. Somebody cut them--jest before the flood--to make sure my
+dad's hosses couldn't be crossed. Somebody figgered the river an' the flood.
+An' if my dad's hosses starve I'm goin' to kill somebody!'"
+
+Brackton took up the lantern and placed a hand on the door ready to go out.
+
+"Then a rider punched Joel--I never seen who--an' Joel had a fit. I dragged
+him in here. An' as you see, he ain't come to yet."
+
+"Wal, Brackton, the boy's crazy," said Bostil.
+
+"So I reckon. An' I'm afeared he'll burn us out--he's crazy on fires,
+anyway--or do somethin' like."
+
+"He's sure a problem. Wal, we'll see," replied Bostil, soberly.
+
+And they went out to find Slone waiting. Then Bostil called his guests, and
+with Slone also accompanying him, went home.
+
+Bostil threw off the recurring gloom, and he was good-natured when Lucy came
+to his room to say good night. He knew she had come to say more than that.
+
+"Hello, daughter!" he said. "Aren't you ashamed to come facin' your poor old
+dad?"
+
+Lucy eyed him dubiously. "No, I'm not ashamed. But I'm still a
+little--afraid."
+
+"I'm harmless, child. I'm a broken man. When you put Sage King out of the race
+you broke me."
+
+"Dad, that isn't funny. You make me an--angry when you hint I did something
+underhand."
+
+"Wal, you didn't consult ME."
+
+"I thought it would be fun to surprise you all. Why, you're always delighted
+with a surprise in a race, unless it beats you. . . . Then, it was my great
+and only chance to get out in front of the King. Oh, how grand it'd have been!
+Dad, I'd have run away from him the same as the others!"
+
+"No, you wouldn't," declared Bostil.
+
+"Dad, Wildfire can beat the King!"
+
+"Never, girl! Knockin' a good-tempered hoss off his pins ain't beatin' him in
+a runnin'-race."
+
+Then father and daughter fought over the old score, the one doggedly,
+imperturbably, the other spiritedly, with flashing eyes. It was different this
+time, however, for it ended in Lucy saying Bostil would never risk another
+race. That stung Bostil, and it cost him an effort to control his temper.
+
+"Let thet go now. Tell me all about how you saved Wildfire, an' Slone, too."
+
+Lucy readily began the narrative, and she had scarcely started before Bostil
+found himself intensely interested. Soon he became absorbed. That was the most
+thrilling and moving kind of romance to him, like his rider's dreams.
+
+"Lucy, you're sure a game kid," he said, fervidly, when she had ended. "I
+reckon I don't blame Slone for fallin' in love with you."
+
+"Who said THAT!" inquired Lucy.
+
+"Nobody. But it's true--ain't it?"
+
+She looked up with eyes as true as ever they were, yet a little sad, he
+thought, a little wistful and wondering, as if a strange and grave thing
+confronted her.
+
+"Yes, Dad--it's--it's true," she answered, haltingly.
+
+"Wal, you didn't need to tell me, but I'm glad you did."
+
+Bostil meant to ask her then if she in any sense returned the rider's love,
+but unaccountably he could not put the question. The girl was as true as
+ever--as good as gold. Bostil feared a secret that might hurt him. Just as
+sure as life was there and death but a step away, some rider, sooner or later,
+would win this girl's love. Bostil knew that, hated it, feared it. Yet he
+would never give his girl to a beggarly rider. Such a man as Wetherby ought to
+win Lucy's hand. And Bostil did not want to know too much at present; he did
+not want his swift-mounting animosity roused so soon. Still he was curious,
+and, wanting to get the drift of Lucy's mind, he took to his old habit of
+teasing.
+
+"Another moonstruck rider!" he said. "Your eyes are sure full moons, Lucy. I'd
+be ashamed to trifle with these poor fellers."
+
+"Dad!"
+
+"You're a heartless flirt--same as your mother was before she met ME."
+
+"I'm not. And I don't believe mother was, either," replied Lucy. It was easy
+to strike fire from her.
+
+"Wal, you did dead wrong to ride out there day after day meetin' Slone,
+because--young woman--if he ever has the nerve to ask me for you I'll beat him
+up bad."
+
+"Then you'd be a brute!" retorted Lucy.
+
+"Wal, mebbe," returned Bostil, secretly delighted and surprised at Lucy's
+failure to see through him. But she was looking inward. He wondered what hid
+there deep in her. "But I can't stand for the nerve of thet."
+
+"He--he means to--to ask you."
+
+"The h---. . . . A-huh!"
+
+Lucy did not catch the slip of tongue. She was flushing now. "He said he'd
+never have let me meet him out there alone--unless--he--he loved me--and as
+our neighbors and the riders would learn of it--and talk--he wanted you and
+them to know he'd asked to--to marry me."
+
+"Wal, he's a square young man!" ejaculated Bostil, involuntarily. It was hard
+for Bostil to hide his sincerity and impulsiveness; much harder than to hide
+unworthy attributes. Then he got back on the other track. "That'll make me
+treat him decent, so when he rides up to ask for you I'll let him off with,
+'No!"
+
+Lucy dropped her head. Bostil would have given all he had, except his horses,
+to feel sure she did not care for Slone.
+
+"Dad--I said--'No'--for myself," she murmured.
+
+This time Bostil did not withhold the profane word of surprise. ". . . So he's
+asked you, then? Wal, wal! When?"
+
+"To-day--out there in the rocks where he waited with Wildfire for me.
+He--he--"
+
+Lucy slipped into her father's arms, and her slender form shook. Bostil
+instinctively felt what she then needed was her mother. Her mother was dead,
+and he was only a rough, old, hard rider. He did not know what to do--to say.
+His heart softened and he clasped her close. It hurt him keenly to realize
+that he might have been a better, kinder father if it were not for the fear
+that she would find him out. But that proved he loved her, craved her respect
+and affection.
+
+"Wal, little girl, tell me," he said.
+
+"He--he broke his word to me."
+
+"A-huh! Thet's too bad. An' how did he?"
+
+"He--he--" Lucy seemed to catch her tongue.
+
+Bostil was positive she had meant to tell him something and suddenly changed
+her mind. Subtly the child vanished--a woman remained. Lucy sat up
+self-possessed once more. Some powerfully impelling thought had transformed
+her. Bostil's keen sense gathered that what she would not tell was not hers to
+reveal. For herself, she was the soul of simplicity and frankness.
+
+"Days ago I told him I cared for him," she went on. "But I forbade him to speak
+of it to me. He promised. I wanted to wait till after the race--till after I
+had found courage to confess to you. He broke his word. . . . Today when he
+put me up on Wildfire he--he suddenly lost his head."
+
+The slow scarlet welled into Lucy's face and her eyes grew shamed, but bravely
+she kept facing her father.
+
+"He--he pulled me off--he hugged me--he k-kissed me. . . . Oh, it was
+dreadful--shameful! . . . Then I gave him back--some--something he had given
+me. And I told him I--I hated him--and I told him, 'No!'"
+
+"But you rode his hoss in the race," said Bostil.
+
+Lucy bowed her head at that. "I--I couldn't resist!"
+
+Bostil stroked the bright head. What a quandary for a thick-skulled old
+horseman! "Wal, it seems to me Slone didn't act so bad, considerin'. You'd
+told him you cared for him. If it wasn't for thet! . . . I remember I did much
+the same to your mother. She raised the devil, but I never seen as she cared
+any less for me."
+
+"I'll never forgive him," Lucy cried, passionately. "I hate him. A man who
+breaks his word in one thing will do it in another."
+
+Bostil sadly realized that his little girl had reached womanhood and love, and
+with them the sweet, bitter pangs of life. He realized also that here was a
+crisis when a word--an unjust or lying word from him would forever ruin any
+hope that might still exist for Slone. Bostil realized this acutely, but the
+realization was not even a temptation.
+
+"Wal, listen. I'm bound to confess your new rider is sure swift. An', Lucy,
+to-day if he hadn't been as swift with a rope as he is in love--wal, your old
+daddy might be dead!"
+
+She grew as white as her dress. "Oh, Dad! I KNEW something had happened," she
+cried, reaching for him.
+
+Then Bostil told her how Dick Sears had menaced him--how Slone had foiled the
+horse-thief. He told the story bluntly, but eloquently, with all a rider's
+praise. Lucy rose with hands pressed against her breast. When had Bostil seen
+eyes like those--dark, shining, wonderful? Ah! he remembered her mother's
+once--only once, as a girl.
+
+Then Lucy kissed him and without a word fled from the room.
+
+Bostil stared after her. "D--n me!" he swore, as he threw a boot against the
+wall. "I reckon I'll never let her marry Slone, but I just had to tell her
+what I think of him!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Slone lay wide awake under an open window, watching the stars glimmer through
+the rustling foliage of the cottonwoods. Somewhere a lonesome hound bayed.
+Very faintly came the silvery tinkle of running water.
+
+For five days Slone had been a guest of Bostil's, and the whole five days had
+been torment.
+
+On the morning of the day after the races Lucy had confronted him. Would he
+ever forget her eyes--her voice? "Bless you for saving my dad!" she had said.
+"It was brave. . . . But don't let dad fool you. Don't believe in his
+kindness. Above all, don't ride for him! He only wants Wildfire, and if he
+doesn't get him he'll hate you!"
+
+That speech of Lucy's had made the succeeding days hard for Slone. Bostil
+loaded him with gifts and kindnesses, and never ceased importuning him to
+accept his offers. But for Lucy, Slone would have accepted. It was she who
+cast the first doubt of Bostil into his mind. Lucy averred that her father was
+splendid and good in every way except in what pertained to fast horses; there
+he was impossible.
+
+The great stallion that Slone had nearly sacrificed his life to catch was like
+a thorn in the rider's flesh. Slone lay there in the darkness, restless, hot,
+rolling from side to side, or staring out at the star-studded sky--miserably
+unhappy all on account of that horse. Almost he hated him. What pride he had
+felt in Wildfire! How he had gloried in the gift of the stallion to Lucy!
+Then, on the morning of the race had come that unexpected, incomprehensible
+and wild act of which he had been guilty. Yet not to save his life, his soul,
+could he regret it! Was it he who had been responsible, or an unknown savage
+within him? He had kept his word to Lucy, when day after day he had burned
+with love until that fatal moment when the touch of her, as he lifted her to
+Wildfire's saddle, had made a madman out of him. He had swept her into his
+arms and held her breast to his, her face before him, and he had kissed the
+sweet, parting lips till he was blind.
+
+Then he had learned what a little fury she was. Then he learned how he had
+fallen, what he had forfeited. In his amaze at himself, in his humility and
+shame, he had not been able to say a word in his own defense. She did not know
+yet that his act had been ungovernable and that he had not known what he was
+doing till too late. And she had finished with: "I'll ride Wildfire in the
+race--but I won't have him--and I won't have YOU! NO!"
+
+She had the steel and hardness of her father.
+
+For Slone, the watching of that race was a blend of rapture and despair. He
+lived over in mind all the time between the race and this hour when he lay
+there sleepless and full of remorse. His mind was like a racecourse with many
+races; and predominating in it was that swift, strange, stinging race of his
+memory of Lucy Bostil's looks and actions.
+
+What an utter fool he was to believe she had meant those tender words when,
+out there under the looming monuments, she had accepted Wildfire! She had been
+an impulsive child. Her scorn and fury that morning of the race had left
+nothing for him except footless fancies. She had mistaken love of Wildfire for
+love of him. No, his case was hopeless with Lucy, and if it had not been so
+Bostil would have made it hopeless. Yet there were things Slone could not
+fathom--the wilful, contradictory, proud and cold and unaccountably sweet
+looks and actions of the girl. They haunted Slone. They made him conscious he
+had a mind and tortured him with his development. But he had no experience
+with girls to compare with what was happening now. It seemed that accepted
+fact and remembered scorn and cold certainty were somehow at variance with
+hitherto unknown intuitions and instincts. Lucy avoided him, if by chance she
+encountered him alone. When Bostil or Aunt Jane or any one else was present
+Lucy was kind, pleasant, agreeable. What made her flush red at sight of him
+and then, pale? Why did she often at table or in the big living-room softly
+brush against him when it seemed she could have avoided that? Many times he
+had felt some inconceivable drawing power, and looked up to find her eyes upon
+him, strange eyes full of mystery, that were suddenly averted. Was there any
+meaning attachable to the fact that his room was kept so tidy and neat, that
+every day something was added to its comfort or color, that he found fresh
+flowers whenever he returned, or a book, or fruit, or a dainty morsel to eat,
+and once a bunch of Indian paint-brush, wild flowers of the desert that Lucy
+knew he loved? Most of all, it was Lucy's eyes which haunted Slone--eyes that
+had changed, darkened, lost their audacious flash, and yet seemed all the
+sweeter. The glances he caught, which he fancied were stolen--and then
+derided his fancy--thrilled him to his heart. Thus Slone had spent waking
+hours by day and night, mad with love and remorse, tormented one hour by
+imagined grounds for hope and resigned to despair the next.
+
+Upon the sixth morning of his stay at Bostil's Slone rose with something of
+his former will reasserting itself. He could not remain in Bostil's home any
+longer unless he accepted Bostil's offer, and this was not to be thought of.
+With a wrench Slone threw off the softening indecision and hurried out to find
+Bostil while the determination was hot.
+
+Bostil was in the corral with Wildfire. This was the second time Slone had
+found him there. Wildfire appeared to regard Bostil with a much better favor
+than he did his master. As Slone noted this a little heat stole along his
+veins. That was gall to a rider.
+
+"I like your hoss," said Bostil, with gruff frankness. But a tinge of red
+showed under his beard.
+
+"Bostil, I'm sorry I can't take you up on the job," rejoined Slone, swiftly.
+"It's been hard for me to decide. You've been good to me. I'm grateful. But
+it's time I was tellin' you."
+
+"Why can't you?" demanded Bostil, straightening up with a glint in his big
+eyes. It was the first time he had asked Slone that.
+
+"I can't ride for you," replied Slone, briefly.
+
+"Anythin' to do with Lucy?" queried Bostil.
+
+"How so?" returned Slone, conscious of more heat.
+
+"Wal, you was sweet on her an' she wouldn't have you," replied Bostil.
+
+Slone felt the blood swell and boil in his veins. This Bostil could say as
+harsh and hard things as repute gave him credit for.
+
+"Yes, I AM sweet on Lucy, an' she won't have me," said Slone, steadily. "I
+asked her to let me come to you an' tell you I wanted to marry her. But she
+wouldn't."
+
+"Wal, it's just as good you didn't come, because I might. . . ." Bostil broke
+off his speech and began again. "You don't lack nerve, Slone. What'd you have
+to offer Lucy?"
+
+"Nothin' except--But that doesn't matter," replied Slone, cut to the quick by
+Bostil's scorn. "I'm glad you know, an' so much for that."
+
+Bostil turned to look at Wildfire once more, and he looked long. When he faced
+around again he was another man. Slone felt the powerful driving passion of
+this old horse-trader.
+
+"Slone, I'll give you pick of a hundred mustangs an' a thousand dollars for
+Wildfire!"
+
+So he unmasked his power in the face of a beggarly rider! Though it struck
+Slone like a thunderbolt, he felt amused. But he did not show that. Bostil had
+only one possession, among all his uncounted wealth, that could win Wildfire
+from his owner.
+
+"No," said Slone, briefly.
+
+"I'll double it," returned Bostil, just as briefly.
+
+"No!"
+
+"I'll--"
+
+"Save your breath, Bostil," flashed Slone. "You don't know me. But let me tell
+you--you CAN'T BUY my horse!"
+
+The great veins swelled and churned in Bostil's bull neck; a thick and ugly
+contortion worked in his face; his eyes reflected a sick rage.
+
+Slone saw that two passions shook Bostil--one, a bitter, terrible
+disappointment, and the other, the passion of a man who could not brook being
+crossed. It appeared to Slone that the best thing he could do was to get away
+quickly, and to this end he led Wildfire out of the corral to the stable
+courtyard, and there quickly saddled him. Then he went into another corral for
+his other horse, Nagger, and, bringing him out, returned to find Bostil had
+followed as far as the court. The old man's rage apparently had passed or had
+been smothered.
+
+"See here," he began, in thick voice, "don't be a d--- fool an' ruin your
+chance in life. I'll--"
+
+"Bostil, my one chance was ruined--an' you know who did it," replied Slone, as
+he gathered Nagger's rope and Wildfire's bridle together. "I've no hard
+feelin's. . . . But I can't sell you my horse. An' I can't ride for
+you--because--well, because it would breed trouble."
+
+"An' what kind?" queried Bostil.
+
+Holley and Farlane and Van, with several other riders, had come up and were
+standing open-mouthed. Slone gathered from their manner and expression that
+anything might happen with Bostil in such a mood.
+
+"We'd be racin' the King an' Wildfire, wouldn't we?" replied Slone.
+
+"An' supposin' we would?" returned Bostil, ominously. His huge frame vibrated
+with a slight start.
+
+"Wildfire would run off with your favorite--an' you wouldn't like that,"
+answered Slone. It was his rider's hot blood that prompted him to launch this
+taunt. He could not help it.
+
+"You wild-hoss chaser," roared Bostil, "your Wildfire may be a bloody killer,
+but he can't beat the King in a race!"
+
+"Excuse ME, Bostil, but Wildfire did beat the King!"
+
+This was only adding fuel to the fire. Slone saw Holley making signs that must
+have meant silence would be best. But Slone's blood was up. Bostil had rubbed
+him the wrong way.
+
+"You're a lair!" declared Bostil, with a tremendous stride forward. Slone saw
+then how dangerous the man really was. "It was no race. Your wild hoss knocked
+the King off the track."
+
+"Sage King had the lead, didn't he? Why didn't he keep it?"
+
+Bostil was like a furious, intractable child whose favorite precious treasure
+had been broken; and he burst out into a torrent of incoherent speech,
+apparently reasons why this and that were so. Slone did not make out what
+Bostil meant and he did not care. When Bostil got out of breath Slone said:
+
+"We're both wastin' talk. An' I'm not wantin' you to call me a liar twice.
+. . . Put your rider up on the King an' come on, right now. I'll--"
+
+"Slone, shut up an' chase yourself," interrupted Holley
+
+"You go to h--l!" returned Slone, coolly.
+
+There was a moment's silence, in which Slone took Holley's measure. The
+hawk-eyed old rider may have been square, but he was then thinking only of
+Bostil.
+
+"What am I up, against here?" demanded Slone. "Am I goin' to be shot because
+I'm takin' my own part? Holley, you an' the rest of your pards are all afraid
+of this old devil. But I'm not--an' you stay out of this."
+
+"Wal, son, you needn't git riled," replied Holley, placatingly. "I was only
+tryin' to stave off talk you might be sorry for."
+
+"Sorry for nothin'! I'm goin' to make this great horse-trader, this rich an'
+mighty rancher, this judge of grand horses, this BOSTIL! . . . I'm goin' to
+make him race the King or take water!" Then Slone turned to Bostil. That
+worthy evidently had been stunned by the rider who dared call him to his face.
+"Come on! Fetch the King! Let your own riders judge the race!"
+
+Bostil struggled both to control himself and to speak. "Naw! I ain't goin' to
+see thet red hoss-killer jump the King again!"
+
+"Bah! you're afraid. You know there'd be no girl on his back. You know he can
+outrun the King an' that's why you want to buy him."
+
+Slone caught his breath then. He realized suddenly, at Bostil's paling face,
+that perhaps he had dared too much. Yet, maybe the truth flung into this hard
+old rider's teeth was what he needed more than anything else. Slone divined,
+rather than saw, that he had done an unprecedented thing.
+
+"I'll go now, Bostil."
+
+Slone nodded a good-by to the riders, and, turning away, he led the two horses
+down the lane toward the house. It scarcely needed sight of Lucy under the
+cottonwoods to still his anger and rouse his regret. Lucy saw him coming, and,
+as usual, started to avoid meeting him, when sight of the horses, or something
+else, caused her to come toward him instead.
+
+Slone halted. Both Wildfire and Nagger whinnied at sight of the girl. Lucy
+took one flashing glance at them, at Slone, and then she evidently guessed
+what was amiss.
+
+"Lucy, I've done it now--played hob, sure," said Slone.
+
+"What?" she cried.
+
+"I called your dad--called him good an' hard--an' he--he--"
+
+"Lin! Oh, don't say Dad." Lucy's face whitened and she put a swift hand upon
+his arm--a touch that thrilled him. "Lin! there's blood--on your face.
+Don't--don't tell me Dad hit you?"
+
+"I should say not," declared Slone, quickly lifting his hand to his face.
+"Must be from my cut, that blood. I barked my hand holdin' Wildfire."
+
+"Oh! I--I was sick with--with--" Lucy faltered and broke off, and then drew
+back quickly, as if suddenly conscious of her actions and words.
+
+Then Slone began to relate everything that had been said, and before he
+concluded his story his heart gave a wild throb at the telltale face and eyes
+of the girl.
+
+"You said that to Dad!" she cried, in amaze and fear and admiration. "Oh, Dad
+richly deserved it! But I wish you hadn't. Oh, I wish you hadn't!"
+
+"Why?" asked Slone.
+
+But she did not answer that. "Where are you going?" she questioned.
+
+"Come to think of that, I don't know," replied Slone, blankly. "I started back
+to fetch my things out of my room. That's as far as my muddled thoughts got."
+
+"Your things? . . . Oh!" Suddenly she grew intensely white. The little
+freckles that had been so indistinct stood out markedly, and it was as if she
+had never had any tan. One brown hand went to her breast, the other fluttered
+to his arm again. "You mean to--to go away--for good."
+
+"Sure. What else can I do?"
+
+"Lin! . . . Oh, there comes Dad! He mustn't see me. I must run. . . . Lin,
+don't leave Bostil's Ford--don't go--DON'T!"
+
+Then she flew round the corner of the house, to disappear. Slone stood there
+transfixed and thrilling. Even Bostil's heavy tread did not break the trance,
+and a meeting would have been unavoidable had not Bostil turned down the path
+that led to the back of the house. Slone, with a start collecting his
+thoughts, hurried into the little room that had been his and gathered up his
+few belongings. He was careful to leave behind the gifts of guns, blankets,
+gloves, and other rider's belongings which Bostil had presented to him. Thus
+laden, he went outside and, tingling with emotions utterly sweet and
+bewildering, he led the horses down into the village.
+
+Slone went down to Brackton's, and put the horses into a large, high-fenced
+pasture adjoining Brackton's house. Slone felt reasonably sure his horses
+would be safe there, but he meant to keep a mighty close watch on them. And
+old Brackton, as if he read Slone's mind, said this: "Keep your eye on thet
+daffy boy, Joel Creech. He hangs round my place, sleeps out somewheres, an'
+he's crazy about hosses."
+
+Slone did not need any warning like that, nor any information to make him
+curious regarding young Creech. Lucy had seen to that, and, in fact, Slone was
+anxious to meet this half-witted fellow who had so grievously offended and
+threatened Lucy. That morning, however, Creech did not put in an appearance.
+The village had nearly returned to its normal state now, and the sleepy tenor
+of its way. The Indians, had been the last to go, but now none remained. The
+days were hot while the sun stayed high, and only the riders braved its heat.
+
+The morning, however, did not pass without an interesting incident. Brackton
+approached Slone with an offer that he take charge of the freighting between
+the Ford and Durango. "What would I do with Wildfire?" was Slone's questioning
+reply, and Brackton held up his hands. A later incident earned more of Slone's
+attention. He had observed a man in Brackton's store, and it chanced that this
+man heard Slone's reply to Brackton's offer, and he said: "You'll sure need to
+corral thet red stallion. Grandest hoss I ever seen!"
+
+That praise won Slone, and he engaged in conversation with the man, who said
+his name was Vorhees. It developed soon that Vorhees owned a little house, a
+corral, and a patch of ground on a likely site up under the bluff, and he was
+anxious to sell cheap because he had a fine opportunity at Durango, where his
+people lived. What interested Slone most was the man's remark that he had a
+corral which could not be broken into. The price he asked was ridiculously low
+if the property was worth anything. An idea flashed across Slone's mind. He
+went up to Vorhees's place and was much pleased with everything, especially
+the corral, which had been built by a man who feared horse-thieves as much as
+Bostil. The view from the door of the little cabin was magnificent beyond
+compare. Slone remembered Lucy's last words. They rang like bells in his ears.
+"Don't go--don't!" They were enough to chain him to Bostil's Ford until the
+crack of doom. He dared not dream of what they meant. He only listened to
+their music as they pealed over and over in his ears.
+
+"Vorhees, are you serious?" he asked. "The money you ask is little enough."
+
+"It's enough an' to spare," replied the man. "An' I'd take it as a favor of
+you."
+
+"Well, I'll go you," said Slone, and he laughed a little irrationally. "Only
+you needn't tell right away that I bought you out."
+
+The deal was consummated, leaving Slone still with half of the money that had
+been his prize in the race. He felt elated. He was rich. He owned two
+horses--one the grandest in all the uplands, the other the faithfulest--and he
+owned a neat little cabin where it was a joy to sit and look out, and a corral
+which would let him sleep at night, and he had money to put into supplies and
+furnishings, and a garden. After he drank out of the spring that bubbled from
+under the bluff he told himself it alone was worth the money.
+
+"Looks right down on Bostil's place," Slone soliloquized, with glee. "Won't he
+just be mad! An' Lucy! . . . Whatever's she goin' to think?"
+
+The more Slone looked around and thought, the more he became convinced that
+good fortune had knocked at his door at last. And when he returned to
+Brackton's he was in an exultant mood. The old storekeeper gave him a nudge
+and pointed underhand to a young man of ragged aspect sitting gloomily on a
+box. Slone recognized Joel Creech. The fellow surely made a pathetic sight,
+and Slone pitied him. He looked needy and hungry.
+
+"Say," said Slone, impulsively, "want to help me carry some grub an' stuff?"
+
+"Howdy!" replied Creech, raising his head. "Sure do."
+
+Slone sustained the queerest shock of his life when he met the gaze of those
+contrasting eyes. Yet he did not believe that his strange feeling came from
+sight of different-colored eyes. There was an instinct or portent in that
+meeting.
+
+He purchased a bill of goods from Brackton, and, with Creech helping, carried
+it up to the cabin under the bluff. Three trips were needed to pack up all the
+supplies, and meanwhile Creech had but few words to say, and these of no
+moment. Slone offered him money, which he refused.
+
+"I'll help you fix up, an' eat a bite," he said. "Nice up hyar."
+
+He seemed rational enough and certainly responded to kindness. Slone found
+that Vorhees had left the cabin so clean there was little cleaning to do. An
+open fireplace of stone required some repair and there was wood to cut.
+
+"Joel, you start a fire while I go down after my horses," said Slone.
+
+Young Creech nodded and Slone left him there. It was not easy to catch
+Wildfire, nor any easier to get him into the new corral; but at last Slone saw
+him safely there. And the bars and locks on the gate might have defied any
+effort to open or break them quickly. Creech was standing in the doorway,
+watching the horses, and somehow Slone saw, or imagined he saw, that Creech
+wore a different aspect.
+
+"Grand wild hoss! He did what Blue was a-goin' to do--beat thet there d--d
+Bostil's King!"
+
+Creech wagged his head. He was gloomy and strange. His eyes were unpleasant to
+look into. His face changed. And he mumbled. Slone pitied him the more, but
+wished to see the last of him. Creech stayed on, however, and grew stranger
+and more talkative during the meal. He repeated things often--talked
+disconnectedly, and gave other indications that he was not wholly right in his
+mind. Yet Slone suspected that Creech's want of balance consisted only in what
+concerned horses and the Bostils. And Slone, wanting to learn all he could,
+encouraged Creech to talk about his father and the racers and the river and
+boat, and finally Bostil.
+
+Slone became convinced that, whether young Creech was half crazy or not, he
+knew his father's horses were doomed, and that the boat at the ferry had been
+cut adrift. Slone could not understand why he was convinced, but he was.
+Finally Creech told how he had gone down to the river only a day before; how
+he had found the flood still raging, but much lower; how he had worked round
+the cliffs and had pulled up the rope cables to find they had been cut.
+
+"You see, Bostil cut them when he didn't need to," continued Creech, shrewdly.
+"But he didn't know the flood was comin' down so quick. He was afeared we'd
+come across an' git the boat thet night. An' he meant to take away them cut
+cables. But he hadn't no time."
+
+"Bostil?" queried Slone, as he gazed hard at Creech. The fellow had told that
+rationally enough. Slone wondered if Bostil could have been so base. No! and
+yet--when it came to horses Bostil was scarcely human.
+
+Slone's query served to send Creech off on another tangent which wound up in
+dark, mysterious threats. Then Slone caught the name of Lucy. It abruptly
+killed his sympathy for Creech.
+
+"What's the girl got to do with it?" he demanded, angrily. "If you want to
+talk to me don't use her name."
+
+"I'll use her name when I want," shouted Creech.
+
+"Not to me!"
+
+"Yes, to you, mister. I ain't carin' a d--n fer you!"
+
+"You crazy loon!" exclaimed Slone, with impatience and disgust added to anger.
+"What's the use of being decent to you?"
+
+Creech crouched low, his hands digging like claws into the table, as if he
+were making ready to spring. At that instant he was hideous.
+
+"Crazy, am I?" he yelled. "Mebbe not d--n crazy! I kin tell you're gone on
+Lucy Bostil! I seen you with her out there in the rocks the mornin' of the
+race. I seen what you did to her. An' I'm a-goin' to tell it! . . . An' I'm
+a-goin' to ketch Lucy Bostil an' strip her naked, an' when I git through with
+her I'll tie her on a hoss an' fire the grass! By Gawd! I am!" Livid and wild,
+he breathed hard as he got up, facing Slone malignantly.
+
+"Crazy or not, here goes!" muttered Slone, grimly; and, leaping up, with one
+blow he knocked Creech half out of the door, and then kicked him the rest of
+the way. "Go on and have a fit!" cried Slone. "I'm liable to kill you if you
+don't have one!"
+
+Creech got up and ran down the path, turning twice on the way. Then he
+disappeared among the trees.
+
+Slone sat down. "Lost my temper again!" he said. "This has been a day. Guess
+I'd better cool off right now an' stay here. . . . That poor devil! Maybe he's
+not so crazy. But he's wilder than an Indian. I must warn Lucy. . . . Lord! I
+wonder if Bostil could have held back repairin' that boat, an' then cut it
+loose? I wonder? Yesterday I'd have sworn never. To-day--"
+
+Slone drove the conclusion of that thought out of his consciousness before he
+wholly admitted it. Then he set to work cutting the long grass from the wet
+and shady nooks under the bluff where the spring made the ground rich. He
+carried an armful down to the corral. Nagger was roaming around outside,
+picking grass for himself. Wildfire snorted as always when he saw Slone, and
+Slone as always, when time permitted, tried to coax the stallion to him. He
+had never succeeded, nor did he this time. When he left the bundle of grass on
+the ground and went outside Wildfire readily came for it.
+
+"You're that tame, anyhow, you hungry red devil," said Slone, jealously.
+Wildfire would take a bunch of grass from Lucy Bostil's hand. Slone's feelings
+had undergone some reaction, though he still loved the horse. But it was love
+mixed with bitterness. More than ever he made up his mind that Lucy should
+have Wildfire. Then he walked around his place, planning the work he meant to
+start at once.
+
+Several days slipped by with Slone scarcely realizing how they flew.
+Unaccustomed labor tired him so that he went to bed early and slept like a
+log. If it had not been for the ever-present worry and suspense and longing,
+in regard to Lucy, he would have been happier than ever he could remember.
+Almost at once he had become attached to his little home, and the more he
+labored to make it productive and comfortable the stronger grew his
+attachment. Practical toil was not conducive to daydreaming, so Slone felt a
+loss of something vague and sweet. Many times he caught himself watching with
+eager eyes for a glimpse of Lucy Bostil down there among the cottonwoods.
+Still, he never saw her, and, in fact, he saw so few villagers that the place
+began to have a loneliness which endeared it to him the more. Then the view
+down the gray valley to the purple monuments was always thrillingly memorable
+to Slone. It was out there Lucy had saved his horse and his life. His keen
+desert gaze could make out even at that distance the great, dark monument,
+gold-crowned, in the shadow of which he had heard Lucy speak words that had
+transformed life for him. He would ride out there some day. The spell of those
+looming grand shafts of colored rock was still strong upon him.
+
+One morning Slone had a visitor--old Brackton. Slone's cordiality died on his
+lips before it was half uttered. Brackton's former friendliness was not in
+evidence. Indeed, he looked at Slone with curiosity and disfavor.
+
+"Howdy, Slone! I jest wanted to see what you was doin' up hyar," he said.
+
+Slone spread his hands and explained in few words.
+
+"So you took over the place, hey? We all figgered thet. But Vorhees was mum.
+Fact is, he was sure mysterious." Brackton sat down and eyed Slone with
+interest. "Folks are talkin' a lot about you," he said, bluntly.
+
+"Is that so?"
+
+"You 'pear to be a pretty mysterious kind of a feller, Slone. I kind of took a
+shine to you at first, an' thet's why I come up hyar to tell you it'd be wise
+fer you to vamoose."
+
+"What!" exclaimed Slone.
+
+Brackton repeated substantially what he had said, then, pausing an instant,
+continued: "I've no call to give you a hunch, but I'll do it jest because I
+did like you fust off."
+
+The old man seemed fussy and nervous and patronizing and disparaging all at
+once.
+
+"What'd you beat up thet poor Joel Creech fer?" demanded Brackton.
+
+"He got what he deserved," replied Slone, and the memory, coming on the head
+of this strange attitude of Brackton's, roused Slone's temper.
+
+"Wal, Joel tells some queer things about you--fer instance, how you took
+advantage of little Lucy Bostil, grabbin' her an' maulin' her the way Joel
+seen you."
+
+"D--n the loon!" muttered Slone, rising to pace the path.
+
+"Wal, Joel's a bit off, but he's not loony all the time. He's seen you an'
+he's tellin' it. When Bostil hears it you'd better be acrost the canyon!"
+
+Slone felt the hot, sick rush of blood to his face, and humiliation and rage
+overtook him.
+
+"Joel's down at my house. He had fits after you beat him, an' he 'ain't got
+over them yet. But he could blab to the riders. Van Sickle's lookin' fer you.
+An' to-day when I was alone with Joel he told me some more queer things about
+you. I shut him up quick. But I ain't guaranteein' I can keep him shut up."
+
+"I'll bet you I shut him up," declared Slone. "What more did the fool say?"
+
+"Slone, hev you been round these hyar parts---down among the monuments--fer
+any considerable time?" queried Brackton.
+
+"Yes, I have--several weeks out there, an' about ten days or so around the
+Ford."
+
+"Where was you the night of the flood?"
+
+The shrewd scrutiny of the old man, the suspicion, angered Slone.
+
+"If it's any of your mix, I was out on the slope among the rocks. I heard that
+flood comin' down long before it got here," replied Slone, deliberately.
+
+Brackton averted his gaze, and abruptly rose as if the occasion was ended.
+"Wal, take my hunch an' leave!" he said, turning away.
+
+"Brackton, if you mean well, I'm much obliged," returned Slone, slowly,
+ponderingly. "But I'll not take the hunch."
+
+"Suit yourself," added Brackton, coldly, and he went away.
+
+Slone watched him go down the path and disappear in the lane of cottonwoods.
+
+"I'll be darned!" muttered Slone. "Funny old man. Maybe Creech's not the only
+loony one hereabouts."
+
+Slone tried to laugh off the effect of the interview, but it persisted and
+worried him all day. After supper he decided to walk down into the village,
+and would have done so but for the fact that he saw a man climbing his path.
+When he recognized the rider Holley he sensed trouble, and straightway he
+became gloomy. Bostil's right-hand man could not call on him for any friendly
+reason. Holley came up slowly, awkwardly, after the manner of a rider unused
+to walking. Slone had built a little porch on the front of his cabin and a
+bench, which he had covered with goatskins. It struck him a little strangely
+that he should bend over to rearrange these skins just as Holley approached
+the porch.
+
+"Howdy, son!" was the rider's drawled remark. "Sure makes--me--puff to
+climb--up this mountain."
+
+Slone turned instantly, surprised at the friendly tone, doubting his own ears,
+and wanting to verify them. He was the more surprised to see Holley
+unmistakably amiable.
+
+"Hello, Holley! How are you?" he replied. "Have a seat."
+
+"Wal, I'm right spry fer an old bird. But I can't climb wuth a d--n . . . .
+Say, this here beats Bostil's view."
+
+"Yes, it's fine," replied Slone, rather awkwardly, as he sat down on the porch
+step. What could Holley want with him? This old rider was above curiosity or
+gossip.
+
+"Slone, you ain't holdin' it ag'in me--thet I tried to shut you up the other
+day?" he drawled, with dry frankness.
+
+"Why, no, Holley, I'm not. I saw your point. You were right. But Bostil made
+me mad."
+
+"Sure! He'd make anybody mad. I've seen riders bite themselves, they was so
+mad at Bostil. You called him, an' you sure tickled all the boys. But you hurt
+yourself, fer Bostil owns an' runs this here Ford."
+
+"So I've discovered," replied Slone.
+
+"You got yourself in bad right off, fer Bostil has turned the riders ag'in
+you, an' this here punchin' of Creech has turned the village folks ag'in you.
+What'd pitch into him fer?"
+
+Slone caught the kindly interest and intent of the rider, and it warmed him as
+Brackton's disapproval had alienated him.
+
+"Wal, I reckon I'd better tell you," drawled Holley, as Slone hesitated, "thet
+Lucy wants to know IF you beat up Joel an' WHY you did."
+
+"Holley! Did she ask you to find out?"
+
+"She sure did. The girl's worried these days, Slone. . . . You see, you
+haven't been around, an' you don't know what's comin' off."
+
+"Brackton was here to-day an' he told me a good deal. I'm worried, too," said
+Slone, dejectedly.
+
+"Thet hoss of yours, Wildfire, he's enough to make you hated in Bostil's camp,
+even if you hadn't made a fool of yourself, which you sure have."
+
+Slone dropped his head as admission.
+
+"What Creech swears he seen you do to Miss Lucy, out there among the rocks,
+where you was hid with Wildfire--is there any truth in thet?" asked Holley,
+earnestly. "Tell me, Slone. Folks believe it. An' it's hurt you at the Ford.
+Bostil hasn't heard it yet, an' Lucy she doesn't know. But I'm figgerin' thet
+you punched Joel because he throwed it in your face."
+
+"He did, an' I lambasted him," replied Slone, with force.
+
+"You did right. But what I want to know, is it true what Joel seen?"
+
+"It's true, Holley. But what I did isn't so bad--so bad as he'd make it look."
+
+"Wal, I knowed thet. I knowed fer a long time how Lucy cares fer you,"
+returned the old rider, kindly.
+
+Slone raised his head swiftly, incredulously. "Holley! You can't be serious."
+
+"Wal, I am. I've been sort of a big brother to Lucy Bostil for eighteen years.
+I carried her in these here hands when she weighed no more 'n my spurs. I
+taught her how to ride--what she knows about hosses. An' she knows more 'n her
+dad. I taught her to shoot. I know her better 'n anybody. An' lately she's
+been different. She's worried an' unhappy."
+
+"But Holley, all that--it doesn't seem--"
+
+"I reckon not," went on Holley, as Slone halted. "I think she cares fer you.
+An' I'm your friend, Slone. You're goin' to buck up ag'in some hell round here
+sooner or later. An' you'll need a friend."
+
+"Thanks--Holley," replied Slone, unsteadily. He thrilled under the iron grasp
+of the rider's hard hand.
+
+"You've got another friend you can gamble on," said Holley, significantly.
+
+"Another! Who?"
+
+"Lucy Bostil. An' don't you fergit thet. I'll bet she'll raise more trouble
+than Bostil when she hears what Joel Creech is tellin'. Fer she's bound to
+hear it. Van Sickle swears he's a-goin' to tell her an' then beat you up with
+a quirt."
+
+"He is, is he?" snapped Slone, darkly.
+
+"I've a hunch Lucy's guessed why you punched Joel. But she wants to know fer
+sure. Now, Slone, I'll tell her why."
+
+"Oh, don't!" said Slone, involuntarily.
+
+"Wal, it'll be better comin' from you an' me. Take my word fer thet. I'll
+prepare Lucy. An' she's as good a scrapper as Bostil, any day."
+
+"It all scares me," replied Slone. He did feel panicky, and that was from
+thoughts of what shame might befall Lucy. The cold sweat oozed out of every
+pore. What might not Bostil do? "Holley, I love the girl. So I--I didn't
+insult her. Bostil will never understand. An' what's he goin' to do when he
+finds out?"
+
+"Wal, let's hope you won't git any wuss'n you give Joel."
+
+"Let Bostil beat me!" ejaculated Slone. "I think I'm willin--now--the--way I
+feel. But I've a temper, and Bostil rubs me the wrong way."
+
+"Wall leave your gun home, an' fight Bostil. You're pretty husky. Sure he'll
+lick you, but mebbe you could give the old cuss a black eye." Holley laughed
+as if the idea gave him infinite pleasure.
+
+"Fight Bostil? . . . Lucy would hate me!" cried Slone.
+
+"Nix! You don't know thet kid. If the old man goes after you Lucy'll care more
+fer you. She's jest like him in some ways." Holley pulled out a stubby black
+pipe and, filling and lighting it, he appeared to grow more thoughtful. "It
+wasn't only Lucy thet sent me up here to see you. Bostil had been pesterin' me
+fer days. But I kept fightin' shy of it till Lucy got hold of me."
+
+"Bostil sent you? Why?"
+
+"Reckon you can guess. He can't sleep, thinkin' about your red hoss. None of
+us ever seen Bostil have sich a bad case. He raised Sage King. But he's always
+been crazy fer a great wild stallion. An' here you come along--an' your hoss
+jumps the King--an' there's trouble generally."
+
+"Holley, do you think Wildfire can beat Sage King?" asked Slone, eagerly.
+
+"Reckon I do. Lucy says so, an' I'll back her any day. But, son, I ain't
+paradin' what I think. I'd git in bad myself. Farlane an' the other boys,
+they're with Bostil. Van he's to blame fer thet. He's takin' a dislike to you,
+right off. An' what he tells Bostil an' the boys about thet race don't agree
+with what Lucy tells me. Lucy says Wildfire ran fiery an' cranky at the start.
+He wanted to run round an' kill the King instead of racin'. So he was three
+lengths behind when Macomber dropped the flag. Lucy says the King got into his
+stride. She knows. An' there Wildfire comes from behind an' climbs all over
+the King! . . . Van tells a different story."
+
+"It came off just as Lucy told you," declared Slone. "I saw every move."
+
+"Wal, thet's neither here nor there. What you're up ag'in is this. Bostil is
+sore since you called him. But he holds himself in because he hasn't given up
+hope of gittin' Wildfire. An', Slone, you're sure wise, ain't you, thet if
+Bostil doesn't buy him you can't stay on here?"
+
+"I'm wise. But I won't sell Wildfire," replied Slone, doggedly.
+
+"Wal, I'd never wasted my breath tellin' you all this if I hadn't figgered
+about Lucy. You've got her to think of."
+
+Slone turned on Holley passionately. "You keep hintin' there's a hope for me,
+when I know there's none!"
+
+"You're only a boy," replied Holley. "Son, where there's life there's hope. I
+ain't a-goin' to tell you agin thet I know Lucy Bostil."
+
+Slone could not stand nor walk nor keep still. He was shaking from head to
+foot.
+
+"Wildfire's not mine to sell. He's Lucy's!" confessed Slone.
+
+"The devil you say!" ejaculated Holley, and he nearly dropped his pipe.
+
+"I gave Wildfire to her. She accepted him. It was DONE. Then--then I lost my
+head an' made her mad. . . . An'--she said she'd ride him in the race, but
+wouldn't keep him. But he IS hers."
+
+"Oho! I see. Slone, I was goin' to advise you to sell Wildfire--all on
+account of Lucy. You're young an' you'd have a big start in life if you would.
+But Lucy's your girl an' you give her the hoss. . . . Thet settles thet!"
+
+"If I go away from here an' leave Wildfire for Lucy--do you think she could
+keep him? Wouldn't Bostil take him from her?"
+
+"Wal, son, if he tried thet on Lucy she'd jump Wildfire an' hit your trail an'
+hang on to it till she found you."
+
+"What'll you tell Bostil?" asked Slone, half beside himself.
+
+"I'm consarned if I know," replied Holley. "Mebbe I'll think of some idee.
+I'll go back now. An' say, son, I reckon you'd better hang close to home. If
+you meet Bostil down in the village you two'd clash sure. I'll come up soon,
+but it'll be after dark."
+
+"Holley, all this is--is good of you," said Slone. "I--I'll--"
+
+"Shut up, son," interrupted the rider, dryly. "Thet's your only weakness, so
+far as I can see. You say too much."
+
+Holley started down then, his long, clinking spurs digging into the steep
+path. He left Slone a prey to deep thoughts at once anxious and dreamy.
+
+Next day Slone worked hard all day, looking forward to nightfall, expecting
+that Holley would come up. He tried to resist the sweet and tantalizing
+anticipation of a message from Lucy, but in vain. The rider had immeasurably
+uplifted Slone's hope that Lucy, at least, cared for him. Not for a moment all
+day could Slone drive away the hope. At twilight he was too eager to eat--too
+obsessed to see the magnificent sunset. But Holley did not come, and Slone
+went to bed late, half sick with disappointment.
+
+The next day was worse. Slone found work irksome, yet he held to it. On the
+third day he rested and dreamed, and grew doubtful again, and then moody. On
+the fourth day Slone found he needed supplies that he must obtain from the
+store. He did not forget Holley's warning, but he disregarded it, thinking
+there would scarcely be a chance of meeting Bostil at midday.
+
+There were horses standing, bridles down, before Brackton's place, and riders
+lounging at the rail and step. Some of these men had been pleasant to Slone on
+earlier occasions. This day they seemed not to see him. Slone was tingling all
+over when he went into the store. Some deviltry was afoot! He had an angry
+thought that these riders could not have minds of their own. Just inside the
+door Slone encountered Wetherby, the young rancher from Durango. Slone spoke,
+but Wetherby only replied with an insolent stare. Slone did not glance at the
+man to whom Wetherby was talking. Only a few people were inside the store, and
+Brackton was waiting upon them. Slone stood back a little in the shadow.
+Brackton had observed his entrance, but did not greet him. Then Slone
+absolutely knew that for him the good will of Bostil's Ford was a thing of the
+past.
+
+Presently Brackton was at leisure, but he showed no disposition to attend to
+Slone's wants. Then Slone walked up to the counter and asked for supplies.
+
+"Have you got the money?" asked Brackton, as if addressing one he would not
+trust.
+
+"Yes," replied Slone, growing red under an insult that he knew Wetherby had
+heard.
+
+Brackton handed out the supplies and received the money, without a word. He
+held his head down. It was a singular action for a man used to dealing fairly
+with every one. Slone felt outraged. He hurried out of the place, with shame
+burning him, with his own eyes downcast, and in his hurry he bumped square
+into a burly form. Slone recoiled--looked up. Bostil! The old rider was eying
+him with cool speculation.
+
+"Wal, are you drunk?" he queried, without any particular expression.
+
+Yet the query was to Slone like a blow. It brought his head up with a jerk,
+his glance steady and keen on Bostil's.
+
+"Bostil, you know I don't drink," he said.
+
+"A-huh! I know a lot about you, Slone. . . . I heard you bought Vorhees's
+place, up on the bench."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Did he tell you it was mortgaged to me for more'n it's worth?"
+
+"No, he didn't."
+
+"Did he make over any papers to you?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Wal, if it interests you I'll show you papers thet proves the property's
+mine."
+
+Slone suffered a pang. The little home had grown dearer and dearer to him.
+
+"All right, Bostil. If it's yours--it's yours," he said, calmly enough.
+
+"I reckon I'd drove you out before this if I hadn't felt we could make a
+deal."
+
+"We can't agree on any deal, Bostil," replied Slone, steadily. It was not what
+Bostil said, but the way he said it, the subtle meaning and power behind it,
+that gave Slone a sense of menace and peril. These he had been used to for
+years; he could meet them. But he was handicapped here because it seemed that,
+though he could meet Bostil face to face, he could not fight him. For he was
+Lucy's father. Slone's position, the impotence of it, rendered him less able
+to control his temper.
+
+"Why can't we?" demanded Bostil. "If you wasn't so touchy we could. An' let me
+say, young feller, thet there's more reason now thet you DO make a deal with
+me."
+
+"Deal? What about?"
+
+"About your red hoss."
+
+"Wildfire! . . . No deals, Bostil," returned Slone, and made as if to pass
+him.
+
+The big hand that forced Slone back was far from gentle, and again he felt the
+quick rush of blood.
+
+"Mebbe I can tell you somethin' thet'll make you sell Wildfire," said Bostil.
+
+"Not if you talked yourself dumb!" flashed Slone. There was no use to try to
+keep cool with this Bostil, if he talked horses. "I'll race Wildfire against
+the King. But no more."
+
+"Race! Wal, we don't run races around here without stakes," replied Bostil,
+with deep scorn. "An' what can you bet? Thet little dab of prize money is
+gone, an' wouldn't be enough to meet me. You're a strange one in these parts.
+I've pride an' reputation to uphold. You brag of racin' with me--an' you a
+beggarly rider! . . . You wouldn't have them clothes an' boots if my girl
+hadn't fetched them to you."
+
+The riders behind Bostil laughed. Wetherby's face was there in the door, not
+amused, but hard with scorn and something else. Slone felt a sickening,
+terrible gust of passion. It fairly shook him. And as the wave subsided the
+quick cooling of skin and body pained him like a burn made with ice.
+
+"Yes, Bostil, I'm what you say," responded Slone, and his voice seemed to fill
+his ears. "But you're dead wrong when you say I've nothin' to bet on a race."
+
+"An' what'll you bet?"
+
+"My life an' my horse!"
+
+The riders suddenly grew silent and intense. Bostil vibrated to that. He
+turned white. He more than any rider on the uplands must have felt the nature
+of that offer.
+
+"Ag'in what?" he demanded, hoarsely.
+
+"YOUR DAUGHTER LUCY!"
+
+One instant the surprise held Bostil mute and motionless. Then he seemed to
+expand. His huge bulk jerked into motion and he bellowed like a mad bull.
+
+Slone saw the blow coming, made no move to avoid it. The big fist took him
+square on the mouth and chin and laid him flat on the ground. Sight failed
+Slone for a little, and likewise ability to move. But he did not lose
+consciousness. His head seemed to have been burst into rays and red mist that
+blurred his eyes. Then these cleared away, leaving intense pain. He started to
+get up, his brain in a whirl. Where was his gun? He had left it at home. But
+for that he would have killed Bostil. He had already killed one man. The thing
+was a burning flash--then all over! He could do it again. But Bostil was
+Lucy's father!
+
+Slone gathered up the packages of supplies, and without looking at the men he
+hurried away. He seemed possessed of a fury to turn and run back. Some force,
+like an invisible hand, withheld him. When he reached the cabin he shut
+himself in, and lay on his bunk, forgetting that the place did not belong to
+him, alive only to the mystery of his trouble, smarting with the shame of the
+assault upon him. It was dark before he composed himself and went out, and
+then he had not the desire to eat. He made no move to open the supplies of
+food, did not even make a light. But he went out to take grass and water to
+the horses. When he returned to the cabin a man was standing at the porch.
+Slone recognized Holley's shape and then his voice.
+
+"Son, you raised the devil to-day."
+
+"Holley, don't you go back on me!" cried Slone. "I was driven!"
+
+"Don't talk so loud," whispered the rider in return. "I've only a minnit.
+. . . Here--a letter from Lucy. . . . An', son, don't git the idee thet
+I'll go back on you."
+
+Slone took the letter with trembling fingers. All the fury and gloom instantly
+fled. Lucy had written him! He could not speak.
+
+"Son, I'm double-crossin' the boss, right this minnit!" whispered Holley,
+hoarsely. "An' the same time I'm playin' Lucy's game. If Bostil finds out
+he'll kill me. I mustn't be ketched up here. But I won't lose track of
+you--wherever you go."
+
+Holley slipped away stealthily in the dusk, leaving Slone with a throbbing
+heart.
+
+"Wherever you go!" he echoed. "Ah! I forgot! I can't stay here."
+
+Lucy's letter made his fingers tingle--made them so hasty and awkward that he
+had difficulty in kindling blaze enough to see to read. The letter was short,
+written in lead-pencil on the torn leaf of a ledger. Slone could not read
+rapidly--those years on the desert had seen to that--and his haste to learn
+what Lucy said bewildered him. At first all the words blurred:
+
+"Come at once to the bench in the cottonwoods. I'll meet you there. My heart
+is breaking. It's a lie--a lie--what they say. I'll swear you were with me
+the night the boat was cut adrift. I KNOW you didn't do that. I know who.
+. . . Oh, come! I will stick to you. I will run off with you. I love you!"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+Slone's heart leaped to his throat, and its beating choked his utterances of
+rapture and amaze and dread. But rapture dominated the other emotions. He
+could scarcely control the impulse to run to meet Lucy, without a single
+cautious thought.
+
+He put the precious letter inside his blouse, where it seemed to warm his
+breast. He buckled on his gun-belt, and, extinguishing the light, he hurried
+out.
+
+A crescent moon had just tipped the bluff. The village lanes and cabins and
+trees lay silver in the moon-light. A lonesome coyote barked in the distance.
+All else was still. The air was cool, sweet, fragrant. There appeared to be a
+glamour of light, of silence, of beauty over the desert.
+
+Slone kept under the dark lee of the bluff and worked around so that he could
+be above the village, where there was little danger of meeting any one. Yet
+presently he had to go out of the shadow into the moon-blanched lane. Swift
+and silent as an Indian he went along, keeping in the shade of what trees
+there were, until he came to the grove of cottonwoods. The grove was a black
+mystery lanced by silver rays. He slipped in among the trees, halting every
+few steps to listen. The action, the realization had helped to make him cool,
+to steel him, though never before in his life had he been so exalted. The
+pursuit and capture of Wildfire, at one time the desire of his heart, were as
+nothing to this. Love had called him--and life--and he knew death hung in the
+balance. If Bostil found him seeking Lucy there would be blood spilled. Slone
+quaked at the thought, for the cold and ghastly oppression following the death
+he had meted out to Sears came to him at times. But such thoughts were
+fleeting; only one thought really held his mind--and the one was that Lucy
+loved him, had sent strange, wild, passionate words to him.
+
+He found the narrow path, its white crossed by slowly moving black bars of
+shadow, and stealthily he followed this, keen of eye and ear, stopping at
+every rustle. He well knew the bench Lucy had mentioned. It was in a remote
+corner of the grove, under big trees near the spring. Once Slone thought he
+had a glimpse of white. Perhaps it was only moonlight. He slipped on and on,
+and when beyond the branching paths that led toward the house he breathed
+freer. The grove appeared deserted. At last he crossed the runway from the
+spring, smelled the cool, wet moss and watercress, and saw the big cottonwood,
+looming dark above the other trees. A patch of moonlight brightened a little
+glade just at the edge of dense shade cast by the cottonwood. Here the bench
+stood. It was empty!
+
+Slone's rapture vanished. He was suddenly chilled. She was not there! She
+might have been intercepted. He would not see her. The disappointment, the
+sudden relaxation, was horrible. Then a white, slender shape flashed from
+beside the black tree-trunk and flew toward him. It was noiseless, like a
+specter, and swift as the wind. Was he dreaming? He felt so strange. Then--the
+white shape reached him and he knew.
+
+Lucy leaped into his arms.
+
+"Lin! Lin! Oh, I'm so--so glad to see you!" she whispered. She seemed
+breathless, keen, new to him, not in the least afraid nor shy. Slone could
+only hold her. He could not have spoken, even if she had given him a chance.
+"I know everything--what they accuse you of--how the riders treated you--how
+my dad struck you. Oh! . . . He's a brute! I hate him for that. Why didn't you
+keep out of his way? . . . Van saw it all. Oh, I hate him, too! He said you
+lay still--where you fell! . . . Dear Lin, that blow may have hurt you
+dreadfully--shamed you because you couldn't strike back at my dad--but it
+reached me, too. It hurt me. It woke my heart. . . . Where--where did he hit
+you? Oh, I've seen him hit men! His terrible fists!"
+
+"Lucy, never mind," whispered Slone. "I'd stood to be shot just for this."
+
+He felt her hands softly on his face, feeling around tenderly till they found
+the swollen bruise on mouth and chin.
+
+"Ah! . . . He struck you. And I--I'll kiss you," she whispered. "If kisses
+will make it well--it'll be well!"
+
+She seemed strange, wild, passionate in her tenderness. She lifted her face
+and kissed him softly again and again and again, till the touch that had been
+exquisitely painful to his bruised lips became rapture. Then she leaned back
+in his arms, her hands on his shoulders, white-faced, dark-eyed, and laughed
+up in his face, lovingly, daringly, as if she defied the world to change what
+she had done.
+
+"Lucy! Lucy! . . . He can beat me--again!" said Slone, low and hoarsely.
+
+"If you love me you'll keep out of his way," replied the girl.
+
+"If I love you? . . . My God! . . . I've felt my heart die a thousand times
+since that mornin'--when--when you--"
+
+"Lin, I didn't know," she interrupted, with sweet, grave earnestness. "I know
+now!"
+
+And Slone could not but know, too, looking at her; and the sweetness, the
+eloquence, the noble abandon of her avowal sounded to the depths of him. His
+dread, his resignation, his shame, all sped forever in the deep, full breath
+of relief with which he cast off that burden. He tasted the nectar of
+happiness, the first time in his life. He lifted his head--never, he knew, to
+lower it again. He would be true to what she had made him.
+
+"Come in the shade," he whispered, and with his arm round her he led her to
+the great tree-trunk. "Is it safe for you here? An' how long can you stay?"
+
+"I had it out with Dad--left him licked once in his life," she replied. "Then
+I went to my room, fastened the door, and slipped out of my window. I can stay
+out as long as I want. No one will know."
+
+Slone's heart throbbed. She was his. The clasp of her hands on his, the gleam
+of her eyes, the white, daring flash of her face in the shadow of the
+moon--these told him she was his. How it had come about was beyond him, but he
+realized the truth. What a girl! This was the same nerve which she showed when
+she had run Wildfire out in front of the fleetest horses in the uplands.
+
+"Tell me, then," he began, quietly, with keen gaze roving under the trees and
+eyes strained tight, "tell me what's come off."
+
+"Don't you know?" she queried, in amaze.
+
+"Only that for some reason I'm done in Bostil's Ford. It can't be because I
+punched Joel Creech. I felt it before I met Bostil at the store. He taunted
+me. We had bitter words. He told before all of them how the outfit I wore you
+gave me. An' then I dared him to race the King. My horse an' my life against
+YOU!"
+
+"Yes, I know," she whispered, softly. "It's all over town. . . . Oh, Lin! it
+was a grand bet! And Bostil four-flushed, as the riders say. For days a race
+between Wildfire and the King had been in the air. There'll never be peace in
+Bostil's Ford again till that race is run."
+
+"But, Lucy, could Bostil's wantin' Wildfire an' hatin' me because I won't
+sell--could that ruin me here at the Ford?"
+
+"It could. But, Lin, there's more. Oh, I hate to tell you!" she whispered,
+passionately. "I thought you'd know. . . . Joel Creech swore you cut the ropes
+on the ferry-boat and sent it adrift."
+
+"The loon!" ejaculated Slone, and he laughed low in both anger and ridicule.
+"Lucy, that's only a fool's talk."
+
+"He's crazy. Oh, if I ever get him in front of me again when I'm on
+Sarch--I'll--I'll. . . ." She ended with a little gasp and leaned a moment
+against Slone. He felt her heart beat--felt the strong clasp of her hands. She
+was indeed Bostil's flesh and blood, and there was that in her dangerous to
+arouse.
+
+"Lin, the folks here are queer," she resumed, more calmly. "For long years Dad
+has ruled them. They see with his eyes and talk with his voice. Joel Creech
+swore you cut those cables. Swore he trailed you. Brackton believed him. Van
+believed him. They told my father. And he--my dad--God forgive him! he jumped
+at that. The village as one person now believes you sent the boat adrift so
+Creech's horses could not cross and you could win the race."
+
+"Lucy, if it wasn't so--so funny I'd be mad as--as--" burst out Slone.
+
+"It isn't funny. It's terrible. . . . I know who cut those cables. . . Holley
+knows. . . . DAD knows--an', oh, Lin--I--hate--I hate my own father!"
+
+"My God!" gasped Slone, as the full signification burst upon him. Then his
+next thought was for Lucy. "Listen, dear--you mustn't say that," he entreated.
+"He's your father. He's a good man every way except when he's after horses.
+Then he's half horse. I understand him. I feel sorry for him. . . . An' if
+he's throwed the blame on me, all right. I'll stand it. What do I care? I was
+queered, anyhow, because I wouldn't part with my horse. It can't matter so
+much if people think I did that just to help win a race. But if they knew
+your--your father did it, an' if Creech's horses starve, why it'd be a
+disgrace for him--an' you."
+
+"Lin Slone--you'll accept the blame!" she whispered, with wide, dark eyes on
+him, hands at his shoulders.
+
+"Sure I will," replied Slone. "I can't be any worse off."
+
+"You're better than all of them--my rider!" she cried, full-voiced and
+tremulous. "Lin, you make me love you so--it--it hurts!" And she seemed about
+to fling herself into his arms again. There was a strangeness about her--a
+glory. "But you'll not take the shame of that act. For I won't let you. I'll
+tell my father I was with you when the boat was cut loose. He'll believe me."
+
+"Yes, an' he'll KILL me!" groaned Slone. "Good Lord! Lucy, don't do that!"
+
+"I will! An' he'll not kill you. Lin, Dad took a great fancy to you. I know
+that. He thinks he hates you. But in his heart he doesn't. If he got hold of
+Wildfire--why, he'd never be able to do enough for you. He never could make it
+up. What do you think? I told him you hugged and kissed me shamefully that
+day."
+
+"Oh, Lucy! you didn't?" implored Slone.
+
+"I sure did. And what do you think? He said he once did the same to my mother!
+. . . No, Lin, Dad'd never kill you for anything except a fury about horses.
+All the fights he ever had were over horse deals. The two men--he--he--" Lucy
+faltered and her shudder was illuminating to Slone. "Both of them--fights over
+horse trades!"
+
+"Lucy, if I'm ever unlucky enough to meet Bostil again I'll be deaf an' dumb.
+An' now you promise me you won't tell him you were with me that night."
+
+"Lin, if the occasion comes, I will--I couldn't help it," replied Lucy.
+
+"Then fight shy of the occasion," he rejoined, earnestly. "For that would be
+the end of Lin Slone!"
+
+"Then--what on earth can--we do?" Lucy said, with sudden break of spirit.
+
+"I think we must wait. You wrote in your letter you'd stick to me--you'd--"
+He could not get the words out, the thought so overcame him.
+
+"If it comes to a finish, I'll go with you," Lucy returned, with passion
+rising again.
+
+"Oh! to ride off with you, Lucy--to have you all to myself--I daren't think of
+it. But that's only selfish."
+
+"Maybe it's not so selfish as you believe. If you left the Ford--now--it'd
+break my heart. I'd never get over it."
+
+"Lucy! You love me--that well?"
+
+Then their lips met again and their hands locked, and they stood silent,
+straining toward each other. He held the slight form, so pliant, so
+responsive, so alive, close to him, and her face lay hidden on his breast; and
+he looked out over her head into the quivering moonlit shadows. The night was
+as still as one away on the desert far from the abode of men. It was more
+beautiful than any dream of a night in which he had wandered far into strange
+lands where wild horses were and forests lay black under moon-silvered peaks.
+
+"We'll run--then--if it comes to a finish," said Slone, huskily. "But I'll
+wait. I'll stick it out here. I'll take what comes. So--maybe I'll not
+disgrace you more."
+
+"I told Van I--I gloried in being hugged by you that day," she replied, and
+her little defiant laugh told what she thought of the alleged disgrace.
+
+"You torment him," remonstrated Slone. "You set him against us. It would be
+better to keep still."
+
+"But my blood is up!" she said, and she pounded his shoulder with her fist.
+"I'll fight--I'll fight! . . . I couldn't avoid Van. It was Holley who told me
+Van was threatening you. And when I met Van he told me how everybody said you
+insulted me--had been worse than a drunken rider--and that he'd beat you half
+to death. So I told Van Joel Creech might have seen us--I didn't doubt
+that--but he didn't see that I liked being hugged."
+
+"What did Van say then?" asked Slone, all aglow with his wonderful joy.
+
+"He wilted. He slunk away. . . . And so I'll tell them all."
+
+"But, Lucy, you've always been so--so truthful."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Well, to say you liked being hugged that day was--was a story, wasn't it?"
+
+"That was what made me so furious," she admitted, shyly. "I was surprised when
+you grabbed me off Wildfire. And my heart beat--beat--beat so when you hugged
+me. And when you kissed me I--I was petrified. I knew I liked it then--and I
+was furious with myself."
+
+Slone drew a long, deep breath of utter enchantment. "You'll take back
+Wildfire?"
+
+"Oh, Lin--don't--ask--me," she implored.
+
+"Take him back--an' me with him."
+
+"Then I will. But no one must know that yet."
+
+They drew apart then.
+
+"An' now you must go," said Slone, reluctantly. "Listen. I forgot to warn you
+about Joel Creech. Don't ever let him near you. He's crazy an' he means evil."
+
+"Oh, I know, Lin! I'll watch. But I'm not afraid of him."
+
+"He's strong, Lucy. I saw him lift bags that were hefty for me. . . . Lucy, do
+you ride these days?"
+
+"Every day. If I couldn't ride I couldn't live."
+
+"I'm afraid," said Slone, nervously. "There's Creech an' Cordts--both have
+threatened you."
+
+"I'm afraid of Cordts," replied Lucy, with a shiver. "You should have seen him
+look at me race-day. It made me hot with anger, yet weak, too, somehow. But
+Dad says I'm never in any danger if I watch out. And I do. Who could catch me
+on Sarch?"
+
+"Any horse can be tripped in the sage. You told me how Joel tried to rope Sage
+King. Did you ever tell your dad that?"
+
+"I forgot. But then I'm glad I didn't. Dad would shoot for that, quicker than
+if Joel tried to rope him. . . . Don't worry, Lin, I always pack a gun."
+
+"But can you use it?"
+
+Lucy laughed. "Do you think I can only ride?"
+
+Slone remembered that Holley had said he had taught Lucy how to shoot as well
+as ride. "You'll be watchful--careful," he said, earnestly.
+
+"Oh, Lin, you need to be that more than I. . . . What will you do?"
+
+"I'll stay up at the little cabin I thought I owned till to-day."
+
+"Didn't you buy it?" asked Lucy, quickly.
+
+"I thought I did. But . . . never mind. Maybe I won't get put out just yet.
+An' when will I see you again?"
+
+"Here, every night. Wait till I come," she replied. "Good night, Lin."
+
+"I'll--wait!" he exclaimed, with a catch in his voice. "Oh, my luck! . . .
+I'll wait, Lucy, every day--hopin' an' prayin' that this trouble will lighten.
+An' I'll wait at night--for you!"
+
+He kissed her good-by and watched the slight form glide away, flit to and fro,
+white in the dark patches, grow indistinct and vanish. He was left alone in
+the silent grove.
+
+Slone stole back to the cabin and lay sleepless and tranced, watching the
+stars, till late that night.
+
+All the next day he did scarcely anything but watch and look after his horses
+and watch and drag the hours out and dream despite his dread. But no one
+visited him. The cabin was left to him that day.
+
+It had been a hot day, with great thunderhead, black and creamy white clouds
+rolling down from the canyon country. No rain had fallen at the Ford, though
+storms near by had cooled the air. At sunset Slone saw a rainbow bending down,
+ruddy and gold, connecting the purple of cloud with the purple of horizon.
+
+Out beyond the valley the clouds were broken, showing rifts of blue, and they
+rolled low, burying the heads of the monuments, creating a wild and strange
+spectacle. Twilight followed, and appeared to rise to meet the darkening
+clouds. And at last the gold on the shafts faded; the monuments faded; and the
+valley grew dark.
+
+Slone took advantage of the hour before moonrise to steal down into the grove,
+there to wait for Lucy. She came so quickly he scarcely felt that he waited at
+all; and then the time spent with her, sweet, fleeting, precious, left him
+stronger to wait for her again, to hold himself in, to cease his brooding, to
+learn faith in something deeper than he could fathom.
+
+The next day he tried to work, but found idle waiting made the time fly
+swifter because in it he could dream. In the dark of the rustling cottonwoods
+he met Lucy, as eager to see him as he was to see her, tender, loving,
+remorseful--a hundred sweet and bewildering things all so new, so unbelievable
+to Slone.
+
+That night he learned that Bostil had started for Durango with some of his
+riders. This trip surprised Slone and relieved him likewise, for Durango was
+over two hundred miles distant, and a journey there even for the hard riders
+was a matter of days.
+
+"He left no orders for me," Lucy said, "except to behave myself. . . . Is this
+behaving?" she whispered, and nestled close to Slone, audacious, tormenting as
+she had been before this dark cloud of trouble. "But he left orders for Holley
+to ride with me and look after me. Isn't that funny? Poor old Holley! He hates
+to doublecross Dad, he says."
+
+"I'm glad Holley's to look after you," replied Slone. "Yesterday I saw you
+tearin' down into the sage on Sarch. I wondered what you'd do, Lucy, if Cordts
+or that loon Creech should get hold of you?"
+
+"I'd fight!"
+
+"But, child, that's nonsense. You couldn't fight either of them."
+
+"Couldn't I? Well, I just could. I'd--I'd shoot Cordts. And I'd whip Joel
+Creech with my quirt. And if he kept after me I'd let Sarch run him down.
+Sarch hates him."
+
+"You're a brave sweetheart," mused Slone. "Suppose you were caught an'
+couldn't get away. Would you leave a trail somehow?"
+
+"I sure would."
+
+"Lucy, I'm a wild-horse hunter," he went on, thoughtfully, as if speaking to
+himself. "I never failed on a trail. I could track you over bare rock."
+
+"Lin, I'll leave a trail, so never fear," she replied. "But don't borrow
+trouble. You're always afraid for me. Look at the bright side. Dad seems to
+have forgotten you. Maybe it all isn't so bad as we thought. Oh, I hope so!
+. . . How is my horse, Wildfire? I want to ride him again. I can hardly keep
+from going after him."
+
+And so they whispered while the moments swiftly passed.
+
+It was early during the afternoon of the next day that Slone, hearing the
+clip-clop of unshod ponies, went outside to look. One part of the lane he
+could see plainly, and into it stalked Joel Creech, leading the leanest and
+gauntest ponies Slone had ever seen. A man as lean and gaunt as the ponies
+stalked behind.
+
+The sight shocked Slone. Joel Creech and his father! Slone had no proof,
+because he had never seen the elder Creech, yet strangely he felt convinced of
+it. And grim ideas began to flash into his mind. Creech would hear who was
+accused of cutting the boat adrift. What would he say? If he believed, as all
+the villagers believed, then Bostil's Ford would become an unhealthy place for
+Lin Slone. Where were the great race-horses--Blue Roan and Peg--and the other
+thoroughbreds? A pang shot through Slone.
+
+"Oh, not lost--not starved?" he muttered. "That would be hell!"
+
+Yet he believed just this had happened. How strange he had never considered
+such an event as the return of Creech.
+
+"I'd better look him up before he looks me," said Slone.
+
+It took but an instant to strap on his belt and gun. Then Slone strode down
+his path, out into the lane toward Brackton's. Whatever before boded ill to
+Slone had been nothing to what menaced him now. He would have a man to face--a
+man whom repute called just, but stern.
+
+Before Slone reached the vicinity of the store he saw riders come out to meet
+the Creech party. It so happened there were more riders than usually
+frequented Brackton's at that hour. The old storekeeper came stumbling out and
+raised his hands. The riders could be heard, loud-voiced and excited. Slone
+drew nearer, and the nearer he got the swifter he strode. Instinct told him
+that he was making the right move. He would face this man whom he was accused
+of ruining. The poor mustangs hung their heads dejectedly.
+
+"Bags of bones," some rider loudly said.
+
+And then Slone drew dose to the excited group. Brackton held the center; he
+was gesticulating; his thin voice rose piercingly.
+
+"Creech! Whar's Peg an' the Roan? Gawd Almighty, man! You ain't meanin' them
+cayuses thar are all you've got left of thet grand bunch of hosses?"
+
+There was scarcely a sound. All the riders were still. Slone fastened his eyes
+on Creech. He saw a gaunt, haggard face almost black with dust--worn and
+sad--with big eyes of terrible gloom. He saw an unkempt, ragged form that had
+been wet and muddy, and was now dust-caked.
+
+Creech stood silent in a dignity of despair that wrung Slone's heart. His
+silence was an answer. It was Joel Creech who broke the suspense.
+
+"Didn't I tell you-all what'd happen?" he shrilled. "PARCHED AN' STARVED!"
+
+"Aw no!" chorused the riders.
+
+Brackton shook all over. Tears dimmed his eyes--tears that he had no shame
+for. "So help me Gawd--I'm sorry!" was his broken exclamation.
+
+Slone had forgotten himself and possible revelation concerning him. But when
+Holley appeared close to him with a significant warning look, Slone grew keen
+once more on his own account. He felt a hot flame inside him--a deep and
+burning anger at the man who might have saved Creech's horses. And he, like
+Brackton, felt sorrow for Creech, and a rider's sense of loss, of pain. These
+horses--these dumb brutes--faithful and sometimes devoted, had to suffer an
+agonizing death because of the selfishness of men.
+
+"I reckon we'd all like to hear what come off, Creech, if you don't feel too
+bad to tell us," said Brackton.
+
+"Gimme a drink," replied Creech.
+
+"Wal, d--n my old head!" exclaimed Brackton. "I'm gittin' old. Come on in. All
+of you! We're glad to see Creech home."
+
+The riders filed in after Brackton and the Creeches. Holley stayed close
+beside Slone, both of them in the background.
+
+"I heerd the flood comin' thet night," said Creech to his silent and
+tense-faced listeners. "I heerd it miles up the canyon. 'Peared a bigger roar
+than any flood before. As it happened, I was alone, an' it took time to git
+the hosses up. If there'd been an Indian with me--or even Joel--mebbe--" His
+voice quavered slightly, broke, and then he resumed. "Even when I got the
+hosses over to the landin' it wasn't too late--if only some one had heerd me
+an' come down. I yelled an' shot. Nobody heerd. The river was risin' fast. An'
+thet roar had begun to make my hair raise. It seemed like years the time I
+waited there. . . . Then the flood came down--black an' windy an' awful. I
+had hell gittin' the hosses back.
+
+"Next mornin' two Piutes come down. They had lost mustangs up on the rocks.
+All the feed on my place was gone. There wasn't nothin' to do but try to git
+out. The Piutes said there wasn't no chance north--no water--no grass--an' so
+I decided to go south, if we could climb over thet last slide. Peg broke her
+leg there, an'--I--I had to shoot her. But we climbed out with the rest of the
+bunch. I left it then to the Piutes. We traveled five days west to head the
+canyons. No grass an' only a little water, salt at thet. Blue Roan was game if
+ever I seen a game hoss. Then the Piutes took to workin' in an' out an'
+around, not to git out, but to find a little grazin'. I never knowed the earth
+was so barren. One by one them hosses went down. . . . An' at last, I
+couldn't--I couldn't see Blue Roan starvin'--dyin' right before my eyes--an' I
+shot him, too. . . . An' what hurts me most now is thet I didn't have the
+nerve to kill him fust off."
+
+There was a long pause in Creech's narrative.
+
+"Them Piutes will git paid if ever I can pay them. I'd parched myself but for
+them. . . . We circled an' crossed them red cliffs an' then the strip of red
+sand, an' worked down into the canyon. Under the wall was a long stretch of
+beach--sandy--an' at the head of this we found Bostil's boat."
+
+"Wal,--!" burst out the profane Brackton. "Bostil's boat! . . . Say, 'ain't
+Joel told you yet about thet boat?"
+
+"No, Joel 'ain't said a word about the boat," replied Creech. "What about it?"
+
+"It was cut loose jest before the flood."
+
+Manifestly Brackton expected this to be staggering to Creech. But he did not
+even show surprise.
+
+"There's a rider here named Slone--a wild-hoss wrangler," went on Brackton,
+"an' Joel swears this Slone cut the boat loose so's he'd have a better chance
+to win the race. Joel swears he tracked this feller Slone."
+
+For Slone the moment was fraught with many emotions, but not one of them was
+fear. He did not need the sudden force of Holley's strong hand, pushing him
+forward. Slone broke into the group and faced Creech.
+
+"It's not true. I never cut that boat loose," he declared ringingly.
+
+"Who're you?" queried Creech.
+
+"My name's Slone. I rode in here with a wild horse, an' he won a race. Then I
+was blamed for this trick."
+
+Creech's steady, gloomy eyes seemed to pierce Slone through. They were
+terrible eyes to look into, yet they held no menace for him. "An' Joel accused
+you?"
+
+"So they say. I fought with him--struck him for an insult to a girl."
+
+"Come round hyar, Joel," called Creech, sternly. His big, scaly, black hand
+closed on the boy's shoulder. Joel cringed under it. "Son, you've lied. What
+for?"
+
+Joel showed abject fear of his father. "He's gone on Lucy--an' I seen him with
+her," muttered the boy.
+
+"An' you lied to hurt Slone?"
+
+Joel would not reply to this in speech, though that was scarcely needed to
+show he had lied. He seemed to have no sense of guilt. Creech eyed him
+pityingly and then pushed him back.
+
+"Men, my son has done this rider dirt," said Creech. "You-all see thet. Slone
+never cut the boat loose. . . . An' say, you-all seem to think cuttin' thet
+boat loose was the crime. . . . No! Thet wasn't the crime. The crime was
+keepin' the boat out of the water fer days when my hosses could have been
+crossed."
+
+Slone stepped back, forgotten, it seemed to him. Both joy and sorrow swayed
+him. He had been exonerated. But this hard and gloomy Creech--he knew things.
+And Slone thought of Lucy.
+
+"Who did cut thet thar boat loose?" demanded Brackton, incredulously.
+
+Creech gave him a strange glance. "As I was sayin', we come on the boat fast
+at the head of the long stretch. I seen the cables had been cut. An' I seen
+more'n thet. . . . Wal, the river was high an' swift. But this was a long
+stretch with good landin' way below on the other side. We got the boat in, an'
+by rowin' hard an' driftin' we got acrost, leadin' the hosses. We had five
+when we took to the river. Two went down on the way over. We climbed out then.
+The Piutes went to find some Navajos an' get hosses. An' I headed fer the
+Ford--made camp twice. An' Joel seen me comin' out a ways."
+
+"Creech, was there anythin' left in thet boat?" began Brackton, with intense
+but pondering curiosity. "Anythin' on the ropes--or so--thet might give an
+idee who cut her loose?"
+
+Creech made no reply to that. The gloom burned darker in his eyes. He seemed a
+man with a secret. He trusted no one there. These men were all friends of his,
+but friends under strange conditions. His silence was tragic, and all about
+the man breathed vengeance.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+No moon showed that night, and few stars twinkled between the slow-moving
+clouds. The air was thick and oppressive, full of the day's heat that had not
+blown away. A dry storm moved in dry majesty across the horizon, and the
+sheets and ropes of lightning, blazing white behind the black monuments, gave
+weird and beautiful grandeur to the desert.
+
+Lucy Bostil had to evade her aunt to get out of the house, and the window,
+that had not been the means of exit since Bostil left, once more came into
+use. Aunt Jane had grown suspicious of late, and Lucy, much as she wanted to
+trust her with her secret, dared not do it. For some reason unknown to Lucy,
+Holley had also been hard to manage, particularly to-day. Lucy certainly did
+not want Holley to accompany her on her nightly rendezvous with Slone. She
+changed her light gown to the darker and thicker riding-habit.
+
+There was a longed-for, all-satisfying flavor in this night adventure
+--something that had not all to do with love. The stealth, the outwitting of
+guardians, the darkness, the silence, the risk--all these called to some deep,
+undeveloped instinct in her, and thrilled along her veins, cool, keen,
+exciting. She had the blood in her of the greatest adventurer of his day.
+
+Lucy feared she was a little late. Allaying the suspicions of Aunt Jane and
+changing her dress had taken time. Lucy burned with less cautious steps. Still
+she had only used caution in the grove because she had promised Slone to do
+so. This night she forgot or disregarded it. And the shadows were
+thick--darker than at any other time when she had undertaken this venture. She
+had always been a little afraid of the dark--a fact that made her contemptuous
+of herself. Nevertheless, she did not peer into the deeper pits of gloom. She
+knew her way and could slip swiftly along with only a rustle of leaves she
+touched.
+
+Suddenly she imagined she heard a step and she halted, still as a tree-trunk.
+There was no reason to be afraid of a step. It had been a surprise to her that
+she had never encountered a rider walking and smoking under the trees.
+Listening, she assured herself she had been mistaken, and then went on. But
+she looked back. Did she see a shadow--darker than others--moving? It was only
+her imagination. Yet she sustained a slight chill. The air seemed more
+oppressive, or else there was some intangible and strange thing hovering in
+it. She went on--reached the lane that divided the grove. But she did not
+cross at once. It was lighter in this lane; she could see quite far.
+
+As she stood there, listening, keenly responsive to all the influences of the
+night, she received an impression that did not have its origin in sight nor
+sound. And only the leaves touched her--and only their dry fragrance came to
+her. But she felt a presence--a strange, indefinable presence.
+
+But Lucy was brave, and this feeling, whatever it might be, angered her. She
+entered the lane and stole swiftly along toward the end of the grove. Paths
+crossed the lane at right angles, and at these points she went swifter. It
+would be something to tell Slone--she had been frightened. But thought of him
+drove away her fear and nervousness, and her anger with herself.
+
+Then she came to a wider path. She scarcely noted it and passed on. Then came
+a quick rustle--a swift shadow. Between two steps--as her heart
+leaped--violent arms swept her off the ground. A hard hand was clapped over
+her mouth. She was being carried swiftly through the gloom.
+
+Lucy tried to struggle. She could scarcely move a muscle. Iron arms wrapped
+her in coils that crushed her. She tried to scream, but her lips were
+tight-pressed. Her nostrils were almost closed between two hard fingers that
+smelled of horse.
+
+Whoever had her, she was helpless. Lucy's fury admitted of reason. Then both
+succumbed to a paralyzing horror. Cordts had got her! She knew it. She grew
+limp as a rag and her senses dulled. She almost fainted. The sickening
+paralysis of her faculties lingered. But she felt her body released--she was
+placed upon her feet--she was shaken by a rough hand. She swayed, and but for
+that hand might have fallen. She could see a tall, dark form over her, and
+horses, and the gloomy gray open of the sage slope. The hand left her face.
+
+"Don't yap, girl!" This command in a hard, low voice pierced her ears. She saw
+the glint of a gun held before her. Instinctive fear revived her old
+faculties. The horrible sick weakness, the dimness, the shaking internal
+collapse all left her.
+
+"I'll--be--quiet!" she faltered. She knew what her father had always feared
+had come to pass. And though she had been told to put no value on her life, in
+that event, she could not run. All in an instant--when life had been so
+sweet--she could not face pain or death.
+
+The man moved back a step. He was tall, gaunt, ragged. But not like Cordts!
+Never would she forget Cordts. She peered up at him. In the dim light of the
+few stars she recognized Joel Creech's father.
+
+"Oh, thank God!" she whispered, in the shock of blessed relief. "I
+thought--you were--Cordts!"
+
+"Keep quiet," he whispered back, sternly, and with rough hand he shook her.
+
+Lucy awoke to realities. Something evil menaced her, even though this man was
+not Cordts. Her mind could not grasp it. She was amazed--stunned. She
+struggled to speak, yet to keep within that warning command.
+
+"What--on earth--does this--mean?" she gasped, very low. She had no sense of
+fear of Creech. Once, when he and her father had been friends, she had been a
+favorite of Creech's. When a little girl she had ridden his knee many times.
+Between Creech and Cordts there was immeasurable distance. Yet she had been
+violently seized and carried out into the sage and menaced.
+
+Creech leaned down. His gaunt face, lighted by terrible eyes, made her recoil.
+"Bostil ruined me--an' killed my hosses," he whispered, grimly. "An' I'm
+takin' you away. An' I'll hold you in ransom for the King an' Sarchedon--an'
+all his racers!"
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, in startling surprise that yet held a pang. "Oh, Creech!
+. . . Then you mean me no harm!"
+
+The man straightened up and stood a moment, darkly silent, as if her query had
+presented a new aspect of the case. "Lucy Bostil, I'm a broken man an' wild
+an' full of hate. But God knows I never thought of thet--of harm to you. . . .
+No, child, I won't harm you. But you must obey an' go quietly, for there's a
+devil in me."
+
+"Where will you take me?" she asked.
+
+"Down in the canyons, where no one can track me," he said. "It'll be hard
+goin' fer you, child, an' hard fare. . . . But I'm strikin' at Bostil's heart
+as he has broken mine. I'll send him word. An' I'll tell him if he won't give
+his hosses thet I'll sell you to Cordts."
+
+"Oh, Creech--but you wouldn't!" she whispered, and her hand went to his brawny
+arm.
+
+"Lucy, in thet case I'd make as poor a blackguard as anythin' else I've been,"
+he said, forlornly. "But I'm figgerin' Bostil will give up his hosses fer
+you."
+
+"Creech, I'm afraid he won't. You'd better give me up. Let me go back. I'll
+never tell. I don't blame you. I think you're square. My dad is. . . . But,
+oh, don't make ME suffer! You used to--to care for me, when I was little."
+
+"Thet ain't no use," he replied. "Don't talk no more. . . . Git up hyar now
+an' ride in front of me."
+
+He led her to a lean mustang. Lucy swung into the saddle. She thought how
+singular a coincidence it was that she had worn a riding-habit. It was dark
+and thick, and comfortable for riding. Suppose she had worn the flimsy dress,
+in which she had met Slone every night save this one? Thought of Slone gave
+her a pang. He would wait and wait and wait. He would go back to his cabin,
+not knowing what had befallen her.
+
+Suddenly Lucy noticed another man, near at hand, holding two mustangs. He
+mounted, rode before her, and then she recognized Joel Creech. Assurance of
+this brought back something of the dread. But the father could control the
+son!
+
+"Ride on," said Creech, hitting her horse from behind.
+
+And Lucy found herself riding single file, with two men and a pack-horse, out
+upon the windy, dark sage slope. They faced the direction of the monuments,
+looming now and then so weirdly black and grand against the broad flare of
+lightning-blazed sky.
+
+Ever since Lucy had reached her teens there had been predictions that she
+would be kidnapped, and now the thing had come to pass. She was in danger, she
+knew, but in infinitely less than had any other wild character of the uplands
+been her captor. She believed, if she went quietly and obediently with Creech,
+that she would be, at least, safe from harm. It was hard luck for Bostil, she
+thought, but no worse than he deserved. Retribution had overtaken him. How
+terribly hard he would take the loss of his horses! Lucy wondered if he really
+ever would part with the King, even to save her from privation and peril.
+Bostil was more likely to trail her with his riders and to kill the Creeches
+than to concede their demands. Perhaps, though, that threat to sell her to
+Cordts would frighten the hard old man.
+
+The horses trotted and swung up over the slope, turning gradually, evidently
+to make a wide detour round the Ford, until Lucy's back was toward the
+monuments. Before her stretched the bleak, barren, dark desert, and through
+the opaque gloom she could see nothing. Lucy knew she was headed for the
+north, toward the wild canyons, unknown to the riders. Cordts and his gang hid
+in there. What might not happen if the Creeches fell in with Cordts? Lucy's
+confidence sustained a check. Still, she remembered the Creeches were like
+Indians. And what would Slone do? He would ride out on her trail. Lucy
+shivered for the Creeches if Slone ever caught up with them, and remembering
+his wild-horse-hunter's skill at tracking, and the fleet and tireless
+Wildfire, she grew convinced that Creech could not long hold her captive. For
+Slone would be wary. He would give no sign of his pursuit. He would steal upon
+the Creeches in the dark and-- Lucy shivered again. What an awful fate had
+been that of Dick Sears!
+
+So as she rode on Lucy's mind was full. She was used to riding, and in the
+motion of a horse there was something in harmony with her blood. Even now,
+with worry and dread and plotting strong upon her, habit had such power over
+her that riding made the hours fleet. She was surprised to be halted, to see
+dimly low, dark mounds of rock ahead.
+
+"Git off," said Creech.
+
+"Where are we?" asked Lucy.
+
+"Reckon hyar's the rocks. An' you sleep some, fer you'll need it." He spread a
+blanket, laid her saddle at the head of it, and dropped another blanket. "What
+I want to know is--shall I tie you up or not?" asked Creech. "If I do you'll
+git sore. An' this'll be the toughest trip you ever made."
+
+"You mean will I try to get away from you--or not?" queried Lucy.
+
+"Jest thet."
+
+Lucy pondered. She divined some fineness of feeling in this coarse man. He
+wanted to spare her not only pain, but the necessity of watchful eyes on her
+every moment. Lucy did not like to promise not to try to escape, if
+opportunity presented. Still, she reasoned, that once deep in the canyons,
+where she would be in another day, she would be worse off if she did get away.
+The memory of Cordts's cavernous, hungry eyes upon her was not a small factor
+in Lucy's decision.
+
+"Creech, if I give my word not to try to get away, would you believe me?" she
+asked.
+
+Creech was slow in replying. "Reckon I would," he said, finally.
+
+"All right, I'll give it."
+
+"An' thet's sense. Now you lay down."
+
+Lucy did as she was bidden and pulled the blanket over her. The place was
+gloomy and still. She heard the sound of mustangs' teeth on grass, and the
+soft footfalls of the men. Presently these sounds ceased. A cold wind blew
+over her face and rustled in the sage near her. Gradually the chill passed
+away, and a stealing warmth took its place. Her eyes grew tired. What had
+happened to her? With eyes closed she thought it was all a dream. Then the
+feeling of the hard saddle as a pillow under her head told her she was indeed
+far from her comfortable little room. What would poor Aunt Jane do in the
+morning when she discovered who was missing? What would Holley do? When would
+Bostil return? It might be soon and it might be days. And Slone--Lucy felt
+sorriest for him. For he loved her best. She thrilled at thought of Slone on
+that grand horse--on her Wildfire. And with her mind running on and on,
+seemingly making sleep impossible, the thoughts at last became dreams. Lucy
+awakened at dawn. One hand ached with cold, for it had been outside the
+blanket. Her hard bed had cramped her muscles. She heard the crackling of fire
+and smelled cedar smoke. In the gray of morning she saw the Creeches round a
+camp-fire.
+
+Lucy got up then. Both men saw her, but made no comment. In that cold, gray
+dawn she felt her predicament more gravely. Her hair was damp. She had ridden
+nearly all night without a hat. She had absolutely nothing of her own except
+what was on her body. But Lucy thanked her lucky stars that she had worn the
+thick riding-suit and her boots, for otherwise, in a summer dress, her
+condition would soon have been miserable.
+
+"Come an' eat," said Creech. "You have sense--an' eat if it sticks in your
+throat."
+
+Bostil had always contended in his arguments with riders that a man should eat
+heartily on the start of a trip so that the finish might find him strong. And
+Lucy ate, though the coarse fare sickened her. Once she looked curiously at
+Joel Creech. She felt his eyes upon her, but instantly he averted them. He had
+grown more haggard and sullen than ever before.
+
+The Creeches did not loiter over the camp tasks. Lucy was left to herself. The
+place appeared to be a kind of depression from which the desert rolled away to
+a bulge against the rosy east, and the rocks behind rose broken and yellow,
+fringed with cedars.
+
+"Git the hosses in, if you want to," Creech called to her, and then as Lucy
+started off to where the mustangs grazed she heard him curse his son. "Come
+back hyar! Leave the girl alone or I'll rap you one!"
+
+Lucy drove three of the mustangs into camp, where Creech began to saddle them.
+The remaining one, the pack animal, Lucy found among the scrub cedars at the
+base of the low cliffs. When she drove him in Creech was talking hard to Joel,
+who had mounted.
+
+"When you come back, work up this canyon till you git up. It heads on the pine
+plateau. I can't miss seein' you, or any one, long before you git up on top.
+An' you needn't come without Bostil's hosses. You know what to tell Bostil if
+he threatens you, or refuses to send his hosses, or turns his riders on my
+trail. Thet's all. Now git!"
+
+Joel Creech rode away toward the rise in the rolling, barren desert.
+
+"An' now we'll go on," said Creech to Lucy.
+
+When he had gotten all in readiness he ordered Lucy to follow closely in his
+tracks. He entered a narrow cleft in the low cliffs which wound in and out,
+and was thick with sage and cedars. Lucy, riding close to the cedars,
+conceived the idea of plucking the little green berries and dropping them on
+parts of the trail where their tracks would not show. Warily she filled the
+pockets of her jacket.
+
+Creech led the way without looking back, and did not seem to care where the
+horses stepped. The time had not yet come, Lucy concluded, when he was ready
+to hide his trail. Presently the narrow cleft opened into a low-walled canyon,
+full of debris from the rotting cliffs, and this in turn opened into a main
+canyon with mounting yellow crags. It appeared to lead north. Far in the
+distance above rims and crags rose in a long, black line like a horizon of
+dark cloud.
+
+Creech crossed this wide canyon and entered one of the many breaks in the
+wall. This one was full of splintered rock and weathered shale--the hardest
+kind of travel for both man and beast. Lucy was nothing if not considerate of
+a horse, and here she began to help her animal in all the ways a good rider
+knows. Much as this taxed her attention, she remembered to drop some of the
+cedar berries upon hard ground or rocks. And she knew she was leaving a trail
+for Slone's keen eyes.
+
+That day was the swiftest and the most strenuous in all Lucy Bostil's
+experience in the open. At sunset, when Creech halted in a niche in a gorge
+between lowering cliffs, Lucy fell off her horse and lay still and spent on
+the grass.
+
+Creech had a glance of sympathy and admiration for her, but he did not say
+anything about the long day's ride. Lucy never in her life before appreciated
+rest nor the softness of grass nor the relief at the end of a ride. She lay
+still with a throbbing, burning ache in all her body. Creech, after he had
+turned the horses loose, brought her a drink of cold water from the brook she
+heard somewhere near by.
+
+"How--far--did--we--come?" she whispered.
+
+"By the way round I reckon nigh on to sixty miles," he replied. "But we ain't
+half thet far from where we camped last night."
+
+Then he set to work at camp tasks. Lucy shook her head when he brought her
+food, but he insisted, and she had to force it down. Creech appeared rough but
+kind. After she had become used to the hard, gaunt, black face she saw sadness
+and thought in it. One thing Lucy had noticed was that Creech never failed to
+spare a horse, if it was possible. He would climb on foot over bad places.
+
+Night soon mantled the gorge in blackness thick as pitch. Lucy could not tell
+whether her eyes were open or shut, so far as what she saw was concerned. Her
+eyes seemed filled, however, with a thousand pictures of the wild and tortuous
+canyons and gorges through which she had ridden that day. The ache in her
+limbs and the fever in her blood would not let her sleep. It seemed that these
+were forever to be a part of her. For twelve hours she had ridden and walked
+with scarce a thought of the nature of the wild country, yet once she lay down
+to rest her mind was an endless hurrying procession of pictures--narrow red
+clefts choked with green growths--yellow gorges and weathered slides--dusty,
+treacherous divides connecting canyons--jumbles of ruined cliffs and piles of
+shale--miles and miles and endless winding miles yellow, low, beetling walls.
+And through it all she had left a trail.
+
+Next day Creech climbed out of that low-walled canyon, and Lucy saw a wild,
+rocky country cut by gorges, green and bare, or yellow and cedared. The long,
+black-fringed line she had noticed the day before loomed closer; overhanging
+this crisscrossed region of canyons. Every half-hour Creech would lead them
+downward and presently climb out again. There were sand and hard ground and
+thick turf and acres and acres of bare rock where even a shod horse would not
+leave a track.
+
+But the going was not so hard--there was not so much travel on foot for
+Lucy--and she finished that day in better condition than the first one.
+
+Next day Creech proceeded with care and caution. Many times he left the direct
+route, bidding Lucy wait for him, and he would ride to the rims of canyons or
+the tops of ridges of cedar forests, and from these vantage-points he would
+survey the country. Lucy gathered after a while that he was apprehensive of
+what might be encountered, and particularly so of what might be feared in
+pursuit. Lucy thought this strange, because it was out of the question for any
+one to be so soon on Creech's trail.
+
+These peculiar actions of Creech were more noticeable on the third day, and
+Lucy grew apprehensive herself. She could not divine why. But when Creech
+halted on a high crest that gave a sweeping vision of the broken table-land
+they had traversed Lucy made out for herself faint moving specks miles behind.
+
+"I reckon you see thet," said Creech
+
+"Horses," replied Lucy.
+
+He nodded his head gloomily, and seemed pondering a serious question.
+
+"Is some one trailing us?" asked Lucy, and she could not keep the tremor out
+of her voice.
+
+"Wal, I should smile! Fer two days--an' it sure beats me. They've never had
+a sight of us. But they keep comin'."
+
+"They! Who?" she asked, swiftly.
+
+"I hate to tell you, but I reckon I ought. Thet's Cordts an' two of his gang."
+
+"Oh--don't tell me so!" cried Lucy, suddenly terrified. Mention of Cordts had
+not always had power to frighten her, but this time she had a return of that
+shaking fear which had overcome her in the grove the night she was captured.
+
+"Cordts all right," replied Creech. "I knowed thet before I seen him. Fer two
+mornin's back I seen his hoss grazin in thet wide canyon. But I thought I'd
+slipped by. Some one seen us. Or they seen our trail. Anyway, he's after us.
+What beats me is how he sticks to thet trail. Cordts never was no tracker. An'
+since Dick Sears is dead there ain't a tracker in Cordts's outfit. An' I
+always could hide my tracks. . . . Beats me!"
+
+"Creech, I've been leaving a trail," confessed Lucy.
+
+"What!"
+
+Then she told him how she had been dropping cedar berries and bits of cedar
+leaves along the bare and stony course they had traversed.
+
+"Wal, I'm--" Creech stifled an oath. Then he laughed, but gruffly. "You air a
+cute one. But I reckon you didn't promise not to do thet. . . . An' now if
+Cordts gits you there'll be only yourself to blame."
+
+"Oh!" cried Lucy, frantically looking back. The moving specks were plainly in
+sight. "How can he know he's trailing me?"
+
+"Thet I can't say. Mebbe he doesn't know. His hosses air fresh, though, an' if
+I can't shake him he'll find out soon enough who he's trailin'."
+
+"Go on! We must shake him. I'll never do THAT again! . . . For God's sake,
+Creech, don't let him get me!"
+
+And Creech led down off the high open land into canyons again.
+
+The day ended, and the night seemed a black blank to Lucy. Another sunrise
+found Creech leading on, sparing neither Lucy nor the horses. He kept on a
+steady walk or trot, and he picked out ground less likely to leave any tracks.
+Like an old deer he doubled on his trail. He traveled down stream-beds where
+the water left no trail. That day the mustangs began to fail. The others were
+wearing out.
+
+The canyons ran like the ribs of a wash-board. And they grew deep and verdant,
+with looming, towered walls. That night Lucy felt lost in an abyss. The
+dreaming silence kept her awake many moments while sleep had already seized
+upon her eyelids. And then she dreamed of Cordts capturing her, of carrying
+her miles deeper into these wild and purple cliffs, of Slone in pursuit on the
+stallion Wildfire, and of a savage fight. And she awoke terrified and cold in
+the blackness of the night.
+
+On the next day Creech traveled west. This seemed to Lucy to be far to the
+left of the direction taken before. And Lucy, in spite of her utter weariness,
+and the necessity of caring for herself and her horse, could not but wonder at
+the wild and frowning canyon. It was only a tributary of the great canyon, she
+supposed, but it was different, strange, impressive, yet intimate, because all
+about it was overpowering, near at hand, even the beetling crags. And at every
+turn it seemed impossible to go farther over that narrow and rock-bestrewn
+floor. Yet Creech found a way on.
+
+Then came hours of climbing such slopes and benches and ledges as Lucy had not
+yet encountered. The grasping spikes of dead cedar tore her dress to shreds,
+and many a scratch burned her flesh. About the middle of the afternoon Creech
+led up over the last declivity, a yellow slope of cedar, to a flat upland
+covered with pine and high bleached grass. They rested.
+
+"We've fooled Cordts, you can be sure of thet," said Creech. "You're a game
+kid, an', by Gawd! if I had this job to do over I'd never tackle it again!"
+
+"Oh, you're sure we've lost him?" implored Lucy.
+
+"Sure as I am of death. An' we'll make surer in crossin' this bench. It's
+miles to the other side where I'm to keep watch fer Joel. An' we won't leave a
+track all the way."
+
+"But this grass?" questioned Lucy. "It'll show our tracks."
+
+"Look at the lanes an' trails between. All pine mats thick an' soft an'
+springy. Only an Indian could follow us hyar on Wild Hoss Bench."
+
+Lucy gazed before her under the pines. It was a beautiful forest, with trees
+standing far apart, yet not so far but that their foliage intermingled. A dry
+fragrance, thick as a heavy perfume, blew into her face. She could not help
+but think of fire--how it would race through here, and that recalled Joel
+Creech's horrible threat. Lucy shuddered and put away the memory. "I can't
+go--any farther--to-day," she said.
+
+Creech looked at her compassionately. Then Lucy became conscious that of late
+he had softened.
+
+"You'll have to come," he said. "There's no water on this side, short of thet
+canyon-bed. An' acrost there's water close under the wall."
+
+So they set out into the forest. And Lucy found that after all she could go
+on. The horses walked and on the soft, springy ground did not jar her. Deer
+and wild turkey abounded there and showed little alarm at sight of the
+travelers. And before long Lucy felt that she would become intoxicated by the
+dry odor. It was so strong, so thick, so penetrating. Yet, though she felt she
+would reel under its influence, it revived her.
+
+The afternoon passed; the sun set off through the pines, a black-streaked,
+golden flare; twilight shortly changed to night. The trees looked spectral in
+the gloom, and the forest appeared to grow thicker. Wolves murmured, and there
+were wild cries of cat and owl. Lucy fell asleep on her horse. At last,
+sometime late in the night, when Creech lifted her from the saddle and laid
+her down, she stretched out on the soft mat of pine needles and knew no more.
+
+She did not awaken until the afternoon of the next day. The site where Creech
+had made his final camp overlooked the wildest of all that wild upland
+country. The pines had scattered and trooped around a beautiful park of grass
+that ended abruptly upon bare rock. Yellow crags towered above the rim, and
+under them a yawning narrow gorge, overshadowed from above, blue in its
+depths, split the end of the great plateau and opened out sheer into the head
+of the canyon, which, according to Creech, stretched away through that
+wilderness of red stone and green clefts. When Lucy's fascinated gaze looked
+afar she was stunned at the vast, billowy, bare surfaces. Every green cleft
+was a short canyon running parallel with this central and longer one. The dips
+and breaks showed how all these canyons were connected. They led the gaze
+away, descending gradually to the dim purple of distance--the bare, rolling
+desert upland.
+
+Lucy did nothing but gaze. She was unable to walk or eat that day. Creech hung
+around her with a remorse he apparently felt, yet could not put into words.
+
+"Do you expect Joel to come up this big canyon?"
+
+"I reckon I do--some day," replied Creech. "An' I wish he'd hurry."
+
+"Does he know the way?"
+
+"Nope. But he's good at findin' places. An' I told him to stick to the main
+canyon. Would you believe you could ride offer this rim, straight down thar
+fer fifty miles, an' never git off your hoss?"
+
+"No, I wouldn't believe it possible."
+
+"Wal, it's so. I've done it. An' I didn't want to come up thet way because I'd
+had to leave tracks."
+
+"Do you think we're safe--from Cordts now?" she asked.
+
+"I reckon so. He's no tracker."
+
+"But suppose he does trail us?"
+
+"Wal, I reckon I've a shade the best of Cordts at gun-play, any day."
+
+Lucy regarded the man in surprise. "Oh, it's so--strange!" she said. "You'd
+fight for me. Yet you dragged me for days over these awful rocks! . . . Look
+at me, Creech. Do I look much like Lucy Bostil?"
+
+Creech hung his head. "Wal, I reckoned I wasn't a blackguard, but I AM."
+
+"You used to care for me when I was little. I remember how I used to take
+rides on your knee."
+
+"Lucy, I never thought of thet when I ketched you. You was only a means to an
+end. Bostil hated me. He ruined me. I give up to revenge. An' I could only git
+thet through you."
+
+"Creech, I'm not defending Dad. He's--he's no good where horses are concerned.
+I know he wronged you. Then why didn't you wait and meet him like a man
+instead of dragging me to this misery?"
+
+"Wal, I never thought of thet, either. I wished I had." He grew gloomier then
+and relapsed into silent watching.
+
+Lucy felt better next day, and offered to help Creech at the few camp duties.
+He would not let her. There was nothing to do but rest and wait, and the
+idleness appeared to be harder on Creech than on Lucy. He had always been
+exceedingly active. Lucy divined that every hour his remorse grew keener, and
+she did all she could think of to make it so. Creech made her a rude brush by
+gathering small roots and binding them tightly and cutting the ends square.
+And Lucy, after the manner of an Indian, got the tangles out of her hair. That
+day Creech seemed to want to hear Lucy's voice, and so they often fell into
+conversation. Once he said, thoughtfully:
+
+"I'm tryin' to remember somethin' I heerd at the Ford. I meant to ask you--"
+Suddenly he turned to her with animation. He who had been so gloomy and
+lusterless and dead showed a bright eagerness. "I heerd you beat the King on a
+red hoss--a wild hoss! . . . Thet must have been a joke--like one of Joel's."
+
+"No. It's true. An' Dad nearly had a fit!"
+
+"Wal!" Creech simply blazed with excitement. "I ain't wonderin' if he did. His
+own girl! Lucy, come to remember, you always said you'd beat thet gray racer.
+. . . Fer the Lord's sake tell me all about it."
+
+Lucy warmed to him because, broken as he was, he could be genuinely glad some
+horse but his own had won a race. Bostil could never have been like that. So
+Lucy told him about the race--and then she had to tell about Wildfire, and
+then about Slone. But at first all of Creech's interest centered round
+Wildfire and the race that had not really been run. He asked a hundred
+questions. He was as pleased as a boy listening to a good story. He praised
+Lucy again and again. He crowed over Bostil's discomfiture. And when Lucy told
+him that Slone had dared her father to race, had offered to bet Wildfire and
+his own life against her hand, then Creech was beside himself.
+
+"This hyar Slone--he CALLED Bostil's hand!"
+
+"He's a wild-horse hunter. And HE can trail us!"
+
+"Trail us! Slone? Say, Lucy, are you in love with him?"
+
+Lucy uttered a strange little broken sound, half laugh, half sob. "Love him!
+Ah!"
+
+"An' your Dad's ag'in him! Sure Bostil'll hate any rider with a fast hoss. Why
+didn't the darn fool sell his stallion to your father?"
+
+"He gave Wildfire to me."
+
+"I'd have done the same. Wal, now, when you git back home what's comin' of it
+all?"
+
+Lucy shook her head sorrowfully. "God only knows. Dad will never own Wildfire,
+and he'll never let me marry Slone. And when you take the King away from him
+to ransom me--then my life will be hell, for if Dad sacrifices Sage King,
+afterward he'll hate me as the cause of his loss."
+
+"I can sure see the sense of all that," replied Creech, soberly. And he
+pondered.
+
+Lucy saw through this man as if he had been an inch of crystal water. He was
+no villain, and just now in his simplicity, in his plodding thought of
+sympathy for her he was lovable.
+
+"It's one hell of a muss, if you'll excuse my talk," said Creech. "An' I don't
+like the looks of what I 'pear to be throwin' in your way. . . . But see hyar,
+Lucy, if Bostil didn't give up--or, say, he gits the King back, thet wouldn't
+make your chance with Slone any brighter."
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Thet race will have to be ran!"
+
+"What good will that do?" cried Lucy, with tears in her eyes. "I don't want to
+lose Dad. I--I--love him--mean as he is. And it'll kill me to lose Lin.
+Because Wildfire can beat Sage King, and that means Dad will be forever
+against him."
+
+"Couldn't this wild-horse feller LET the King win thet race?"
+
+"Oh, he could, but he wouldn't."
+
+"Can't you be sweet round him--fetch him over to thet?"
+
+"Oh, I could, but I won't."
+
+Creech might have been plotting the happiness of his own daughter, he was so
+deeply in earnest.
+
+"Wal, mebbe you don't love each other so much, after all. . . . Fast hosses
+mean much to a man in this hyar country. I know, fer I lost mine! . . . But
+they ain't all. . . . I reckon you young folks don't love so much, after all."
+
+"But--we--do!" cried Lucy, with a passionate sob. All this talk had unnerved
+her.
+
+"Then the only way is fer Slone to lie to Bostil."
+
+"Lie!" exclaimed Lucy.
+
+"Thet's it. Fetch about a race, somehow--one Bostil can't see--an' then lie
+an' say the King run Wildfire off his legs."
+
+Suddenly it occurred to Lucy that one significance of this idea of Creech's
+had not dawned upon him. "You forget that soon my father will no longer own
+Sage King or Sarchedon or Dusty Ben--or any racer. He loses them or me, I
+thought. That's what I am here for."
+
+Creech's aspect changed. The eagerness and sympathy fled from his face,
+leaving it once more hard and stern. He got up and stood a tall, dark, and
+gloomy man, brooding over his loss, as he watched the canyon. Still, there was
+in him then a struggle that Lucy felt. Presently he bent over and put his big
+hand on her head. It seemed gentle and tender compared with former contacts,
+and it made Lucy thrill. She could not see his face. What did he mean? She
+divined something startling, and sat there trembling in suspense.
+
+"Bostil won't lose his only girl--or his favorite hoss! . . . Lucy, I never
+had no girl. But it seems I'm rememberin' them rides you used to have on my
+knee when you was little!"
+
+Then he strode away toward the forest. Lucy watched him with a full heart, and
+as she thought of his overcoming the evil in him when her father had yielded
+to it, she suffered poignant shame. This Creech was not a bad man. He was
+going to let her go, and he was going to return Bostil's horses when they
+came. Lucy resolved with a passionate determination that her father must make
+ample restitution for the loss Creech had endured. She meant to tell Creech
+so.
+
+Upon his return, however, he seemed so strange and forbidding again that her
+heart failed her. Had he reconsidered his generous thought? Lucy almost
+believed so. These old horse-traders were incomprehensible in any relation
+concerning horses. Recalling Creech's intense interest in Wildfire and in the
+inevitable race to be run between him and Sage King, Lucy almost believed that
+Creech would sacrifice his vengeance just to see the red stallion beat the
+gray. If Creech kept the King in ransom for Lucy he would have to stay deeply
+hidden in the wild breaks of the canyon country or leave the uplands. For
+Bostil would never let that deed go unreckoned with. Like Bostil, old Creech
+was half horse and half human. The human side had warmed to remorse. He had
+regretted Lucy's plight; he wanted her to be safe at home again and to find
+happiness; he remembered what she had been to him when she was a little girl.
+Creech's other side was more complex.
+
+Before the evening meal ended Lucy divined that Creech was dark and troubled
+because he had resigned himself to a sacrifice harder than it had seemed in
+the first flush of noble feeling. But she doubted him no more. She was safe.
+The King would be returned. She would compel her father to pay Creech horse
+for horse. And perhaps the lesson to Bostil would be worth all the pain of
+effort and distress of mind that it had cost her.
+
+That night as she lay awake listening to the roar of the wind in the pines a
+strange premonition--like a mysterious voice---came to her with the assurance
+that Slone was on her trail.
+
+On the following day Creech appeared to have cast off the brooding mood.
+Still, he was not talkative. He applied himself to constant watching from the
+rim.
+
+Lucy began to feel rested. That long trip with Creech had made her thin and
+hard and strong. She spent the hours under the shade of a cedar on the rim
+that protected her from sun and wind. The wind, particularly, was hard to
+stand. It blew a gale out of the west, a dry, odorous, steady rush that roared
+through the pine-tops and flattened the long, white grass. This day Creech had
+to build up a barrier of rock round his camp-fire, to keep it from blowing
+away. And there was a constant danger of firing the grass.
+
+Once Lucy asked Creech what would happen in that case.
+
+"Wal, I reckon the grass would burn back even ag'in thet wind," replied
+Creech. "I'd hate to see fire in the woods now before the rains come. It's
+been the longest, dryest spell I ever lived through. But fer thet my hosses--
+This hyar's a west wind, an' it's blowin' harder every day. It'll fetch the
+rains."
+
+Next day about noon, when both wind and heat were high, Lucy was awakened from
+a doze. Creech was standing near her. When he turned his long gaze away from
+the canyon he was smiling. It was a smile at once triumphant and sad.
+
+"Joel's comin' with the hosses!"
+
+Lucy jumped up, trembling and agitated. "Oh! . . . Where? Where?"
+
+Creech pointed carefully with bent hand, like an Indian, and Lucy either could
+not get the direction or see far enough.
+
+"Right down along the base of thet red wall. A line of hosses. Jest like a few
+crawlin' ants' . . . An' now they're creepin' out of sight."
+
+"Oh, I can't see them!" cried Lucy. "Are you SURE?"
+
+"Positive an' sartin," he replied. "Joel's comin'. He'll be up hyar before
+long. I reckon we'd jest as well let him come. Fer there's water an' grass
+hyar. An' down below grass is scarce."
+
+It seemed an age to Lucy, waiting there, until she did see horses zigzagging
+the ridges below. They disappeared, and then it was another age before they
+reappeared close under the bulge of wall. She thrilled at sight of Sage King
+and Sarchedon. She got only a glimpse of them. They must pass round under her
+to climb a split in the wall, and up a long draw that reached level ground
+back in the forest. But they were near, and Lucy tried to wait. Creech showed
+eagerness at first, and then went on with his camp-fire duties. While in camp
+he always cooked a midday meal.
+
+Lucy saw the horses first. She screamed out. Creech jumped up in alarm.
+
+Joel Creech, mounted on Sage King, and leading Sarchedon, was coming at a
+gallop. The other horses were following.
+
+"What's his hurry?" demanded Lucy. "After climbing out of that canyon Joel
+ought not to push the horses."
+
+"He'll git it from me if there's no reason," growled Creech. "Them hosses is
+wet."
+
+"Look at Sarch! He's wild. He always hated Joel."
+
+"Wal, Lucy, I reckon I ain't likin' this hyar. Look at Joel!" muttered Creech,
+and he strode out to meet his son.
+
+Lucy ran out too, and beyond him. She saw only Sage King. He saw her,
+recognized her, and, whistled even while Joel was pulling him in. For once the
+King showed he was glad to see Lucy. He had been having rough treatment. But
+he was not winded--only hot and wet. She assured herself of that, then ran to
+quiet the plunging Sarch. He came down at once, and pushed his big nose almost
+into her face. She hugged his great, hot neck. He was quivering all over. Lucy
+heard the other horses pounding up; she recognized Two Face's high whinny,
+like a squeal; and in her delight she was about to run to them when Creech's
+harsh voice arrested her. And sight of Joel's face suddenly made her weak.
+
+"What'd you say?" demanded Creech.
+
+"I'd a good reason to run the hosses up-hill--thet's what!" snapped Joel. He
+was frothing at the mouth.
+
+"Out with it!"
+
+"Cordts an' Hutch!"
+
+"What?" roared Creech, grasping the pale Joel and shaking him.
+
+"Cordts an' Hutch rode in behind me down at thet cross canyon. They seen me.
+An' they're after me hard!"
+
+Creech gave close and keen scrutiny to the strange face of his son. Then he
+wheeled away.
+
+"Help me pack. An' you, too, Lucy. We've got to rustle out of hyar."
+
+Lucy fought a sick faintness that threatened to make her useless. But she
+tried to help, and presently action made her stronger.
+
+The Creeches made short work of that breaking of camp. But when it came to
+getting the horses there appeared danger of delay. Sarchedon had led Dusty Ben
+and Two Face off in the grass. When Joel went for them they galloped away
+toward the woods. Joel ran back.
+
+"Son, you're a smart hossman!" exclaimed Creech, in disgust.
+
+"Shall I git on the King an' ketch them?"
+
+"No. Hold the King." Creech went out after Plume, but the excited and wary
+horse eluded him. Then Creech gave up, caught his own mustangs, and hurried
+into camp.
+
+"Lucy, if Cordts gits after Sarch an' the others it'll be as well fer us," he
+said.
+
+Soon they were riding into the forest, Creech leading, Lucy in the center, and
+Joel coming behind on the King. Two unsaddled mustangs carrying the packs were
+driven in front. Creech limited the gait to the best that the pack-horses
+could do. They made fast time. The level forest floor, hard and springy,
+afforded the best kind of going.
+
+A cold dread had once more clutched Lucy's heart. What would be the end of
+this flight? The way Creech looked back increased her dread. How horrible it
+would be if Cordts accomplished what he had always threatened--to run off with
+both her and the King! Lucy lost her confidence in Creech. She did not glance
+again at Joel. Once had been enough. She rode on with heavy heart. Anxiety and
+dread and conjecture and a gradual sinking of spirit weighed her down. Yet she
+never had a clearer perception of outside things. The forest loomed thicker
+and darker. The sky was seen only through a green, crisscross of foliage
+waving in the roaring gale. This strong wind was like a blast in Lucy's face,
+and its keen dryness cracked her lips.
+
+When they rode out of the forest, down a gentle slope of wind-swept grass, to
+an opening into a canyon Lucy was surprised to recognize the place. How
+quickly the ride through the forest had been made!
+
+Creech dismounted. "Git off, Lucy. You, Joel, hurry an' hand me the little
+pack. . . . Now I'll take Lucy an' the King down in hyar. You go thet way with
+the hosses an' make as if you was hidin' your trail, but don't. Do you savvy?"
+
+Joel shook his head. He looked sullen, somber, strange. His father repeated
+what he had said.
+
+"You're wantin' Cordts to split on the trail?" asked Joel.
+
+"Sure. He'll ketch up with you sometime. But you needn't be afeared if he
+does."
+
+"I ain't a-goin' to do thet."
+
+"Why not?" Creech demanded, slowly, with a rising voice.
+
+"I'm a-goin' with you. What d'ye mean, Dad, by this move? You'll be headin'
+back fer the Ford. An' we'd git safer if we go the other way."
+
+Creech evidently controlled his temper by an effort. "I'm takin' Lucy an' the
+King back to Bostil."
+
+Joel echoed those words, slowly divining them. "Takin' them BOTH! The girl.
+. . . An' givin' up the King!"
+
+"Yes, both of them. I've changed my mind, Joel. Now--you--"
+
+But Creech never finished what he meant to say. Joel Creech was suddenly
+seized by a horrible madness. It was then, perhaps, that the final thread
+which linked his mind to rationality stretched and snapped. His face turned
+green. His strange eyes protruded. His jaw worked. He frothed at the mouth. He
+leaped, apparently to get near his father, but he missed his direction. Then,
+as if sight had come back, he wheeled and made strange gestures, all the while
+cursing incoherently. The father's shocked face began to show disgust. Then
+part of Joel's ranting became intelligible.
+
+"Shut up!" suddenly roared Creech.
+
+"No, I won't!" shrieked Joel, wagging his head in spent passion. "An' you
+ain't a-goin' to take thet girl home. . . . I'll take her with me. . . . An'
+you take the hosses home!"
+
+"You're crazy!" hoarsely shouted Creech, his face going black. "They allus
+said so. But I never believed thet."
+
+"An' if I'm crazy, thet girl made me. . . . You know what I'm a-goin' to do?
+. . . I'll strip her naked--an' I'll--"
+
+Lucy saw old Creech lunge and strike. She heard the sodden blow. Joel went
+down. But he scrambled up with his eyes and mouth resembling those of a mad
+hound Lucy once had seen. The fact that he reached twice for his gun and could
+not find it proved the breaking connection of nerve and sense. Creech jumped
+and grappled with Joel. There was a wrestling, strained struggle. Creech's
+hair stood up and his face had a kind of sick fury, and he continued to curse
+and command. They fought for the possession of the gun. But Joel seemed to
+have superhuman strength. His hold on the gun could not be broken. Moreover,
+he kept straining to point the gun at his father. Lucy screamed. Creech yelled
+hoarsely. But the boy was beyond reason or help, and he was beyond over
+powering! Lucy saw him bend his arm in spite of the desperate hold upon it and
+fire the gun. Creech's hoarse entreaties ceased as his hold on Joel broke. He
+staggered. His arms went up with a tragic, terrible gesture. He fell. Joel
+stood over him, shaking and livid, but he showed only the vaguest realization
+of the deed. His actions were instinctive. He was the animal that had clawed
+himself free. Further proof of his aberration stood out in the action of
+sheathing his gun; he made the motion to do so, but he only dropped it in the
+grass.
+
+Sight of that dropped gun broke Lucy's spell of horror, which had kept her
+silent but for one scream. Suddenly her blood leaped like fire in her veins.
+She measured the distance to Sage King. Joel was turning. Then Lucy darted at
+the King, reached him, and, leaping, was half up on him when he snorted and
+jumped, not breaking her hold, but keeping her from getting up. Then iron
+hands clutched her and threw her, like an empty sack, to the grass.
+
+Joel Creech did not say a word. His distorted face had the deriding scorn of a
+superior being. Lucy lay flat on her back, watching him. Her mind worked
+swiftly. She would have to fight for her body and her life. Her terror had
+fled with her horror. She was not now afraid of this demented boy. She meant
+to fight, calculating like a cunning Indian, wild as a trapped wildcat.
+
+Lucy lay perfectly still, for she knew she had been thrown near the spot where
+the gun lay. If she got her hands on that gun she would kill Joel. It would be
+the action of an instant. She watched Joel while he watched her. And she saw
+that he had his foot on the rope round Sage King's neck. The King never liked
+a rope. He was nervous. He tossed his head to get rid of it. Creech, watching
+Lucy all the while, reached for the rope, pulled the King closer and closer,
+and untied the knot. The King stood then, bridle down and quiet. Instead of a
+saddle he wore a blanket strapped round him.
+
+It seemed that Lucy located the gun without turning her eyes away from Joel's.
+She gathered all her force--rolled over swiftly--again--got her hands on the
+gun just as Creech leaped like a panther upon her. His weight crushed her
+flat--his strength made her hand-hold like that of a child. He threw the gun
+aside. Lucy lay face down, unable to move her body while he stood over her.
+Then he struck her, not a stunning blow, but just the hard rap a cruel rider
+gives to a horse that wants its own way. Under that blow Lucy's spirit rose to
+a height of terrible passion. Still she did not lose her cunning; the blow
+increased it. That blow showed Joel to be crazy. She might outwit a crazy man,
+where a man merely wicked might master her.
+
+Creech tried to turn her. Lucy resisted. And she was strong. Resistance
+infuriated Creech. He cuffed her sharply. This action only made him worse.
+Then with hands like steel claws he tore away her blouse.
+
+The shock of his hands on her bare flesh momentarily weakened Lucy, and Creech
+dragged at her until she lay seemingly helpless before him.
+
+And Lucy saw that at the sight of her like this something had come between
+Joel Creech's mad motives and their execution. Once he had loved her--desired
+her. He looked vague. He stroked her shoulder. His strange eyes softened, then
+blazed with a different light. Lucy divined that she was lost unless she could
+recall his insane fury. She must begin that terrible fight in which now the
+best she could hope for was to make him kill her quickly.
+
+Swift and vicious as a cat she fastened her teeth in his arm. She bit deep and
+held on. Creech howled like a dog. He beat her. He jerked and wrestled. Then
+he lifted her, and the swing of her body tore the flesh loose from his arm and
+broke her hold. Lucy half rose, crawled, plunged for the gun. She got it, too,
+only to have Creech kick it out of her hand. The pain of that brutal kick was
+severe, but when he cut her across the bare back with the rope she shrieked
+out. Supple and quick, she leaped up and ran. In vain! With a few bounds he
+had her again, tripped her up. Lucy fell over the dead body of the father. Yet
+even that did not shake her desperate nerve. All the ferocity of a desert-bred
+savage culminated in her, fighting for death.
+
+Creech leaned down, swinging the coiled rope. He meant to do more than lash
+her with it. Lucy's hands flashed up, closed tight in his long hair. Then with
+a bellow he jerked up and lifted her sheer off the ground. There was an
+instant in which Lucy felt herself swung and torn; she saw everything as a
+whirling blur; she felt an agony in her wrists at which Creech was clawing.
+When he broke her hold there were handfuls of hair in Lucy's fists.
+
+She fell again and had not the strength to rise. But Creech was raging, and
+little of his broken speech was intelligible. He knelt with a sharp knee
+pressing her down. He cut the rope. Nimbly, like a rider in moments of needful
+swiftness, he noosed one end of the rope round her ankle, then the end of the
+other piece round her wrist. He might have been tying up an unbroken mustang.
+Rising, he retained hold on both ropes. He moved back, sliding them through
+his hands. Then with a quick move he caught up Sage King's bridle.
+
+Creech paused a moment, darkly triumphant. A hideous success showed in his
+strange eyes. A long-cherished mad vengeance had reached its fruition. Then he
+led the horse near to Lucy.
+
+Warily he reached down. He did not know Lucy's strength was spent. He feared
+she might yet escape. With hard, quick grasp he caught her, lifted her, threw
+her over the King's back. He forced her down.
+
+Lucy's resistance was her only salvation, because it kept him on the track of
+his old threat. She resisted all she could. He pulled her arms down round the
+King's neck and tied them close. Then he pulled hard on the rope on her ankle
+and tied that to her other ankle.
+
+Lucy realized that she was bound fast. Creech had made good most of his
+threat. And now in her mind the hope of the death she had sought changed to
+the hope of life that was possible. Whatever power she had ever had over the
+King was in her voice. If only Creech would slip the bridle or cut the
+reins--if only Sage King could be free to run!
+
+Lucy could turn her face far enough to see Creech. Like a fiend he was
+reveling in his work. Suddenly he picked up the gun.
+
+"Look a-hyar!" he called, hoarsely.
+
+With eyes on her, grinning horribly, he walked a few paces to where the long
+grass had not been trampled or pressed down. The wind, whipping up out of the
+canyon, was still blowing hard. Creech put the gun down in the grass and
+fired.
+
+Sage King plunged. But he was not gun-shy. He steadied down with a pounding of
+heavy hoofs. Then Lucy could see again. A thin streak of yellow smoke rose--a
+little snaky flame--a slight crackling hiss! Then as the wind caught the blaze
+there came a rushing, low roar. Fire, like magic, raced and spread before the
+wind toward the forest.
+
+Lucy had forgotten that Creech had meant to drive her into fire. The sudden
+horror of it almost caused collapse. Commotion within--cold and quake and
+nausea and agony--deadened her hearing and darkened her sight. But Creech's
+hard hands quickened her. She could see him then, though not clearly. His face
+seemed inhuman, misshapen, gray. His hands pulled at her arms--a last
+precaution to see that she was tightly bound. Then with the deft fingers of a
+rider he slipped Sage King's bridle.
+
+Lucy could not trust her sight. What made the King stand so still? His ears
+went up--stiff--pointed!
+
+Creech stepped back and laid a violent hand on Lucy's garments. She
+bent--twisted her neck to watch him. But her sight grew no clearer. Still she
+saw he meant to strip her naked. He braced himself for a strong, ripping pull.
+His yellow teeth showed deep in his lip. His contrasting eyes were alight with
+insane joy.
+
+But he never pulled. Something attracted his attention. He looked. He saw
+something. The beast in him became human--the madness changed to
+rationality--the devil to a craven! His ashen lips uttered a low, terrible
+cry.
+
+Lucy felt the King trembling in every muscle. She knew that was flight. She
+expected his loud snort, and was prepared for it when it rang out. In a second
+he would bolt. She knew that. She thrilled. She tried to call to him, but her
+lips were weak. Creech seemed paralyzed. The King shifted his position, and
+Lucy's last glimpse of Creech was one she would never forget. It was as if
+Creech faced burning hell!
+
+Then the King whistled and reared. Lucy heard swift, dull, throbbing beats.
+Beats of a fast horse's hoofs on the run! She felt a surging thrill of joy.
+She could not think. All of her blood and bone and muscle seemed to throb.
+Suddenly the air split to a high-pitched, wild, whistling blast. It pierced to
+Lucy's mind. She knew that whistle.
+
+"Wildfire!" she screamed, with bursting heart.
+
+The King gave a mighty convulsive bound of terror. He, too, knew that whistle.
+And in that one great bound he launched out into a run. Straight across the
+line of burning grass! Lucy felt the sting of flame. Smoke blinded and choked
+her. Then clear, dry, keen wind sung in her ears and whipped her hair. The
+light about her darkened. The King had headed into the pines. The heavy roar
+of the gale overhead struck Lucy with new and torturing dread. Sage King once
+in his life was running away, bridleless, and behind him there was fire on the
+wings of the wind.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+For the first time in his experience Bostil found that horse-trading palled
+upon him. This trip to Durango was a failure. Something was wrong. There was a
+voice constantly calling into his inner ear--a voice to which he refused to
+listen. And during the five days of the return trip the strange mood grew upon
+him.
+
+The last day he and his riders covered over fifty miles and reached the Ford
+late at night. No one expected them, and only the men on duty at the corrals
+knew of the return. Bostil, much relieved to get home, went to bed and at once
+fell asleep.
+
+He awakened at a late hour for him. When he dressed and went out to the
+kitchen he found that his sister had learned of his return and had breakfast
+waiting.
+
+"Where's the girl?" asked Bostil.
+
+"Not up yet," replied Aunt Jane.
+
+"What!"
+
+"Lucy and I had a tiff last night and she went to her room in a temper."
+
+"Nothin' new about thet."
+
+"Holley and I have had our troubles holding her in. Don't you forget that."
+
+Bostil laughed. "Wal, call her an' tell her I'm home."
+
+Aunt Jane did as she was bidden. Bostil finished his breakfast. But Lucy did
+not come.
+
+Bostil began to feel something strange, and, going to Lucy's door, he knocked.
+There was no reply. Bostil pushed open the door. Lucy was not in evidence, and
+her room was not as tidy as usual. He saw her white dress thrown upon the bed
+she had not slept in. Bostil gazed around with a queer contraction of the
+heart. That sense of something amiss grew stronger. Then he saw a chair before
+the open window. That window was rather high, and Lucy had placed a chair
+before it so that she could look out or get out. Bostil stretched his neck,
+looked out, and in the red earth beneath the window he saw fresh tracks of
+Lucy's boots. Then he roared for Jane.
+
+She came running, and between Bostil's furious questions and her own excited
+answers there was nothing arrived at. But presently she spied the white dress,
+and then she ran to Lucy's closet. From there she turned a white face to
+Bostil.
+
+"She put on her riding-clothes!" gasped Aunt Jane.
+
+"Supposin' she did! Where is she?" demanded Bostil.
+
+"SHE'S RUN OFF WITH SLONE!"
+
+Bostil could not have been shocked or hurt any more acutely by a knife-thrust.
+He glared at his sister.
+
+"A-huh! So thet's the way you watch her!"
+
+"Watch her? It wasn't possible. She's--well, she's as smart as you are. . . .
+Oh, I knew she'd do it! She was wild in love with him!"
+
+Bostil strode out of the room and the house. He went through the grove and
+directly up the path to Slone's cabin. It was empty, just as Bostil expected
+to find it.
+
+The bars of the corral were down. Both Slone's horses were gone. Presently
+Bostil saw the black horse Nagger down in Brackton's pasture.
+
+There were riders in front of Brackton's. All spoke at once to Bostil, and he
+only yelled for Brackton. The old man came hurriedly out, alarmed.
+
+"Where's this Slone?" demanded Bostil.
+
+"Slone!" ejaculated Brackton. "I'm blessed if I know. Ain't he home?"
+
+"No. An' he's left his black hoss in your field."
+
+"Wal, by golly, thet's news to me. . . . Bostil, there's been strange doin's
+lately." Brackton seemed at a loss for words. "Mebbe Slone got out because of
+somethin' thet come off last night. . . . Now, Joel Creech an'--an'--"
+
+Bostil waited to hear no more. What did he care about the idiot Creech? He
+strode down the lane to the corrals. Farlane, Van, and other riders were
+there, leisurely as usual. Then Holley appeared, coming out of the barn. He,
+too, was easy, cool, natural, lazy. None of these riders knew what was amiss.
+But instantly a change passed over them. It came because Bostil pulled a gun.
+"Holley, I've a mind to bore you!"
+
+The old hawk-eyed rider did not flinch or turn a shade off color. "What fer?"
+he queried. But his customary drawl was wanting.
+
+"I left you to watch Lucy. . . . An' she's gone!"
+
+Holley showed genuine surprise and distress. The other riders echoed Bostil's
+last word. Bostil lowered the gun.
+
+"I reckon what saves you is you're the only tracker thet'd have a show to find
+this cussed Slone."
+
+Holley now showed no sign of surprise, but the other riders were astounded.
+
+"Lucy's run off with Slone," added Bostil.
+
+"Wal, if she's gone, an' if he's gone, it's a cinch," replied Holley, throwing
+up his hands. "Boss, she double-crossed me same as you! . . . She promised
+faithful to stay in the house."
+
+"Promises nothin'!" roared Bostil. "She's in love with this wild-hoss
+wrangler! She met him last night!"
+
+"I couldn't help thet," retorted Holley. "An' I trusted the girl."
+
+Bostil tossed his hands. He struggled with his rage. He had no fear that Lucy
+would not soon be found. But the opposition to his will made him furious.
+
+Van left the group of riders and came close to Bostil. "It ain't an hour back
+thet I seen Slone ride off alone on his red hoss."
+
+"What of thet?" demanded Bostil. "Sure she was waitin' somewheres. They'd have
+too much sense to go together. . . . Saddle up, you boys, an' we'll--"
+
+"Say, Bostil, I happen to know Slone didn't see Lucy last night," interrupted
+Holley.
+
+"A-huh! Wal, you'd better talk out."
+
+"I trusted Lucy," said Holley. "But all the same, knowin' she was in love, I
+jest wanted to see if any girl in love could keep her word. . . . So about
+dark I went down the grove an' watched fer Slone. Pretty soon I seen him. He
+sneaked along the upper end an' I follered. He went to thet bench up by the
+biggest cottonwood. An' he waited a long time. But Lucy didn't come. He must
+have waited till midnight. Then he left. I watched him go back--seen him go up
+to his cabin."
+
+"Wal, if she didn't meet him, where was she? She wasn't in her room."
+
+Bostil gazed at Holley and the other riders, then back to Holley. What was the
+matter with this old rider? Bostil had never seen Holley seem so strange. The
+whole affair began to loom strangely, darkly. Some portent quickened Bostil's
+lumbering pulse. It seemed that Holley's mind must have found an obstacle to
+thought. Suddenly the old rider's face changed--the bronze was blotted out--a
+grayness came, and then a dead white.
+
+"Bostil, mebbe you 'ain't been told yet thet--thet Creech rode in yesterday. .
+. . He lost all his racers! He had to shoot both Peg an' Roan!"
+
+Bostil's thought suffered a sudden, blank halt. Then, with realization, came
+the shock for which he had long been prepared.
+
+"A-huh! Is thet so? . . . Wal, an' what did he say?"
+
+Holley laughed a grim, significant laugh that curdled Bostil's blood. "Creech
+said a lot! But let thet go now. . . . Come with me."
+
+Holley started with rapid strides down the lane. Bostil followed. And he heard
+the riders coming behind. A dark and gloomy thought settled upon Bostil. He
+could not check that, but he held back impatience and passion.
+
+Holley went straight to Lucy's window. He got down on his knees to scrutinize
+the tracks.
+
+"Made more 'n twelve hours ago," he said, swiftly. "She had on her boots, but
+no spurs. . . . Now let's see where she went."
+
+Holley began to trail Lucy's progress through the grove, silently pointing now
+and then to a track. He went swifter, till Bostil had to hurry. The other men
+came whispering after them.
+
+Holley was as keen as a hound on scent.
+
+"She stopped there," he said, "mebbe to listen. Looks like she wanted to cross
+the lane, but she didn't: here she got to goin' faster."
+
+Holley reached an intersecting path and suddenly halted stock-still, pointing
+at a big track in the dust.
+
+"My God! . . . Bostil, look at thet!"
+
+One riving pang tore through Bostil--and then he was suddenly his old self,
+facing the truth of danger to one he loved. He saw beside the big track a
+faint imprint of Lucy's small foot. That was the last sign of her progress and
+it told a story.
+
+"Bostil, thet ain't Slone's track," said Holley, ringingly.
+
+"Sure it ain't. Thet's the track of a big man," replied Bostil.
+
+The other riders, circling round with bent heads, all said one way or another
+that Slone could not have made the trail.
+
+"An' whoever he was grabbed Lucy up--made off with her?" asked Bostil.
+
+"Plain as if we seen it done!" exclaimed Holley. There was fire in the clear,
+hawk eyes.
+
+"Cordts!" cried Bostil, hoarsely.
+
+"Mebbe--mebbe. But thet ain't my idee. . . . Come on."
+
+Holley went so fast he almost ran, and he got ahead of Bostil. Finally several
+hundred yards out in the sage he halted, and again dropped to his knees.
+Bostil and the riders hurried on.
+
+"Keep back; don't stamp round so close," ordered Holley. Then like a man
+searching for lost gold in sand and grass he searched the ground. To Bostil it
+seemed a long time before he got through. When he arose there was a dark and
+deadly certainty in his face, by which Bostil knew the worst had befallen
+Lucy.
+
+"Four mustangs an' two men last night," said Holley, rapidly. "Here's where
+Lucy was set down on her feet. Here's where she mounted. . . . An' here's the
+tracks of a third man--tracks made this mornin'."
+
+Bostil straightened up and faced Holley as if ready to take a death-blow. "I'm
+reckonin' them last is Slone's tracks."
+
+"Yes, I know them," replied Holley.
+
+"An'--them--other tracks? Who made them?"
+
+"CREECH AN' HIS SON!"
+
+Bostil felt swept away by a dark, whirling flame. And when it passed he lay in
+his barn, in the shade of the loft, prostrate on the fragrant hay. His
+strength with his passion was spent. A dull ache remained. The fight was gone
+from him. His spirit was broken. And he looked down into that dark abyss which
+was his own soul.
+
+By and by the riders came for him, got him up, and led him out. He shook them
+off and stood breathing slowly. The air felt refreshing; it cooled his hot,
+tired brain. It did not surprise him to see Joel Creech there, cringing behind
+Holley.
+
+Bostil lifted a hand for some one to speak. And Holley came a step forward.
+His face was haggard, but its white tenseness was gone. He seemed as if he
+were reluctant to speak, to inflict more pain.
+
+"Bostil," he began, huskily, "you're to send the King--an' Sarch--an' Ben an'
+Two Face an' Plume to ransom Lucy! . . . If you won't--then Creech'll sell her
+to Cordts!"
+
+What a strange look came into the faces of the riders! Did, they think he
+cared more for horseflesh than for his own flesh and blood?
+
+"Send the King--an' all he wants. . . . An' send word fer Creech to come back
+to the Ford. . . . Tell him I said--my sin found me out!"
+
+Bostil watched Joel Creech ride the King out upon the slope, driving the
+others ahead. Sage King wanted to run. Sarchedon was wild and unruly. They
+passed out of sight. Then Bostil turned to his silent riders.
+
+"Boys, seein' the King go thet way wasn't nothin'. . . . But what crucifies me
+is--WILL THET FETCH HER BACK?"
+
+"God only knows!" replied Holley. "Mebbe not--I reckon not! . . . But, Bostil,
+you forget Slone is out there on Lucy's trail. Out there ahead of Joel! Slone
+he's a wild-hoss hunter--the keenest I ever seen. Do you think Creech can
+shake him on a trail? He'll kill Creech, an' he'll lay fer Joel goin'
+back--an' he'll kill him. . . . An' I'll bet my all he'll ride in here with
+Lucy an' the King!"
+
+"Holley, you ain't figurin' on thet red hoss of Slone's ridin' down the King?"
+
+Holley laughed as if Bostil's query was the strangest thing of all that
+poignant day. "Naw. Slone'll lay fer Joel an' rope him like he roped Dick
+Sears."
+
+"Holley, I reckon you see--clearer 'n me," said Bostil, plaintively. "'Pears
+as if I never had a hard knock before. Fer my nerve's broke. I can't hope. . .
+. Lucy's gone! . . . Ain't there anythin' to do but wait?"
+
+"Thet's all. Jest wait. If we went out on Joel's trail we'd queer the chance
+of Creech's bein' honest. An' we'd queer Slone's game. I'd hate to have him
+trailin' me."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+On the day that old Creech repudiated his son, Slone with immeasurable relief
+left Brackton's without even a word to the rejoicing Holley, and plodded up
+the path to his cabin.
+
+After the first flush of elation had passed he found a peculiar mood settling
+down upon him. It was as if all was not so well as he had impulsively
+conceived. He began to ponder over this strange depression, to think back.
+What had happened to dash the cup from his lips? Did he regret being freed
+from guilt in the simple minds of the villagers--regret it because suspicion
+would fall upon Lucy's father? No; he was sorry for the girl, but not for
+Bostil. It was not this new aspect of the situation at the Ford that oppressed
+him.
+
+He trailed his vague feelings back to a subtle shock he had sustained in a
+last look at Creech's dark, somber face. It had been the face of a Nemesis.
+All about Creech breathed silent, revengeful force. Slone worked out in his
+plodding thought why that fact should oppress him; and it was because in
+striking Bostil old Creech must strike through Bostil's horses and his
+daughter.
+
+Slone divined it--divined it by the subtle, intuitive power of his love for
+Lucy. He did not reconsider what had been his supposition before Creech's
+return--that Creech would kill Bostil. Death would be no revenge. Creech had
+it in him to steal the King and starve him or to do the same and worse with
+Lucy. So Slone imagined, remembering Creech's face.
+
+Before twilight set in Slone saw the Creeches riding out of the lane into the
+sage, evidently leaving the Ford. This occasioned Slone great relief, but only
+for a moment. What the Creeches appeared to be doing might not be significant.
+And he knew if they had stayed in the village that he would have watched them
+as closely as if he thought they were trying to steal Wildfire.
+
+He got his evening meal, cared for his horses, and just as darkness came on he
+slipped down into the grove for his rendezvous with Lucy. Always this made his
+heart beat and his nerves thrill, but to-night he was excited. The grove
+seemed full of moving shadows, all of which he fancied were Lucy. Reaching the
+big cottonwood, he tried to compose himself on the bench to wait. But
+composure seemed unattainable. The night was still, only the crickets and the
+soft rustle of leaves breaking a dead silence. Slone had the ears of a wild
+horse in that he imagined sounds he did not really hear. Many a lonely night
+while he lay watching and waiting in the dark, ambushing a water-hole where
+wild horses drank, he had heard soft treads that were only the substance of
+dreams. That was why, on this night when he was overstrained, he fancied he
+saw Lucy coming, a silent, moving shadow, when in reality she did not come.
+That was why he thought he heard very stealthy steps.
+
+He waited. Lucy did not come. She had never failed before and he knew she
+would come. Waiting became hard. He wanted to go back toward the house--to
+intercept her on the way. Still he kept to his post, watchful, listening, his
+heart full. And he tried to reason away his strange dread, his sense of a need
+of hurry. For a time he succeeded by dreaming of Lucy's sweetness, of her
+courage, of what a wonderful girl she was. Hours and hours he had passed in
+such dreams. One dream in particular always fascinated him, and it was one in
+which he saw the girl riding Wildfire, winning a great race for her life.
+Another, just as fascinating, but so haunting that he always dispelled it, was
+a dream where Lucy, alone and in peril, fought with Cordts or Joel Creech for
+more than her life. These vague dreams were Slone's acceptance of the blood
+and spirit in Lucy. She was Bostil's daughter. She had no sense of fear. She
+would fight. And though Slone always thrilled with pride, he also trembled
+with dread.
+
+At length even wilder dreams of Lucy's rare moments, when she let herself go,
+like a desert whirlwind, to envelop him in all her sweetness, could not avail
+to keep Slone patient. He began to pace to and fro under the big tree. He
+waited and waited. What could have detained her? Slone inwardly laughed at the
+idea that either Holley or Aunt Jane could keep his girl indoors when she
+wanted to come out to meet him. Yet Lucy had always said something might
+prevent. There was no reason for Slone to be concerned. He was mistaking his
+thrills and excitement and love and disappointment for something in which
+there was no reality. Yet he could not help it. The longer he waited the more
+shadows glided beneath the cottonwoods, the more faint, nameless sounds he
+heard.
+
+He waited long after he became convinced she would not come. Upon his return
+through the grove he reached a point where the unreal and imaginative
+perceptions were suddenly and stunningly broken. He did hear a step. He kept
+on, as before, and in the deep shadow he turned. He saw a man just faintly
+outlined. One of the riders had been watching him--had followed him! Slone had
+always expected this. So had Lucy. And now it had happened. But Lucy had been
+too clever. She had not come. She had found out or suspected the spy and she
+had outwitted him. Slone had reason to be prouder of Lucy, and he went back to
+his cabin free from further anxiety.
+
+Before he went to sleep, however, he heard the clatter of a number of horses
+in the lane. He could tell they were tired horses. Riders returning, he
+thought, and instantly corrected that, for riders seldom came in at night. And
+then it occurred to him that it might be Bostil's return. But then it might be
+the Creeches. Slone had an uneasy return of puzzling thoughts. These, however,
+did not hinder drowsiness, and, deciding that the first thing in the morning
+he would trail the Creeches, just to see where they had gone, he fell asleep.
+
+In the morning the bright, broad day, with its dispelling reality, made Slone
+regard himself differently. Things that oppressed him in the dark of night
+vanished in the light of the sun. Still, he was curious about the Creeches,
+and after he had done his morning's work he strolled out to take up their
+trail. It was not hard to follow in the lane, for no other horses had gone in
+that direction since the Creeches had left.
+
+Once up on the wide, windy slope the reach and color and fragrance seemed to
+call to Slone irresistibly, and he fell to trailing these tracks just for the
+love of a skill long unused. Half a mile out the road turned toward Durango.
+But the Creeches did not continue on that road. They entered the sage.
+Instantly Slone became curious.
+
+He followed the tracks to a pile of rocks where the Creeches had made a
+greasewood fire and had cooked a meal. This was strange--within a mile of the
+Ford, where Brackton and others would have housed them. What was stranger was
+the fact that the trail started south from there and swung round toward the
+village.
+
+Slone's heart began to thump. But he forced himself to think only of these
+tracks and not any significance they might have. He trailed the men down to a
+bench on the slope, a few hundred yards from Bostil's grove, and here a
+trampled space marked where a halt had been made and a wait.
+
+And here Slone could no longer restrain conjecture and dread. He searched and
+searched. He got on his knees. He crawled through the sage all around the
+trampled space. Suddenly his heart seemed to receive a stab. He had found
+prints of Lucy's boots in the soft earth! And he leaped up, wild and fierce,
+needing to know no more.
+
+He ran back to his cabin. He never thought of Bostil, of Holley, of anything
+except the story revealed in those little boot-tracks. He packed a saddle-bag
+with meat and biscuits, filled a canvas water-bottle, and, taking them and his
+rifle, he hurried out to the corral. First he took Nagger down to Brackton's
+pasture and let him in. Then returning, he went at the fiery stallion as he
+had not gone in many a day, roped him, saddled him, mounted him, and rode off
+with a hard, grim certainty that in Wildfire was Lucy's salvation.
+
+Four hours later Slone halted on the crest of a ridge, in the cover of sparse
+cedars, and surveyed a vast, gray, barren basin yawning and reaching out to a
+rugged, broken plateau.
+
+He expected to find Joel Creech returning on the back-trail, and he had taken
+the precaution to ride on one side of the tracks he was following. He did not
+want Joel to cross his trail. Slone had long ago solved the meaning of the
+Creeches' flight. They would use Lucy to ransom Bostil's horses, and more than
+likely they would not let her go back. That they had her was enough for Slone.
+He was grim and implacable.
+
+The eyes of the wild-horse hunter had not searched that basin long before they
+picked out a dot which was not a rock or a cedar, but a horse. Slone watched
+it grow, and, hidden himself, he held his post until he knew the rider was
+Joel Creech. Slone drew his own horse back and tied him to a sage-bush amidst
+some scant grass. Then he returned to watch. It appeared Creech was climbing
+the ridge below Slone, and some distance away. It was a desperate chance Joel
+ran then, for Slone had set out to kill him. It was certain that if Joel had
+happened to ride near instead of far, Slone could not have helped but kill
+him. As it was, he desisted because he realized that Joel would acquaint
+Bostil with the abducting of Lucy, and it might be that this would be well.
+
+Slone was shaking when young Creech passed up and out of sight over the
+ridge--shaking with the deadly grip of passion such as he had never known. He
+waited, slowly gaining control, and at length went back for Wildfire.
+
+Then he rode boldly forth on the trail. He calculated that old Creech would
+take Lucy to some wild retreat in the canyons and there wait for Joel and the
+horses. Creech had almost certainly gone on and would be unaware of a pursuer
+so closely on his trail. Slone took the direction of the trail, and he saw a
+low, dark notch in the rocky wall in the distance. After that he paid no more
+attention to choosing good ground for Wildfire than he did to the trail. The
+stallion was more tractable than Slone had ever found him. He loved the open.
+He smelled the sage and the wild. He settled down into his long, easy,
+swinging lope which seemed to eat up the miles. Slone was obsessed with
+thoughts centering round Lucy, and time and distance were scarcely
+significant.
+
+The sun had dipped full red in a golden west when Slone reached the wall of
+rocks and the cleft where Creech's tracks and Lucy's, too, marked the camp.
+Slone did not even dismount. Riding on into the cleft, he wound at length into
+a canyon and out of that into a larger one, where he found that Lucy had
+remembered to leave a trail, and down this to a break in a high wall, and
+through it to another winding, canyon. The sun set, but Slone kept on as long
+as he could see the trail, and after that, until an intersecting canyon made
+it wise for him to halt.
+
+There were rich grass and sweet water for his horse. He himself was not
+hungry, but he ate; he was not sleepy, but he slept. And daylight found him
+urging Wildfire in pursuit. On the rocky places Slone found the cedar berries
+Lucy had dropped. He welcomed sight of them, but he did not need them. This
+man Creech could never hide a trail from him, Slone thought grimly, and it
+suited him to follow that trail at a rapid trot. If he lost the tracks for a
+distance he went right on, and he knew where to look for them ahead. There was
+a vast difference between the cunning of Creech and the cunning of a wild
+horse. And there was an equal difference between the going and staying powers
+of Creech's mustangs and Wildfire. Yes, Slone divined that Lucy's salvation
+would be Wildfire, her horse. The trail grew rougher, steeper, harder, but the
+stallion kept his eagerness and his pace. On many an open length of canyon or
+height of wild upland Slone gazed ahead hoping to see Creech's mustangs. He
+hoped for that even when he knew he was still too far behind. And then,
+suddenly, in the open, sandy flat of an intersecting canyon he came abruptly
+on a fresh trail of three horses, one of them shod.
+
+The surprise stunned him. For a moment he gazed stupidly at these strange
+tracks. Who had made them? Had Creech met allies? Was that likely when the man
+had no friends? Pondering the thing, Slone went slowly on, realizing that a
+new and disturbing feature confronted him. Then when these new tracks met the
+trail that Creech had left Slone found that these strangers were as interested
+in Creech's tracks as he was. Slone found their boot-marks in the sand--the
+hand-prints where some one had knelt to scrutinize Creech's trail.
+
+Slone led his horse and walked on, more and more disturbed in mind. When he
+came to a larger, bare, flat canyon bottom, where the rock had been washed
+clear of sand, he found no more cedar berries. They had been picked up. At the
+other extreme edge of this stony ground he found crumpled bits of cedar and
+cedar berries scattered in one spot, as if thrown there by some one who read
+their meaning.
+
+This discovery unnerved Slone. It meant so much. And if Slone had any hope or
+reason to doubt that these strangers had taken up the trail for good, the next
+few miles dispelled it. They were trailing Creech.
+
+Suddenly Slone gave a wild start, which made Wildfire plunge.
+
+"CORDTS!" whispered Slone and the cold sweat oozed out of every pore.
+
+These canyons were the hiding-places of the horse-thief. He and two of his men
+had chanced upon Creech's trail; and perhaps their guess at its meaning was
+like Slone's. If they had not guessed they would soon learn. It magnified
+Slone's task a thousandfold. He had a moment of bitter, almost hopeless
+realization before a more desperate spirit awoke in him. He had only more men
+to kill--that was all. These upland riders did not pack rifles, of that Slone
+was sure. And the sooner he came up with Cordts the better. It was then he let
+Wildfire choose his gait and the trail. Sunset, twilight, dusk, and darkness
+came with Slone keeping on and on. As long as there were no intersecting
+canyons or clefts or slopes by which Creech might have swerved from his
+course, just so long Slone would travel. And it was late in the night when he
+had to halt.
+
+Early next day the trail led up out of the red and broken gulches to the
+cedared uplands. Slone saw a black-rimmed, looming plateau in the distance.
+All these winding canyons, and the necks of the high ridges between, must run
+up to that great table-land.
+
+That day he lost two of the horse tracks. He did not mark the change for a
+long time after there had been a split in the party that had been trailing
+Creech. Then it was too late for him to go back to investigate, even if that
+had been wise. He kept on, pondering, trying to decide whether or not he had
+been discovered and was now in danger of ambush ahead and pursuit from behind.
+He thought that possibly Cordts had split his party, one to trail along after
+Creech, the others to work around to head him off. Undoubtedly Cordts knew
+this broken canyon country and could tell where Creech was going, and knew how
+to intercept him.
+
+The uncertainty wore heavily upon Slone. He grew desperate. He had no time to
+steal along cautiously. He must be the first to get to Creech. So he held to
+the trail and went as rapidly as the nature of the ground would permit,
+expecting to be shot at from any clump of cedars. The trail led down again
+into a narrow canyon with low walls. Slone put all his keenness on what lay
+before him.
+
+Wildfire's sudden break and upflinging of head and his snort preceded the
+crack of a rifle. Slone knew he had been shot at, although he neither felt nor
+heard the bullet. He had no chance to see where the shot came from, for
+Wildfire bolted, and needed as much holding and guiding as Slone could give.
+He ran a mile. Then Slone was able to look about him. Had he been shot at from
+above or behind? He could not tell. It did not matter, so long as the danger
+was not in front. He kept a sharp lookout, and presently along the right
+canyon rim, five hundred feet above him, he saw a bay horse, and a rider with
+a rifle. He had been wrong, then, about these riders and their weapons. Slone
+did not see any wisdom in halting to shoot up at this pursuer, and he spurred
+Wildfire just as a sharp crack sounded above. The bullet thudded into the
+earth a few feet behind him. And then over bad ground, with the stallion
+almost unmanageable, Slone ran a gantlet of shots. Evidently the man on the
+rim had smooth ground to ride over, for he easily kept abreast of Slone. But
+he could not get the range. Fortunately for Slone, broken ramparts above
+checked the tricks of that pursuer, and Slone saw no more of him.
+
+It afforded him great relief to find that Creech's trail turned into a canyon
+on the left; and here, with the sun already low, Slone began to watch the
+clumps of cedars and the jumbles of rock. But he was not ambushed. Darkness
+set in, and, being tired out, he was about to halt for the night when he
+caught the flicker of a campfire. The stallion saw it, too, but did not snort.
+Slone dismounted and, leading him, went cautiously forward on foot, rifle in
+hand.
+
+The canyon widened at a point where two breaks occurred, and the
+less-restricted space was thick with cedar and pinyon. Slone could tell by the
+presence of these trees and also by a keener atmosphere that he was slowly
+getting to a higher attitude. This camp-fire must belong to Cordts or the one
+man who had gone on ahead. And Slone advanced boldly. He did not have to make
+up his mind what to do.
+
+But he was amazed to see several dark forms moving to and fro before the
+bright camp-fire, and he checked himself abruptly. Considering a moment, Slone
+thought he had better have a look at these fellows. So he tied Wildfire and,
+taking to the darker side of the canyon, he stole cautiously forward.
+
+The distance was considerable, as he had calculated. Soon, however, he made
+out the shadowy outlines of horses feeding in the open. He hugged the canyon
+wall for fear they might see him. As luck would have it the night breeze was
+in his favor. Stealthily he stole on, in the deep shadow of the wall, and
+under the cedars, until he came to a point opposite the camp-fire, and then he
+turned toward it. He went slowly, carefully, noiselessly, and at last he
+crawled through the narrow aisles between thick sage-brush. Another clump of
+cedars loomed up, and he saw the flickering of firelight upon the pale-green
+foliage.
+
+He heard gruff voices before he raised himself to look, and by this he gauged
+his distance. He was close enough--almost too close. But as he crouched in
+dark shade and there were no horses near, he did not fear discovery.
+
+When he peered out from his covert the first thing to strike and hold his
+rapid glance was the slight figure of a girl. Slone stifled a gasp in his
+throat. He thought he recognized Lucy. Stunned, he crouched down again with
+his hands clenched round his rifle. And there he remained for a long moment of
+agony before reason asserted itself over emotion. Had he really seen Lucy? He
+had heard of a girl now and then in the camps of these men, especially Cordts.
+Maybe Creech had fallen in with comrades. No, he could not have had any
+comrades there but horse-thieves, and Creech was above that. If Creech was
+there he had been held up by Cordts; if Lucy only was with the gang, Creech
+had been killed.
+
+Slone had to force himself to look again. The girl had changed her position.
+But the light shone upon the men. Creech was not one of the three, nor Cordts,
+nor any man Slone had seen before. They were not honest men, judging from
+their hard, evil looks. Slone was nonplussed and he was losing self-control.
+Again he lowered himself and waited. He caught the word "Durango" and "hosses"
+and "fer enough in," the meaning of which was, vague. Then the girl laughed.
+And Slone found himself trembling with joy. Beyond any doubt that laugh could
+not have been Lucy's.
+
+Slone stole back as he had come, reached the shadow of the wall, and drew away
+until he felt it safe to walk quickly. When he reached the place where he
+expected to find Wildfire he did not see him. Slone looked and looked. Perhaps
+he had misjudged distance and place in the gloom. Still, he never made
+mistakes of that nature. He searched around till he found the cedar stump to
+which he had tied the lasso. In the gloom he could not see it, and when he
+reached out he did not feel it. Wildfire was gone! Slone sank down, overcome.
+He cursed what must have been carelessness, though he knew he never was
+careless with a horse. What had happened? He did not know. But Wildfire was
+gone--and that meant Lucy's doom and his! Slone shook with cold.
+
+Then, as he leaned against the stump, wet and shaking, familiar sound met his
+ears. It was made by the teeth of a grazing horse--a slight, keen, tearing
+cut. Wildfire was close at hand! With a sweep Slone circled the stump and he
+found the knot of the lasso. He had missed it. He began to gather in the long
+rope, and soon felt the horse. In the black gloom against the wall Slone could
+not distinguish Wildfire.
+
+"Whew!" he muttered, wiping the sweat off his face. "Good Lord! . . . All for
+nothin'."
+
+It did not take Slone long to decide to lead the horse and work up the canyon
+past the campers. He must get ahead of them, and once there he had no fear of
+them, either by night or day. He really had no hopes of getting by
+undiscovered, and all he wished for was to get far enough so that he could not
+be intercepted. The grazing horses would scent Wildfire or he would scent
+them.
+
+For a wonder Wildfire allowed himself to be led as well as if he had been old,
+faithful Nagger. Slone could not keep close in to the wall for very long, on
+account of the cedars, but he managed to stay in the outer edge of shadow cast
+by the wall. Wildfire winded the horses, halted, threw up his head. But for
+some reason beyond Slone the horse did not snort or whistle. As he knew
+Wildfire he could have believed him intelligent enough and hateful enough to
+betray his master.
+
+It was one of the other horses that whistled an alarm. This came at a point
+almost even with the camp-fire. Slone, holding Wildfire down, had no time to
+get into a stirrup, but leaped to the saddle and let the horse go. There were
+hoarse yells and then streaks of fire and shots. Slone heard the whizz of
+heavy bullets, and he feared for Wildfire. But the horse drew swiftly away
+into the darkness. Slone could not see whether the ground was smooth or
+broken, and he left that to Wildfire. Luck favored them, and presently Slone
+pulled him in to a safe gait, and regretted only that he had not had a chance
+to take a shot at that camp.
+
+Slone walked the horse for an hour, and then decided that he could well risk a
+halt for the night.
+
+Before dawn he was up, warming his chilled body by violent movements, and
+forcing himself to eat.
+
+The rim of the west wall changed from gray to pink. A mocking-bird burst into
+song. A coyote sneaked away from the light of day. Out in the open Slone found
+the trail made by Creech's mustangs and by the horse of Cordts's man. The
+latter could not be very far ahead. In less than an hour Slone came to a clump
+of cedars where this man had camped. An hour behind him!
+
+This canyon was open, with a level and narrow floor divided by a deep wash.
+Slone put Wildfire to a gallop. The narrow wash was no obstacle to Wildfire;
+he did not have to be urged or checked. It was not long before Slone saw a
+horseman a quarter of a mile ahead, and he was discovered almost at the same
+time. This fellow showed both surprise and fear. He ran his horse. But in
+comparison with Wildfire that horse seemed sluggish. Slone would have caught
+up with him very soon but for a change in the lay of the land. The canyon
+split up and all of its gorges and ravines and washes headed upon the
+pine-fringed plateau, now only a few miles distant. The gait of the horses had
+to be reduced to a trot, and then a walk. The man Slone was after left
+Creech's trail and took to a side cleft. Slone, convinced he would soon
+overhaul him, and then return to take up Creech's trail, kept on in pursuit.
+Then Slone was compelled to climb. Wildfire was so superior to the other's
+horse, and Slone was so keen at choosing ground and short cuts, that he would
+have been right upon him but for a split in the rock which suddenly yawned
+across his path. It was impassable. After a quick glance Slone abandoned the
+direct pursuit, and, turning along this gulch, he gained a point where the
+horse-thief would pass under the base of the rim-wall, and here Slone would
+have him within easy rifle shot.
+
+And the man, intent on getting out of the canyon, rode into the trap,
+approaching to within a hundred yards of Slone, who suddenly showed himself on
+foot, rifle in hand. The deep gulch was a barrier to Slone's further progress,
+but his rifle dominated the situation.
+
+"Hold on!" he called, warningly.
+
+"Hold on yerself!" yelled the other, aghast, as he halted his horse. He gazed
+down and evidently was quick to take in the facts.
+
+Slone had meant to kill this man without even a word, yet now when the moment
+had come a feeling almost of sickness clouded his resolve. But he leveled the
+rifle.
+
+"I got it on you," he called.
+
+"Reckon you hev. But see hyar--"
+
+"I can hit you anywhere."
+
+"Wal, I'll take yer word fer thet."
+
+"All right. Now talk fast. . . . Are you one of Cordts's gang?"
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Why are you alone?"
+
+"We split down hyar."
+
+"Did you know I was on this trail?"
+
+"Nope. I didn't sure, or you'd never ketched me, red hoss or no."
+
+"Who were you trailin'?"
+
+"Ole Creech an' the girl he kidnapped."
+
+Slone felt the leap of his blood and the jerk it gave the rifle as his tense
+finger trembled on the trigger.
+
+"Girl. . . . What girl?" he called, hoarsely.
+
+"Bostil's girl."
+
+"Why did Cordts split on the trail?"
+
+"He an' Hutch went round fer some more of the gang, an' to head off Joel
+Creech when he comes in with Bostil's hosses."
+
+Slone was amazed to find how the horse thieves had calculated; yet, on second
+thought, the situation, once the Creeches had been recognized, appeared simple
+enough.
+
+"What was your game?" he demanded.
+
+"I was follerin' Creech jest to find out where he'd hole up with the girl."
+
+"What's Cordts's game--AFTER he heads Joel Creech?"
+
+"Then he's goin' fer the girl."
+
+Slone scarcely needed to be told all this, but the deliberate words from the
+lips of one of Cordts's gang bore a raw, brutal proof of Lucy's peril. And yet
+Slone could not bring himself to kill this man in cold blood. He tried, but in
+vain.
+
+"Have you got a gun?" called Slone, hoarsely.
+
+"Sure."
+
+"Ride back the other way! . . . If you don't lose me I'll kill you!"
+
+The man stared. Slone saw the color return to his pale face. Then he turned
+his horse and rode back out of sight. Slone heard him rolling the stones down
+the long, rough slope; and when he felt sure the horse-thief had gotten a fair
+start he went back to mount Wildfire in pursuit.
+
+This trailer of Lucy never got back to Lucy's trail--never got away.
+
+But Slone, when that day's hard, deadly pursuit ended, found himself lost in
+the canyons. How bitterly he cursed both his weakness in not shooting the man
+at sight, and his strength in following him with implacable purpose! For to be
+fair, to give the horse-thief a chance for his life, Slone had lost Lucy's
+trail. The fact nearly distracted him. He spent a sleepless night of torture.
+
+All next day, like a wild man, he rode and climbed and descended, spurred by
+one purpose, pursued by suspense and dread. That night he tied Wildfire near
+water and grass and fell into the sleep of exhaustion.
+
+Morning came. But with it no hope. He had been desperate. And now he was in a
+frightful state. It seemed that days and days had passed, and nights that were
+hideous with futile nightmares.
+
+He rode down into a canyon with sloping walls, and broken, like all of these
+canyons under the great plateau. Every canyon resembled another. The upland
+was one vast network. The world seemed a labyrinth of canyons among which he
+was hopelessly lost. What would--what had become of Lucy? Every thought in his
+whirling brain led back to that--and it was terrible.
+
+Then--he was gazing transfixed down upon the familiar tracks left by Creech's
+mustangs. Days old, but still unfollowed!
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+That track led up the narrowing canyon to its head at the base of the plateau.
+
+Slone, mindful of his horse, climbed on foot, halting at the zigzag turns to
+rest. A long, gradually ascending trail mounted the last slope, which when
+close at hand was not so precipitous as it appeared from below. Up there the
+wind, sucked out of the canyons, swooped and twisted hard.
+
+At last Slone led Wildfire over the rim and halted for another
+breathing-spell. Before him was a beautiful, gently sloping stretch of waving
+grass leading up to the dark pine forest from which came a roar of wind.
+Beneath Slone the wild and whorled canyon breaks extended, wonderful in
+thousands of denuded surfaces, gold and red and yellow, with the smoky depths
+between.
+
+Wildfire sniffed the wind and snorted. Slone turned, instantly alert. The wild
+horse had given an alarm. Like a flash Slone leaped into the saddle. A faint
+cry, away from the wind, startled Slone. It was like a cry he had heard in
+dreams. How overstrained his perceptions! He was not really sure of anything,
+yet on the instant he was tense.
+
+Straggling cedars on his left almost wholly obstructed Slone's view.
+Wildfire's ears and nose were pointed that way. Slone trotted him down toward
+the edge of this cedar clump so that he could see beyond. Before he reached
+it, however, he saw something blue, moving, waving, lifting.
+
+"Smoke!" muttered Slone. And he thought more of the danger of fire on that
+windy height than he did of another peril to himself.
+
+Wildfire was hard to hold as he rounded the edge of the cedars.
+
+Slone saw a line of leaping flame, a line of sweeping smoke, the grass on fire
+. . . horses!--a man!
+
+Wildfire whistled his ringing blast of hate and menace, his desert challenge
+to another stallion.
+
+The man whirled to look.
+
+Slone saw Joel Creech--and Sage King--and Lucy, half naked, bound on his back!
+
+Joy, agony, terror in lightning-swift turns, paralyzed Slone. But Wildfire
+lunged out on the run.
+
+Sage King reared in fright, came down to plunge away, and with a magnificent
+leap cleared the line of fire.
+
+Slone, more from habit than thought, sat close in the saddle. A few of
+Wildfire's lengthening strides, quickened Slone's blood. Then Creech moved,
+also awaking from a stupefying surprise, and he snatched up a gun and fired.
+Slone saw the spurts of red, the puffs of white. But he heard nothing. The
+torrent of his changed blood, burning and terrible, filled his ears with hate
+and death.
+
+He guided the running stallion. In a few tremendous strides Wildfire struck
+Creech, and Slone had one glimpse of an awful face. The impact was terrific.
+Creech went hurtling through the air, limp and broken, to go down upon a rock,
+his skull cracking like a melon.
+
+The horse leaped over the body and the stone, and beyond he leaped the line of
+burning grass.
+
+Slone saw the King running into the forest. He saw poor Lucy's white body
+swinging with the horse's motion. One glance showed the great gray to be
+running wild. Then the hate and passion cleared away, leaving suspense and
+terror.
+
+Wildfire reached the pines. There down the open aisles between the black trees
+ran the fleet gray racer. Wildfire saw him and snorted. The King was a hundred
+yards to the fore.
+
+"Wildfire--it's come--the race--the race!" called Slone. But he could not hear
+his own call. There was a roar overhead, heavy, almost deafening. The wind!
+the wind! Yet that roar did not deaden a strange, shrieking crack somewhere
+behind. Wildfire leaped in fright. Slone turned. Fire had run up a pine-tree,
+which exploded as if the trunk were powder!
+
+"MY GOD! A RACE WITH FIRE! . . . LUCY! LUCY!"
+
+In that poignant cry Slone uttered his realization of the strange fate that
+had waited for the inevitable race between Wildfire and the King; he uttered
+his despairing love for Lucy, and his acceptance of death for her and himself.
+No horse could outrun wind-driven fire in a dry pine forest. Slone had no hope
+of that. How perfectly fate and time and place and horses, himself and his
+sweetheart, had met! Slone damned Joel Creech's insane soul to everlasting
+torment. To think--to think his idiotic and wild threat had come true--and
+come true with a gale in the pine-tops! Slone grew old at the thought, and the
+fact seemed to be a dream. But the dry, pine-scented air made breathing hard;
+the gray racer, carrying that slender, half-naked form, white in the forest
+shade, lengthened into his fleet and beautiful stride; the motion of Wildfire,
+so easy, so smooth, so swift, and the fierce reach of his head shooting
+forward--all these proved that it was no dream.
+
+Tense questions pierced the dark chaos of Slone's mind--what could he do? Run
+the King down! Make 'him kill Lucy! Save her from horrible death by fire!
+
+The red horse had not gained a yard on the gray. Slone, keen to judge
+distance, saw this, and for the first time he doubted Wildfire's power to ran
+down the King. Not with such a lead! It was hopeless--so hopeless--
+
+He turned to look back. He saw no fire, no smoke--only the dark trunks, and
+the massed green foliage in violent agitation against the blue sky. That
+revived a faint hope. If he could get a few miles ahead, before the fire began
+to leap across the pine-crests, then it might be possible to run out of the
+forest if it were not wide.
+
+Then a stronger hope grew. It seemed that foot by foot Wildfire was gaining on
+the King. Slone studied the level forest floor sliding toward him. He lost his
+hope--then regained it again, and then he spurred the horse. Wildfire hated
+that as he hated Slone. But apparently he did not quicken his strides. And
+Slone could not tell if he lengthened them. He was not running near his limit
+but, after the nature of such a horse, left to choose his gait, running
+slowly, but rising toward his swiftest and fiercest.
+
+Slone's rider's blood never thrilled to that race, for his blood had curdled.
+The sickness within rose to his mind. And that flashed up whenever he dared to
+look forward at Lucy's white form. Slone could not bear this sight; it almost
+made him reel, yet he was driven to look. He saw that the King carried no
+saddle, so with Lucy on him he was light. He ought to run all day with only
+that weight. Wildfire carried a heavy saddle, a pack, a water bag, and a
+rifle. Slone untied the pack and let it drop. He almost threw aside the
+water-bag, but something withheld his hand, and also he kept his rifle. What
+were a few more pounds to this desert stallion in his last run? Slone knew it
+was Wildfire's greatest and last race.
+
+Suddenly Slone's ears rang with a terrible on-coming roar. For an instant the
+unknown sound stiffened him, robbed him of strength. Only the horn of the
+saddle, hooking into him, held him on. Then the years of his desert life
+answered to a call more than human.
+
+He had to race against fire. He must beat the flame to the girl he loved.
+There were miles of dry forest, like powder. Fire backed by a heavy gale could
+rage through dry pine faster than any horse could run. He might fail to save
+Lucy. Fate had given him a bitter ride. But he swore a grim oath that he would
+beat the flame. The intense and abnormal rider's passion in him, like
+Bostil's, dammed up, but never fully controlled, burst within him, and
+suddenly he awoke to a wild and terrible violence of heart and soul. He had
+accepted death; he had no fear. All that he wanted to do, the last thing he
+wanted to do, was to ride down the King and kill Lucy mercifully. How he would
+have gloried to burn there in the forest, and for a million years in the dark
+beyond, to save the girl!
+
+He goaded the horse. Then he looked back.
+
+Through the aisles of the forest he saw a strange, streaky, murky something
+moving, alive, shifting up and down, never an instant the same. It must have
+been the wind--the heat before the fire. He seemed to see through it, but
+there was nothing beyond, only opaque, dim, mustering clouds. Hot puffs shot
+forward into his face. His eyes smarted and stung. His ears hurt and were
+growing deaf. The tumult was the rear of avalanches, of maelstroms, of rushing
+seas, of the wreck of the uplands and the ruin of the earth. It grew to be so
+great a roar that he no longer heard. There was only silence.
+
+And he turned to face ahead. The stallion stretched low on a dead run; the
+tips of the pines were bending before the wind; and Wildfire, the terrible
+thing for which his horse was named, was leaping through the forest. But there
+was no sound.
+
+Ahead of Slone, down the aisles, low under the trees spreading over the
+running King, floated swiftly some medium, like a transparent veil. It was
+neither smoke nor air. It carried faint pin points of light, sparks, that
+resembled atoms of dust floating in sunlight. It was a wave of heat driven
+before the storm of fire. Slone did not feel pain, but he seemed to be drying
+up, parching. And Lucy must be suffering now. He goaded the stallion, raking
+his flanks. Wildfire answered with a scream and a greater speed. All except
+Lucy and Sage King and Wildfire seemed so strange and unreal--the swift rush
+between the pines, now growing ghostly in the dimming light, the sense of a
+pursuing, overpowering force, and yet absolute silence.
+
+Slone fought the desire to look back. But he could not resist it. Some
+horrible fascination compelled him. All behind had changed. A hot wind, like a
+blast from a furnace, blew light, stinging particles into his face. The fire
+was racing in the tree-tops, while below all was yet clear. A lashing, leaping
+flame engulfed the canopy of pines. It was white, seething, inconceivably
+swift, with a thousand flashing tongues. It traveled ahead of smoke. It was so
+thin he could see the branches through it, and the fiery clouds behind. It
+swept onward, a sublime and an appalling spectacle. Slone could not think of
+what it looked like. It was fire, liberated, freed from the bowels of the
+earth, tremendous, devouring. This, then, was the meaning of fire. This, then,
+was the horrible fate to befall Lucy.
+
+But no! He thought he must be insane not to be overcome in spirit. Yet he was
+not. He would beat the flame to Lucy. He felt the loss of something, some kind
+of a sensation which he ought to have had. Still he rode that race to kill his
+sweetheart better than any race he had ever before ridden. He kept his seat;
+he dodged the snags; he pulled the maddened horse the shortest way, he kept
+the King running straight.
+
+No horse had ever run so magnificent a race! Wildfire was outracing wind and
+fire, and he was overhauling the most noted racer of the uplands against a
+tremendous handicap. But now he was no longer racing to kill the King; he was
+running in terror. For miles he held that long, swift, wonderful stride
+without a break. He was running to his death, whether or not he distanced the
+fire. Nothing could stop him now but a bursting heart.
+
+Slone untied his lasso and coiled the noose. Almost within reach of the King!
+One throw--one sudden swerve--and the King would go down. Lucy would know only
+a stunning shock. Slone's heart broke. Could he kill her--crush that dear
+golden head? He could not, yet he must! He saw a long, curved, red welt on
+Lucy's white shoulders. What was that? Had a branch lashed her? Slone could
+not see her face. She could not have been dead or in a faint, for she was
+riding the King, bound as she was!
+
+Closer and closer drew Wildfire. He seemed to go faster and faster as that
+wind of flame gained upon them. The air was too thick to breathe. It had an
+irresistible weight. It pushed horses and riders onward in their
+flight--straws on the crest of a cyclone.
+
+Again Slone looked back and again the spectacle was different. There was a
+white and golden fury of flame above, beautiful and blinding; and below,
+farther back, an inferno of glowing fire, black-streaked, with trembling,
+exploding puffs and streams of yellow smoke. The aisles between the burning
+pines were smoky, murky caverns, moving and weird. Slone saw fire shoot from
+the tree-tops down the trunks, and he saw fire shoot up the trunks, like
+trains of powder. They exploded like huge rockets. And along the forest floor
+leaped the little flames. His eyes burned and blurred till all merged into a
+wide, pursuing storm too awful for the gaze of man.
+
+Wildfire was running down the King. The great gray had not lessened his speed,
+but he was breaking. Slone felt a ghastly triumph when he began to whirl the
+noose of the lasso round his head. Already he was within range. But he held
+back his throw which meant the end of all. And as he hesitated Wildfire
+suddenly whistled one shrieking blast.
+
+Slone looked. Ahead there was light through the forest! Slone saw a white,
+open space of grass. A park? No--the end of the forest! Wildfire, like a
+demon, hurtled onward, with his smoothness of action gone, beginning to break,
+within a length of the King.
+
+A cry escaped Slone--a cry as silent as if there had been no deafening
+roar--as wild as the race, and as terrible as the ruthless fire. It was the
+cry of life--instead of death. Both Sage King and Wildfire would beat the
+flame.
+
+Then, with the open just ahead, Slone felt a wave of hot wind rolling over
+him. He saw the lashing tongues of flame above him in the pines. The storm had
+caught him. It forged ahead. He was riding under a canopy of fire. Burning
+pine cones, like torches, dropped all around him. He had a terrible blank
+sense of weight, of suffocation, of the air turning to fire.
+
+Then Wildfire, with his nose at Sage King's flank, flashed out of the pines
+into the open. Slone saw a grassy wide reach inclining gently toward a dark
+break in the ground with crags rising sheer above it, and to the right a great
+open space.
+
+Slone felt that clear air as the breath of deliverance. His reeling sense
+righted. There--the King ran, blindly going to his death. Wildfire was
+breaking fast. His momentum carried him. He was almost done.
+
+Slone roped the King, and holding hard, waited for the end. They ran on,
+breaking, breaking. Slone thought he would have to throw the King, for they
+were perilously near the deep cleft in the rim. But Sage King went to his
+knees.
+
+Slone leaped off just as Wildfire fell. How the blade flashed that released
+Lucy! She was wet from the horse's sweat and foam. She slid off into Slone's
+arms, and he called her name. Could she hear above that roar back there in the
+forest? The pieces of rope hung to her wrists and Slone saw dark bruises, raw
+and bloody. She fell against him. Was she dead? His heart contracted. How
+white the face! No; he saw her breast heave against his! And he cried aloud,
+incoherently in his joy. She was alive. She was not badly hurt. She stirred.
+She plucked at him with nerveless hands. She pressed close to him. He heard a
+smothered voice, yet so full, so wonderful!
+
+"Put--your--coat--on me!" came somehow to his ears.
+
+Slone started violently. Abashed, shamed to realize he had forgotten she was
+half nude, he blindly tore off his coat, blindly folded it around her.
+
+"Lin! Lin!" she cried.
+
+"Lucy--Oh! are y-you--" he replied, huskily.
+
+"I'm not hurt. I'm all right."
+
+"But that wretch, Joel. He--"
+
+"He'd killed his father--just a--minute--before you came. I fought him! Oh!
+. . . But I'm all right. . . . Did you--"
+
+"Wildfire ran him down--smashed him. . . . Lucy! this can't be true. . . . Yet
+I feel you! Thank God!"
+
+With her free hand Lucy returned his clasp. She seemed to be strong. It was a
+precious moment for Slone, in which he was uplifted beyond all dreams.
+
+"Let me loose--a second," she said. "I want to--get in your coat."
+
+She laughed as he released her. She laughed! And Slone thrilled with
+unutterable sweetness at that laugh.
+
+As he turned away he felt a swift wind, then a strange impact from an
+invisible force that staggered him, then the rend of flesh. After that came
+the heavy report of a gun.
+
+Slone fell. He knew he had been shot. Following the rending of his flesh came
+a hot agony. It was in his shoulder, high up, and the dark, swift fear for his
+life was checked.
+
+Lucy stood staring down at him, unable to comprehend, slowly paling. Her hands
+clasped the coat round her. Slone saw her, saw the edge of streaming clouds of
+smoke above her, saw on the cliff beyond the gorge two men, one with a smoking
+gun half leveled.
+
+If Slone had been inattentive to his surroundings before, the sight of Cordts
+electrified him.
+
+"Lucy! drop down! quick!"
+
+"Oh, what's happened? You--you--"
+
+"I've been shot. Drop down, I tell you. Get behind the horse an' pull my
+rifle."
+
+"Shot!" exclaimed Lucy, blankly.
+
+"Yes--Yes. . . . My God! Lucy, he's goin' to shoot again!"
+
+It was then Lucy Bostil saw Cordts across the gulch. He was not fifty yards
+distant, plainly recognizable, tall, gaunt, sardonic. He held the half-leveled
+gun ready as if waiting. He had waited there in ambush. The clouds of smoke
+rolled up above him, hiding the crags.
+
+"CORDTS!" Bostil's blood spoke in the girl's thrilling cry.
+
+"Hunch down, Lucy!" cried Slone. "Pull my rifle. . . . I'm only winged--not
+hurt. Hurry! He's goin'--"
+
+Another heavy report interrupted Slone. The bullet missed, but Slone made a
+pretense, a convulsive flop, as if struck.
+
+"Get the rifle! Quick!" he called.
+
+But Lucy misunderstood his ruse to deceive Cordts. She thought he had been hit
+again. She ran to the fallen Wildfire and jerked the rifle from its sheath.
+
+Cordts had begun to climb round a ledge, evidently a short cut to get down and
+across. Hutchinson saw the rifle and yelled to Cordts. The horse-thief halted,
+his dark face gleaming toward Lucy.
+
+When Lucy rose the coat fell from her nude shoulders. And Slone, watching,
+suddenly lost his agony of terror for her and uttered a pealing cry of
+defiance and of rapture.
+
+She swept up the rifle. It wavered. Hutchinson was above, and Cordts, reaching
+up, yelled for help. Hutchinson was reluctant. But the stronger force
+dominated. He leaned down--clasped Cordts's outstretched hands, and pulled.
+Hutchinson bawled out hoarsely. Cordts turned what seemed a paler face. He had
+difficulty on the slight footing. He was slow.
+
+Slone tried to call to Lucy to shoot low, but his lips had drawn tight after
+his one yell. Slone saw her white, rounded shoulders bent, with cold, white
+face pressed against the rifle, with slim arms quivering and growing tense,
+with the tangled golden hair blowing out.
+
+Then she shot.
+
+Slone's glance shifted. He did not see the bullet strike up dust. The figures
+of the men remained the same--Hutchinson straining, Cordts. . . . No, Cordts
+was not the same! A strange change seemed manifest in his long form. It did
+not seem instinct with effort. Yet it moved.
+
+Hutchinson also was acting strangely, yelling, heaving, wrestling. But he
+could not help Cordts. He lifted violently, raised Cordts a little, and then
+appeared to be in peril of losing his balance.
+
+Cordts leaned against the cliff. Then it dawned upon Slone that Lucy had hit
+the horse-thief. Hard hit! He would not--he could not let go of Hutchinson.
+His was a death clutch. The burly Hutchinson slipped from his knee-hold, and
+as he moved Cordts swayed, his feet left the ledge, he hung, upheld only by
+the tottering comrade.
+
+What a harsh and terrible cry from Hutchinson! He made one last convulsive
+effort and it doomed him. Slowly he lost his balance. Cordts's dark, evil,
+haunting face swung round. Both men became lax and plunged, and separated. The
+dust rose from the rough steps. Then the dark forms shot down--Cordts falling
+sheer and straight, Hutchinson headlong, with waving arms--down and down,
+vanishing in the depths. No sound came up. A little column of yellow dust
+curled from the fatal ledge and, catching the wind above, streamed away into
+the drifting clouds of smoke.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+A darkness, like the streaming clouds overhead, seemed to blot out Slone's
+sight, and then passed away, leaving it clearer.
+
+Lucy was bending over him, binding a scarf round his shoulder and under his
+arm. "Lin! It's nothing!" she was saying, earnestly. "Never touched a bone!"
+
+Slone sat up. The smoke was clearing away. Little curves of burning grass were
+working down along the rim. He put out a hand to grasp Lucy, remembering in a
+flash. He pointed to the ledge across the chasm.
+
+"They're--gone!" cried Lucy, with a strange and deep note in her voice. She
+shook violently. But she did not look away from Slone.
+
+"Wildfire! The King!" he added, hoarsely.
+
+"Both where they dropped. Oh, I'm afraid to--to look. . . . And, Lin, I saw
+Sarch, Two Face, and Ben and Plume go down there."
+
+She had her back to the chasm where the trail led down, and she pointed
+without looking.
+
+Slone got up, a little unsteady on his feet and conscious of a dull pain.
+
+"Sarch will go straight home, and the others will follow him," said Lucy.
+"They got away here where Joel came up the trail. The fire chased them out of
+the woods. Sarch will go home. And that'll fetch the riders."
+
+"We won't need them if only Wildfire and the King--" Slone broke off and
+grimly, with a catch in his breath, turned to the horses.
+
+How strange that Slone should run toward the King while Lucy ran to Wildfire!
+
+Sage King was a beaten, broken horse, but he would live to run another race.
+
+Lucy was kneeling beside Wildfire, sobbing and crying: "Wildfire! Wildfire!"
+
+All of Wildfire was white except where he was red, and that red was not now
+his glossy, flaming skin. A terrible muscular convulsion as of internal
+collapse grew slower and slower. Yet choked, blinded, dying, killed on his
+feet, Wildfire heard Lucy's voice.
+
+"Oh, Lin! Oh, Lin!" moaned Lucy.
+
+While they knelt there the violent convulsions changed to slow heaves.
+
+"He run the King down--carryin' weight--with a long lead to overcome!" Slone
+muttered, and he put a shaking hand on the horse's wet neck.
+
+"Oh, he beat the King!" cried Lucy. "But you mustn't--you CAN'T tell Dad!"
+
+"What CAN we tell him?"
+
+"Oh, I know. Old Creech told me what to say!"
+
+A change, both of body and spirit, seemed to pass over the great stallion.
+
+"WILDFIRE! WILDFIRE!"
+
+Again the rider called to his horse, with a low and piercing cry. But Wildfire
+did not hear.
+
+
+The morning sun glanced brightly over the rippling sage which rolled away from
+the Ford like a gray sea.
+
+Bostil sat on his porch, a stricken man. He faced the blue haze of the north,
+where days before all that he had loved had vanished. Every day, from sunrise
+till sunset, he had been there, waiting and watching. His riders were grouped
+near him, silent, awed by his agony, awaiting orders that never came.
+
+From behind a ridge puffed up a thin cloud of dust. Bostil saw it and gave a
+start. Above the sage appeared a bobbing, black object--the head of a horse.
+Then the big black body followed.
+
+"Sarch!" exclaimed Bostil.
+
+With spurs clinking the riders ran and trooped behind him.
+
+"More hosses back," said Holley, quietly.
+
+"Thar's Plume!" exclaimed Farlane.
+
+"An' Two Face!" added Van.
+
+"Dusty Ben!" said another.
+
+"RIDERLESS!" finished Bostil.
+
+Then all were intensely quiet, watching the racers come trotting in single
+file down the ridge. Sarchedon's shrill neigh, like a whistle-blast, pealed in
+from the sage. From, fields and corrals clamored the answer attended by the
+clattering of hundreds of hoofs.
+
+Sarchedon and his followers broke from trot to canter--canter to gallop--and
+soon were cracking their hard hoofs on the stony court. Like a swarm of bees
+the riders swooped down upon the racers, caught them, and led them up to
+Bostil.
+
+On Sarchedon's neck showed a dry, dust-caked stain of reddish tinge. Holley,
+the old hawk-eyed rider, had precedence in the examination.
+
+"Wal, thet's a bullet-mark, plain as day," said Holley.
+
+"Who shot him?" demanded Bostil.
+
+Holley shook his gray head.
+
+"He smells of smoke," put in Farlane, who had knelt at the black's legs. "He's
+been runnin' fire. See thet! Fetlocks all singed!"
+
+All the riders looked, and then with grave, questioning eyes at one another.
+
+"Reckon thar's been hell!" muttered Holley, darkly.
+
+Some of the riders led the horses away toward the corrals. Bostil wheeled to
+face the north again. His brow was lowering; his cheek was pale and sunken;
+his jaw was set.
+
+The riders came and went, but Bostil kept his vigil. The hours passed.
+Afternoon came and wore on. The sun lost its brightness and burned red.
+
+Again dust-clouds, now like reddened smoke, puffed over the ridge. A horse
+carrying a dark, thick figure appeared above the sage.
+
+Bostil leaped up. "Is thet a gray hoss--or am--I blind?" he called,
+unsteadily.
+
+The riders dared not answer. They must be sure. They gazed through narrow
+slits of eyelids; and the silence grew intense.
+
+Holley shaded the hawk eyes with his hand. "Gray he is--Bostil--gray as the
+sage. . . . AN' SO HELP ME GOD IF HE AIN'T THE KING!"
+
+"Yes, it's the King!" cried the riders, excitedly. "Sure! I reckon! No mistake
+about thet! It's the King!"
+
+Bostil shook his huge frame, and he rubbed his eyes as if they had become dim,
+and he stared again.
+
+"Who's thet up on him?"
+
+"Slone. I never seen his like on a hoss," replied Holley.
+
+"An' what's--he packin'?" queried Bostil, huskily.
+
+Plain to all keen eyes was the glint of Lucy Bostil's golden hair. But only
+Holley had courage to speak.
+
+"It's Lucy! I seen thet long ago."
+
+A strange, fleeting light of joy died out of Bostil's face. The change once
+more silenced his riders. They watched the King trotting in from the sage. His
+head drooped. He seemed grayer than ever and he limped. But he was Sage King,
+splendid as of old, all the more gladdening to the riders' eyes because he had
+been lost. He came on, quickening a little to the clamoring welcome from the
+corrals.
+
+Holley put out a swift hand. "Bostil--the girl's alive--she's smilin'!" he
+called, and the cool voice was strangely different.
+
+The riders waited for Bostil. Slone rode into the courtyard. He was white and
+weary, reeling in the saddle. A bloody scarf was bound round his shoulder. He
+held Lucy in his arms. She had on his coat. A wan smile lighted her haggard
+face.
+
+Bostil, cursing deep, like muttering thunder, strode out. "Lucy! You ain't bad
+hurt?" he implored, in a voice no one had ever heard before.
+
+"I'm--all right--Dad," she said, and slipped down into his arms.
+
+He kissed the pale face and held her up like a child, and then, carrying her
+to the door of the house, he roared for Aunt Jane.
+
+When he reappeared the crowd of riders scattered from around Slone. But it
+seemed that Bostil saw only the King. The horse was caked with dusty lather,
+scratched and disheveled, weary and broken, yet he was still beautiful. He
+raised his drooping head and reached for his master with a look as soft and
+dark and eloquent as a woman's.
+
+No rider there but felt Bostil's passion of doubt and hope. Had the King been
+beaten? Bostil's glory and pride were battling with love. Mighty as that was,
+it did not at once overcome his fear of defeat.
+
+Slowly the gaze of Bostil moved away from Sage King and roved out to the sage
+and back, as if he expected to see another horse. But no other horse was in
+sight. At last his hard eyes rested upon the white-faced Slone.
+
+"Been some--hard ridin'?" he queried, haltingly. All there knew that had not
+been the question upon his lips.
+
+"Pretty hard--yes," replied Slone. He was weary, yet tight-lipped, intense.
+
+"Now--them Creeches?" slowly continued Bostil.
+
+"Dead."
+
+A murmur ran through the listening riders, and they drew closer.
+
+"Both of them?"
+
+"Yes. Joel killed his father, fightin' to get Lucy. . . . An' I ran--Wildfire
+over Joel--smashed him!"
+
+"Wal, I'm sorry for the old man," replied Bostil, gruffly. "I meant to make up
+to him. . . . But thet fool boy! . . . An' Slone--you're all bloody."
+
+He stepped forward and pulled the scarf aside. He was curious and kindly, as
+if it was beyond him to be otherwise. Yet that dark cold something, almost
+sullen clung round him.
+
+"Been bored, eh? Wal, it ain't low, an' thet's good. Who shot you?"
+
+"Cordts."
+
+"CORDTS!" Bostil leaned forward in sudden, fierce eagerness.
+
+"Yes, Cordts. . . . His outfit run across Creech's trail an' we bunched. I
+can't tell now. . . . But we had--hell! An' Cordts is dead--so's Hutch--an'
+that other pard of his. . . . Bostil, they'll never haunt your sleep again!"
+
+Slone finished with a strange sternness that seemed almost bitter.
+
+Bostil raised both his huge fists. The blood was bulging his thick neck. It
+was another kind of passion that obsessed him. Only some violent check to his
+emotion prevented him from embracing Slone. The huge fists unclenched and the
+big fingers worked.
+
+"You mean to tell me you did fer Cordts an' Hutch what you did fer Sears?" he
+boomed out.
+
+"They're dead--gone, Bostil--honest to God!" replied Slone.
+
+Holley thrust a quivering, brown hand into Bostil's face. "What did I tell
+you?" he shouted. "Didn't I say wait?"
+
+Bostil threw away all that deep fury of passion, and there seemed only a
+resistless and speechless admiration left. Then ensued a moment of silence.
+The riders watched Slone's weary face as it drooped, and Bostil, as he loomed
+over him.
+
+"Where's the red stallion?" queried Bostil. That was the question hard to get
+out.
+
+Slone raised eyes dark with pain, yet they flashed as he looked straight up
+into Bostil's face. "Wildfire's dead!"
+
+"DEAD!" ejaculated Bostil.
+
+Another moment of strained exciting suspense.
+
+"Shot?" he went on.
+
+"No."
+
+"What killed him?"
+
+"The King, sir! . . . Killed him on his feet!"
+
+Bostil's heavy jaw bulged and quivered. His hand shook as he laid it on Sage
+King's mane--the first touch since the return of his favorite.
+
+"Slone--what--is it?" he said, brokenly, with voice strangely softened. His
+face became transfigured.
+
+"Sage King killed Wildfire on his feet. . . . A grand race, Bostil! . . . But
+Wildfire's dead--an' here's the King! Ask me no more. I want to forget."
+
+Bostil put his arm around the young man's shoulder. "Slone, if I don't know
+what you feel fer the loss of thet grand hoss, no rider on earth knows! . . .
+Go in the house. Boys, take him in--all of you--an' look after him."
+
+Bostil wanted to be alone, to welcome the King, to lead him back to the home
+corral, perhaps to hide from all eyes the change and the uplift that would
+forever keep him from wronging another man.
+
+The late rains came and like magic, in a few days, the sage grew green and
+lustrous and fresh, the gray turning to purple.
+
+Every morning the sun rose white and hot in a blue and cloudless sky. And then
+soon the horizon line showed creamy clouds that rose and spread and darkened.
+Every afternoon storms hung along the ramparts and rainbows curved down
+beautiful and ethereal. The dim blackness of the storm-clouds was split to the
+blinding zigzag of lightning, and the thunder rolled and boomed, like the
+Colorado in flood.
+
+The wind was fragrant, sage-laden, no longer dry and hot, but cool in the
+shade.
+
+Slone and Lucy never rode down so far as the stately monuments, though these
+held memories as hauntingly sweet as others were poignantly bitter. Lucy never
+rode the King again. But Slone rode him, learned to love him. And Lucy did not
+race any more. When Slone tried to stir in her the old spirit all the response
+he got was a wistful shake of head or a laugh that hid the truth or an excuse
+that the strain on her ankles from Joel Creech's lasso had never mended. The
+girl was unutterably happy, but it was possible that she would never race a
+horse again.
+
+She rode Sarchedon, and she liked to trot or lope along beside Slone while
+they linked hands and watched the distance. But her glance shunned the north,
+that distance which held the wild canyons and the broken battlements and the
+long, black, pine-fringed plateau.
+
+"Won't you ever ride with me, out to the old camp, where I used to wait for
+you?" asked Slone.
+
+"Some day," she said, softly.
+
+"When?"
+
+"When--when we come back from Durango," she replied, with averted eyes and
+scarlet cheek. And Slone was silent, for that planned trip to Durango, with
+its wonderful gift to be, made his heart swell.
+
+And so on this rainbow day, with storms all around them, and blue sky above,
+they rode only as far as the valley. But from there, before they turned to go
+back, the monuments appeared close, and they loomed grandly with the
+background of purple bank and creamy cloud and shafts of golden lightning.
+They seemed like sentinels--guardians of a great and beautiful love born
+under their lofty heights, in the lonely silence of day, in the star-thrown
+shadow of night. They were like that love. And they held Lucy and Slone,
+calling every day, giving a nameless and tranquil content, binding them true
+to love, true to the sage and the open, true to that wild upland home.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Wildfire, by Zane Grey
+
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