The Western Romance MEGAPACK ®: 20 Classic Tales

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The Western Romance MEGAPACK ®: 20 Classic Tales Page 202

by Zane Grey


  Billy Porter declaimed in a loud voice from the head of the procession.

  “Of course, Kut-le has taken to the mountains. He’ll steer clear of ranches and cowboys for a while. Our chance lies in his giving up covering his trail after he gets well into the ranges. We will get his trail and hang on till we can outwit him. If he was alone, we’d never get him, barring accident. But he will be a lot hampered by Miss Rhoda and I trust to her to hamper him a whole lot after she gets her hand in.”

  All the rest of the burning afternoon they moved toward the mountains. It was quite dusk when they entered the foothills. The way, not good at best, grew difficult and dangerous to follow. Billy led on, however, until darkness closed down on them in a little cactus-grown cañon. Here he halted and ordered camp for a few hours.

  “Lord!” exclaimed DeWitt. “You’re not going to camp! I thought you were really going to do something!”

  Billy finished lighting the fire and by its light he gave an impatient glance at the tenderfoot. But the look of the burned, sand-grimed face, the bloodshot eyes, blazing with anxiety, caused him to speak patiently.

  “Can’t kill the horses, DeWitt. You must make up your mind that this is going to be a hard hunt. You got to call out all the strength you’ve been storing up all your life, and then some. We’ve got to use common sense. Lord, I want to get ahead, don’t I! I seen Miss Rhoda. I know what she’s like. This ain’t any joy ride for me, either. I got a lot of feeling in it.”

  John DeWitt extended his sun-blistered right hand and Billy Porter clasped it with his brown paw.

  Jack Newman cleared his throat.

  “Did you give your horse enough rope, John? There is a good lot of grass close to the cañon wall. Quick as you finish your coffee, old man, roll in your blanket. We will rest till midnight when the moon comes up, eh, Billy?”

  DeWitt, finally convinced of the good sense and earnestness of his friends, obeyed. The cañon was still in darkness when Jack shook him into wakefulness but the mountain peak above was a glorious silver. Camp was broken quickly and in a short time Billy was leading the way up the wretched trail. DeWitt’s four hours of sleep had helped him. He could, to some degree, control the feverish anxiety that was consuming him and he tried to turn his mind from picturing Rhoda’s agonies to castigating himself for leaving her unguarded even though Kut-le had left the ranch. Before leaving the ranch that afternoon he had telegraphed and written Rhoda’s only living relative, her Aunt Mary. He had been thankful as he wrote that Rhoda had no mother. He had so liked the young Indian; there had been such good feeling between them that he could not yet believe that Porter’s surmise was wholly correct.

  “Supposing,” he said aloud, “that you are wrong, Porter? Supposing that she’s—she’s dying of thirst down there in the desert? You have no proof of Kut-le’s doing it. It’s only founded on your Indian hate, you say yourself.”

  “That’s right,” said Newman. “Are you sure we aren’t wasting time, Billy?”

  Billy turned in the saddle to face them.

  “Well, boys,” he said, “you’ve got half the county scratching the desert with a fine-tooth comb. I don’t see how we three can help very much there. On the other hand we might do some good up here. Now I’ll make a bargain with you. If by midnight tonight we ain’t struck any trace of her, you folks can quit.”

  “And what will you do?” asked Jack.

  “Me?” Billy shrugged his shoulders. “Why, I’ll keep on this trail till my legs is wore off above my boots!” and he turned to guide his pony up a little branch trail at the top of which stood a tent with the telltale windlass and forge close by.

  Before the tent they drew rein. In response to Billy’s call a rough-bearded fellow lifted the tent flap and stood suppressing a yawn, as if visitors to his lonely claim were of daily occurrence.

  “Say, friend,” said Billy, “do you know Newman’s ranch?”

  “Sure,” returned the prospector.

  “Well, this is Mr. Newman. A young lady has been visiting him and his wife. She disappeared night before last. We suspicion that Cartwell, that educated Injun, has stole her. We’re trying to find his trail. Can you give us a hunch?”

  The sleepy look left the prospector’s eyes. He crossed the rocks to put a hand on Billy’s pommel.

  “Gee! Ain’t that ungodly!” he exclaimed. “I ain’t seen a soul. But night before last I heard a screaming in my sleep. It woke me up but when I got out here I couldn’t hear a thing. It was faint and far away and I decided it was a wildcat. Do you suppose it was her?”

  DeWitt ground his teeth together and his hands shook but he made no sound. Jack breathed heavily.

  “You think it was a woman?” asked Billy hoarsely.

  The prospector spoke hesitatingly.

  “If I’d been shore, I’d a gone on a hunt. But it was all kind of in my sleep. It was from way back in the mountain there.”

  “Thanks,” said Billy, “we’ll be on our way.”

  “It’s four o’clock. Better stop and have some grub with me, then I’ll join in and help you.”

  “No!” cried DeWitt, breaking his silence. “No!”

  “That’s the young lady’s financier,” said Billy, nodding toward John.

  “Sho!” said the prospector sympathetically.

  Billy lifted his reins.

  “Thanks, we’ll be getting along, I guess. Just as much obliged to you. We’ll water here in your spring.”

  They moved on in the direction whither the prospector had pointed. They rode in silence. Dawn came slowly, clearly. The peaks lifted magnificently, range after range against the rosy sky. There was no trail. They followed the possible way. The patient little cow ponies clambered over rocks and slid down inclines of a frightful angle as cleverly as mountain goats. At ten o’clock, they stopped for breakfast and a three hours’ sleep. It was some time before DeWitt could be persuaded to lie down but at last, perceiving that he was keeping the others from their rest, he took his blanket to the edge of the ledge and lay down.

  His sleepless eyes roved up and down the adjoining cañon. Far to the south, near the desert floor, he saw a fluttering bit of white. Now a fluttering bit of white, far from human byways, means something! Tenderfoot though he was, DeWitt realized this and sleep left his eyes. He sat erect. For a moment he was tempted to call the others but he restrained himself. He would let them rest while he kept watch over the little white beacon, for so, unaccountably, it seemed to him. He eyed it hungrily, and then a vague comfort and hopefulness came to him and he fell asleep.

  Jack’s lusty call to coffee woke him. DeWitt jumped to his feet and with a new light in his eyes he pointed out his discovery. The meal was disposed of very hurriedly and, leaving Jack to watch the camp, John and Billy crossed the cañon southward. After heavy scrambling they reached the foot of the cañon wall. Twenty feet above them dangled a white cloth. Catching any sort of hand and foot hold, John clambered upward. Then he gave a great shout of joy. Rhoda’s neck scarf with the pebble pinned in one end was in his hands! DeWitt slid to the ground and he and Billy examined the scarf tenderly, eagerly.

  “I told you! I told you!” exulted Billy hoarsely. “See that weight fastened to it? Wasn’t that smart of her? Bless her heart! Now we got to get above, somehow, and find where she dropped it from!”

  CHAPTER VI

  ENTERING THE DESERT KINDERGARTEN

  “We’ll start now,” said Kut-le.

  Alchise led out the horses. The squaws each threw an emancipated, sinewy leg across a pony’s back and followed Alchise’s fluttering shirt up the mountain. Kut-le stood holding the bridle of a sedate little horse on which he had fastened a comfortable high-backed saddle.

  “Come, Rhoda,” he said. “I’ll shorten the stirrups after you are mounted.”

  Rhoda stood wi
th her back to the wall, her blue-veined hands clutching the rough out-croppings on either side, horror and fear in her eyes.

  “I can’t ride cross-saddle!” she exclaimed. “I used to be a good horsewoman in the side-saddle. But I’m so weak that even keeping in the side-saddle is out of the question.”

  “Anything except cross-saddle is utterly out of the question,” replied the Indian, “on the sort of trails we have to take. You might as well begin to control your nerves now as later. I’m going to have an expert rider in you by the time you have regained your strength. Come, Rhoda.”

  The girl turned her face to the afterglow. Remote and pitiless lay the distant crimson ranges. She shuddered and turned back to the young Indian who stood watching her. For the moment all the agony of her situation was concentrated in horror of another night in the saddle.

  “Kut-le, I can’t!”

  “Shall I pick you up and carry you over here?” asked Kut-le patiently.

  In her weakness and misery, Rhoda’s cleft chin quivered. There was only merciless determination in the Indian’s face. Slowly the girl walked to his side. He swung her to the saddle, adjusted the stirrups carefully, then fastened her securely to the saddle with a strap about her waist. Rhoda watched him in the silence of utter fear. Having settled the girl to his satisfaction, he mounted his own horse, and Rhoda’s pony followed him tractably up the trail.

  The trail rose steeply. After the first few dizzy moments, Rhoda, clinging to the saddle with hands and knees, was thankful for the security of her new seat. The scenery was uncanny to her terrorized eyes. To the left were great overhanging walls with cactus growing from every crevice; to the right, depth of cañon toward which she dared not look but only trusted herself prayerfully to her steady little horse.

  As the trail led higher and darkness settled, the cold grew intense and Rhoda cowered and shivered. Yet through her fear and discomfort was creeping surprise that her strength had endured even this long. In a spot where the trail widened Kut-le dropped back beside her and she felt the warm folds of a Navajo blanket about her shoulders. Neither she nor the Indian spoke. The madness of the night before, the fear and disgust of the afternoon gave way, slowly, to a lethargy of exhaustion. All thought of her frightful predicament, of her friends’ anxiety, of Kut-le’s treachery, was dulled by a weariness so great that she could only cling to the saddle and pray for the trail to end.

  Kut-le, riding just ahead, glanced back constantly at the girl’s dim figure. But Rhoda was beyond pleading or protesting. The trail twisted and undulated on and on. Each moment Rhoda felt less certain of her seat. Each moment the motion of the horse grew more painful. At last a faint odor of pine-needles roused her sinking senses and she opened her heavy eyes. They had left the sickening edge of the cañon and Alchise was leading them into a beautiful growth of pines where the mournful hooting of owls gave a graveyard sadness to the moon-flecked shadows.

  Here, in a long aisle of columnar pines, Kut-le called the first halt. Rhoda reeled in her saddle. Before her horse had stopped, Kut-le was beside her, unfastening her waist strap and lifting her to the ground. He pulled the blanket from his own shoulders and Molly stretched it on the soft pine-needles. Rhoda, half delirious, looked up into the young Indian’s face with the pathetic unconsciousness of a sick child. He laid her carefully on the blanket. The two squaws hurriedly knelt at Rhoda’s side and with clever hands rubbed and manipulated the slender, exhausted body until the girl opened her languid eyes.

  Kut-le, while this was being done, stood quietly by the blanket, his fine face stern and intent. When Rhoda opened her eyes, he put aside the two squaws, knelt and raised the girl’s head and held a cup of the rich broth to her lips. It was cold, yet it tasted good, and Rhoda finished the cup without protest, then struggled to a sitting position. After a moment Kut-le raised her gently to her feet. Here, however, she pushed him away and walked unsteadily to her horse. Kut-le’s hands dropped to his side and he stood in the moonlight watching the frail boyish figure clamber with infinite travail into the saddle.

  From the pine wood, the trail led downward. The rubbing and the broth had put new life into Rhoda, and for a little while she kept a clear brain. For the first time it occurred to her that instead of following the Indians so stupidly she ought to watch her chance and at the first opportunity make a wild dash off into the darkness. Kut-le was so sure of her weakness and cowardice that she felt that he would be taken completely by surprise and she might elude him. With a definite purpose in her mind she was able to fight off again and again the blur of weakness that threatened her.

  As the trail widened in the descent, Kut-le rode in beside her.

  “Feeling better?” he asked cheerfully.

  Rhoda made no reply. Such a passion of hatred for the man shook her that words failed her. She turned a white face toward him, the eyes black, the nostrils quivering with passion.

  Kut-le laughed softly.

  “Hate me, Rhoda! Hate me as much as you wish! That’s a heap more hopeful than indifference. I’ll bet you aren’t thinking of dying of ennui now!”

  What fiend, thought Rhoda, ever had induced her to make a friend of this savage! She clung to the pommel of her saddle, her eyes fastened on him. If only he would drop dead as he sat! If only his Indians would turn on him and kill him!

  They were riding through the desert now, desert thick-grown with cactus and sage-brush. Suddenly a far away roar came to Rhoda’s ears. There was a faint whistle repeated with increasing loudness. Off to the north appeared a light that grew till it threw a dazzling beam on the strange little waiting group. The train passed, a half-dozen dimly lighted Pullmans. The roaring decreased, the whistle sounded lower and lower and the night was silent. Rhoda sat following the last dim light with burning eyes. Kut-le led the way from the difficult going of the desert to the road-bed. As Rhoda saw the long line of rails the panic of the previous night overwhelmed her. Like a mad thing, unmindful of the strap about her waist she threw herself from the saddle and hung against the stolid pony. Kut-le dismounted and undid the strap. The girl dropped to the ties and lay crouched with her face against the steel rail.

  “O John! O John DeWitt!” she sobbed.

  “Alchise, go ahead with the horses,” said Kut-le. “Wait for me at the painted rock.”

  Then as the Indians became indistinguishable along the track he lifted Rhoda to her feet.

  “Walk for a while,” he said. “It will rest you. Poor little girl! I wish I could have managed differently but this was best for you. Come, don’t be afraid of me!”

  Some savage instinct stirred in Rhoda. For the first time in her life she felt an insane joy in anger.

  “I’m not afraid of you, you Apache Indian!” she said clearly. “I loathe you! Your touch poisons me! But I’m not afraid of you! I shall choke myself with my bare hands before you shall harm me! And if you keep me long enough I shall try to kill you!”

  Kut-le gave a short laugh.

  “Listen, Rhoda. Your protests show that you are afraid of me. But you need not be. Your protection lies in the fact that I love you—love you with all the passion of a savage, all the restraint of a Caucasian. I’d rather die than harm you! Why, girl, I’m saving you, not destroying you! Rhoda! Dear one!” He paused and Rhoda could hear his quickened breath. Then he added lightly, “Let’s get on with our little stroll!”

  Rhoda wrung her hands and groaned. Only to escape—to escape! Suddenly turning, she ran down the track. Kut-le watched her, motionless, until she had run perhaps a hundred yards, then with a few mighty leaps he overtook her and gathered her to his great chest. Moaning, Rhoda lay still.

  “Dear,” said Kut-le, “don’t exert yourself foolishly. If you must escape, lay your plans carefully. Use your brain. Don’t act like a child. I love you, Rhoda!”

  “I loathe you! I loathe you!” whispered the girl.<
br />
  “You don’t—ah—” He stopped abruptly and set the girl on the ground. They were standing beside a side-track near a desert water-tank. “I’ve caught my foot in a switch-frog,” muttered Kut-le, keeping his hold on Rhoda with one hand while with the other he tugged at his moccasined foot.

  Rhoda stood rigid.

  “I hear a train!” she cried. “O dear God, I hear a train!” Then, “The other Indians are too far away to reach you before the train does,” she added calmly.

  “But I’ll never loose my grip on you,” returned the Indian grimly.

  He tore at the imprisoned foot, ripping the moccasin and tearing at the road bed. The rails began to sing. Far down the track they saw a star of light Rhoda’s heart stood still. This, then, was to be the end! After all the months of distant menace, death was to be upon her in a moment! This, then, was to be the solution! And with all the horror of what life might mean to her, she cried out with a sob:

  “Oh, not this way! Not this way!”

  Kut-le gave her a quick push.

  “Hurry,” he said, “and try to remember good things of me!”

  With a cry of joy, Rhoda jumped from the track, then stopped. There flashed across her inner vision the face of young Cartwell, debonair and dark, with unfathomable eyes; young Cartwell who had saved her life when the scorpion had stung her, who had spent hours trying to lead her back to health. Instantly she turned and staggered back to the Indian.

  “I can’t let a human being die like a trapped animal!” she panted, and she threw herself wildly against him.

 

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