summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 23:52:33 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 23:52:33 -0800
commitd0055649efe7d8766c6e7a5258418a07008c1073 (patch)
tree2ea91cac16b11e06e2fb3ad21864912a0a11c14f
parent7200d080ac73e757906fae030a080951d412bd7f (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/50256-0.txt5199
-rw-r--r--old/50256-0.zipbin97313 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/50256-8.txt5200
-rw-r--r--old/50256-8.zipbin96421 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/50256-h.zipbin351793 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/50256-h/50256-h.htm5834
-rw-r--r--old/50256-h/images/cover.jpgbin142285 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/50256-h/images/pic1.jpgbin104449 -> 0 bytes
11 files changed, 17 insertions, 16233 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..28d460d
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50256 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50256)
diff --git a/old/50256-0.txt b/old/50256-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index cded816..0000000
--- a/old/50256-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5199 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Black Treasure, by Roger Barlow
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Black Treasure
- Sandy Steele Adventures #1
-
-Author: Roger Barlow
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2015 [EBook #50256]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACK TREASURE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SANDY STEELE ADVENTURES
-
- Black Treasure
- Danger at Mormon Crossing
- Stormy Voyage
- Fire at Red Lake
- Secret Mission to Alaska
- Troubled Waters
-
-
-
-
- Sandy Steele Adventures
- _BLACK TREASURE_
-
-
- BY ROGER BARLOW
-
-
- SIMON AND SCHUSTER
- _New York, 1959_
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- INCLUDING THE RIGHT OF REPRODUCTION
- IN WHOLE OR IN PART IN ANY FORM
- COPYRIGHT © 1959 BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
- PUBLISHED BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
- ROCKEFELLER CENTER, 630 FIFTH AVENUE
- NEW YORK 20, N. Y.
-
- FIRST PRINTING
-
- LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER: 59-13882
- MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- BY H. WOLFF BOOK MFG. CO., INC., NEW YORK.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- 1 The Man in Blue Jeans 7
- 2 Kit Carson Country 17
- 3 A “Poor Boy” Outfit 33
- 4 Learning the Ropes 46
- 5 A Light in the Window Rock 61
- 6 Cliff Dweller Country 75
- 7 Back of Beyond 90
- 8 Cavanaugh Shows His Colors 103
- 9 Fighting Fire with Fire 116
- 10 Pepper Makes a Play 128
- 11 Serendipity 144
- 12 Cavanaugh Makes a Mistake 154
- 13 Think Like a Dog 165
- 14 Showdown 177
- 15 The Fourth Touchdown 184
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ONE
- The Man in Blue Jeans
-
-
-High jinks were in order as the Regional Science Fair drew to a close in
-the big auditorium at Poplar City, California. A board of judges had
-selected prize-winning exhibits entered by high-school students from
-Valley View, Poplar City and other nearby communities. Now the winners
-were blowing off steam while teachers who had supervised the fair sat in
-quiet corners and fanned themselves wearily.
-
-“Step right up, ladies and gentlemen,” Pepper March whooped like a
-circus barker as he strutted in front of his First Prize winner, a
-glittering maze of electronic equipment. “Broadcast your voice over my
-beam of light. The very newest thing in science. Built through the
-co-operation of Valley View’s own Cavanaugh Laboratories. Step right
-up.... Yes, miss?” A girl had approached the exhibit, wide-eyed. “Please
-speak into this microphone.”
-
-“What do I say?” As she spoke, a quivering pencil of light leaped from a
-black box in the booth and her words thundered from a loudspeaker in the
-balcony.
-
-“Oh, recite ‘Mary Had a Little Lamb,’” suggested the big blond boy, and
-grinned.
-
-“‘Mary,’” boomed the girl’s voice from the rear of the hall as Pepper
-twiddled a mirror that deflected the light beam to a second
-loud-speaker, “‘had a little lamb.’” (Those words seemed to come out of
-the floor.) “‘Its fleece was white as snow.’” (The last phrase blared
-from a chandelier.)
-
-“Good old Pepper! Grandstanding again!” muttered Sandy Steele as the
-crowd cheered. Sandy stared glumly at a small sign reading Honorable
-Mention that perched on the exhibit which he and his pal Quiz Taylor had
-entered in the fair. It wasn’t fancy-looking like Pepper’s, he had to
-admit. It was just a mound of wet cardboard sheets stuck full of pins,
-plus a homemade control panel and some batteries. “Ours _was_ better,”
-he added.
-
-“I agree,” Quiz sighed. “After all the work we put into this thing!
-Molding sheets of cardboard to the shape of underground rock layers.
-Soaking them with salt water so they’ll carry electric currents that
-imitate the direction in which oil deposits flow.” He hooked a wire to
-one of the pins and pressed a button. A flashlight bulb on the control
-panel winked at him mockingly. “We sure deserve something better than a
-Mention!”
-
-“Step this way, folks,” Quiz called halfheartedly to the passers-by.
-“Learn how petroleum can be located, thousands of feet beneath the
-earth.”
-
-Nobody paid any attention except one Valley View boy who was pushing his
-way toward Pepper’s booth, a phonograph record under one skinny arm.
-
-“Sour grapes,” jeered the boy. “You and Sandy better forget that mess.
-Come over and watch Pepper play this stereo record over his beam. It’ll
-be something!”
-
-“Shall we?” Sandy looked at his friend miserably.
-
-“Unh-uh,” answered the short, round-faced boy. “Here comes a customer—I
-think.”
-
-A suntanned little man in faded blue shirt and jeans had ambled up to
-their booth and was studying the exhibit with his gray head tilted to
-one side.
-
-“A reservoir behavior analyzer, huh?” he said. “Represents the Four
-Corners area. Right?”
-
-“Why ... yes, sir.” Sandy stared at him, openmouthed. “We built it to
-represent the geological structure of the country where the boundaries
-of Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico meet. This map and card
-explain—”
-
-“I know the Four Corners,” grunted the little man as he sized up the
-tall, sandy-haired youngster. “Is your gadget accurate?”
-
-“As accurate as we could make it with the survey maps we could find.”
-
-“Hmmm.” Their visitor’s sharp eyes studied the gray mound. “What happens
-if I should drill an oil well here, in the northwest corner of the
-Navajo Indian reservation?” He pointed with a lean finger.
-
-Sandy moved a pin to the spot he indicated, connected it to the control
-panel with a length of wire, and pressed a switch.
-
-Nothing happened!
-
-Quiz groaned. Why couldn’t the thing show off when they wanted it to?
-
-“If you drilled there, sir, you’d just have a dry hole,” Sandy said with
-more confidence than he felt. “That location must be on the far fringe
-of the oil pool.”
-
-“Right!” The little man grinned from ear to ear, showing a fine white
-set of false teeth. “I did drill a wildcat well there. She was dry as a
-bone. My ninth duster in a row.... Now what happens if I drill here,
-near the bed of the San Juan River?”
-
-This time a bulb glowed brightly when they stuck their pin into the
-cardboard.
-
-“We can’t be sure, sir,” Sandy hesitated. “We don’t know too much about
-geology. Besides, oil is like gold. It’s where you find it, and the only
-way you find it is by drilling for it. But I’d guess that, in the
-neighborhood you indicated, you’d stand a chance of hitting a thousand
-barrels per day.”
-
-“Eight hundred and fifty barrels,” corrected the man in the blue jeans.
-“The well I drilled on the San Juan was the only thing that kept me out
-of bankruptcy.”
-
-A blare of jazz from Pepper’s loud-speakers, now working in unison, cut
-off further conversation and gave the boys a chance to study their
-strange acquaintance.
-
-“Why don’t you go over and take in that beam-of-light exhibit?” Sandy
-said when Pepper had brought the sound down to bearable levels. “It won
-first prize.”
-
-“That pile of expensive junk?” sniffed the little man. “All the kid did
-was to borrow some apparatus from Red Cavanaugh’s Valley View
-Laboratory. If I know Red—and I do know the big fourflusher well—he
-didn’t make the boy do a lick of real research on it.... Oh!” Again that
-wide grin. “You think I’m crazy and want to get rid of me, don’t you?
-Here.”
-
-He dug into his jeans and came up with a greasy card which read:
-
- The Four Corners Drilling Company
- John Hall, President
- Farmington, N. M.
-
-“Guess I should have got dressed up for this shindig,” Hall apologized,
-“but I just got in from Farmington. I read about your analyzer in the
-_Valley View News_ when you won first prize at your high-school science
-fair last month. Used to live there. That’s why I still get the paper.
-Your dingus should have received first prize here too, instead of that
-voice-cast thing.”
-
-“Say! You came all this way just to see our exhibit? Thanks!” was all
-Sandy could think of to say.
-
-As the auditorium lights blinked to indicate that the fair was closing,
-Hall added, “Got time for a bite? I have a proposition I’d like to sound
-you out on.”
-
-At a nearby diner, the oilman ordered full meals for all of them.
-
-“Here’s my proposition,” he said when the boys couldn’t eat another
-mouthful. “I’m a small wildcat operator. That means I hunt for oil in
-places that are so wild and woolly that only wildcats can live there.
-Once or twice I’ve struck it rich. Should have retired then, but there’s
-something about oil exploration that gets in a feller’s blood. So I went
-out, drilled some dry holes, and lost my shirt.
-
-“Right now I’m strapped until my new field pays off—if it does. But I
-think I’m onto something big in the Four Corners and I need help. You
-boys must have a working knowledge of geology to build an analyzer as
-good as that. How about working for me this summer?”
-
-“Sandy’s the rock hound,” Quiz said and hesitated. “I ... I’ve only read
-up on it in books.”
-
-“All I know is what Dad has told me,” Sandy remarked. “I couldn’t have
-built the exhibit without Quiz’s help.”
-
-“Forget the mutual-admiration-society stuff,” said Hall. “Would you both
-like to spend your vacations in the Four Corners, working as roustabouts
-and helping me out wherever else you can? It won’t be easy. But when you
-get through you’ll know a lot about oil, geology, how to get along with
-Indians, and I don’t know what all.
-
-“You’ll be out on the desert in all kinds of weather. You’ll chip rocks,
-hold stadia rods, sharpen tools and dig the trucks out of holes on those
-awful roads. Everything you learn will come in handy when you go to
-college.... You are going, aren’t you?”
-
-Sandy nodded but Quiz shook his head miserably.
-
-“I doubt it,” he said, “unless things at Dad’s restaurant pick up.”
-
-“Nonsense,” Hall snorted. “You can get a scholarship in geology if
-you’ve had experience in the field. Tell you what: I know your father
-slightly—he serves mighty good victuals. I’ll go over to Valley View
-tomorrow and talk things over with him. I’ll bet we can work something
-out for you.
-
-“Here’s another thing, though,” he went on thoughtfully. “I’ve got
-almost every cent I own tied up in oil leases right now. I can’t pay
-either of you very much—say forty dollars a week. You probably can do
-almost as well right at home.”
-
-“I’d rather work with you than wait on table,” Quiz declared.
-
-“Or cut lawns and things,” Sandy added.
-
-“It’s settled then.” Hall shook hands gravely. “See you in Valley View.”
-
-As they were leaving the diner, Pepper March came charging in with a
-flock of admiring Valley Viewers behind him.
-
-“Wait up,” Pepper whooped, grabbing his defeated rivals as they tried to
-dodge past him. “My treat. Come have a Coke while I tell you about my
-good luck.”
-
-“_Another_ Coke!” Sandy groaned. He had practically lived on them during
-the science fair. But curiosity got the better of him and he went back
-to the counter, followed by Quiz. By the time he found a stool, Pepper
-was holding forth.
-
-“You know Mr. Cavanaugh, the man I got some of the stuff for my
-voice-caster from?”
-
-“The man from whom you borrowed _all_ your equipment,” Sandy corrected
-between his teeth.
-
-“That’s what _you_ think, Honorable Mention.” Pepper turned to his
-admirers. “Anyway, he has a sideline: spends his summers hunting
-uranium. Also, he’s the same Red Cavanaugh who was All-American
-quarterback for State U. in 1930. He’s the fellow who ran three
-touchdowns against California in the Thanksgiving game that year.”
-
-“There was a Cavanaugh who made All-American,” Quiz agreed as he
-scratched his round head, “but I thought....”
-
-“See!” cried Pepper. “Quiz knows all there is to know about football.
-He’s heard about Red. Well, Mr. Cavanaugh attends all the Valley View
-games. Says he likes the way _I_ run touchdowns.” Pepper leered at
-Sandy, who was not always the spectacular player that Pepper was. “Also,
-Mr. Cavanaugh appreciates the plugs I gave to his laboratory whenever I
-explained my voice-caster, so what do you think...?”
-
-“He’s going to install you as a loud-speaker in one of his TV sets,”
-Quiz suggested.
-
-“Nah!” Pepper stopped the laughter with a lordly, upraised hand. “He’s
-giving me a summer job. I’m going to help him hunt uranium.”
-
-“Where?” Sandy gave his pal a stricken look.
-
-“Where? Why, the place where there’s more uranium than almost anywhere
-in the United States. But you wouldn’t know where that is.”
-
-“Oh, no,” groaned Quiz. “Not the Four Corners. Not there! Ain’t there no
-justice?”
-
-“What do you mean?” Pepper looked at him doubtfully.
-
-“I mean Sandy and I have jobs there too, and Four Corners is going to be
-awfully crowded this summer.”
-
-“Oh.” Some of the wind went out of Pepper’s sails. Then he brightened.
-“I’ll buy another round of Cokes if either of _you_ is going to get
-sixty dollars a week,” he crowed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWO
- Kit Carson Country
-
-
-“This sure isn’t my idea of a boom town!” Sandy grumbled as he and Quiz
-got off the eastbound Greyhound at Farmington, New Mexico, dropped their
-dusty bags and stood watching the early morning bustle on the little
-town’s wide streets.
-
-“Yeah.” Quiz wagged his head. “The Wild West shore ain’t what she used
-to be, pardner. No twenty-mule-team wagons stuck in Main Street
-mudholes. No gambling dives in evidence. No false store fronts. No
-sheriff in a white hat walkin’ slowlike down a wooden sidewalk to shoot
-it out with the bad man in a black hat. Ah, for the good old days.”
-
-“Oh, go fly a jet,” Sandy grinned. “Let’s look up Mr. Hall. Funny, his
-giving us his home address. He must have an office in town.”
-
-They strolled along, noticing the new stores and office buildings, the
-modern high school. Farmington would never become a ghost town. It was
-building solidly for the future.
-
-Suddenly Quiz grabbed his friend’s arm.
-
-“Look at that oilman who’s just made a strike,” he said. “We’ll ask him
-if he knows Mr. Hall.”
-
-“How do you know that he is, and has?” Sandy demanded as they approached
-a lanky stranger.
-
-“Because he’s wearing a brand-new Stetson and new shoes, of course,”
-Quiz explained, as to a child. “Drillers always buy them when their well
-comes in.”
-
-“Trust you to know something like that,” Sandy said in mock admiration.
-
-“Well now,” drawled the Farmingtonian when they put their question,
-“you’d have to get up earlier than this to catch John Hall in town. John
-keeps his office in his hat. Might as well spend the day seeing the
-sights, and look him up at his motel when he gets back from the Regions
-tonight.”
-
-“What sights?” asked Sandy when the oilman, obviously a transplanted
-Texan, had stumped away in high-heeled boots that must have hurt his
-feet. “Those mountains, maybe? They look close enough to touch. Let’s
-walk out to them.”
-
-“Don’t let this clear, thin air fool you,” Quiz warned. “Those mountains
-are probably twenty miles away. We’d need a car to—”
-
-A great honking and squealing of brakes behind them made the boys jump
-for safety. As they turned to give the driver what-for, Pepper March
-stuck his curly head out the window of a new jeep that was towing an
-equally new aluminum house trailer as big as a barn.
-
-“Welcome to our fair city,” Pepper shouted. “Saw you get off the bus, so
-I prepared a proper reception. How about a guided tour while I run this
-trailer over to Red’s camp?”
-
-“How long have you been here?” Sandy asked as they climbed aboard.
-
-“Red flew me over last Friday in his Bonanza. I’ve got the hang of his
-entire layout already. Nothing to it, really.”
-
-As he headed the jeep for the mountains, Pepper kept up a monologue in
-which skimpy descriptions of the countryside were mixed with large
-chunks of autobiography.
-
-“Every square mile of this desert supports five Indians, fifty sheep,
-five hundred rattlesnakes and fifty thousand prairie dogs,” he joked as
-they left the pavement for a winding dirt trail. They bounced madly
-through clumps of sagebrush, prairie-dog colonies, and tortured hills
-made of many-colored rock.
-
-“These roads wear out a car in a year, and you have to put in new
-springs every three months,” he added as they hit a chuckhole that made
-their teeth rattle.
-
-“Look at those crazy rock formations,” he said later while the boys
-sweated and puffed to jack up the rear end of the trailer so it could
-get around a particularly sharp hairpin turn in the trail. (_Now_ they
-knew why Pepper had extended his invitation for a tour!) “No telling
-what minerals you might find if you used electronic exploration methods
-on scrambled geology like this. Why, only last night, while we were
-sitting around the campfire at Elbow Rock, I said to Red: ‘Red,’ I said,
-just like that—we’ve become real pals already, you know—‘Red,’ I said,
-‘why don’t we branch out? Why don’t we look for oil as well as uranium,
-now that we’re out here?’ And Red said to me: ‘Pepper,’ he said—”
-
-“‘—when did you get your Ph.D. in geology?’” Sandy cut in.
-
-“Nothing like that at all! ‘Pepper,’ he said, ‘you’re right on the
-electron beam. We’ll organize the Red Pepper Oil Exploration and
-Contracting Company and give John Hall and those other stick-in-the-muds
-a run for their money.’ Oops! Hope we didn’t break anything that time!”
-
-The jeep’s front wheel had dropped into a pothole with a terrific thump.
-
-They found that the axle had wedged itself against a rock. Thirty
-minutes later, while they were still trying to get it loose, a
-rattletrap car pulled up beside them and an Indian stuck his flat,
-mahogany-colored face through its window.
-
-“Give us a hand—please,” Pepper ordered.
-
-The newcomer started to get out. Then his black eyes settled on the
-lettering on the side of the trailer:
-
- Cavanaugh Laboratories
- Farmington, N.M. & Valley View, Cal.
-
-“Cavanaugh! Huh!” snorted the Indian. He slammed the door of his car and
-roared off in a cloud of yellow dust.
-
-“Those confounded Indians,” snarled Pepper, staring after him in
-white-faced fury. “I’d like to.... Oh, well. Come on, fellows. Guess
-we’ve got to do this ourselves.”
-
-They finally got the jeep back on the trail and drove the twenty miles
-to Elbow Rock without further mishap. There Pepper parked beside a
-sparkling trout stream. They raided the trailer’s big freezer for
-sandwich materials and ate lunch at a spot overlooking a thousand square
-miles of yellow desert backed by blue, snowcapped peaks. Pepper was at
-his best as a host. For once in their lives, Sandy and Quiz almost liked
-him. At least here he seemed much pleasanter than he did at home,
-lording it over everyone—or trying to.
-
-In the cool of the afternoon—85 degrees in the sun instead of the 110
-degrees the thermometer had shown at noon—they rode the jeep back to
-Farmington by way of a wide detour that took them within sight of the
-San Juan River gorge.
-
-“I wanted to show you those two oil-well derricks over yonder,” Pepper
-explained. “They’re a mile and a half apart, as the crow flies. But,
-because they’re on opposite sides of the river, they were 125 long miles
-apart by car until we got that new bridge finished a few months ago.
-Shows you the problems we explorers face.”
-
-“The San Juan runs into the Colorado, doesn’t it?” Quiz asked as he
-studied the tiny stream at the bottom of its deep gorge, under the fine
-new steel bridge.
-
-“Yep. And thereby hangs a tale. Mr. Cavanaugh—Red, I mean—has found
-state documents down at Santa Fe showing that the San Juan used to be
-navigable. But the confounded dumb Indians swear it can’t be navigated.
-If boats _can_ go down the stream, even during part of the year, the
-river bed belongs to the Federal government. If the stream _can’t_ be
-navigated, the Navajos own the bed. That’s the law! While the argument
-continues, nobody can lease uranium or oil land near the river. Red says
-that, one of these days, he’s going to prove that—oops! I’m talking too
-much!”
-
-Pepper clammed up for the first time they could remember. He said hardly
-a word until he dropped them off at Hall’s motel.
-
-“I don’t get it,” Quiz said to his chum as they walked up a graveled
-path from the road to the rambling adobe building.
-
-“Don’t get what?” Sandy wanted to know.
-
-“This uranium hunting business Pepper’s got himself into. I read in
-_Time_ a while back that the Federal government stopped buying uranium
-from prospectors in 1957. Since then, it has bought from existing mills,
-but it hasn’t signed a single new contract. Cavanaugh doesn’t own a
-uranium mill. So why is he snooping around, digging into state documents
-and antagonizing the Indians?”
-
-“I only met him once, when he snooted our exhibit as a judge at the
-regional science fair,” Sandy replied. “Can’t say I took to him, under
-the circumstances.”
-
-“There’s something phony about that man. If only I could remember ...
-something to do with football, I think.” Quiz scratched his head, but no
-more information came out.
-
-They found Mr. Hall, dressed as usual in faded levis and denim shirt,
-sitting with several other guests of the motel on a wide patio facing
-the setting sun.
-
-“Well, here are my roustabouts,” the little man cried with a flash of
-those too-perfect teeth. “I was beginning to be afraid that you had lost
-yourselves in the desert.”
-
-He introduced them to the owners of the place, two maiden ladies from
-Minnesota who plainly were having the time of their middle-aged lives
-here on the last frontier. The Misses Emery, as alike as two wrinkled
-peas, showed the boys to their room, a comfortable place complete with
-fireplace and an air conditioner.
-
-“Supper will be served in half an hour,” said one.
-
-“Don’t be late,” said the other.
-
-The newcomers scrubbed the sticky dust off their bodies and out of their
-hair, changed into clothes that didn’t smell of jeep, and were heading
-for the dining room when Mr. Hall overtook them.
-
-“You may be wondering why I live out here on the edge of the desert,” he
-said quietly. “One reason is that I like the silence of desert nights.
-Another is the good cooking. The most important reason, though, is that
-some of the Farmington places are pretty nasty to Indians and Mexicans.
-Me, I like Indians and Mexes. Also, I learn a lot from them when they
-let their hair down. Well, here we are. You’ll find that the Misses
-Emery still cook like Mother used to. I’ll give you a tip. Don’t talk
-during supper. It isn’t considered polite in the Southwest.”
-
-“Why is that?” Sandy wondered.
-
-“It’s a hang-over from cowpunching days. If a ranch hand stopped to
-talk, somebody else grabbed his second helping.”
-
-After a silent meal, the guests gathered on the patio to watch the stars
-come out.
-
-“Folks,” said Mr. Hall, “meet Sandy Steele and Quiz Taylor. They’re
-going to join my crew this summer. Boys, meet Miss Kitty Gonzales, from
-Window Rock, Arizona. She’s going north in the morning to teach school
-in the part of the Navajo reservation that extends into Utah. Her
-schoolhouse will be a big trailer. Too bad you can’t be her students,
-eh? But sixteen is a mite old for Miss Kitty’s class.”
-
-Kitty was slim, in her late teens, and not much over five feet tall. She
-had an oval face, black hair and eyes, and a warm smile that made the
-newcomers like her at once.
-
-“This is Kenneth White,” Hall went on. “Ken works for the Bureau of
-Indian Affairs. When he talks, you listen!”
-
-The white-haired man gave the boys handshakes that they felt for an
-hour.
-
-“Chief John Quail, from the Arizona side of the Navajo reservation,”
-Hall said next. “The chief is here to talk over an oil lease.”
-
-Chief Quail, a dark, heavily muscled Indian, wore a light-gray business
-suit that showed evidence of the best tailoring. He surprised the boys
-by giving them the limpest of handshakes.
-
-“And Ralph Salmon, boss of my drill crew,” Hall concluded. “Ralph’s a
-southern Ute from Colorado. Do exactly as he says this summer if you
-want to learn oil.”
-
-The lithe, golden-skinned young Indian nodded, but did not shake hands.
-
-“So you’re off to your great adventure in the morning, Kitty,” White
-said to break the conversational ice. He lighted a pipe and leaned
-against the patio railing where he could watch the changing evening
-light as it stole over the desert.
-
-“I’m so excited I won’t be able to sleep,” the girl answered in a rich
-contralto voice. “It’s all so wonderful. The oil lease money pouring in
-like this, after long lean years when starvation for the Navajos was
-just around the corner and it looked as though their reservation might
-be taken from them. Schools and hospitals being built all over. My
-wonderful new trailer with books and maps and even a kitchen and a
-shower for the children. Oh, my Navajos are going places at last.” She
-gave an embarrassed laugh at her long speech.
-
-“One place your Navajos can go is to Salt Lake City,” Hall growled. “Get
-the state of Utah to settle that quarrel about who owns the land your
-schools and hospitals are being built on. Then I can get my hands on
-some leases up there.”
-
-“I thought the Navajo reservation was in New Mexico and Arizona,” Sandy
-said.
-
-“A small part of it is in southern Utah,” Hall explained. “That’s the
-part bounded by the San Juan River.”
-
-“The argument over school lands is less important than our other
-disputes,” Chief Quail said carefully. He spoke good English but his
-words seemed to be tied together with string. Plainly, he had learned
-the white man’s language not many years ago. “The real problem—the one
-that is, how do you say, tying up millions of dollars of lease money—is
-to have a correct boundary drawn around the Hopi reservation.”
-
-“The chief means,” Hall explained for the boys’ benefit, “that the
-Navajo reservation forms a large rectangle that completely surrounds a
-smaller square of land in Arizona where the Hopi Indians live.”
-
-“Not a square, Mr. Hall,” Chief Quail objected. “The Hopis really own
-only a small triangle. Those primitive, stupid cliff dwellers claim
-thousands of Navajo acres to which they have no right. If I had my way
-in our Council, I would....”
-
-“The Navajos _and_ the Hopis are all grandmothers,” Salmon cut in
-angrily. “Squabbling over money like palefaces! Spending their royalties
-on things like schools and hospitals! When my tribe, the southern Utes,
-got its first royalty check, the Council voted to have some fun with the
-money. We spent it to build a race track for our fast horses!”
-
-“Digger Indian!” The Navajo sneered at Salmon without moving a muscle of
-his broad face. “Fish eater! Soon you will waste all your easy money.
-When the oil runs out you will be running about naked again, living on
-roots and fried caterpillars like you used to!”
-
-“Oh, no, John.” The Ute’s grin was just visible in the gathering
-darkness. “Maybe we’ll go on the warpath and take what we need from you
-fat Navajo sheep herders, as we did in the good old days. Or—” he added
-quickly as the chief lunged to his feet—“we’ll sing you to death. Like
-this!”
-
-Salmon began a wailing chant that set everyone’s teeth on edge. The
-Navajo stopped his advance as if he had struck a wall. He clapped his
-hands over his ears and, after a moment, stalked out into the night.
-
-“You shouldn’t have done that, Ralph,” Hall said coldly. “Some day Chief
-Quail is going to take you apart if you don’t stop baiting him.”
-
-“Can you actually sing people to death, Mr. Salmon?” Sandy said to break
-the tension.
-
-“Of course not,” the Ute answered softly. “But the chief _thinks_ I can,
-and I wouldn’t spoil his belief for anything. We have a set-to like this
-every time we meet. Some of our medicine men can sing people _well_,
-though. They chant awhile and then pull the pain right out of your
-tooth, ear, or stomach.”
-
-“What does a pain look like?” Quiz asked, half convinced.
-
-“Looks just like a fingernail about two inches long,” the Ute answered.
-“It’s bright red. If you strike it, it goes _tinnnggg_, like the reed of
-a saxophone.”
-
-“Stop your nonsense, Ralph,” White commanded, “while I go out and smooth
-Quail’s ruffled feathers.” He followed the chief and brought him back
-five minutes later to receive an oily apology from his ancestral enemy.
-
-“You Indians will be broke again, one of these days, if you keep
-quarreling among yourselves,” Hall said then. “Crooked white men are
-hanging around the Four Corners. They’re just waiting for something like
-that so they can trick you out of your oil and uranium rights, or even
-your reservations.”
-
-Everyone had to agree that this was true, so the little party settled
-down in reasonable harmony to watch the giant stars come out. Salmon
-produced a guitar after a while. Then he and Kitty sang Indian and
-Mexican songs together. Sandy particularly liked one that went:
-
- _I wander with the pollen of dawn upon my trail._
- _Beauty surrounding me, with it I wander._
-
-“That’s a Navajo song,” the Ute said, grinning. “We sing it in honor of
-Chief Quail. Here’s one by a white man that I like:
-
- _Mañana is a lovely word we all would like to borrow._
- _It means ‘Don’t skeen no wolfs today wheech you don’t shoot
- tomorrow.’_
- _An’ eef you got some jobs to did, of which you do not wanna,_
- _Go ’head and take siesta now; tomorrow ees mañana!”_
-
-“Guess that’s a hint we’d better take our siestas,” Hall said to the
-boys. “Big day ahead mañana.”
-
-“This country sort of grows on one,” Sandy said to Kitty as they shook
-hands. “I’m beginning to feel at home already.”
-
-“Oh, you haven’t really seen anything yet,” the girl answered. “If you
-and Mr. Taylor get up in the neighborhood of my school, look me up. I’ll
-show you some of the wildest and most beautiful country on earth.”
-
-“Mother said I’d fall in love with the place.” Sandy took a last look
-across the sleeping desert. “She was born not far from here. Met my
-father when he was working for the U.S. Geological Survey.”
-
-“How interesting,” cried the girl. “Maybe my folks know her. What was
-her maiden name?”
-
-“It was Ruth Carson.”
-
-“Oh!” Kitty snatched her hand out of his. “She’s related to Kit Carson,
-isn’t she?”
-
-“The general was my great-uncle,” Sandy said proudly. “That’s why I’m so
-interested in this part of—”
-
-He stopped because Kitty had backed away from him until her back pressed
-against the motel wall. As he stared, she spat into the dust of the
-patio in a most unladylike fashion before turning and running toward her
-room.
-
-“What did I do to her?” Sandy gasped, openmouthed.
-
-“Kitty’s mother is a Navajo,” Chief Quail answered. “Back in Civil War
-days, Kit Carson rounded up the Navajos to take us away from our
-reservation. We went on the warpath and retreated into the mountains.
-Carson followed. His soldiers shot several dozen of us, and slaughtered
-all our sheep so we would either have to surrender or starve. Even
-today, many of us would rather eat fish as the Utes do than touch one of
-Kit Carson’s descendants!” He turned his back and marched off.
-
-“Ouch!” Sandy groaned. “I certainly put my foot into it that time.”
-
-“Don’t worry too much about it,” said White. “Fact of the matter is that
-Kit Carson made a mighty good Indian Agent later on, and most Navajos
-admit it. He was the man who insisted that they all be returned to the
-reservation after the rebellion was over. He eventually died from
-overwork in behalf of ‘his Indians.’ Except for a few diehards, the
-Navajos won’t hold your mother’s name against you.”
-
-“I certainly hope you’re right,” Sandy sighed as he and Quiz said good
-night to the others and headed for their room.
-
-“What a mess,” his friend said. “Navajos squabbling with Utes, Hopis and
-the state of Utah. Crooks waiting to take advantage of them all. Pains
-like fingernails! Cavalry heroes who turn into villains. I suppose
-that’s why the biggest oil field in the Four Corners is called the
-Paradox Basin!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THREE
- A “Poor Boy” Outfit
-
-
-Hall routed Ralph Salmon and the boys out of bed before dawn the next
-day. They ate a huge pancakes-and-sausage breakfast cooked by the
-sleepy-eyed but cheerfully clucking Misses Emery and climbed into the
-company jeep just as the sun was gilding the peaks of the mountains.
-Soon their teeth were chattering in the morning cold as Salmon roared
-off in a northwesterly direction toward the San Juan River lease.
-
-“I wouldn’t have come down to Farmington at all this week,” Hall shouted
-above the wind which made the jeep top pop and crack, “except that I
-promised to pick up you boys, and Ralph had to get our core drill
-repaired. That’s the drill you hear thumping under the seat. We’re down
-a thousand feet with our second well and I should be riding herd on it
-every minute.”
-
-“You’re a worrywart, boss,” chuckled the Indian. “You know that Harry
-Donovan’s on the job up there. He can handle things just as well as you
-can.”
-
-“You’re right,” Hall answered. “But somehow it doesn’t seem right to
-have a geologist bossing the drill crew. That’s a hang-over from my days
-with a big spit-and-polish producing company, I guess.
-
-“Ours is what they call a ‘poor boy’ outfit here in the oil country,” he
-explained to Sandy and Quiz. “We make do with secondhand drill rigs and
-other equipment. Sometimes we dig our engines and cables out of junk
-yards.”
-
-“Now, now, boss, don’t cry,” said their driver. “It’s not quite that
-bad.”
-
-“It will be if this well doesn’t come in.” Hall grinned. “But we do have
-to make every penny count, kids. We all pitch in on anything that needs
-doing. What kind of jobs have you cooked up for our new roustabouts,
-Ralph?”
-
-“There’s a new batch of mud to be mixed,” the Indian answered. “How
-about that for a starter?”
-
-“Mud!” Quiz exploded. “What’s mud got to do with drilling an oil well?”
-
-“Plenty, my friend. Plenty,” Ralph answered. “Mud is forced down into a
-well to cool the drill bit and to wash rock cuttings to the surface. You
-use mud if you have water, that is. In parts of this country, water’s so
-short, or so expensive to haul, that producers use compressed air for
-those purposes. We’re lucky. We can pipe plenty of water from the
-river.”
-
-“Then you mix the water with all sorts of fancy chemicals to make
-something that’s called mud but really isn’t,” said Sandy, remembering
-tales of the oil country that his father had told him.
-
-“You’re forgetting that we’re a ‘poor boy’ outfit,” said Hall.
-“Chemicals cost money. We dig shale from the river bed and grind it up
-and use it for a mix. You’ll both have a nice new set of blisters before
-this day is over.”
-
-They followed a good paved road to the little town of Shiprock, which
-got its name from a huge butte that looked amazingly like a ship under
-full sail. Crossing the San Juan over the new bridge that Pepper had
-pointed out the day before, they turned northwest onto a badly rutted
-trail. Here and there they saw flocks of sheep, watched by half-naked
-Indian children and their dogs. Occasionally they passed a six-sided
-Navajo house surrounded by a few plowed acres.
-
-“Those huts are called hogans,” Ralph explained, placing the accent on
-the last syllable. “Notice that they have no windows and that their only
-doors always face toward the rising sun. Never knock on a hogan door.
-That’s considered bad luck. Just walk in when you go to visit a Navajo.”
-
-“Whe-e-ew!” Sandy panted when an hour had passed and he had peeled out
-of his coat, shirt, and finally his undershirt. “How can it get so hot
-at this altitude?”
-
-“Call this hot?” jeered Salmon. “Last time I was down in Phoenix it was
-125 degrees in the shade, and raining cats and dogs at the same time. I
-had to park my car a block from the hotel, so I ran for it. But when I
-got into the lobby my clothes were absolutely dry. The rain evaporated
-as fast as it fell!”
-
-“That,” said Hall, “is what I’d call evaporating the truth just a leetle
-bit.”
-
-“Mr. Salmon....” Quiz hesitated. “Could I ask you a personal question?”
-
-“You can if you call me Ralph,” answered the tall driller as he slowed
-to let a Navajo woman drive a flock of goats across the trail. She was
-dressed in a brightly colored blouse and long Spanish skirt, as if she
-were going to a party instead of doing a chore, and she did not look up
-as they passed.
-
-“Well, how is it you don’t talk more—like an Indian?” Quiz asked.
-
-“How do Indians talk?” A part of the Ute’s smile faded and his black
-eyes narrowed ever so slightly.
-
-“Why, I dunno—” the boy’s face turned red with embarrassment—“like Chief
-Quail, I guess. I mean ... I thought....”
-
-“When you’ve served a hitch in the Navy, Quiz, you get to talking just
-like everyone else, whether you’re an Indian or an Eskimo.”
-
-“Were you in Korea, Ralph?” Sandy asked to break the tension.
-
-“I was not! I served my time working as a roustabout on oil wells in one
-of the Naval Reserves.”
-
-“And, since that wasn’t enough punishment,” Hall said as he grinned,
-“Ralph came home and took advantage of the GI bill to go to school in
-Texas and became a driller.”
-
-“Yep,” Salmon agreed. “And I soon found out that an Indian oil driller
-is about as much in demand as a two-headed calf.” He threaded the car
-through the narrow crevice between two tall buttes of red sandstone that
-stuck up out of the desert like gnarled fingers. “I was just about down
-to that fried caterpillar diet that Chief Quail keeps kidding me about
-when a certain man whose name I won’t mention gave me my first job.”
-
-“And you turned out to be the best all-round oilman I ever hired,” said
-Hall as he slapped the other on his bronzed, smoothly muscled back. “I
-figured that if Iroquois Indians make the finest steelworkers in the
-construction business, a Ute should know how to run a drill rig. I
-wasn’t mistaken.”
-
-Salmon was at a loss for words for once. His ears turned pink and he
-concentrated on the road, which was becoming almost impassable, even for
-a jeep.
-
-“That’s my reservation over there across the Colorado line,” he said at
-last, turning his head and pointing with outthrust lips toward the north
-and east.
-
-“Nice country—for prairie dogs. Although the southern Utes are doing all
-right these days from royalties on the big oil field that’s located just
-over that ridge. They tell me, too, that the reservation holds one of
-the biggest coal deposits in the western United States.”
-
-“Why didn’t you stay on the reservation, then?” Quiz wanted to know.
-
-“I like to move around. People ask me more questions that way.”
-
-“Oh.” Quiz stopped his questioning.
-
-“Up ahead and to the left,” Ralph went on, “is the actual Four Corners,
-the only place in the country where the boundaries of four states meet.
-It also is the farthest point from a railroad in the whole United
-States—one hundred and eighty miles or so, I understand. How about
-stopping there for lunch, boss, as soon as we cross into Utah? Nice and
-quiet.” He winked at Quiz to take any sting out of his earlier words.
-
-After they had eaten every one of the Misses Emery’s chicken and ham
-sandwiches, Hall took over as their driver and guide.
-
-“My lease is up near the village of Bluff, on the north side of the
-river,” he explained. “I’m convinced, though, that most of the oil and
-uranium is in Navajo and Hopi territory south of the San Juan. I’ve had
-Donovan down there running seismographic surveys and he says the place
-is rich as Croesus. That’s why I’ve been talking turkey to Chief
-Quail—trying to get him to get the Navajo and Hopi councils together so
-we can develop the area.”
-
-“Is Quail chief of all the Navajos?” Sandy asked. “He didn’t seem to be
-exactly....” He stammered to a stop while Ralph chuckled.
-
-“Oh, no,” Hall answered. “Quail is just a chief of one of the many
-Navajo clans, or families. The real power is held by the tribal council,
-of which Paul Jones is chairman. But Chief Quail swings a lot of weight
-on the reservation.”
-
-“Hah!” Ralph snorted. “Chief Quail’s a stuffed shirt. They made a
-uranium strike on his farm last year, so what does he do?... Buys
-himself a new pickup truck! I’d have celebrated by getting a Jaguar.”
-
-“A Jaguar is like a British Buick,” said Quiz, suddenly coming into his
-element as the talk got around to cars. “A Bentley would have been
-better.”
-
-“I know, I know,” Ralph answered. “Or a Rolls Royce if he could afford a
-chauffeur. I read the ads too.”
-
-They followed the river, now deep in its gorge and getting considerably
-wider, for another twenty miles. They were out of the reservation now
-and passed a number of prosperous farms. The road remained awful,
-however, being a long string of potholes filled to the brim with yellow
-dust. The holes couldn’t be seen until the jeep was right on top of
-them. Hall had to keep slamming on his brakes at the risk of dislocating
-his passengers’ necks.
-
-“You should travel through this country when it rains,” he said
-cheerfully. “Cars sink into the mud until all you can see is the tips of
-their radio antennas.”
-
-“We’d get to the well before sunset if you drove as well as you tell
-tall stories,” Ralph commented dryly.
-
-They finally made the field headquarters of the Four Corners Drilling
-Company with two hours of sunlight to spare. The boys looked at the
-place in disappointment. An unpainted sheet-iron shack with a sign
-reading Office over its only door squatted close to the top of the San
-Juan gorge. Not far from it was an odd-looking contraption of pipes,
-valves and dials about as big as a home furnace. There was no sign of a
-well derrick as far as they could see across deserted stretches of sand,
-sagebrush, and rust-colored rock.
-
-“There she is—Hall Number One,” said their employer. He walked over to
-the contraption, patted it as though it was his best friend, and stood,
-thumbs hooked in the armholes of his worn vest, while he studied the
-dials proudly. “This is my discovery well. It’s what buys the baby new
-shoes.”
-
-“But where are the derricks and everything?” Quiz tried unsuccessfully
-to keep the disappointment out of his voice.
-
-“Shhh!” whispered Sandy. “They’ve skidded the derrick to the new well
-site. This thing’s called a Christmas tree. It controls the flow of oil
-out of the ground.”
-
-“Smart boy,” said Hall. “We’ve got our wildcat hogtied and hooked into
-this gathering line.” He pointed to a small pipe that snaked southward
-across the desert. “The gathering line connects with the big new
-pipeline to the West Coast that passes a few miles from here. Number One
-is flowing a sweet eight hundred and fifty barrels a day.”
-
-“But I don’t see any other well,” Quiz persisted.
-
-“It’s over behind that butte.” Hall pointed again. “Oh, I know what’s
-bothering you. You’re remembering those old pictures that show derricks
-in an oil field standing shoulder to shoulder, like soldiers. We don’t
-do things that way any longer. We’ve got plenty of room out here, so we
-space our wells. Only drill enough of them to bring up the oil without
-waste. Come on. I’ll take you over and introduce you to the gang.”
-
-A short ride brought them to a scene of whirlwind activity. Drilling had
-stopped temporarily on Hall’s second well so that a worn bit could be
-pulled out of the hole and replaced with a sharp one. But that didn’t
-mean work had stopped!
-
-The boys watched, spellbound, while dripping lengths of pipe were snaked
-out of the ground by a cable which ran through a block at the top of the
-tall derrick and was connected to a powerful diesel engine. As every
-three lengths arrived at the surface, two brawny men wielding big iron
-tongs leaped forward and disconnected them from the pipe remaining in
-the well. Then the 90-foot “stand” was gently maneuvered, with the help
-of another man, wearing a safety belt, who stood on a platform high up
-on the derrick. When a stand had been neatly propped out of the way, the
-next one was ready to be pulled out of the well.
-
-The crew worked at top speed without saying a word until the mud-covered
-drill finally came in sight. They unscrewed the bit from the end of the
-last stand of pipe, and replaced it with a sharp one. Then the process
-was reversed. Stand after stand of pipe was reconnected and lowered
-until all were back in the well. Then the engine began to roar steadily.
-A huge turntable under the derrick started spinning the pipe at high
-speed. Down at the bottom of the hole the bit resumed chewing into the
-rock.
-
-“Nice teamwork, Ralph,” said Hall. “You certainly have trained as good a
-crew as can be found in the Regions.”
-
-“Nice team to work _with_,” answered the driller as he looked proudly at
-his men, who were about equally divided between Indians and whites. “Now
-let’s see if there’s any work for our two tenderfeet before it’s time to
-knock off for supper. Come on, fellows. The mud pit is slurping for
-you.”
-
-Two hours later, when the cook began hammering on his iron triangle,
-Sandy and Quiz looked like mud puppies.
-
-“You’re a howling fright,” said the tall boy as he climbed out of the
-big pit where a new batch of goo was swirling and settling. He plastered
-down his unruly cowlick with a slimy hand. For once the hair stayed in
-place.
-
-“And you look like a dirty little green man from the swamps of the
-planet Venus.” Quiz spat out a bit of mud and roared with laughter.
-“Lucky thing we don’t have to get this muck off with compressed air.
-Come on. I’ll race you to the showers.”
-
-Dinner was eaten in the same dogged quiet that they had noted at the
-motel. It was a good dinner, too, although it came mostly out of cans.
-
-The boys were introduced all around after the apple pie had been
-consumed to the last crumb, but they were too tired and sleepy to sort
-out names and faces. They did gather that four-man shifts—or “towers,”
-as they seemed to be called—kept the drill turning day and night until
-the drill struck oil or the well had to be abandoned as a “duster.”
-
-The only person present who made a real impression was Harry Donovan,
-Hall’s geologist. He was an intense, bald, wiry fellow in his thirties
-who kept biting his lips, as though he was just about to impart a deep
-secret. But all he seemed to talk about were mysterious things like
-electronic log readings, core analyses, and the distance still to be
-drilled before something called the “Gallup Pay” would be reached.
-
-Hall and Salmon were intensely interested in Donovan’s report. Try as
-they would to follow it, Sandy and Quiz soon found themselves nodding.
-Finally they leaned their elbows on the oilcloth-covered dinner table
-and snored gently.
-
-Ralph shook them partially awake and showed them their beds in a
-battered trailer. They slept like logs despite the fact that, bathed in
-brilliant white light provided by a portable electric generator, the rig
-roared and clanked steadily throughout the night as its bit “made hole”
-more than a thousand feet underground.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FOUR
- Learning the Ropes
-
-
-Sandy and Quiz spent the next two weeks picking up a working knowledge
-of drilling, getting acquainted with Hall’s outfit, and learning to keep
-out from under the feet of the crew. Ralph saw to it that their jobs
-varied from day to day as they grew lean and brown under the desert sun.
-
-“Used to have a lot of trouble keeping fellows on the job out here next
-to nowhere,” he explained with a grin. “The boys would get fed up after
-a few weeks. Then they’d quit, head for town, and I’d have to spend
-valuable time rounding up replacements. Now I switch their work around
-so they don’t have so much chance to become bored. Let’s see ... you
-mixed mud yesterday, didn’t you? Well, today I want you to help Jack
-Boyd keep his diesel running.” Whereupon the boys would spend a “tower”
-cleaning the engine room, or oiling and polishing the powerful but
-over-age motor that Boyd nursed like a sick child to make it keep the
-bit turning steadily.
-
-On other days they were assigned to drive to Shiprock or Farmington for
-supplies, to help Ching Chao in the cookhouse, or to learn the abc’s of
-oil geology from Donovan. Sandy preferred to do chores around the
-derrick and was very proud when he finally was allowed to handle one of
-the huge tongs used to grip the stands of pipe so that they could be
-removed from the well or returned to it.
-
-Quiz, on the other hand, never tired of studying the wavering lines
-marked on strips of paper by the electric log that Donovan lowered into
-the well at regular intervals. He soon got so that he could identify the
-different kinds of rock layers through which the bit was drilling, by
-the slight changes in the shapes of those lines. Or he would train a
-microscope on thin slices of sandstone sawed from the yard-long cores
-that were hauled out of the well from time to time. With his usual
-curiosity, he had read up enough about geology to recognize the
-different marine fossils that the cores contained. He would become as
-excited as Donovan did when the geologist pointed to a group of minute
-shells in a slice of core and whispered, “Those are Foraminifera, boys!
-We must be getting close to the oil.” And he would become as discouraged
-as his teacher when careful study of another core showed no indication
-of ancient sea creatures.
-
-“I don’t get it,” Sandy would mutter on such occasions. “How come those
-shells got thousands of feet underground in the first place? And what
-have they got to do with finding oil?”
-
-Then the geologist would mop his bald head with a bandanna handkerchief,
-take off his thick horn-rimmed glasses and use them as a pointer while
-he lectured the boys on his beloved science.
-
-“All of this country has been deep under water several times during the
-last few million years,” he would explain patiently. “In fact, most of
-the center of the North American continent has been submerged at one
-time or another. When the Four Corners region was a sea bottom back in
-the Carboniferous era, untold generations of marine plants and animals
-died in the water and sank to the bottom.
-
-“As the ages passed, those life forms were buried by mud and silt
-brought down from surrounding mountains by the raging rivers of those
-days. The weight of the silt caused it to turn into sandstone or
-limestone layers hundreds of feet thick. This pressure generated a great
-deal of heat. Geologists think that pressure and heat compressed the
-dead marine creatures into particles of oil and gas.
-
-“Every time the land rose to the surface and sank again, another layer
-or stratum of dead fish and plants would form. All this heaving and
-twisting of the earth formed traps or domes, called anticlines, into
-which the oil and gas moved. That’s why we find oil today at different
-depths beneath the surface.”
-
-“I understand that water and gas pressure keeps pushing oil toward the
-surface,” Sandy said on one occasion, “but then why doesn’t it escape?”
-
-“Usually it gets caught under anticlines where the rock is too thick and
-hard for it to move any farther,” Quiz cut in, eager to show off his new
-knowledge of geology. “But it does escape in some places, Sandy. You’ve
-heard of oil springs. George Washington owned one of them. And the
-Indians used to sop crude petroleum from such springs with their
-blankets and use it as a medicine or to waterproof their canoes.
-Sometimes the springs catch fire. Some of those still exist in parts of
-Iran. I read an article once which said that Jason really was looking
-for a cargo of oil when he sailed the _Argo_ to the Caucasus Mountains
-in search of the Golden Fleece. The fleece was just a flowery Greek term
-for a burning spring, maybe.”
-
-“Maybe,” Donovan agreed as he stoked his pipe and sent clouds of smoke
-billowing through the laboratory. “There’s also a theory that Job was an
-oilman. The Bible has him saying that ‘the rock poured me forth rivers
-of oil,’ you remember. If you read the Book of Job carefully, it almost
-sounds as if the poor fellow’s troubles started when his oil field
-caught fire. However that may be, we know that the Greeks of Jason’s
-time used quite a bit of oil. The Arabs even refined petroleum and
-lighted the streets of their cities with something resembling kerosene
-almost a thousand years ago.”
-
-“Golly,” said Sandy. “It’s all too deep for me—several thousand feet too
-deep. I think I’ll go help Chao get dinner ready! I _do_ know how to
-cook.”
-
-
-The one job around the derrick that the boys never got a chance to
-handle was that of Peter Sanchez, the platform man who worked on their
-shift, or “tower.” Whenever the time came to replace a bit, Peter would
-climb to his perch halfway up the rig, snap on a safety belt, and guide
-the upper ends of the ninety-foot stands of pipe into their rack. There
-they would stand upright in a slimy black bunch until it was time to
-return them to the well.
-
-Peter, who boasted that he had been an oilman for a quarter of a
-century, worked effortlessly. He never lost his footing on the narrow
-platform, even when the strongest wind blew. Platform men on the other
-shifts were equally sure-footed—and very proud of their ability to
-“walk” strings of pipe weighing several tons. And they took things easy
-whenever they climbed down from their dizzy perches.
-
-Peter, in particular, was fond of amusing the other crew members by
-telling them stories about the oil fields in the “good old days.” His
-favorite character was a driller named Gib Morgan. Gib, he said, had
-come down originally from the Pennsylvania regions when the first big
-strikes were being made in Texas and Oklahoma, around 1900.
-
-“You never heard of Gib?” Peter said one night as the off-duty crews
-were sitting around a roaring campfire after dinner. “Well, I’ll tell
-you....” He rolled a cigarette with one hand, cowboy fashion, while
-studying the young greenhorns out of the corner of his eye. “Gib was a
-little feller with a big mustache but he could put Davy Crockett and
-Paul Bunyan in the shade when he had a mind to. When he first came to
-Texas he had a run of bad luck. Drilled almost a hundred dry holes
-without hitting a single gusher. Got down to his last silver dollar.
-Then do you know what he did to make a stake?”
-
-“No. What?” Quiz leaned forward eagerly.
-
-“He pulled up all those dusters, sawed ’em into four-foot lengths, and
-sold ’em to the ranchers for postholes. That’s how it happens that all
-the Texas ranges got fenced in with barbed wire, son.”
-
-When the laughter had died down and Quiz’s ears had returned to their
-normal color, the platform man went on: “That wasn’t the only time that
-Gib helped out his fellow man. Back around 1900, just before the big
-Spindletop gusher came in, oilmen in these parts were having a lot of
-trouble with whickles—you know what a whickle is, don’t you, Sandy?”
-
-“It’s a cross between a canary bird and a bumblebee, isn’t it?” Sandy
-was dimly remembering a story that his father had told him.
-
-“Well! Well!” Peter looked at him with more respect. “That’s exactly
-right. Pretty little varmints, whickles, but they developed a powerful
-taste for crude oil. Soon as a well came in, they’d smell it from miles
-away. That’s no great feat, I’ll admit, for crude oil sure has a strong
-odor. Anyway, they’d descend on the well in swarms so thick that they’d
-darken the sky. And they’d suck it plumb dry before you could say Jack
-Robinson, unless you capped it quick.
-
-“Well, Gib got one of his big ideas. He went out to one of his dusters
-that he hadn’t pulled up yet, poured several barrels of oil down it, and
-‘salted’ the ground with more oil. Pretty soon, here came the whickles.
-They lapped up all the oil on the ground. Then a big whickle, probably
-the boss, rose up in the air and let out a lot of whickle talk about how
-he personally had discovered the biggest oil highball on earth. After
-that he dived into the well, and all the others followed him, like the
-animals that went into the ark. Soon as the last one was down the hole,
-Gib grabbed a big wooden plug and capped the well. We haven’t had any
-whickle trouble since.”
-
-“Then all the poor whickles died?” Quiz rose to the bait.
-
-“Oh, no,” Peter answered with a straight face. “They’re still buzzing
-around in that hole, mad as hops. Some day a greenhorn like you will
-come along and let ’em out.”
-
-“Wonder what ever became of Gib,” said Donovan, between puffs on his
-pipe.
-
-“Last I heard he was up Alaska way,” Ralph said. “Here’s a story about
-him that you may want to add to your repertoire, Pete. Gib was drilling
-near Moose Jaw in December when it got so cold the mercury in the
-thermometer on the derrick started shivering and shaking so hard that it
-knocked a hole right through the bottom of the tube. During January it
-got colder yet and the joints on the drill pipe froze so they couldn’t
-be unscrewed.
-
-“Now Gib had a bet he could finish that well in four months and he
-wasn’t going to let Jack Frost faze him. He just rigged up a pile driver
-that drove that frozen pipe on down into the ground as pretty as you
-please. Soon as one stand of pipe was down, the crew would weld on
-another and keep driving. Course the pipe got compressed a lot from all
-that hammering, but Gib couldn’t see any harm in that.
-
-“Time February came around it got real chilly—a hundred or so below
-zero. He was using a steam engine by that time because the diesel fuel
-was frozen solid, but no sooner would the smoke from the fire box come
-out of the chimney than it would freeze and fall back on the snow.
-Wading through that black stuff was like pushing through cotton wool,
-and besides, the men tracked it all over the clean bunkhouse floor. So
-Gib had to get out a bulldozer and shove it into one corner of the
-clearing where he had his rig set up.
-
-“They were down about four miles on March 15 when an early spring thaw
-set in. First thing that happened was that the smoke melted and spread
-all over the place. Couldn’t see your nose on your face. Fire wardens
-came from miles around thinking the forest was ablaze. Gib was in a
-tight spot so he did something he had never done before—he looked up his
-hated rival, Bill McGee, who was in the Yukon selling some refrigerators
-to the Eskimos. He had to give skinflint McGee a half interest in the
-well to get him to help out. McGee just borrowed those refrigerators,
-stuffed the smoke into them, and refroze it.
-
-“No sooner was the smoke under control than all that compressed drill
-pipe down the well started to thaw out. It began shooting out of the
-hole like a released coil spring. First it humped up under the derrick
-and pushed it a hundred feet into the air. Then it toppled over and
-squirmed about the clearing like a boa constrictor.
-
-“That was where Bill McGee made his big mistake. Gib had told him the
-drill bit, which had been dragged out of the well by the thrashing pipe,
-had cuttings on it which showed there was good oil sand only a few feet
-farther down. But Bill figured that with the derrick a wreck, the well
-was a frost. So he sold his half interest back to Gib, who didn’t
-object, for a plug of good chewing tobacco.
-
-“Soon as McGee was out of sight, Gib headed for the nearest U.S. Assay
-Office. He got the clerk to lend him about a quart of the mercury that
-assay men use to test the purity of gold nuggets.
-
-“Morgan went back to camp, sat down beside the derrick, lit his pipe and
-waited for the freeze-up which he knew was bound to come before spring
-actually set in. It came all right! Puffing his pipe to keep warm Gib
-watched the new alcohol thermometer he had bought in town go down, down,
-and down until it hit a hundred and ten below. Right then he dropped his
-quart of solidified mercury into the well.
-
-“Just as he figured, it acted the way the mercury in the old thermometer
-had done—went right to the bottom and banged and banged trying to escape
-from that awful cold. Yes, sir, that hunk of mercury smashed right
-through to the oil sand. Pretty soon there was a rumble and a roar. Up
-came a thick black column of oil.”
-
-“Wait a minute,” cried Sandy, thinking he had caught the storyteller out
-on a limb. “Why didn’t the oil freeze too?”
-
-“It did, Sandy. It did,” Ralph answered blandly. “Soon as it hit the
-air, it froze solid. But it was slippery enough so it kept sliding out
-of the ground a foot at a time. Gib got his men together and, until
-spring really came, they kept busy sawing hunks off that gusher and
-shipping them out to the States on flatcars!”
-
-“You win, Ralph,” sighed the platform man as he heaved himself to his
-feet. “I can’t even attempt to top that tall one, so I guess I’d better
-go to bed. Your story should keep us cool out here for at least a week.”
-
-
-After that mild hazing session, Sandy and Quiz found themselves accepted
-as full-fledged members of the gang. The crew members, who had kept
-their distance up to that point, now treated them like equals. Each boy
-soon was doing a man’s work around the rig and glorying in his hardening
-muscles.
-
-As the end of June approached, Hall, Donovan and Salmon got ready for
-their monthly trip to Window Rock, Arizona, to submit bids for several
-leases in the Navajo reservation.
-
-“There’s room in the jeep, so you might as well go along and learn
-something more about the oil business,” Hall told the boys. “I’m pretty
-sure our bids won’t be accepted, but the only thing we can do is try.”
-
-At that point trouble descended on the camp in the form of a Bonanza
-bearing Red Cavanaugh and Pepper March.
-
-The husky electronics man clambered out of his machine and came forward
-at a lope. He was dressed only in shorts, and the thick red hair on his
-brawny chest glinted in the sunlight. Pepper trotted behind him like an
-adoring puppy.
-
-“Howdy, Mr. Hall. Howdy, Donovan,” Cavanaugh boomed as he reached the
-rig. “Heard you’d been exploring down in the Hopi butte section. Thought
-I’d bounce over and sell you some equipment that has seismographs,
-magnetometers and gravimeters beat three ways from Sunday. The very
-latest thing. You can’t get along without it.”
-
-“Can’t I?” said Donovan mildly.
-
-“Of course you can’t!” Cavanaugh clapped the little man on the back so
-hard that he almost dislodged Donovan’s glasses. “This is terrific! The
-biggest thing that’s happened to me since I ran those three touchdowns
-for State back in 1930. I developed it in my own lab. You know how a
-Geiger counter works...?”
-
-“Well, faintly,” answered the geologist, who had three of them in his
-own laboratory. “I wasn’t born yesterday, _Mr._ Cavanaugh.”
-
-“Well, don’t get sore, _Mr._ Donovan.” Cavanaugh bellowed with laughter.
-“All I wanted to say was that my new device uses scintillation counters,
-which are—”
-
-“—a thousand times more sensitive to atomic radiation than Geiger
-counters,” Donovan interrupted. “And you’re going on to tell me that you
-can take your doodlebug up in an airplane and spot a radiation halo
-surrounding any oil deposit. Right? I read the trade papers, too, you
-know. May I ask you a question?”
-
-“Why, of course.” Cavanaugh’s chest and neck had begun to sweat.
-
-“Do you have a Ph.D. degree in electronic engineering?”
-
-“Why, uh, naturally.”
-
-“Well, I don’t, unfortunately, Mr. Cavanaugh. But I know enough about
-the science to understand that the gadget you are selling isn’t worth a
-plugged nickel unless it’s operated by an expert, and unless it’s used
-in connection with other methods of exploration. I have told you several
-times at Farmington that this outfit can’t afford another scientist at
-present, so I wish you would please go away.”
-
-“Now, Mr. Hall—” Cavanaugh turned to the grinning oilman—“can’t you make
-your man listen to reason?”
-
-“He’s not my man. He’s my partner,” Hall answered mildly. “What he says
-goes. Now, if you and your, ah, man will have a bite of lunch with us,
-I’d be mighty pleased, providing you stop this high-pressure
-salesmanship.”
-
-“Well ...” Cavanaugh seemed on the verge of an explosion. “Well, thanks
-for your invitation, but Mr. March and I are due up at Cortez in half an
-hour. We’re delivering several of my gadgets, as you call them, to smart
-oilmen. Come on, Pepper.”
-
-“John,” said Donovan after they had watched Cavanaugh’s plane roar away,
-“I think I’ll have to sock that big lug the next time I meet him.”
-
-“He’d make mincemeat of you,” Mr. Hall warned.
-
-“I doubt it. He’s soft as mush. Anyway, I don’t like him and I’ll have
-nothing to do with the equipment he peddles. He knows that, so I think
-the real reason he came here was to spy on us—to find out whether our
-well had come in yet.”
-
-“Oh, he’s not that bad,” Hall objected. “Boys, you know something about
-him. What’s his reputation in Valley View?”
-
-“He acts rich,” Sandy answered after a moment of deep thought.
-
-“The people who work in his lab say he’s not as smart as he makes out,”
-Quiz added. “I agree with Mr. Donovan. There’s something phony about
-him. I’ve a hunch it’s connected with those three touchdowns he’s always
-bragging about. If I could only remember.... Some day I will, I bet.”
-
-“Well, let’s all simmer down and forget him,” said Hall. “It’s time for
-lunch.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FIVE
- A Light in the Window Rock
-
-
-The morning after Cavanaugh’s unwelcome visit, Hall, Donovan, Salmon and
-the boys set out on their 150-mile drive south to the town of Window
-Rock. The jeep wallowed and bounced as usual over the dusty trail to
-Shiprock. There Ralph turned right onto US 666, pushed the accelerator
-toward the floor board and relaxed.
-
-“We don’t have a Bonanza, boss,” he said, “but a loaded jeep on a good
-paved road is the next best thing.”
-
-“I’d prefer a helicopter, equipped with a supercharger that could lift
-it over the ranges,” Hall answered. “Maybe, if Number Two comes in, we
-can buy a whirlybird, along with a portable drill rig truck.”
-
-“A portable rig sure would come in handy for drilling test wells,” Ralph
-agreed. “Maybe we could make it come true by putting an offering on that
-Navajo wishing pile.” He nodded toward a mound of small brightly colored
-stones that stood where an Indian trail crossed the highway.
-
-“Nuh uh,” the oilman said sharply. “And don’t _you_ ever try that stunt,
-boys. The Navajos don’t want white men thinning out their luck by
-putting things on their wishing piles. By the same token, never take any
-object from the piles that you will see scattered through the
-reservation. If you’re caught doing that, you’ll be in for real
-trouble.”
-
-“Yep. The braves will get mad as wet hens,” Salmon said, chuckling.
-
-“Ralph,” said Quiz, “why do you poke fun at the Navajos?”
-
-“Well, pardner, did you ever hear a UCLA man say anything good about the
-Stanford football team?”
-
-“Oh, but that’s different. It’s just school rivalry,” Sandy objected as
-he crossed his long legs the other way in an effort to keep his knees
-from banging against the dash.
-
-“Well, you might say that the Navajos and Utes have been traditional
-rivals since the beginning of time. Nothing very serious, you
-understand. We’ve raided each other’s cattle, and taken a few scalps now
-and then, when a Navajo stepped on a Ute’s shadow, or vice versa. The
-Navajos are Athapascans, you see. They’re related to the Apaches, and
-think they’re the lords of creation. But Utes are Shoshoneans. We belong
-to one of the biggest Indian ‘families’ in North America. The state of
-Utah is named in our honor and there are Shoshones living as far north
-as Alaska. Maybe you’ve heard of Sacagawea, the Shoshone ‘Bird Woman,’
-who guided the Lewis and Clark Expedition all the way to the Pacific
-Coast.
-
-“The Hopis are our brothers, and the Piutes are our poor relations. The
-Piutes _did_ eat fried caterpillars and roots in the old days, I guess,
-but that was only because they lived out in the western Utah desert
-where there wasn’t much else to eat. We southern Utes lived mostly on
-buffalo meat. We were great hunters. Our braves would creep right into
-the middle of a herd of buffalo and kill as many as they wanted with
-their long knives, without causing the animals to take fright and
-stampede.”
-
-“How could they do that?” Sandy asked.
-
-“When they went on a hunt, they dressed in buffalo hides, and made
-themselves smell like, walk like and even think like buffalo. The
-animals didn’t believe they were men.”
-
-“Can you still do that—think like a buffalo, I mean?” Quiz gasped.
-
-“Oh, sure. Just find me a herd of wild ones and I’ll prove it.”
-
-“Ralph’s talents sure are being wasted on drilling for oil,” Donovan
-said, knocking out his pipe against the jeep’s side for emphasis.
-
-“All very amusing,” Hall grunted. “But crooked white men have taken
-advantage of your sporting rivalry with the Navajo to rob both of you
-blind during the past century. The same thing will happen again, I warn
-you, if you don’t stop playing Indian and begin working at it.”
-
-“Yes, boss,” Ralph agreed shamefacedly. “You’re absolutely right. But—I
-forget everything you’ve said when that Quail character starts getting
-under my buffalo hide!”
-
-The car whined merrily down the road past the little towns of Newcomb
-and Tohatchi while Ralph sulked and Hall and Donovan talked shop which
-the boys couldn’t understand. They turned left on Route 68 in the middle
-of the hot afternoon, crossed the line from New Mexico into Arizona, and
-a few minutes later pulled into Window Rock.
-
-The town, made up mostly of low, well-kept adobe and stone buildings,
-lay in a little valley almost surrounded by red sandstone cliffs. It had
-received its name, obviously, from one huge cliff that had a round hole
-in it big enough to fly a plane through. One of its largest buildings
-was occupied by the Indian Service. Another, built like a gigantic
-hogan, was the Navajo Tribal Council, Hall told the boys. They passed a
-brand-new hospital and a school and pulled up at a motel where a large
-number of Cadillacs and less imposing vehicles were parked.
-
-“Looks as if everybody in the Southwest had come to bid on or sell
-equipment,” said Mr. Hall as he studied the array of cars and trucks.
-Some of the latter bore the names of well-known companies such as Gulf,
-Continental, Skelly and Schlumberger. Others belonged to smaller oil and
-uranium firms that Sandy had never heard of.
-
-“Donovan, Ralph, and I had better go in and chew the rag with them
-awhile,” the oilman continued. “Why don’t you fellows look the town over
-until it’s time for dinner? You’d just get bored sitting around.”
-
-The boys were drifting over toward the Council Hall for a better look at
-the many Navajos in stiff black hats and colorful shirts who clustered
-around its doorway when they heard a familiar shout.
-
-“Wait up!” Pepper March dashed across the dusty street and pounded them
-on their backs as if they were his best friends. “Gee, it’s good to see
-a white man you know.”
-
-“You saw us only yesterday,” Sandy pointed out rather coldly.
-
-“Oh, but that was business. Come on. I’ll buy a Coke. What have you been
-up to? How do you like working for an old crank? What’s biting Hall’s
-geologist? Boy, isn’t it hot? Did you know that I’m learning to fly
-Red’s Bonanza? How’s your well coming along?”
-
-“Whoa!” cried Quiz. “Relax! We’ve been working like sin. We like Mr.
-Hall. His geologist is going to bite your Mr. Cavanaugh pretty soon, I’m
-thinking. It is exactly 110 degrees in the shade. We did not know you
-were learning to fly a plane. And the situation at the well is strictly
-our own affair.”
-
-“Uh—” said Pepper, “you’re not sore about what happened yesterday, are
-you? Red was only trying to make a sale.”
-
-“Nope. We’re not sore,” Sandy answered. “But we’re beginning to take a
-dim view of your boss.”
-
-“Why, Red’s the grandest guy you ever met. Do you know what he’s got me
-doing?”
-
-“There you go again, asking personal questions,” said Quiz.
-
-“I’m helping him set up a string of light beam transceivers that will
-keep his camps here and at Shiprock in constant communication with his
-agent down at Gallup.”
-
-“What on earth for?” Sandy almost choked on his Coke in amazement.
-“What’s the matter with the telephone, telegraph and short-wave radio
-stations that are scattered all over this territory? And how come
-Cavanaugh has to have a permanent camp at Window Rock, and an agent in
-Gallup?”
-
-“Now who’s asking the questions?” Pepper said smugly. “Have another
-Coke?”
-
-“No, but we’ll buy you one,” Quiz replied, and added with a wink at his
-pal, “It must be quite a job, setting up one of your stations.”
-
-“Sure is!” The blond boy expanded at this implied praise. “It’s never
-been done before over such long distances, Red says. You have to focus
-the beam perfectly, or it’s no good. But, after you do that, nobody can
-eavesdrop on you unless....” He stopped short, and jumped off the diner
-stool as though it had suddenly become hot. “Well, so long, fellows.
-I’ve got to be getting back to camp. See you around.” And he departed as
-abruptly as he had come.
-
-“Now what kind of business was that?” Sandy asked as he paid the entire
-bill.
-
-“Monkey business, I guess,” Quiz answered. “I think Mr. Hall ought to
-know about those stations, and maybe Mr. White, the Indian Agent, should
-be told too.” He kicked at the dust thoughtfully as they walked slowly
-down Window Rock’s main street.
-
-“Hmmm. You have to get a license from the government to operate a
-short-wave station,” said Sandy. “But I don’t suppose you need one yet
-for a light-beam job. Now, just supposing that Cavanaugh wanted to—”
-
-“Wanted to what?”
-
-“That’s what I don’t know. But I sure would like to find out. Let’s be
-getting back to the motel.”
-
-They found themselves in the middle of a tense scene when they entered
-the motel patio. Twenty or thirty oil and uranium men were gathered
-there, their chairs propped comfortably against the adobe walls, while
-they listened to Cavanaugh and Donovan argue the merits of the big man’s
-electronic explorer.
-
-“You all know, my friends, that uranium ore can be, and has been, found
-with a one-tube Geiger,” Red was booming. “But that’s like throwing a
-lucky pass in a football game. To win the game, you need power in the
-line—power that will let your ball carrier cross the line again, and
-again, and again, the way I became an All-American by scoring those
-three touchdowns against California back in 1930.”
-
-“Oh, no!” Quiz whispered as he and Sandy founds seats in a far corner.
-“This is where we came in last time.”
-
-“In searching for oil, or even for uranium under a heavy overburden of
-rock,” Cavanaugh went on, “you need at least the simplest scintillation
-counter because it is sixty times as sensitive as a one-tube Geiger.
-Better yet is the really professional counter—as much as 600 times more
-sensitive than the best Geiger built. Best of all is my multiple
-scintillator—100 times more sensitive than the best single tube. Even
-you won’t disagree with that, will you, _Mr._ Donovan?”
-
-“Not at all,” answered the bald man after several furious puffs on his
-pipe. “I only say that, in addition to the best possible electronic
-instrument, you need an operator who thoroughly understands radiation
-equipment. Also, you should have a crew of geologists and geophysicists
-who know how to balance radiation findings against those established by
-other methods.”
-
-“Nonsense,” shouted the ex-football player. “Many of my customers have
-located oil-containing faults and stratigraphic traps with my detector
-where all other instruments had failed. You’re just old-fashioned.”
-
-“Maybe I am,” said Donovan, “and then maybe I just don’t like to have
-wool pulled over my eyes, or the eyes of men I consider to be my
-friends.”
-
-“I’m not pulling wool. Halos or circles of radiation can be detected on
-the surface of the earth around the edges of every oil deposit. That’s a
-proven fact.” Cavanaugh pounded on the arm of his chair with a fist as
-big as a ham.
-
-“Is it?” Donovan asked gently. “Jakosky, who is an authority on
-exploration geophysics, says, and I quote his exact words: ‘Atomic
-exploration is still in its infancy.’ Let me tell you a story:
-
-“Back in the early days of the oil business, a number of people made
-fortunes by charging big fees to locate petroleum deposits with the help
-of split willow wands. They’d walk around with the split ends of the
-wands between their hands until, they said, some mysterious force pulled
-the big end downward until it pointed to oil. A man who helped Colonel
-Drake promote his original oil well at Titusville, Pennsylvania, back in
-1859, actually located several profitable fields with the ‘help’ of a
-spiritualist medium.”
-
-“He could hardly have failed,” one of the onlookers spoke up. “In those
-days, oil was literally bursting out of the ground along many
-Pennsylvania creek beds.”
-
-“That’s right, Tom,” Donovan agreed. “Oil was everywhere, so those
-dowsers, or ‘creekologists’ as they often were called, did very well
-until the search for oil moved west where deposits were scarcer and much
-deeper underground.
-
-“Around 1913, geologists had to be called in to do the exploration.
-They’ve been responsible for finding practically all the fields
-discovered since then. But the creekologists didn’t give up easily. They
-built pseudo-scientific gadgets called doodlebugs and equipped them with
-lots of fancy dials and flashing lights. One doodlebug even had a
-phonograph in it. As it was carried across a field, a ghostly voice
-would be heard saying, ‘Your sainted Aunt Minnie bids me tell you to
-drill right here and you will bring in a second Spindletop.’”
-
-“You can’t call me a crook!” Cavanaugh, his face scarlet with rage,
-lunged to his feet and advanced on his tormentor.
-
-“I’m not calling you a crook—yet.” Donovan stood up too, knocked out his
-pipe and put it into his pants pocket. “If you would just stop making
-all of those wild-eyed claims for your detector, though, you would make
-out better out here.”
-
-As Cavanaugh continued to advance he added mildly, “I suppose I ought to
-warn you that I studied judo when I was in college.”
-
-“Excuse me for interrupting your fun, gentlemen,” a quiet voice broke
-in. “Is there anyone here named Quincy Taylor? An urgent telegram for
-him was just relayed down from Farmington.” Kenneth White, the Indian
-Agent, stood in the motel doorway holding a yellow envelope.
-
-Nobody answered for a moment, but Cavanaugh took the opportunity to
-stomp out of the room while Donovan sat down quietly and started stoking
-his pipe.
-
-“Hey, Quiz!” Sandy exploded at last. “Don’t you recognize your own name?
-It’s for you!”
-
-His friend blushed with embarrassment as he accepted the wire, but his
-round face turned pale as he read it.
-
-“Mr. Hall,” he choked at last. “It’s from Dad. He slipped and broke his
-leg in two places. I’m to come home immediately and run the restaurant
-while he’s laid up. Gee whiz!” He bit his lips to keep back the tears.
-
-“That’s tough, Quiz.” The oilman came over and slipped a fatherly arm
-around the boy’s shoulders. “Your father will be all right soon, I’m
-sure, but we certainly will miss you up at the well. Now the problem is
-to get you back to Farmington quick so you can catch the midnight bus.
-I’ll send your things on, soon as we get back.”
-
-“One of my trucks is returning to Farmington after supper,” spoke up the
-oilman named Tom. “You can go in that.”
-
-“Thanks,” gulped Quiz.
-
-The ban about talking at mealtime was broken that night. All the oil and
-uranium men were agreed that Cavanaugh was a bad-mannered blusterer, but
-they differed sharply about the value of his electronic detector.
-
-“He has made several good uranium strikes with the thing,” a bearded
-prospector insisted, “though what good they’re going to do him I can’t
-imagine, with the government not buying except from established mills.
-But don’t sell Red Cavanaugh short. He has made millions out of
-electronics, they say. He knows electronics. He’s a smart operator. You
-keep an eye on the bids he makes tomorrow and you’ll see what I mean.”
-
-“Well, I’m not throwing my seismograph away for a while yet,” Tom
-retorted. “I’ll put my money on Don’s opinion any day.”
-
-The boys tried to follow the conversation, but Quiz’s heart was not in
-it, and he only picked at his food. Finally he excused himself and
-headed for the dining-room door with Sandy after him.
-
-“It’s a tough break,” he said half an hour later while he and his pal
-stood at the edge of town and stared upward at that amazing natural
-bridge called the Window Rock.
-
-“It sure is,” Sandy agreed glumly. “Maybe you can come back, though.”
-
-“Not a chance. Dad will be laid up most of the summer, and he can’t
-afford to hire a manager, the way things are. There’s nothing I can—
-Hey! Look!” He grabbed Sandy’s arm and pointed. “See that point of light
-twinkling ’way up on top of the Window Rock? That isn’t a star, is it?”
-
-“Nuh-uh!” Sandy watched the faint flicker a thousand feet above them.
-“That must be where Cavanaugh has pitched his camp. He’s sending a
-message of some kind over light beam. If it were a heliograph
-transmitting in Morse code I could read it. But that’s a modulated
-beam.... Say, we’d better be moseying back to the motel. Must be about
-time for your truck to leave.”
-
-“Sandy,” Quiz said half an hour later after they had shaken hands
-solemnly, “I’m going to do everything I can, when I get home, to do some
-detective work on Cavanaugh. If anything turns up, I’ll let you know
-quick.”
-
-“Do that, Quiz.” Sandy swallowed and his voice broke. “Be seeing you.”
-
-Quiz climbed slowly into the cab of the big tool truck. As it roared off
-into the starlit desert night he kept waving a forlorn farewell.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER SIX
- Cliff Dweller Country
-
-
-Sandy had expected that the opening of bids for leases on thousands of
-acres in the Navajo reservation would be an exciting occasion, something
-like a country auction. Instead, he found it a great bore.
-
-Scores of bidders in their shirt sleeves lounged on hard straight-backed
-chairs in the stuffy meeting room of the Indian Service building, or
-chatted, smoked and told jokes in the corridors. Kenneth White and other
-representatives of the Indian Service sat behind a long redwood table,
-opened piles of envelopes, compared bids, held long whispered
-conferences with grave, leather-faced members of the Navajo Council and
-their advisers, and very occasionally handed down decisions.
-
-“The bid of $3,900 per acre made for 200 Navajo acres in San Juan
-County, northeast, southeast of Section 27-24 N-8 is accepted,” White
-then would drone. Or: “A bid of $318 per acre for 125 acres of Section
-18, 42 north, 30 east is rejected by the Council because it’s too low.
-Another bid may be made at the August meeting, if desired.”
-
-After an hour of this, Sandy was counting the cracks in the floor,
-watching flies buzzing against the windowpanes, and wondering whether he
-dared ask Mr. Hall to be excused. He hesitated about doing this because
-the oilman was following the bidding with tense interest and making
-endless notes on the backs of old envelopes that he kept dragging out of
-his vest pockets.
-
-“Ssst!” Ralph whispered from the seat behind him. “This is murder. How
-about having a second breakfast with me?
-
-“We never should have come down here this month when our well needs
-watching every minute,” the young Indian added after they had entered a
-nearly empty diner and ordered ham and eggs which neither of them really
-wanted. “The big companies have the big money, so they’ll gobble up the
-best of the acreage, as usual. We poor boys will get some small tracts,
-if we’re lucky. And I don’t think John Hall’s outfit is going to be
-lucky today.”
-
-“Why is that?” Sandy asked.
-
-“Because most of our bids are for land that’s under dispute between the
-Navajos and Hopis. They can’t be accepted until some sort of settlement
-is reached between the tribes. I don’t know why John keeps putting them
-in. Well—” Ralph finished his coffee and slid off the stool and onto his
-feet in one motion, like a big cat—“let’s go back and learn the worst.”
-
-There was a strange tenseness in the meeting room when they entered.
-Cavanaugh and White were standing facing each other across the table.
-All eyes were riveted on them and not a sound was being made by the
-onlookers.
-
-“Mr. Cavanaugh,” the Indian Agent was saying, “neither the Service nor
-the Council can understand the meaning of the bids you have submitted.
-Some of them are for small tracts around the Pinta Dome area in Apache
-country where there has never been the slightest show of uranium-bearing
-ore. I don’t want to tell you your business, but....”
-
-“Thank you for that, Mr. White,” the redhaired giant growled. “Let the
-bids stand.”
-
-“Very well. They are accepted. But this other bid—for a thousand acres
-in the bed of the San Juan River. You must have made an error. It is
-submitted directly to the United States government, instead of to the
-Navajo Council. Do you wish to correct it?”
-
-“I do not,” snapped Cavanaugh.
-
-“But it cannot be accepted, since the stream is not navigable.”
-
-“I challenge that statement, Mr. White. Under the law it cannot be
-rejected until the stream is _proved_ not to be navigable. If you won’t
-accept it, let it stand as a prior claim. Is there anything else?”
-
-“Nothing else whatsoever,” White answered mildly, but between stiff
-lips.
-
-“That suits me fine.” Cavanaugh lit a long black cigar in defiance of a
-NO SMOKING sign, and strutted out. All heads turned to watch him go and
-a buzz of conversation started.
-
-“Wheeuw!” Ralph said in Sandy’s ear. “That Pinta Dome area had a big
-helium strike some years back. Wells in that region are all closed in
-now, and the government is very hush-hush about the whole thing. What’s
-Cavanaugh up to?”
-
-White picked up another bunch of bids and called Hall to the table.
-
-“You know, John, that bids on land in the disputed Navajo-Hopi area
-can’t be accepted. I’ve told you so again and again. So has Chairman
-Paul Jones of the Navajo Council. Why do you keep submitting them?”
-
-“Because I’m a stubborn man, Ken.” Hall grinned, tilting his gray head
-as he always did when he was being stubborn. “And because I think
-there’s oil under those lands. And because I also think the tribes will
-get together soon. You just let my bids stand and tell me where I can
-locate Jones.”
-
-“Hosteen Sandez, do you know where Mr. Jones is today?” White asked a
-lean old Indian who sat next to him.
-
-“Gone to Chinle,” was the reply. “Two families there having dispute—with
-shotguns—about irrigation water. He trying to settle it before Navajo
-police come.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Hall. “I think we’ll just mosey on up Chinle way.”
-
-
-The jeep followed a good paved road as far west as Ganado, but when it
-turned north toward Chinle it got back once more on a trail made of
-stones from which none of the corners had been removed. They were
-driving through a wild country of mesas, washes and canyons which made
-conversation almost impossible.
-
-“What do you expect to gain by talking to Jones, John?” Donovan asked
-once when the road became smoother for a few miles.
-
-“I’ve been reading so much about summit conferences,” Hall answered,
-“that it just occurred to me we might set one up out here. I want to
-suggest to Jones that we get some of the more important chiefs of the
-two tribes to meet out here in the desert somewhere, where there are no
-reporters or members of the Land Resources Association hanging around.
-I’ll bet we could accomplish something.”
-
-“Good idea,” Donovan agreed. “If the tribes weren’t continually stirred
-up by white men with axes to grind they’d soon be able to agree on that
-boundary line.”
-
-“Don’t mind me, palefaces,” said Ralph as he spun the wheel to avoid a
-particularly hard-looking stone. “But I doubt it. I know both tribes,
-and....”
-
-Crash! The jeep bucked like a pinto pony and the motor roared.
-
-“There goes the second muffler in three months,” Ralph shouted, pointing
-backward to a heap of junk on the trail.
-
-After that, all conversation was impossible until they pulled into the
-little town of Chinle—and learned at the trading post that Jones had
-already departed for Tuba City!
-
-“Say, John,” Ralph said, as they were standing around waiting for a
-“shade tree mechanic” to dig a muffler that would fit out of a rusty
-pile of spare parts that leaned against his hogan, “we can’t possibly
-drive back to the well tonight. Why don’t we put up at the Canyon de
-Chelly camp so I can show Sandy where his great-uncle fit the Navajos?”
-
-“Good idea,” said his employer. “You’ll have time to show Sandy the
-cliff dwellings tomorrow, too. Chief Quail lives over in the Canyon de
-Chelly neighborhood. I want to sound him out on my idea for a summit
-conference.”
-
-The sun was sinking in golden glory behind thousand-foot-high red
-sandstone buttes when they drove up to the Thunderbird guest ranch at
-the entrance of the Canyon de Chelly National Monument area. There they
-obtained two pleasant double rooms furnished after the rugged style of
-the Old West. When they had showered most of the dust off themselves,
-they gathered for a fine meal in the timbered mess hall. Then, in the
-cool of the mountain evening, they went over to a big campfire where a
-National Park Service Ranger was lecturing to a group of tourists.
-
-“These canyons housed one of the great centers of the Anasazi, or Basket
-Maker, civilization,” the Ranger was explaining. “During the first
-several centuries of what we call the Christian era, Basket Makers
-occupied the whole drainage basin of the San Juan River. In addition to
-baskets, they made fine pottery and woven sandals, but they used dart
-throwers instead of the later bows and arrows. They built peculiar
-circular homes with floors sunk a foot or more into the ground. You’ll
-see one of those tomorrow when you visit Mummy Cave.
-
-“When the Basket Makers vanished early in the eighth century, Pueblo
-Indians occupied the canyons. They built many-storied cliff dwellings
-over the old caves. They were farmers, but they also made beautiful
-pottery, cloth, stone tools, and ornaments of copper and gold.
-
-“Coronado, the Spanish Conquistador, may have been looking for this
-place when he came up from Mexico in 1540 to search for the fabulous
-riches of El Dorado and the Seven Cities of Cibola. He never found
-anything but thirst and death.”
-
-“Were the Pueblos and Basket Makers related?” someone asked.
-
-“Yes, they were both Shoshones, like the modern Hopis,” answered the
-Ranger as he threw more wood on the fire.
-
-“More distinguished ancestors for us Utes,” Ralph whispered to Sandy.
-
-“Seven or eight centuries ago,” the Ranger went on, “the Pueblos grouped
-their cliff dwellings into large ‘apartment houses’ situated on sites
-that could easily be defended. Tomorrow you’ll visit White House,
-Antelope House, and Standing Cow, which are their finest structures. Let
-me warn you, though, that only people accustomed to conditions in the
-canyons should drive cars into them. The spring rains are late this
-year. There is very grave danger from flash floods and quicksand. In
-past years, many covered wagons and other vehicles drove into the
-canyons, got caught in a sudden storm, and were never found. I suggest
-you rent a car and guide from the Thunderbird Ranch operator.”
-
-“What became of the Pueblos?” a tourist asked in an awed voice.
-
-“Nobody knows. Some people think a great drought hit this part of the
-country and they had to move to an area where there was more rainfall.
-Others believe that an enemy—possibly the fierce Aztecs—came up from
-Mexico and killed all the inhabitants. Terrible battles were fought
-here, we know, before the end. Sometimes Pueblo mummies with weapons
-still in their hands are found when a new cliff dwelling is explored.
-The Navajos say the whole place was deserted when they moved in, more
-than 200 years ago. Now, I want to tell you about the troubles that
-_they_ had with the Spaniards and Kit Carson.”
-
-“We’d better go to bed, I think,” Hall said to the others in his group.
-“Ralph knows a lot more about recent history than this fellow does.
-He’ll tell you all about it in the morning.”
-
-
-Sandy and Ralph crawled out of their bunks shortly after sunrise, but
-they found that Hall had already departed. A note under their door read:
-
-“Have located Chief Quail. Don and I have him cornered and are trying to
-talk him over to our side. You can use the jeep to explore the canyons
-this morning but be back by lunchtime, so we can hunt for Hopi Chief
-Ponytooth. He’s up in this neighborhood, Chief Quail says. Happy
-cliff-hanging.”
-
-After a brief argument with the Ranger, who repeated his warnings about
-flash floods and quicksand, Sandy and Ralph got under way.
-
-“I know this territory like the palm of my hand,” the driller said as he
-drove carefully into dark gorges where the sun shone only around noon.
-“There really are four separate canyons, you’ll notice. From right to
-left they’re Monument Canyon, the Canyon de Chelly proper, Black Rock,
-and the famous Canyon del Muerto, which means Death Canyon. That’s the
-one where the Navajos made their last stand against Kit Carson.”
-
-“How did he ever drive them out of a place like this?” Sandy marveled as
-he stared up at towering cliffs that rose almost straight up from the
-grass-covered canyon floor. “One man on a cliff should have been able to
-stand off a regiment by rolling rocks down on their heads.”
-
-“That’s where your great-uncle was smarter than General Custer,”
-answered his guide. “He didn’t try to attack. If he had, the Navajos
-would have massacred his troops. Instead, Kit sent small raiding parties
-of cavalrymen down the centers of the canyons where they were fairly
-safe from rocks and arrows. They had orders to shoot every sheep, goat
-and cow in sight. After they did that, they retreated and blocked all
-exits to the canyons.”
-
-“And the braves and their families just stayed inside and starved?”
-Sandy was really shocked.
-
-“What else could they do? See that big blue-and-white picture of a cow
-drawn on the canyon wall over the cliff dwelling to your left? That’s a
-sort of monument which the poor old Navajos made to remind them of their
-slaughtered herds. After they finished it, they all came out and
-surrendered.”
-
-“Gee whiz!” was all that Sandy could think of to say.
-
-“We have time to explore just one cliff house,” Ralph continued. “It
-might as well be Standing Cow. Come on.”
-
-They climbed a swaying ladder to reach one of the dwellings. This had
-been restored by archaeologists and looked as though its Indian
-inhabitants had departed the night before, instead of a long 400 years
-ago. There was the loom on which they had woven their cloth. Graceful
-pottery with decorations in glaze was stacked in a corner. A bedboard
-rested on two timbers cemented into the rear wall.
-
-“These were de luxe apartments, probably occupied by the chief,” Ralph
-explained. “They have one big drawback—no hallways. You have to go
-through the living quarters to get to the other rooms. Come back here
-and I’ll show you one of their kivas, or ceremonial rooms.”
-
-He led the way into a much larger cave that had a balcony overlooking a
-round hole some twenty feet across by six feet deep. Light filtered into
-the gloomy place through one small window in the cliff face.
-
-The driller turned a flashlight beam into the hole. Sandy saw that its
-bottom could be reached by steep stone stairways. A wide bench ran
-around the sides of this strange pit. In its center stood several stone
-tanks about the size of bathtubs.
-
-“When the cliff dwellers wanted to talk to their gods,” said Ralph,
-“they climbed down into a kiva hole like this and stayed for days
-without eating, drinking or sleeping. They practiced a kind of
-self-hypnotism, I guess.”
-
-“Maybe,” Sandy guessed, “they just went down there to take their
-Saturday-night baths. I don’t see any gods—idols, I mean.”
-
-“These people didn’t have idols—just those tub things,” Ralph answered.
-For a long time he stood staring down into the kiva, as though he were
-trying to picture his dead-and-forgotten ancestors there, conducting
-their silent worship. “We’d better be getting back to the ranch,” he
-said at last, shaking his handsome head as though to clear it of dreams.
-
-“That was a pretty grim thing Carson did to the Indians,” Sandy said as
-they drove back to Thunderbird.
-
-“It was better than a massacre. Only twenty or so Navajos were actually
-killed by his troops, remember. And you should not forget, either, that
-Kit was acting under orders from Washington.”
-
-“Those Nazi officers who killed innocent people in German concentration
-camps said they were acting under orders too,” Sandy pointed out grimly.
-
-“Oh, but Carson never tried to excuse his actions. At first, he thought
-he was doing the right thing to move the tribe onto a fine new
-reservation. But as soon as he had herded several thousand of them over
-to Bosque Redondo on the Pecos River, he changed his mind. Bosque
-Redondo means Round Forest in Spanish, but he found there weren’t more
-than half a dozen trees on the whole place, while good grazing grass was
-almost as rare. It was a hellhole and the Navajos hated it. They ran
-away or, if they weren’t able to do that, they just sat down and pined.
-A thousand of them died there from hunger and homesickness.
-
-“So Carson climbed on a train, went to Washington, and told the Great
-White Father just what was happening. When he warned that all the
-Navajos at Bosque Redondo would be dead in a few years, nobody seemed to
-mind very much. ‘Good Indian: dead Indian,’ you know. When he added that
-the government was spending a million dollars a year just to help them
-die, a few ears pricked up. But when he said that half the Navajos had
-never left Arizona and that they were threatening to go on the warpath
-to help their imprisoned brothers, Carson got action. He was ordered to
-return the tribe to its original reservation—this one—and was given
-money to help them get a new start.”
-
-“I’d like to tell Miss Gonzales what you just told me,” said Sandy. “I
-don’t want her to dislike me because she thinks my great-uncle was a
-monster.”
-
-“Well, why don’t you? Her school trailer is located only about twenty
-miles from our well. Drop in on her when you get a day off.”
-
-“Gee, I’d like to, Ralph,” said Sandy as they approached the ranch gate
-where Hall, Donovan and Chief Quail were waiting for them, “but she
-seemed pretty angry that night at the motel.”
-
-“Kitty’s a fine girl,” Ralph answered slowly, “even though she tries to
-be more Navajo than the Navajos. Fact is, I’ll let you in on a secret:
-My last oil royalty check from the wells in the Southern Ute reservation
-amounted to $12,000. When I get a few more of them in my bank account,
-so I can give her a big marriage gift, I’m going to ask my uncle to ask
-_her_ uncle if she’ll have me for a husband.”
-
-“What have uncles got to do with marriage?” Sandy stared at Ralph in
-amazement, realizing for the first time that he really was an Indian and
-had ways of doing things that were hard to understand.
-
-“It’s just an old Navajo custom.” Ralph grinned uncomfortably. “And that
-reminds me: If Kitty gets uppity about Carson again, you tell her I said
-to be nice or I’ll ask my great-uncle to step on her great-uncle’s
-shadow. That will make her behave!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- Back of Beyond
-
-
-After a hurried lunch that ended with flabby apple pie, as Sandy had
-discovered most lunches usually did in the Southwest, the five men
-climbed into Quail’s pickup truck. (The Chief insisted that the jeep
-couldn’t possibly travel the trails they would have to follow.) Then
-they set out for the wild Dot Klish Canyon area, to the northwest of
-Chinle, where the Navajo thought Chief Ponytooth and his wife were
-“squatting,” as he put it.
-
-Ralph chose to sit on a box in the bed of the truck because, as he said
-frankly, “If I’m in the cab with the Chief, we’ll quarrel.”
-
-Sandy joined the driller on another box that was scantily padded with a
-piece of blanket. Soon both of them were hanging onto the truck body for
-dear life as they bumped and blundered over a road that made previous
-ones they had traveled seem like superhighways.
-
-Sometimes their way led through tall thickets of mesquite and briars
-that threatened to tear the clothes off their backs. Then they would
-ford a stream so deep that water splashed over them. The machine, though
-still fairly new, groaned and knocked like a Model T at the torture it
-was undergoing.
-
-“This territory is what Australians call ‘back of beyond,’” Ralph
-shouted at one point as he dodged low-hanging tree branches. “We need a
-covered wagon.”
-
-At another, when they all had to get out and push the machine from a
-gully into which it had slid, he made sarcastic remarks about the
-driving abilities of all unprintable Navajos.
-
-Once he wiped the streaming perspiration from his face and neck, pointed
-to a mass of black clouds in the west and muttered, “Thunderstorm
-weather. A good day to lie under a tree and take siesta.” Mostly,
-though, the Ute gritted his teeth and kept silent as the pickup fought
-its lonely way across the fringes of the Painted Desert.
-
-It was midafternoon and the sticky heat was stifling when they reached
-the great box canyon where the Hopis were supposed to be living.
-
-“I don’t like the feel of this place,” Quail said as he stopped the
-truck on a high bank that overlooked the trout stream pouring out of a
-narrow cleft between two buttes. “Look at those thunder clouds piling
-up. I should not wish to lose my car in there.”
-
-“_We_ don’t matter, of course,” Ralph grunted. “How far is it to
-Ponytooth’s place?”
-
-“About half a mile, I think,” the Navajo answered.
-
-“Then let’s leave your precious hunk of junk out here and walk in.”
-Ralph set off down a faint trail at a fast lope that the others found
-hard to match.
-
-Around a sharp bend in the canyon they came at last to a heap of
-sandstone ruins. The little group of circular pueblos looked as old as
-the surrounding hills. Most of the walls had crumbled or been knocked
-apart in some strange manner. Only one had a roof of pine or cottonwood
-beams, light poles and bunch grass. In front of it a tiny old woman sat
-smoking a long pipe.
-
-Her face, brown as chocolate, was a mass of wrinkles. But her black
-eyes, which peered out of the folds of a heavy wool blanket, or manta,
-were sharp with intelligence.
-
-She made no answer to their questions in English and Navajo. When Ralph
-spoke to her in the basic Shoshonean language, however, she pursed her
-lips and pointed up the canyon with them.
-
-“Ponytooth is probably up there hunting somewhere,” Chief Quail said.
-“We’d better find him before it gets too dark.”
-
-Half a mile farther up the stream they found the old Chief. He was
-stalking a jack rabbit with, of all things, a bow and arrows. Slanting
-rays of sunshine that broke through the gathering clouds showed that he
-was dressed in the ancient Hopi costume. It consisted of a woolen
-poncho, or blanket, with a hole cut in the center, through which he had
-thrust his white head, baggy trousers slit up to the knees on the sides,
-deerskin leggings wrapped round and round his spindly shanks, and
-beautifully woven sandals. Only his belt, which was mounted with large
-silver discs, showed that he was a person of importance.
-
-“I didn’t know that clothing like that existed any more, except in
-museums,” Ralph said softly.
-
-The Hopi shot the jack rabbit through the heart, retrieved his arrow,
-and came toward them, carrying the animal by its long ears. When Hall
-went forward, with outstretched hand, the Hopi showed no surprise
-whatever.
-
-“No spikum English mush,” he said gravely in return to the oilman’s
-greeting.
-
-Chief Quail tried him in Navajo—and got a cold stare in return.
-
-“I think I can make him understand what we want, if it’s O.K. with you,
-John,” said the driller.
-
-At a nod from Hall he spoke at great length in Shoshone clicks and
-gutturals.
-
-Chief Ponytooth listened, at first politely, then with a growing frown.
-At last he held up a hand and replied with a torrent of words. As he
-spoke, thunder rolled in the far distance.
-
-“He says,” Ralph translated, “that he is an old man. Soon his body will
-be placed in a crevice in the rocks, and his spirit will go northward to
-join those of his ancestors at a place called Sipapu. Meanwhile,
-however, he has been ordered by the Hopi Council to live here in the
-ruins of Awatobi, a pueblo or village that was destroyed by the
-Spaniards hundreds of years ago because the tribe had killed all of
-their Christian missionaries.
-
-“Although he knows that the Navajos claim this territory as part of
-their reservation, he declares that it is part of Tusayan, an ancient
-province belonging to the Hopi and their cousins, the Moqui. So long as
-he stays here, he believes, neither Navajos nor palefaces will dare to
-steal this land.”
-
-“Tell him we don’t want his confounded desert,” Hall said impatiently.
-“Tell him we won’t kill a single jack rabbit or harm a piece of
-sagebrush. Try to make him understand that all we want to do is to
-remove oil from far beneath the ground. In exchange we will give his
-people money so they may build schools and hospitals.”
-
-When this was translated, Ponytooth straightened his bent back and
-glared at them defiantly. His face, under its broad white hairband, took
-on a haughty grandeur. Then he spoke again, waving his skinny arms and
-beating his breast for emphasis.
-
-And the thunder rolled nearer with every sentence he uttered.
-
-“He says—” Ralph shrugged—“that neither the Navajos nor the palefaces
-have ever given his people anything. They have always taken things
-away—cattle, wheat, the spirits of young warriors. They are his enemies
-until the end of the world. He is weak and old now, but you can only
-take this land by killing him.”
-
-A spatter of cold rain emphasized the Chief’s meaning.
-
-“We had better leave this place,” Quail said as he gripped Hall’s arm.
-“It must be raining hard farther up the canyon.”
-
-“Not yet,” Hall snapped. “Ralph, tell the Chief that we understand how
-he feels and that we will go, if he wishes. But warn him that if he does
-not accept the fair offer we wish to make him, other men may come and
-take this land from him, as they took other things from his ancestors.
-Try to make him understand that we are his friends.”
-
-The Chief understood the last English word.
-
-“Frens!” he screamed. “Frens! Frens! Frens!” In the rapidly gathering
-darkness the canyon walls echoed with his shouts. “Paleface, Navajo,
-never frens to Hopi!”
-
-Chief Ponytooth, last of the Pony Clan, burst into wild whoops of
-sarcastic laughter. At the same moment, thunder rolled deafeningly above
-their heads, lightning danced about the canyon walls like angry spirits,
-and the rain began coming down in bucketfuls.
-
-“Out!” yelled Chief Quail. In his excitement he forgot his careful
-grammar. “Water come. We die!”
-
-He spoke too late. A roaring sound had begun far up the canyon. Before
-they could move, it grew deafening. At the same time a five-foot wall of
-yellow water swept down upon them like an express train.
-
-After that, things happened too fast to be described. As he ran madly
-toward the canyon wall with the idea of climbing out of reach of the
-flash flood, Sandy slipped on a bank of wet clay and fell headlong.
-Ralph grabbed him by the collar and barely managed to drag him to
-safety.
-
-Hall let out a wild yell as the dry sandbank on which he had been
-standing a moment before absorbed water like a sponge, turned to
-quicksand, and began to suck at his legs. Just before the wall of water
-struck, Donovan snatched up a long branch and held it out. Hall grasped
-it and, in turn, was pulled to comparative safety.
-
-By this time the little trout stream had turned into a raging torrent. A
-great pine tree in its bed, roots torn loose by the tremendous sudden
-push of the water wall, came crashing down. A branch caught Ponytooth
-across the thighs and dragged him from sight beneath the flood.
-
-Chief Quail, who was nearest to the Hopi, acted instinctively. He
-plunged into the frothing, rock-filled water and fought it with all the
-power of his massive shoulders. A moment later he was tumbling
-downstream with the old man held tightly in his arms.
-
-While the others watched spellbound in the gathering darkness, the
-Navajo fought the cloudburst. Fifty yards downstream, he managed to hook
-a leg around a rock that still held firm. His face purple with effort,
-he finally succeeded in pulling his apparently lifeless burden to the
-top of a dry ledge.
-
-Almost as quickly as it had come, the flood subsided. Dripping, cold and
-shaken, the little party headed back toward the pueblo ruins. Chief
-Quail walked ahead, carrying the Hopi in his arms.
-
-An hour later Donovan rose from examining the Chief and looked across a
-campfire at the rest of them with a worried frown. The geologist had
-found Ponytooth’s only apparent injury—a broken leg—and had set it with
-expert fingers. But the old man failed to return to full consciousness
-thereafter. He threw his arms about and shouted wildly. His cheeks
-burned with sudden fever. When his little brown wife crept to his side,
-he ordered her away in a frenzy.
-
-“I can’t understand it,” said Donovan. “So far as I can tell, he has no
-internal injuries. But the life is running out of him like water out of
-a sack. I’m afraid he may be dying.”
-
-“He _is_ dying,” Ralph spoke up softly. “I’ve been listening to his
-ravings. He thinks he has offended the water spirits by even talking to
-palefaces and a Navajo and a Ute about the tribe’s sacred boundary line.
-He thinks he must die to make his peace with the spirits. And so, he
-_will_ die before the night is out.”
-
-“Hosteen Quail,” said Hall, “Navajo chiefs are medicine men as well,
-aren’t they? Can’t you paint a sand picture or something, and cure
-Ponytooth of his delusion?”
-
-“No,” the Chief answered sadly. “Navajo magic works only for Navajos.”
-
-“Let me try,” Ralph said suddenly. He gripped the Hopi’s shoulder to get
-his dazed attention, and spoke to him for a long time in Shoshonean. The
-old man shook his head back and forth in disagreement, but he stopped
-picking at the moth-eaten buffalo robe which Donovan had thrown over
-him.
-
-“I told him that the water spirits were not angry,” the Ute said at
-last. “He said I lied. I told him we are all his friends. He said to
-prove it. So I told him I would prove it by singing him well.” Ralph
-stood up slowly and paced around the fire three times in a
-counterclockwise direction. “My father was a medicine man,” he went on.
-“As a boy I watched him sing people well, but I never was allowed to try
-it, of course.... Well, here goes.... Wish me luck, Hosteen Quail.”
-
-He leaned his head back against the ruined pueblo wall for a moment, as
-though gathering strength from the ancient building. Then he began to
-sing in his rich baritone.
-
-At first the chant went slowly, slowly, like the beat of buffalo hoofs
-on the open prairie. Then, as Sandy held his breath to listen, the
-rhythm became faster. The words meant nothing to the boy, but somehow
-they painted pictures in his mind: A wild charge of naked Indian
-horsemen, dying in a hopeless effort to capture a fort from which white
-rifle smoke wreathed. The thundering rapids of some great northern
-river. Chirping of treetoads in the spring. A love song on some distant
-mesa. A bird call. The silence of a summer night....
-
-“There!” Ralph whispered at last, his broad face dripping sweat.
-
-He reached under Ponytooth’s robe and fumbled there for several moments.
-Almost, he seemed to be withdrawing some object from the old man’s
-body—something red and wet—like a fingernail!
-
-The Hopi gave a long sigh. “Frens,” he murmured as he sank into peaceful
-slumber.
-
-“He’ll be all right now,” said the Ute, “providing we take him to the
-hospital at Lukachukai quick to get that compound fracture fixed.”
-
-He stumbled out into the darkness, which now was spangled with stars.
-
-Her eyes round with faith and wonder, the little brown woman followed
-him. She was carrying a pot of steaming coffee.
-
-
-The less said about that awful midnight drive to Lukachukai, the better.
-Hall got them there somehow, while Chief Quail and Ralph held Ponytooth
-in their arms during the entire journey to protect his leg.
-
-Then they had to go all the way back to Chinle for the jeep, but not
-before Chief Quail had made a detour to toss a piece of yellow carnotite
-ore on the wishing pile which stood near the entrance to Canyon de
-Chelly.
-
-“It’s not that I like Hopis any better than I do Utes,” he said
-shamefacedly. “It’s just that I want Ponytooth’s leg to get well quick
-so we can settle the boundary dispute.”
-
-“Well, here, I’ll chuck something on your silly pile, too.” Ralph
-twisted a ring off his finger and tossed it onto the big mound of
-stones. “Me Boy Scout. Always do good turn.” But he turned away so the
-others couldn’t see his face.
-
-They got a few hours’ sleep at Thunderbird, but a much-relayed telegram
-dragged them out of bed before sunup. It was from Jack Boyd, the diesel
-engine man at the well, and it read:
-
- SHE’S ACTING UP STOP HAVE HER STUFFED FULL OF MUD STOP HURRY
-
-More dead than alive, they pulled onto Hall’s property to find that
-things had calmed down. Drilling was proceeding as usual, in fact, and
-Boyd was covered with embarrassment.
-
-As Ralph and Sandy stood outside the bunk trailer, almost too tired to
-go in and take their clothes off, the driller said lazily, “See that big
-mountain there to the north? What does it remind you of?”
-
-Sandy blinked the sleep out of his eyes and stared. The mountain in
-question had a big round cliff at one end, a long high ridge in its
-center, two branching ridges farther along, and sharply pointed cliffs
-at its other end.
-
-“Why,” he said at last, “it looks like a man lying on his back.”
-
-“Good boy. That’s what it is.” Ralph grinned. “That mountain is called
-the Sleeping Ute. It’s supposed to be a great warrior who will awake
-some day, to unite all the Indians.... And do you know what?”
-
-“What?” Sandy yawned mightily.
-
-“I thought I saw his big toe wiggle just a minute ago.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- Cavanaugh Shows His Colors
-
-
-Long before sunup, the screaming of a siren on the rig brought off-duty
-crewmen pouring out of their bunks in all stages of undress. When Sandy
-arrived at the brightly lighted well, the night foreman was already
-halfway through his report to Hall, Salmon and Donovan.
-
-“She started rumblin’ an’ kickin’ at the drillpipe just like she did
-yesterday.” The fat, oil-smeared man was puffing. “I stepped up the mud
-pressure an’ pulled the siren. She’s calmed down now, but the blowout
-preventers are having all they can do to hold her.”
-
-“Good boy,” said Hall. “If you had pulled the siren and waited for
-orders we might have a gusher on our hands and pieces of derrick flying
-in all directions. How far down are we?”
-
-“Little over 5,500 feet, last time I checked.”
-
-“That’s the Gallup Pay.” Donovan was dancing with excitement. “I knew
-we’d hit it. Let’s take a sample and see what we’ve got.”
-
-The big old diesel roared for a moment. It dragged a bar of iron called
-a “kelly” out of the square hole in the turntable until the top of the
-first section of drillpipe appeared.
-
-After the pipe had been securely locked in the turntable so that it
-could neither fall back into the well nor shoot upward if the
-underground pressure increased suddenly, two floormen clamped their
-six-foot-long tongs, or monkey wrenches, around the kelly and unscrewed
-it from the pipe with great care.
-
-They had eased it off only two or three turns when a frothy mixture with
-the foul odor of rotten eggs began to squirt from between kelly and
-pipe.
-
-Donovan caught some of this in his cupped hands. He smelled it, rubbed
-it between his fingers and then _tasted_ it.
-
-“Beautiful!” the geologist crooned. “This is good, high-gravity oil. The
-sulphur content is high, as you can smell, but refiners know how to take
-that out. I’ll tell you more when I’ve run a full analysis, but it sure
-looks as if we’ve licked the law of averages. Two flowing wells in two
-tries is ’way above par.”
-
-The crewmen, who had been holding their breaths for his verdict, let out
-wild rebel yells and spun their battered hats into the air. Jack Boyd
-and the night foreman hoisted Hall on their shoulders and marched him
-around the derrick in triumph.
-
-“All right, fellows,” the oilman shouted to stop the riot. “You all get
-new hats, new shoes and bonuses!” As they started another cheer he
-mounted the drill platform and held up his hand for attention.
-
-“But I’m going to ask you not to wear those hats and shoes, or bank your
-bonuses, for a few weeks yet. This has got to be a tight well.”
-
-“Glory, Mr. Hall,” somebody called from the edge of the crowd. “No
-celebration? That’s a lot to ask.”
-
-“I know it is, Bill. But look at it this way: With this well under my
-belt, I can get a big bank loan and hire several more rigs to work this
-property. That will take me at least a month. If news gets out about
-this strike in the meantime, what will happen?”
-
-“Cavanaugh and the oil companies that hold adjoining leases will rush in
-and drill offset wells just outside your boundaries before you can get
-started,” Bill answered glumly. “They’ll drain most of the oil out from
-under your land, like they did up at Cortez last year.”
-
-“Right!” said Hall. “I know things have been tough these last few
-months. I’ve had to hold up your pay several times, to make ends meet.
-But you all hold stock in our company. If you hang on a little longer,
-we’ll all be in clover. So I’m sure you’ll keep your mouths shut when
-the spies come prowling, as they will.”
-
-A roar of agreement went up, but then someone said, “How about the kid?
-He don’t own no stock, does he?”
-
-“I know Sandy, and I know his dad,” Hall answered. “Also, his bonus is
-going to be twenty shares of stock. I’ll vouch for him.” He slapped the
-surprised boy on the back and added, “All right, gang. Back to work.
-We’ll pull the string and get the well cemented and closed in. Then
-we’ll shut down here till I get that bank loan arranged. Some of you
-have vacations coming. Take them now. Don will put the rest of you to
-work running surveys and drilling test wells on our downriver lease.
-Tell any snoopers that John Hall ran out of cash—which is no lie. I
-closed out my balance at Farmington last week so I could meet the
-payroll!”
-
-After the drillpipe was withdrawn and stacked, the combined crews spent
-the rest of the day mixing an untold number of bags of cement with
-water. This mixture was pumped down the well to replace the mud that had
-filled it to the brim.
-
-Once, when they heard a plane approaching, most of the men faded into
-the trailers while the others tried to look as unbusy as possible. The
-ship was Cavanaugh’s Bonanza! It circled twice and roared away.
-
-When Salmon estimated that the hole was full of cement, the diesel began
-pumping mud again. This forced the cement out of the well and up to the
-surface between the earth walls and the heavy steel casing inside which
-the drillpipe had rotated.
-
-“How do you ever reach the oil again?” Sandy asked when the operation
-was completed.
-
-“Easy.” Ralph yawned tiredly. “After the cement has hardened, we’ll pump
-out the mud. That will leave a cement plug twenty feet or so thick in
-the well bottom to keep the pressure under control. When we want to
-start producing, we just drill through the plug and away we go. Say, why
-don’t you go to bed instead of asking foolish questions? You look as if
-you had been dragged through a dustbin.”
-
-“I was just thinking, Ralph. Since we’ll be having some time off, why
-don’t we visit Miss Gonzales’ school?”
-
-“You go,” yawned the driller. “I’ve got to get this well capped good and
-tight tomorrow and then drive to Farmington and try to rent a portable
-test rig—on the cuff. I’m going to act so poor-boyish that it will break
-your heart. Casehardened drillers will weep in their beer when they hear
-my tale of woe.”
-
-“Is that exactly honest?” Sandy tried to smooth down his cement-whitened
-cowlick, as he always did when he was thinking hard. “I mean—we _have_
-struck oil.”
-
-“We’ll have struck it for somebody else’s benefit if we don’t play our
-cards close to our chests and keep a close guard over our well _and_ our
-tongues.” Ralph looked at him shrewdly. “You’ll see what I mean in a day
-or two. And here’s some good advice: Watch your step, Sandy. There are
-some mighty curly wolves in this oil game. Don’t try playing Red Riding
-Hood with them.”
-
-
-Learning that Jack Boyd was one of the men assigned to guard the well
-from all intruders, Sandy borrowed the engine man’s car the next day and
-headed in the direction of Kitty’s school. The going was rough, as
-usual, but the machine was equipped with a heavy-duty transmission and
-rear axle, double shock absorbers, an oversized gasoline tank and other
-features which defied the chuckholes. He made good time and found the
-school trailer during the noon recess.
-
-Twenty Navajo children of all ages were playing what looked like a fast
-game of baseball as he drove up. They flew into the trailer like a flock
-of frightened chickens, and came out trying to hide behind their
-teacher’s skirts.
-
-Kitty greeted her visitor with considerable reserve, but when he told
-her that Ralph had asked him to come, she became much more friendly and
-invited him to share her lunch.
-
-He found that the roomy trailer was well equipped for its purpose, with
-plenty of desks, books, a blackboard and other facilities. It was parked
-under tall pine trees near the first brook that he had found since he
-left the well.
-
-“A good place to study,” he said to make conversation as he looked out
-of the big windows at the nearby Chuska Mountains.
-
-“But it’s the shower that attracts the children at first,” she admitted.
-“I have a little pump in the creek, you see, so we have all the water in
-the world. They’ve never seen anything like it. Most of them live in
-gloomy hogans where the only light comes through the door and the smoke
-hole in the center of the room, and where water has to be brought in in
-buckets. _Hot_ water is the greatest luxury they’ve ever known. They’d
-stay under the shower all day long, except that they are so eager to
-learn their lessons.”
-
-“Navajos really like to study?” He tried to keep the surprise out of his
-voice.
-
-“Of course they do. They’re bright as silver dollars. Now that they have
-schools, they’re going to surprise everybody with the speed at which
-they learn.”
-
-“Do you ever teach them about Kit Carson?” he took the plunge.
-
-“Why ...” she stared at him uncertainly. “I mention his name when I have
-to.”
-
-“I think you’re being prejudiced.” Sandy smoothed his cowlick
-desperately. Would she throw him out of the trailer for being so bold?
-
-“So that’s why you came!” She startled him by bursting into a merry peal
-of laughter. “That was brave, after the—after the nasty way I treated
-you at Farmington. Very well, teacher. Tell me why you think Great-uncle
-Kit was a friend of the Navajos.”
-
-Sandy began haltingly, but soon warmed to his subject while the Navajo
-children came in from their play, gathered around him, and listened
-intently. Remembering old stories his mother had told him, Sandy related
-how Kit, an undersized, sickly boy of fifteen, had learned to make
-saddles so he could get a job with a wagon train that was heading west
-from his home town in Missouri.
-
-He went on to tell how his great-uncle had overcome endless hardships to
-become famous as a hunter, trapper and scout with Frémont’s expedition.
-He described how Kit had driven a flock of 6,500 sheep across the
-Rockies to prevent a famine that threatened the early settlers in
-California. He explained the happy ending to the blockade of the Navajos
-in the Canyon de Chelly, and wound up by telling how Carson had left his
-deathbed to go to Washington and make one more plea for government help
-for “his Indians.”
-
-“That’s about all,” he concluded, “except that a town and a river in
-Nevada, and an oil field in New Mexico are named after Kit Carson. He
-_must_ have been a good man.”
-
-“Perhaps he was,” the girl said softly while her pupils smiled and
-nodded their dark heads. “I’ll be kinder to him when I teach a history
-lesson after this. He sounds a lot nicer than some of the people I have
-met recently. That Mr. Cavanaugh, for instance....” She turned up her
-snub nose and let her voice trail off.
-
-“Cavanaugh!” Sandy cried. “Has he been prowling around here too?”
-
-“Yes. He drove through here this morning in a truck. Said he was making
-some sort of ax minerals survey of school lands. Also said he’d stop by
-again after school. Will you stay here until he has gone, Mr. Cars—Mr.
-Steele? I can’t bear him.”
-
-“I will if you’ll call me Sandy,” the boy said bashfully.
-
-“All right, Sandy. And you may call me Kitty.”
-
-“Cavanaugh certainly gets around,” Sandy said. “Did he have anyone with
-him?”
-
-“Yes, a young man who seemed to worship the ground he walked on. _He_
-was nice enough, but, well, sort of dewy-eyed, if you know what I mean.”
-
-“I know,” Sandy grunted, “and not quite dry behind the ears, either.
-That was Pepper March.”
-
-“Well, time to get classes started.” Kitty jumped up with a flutter of
-skirts and shooed her children to their desks. For the next two hours,
-while Sandy listened admiringly, she was an efficient, understanding
-schoolma’am. As he followed the recitation he had to admit that, as she
-had said, the Navajo children were “bright as silver dollars.” They
-displayed an eagerness to learn that almost frightened him. Very few
-youngsters showed that hunger for knowledge back at Valley View High.
-
-That got him to thinking about poor old Quiz. How he would have enjoyed
-this visit. What tough luck! But maybe he’d have a chance to get some
-sort of line on Cavanaugh, the big lug.
-
-The roar of an approaching truck jerked him out of his reverie. Kitty
-quickly dismissed her pupils and she and Sandy were alone in the trailer
-when Cavanaugh strode in, closely pursued by Pepper.
-
-“Oh!” The big man frowned at the unexpected visitor until Pepper rushed
-forward, shouting Sandy’s name, and shook hands as though his school
-rival were the best friend he had in the world.
-
-Then Cavanaugh turned on a smile as bright as a neon sign and insisted
-on shaking hands too.
-
-“I’ve heard a lot about you from Pepper,” he boomed. “Wish you were on
-my team instead of John Hall’s. Say! I heard you had a bit of luck at
-your well. Is that right?”
-
-“Luck?” Sandy stammered, wondering how on earth he was going to get out
-of this one.
-
-“Oh, sure. Everybody knows about the telegram that brought you all
-tearing back from Chinle. Did the well come in?”
-
-“It.... We....” Sandy almost swallowed his Adam’s apple and his face
-went white under its tan. What on earth could he say?
-
-Cavanaugh misunderstood the reason for his hesitation and lost his
-momentary advantage by rushing on.
-
-“Oh, come on, son.” He pounded the boy’s shoulder with a great show of
-affection. “You don’t owe a thing to that old skinflint Hall. Give me
-the real lowdown on the well and I’ll make it very much worth your
-while.”
-
-Sandy jerked away, his fists clenched in fury, but Kitty stepped quickly
-between him and his tormentor.
-
-“Mr. Cavanaugh,” she said in a voice that dripped ice water, “you’re new
-around the oil regions, aren’t you?”
-
-“What do you mean?” The electronics man pulled in his dimpled chin as
-though the girl had slapped him.
-
-“Out here in the Southwest,” she said slowly, “folks don’t pry into
-other folks’ business if they know what’s good for them.”
-
-“Well.... I.... You....” His face turned scarlet. “You can’t talk to
-me....”
-
-“I can, and will.” Her black eyes flashed fire. “Your truck is
-trespassing on school property belonging to the state of Utah. Remove it
-at once!”
-
-Cavanaugh opened and closed his mouth several times, like a fish out of
-water.
-
-“You’ll both be sorry for this,” he gritted like a stage villain. “Come
-along, Pepper.”
-
-“Do you....” Sandy spoke through a dry throat after Cavanaugh’s truck
-had thundered away. “Kitty, do you live here in the trailer?”
-
-“Why, of course.” She looked at him oddly. “There’s not the slightest
-danger.”
-
-“I’m not so sure, now. Couldn’t you stay with one of the Navajo families
-in the neighborhood for a while?”
-
-“Then who would protect the school? It’s more important than I am.”
-
-“But....”
-
-“Don’t you worry, Sandy Carson Steele.” She patted his arm. “The Navajos
-are my friends, and they’re no friends of Cavanaugh. I’ll tell them
-what’s happened and they’ll take good care of me. Now you had better get
-back to the well as fast as you can. The roads are completely impossible
-after dark.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER NINE
- Fighting Fire with Fire
-
-
-When he got back to the well Sandy found that Hall had already set out
-on his fund-raising campaign while Donovan had locked himself in his
-trailer laboratory and was running analyses on oil samples he had taken
-before the cement was poured. Ralph had just finished welding a heavy
-cap to the top of the casing.
-
-“I defy anybody to find out what’s down there until we’re ready to let
-them know,” he said as he grinned at the tired and dirty boy. The grin
-changed to a frown. “What have you been up to this time, Sandy? You look
-like something the cat refused to drag in!”
-
-When he learned about the events at Kitty’s school, the driller nodded
-grimly.
-
-“I warned you about the curly wolves,” he said. “Go get cleaned up and
-have some supper. Then come over to the lab. We’ll talk to Don about
-this.”
-
-The geologist smoked thoughtfully while Sandy reported. Then he knocked
-out his pipe and said, “He’s impossible.”
-
-“Who’s impossible?” Ralph asked.
-
-“This man Cavanaugh. No man can spread himself as thin as he has been
-doing. Look at it this way.” He held up a long finger stained with
-chemicals. “First, he’s bidding for helium leases on land where he
-wouldn’t be allowed to drill. Second—” another finger went up—“he’s
-bidding for uranium leases although the government isn’t buying ore from
-companies that don’t have mills. Third, he’s spying on our well. Fourth,
-he’s trying to lease land in the disputed San Juan River bed. Fifth,
-he’s prospecting on school lands without asking anyone’s permission.
-Hmmm! I’ll run out of fingers pretty soon. Sixth, he’s peddling
-electronic exploration equipment that isn’t worth a hoot when used by
-itself. Seventh, he’s operating an unlicensed light beam communications
-network. Eighth—and here’s something I learned when I drove over to
-Farmington with John and we called Lukachukai to find out how Chief
-Ponytooth is getting on—Cavanaugh flew down there yesterday and almost
-pulled the hospital apart trying to get permission to talk to the old
-man.”
-
-“That means he hopes to get in on the ground floor if the Navajos and
-Hopis settle their dispute,” said Ralph.
-
-“Either that or he wants to hurt John by convincing the Chief that the
-tribes shouldn’t get together.”
-
-“How is the Chief feeling?” Sandy asked.
-
-“Just fine, the nurse told me. He’s tough as shoe leather. Now, is there
-anything else about Cavanaugh’s activities that we should consider?”
-
-“Why does he work day and night to convince people that he’s a heel?”
-Ralph contributed.
-
-“Quiz thinks there’s something wrong with the football stories he’s
-always telling,” said Sandy.
-
-“All right,” Donovan went on thoughtfully. “I suggest that a lot of the
-things Cavanaugh is doing are meant to be camouflage. He’s throwing up
-some sort of smoke screen to get people confused about his true
-intentions. And, since we’re the ones most likely to get hurt by
-whatever he’s really up to, I also think we had better do a little
-investigating. Does either of you have any suggestions?”
-
-“If he were sending up smoke signals instead of talking on a light beam,
-I’ll bet I could soon find out,” the Indian said.
-
-“That’s an excellent idea, Ralph.” The geologist fired up his pipe and
-sent clouds of smoke billowing through the crowded lab. “Eavesdroppers
-never hear anything good about themselves, they say. Nevertheless, I
-think we should fight fire with fire by listening in on him and learning
-the worst.”
-
-“But how _can_ we listen in?” Sandy objected. “Even if we got high
-enough to intercept his beam—in a helicopter, let’s say—he would know
-something had gone wrong when his receiving station didn’t reply. He’d
-stop talking.”
-
-“There’s another way to go about it,” Donovan replied. “I’m a pretty
-good geophysicist as well as a geologist, Sandy. I have to be out here,
-where I may go out looking for oil and find a uranium lode if I keep my
-eyes peeled and my Geiger counter turned on.
-
-“Over on that table—” he nodded toward a small electric furnace and a
-collection of retorts, chemicals and test tubes on one corner of his
-work bench—“I have equipment so sensitive that I can burn the branch of
-a pine tree, or even a bunch of loco weed and find out whether the roots
-of that tree or weed reach down into a uranium ore deposit. With it, I
-can detect in the ash as little as one part in a million of any
-radioactive ore the plant has sucked up from underground in its sap.
-Which reminds me that any time you run across a patch of loco weed, let
-me know immediately. The poisonous stuff seems to like to grow on ground
-in the vicinity of uranium.
-
-“All right. Any physicist understands the principles of electronics, the
-properties of light, and so on, doesn’t he?”
-
-Sandy nodded with growing excitement.
-
-“Also, you may have heard that the FBI has an electronic gadget so
-sensitive that it can eavesdrop on the conversations of crooks, even
-though they may be sitting in a boat half a mile from shore.”
-
-“I’ll bet the Shoshonean water spirits take a dim view of that,” said
-Ralph, grinning.
-
-Donovan waved him to silence with his pipe and continued.
-
-“Now my guess is that Cavanaugh is using a lot of power from a portable
-generator to produce a beam bright enough to be seen a hundred or so
-miles away. And it’s a lot easier for him to modulate that current so it
-will modulate the beam than to use revolving mirrors or some other
-mechanical means to do the job. There is bound to be considerable
-leakage in a circuit of that kind. I think I can go to one of the radio
-supply stores in Farmington tomorrow and pick up enough parts to make an
-electronic ‘ear’ that can tune in on that leakage if we get it within a
-hundred feet of Cavanaugh’s transmitter.”
-
-“Sherlock Donovan,” said Ralph, “I take off my hat to you.”
-
-
-The haywire “ear” that Donovan built during the next several days with
-what little assistance Sandy was able to supply didn’t look like much.
-It was just a collection of transistors, fixed and variable condensers,
-coils and verniers mounted on an old breadboard. But it had the
-advantage of being light and portable. And, when they tried it out with
-the help of their radio receiving set, it worked!
-
-They found that, with the set’s loudspeaker disconnected, they could
-place their gadget several hundred feet away and hear the programs
-perfectly, either on the short-wave or regular broadcasting channels.
-
-“That does it,” Donovan finally said after a careful series of night
-tests. “We don’t know the frequency that Cavanaugh is using as a
-modulator, but this thing is flexible enough to tune in on practically
-any wave band. Now the question becomes, when do we try it out?”
-
-“Why not right now?” Ralph asked.
-
-“Boyd has gone in to town, so I’m in charge of keeping an eye on the
-well,” said the geologist. “I can’t go with you tonight.”
-
-“Sandy and I can handle it,” said the driller. “We’ll take the jeep. If
-we get in a jam we’ll send up a rocket or something.”
-
-On the slow, twenty-mile drive to Elbow Rock, Ralph spun old tales about
-Ute scouting expeditions and buffalo hunts, but Sandy scarcely listened.
-He was feeling miserable, and wished for the first time that he was back
-home in Valley View.
-
-“You don’t like what we’re doing, do you?” Ralph said at last.
-
-“Well, gee. Eavesdropping seems sort of sneaking.”
-
-“I know it does, but don’t forget that we’re dealing with a sneak. Tell
-you what: you stay in the car. I’ll take the ear in.”
-
-“No,” Sandy said firmly. “I’ll do anything I can to help Mr. Hall.
-Besides, I helped build the ear and know just how it works. I’ll carry
-it.”
-
-They parked as close to Cavanaugh’s brightly lighted trailer as they
-dared. Then Sandy strapped the detector on his chest and walked slowly
-up the mountain in darkness so intense and silent that it could almost
-be felt. Remembering the lay of the land from the time that he and Quiz
-had visited the spot with Pepper, he managed to stay mostly on the
-trail.
-
-He was still several hundred yards from the trailer when the night
-exploded in a blare of savage noise. Several large dogs had started
-baying furiously near the trailer. A door opened. Cavanaugh shouted
-angrily at a pack of long-legged animals that leaped and whined in the
-shaft of light.
-
-When quiet had been restored, Sandy inched forward once more. But it was
-no use. The chorus of barks rose louder than before and several of the
-dogs started in his direction. With mixed emotions of annoyance and
-relief, he returned to the jeep and reported.
-
-“Dogs!” Ralph growled. “That means Cavanaugh really has something to
-hide. What did they look like?”
-
-“They had long legs, sharp noses and big white teeth.”
-
-“Doberman pinschers, I’ll bet. Say! Tim Robbins breeds Dobermans over in
-Bluff. They make better sheep tenders than shepherds, he claims. Let’s
-pay him a visit, even if it is late.” He started the jeep.
-
-“What are you planning to do?” Sandy asked sharply.
-
-“If Utes could behave like buffalo, there’s no reason why I can’t be a
-dog,” Ralph answered.
-
-“But you don’t have a dog skin,” Sandy objected.
-
-“I’m going to get one.”
-
-Old man Robbins was in bed when they arrived at his home on the
-outskirts of the little mining town. He came downstairs in his
-nightshirt when he recognized Ralph’s voice, made coffee for his
-visitors, and listened to their request without surprise.
-
-“Why, sure, I’ve got a few skins,” he said. “Here’s one that belonged to
-poor Maisie. She died of distemper last year. I was going to upholster a
-chair with her, but you can have her for a dollar.”
-
-“Mind if I take a look around your runways and kennels, Dad?” Ralph
-asked.
-
-“Go ahead, but don’t get yourself bit, young feller.” The old man shook
-his head at the strange ways of all Indians.
-
-Five minutes later they were headed back toward Elbow Rock.
-
-“Phooey!” said Sandy. “You smell like dog, all right.”
-
-“I rolled around a bit in the kennels.” Ralph’s grin was just visible in
-the light from the dash bulb. “Now I’ve got to start thinking like a
-dog. Don’t bother me, human!”
-
-When they arrived at their destination the driller took a brief lesson
-in the operation of the ear, slipped its harness over his shoulders, and
-draped Maisie’s hide around his hips.
-
-“Keep your fingers crossed and say a prayer to the water spirits,” he
-whispered just before he faded into the velvety darkness.
-
-For long moments Sandy held his breath, expecting a renewal of that wild
-barking. But it didn’t come. High on the Elbow Rock the aluminum trailer
-glowed undisturbed in the soft light pouring from its picture windows.
-
-A trout, leaping in the stream nearby, caused the boy to start
-violently. He tried to relax but that only made him listen harder. Once
-he thought he heard a strain of music coming from the trailer. Hours
-later, it seemed, an owl’s hoot made his hair stir on his scalp. He
-smoothed down his cowlick and then gripped the wheel of the car with
-both hands to stop their trembling. What if Dobermans didn’t always bark
-before they attacked? What if Ralph was up there....
-
-“I’m back.”
-
-Sandy almost yelled with relief as his friend materialized out of
-nowhere and climbed nonchalantly into the car. “Wha ... what happened?”
-gasped the boy, gripping the Indian’s arm to see if he really was real.
-“You fooled the dogs?”
-
-“Nothing happened. And your little friends never batted an eyelash. I’m
-good, I guess.” He removed the skin and tossed it into the rear of the
-jeep.
-
-“What do you mean, nothing happened? Didn’t the ear work?”
-
-“It worked perfectly.” He started the motor and jammed the car into
-gear.
-
-“What did you hear?”
-
-“Music,” said the Ute disgustedly. “Highbrow music. Bach and stuff.”
-
-“Was it code of some kind?”
-
-“Nah!” Ralph spat into the night. “Your friend Pepper would say, ‘Come
-in, Gallup. I’ve got something here that you’d like: the umpteenth
-symphony by so-and-so.’ Then he’d play a record and say, ‘How did that
-sound, Gallup?’ And Gallup would answer, ‘Clear as a bell, kid. Keep it
-up.’ Or Window Rock trailer would come in, ask for a Belafonte number,
-and then say it was fuzzy and to sharpen up the beam. Craziest
-performance I ever heard.”
-
-“Maybe they’re just lonesome, way up here,” Sandy said with great
-relief.
-
-“Maybe. But it’s a mighty expensive way to be lonesome.”
-
-“Or they could be testing,” the boy went on with less assurance.
-
-“That sounds more like it.”
-
-“Or they’re killing time while they wait for a message of some kind?”
-
-“Now you’re cooking with LP gas. The question remains: where is that
-message going to come from? I don’t like this business, Sandy. It gets
-screwier. I wish we could monitor his station every night, but that’s
-impossible, of course. Well, at least we know our ear works and that
-Cavanaugh keeps a kennel. I wonder what John and Don will make of this
-one.”
-
-“When will Mr. Hall be back?” Sandy was glad for a chance to change the
-subject.
-
-“Next week, I think. Keep this under your hat, but he has got his loan,
-and has flown down to Houston to put some more rigs under contract.
-Also, I wangled a portable drill rig when I was in Farmington today.
-That means we’ll soon be heading for the other lease to run some
-surveys. And _that’s_ a job that separates the men from the boys, I can
-tell you.”
-
-“After what happened tonight I feel as if I’d already been separated.”
-Sandy yawned. “Gee, don’t oilmen ever get any sleep?”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TEN
- Pepper Makes a Play
-
-
-A huge truck carrying a light folding drill rig and motor rumbled into
-camp from Farmington two days after the Elbow Rock episode. Donovan then
-set about organizing an exploration crew. Since the need for secrecy had
-lessened, only five of the older men were selected to act as a token
-guard for the property. Ten others, who had had experience in survey
-work, were directed to take tarpaulins off the long-unused instrument
-and “shooting” trucks, tune up their motors, and get the trailers set
-for travel. After Ralph had checked every item on the rented truck and
-Donovan had made sure that his seismograph, magnetometer, gravimeter and
-other scientific apparatus were all in perfect working order, the little
-caravan rolled westward toward Hall’s other San Juan River lease.
-
-“We may be going on a wild-goose chase,” the geologist told Sandy, who
-was riding with him in the jeep that now had the laboratory in tow. “I
-had an aerial survey run on the property last fall. It shows one
-anticline that _may_ contain oil, but I’ll have to do a lot of surface
-work before I recommend that John spends money on a wildcat well.”
-
-“How do you make an aerial survey, Mr. Donovan?”
-
-“I’d like you to call me Don, if you will, Sandy,” the geologist said.
-“And you ought to call John by his first name, too. Oilmen don’t go in
-for formality after they get acquainted.”
-
-“Yes, sir ... Mr.—Don, I mean.” Sandy felt a warm glow at this mark of
-friendship.
-
-“One method of making an aerial survey is by means of photographs taken
-from a plane or helicopter,” the geologist explained. “A stereoscopic
-color camera is used to provide a true three-dimensional picture of the
-area in which you are interested. Such photographs show the pitch and
-strike of surface rock strata and give you some idea of what formations
-lie beneath them. In addition, prospectors use an airborne magnetometer.
-You know what a magnetometer is, don’t you?”
-
-“It measures small differences in the earth’s magnetic field.”
-
-“Right! I see that you listened when your dad talked about geology.
-Well, you fly a magnetometer back and forth in a checkerboard pattern
-over any area where photographs have shown rock formations favorable for
-oil deposits. Heavy basement strata are more magnetic than the
-sedimentary rocks that cover them. So, when those igneous basement rocks
-bulge toward the surface of the earth, your magnetometer reading goes
-up. That gives you a double check because, if the basement bulges, the
-sedimentary rocks that may contain oil have to bulge too. And such a
-bulge, or anticline, may trap that oil in big enough quantities to make
-it worth your while to drill for it.
-
-“Then, if your money holds out—aerial surveys cost a young fortune—you
-may run a triple check with a scintillation counter to see whether
-there’s a radiation halo around the anticline. One complication with
-that is that you have to remove the radium dials from the instrument
-panel of your plane to keep leakage from interfering with your
-scintillation readings.”
-
-A loud honking from the rear of the column caused Donovan to stop the
-jeep. Going back, they found that the new drill truck had slipped into a
-ditch and was teetering dangerously.
-
-Although they had been traveling through such wild and arid country that
-it seemed impossible that even prairie dogs could live there, quite a
-crowd collected while they struggled and sweated for half an hour to get
-the machine back on what passed for a road. First came a wagon pulled by
-two scrawny horses and carrying a whole Navajo family—father, mother,
-two children and a goat. An ancient truck with three more Indians aboard
-pulled up in a cloud of dust. Then came two Navajos on horseback.
-
-Ralph recognized one of the riders and gravely offered him a cigarette
-which he held crosswise between his first and second fingers.
-
-“Hosteen Buray, we need your help,” said the driller after his gift had
-been accepted.
-
-The rider said a few words to the other bystanders and things began to
-happen. The riders galloped away and came back dragging a small tree
-trunk that could be used to raise the truck axle. The children gathered
-sagebrush to stuff under the wheels. The woman milked her goat into a
-pan and presented the steaming drink to the thirsty oilmen. Finally,
-everyone got behind the machine and pushed with many shouts and grunts.
-
-With Ralph’s expert hand at the wheel, the truck struggled back onto the
-trail.
-
-After receiving “thank yous” from all concerned, the Navajos stood aside
-and waved in silence as the column drove away.
-
-This time, Sandy asked to ride with the driller because, as he
-explained, “I’ve got a lot of questions about things.”
-
-“Shoot,” said Ralph.
-
-“Why didn’t anyone offer to pay those people for helping us?”
-
-“They would have been insulted. That’s how Cavanaugh got in bad with
-them in the first place—by insisting that they take money for
-everything. Navajos are proud. Next question.”
-
-“Why did you hand out cigarettes in that funny way, instead of just
-offering your pack?”
-
-“You never point anything at an Indian. It might be a gun.”
-
-“Oh....”
-
-“Anything else on your mind, Sandy?”
-
-“Are all Navajos named Hosteen something-or-other?”
-
-“Hosteen means ‘Mister.’ Most white men don’t use the term. The Navajos
-resent that, too.”
-
-“I guess I’ve got a lot to learn,” the boy sighed.
-
-“You’re doing all right.” Ralph slapped him on the knee.
-
-
-They made camp in a forest of pines not far from a dry wash that ran
-into the San Juan River gorge, and started work at once. Donovan split
-the party into two groups. One, which he headed, loaded the heavy
-magnetometer and gravimeter equipment into a truck and set out to check
-formations revealed by the aerial studies. Ralph and Sam Stack, a burly
-surveyor who had arrived with the portable drill rig, took charge of a
-transit, plane table and Brunton compass. They named Sandy and three
-others to carry stadia rods and help them make a careful surface survey
-of the vicinity where the oil anticline was believed to be.
-
-Then began one of the hardest weeks of grinding labor that Sandy had
-ever put in. All day long he climbed over rocks and fought briary
-thickets while moving his rod to spots where it could be seen from the
-various transit positions. His experience on Boy Scout geology field
-trips kept him from getting lost and enabled him to chip a number of
-rock formations for analysis. But it was only after he returned to camp
-at night and propped his tired eyes open with his fingers while watching
-Don, Ralph and Stack plot lines on a topographical map of the region,
-that he could form any idea of what was being done.
-
-Hall joined them on the third evening and watched without comment as the
-work went on. He looked gray and tired.
-
-“You seem bushed, John,” said Donovan after they had added the day’s
-data to the map. “Any trouble?”
-
-“Plenty, Don. At the last minute the bank refused a loan. It said that
-two wells didn’t make a profitable field, out here in the middle of
-nowhere. I had to trade a two-thirds interest in the other lease to
-Midray before I got my money!”
-
-“That’s the way the oil squirts,” Ralph said philosophically. “So we’re
-in partnership with a big company.”
-
-“I’m solvent, anyway.” Hall shrugged. “But we won’t make our fortunes
-unless that first lease turns out to have the largest field in San Juan
-County. Of course, if this one pays off, too....” His voice trailed
-away.
-
-“I don’t know about that, John.” Donovan bit his thin lips. “We’re
-finding some underground anomalies, but, confound it, I don’t feel right
-about the situation. For one thing, the plants that usually grow in the
-neighborhood of a deposit just aren’t in evidence. We’ve found an
-anticline, all right, but I have a hunch there’s mighty little oil in
-it.”
-
-“Excuse me,” Sandy interrupted from his seat at the end of the map
-table, “but if you find a dome, or anticline, doesn’t it just have to
-hold oil?”
-
-“Not at all,” the geologist answered with a wave of his pipe. “The oil
-might have escaped before the bulge was formed by movements of the
-earth’s crust. Or perhaps the top of the anticline had a crack, or
-fault, through which the oil seeped to the surface ages ago.”
-
-“You are going to run a seismic survey, aren’t you?” Hall asked.
-
-“Yes, we’ll start tomorrow if the weather holds out. The radio says
-thunderstorms are brewing, though.”
-
-“Do the best you can.” Hall rose and stretched. “I’m going to turn in
-now. I feel lousy.”
-
-
-Sandy didn’t sleep well, although he, too, was so tired that his bones
-ached. He was up at sunrise—except that there was no sunrise. The sky
-looked like a bowl of brass and the heat was the worst he had met with
-since his arrival in the Southwest.
-
-After a hurried breakfast they drove the portable drill rig, instrument
-truck and shooting truck to the anticline which lay, circled by tall
-yellow buttes, about three miles from the camp site.
-
-Once there, Ralph used a small diamond drill to make a hole through
-surface dirt and rubble. The rest of the crew dug a line of shallow pits
-with their spades. These were evenly spaced from “ground zero” near the
-hole Ralph had drilled to a distance from it of about 2,000 feet. While
-two men tamped a dynamite charge into the “shot hole,” other crew
-members buried small electronic detectors called geophones in the pits,
-and connected them, with long insulated wires, to the seismograph in the
-instrument truck.
-
-Just as the job was finished, a roaring squall sent everyone dashing for
-cover.
-
-“We’re going to set off a man-made earthquake in a moment, Sandy,”
-Donovan said when the dripping boy climbed into the instrument truck.
-“Watch carefully. When I give the word, Ralph will explode the dynamite.
-The shock will send vibrations down to the rock layers beneath us. Those
-vibrations will bounce back to the line of geophones and be relayed to
-the seismograph here. Since shock waves travel through the ground at
-different speeds and on different paths, depending on the strata that
-they strike, they will trace different kinds of lines on this strip of
-sensitized paper. I can interpret those lines and get a pretty good
-picture of what the situation is down below.”
-
-“You mean you can make an earthquake with dynamite?” Sandy cried.
-
-“A mighty little one. But it will be big enough for our purposes. This
-seismograph measures changes of one millionth of an inch in the position
-of the earth’s surface.” He started the wide tape rolling, and picked up
-a field telephone that connected the three trucks.
-
-“All ready, Ralph?” he asked. “Fine! I’ll give you a ten-second
-countdown. Ten. Nine. Eight. Seven. Six. Five. Four. Three. Two. One.
-Shoot!”
-
-There was a subdued roar deep underground. A geyser of earth and
-splintered rock spouted from the shot hole. The seismograph pens, which
-had been tracing steady parallel lines on the paper, began tracing
-jagged lines instead.
-
-“All right, Ralph,” Donovan spoke into the phone. “If the rain lets up,
-have the boys string another line of geophones and we’ll cross-check.”
-
-They got in one more shot before the increasing thunderstorm made
-further work impossible. Then Ralph and Hall sprinted over from the
-shooting truck and spent the next hour listening while Donovan explained
-the squiggles on the graph.
-
-“So you’re not too happy about the situation, Don?” the producer asked
-at last.
-
-“I hate to say so, John,” the geologist answered, “but things don’t look
-too good. We’ve found a dome, all right, but I’m afraid it has a crack
-in its top. Look at this.” He put away his magnifying glass, lighted up,
-and pointed his pipe stem at a sharp break in the inked lines. “I can’t
-take the responsibility for telling you to spend a hundred thousand
-dollars or so drilling five thousand feet into a cockeyed formation like
-that.”
-
-“Once a poor boy, always a poor boy, I guess.” Hall shrugged.
-
-“Oh, I haven’t given up yet,” said Donovan grimly. “The aerial survey
-shows another possible anomaly about three miles west of here. I’ll do
-some work on that before we call it quits.”
-
-“Take your time,” said his employer.
-
-“Hey!” Ralph, who had been standing at the trailer window, staring
-glumly into the sheets of rain that swept toward them across the San
-Juan gorge, spoke up sharply. “Take a look at that river, will you?”
-
-They joined him at the window and found that the stream had doubled in
-size since the rain had started. Now it was a raging yellow torrent that
-filled the gorge from border to border.
-
-“It beats me,” said Hall, “how it can rain cats and dogs in this country
-one day and flood everything, but be dry as dust the next. When the
-government finishes building its series of dams around here and all this
-water is impounded for irrigation, you’ll see the desert blossom like
-the rose, I’ll bet.”
-
-“The rain all runs off and does no good now, that’s a sure thing,”
-Donovan agreed.
-
-“Look,” Ralph interrupted. “There’s a boat or barge or something coming
-down the river.”
-
-“You’re crazy,” said Donovan. “Nothing could live in that—Say!” He
-rubbed mist off the window and peered out into the downpour. “Something
-_is_ coming down. You’re right!”
-
-They stood shoulder to shoulder and stared in horror. Around a bend in
-the stream a heavily laden homemade barge had plunged into view. A vivid
-flash of lightning showed one man standing upright in the stern. Blond
-hair flying, he was struggling to steer the bucking craft with a long
-sweep.
-
-“That’s Pepper March!” Sandy shouted as another flash spotlighted the
-craft. “He must be trying to prove that the San Juan is navigable.”
-
-“He won’t last five miles,” Ralph snapped. “I’ve got to go after the
-young fool. Grab some rope, Sandy, and come along.”
-
-There was no rope in the truck, so Sandy snatched up a coil of heavy
-wire cable used to lower electric logs into test wells. With it over his
-shoulder, he tore out into the storm after the driller.
-
-They got the jeep going after considerable cranking and headed
-downstream. It was a nip and tuck race since there was no trail along
-the gorge. But Ralph put the car in four-wheel drive and tore along over
-rocks and through flooded washes while Sandy hung onto the windshield
-frame for dear life. Finally they managed to pull ahead of the tossing
-barge.
-
-“There’s a rapids about five miles downstream,” Ralph shouted above the
-thunder that rolled back and forth like cannon shots among the buttes
-and cliffs. “He’ll never go farther than that. The only thing I can do
-is to stand by there and try to throw him a line. It’s a long chance.
-Thank heaven and the water spirits that I learned to rope horses when I
-was a kid.”
-
-They reached the rapids with only seconds to spare. The Indian fastened
-one end of the cable to the power takeoff at the rear of the jeep and
-coiled the rest of it with great care at the edge of the gorge. Then he
-stood, braced against the howling wind, swinging the heavy log in his
-right hand.
-
-“Here he comes,” Ralph said. “What a shame that damned fools often look
-like heroes. Your friend is probably thinking he’s Lewis, Clark and Paul
-Revere rolled into one. Stand by to start the takeoff and reel him in if
-I hook him, Sandy.... There he goes. There he goes! Stand by!”
-
-Pepper was fighting the rapids now, like some yellow-haired Viking out
-of the past. It was no use. Halfway through, the awkward barge hit a
-submerged rock. Slowly its bow reared into the air. The heavy pipe with
-which it had been loaded started cascading into the boiling water.
-
-Pepper had enough presence of mind to drop the useless sweep, and
-scramble out of the path of the lengths of pipe as they flew like
-jackstraws. As he managed to grab the uptilting rail, Ralph’s mighty arm
-swung back and forward. The end of the cable carrying the log paid out
-smoothly. Out and down it sped in a long arc.
-
-It struck the boat and slid slowly along the rapidly sinking rail. After
-one wild look upward, Pepper understood what had happened. He snatched
-the wire as it went by and looped it twice around his waist.
-
-“Haul away,” Ralph whooped to Sandy. “We’ve caught our fish.”
-
-As the jeep’s motor roared and the takeoff spun, Pepper was snatched
-from his perch and dragged helter-skelter through the wild waters.
-Minutes later Ralph dragged him over the edge of the cliff, choking and
-half drowned.
-
-“No real damage except a few nasty bruises,” the driller grunted after
-he had applied artificial respiration with more vigor than was really
-needed. “How do you feel, bud?”
-
-“Awful!” Pepper groaned. Then he amazed them by sitting up and glaring
-at them.
-
-“That was ... a stinking trick,” he croaked after he had spat out a
-mouthful of dirty water. “Stringing cable ... capsizing my barge ... I’d
-have made it.”
-
-“Whaaat?” Sandy hardly believed his ears.
-
-“I’d have made it, I tell you! I would have!” Pepper wailed
-hysterically. “Then you ... then you ...” He retched miserably.
-
-“Listen, kid,” Ralph snapped as he half-carried the boy to the jeep.
-“Your Red Cavanaugh ought to be strung up for egging you on to try a
-stunt like that.”
-
-“No!” Tears dripped down Pepper’s dirty cheeks. “My idea. He didn’t
-know.”
-
-“Bunk! You mean he didn’t know you had built a barge and loaded it with
-pipe? Don’t lie! Your boss is a stinking, no-good, lowdown louse.”
-
-“Oh, no!” Pepper tried to pull free, then leaned against the side of the
-car and clung there like a half-drowned monkey. “Red’s best boss a man
-ever had. He’s ... he’s wonderful.... Likes good music ... dogs ...
-Indians. I’d die for Red.”
-
-“That’s the point.” Ralph rummaged in the back of the jeep, found
-Maisie’s mangy hide, and wrapped it around the shivering boy. “You
-almost did die. Cavanaugh’s next door to a murderer.”
-
-Pepper stared at them as if he were waking from a dream.
-
-“You really believe that, Sandy?” he gulped weakly.
-
-“I know it, Pepper.” Torn between pity and anger, Sandy gripped the
-blond boy’s arm. “Cavanaugh’s a crook!”
-
-“Crook?” Pepper babbled. “No, no!” His knees sagged and they just
-managed to catch him as he fell.
-
-“A strange boy,” said Ralph as they drove back to camp with the would-be
-Viking sleeping the sleep of exhaustion between them. “He’s in trouble,
-some way. Maybe he was trying to prove himself, like young Indians once
-did before they could become braves.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ELEVEN
- Serendipity
-
-
-Pepper was black, blue, stiff and somewhat chastened when he ate
-breakfast with Ralph and Sandy the next morning. Also, he was disturbed
-by the fact that Cavanaugh’s plane had come over at dawn, circled the
-wrecked barge in the rapids for several minutes, and then scooted
-eastward without landing.
-
-“He must have known I planned to run the river,” the blond boy admitted.
-“But why do you suppose he didn’t stop to ask whether you folks had seen
-me?”
-
-“Probably was afraid to.” Ralph attacked a big plate of ham and
-scrambled eggs. “Figures he may be blamed for letting you drown, so he’s
-gone home to frame an alibi. Won’t he be surprised when you show up in
-one of our supply trucks!”
-
-“Gee whiz! Do you really think he’s that bad, Mr. Salmon?”
-
-“I think he’s worse. See here, kid. Why don’t you stop working for that
-heel and come over here? I’m sure John will give you a roustabout job.”
-
-“No.” Pepper shook his head stubbornly. “I signed a contract and I can’t
-go back on my word. Besides, I haven’t seen him do anything really bad.
-I’ll admit that some of the things he does seem, well, sort of queer.
-But maybe you’re just too suspicious.”
-
-“Maybe.” Ralph washed down a hunk of Ching Chao’s good apple pie with
-half a cup of steaming coffee. “Well, it’s your funeral.”
-
-“I’ll keep my eyes open after this.” Pepper rose as a honk from the
-truck told him it was time to get going. “Thanks for everything. And I
-really do mean for everything.”
-
-The Indian stood up and stretched like a lazy panther as he watched
-their visitor depart. “Crazy kid,” he said. “Well, it’s time for us to
-be getting back to the mines, Sandy. Don’s staying here for a few days
-to run some final tests. He has assigned our group to start surveying
-the other structure. So pick up your rock hammer and stadia rod. Hike!”
-
-The new location proved to be several miles north of the river in a
-tumbled and desolate region of weathered buttes and washes that already
-were dry as bone.
-
-“Geologists call those buttes ‘diatremes,’” Stack, the surveyor,
-explained to the crew as they unloaded equipment at a central spot.
-“They stick up like sore thumbs because they’re really vents from
-ancient volcanoes. The lava they’re made of doesn’t erode much although
-the surrounding sedimentary rocks have been worn away in the course of
-ages. There are at least 250 diatremes scattered through this Colorado
-Plateau area, and some of them are rich in minerals. So keep your eyes
-open while you’re prowling.”
-
-“Prowling” was exactly the word for what the crew did, Sandy decided
-after a few days in the broiling sun. He had to admit that the territory
-was beautiful, in its wild way, but he decided that it was more fit for
-mountain goats than human beings. More and more, as he slowly worked his
-way from one rod location to another, measured the slope of exposed
-strata with his Brunton compass, or chipped rock samples for analysis
-back at camp, he began to dream of the soft green hills and winding
-streams near Valley View.
-
-His homesickness grew worse when Hall brought him a letter from Quiz.
-
- Dear Sandy,
-
- I sure do envy you, out there in God’s country. Things are mighty dull
- around here, although I do get some time for swimming and tennis, now
- that Dad is able to hobble around in his cast and help out at the
- restaurant.
-
- Last Sunday we had a picnic out by the lake. The fishing was swell.
- And there was a dance at the pavilion afterward. I’m not much for
- dancing, but I know you like to. Still, you must be having plenty of
- fun out at the well.
-
-“Fun!” Sandy exploded as he reread that paragraph. He was bathing his
-blistered feet in the first spring he had found that day and batting at
-deer flies that seemed determined to eat him alive. Then he read on:
-
- I haven’t forgotten about Cavanaugh. Dad says he’s a lone wolf and
- that nobody knows much about him. He came here about two years ago,
- flashed a lot of money around, and built his lab. Joined the Country
- Club, Rotary, and so on. Impressed a lot of people with his football
- talk. Makes good equipment and has several research contracts that
- take him to Washington quite frequently. His employees think he’s a
- stuffed shirt, too.
-
- I tried to look up his sports record at the library, but the
- newspapers that should tell about his big game are missing from the
- files. When Dad gets better, he says I can take a day or two off and
- see what I can find in the San Francisco library. I’ll let you know.
- Funny about those newspapers, isn’t it?
-
- Give my regards to the gang. I sure do wish I was there instead of
- here.
- As ever,
- Quiz
-
-After he had finished reading Sandy sat for a long time with his chin in
-his hands, thinking. The survey wasn’t going well, he knew. Yesterday,
-Hall and Donovan had paid them a visit and shaken their heads at the map
-that Ralph and Stack were drawing.
-
-“This isn’t an anticline, John,” the geologist had said. “What we have
-here is fault that has caused a stratigraphic trap. That is, layers of
-rock on one side of the fault line have been lifted above those on the
-other side of the crack by some old earthquake. The slip sealed off the
-upper end of what may be an oil-bearing layer with the edge of a layer
-of hard, impervious rock. If you drill here—” he pointed with his pipe
-stem—“you may hit a small pool. Nothing spectacular, you understand, but
-it ought to more than pay expenses.”
-
-“I don’t know whether I should take the chance.” Hall had shaken his
-gray head. “I need something better than this to gamble on, the way
-things are. Tell you what, Don. There’s going to be a bid session at
-Window Rock next Monday. Keep the crew working here for a few days
-longer while I drive down and see if I can shake loose a better lease.
-Ralph, you’d better come along. I hear that the Navajo and Hopi Councils
-will have some sort of joint powwow at the Rock and I’ll want you to
-keep an eye on it. You come along too, Sandy, and bring the ‘ear.’ I
-have a hunch that a lot of things are about to pop.”
-
-“Will we have room for Kitty?” Ralph asked. “I dropped over to see her
-after work yesterday and she told me the school is closing Monday and
-Tuesday because there’s going to be a big Squaw Dance in the
-neighborhood. She wants to go home and get her best clothes to wear to
-it. She could drive her own car, of course....”
-
-“Kitty’s good company,” Hall had replied. “I’d be glad to have her
-along.”
-
-A distant hail jerked Sandy out of his reverie. He put on his shoes,
-picked up his rod, hammer and compass, and started climbing over jagged
-rocks to the top of a crumbling low butte that was to be the next survey
-location. The going wasn’t too bad because one side of the cone had
-collapsed, thus providing a slope of debris up which he could clamber
-with fair speed.
-
-When Stack’s transit came in sight, Sandy placed the stadia rod upright
-so that it could be seen against the skyline and started the slow
-business of moving it about in response to the surveyor’s hand signals.
-
-Several times he stopped and listened intently. Off to his right, hidden
-in the underbrush that choked the crater, he thought he heard some large
-animal moving. A deer, probably, he tried to reassure himself, although
-he remembered that one of the other crewmen had had a nasty brush with a
-bobcat several days previously.
-
-“That’s it, Sandy,” the surveyor in the valley bellowed through cupped
-hands at last. “Call it a day.”
-
-The boy was beating a quiet retreat down the slope when a tired bleat
-stopped him in his tracks. The animal in there was either a sheep or a
-calf, and it seemed to be in trouble.
-
-“Better take a look,” said Sandy. (He had got into the habit of talking
-to himself these last few lonely weeks. The noise seemed to keep the
-homesickness away.)
-
-It was a calf, he found, when he had fought his way into the thicket.
-And it seemed to be sick. First it would nibble at some plants where it
-stood, then, lifting its feet high and putting them down gingerly, it
-would move slowly to another location and repeat the performance. Every
-so often it let out that piteous bleat.
-
-“Poor thing,” Sandy murmured. “Maybe I ought to take it back to camp.”
-
-He fished a length of cord out of his knapsack, looped it around the
-calf’s neck and tugged. The animal gave him a glassy stare and wobbled
-forward.
-
-“Probably a Navajo stray,” he said. “Its owners will be looking for it.”
-
-When he reached the temporary camp half an hour later, Ralph took one
-look at the calf and let out an astonished whoop.
-
-“Loco,” he shouted. “Hey, gang! Come look what Sandy found.”
-
-Men came running from all directions.
-
-“Where did you find it?” Stack demanded.
-
-“Up there. On top of that butte.” Sandy pointed.
-
-“Was it eating anything at the time?” Ralph snapped.
-
-“Yes. Some plants that looked sort of like ferns, only they had little
-bell-like blossoms hanging from stalks in their centers.”
-
-“Locoweed,” the Indian crowed. “_Astragalus Pattersoni_, Donovan calls
-it. Sandy, you may have found just what the doctor ordered to get John
-out of his pinch. I’ll get a Geiger counter. The rest of you round up
-some flashlights, sacks and spades. We’d better take a look at this
-right away.”
-
-“What about my calf?” Sandy objected.
-
-“Oh, stake it out somewhere and give it some water. It may recover. It’s
-just drugged. Indians used to chew locoweed when they went down in their
-kivas, you know. They said it made them see visions in which they talked
-to the spirits. Eat too much of the stuff, though, and you’re a goner.”
-
-
-Two hours later, after having dug up most of the crater, the men tramped
-wearily back to camp in the light of the rising moon. The sacks they
-carried on their backs bulged with loads of black earth mixed with
-yellow carnotite crystals that made the Geiger chatter madly.
-
-Hall was just driving into camp as they arrived.
-
-“We’ve found a rich uranium lode or lens, I think, John,” Ralph shouted
-to him. For once he had lost his Indian calm and was almost dancing with
-excitement.
-
-“You don’t say,” yawned the producer as he dragged himself out of the
-car.
-
-“Well!” Ralph stared, openmouthed, at this cool reception. “What’s the
-matter, boss? Don’t you care?”
-
-“Where are we going to sell the ore?” Hall asked gently.
-
-“Oh!” Ralph wilted. “I hadn’t thought of that. The government only buys
-from people who have mills.”
-
-“Sure. A uranium strike these days is just like money in a safe for
-which you have lost the combination.”
-
-“Excuse me, Mr. Hall,” Stack interrupted, “but doesn’t Midray own an
-interest in a uranium mill?”
-
-“Oh, yes.” Hall smiled grimly at the surveyor. “Midray owns an interest
-in most everything. It will be delighted to help me develop the lode—in
-exchange for three-fourths of the profits.
-
-“That’s better than nothing, though.” He straightened his shoulders. “A
-uranium strike will shorten the odds enough so I can take a chance on
-drilling a well here. Why, what am I grousing about? This could be a
-real stroke of luck. How did you happen to find it?”
-
-When he had heard the story, Hall slapped Sandy on the back.
-
-“That’s what’s called serendipity,” he said, chuckling. “You remember
-the three Princes of Serendip in the fairy story: on their travels they
-always found things they weren’t looking for. Congratulations, Sandy.
-You have the makings of a real wildcatter.”
-
-But, as the boy went off to take care of his sick calf, he knew that his
-employer had been putting on an act. Serendipity or no, John Hall was
-still running a poor-boy outfit.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWELVE
- Cavanaugh Makes a Mistake
-
-
-Hall had completely recovered his good spirits by the time that Ralph
-brought Kitty to camp at dawn. Just as the sun rose the little party set
-out for Window Rock in a holiday mood. Hall made one stop for a brief
-conference with Donovan. Then he drove on to his base camp, arriving in
-time for breakfast.
-
-Sandy could hardly recognize the place where he had worked such a short
-time before. Number Two well had been opened and connected to the feeder
-pipeline through a Christmas tree, while its derrick had been moved to a
-new location. Three big new Midray rigs were being erected at other
-spots on the property. Still more derricks were going up on surrounding
-leases. This was rapidly becoming an important field.
-
-Hall had a short talk with the Midray superintendent, a big man who
-reminded Sandy of Cavanaugh and who acted as if he owned the place. Then
-they were on their way again.
-
-“The lease looks like Times Square,” Hall grunted as he headed the jeep
-toward Shiprock. “Makes me uncomfortable. I like to work where there’s
-plenty of room to swing a wildcat.”
-
-“I bet you still prefer to use a burro when you go prospecting, you old
-sourdough,” Kitty teased him.
-
-“Well, a burro never runs out of gas or breaks a spring, and it has a
-better horn than a jeep,” Hall said, grinning. “When a burro brays, even
-the mountains have to listen. That’s why he’s called a Rocky Mountain
-canary, I suppose.”
-
-They reached Route 666 in good time, turned south between Shiprock Peak
-and Hogback Mountain, and sailed down through the picturesque Chuskas
-past road signs that beckoned toward far-off, mysterious places like
-Toadlena, Beautiful Mountain, Coyote Wash, Nakaibito, Pueblo Bonito
-(Lovely Village) and Ojo Caliente (Hot Eye).
-
-Kitty made the time pass quickly by singing the praises of the desert,
-pointing out spots of historic interest, and telling them Navajo
-legends.
-
-“The Wind People, who ride the lightning, own all of these box canyons
-and hilltops,” she said half seriously. “No Navajo will build his hogan
-near such places, or where lightning has struck. If he did, he thinks
-the Wind People would give him bad headaches.”
-
-“It gives me a bad headache trying to understand why your Navajos love a
-godforsaken place like this,” Ralph said.
-
-“Your Utes live here too!” Kitty’s eyes flashed.
-
-“Only because white men drove us off our good land farther north,” Ralph
-snapped. “We put up a good fight before they expelled us, too. My
-grandfather was one of Chief Douglas’ warriors, back in 1879, when the
-Utes surrounded and almost destroyed an entire U.S. Army detachment that
-invaded our White River reservation.”
-
-“The Navajos got _their_ reservation back,” Kitty pointed out.
-
-“Don’t squabble, children,” Hall said and added, to break the tension,
-“I heard a rumor that you’re going to the Squaw Dance together next
-week. Is that right?”
-
-Kitty blushed and Ralph nodded.
-
-“That’s the same as becoming engaged, isn’t it?”
-
-“If our uncles approve,” Kitty admitted.
-
-“Well, here’s a tip from an old bachelor: Don’t bicker about things that
-happened long ago, and don’t hold grudges. We’re all Americans today, no
-matter how our skins are colored.”
-
-“I’ll be good,” Kitty promised. “And that reminds me. Will you all be
-good and come to dinner with Mother and me tonight?”
-
-When they pulled up to the motel at Window Rock, an Indian wearing a
-Hopi hairband rose from where he had been squatting near the entrance
-and handed Ralph a message. The driller read it and turned to the others
-with a frown.
-
-“It’s from Chief Ponytooth,” he explained. “He says the Hopis and
-Navajos are having a session at the Council Hall tonight and he wants me
-there as a representative of the Utes. Looks as if I’ll have to eat and
-run.”
-
-“Dinner will be early,” Kitty promised.
-
-“Wait here till I make a quick visit to the Indian Agency,” Hall said.
-“Then we’ll walk over to your house. I’m tired of riding.”
-
-Sandy had expected that Kitty might live in an eight-sided wooden hogan
-such as he had seen in other parts of the reservation. Instead, she took
-them to a neat white cottage surrounded by palo-verde trees.
-
-Mrs. Gonzales was an attractive widow who might have passed for Kitty’s
-older sister, except that she was somewhat heavier and her skin was much
-darker. She greeted the two older men as if they were members of the
-family and made Sandy feel at home immediately. First, she showed them
-around the tiny forge and workshop where she apparently earned a good
-living by making lovely silver buckles and heavy medallions called
-conchas which she sold to tourists. Then, after learning that Ralph had
-to leave soon, she rushed dinner to the table. It featured several
-highly spiced Mexican and Indian dishes and was delicious.
-
-After coffee, they stood under the stars for a few minutes on a patio
-looking toward the great black hole in Window Rock.
-
-“What is the light that twinkles on the cliff these days?” Mrs. Gonzales
-asked as she pointed upward with pursed lips.
-
-“Bad man!” she sniffed after Hall explained that it was Cavanaugh’s
-light beam.
-
-“What do you know about him, Mother?” Ralph asked.
-
-“Nothing good.” She crossed her arms in the wide sleeves of her
-embroidered blouse to keep the evening chill away. “He came here in the
-early ’50s, looking for uranium. Pablo, my poor husband, was a
-prospector too in those days, and knew every foot of this reservation.
-Cavanaugh went into partnership with him, but somehow, he never got
-round to signing a contract.
-
-“They made a strike too—one of the biggest. Cavanaugh sold the claim for
-much money, just before the government stopped buying ore. He forgot all
-his promises then, and went away. Pablo’s heart broke when the man he
-thought was his friend betrayed him.” She sighed deeply.
-
-“Now Cavanaugh has returned,” she went on at last, “like the Spaniards
-who used to descend on us Indians like locusts when they needed more
-money. He is not good for this country.”
-
-“He certainly is riding a high horse today,” Hall agreed. “When I was at
-the Agency he came stalking in with Pepper behind him, leading two of
-his big dogs on leashes. He looked just like the cat that ate the canary
-as he submitted a pile of sealed bids a foot high. I sure do wish I knew
-what he was up to.”
-
-“If I didn’t have to attend the Council meeting,” Ralph said
-regretfully, “I could take the ‘ear’ up to his camp and find out,
-maybe.”
-
-Kitty insisted on walking them back to town. She and Ralph went
-arm-in-arm until Hall met another oilman, got into a business
-discussion, and called his driller back to take part in it. Sandy and
-the girl continued on together.
-
-Cavanaugh came out of the motel as they approached. Quite evidently, the
-redhaired man had had a few drinks.
-
-“Well!” he said as he recognized them. “If it isn’t the squaw who kicked
-me out of school, with her little squaw man!” He stood in their path,
-swaying ever so slightly.
-
-“Get out of our way, please,” Sandy said, fighting down his fury at the
-words.
-
-For answer, Cavanaugh swung a brawny arm and struck the boy across the
-mouth with the back of a hairy hand.
-
-Sandy staggered from the unexpected blow, then charged, fists flying. He
-connected several times, but he might as well have hit a brick wall. His
-155 pounds made no impression on Cavanaugh’s 200-plus.
-
-“So you think you can fight the man who made three touchdowns against
-California,” Cavanaugh bawled drunkenly. “Well, take this for being an
-Injun lover!” He swung a short right to the jaw that snapped Sandy’s
-head back. “And this for your Injun-loving boss!” He followed with a
-stunning left. “And this for your snooty Ute!” He swung a haymaker that
-smashed through the boy’s weakened guard and hit his solar plexus like a
-bolt of lightning.
-
-As he lay in the gutter, gasping desperately for breath, Sandy thought
-he heard the sound of running feet.
-
-“And this,” Cavanaugh said deliberately, “is just part of what I owe
-Donovan for calling me a liar. Won’t he look like a fool tomorrow if my
-high sign comes through?”
-
-Through bleared eyes, Sandy saw his enemy push Kitty aside and swing a
-heavy boot at his ribs.
-
-At that moment, Ralph plunged into the little circle of lamplight. The
-Indian gripped Cavanaugh by one beefy shoulder and spun him around.
-
-“This,” he raged, “is for a skunk who picks on people half his size and
-kicks them when they’re down!”
-
-He dealt the bully a smashing blow under the ear.
-
-“Fight! Fight!” somebody in the motel yelled. In an instant the building
-poured forth a mob of oilmen. They gathered in a circle around the
-combatants and shouted encouragement. A few of them egged Cavanaugh on,
-but the majority were rooting for his opponent.
-
-Sandy sat up groggily, dabbed at his bleeding lips, and watched the
-battle with growing excitement. Ralph was many pounds lighter than the
-redhead, but he made up for that by being fast as a rattler. He avoided
-the big man’s efforts to go into a clinch that would give him time to
-clear his head of that first murderous punch. He danced about as his
-ancestors must have done at their buffalo ceremonials. He struck again
-and again—short, stabbing blows that soon cut Cavanaugh’s face to
-ribbons and closed his right eye.
-
-The bully was no coward though, Sandy was surprised to discover. He
-fought doggedly, and managed to get in some damaging blows to the body
-that made his supporters cheer. But Ralph’s long reach held him too far
-away. He could not use his great strength to advantage. And it was plain
-that he was badly out of condition. Before three minutes had passed he
-was becoming winded.
-
-“Kill the big bum, Fisheater,” a Navajo whooped from the edge of the
-crowd. “He asked for it. Kill ’im.”
-
-“With pleasure,” Ralph answered. “Watch this, benighted Navajo. I
-learned it in Uncle Sam’s Navy.”
-
-He started a right, almost from the pavement. Up and up it came,
-completely under Cavanaugh’s guard. It landed on the point of his chin
-with a crack like that of a whip!
-
-The big man threw out his arms wildly, rocked back on his heels, and
-came crashing down, as a tree falls, into the gutter beside Sandy. He
-scrabbled about there for a moment, managed to get halfway to his knees,
-then slid forward on his face. Out!
-
-The Navajo threw his big black cowboy hat on the street, jumped up and
-down on it in utter joy, and sent warwhoop after warwhoop echoing
-through the little town.
-
-“Hand me my coat, John,” Ralph said to the producer, who had been
-coaching him from the sidelines. “If I don’t hurry, I’ll be late for
-that meeting.”
-
-Kitty, who had stood close beside Sandy throughout the battle,
-alternately wringing her hands and jumping up and down with excitement
-as Ralph seemed to be getting the worst or best of it, now ran forward.
-As the crowd cheered again, she hugged her man until he had to beg her
-to spare his bruised ribs.
-
-“Kitty,” said Hall, when Ralph had been carried away on the shoulders of
-admiring Navajos and Hopis who had run over from the Council Hall to
-witness the fracas, “will you take Sandy home and patch him up? He has a
-pretty deep cut on his cheekbone. Better drive him over in the jeep, if
-he feels like he looks.
-
-“I’ve got to talk to Ken White about Cavanaugh. This situation is
-getting out of hand. I’ll come over as soon as I can.”
-
-Half an hour later, Sandy pushed aside the cold compresses that Mrs.
-Gonzales had been applying to his face and sat bolt upright on the couch
-where he had been lying.
-
-“Kitty,” he gasped. “I just thought! What was it Cavanaugh said about a
-high sign or something?”
-
-“When he was getting ready to kick you, you mean?” she frowned.
-
-“Yes. It had to do with Donovan, I think. I was pretty groggy at the
-time.”
-
-“Oh! He said something like ‘Won’t Donovan feel like a fool tomorrow if
-my high sign comes through!’”
-
-“That’s it! That’s it!” Sandy yelled as he pushed Mrs. Gonzales’
-fluttering hands away and scrambled to his feet. “It could only mean
-that he’s expecting some sort of message tonight over his light beam.
-Ralph’s tied up, so I’ve got to go up there and try to find out what it
-is.”
-
-“Don’t be silly,” said Kitty. “You’ve taken a bad beating. You’re in no
-condition to go anywhere.”
-
-“But I’ve got to go,” he pleaded. “This may mean everything to John, and
-Don, and, yes, to you and Ralph too. I’m the only one who knows how to
-operate the ‘ear.’ I’m going right now. And you’re going to help me!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THIRTEEN
- Think Like a Dog
-
-
-“But _how_ do I go about feeling like a dog?” Sandy groaned after he had
-explained his plan of action.
-
-“You shouldn’t have any trouble about that.” Kitty smiled tenderly as
-she patted the last strip of bandage in place on his cheek. “You must
-feel awful.”
-
-“That’s not what I mean. When Ralph went into Cavanaugh’s camp at Elbow
-Rock he wore a dog skin and made himself smell like a dog. But he said
-that wasn’t enough. He also had to feel and think like one. There’s a
-skin in the jeep. And you must know a kennel where I can roll around and
-get the smell. But how about the rest of it?
-
-“Of course I’ve read _The Call of the Wild_, but that’s only Jack
-London’s _idea_ of how dogs think. What I’ve got to find out quick is
-how they really feel.”
-
-“I am an Indian,” Mrs. Gonzales spoke up suddenly. “Indians are wise in
-the ways of animals. You have heard that Indians of the old days were
-the world’s best horsemen, although they used no saddles, and sometimes
-no bridles. Why? I say it was because they could talk with their horses.
-Yes, and they honored their mounts as no other people have ever done by
-printing what was called a pat hand on the rumps of those who helped
-them win battles.” She held up the palm of her hand to show what she
-meant.
-
-“Then there are our totems. Animals, all of them. To be a member of the
-buffalo clan, a young brave had to study the wild herds until he knew
-their every thought—what frightened them, what pastures they preferred,
-their mating habits. All that.
-
-“What of the great cattle and sheep herds in which modern Navajos take
-such pride? They thrive where it seems only jack rabbits could live
-because their herdsmen understand their every need, care for them as if
-they were children, and weep, as for children, when they are injured or
-die.
-
-“And consider the Hopi snake dances. Why should the rattlers not bite
-the dancers, except that they are friends? You do not believe me,
-Sandy?”
-
-“Well,” he gulped, “it’s just that I am not an Indian....”
-
-“But white men have been the friends of dogs since time began. You can
-learn to remember how a cave man felt when he and his dog slept back to
-back to protect themselves against the howling things outside in the
-night. You want to be among dogs, Sandy? Very well, I will call them
-here.”
-
-She closed her black eyes and sat swaying slowly from side to side,
-making an almost inaudible whining, snuffling noise through her nose.
-
-A dog barked questioningly in the distance. Another answered, nearer.
-Within minutes, three scrawny mutts were scratching at the screen door
-of the cottage.
-
-“You must remember that dogs are always hungry,” Mrs. Gonzales said as
-she let the animals in and went to the kitchen to find scraps for them,
-“so you must think of food at all times. You must remember that they are
-loyal, even though their master beats them, so you must not let your
-hatred or distrust of Cavanaugh into your mind when you approach his
-camp. You must be sleepy ... oh so sleepy ... so that you do not wake
-them from their dreams of chasing rabbits, or bigger game.
-
-“Also,” she said thoughtfully, “it would be wise to remove all your
-clothing except the dog skin before you approach. There will not be so
-much man smell to overcome. Now play with these dogs for a time to get
-their scent on you. Then Kitty will drive you as near the camp as she
-dares. And may the blessings of the good Jesus and Mary, and the water
-and wind people, ride with you.”
-
-
-Kitty was at the wheel as the jeep skirted the town and headed up a
-steep trail that had been chopped through the mesquite for the benefit
-of tourists who liked to snap their everlasting cameras from the top of
-the Rock. It was much too late for tourists to be out, however, so they
-had the road to themselves. This was a good thing, since they dared not
-use the car lights and had to depend on what little illumination was
-provided by a half-moon.
-
-Sandy sat fingering Maisie’s hide nervously and holding the “ear” on his
-lap to protect it from bumps. From time to time, as they twisted and
-turned, he got glimpses of Cavanaugh’s beam far above. It twinkled
-without interruption and was hard to distinguish among the stars.
-
-“Pepper must be playing music,” he said softly at last. “Ralph says the
-beam fades up and down when a two-way conversation is going on. We’re
-still in time.”
-
-“Are you sure you ought to be doing this?” Kitty asked unhappily. “John
-wouldn’t have let you go if he had known about it, I’m certain.”
-
-“That’s why I was in such a hurry to start before he returned from the
-Agency. Ralph isn’t here, so I’m the only person who knows how to
-operate this gadget. I have to go through with it.”
-
-“But why do you have to?” she demanded. “Why not leave it up to the
-Agency and the Navajo police?”
-
-“Because I have only a hunch to go on—the kind of hunch that Mother says
-Kit Carson used to have. I haven’t any proof that Cavanaugh is planning
-to play some sort of dirty trick on the Indians tomorrow, or that his
-plans may depend on what comes over the beam. The police would laugh at
-me. I’ve _got_ to do it my way.”
-
-“I guess you do,” the girl agreed. “You’ll have to walk the rest of the
-way,” she added, driving the car off the trail and into a thicket as the
-lights shining from Cavanaugh’s trailer showed up on the skyline ahead.
-
-When Sandy climbed out, strapped the “ear” to his chest and started
-away, she called him back sharply.
-
-“Take your clothes off here and put them in the back of the jeep,” she
-commanded. “You’d never find them on the trail.”
-
-“But....”
-
-“Do as I say, silly. And hurry. I’m scared.”
-
-“I’m scareder than you are, I’ll bet,” Sandy said grumpily as he obeyed.
-
-The cold night wind hit his bare skin and he started shivering.
-
-Well, he thought as he started away through the darkness, that was all
-to the good. Dogs shivered all the time, didn’t they? And the hide
-offered some protection.
-
-It seemed to take him an age to reach the vicinity of the trailer. Once
-he stubbed his toe badly, and once he cut his foot on a sharp rock.
-Confound that Kitty! He needed his shoes. Still, shoes did smell pretty
-strong sometimes. He grinned in spite of himself.
-
-A hundred yards from the trailer he got down on hands and knees, started
-to crawl forward, then stopped with a jerk.
-
-Dogs usually didn’t take kindly to strangers of their own kind! How many
-times had he seen them set upon an outsider and send him yipping for his
-life. Maybe the foreigner had come looking for a fight, though! He,
-Sandy, would be the friendliest doggy in seven states! He did his best
-to imitate the low whimpering that Mrs. Gonzales had used as he crept
-forward. If Ralph could get away with this, there was no reason why
-Sandy Carson Steele couldn’t!
-
-He was only a few feet from the trailer when three big brutes, who had
-been sleeping under its wheels, rose and advanced toward him,
-stiff-legged. This was it!
-
-Desperately, Sandy tried to project the idea through his soft whining
-that he was hungry, and cold, and wet with dew, and only wanted a quiet
-place where he could spend the night under the protection of those
-splendid humans, Cavanaugh and Pepper March.
-
-For a moment, he thought he had got the idea across. The dogs hesitated.
-They seemed to confer among themselves. But they were not quite
-satisfied. The lead animal bared his long white teeth and barked a
-tentative challenge. The others followed his example as they sidled
-toward this strange creature who certainly smelled like a dog but who
-looked—well, looked somewhat queer, to say the least.
-
-A quotation his father once had repeated flashed through Sandy’s mind:
-_The minds of dogs do not benefit by being treated as though they were
-the minds of men._ As the barking grew louder, he gathered himself and
-prepared to go away from that place as fast as his bare feet could carry
-him.
-
-The trailer door banged open. A shaft of light illuminated the yard but
-mercifully did not reach to the spot where Sandy crouched.
-
-“Shut up, you idiotic mutts!” Cavanaugh yelled. Then to Pepper, who
-appeared in the doorway behind him, “Can’t you make those confounded
-dogs keep quiet? They’re driving me insane.”
-
-“I’m sorry, Red,” Pepper answered. “You brought the dogs here to guard
-the trailer.”
-
-“‘Red. Red. Red,’” snarled the big man, who plainly was feeling the
-effects of the beating Ralph had given him. “I’m sick of your crawling
-and fawning. Why weren’t you at Window Rock tonight when the whole town
-ganged up on me?”
-
-“When Andy quit today, you told me to stay here and take care of the
-beam, Red,” Pepper answered patiently. “I’m sorry, Red.”
-
-“From now on, call me Mister Cavanaugh,” his boss raged.
-
-“Yes, _Mister_ Cavanaugh ... sir.” Pepper’s voice still was soft but
-Sandy could see his fists clench.
-
-“And stop that confounded record. Highbrow music gives me the willies.
-Always has! Call Elbow Rock and see if the message has come through.”
-
-“Yes, sir. At once, sir.” The door slammed and the voices became a
-mumble.
-
-Sandy tried to still the beating of his heart as he whined canine terror
-at this outburst. The “other” dogs whimpered uncertainly. Finally they
-crept back to their sleeping places. Evidently their master didn’t
-approve of their warning. In that case.... Sandy could almost feel them
-relax as they turned round and round in their nests, trying to find the
-most comfortable spots for slumber.
-
-Carefully he edged forward until he was lying among them. Then he turned
-the switch that fed power from a series of flashlight batteries into the
-transistors mounted on the “ear,” adjusted the headphones, and listened.
-
-“Calling Elbow Rock. Calling Elbow Rock. Over,” he heard Pepper say.
-
-There was no answer.
-
-“Calling Elbow Rock. Window Rock calling Elbow Rock. Over,” Pepper
-repeated.
-
-Still no answer.
-
-“Come in, Elbow Rock!” Cavanaugh’s voice barked through the phones. “Why
-don’t you answer, Elbow Rock?”
-
-“I read you, Window Rock,” a faraway voice answered at last.
-“Something’s coming in from Gallup. Stand by.”
-
-“This is it!” Cavanaugh’s yell almost split Sandy’s ears. “Get out of
-the way, can’t you, Pepper? I’ll take this. Go to bed or something. It
-makes me sick just to look at your silly face.... All right, Elbow Rock.
-I’m ready when you are.”
-
-The minutes slid by while only the mutter of static filled Sandy’s
-earphones. Beside him, he felt the Dobermans flinch and shiver in their
-restless sleep. The cold night wind seeped under the bottom of the
-trailer and set his teeth to chattering uncontrollably. Now he knew what
-the phrase “a dog’s life” really meant.
-
-“Elbow Rock calling Window Rock.” The phones clattered into life.
-“Over.”
-
-“I read you loud and clear, Elbow Rock,” Cavanaugh’s voice replied.
-“What is the message from Gallup?”
-
-“You want it coded, like it was relayed from Washington, or straight?”
-the distant voice inquired.
-
-“Straight, you fool. Nobody listens in on a light beam.”
-
-“You never know,” said the man at Elbow Rock. “Well, here’s your
-message, as well as I can dope it out. It’s from your ‘keyhole man,’ Mr.
-—”
-
-“Never mind his name,” Cavanaugh snapped. “Just give me the message.”
-
-“O.K.! O.K.! Take it easy, will you, boss? Here ’tis: Quote: Have picked
-up leak from strictly official source. Next month U.S. government starts
-buying uranium ore from all comers again. Expanding space ship and power
-reactor program has increased demand for atomic fuels to such an extent
-that existing mills no longer can supply it—Are you reading me all
-right, boss?”
-
-“Clear as a bell,” Cavanaugh crooned. “This is wonderful. Go on. Go on.”
-
-“Here’s the rest of it: Quote: Announcement of policy change withheld
-until middle of next month so it won’t upset bids to be opened tomorrow
-at Window Rock and similar places. Happy hunting. Unquote. Over.”
-
-“Whoopee!” Cavanaugh yelled the word into the microphone so loudly that
-Sandy’s earphones rattled. “Boy! This came through just in time.
-Otherwise, I’d have had to cancel all of those high bids I made today or
-go bankrupt tomorrow. Now I’ll be in clover with most of the good leases
-sewed up at rock-bottom prices before the boom starts. Thank you, Elbow
-Rock. There’s a bonus for you in this. Over and out.”
-
-“Roger!” came the delighted answer.
-
-“Did you hear all of that, Pepper?” Cavanaugh asked.
-
-“Was I supposed to, Mister Cavanaugh ... sir?” Pepper answered off-mike.
-His voice was bitter.
-
-“Oh, don’t be sore, boy.” Cavanaugh roared with laughter. “If you’d
-taken the beating I took tonight from Hall’s gang of toughs, you’d have
-been grouchy, too. And no more of that ‘Mister Cavanaugh’ stuff. Just
-call me ‘Red.’ We’re pals.”
-
-“Are we?”
-
-“Sure we are. We’ll both get rich out of this. And even better, we’ll do
-the Indian Agency and the whole Navajo nation in the eye. If they accept
-my bids—and they’ll have to, because they’re higher than those of anyone
-else—we’ll get those leases for a half, or even a third, of what’d
-they’d sell for next month when the policy change is announced.”
-
-In his hiding place under the trailer floor, Sandy was boiling with
-fury. Momentarily he had forgotten all about being a dog. The Dobermans
-sensed the difference instantly. Perhaps they caught a subtle change in
-his body odor. His anger was making him perspire despite the cold.
-
-The lead dog barked sharply and scrambled to its feet. The others
-followed suit. Sandy tried to croon reassurance to them, but failed.
-They were becoming thoroughly aroused and making an awful racket. He had
-to get out of there—and quickly—before Cavanaugh came to investigate.
-
-He scrambled from under the trailer and sprinted for the jeep. The dogs
-broke into full cry now, and streaked after him. This was a human! And
-an enemy human too! They were out to make him pay dearly for his deceit.
-
-The trailer door banged open as the bedlam rose. Moments later, a
-spotlight picked up the running boy and the dogs that leaped and snapped
-at his bare heels.
-
-“Stop, thief!” Cavanaugh yelled. “Stop or I’ll fire!”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FOURTEEN
- Showdown
-
-
-At that moment, Sandy tripped over a branch, flung up his arms as he
-fell headlong. The rifle bullet meant for his head merely creased him
-instead, from shoulder to elbow.
-
-He scrambled behind a large rock, managed to get to his feet, and faced
-the gleaming eyes of the oncoming dogs. Something that Quiz once had
-read to him out of a sports magazine flashed through his mind: “If
-attacked by vicious dogs, hold out some object, such as your hat, at
-waist height. They will hesitate while they decide whether to leap over
-it or under it, thus giving you an advantage.”
-
-His left arm was numb from the shock of the bullet, but he managed to
-use it to rip the dog skin from around his waist and hold it forward. As
-the dogs whined and tried to make up their minds as to the best method
-of attack, he tore the board on which the “ear” was mounted from his
-chest with his good hand. Thank heaven, one end of the plank had been
-whittled down into a sort of handle, for easier carrying.
-
-Then he charged, swinging the improvised club like a demon.
-
-Luckily, his first blow landed squarely on the snout of a leaping dog!
-
-Sparks flashed. Pieces of equipment flew in all directions. The animal
-howled and rolled on the ground, holding its nose with both paws. Its
-companions backed away.
-
-Sandy followed up his advantage. He struck again and again. The dogs
-fled, howling, to a safe distance.
-
-To the right of him, the boy now heard the pounding of human feet.
-Cavanaugh had abandoned a frontal attack for the moment and was
-sprinting to cut him off from the road leading back to the village.
-
-“Don’t kill him, Red,” Pepper was shouting. “It would be murder.”
-
-“Nobody’s going to kill anybody—yet,” Cavanaugh yelled as he ran. “But
-we can’t let him get away, after what he may have heard. Rig another
-floodlight. Then come over here and help me.”
-
-Forgetful of the thorns that tore his skin and the rocks that cut his
-knees, Sandy wriggled, Indian fashion, into a darker spot. In his bare
-feet, he had no chance of reaching the road ahead of Cavanaugh, or even
-of staying out of his way. Keeping a wary eye on the dogs that still
-followed, whining with uncertainty, he ripped Maisie’s hide into pieces
-and bound them under his feet. There. That would be better!
-
-He made a feint for the road now—and ducked as another bullet whispered
-overhead and smacked into a nearby tree.
-
-He was in a real spot! If he tried to cross the bare top of the natural
-bridge that arched over the hole in Window Rock, he would make an ideal
-target, silhouetted against the moon. (Thank all the little Navajo gods
-and demons that Cavanaugh’s right eye must be swollen shut from the
-beating Ralph had given him. He was in no condition to shoot accurately
-even if he disregarded Pepper’s warning.)
-
-Sandy decided that his best strategy lay in hiding among the mesquite
-and sagebrush thickets under the pine trees that covered the side of the
-rock nearest the village. Kitty must have heard the racket. Perhaps she
-would understand what was happening and head for town to get help.
-
-A whoop of delight, followed by several quick shots, made his heart
-sink.
-
-“That jeep will never move again,” he heard Cavanaugh yell. The next
-words made him feel much better. “Come on out of the woods, driver, and
-give yourself up. I’ve got you cut off from the road.”
-
-Sandy dithered in his hiding place. He was feeling decidedly queer all
-of a sudden. The fact that his left hand felt wet and slippery brought
-him up short. He was bleeding steadily from that wound in his shoulder.
-He tried dabbing sand on the crease, but it didn’t stop the flow.
-Another fifteen or twenty minutes and he would be so weak, that he would
-fall easy prey to his pursuers.
-
-“Bring flashlights out here,” Cavanaugh was shouting to Pepper now.
-“We’ll beat the woods for the driver first.”
-
-Sandy bit his cold lips. Time was running out. He had to act, and act
-fast, before he keeled over from loss of blood. Should he throw himself
-on Pepper’s mercy? But, even granted that his old rival wouldn’t betray
-him, what good would that do? Cavanaugh had the gun!
-
-The sight of the blond boy walking reluctantly into the woods through
-the floodlight glare, with a heavy flashlight in either hand, gave him
-an idea.
-
-Or was it Quiz who told him what to do? He shook his head dazedly.
-Almost, he could hear Quiz saying: “Where would Professor Moriarty least
-expect to find you, Sherlock Holmes?”
-
-“Elementary, my dear Dr. Watson,” he whispered in reply. “In the
-trailer, of course.”
-
-Gripping the breadboard in both hands, he made a last weak lunge at the
-circling Dobermans. They fled, yelping, from this blood-spattered
-terror.
-
-Then he crawled frantically toward the open trailer door.
-
-Safe inside, and with the door locked behind him, he hung onto a table
-and stared about him with eyes that were beginning to go out of focus.
-
-He should find a cloth with which to bind up his wound, he knew. But he
-had no time.
-
-The glittering light-beam mechanism caught his attention. That was the
-key to the whole situation! It must project a million candle-power, at
-least, to be seen at Elbow Rock. If he could turn it on Window Rock it
-would light up the village as bright as day.
-
-There must be a wheel or something by which the light could be moved....
-There it was! On the control board to the right!
-
-He twisted the little chrome wheel frantically, watching through a
-window as he did so. At first his aim was wild. Then, every street and
-building in Window Rock leaped into view, as though outlined by a
-lightning stroke.
-
-There! That would tell them something was wrong up here.
-
-He was sleepy and tired after all that effort. So sleepy! He sank into a
-chair in front of the beam console and pillowed his head on his bloody
-arms.
-
-But something nagged him. What he had done wasn’t enough. Kitty was out
-there alone in the woods. Cavanaugh might come pounding on the trailer
-door at any moment. He had to tell them ... tell them ... tell them
-what? Why, where he was, and what was happening, naturally!
-
-He jerked himself upright and started tearing at the mass of wiring that
-ran to the light beam modulator. Finally he got down to the heavy
-insulated lead-in wires ... tore them loose.
-
-The beam illuminating the village died away.
-
-He slapped the leads together. The light blinked on.
-
-“SOS,” he heliographed in Morse code remembered from Scouting field
-trips. “SOS. May Day. May Day.”
-
-Surely somebody at Window Rock would know the code. Certainly Ralph did.
-He repeated the international distress calls again and again.
-
-“SOS. May Day!” he spelled out, his cold fingers making many mistakes.
-“Sandy Steele and Kitty on the Rock. Cavanaugh trying to kill us. Send
-help. SOS. May Day! Sandy Steele and Kitty on the Rock. Cavanaugh....”
-
-He fell forward across the console.
-
-The smash of some heavy object against the door brought him back to
-semi-consciousness.
-
-“Stop that!” Cavanaugh was yelling. “Stop it or I will kill you. Stop
-it. Stop it!” The man sounded completely insane now.
-
-The door bulged, then broke loose from its hinges under a rain of blows.
-
-Cavanaugh stood in the entrance, his good eye wild and rolling, his
-rifle pointed. Behind him, Pepper appeared, still holding one of the
-heavy flashlights.
-
-“An Injun,” Cavanaugh gloated without recognition as he took in Sandy’s
-dirt-smeared, blood-caked body. “One of Hall’s dirty, stinking Injuns.
-This will teach you!”
-
-His finger tightened on the trigger.
-
-“Pepper!” Sandy gasped with the last remnant of his strength. “Don’t let
-him kill me, Pepper!”
-
-He slid to the floor as the gun went off.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FIFTEEN
- The Fourth Touchdown
-
-
-Sandy fought his way up from unconsciousness like a diver rising from
-the bottom of a dark sea. For a long time he lay without moving as he
-tried to sort out the sounds around him. He was dead, of course, he
-reasoned. Nevertheless, some of the voices he seemed to hear sounded
-familiar.
-
-He opened one eye experimentally, prepared to snap it shut if he didn’t
-like what he saw. Mrs. Gonzales was bending over him with one of her
-eternal compresses. So was a man with a goatee who had a stethoscope
-clipped around his neck.
-
-Sandy opened the other eye and turned his head, which seemed to weigh a
-ton.
-
-He found that he was in bed and bandaged right up to his chin. Kitty,
-her pretty face badly scratched, was watching him too. So were John Hall
-and ... yes, it was Pepper!
-
-“But I _ought_ to be dead,” Sandy whispered in great surprise. “What
-happened?”
-
-“I conked Cavanaugh with his own flashlight,” Pepper said with pride.
-“Knocked him out. His shot went wild.”
-
-“Thanks a lot, Pepper. Shake.” Sandy tried to hold out his hand but
-found he couldn’t quite make it.
-
-“Easy,” said the doctor.
-
-“Am I badly hurt?” Sandy managed to say.
-
-“Nothing worse than loss of a lot of blood. I’ve pumped you full of
-plasma. You’ll be all right in a few days, but you mustn’t exert
-yourself for a while,” said the doctor as he started packing instruments
-into his little black bag.
-
-“But I’ve _got_ to know what happened,” Sandy said fretfully. “For
-Pete’s _sake_!”
-
-“I called Kitty out of the woods after I hit Cavanaugh,” Pepper
-explained. “We got you into his car and brought you home as fast as we
-could.”
-
-“And you’re all right, Kitty?” Sandy persisted.
-
-“Just a few scratches and bruises.” She came forward to prove it and
-patted his bandaged shoulder.
-
-“And ... and Cavanaugh?”
-
-“The crazy fool is still up there,” Hall spoke up. “Look.” He pointed
-through the bedroom window.
-
-Sandy worked his head around in that direction. The great hump of the
-Window Rock was lit up as bright as day.
-
-“Floodlights,” Hall explained as he saw the boy’s surprise. “They’re set
-up permanently to illuminate the Rock on Frontier Day and for other
-tourist events.”
-
-“But....”
-
-“The Navajo police turned them on. The whole force, as well as most of
-the Indians who attended the joint Council meeting, are up there trying
-to flush Cavanaugh out of hiding.”
-
-“Ralph too?” Sandy’s eyes were shining.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Did the Council meeting come to anything, Mr.—John?”
-
-“It broke up before any formal agreement was signed when we got your
-message, but....”
-
-“Gee, I’m sorry about that.”
-
-“Forget it. I only had the chance to say a few words to Ralph while they
-were organizing the posse, but he told me the tribes understand each
-other’s position now. It’s just a matter of ironing out details before
-they agree to put those boundary-line leases up for bids.”
-
-“That’ll be great for you,” Sandy said, “but I sure wish I hadn’t had
-to....”
-
-“Forget it, I said.” Hall patted his shoulder too. (Why did everybody
-have to pat him as if he were a dog? Sandy wondered crossly. Then he
-burst out laughing, although to do so hurt his face and chest. Why, he
-almost _was_ a dog, wasn’t he?)
-
-“Young man, you’re getting much too excited,” the doctor warned as he
-approached the bed, hypodermic needle in hand. “I’d better put you to
-sleep for a while.”
-
-Sandy pushed him away.
-
-“There’s something else,” he cried. “John, did Pepper tell you about the
-message Cavanaugh received from Washington?”
-
-“I told him there had been a message, and what Cavanaugh said to Elbow
-Rock,” Pepper spoke up. “But I couldn’t hear the message itself.
-Cavanaugh was wearing the earphones.”
-
-“Better forget all this for a while and go to sleep, Sandy,” said Hall.
-His face was gaunt with worry.
-
-“No! You must listen now.”
-
-Sandy wanted desperately to go to sleep, but he wouldn’t let himself
-give in. Slowly, forcing each word out of his mouth as though it weighed
-several pounds, he repeated the message to Cavanaugh as well as he could
-remember it.
-
-“Good Lord!” Hall gasped. “This changes the whole picture. I must call
-Ken!”
-
-He rushed to the telephone while Sandy’s eyelids closed in spite of his
-efforts to keep them open. He just _had_ to have a few minutes’ sleep.
-
-White’s arrival at the cottage jerked him awake again. The Agent was
-wearing heavy boots and carried a pair of binoculars slung over his
-pudgy shoulder.
-
-“What’s all this, John?” he demanded. “I was just leaving from the Rock
-when you called. I sent off an inquiry to the Department of Interior
-immediately, of course. Then this message came in from San Francisco.
-That’s what took me so long getting here. The message is for you,
-Sandy.”
-
-“Read it to me, please,” the boy said. “I’m too weak to lift a finger.”
-
-White ripped open the yellow envelope, got out his glasses, and read:
-
- FINALLY GOT HERE STOP NEWSPAPER FILES SHOW THERE WAS CAVANAUGH ON
- STATE TEAM IN 1930 WHO MADE ALL-AMERICAN STOP BUT HE WAS CALLED BRICK
- NOT RED STOP ALL SPORTS PAGE STORIES ON BIG GAME SAY HE MADE FOUR
- TOUCHDOWNS REPEAT FOUR TOUCHDOWNS AGAINST CALIFORNIA STOP QUIZ TAYLOR
-
-“Aw shucks,” Pepper said disgustedly. “That proves our Cavanaugh isn’t
-an impostor after all.”
-
-“Wait a minute! Wait a minute!” Sandy dragged himself up on one elbow
-despite Mrs. Gonzales’ efforts to make him lie still. “It proves no such
-thing!”
-
-“But if he did make those three touchdowns he was always bragging
-about....” Pepper started to protest.
-
-“_Four_ touchdowns, the telegram says,” Sandy panted. “Now look, all of
-you. Maybe a real football player might _add_ a touchdown to his record
-if he thought no one would catch him at it. But who would _subtract_ a
-touchdown? Nobody. That’s who!
-
-“Cavanaugh is a phony, I tell you. Whoever he really is, he wanted to
-impress people, and keep them from asking too many personal questions
-when he went to Valley View and started building his lab with the money
-he had stolen from Mr. Gonzales. He remembered that there was another
-Cavanaugh on the State team, so he took his identity. But the game had
-been played so many years ago that he got the details wrong, see? I’ll
-bet that, if we start digging into his past, we’ll find lots of other
-queer things.”
-
-“We’ll need to do a lot of digging, too, to make any charges stick
-against him after we catch him,” White said grimly.
-
-“What do you mean?” Hall exploded. “He’s guilty of attempted homicide,
-defrauding the Indians, disturbing the peace, and I don’t know what all
-else.”
-
-“Oh, he’s guilty all right,” the Agent agreed, “but could you prove that
-to a jury, particularly out here where so many people still think that
-the only good Indian is a dead Indian?”
-
-“Oh, you’re being an old woman, Ken,” the oilman snapped.
-
-“Maybe so, John. Maybe so. But I’ve been in this business a long time.
-If Cavanaugh or whoever he is hadn’t lost his head, he would have come
-right down here and given himself up. Then his lawyers could have
-claimed that he was only defending his property from a prowler. No. No.
-Shut up and listen to me. People are awful touchy about property rights
-out here. Remember what they used to do to cattle rustlers—still do, for
-that matter, on occasion.
-
-“And now about this message that Sandy heard: Cavanaugh’s lawyers would
-say ‘Prove it!’ And what real proof have we got? We’d be putting up the
-word of a minor who _did_ prowl—I’m not blaming you, Sandy. You did the
-only thing possible and your idea of using the light beam to call for
-help was a stroke of pure genius—but, as I say, the word of a minor
-against the word of an established businessman who has a lot of friends
-in these parts.”
-
-“Then you don’t think....” Hall was really shocked.
-
-“I _think_ we have a chance of making our charges stick with the help of
-the information Quiz has dug up, but I’m not even sure of that. Frankly,
-if the government doesn’t act faster than it usually does, I’m afraid
-all of Cavanaugh’s uranium lease bids may have to be accepted tomorrow.
-He can claim, you see, that he put them in before the time that he is
-even _accused_ of having received his illegal tip.”
-
-“Wow!” Sandy stared at his employer with round eyes. “Well anyway,” he
-added, “the change in policy will give you a chance to develop your own
-uranium strike on the San Juan.”
-
-“Fat lot of good that will do me if Cavanaugh ties us up with a libel
-and defamation suit,” Hall grunted. “Well, Ken, it looks as if we’re all
-in trouble unless ... what was that?”
-
-They all whirled toward the window.
-
-Far up near the top of Window Rock, pinpoints of light were flashing.
-The clean, thin sound of rifle shots came down to them through the still
-desert air.
-
-White snatched at his binoculars and trained them on the mountain. Long
-moments passed as he fiddled with the focus.
-
-“The idiot!” he almost whispered at last. “The poor scared, hysterical
-fool. He’s making a run for it across the top of the natural bridge!”
-
-Hall snapped off the room light. Somehow, Sandy managed, with Kitty’s
-help, to sit up where he could get a view of the bare slab of rock where
-he had almost been tempted to do what Cavanaugh was now trying.
-
-They all held their breath in the darkness as they strained their eyes.
-
-There he was! A tiny black shadow, bent nearly double as he raced madly
-through the floodlight glare.
-
-“He’s going to make it. He’s going to make it!” Pepper shouted, his old
-loyalty to his boss coming to the fore. “Run, Red. _Run!_”
-
-The fleeing man stumbled. He threw up his arms and reeled to the edge of
-the narrow rock bridge. Almost, he recovered his balance....
-
-Then he fell, turning over and over slowly, for a thousand miles, it
-seemed.
-
-Kitty and her mother screamed together.
-
-“It’s better so,” White murmured at last as he put his glasses back in
-their case. “A clean death. Cavanaugh made that fourth touchdown after
-all.”
-
-
- SANDY STEELE ADVENTURES
-
- 1. BLACK TREASURE
-
-Sandy Steele and Quiz spend an action-filled summer in the oil fields of
-the Southwest. In their search for oil and uranium, they unmask a
-dangerous masquerader.
-
- 2. DANGER AT MORMON CROSSING
-
-On a hunting trip in the Lost River section of Idaho, Sandy and Mike
-ride the rapids, bag a mountain lion, and stumble onto the answer to a
-hundred-year-old mystery.
-
- 3. STORMY VOYAGE
-
-Sandy and Jerry James ship as deck hands on one of the “long boats” of
-the Great Lakes. They are plunged into a series of adventures and find
-themselves involved in a treacherous plot.
-
- 4. FIRE AT RED LAKE
-
-Sandy and his friends pitch in to fight a forest fire in Minnesota. Only
-they and Sandy’s uncle know that there is an unexploded A-bomb in the
-area to add to the danger.
-
- 5. SECRET MISSION TO ALASKA
-
-A pleasant Christmas trip turns into a startling adventure. Sandy and
-Jerry participate in a perilous dog-sled race, encounter a wounded bear,
-and are taken as hostages by a ruthless enemy.
-
- 6. TROUBLED WATERS
-
-When Sandy and Jerry mistakenly sail off in a stranger’s sloop instead
-of their own, they land in a sea of trouble. Their attempts to
-outmaneuver a desperate crew are intertwined with fascinating sailing
-lore.
-
- PUBLISHED BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original—this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
---In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the
- HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Black Treasure, by Roger Barlow
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACK TREASURE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 50256-0.txt or 50256-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/0/2/5/50256/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/50256-0.zip b/old/50256-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index f2fdbd5..0000000
--- a/old/50256-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/50256-8.txt b/old/50256-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index ec36d61..0000000
--- a/old/50256-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5200 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Black Treasure, by Roger Barlow
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Black Treasure
- Sandy Steele Adventures #1
-
-Author: Roger Barlow
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2015 [EBook #50256]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACK TREASURE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
- SANDY STEELE ADVENTURES
-
- Black Treasure
- Danger at Mormon Crossing
- Stormy Voyage
- Fire at Red Lake
- Secret Mission to Alaska
- Troubled Waters
-
-
-
-
- Sandy Steele Adventures
- _BLACK TREASURE_
-
-
- BY ROGER BARLOW
-
-
- SIMON AND SCHUSTER
- _New York, 1959_
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
- INCLUDING THE RIGHT OF REPRODUCTION
- IN WHOLE OR IN PART IN ANY FORM
- COPYRIGHT 1959 BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
- PUBLISHED BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
- ROCKEFELLER CENTER, 630 FIFTH AVENUE
- NEW YORK 20, N. Y.
-
- FIRST PRINTING
-
- LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER: 59-13882
- MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- BY H. WOLFF BOOK MFG. CO., INC., NEW YORK.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- 1 The Man in Blue Jeans 7
- 2 Kit Carson Country 17
- 3 A "Poor Boy" Outfit 33
- 4 Learning the Ropes 46
- 5 A Light in the Window Rock 61
- 6 Cliff Dweller Country 75
- 7 Back of Beyond 90
- 8 Cavanaugh Shows His Colors 103
- 9 Fighting Fire with Fire 116
- 10 Pepper Makes a Play 128
- 11 Serendipity 144
- 12 Cavanaugh Makes a Mistake 154
- 13 Think Like a Dog 165
- 14 Showdown 177
- 15 The Fourth Touchdown 184
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ONE
- The Man in Blue Jeans
-
-
-High jinks were in order as the Regional Science Fair drew to a close in
-the big auditorium at Poplar City, California. A board of judges had
-selected prize-winning exhibits entered by high-school students from
-Valley View, Poplar City and other nearby communities. Now the winners
-were blowing off steam while teachers who had supervised the fair sat in
-quiet corners and fanned themselves wearily.
-
-"Step right up, ladies and gentlemen," Pepper March whooped like a
-circus barker as he strutted in front of his First Prize winner, a
-glittering maze of electronic equipment. "Broadcast your voice over my
-beam of light. The very newest thing in science. Built through the
-co-operation of Valley View's own Cavanaugh Laboratories. Step right
-up.... Yes, miss?" A girl had approached the exhibit, wide-eyed. "Please
-speak into this microphone."
-
-"What do I say?" As she spoke, a quivering pencil of light leaped from a
-black box in the booth and her words thundered from a loudspeaker in the
-balcony.
-
-"Oh, recite 'Mary Had a Little Lamb,'" suggested the big blond boy, and
-grinned.
-
-"'Mary,'" boomed the girl's voice from the rear of the hall as Pepper
-twiddled a mirror that deflected the light beam to a second
-loud-speaker, "'had a little lamb.'" (Those words seemed to come out of
-the floor.) "'Its fleece was white as snow.'" (The last phrase blared
-from a chandelier.)
-
-"Good old Pepper! Grandstanding again!" muttered Sandy Steele as the
-crowd cheered. Sandy stared glumly at a small sign reading Honorable
-Mention that perched on the exhibit which he and his pal Quiz Taylor had
-entered in the fair. It wasn't fancy-looking like Pepper's, he had to
-admit. It was just a mound of wet cardboard sheets stuck full of pins,
-plus a homemade control panel and some batteries. "Ours _was_ better,"
-he added.
-
-"I agree," Quiz sighed. "After all the work we put into this thing!
-Molding sheets of cardboard to the shape of underground rock layers.
-Soaking them with salt water so they'll carry electric currents that
-imitate the direction in which oil deposits flow." He hooked a wire to
-one of the pins and pressed a button. A flashlight bulb on the control
-panel winked at him mockingly. "We sure deserve something better than a
-Mention!"
-
-"Step this way, folks," Quiz called halfheartedly to the passers-by.
-"Learn how petroleum can be located, thousands of feet beneath the
-earth."
-
-Nobody paid any attention except one Valley View boy who was pushing his
-way toward Pepper's booth, a phonograph record under one skinny arm.
-
-"Sour grapes," jeered the boy. "You and Sandy better forget that mess.
-Come over and watch Pepper play this stereo record over his beam. It'll
-be something!"
-
-"Shall we?" Sandy looked at his friend miserably.
-
-"Unh-uh," answered the short, round-faced boy. "Here comes a customer--I
-think."
-
-A suntanned little man in faded blue shirt and jeans had ambled up to
-their booth and was studying the exhibit with his gray head tilted to
-one side.
-
-"A reservoir behavior analyzer, huh?" he said. "Represents the Four
-Corners area. Right?"
-
-"Why ... yes, sir." Sandy stared at him, openmouthed. "We built it to
-represent the geological structure of the country where the boundaries
-of Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico meet. This map and card
-explain--"
-
-"I know the Four Corners," grunted the little man as he sized up the
-tall, sandy-haired youngster. "Is your gadget accurate?"
-
-"As accurate as we could make it with the survey maps we could find."
-
-"Hmmm." Their visitor's sharp eyes studied the gray mound. "What happens
-if I should drill an oil well here, in the northwest corner of the
-Navajo Indian reservation?" He pointed with a lean finger.
-
-Sandy moved a pin to the spot he indicated, connected it to the control
-panel with a length of wire, and pressed a switch.
-
-Nothing happened!
-
-Quiz groaned. Why couldn't the thing show off when they wanted it to?
-
-"If you drilled there, sir, you'd just have a dry hole," Sandy said with
-more confidence than he felt. "That location must be on the far fringe
-of the oil pool."
-
-"Right!" The little man grinned from ear to ear, showing a fine white
-set of false teeth. "I did drill a wildcat well there. She was dry as a
-bone. My ninth duster in a row.... Now what happens if I drill here,
-near the bed of the San Juan River?"
-
-This time a bulb glowed brightly when they stuck their pin into the
-cardboard.
-
-"We can't be sure, sir," Sandy hesitated. "We don't know too much about
-geology. Besides, oil is like gold. It's where you find it, and the only
-way you find it is by drilling for it. But I'd guess that, in the
-neighborhood you indicated, you'd stand a chance of hitting a thousand
-barrels per day."
-
-"Eight hundred and fifty barrels," corrected the man in the blue jeans.
-"The well I drilled on the San Juan was the only thing that kept me out
-of bankruptcy."
-
-A blare of jazz from Pepper's loud-speakers, now working in unison, cut
-off further conversation and gave the boys a chance to study their
-strange acquaintance.
-
-"Why don't you go over and take in that beam-of-light exhibit?" Sandy
-said when Pepper had brought the sound down to bearable levels. "It won
-first prize."
-
-"That pile of expensive junk?" sniffed the little man. "All the kid did
-was to borrow some apparatus from Red Cavanaugh's Valley View
-Laboratory. If I know Red--and I do know the big fourflusher well--he
-didn't make the boy do a lick of real research on it.... Oh!" Again that
-wide grin. "You think I'm crazy and want to get rid of me, don't you?
-Here."
-
-He dug into his jeans and came up with a greasy card which read:
-
- The Four Corners Drilling Company
- John Hall, President
- Farmington, N. M.
-
-"Guess I should have got dressed up for this shindig," Hall apologized,
-"but I just got in from Farmington. I read about your analyzer in the
-_Valley View News_ when you won first prize at your high-school science
-fair last month. Used to live there. That's why I still get the paper.
-Your dingus should have received first prize here too, instead of that
-voice-cast thing."
-
-"Say! You came all this way just to see our exhibit? Thanks!" was all
-Sandy could think of to say.
-
-As the auditorium lights blinked to indicate that the fair was closing,
-Hall added, "Got time for a bite? I have a proposition I'd like to sound
-you out on."
-
-At a nearby diner, the oilman ordered full meals for all of them.
-
-"Here's my proposition," he said when the boys couldn't eat another
-mouthful. "I'm a small wildcat operator. That means I hunt for oil in
-places that are so wild and woolly that only wildcats can live there.
-Once or twice I've struck it rich. Should have retired then, but there's
-something about oil exploration that gets in a feller's blood. So I went
-out, drilled some dry holes, and lost my shirt.
-
-"Right now I'm strapped until my new field pays off--if it does. But I
-think I'm onto something big in the Four Corners and I need help. You
-boys must have a working knowledge of geology to build an analyzer as
-good as that. How about working for me this summer?"
-
-"Sandy's the rock hound," Quiz said and hesitated. "I ... I've only read
-up on it in books."
-
-"All I know is what Dad has told me," Sandy remarked. "I couldn't have
-built the exhibit without Quiz's help."
-
-"Forget the mutual-admiration-society stuff," said Hall. "Would you both
-like to spend your vacations in the Four Corners, working as roustabouts
-and helping me out wherever else you can? It won't be easy. But when you
-get through you'll know a lot about oil, geology, how to get along with
-Indians, and I don't know what all.
-
-"You'll be out on the desert in all kinds of weather. You'll chip rocks,
-hold stadia rods, sharpen tools and dig the trucks out of holes on those
-awful roads. Everything you learn will come in handy when you go to
-college.... You are going, aren't you?"
-
-Sandy nodded but Quiz shook his head miserably.
-
-"I doubt it," he said, "unless things at Dad's restaurant pick up."
-
-"Nonsense," Hall snorted. "You can get a scholarship in geology if
-you've had experience in the field. Tell you what: I know your father
-slightly--he serves mighty good victuals. I'll go over to Valley View
-tomorrow and talk things over with him. I'll bet we can work something
-out for you.
-
-"Here's another thing, though," he went on thoughtfully. "I've got
-almost every cent I own tied up in oil leases right now. I can't pay
-either of you very much--say forty dollars a week. You probably can do
-almost as well right at home."
-
-"I'd rather work with you than wait on table," Quiz declared.
-
-"Or cut lawns and things," Sandy added.
-
-"It's settled then." Hall shook hands gravely. "See you in Valley View."
-
-As they were leaving the diner, Pepper March came charging in with a
-flock of admiring Valley Viewers behind him.
-
-"Wait up," Pepper whooped, grabbing his defeated rivals as they tried to
-dodge past him. "My treat. Come have a Coke while I tell you about my
-good luck."
-
-"_Another_ Coke!" Sandy groaned. He had practically lived on them during
-the science fair. But curiosity got the better of him and he went back
-to the counter, followed by Quiz. By the time he found a stool, Pepper
-was holding forth.
-
-"You know Mr. Cavanaugh, the man I got some of the stuff for my
-voice-caster from?"
-
-"The man from whom you borrowed _all_ your equipment," Sandy corrected
-between his teeth.
-
-"That's what _you_ think, Honorable Mention." Pepper turned to his
-admirers. "Anyway, he has a sideline: spends his summers hunting
-uranium. Also, he's the same Red Cavanaugh who was All-American
-quarterback for State U. in 1930. He's the fellow who ran three
-touchdowns against California in the Thanksgiving game that year."
-
-"There was a Cavanaugh who made All-American," Quiz agreed as he
-scratched his round head, "but I thought...."
-
-"See!" cried Pepper. "Quiz knows all there is to know about football.
-He's heard about Red. Well, Mr. Cavanaugh attends all the Valley View
-games. Says he likes the way _I_ run touchdowns." Pepper leered at
-Sandy, who was not always the spectacular player that Pepper was. "Also,
-Mr. Cavanaugh appreciates the plugs I gave to his laboratory whenever I
-explained my voice-caster, so what do you think...?"
-
-"He's going to install you as a loud-speaker in one of his TV sets,"
-Quiz suggested.
-
-"Nah!" Pepper stopped the laughter with a lordly, upraised hand. "He's
-giving me a summer job. I'm going to help him hunt uranium."
-
-"Where?" Sandy gave his pal a stricken look.
-
-"Where? Why, the place where there's more uranium than almost anywhere
-in the United States. But you wouldn't know where that is."
-
-"Oh, no," groaned Quiz. "Not the Four Corners. Not there! Ain't there no
-justice?"
-
-"What do you mean?" Pepper looked at him doubtfully.
-
-"I mean Sandy and I have jobs there too, and Four Corners is going to be
-awfully crowded this summer."
-
-"Oh." Some of the wind went out of Pepper's sails. Then he brightened.
-"I'll buy another round of Cokes if either of _you_ is going to get
-sixty dollars a week," he crowed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWO
- Kit Carson Country
-
-
-"This sure isn't my idea of a boom town!" Sandy grumbled as he and Quiz
-got off the eastbound Greyhound at Farmington, New Mexico, dropped their
-dusty bags and stood watching the early morning bustle on the little
-town's wide streets.
-
-"Yeah." Quiz wagged his head. "The Wild West shore ain't what she used
-to be, pardner. No twenty-mule-team wagons stuck in Main Street
-mudholes. No gambling dives in evidence. No false store fronts. No
-sheriff in a white hat walkin' slowlike down a wooden sidewalk to shoot
-it out with the bad man in a black hat. Ah, for the good old days."
-
-"Oh, go fly a jet," Sandy grinned. "Let's look up Mr. Hall. Funny, his
-giving us his home address. He must have an office in town."
-
-They strolled along, noticing the new stores and office buildings, the
-modern high school. Farmington would never become a ghost town. It was
-building solidly for the future.
-
-Suddenly Quiz grabbed his friend's arm.
-
-"Look at that oilman who's just made a strike," he said. "We'll ask him
-if he knows Mr. Hall."
-
-"How do you know that he is, and has?" Sandy demanded as they approached
-a lanky stranger.
-
-"Because he's wearing a brand-new Stetson and new shoes, of course,"
-Quiz explained, as to a child. "Drillers always buy them when their well
-comes in."
-
-"Trust you to know something like that," Sandy said in mock admiration.
-
-"Well now," drawled the Farmingtonian when they put their question,
-"you'd have to get up earlier than this to catch John Hall in town. John
-keeps his office in his hat. Might as well spend the day seeing the
-sights, and look him up at his motel when he gets back from the Regions
-tonight."
-
-"What sights?" asked Sandy when the oilman, obviously a transplanted
-Texan, had stumped away in high-heeled boots that must have hurt his
-feet. "Those mountains, maybe? They look close enough to touch. Let's
-walk out to them."
-
-"Don't let this clear, thin air fool you," Quiz warned. "Those mountains
-are probably twenty miles away. We'd need a car to--"
-
-A great honking and squealing of brakes behind them made the boys jump
-for safety. As they turned to give the driver what-for, Pepper March
-stuck his curly head out the window of a new jeep that was towing an
-equally new aluminum house trailer as big as a barn.
-
-"Welcome to our fair city," Pepper shouted. "Saw you get off the bus, so
-I prepared a proper reception. How about a guided tour while I run this
-trailer over to Red's camp?"
-
-"How long have you been here?" Sandy asked as they climbed aboard.
-
-"Red flew me over last Friday in his Bonanza. I've got the hang of his
-entire layout already. Nothing to it, really."
-
-As he headed the jeep for the mountains, Pepper kept up a monologue in
-which skimpy descriptions of the countryside were mixed with large
-chunks of autobiography.
-
-"Every square mile of this desert supports five Indians, fifty sheep,
-five hundred rattlesnakes and fifty thousand prairie dogs," he joked as
-they left the pavement for a winding dirt trail. They bounced madly
-through clumps of sagebrush, prairie-dog colonies, and tortured hills
-made of many-colored rock.
-
-"These roads wear out a car in a year, and you have to put in new
-springs every three months," he added as they hit a chuckhole that made
-their teeth rattle.
-
-"Look at those crazy rock formations," he said later while the boys
-sweated and puffed to jack up the rear end of the trailer so it could
-get around a particularly sharp hairpin turn in the trail. (_Now_ they
-knew why Pepper had extended his invitation for a tour!) "No telling
-what minerals you might find if you used electronic exploration methods
-on scrambled geology like this. Why, only last night, while we were
-sitting around the campfire at Elbow Rock, I said to Red: 'Red,' I said,
-just like that--we've become real pals already, you know--'Red,' I said,
-'why don't we branch out? Why don't we look for oil as well as uranium,
-now that we're out here?' And Red said to me: 'Pepper,' he said--"
-
-"'--when did you get your Ph.D. in geology?'" Sandy cut in.
-
-"Nothing like that at all! 'Pepper,' he said, 'you're right on the
-electron beam. We'll organize the Red Pepper Oil Exploration and
-Contracting Company and give John Hall and those other stick-in-the-muds
-a run for their money.' Oops! Hope we didn't break anything that time!"
-
-The jeep's front wheel had dropped into a pothole with a terrific thump.
-
-They found that the axle had wedged itself against a rock. Thirty
-minutes later, while they were still trying to get it loose, a
-rattletrap car pulled up beside them and an Indian stuck his flat,
-mahogany-colored face through its window.
-
-"Give us a hand--please," Pepper ordered.
-
-The newcomer started to get out. Then his black eyes settled on the
-lettering on the side of the trailer:
-
- Cavanaugh Laboratories
- Farmington, N.M. & Valley View, Cal.
-
-"Cavanaugh! Huh!" snorted the Indian. He slammed the door of his car and
-roared off in a cloud of yellow dust.
-
-"Those confounded Indians," snarled Pepper, staring after him in
-white-faced fury. "I'd like to.... Oh, well. Come on, fellows. Guess
-we've got to do this ourselves."
-
-They finally got the jeep back on the trail and drove the twenty miles
-to Elbow Rock without further mishap. There Pepper parked beside a
-sparkling trout stream. They raided the trailer's big freezer for
-sandwich materials and ate lunch at a spot overlooking a thousand square
-miles of yellow desert backed by blue, snowcapped peaks. Pepper was at
-his best as a host. For once in their lives, Sandy and Quiz almost liked
-him. At least here he seemed much pleasanter than he did at home,
-lording it over everyone--or trying to.
-
-In the cool of the afternoon--85 degrees in the sun instead of the 110
-degrees the thermometer had shown at noon--they rode the jeep back to
-Farmington by way of a wide detour that took them within sight of the
-San Juan River gorge.
-
-"I wanted to show you those two oil-well derricks over yonder," Pepper
-explained. "They're a mile and a half apart, as the crow flies. But,
-because they're on opposite sides of the river, they were 125 long miles
-apart by car until we got that new bridge finished a few months ago.
-Shows you the problems we explorers face."
-
-"The San Juan runs into the Colorado, doesn't it?" Quiz asked as he
-studied the tiny stream at the bottom of its deep gorge, under the fine
-new steel bridge.
-
-"Yep. And thereby hangs a tale. Mr. Cavanaugh--Red, I mean--has found
-state documents down at Santa Fe showing that the San Juan used to be
-navigable. But the confounded dumb Indians swear it can't be navigated.
-If boats _can_ go down the stream, even during part of the year, the
-river bed belongs to the Federal government. If the stream _can't_ be
-navigated, the Navajos own the bed. That's the law! While the argument
-continues, nobody can lease uranium or oil land near the river. Red says
-that, one of these days, he's going to prove that--oops! I'm talking too
-much!"
-
-Pepper clammed up for the first time they could remember. He said hardly
-a word until he dropped them off at Hall's motel.
-
-"I don't get it," Quiz said to his chum as they walked up a graveled
-path from the road to the rambling adobe building.
-
-"Don't get what?" Sandy wanted to know.
-
-"This uranium hunting business Pepper's got himself into. I read in
-_Time_ a while back that the Federal government stopped buying uranium
-from prospectors in 1957. Since then, it has bought from existing mills,
-but it hasn't signed a single new contract. Cavanaugh doesn't own a
-uranium mill. So why is he snooping around, digging into state documents
-and antagonizing the Indians?"
-
-"I only met him once, when he snooted our exhibit as a judge at the
-regional science fair," Sandy replied. "Can't say I took to him, under
-the circumstances."
-
-"There's something phony about that man. If only I could remember ...
-something to do with football, I think." Quiz scratched his head, but no
-more information came out.
-
-They found Mr. Hall, dressed as usual in faded levis and denim shirt,
-sitting with several other guests of the motel on a wide patio facing
-the setting sun.
-
-"Well, here are my roustabouts," the little man cried with a flash of
-those too-perfect teeth. "I was beginning to be afraid that you had lost
-yourselves in the desert."
-
-He introduced them to the owners of the place, two maiden ladies from
-Minnesota who plainly were having the time of their middle-aged lives
-here on the last frontier. The Misses Emery, as alike as two wrinkled
-peas, showed the boys to their room, a comfortable place complete with
-fireplace and an air conditioner.
-
-"Supper will be served in half an hour," said one.
-
-"Don't be late," said the other.
-
-The newcomers scrubbed the sticky dust off their bodies and out of their
-hair, changed into clothes that didn't smell of jeep, and were heading
-for the dining room when Mr. Hall overtook them.
-
-"You may be wondering why I live out here on the edge of the desert," he
-said quietly. "One reason is that I like the silence of desert nights.
-Another is the good cooking. The most important reason, though, is that
-some of the Farmington places are pretty nasty to Indians and Mexicans.
-Me, I like Indians and Mexes. Also, I learn a lot from them when they
-let their hair down. Well, here we are. You'll find that the Misses
-Emery still cook like Mother used to. I'll give you a tip. Don't talk
-during supper. It isn't considered polite in the Southwest."
-
-"Why is that?" Sandy wondered.
-
-"It's a hang-over from cowpunching days. If a ranch hand stopped to
-talk, somebody else grabbed his second helping."
-
-After a silent meal, the guests gathered on the patio to watch the stars
-come out.
-
-"Folks," said Mr. Hall, "meet Sandy Steele and Quiz Taylor. They're
-going to join my crew this summer. Boys, meet Miss Kitty Gonzales, from
-Window Rock, Arizona. She's going north in the morning to teach school
-in the part of the Navajo reservation that extends into Utah. Her
-schoolhouse will be a big trailer. Too bad you can't be her students,
-eh? But sixteen is a mite old for Miss Kitty's class."
-
-Kitty was slim, in her late teens, and not much over five feet tall. She
-had an oval face, black hair and eyes, and a warm smile that made the
-newcomers like her at once.
-
-"This is Kenneth White," Hall went on. "Ken works for the Bureau of
-Indian Affairs. When he talks, you listen!"
-
-The white-haired man gave the boys handshakes that they felt for an
-hour.
-
-"Chief John Quail, from the Arizona side of the Navajo reservation,"
-Hall said next. "The chief is here to talk over an oil lease."
-
-Chief Quail, a dark, heavily muscled Indian, wore a light-gray business
-suit that showed evidence of the best tailoring. He surprised the boys
-by giving them the limpest of handshakes.
-
-"And Ralph Salmon, boss of my drill crew," Hall concluded. "Ralph's a
-southern Ute from Colorado. Do exactly as he says this summer if you
-want to learn oil."
-
-The lithe, golden-skinned young Indian nodded, but did not shake hands.
-
-"So you're off to your great adventure in the morning, Kitty," White
-said to break the conversational ice. He lighted a pipe and leaned
-against the patio railing where he could watch the changing evening
-light as it stole over the desert.
-
-"I'm so excited I won't be able to sleep," the girl answered in a rich
-contralto voice. "It's all so wonderful. The oil lease money pouring in
-like this, after long lean years when starvation for the Navajos was
-just around the corner and it looked as though their reservation might
-be taken from them. Schools and hospitals being built all over. My
-wonderful new trailer with books and maps and even a kitchen and a
-shower for the children. Oh, my Navajos are going places at last." She
-gave an embarrassed laugh at her long speech.
-
-"One place your Navajos can go is to Salt Lake City," Hall growled. "Get
-the state of Utah to settle that quarrel about who owns the land your
-schools and hospitals are being built on. Then I can get my hands on
-some leases up there."
-
-"I thought the Navajo reservation was in New Mexico and Arizona," Sandy
-said.
-
-"A small part of it is in southern Utah," Hall explained. "That's the
-part bounded by the San Juan River."
-
-"The argument over school lands is less important than our other
-disputes," Chief Quail said carefully. He spoke good English but his
-words seemed to be tied together with string. Plainly, he had learned
-the white man's language not many years ago. "The real problem--the one
-that is, how do you say, tying up millions of dollars of lease money--is
-to have a correct boundary drawn around the Hopi reservation."
-
-"The chief means," Hall explained for the boys' benefit, "that the
-Navajo reservation forms a large rectangle that completely surrounds a
-smaller square of land in Arizona where the Hopi Indians live."
-
-"Not a square, Mr. Hall," Chief Quail objected. "The Hopis really own
-only a small triangle. Those primitive, stupid cliff dwellers claim
-thousands of Navajo acres to which they have no right. If I had my way
-in our Council, I would...."
-
-"The Navajos _and_ the Hopis are all grandmothers," Salmon cut in
-angrily. "Squabbling over money like palefaces! Spending their royalties
-on things like schools and hospitals! When my tribe, the southern Utes,
-got its first royalty check, the Council voted to have some fun with the
-money. We spent it to build a race track for our fast horses!"
-
-"Digger Indian!" The Navajo sneered at Salmon without moving a muscle of
-his broad face. "Fish eater! Soon you will waste all your easy money.
-When the oil runs out you will be running about naked again, living on
-roots and fried caterpillars like you used to!"
-
-"Oh, no, John." The Ute's grin was just visible in the gathering
-darkness. "Maybe we'll go on the warpath and take what we need from you
-fat Navajo sheep herders, as we did in the good old days. Or--" he added
-quickly as the chief lunged to his feet--"we'll sing you to death. Like
-this!"
-
-Salmon began a wailing chant that set everyone's teeth on edge. The
-Navajo stopped his advance as if he had struck a wall. He clapped his
-hands over his ears and, after a moment, stalked out into the night.
-
-"You shouldn't have done that, Ralph," Hall said coldly. "Some day Chief
-Quail is going to take you apart if you don't stop baiting him."
-
-"Can you actually sing people to death, Mr. Salmon?" Sandy said to break
-the tension.
-
-"Of course not," the Ute answered softly. "But the chief _thinks_ I can,
-and I wouldn't spoil his belief for anything. We have a set-to like this
-every time we meet. Some of our medicine men can sing people _well_,
-though. They chant awhile and then pull the pain right out of your
-tooth, ear, or stomach."
-
-"What does a pain look like?" Quiz asked, half convinced.
-
-"Looks just like a fingernail about two inches long," the Ute answered.
-"It's bright red. If you strike it, it goes _tinnnggg_, like the reed of
-a saxophone."
-
-"Stop your nonsense, Ralph," White commanded, "while I go out and smooth
-Quail's ruffled feathers." He followed the chief and brought him back
-five minutes later to receive an oily apology from his ancestral enemy.
-
-"You Indians will be broke again, one of these days, if you keep
-quarreling among yourselves," Hall said then. "Crooked white men are
-hanging around the Four Corners. They're just waiting for something like
-that so they can trick you out of your oil and uranium rights, or even
-your reservations."
-
-Everyone had to agree that this was true, so the little party settled
-down in reasonable harmony to watch the giant stars come out. Salmon
-produced a guitar after a while. Then he and Kitty sang Indian and
-Mexican songs together. Sandy particularly liked one that went:
-
- _I wander with the pollen of dawn upon my trail._
- _Beauty surrounding me, with it I wander._
-
-"That's a Navajo song," the Ute said, grinning. "We sing it in honor of
-Chief Quail. Here's one by a white man that I like:
-
- _Maana is a lovely word we all would like to borrow._
- _It means 'Don't skeen no wolfs today wheech you don't shoot
- tomorrow.'_
- _An' eef you got some jobs to did, of which you do not wanna,_
- _Go 'head and take siesta now; tomorrow ees maana!"_
-
-"Guess that's a hint we'd better take our siestas," Hall said to the
-boys. "Big day ahead maana."
-
-"This country sort of grows on one," Sandy said to Kitty as they shook
-hands. "I'm beginning to feel at home already."
-
-"Oh, you haven't really seen anything yet," the girl answered. "If you
-and Mr. Taylor get up in the neighborhood of my school, look me up. I'll
-show you some of the wildest and most beautiful country on earth."
-
-"Mother said I'd fall in love with the place." Sandy took a last look
-across the sleeping desert. "She was born not far from here. Met my
-father when he was working for the U.S. Geological Survey."
-
-"How interesting," cried the girl. "Maybe my folks know her. What was
-her maiden name?"
-
-"It was Ruth Carson."
-
-"Oh!" Kitty snatched her hand out of his. "She's related to Kit Carson,
-isn't she?"
-
-"The general was my great-uncle," Sandy said proudly. "That's why I'm so
-interested in this part of--"
-
-He stopped because Kitty had backed away from him until her back pressed
-against the motel wall. As he stared, she spat into the dust of the
-patio in a most unladylike fashion before turning and running toward her
-room.
-
-"What did I do to her?" Sandy gasped, openmouthed.
-
-"Kitty's mother is a Navajo," Chief Quail answered. "Back in Civil War
-days, Kit Carson rounded up the Navajos to take us away from our
-reservation. We went on the warpath and retreated into the mountains.
-Carson followed. His soldiers shot several dozen of us, and slaughtered
-all our sheep so we would either have to surrender or starve. Even
-today, many of us would rather eat fish as the Utes do than touch one of
-Kit Carson's descendants!" He turned his back and marched off.
-
-"Ouch!" Sandy groaned. "I certainly put my foot into it that time."
-
-"Don't worry too much about it," said White. "Fact of the matter is that
-Kit Carson made a mighty good Indian Agent later on, and most Navajos
-admit it. He was the man who insisted that they all be returned to the
-reservation after the rebellion was over. He eventually died from
-overwork in behalf of 'his Indians.' Except for a few diehards, the
-Navajos won't hold your mother's name against you."
-
-"I certainly hope you're right," Sandy sighed as he and Quiz said good
-night to the others and headed for their room.
-
-"What a mess," his friend said. "Navajos squabbling with Utes, Hopis and
-the state of Utah. Crooks waiting to take advantage of them all. Pains
-like fingernails! Cavalry heroes who turn into villains. I suppose
-that's why the biggest oil field in the Four Corners is called the
-Paradox Basin!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THREE
- A "Poor Boy" Outfit
-
-
-Hall routed Ralph Salmon and the boys out of bed before dawn the next
-day. They ate a huge pancakes-and-sausage breakfast cooked by the
-sleepy-eyed but cheerfully clucking Misses Emery and climbed into the
-company jeep just as the sun was gilding the peaks of the mountains.
-Soon their teeth were chattering in the morning cold as Salmon roared
-off in a northwesterly direction toward the San Juan River lease.
-
-"I wouldn't have come down to Farmington at all this week," Hall shouted
-above the wind which made the jeep top pop and crack, "except that I
-promised to pick up you boys, and Ralph had to get our core drill
-repaired. That's the drill you hear thumping under the seat. We're down
-a thousand feet with our second well and I should be riding herd on it
-every minute."
-
-"You're a worrywart, boss," chuckled the Indian. "You know that Harry
-Donovan's on the job up there. He can handle things just as well as you
-can."
-
-"You're right," Hall answered. "But somehow it doesn't seem right to
-have a geologist bossing the drill crew. That's a hang-over from my days
-with a big spit-and-polish producing company, I guess.
-
-"Ours is what they call a 'poor boy' outfit here in the oil country," he
-explained to Sandy and Quiz. "We make do with secondhand drill rigs and
-other equipment. Sometimes we dig our engines and cables out of junk
-yards."
-
-"Now, now, boss, don't cry," said their driver. "It's not quite that
-bad."
-
-"It will be if this well doesn't come in." Hall grinned. "But we do have
-to make every penny count, kids. We all pitch in on anything that needs
-doing. What kind of jobs have you cooked up for our new roustabouts,
-Ralph?"
-
-"There's a new batch of mud to be mixed," the Indian answered. "How
-about that for a starter?"
-
-"Mud!" Quiz exploded. "What's mud got to do with drilling an oil well?"
-
-"Plenty, my friend. Plenty," Ralph answered. "Mud is forced down into a
-well to cool the drill bit and to wash rock cuttings to the surface. You
-use mud if you have water, that is. In parts of this country, water's so
-short, or so expensive to haul, that producers use compressed air for
-those purposes. We're lucky. We can pipe plenty of water from the
-river."
-
-"Then you mix the water with all sorts of fancy chemicals to make
-something that's called mud but really isn't," said Sandy, remembering
-tales of the oil country that his father had told him.
-
-"You're forgetting that we're a 'poor boy' outfit," said Hall.
-"Chemicals cost money. We dig shale from the river bed and grind it up
-and use it for a mix. You'll both have a nice new set of blisters before
-this day is over."
-
-They followed a good paved road to the little town of Shiprock, which
-got its name from a huge butte that looked amazingly like a ship under
-full sail. Crossing the San Juan over the new bridge that Pepper had
-pointed out the day before, they turned northwest onto a badly rutted
-trail. Here and there they saw flocks of sheep, watched by half-naked
-Indian children and their dogs. Occasionally they passed a six-sided
-Navajo house surrounded by a few plowed acres.
-
-"Those huts are called hogans," Ralph explained, placing the accent on
-the last syllable. "Notice that they have no windows and that their only
-doors always face toward the rising sun. Never knock on a hogan door.
-That's considered bad luck. Just walk in when you go to visit a Navajo."
-
-"Whe-e-ew!" Sandy panted when an hour had passed and he had peeled out
-of his coat, shirt, and finally his undershirt. "How can it get so hot
-at this altitude?"
-
-"Call this hot?" jeered Salmon. "Last time I was down in Phoenix it was
-125 degrees in the shade, and raining cats and dogs at the same time. I
-had to park my car a block from the hotel, so I ran for it. But when I
-got into the lobby my clothes were absolutely dry. The rain evaporated
-as fast as it fell!"
-
-"That," said Hall, "is what I'd call evaporating the truth just a leetle
-bit."
-
-"Mr. Salmon...." Quiz hesitated. "Could I ask you a personal question?"
-
-"You can if you call me Ralph," answered the tall driller as he slowed
-to let a Navajo woman drive a flock of goats across the trail. She was
-dressed in a brightly colored blouse and long Spanish skirt, as if she
-were going to a party instead of doing a chore, and she did not look up
-as they passed.
-
-"Well, how is it you don't talk more--like an Indian?" Quiz asked.
-
-"How do Indians talk?" A part of the Ute's smile faded and his black
-eyes narrowed ever so slightly.
-
-"Why, I dunno--" the boy's face turned red with embarrassment--"like
-Chief Quail, I guess. I mean ... I thought...."
-
-"When you've served a hitch in the Navy, Quiz, you get to talking just
-like everyone else, whether you're an Indian or an Eskimo."
-
-"Were you in Korea, Ralph?" Sandy asked to break the tension.
-
-"I was not! I served my time working as a roustabout on oil wells in one
-of the Naval Reserves."
-
-"And, since that wasn't enough punishment," Hall said as he grinned,
-"Ralph came home and took advantage of the GI bill to go to school in
-Texas and became a driller."
-
-"Yep," Salmon agreed. "And I soon found out that an Indian oil driller
-is about as much in demand as a two-headed calf." He threaded the car
-through the narrow crevice between two tall buttes of red sandstone that
-stuck up out of the desert like gnarled fingers. "I was just about down
-to that fried caterpillar diet that Chief Quail keeps kidding me about
-when a certain man whose name I won't mention gave me my first job."
-
-"And you turned out to be the best all-round oilman I ever hired," said
-Hall as he slapped the other on his bronzed, smoothly muscled back. "I
-figured that if Iroquois Indians make the finest steelworkers in the
-construction business, a Ute should know how to run a drill rig. I
-wasn't mistaken."
-
-Salmon was at a loss for words for once. His ears turned pink and he
-concentrated on the road, which was becoming almost impassable, even for
-a jeep.
-
-"That's my reservation over there across the Colorado line," he said at
-last, turning his head and pointing with outthrust lips toward the north
-and east.
-
-"Nice country--for prairie dogs. Although the southern Utes are doing
-all right these days from royalties on the big oil field that's located
-just over that ridge. They tell me, too, that the reservation holds one
-of the biggest coal deposits in the western United States."
-
-"Why didn't you stay on the reservation, then?" Quiz wanted to know.
-
-"I like to move around. People ask me more questions that way."
-
-"Oh." Quiz stopped his questioning.
-
-"Up ahead and to the left," Ralph went on, "is the actual Four Corners,
-the only place in the country where the boundaries of four states meet.
-It also is the farthest point from a railroad in the whole United
-States--one hundred and eighty miles or so, I understand. How about
-stopping there for lunch, boss, as soon as we cross into Utah? Nice and
-quiet." He winked at Quiz to take any sting out of his earlier words.
-
-After they had eaten every one of the Misses Emery's chicken and ham
-sandwiches, Hall took over as their driver and guide.
-
-"My lease is up near the village of Bluff, on the north side of the
-river," he explained. "I'm convinced, though, that most of the oil and
-uranium is in Navajo and Hopi territory south of the San Juan. I've had
-Donovan down there running seismographic surveys and he says the place
-is rich as Croesus. That's why I've been talking turkey to Chief
-Quail--trying to get him to get the Navajo and Hopi councils together so
-we can develop the area."
-
-"Is Quail chief of all the Navajos?" Sandy asked. "He didn't seem to be
-exactly...." He stammered to a stop while Ralph chuckled.
-
-"Oh, no," Hall answered. "Quail is just a chief of one of the many
-Navajo clans, or families. The real power is held by the tribal council,
-of which Paul Jones is chairman. But Chief Quail swings a lot of weight
-on the reservation."
-
-"Hah!" Ralph snorted. "Chief Quail's a stuffed shirt. They made a
-uranium strike on his farm last year, so what does he do?... Buys
-himself a new pickup truck! I'd have celebrated by getting a Jaguar."
-
-"A Jaguar is like a British Buick," said Quiz, suddenly coming into his
-element as the talk got around to cars. "A Bentley would have been
-better."
-
-"I know, I know," Ralph answered. "Or a Rolls Royce if he could afford a
-chauffeur. I read the ads too."
-
-They followed the river, now deep in its gorge and getting considerably
-wider, for another twenty miles. They were out of the reservation now
-and passed a number of prosperous farms. The road remained awful,
-however, being a long string of potholes filled to the brim with yellow
-dust. The holes couldn't be seen until the jeep was right on top of
-them. Hall had to keep slamming on his brakes at the risk of dislocating
-his passengers' necks.
-
-"You should travel through this country when it rains," he said
-cheerfully. "Cars sink into the mud until all you can see is the tips of
-their radio antennas."
-
-"We'd get to the well before sunset if you drove as well as you tell
-tall stories," Ralph commented dryly.
-
-They finally made the field headquarters of the Four Corners Drilling
-Company with two hours of sunlight to spare. The boys looked at the
-place in disappointment. An unpainted sheet-iron shack with a sign
-reading Office over its only door squatted close to the top of the San
-Juan gorge. Not far from it was an odd-looking contraption of pipes,
-valves and dials about as big as a home furnace. There was no sign of a
-well derrick as far as they could see across deserted stretches of sand,
-sagebrush, and rust-colored rock.
-
-"There she is--Hall Number One," said their employer. He walked over to
-the contraption, patted it as though it was his best friend, and stood,
-thumbs hooked in the armholes of his worn vest, while he studied the
-dials proudly. "This is my discovery well. It's what buys the baby new
-shoes."
-
-"But where are the derricks and everything?" Quiz tried unsuccessfully
-to keep the disappointment out of his voice.
-
-"Shhh!" whispered Sandy. "They've skidded the derrick to the new well
-site. This thing's called a Christmas tree. It controls the flow of oil
-out of the ground."
-
-"Smart boy," said Hall. "We've got our wildcat hogtied and hooked into
-this gathering line." He pointed to a small pipe that snaked southward
-across the desert. "The gathering line connects with the big new
-pipeline to the West Coast that passes a few miles from here. Number One
-is flowing a sweet eight hundred and fifty barrels a day."
-
-"But I don't see any other well," Quiz persisted.
-
-"It's over behind that butte." Hall pointed again. "Oh, I know what's
-bothering you. You're remembering those old pictures that show derricks
-in an oil field standing shoulder to shoulder, like soldiers. We don't
-do things that way any longer. We've got plenty of room out here, so we
-space our wells. Only drill enough of them to bring up the oil without
-waste. Come on. I'll take you over and introduce you to the gang."
-
-A short ride brought them to a scene of whirlwind activity. Drilling had
-stopped temporarily on Hall's second well so that a worn bit could be
-pulled out of the hole and replaced with a sharp one. But that didn't
-mean work had stopped!
-
-The boys watched, spellbound, while dripping lengths of pipe were snaked
-out of the ground by a cable which ran through a block at the top of the
-tall derrick and was connected to a powerful diesel engine. As every
-three lengths arrived at the surface, two brawny men wielding big iron
-tongs leaped forward and disconnected them from the pipe remaining in
-the well. Then the 90-foot "stand" was gently maneuvered, with the help
-of another man, wearing a safety belt, who stood on a platform high up
-on the derrick. When a stand had been neatly propped out of the way, the
-next one was ready to be pulled out of the well.
-
-The crew worked at top speed without saying a word until the mud-covered
-drill finally came in sight. They unscrewed the bit from the end of the
-last stand of pipe, and replaced it with a sharp one. Then the process
-was reversed. Stand after stand of pipe was reconnected and lowered
-until all were back in the well. Then the engine began to roar steadily.
-A huge turntable under the derrick started spinning the pipe at high
-speed. Down at the bottom of the hole the bit resumed chewing into the
-rock.
-
-"Nice teamwork, Ralph," said Hall. "You certainly have trained as good a
-crew as can be found in the Regions."
-
-"Nice team to work _with_," answered the driller as he looked proudly at
-his men, who were about equally divided between Indians and whites. "Now
-let's see if there's any work for our two tenderfeet before it's time to
-knock off for supper. Come on, fellows. The mud pit is slurping for
-you."
-
-Two hours later, when the cook began hammering on his iron triangle,
-Sandy and Quiz looked like mud puppies.
-
-"You're a howling fright," said the tall boy as he climbed out of the
-big pit where a new batch of goo was swirling and settling. He plastered
-down his unruly cowlick with a slimy hand. For once the hair stayed in
-place.
-
-"And you look like a dirty little green man from the swamps of the
-planet Venus." Quiz spat out a bit of mud and roared with laughter.
-"Lucky thing we don't have to get this muck off with compressed air.
-Come on. I'll race you to the showers."
-
-Dinner was eaten in the same dogged quiet that they had noted at the
-motel. It was a good dinner, too, although it came mostly out of cans.
-
-The boys were introduced all around after the apple pie had been
-consumed to the last crumb, but they were too tired and sleepy to sort
-out names and faces. They did gather that four-man shifts--or "towers,"
-as they seemed to be called--kept the drill turning day and night until
-the drill struck oil or the well had to be abandoned as a "duster."
-
-The only person present who made a real impression was Harry Donovan,
-Hall's geologist. He was an intense, bald, wiry fellow in his thirties
-who kept biting his lips, as though he was just about to impart a deep
-secret. But all he seemed to talk about were mysterious things like
-electronic log readings, core analyses, and the distance still to be
-drilled before something called the "Gallup Pay" would be reached.
-
-Hall and Salmon were intensely interested in Donovan's report. Try as
-they would to follow it, Sandy and Quiz soon found themselves nodding.
-Finally they leaned their elbows on the oilcloth-covered dinner table
-and snored gently.
-
-Ralph shook them partially awake and showed them their beds in a
-battered trailer. They slept like logs despite the fact that, bathed in
-brilliant white light provided by a portable electric generator, the rig
-roared and clanked steadily throughout the night as its bit "made hole"
-more than a thousand feet underground.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FOUR
- Learning the Ropes
-
-
-Sandy and Quiz spent the next two weeks picking up a working knowledge
-of drilling, getting acquainted with Hall's outfit, and learning to keep
-out from under the feet of the crew. Ralph saw to it that their jobs
-varied from day to day as they grew lean and brown under the desert sun.
-
-"Used to have a lot of trouble keeping fellows on the job out here next
-to nowhere," he explained with a grin. "The boys would get fed up after
-a few weeks. Then they'd quit, head for town, and I'd have to spend
-valuable time rounding up replacements. Now I switch their work around
-so they don't have so much chance to become bored. Let's see ... you
-mixed mud yesterday, didn't you? Well, today I want you to help Jack
-Boyd keep his diesel running." Whereupon the boys would spend a "tower"
-cleaning the engine room, or oiling and polishing the powerful but
-over-age motor that Boyd nursed like a sick child to make it keep the
-bit turning steadily.
-
-On other days they were assigned to drive to Shiprock or Farmington for
-supplies, to help Ching Chao in the cookhouse, or to learn the abc's of
-oil geology from Donovan. Sandy preferred to do chores around the
-derrick and was very proud when he finally was allowed to handle one of
-the huge tongs used to grip the stands of pipe so that they could be
-removed from the well or returned to it.
-
-Quiz, on the other hand, never tired of studying the wavering lines
-marked on strips of paper by the electric log that Donovan lowered into
-the well at regular intervals. He soon got so that he could identify the
-different kinds of rock layers through which the bit was drilling, by
-the slight changes in the shapes of those lines. Or he would train a
-microscope on thin slices of sandstone sawed from the yard-long cores
-that were hauled out of the well from time to time. With his usual
-curiosity, he had read up enough about geology to recognize the
-different marine fossils that the cores contained. He would become as
-excited as Donovan did when the geologist pointed to a group of minute
-shells in a slice of core and whispered, "Those are Foraminifera, boys!
-We must be getting close to the oil." And he would become as discouraged
-as his teacher when careful study of another core showed no indication
-of ancient sea creatures.
-
-"I don't get it," Sandy would mutter on such occasions. "How come those
-shells got thousands of feet underground in the first place? And what
-have they got to do with finding oil?"
-
-Then the geologist would mop his bald head with a bandanna handkerchief,
-take off his thick horn-rimmed glasses and use them as a pointer while
-he lectured the boys on his beloved science.
-
-"All of this country has been deep under water several times during the
-last few million years," he would explain patiently. "In fact, most of
-the center of the North American continent has been submerged at one
-time or another. When the Four Corners region was a sea bottom back in
-the Carboniferous era, untold generations of marine plants and animals
-died in the water and sank to the bottom.
-
-"As the ages passed, those life forms were buried by mud and silt
-brought down from surrounding mountains by the raging rivers of those
-days. The weight of the silt caused it to turn into sandstone or
-limestone layers hundreds of feet thick. This pressure generated a great
-deal of heat. Geologists think that pressure and heat compressed the
-dead marine creatures into particles of oil and gas.
-
-"Every time the land rose to the surface and sank again, another layer
-or stratum of dead fish and plants would form. All this heaving and
-twisting of the earth formed traps or domes, called anticlines, into
-which the oil and gas moved. That's why we find oil today at different
-depths beneath the surface."
-
-"I understand that water and gas pressure keeps pushing oil toward the
-surface," Sandy said on one occasion, "but then why doesn't it escape?"
-
-"Usually it gets caught under anticlines where the rock is too thick and
-hard for it to move any farther," Quiz cut in, eager to show off his new
-knowledge of geology. "But it does escape in some places, Sandy. You've
-heard of oil springs. George Washington owned one of them. And the
-Indians used to sop crude petroleum from such springs with their
-blankets and use it as a medicine or to waterproof their canoes.
-Sometimes the springs catch fire. Some of those still exist in parts of
-Iran. I read an article once which said that Jason really was looking
-for a cargo of oil when he sailed the _Argo_ to the Caucasus Mountains
-in search of the Golden Fleece. The fleece was just a flowery Greek term
-for a burning spring, maybe."
-
-"Maybe," Donovan agreed as he stoked his pipe and sent clouds of smoke
-billowing through the laboratory. "There's also a theory that Job was an
-oilman. The Bible has him saying that 'the rock poured me forth rivers
-of oil,' you remember. If you read the Book of Job carefully, it almost
-sounds as if the poor fellow's troubles started when his oil field
-caught fire. However that may be, we know that the Greeks of Jason's
-time used quite a bit of oil. The Arabs even refined petroleum and
-lighted the streets of their cities with something resembling kerosene
-almost a thousand years ago."
-
-"Golly," said Sandy. "It's all too deep for me--several thousand feet
-too deep. I think I'll go help Chao get dinner ready! I _do_ know how to
-cook."
-
-
-The one job around the derrick that the boys never got a chance to
-handle was that of Peter Sanchez, the platform man who worked on their
-shift, or "tower." Whenever the time came to replace a bit, Peter would
-climb to his perch halfway up the rig, snap on a safety belt, and guide
-the upper ends of the ninety-foot stands of pipe into their rack. There
-they would stand upright in a slimy black bunch until it was time to
-return them to the well.
-
-Peter, who boasted that he had been an oilman for a quarter of a
-century, worked effortlessly. He never lost his footing on the narrow
-platform, even when the strongest wind blew. Platform men on the other
-shifts were equally sure-footed--and very proud of their ability to
-"walk" strings of pipe weighing several tons. And they took things easy
-whenever they climbed down from their dizzy perches.
-
-Peter, in particular, was fond of amusing the other crew members by
-telling them stories about the oil fields in the "good old days." His
-favorite character was a driller named Gib Morgan. Gib, he said, had
-come down originally from the Pennsylvania regions when the first big
-strikes were being made in Texas and Oklahoma, around 1900.
-
-"You never heard of Gib?" Peter said one night as the off-duty crews
-were sitting around a roaring campfire after dinner. "Well, I'll tell
-you...." He rolled a cigarette with one hand, cowboy fashion, while
-studying the young greenhorns out of the corner of his eye. "Gib was a
-little feller with a big mustache but he could put Davy Crockett and
-Paul Bunyan in the shade when he had a mind to. When he first came to
-Texas he had a run of bad luck. Drilled almost a hundred dry holes
-without hitting a single gusher. Got down to his last silver dollar.
-Then do you know what he did to make a stake?"
-
-"No. What?" Quiz leaned forward eagerly.
-
-"He pulled up all those dusters, sawed 'em into four-foot lengths, and
-sold 'em to the ranchers for postholes. That's how it happens that all
-the Texas ranges got fenced in with barbed wire, son."
-
-When the laughter had died down and Quiz's ears had returned to their
-normal color, the platform man went on: "That wasn't the only time that
-Gib helped out his fellow man. Back around 1900, just before the big
-Spindletop gusher came in, oilmen in these parts were having a lot of
-trouble with whickles--you know what a whickle is, don't you, Sandy?"
-
-"It's a cross between a canary bird and a bumblebee, isn't it?" Sandy
-was dimly remembering a story that his father had told him.
-
-"Well! Well!" Peter looked at him with more respect. "That's exactly
-right. Pretty little varmints, whickles, but they developed a powerful
-taste for crude oil. Soon as a well came in, they'd smell it from miles
-away. That's no great feat, I'll admit, for crude oil sure has a strong
-odor. Anyway, they'd descend on the well in swarms so thick that they'd
-darken the sky. And they'd suck it plumb dry before you could say Jack
-Robinson, unless you capped it quick.
-
-"Well, Gib got one of his big ideas. He went out to one of his dusters
-that he hadn't pulled up yet, poured several barrels of oil down it, and
-'salted' the ground with more oil. Pretty soon, here came the whickles.
-They lapped up all the oil on the ground. Then a big whickle, probably
-the boss, rose up in the air and let out a lot of whickle talk about how
-he personally had discovered the biggest oil highball on earth. After
-that he dived into the well, and all the others followed him, like the
-animals that went into the ark. Soon as the last one was down the hole,
-Gib grabbed a big wooden plug and capped the well. We haven't had any
-whickle trouble since."
-
-"Then all the poor whickles died?" Quiz rose to the bait.
-
-"Oh, no," Peter answered with a straight face. "They're still buzzing
-around in that hole, mad as hops. Some day a greenhorn like you will
-come along and let 'em out."
-
-"Wonder what ever became of Gib," said Donovan, between puffs on his
-pipe.
-
-"Last I heard he was up Alaska way," Ralph said. "Here's a story about
-him that you may want to add to your repertoire, Pete. Gib was drilling
-near Moose Jaw in December when it got so cold the mercury in the
-thermometer on the derrick started shivering and shaking so hard that it
-knocked a hole right through the bottom of the tube. During January it
-got colder yet and the joints on the drill pipe froze so they couldn't
-be unscrewed.
-
-"Now Gib had a bet he could finish that well in four months and he
-wasn't going to let Jack Frost faze him. He just rigged up a pile driver
-that drove that frozen pipe on down into the ground as pretty as you
-please. Soon as one stand of pipe was down, the crew would weld on
-another and keep driving. Course the pipe got compressed a lot from all
-that hammering, but Gib couldn't see any harm in that.
-
-"Time February came around it got real chilly--a hundred or so below
-zero. He was using a steam engine by that time because the diesel fuel
-was frozen solid, but no sooner would the smoke from the fire box come
-out of the chimney than it would freeze and fall back on the snow.
-Wading through that black stuff was like pushing through cotton wool,
-and besides, the men tracked it all over the clean bunkhouse floor. So
-Gib had to get out a bulldozer and shove it into one corner of the
-clearing where he had his rig set up.
-
-"They were down about four miles on March 15 when an early spring thaw
-set in. First thing that happened was that the smoke melted and spread
-all over the place. Couldn't see your nose on your face. Fire wardens
-came from miles around thinking the forest was ablaze. Gib was in a
-tight spot so he did something he had never done before--he looked up
-his hated rival, Bill McGee, who was in the Yukon selling some
-refrigerators to the Eskimos. He had to give skinflint McGee a half
-interest in the well to get him to help out. McGee just borrowed those
-refrigerators, stuffed the smoke into them, and refroze it.
-
-"No sooner was the smoke under control than all that compressed drill
-pipe down the well started to thaw out. It began shooting out of the
-hole like a released coil spring. First it humped up under the derrick
-and pushed it a hundred feet into the air. Then it toppled over and
-squirmed about the clearing like a boa constrictor.
-
-"That was where Bill McGee made his big mistake. Gib had told him the
-drill bit, which had been dragged out of the well by the thrashing pipe,
-had cuttings on it which showed there was good oil sand only a few feet
-farther down. But Bill figured that with the derrick a wreck, the well
-was a frost. So he sold his half interest back to Gib, who didn't
-object, for a plug of good chewing tobacco.
-
-"Soon as McGee was out of sight, Gib headed for the nearest U.S. Assay
-Office. He got the clerk to lend him about a quart of the mercury that
-assay men use to test the purity of gold nuggets.
-
-"Morgan went back to camp, sat down beside the derrick, lit his pipe and
-waited for the freeze-up which he knew was bound to come before spring
-actually set in. It came all right! Puffing his pipe to keep warm Gib
-watched the new alcohol thermometer he had bought in town go down, down,
-and down until it hit a hundred and ten below. Right then he dropped his
-quart of solidified mercury into the well.
-
-"Just as he figured, it acted the way the mercury in the old thermometer
-had done--went right to the bottom and banged and banged trying to
-escape from that awful cold. Yes, sir, that hunk of mercury smashed
-right through to the oil sand. Pretty soon there was a rumble and a
-roar. Up came a thick black column of oil."
-
-"Wait a minute," cried Sandy, thinking he had caught the storyteller out
-on a limb. "Why didn't the oil freeze too?"
-
-"It did, Sandy. It did," Ralph answered blandly. "Soon as it hit the
-air, it froze solid. But it was slippery enough so it kept sliding out
-of the ground a foot at a time. Gib got his men together and, until
-spring really came, they kept busy sawing hunks off that gusher and
-shipping them out to the States on flatcars!"
-
-"You win, Ralph," sighed the platform man as he heaved himself to his
-feet. "I can't even attempt to top that tall one, so I guess I'd better
-go to bed. Your story should keep us cool out here for at least a week."
-
-
-After that mild hazing session, Sandy and Quiz found themselves accepted
-as full-fledged members of the gang. The crew members, who had kept
-their distance up to that point, now treated them like equals. Each boy
-soon was doing a man's work around the rig and glorying in his hardening
-muscles.
-
-As the end of June approached, Hall, Donovan and Salmon got ready for
-their monthly trip to Window Rock, Arizona, to submit bids for several
-leases in the Navajo reservation.
-
-"There's room in the jeep, so you might as well go along and learn
-something more about the oil business," Hall told the boys. "I'm pretty
-sure our bids won't be accepted, but the only thing we can do is try."
-
-At that point trouble descended on the camp in the form of a Bonanza
-bearing Red Cavanaugh and Pepper March.
-
-The husky electronics man clambered out of his machine and came forward
-at a lope. He was dressed only in shorts, and the thick red hair on his
-brawny chest glinted in the sunlight. Pepper trotted behind him like an
-adoring puppy.
-
-"Howdy, Mr. Hall. Howdy, Donovan," Cavanaugh boomed as he reached the
-rig. "Heard you'd been exploring down in the Hopi butte section. Thought
-I'd bounce over and sell you some equipment that has seismographs,
-magnetometers and gravimeters beat three ways from Sunday. The very
-latest thing. You can't get along without it."
-
-"Can't I?" said Donovan mildly.
-
-"Of course you can't!" Cavanaugh clapped the little man on the back so
-hard that he almost dislodged Donovan's glasses. "This is terrific! The
-biggest thing that's happened to me since I ran those three touchdowns
-for State back in 1930. I developed it in my own lab. You know how a
-Geiger counter works...?"
-
-"Well, faintly," answered the geologist, who had three of them in his
-own laboratory. "I wasn't born yesterday, _Mr._ Cavanaugh."
-
-"Well, don't get sore, _Mr._ Donovan." Cavanaugh bellowed with laughter.
-"All I wanted to say was that my new device uses scintillation counters,
-which are--"
-
-"--a thousand times more sensitive to atomic radiation than Geiger
-counters," Donovan interrupted. "And you're going on to tell me that you
-can take your doodlebug up in an airplane and spot a radiation halo
-surrounding any oil deposit. Right? I read the trade papers, too, you
-know. May I ask you a question?"
-
-"Why, of course." Cavanaugh's chest and neck had begun to sweat.
-
-"Do you have a Ph.D. degree in electronic engineering?"
-
-"Why, uh, naturally."
-
-"Well, I don't, unfortunately, Mr. Cavanaugh. But I know enough about
-the science to understand that the gadget you are selling isn't worth a
-plugged nickel unless it's operated by an expert, and unless it's used
-in connection with other methods of exploration. I have told you several
-times at Farmington that this outfit can't afford another scientist at
-present, so I wish you would please go away."
-
-"Now, Mr. Hall--" Cavanaugh turned to the grinning oilman--"can't you
-make your man listen to reason?"
-
-"He's not my man. He's my partner," Hall answered mildly. "What he says
-goes. Now, if you and your, ah, man will have a bite of lunch with us,
-I'd be mighty pleased, providing you stop this high-pressure
-salesmanship."
-
-"Well ..." Cavanaugh seemed on the verge of an explosion. "Well, thanks
-for your invitation, but Mr. March and I are due up at Cortez in half an
-hour. We're delivering several of my gadgets, as you call them, to smart
-oilmen. Come on, Pepper."
-
-"John," said Donovan after they had watched Cavanaugh's plane roar away,
-"I think I'll have to sock that big lug the next time I meet him."
-
-"He'd make mincemeat of you," Mr. Hall warned.
-
-"I doubt it. He's soft as mush. Anyway, I don't like him and I'll have
-nothing to do with the equipment he peddles. He knows that, so I think
-the real reason he came here was to spy on us--to find out whether our
-well had come in yet."
-
-"Oh, he's not that bad," Hall objected. "Boys, you know something about
-him. What's his reputation in Valley View?"
-
-"He acts rich," Sandy answered after a moment of deep thought.
-
-"The people who work in his lab say he's not as smart as he makes out,"
-Quiz added. "I agree with Mr. Donovan. There's something phony about
-him. I've a hunch it's connected with those three touchdowns he's always
-bragging about. If I could only remember.... Some day I will, I bet."
-
-"Well, let's all simmer down and forget him," said Hall. "It's time for
-lunch."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FIVE
- A Light in the Window Rock
-
-
-The morning after Cavanaugh's unwelcome visit, Hall, Donovan, Salmon and
-the boys set out on their 150-mile drive south to the town of Window
-Rock. The jeep wallowed and bounced as usual over the dusty trail to
-Shiprock. There Ralph turned right onto US 666, pushed the accelerator
-toward the floor board and relaxed.
-
-"We don't have a Bonanza, boss," he said, "but a loaded jeep on a good
-paved road is the next best thing."
-
-"I'd prefer a helicopter, equipped with a supercharger that could lift
-it over the ranges," Hall answered. "Maybe, if Number Two comes in, we
-can buy a whirlybird, along with a portable drill rig truck."
-
-"A portable rig sure would come in handy for drilling test wells," Ralph
-agreed. "Maybe we could make it come true by putting an offering on that
-Navajo wishing pile." He nodded toward a mound of small brightly colored
-stones that stood where an Indian trail crossed the highway.
-
-"Nuh uh," the oilman said sharply. "And don't _you_ ever try that stunt,
-boys. The Navajos don't want white men thinning out their luck by
-putting things on their wishing piles. By the same token, never take any
-object from the piles that you will see scattered through the
-reservation. If you're caught doing that, you'll be in for real
-trouble."
-
-"Yep. The braves will get mad as wet hens," Salmon said, chuckling.
-
-"Ralph," said Quiz, "why do you poke fun at the Navajos?"
-
-"Well, pardner, did you ever hear a UCLA man say anything good about the
-Stanford football team?"
-
-"Oh, but that's different. It's just school rivalry," Sandy objected as
-he crossed his long legs the other way in an effort to keep his knees
-from banging against the dash.
-
-"Well, you might say that the Navajos and Utes have been traditional
-rivals since the beginning of time. Nothing very serious, you
-understand. We've raided each other's cattle, and taken a few scalps now
-and then, when a Navajo stepped on a Ute's shadow, or vice versa. The
-Navajos are Athapascans, you see. They're related to the Apaches, and
-think they're the lords of creation. But Utes are Shoshoneans. We belong
-to one of the biggest Indian 'families' in North America. The state of
-Utah is named in our honor and there are Shoshones living as far north
-as Alaska. Maybe you've heard of Sacagawea, the Shoshone 'Bird Woman,'
-who guided the Lewis and Clark Expedition all the way to the Pacific
-Coast.
-
-"The Hopis are our brothers, and the Piutes are our poor relations. The
-Piutes _did_ eat fried caterpillars and roots in the old days, I guess,
-but that was only because they lived out in the western Utah desert
-where there wasn't much else to eat. We southern Utes lived mostly on
-buffalo meat. We were great hunters. Our braves would creep right into
-the middle of a herd of buffalo and kill as many as they wanted with
-their long knives, without causing the animals to take fright and
-stampede."
-
-"How could they do that?" Sandy asked.
-
-"When they went on a hunt, they dressed in buffalo hides, and made
-themselves smell like, walk like and even think like buffalo. The
-animals didn't believe they were men."
-
-"Can you still do that--think like a buffalo, I mean?" Quiz gasped.
-
-"Oh, sure. Just find me a herd of wild ones and I'll prove it."
-
-"Ralph's talents sure are being wasted on drilling for oil," Donovan
-said, knocking out his pipe against the jeep's side for emphasis.
-
-"All very amusing," Hall grunted. "But crooked white men have taken
-advantage of your sporting rivalry with the Navajo to rob both of you
-blind during the past century. The same thing will happen again, I warn
-you, if you don't stop playing Indian and begin working at it."
-
-"Yes, boss," Ralph agreed shamefacedly. "You're absolutely right. But--I
-forget everything you've said when that Quail character starts getting
-under my buffalo hide!"
-
-The car whined merrily down the road past the little towns of Newcomb
-and Tohatchi while Ralph sulked and Hall and Donovan talked shop which
-the boys couldn't understand. They turned left on Route 68 in the middle
-of the hot afternoon, crossed the line from New Mexico into Arizona, and
-a few minutes later pulled into Window Rock.
-
-The town, made up mostly of low, well-kept adobe and stone buildings,
-lay in a little valley almost surrounded by red sandstone cliffs. It had
-received its name, obviously, from one huge cliff that had a round hole
-in it big enough to fly a plane through. One of its largest buildings
-was occupied by the Indian Service. Another, built like a gigantic
-hogan, was the Navajo Tribal Council, Hall told the boys. They passed a
-brand-new hospital and a school and pulled up at a motel where a large
-number of Cadillacs and less imposing vehicles were parked.
-
-"Looks as if everybody in the Southwest had come to bid on or sell
-equipment," said Mr. Hall as he studied the array of cars and trucks.
-Some of the latter bore the names of well-known companies such as Gulf,
-Continental, Skelly and Schlumberger. Others belonged to smaller oil and
-uranium firms that Sandy had never heard of.
-
-"Donovan, Ralph, and I had better go in and chew the rag with them
-awhile," the oilman continued. "Why don't you fellows look the town over
-until it's time for dinner? You'd just get bored sitting around."
-
-The boys were drifting over toward the Council Hall for a better look at
-the many Navajos in stiff black hats and colorful shirts who clustered
-around its doorway when they heard a familiar shout.
-
-"Wait up!" Pepper March dashed across the dusty street and pounded them
-on their backs as if they were his best friends. "Gee, it's good to see
-a white man you know."
-
-"You saw us only yesterday," Sandy pointed out rather coldly.
-
-"Oh, but that was business. Come on. I'll buy a Coke. What have you been
-up to? How do you like working for an old crank? What's biting Hall's
-geologist? Boy, isn't it hot? Did you know that I'm learning to fly
-Red's Bonanza? How's your well coming along?"
-
-"Whoa!" cried Quiz. "Relax! We've been working like sin. We like Mr.
-Hall. His geologist is going to bite your Mr. Cavanaugh pretty soon, I'm
-thinking. It is exactly 110 degrees in the shade. We did not know you
-were learning to fly a plane. And the situation at the well is strictly
-our own affair."
-
-"Uh--" said Pepper, "you're not sore about what happened yesterday, are
-you? Red was only trying to make a sale."
-
-"Nope. We're not sore," Sandy answered. "But we're beginning to take a
-dim view of your boss."
-
-"Why, Red's the grandest guy you ever met. Do you know what he's got me
-doing?"
-
-"There you go again, asking personal questions," said Quiz.
-
-"I'm helping him set up a string of light beam transceivers that will
-keep his camps here and at Shiprock in constant communication with his
-agent down at Gallup."
-
-"What on earth for?" Sandy almost choked on his Coke in amazement.
-"What's the matter with the telephone, telegraph and short-wave radio
-stations that are scattered all over this territory? And how come
-Cavanaugh has to have a permanent camp at Window Rock, and an agent in
-Gallup?"
-
-"Now who's asking the questions?" Pepper said smugly. "Have another
-Coke?"
-
-"No, but we'll buy you one," Quiz replied, and added with a wink at his
-pal, "It must be quite a job, setting up one of your stations."
-
-"Sure is!" The blond boy expanded at this implied praise. "It's never
-been done before over such long distances, Red says. You have to focus
-the beam perfectly, or it's no good. But, after you do that, nobody can
-eavesdrop on you unless...." He stopped short, and jumped off the diner
-stool as though it had suddenly become hot. "Well, so long, fellows.
-I've got to be getting back to camp. See you around." And he departed as
-abruptly as he had come.
-
-"Now what kind of business was that?" Sandy asked as he paid the entire
-bill.
-
-"Monkey business, I guess," Quiz answered. "I think Mr. Hall ought to
-know about those stations, and maybe Mr. White, the Indian Agent, should
-be told too." He kicked at the dust thoughtfully as they walked slowly
-down Window Rock's main street.
-
-"Hmmm. You have to get a license from the government to operate a
-short-wave station," said Sandy. "But I don't suppose you need one yet
-for a light-beam job. Now, just supposing that Cavanaugh wanted to--"
-
-"Wanted to what?"
-
-"That's what I don't know. But I sure would like to find out. Let's be
-getting back to the motel."
-
-They found themselves in the middle of a tense scene when they entered
-the motel patio. Twenty or thirty oil and uranium men were gathered
-there, their chairs propped comfortably against the adobe walls, while
-they listened to Cavanaugh and Donovan argue the merits of the big man's
-electronic explorer.
-
-"You all know, my friends, that uranium ore can be, and has been, found
-with a one-tube Geiger," Red was booming. "But that's like throwing a
-lucky pass in a football game. To win the game, you need power in the
-line--power that will let your ball carrier cross the line again, and
-again, and again, the way I became an All-American by scoring those
-three touchdowns against California back in 1930."
-
-"Oh, no!" Quiz whispered as he and Sandy founds seats in a far corner.
-"This is where we came in last time."
-
-"In searching for oil, or even for uranium under a heavy overburden of
-rock," Cavanaugh went on, "you need at least the simplest scintillation
-counter because it is sixty times as sensitive as a one-tube Geiger.
-Better yet is the really professional counter--as much as 600 times more
-sensitive than the best Geiger built. Best of all is my multiple
-scintillator--100 times more sensitive than the best single tube. Even
-you won't disagree with that, will you, _Mr._ Donovan?"
-
-"Not at all," answered the bald man after several furious puffs on his
-pipe. "I only say that, in addition to the best possible electronic
-instrument, you need an operator who thoroughly understands radiation
-equipment. Also, you should have a crew of geologists and geophysicists
-who know how to balance radiation findings against those established by
-other methods."
-
-"Nonsense," shouted the ex-football player. "Many of my customers have
-located oil-containing faults and stratigraphic traps with my detector
-where all other instruments had failed. You're just old-fashioned."
-
-"Maybe I am," said Donovan, "and then maybe I just don't like to have
-wool pulled over my eyes, or the eyes of men I consider to be my
-friends."
-
-"I'm not pulling wool. Halos or circles of radiation can be detected on
-the surface of the earth around the edges of every oil deposit. That's a
-proven fact." Cavanaugh pounded on the arm of his chair with a fist as
-big as a ham.
-
-"Is it?" Donovan asked gently. "Jakosky, who is an authority on
-exploration geophysics, says, and I quote his exact words: 'Atomic
-exploration is still in its infancy.' Let me tell you a story:
-
-"Back in the early days of the oil business, a number of people made
-fortunes by charging big fees to locate petroleum deposits with the help
-of split willow wands. They'd walk around with the split ends of the
-wands between their hands until, they said, some mysterious force pulled
-the big end downward until it pointed to oil. A man who helped Colonel
-Drake promote his original oil well at Titusville, Pennsylvania, back in
-1859, actually located several profitable fields with the 'help' of a
-spiritualist medium."
-
-"He could hardly have failed," one of the onlookers spoke up. "In those
-days, oil was literally bursting out of the ground along many
-Pennsylvania creek beds."
-
-"That's right, Tom," Donovan agreed. "Oil was everywhere, so those
-dowsers, or 'creekologists' as they often were called, did very well
-until the search for oil moved west where deposits were scarcer and much
-deeper underground.
-
-"Around 1913, geologists had to be called in to do the exploration.
-They've been responsible for finding practically all the fields
-discovered since then. But the creekologists didn't give up easily. They
-built pseudo-scientific gadgets called doodlebugs and equipped them with
-lots of fancy dials and flashing lights. One doodlebug even had a
-phonograph in it. As it was carried across a field, a ghostly voice
-would be heard saying, 'Your sainted Aunt Minnie bids me tell you to
-drill right here and you will bring in a second Spindletop.'"
-
-"You can't call me a crook!" Cavanaugh, his face scarlet with rage,
-lunged to his feet and advanced on his tormentor.
-
-"I'm not calling you a crook--yet." Donovan stood up too, knocked out
-his pipe and put it into his pants pocket. "If you would just stop
-making all of those wild-eyed claims for your detector, though, you
-would make out better out here."
-
-As Cavanaugh continued to advance he added mildly, "I suppose I ought to
-warn you that I studied judo when I was in college."
-
-"Excuse me for interrupting your fun, gentlemen," a quiet voice broke
-in. "Is there anyone here named Quincy Taylor? An urgent telegram for
-him was just relayed down from Farmington." Kenneth White, the Indian
-Agent, stood in the motel doorway holding a yellow envelope.
-
-Nobody answered for a moment, but Cavanaugh took the opportunity to
-stomp out of the room while Donovan sat down quietly and started stoking
-his pipe.
-
-"Hey, Quiz!" Sandy exploded at last. "Don't you recognize your own name?
-It's for you!"
-
-His friend blushed with embarrassment as he accepted the wire, but his
-round face turned pale as he read it.
-
-"Mr. Hall," he choked at last. "It's from Dad. He slipped and broke his
-leg in two places. I'm to come home immediately and run the restaurant
-while he's laid up. Gee whiz!" He bit his lips to keep back the tears.
-
-"That's tough, Quiz." The oilman came over and slipped a fatherly arm
-around the boy's shoulders. "Your father will be all right soon, I'm
-sure, but we certainly will miss you up at the well. Now the problem is
-to get you back to Farmington quick so you can catch the midnight bus.
-I'll send your things on, soon as we get back."
-
-"One of my trucks is returning to Farmington after supper," spoke up the
-oilman named Tom. "You can go in that."
-
-"Thanks," gulped Quiz.
-
-The ban about talking at mealtime was broken that night. All the oil and
-uranium men were agreed that Cavanaugh was a bad-mannered blusterer, but
-they differed sharply about the value of his electronic detector.
-
-"He has made several good uranium strikes with the thing," a bearded
-prospector insisted, "though what good they're going to do him I can't
-imagine, with the government not buying except from established mills.
-But don't sell Red Cavanaugh short. He has made millions out of
-electronics, they say. He knows electronics. He's a smart operator. You
-keep an eye on the bids he makes tomorrow and you'll see what I mean."
-
-"Well, I'm not throwing my seismograph away for a while yet," Tom
-retorted. "I'll put my money on Don's opinion any day."
-
-The boys tried to follow the conversation, but Quiz's heart was not in
-it, and he only picked at his food. Finally he excused himself and
-headed for the dining-room door with Sandy after him.
-
-"It's a tough break," he said half an hour later while he and his pal
-stood at the edge of town and stared upward at that amazing natural
-bridge called the Window Rock.
-
-"It sure is," Sandy agreed glumly. "Maybe you can come back, though."
-
-"Not a chance. Dad will be laid up most of the summer, and he can't
-afford to hire a manager, the way things are. There's nothing I can--
-Hey! Look!" He grabbed Sandy's arm and pointed. "See that point of light
-twinkling 'way up on top of the Window Rock? That isn't a star, is it?"
-
-"Nuh-uh!" Sandy watched the faint flicker a thousand feet above them.
-"That must be where Cavanaugh has pitched his camp. He's sending a
-message of some kind over light beam. If it were a heliograph
-transmitting in Morse code I could read it. But that's a modulated
-beam.... Say, we'd better be moseying back to the motel. Must be about
-time for your truck to leave."
-
-"Sandy," Quiz said half an hour later after they had shaken hands
-solemnly, "I'm going to do everything I can, when I get home, to do some
-detective work on Cavanaugh. If anything turns up, I'll let you know
-quick."
-
-"Do that, Quiz." Sandy swallowed and his voice broke. "Be seeing you."
-
-Quiz climbed slowly into the cab of the big tool truck. As it roared off
-into the starlit desert night he kept waving a forlorn farewell.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER SIX
- Cliff Dweller Country
-
-
-Sandy had expected that the opening of bids for leases on thousands of
-acres in the Navajo reservation would be an exciting occasion, something
-like a country auction. Instead, he found it a great bore.
-
-Scores of bidders in their shirt sleeves lounged on hard straight-backed
-chairs in the stuffy meeting room of the Indian Service building, or
-chatted, smoked and told jokes in the corridors. Kenneth White and other
-representatives of the Indian Service sat behind a long redwood table,
-opened piles of envelopes, compared bids, held long whispered
-conferences with grave, leather-faced members of the Navajo Council and
-their advisers, and very occasionally handed down decisions.
-
-"The bid of $3,900 per acre made for 200 Navajo acres in San Juan
-County, northeast, southeast of Section 27-24 N-8 is accepted," White
-then would drone. Or: "A bid of $318 per acre for 125 acres of Section
-18, 42 north, 30 east is rejected by the Council because it's too low.
-Another bid may be made at the August meeting, if desired."
-
-After an hour of this, Sandy was counting the cracks in the floor,
-watching flies buzzing against the windowpanes, and wondering whether he
-dared ask Mr. Hall to be excused. He hesitated about doing this because
-the oilman was following the bidding with tense interest and making
-endless notes on the backs of old envelopes that he kept dragging out of
-his vest pockets.
-
-"Ssst!" Ralph whispered from the seat behind him. "This is murder. How
-about having a second breakfast with me?
-
-"We never should have come down here this month when our well needs
-watching every minute," the young Indian added after they had entered a
-nearly empty diner and ordered ham and eggs which neither of them really
-wanted. "The big companies have the big money, so they'll gobble up the
-best of the acreage, as usual. We poor boys will get some small tracts,
-if we're lucky. And I don't think John Hall's outfit is going to be
-lucky today."
-
-"Why is that?" Sandy asked.
-
-"Because most of our bids are for land that's under dispute between the
-Navajos and Hopis. They can't be accepted until some sort of settlement
-is reached between the tribes. I don't know why John keeps putting them
-in. Well--" Ralph finished his coffee and slid off the stool and onto
-his feet in one motion, like a big cat--"let's go back and learn the
-worst."
-
-There was a strange tenseness in the meeting room when they entered.
-Cavanaugh and White were standing facing each other across the table.
-All eyes were riveted on them and not a sound was being made by the
-onlookers.
-
-"Mr. Cavanaugh," the Indian Agent was saying, "neither the Service nor
-the Council can understand the meaning of the bids you have submitted.
-Some of them are for small tracts around the Pinta Dome area in Apache
-country where there has never been the slightest show of uranium-bearing
-ore. I don't want to tell you your business, but...."
-
-"Thank you for that, Mr. White," the redhaired giant growled. "Let the
-bids stand."
-
-"Very well. They are accepted. But this other bid--for a thousand acres
-in the bed of the San Juan River. You must have made an error. It is
-submitted directly to the United States government, instead of to the
-Navajo Council. Do you wish to correct it?"
-
-"I do not," snapped Cavanaugh.
-
-"But it cannot be accepted, since the stream is not navigable."
-
-"I challenge that statement, Mr. White. Under the law it cannot be
-rejected until the stream is _proved_ not to be navigable. If you won't
-accept it, let it stand as a prior claim. Is there anything else?"
-
-"Nothing else whatsoever," White answered mildly, but between stiff
-lips.
-
-"That suits me fine." Cavanaugh lit a long black cigar in defiance of a
-NO SMOKING sign, and strutted out. All heads turned to watch him go and
-a buzz of conversation started.
-
-"Wheeuw!" Ralph said in Sandy's ear. "That Pinta Dome area had a big
-helium strike some years back. Wells in that region are all closed in
-now, and the government is very hush-hush about the whole thing. What's
-Cavanaugh up to?"
-
-White picked up another bunch of bids and called Hall to the table.
-
-"You know, John, that bids on land in the disputed Navajo-Hopi area
-can't be accepted. I've told you so again and again. So has Chairman
-Paul Jones of the Navajo Council. Why do you keep submitting them?"
-
-"Because I'm a stubborn man, Ken." Hall grinned, tilting his gray head
-as he always did when he was being stubborn. "And because I think
-there's oil under those lands. And because I also think the tribes will
-get together soon. You just let my bids stand and tell me where I can
-locate Jones."
-
-"Hosteen Sandez, do you know where Mr. Jones is today?" White asked a
-lean old Indian who sat next to him.
-
-"Gone to Chinle," was the reply. "Two families there having
-dispute--with shotguns--about irrigation water. He trying to settle it
-before Navajo police come."
-
-"Thank you," said Hall. "I think we'll just mosey on up Chinle way."
-
-
-The jeep followed a good paved road as far west as Ganado, but when it
-turned north toward Chinle it got back once more on a trail made of
-stones from which none of the corners had been removed. They were
-driving through a wild country of mesas, washes and canyons which made
-conversation almost impossible.
-
-"What do you expect to gain by talking to Jones, John?" Donovan asked
-once when the road became smoother for a few miles.
-
-"I've been reading so much about summit conferences," Hall answered,
-"that it just occurred to me we might set one up out here. I want to
-suggest to Jones that we get some of the more important chiefs of the
-two tribes to meet out here in the desert somewhere, where there are no
-reporters or members of the Land Resources Association hanging around.
-I'll bet we could accomplish something."
-
-"Good idea," Donovan agreed. "If the tribes weren't continually stirred
-up by white men with axes to grind they'd soon be able to agree on that
-boundary line."
-
-"Don't mind me, palefaces," said Ralph as he spun the wheel to avoid a
-particularly hard-looking stone. "But I doubt it. I know both tribes,
-and...."
-
-Crash! The jeep bucked like a pinto pony and the motor roared.
-
-"There goes the second muffler in three months," Ralph shouted, pointing
-backward to a heap of junk on the trail.
-
-After that, all conversation was impossible until they pulled into the
-little town of Chinle--and learned at the trading post that Jones had
-already departed for Tuba City!
-
-"Say, John," Ralph said, as they were standing around waiting for a
-"shade tree mechanic" to dig a muffler that would fit out of a rusty
-pile of spare parts that leaned against his hogan, "we can't possibly
-drive back to the well tonight. Why don't we put up at the Canyon de
-Chelly camp so I can show Sandy where his great-uncle fit the Navajos?"
-
-"Good idea," said his employer. "You'll have time to show Sandy the
-cliff dwellings tomorrow, too. Chief Quail lives over in the Canyon de
-Chelly neighborhood. I want to sound him out on my idea for a summit
-conference."
-
-The sun was sinking in golden glory behind thousand-foot-high red
-sandstone buttes when they drove up to the Thunderbird guest ranch at
-the entrance of the Canyon de Chelly National Monument area. There they
-obtained two pleasant double rooms furnished after the rugged style of
-the Old West. When they had showered most of the dust off themselves,
-they gathered for a fine meal in the timbered mess hall. Then, in the
-cool of the mountain evening, they went over to a big campfire where a
-National Park Service Ranger was lecturing to a group of tourists.
-
-"These canyons housed one of the great centers of the Anasazi, or Basket
-Maker, civilization," the Ranger was explaining. "During the first
-several centuries of what we call the Christian era, Basket Makers
-occupied the whole drainage basin of the San Juan River. In addition to
-baskets, they made fine pottery and woven sandals, but they used dart
-throwers instead of the later bows and arrows. They built peculiar
-circular homes with floors sunk a foot or more into the ground. You'll
-see one of those tomorrow when you visit Mummy Cave.
-
-"When the Basket Makers vanished early in the eighth century, Pueblo
-Indians occupied the canyons. They built many-storied cliff dwellings
-over the old caves. They were farmers, but they also made beautiful
-pottery, cloth, stone tools, and ornaments of copper and gold.
-
-"Coronado, the Spanish Conquistador, may have been looking for this
-place when he came up from Mexico in 1540 to search for the fabulous
-riches of El Dorado and the Seven Cities of Cibola. He never found
-anything but thirst and death."
-
-"Were the Pueblos and Basket Makers related?" someone asked.
-
-"Yes, they were both Shoshones, like the modern Hopis," answered the
-Ranger as he threw more wood on the fire.
-
-"More distinguished ancestors for us Utes," Ralph whispered to Sandy.
-
-"Seven or eight centuries ago," the Ranger went on, "the Pueblos grouped
-their cliff dwellings into large 'apartment houses' situated on sites
-that could easily be defended. Tomorrow you'll visit White House,
-Antelope House, and Standing Cow, which are their finest structures. Let
-me warn you, though, that only people accustomed to conditions in the
-canyons should drive cars into them. The spring rains are late this
-year. There is very grave danger from flash floods and quicksand. In
-past years, many covered wagons and other vehicles drove into the
-canyons, got caught in a sudden storm, and were never found. I suggest
-you rent a car and guide from the Thunderbird Ranch operator."
-
-"What became of the Pueblos?" a tourist asked in an awed voice.
-
-"Nobody knows. Some people think a great drought hit this part of the
-country and they had to move to an area where there was more rainfall.
-Others believe that an enemy--possibly the fierce Aztecs--came up from
-Mexico and killed all the inhabitants. Terrible battles were fought
-here, we know, before the end. Sometimes Pueblo mummies with weapons
-still in their hands are found when a new cliff dwelling is explored.
-The Navajos say the whole place was deserted when they moved in, more
-than 200 years ago. Now, I want to tell you about the troubles that
-_they_ had with the Spaniards and Kit Carson."
-
-"We'd better go to bed, I think," Hall said to the others in his group.
-"Ralph knows a lot more about recent history than this fellow does.
-He'll tell you all about it in the morning."
-
-
-Sandy and Ralph crawled out of their bunks shortly after sunrise, but
-they found that Hall had already departed. A note under their door read:
-
-"Have located Chief Quail. Don and I have him cornered and are trying to
-talk him over to our side. You can use the jeep to explore the canyons
-this morning but be back by lunchtime, so we can hunt for Hopi Chief
-Ponytooth. He's up in this neighborhood, Chief Quail says. Happy
-cliff-hanging."
-
-After a brief argument with the Ranger, who repeated his warnings about
-flash floods and quicksand, Sandy and Ralph got under way.
-
-"I know this territory like the palm of my hand," the driller said as he
-drove carefully into dark gorges where the sun shone only around noon.
-"There really are four separate canyons, you'll notice. From right to
-left they're Monument Canyon, the Canyon de Chelly proper, Black Rock,
-and the famous Canyon del Muerto, which means Death Canyon. That's the
-one where the Navajos made their last stand against Kit Carson."
-
-"How did he ever drive them out of a place like this?" Sandy marveled as
-he stared up at towering cliffs that rose almost straight up from the
-grass-covered canyon floor. "One man on a cliff should have been able to
-stand off a regiment by rolling rocks down on their heads."
-
-"That's where your great-uncle was smarter than General Custer,"
-answered his guide. "He didn't try to attack. If he had, the Navajos
-would have massacred his troops. Instead, Kit sent small raiding parties
-of cavalrymen down the centers of the canyons where they were fairly
-safe from rocks and arrows. They had orders to shoot every sheep, goat
-and cow in sight. After they did that, they retreated and blocked all
-exits to the canyons."
-
-"And the braves and their families just stayed inside and starved?"
-Sandy was really shocked.
-
-"What else could they do? See that big blue-and-white picture of a cow
-drawn on the canyon wall over the cliff dwelling to your left? That's a
-sort of monument which the poor old Navajos made to remind them of their
-slaughtered herds. After they finished it, they all came out and
-surrendered."
-
-"Gee whiz!" was all that Sandy could think of to say.
-
-"We have time to explore just one cliff house," Ralph continued. "It
-might as well be Standing Cow. Come on."
-
-They climbed a swaying ladder to reach one of the dwellings. This had
-been restored by archaeologists and looked as though its Indian
-inhabitants had departed the night before, instead of a long 400 years
-ago. There was the loom on which they had woven their cloth. Graceful
-pottery with decorations in glaze was stacked in a corner. A bedboard
-rested on two timbers cemented into the rear wall.
-
-"These were de luxe apartments, probably occupied by the chief," Ralph
-explained. "They have one big drawback--no hallways. You have to go
-through the living quarters to get to the other rooms. Come back here
-and I'll show you one of their kivas, or ceremonial rooms."
-
-He led the way into a much larger cave that had a balcony overlooking a
-round hole some twenty feet across by six feet deep. Light filtered into
-the gloomy place through one small window in the cliff face.
-
-The driller turned a flashlight beam into the hole. Sandy saw that its
-bottom could be reached by steep stone stairways. A wide bench ran
-around the sides of this strange pit. In its center stood several stone
-tanks about the size of bathtubs.
-
-"When the cliff dwellers wanted to talk to their gods," said Ralph,
-"they climbed down into a kiva hole like this and stayed for days
-without eating, drinking or sleeping. They practiced a kind of
-self-hypnotism, I guess."
-
-"Maybe," Sandy guessed, "they just went down there to take their
-Saturday-night baths. I don't see any gods--idols, I mean."
-
-"These people didn't have idols--just those tub things," Ralph answered.
-For a long time he stood staring down into the kiva, as though he were
-trying to picture his dead-and-forgotten ancestors there, conducting
-their silent worship. "We'd better be getting back to the ranch," he
-said at last, shaking his handsome head as though to clear it of dreams.
-
-"That was a pretty grim thing Carson did to the Indians," Sandy said as
-they drove back to Thunderbird.
-
-"It was better than a massacre. Only twenty or so Navajos were actually
-killed by his troops, remember. And you should not forget, either, that
-Kit was acting under orders from Washington."
-
-"Those Nazi officers who killed innocent people in German concentration
-camps said they were acting under orders too," Sandy pointed out grimly.
-
-"Oh, but Carson never tried to excuse his actions. At first, he thought
-he was doing the right thing to move the tribe onto a fine new
-reservation. But as soon as he had herded several thousand of them over
-to Bosque Redondo on the Pecos River, he changed his mind. Bosque
-Redondo means Round Forest in Spanish, but he found there weren't more
-than half a dozen trees on the whole place, while good grazing grass was
-almost as rare. It was a hellhole and the Navajos hated it. They ran
-away or, if they weren't able to do that, they just sat down and pined.
-A thousand of them died there from hunger and homesickness.
-
-"So Carson climbed on a train, went to Washington, and told the Great
-White Father just what was happening. When he warned that all the
-Navajos at Bosque Redondo would be dead in a few years, nobody seemed to
-mind very much. 'Good Indian: dead Indian,' you know. When he added that
-the government was spending a million dollars a year just to help them
-die, a few ears pricked up. But when he said that half the Navajos had
-never left Arizona and that they were threatening to go on the warpath
-to help their imprisoned brothers, Carson got action. He was ordered to
-return the tribe to its original reservation--this one--and was given
-money to help them get a new start."
-
-"I'd like to tell Miss Gonzales what you just told me," said Sandy. "I
-don't want her to dislike me because she thinks my great-uncle was a
-monster."
-
-"Well, why don't you? Her school trailer is located only about twenty
-miles from our well. Drop in on her when you get a day off."
-
-"Gee, I'd like to, Ralph," said Sandy as they approached the ranch gate
-where Hall, Donovan and Chief Quail were waiting for them, "but she
-seemed pretty angry that night at the motel."
-
-"Kitty's a fine girl," Ralph answered slowly, "even though she tries to
-be more Navajo than the Navajos. Fact is, I'll let you in on a secret:
-My last oil royalty check from the wells in the Southern Ute reservation
-amounted to $12,000. When I get a few more of them in my bank account,
-so I can give her a big marriage gift, I'm going to ask my uncle to ask
-_her_ uncle if she'll have me for a husband."
-
-"What have uncles got to do with marriage?" Sandy stared at Ralph in
-amazement, realizing for the first time that he really was an Indian and
-had ways of doing things that were hard to understand.
-
-"It's just an old Navajo custom." Ralph grinned uncomfortably. "And that
-reminds me: If Kitty gets uppity about Carson again, you tell her I said
-to be nice or I'll ask my great-uncle to step on her great-uncle's
-shadow. That will make her behave!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- Back of Beyond
-
-
-After a hurried lunch that ended with flabby apple pie, as Sandy had
-discovered most lunches usually did in the Southwest, the five men
-climbed into Quail's pickup truck. (The Chief insisted that the jeep
-couldn't possibly travel the trails they would have to follow.) Then
-they set out for the wild Dot Klish Canyon area, to the northwest of
-Chinle, where the Navajo thought Chief Ponytooth and his wife were
-"squatting," as he put it.
-
-Ralph chose to sit on a box in the bed of the truck because, as he said
-frankly, "If I'm in the cab with the Chief, we'll quarrel."
-
-Sandy joined the driller on another box that was scantily padded with a
-piece of blanket. Soon both of them were hanging onto the truck body for
-dear life as they bumped and blundered over a road that made previous
-ones they had traveled seem like superhighways.
-
-Sometimes their way led through tall thickets of mesquite and briars
-that threatened to tear the clothes off their backs. Then they would
-ford a stream so deep that water splashed over them. The machine, though
-still fairly new, groaned and knocked like a Model T at the torture it
-was undergoing.
-
-"This territory is what Australians call 'back of beyond,'" Ralph
-shouted at one point as he dodged low-hanging tree branches. "We need a
-covered wagon."
-
-At another, when they all had to get out and push the machine from a
-gully into which it had slid, he made sarcastic remarks about the
-driving abilities of all unprintable Navajos.
-
-Once he wiped the streaming perspiration from his face and neck, pointed
-to a mass of black clouds in the west and muttered, "Thunderstorm
-weather. A good day to lie under a tree and take siesta." Mostly,
-though, the Ute gritted his teeth and kept silent as the pickup fought
-its lonely way across the fringes of the Painted Desert.
-
-It was midafternoon and the sticky heat was stifling when they reached
-the great box canyon where the Hopis were supposed to be living.
-
-"I don't like the feel of this place," Quail said as he stopped the
-truck on a high bank that overlooked the trout stream pouring out of a
-narrow cleft between two buttes. "Look at those thunder clouds piling
-up. I should not wish to lose my car in there."
-
-"_We_ don't matter, of course," Ralph grunted. "How far is it to
-Ponytooth's place?"
-
-"About half a mile, I think," the Navajo answered.
-
-"Then let's leave your precious hunk of junk out here and walk in."
-Ralph set off down a faint trail at a fast lope that the others found
-hard to match.
-
-Around a sharp bend in the canyon they came at last to a heap of
-sandstone ruins. The little group of circular pueblos looked as old as
-the surrounding hills. Most of the walls had crumbled or been knocked
-apart in some strange manner. Only one had a roof of pine or cottonwood
-beams, light poles and bunch grass. In front of it a tiny old woman sat
-smoking a long pipe.
-
-Her face, brown as chocolate, was a mass of wrinkles. But her black
-eyes, which peered out of the folds of a heavy wool blanket, or manta,
-were sharp with intelligence.
-
-She made no answer to their questions in English and Navajo. When Ralph
-spoke to her in the basic Shoshonean language, however, she pursed her
-lips and pointed up the canyon with them.
-
-"Ponytooth is probably up there hunting somewhere," Chief Quail said.
-"We'd better find him before it gets too dark."
-
-Half a mile farther up the stream they found the old Chief. He was
-stalking a jack rabbit with, of all things, a bow and arrows. Slanting
-rays of sunshine that broke through the gathering clouds showed that he
-was dressed in the ancient Hopi costume. It consisted of a woolen
-poncho, or blanket, with a hole cut in the center, through which he had
-thrust his white head, baggy trousers slit up to the knees on the sides,
-deerskin leggings wrapped round and round his spindly shanks, and
-beautifully woven sandals. Only his belt, which was mounted with large
-silver discs, showed that he was a person of importance.
-
-"I didn't know that clothing like that existed any more, except in
-museums," Ralph said softly.
-
-The Hopi shot the jack rabbit through the heart, retrieved his arrow,
-and came toward them, carrying the animal by its long ears. When Hall
-went forward, with outstretched hand, the Hopi showed no surprise
-whatever.
-
-"No spikum English mush," he said gravely in return to the oilman's
-greeting.
-
-Chief Quail tried him in Navajo--and got a cold stare in return.
-
-"I think I can make him understand what we want, if it's O.K. with you,
-John," said the driller.
-
-At a nod from Hall he spoke at great length in Shoshone clicks and
-gutturals.
-
-Chief Ponytooth listened, at first politely, then with a growing frown.
-At last he held up a hand and replied with a torrent of words. As he
-spoke, thunder rolled in the far distance.
-
-"He says," Ralph translated, "that he is an old man. Soon his body will
-be placed in a crevice in the rocks, and his spirit will go northward to
-join those of his ancestors at a place called Sipapu. Meanwhile,
-however, he has been ordered by the Hopi Council to live here in the
-ruins of Awatobi, a pueblo or village that was destroyed by the
-Spaniards hundreds of years ago because the tribe had killed all of
-their Christian missionaries.
-
-"Although he knows that the Navajos claim this territory as part of
-their reservation, he declares that it is part of Tusayan, an ancient
-province belonging to the Hopi and their cousins, the Moqui. So long as
-he stays here, he believes, neither Navajos nor palefaces will dare to
-steal this land."
-
-"Tell him we don't want his confounded desert," Hall said impatiently.
-"Tell him we won't kill a single jack rabbit or harm a piece of
-sagebrush. Try to make him understand that all we want to do is to
-remove oil from far beneath the ground. In exchange we will give his
-people money so they may build schools and hospitals."
-
-When this was translated, Ponytooth straightened his bent back and
-glared at them defiantly. His face, under its broad white hairband, took
-on a haughty grandeur. Then he spoke again, waving his skinny arms and
-beating his breast for emphasis.
-
-And the thunder rolled nearer with every sentence he uttered.
-
-"He says--" Ralph shrugged--"that neither the Navajos nor the palefaces
-have ever given his people anything. They have always taken things
-away--cattle, wheat, the spirits of young warriors. They are his enemies
-until the end of the world. He is weak and old now, but you can only
-take this land by killing him."
-
-A spatter of cold rain emphasized the Chief's meaning.
-
-"We had better leave this place," Quail said as he gripped Hall's arm.
-"It must be raining hard farther up the canyon."
-
-"Not yet," Hall snapped. "Ralph, tell the Chief that we understand how
-he feels and that we will go, if he wishes. But warn him that if he does
-not accept the fair offer we wish to make him, other men may come and
-take this land from him, as they took other things from his ancestors.
-Try to make him understand that we are his friends."
-
-The Chief understood the last English word.
-
-"Frens!" he screamed. "Frens! Frens! Frens!" In the rapidly gathering
-darkness the canyon walls echoed with his shouts. "Paleface, Navajo,
-never frens to Hopi!"
-
-Chief Ponytooth, last of the Pony Clan, burst into wild whoops of
-sarcastic laughter. At the same moment, thunder rolled deafeningly above
-their heads, lightning danced about the canyon walls like angry spirits,
-and the rain began coming down in bucketfuls.
-
-"Out!" yelled Chief Quail. In his excitement he forgot his careful
-grammar. "Water come. We die!"
-
-He spoke too late. A roaring sound had begun far up the canyon. Before
-they could move, it grew deafening. At the same time a five-foot wall of
-yellow water swept down upon them like an express train.
-
-After that, things happened too fast to be described. As he ran madly
-toward the canyon wall with the idea of climbing out of reach of the
-flash flood, Sandy slipped on a bank of wet clay and fell headlong.
-Ralph grabbed him by the collar and barely managed to drag him to
-safety.
-
-Hall let out a wild yell as the dry sandbank on which he had been
-standing a moment before absorbed water like a sponge, turned to
-quicksand, and began to suck at his legs. Just before the wall of water
-struck, Donovan snatched up a long branch and held it out. Hall grasped
-it and, in turn, was pulled to comparative safety.
-
-By this time the little trout stream had turned into a raging torrent. A
-great pine tree in its bed, roots torn loose by the tremendous sudden
-push of the water wall, came crashing down. A branch caught Ponytooth
-across the thighs and dragged him from sight beneath the flood.
-
-Chief Quail, who was nearest to the Hopi, acted instinctively. He
-plunged into the frothing, rock-filled water and fought it with all the
-power of his massive shoulders. A moment later he was tumbling
-downstream with the old man held tightly in his arms.
-
-While the others watched spellbound in the gathering darkness, the
-Navajo fought the cloudburst. Fifty yards downstream, he managed to hook
-a leg around a rock that still held firm. His face purple with effort,
-he finally succeeded in pulling his apparently lifeless burden to the
-top of a dry ledge.
-
-Almost as quickly as it had come, the flood subsided. Dripping, cold and
-shaken, the little party headed back toward the pueblo ruins. Chief
-Quail walked ahead, carrying the Hopi in his arms.
-
-An hour later Donovan rose from examining the Chief and looked across a
-campfire at the rest of them with a worried frown. The geologist had
-found Ponytooth's only apparent injury--a broken leg--and had set it
-with expert fingers. But the old man failed to return to full
-consciousness thereafter. He threw his arms about and shouted wildly.
-His cheeks burned with sudden fever. When his little brown wife crept to
-his side, he ordered her away in a frenzy.
-
-"I can't understand it," said Donovan. "So far as I can tell, he has no
-internal injuries. But the life is running out of him like water out of
-a sack. I'm afraid he may be dying."
-
-"He _is_ dying," Ralph spoke up softly. "I've been listening to his
-ravings. He thinks he has offended the water spirits by even talking to
-palefaces and a Navajo and a Ute about the tribe's sacred boundary line.
-He thinks he must die to make his peace with the spirits. And so, he
-_will_ die before the night is out."
-
-"Hosteen Quail," said Hall, "Navajo chiefs are medicine men as well,
-aren't they? Can't you paint a sand picture or something, and cure
-Ponytooth of his delusion?"
-
-"No," the Chief answered sadly. "Navajo magic works only for Navajos."
-
-"Let me try," Ralph said suddenly. He gripped the Hopi's shoulder to get
-his dazed attention, and spoke to him for a long time in Shoshonean. The
-old man shook his head back and forth in disagreement, but he stopped
-picking at the moth-eaten buffalo robe which Donovan had thrown over
-him.
-
-"I told him that the water spirits were not angry," the Ute said at
-last. "He said I lied. I told him we are all his friends. He said to
-prove it. So I told him I would prove it by singing him well." Ralph
-stood up slowly and paced around the fire three times in a
-counterclockwise direction. "My father was a medicine man," he went on.
-"As a boy I watched him sing people well, but I never was allowed to try
-it, of course.... Well, here goes.... Wish me luck, Hosteen Quail."
-
-He leaned his head back against the ruined pueblo wall for a moment, as
-though gathering strength from the ancient building. Then he began to
-sing in his rich baritone.
-
-At first the chant went slowly, slowly, like the beat of buffalo hoofs
-on the open prairie. Then, as Sandy held his breath to listen, the
-rhythm became faster. The words meant nothing to the boy, but somehow
-they painted pictures in his mind: A wild charge of naked Indian
-horsemen, dying in a hopeless effort to capture a fort from which white
-rifle smoke wreathed. The thundering rapids of some great northern
-river. Chirping of treetoads in the spring. A love song on some distant
-mesa. A bird call. The silence of a summer night....
-
-"There!" Ralph whispered at last, his broad face dripping sweat.
-
-He reached under Ponytooth's robe and fumbled there for several moments.
-Almost, he seemed to be withdrawing some object from the old man's
-body--something red and wet--like a fingernail!
-
-The Hopi gave a long sigh. "Frens," he murmured as he sank into peaceful
-slumber.
-
-"He'll be all right now," said the Ute, "providing we take him to the
-hospital at Lukachukai quick to get that compound fracture fixed."
-
-He stumbled out into the darkness, which now was spangled with stars.
-
-Her eyes round with faith and wonder, the little brown woman followed
-him. She was carrying a pot of steaming coffee.
-
-
-The less said about that awful midnight drive to Lukachukai, the better.
-Hall got them there somehow, while Chief Quail and Ralph held Ponytooth
-in their arms during the entire journey to protect his leg.
-
-Then they had to go all the way back to Chinle for the jeep, but not
-before Chief Quail had made a detour to toss a piece of yellow carnotite
-ore on the wishing pile which stood near the entrance to Canyon de
-Chelly.
-
-"It's not that I like Hopis any better than I do Utes," he said
-shamefacedly. "It's just that I want Ponytooth's leg to get well quick
-so we can settle the boundary dispute."
-
-"Well, here, I'll chuck something on your silly pile, too." Ralph
-twisted a ring off his finger and tossed it onto the big mound of
-stones. "Me Boy Scout. Always do good turn." But he turned away so the
-others couldn't see his face.
-
-They got a few hours' sleep at Thunderbird, but a much-relayed telegram
-dragged them out of bed before sunup. It was from Jack Boyd, the diesel
-engine man at the well, and it read:
-
- SHE'S ACTING UP STOP HAVE HER STUFFED FULL OF MUD STOP HURRY
-
-More dead than alive, they pulled onto Hall's property to find that
-things had calmed down. Drilling was proceeding as usual, in fact, and
-Boyd was covered with embarrassment.
-
-As Ralph and Sandy stood outside the bunk trailer, almost too tired to
-go in and take their clothes off, the driller said lazily, "See that big
-mountain there to the north? What does it remind you of?"
-
-Sandy blinked the sleep out of his eyes and stared. The mountain in
-question had a big round cliff at one end, a long high ridge in its
-center, two branching ridges farther along, and sharply pointed cliffs
-at its other end.
-
-"Why," he said at last, "it looks like a man lying on his back."
-
-"Good boy. That's what it is." Ralph grinned. "That mountain is called
-the Sleeping Ute. It's supposed to be a great warrior who will awake
-some day, to unite all the Indians.... And do you know what?"
-
-"What?" Sandy yawned mightily.
-
-"I thought I saw his big toe wiggle just a minute ago."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- Cavanaugh Shows His Colors
-
-
-Long before sunup, the screaming of a siren on the rig brought off-duty
-crewmen pouring out of their bunks in all stages of undress. When Sandy
-arrived at the brightly lighted well, the night foreman was already
-halfway through his report to Hall, Salmon and Donovan.
-
-"She started rumblin' an' kickin' at the drillpipe just like she did
-yesterday." The fat, oil-smeared man was puffing. "I stepped up the mud
-pressure an' pulled the siren. She's calmed down now, but the blowout
-preventers are having all they can do to hold her."
-
-"Good boy," said Hall. "If you had pulled the siren and waited for
-orders we might have a gusher on our hands and pieces of derrick flying
-in all directions. How far down are we?"
-
-"Little over 5,500 feet, last time I checked."
-
-"That's the Gallup Pay." Donovan was dancing with excitement. "I knew
-we'd hit it. Let's take a sample and see what we've got."
-
-The big old diesel roared for a moment. It dragged a bar of iron called
-a "kelly" out of the square hole in the turntable until the top of the
-first section of drillpipe appeared.
-
-After the pipe had been securely locked in the turntable so that it
-could neither fall back into the well nor shoot upward if the
-underground pressure increased suddenly, two floormen clamped their
-six-foot-long tongs, or monkey wrenches, around the kelly and unscrewed
-it from the pipe with great care.
-
-They had eased it off only two or three turns when a frothy mixture with
-the foul odor of rotten eggs began to squirt from between kelly and
-pipe.
-
-Donovan caught some of this in his cupped hands. He smelled it, rubbed
-it between his fingers and then _tasted_ it.
-
-"Beautiful!" the geologist crooned. "This is good, high-gravity oil. The
-sulphur content is high, as you can smell, but refiners know how to take
-that out. I'll tell you more when I've run a full analysis, but it sure
-looks as if we've licked the law of averages. Two flowing wells in two
-tries is 'way above par."
-
-The crewmen, who had been holding their breaths for his verdict, let out
-wild rebel yells and spun their battered hats into the air. Jack Boyd
-and the night foreman hoisted Hall on their shoulders and marched him
-around the derrick in triumph.
-
-"All right, fellows," the oilman shouted to stop the riot. "You all get
-new hats, new shoes and bonuses!" As they started another cheer he
-mounted the drill platform and held up his hand for attention.
-
-"But I'm going to ask you not to wear those hats and shoes, or bank your
-bonuses, for a few weeks yet. This has got to be a tight well."
-
-"Glory, Mr. Hall," somebody called from the edge of the crowd. "No
-celebration? That's a lot to ask."
-
-"I know it is, Bill. But look at it this way: With this well under my
-belt, I can get a big bank loan and hire several more rigs to work this
-property. That will take me at least a month. If news gets out about
-this strike in the meantime, what will happen?"
-
-"Cavanaugh and the oil companies that hold adjoining leases will rush in
-and drill offset wells just outside your boundaries before you can get
-started," Bill answered glumly. "They'll drain most of the oil out from
-under your land, like they did up at Cortez last year."
-
-"Right!" said Hall. "I know things have been tough these last few
-months. I've had to hold up your pay several times, to make ends meet.
-But you all hold stock in our company. If you hang on a little longer,
-we'll all be in clover. So I'm sure you'll keep your mouths shut when
-the spies come prowling, as they will."
-
-A roar of agreement went up, but then someone said, "How about the kid?
-He don't own no stock, does he?"
-
-"I know Sandy, and I know his dad," Hall answered. "Also, his bonus is
-going to be twenty shares of stock. I'll vouch for him." He slapped the
-surprised boy on the back and added, "All right, gang. Back to work.
-We'll pull the string and get the well cemented and closed in. Then
-we'll shut down here till I get that bank loan arranged. Some of you
-have vacations coming. Take them now. Don will put the rest of you to
-work running surveys and drilling test wells on our downriver lease.
-Tell any snoopers that John Hall ran out of cash--which is no lie. I
-closed out my balance at Farmington last week so I could meet the
-payroll!"
-
-After the drillpipe was withdrawn and stacked, the combined crews spent
-the rest of the day mixing an untold number of bags of cement with
-water. This mixture was pumped down the well to replace the mud that had
-filled it to the brim.
-
-Once, when they heard a plane approaching, most of the men faded into
-the trailers while the others tried to look as unbusy as possible. The
-ship was Cavanaugh's Bonanza! It circled twice and roared away.
-
-When Salmon estimated that the hole was full of cement, the diesel began
-pumping mud again. This forced the cement out of the well and up to the
-surface between the earth walls and the heavy steel casing inside which
-the drillpipe had rotated.
-
-"How do you ever reach the oil again?" Sandy asked when the operation
-was completed.
-
-"Easy." Ralph yawned tiredly. "After the cement has hardened, we'll pump
-out the mud. That will leave a cement plug twenty feet or so thick in
-the well bottom to keep the pressure under control. When we want to
-start producing, we just drill through the plug and away we go. Say, why
-don't you go to bed instead of asking foolish questions? You look as if
-you had been dragged through a dustbin."
-
-"I was just thinking, Ralph. Since we'll be having some time off, why
-don't we visit Miss Gonzales' school?"
-
-"You go," yawned the driller. "I've got to get this well capped good and
-tight tomorrow and then drive to Farmington and try to rent a portable
-test rig--on the cuff. I'm going to act so poor-boyish that it will
-break your heart. Casehardened drillers will weep in their beer when
-they hear my tale of woe."
-
-"Is that exactly honest?" Sandy tried to smooth down his cement-whitened
-cowlick, as he always did when he was thinking hard. "I mean--we _have_
-struck oil."
-
-"We'll have struck it for somebody else's benefit if we don't play our
-cards close to our chests and keep a close guard over our well _and_ our
-tongues." Ralph looked at him shrewdly. "You'll see what I mean in a day
-or two. And here's some good advice: Watch your step, Sandy. There are
-some mighty curly wolves in this oil game. Don't try playing Red Riding
-Hood with them."
-
-
-Learning that Jack Boyd was one of the men assigned to guard the well
-from all intruders, Sandy borrowed the engine man's car the next day and
-headed in the direction of Kitty's school. The going was rough, as
-usual, but the machine was equipped with a heavy-duty transmission and
-rear axle, double shock absorbers, an oversized gasoline tank and other
-features which defied the chuckholes. He made good time and found the
-school trailer during the noon recess.
-
-Twenty Navajo children of all ages were playing what looked like a fast
-game of baseball as he drove up. They flew into the trailer like a flock
-of frightened chickens, and came out trying to hide behind their
-teacher's skirts.
-
-Kitty greeted her visitor with considerable reserve, but when he told
-her that Ralph had asked him to come, she became much more friendly and
-invited him to share her lunch.
-
-He found that the roomy trailer was well equipped for its purpose, with
-plenty of desks, books, a blackboard and other facilities. It was parked
-under tall pine trees near the first brook that he had found since he
-left the well.
-
-"A good place to study," he said to make conversation as he looked out
-of the big windows at the nearby Chuska Mountains.
-
-"But it's the shower that attracts the children at first," she admitted.
-"I have a little pump in the creek, you see, so we have all the water in
-the world. They've never seen anything like it. Most of them live in
-gloomy hogans where the only light comes through the door and the smoke
-hole in the center of the room, and where water has to be brought in in
-buckets. _Hot_ water is the greatest luxury they've ever known. They'd
-stay under the shower all day long, except that they are so eager to
-learn their lessons."
-
-"Navajos really like to study?" He tried to keep the surprise out of his
-voice.
-
-"Of course they do. They're bright as silver dollars. Now that they have
-schools, they're going to surprise everybody with the speed at which
-they learn."
-
-"Do you ever teach them about Kit Carson?" he took the plunge.
-
-"Why ..." she stared at him uncertainly. "I mention his name when I have
-to."
-
-"I think you're being prejudiced." Sandy smoothed his cowlick
-desperately. Would she throw him out of the trailer for being so bold?
-
-"So that's why you came!" She startled him by bursting into a merry peal
-of laughter. "That was brave, after the--after the nasty way I treated
-you at Farmington. Very well, teacher. Tell me why you think Great-uncle
-Kit was a friend of the Navajos."
-
-Sandy began haltingly, but soon warmed to his subject while the Navajo
-children came in from their play, gathered around him, and listened
-intently. Remembering old stories his mother had told him, Sandy related
-how Kit, an undersized, sickly boy of fifteen, had learned to make
-saddles so he could get a job with a wagon train that was heading west
-from his home town in Missouri.
-
-He went on to tell how his great-uncle had overcome endless hardships to
-become famous as a hunter, trapper and scout with Frmont's expedition.
-He described how Kit had driven a flock of 6,500 sheep across the
-Rockies to prevent a famine that threatened the early settlers in
-California. He explained the happy ending to the blockade of the Navajos
-in the Canyon de Chelly, and wound up by telling how Carson had left his
-deathbed to go to Washington and make one more plea for government help
-for "his Indians."
-
-"That's about all," he concluded, "except that a town and a river in
-Nevada, and an oil field in New Mexico are named after Kit Carson. He
-_must_ have been a good man."
-
-"Perhaps he was," the girl said softly while her pupils smiled and
-nodded their dark heads. "I'll be kinder to him when I teach a history
-lesson after this. He sounds a lot nicer than some of the people I have
-met recently. That Mr. Cavanaugh, for instance...." She turned up her
-snub nose and let her voice trail off.
-
-"Cavanaugh!" Sandy cried. "Has he been prowling around here too?"
-
-"Yes. He drove through here this morning in a truck. Said he was making
-some sort of ax minerals survey of school lands. Also said he'd stop by
-again after school. Will you stay here until he has gone, Mr. Cars--Mr.
-Steele? I can't bear him."
-
-"I will if you'll call me Sandy," the boy said bashfully.
-
-"All right, Sandy. And you may call me Kitty."
-
-"Cavanaugh certainly gets around," Sandy said. "Did he have anyone with
-him?"
-
-"Yes, a young man who seemed to worship the ground he walked on. _He_
-was nice enough, but, well, sort of dewy-eyed, if you know what I mean."
-
-"I know," Sandy grunted, "and not quite dry behind the ears, either.
-That was Pepper March."
-
-"Well, time to get classes started." Kitty jumped up with a flutter of
-skirts and shooed her children to their desks. For the next two hours,
-while Sandy listened admiringly, she was an efficient, understanding
-schoolma'am. As he followed the recitation he had to admit that, as she
-had said, the Navajo children were "bright as silver dollars." They
-displayed an eagerness to learn that almost frightened him. Very few
-youngsters showed that hunger for knowledge back at Valley View High.
-
-That got him to thinking about poor old Quiz. How he would have enjoyed
-this visit. What tough luck! But maybe he'd have a chance to get some
-sort of line on Cavanaugh, the big lug.
-
-The roar of an approaching truck jerked him out of his reverie. Kitty
-quickly dismissed her pupils and she and Sandy were alone in the trailer
-when Cavanaugh strode in, closely pursued by Pepper.
-
-"Oh!" The big man frowned at the unexpected visitor until Pepper rushed
-forward, shouting Sandy's name, and shook hands as though his school
-rival were the best friend he had in the world.
-
-Then Cavanaugh turned on a smile as bright as a neon sign and insisted
-on shaking hands too.
-
-"I've heard a lot about you from Pepper," he boomed. "Wish you were on
-my team instead of John Hall's. Say! I heard you had a bit of luck at
-your well. Is that right?"
-
-"Luck?" Sandy stammered, wondering how on earth he was going to get out
-of this one.
-
-"Oh, sure. Everybody knows about the telegram that brought you all
-tearing back from Chinle. Did the well come in?"
-
-"It.... We...." Sandy almost swallowed his Adam's apple and his face
-went white under its tan. What on earth could he say?
-
-Cavanaugh misunderstood the reason for his hesitation and lost his
-momentary advantage by rushing on.
-
-"Oh, come on, son." He pounded the boy's shoulder with a great show of
-affection. "You don't owe a thing to that old skinflint Hall. Give me
-the real lowdown on the well and I'll make it very much worth your
-while."
-
-Sandy jerked away, his fists clenched in fury, but Kitty stepped quickly
-between him and his tormentor.
-
-"Mr. Cavanaugh," she said in a voice that dripped ice water, "you're new
-around the oil regions, aren't you?"
-
-"What do you mean?" The electronics man pulled in his dimpled chin as
-though the girl had slapped him.
-
-"Out here in the Southwest," she said slowly, "folks don't pry into
-other folks' business if they know what's good for them."
-
-"Well.... I.... You...." His face turned scarlet. "You can't talk to
-me...."
-
-"I can, and will." Her black eyes flashed fire. "Your truck is
-trespassing on school property belonging to the state of Utah. Remove it
-at once!"
-
-Cavanaugh opened and closed his mouth several times, like a fish out of
-water.
-
-"You'll both be sorry for this," he gritted like a stage villain. "Come
-along, Pepper."
-
-"Do you...." Sandy spoke through a dry throat after Cavanaugh's truck
-had thundered away. "Kitty, do you live here in the trailer?"
-
-"Why, of course." She looked at him oddly. "There's not the slightest
-danger."
-
-"I'm not so sure, now. Couldn't you stay with one of the Navajo families
-in the neighborhood for a while?"
-
-"Then who would protect the school? It's more important than I am."
-
-"But...."
-
-"Don't you worry, Sandy Carson Steele." She patted his arm. "The Navajos
-are my friends, and they're no friends of Cavanaugh. I'll tell them
-what's happened and they'll take good care of me. Now you had better get
-back to the well as fast as you can. The roads are completely impossible
-after dark."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER NINE
- Fighting Fire with Fire
-
-
-When he got back to the well Sandy found that Hall had already set out
-on his fund-raising campaign while Donovan had locked himself in his
-trailer laboratory and was running analyses on oil samples he had taken
-before the cement was poured. Ralph had just finished welding a heavy
-cap to the top of the casing.
-
-"I defy anybody to find out what's down there until we're ready to let
-them know," he said as he grinned at the tired and dirty boy. The grin
-changed to a frown. "What have you been up to this time, Sandy? You look
-like something the cat refused to drag in!"
-
-When he learned about the events at Kitty's school, the driller nodded
-grimly.
-
-"I warned you about the curly wolves," he said. "Go get cleaned up and
-have some supper. Then come over to the lab. We'll talk to Don about
-this."
-
-The geologist smoked thoughtfully while Sandy reported. Then he knocked
-out his pipe and said, "He's impossible."
-
-"Who's impossible?" Ralph asked.
-
-"This man Cavanaugh. No man can spread himself as thin as he has been
-doing. Look at it this way." He held up a long finger stained with
-chemicals. "First, he's bidding for helium leases on land where he
-wouldn't be allowed to drill. Second--" another finger went up--"he's
-bidding for uranium leases although the government isn't buying ore from
-companies that don't have mills. Third, he's spying on our well. Fourth,
-he's trying to lease land in the disputed San Juan River bed. Fifth,
-he's prospecting on school lands without asking anyone's permission.
-Hmmm! I'll run out of fingers pretty soon. Sixth, he's peddling
-electronic exploration equipment that isn't worth a hoot when used by
-itself. Seventh, he's operating an unlicensed light beam communications
-network. Eighth--and here's something I learned when I drove over to
-Farmington with John and we called Lukachukai to find out how Chief
-Ponytooth is getting on--Cavanaugh flew down there yesterday and almost
-pulled the hospital apart trying to get permission to talk to the old
-man."
-
-"That means he hopes to get in on the ground floor if the Navajos and
-Hopis settle their dispute," said Ralph.
-
-"Either that or he wants to hurt John by convincing the Chief that the
-tribes shouldn't get together."
-
-"How is the Chief feeling?" Sandy asked.
-
-"Just fine, the nurse told me. He's tough as shoe leather. Now, is there
-anything else about Cavanaugh's activities that we should consider?"
-
-"Why does he work day and night to convince people that he's a heel?"
-Ralph contributed.
-
-"Quiz thinks there's something wrong with the football stories he's
-always telling," said Sandy.
-
-"All right," Donovan went on thoughtfully. "I suggest that a lot of the
-things Cavanaugh is doing are meant to be camouflage. He's throwing up
-some sort of smoke screen to get people confused about his true
-intentions. And, since we're the ones most likely to get hurt by
-whatever he's really up to, I also think we had better do a little
-investigating. Does either of you have any suggestions?"
-
-"If he were sending up smoke signals instead of talking on a light beam,
-I'll bet I could soon find out," the Indian said.
-
-"That's an excellent idea, Ralph." The geologist fired up his pipe and
-sent clouds of smoke billowing through the crowded lab. "Eavesdroppers
-never hear anything good about themselves, they say. Nevertheless, I
-think we should fight fire with fire by listening in on him and learning
-the worst."
-
-"But how _can_ we listen in?" Sandy objected. "Even if we got high
-enough to intercept his beam--in a helicopter, let's say--he would know
-something had gone wrong when his receiving station didn't reply. He'd
-stop talking."
-
-"There's another way to go about it," Donovan replied. "I'm a pretty
-good geophysicist as well as a geologist, Sandy. I have to be out here,
-where I may go out looking for oil and find a uranium lode if I keep my
-eyes peeled and my Geiger counter turned on.
-
-"Over on that table--" he nodded toward a small electric furnace and a
-collection of retorts, chemicals and test tubes on one corner of his
-work bench--"I have equipment so sensitive that I can burn the branch of
-a pine tree, or even a bunch of loco weed and find out whether the roots
-of that tree or weed reach down into a uranium ore deposit. With it, I
-can detect in the ash as little as one part in a million of any
-radioactive ore the plant has sucked up from underground in its sap.
-Which reminds me that any time you run across a patch of loco weed, let
-me know immediately. The poisonous stuff seems to like to grow on ground
-in the vicinity of uranium.
-
-"All right. Any physicist understands the principles of electronics, the
-properties of light, and so on, doesn't he?"
-
-Sandy nodded with growing excitement.
-
-"Also, you may have heard that the FBI has an electronic gadget so
-sensitive that it can eavesdrop on the conversations of crooks, even
-though they may be sitting in a boat half a mile from shore."
-
-"I'll bet the Shoshonean water spirits take a dim view of that," said
-Ralph, grinning.
-
-Donovan waved him to silence with his pipe and continued.
-
-"Now my guess is that Cavanaugh is using a lot of power from a portable
-generator to produce a beam bright enough to be seen a hundred or so
-miles away. And it's a lot easier for him to modulate that current so it
-will modulate the beam than to use revolving mirrors or some other
-mechanical means to do the job. There is bound to be considerable
-leakage in a circuit of that kind. I think I can go to one of the radio
-supply stores in Farmington tomorrow and pick up enough parts to make an
-electronic 'ear' that can tune in on that leakage if we get it within a
-hundred feet of Cavanaugh's transmitter."
-
-"Sherlock Donovan," said Ralph, "I take off my hat to you."
-
-
-The haywire "ear" that Donovan built during the next several days with
-what little assistance Sandy was able to supply didn't look like much.
-It was just a collection of transistors, fixed and variable condensers,
-coils and verniers mounted on an old breadboard. But it had the
-advantage of being light and portable. And, when they tried it out with
-the help of their radio receiving set, it worked!
-
-They found that, with the set's loudspeaker disconnected, they could
-place their gadget several hundred feet away and hear the programs
-perfectly, either on the short-wave or regular broadcasting channels.
-
-"That does it," Donovan finally said after a careful series of night
-tests. "We don't know the frequency that Cavanaugh is using as a
-modulator, but this thing is flexible enough to tune in on practically
-any wave band. Now the question becomes, when do we try it out?"
-
-"Why not right now?" Ralph asked.
-
-"Boyd has gone in to town, so I'm in charge of keeping an eye on the
-well," said the geologist. "I can't go with you tonight."
-
-"Sandy and I can handle it," said the driller. "We'll take the jeep. If
-we get in a jam we'll send up a rocket or something."
-
-On the slow, twenty-mile drive to Elbow Rock, Ralph spun old tales about
-Ute scouting expeditions and buffalo hunts, but Sandy scarcely listened.
-He was feeling miserable, and wished for the first time that he was back
-home in Valley View.
-
-"You don't like what we're doing, do you?" Ralph said at last.
-
-"Well, gee. Eavesdropping seems sort of sneaking."
-
-"I know it does, but don't forget that we're dealing with a sneak. Tell
-you what: you stay in the car. I'll take the ear in."
-
-"No," Sandy said firmly. "I'll do anything I can to help Mr. Hall.
-Besides, I helped build the ear and know just how it works. I'll carry
-it."
-
-They parked as close to Cavanaugh's brightly lighted trailer as they
-dared. Then Sandy strapped the detector on his chest and walked slowly
-up the mountain in darkness so intense and silent that it could almost
-be felt. Remembering the lay of the land from the time that he and Quiz
-had visited the spot with Pepper, he managed to stay mostly on the
-trail.
-
-He was still several hundred yards from the trailer when the night
-exploded in a blare of savage noise. Several large dogs had started
-baying furiously near the trailer. A door opened. Cavanaugh shouted
-angrily at a pack of long-legged animals that leaped and whined in the
-shaft of light.
-
-When quiet had been restored, Sandy inched forward once more. But it was
-no use. The chorus of barks rose louder than before and several of the
-dogs started in his direction. With mixed emotions of annoyance and
-relief, he returned to the jeep and reported.
-
-"Dogs!" Ralph growled. "That means Cavanaugh really has something to
-hide. What did they look like?"
-
-"They had long legs, sharp noses and big white teeth."
-
-"Doberman pinschers, I'll bet. Say! Tim Robbins breeds Dobermans over in
-Bluff. They make better sheep tenders than shepherds, he claims. Let's
-pay him a visit, even if it is late." He started the jeep.
-
-"What are you planning to do?" Sandy asked sharply.
-
-"If Utes could behave like buffalo, there's no reason why I can't be a
-dog," Ralph answered.
-
-"But you don't have a dog skin," Sandy objected.
-
-"I'm going to get one."
-
-Old man Robbins was in bed when they arrived at his home on the
-outskirts of the little mining town. He came downstairs in his
-nightshirt when he recognized Ralph's voice, made coffee for his
-visitors, and listened to their request without surprise.
-
-"Why, sure, I've got a few skins," he said. "Here's one that belonged to
-poor Maisie. She died of distemper last year. I was going to upholster a
-chair with her, but you can have her for a dollar."
-
-"Mind if I take a look around your runways and kennels, Dad?" Ralph
-asked.
-
-"Go ahead, but don't get yourself bit, young feller." The old man shook
-his head at the strange ways of all Indians.
-
-Five minutes later they were headed back toward Elbow Rock.
-
-"Phooey!" said Sandy. "You smell like dog, all right."
-
-"I rolled around a bit in the kennels." Ralph's grin was just visible in
-the light from the dash bulb. "Now I've got to start thinking like a
-dog. Don't bother me, human!"
-
-When they arrived at their destination the driller took a brief lesson
-in the operation of the ear, slipped its harness over his shoulders, and
-draped Maisie's hide around his hips.
-
-"Keep your fingers crossed and say a prayer to the water spirits," he
-whispered just before he faded into the velvety darkness.
-
-For long moments Sandy held his breath, expecting a renewal of that wild
-barking. But it didn't come. High on the Elbow Rock the aluminum trailer
-glowed undisturbed in the soft light pouring from its picture windows.
-
-A trout, leaping in the stream nearby, caused the boy to start
-violently. He tried to relax but that only made him listen harder. Once
-he thought he heard a strain of music coming from the trailer. Hours
-later, it seemed, an owl's hoot made his hair stir on his scalp. He
-smoothed down his cowlick and then gripped the wheel of the car with
-both hands to stop their trembling. What if Dobermans didn't always bark
-before they attacked? What if Ralph was up there....
-
-"I'm back."
-
-Sandy almost yelled with relief as his friend materialized out of
-nowhere and climbed nonchalantly into the car. "Wha ... what happened?"
-gasped the boy, gripping the Indian's arm to see if he really was real.
-"You fooled the dogs?"
-
-"Nothing happened. And your little friends never batted an eyelash. I'm
-good, I guess." He removed the skin and tossed it into the rear of the
-jeep.
-
-"What do you mean, nothing happened? Didn't the ear work?"
-
-"It worked perfectly." He started the motor and jammed the car into
-gear.
-
-"What did you hear?"
-
-"Music," said the Ute disgustedly. "Highbrow music. Bach and stuff."
-
-"Was it code of some kind?"
-
-"Nah!" Ralph spat into the night. "Your friend Pepper would say, 'Come
-in, Gallup. I've got something here that you'd like: the umpteenth
-symphony by so-and-so.' Then he'd play a record and say, 'How did that
-sound, Gallup?' And Gallup would answer, 'Clear as a bell, kid. Keep it
-up.' Or Window Rock trailer would come in, ask for a Belafonte number,
-and then say it was fuzzy and to sharpen up the beam. Craziest
-performance I ever heard."
-
-"Maybe they're just lonesome, way up here," Sandy said with great
-relief.
-
-"Maybe. But it's a mighty expensive way to be lonesome."
-
-"Or they could be testing," the boy went on with less assurance.
-
-"That sounds more like it."
-
-"Or they're killing time while they wait for a message of some kind?"
-
-"Now you're cooking with LP gas. The question remains: where is that
-message going to come from? I don't like this business, Sandy. It gets
-screwier. I wish we could monitor his station every night, but that's
-impossible, of course. Well, at least we know our ear works and that
-Cavanaugh keeps a kennel. I wonder what John and Don will make of this
-one."
-
-"When will Mr. Hall be back?" Sandy was glad for a chance to change the
-subject.
-
-"Next week, I think. Keep this under your hat, but he has got his loan,
-and has flown down to Houston to put some more rigs under contract.
-Also, I wangled a portable drill rig when I was in Farmington today.
-That means we'll soon be heading for the other lease to run some
-surveys. And _that's_ a job that separates the men from the boys, I can
-tell you."
-
-"After what happened tonight I feel as if I'd already been separated."
-Sandy yawned. "Gee, don't oilmen ever get any sleep?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TEN
- Pepper Makes a Play
-
-
-A huge truck carrying a light folding drill rig and motor rumbled into
-camp from Farmington two days after the Elbow Rock episode. Donovan then
-set about organizing an exploration crew. Since the need for secrecy had
-lessened, only five of the older men were selected to act as a token
-guard for the property. Ten others, who had had experience in survey
-work, were directed to take tarpaulins off the long-unused instrument
-and "shooting" trucks, tune up their motors, and get the trailers set
-for travel. After Ralph had checked every item on the rented truck and
-Donovan had made sure that his seismograph, magnetometer, gravimeter and
-other scientific apparatus were all in perfect working order, the little
-caravan rolled westward toward Hall's other San Juan River lease.
-
-"We may be going on a wild-goose chase," the geologist told Sandy, who
-was riding with him in the jeep that now had the laboratory in tow. "I
-had an aerial survey run on the property last fall. It shows one
-anticline that _may_ contain oil, but I'll have to do a lot of surface
-work before I recommend that John spends money on a wildcat well."
-
-"How do you make an aerial survey, Mr. Donovan?"
-
-"I'd like you to call me Don, if you will, Sandy," the geologist said.
-"And you ought to call John by his first name, too. Oilmen don't go in
-for formality after they get acquainted."
-
-"Yes, sir ... Mr.--Don, I mean." Sandy felt a warm glow at this mark of
-friendship.
-
-"One method of making an aerial survey is by means of photographs taken
-from a plane or helicopter," the geologist explained. "A stereoscopic
-color camera is used to provide a true three-dimensional picture of the
-area in which you are interested. Such photographs show the pitch and
-strike of surface rock strata and give you some idea of what formations
-lie beneath them. In addition, prospectors use an airborne magnetometer.
-You know what a magnetometer is, don't you?"
-
-"It measures small differences in the earth's magnetic field."
-
-"Right! I see that you listened when your dad talked about geology.
-Well, you fly a magnetometer back and forth in a checkerboard pattern
-over any area where photographs have shown rock formations favorable for
-oil deposits. Heavy basement strata are more magnetic than the
-sedimentary rocks that cover them. So, when those igneous basement rocks
-bulge toward the surface of the earth, your magnetometer reading goes
-up. That gives you a double check because, if the basement bulges, the
-sedimentary rocks that may contain oil have to bulge too. And such a
-bulge, or anticline, may trap that oil in big enough quantities to make
-it worth your while to drill for it.
-
-"Then, if your money holds out--aerial surveys cost a young fortune--you
-may run a triple check with a scintillation counter to see whether
-there's a radiation halo around the anticline. One complication with
-that is that you have to remove the radium dials from the instrument
-panel of your plane to keep leakage from interfering with your
-scintillation readings."
-
-A loud honking from the rear of the column caused Donovan to stop the
-jeep. Going back, they found that the new drill truck had slipped into a
-ditch and was teetering dangerously.
-
-Although they had been traveling through such wild and arid country that
-it seemed impossible that even prairie dogs could live there, quite a
-crowd collected while they struggled and sweated for half an hour to get
-the machine back on what passed for a road. First came a wagon pulled by
-two scrawny horses and carrying a whole Navajo family--father, mother,
-two children and a goat. An ancient truck with three more Indians aboard
-pulled up in a cloud of dust. Then came two Navajos on horseback.
-
-Ralph recognized one of the riders and gravely offered him a cigarette
-which he held crosswise between his first and second fingers.
-
-"Hosteen Buray, we need your help," said the driller after his gift had
-been accepted.
-
-The rider said a few words to the other bystanders and things began to
-happen. The riders galloped away and came back dragging a small tree
-trunk that could be used to raise the truck axle. The children gathered
-sagebrush to stuff under the wheels. The woman milked her goat into a
-pan and presented the steaming drink to the thirsty oilmen. Finally,
-everyone got behind the machine and pushed with many shouts and grunts.
-
-With Ralph's expert hand at the wheel, the truck struggled back onto the
-trail.
-
-After receiving "thank yous" from all concerned, the Navajos stood aside
-and waved in silence as the column drove away.
-
-This time, Sandy asked to ride with the driller because, as he
-explained, "I've got a lot of questions about things."
-
-"Shoot," said Ralph.
-
-"Why didn't anyone offer to pay those people for helping us?"
-
-"They would have been insulted. That's how Cavanaugh got in bad with
-them in the first place--by insisting that they take money for
-everything. Navajos are proud. Next question."
-
-"Why did you hand out cigarettes in that funny way, instead of just
-offering your pack?"
-
-"You never point anything at an Indian. It might be a gun."
-
-"Oh...."
-
-"Anything else on your mind, Sandy?"
-
-"Are all Navajos named Hosteen something-or-other?"
-
-"Hosteen means 'Mister.' Most white men don't use the term. The Navajos
-resent that, too."
-
-"I guess I've got a lot to learn," the boy sighed.
-
-"You're doing all right." Ralph slapped him on the knee.
-
-
-They made camp in a forest of pines not far from a dry wash that ran
-into the San Juan River gorge, and started work at once. Donovan split
-the party into two groups. One, which he headed, loaded the heavy
-magnetometer and gravimeter equipment into a truck and set out to check
-formations revealed by the aerial studies. Ralph and Sam Stack, a burly
-surveyor who had arrived with the portable drill rig, took charge of a
-transit, plane table and Brunton compass. They named Sandy and three
-others to carry stadia rods and help them make a careful surface survey
-of the vicinity where the oil anticline was believed to be.
-
-Then began one of the hardest weeks of grinding labor that Sandy had
-ever put in. All day long he climbed over rocks and fought briary
-thickets while moving his rod to spots where it could be seen from the
-various transit positions. His experience on Boy Scout geology field
-trips kept him from getting lost and enabled him to chip a number of
-rock formations for analysis. But it was only after he returned to camp
-at night and propped his tired eyes open with his fingers while watching
-Don, Ralph and Stack plot lines on a topographical map of the region,
-that he could form any idea of what was being done.
-
-Hall joined them on the third evening and watched without comment as the
-work went on. He looked gray and tired.
-
-"You seem bushed, John," said Donovan after they had added the day's
-data to the map. "Any trouble?"
-
-"Plenty, Don. At the last minute the bank refused a loan. It said that
-two wells didn't make a profitable field, out here in the middle of
-nowhere. I had to trade a two-thirds interest in the other lease to
-Midray before I got my money!"
-
-"That's the way the oil squirts," Ralph said philosophically. "So we're
-in partnership with a big company."
-
-"I'm solvent, anyway." Hall shrugged. "But we won't make our fortunes
-unless that first lease turns out to have the largest field in San Juan
-County. Of course, if this one pays off, too...." His voice trailed
-away.
-
-"I don't know about that, John." Donovan bit his thin lips. "We're
-finding some underground anomalies, but, confound it, I don't feel right
-about the situation. For one thing, the plants that usually grow in the
-neighborhood of a deposit just aren't in evidence. We've found an
-anticline, all right, but I have a hunch there's mighty little oil in
-it."
-
-"Excuse me," Sandy interrupted from his seat at the end of the map
-table, "but if you find a dome, or anticline, doesn't it just have to
-hold oil?"
-
-"Not at all," the geologist answered with a wave of his pipe. "The oil
-might have escaped before the bulge was formed by movements of the
-earth's crust. Or perhaps the top of the anticline had a crack, or
-fault, through which the oil seeped to the surface ages ago."
-
-"You are going to run a seismic survey, aren't you?" Hall asked.
-
-"Yes, we'll start tomorrow if the weather holds out. The radio says
-thunderstorms are brewing, though."
-
-"Do the best you can." Hall rose and stretched. "I'm going to turn in
-now. I feel lousy."
-
-
-Sandy didn't sleep well, although he, too, was so tired that his bones
-ached. He was up at sunrise--except that there was no sunrise. The sky
-looked like a bowl of brass and the heat was the worst he had met with
-since his arrival in the Southwest.
-
-After a hurried breakfast they drove the portable drill rig, instrument
-truck and shooting truck to the anticline which lay, circled by tall
-yellow buttes, about three miles from the camp site.
-
-Once there, Ralph used a small diamond drill to make a hole through
-surface dirt and rubble. The rest of the crew dug a line of shallow pits
-with their spades. These were evenly spaced from "ground zero" near the
-hole Ralph had drilled to a distance from it of about 2,000 feet. While
-two men tamped a dynamite charge into the "shot hole," other crew
-members buried small electronic detectors called geophones in the pits,
-and connected them, with long insulated wires, to the seismograph in the
-instrument truck.
-
-Just as the job was finished, a roaring squall sent everyone dashing for
-cover.
-
-"We're going to set off a man-made earthquake in a moment, Sandy,"
-Donovan said when the dripping boy climbed into the instrument truck.
-"Watch carefully. When I give the word, Ralph will explode the dynamite.
-The shock will send vibrations down to the rock layers beneath us. Those
-vibrations will bounce back to the line of geophones and be relayed to
-the seismograph here. Since shock waves travel through the ground at
-different speeds and on different paths, depending on the strata that
-they strike, they will trace different kinds of lines on this strip of
-sensitized paper. I can interpret those lines and get a pretty good
-picture of what the situation is down below."
-
-"You mean you can make an earthquake with dynamite?" Sandy cried.
-
-"A mighty little one. But it will be big enough for our purposes. This
-seismograph measures changes of one millionth of an inch in the position
-of the earth's surface." He started the wide tape rolling, and picked up
-a field telephone that connected the three trucks.
-
-"All ready, Ralph?" he asked. "Fine! I'll give you a ten-second
-countdown. Ten. Nine. Eight. Seven. Six. Five. Four. Three. Two. One.
-Shoot!"
-
-There was a subdued roar deep underground. A geyser of earth and
-splintered rock spouted from the shot hole. The seismograph pens, which
-had been tracing steady parallel lines on the paper, began tracing
-jagged lines instead.
-
-"All right, Ralph," Donovan spoke into the phone. "If the rain lets up,
-have the boys string another line of geophones and we'll cross-check."
-
-They got in one more shot before the increasing thunderstorm made
-further work impossible. Then Ralph and Hall sprinted over from the
-shooting truck and spent the next hour listening while Donovan explained
-the squiggles on the graph.
-
-"So you're not too happy about the situation, Don?" the producer asked
-at last.
-
-"I hate to say so, John," the geologist answered, "but things don't look
-too good. We've found a dome, all right, but I'm afraid it has a crack
-in its top. Look at this." He put away his magnifying glass, lighted up,
-and pointed his pipe stem at a sharp break in the inked lines. "I can't
-take the responsibility for telling you to spend a hundred thousand
-dollars or so drilling five thousand feet into a cockeyed formation like
-that."
-
-"Once a poor boy, always a poor boy, I guess." Hall shrugged.
-
-"Oh, I haven't given up yet," said Donovan grimly. "The aerial survey
-shows another possible anomaly about three miles west of here. I'll do
-some work on that before we call it quits."
-
-"Take your time," said his employer.
-
-"Hey!" Ralph, who had been standing at the trailer window, staring
-glumly into the sheets of rain that swept toward them across the San
-Juan gorge, spoke up sharply. "Take a look at that river, will you?"
-
-They joined him at the window and found that the stream had doubled in
-size since the rain had started. Now it was a raging yellow torrent that
-filled the gorge from border to border.
-
-"It beats me," said Hall, "how it can rain cats and dogs in this country
-one day and flood everything, but be dry as dust the next. When the
-government finishes building its series of dams around here and all this
-water is impounded for irrigation, you'll see the desert blossom like
-the rose, I'll bet."
-
-"The rain all runs off and does no good now, that's a sure thing,"
-Donovan agreed.
-
-"Look," Ralph interrupted. "There's a boat or barge or something coming
-down the river."
-
-"You're crazy," said Donovan. "Nothing could live in that--Say!" He
-rubbed mist off the window and peered out into the downpour. "Something
-_is_ coming down. You're right!"
-
-They stood shoulder to shoulder and stared in horror. Around a bend in
-the stream a heavily laden homemade barge had plunged into view. A vivid
-flash of lightning showed one man standing upright in the stern. Blond
-hair flying, he was struggling to steer the bucking craft with a long
-sweep.
-
-"That's Pepper March!" Sandy shouted as another flash spotlighted the
-craft. "He must be trying to prove that the San Juan is navigable."
-
-"He won't last five miles," Ralph snapped. "I've got to go after the
-young fool. Grab some rope, Sandy, and come along."
-
-There was no rope in the truck, so Sandy snatched up a coil of heavy
-wire cable used to lower electric logs into test wells. With it over his
-shoulder, he tore out into the storm after the driller.
-
-They got the jeep going after considerable cranking and headed
-downstream. It was a nip and tuck race since there was no trail along
-the gorge. But Ralph put the car in four-wheel drive and tore along over
-rocks and through flooded washes while Sandy hung onto the windshield
-frame for dear life. Finally they managed to pull ahead of the tossing
-barge.
-
-"There's a rapids about five miles downstream," Ralph shouted above the
-thunder that rolled back and forth like cannon shots among the buttes
-and cliffs. "He'll never go farther than that. The only thing I can do
-is to stand by there and try to throw him a line. It's a long chance.
-Thank heaven and the water spirits that I learned to rope horses when I
-was a kid."
-
-They reached the rapids with only seconds to spare. The Indian fastened
-one end of the cable to the power takeoff at the rear of the jeep and
-coiled the rest of it with great care at the edge of the gorge. Then he
-stood, braced against the howling wind, swinging the heavy log in his
-right hand.
-
-"Here he comes," Ralph said. "What a shame that damned fools often look
-like heroes. Your friend is probably thinking he's Lewis, Clark and Paul
-Revere rolled into one. Stand by to start the takeoff and reel him in if
-I hook him, Sandy.... There he goes. There he goes! Stand by!"
-
-Pepper was fighting the rapids now, like some yellow-haired Viking out
-of the past. It was no use. Halfway through, the awkward barge hit a
-submerged rock. Slowly its bow reared into the air. The heavy pipe with
-which it had been loaded started cascading into the boiling water.
-
-Pepper had enough presence of mind to drop the useless sweep, and
-scramble out of the path of the lengths of pipe as they flew like
-jackstraws. As he managed to grab the uptilting rail, Ralph's mighty arm
-swung back and forward. The end of the cable carrying the log paid out
-smoothly. Out and down it sped in a long arc.
-
-It struck the boat and slid slowly along the rapidly sinking rail. After
-one wild look upward, Pepper understood what had happened. He snatched
-the wire as it went by and looped it twice around his waist.
-
-"Haul away," Ralph whooped to Sandy. "We've caught our fish."
-
-As the jeep's motor roared and the takeoff spun, Pepper was snatched
-from his perch and dragged helter-skelter through the wild waters.
-Minutes later Ralph dragged him over the edge of the cliff, choking and
-half drowned.
-
-"No real damage except a few nasty bruises," the driller grunted after
-he had applied artificial respiration with more vigor than was really
-needed. "How do you feel, bud?"
-
-"Awful!" Pepper groaned. Then he amazed them by sitting up and glaring
-at them.
-
-"That was ... a stinking trick," he croaked after he had spat out a
-mouthful of dirty water. "Stringing cable ... capsizing my barge ... I'd
-have made it."
-
-"Whaaat?" Sandy hardly believed his ears.
-
-"I'd have made it, I tell you! I would have!" Pepper wailed
-hysterically. "Then you ... then you ..." He retched miserably.
-
-"Listen, kid," Ralph snapped as he half-carried the boy to the jeep.
-"Your Red Cavanaugh ought to be strung up for egging you on to try a
-stunt like that."
-
-"No!" Tears dripped down Pepper's dirty cheeks. "My idea. He didn't
-know."
-
-"Bunk! You mean he didn't know you had built a barge and loaded it with
-pipe? Don't lie! Your boss is a stinking, no-good, lowdown louse."
-
-"Oh, no!" Pepper tried to pull free, then leaned against the side of the
-car and clung there like a half-drowned monkey. "Red's best boss a man
-ever had. He's ... he's wonderful.... Likes good music ... dogs ...
-Indians. I'd die for Red."
-
-"That's the point." Ralph rummaged in the back of the jeep, found
-Maisie's mangy hide, and wrapped it around the shivering boy. "You
-almost did die. Cavanaugh's next door to a murderer."
-
-Pepper stared at them as if he were waking from a dream.
-
-"You really believe that, Sandy?" he gulped weakly.
-
-"I know it, Pepper." Torn between pity and anger, Sandy gripped the
-blond boy's arm. "Cavanaugh's a crook!"
-
-"Crook?" Pepper babbled. "No, no!" His knees sagged and they just
-managed to catch him as he fell.
-
-"A strange boy," said Ralph as they drove back to camp with the would-be
-Viking sleeping the sleep of exhaustion between them. "He's in trouble,
-some way. Maybe he was trying to prove himself, like young Indians once
-did before they could become braves."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER ELEVEN
- Serendipity
-
-
-Pepper was black, blue, stiff and somewhat chastened when he ate
-breakfast with Ralph and Sandy the next morning. Also, he was disturbed
-by the fact that Cavanaugh's plane had come over at dawn, circled the
-wrecked barge in the rapids for several minutes, and then scooted
-eastward without landing.
-
-"He must have known I planned to run the river," the blond boy admitted.
-"But why do you suppose he didn't stop to ask whether you folks had seen
-me?"
-
-"Probably was afraid to." Ralph attacked a big plate of ham and
-scrambled eggs. "Figures he may be blamed for letting you drown, so he's
-gone home to frame an alibi. Won't he be surprised when you show up in
-one of our supply trucks!"
-
-"Gee whiz! Do you really think he's that bad, Mr. Salmon?"
-
-"I think he's worse. See here, kid. Why don't you stop working for that
-heel and come over here? I'm sure John will give you a roustabout job."
-
-"No." Pepper shook his head stubbornly. "I signed a contract and I can't
-go back on my word. Besides, I haven't seen him do anything really bad.
-I'll admit that some of the things he does seem, well, sort of queer.
-But maybe you're just too suspicious."
-
-"Maybe." Ralph washed down a hunk of Ching Chao's good apple pie with
-half a cup of steaming coffee. "Well, it's your funeral."
-
-"I'll keep my eyes open after this." Pepper rose as a honk from the
-truck told him it was time to get going. "Thanks for everything. And I
-really do mean for everything."
-
-The Indian stood up and stretched like a lazy panther as he watched
-their visitor depart. "Crazy kid," he said. "Well, it's time for us to
-be getting back to the mines, Sandy. Don's staying here for a few days
-to run some final tests. He has assigned our group to start surveying
-the other structure. So pick up your rock hammer and stadia rod. Hike!"
-
-The new location proved to be several miles north of the river in a
-tumbled and desolate region of weathered buttes and washes that already
-were dry as bone.
-
-"Geologists call those buttes 'diatremes,'" Stack, the surveyor,
-explained to the crew as they unloaded equipment at a central spot.
-"They stick up like sore thumbs because they're really vents from
-ancient volcanoes. The lava they're made of doesn't erode much although
-the surrounding sedimentary rocks have been worn away in the course of
-ages. There are at least 250 diatremes scattered through this Colorado
-Plateau area, and some of them are rich in minerals. So keep your eyes
-open while you're prowling."
-
-"Prowling" was exactly the word for what the crew did, Sandy decided
-after a few days in the broiling sun. He had to admit that the territory
-was beautiful, in its wild way, but he decided that it was more fit for
-mountain goats than human beings. More and more, as he slowly worked his
-way from one rod location to another, measured the slope of exposed
-strata with his Brunton compass, or chipped rock samples for analysis
-back at camp, he began to dream of the soft green hills and winding
-streams near Valley View.
-
-His homesickness grew worse when Hall brought him a letter from Quiz.
-
- Dear Sandy,
-
- I sure do envy you, out there in God's country. Things are mighty dull
- around here, although I do get some time for swimming and tennis, now
- that Dad is able to hobble around in his cast and help out at the
- restaurant.
-
- Last Sunday we had a picnic out by the lake. The fishing was swell.
- And there was a dance at the pavilion afterward. I'm not much for
- dancing, but I know you like to. Still, you must be having plenty of
- fun out at the well.
-
-"Fun!" Sandy exploded as he reread that paragraph. He was bathing his
-blistered feet in the first spring he had found that day and batting at
-deer flies that seemed determined to eat him alive. Then he read on:
-
- I haven't forgotten about Cavanaugh. Dad says he's a lone wolf and
- that nobody knows much about him. He came here about two years ago,
- flashed a lot of money around, and built his lab. Joined the Country
- Club, Rotary, and so on. Impressed a lot of people with his football
- talk. Makes good equipment and has several research contracts that
- take him to Washington quite frequently. His employees think he's a
- stuffed shirt, too.
-
- I tried to look up his sports record at the library, but the
- newspapers that should tell about his big game are missing from the
- files. When Dad gets better, he says I can take a day or two off and
- see what I can find in the San Francisco library. I'll let you know.
- Funny about those newspapers, isn't it?
-
- Give my regards to the gang. I sure do wish I was there instead of
- here.
- As ever,
- Quiz
-
-After he had finished reading Sandy sat for a long time with his chin in
-his hands, thinking. The survey wasn't going well, he knew. Yesterday,
-Hall and Donovan had paid them a visit and shaken their heads at the map
-that Ralph and Stack were drawing.
-
-"This isn't an anticline, John," the geologist had said. "What we have
-here is fault that has caused a stratigraphic trap. That is, layers of
-rock on one side of the fault line have been lifted above those on the
-other side of the crack by some old earthquake. The slip sealed off the
-upper end of what may be an oil-bearing layer with the edge of a layer
-of hard, impervious rock. If you drill here--" he pointed with his pipe
-stem--"you may hit a small pool. Nothing spectacular, you understand,
-but it ought to more than pay expenses."
-
-"I don't know whether I should take the chance." Hall had shaken his
-gray head. "I need something better than this to gamble on, the way
-things are. Tell you what, Don. There's going to be a bid session at
-Window Rock next Monday. Keep the crew working here for a few days
-longer while I drive down and see if I can shake loose a better lease.
-Ralph, you'd better come along. I hear that the Navajo and Hopi Councils
-will have some sort of joint powwow at the Rock and I'll want you to
-keep an eye on it. You come along too, Sandy, and bring the 'ear.' I
-have a hunch that a lot of things are about to pop."
-
-"Will we have room for Kitty?" Ralph asked. "I dropped over to see her
-after work yesterday and she told me the school is closing Monday and
-Tuesday because there's going to be a big Squaw Dance in the
-neighborhood. She wants to go home and get her best clothes to wear to
-it. She could drive her own car, of course...."
-
-"Kitty's good company," Hall had replied. "I'd be glad to have her
-along."
-
-A distant hail jerked Sandy out of his reverie. He put on his shoes,
-picked up his rod, hammer and compass, and started climbing over jagged
-rocks to the top of a crumbling low butte that was to be the next survey
-location. The going wasn't too bad because one side of the cone had
-collapsed, thus providing a slope of debris up which he could clamber
-with fair speed.
-
-When Stack's transit came in sight, Sandy placed the stadia rod upright
-so that it could be seen against the skyline and started the slow
-business of moving it about in response to the surveyor's hand signals.
-
-Several times he stopped and listened intently. Off to his right, hidden
-in the underbrush that choked the crater, he thought he heard some large
-animal moving. A deer, probably, he tried to reassure himself, although
-he remembered that one of the other crewmen had had a nasty brush with a
-bobcat several days previously.
-
-"That's it, Sandy," the surveyor in the valley bellowed through cupped
-hands at last. "Call it a day."
-
-The boy was beating a quiet retreat down the slope when a tired bleat
-stopped him in his tracks. The animal in there was either a sheep or a
-calf, and it seemed to be in trouble.
-
-"Better take a look," said Sandy. (He had got into the habit of talking
-to himself these last few lonely weeks. The noise seemed to keep the
-homesickness away.)
-
-It was a calf, he found, when he had fought his way into the thicket.
-And it seemed to be sick. First it would nibble at some plants where it
-stood, then, lifting its feet high and putting them down gingerly, it
-would move slowly to another location and repeat the performance. Every
-so often it let out that piteous bleat.
-
-"Poor thing," Sandy murmured. "Maybe I ought to take it back to camp."
-
-He fished a length of cord out of his knapsack, looped it around the
-calf's neck and tugged. The animal gave him a glassy stare and wobbled
-forward.
-
-"Probably a Navajo stray," he said. "Its owners will be looking for it."
-
-When he reached the temporary camp half an hour later, Ralph took one
-look at the calf and let out an astonished whoop.
-
-"Loco," he shouted. "Hey, gang! Come look what Sandy found."
-
-Men came running from all directions.
-
-"Where did you find it?" Stack demanded.
-
-"Up there. On top of that butte." Sandy pointed.
-
-"Was it eating anything at the time?" Ralph snapped.
-
-"Yes. Some plants that looked sort of like ferns, only they had little
-bell-like blossoms hanging from stalks in their centers."
-
-"Locoweed," the Indian crowed. "_Astragalus Pattersoni_, Donovan calls
-it. Sandy, you may have found just what the doctor ordered to get John
-out of his pinch. I'll get a Geiger counter. The rest of you round up
-some flashlights, sacks and spades. We'd better take a look at this
-right away."
-
-"What about my calf?" Sandy objected.
-
-"Oh, stake it out somewhere and give it some water. It may recover. It's
-just drugged. Indians used to chew locoweed when they went down in their
-kivas, you know. They said it made them see visions in which they talked
-to the spirits. Eat too much of the stuff, though, and you're a goner."
-
-
-Two hours later, after having dug up most of the crater, the men tramped
-wearily back to camp in the light of the rising moon. The sacks they
-carried on their backs bulged with loads of black earth mixed with
-yellow carnotite crystals that made the Geiger chatter madly.
-
-Hall was just driving into camp as they arrived.
-
-"We've found a rich uranium lode or lens, I think, John," Ralph shouted
-to him. For once he had lost his Indian calm and was almost dancing with
-excitement.
-
-"You don't say," yawned the producer as he dragged himself out of the
-car.
-
-"Well!" Ralph stared, openmouthed, at this cool reception. "What's the
-matter, boss? Don't you care?"
-
-"Where are we going to sell the ore?" Hall asked gently.
-
-"Oh!" Ralph wilted. "I hadn't thought of that. The government only buys
-from people who have mills."
-
-"Sure. A uranium strike these days is just like money in a safe for
-which you have lost the combination."
-
-"Excuse me, Mr. Hall," Stack interrupted, "but doesn't Midray own an
-interest in a uranium mill?"
-
-"Oh, yes." Hall smiled grimly at the surveyor. "Midray owns an interest
-in most everything. It will be delighted to help me develop the lode--in
-exchange for three-fourths of the profits.
-
-"That's better than nothing, though." He straightened his shoulders. "A
-uranium strike will shorten the odds enough so I can take a chance on
-drilling a well here. Why, what am I grousing about? This could be a
-real stroke of luck. How did you happen to find it?"
-
-When he had heard the story, Hall slapped Sandy on the back.
-
-"That's what's called serendipity," he said, chuckling. "You remember
-the three Princes of Serendip in the fairy story: on their travels they
-always found things they weren't looking for. Congratulations, Sandy.
-You have the makings of a real wildcatter."
-
-But, as the boy went off to take care of his sick calf, he knew that his
-employer had been putting on an act. Serendipity or no, John Hall was
-still running a poor-boy outfit.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER TWELVE
- Cavanaugh Makes a Mistake
-
-
-Hall had completely recovered his good spirits by the time that Ralph
-brought Kitty to camp at dawn. Just as the sun rose the little party set
-out for Window Rock in a holiday mood. Hall made one stop for a brief
-conference with Donovan. Then he drove on to his base camp, arriving in
-time for breakfast.
-
-Sandy could hardly recognize the place where he had worked such a short
-time before. Number Two well had been opened and connected to the feeder
-pipeline through a Christmas tree, while its derrick had been moved to a
-new location. Three big new Midray rigs were being erected at other
-spots on the property. Still more derricks were going up on surrounding
-leases. This was rapidly becoming an important field.
-
-Hall had a short talk with the Midray superintendent, a big man who
-reminded Sandy of Cavanaugh and who acted as if he owned the place. Then
-they were on their way again.
-
-"The lease looks like Times Square," Hall grunted as he headed the jeep
-toward Shiprock. "Makes me uncomfortable. I like to work where there's
-plenty of room to swing a wildcat."
-
-"I bet you still prefer to use a burro when you go prospecting, you old
-sourdough," Kitty teased him.
-
-"Well, a burro never runs out of gas or breaks a spring, and it has a
-better horn than a jeep," Hall said, grinning. "When a burro brays, even
-the mountains have to listen. That's why he's called a Rocky Mountain
-canary, I suppose."
-
-They reached Route 666 in good time, turned south between Shiprock Peak
-and Hogback Mountain, and sailed down through the picturesque Chuskas
-past road signs that beckoned toward far-off, mysterious places like
-Toadlena, Beautiful Mountain, Coyote Wash, Nakaibito, Pueblo Bonito
-(Lovely Village) and Ojo Caliente (Hot Eye).
-
-Kitty made the time pass quickly by singing the praises of the desert,
-pointing out spots of historic interest, and telling them Navajo
-legends.
-
-"The Wind People, who ride the lightning, own all of these box canyons
-and hilltops," she said half seriously. "No Navajo will build his hogan
-near such places, or where lightning has struck. If he did, he thinks
-the Wind People would give him bad headaches."
-
-"It gives me a bad headache trying to understand why your Navajos love a
-godforsaken place like this," Ralph said.
-
-"Your Utes live here too!" Kitty's eyes flashed.
-
-"Only because white men drove us off our good land farther north," Ralph
-snapped. "We put up a good fight before they expelled us, too. My
-grandfather was one of Chief Douglas' warriors, back in 1879, when the
-Utes surrounded and almost destroyed an entire U.S. Army detachment that
-invaded our White River reservation."
-
-"The Navajos got _their_ reservation back," Kitty pointed out.
-
-"Don't squabble, children," Hall said and added, to break the tension,
-"I heard a rumor that you're going to the Squaw Dance together next
-week. Is that right?"
-
-Kitty blushed and Ralph nodded.
-
-"That's the same as becoming engaged, isn't it?"
-
-"If our uncles approve," Kitty admitted.
-
-"Well, here's a tip from an old bachelor: Don't bicker about things that
-happened long ago, and don't hold grudges. We're all Americans today, no
-matter how our skins are colored."
-
-"I'll be good," Kitty promised. "And that reminds me. Will you all be
-good and come to dinner with Mother and me tonight?"
-
-When they pulled up to the motel at Window Rock, an Indian wearing a
-Hopi hairband rose from where he had been squatting near the entrance
-and handed Ralph a message. The driller read it and turned to the others
-with a frown.
-
-"It's from Chief Ponytooth," he explained. "He says the Hopis and
-Navajos are having a session at the Council Hall tonight and he wants me
-there as a representative of the Utes. Looks as if I'll have to eat and
-run."
-
-"Dinner will be early," Kitty promised.
-
-"Wait here till I make a quick visit to the Indian Agency," Hall said.
-"Then we'll walk over to your house. I'm tired of riding."
-
-Sandy had expected that Kitty might live in an eight-sided wooden hogan
-such as he had seen in other parts of the reservation. Instead, she took
-them to a neat white cottage surrounded by palo-verde trees.
-
-Mrs. Gonzales was an attractive widow who might have passed for Kitty's
-older sister, except that she was somewhat heavier and her skin was much
-darker. She greeted the two older men as if they were members of the
-family and made Sandy feel at home immediately. First, she showed them
-around the tiny forge and workshop where she apparently earned a good
-living by making lovely silver buckles and heavy medallions called
-conchas which she sold to tourists. Then, after learning that Ralph had
-to leave soon, she rushed dinner to the table. It featured several
-highly spiced Mexican and Indian dishes and was delicious.
-
-After coffee, they stood under the stars for a few minutes on a patio
-looking toward the great black hole in Window Rock.
-
-"What is the light that twinkles on the cliff these days?" Mrs. Gonzales
-asked as she pointed upward with pursed lips.
-
-"Bad man!" she sniffed after Hall explained that it was Cavanaugh's
-light beam.
-
-"What do you know about him, Mother?" Ralph asked.
-
-"Nothing good." She crossed her arms in the wide sleeves of her
-embroidered blouse to keep the evening chill away. "He came here in the
-early '50s, looking for uranium. Pablo, my poor husband, was a
-prospector too in those days, and knew every foot of this reservation.
-Cavanaugh went into partnership with him, but somehow, he never got
-round to signing a contract.
-
-"They made a strike too--one of the biggest. Cavanaugh sold the claim
-for much money, just before the government stopped buying ore. He forgot
-all his promises then, and went away. Pablo's heart broke when the man
-he thought was his friend betrayed him." She sighed deeply.
-
-"Now Cavanaugh has returned," she went on at last, "like the Spaniards
-who used to descend on us Indians like locusts when they needed more
-money. He is not good for this country."
-
-"He certainly is riding a high horse today," Hall agreed. "When I was at
-the Agency he came stalking in with Pepper behind him, leading two of
-his big dogs on leashes. He looked just like the cat that ate the canary
-as he submitted a pile of sealed bids a foot high. I sure do wish I knew
-what he was up to."
-
-"If I didn't have to attend the Council meeting," Ralph said
-regretfully, "I could take the 'ear' up to his camp and find out,
-maybe."
-
-Kitty insisted on walking them back to town. She and Ralph went
-arm-in-arm until Hall met another oilman, got into a business
-discussion, and called his driller back to take part in it. Sandy and
-the girl continued on together.
-
-Cavanaugh came out of the motel as they approached. Quite evidently, the
-redhaired man had had a few drinks.
-
-"Well!" he said as he recognized them. "If it isn't the squaw who kicked
-me out of school, with her little squaw man!" He stood in their path,
-swaying ever so slightly.
-
-"Get out of our way, please," Sandy said, fighting down his fury at the
-words.
-
-For answer, Cavanaugh swung a brawny arm and struck the boy across the
-mouth with the back of a hairy hand.
-
-Sandy staggered from the unexpected blow, then charged, fists flying. He
-connected several times, but he might as well have hit a brick wall. His
-155 pounds made no impression on Cavanaugh's 200-plus.
-
-"So you think you can fight the man who made three touchdowns against
-California," Cavanaugh bawled drunkenly. "Well, take this for being an
-Injun lover!" He swung a short right to the jaw that snapped Sandy's
-head back. "And this for your Injun-loving boss!" He followed with a
-stunning left. "And this for your snooty Ute!" He swung a haymaker that
-smashed through the boy's weakened guard and hit his solar plexus like a
-bolt of lightning.
-
-As he lay in the gutter, gasping desperately for breath, Sandy thought
-he heard the sound of running feet.
-
-"And this," Cavanaugh said deliberately, "is just part of what I owe
-Donovan for calling me a liar. Won't he look like a fool tomorrow if my
-high sign comes through?"
-
-Through bleared eyes, Sandy saw his enemy push Kitty aside and swing a
-heavy boot at his ribs.
-
-At that moment, Ralph plunged into the little circle of lamplight. The
-Indian gripped Cavanaugh by one beefy shoulder and spun him around.
-
-"This," he raged, "is for a skunk who picks on people half his size and
-kicks them when they're down!"
-
-He dealt the bully a smashing blow under the ear.
-
-"Fight! Fight!" somebody in the motel yelled. In an instant the building
-poured forth a mob of oilmen. They gathered in a circle around the
-combatants and shouted encouragement. A few of them egged Cavanaugh on,
-but the majority were rooting for his opponent.
-
-Sandy sat up groggily, dabbed at his bleeding lips, and watched the
-battle with growing excitement. Ralph was many pounds lighter than the
-redhead, but he made up for that by being fast as a rattler. He avoided
-the big man's efforts to go into a clinch that would give him time to
-clear his head of that first murderous punch. He danced about as his
-ancestors must have done at their buffalo ceremonials. He struck again
-and again--short, stabbing blows that soon cut Cavanaugh's face to
-ribbons and closed his right eye.
-
-The bully was no coward though, Sandy was surprised to discover. He
-fought doggedly, and managed to get in some damaging blows to the body
-that made his supporters cheer. But Ralph's long reach held him too far
-away. He could not use his great strength to advantage. And it was plain
-that he was badly out of condition. Before three minutes had passed he
-was becoming winded.
-
-"Kill the big bum, Fisheater," a Navajo whooped from the edge of the
-crowd. "He asked for it. Kill 'im."
-
-"With pleasure," Ralph answered. "Watch this, benighted Navajo. I
-learned it in Uncle Sam's Navy."
-
-He started a right, almost from the pavement. Up and up it came,
-completely under Cavanaugh's guard. It landed on the point of his chin
-with a crack like that of a whip!
-
-The big man threw out his arms wildly, rocked back on his heels, and
-came crashing down, as a tree falls, into the gutter beside Sandy. He
-scrabbled about there for a moment, managed to get halfway to his knees,
-then slid forward on his face. Out!
-
-The Navajo threw his big black cowboy hat on the street, jumped up and
-down on it in utter joy, and sent warwhoop after warwhoop echoing
-through the little town.
-
-"Hand me my coat, John," Ralph said to the producer, who had been
-coaching him from the sidelines. "If I don't hurry, I'll be late for
-that meeting."
-
-Kitty, who had stood close beside Sandy throughout the battle,
-alternately wringing her hands and jumping up and down with excitement
-as Ralph seemed to be getting the worst or best of it, now ran forward.
-As the crowd cheered again, she hugged her man until he had to beg her
-to spare his bruised ribs.
-
-"Kitty," said Hall, when Ralph had been carried away on the shoulders of
-admiring Navajos and Hopis who had run over from the Council Hall to
-witness the fracas, "will you take Sandy home and patch him up? He has a
-pretty deep cut on his cheekbone. Better drive him over in the jeep, if
-he feels like he looks.
-
-"I've got to talk to Ken White about Cavanaugh. This situation is
-getting out of hand. I'll come over as soon as I can."
-
-Half an hour later, Sandy pushed aside the cold compresses that Mrs.
-Gonzales had been applying to his face and sat bolt upright on the couch
-where he had been lying.
-
-"Kitty," he gasped. "I just thought! What was it Cavanaugh said about a
-high sign or something?"
-
-"When he was getting ready to kick you, you mean?" she frowned.
-
-"Yes. It had to do with Donovan, I think. I was pretty groggy at the
-time."
-
-"Oh! He said something like 'Won't Donovan feel like a fool tomorrow if
-my high sign comes through!'"
-
-"That's it! That's it!" Sandy yelled as he pushed Mrs. Gonzales'
-fluttering hands away and scrambled to his feet. "It could only mean
-that he's expecting some sort of message tonight over his light beam.
-Ralph's tied up, so I've got to go up there and try to find out what it
-is."
-
-"Don't be silly," said Kitty. "You've taken a bad beating. You're in no
-condition to go anywhere."
-
-"But I've got to go," he pleaded. "This may mean everything to John, and
-Don, and, yes, to you and Ralph too. I'm the only one who knows how to
-operate the 'ear.' I'm going right now. And you're going to help me!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER THIRTEEN
- Think Like a Dog
-
-
-"But _how_ do I go about feeling like a dog?" Sandy groaned after he had
-explained his plan of action.
-
-"You shouldn't have any trouble about that." Kitty smiled tenderly as
-she patted the last strip of bandage in place on his cheek. "You must
-feel awful."
-
-"That's not what I mean. When Ralph went into Cavanaugh's camp at Elbow
-Rock he wore a dog skin and made himself smell like a dog. But he said
-that wasn't enough. He also had to feel and think like one. There's a
-skin in the jeep. And you must know a kennel where I can roll around and
-get the smell. But how about the rest of it?
-
-"Of course I've read _The Call of the Wild_, but that's only Jack
-London's _idea_ of how dogs think. What I've got to find out quick is
-how they really feel."
-
-"I am an Indian," Mrs. Gonzales spoke up suddenly. "Indians are wise in
-the ways of animals. You have heard that Indians of the old days were
-the world's best horsemen, although they used no saddles, and sometimes
-no bridles. Why? I say it was because they could talk with their horses.
-Yes, and they honored their mounts as no other people have ever done by
-printing what was called a pat hand on the rumps of those who helped
-them win battles." She held up the palm of her hand to show what she
-meant.
-
-"Then there are our totems. Animals, all of them. To be a member of the
-buffalo clan, a young brave had to study the wild herds until he knew
-their every thought--what frightened them, what pastures they preferred,
-their mating habits. All that.
-
-"What of the great cattle and sheep herds in which modern Navajos take
-such pride? They thrive where it seems only jack rabbits could live
-because their herdsmen understand their every need, care for them as if
-they were children, and weep, as for children, when they are injured or
-die.
-
-"And consider the Hopi snake dances. Why should the rattlers not bite
-the dancers, except that they are friends? You do not believe me,
-Sandy?"
-
-"Well," he gulped, "it's just that I am not an Indian...."
-
-"But white men have been the friends of dogs since time began. You can
-learn to remember how a cave man felt when he and his dog slept back to
-back to protect themselves against the howling things outside in the
-night. You want to be among dogs, Sandy? Very well, I will call them
-here."
-
-She closed her black eyes and sat swaying slowly from side to side,
-making an almost inaudible whining, snuffling noise through her nose.
-
-A dog barked questioningly in the distance. Another answered, nearer.
-Within minutes, three scrawny mutts were scratching at the screen door
-of the cottage.
-
-"You must remember that dogs are always hungry," Mrs. Gonzales said as
-she let the animals in and went to the kitchen to find scraps for them,
-"so you must think of food at all times. You must remember that they are
-loyal, even though their master beats them, so you must not let your
-hatred or distrust of Cavanaugh into your mind when you approach his
-camp. You must be sleepy ... oh so sleepy ... so that you do not wake
-them from their dreams of chasing rabbits, or bigger game.
-
-"Also," she said thoughtfully, "it would be wise to remove all your
-clothing except the dog skin before you approach. There will not be so
-much man smell to overcome. Now play with these dogs for a time to get
-their scent on you. Then Kitty will drive you as near the camp as she
-dares. And may the blessings of the good Jesus and Mary, and the water
-and wind people, ride with you."
-
-
-Kitty was at the wheel as the jeep skirted the town and headed up a
-steep trail that had been chopped through the mesquite for the benefit
-of tourists who liked to snap their everlasting cameras from the top of
-the Rock. It was much too late for tourists to be out, however, so they
-had the road to themselves. This was a good thing, since they dared not
-use the car lights and had to depend on what little illumination was
-provided by a half-moon.
-
-Sandy sat fingering Maisie's hide nervously and holding the "ear" on his
-lap to protect it from bumps. From time to time, as they twisted and
-turned, he got glimpses of Cavanaugh's beam far above. It twinkled
-without interruption and was hard to distinguish among the stars.
-
-"Pepper must be playing music," he said softly at last. "Ralph says the
-beam fades up and down when a two-way conversation is going on. We're
-still in time."
-
-"Are you sure you ought to be doing this?" Kitty asked unhappily. "John
-wouldn't have let you go if he had known about it, I'm certain."
-
-"That's why I was in such a hurry to start before he returned from the
-Agency. Ralph isn't here, so I'm the only person who knows how to
-operate this gadget. I have to go through with it."
-
-"But why do you have to?" she demanded. "Why not leave it up to the
-Agency and the Navajo police?"
-
-"Because I have only a hunch to go on--the kind of hunch that Mother
-says Kit Carson used to have. I haven't any proof that Cavanaugh is
-planning to play some sort of dirty trick on the Indians tomorrow, or
-that his plans may depend on what comes over the beam. The police would
-laugh at me. I've _got_ to do it my way."
-
-"I guess you do," the girl agreed. "You'll have to walk the rest of the
-way," she added, driving the car off the trail and into a thicket as the
-lights shining from Cavanaugh's trailer showed up on the skyline ahead.
-
-When Sandy climbed out, strapped the "ear" to his chest and started
-away, she called him back sharply.
-
-"Take your clothes off here and put them in the back of the jeep," she
-commanded. "You'd never find them on the trail."
-
-"But...."
-
-"Do as I say, silly. And hurry. I'm scared."
-
-"I'm scareder than you are, I'll bet," Sandy said grumpily as he obeyed.
-
-The cold night wind hit his bare skin and he started shivering.
-
-Well, he thought as he started away through the darkness, that was all
-to the good. Dogs shivered all the time, didn't they? And the hide
-offered some protection.
-
-It seemed to take him an age to reach the vicinity of the trailer. Once
-he stubbed his toe badly, and once he cut his foot on a sharp rock.
-Confound that Kitty! He needed his shoes. Still, shoes did smell pretty
-strong sometimes. He grinned in spite of himself.
-
-A hundred yards from the trailer he got down on hands and knees, started
-to crawl forward, then stopped with a jerk.
-
-Dogs usually didn't take kindly to strangers of their own kind! How many
-times had he seen them set upon an outsider and send him yipping for his
-life. Maybe the foreigner had come looking for a fight, though! He,
-Sandy, would be the friendliest doggy in seven states! He did his best
-to imitate the low whimpering that Mrs. Gonzales had used as he crept
-forward. If Ralph could get away with this, there was no reason why
-Sandy Carson Steele couldn't!
-
-He was only a few feet from the trailer when three big brutes, who had
-been sleeping under its wheels, rose and advanced toward him,
-stiff-legged. This was it!
-
-Desperately, Sandy tried to project the idea through his soft whining
-that he was hungry, and cold, and wet with dew, and only wanted a quiet
-place where he could spend the night under the protection of those
-splendid humans, Cavanaugh and Pepper March.
-
-For a moment, he thought he had got the idea across. The dogs hesitated.
-They seemed to confer among themselves. But they were not quite
-satisfied. The lead animal bared his long white teeth and barked a
-tentative challenge. The others followed his example as they sidled
-toward this strange creature who certainly smelled like a dog but who
-looked--well, looked somewhat queer, to say the least.
-
-A quotation his father once had repeated flashed through Sandy's mind:
-_The minds of dogs do not benefit by being treated as though they were
-the minds of men._ As the barking grew louder, he gathered himself and
-prepared to go away from that place as fast as his bare feet could carry
-him.
-
-The trailer door banged open. A shaft of light illuminated the yard but
-mercifully did not reach to the spot where Sandy crouched.
-
-"Shut up, you idiotic mutts!" Cavanaugh yelled. Then to Pepper, who
-appeared in the doorway behind him, "Can't you make those confounded
-dogs keep quiet? They're driving me insane."
-
-"I'm sorry, Red," Pepper answered. "You brought the dogs here to guard
-the trailer."
-
-"'Red. Red. Red,'" snarled the big man, who plainly was feeling the
-effects of the beating Ralph had given him. "I'm sick of your crawling
-and fawning. Why weren't you at Window Rock tonight when the whole town
-ganged up on me?"
-
-"When Andy quit today, you told me to stay here and take care of the
-beam, Red," Pepper answered patiently. "I'm sorry, Red."
-
-"From now on, call me Mister Cavanaugh," his boss raged.
-
-"Yes, _Mister_ Cavanaugh ... sir." Pepper's voice still was soft but
-Sandy could see his fists clench.
-
-"And stop that confounded record. Highbrow music gives me the willies.
-Always has! Call Elbow Rock and see if the message has come through."
-
-"Yes, sir. At once, sir." The door slammed and the voices became a
-mumble.
-
-Sandy tried to still the beating of his heart as he whined canine terror
-at this outburst. The "other" dogs whimpered uncertainly. Finally they
-crept back to their sleeping places. Evidently their master didn't
-approve of their warning. In that case.... Sandy could almost feel them
-relax as they turned round and round in their nests, trying to find the
-most comfortable spots for slumber.
-
-Carefully he edged forward until he was lying among them. Then he turned
-the switch that fed power from a series of flashlight batteries into the
-transistors mounted on the "ear," adjusted the headphones, and listened.
-
-"Calling Elbow Rock. Calling Elbow Rock. Over," he heard Pepper say.
-
-There was no answer.
-
-"Calling Elbow Rock. Window Rock calling Elbow Rock. Over," Pepper
-repeated.
-
-Still no answer.
-
-"Come in, Elbow Rock!" Cavanaugh's voice barked through the phones. "Why
-don't you answer, Elbow Rock?"
-
-"I read you, Window Rock," a faraway voice answered at last.
-"Something's coming in from Gallup. Stand by."
-
-"This is it!" Cavanaugh's yell almost split Sandy's ears. "Get out of
-the way, can't you, Pepper? I'll take this. Go to bed or something. It
-makes me sick just to look at your silly face.... All right, Elbow Rock.
-I'm ready when you are."
-
-The minutes slid by while only the mutter of static filled Sandy's
-earphones. Beside him, he felt the Dobermans flinch and shiver in their
-restless sleep. The cold night wind seeped under the bottom of the
-trailer and set his teeth to chattering uncontrollably. Now he knew what
-the phrase "a dog's life" really meant.
-
-"Elbow Rock calling Window Rock." The phones clattered into life.
-"Over."
-
-"I read you loud and clear, Elbow Rock," Cavanaugh's voice replied.
-"What is the message from Gallup?"
-
-"You want it coded, like it was relayed from Washington, or straight?"
-the distant voice inquired.
-
-"Straight, you fool. Nobody listens in on a light beam."
-
-"You never know," said the man at Elbow Rock. "Well, here's your
-message, as well as I can dope it out. It's from your 'keyhole man,' Mr.
---"
-
-"Never mind his name," Cavanaugh snapped. "Just give me the message."
-
-"O.K.! O.K.! Take it easy, will you, boss? Here 'tis: Quote: Have picked
-up leak from strictly official source. Next month U.S. government starts
-buying uranium ore from all comers again. Expanding space ship and power
-reactor program has increased demand for atomic fuels to such an extent
-that existing mills no longer can supply it--Are you reading me all
-right, boss?"
-
-"Clear as a bell," Cavanaugh crooned. "This is wonderful. Go on. Go on."
-
-"Here's the rest of it: Quote: Announcement of policy change withheld
-until middle of next month so it won't upset bids to be opened tomorrow
-at Window Rock and similar places. Happy hunting. Unquote. Over."
-
-"Whoopee!" Cavanaugh yelled the word into the microphone so loudly that
-Sandy's earphones rattled. "Boy! This came through just in time.
-Otherwise, I'd have had to cancel all of those high bids I made today or
-go bankrupt tomorrow. Now I'll be in clover with most of the good leases
-sewed up at rock-bottom prices before the boom starts. Thank you, Elbow
-Rock. There's a bonus for you in this. Over and out."
-
-"Roger!" came the delighted answer.
-
-"Did you hear all of that, Pepper?" Cavanaugh asked.
-
-"Was I supposed to, Mister Cavanaugh ... sir?" Pepper answered off-mike.
-His voice was bitter.
-
-"Oh, don't be sore, boy." Cavanaugh roared with laughter. "If you'd
-taken the beating I took tonight from Hall's gang of toughs, you'd have
-been grouchy, too. And no more of that 'Mister Cavanaugh' stuff. Just
-call me 'Red.' We're pals."
-
-"Are we?"
-
-"Sure we are. We'll both get rich out of this. And even better, we'll do
-the Indian Agency and the whole Navajo nation in the eye. If they accept
-my bids--and they'll have to, because they're higher than those of
-anyone else--we'll get those leases for a half, or even a third, of
-what'd they'd sell for next month when the policy change is announced."
-
-In his hiding place under the trailer floor, Sandy was boiling with
-fury. Momentarily he had forgotten all about being a dog. The Dobermans
-sensed the difference instantly. Perhaps they caught a subtle change in
-his body odor. His anger was making him perspire despite the cold.
-
-The lead dog barked sharply and scrambled to its feet. The others
-followed suit. Sandy tried to croon reassurance to them, but failed.
-They were becoming thoroughly aroused and making an awful racket. He had
-to get out of there--and quickly--before Cavanaugh came to investigate.
-
-He scrambled from under the trailer and sprinted for the jeep. The dogs
-broke into full cry now, and streaked after him. This was a human! And
-an enemy human too! They were out to make him pay dearly for his deceit.
-
-The trailer door banged open as the bedlam rose. Moments later, a
-spotlight picked up the running boy and the dogs that leaped and snapped
-at his bare heels.
-
-"Stop, thief!" Cavanaugh yelled. "Stop or I'll fire!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FOURTEEN
- Showdown
-
-
-At that moment, Sandy tripped over a branch, flung up his arms as he
-fell headlong. The rifle bullet meant for his head merely creased him
-instead, from shoulder to elbow.
-
-He scrambled behind a large rock, managed to get to his feet, and faced
-the gleaming eyes of the oncoming dogs. Something that Quiz once had
-read to him out of a sports magazine flashed through his mind: "If
-attacked by vicious dogs, hold out some object, such as your hat, at
-waist height. They will hesitate while they decide whether to leap over
-it or under it, thus giving you an advantage."
-
-His left arm was numb from the shock of the bullet, but he managed to
-use it to rip the dog skin from around his waist and hold it forward. As
-the dogs whined and tried to make up their minds as to the best method
-of attack, he tore the board on which the "ear" was mounted from his
-chest with his good hand. Thank heaven, one end of the plank had been
-whittled down into a sort of handle, for easier carrying.
-
-Then he charged, swinging the improvised club like a demon.
-
-Luckily, his first blow landed squarely on the snout of a leaping dog!
-
-Sparks flashed. Pieces of equipment flew in all directions. The animal
-howled and rolled on the ground, holding its nose with both paws. Its
-companions backed away.
-
-Sandy followed up his advantage. He struck again and again. The dogs
-fled, howling, to a safe distance.
-
-To the right of him, the boy now heard the pounding of human feet.
-Cavanaugh had abandoned a frontal attack for the moment and was
-sprinting to cut him off from the road leading back to the village.
-
-"Don't kill him, Red," Pepper was shouting. "It would be murder."
-
-"Nobody's going to kill anybody--yet," Cavanaugh yelled as he ran. "But
-we can't let him get away, after what he may have heard. Rig another
-floodlight. Then come over here and help me."
-
-Forgetful of the thorns that tore his skin and the rocks that cut his
-knees, Sandy wriggled, Indian fashion, into a darker spot. In his bare
-feet, he had no chance of reaching the road ahead of Cavanaugh, or even
-of staying out of his way. Keeping a wary eye on the dogs that still
-followed, whining with uncertainty, he ripped Maisie's hide into pieces
-and bound them under his feet. There. That would be better!
-
-He made a feint for the road now--and ducked as another bullet whispered
-overhead and smacked into a nearby tree.
-
-He was in a real spot! If he tried to cross the bare top of the natural
-bridge that arched over the hole in Window Rock, he would make an ideal
-target, silhouetted against the moon. (Thank all the little Navajo gods
-and demons that Cavanaugh's right eye must be swollen shut from the
-beating Ralph had given him. He was in no condition to shoot accurately
-even if he disregarded Pepper's warning.)
-
-Sandy decided that his best strategy lay in hiding among the mesquite
-and sagebrush thickets under the pine trees that covered the side of the
-rock nearest the village. Kitty must have heard the racket. Perhaps she
-would understand what was happening and head for town to get help.
-
-A whoop of delight, followed by several quick shots, made his heart
-sink.
-
-"That jeep will never move again," he heard Cavanaugh yell. The next
-words made him feel much better. "Come on out of the woods, driver, and
-give yourself up. I've got you cut off from the road."
-
-Sandy dithered in his hiding place. He was feeling decidedly queer all
-of a sudden. The fact that his left hand felt wet and slippery brought
-him up short. He was bleeding steadily from that wound in his shoulder.
-He tried dabbing sand on the crease, but it didn't stop the flow.
-Another fifteen or twenty minutes and he would be so weak, that he would
-fall easy prey to his pursuers.
-
-"Bring flashlights out here," Cavanaugh was shouting to Pepper now.
-"We'll beat the woods for the driver first."
-
-Sandy bit his cold lips. Time was running out. He had to act, and act
-fast, before he keeled over from loss of blood. Should he throw himself
-on Pepper's mercy? But, even granted that his old rival wouldn't betray
-him, what good would that do? Cavanaugh had the gun!
-
-The sight of the blond boy walking reluctantly into the woods through
-the floodlight glare, with a heavy flashlight in either hand, gave him
-an idea.
-
-Or was it Quiz who told him what to do? He shook his head dazedly.
-Almost, he could hear Quiz saying: "Where would Professor Moriarty least
-expect to find you, Sherlock Holmes?"
-
-"Elementary, my dear Dr. Watson," he whispered in reply. "In the
-trailer, of course."
-
-Gripping the breadboard in both hands, he made a last weak lunge at the
-circling Dobermans. They fled, yelping, from this blood-spattered
-terror.
-
-Then he crawled frantically toward the open trailer door.
-
-Safe inside, and with the door locked behind him, he hung onto a table
-and stared about him with eyes that were beginning to go out of focus.
-
-He should find a cloth with which to bind up his wound, he knew. But he
-had no time.
-
-The glittering light-beam mechanism caught his attention. That was the
-key to the whole situation! It must project a million candle-power, at
-least, to be seen at Elbow Rock. If he could turn it on Window Rock it
-would light up the village as bright as day.
-
-There must be a wheel or something by which the light could be moved....
-There it was! On the control board to the right!
-
-He twisted the little chrome wheel frantically, watching through a
-window as he did so. At first his aim was wild. Then, every street and
-building in Window Rock leaped into view, as though outlined by a
-lightning stroke.
-
-There! That would tell them something was wrong up here.
-
-He was sleepy and tired after all that effort. So sleepy! He sank into a
-chair in front of the beam console and pillowed his head on his bloody
-arms.
-
-But something nagged him. What he had done wasn't enough. Kitty was out
-there alone in the woods. Cavanaugh might come pounding on the trailer
-door at any moment. He had to tell them ... tell them ... tell them
-what? Why, where he was, and what was happening, naturally!
-
-He jerked himself upright and started tearing at the mass of wiring that
-ran to the light beam modulator. Finally he got down to the heavy
-insulated lead-in wires ... tore them loose.
-
-The beam illuminating the village died away.
-
-He slapped the leads together. The light blinked on.
-
-"SOS," he heliographed in Morse code remembered from Scouting field
-trips. "SOS. May Day. May Day."
-
-Surely somebody at Window Rock would know the code. Certainly Ralph did.
-He repeated the international distress calls again and again.
-
-"SOS. May Day!" he spelled out, his cold fingers making many mistakes.
-"Sandy Steele and Kitty on the Rock. Cavanaugh trying to kill us. Send
-help. SOS. May Day! Sandy Steele and Kitty on the Rock. Cavanaugh...."
-
-He fell forward across the console.
-
-The smash of some heavy object against the door brought him back to
-semi-consciousness.
-
-"Stop that!" Cavanaugh was yelling. "Stop it or I will kill you. Stop
-it. Stop it!" The man sounded completely insane now.
-
-The door bulged, then broke loose from its hinges under a rain of blows.
-
-Cavanaugh stood in the entrance, his good eye wild and rolling, his
-rifle pointed. Behind him, Pepper appeared, still holding one of the
-heavy flashlights.
-
-"An Injun," Cavanaugh gloated without recognition as he took in Sandy's
-dirt-smeared, blood-caked body. "One of Hall's dirty, stinking Injuns.
-This will teach you!"
-
-His finger tightened on the trigger.
-
-"Pepper!" Sandy gasped with the last remnant of his strength. "Don't let
-him kill me, Pepper!"
-
-He slid to the floor as the gun went off.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER FIFTEEN
- The Fourth Touchdown
-
-
-Sandy fought his way up from unconsciousness like a diver rising from
-the bottom of a dark sea. For a long time he lay without moving as he
-tried to sort out the sounds around him. He was dead, of course, he
-reasoned. Nevertheless, some of the voices he seemed to hear sounded
-familiar.
-
-He opened one eye experimentally, prepared to snap it shut if he didn't
-like what he saw. Mrs. Gonzales was bending over him with one of her
-eternal compresses. So was a man with a goatee who had a stethoscope
-clipped around his neck.
-
-Sandy opened the other eye and turned his head, which seemed to weigh a
-ton.
-
-He found that he was in bed and bandaged right up to his chin. Kitty,
-her pretty face badly scratched, was watching him too. So were John Hall
-and ... yes, it was Pepper!
-
-"But I _ought_ to be dead," Sandy whispered in great surprise. "What
-happened?"
-
-"I conked Cavanaugh with his own flashlight," Pepper said with pride.
-"Knocked him out. His shot went wild."
-
-"Thanks a lot, Pepper. Shake." Sandy tried to hold out his hand but
-found he couldn't quite make it.
-
-"Easy," said the doctor.
-
-"Am I badly hurt?" Sandy managed to say.
-
-"Nothing worse than loss of a lot of blood. I've pumped you full of
-plasma. You'll be all right in a few days, but you mustn't exert
-yourself for a while," said the doctor as he started packing instruments
-into his little black bag.
-
-"But I've _got_ to know what happened," Sandy said fretfully. "For
-Pete's _sake_!"
-
-"I called Kitty out of the woods after I hit Cavanaugh," Pepper
-explained. "We got you into his car and brought you home as fast as we
-could."
-
-"And you're all right, Kitty?" Sandy persisted.
-
-"Just a few scratches and bruises." She came forward to prove it and
-patted his bandaged shoulder.
-
-"And ... and Cavanaugh?"
-
-"The crazy fool is still up there," Hall spoke up. "Look." He pointed
-through the bedroom window.
-
-Sandy worked his head around in that direction. The great hump of the
-Window Rock was lit up as bright as day.
-
-"Floodlights," Hall explained as he saw the boy's surprise. "They're set
-up permanently to illuminate the Rock on Frontier Day and for other
-tourist events."
-
-"But...."
-
-"The Navajo police turned them on. The whole force, as well as most of
-the Indians who attended the joint Council meeting, are up there trying
-to flush Cavanaugh out of hiding."
-
-"Ralph too?" Sandy's eyes were shining.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Did the Council meeting come to anything, Mr.--John?"
-
-"It broke up before any formal agreement was signed when we got your
-message, but...."
-
-"Gee, I'm sorry about that."
-
-"Forget it. I only had the chance to say a few words to Ralph while they
-were organizing the posse, but he told me the tribes understand each
-other's position now. It's just a matter of ironing out details before
-they agree to put those boundary-line leases up for bids."
-
-"That'll be great for you," Sandy said, "but I sure wish I hadn't had
-to...."
-
-"Forget it, I said." Hall patted his shoulder too. (Why did everybody
-have to pat him as if he were a dog? Sandy wondered crossly. Then he
-burst out laughing, although to do so hurt his face and chest. Why, he
-almost _was_ a dog, wasn't he?)
-
-"Young man, you're getting much too excited," the doctor warned as he
-approached the bed, hypodermic needle in hand. "I'd better put you to
-sleep for a while."
-
-Sandy pushed him away.
-
-"There's something else," he cried. "John, did Pepper tell you about the
-message Cavanaugh received from Washington?"
-
-"I told him there had been a message, and what Cavanaugh said to Elbow
-Rock," Pepper spoke up. "But I couldn't hear the message itself.
-Cavanaugh was wearing the earphones."
-
-"Better forget all this for a while and go to sleep, Sandy," said Hall.
-His face was gaunt with worry.
-
-"No! You must listen now."
-
-Sandy wanted desperately to go to sleep, but he wouldn't let himself
-give in. Slowly, forcing each word out of his mouth as though it weighed
-several pounds, he repeated the message to Cavanaugh as well as he could
-remember it.
-
-"Good Lord!" Hall gasped. "This changes the whole picture. I must call
-Ken!"
-
-He rushed to the telephone while Sandy's eyelids closed in spite of his
-efforts to keep them open. He just _had_ to have a few minutes' sleep.
-
-White's arrival at the cottage jerked him awake again. The Agent was
-wearing heavy boots and carried a pair of binoculars slung over his
-pudgy shoulder.
-
-"What's all this, John?" he demanded. "I was just leaving from the Rock
-when you called. I sent off an inquiry to the Department of Interior
-immediately, of course. Then this message came in from San Francisco.
-That's what took me so long getting here. The message is for you,
-Sandy."
-
-"Read it to me, please," the boy said. "I'm too weak to lift a finger."
-
-White ripped open the yellow envelope, got out his glasses, and read:
-
- FINALLY GOT HERE STOP NEWSPAPER FILES SHOW THERE WAS CAVANAUGH ON
- STATE TEAM IN 1930 WHO MADE ALL-AMERICAN STOP BUT HE WAS CALLED BRICK
- NOT RED STOP ALL SPORTS PAGE STORIES ON BIG GAME SAY HE MADE FOUR
- TOUCHDOWNS REPEAT FOUR TOUCHDOWNS AGAINST CALIFORNIA STOP QUIZ TAYLOR
-
-"Aw shucks," Pepper said disgustedly. "That proves our Cavanaugh isn't
-an impostor after all."
-
-"Wait a minute! Wait a minute!" Sandy dragged himself up on one elbow
-despite Mrs. Gonzales' efforts to make him lie still. "It proves no such
-thing!"
-
-"But if he did make those three touchdowns he was always bragging
-about...." Pepper started to protest.
-
-"_Four_ touchdowns, the telegram says," Sandy panted. "Now look, all of
-you. Maybe a real football player might _add_ a touchdown to his record
-if he thought no one would catch him at it. But who would _subtract_ a
-touchdown? Nobody. That's who!
-
-"Cavanaugh is a phony, I tell you. Whoever he really is, he wanted to
-impress people, and keep them from asking too many personal questions
-when he went to Valley View and started building his lab with the money
-he had stolen from Mr. Gonzales. He remembered that there was another
-Cavanaugh on the State team, so he took his identity. But the game had
-been played so many years ago that he got the details wrong, see? I'll
-bet that, if we start digging into his past, we'll find lots of other
-queer things."
-
-"We'll need to do a lot of digging, too, to make any charges stick
-against him after we catch him," White said grimly.
-
-"What do you mean?" Hall exploded. "He's guilty of attempted homicide,
-defrauding the Indians, disturbing the peace, and I don't know what all
-else."
-
-"Oh, he's guilty all right," the Agent agreed, "but could you prove that
-to a jury, particularly out here where so many people still think that
-the only good Indian is a dead Indian?"
-
-"Oh, you're being an old woman, Ken," the oilman snapped.
-
-"Maybe so, John. Maybe so. But I've been in this business a long time.
-If Cavanaugh or whoever he is hadn't lost his head, he would have come
-right down here and given himself up. Then his lawyers could have
-claimed that he was only defending his property from a prowler. No. No.
-Shut up and listen to me. People are awful touchy about property rights
-out here. Remember what they used to do to cattle rustlers--still do,
-for that matter, on occasion.
-
-"And now about this message that Sandy heard: Cavanaugh's lawyers would
-say 'Prove it!' And what real proof have we got? We'd be putting up the
-word of a minor who _did_ prowl--I'm not blaming you, Sandy. You did the
-only thing possible and your idea of using the light beam to call for
-help was a stroke of pure genius--but, as I say, the word of a minor
-against the word of an established businessman who has a lot of friends
-in these parts."
-
-"Then you don't think...." Hall was really shocked.
-
-"I _think_ we have a chance of making our charges stick with the help of
-the information Quiz has dug up, but I'm not even sure of that. Frankly,
-if the government doesn't act faster than it usually does, I'm afraid
-all of Cavanaugh's uranium lease bids may have to be accepted tomorrow.
-He can claim, you see, that he put them in before the time that he is
-even _accused_ of having received his illegal tip."
-
-"Wow!" Sandy stared at his employer with round eyes. "Well anyway," he
-added, "the change in policy will give you a chance to develop your own
-uranium strike on the San Juan."
-
-"Fat lot of good that will do me if Cavanaugh ties us up with a libel
-and defamation suit," Hall grunted. "Well, Ken, it looks as if we're all
-in trouble unless ... what was that?"
-
-They all whirled toward the window.
-
-Far up near the top of Window Rock, pinpoints of light were flashing.
-The clean, thin sound of rifle shots came down to them through the still
-desert air.
-
-White snatched at his binoculars and trained them on the mountain. Long
-moments passed as he fiddled with the focus.
-
-"The idiot!" he almost whispered at last. "The poor scared, hysterical
-fool. He's making a run for it across the top of the natural bridge!"
-
-Hall snapped off the room light. Somehow, Sandy managed, with Kitty's
-help, to sit up where he could get a view of the bare slab of rock where
-he had almost been tempted to do what Cavanaugh was now trying.
-
-They all held their breath in the darkness as they strained their eyes.
-
-There he was! A tiny black shadow, bent nearly double as he raced madly
-through the floodlight glare.
-
-"He's going to make it. He's going to make it!" Pepper shouted, his old
-loyalty to his boss coming to the fore. "Run, Red. _Run!_"
-
-The fleeing man stumbled. He threw up his arms and reeled to the edge of
-the narrow rock bridge. Almost, he recovered his balance....
-
-Then he fell, turning over and over slowly, for a thousand miles, it
-seemed.
-
-Kitty and her mother screamed together.
-
-"It's better so," White murmured at last as he put his glasses back in
-their case. "A clean death. Cavanaugh made that fourth touchdown after
-all."
-
-
- SANDY STEELE ADVENTURES
-
- 1. BLACK TREASURE
-
-Sandy Steele and Quiz spend an action-filled summer in the oil fields of
-the Southwest. In their search for oil and uranium, they unmask a
-dangerous masquerader.
-
- 2. DANGER AT MORMON CROSSING
-
-On a hunting trip in the Lost River section of Idaho, Sandy and Mike
-ride the rapids, bag a mountain lion, and stumble onto the answer to a
-hundred-year-old mystery.
-
- 3. STORMY VOYAGE
-
-Sandy and Jerry James ship as deck hands on one of the "long boats" of
-the Great Lakes. They are plunged into a series of adventures and find
-themselves involved in a treacherous plot.
-
- 4. FIRE AT RED LAKE
-
-Sandy and his friends pitch in to fight a forest fire in Minnesota. Only
-they and Sandy's uncle know that there is an unexploded A-bomb in the
-area to add to the danger.
-
- 5. SECRET MISSION TO ALASKA
-
-A pleasant Christmas trip turns into a startling adventure. Sandy and
-Jerry participate in a perilous dog-sled race, encounter a wounded bear,
-and are taken as hostages by a ruthless enemy.
-
- 6. TROUBLED WATERS
-
-When Sandy and Jerry mistakenly sail off in a stranger's sloop instead
-of their own, they land in a sea of trouble. Their attempts to
-outmaneuver a desperate crew are intertwined with fascinating sailing
-lore.
-
- PUBLISHED BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original--this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
---In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the
- HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Black Treasure, by Roger Barlow
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACK TREASURE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 50256-8.txt or 50256-8.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/0/2/5/50256/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
diff --git a/old/50256-8.zip b/old/50256-8.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 319ccdc..0000000
--- a/old/50256-8.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/50256-h.zip b/old/50256-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index f69b1e0..0000000
--- a/old/50256-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/50256-h/50256-h.htm b/old/50256-h/50256-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 4a29872..0000000
--- a/old/50256-h/50256-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,5834 +0,0 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
-<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8" />
-<title>Black Treasure, by Roger Barlow</title>
-<meta name="author" content="Roger Barlow" />
-<link rel="coverpage" href="images/cover.jpg" />
-<link rel="schema.DC" href="http://dublincore.org/documents/1998/09/dces/" />
-<meta name="DC.Creator" content="Roger Barlow (ps.)" />
-<meta name="DC.Title" content="Black Treasure" />
-<meta name="DC.Language" content="en" />
-<meta name="DC.Format" content="text/html" />
-<meta name="pss.pubdate" content="1959" />
-<style type="text/css">
-xbody, table.twocol tr td { margin-left:2em; margin-right:2em; } /* BODY */
-
-h1, h2, h3, h5, h6, .titlepg p { text-align:center; clear:right; } /* HEADINGS */
-h1 { margin-top:3em; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto; max-width:15em; }
-.box h1, .box h2 { margin-top:.5em; }
-h2, h3 { margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:2em; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width: 17em; }
-.box h3 { margin-top:1em; }
-h2.toc { font-style:normal; }
-h2 { font-style:italic; }
-h2 span { font-style:normal; }
-h6 { font-size:100%; font-style:italic; }
-h6.var { font-size:80%; font-style:normal; }
-.titlepg { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; border-style:double; clear:both; }
-
-/* == BOXES == */
-.dbox { border-style:double; }
-div.box, .dbox { margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; max-width:25em;}
-.nbox { margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; max-width:18em;}
-div.box, div.subbox, div.nbox { border-style:solid; border-width:1px; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em; }
-div.subbox { margin:.2em; }
-div.box dl dd, div.subbox dl dd, div.nbox dl dd {margin-left:2em; font-size:90%; }
-div.box dl dt, div.subbox dl dt, div.nbox dl dt {margin-left:1em; }
-div.box p {margin-left:1em; margin-right:1em; max-width:70em; }
-h4 { font-size:80%; text-align:center; clear:right; }
-span.chaptertitle { font-style:normal; display:block; text-align:center; font-size:150%; }
-
-p, blockquote, li { text-align:justify; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; } /* PARAGRAPHS */
-p.bq, blockquote { margin-left:2em; margin-right:2em; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:2em; }
-div.verse { font-size:100%; }
-p.indent {text-indent:2em; text-align:left; }
-p.tb, p.tbcenter { margin-top:2em; }
-
-span.pb, div.pb, dt.pb, p.pb /* PAGE BREAKS */
-{ text-align:right; float:right; margin-right:0em; clear:right; }
-div.pb { display:inline; }
-.pb, dt.pb, dl.toc dt.pb, dl.tocl dt.pb, .index dt.pb { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left: 1.5em;
- margin-top:.5em; margin-bottom:.5em; display:inline; text-indent:0;
- font-size:80%; font-style:normal; font-weight:bold;
- color:gray; border:1px solid gray;padding:1px 3px; }
-div.index .pb { display:block; }
-.bq div.pb, .bq span.pb { font-size:90%; margin-right:2em; }
-
-div.img, body a img, .imgcenter {text-align:center; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; margin-top:2em; }
-
-sup, a.fn { font-size:75%; vertical-align:100%; line-height:50%; font-weight:normal; }
-.center, .tbcenter, .csmallest, .csmaller { text-align:center; clear:both; } /* TEXTUAL MARKUP */
-table.center { clear:both; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
-.small { font-size:80%; }
-.smaller, .csmaller { font-size:66%; }
-.smallest, .csmallest { font-size:50%; }
-.larger, .xlarge { font-size:150%; }
-.large { font-size:125%; }
-.gs { letter-spacing:1em; }
-.gs3 { letter-spacing:1.5em; }
-.gslarge { letter-spacing:.3em; font-size:110%; }
-.sc { font-variant:small-caps; font-style: normal; }
-.sc i { font-variant:normal; }
-.rubric { color: red; font-weight:bold; }
-hr { width:40%; margin-left:30%; }
-.shorthr { width:20%; }
-.jl { text-align:left; }
-span.jl { float:left; }
-.jr, .jr1 { text-align:right; }
-span.jr, span.jr1, span.center, span.jl { display:block; }
-.jr1 { margin-right:2em; }
-.ind1 { text-align:left; margin-left:2em; }
-.u { text-decoration:underline; }
-
-table.center { border-style: groove; }
-table.center, table.hymntab { clear:both; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
-
-dd.t { text-align:left; margin-left: 5.5em; }
-
-span.date, span.author { text-align:right; font-variant:small-caps; display:block; margin-right:1em; }
-span.center { text-align:center; display:block; }
-span.hst { margin-left:1.5em; }
-.biblio dt { margin-top:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
-.biblio dd { font-size:90%; }
-
-/* INDEX (.INDEX) */
-
-/* FOOTNOTE BLOCKS */
-div.notes p { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; text-align:justify; max-width:25em; }
-.fnblock { margin-top:2em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; max-width:25em; }
-.fndef { text-align:justify; margin-top:1.5em; margin-left:1.5em; text-indent:-1.5em; }
-.fndef p.fncont, .fndef dl { margin-left:0em; text-indent:0em; }
-.fndef p.fnbq, .fndef dl { margin-left:1em; text-indent:0em; }
-
-.lnum { text-align:right; float:right; margin-left:.5em; /* POETRY LINE NUMBER */
-display:inline; }
-
-.hymn { text-align:left; } /* HYMN AND VERSE: HTML */
-.verse { text-align:left; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:0em; }
-p.t0, p.l, .t0, .l, div.l, l { margin-left:4em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.tw, div.tw, .tw { margin-left:1em; text-indent:-1em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t, div.t, .t { margin-left:5em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t2, div.t2, .t2 { margin-left:6em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t3, div.t3, .t3 { margin-left:7em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t4, div.t4, .t4 { margin-left:8em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t5, div.t5, .t5 { margin-left:9em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t6, div.t6, .t6 { margin-left:10em; text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t7, div.t7, .t7 { margin-left:11em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t8, div.t8, .t8 { margin-left:12em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t9, div.t9, .t9 { margin-left:13em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t10,div.t10,.t10 { margin-left:14em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t11,div.t11,.t11 { margin-left:15em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t12,div.t12,.t12 { margin-left:16em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t13,div.t13,.t13 { margin-left:17em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t14,div.t14,.t14 { margin-left:18em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-p.t15,div.t15,.t15 { margin-left:19em;text-indent:-3em; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; text-align:left; }
-
- /* CONTENTS (.TOC) */
- .toc dt.center { text-align:center; clear:both; margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:1em; }
- .toc dt { text-align:right; clear:left;
- margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width:25em; font-style:italic; }
- .toc dt .cn { font-style:normal; }
- .toc dt.jr { text-align:right; }
- .toc dt.smaller { max-width:25em; }
- .toc dd { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:2em; }
- .toc dd.t { text-align:right; clear:both; margin-left:4em; text-indent:0em; }
- .toc dt a, .toc dd a { text-align:left; clear:right; float:left; }
- .toc dt.sc { text-align:right; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
- .toc dt.scl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
- .toc dt.sct { text-align:right; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; margin-left:1em; }
- .toc dt.jl { text-align:left; clear:both; font-variant:normal; }
- .toc dt.scc { text-align:center; clear:both; font-variant:small-caps; }
- .toc dt span.lj { text-align:left; display:block; float:left; }
- .toc dt.jr { font-style:normal; }
- .toc dt a span.cn, .toc dt span.cn, dt span.cn { width:3.5em; text-align:right; margin-right:.7em; float:left; }
- dt .large {font-weight:bold; }
- div.bcat dl dd { margin-left:4em; max-width:21em; }
- div.bcat dl dt { text-indent:-2em; margin-left:2em; }
-
-.clear { clear:both; }
-.htab { margin-left:8em; }
- /* MAXWIDTH FOR JUVENILE BOOKS */
- p, blockquote, li, dd, dt, div.bcat, pre { text-align:justify; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- p, li, dd, dt, div.bcat, pre.internal dl { max-width:25em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- p.csmaller { max-width:38em; }
- p.csmallest { max-width:40em; }
- blockquote { max-width:23em; }
-
-
- div.verse { max-width:25em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- div.bq { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width:23em; }
-/* book advertisements */
- p.bkad {font-size:125%; font-weight:bold; margin-top:2em; max-width:20em; margin-right:auto; margin-left:auto; }
- p.bkpr {font-size:90%; }
- p.bkrv { }
- dl.blist dt { margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; }
- dl.blist, dl.biblio { margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; max-width:25em; }
-</style>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Black Treasure, by Roger Barlow
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Black Treasure
- Sandy Steele Adventures #1
-
-Author: Roger Barlow
-
-Release Date: October 19, 2015 [EBook #50256]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACK TREASURE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Black Treasure" width="500" height="789" />
-</div>
-<p class="center">SANDY STEELE ADVENTURES</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="sc">Black Treasure</span>
-<br /><span class="sc">Danger at Mormon Crossing</span>
-<br /><span class="sc">Stormy Voyage</span>
-<br /><span class="sc">Fire at Red Lake</span>
-<br /><span class="sc">Secret Mission to Alaska</span>
-<br /><span class="sc">Troubled Waters</span></p>
-<div class="box">
-<h1>Sandy Steele Adventures<br />
-<br /><i>BLACK TREASURE</i></h1>
-<p class="tbcenter">BY ROGER BARLOW</p>
-<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">SIMON AND SCHUSTER</span>
-<br /><i>New York, 1959</i></p>
-</div>
-<p class="csmaller">ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-<br />INCLUDING THE RIGHT OF REPRODUCTION
-<br />IN WHOLE OR IN PART IN ANY FORM
-<br />COPYRIGHT &copy; 1959 BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
-<br />PUBLISHED BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER, INC.
-<br />ROCKEFELLER CENTER, 630 FIFTH AVENUE
-<br />NEW YORK 20, N. Y.</p>
-<p class="csmaller">FIRST PRINTING</p>
-<p class="csmaller">LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER: 59-13882
-<br />MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-<br />BY H. WOLFF BOOK MFG. CO., INC., NEW YORK.</p>
-<h2 class="toc">CONTENTS</h2>
-<dl class="toc">
-<dt class="jr"><span class="jl"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span></span> <span class="small">PAGE</span></dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">1 </span><a href="#c1">The Man in Blue Jeans</a> 7</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">2 </span><a href="#c2">Kit Carson Country</a> 17</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">3 </span><a href="#c3">A &ldquo;Poor Boy&rdquo; Outfit</a> 33</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">4 </span><a href="#c4">Learning the Ropes</a> 46</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">5 </span><a href="#c5">A Light in the Window Rock</a> 61</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">6 </span><a href="#c6">Cliff Dweller Country</a> 75</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">7 </span><a href="#c7">Back of Beyond</a> 90</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">8 </span><a href="#c8">Cavanaugh Shows His Colors</a> 103</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">9 </span><a href="#c9">Fighting Fire with Fire</a> 116</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">10 </span><a href="#c10">Pepper Makes a Play</a> 128</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">11 </span><a href="#c11">Serendipity</a> 144</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">12 </span><a href="#c12">Cavanaugh Makes a Mistake</a> 154</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">13 </span><a href="#c13">Think Like a Dog</a> 165</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">14 </span><a href="#c14">Showdown</a> 177</dt>
-<dt><span class="cn">15 </span><a href="#c15">The Fourth Touchdown</a> 184</dt>
-</dl>
-<div class="img" id="pic1">
-<img src="images/pic1.jpg" alt="Map of Four Corners" width="600" height="727" />
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">CHAPTER ONE</span>
-<br />The Man in Blue Jeans</h2>
-<p>High jinks were in order as the Regional Science
-Fair drew to a close in the big auditorium at
-Poplar City, California. A board of judges had
-selected prize-winning exhibits entered by high-school
-students from Valley View, Poplar City and
-other nearby communities. Now the winners were
-blowing off steam while teachers who had supervised
-the fair sat in quiet corners and fanned
-themselves wearily.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Step right up, ladies and gentlemen,&rdquo; Pepper
-March whooped like a circus barker as he strutted
-in front of his First Prize winner, a glittering
-maze of electronic equipment. &ldquo;Broadcast your
-voice over my beam of light. The very newest
-thing in science. Built through the co-operation of
-Valley View&rsquo;s own Cavanaugh Laboratories. Step
-right up.... Yes, miss?&rdquo; A girl had approached
-the exhibit, wide-eyed. &ldquo;Please speak into this
-microphone.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What do I say?&rdquo; As she spoke, a quivering
-pencil of light leaped from a black box in the
-booth and her words thundered from a loudspeaker
-in the balcony.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, recite &lsquo;Mary Had a Little Lamb,&rsquo;&rdquo; suggested
-the big blond boy, and grinned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Mary,&rsquo;&rdquo; boomed the girl&rsquo;s voice from the
-rear of the hall as Pepper twiddled a mirror that
-deflected the light beam to a second loud-speaker,
-&ldquo;&lsquo;had a little lamb.&rsquo;&rdquo; (Those words seemed to
-come out of the floor.) &ldquo;&lsquo;Its fleece was white as
-snow.&rsquo;&rdquo; (The last phrase blared from a chandelier.)</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good old Pepper! Grandstanding again!&rdquo;
-muttered Sandy Steele as the crowd cheered.
-Sandy stared glumly at a small sign reading
-<span class="sc">Honorable Mention</span> that perched on the exhibit
-which he and his pal Quiz Taylor had entered in
-the fair. It wasn&rsquo;t fancy-looking like Pepper&rsquo;s, he
-had to admit. It was just a mound of wet cardboard
-sheets stuck full of pins, plus a homemade
-control panel and some batteries. &ldquo;Ours <i>was</i>
-better,&rdquo; he added.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I agree,&rdquo; Quiz sighed. &ldquo;After all the work we
-put into this thing! Molding sheets of cardboard
-to the shape of underground rock layers. Soaking
-them with salt water so they&rsquo;ll carry electric
-currents that imitate the direction in which oil
-deposits flow.&rdquo; He hooked a wire to one of the
-pins and pressed a button. A flashlight bulb on
-the control panel winked at him mockingly.
-&ldquo;We sure deserve something better than a Mention!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Step this way, folks,&rdquo; Quiz called halfheartedly
-to the passers-by. &ldquo;Learn how petroleum can be
-located, thousands of feet beneath the earth.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Nobody paid any attention except one Valley
-View boy who was pushing his way toward Pepper&rsquo;s
-booth, a phonograph record under one
-skinny arm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sour grapes,&rdquo; jeered the boy. &ldquo;You and Sandy
-better forget that mess. Come over and watch
-Pepper play this stereo record over his beam. It&rsquo;ll
-be something!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shall we?&rdquo; Sandy looked at his friend miserably.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Unh-uh,&rdquo; answered the short, round-faced
-boy. &ldquo;Here comes a customer&mdash;I think.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A suntanned little man in faded blue shirt and
-jeans had ambled up to their booth and was studying
-the exhibit with his gray head tilted to one
-side.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A reservoir behavior analyzer, huh?&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;Represents the Four Corners area. Right?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why ... yes, sir.&rdquo; Sandy stared at him,
-openmouthed. &ldquo;We built it to represent the geological
-structure of the country where the boundaries
-of Utah, Colorado, Arizona and New Mexico
-meet. This map and card explain&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know the Four Corners,&rdquo; grunted the little
-man as he sized up the tall, sandy-haired youngster.
-&ldquo;Is your gadget accurate?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As accurate as we could make it with the
-survey maps we could find.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hmmm.&rdquo; Their visitor&rsquo;s sharp eyes studied
-the gray mound. &ldquo;What happens if I should drill
-an oil well here, in the northwest corner of the
-Navajo Indian reservation?&rdquo; He pointed with a
-lean finger.</p>
-<p>Sandy moved a pin to the spot he indicated,
-connected it to the control panel with a length of
-wire, and pressed a switch.</p>
-<p>Nothing happened!</p>
-<p>Quiz groaned. Why couldn&rsquo;t the thing show off
-when they wanted it to?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If you drilled there, sir, you&rsquo;d just have a dry
-hole,&rdquo; Sandy said with more confidence than he
-felt. &ldquo;That location must be on the far fringe of
-the oil pool.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right!&rdquo; The little man grinned from ear to
-ear, showing a fine white set of false teeth. &ldquo;I did
-drill a wildcat well there. She was dry as a bone.
-My ninth duster in a row.... Now what
-happens if I drill here, near the bed of the San
-Juan River?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_11">11</div>
-<p>This time a bulb glowed brightly when they
-stuck their pin into the cardboard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t be sure, sir,&rdquo; Sandy hesitated. &ldquo;We
-don&rsquo;t know too much about geology. Besides, oil
-is like gold. It&rsquo;s where you find it, and the only
-way you find it is by drilling for it. But I&rsquo;d guess
-that, in the neighborhood you indicated, you&rsquo;d
-stand a chance of hitting a thousand barrels per
-day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Eight hundred and fifty barrels,&rdquo; corrected the
-man in the blue jeans. &ldquo;The well I drilled on the
-San Juan was the only thing that kept me out of
-bankruptcy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A blare of jazz from Pepper&rsquo;s loud-speakers,
-now working in unison, cut off further conversation
-and gave the boys a chance to study their
-strange acquaintance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you go over and take in that beam-of-light
-exhibit?&rdquo; Sandy said when Pepper had
-brought the sound down to bearable levels. &ldquo;It
-won first prize.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That pile of expensive junk?&rdquo; sniffed the little
-man. &ldquo;All the kid did was to borrow some apparatus
-from Red Cavanaugh&rsquo;s Valley View Laboratory.
-If I know Red&mdash;and I do know the big
-fourflusher well&mdash;he didn&rsquo;t make the boy do a
-lick of real research on it.... Oh!&rdquo; Again that
-wide grin. &ldquo;You think I&rsquo;m crazy and want to get
-rid of me, don&rsquo;t you? Here.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
-<p>He dug into his jeans and came up with a
-greasy card which read:</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="sc">The Four Corners Drilling Company
-<br />John Hall, President
-<br />Farmington, N. M.</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;Guess I should have got dressed up for this
-shindig,&rdquo; Hall apologized, &ldquo;but I just got in from
-Farmington. I read about your analyzer in the
-<i>Valley View News</i> when you won first prize at
-your high-school science fair last month. Used to
-live there. That&rsquo;s why I still get the paper. Your
-dingus should have received first prize here too,
-instead of that voice-cast thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say! You came all this way just to see our
-exhibit? Thanks!&rdquo; was all Sandy could think of
-to say.</p>
-<p>As the auditorium lights blinked to indicate
-that the fair was closing, Hall added, &ldquo;Got time
-for a bite? I have a proposition I&rsquo;d like to sound
-you out on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At a nearby diner, the oilman ordered full
-meals for all of them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s my proposition,&rdquo; he said when the boys
-couldn&rsquo;t eat another mouthful. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a small wildcat
-operator. That means I hunt for oil in places
-that are so wild and woolly that only wildcats can
-live there. Once or twice I&rsquo;ve struck it rich.
-Should have retired then, but there&rsquo;s something
-about oil exploration that gets in a feller&rsquo;s blood.
-So I went out, drilled some dry holes, and lost my
-shirt.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Right now I&rsquo;m strapped until my new field
-pays off&mdash;if it does. But I think I&rsquo;m onto something
-big in the Four Corners and I need help.
-You boys must have a working knowledge of
-geology to build an analyzer as good as that. How
-about working for me this summer?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sandy&rsquo;s the rock hound,&rdquo; Quiz said and hesitated.
-&ldquo;I ... I&rsquo;ve only read up on it in books.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All I know is what Dad has told me,&rdquo; Sandy
-remarked. &ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t have built the exhibit without
-Quiz&rsquo;s help.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Forget the mutual-admiration-society stuff,&rdquo;
-said Hall. &ldquo;Would you both like to spend your
-vacations in the Four Corners, working as roustabouts
-and helping me out wherever else you can?
-It won&rsquo;t be easy. But when you get through you&rsquo;ll
-know a lot about oil, geology, how to get along
-with Indians, and I don&rsquo;t know what all.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be out on the desert in all kinds of
-weather. You&rsquo;ll chip rocks, hold stadia rods,
-sharpen tools and dig the trucks out of holes on
-those awful roads. Everything you learn will come
-in handy when you go to college.... You are
-going, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy nodded but Quiz shook his head miserably.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I doubt it,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;unless things at Dad&rsquo;s
-restaurant pick up.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense,&rdquo; Hall snorted. &ldquo;You can get a
-scholarship in geology if you&rsquo;ve had experience in
-the field. Tell you what: I know your father
-slightly&mdash;he serves mighty good victuals. I&rsquo;ll go
-over to Valley View tomorrow and talk things
-over with him. I&rsquo;ll bet we can work something out
-for you.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s another thing, though,&rdquo; he went on
-thoughtfully. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got almost every cent I own
-tied up in oil leases right now. I can&rsquo;t pay either
-of you very much&mdash;say forty dollars a week. You
-probably can do almost as well right at home.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d rather work with you than wait on table,&rdquo;
-Quiz declared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Or cut lawns and things,&rdquo; Sandy added.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s settled then.&rdquo; Hall shook hands gravely.
-&ldquo;See you in Valley View.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As they were leaving the diner, Pepper March
-came charging in with a flock of admiring Valley
-Viewers behind him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait up,&rdquo; Pepper whooped, grabbing his defeated
-rivals as they tried to dodge past him. &ldquo;My
-treat. Come have a Coke while I tell you about my
-good luck.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Another</i> Coke!&rdquo; Sandy groaned. He had
-practically lived on them during the science fair.
-But curiosity got the better of him and he went
-back to the counter, followed by Quiz. By the time
-he found a stool, Pepper was holding forth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know Mr. Cavanaugh, the man I got some
-of the stuff for my voice-caster from?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The man from whom you borrowed <i>all</i> your
-equipment,&rdquo; Sandy corrected between his teeth.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what <i>you</i> think, Honorable Mention.&rdquo;
-Pepper turned to his admirers. &ldquo;Anyway, he has a
-sideline: spends his summers hunting uranium.
-Also, he&rsquo;s the same Red Cavanaugh who was All-American
-quarterback for State U. in 1930. He&rsquo;s
-the fellow who ran three touchdowns against
-California in the Thanksgiving game that year.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There was a Cavanaugh who made All-American,&rdquo;
-Quiz agreed as he scratched his round head,
-&ldquo;but I thought....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;See!&rdquo; cried Pepper. &ldquo;Quiz knows all there is
-to know about football. He&rsquo;s heard about Red.
-Well, Mr. Cavanaugh attends all the Valley View
-games. Says he likes the way <i>I</i> run touchdowns.&rdquo;
-Pepper leered at Sandy, who was not always the
-spectacular player that Pepper was. &ldquo;Also, Mr.
-Cavanaugh appreciates the plugs I gave to his
-laboratory whenever I explained my voice-caster,
-so what do you think...?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s going to install you as a loud-speaker in
-one of his TV sets,&rdquo; Quiz suggested.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_16">16</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Nah!&rdquo; Pepper stopped the laughter with a
-lordly, upraised hand. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s giving me a summer
-job. I&rsquo;m going to help him hunt uranium.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where?&rdquo; Sandy gave his pal a stricken look.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where? Why, the place where there&rsquo;s more
-uranium than almost anywhere in the United
-States. But you wouldn&rsquo;t know where that is.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; groaned Quiz. &ldquo;Not the Four Corners.
-Not there! Ain&rsquo;t there no justice?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; Pepper looked at him
-doubtfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I mean Sandy and I have jobs there too, and
-Four Corners is going to be awfully crowded this
-summer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh.&rdquo; Some of the wind went out of Pepper&rsquo;s
-sails. Then he brightened. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll buy another round
-of Cokes if either of <i>you</i> is going to get sixty
-dollars a week,&rdquo; he crowed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_17">17</div>
-<h2 id="c2"><span class="small">CHAPTER TWO</span>
-<br />Kit Carson Country</h2>
-<p>&ldquo;This sure isn&rsquo;t my idea of a boom town!&rdquo; Sandy
-grumbled as he and Quiz got off the eastbound
-Greyhound at Farmington, New Mexico, dropped
-their dusty bags and stood watching the early
-morning bustle on the little town&rsquo;s wide streets.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yeah.&rdquo; Quiz wagged his head. &ldquo;The Wild West
-shore ain&rsquo;t what she used to be, pardner. No
-twenty-mule-team wagons stuck in Main Street
-mudholes. No gambling dives in evidence. No
-false store fronts. No sheriff in a white hat walkin&rsquo;
-slowlike down a wooden sidewalk to shoot it out
-with the bad man in a black hat. Ah, for the good
-old days.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, go fly a jet,&rdquo; Sandy grinned. &ldquo;Let&rsquo;s look
-up Mr. Hall. Funny, his giving us his home
-address. He must have an office in town.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_18">18</div>
-<p>They strolled along, noticing the new stores
-and office buildings, the modern high school.
-Farmington would never become a ghost town. It
-was building solidly for the future.</p>
-<p>Suddenly Quiz grabbed his friend&rsquo;s arm.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look at that oilman who&rsquo;s just made a strike,&rdquo;
-he said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll ask him if he knows Mr. Hall.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you know that he is, and has?&rdquo; Sandy
-demanded as they approached a lanky stranger.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because he&rsquo;s wearing a brand-new Stetson and
-new shoes, of course,&rdquo; Quiz explained, as to a
-child. &ldquo;Drillers always buy them when their well
-comes in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Trust you to know something like that,&rdquo;
-Sandy said in mock admiration.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well now,&rdquo; drawled the Farmingtonian when
-they put their question, &ldquo;you&rsquo;d have to get up
-earlier than this to catch John Hall in town. John
-keeps his office in his hat. Might as well spend the
-day seeing the sights, and look him up at his motel
-when he gets back from the Regions tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What sights?&rdquo; asked Sandy when the oilman,
-obviously a transplanted Texan, had stumped
-away in high-heeled boots that must have hurt his
-feet. &ldquo;Those mountains, maybe? They look close
-enough to touch. Let&rsquo;s walk out to them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let this clear, thin air fool you,&rdquo; Quiz
-warned. &ldquo;Those mountains are probably twenty
-miles away. We&rsquo;d need a car to&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_19">19</div>
-<p>A great honking and squealing of brakes behind
-them made the boys jump for safety. As they
-turned to give the driver what-for, Pepper March
-stuck his curly head out the window of a new
-jeep that was towing an equally new aluminum
-house trailer as big as a barn.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Welcome to our fair city,&rdquo; Pepper shouted.
-&ldquo;Saw you get off the bus, so I prepared a proper
-reception. How about a guided tour while I run
-this trailer over to Red&rsquo;s camp?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How long have you been here?&rdquo; Sandy asked
-as they climbed aboard.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Red flew me over last Friday in his Bonanza.
-I&rsquo;ve got the hang of his entire layout already.
-Nothing to it, really.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As he headed the jeep for the mountains,
-Pepper kept up a monologue in which skimpy
-descriptions of the countryside were mixed with
-large chunks of autobiography.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Every square mile of this desert supports five
-Indians, fifty sheep, five hundred rattlesnakes
-and fifty thousand prairie dogs,&rdquo; he joked as they
-left the pavement for a winding dirt trail. They
-bounced madly through clumps of sagebrush,
-prairie-dog colonies, and tortured hills made of
-many-colored rock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;These roads wear out a car in a year, and you
-have to put in new springs every three months,&rdquo;
-he added as they hit a chuckhole that made their
-teeth rattle.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_20">20</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Look at those crazy rock formations,&rdquo; he said
-later while the boys sweated and puffed to jack
-up the rear end of the trailer so it could get
-around a particularly sharp hairpin turn in the
-trail. (<i>Now</i> they knew why Pepper had extended
-his invitation for a tour!) &ldquo;No telling what minerals
-you might find if you used electronic exploration
-methods on scrambled geology like this. Why,
-only last night, while we were sitting around the
-campfire at Elbow Rock, I said to Red: &lsquo;Red,&rsquo; I
-said, just like that&mdash;we&rsquo;ve become real pals already,
-you know&mdash;&lsquo;Red,&rsquo; I said, &lsquo;why don&rsquo;t we
-branch out? Why don&rsquo;t we look for oil as well as
-uranium, now that we&rsquo;re out here?&rsquo; And Red said
-to me: &lsquo;Pepper,&rsquo; he said&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;&mdash;when did you get your Ph.D. in geology?&rsquo;&rdquo;
-Sandy cut in.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing like that at all! &lsquo;Pepper,&rsquo; he said,
-&lsquo;you&rsquo;re right on the electron beam. We&rsquo;ll organize
-the Red Pepper Oil Exploration and Contracting
-Company and give John Hall and those other
-stick-in-the-muds a run for their money.&rsquo; Oops!
-Hope we didn&rsquo;t break anything that time!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The jeep&rsquo;s front wheel had dropped into a pothole
-with a terrific thump.</p>
-<p>They found that the axle had wedged itself
-against a rock. Thirty minutes later, while they
-were still trying to get it loose, a rattletrap car
-pulled up beside them and an Indian stuck his
-flat, mahogany-colored face through its window.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_21">21</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Give us a hand&mdash;please,&rdquo; Pepper ordered.</p>
-<p>The newcomer started to get out. Then his
-black eyes settled on the lettering on the side of
-the trailer:</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="sc">Cavanaugh Laboratories
-<br />Farmington, N.M. &amp; Valley View, Cal.</span></p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cavanaugh! Huh!&rdquo; snorted the Indian. He
-slammed the door of his car and roared off in a
-cloud of yellow dust.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those confounded Indians,&rdquo; snarled Pepper,
-staring after him in white-faced fury. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to....
-Oh, well. Come on, fellows. Guess we&rsquo;ve got
-to do this ourselves.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They finally got the jeep back on the trail and
-drove the twenty miles to Elbow Rock without
-further mishap. There Pepper parked beside a
-sparkling trout stream. They raided the trailer&rsquo;s
-big freezer for sandwich materials and ate lunch at
-a spot overlooking a thousand square miles of
-yellow desert backed by blue, snowcapped peaks.
-Pepper was at his best as a host. For once in their
-lives, Sandy and Quiz almost liked him. At least
-here he seemed much pleasanter than he did at
-home, lording it over everyone&mdash;or trying to.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_22">22</div>
-<p>In the cool of the afternoon&mdash;85 degrees in the
-sun instead of the 110 degrees the thermometer
-had shown at noon&mdash;they rode the jeep back to
-Farmington by way of a wide detour that took
-them within sight of the San Juan River gorge.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wanted to show you those two oil-well derricks
-over yonder,&rdquo; Pepper explained. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re
-a mile and a half apart, as the crow flies. But,
-because they&rsquo;re on opposite sides of the river, they
-were 125 long miles apart by car until we got that
-new bridge finished a few months ago. Shows you
-the problems we explorers face.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The San Juan runs into the Colorado, doesn&rsquo;t
-it?&rdquo; Quiz asked as he studied the tiny stream at the
-bottom of its deep gorge, under the fine new steel
-bridge.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yep. And thereby hangs a tale. Mr. Cavanaugh&mdash;Red,
-I mean&mdash;has found state documents down
-at Santa Fe showing that the San Juan used to be
-navigable. But the confounded dumb Indians
-swear it can&rsquo;t be navigated. If boats <i>can</i> go down
-the stream, even during part of the year, the river
-bed belongs to the Federal government. If the
-stream <i>can&rsquo;t</i> be navigated, the Navajos own the
-bed. That&rsquo;s the law! While the argument continues,
-nobody can lease uranium or oil land near
-the river. Red says that, one of these days, he&rsquo;s
-going to prove that&mdash;oops! I&rsquo;m talking too
-much!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pepper clammed up for the first time they
-could remember. He said hardly a word until he
-dropped them off at Hall&rsquo;s motel.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_23">23</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t get it,&rdquo; Quiz said to his chum as they
-walked up a graveled path from the road to the
-rambling adobe building.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t get what?&rdquo; Sandy wanted to know.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This uranium hunting business Pepper&rsquo;s got
-himself into. I read in <i>Time</i> a while back that the
-Federal government stopped buying uranium
-from prospectors in 1957. Since then, it has
-bought from existing mills, but it hasn&rsquo;t signed a
-single new contract. Cavanaugh doesn&rsquo;t own a
-uranium mill. So why is he snooping around,
-digging into state documents and antagonizing
-the Indians?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I only met him once, when he snooted our
-exhibit as a judge at the regional science fair,&rdquo;
-Sandy replied. &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t say I took to him, under the
-circumstances.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s something phony about that man. If
-only I could remember ... something to do
-with football, I think.&rdquo; Quiz scratched his head,
-but no more information came out.</p>
-<p>They found Mr. Hall, dressed as usual in faded
-levis and denim shirt, sitting with several other
-guests of the motel on a wide patio facing the
-setting sun.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, here are my roustabouts,&rdquo; the little man
-cried with a flash of those too-perfect teeth. &ldquo;I
-was beginning to be afraid that you had lost yourselves
-in the desert.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
-<p>He introduced them to the owners of the place,
-two maiden ladies from Minnesota who plainly
-were having the time of their middle-aged lives
-here on the last frontier. The Misses Emery, as
-alike as two wrinkled peas, showed the boys to
-their room, a comfortable place complete with
-fireplace and an air conditioner.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Supper will be served in half an hour,&rdquo; said
-one.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be late,&rdquo; said the other.</p>
-<p>The newcomers scrubbed the sticky dust off
-their bodies and out of their hair, changed into
-clothes that didn&rsquo;t smell of jeep, and were heading
-for the dining room when Mr. Hall overtook
-them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You may be wondering why I live out here on
-the edge of the desert,&rdquo; he said quietly. &ldquo;One
-reason is that I like the silence of desert nights.
-Another is the good cooking. The most important
-reason, though, is that some of the Farmington
-places are pretty nasty to Indians and Mexicans.
-Me, I like Indians and Mexes. Also, I learn a lot
-from them when they let their hair down. Well,
-here we are. You&rsquo;ll find that the Misses Emery
-still cook like Mother used to. I&rsquo;ll give you a tip.
-Don&rsquo;t talk during supper. It isn&rsquo;t considered
-polite in the Southwest.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why is that?&rdquo; Sandy wondered.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a hang-over from cowpunching days. If
-a ranch hand stopped to talk, somebody else
-grabbed his second helping.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After a silent meal, the guests gathered on the
-patio to watch the stars come out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Folks,&rdquo; said Mr. Hall, &ldquo;meet Sandy Steele and
-Quiz Taylor. They&rsquo;re going to join my crew
-this summer. Boys, meet Miss Kitty Gonzales,
-from Window Rock, Arizona. She&rsquo;s going north
-in the morning to teach school in the part of the
-Navajo reservation that extends into Utah. Her
-schoolhouse will be a big trailer. Too bad you
-can&rsquo;t be her students, eh? But sixteen is a mite old
-for Miss Kitty&rsquo;s class.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Kitty was slim, in her late teens, and not much
-over five feet tall. She had an oval face, black hair
-and eyes, and a warm smile that made the newcomers
-like her at once.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is Kenneth White,&rdquo; Hall went on. &ldquo;Ken
-works for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. When he
-talks, you listen!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The white-haired man gave the boys handshakes
-that they felt for an hour.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Chief John Quail, from the Arizona side of the
-Navajo reservation,&rdquo; Hall said next. &ldquo;The chief
-is here to talk over an oil lease.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Chief Quail, a dark, heavily muscled Indian,
-wore a light-gray business suit that showed evidence
-of the best tailoring. He surprised the boys
-by giving them the limpest of handshakes.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
-<p>&ldquo;And Ralph Salmon, boss of my drill crew,&rdquo;
-Hall concluded. &ldquo;Ralph&rsquo;s a southern Ute from
-Colorado. Do exactly as he says this summer if
-you want to learn oil.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The lithe, golden-skinned young Indian
-nodded, but did not shake hands.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So you&rsquo;re off to your great adventure in the
-morning, Kitty,&rdquo; White said to break the conversational
-ice. He lighted a pipe and leaned
-against the patio railing where he could watch
-the changing evening light as it stole over the
-desert.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m so excited I won&rsquo;t be able to sleep,&rdquo; the
-girl answered in a rich contralto voice. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all so
-wonderful. The oil lease money pouring in like
-this, after long lean years when starvation for the
-Navajos was just around the corner and it looked
-as though their reservation might be taken from
-them. Schools and hospitals being built all over.
-My wonderful new trailer with books and maps
-and even a kitchen and a shower for the children.
-Oh, my Navajos are going places at last.&rdquo; She gave
-an embarrassed laugh at her long speech.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One place your Navajos can go is to Salt Lake
-City,&rdquo; Hall growled. &ldquo;Get the state of Utah to
-settle that quarrel about who owns the land your
-schools and hospitals are being built on. Then I
-can get my hands on some leases up there.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought the Navajo reservation was in New
-Mexico and Arizona,&rdquo; Sandy said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A small part of it is in southern Utah,&rdquo; Hall
-explained. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s the part bounded by the San
-Juan River.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The argument over school lands is less important
-than our other disputes,&rdquo; Chief Quail said
-carefully. He spoke good English but his words
-seemed to be tied together with string. Plainly,
-he had learned the white man&rsquo;s language not
-many years ago. &ldquo;The real problem&mdash;the one that
-is, how do you say, tying up millions of dollars of
-lease money&mdash;is to have a correct boundary drawn
-around the Hopi reservation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The chief means,&rdquo; Hall explained for the boys&rsquo;
-benefit, &ldquo;that the Navajo reservation forms a
-large rectangle that completely surrounds a
-smaller square of land in Arizona where the Hopi
-Indians live.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not a square, Mr. Hall,&rdquo; Chief Quail objected.
-&ldquo;The Hopis really own only a small triangle.
-Those primitive, stupid cliff dwellers claim
-thousands of Navajo acres to which they have no
-right. If I had my way in our Council, I
-would....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The Navajos <i>and</i> the Hopis are all grandmothers,&rdquo;
-Salmon cut in angrily. &ldquo;Squabbling
-over money like palefaces! Spending their royalties
-on things like schools and hospitals! When my
-tribe, the southern Utes, got its first royalty
-check, the Council voted to have some fun with
-the money. We spent it to build a race track for
-our fast horses!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Digger Indian!&rdquo; The Navajo sneered at
-Salmon without moving a muscle of his broad
-face. &ldquo;Fish eater! Soon you will waste all your
-easy money. When the oil runs out you will be
-running about naked again, living on roots and
-fried caterpillars like you used to!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no, John.&rdquo; The Ute&rsquo;s grin was just visible
-in the gathering darkness. &ldquo;Maybe we&rsquo;ll go on the
-warpath and take what we need from you fat
-Navajo sheep herders, as we did in the good old
-days. Or&mdash;&rdquo; he added quickly as the chief lunged
-to his feet&mdash;&ldquo;we&rsquo;ll sing you to death. Like this!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Salmon began a wailing chant that set everyone&rsquo;s
-teeth on edge. The Navajo stopped his
-advance as if he had struck a wall. He clapped
-his hands over his ears and, after a moment,
-stalked out into the night.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t have done that, Ralph,&rdquo; Hall
-said coldly. &ldquo;Some day Chief Quail is going to
-take you apart if you don&rsquo;t stop baiting him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can you actually sing people to death, Mr.
-Salmon?&rdquo; Sandy said to break the tension.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course not,&rdquo; the Ute answered softly. &ldquo;But
-the chief <i>thinks</i> I can, and I wouldn&rsquo;t spoil his
-belief for anything. We have a set-to like this every
-time we meet. Some of our medicine men can sing
-people <i>well</i>, though. They chant awhile and then
-pull the pain right out of your tooth, ear, or
-stomach.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What does a pain look like?&rdquo; Quiz asked, half
-convinced.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Looks just like a fingernail about two inches
-long,&rdquo; the Ute answered. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s bright red. If you
-strike it, it goes <i>tinnnggg</i>, like the reed of a saxophone.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop your nonsense, Ralph,&rdquo; White commanded,
-&ldquo;while I go out and smooth Quail&rsquo;s ruffled
-feathers.&rdquo; He followed the chief and brought him
-back five minutes later to receive an oily apology
-from his ancestral enemy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You Indians will be broke again, one of these
-days, if you keep quarreling among yourselves,&rdquo;
-Hall said then. &ldquo;Crooked white men are hanging
-around the Four Corners. They&rsquo;re just waiting
-for something like that so they can trick you out
-of your oil and uranium rights, or even your reservations.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Everyone had to agree that this was true, so the
-little party settled down in reasonable harmony
-to watch the giant stars come out. Salmon produced
-a guitar after a while. Then he and Kitty
-sang Indian and Mexican songs together. Sandy
-particularly liked one that went:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0"><i>I wander with the pollen of dawn upon my trail.</i></p>
-<p class="t0"><i>Beauty surrounding me, with it I wander.</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s a Navajo song,&rdquo; the Ute said, grinning.
-&ldquo;We sing it in honor of Chief Quail. Here&rsquo;s one
-by a white man that I like:</p>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0"><i>Ma&ntilde;ana is a lovely word we all would like to borrow.</i></p>
-<p class="t0"><i>It means &lsquo;Don&rsquo;t skeen no wolfs today wheech you don&rsquo;t shoot tomorrow.&rsquo;</i></p>
-<p class="t0"><i>An&rsquo; eef you got some jobs to did, of which you do not wanna,</i></p>
-<p class="t0"><i>Go &rsquo;head and take siesta now; tomorrow ees ma&ntilde;ana!&rdquo;</i></p>
-</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Guess that&rsquo;s a hint we&rsquo;d better take our siestas,&rdquo;
-Hall said to the boys. &ldquo;Big day ahead
-ma&ntilde;ana.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This country sort of grows on one,&rdquo; Sandy
-said to Kitty as they shook hands. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m beginning
-to feel at home already.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you haven&rsquo;t really seen anything yet,&rdquo; the
-girl answered. &ldquo;If you and Mr. Taylor get up in
-the neighborhood of my school, look me up. I&rsquo;ll
-show you some of the wildest and most beautiful
-country on earth.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Mother said I&rsquo;d fall in love with the place.&rdquo;
-Sandy took a last look across the sleeping desert.
-&ldquo;She was born not far from here. Met my father
-when he was working for the U.S. Geological
-Survey.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How interesting,&rdquo; cried the girl. &ldquo;Maybe my
-folks know her. What was her maiden name?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was Ruth Carson.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Kitty snatched her hand out of his.
-&ldquo;She&rsquo;s related to Kit Carson, isn&rsquo;t she?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The general was my great-uncle,&rdquo; Sandy said
-proudly. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;m so interested in this part
-of&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He stopped because Kitty had backed away
-from him until her back pressed against the motel
-wall. As he stared, she spat into the dust of the
-patio in a most unladylike fashion before turning
-and running toward her room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did I do to her?&rdquo; Sandy gasped, openmouthed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kitty&rsquo;s mother is a Navajo,&rdquo; Chief Quail
-answered. &ldquo;Back in Civil War days, Kit Carson
-rounded up the Navajos to take us away from our
-reservation. We went on the warpath and retreated
-into the mountains. Carson followed. His
-soldiers shot several dozen of us, and slaughtered
-all our sheep so we would either have to surrender
-or starve. Even today, many of us would rather
-eat fish as the Utes do than touch one of Kit
-Carson&rsquo;s descendants!&rdquo; He turned his back and
-marched off.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Ouch!&rdquo; Sandy groaned. &ldquo;I certainly put my
-foot into it that time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t worry too much about it,&rdquo; said White.
-&ldquo;Fact of the matter is that Kit Carson made a
-mighty good Indian Agent later on, and most
-Navajos admit it. He was the man who insisted
-that they all be returned to the reservation after
-the rebellion was over. He eventually died from
-overwork in behalf of &lsquo;his Indians.&rsquo; Except for a
-few diehards, the Navajos won&rsquo;t hold your
-mother&rsquo;s name against you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I certainly hope you&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; Sandy sighed as
-he and Quiz said good night to the others and
-headed for their room.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What a mess,&rdquo; his friend said. &ldquo;Navajos
-squabbling with Utes, Hopis and the state of
-Utah. Crooks waiting to take advantage of them
-all. Pains like fingernails! Cavalry heroes who
-turn into villains. I suppose that&rsquo;s why the biggest
-oil field in the Four Corners is called the Paradox
-Basin!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_33">33</div>
-<h2 id="c3"><span class="small">CHAPTER THREE</span>
-<br />A &ldquo;Poor Boy&rdquo; Outfit</h2>
-<p>Hall routed Ralph Salmon and the boys out of
-bed before dawn the next day. They ate a huge
-pancakes-and-sausage breakfast cooked by the
-sleepy-eyed but cheerfully clucking Misses Emery
-and climbed into the company jeep just as the sun
-was gilding the peaks of the mountains. Soon their
-teeth were chattering in the morning cold as
-Salmon roared off in a northwesterly direction
-toward the San Juan River lease.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t have come down to Farmington at
-all this week,&rdquo; Hall shouted above the wind which
-made the jeep top pop and crack, &ldquo;except that I
-promised to pick up you boys, and Ralph had to
-get our core drill repaired. That&rsquo;s the drill you
-hear thumping under the seat. We&rsquo;re down a
-thousand feet with our second well and I should
-be riding herd on it every minute.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_34">34</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a worrywart, boss,&rdquo; chuckled the
-Indian. &ldquo;You know that Harry Donovan&rsquo;s on the
-job up there. He can handle things just as well as
-you can.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; Hall answered. &ldquo;But somehow
-it doesn&rsquo;t seem right to have a geologist bossing
-the drill crew. That&rsquo;s a hang-over from my days
-with a big spit-and-polish producing company, I
-guess.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ours is what they call a &lsquo;poor boy&rsquo; outfit here
-in the oil country,&rdquo; he explained to Sandy and
-Quiz. &ldquo;We make do with secondhand drill rigs
-and other equipment. Sometimes we dig our
-engines and cables out of junk yards.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, now, boss, don&rsquo;t cry,&rdquo; said their driver.
-&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not quite that bad.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It will be if this well doesn&rsquo;t come in.&rdquo; Hall
-grinned. &ldquo;But we do have to make every penny
-count, kids. We all pitch in on anything that needs
-doing. What kind of jobs have you cooked up for
-our new roustabouts, Ralph?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a new batch of mud to be mixed,&rdquo; the
-Indian answered. &ldquo;How about that for a starter?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mud!&rdquo; Quiz exploded. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s mud got to do
-with drilling an oil well?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Plenty, my friend. Plenty,&rdquo; Ralph answered.
-&ldquo;Mud is forced down into a well to cool the drill
-bit and to wash rock cuttings to the surface. You
-use mud if you have water, that is. In parts of this
-country, water&rsquo;s so short, or so expensive to haul,
-that producers use compressed air for those purposes.
-We&rsquo;re lucky. We can pipe plenty of water
-from the river.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_35">35</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you mix the water with all sorts of fancy
-chemicals to make something that&rsquo;s called mud
-but really isn&rsquo;t,&rdquo; said Sandy, remembering tales
-of the oil country that his father had told him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re forgetting that we&rsquo;re a &lsquo;poor boy&rsquo; outfit,&rdquo;
-said Hall. &ldquo;Chemicals cost money. We dig
-shale from the river bed and grind it up and use it
-for a mix. You&rsquo;ll both have a nice new set of
-blisters before this day is over.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They followed a good paved road to the little
-town of Shiprock, which got its name from a huge
-butte that looked amazingly like a ship under full
-sail. Crossing the San Juan over the new bridge
-that Pepper had pointed out the day before, they
-turned northwest onto a badly rutted trail. Here
-and there they saw flocks of sheep, watched by
-half-naked Indian children and their dogs. Occasionally
-they passed a six-sided Navajo house
-surrounded by a few plowed acres.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those huts are called hogans,&rdquo; Ralph explained,
-placing the accent on the last syllable.
-&ldquo;Notice that they have no windows and that their
-only doors always face toward the rising sun.
-Never knock on a hogan door. That&rsquo;s considered
-bad luck. Just walk in when you go to visit a
-Navajo.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_36">36</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Whe-e-ew!&rdquo; Sandy panted when an hour had
-passed and he had peeled out of his coat, shirt, and
-finally his undershirt. &ldquo;How can it get so hot at
-this altitude?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Call this hot?&rdquo; jeered Salmon. &ldquo;Last time I
-was down in Phoenix it was 125 degrees in the
-shade, and raining cats and dogs at the same time.
-I had to park my car a block from the hotel, so
-I ran for it. But when I got into the lobby my
-clothes were absolutely dry. The rain evaporated
-as fast as it fell!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That,&rdquo; said Hall, &ldquo;is what I&rsquo;d call evaporating
-the truth just a leetle bit.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Salmon....&rdquo; Quiz hesitated. &ldquo;Could I
-ask you a personal question?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can if you call me Ralph,&rdquo; answered the
-tall driller as he slowed to let a Navajo woman
-drive a flock of goats across the trail. She was
-dressed in a brightly colored blouse and long
-Spanish skirt, as if she were going to a party instead
-of doing a chore, and she did not look up as they
-passed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, how is it you don&rsquo;t talk more&mdash;like an
-Indian?&rdquo; Quiz asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do Indians talk?&rdquo; A part of the Ute&rsquo;s
-smile faded and his black eyes narrowed ever so
-slightly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, I dunno&mdash;&rdquo; the boy&rsquo;s face turned red
-with embarrassment&mdash;&ldquo;like Chief Quail, I guess.
-I mean ... I thought....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_37">37</div>
-<p>&ldquo;When you&rsquo;ve served a hitch in the Navy, Quiz,
-you get to talking just like everyone else, whether
-you&rsquo;re an Indian or an Eskimo.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Were you in Korea, Ralph?&rdquo; Sandy asked to
-break the tension.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was not! I served my time working as a
-roustabout on oil wells in one of the Naval
-Reserves.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And, since that wasn&rsquo;t enough punishment,&rdquo;
-Hall said as he grinned, &ldquo;Ralph came home and
-took advantage of the GI bill to go to school in
-Texas and became a driller.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yep,&rdquo; Salmon agreed. &ldquo;And I soon found out
-that an Indian oil driller is about as much in
-demand as a two-headed calf.&rdquo; He threaded the
-car through the narrow crevice between two tall
-buttes of red sandstone that stuck up out of the
-desert like gnarled fingers. &ldquo;I was just about down
-to that fried caterpillar diet that Chief Quail
-keeps kidding me about when a certain man
-whose name I won&rsquo;t mention gave me my first
-job.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you turned out to be the best all-round
-oilman I ever hired,&rdquo; said Hall as he slapped the
-other on his bronzed, smoothly muscled back. &ldquo;I
-figured that if Iroquois Indians make the finest
-steelworkers in the construction business, a Ute
-should know how to run a drill rig. I wasn&rsquo;t mistaken.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_38">38</div>
-<p>Salmon was at a loss for words for once. His
-ears turned pink and he concentrated on the road,
-which was becoming almost impassable, even for
-a jeep.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my reservation over there across the
-Colorado line,&rdquo; he said at last, turning his head
-and pointing with outthrust lips toward the north
-and east.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nice country&mdash;for prairie dogs. Although
-the southern Utes are doing all right these
-days from royalties on the big oil field that&rsquo;s
-located just over that ridge. They tell me, too,
-that the reservation holds one of the biggest coal
-deposits in the western United States.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you stay on the reservation, then?&rdquo;
-Quiz wanted to know.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I like to move around. People ask me more
-questions that way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh.&rdquo; Quiz stopped his questioning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Up ahead and to the left,&rdquo; Ralph went on, &ldquo;is
-the actual Four Corners, the only place in the
-country where the boundaries of four states meet.
-It also is the farthest point from a railroad in the
-whole United States&mdash;one hundred and eighty
-miles or so, I understand. How about stopping
-there for lunch, boss, as soon as we cross into
-Utah? Nice and quiet.&rdquo; He winked at Quiz to take
-any sting out of his earlier words.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
-<p>After they had eaten every one of the Misses
-Emery&rsquo;s chicken and ham sandwiches, Hall took
-over as their driver and guide.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;My lease is up near the village of Bluff, on the
-north side of the river,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m
-convinced, though, that most of the oil and
-uranium is in Navajo and Hopi territory south of
-the San Juan. I&rsquo;ve had Donovan down there running
-seismographic surveys and he says the place
-is rich as Croesus. That&rsquo;s why I&rsquo;ve been talking
-turkey to Chief Quail&mdash;trying to get him to get the
-Navajo and Hopi councils together so we can
-develop the area.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Is Quail chief of all the Navajos?&rdquo; Sandy
-asked. &ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t seem to be exactly....&rdquo; He
-stammered to a stop while Ralph chuckled.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; Hall answered. &ldquo;Quail is just a chief
-of one of the many Navajo clans, or families. The
-real power is held by the tribal council, of which
-Paul Jones is chairman. But Chief Quail swings
-a lot of weight on the reservation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hah!&rdquo; Ralph snorted. &ldquo;Chief Quail&rsquo;s a stuffed
-shirt. They made a uranium strike on his farm
-last year, so what does he do?... Buys himself
-a new pickup truck! I&rsquo;d have celebrated by getting
-a Jaguar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A Jaguar is like a British Buick,&rdquo; said Quiz,
-suddenly coming into his element as the talk got
-around to cars. &ldquo;A Bentley would have been
-better.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_40">40</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I know, I know,&rdquo; Ralph answered. &ldquo;Or a Rolls
-Royce if he could afford a chauffeur. I read the
-ads too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They followed the river, now deep in its gorge
-and getting considerably wider, for another
-twenty miles. They were out of the reservation
-now and passed a number of prosperous farms.
-The road remained awful, however, being a long
-string of potholes filled to the brim with yellow
-dust. The holes couldn&rsquo;t be seen until the jeep
-was right on top of them. Hall had to keep
-slamming on his brakes at the risk of dislocating
-his passengers&rsquo; necks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You should travel through this country when
-it rains,&rdquo; he said cheerfully. &ldquo;Cars sink into the
-mud until all you can see is the tips of their radio
-antennas.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;d get to the well before sunset if you drove
-as well as you tell tall stories,&rdquo; Ralph commented
-dryly.</p>
-<p>They finally made the field headquarters of the
-Four Corners Drilling Company with two hours
-of sunlight to spare. The boys looked at the place
-in disappointment. An unpainted sheet-iron shack
-with a sign reading <span class="sc">Office</span> over its only door
-squatted close to the top of the San Juan gorge.
-Not far from it was an odd-looking contraption of
-pipes, valves and dials about as big as a home
-furnace. There was no sign of a well derrick as
-far as they could see across deserted stretches of
-sand, sagebrush, and rust-colored rock.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_41">41</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There she is&mdash;Hall Number One,&rdquo; said their
-employer. He walked over to the contraption,
-patted it as though it was his best friend, and
-stood, thumbs hooked in the armholes of his worn
-vest, while he studied the dials proudly. &ldquo;This is
-my discovery well. It&rsquo;s what buys the baby new
-shoes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But where are the derricks and everything?&rdquo;
-Quiz tried unsuccessfully to keep the disappointment
-out of his voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shhh!&rdquo; whispered Sandy. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve skidded
-the derrick to the new well site. This thing&rsquo;s
-called a Christmas tree. It controls the flow of oil
-out of the ground.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Smart boy,&rdquo; said Hall. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got our wildcat
-hogtied and hooked into this gathering line.&rdquo; He
-pointed to a small pipe that snaked southward
-across the desert. &ldquo;The gathering line connects
-with the big new pipeline to the West Coast that
-passes a few miles from here. Number One is
-flowing a sweet eight hundred and fifty barrels a
-day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t see any other well,&rdquo; Quiz persisted.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_42">42</div>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s over behind that butte.&rdquo; Hall pointed
-again. &ldquo;Oh, I know what&rsquo;s bothering you. You&rsquo;re
-remembering those old pictures that show derricks
-in an oil field standing shoulder to shoulder,
-like soldiers. We don&rsquo;t do things that way any
-longer. We&rsquo;ve got plenty of room out here, so we
-space our wells. Only drill enough of them to
-bring up the oil without waste. Come on. I&rsquo;ll take
-you over and introduce you to the gang.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A short ride brought them to a scene of whirlwind
-activity. Drilling had stopped temporarily
-on Hall&rsquo;s second well so that a worn bit could be
-pulled out of the hole and replaced with a sharp
-one. But that didn&rsquo;t mean work had stopped!</p>
-<p>The boys watched, spellbound, while dripping
-lengths of pipe were snaked out of the ground by
-a cable which ran through a block at the top of
-the tall derrick and was connected to a powerful
-diesel engine. As every three lengths arrived at
-the surface, two brawny men wielding big iron
-tongs leaped forward and disconnected them from
-the pipe remaining in the well. Then the 90-foot
-&ldquo;stand&rdquo; was gently maneuvered, with the help of
-another man, wearing a safety belt, who stood on
-a platform high up on the derrick. When a stand
-had been neatly propped out of the way, the next
-one was ready to be pulled out of the well.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_43">43</div>
-<p>The crew worked at top speed without saying
-a word until the mud-covered drill finally came in
-sight. They unscrewed the bit from the end of
-the last stand of pipe, and replaced it with a
-sharp one. Then the process was reversed. Stand
-after stand of pipe was reconnected and lowered
-until all were back in the well. Then the engine
-began to roar steadily. A huge turntable under
-the derrick started spinning the pipe at high
-speed. Down at the bottom of the hole the bit resumed
-chewing into the rock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nice teamwork, Ralph,&rdquo; said Hall. &ldquo;You
-certainly have trained as good a crew as can be
-found in the Regions.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nice team to work <i>with</i>,&rdquo; answered the driller
-as he looked proudly at his men, who were about
-equally divided between Indians and whites.
-&ldquo;Now let&rsquo;s see if there&rsquo;s any work for our two
-tenderfeet before it&rsquo;s time to knock off for supper.
-Come on, fellows. The mud pit is slurping for
-you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Two hours later, when the cook began hammering
-on his iron triangle, Sandy and Quiz looked
-like mud puppies.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re a howling fright,&rdquo; said the tall boy as
-he climbed out of the big pit where a new batch
-of goo was swirling and settling. He plastered
-down his unruly cowlick with a slimy hand. For
-once the hair stayed in place.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you look like a dirty little green man
-from the swamps of the planet Venus.&rdquo; Quiz spat
-out a bit of mud and roared with laughter. &ldquo;Lucky
-thing we don&rsquo;t have to get this muck off with
-compressed air. Come on. I&rsquo;ll race you to the
-showers.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_44">44</div>
-<p>Dinner was eaten in the same dogged quiet that
-they had noted at the motel. It was a good dinner,
-too, although it came mostly out of cans.</p>
-<p>The boys were introduced all around after the
-apple pie had been consumed to the last crumb,
-but they were too tired and sleepy to sort out
-names and faces. They did gather that four-man
-shifts&mdash;or &ldquo;towers,&rdquo; as they seemed to be called&mdash;kept
-the drill turning day and night until the
-drill struck oil or the well had to be abandoned
-as a &ldquo;duster.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The only person present who made a real impression
-was Harry Donovan, Hall&rsquo;s geologist.
-He was an intense, bald, wiry fellow in his thirties
-who kept biting his lips, as though he was just
-about to impart a deep secret. But all he seemed
-to talk about were mysterious things like electronic
-log readings, core analyses, and the distance
-still to be drilled before something called the
-&ldquo;Gallup Pay&rdquo; would be reached.</p>
-<p>Hall and Salmon were intensely interested in
-Donovan&rsquo;s report. Try as they would to follow
-it, Sandy and Quiz soon found themselves
-nodding. Finally they leaned their elbows on the
-oilcloth-covered dinner table and snored gently.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
-<p>Ralph shook them partially awake and showed
-them their beds in a battered trailer. They slept
-like logs despite the fact that, bathed in brilliant
-white light provided by a portable electric generator,
-the rig roared and clanked steadily throughout
-the night as its bit &ldquo;made hole&rdquo; more than a
-thousand feet underground.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_46">46</div>
-<h2 id="c4"><span class="small">CHAPTER FOUR</span>
-<br />Learning the Ropes</h2>
-<p>Sandy and Quiz spent the next two weeks picking
-up a working knowledge of drilling, getting
-acquainted with Hall&rsquo;s outfit, and learning to
-keep out from under the feet of the crew. Ralph
-saw to it that their jobs varied from day to day as
-they grew lean and brown under the desert sun.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Used to have a lot of trouble keeping fellows
-on the job out here next to nowhere,&rdquo; he explained
-with a grin. &ldquo;The boys would get fed up
-after a few weeks. Then they&rsquo;d quit, head for
-town, and I&rsquo;d have to spend valuable time rounding
-up replacements. Now I switch their work
-around so they don&rsquo;t have so much chance to
-become bored. Let&rsquo;s see ... you mixed mud
-yesterday, didn&rsquo;t you? Well, today I want you to
-help Jack Boyd keep his diesel running.&rdquo; Whereupon
-the boys would spend a &ldquo;tower&rdquo; cleaning
-the engine room, or oiling and polishing the
-powerful but over-age motor that Boyd nursed
-like a sick child to make it keep the bit turning steadily.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_47">47</div>
-<p>On other days they were assigned to drive to
-Shiprock or Farmington for supplies, to help
-Ching Chao in the cookhouse, or to learn the
-abc&rsquo;s of oil geology from Donovan. Sandy preferred
-to do chores around the derrick and was
-very proud when he finally was allowed to handle
-one of the huge tongs used to grip the stands of
-pipe so that they could be removed from the well
-or returned to it.</p>
-<p>Quiz, on the other hand, never tired of studying
-the wavering lines marked on strips of paper by
-the electric log that Donovan lowered into the
-well at regular intervals. He soon got so that he
-could identify the different kinds of rock layers
-through which the bit was drilling, by the slight
-changes in the shapes of those lines. Or he would
-train a microscope on thin slices of sandstone
-sawed from the yard-long cores that were hauled
-out of the well from time to time. With his usual
-curiosity, he had read up enough about geology to
-recognize the different marine fossils that the
-cores contained. He would become as excited as
-Donovan did when the geologist pointed to a
-group of minute shells in a slice of core and
-whispered, &ldquo;Those are Foraminifera, boys! We
-must be getting close to the oil.&rdquo; And he would
-become as discouraged as his teacher when careful
-study of another core showed no indication of
-ancient sea creatures.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_48">48</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t get it,&rdquo; Sandy would mutter on such
-occasions. &ldquo;How come those shells got thousands
-of feet underground in the first place? And what
-have they got to do with finding oil?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Then the geologist would mop his bald head
-with a bandanna handkerchief, take off his thick
-horn-rimmed glasses and use them as a pointer
-while he lectured the boys on his beloved science.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All of this country has been deep under water
-several times during the last few million years,&rdquo;
-he would explain patiently. &ldquo;In fact, most of the
-center of the North American continent has been
-submerged at one time or another. When the
-Four Corners region was a sea bottom back in the
-Carboniferous era, untold generations of marine
-plants and animals died in the water and sank to
-the bottom.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;As the ages passed, those life forms were
-buried by mud and silt brought down from surrounding
-mountains by the raging rivers of those
-days. The weight of the silt caused it to turn into
-sandstone or limestone layers hundreds of feet
-thick. This pressure generated a great deal of
-heat. Geologists think that pressure and heat
-compressed the dead marine creatures into particles
-of oil and gas.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_49">49</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Every time the land rose to the surface and
-sank again, another layer or stratum of dead fish
-and plants would form. All this heaving and
-twisting of the earth formed traps or domes, called
-anticlines, into which the oil and gas moved.
-That&rsquo;s why we find oil today at different depths
-beneath the surface.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I understand that water and gas pressure keeps
-pushing oil toward the surface,&rdquo; Sandy said on one
-occasion, &ldquo;but then why doesn&rsquo;t it escape?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Usually it gets caught under anticlines where
-the rock is too thick and hard for it to move any
-farther,&rdquo; Quiz cut in, eager to show off his new
-knowledge of geology. &ldquo;But it does escape in some
-places, Sandy. You&rsquo;ve heard of oil springs. George
-Washington owned one of them. And the Indians
-used to sop crude petroleum from such springs
-with their blankets and use it as a medicine or
-to waterproof their canoes. Sometimes the springs
-catch fire. Some of those still exist in parts of Iran.
-I read an article once which said that Jason really
-was looking for a cargo of oil when he sailed the
-<i>Argo</i> to the Caucasus Mountains in search of the
-Golden Fleece. The fleece was just a flowery
-Greek term for a burning spring, maybe.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; Donovan agreed as he stoked his
-pipe and sent clouds of smoke billowing through
-the laboratory. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s also a theory that Job
-was an oilman. The Bible has him saying that
-&lsquo;the rock poured me forth rivers of oil,&rsquo; you remember.
-If you read the Book of Job carefully,
-it almost sounds as if the poor fellow&rsquo;s troubles
-started when his oil field caught fire. However
-that may be, we know that the Greeks of Jason&rsquo;s
-time used quite a bit of oil. The Arabs even refined
-petroleum and lighted the streets of their
-cities with something resembling kerosene almost
-a thousand years ago.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Golly,&rdquo; said Sandy. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all too deep for me&mdash;several
-thousand feet too deep. I think I&rsquo;ll go
-help Chao get dinner ready! I <i>do</i> know how to
-cook.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">The one job around the derrick that the boys
-never got a chance to handle was that of Peter
-Sanchez, the platform man who worked on their
-shift, or &ldquo;tower.&rdquo; Whenever the time came to replace
-a bit, Peter would climb to his perch halfway
-up the rig, snap on a safety belt, and guide
-the upper ends of the ninety-foot stands of pipe
-into their rack. There they would stand upright
-in a slimy black bunch until it was time to return
-them to the well.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
-<p>Peter, who boasted that he had been an oilman
-for a quarter of a century, worked effortlessly. He
-never lost his footing on the narrow platform,
-even when the strongest wind blew. Platform men
-on the other shifts were equally sure-footed&mdash;and
-very proud of their ability to &ldquo;walk&rdquo; strings
-of pipe weighing several tons. And they took
-things easy whenever they climbed down from
-their dizzy perches.</p>
-<p>Peter, in particular, was fond of amusing the
-other crew members by telling them stories about
-the oil fields in the &ldquo;good old days.&rdquo; His favorite
-character was a driller named Gib Morgan. Gib,
-he said, had come down originally from the
-Pennsylvania regions when the first big strikes
-were being made in Texas and Oklahoma, around
-1900.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You never heard of Gib?&rdquo; Peter said one night
-as the off-duty crews were sitting around a roaring
-campfire after dinner. &ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;ll tell you....&rdquo;
-He rolled a cigarette with one hand, cowboy
-fashion, while studying the young greenhorns out
-of the corner of his eye. &ldquo;Gib was a little feller
-with a big mustache but he could put Davy
-Crockett and Paul Bunyan in the shade when he
-had a mind to. When he first came to Texas he
-had a run of bad luck. Drilled almost a hundred
-dry holes without hitting a single gusher. Got
-down to his last silver dollar. Then do you know
-what he did to make a stake?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No. What?&rdquo; Quiz leaned forward eagerly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He pulled up all those dusters, sawed &rsquo;em into
-four-foot lengths, and sold &rsquo;em to the ranchers for
-postholes. That&rsquo;s how it happens that all the
-Texas ranges got fenced in with barbed wire,
-son.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When the laughter had died down and Quiz&rsquo;s
-ears had returned to their normal color, the platform
-man went on: &ldquo;That wasn&rsquo;t the only time
-that Gib helped out his fellow man. Back around
-1900, just before the big Spindletop gusher came
-in, oilmen in these parts were having a lot of
-trouble with whickles&mdash;you know what a whickle
-is, don&rsquo;t you, Sandy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a cross between a canary bird and a
-bumblebee, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo; Sandy was dimly remembering
-a story that his father had told him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well! Well!&rdquo; Peter looked at him with more
-respect. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s exactly right. Pretty little varmints,
-whickles, but they developed a powerful
-taste for crude oil. Soon as a well came in, they&rsquo;d
-smell it from miles away. That&rsquo;s no great feat,
-I&rsquo;ll admit, for crude oil sure has a strong odor.
-Anyway, they&rsquo;d descend on the well in swarms so
-thick that they&rsquo;d darken the sky. And they&rsquo;d
-suck it plumb dry before you could say Jack
-Robinson, unless you capped it quick.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_53">53</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, Gib got one of his big ideas. He went
-out to one of his dusters that he hadn&rsquo;t pulled up
-yet, poured several barrels of oil down it, and
-&lsquo;salted&rsquo; the ground with more oil. Pretty soon,
-here came the whickles. They lapped up all the
-oil on the ground. Then a big whickle, probably
-the boss, rose up in the air and let out a lot of
-whickle talk about how he personally had discovered
-the biggest oil highball on earth. After
-that he dived into the well, and all the others
-followed him, like the animals that went into the
-ark. Soon as the last one was down the hole, Gib
-grabbed a big wooden plug and capped the well.
-We haven&rsquo;t had any whickle trouble since.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then all the poor whickles died?&rdquo; Quiz rose
-to the bait.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; Peter answered with a straight face.
-&ldquo;They&rsquo;re still buzzing around in that hole, mad
-as hops. Some day a greenhorn like you will come
-along and let &rsquo;em out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wonder what ever became of Gib,&rdquo; said
-Donovan, between puffs on his pipe.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Last I heard he was up Alaska way,&rdquo; Ralph
-said. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s a story about him that you may
-want to add to your repertoire, Pete. Gib was
-drilling near Moose Jaw in December when it got
-so cold the mercury in the thermometer on the
-derrick started shivering and shaking so hard that
-it knocked a hole right through the bottom of the
-tube. During January it got colder yet and the
-joints on the drill pipe froze so they couldn&rsquo;t be
-unscrewed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_54">54</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now Gib had a bet he could finish that well
-in four months and he wasn&rsquo;t going to let Jack
-Frost faze him. He just rigged up a pile driver
-that drove that frozen pipe on down into the
-ground as pretty as you please. Soon as one stand
-of pipe was down, the crew would weld on another
-and keep driving. Course the pipe got compressed
-a lot from all that hammering, but Gib couldn&rsquo;t
-see any harm in that.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Time February came around it got real chilly&mdash;a
-hundred or so below zero. He was using a
-steam engine by that time because the diesel fuel
-was frozen solid, but no sooner would the smoke
-from the fire box come out of the chimney than it
-would freeze and fall back on the snow. Wading
-through that black stuff was like pushing through
-cotton wool, and besides, the men tracked it all
-over the clean bunkhouse floor. So Gib had to get
-out a bulldozer and shove it into one corner of the
-clearing where he had his rig set up.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They were down about four miles on March
-15 when an early spring thaw set in. First thing
-that happened was that the smoke melted and
-spread all over the place. Couldn&rsquo;t see your nose
-on your face. Fire wardens came from miles
-around thinking the forest was ablaze. Gib was
-in a tight spot so he did something he had never
-done before&mdash;he looked up his hated rival, Bill
-McGee, who was in the Yukon selling some
-refrigerators to the Eskimos. He had to give skinflint
-McGee a half interest in the well to get him
-to help out. McGee just borrowed those refrigerators,
-stuffed the smoke into them, and refroze it.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
-<p>&ldquo;No sooner was the smoke under control than
-all that compressed drill pipe down the well
-started to thaw out. It began shooting out of the
-hole like a released coil spring. First it humped
-up under the derrick and pushed it a hundred
-feet into the air. Then it toppled over and
-squirmed about the clearing like a boa constrictor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was where Bill McGee made his big
-mistake. Gib had told him the drill bit, which had
-been dragged out of the well by the thrashing
-pipe, had cuttings on it which showed there was
-good oil sand only a few feet farther down. But
-Bill figured that with the derrick a wreck, the well
-was a frost. So he sold his half interest back to Gib,
-who didn&rsquo;t object, for a plug of good chewing
-tobacco.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Soon as McGee was out of sight, Gib headed
-for the nearest U.S. Assay Office. He got the clerk
-to lend him about a quart of the mercury that
-assay men use to test the purity of gold nuggets.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Morgan went back to camp, sat down beside
-the derrick, lit his pipe and waited for the
-freeze-up which he knew was bound to come
-before spring actually set in. It came all right!
-Puffing his pipe to keep warm Gib watched the
-new alcohol thermometer he had bought in town
-go down, down, and down until it hit a hundred
-and ten below. Right then he dropped his quart of
-solidified mercury into the well.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_56">56</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Just as he figured, it acted the way the mercury
-in the old thermometer had done&mdash;went right to
-the bottom and banged and banged trying to
-escape from that awful cold. Yes, sir, that hunk of
-mercury smashed right through to the oil sand.
-Pretty soon there was a rumble and a roar. Up
-came a thick black column of oil.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute,&rdquo; cried Sandy, thinking he had
-caught the storyteller out on a limb. &ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t
-the oil freeze too?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It did, Sandy. It did,&rdquo; Ralph answered blandly.
-&ldquo;Soon as it hit the air, it froze solid. But it was
-slippery enough so it kept sliding out of the
-ground a foot at a time. Gib got his men together
-and, until spring really came, they kept busy
-sawing hunks off that gusher and shipping them
-out to the States on flatcars!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You win, Ralph,&rdquo; sighed the platform man as
-he heaved himself to his feet. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t even attempt
-to top that tall one, so I guess I&rsquo;d better go to bed.
-Your story should keep us cool out here for at
-least a week.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_57">57</div>
-<p class="tb">After that mild hazing session, Sandy and Quiz
-found themselves accepted as full-fledged members
-of the gang. The crew members, who had kept
-their distance up to that point, now treated them
-like equals. Each boy soon was doing a man&rsquo;s work
-around the rig and glorying in his hardening
-muscles.</p>
-<p>As the end of June approached, Hall, Donovan
-and Salmon got ready for their monthly trip to
-Window Rock, Arizona, to submit bids for several
-leases in the Navajo reservation.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s room in the jeep, so you might as well
-go along and learn something more about the oil
-business,&rdquo; Hall told the boys. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m pretty sure our
-bids won&rsquo;t be accepted, but the only thing we can
-do is try.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At that point trouble descended on the camp
-in the form of a Bonanza bearing Red Cavanaugh
-and Pepper March.</p>
-<p>The husky electronics man clambered out of
-his machine and came forward at a lope. He was
-dressed only in shorts, and the thick red hair on
-his brawny chest glinted in the sunlight. Pepper
-trotted behind him like an adoring puppy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Howdy, Mr. Hall. Howdy, Donovan,&rdquo; Cavanaugh
-boomed as he reached the rig. &ldquo;Heard
-you&rsquo;d been exploring down in the Hopi butte
-section. Thought I&rsquo;d bounce over and sell you
-some equipment that has seismographs, magnetometers
-and gravimeters beat three ways from
-Sunday. The very latest thing. You can&rsquo;t get along
-without it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t I?&rdquo; said Donovan mildly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course you can&rsquo;t!&rdquo; Cavanaugh clapped the
-little man on the back so hard that he almost dislodged
-Donovan&rsquo;s glasses. &ldquo;This is terrific! The
-biggest thing that&rsquo;s happened to me since I ran
-those three touchdowns for State back in 1930.
-I developed it in my own lab. You know how a
-Geiger counter works...?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, faintly,&rdquo; answered the geologist, who
-had three of them in his own laboratory. &ldquo;I
-wasn&rsquo;t born yesterday, <i>Mr.</i> Cavanaugh.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, don&rsquo;t get sore, <i>Mr.</i> Donovan.&rdquo; Cavanaugh
-bellowed with laughter. &ldquo;All I wanted to
-say was that my new device uses scintillation
-counters, which are&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;&mdash;a thousand times more sensitive to atomic
-radiation than Geiger counters,&rdquo; Donovan interrupted.
-&ldquo;And you&rsquo;re going on to tell me that
-you can take your doodlebug up in an airplane
-and spot a radiation halo surrounding any oil
-deposit. Right? I read the trade papers, too, you
-know. May I ask you a question?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, of course.&rdquo; Cavanaugh&rsquo;s chest and neck
-had begun to sweat.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you have a Ph.D. degree in electronic
-engineering?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, uh, naturally.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I don&rsquo;t, unfortunately, Mr. Cavanaugh.
-But I know enough about the science to understand
-that the gadget you are selling isn&rsquo;t worth a
-plugged nickel unless it&rsquo;s operated by an expert,
-and unless it&rsquo;s used in connection with other
-methods of exploration. I have told you several
-times at Farmington that this outfit can&rsquo;t afford
-another scientist at present, so I wish you would
-please go away.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now, Mr. Hall&mdash;&rdquo; Cavanaugh turned to the
-grinning oilman&mdash;&ldquo;can&rsquo;t you make your man
-listen to reason?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s not my man. He&rsquo;s my partner,&rdquo; Hall
-answered mildly. &ldquo;What he says goes. Now, if you
-and your, ah, man will have a bite of lunch with
-us, I&rsquo;d be mighty pleased, providing you stop this
-high-pressure salesmanship.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well ...&rdquo; Cavanaugh seemed on the verge of
-an explosion. &ldquo;Well, thanks for your invitation,
-but Mr. March and I are due up at Cortez in
-half an hour. We&rsquo;re delivering several of my
-gadgets, as you call them, to smart oilmen. Come
-on, Pepper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;John,&rdquo; said Donovan after they had watched
-Cavanaugh&rsquo;s plane roar away, &ldquo;I think I&rsquo;ll have
-to sock that big lug the next time I meet him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;d make mincemeat of you,&rdquo; Mr. Hall
-warned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I doubt it. He&rsquo;s soft as mush. Anyway, I don&rsquo;t
-like him and I&rsquo;ll have nothing to do with the
-equipment he peddles. He knows that, so I think
-the real reason he came here was to spy on us&mdash;to
-find out whether our well had come in yet.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s not that bad,&rdquo; Hall objected. &ldquo;Boys,
-you know something about him. What&rsquo;s his reputation
-in Valley View?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He acts rich,&rdquo; Sandy answered after a moment
-of deep thought.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The people who work in his lab say he&rsquo;s not
-as smart as he makes out,&rdquo; Quiz added. &ldquo;I agree
-with Mr. Donovan. There&rsquo;s something phony
-about him. I&rsquo;ve a hunch it&rsquo;s connected with those
-three touchdowns he&rsquo;s always bragging about. If
-I could only remember.... Some day I will, I
-bet.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, let&rsquo;s all simmer down and forget him,&rdquo;
-said Hall. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s time for lunch.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
-<h2 id="c5"><span class="small">CHAPTER FIVE</span>
-<br />A Light in the Window Rock</h2>
-<p>The morning after Cavanaugh&rsquo;s unwelcome
-visit, Hall, Donovan, Salmon and the boys set out
-on their 150-mile drive south to the town of
-Window Rock. The jeep wallowed and bounced
-as usual over the dusty trail to Shiprock. There
-Ralph turned right onto US 666, pushed the accelerator
-toward the floor board and relaxed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t have a Bonanza, boss,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but
-a loaded jeep on a good paved road is the next
-best thing.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d prefer a helicopter, equipped with a supercharger
-that could lift it over the ranges,&rdquo; Hall
-answered. &ldquo;Maybe, if Number Two comes in, we
-can buy a whirlybird, along with a portable drill
-rig truck.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
-<p>&ldquo;A portable rig sure would come in handy for
-drilling test wells,&rdquo; Ralph agreed. &ldquo;Maybe we
-could make it come true by putting an offering
-on that Navajo wishing pile.&rdquo; He nodded toward
-a mound of small brightly colored stones that
-stood where an Indian trail crossed the highway.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nuh uh,&rdquo; the oilman said sharply. &ldquo;And don&rsquo;t
-<i>you</i> ever try that stunt, boys. The Navajos don&rsquo;t
-want white men thinning out their luck by putting
-things on their wishing piles. By the same token,
-never take any object from the piles that you will
-see scattered through the reservation. If you&rsquo;re
-caught doing that, you&rsquo;ll be in for real trouble.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yep. The braves will get mad as wet hens,&rdquo;
-Salmon said, chuckling.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ralph,&rdquo; said Quiz, &ldquo;why do you poke fun at
-the Navajos?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, pardner, did you ever hear a UCLA
-man say anything good about the Stanford football
-team?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, but that&rsquo;s different. It&rsquo;s just school
-rivalry,&rdquo; Sandy objected as he crossed his long
-legs the other way in an effort to keep his knees
-from banging against the dash.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, you might say that the Navajos and Utes
-have been traditional rivals since the beginning
-of time. Nothing very serious, you understand.
-We&rsquo;ve raided each other&rsquo;s cattle, and taken a few
-scalps now and then, when a Navajo stepped on
-a Ute&rsquo;s shadow, or vice versa. The Navajos are
-Athapascans, you see. They&rsquo;re related to the
-Apaches, and think they&rsquo;re the lords of creation.
-But Utes are Shoshoneans. We belong to one of
-the biggest Indian &lsquo;families&rsquo; in North America.
-The state of Utah is named in our honor and
-there are Shoshones living as far north as Alaska.
-Maybe you&rsquo;ve heard of Sacagawea, the Shoshone
-&lsquo;Bird Woman,&rsquo; who guided the Lewis and Clark
-Expedition all the way to the Pacific Coast.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Hopis are our brothers, and the Piutes
-are our poor relations. The Piutes <i>did</i> eat fried
-caterpillars and roots in the old days, I guess, but
-that was only because they lived out in the western
-Utah desert where there wasn&rsquo;t much else to eat.
-We southern Utes lived mostly on buffalo meat.
-We were great hunters. Our braves would creep
-right into the middle of a herd of buffalo and kill
-as many as they wanted with their long knives,
-without causing the animals to take fright and
-stampede.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How could they do that?&rdquo; Sandy asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When they went on a hunt, they dressed in
-buffalo hides, and made themselves smell like,
-walk like and even think like buffalo. The animals
-didn&rsquo;t believe they were men.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Can you still do that&mdash;think like a buffalo, I
-mean?&rdquo; Quiz gasped.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, sure. Just find me a herd of wild ones and
-I&rsquo;ll prove it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ralph&rsquo;s talents sure are being wasted on drilling
-for oil,&rdquo; Donovan said, knocking out his pipe
-against the jeep&rsquo;s side for emphasis.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
-<p>&ldquo;All very amusing,&rdquo; Hall grunted. &ldquo;But
-crooked white men have taken advantage of your
-sporting rivalry with the Navajo to rob both of
-you blind during the past century. The same
-thing will happen again, I warn you, if you don&rsquo;t
-stop playing Indian and begin working at it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, boss,&rdquo; Ralph agreed shamefacedly.
-&ldquo;You&rsquo;re absolutely right. But&mdash;I forget everything
-you&rsquo;ve said when that Quail character starts
-getting under my buffalo hide!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The car whined merrily down the road past
-the little towns of Newcomb and Tohatchi while
-Ralph sulked and Hall and Donovan talked shop
-which the boys couldn&rsquo;t understand. They turned
-left on Route 68 in the middle of the hot afternoon,
-crossed the line from New Mexico into
-Arizona, and a few minutes later pulled into
-Window Rock.</p>
-<p>The town, made up mostly of low, well-kept
-adobe and stone buildings, lay in a little valley
-almost surrounded by red sandstone cliffs. It had
-received its name, obviously, from one huge cliff
-that had a round hole in it big enough to fly a
-plane through. One of its largest buildings was
-occupied by the Indian Service. Another, built
-like a gigantic hogan, was the Navajo Tribal
-Council, Hall told the boys. They passed a brand-new
-hospital and a school and pulled up at a motel
-where a large number of Cadillacs and less imposing
-vehicles were parked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_65">65</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Looks as if everybody in the Southwest had
-come to bid on or sell equipment,&rdquo; said Mr. Hall
-as he studied the array of cars and trucks. Some of
-the latter bore the names of well-known companies
-such as Gulf, Continental, Skelly and Schlumberger.
-Others belonged to smaller oil and
-uranium firms that Sandy had never heard of.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Donovan, Ralph, and I had better go in and
-chew the rag with them awhile,&rdquo; the oilman
-continued. &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you fellows look the town
-over until it&rsquo;s time for dinner? You&rsquo;d just get
-bored sitting around.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boys were drifting over toward the Council
-Hall for a better look at the many Navajos in stiff
-black hats and colorful shirts who clustered
-around its doorway when they heard a familiar
-shout.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait up!&rdquo; Pepper March dashed across the
-dusty street and pounded them on their backs as
-if they were his best friends. &ldquo;Gee, it&rsquo;s good to
-see a white man you know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You saw us only yesterday,&rdquo; Sandy pointed
-out rather coldly.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_66">66</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, but that was business. Come on. I&rsquo;ll buy
-a Coke. What have you been up to? How do you
-like working for an old crank? What&rsquo;s biting Hall&rsquo;s
-geologist? Boy, isn&rsquo;t it hot? Did you know that
-I&rsquo;m learning to fly Red&rsquo;s Bonanza? How&rsquo;s your
-well coming along?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Whoa!&rdquo; cried Quiz. &ldquo;Relax! We&rsquo;ve been
-working like sin. We like Mr. Hall. His geologist
-is going to bite your Mr. Cavanaugh pretty soon,
-I&rsquo;m thinking. It is exactly 110 degrees in the shade.
-We did not know you were learning to fly a plane.
-And the situation at the well is strictly our own
-affair.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Uh&mdash;&rdquo; said Pepper, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re not sore about
-what happened yesterday, are you? Red was only
-trying to make a sale.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nope. We&rsquo;re not sore,&rdquo; Sandy answered. &ldquo;But
-we&rsquo;re beginning to take a dim view of your boss.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, Red&rsquo;s the grandest guy you ever met. Do
-you know what he&rsquo;s got me doing?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There you go again, asking personal questions,&rdquo;
-said Quiz.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m helping him set up a string of light beam
-transceivers that will keep his camps here and at
-Shiprock in constant communication with his
-agent down at Gallup.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What on earth for?&rdquo; Sandy almost choked on
-his Coke in amazement. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter with
-the telephone, telegraph and short-wave radio
-stations that are scattered all over this territory?
-And how come Cavanaugh has to have a permanent
-camp at Window Rock, and an agent in
-Gallup?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_67">67</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now who&rsquo;s asking the questions?&rdquo; Pepper said
-smugly. &ldquo;Have another Coke?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No, but we&rsquo;ll buy you one,&rdquo; Quiz replied, and
-added with a wink at his pal, &ldquo;It must be quite a
-job, setting up one of your stations.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure is!&rdquo; The blond boy expanded at this
-implied praise. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s never been done before over
-such long distances, Red says. You have to focus the
-beam perfectly, or it&rsquo;s no good. But, after you do
-that, nobody can eavesdrop on you unless....&rdquo;
-He stopped short, and jumped off the diner stool
-as though it had suddenly become hot. &ldquo;Well, so
-long, fellows. I&rsquo;ve got to be getting back to camp.
-See you around.&rdquo; And he departed as abruptly
-as he had come.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now what kind of business was that?&rdquo; Sandy
-asked as he paid the entire bill.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Monkey business, I guess,&rdquo; Quiz answered.
-&ldquo;I think Mr. Hall ought to know about those
-stations, and maybe Mr. White, the Indian Agent,
-should be told too.&rdquo; He kicked at the dust
-thoughtfully as they walked slowly down Window
-Rock&rsquo;s main street.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_68">68</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Hmmm. You have to get a license from the
-government to operate a short-wave station,&rdquo; said
-Sandy. &ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t suppose you need one yet
-for a light-beam job. Now, just supposing that
-Cavanaugh wanted to&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wanted to what?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I don&rsquo;t know. But I sure would
-like to find out. Let&rsquo;s be getting back to the
-motel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They found themselves in the middle of a tense
-scene when they entered the motel patio. Twenty
-or thirty oil and uranium men were gathered
-there, their chairs propped comfortably against
-the adobe walls, while they listened to Cavanaugh
-and Donovan argue the merits of the big man&rsquo;s
-electronic explorer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You all know, my friends, that uranium ore
-can be, and has been, found with a one-tube
-Geiger,&rdquo; Red was booming. &ldquo;But that&rsquo;s like throwing
-a lucky pass in a football game. To win the
-game, you need power in the line&mdash;power that
-will let your ball carrier cross the line again, and
-again, and again, the way I became an All-American
-by scoring those three touchdowns against
-California back in 1930.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; Quiz whispered as he and Sandy
-founds seats in a far corner. &ldquo;This is where we
-came in last time.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_69">69</div>
-<p>&ldquo;In searching for oil, or even for uranium
-under a heavy overburden of rock,&rdquo; Cavanaugh
-went on, &ldquo;you need at least the simplest scintillation
-counter because it is sixty times as sensitive
-as a one-tube Geiger. Better yet is the really professional
-counter&mdash;as much as 600 times more
-sensitive than the best Geiger built. Best of all is
-my multiple scintillator&mdash;100 times more sensitive
-than the best single tube. Even you won&rsquo;t
-disagree with that, will you, <i>Mr.</i> Donovan?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; answered the bald man after
-several furious puffs on his pipe. &ldquo;I only say that,
-in addition to the best possible electronic instrument,
-you need an operator who thoroughly
-understands radiation equipment. Also, you
-should have a crew of geologists and geophysicists
-who know how to balance radiation findings
-against those established by other methods.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nonsense,&rdquo; shouted the ex-football player.
-&ldquo;Many of my customers have located oil-containing
-faults and stratigraphic traps with my detector
-where all other instruments had failed. You&rsquo;re just
-old-fashioned.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe I am,&rdquo; said Donovan, &ldquo;and then maybe
-I just don&rsquo;t like to have wool pulled over my eyes,
-or the eyes of men I consider to be my friends.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not pulling wool. Halos or circles of radiation
-can be detected on the surface of the earth
-around the edges of every oil deposit. That&rsquo;s a
-proven fact.&rdquo; Cavanaugh pounded on the arm of
-his chair with a fist as big as a ham.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_70">70</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Is it?&rdquo; Donovan asked gently. &ldquo;Jakosky, who
-is an authority on exploration geophysics, says,
-and I quote his exact words: &lsquo;Atomic exploration
-is still in its infancy.&rsquo; Let me tell you a story:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Back in the early days of the oil business, a
-number of people made fortunes by charging big
-fees to locate petroleum deposits with the help
-of split willow wands. They&rsquo;d walk around with
-the split ends of the wands between their hands
-until, they said, some mysterious force pulled the
-big end downward until it pointed to oil. A man
-who helped Colonel Drake promote his original
-oil well at Titusville, Pennsylvania, back in 1859,
-actually located several profitable fields with the
-&lsquo;help&rsquo; of a spiritualist medium.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He could hardly have failed,&rdquo; one of the onlookers
-spoke up. &ldquo;In those days, oil was literally
-bursting out of the ground along many Pennsylvania
-creek beds.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s right, Tom,&rdquo; Donovan agreed. &ldquo;Oil
-was everywhere, so those dowsers, or &lsquo;creekologists&rsquo;
-as they often were called, did very well until the
-search for oil moved west where deposits were
-scarcer and much deeper underground.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_71">71</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Around 1913, geologists had to be called in to
-do the exploration. They&rsquo;ve been responsible for
-finding practically all the fields discovered since
-then. But the creekologists didn&rsquo;t give up easily.
-They built pseudo-scientific gadgets called doodlebugs
-and equipped them with lots of fancy dials
-and flashing lights. One doodlebug even had a
-phonograph in it. As it was carried across a field, a
-ghostly voice would be heard saying, &lsquo;Your sainted
-Aunt Minnie bids me tell you to drill right here
-and you will bring in a second Spindletop.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You can&rsquo;t call me a crook!&rdquo; Cavanaugh, his
-face scarlet with rage, lunged to his feet and
-advanced on his tormentor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not calling you a crook&mdash;yet.&rdquo; Donovan
-stood up too, knocked out his pipe and put it
-into his pants pocket. &ldquo;If you would just stop
-making all of those wild-eyed claims for your
-detector, though, you would make out better out
-here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As Cavanaugh continued to advance he added
-mildly, &ldquo;I suppose I ought to warn you that I
-studied judo when I was in college.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Excuse me for interrupting your fun, gentlemen,&rdquo;
-a quiet voice broke in. &ldquo;Is there anyone
-here named Quincy Taylor? An urgent telegram
-for him was just relayed down from Farmington.&rdquo;
-Kenneth White, the Indian Agent, stood in the
-motel doorway holding a yellow envelope.</p>
-<p>Nobody answered for a moment, but Cavanaugh
-took the opportunity to stomp out of the room
-while Donovan sat down quietly and started
-stoking his pipe.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hey, Quiz!&rdquo; Sandy exploded at last. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t
-you recognize your own name? It&rsquo;s for you!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_72">72</div>
-<p>His friend blushed with embarrassment as he
-accepted the wire, but his round face turned pale
-as he read it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Hall,&rdquo; he choked at last. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s from Dad.
-He slipped and broke his leg in two places. I&rsquo;m
-to come home immediately and run the restaurant
-while he&rsquo;s laid up. Gee whiz!&rdquo; He bit his lips to
-keep back the tears.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s tough, Quiz.&rdquo; The oilman came over
-and slipped a fatherly arm around the boy&rsquo;s
-shoulders. &ldquo;Your father will be all right soon,
-I&rsquo;m sure, but we certainly will miss you up at the
-well. Now the problem is to get you back to
-Farmington quick so you can catch the midnight
-bus. I&rsquo;ll send your things on, soon as we get back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One of my trucks is returning to Farmington
-after supper,&rdquo; spoke up the oilman named Tom.
-&ldquo;You can go in that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thanks,&rdquo; gulped Quiz.</p>
-<p>The ban about talking at mealtime was broken
-that night. All the oil and uranium men were
-agreed that Cavanaugh was a bad-mannered
-blusterer, but they differed sharply about the
-value of his electronic detector.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_73">73</div>
-<p>&ldquo;He has made several good uranium strikes
-with the thing,&rdquo; a bearded prospector insisted,
-&ldquo;though what good they&rsquo;re going to do him I
-can&rsquo;t imagine, with the government not buying
-except from established mills. But don&rsquo;t sell Red
-Cavanaugh short. He has made millions out of
-electronics, they say. He knows electronics. He&rsquo;s
-a smart operator. You keep an eye on the bids he
-makes tomorrow and you&rsquo;ll see what I mean.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, I&rsquo;m not throwing my seismograph away
-for a while yet,&rdquo; Tom retorted. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll put my money
-on Don&rsquo;s opinion any day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boys tried to follow the conversation, but
-Quiz&rsquo;s heart was not in it, and he only picked
-at his food. Finally he excused himself and headed
-for the dining-room door with Sandy after him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a tough break,&rdquo; he said half an hour later
-while he and his pal stood at the edge of town and
-stared upward at that amazing natural bridge
-called the Window Rock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It sure is,&rdquo; Sandy agreed glumly. &ldquo;Maybe you
-can come back, though.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not a chance. Dad will be laid up most of the
-summer, and he can&rsquo;t afford to hire a manager, the
-way things are. There&rsquo;s nothing I can&mdash; Hey!
-Look!&rdquo; He grabbed Sandy&rsquo;s arm and pointed.
-&ldquo;See that point of light twinkling &rsquo;way up on top
-of the Window Rock? That isn&rsquo;t a star, is it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_74">74</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Nuh-uh!&rdquo; Sandy watched the faint flicker a
-thousand feet above them. &ldquo;That must be where
-Cavanaugh has pitched his camp. He&rsquo;s sending a
-message of some kind over light beam. If it were
-a heliograph transmitting in Morse code I could
-read it. But that&rsquo;s a modulated beam.... Say,
-we&rsquo;d better be moseying back to the motel. Must
-be about time for your truck to leave.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sandy,&rdquo; Quiz said half an hour later after
-they had shaken hands solemnly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to do
-everything I can, when I get home, to do some
-detective work on Cavanaugh. If anything turns
-up, I&rsquo;ll let you know quick.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do that, Quiz.&rdquo; Sandy swallowed and his voice
-broke. &ldquo;Be seeing you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Quiz climbed slowly into the cab of the big tool
-truck. As it roared off into the starlit desert night
-he kept waving a forlorn farewell.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_75">75</div>
-<h2 id="c6"><span class="small">CHAPTER SIX</span>
-<br />Cliff Dweller Country</h2>
-<p>Sandy had expected that the opening of bids for
-leases on thousands of acres in the Navajo reservation
-would be an exciting occasion, something
-like a country auction. Instead, he found it a
-great bore.</p>
-<p>Scores of bidders in their shirt sleeves lounged
-on hard straight-backed chairs in the stuffy meeting
-room of the Indian Service building, or
-chatted, smoked and told jokes in the corridors.
-Kenneth White and other representatives of the
-Indian Service sat behind a long redwood table,
-opened piles of envelopes, compared bids, held
-long whispered conferences with grave, leather-faced
-members of the Navajo Council and their
-advisers, and very occasionally handed down
-decisions.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_76">76</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The bid of $3,900 per acre made for 200
-Navajo acres in San Juan County, northeast,
-southeast of Section 27-24 N-8 is accepted,&rdquo; White
-then would drone. Or: &ldquo;A bid of $318 per acre for
-125 acres of Section 18, 42 north, 30 east is rejected
-by the Council because it&rsquo;s too low. Another
-bid may be made at the August meeting, if
-desired.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After an hour of this, Sandy was counting the
-cracks in the floor, watching flies buzzing against
-the windowpanes, and wondering whether he
-dared ask Mr. Hall to be excused. He hesitated
-about doing this because the oilman was following
-the bidding with tense interest and making
-endless notes on the backs of old envelopes that he
-kept dragging out of his vest pockets.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ssst!&rdquo; Ralph whispered from the seat behind
-him. &ldquo;This is murder. How about having a second
-breakfast with me?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We never should have come down here this
-month when our well needs watching every
-minute,&rdquo; the young Indian added after they had
-entered a nearly empty diner and ordered ham
-and eggs which neither of them really wanted.
-&ldquo;The big companies have the big money, so they&rsquo;ll
-gobble up the best of the acreage, as usual. We
-poor boys will get some small tracts, if we&rsquo;re lucky.
-And I don&rsquo;t think John Hall&rsquo;s outfit is going to be
-lucky today.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why is that?&rdquo; Sandy asked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_77">77</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Because most of our bids are for land that&rsquo;s
-under dispute between the Navajos and Hopis.
-They can&rsquo;t be accepted until some sort of settlement
-is reached between the tribes. I don&rsquo;t know
-why John keeps putting them in. Well&mdash;&rdquo; Ralph
-finished his coffee and slid off the stool and onto
-his feet in one motion, like a big cat&mdash;&ldquo;let&rsquo;s go
-back and learn the worst.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was a strange tenseness in the meeting
-room when they entered. Cavanaugh and White
-were standing facing each other across the table.
-All eyes were riveted on them and not a sound
-was being made by the onlookers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Cavanaugh,&rdquo; the Indian Agent was saying,
-&ldquo;neither the Service nor the Council can understand
-the meaning of the bids you have submitted.
-Some of them are for small tracts around the Pinta
-Dome area in Apache country where there has
-never been the slightest show of uranium-bearing
-ore. I don&rsquo;t want to tell you your business,
-but....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you for that, Mr. White,&rdquo; the redhaired
-giant growled. &ldquo;Let the bids stand.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Very well. They are accepted. But this other
-bid&mdash;for a thousand acres in the bed of the San
-Juan River. You must have made an error. It is
-submitted directly to the United States government,
-instead of to the Navajo Council. Do you
-wish to correct it?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I do not,&rdquo; snapped Cavanaugh.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But it cannot be accepted, since the stream is
-not navigable.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I challenge that statement, Mr. White. Under
-the law it cannot be rejected until the stream is
-<i>proved</i> not to be navigable. If you won&rsquo;t accept it,
-let it stand as a prior claim. Is there anything
-else?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing else whatsoever,&rdquo; White answered
-mildly, but between stiff lips.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That suits me fine.&rdquo; Cavanaugh lit a long
-black cigar in defiance of a <span class="sc">NO SMOKING</span> sign, and
-strutted out. All heads turned to watch him go
-and a buzz of conversation started.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wheeuw!&rdquo; Ralph said in Sandy&rsquo;s ear. &ldquo;That
-Pinta Dome area had a big helium strike some
-years back. Wells in that region are all closed in
-now, and the government is very hush-hush about
-the whole thing. What&rsquo;s Cavanaugh up to?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>White picked up another bunch of bids and
-called Hall to the table.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You know, John, that bids on land in the
-disputed Navajo-Hopi area can&rsquo;t be accepted. I&rsquo;ve
-told you so again and again. So has Chairman Paul
-Jones of the Navajo Council. Why do you keep
-submitting them?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_79">79</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Because I&rsquo;m a stubborn man, Ken.&rdquo; Hall
-grinned, tilting his gray head as he always did
-when he was being stubborn. &ldquo;And because I
-think there&rsquo;s oil under those lands. And because
-I also think the tribes will get together soon. You
-just let my bids stand and tell me where I can
-locate Jones.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hosteen Sandez, do you know where Mr. Jones
-is today?&rdquo; White asked a lean old Indian who sat
-next to him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gone to Chinle,&rdquo; was the reply. &ldquo;Two families
-there having dispute&mdash;with shotguns&mdash;about irrigation
-water. He trying to settle it before Navajo
-police come.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; said Hall. &ldquo;I think we&rsquo;ll just
-mosey on up Chinle way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">The jeep followed a good paved road as far
-west as Ganado, but when it turned north toward
-Chinle it got back once more on a trail made of
-stones from which none of the corners had been
-removed. They were driving through a wild
-country of mesas, washes and canyons which made
-conversation almost impossible.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you expect to gain by talking to
-Jones, John?&rdquo; Donovan asked once when the road
-became smoother for a few miles.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_80">80</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been reading so much about summit
-conferences,&rdquo; Hall answered, &ldquo;that it just occurred
-to me we might set one up out here. I want
-to suggest to Jones that we get some of the more
-important chiefs of the two tribes to meet out
-here in the desert somewhere, where there are
-no reporters or members of the Land Resources
-Association hanging around. I&rsquo;ll bet we could
-accomplish something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good idea,&rdquo; Donovan agreed. &ldquo;If the tribes
-weren&rsquo;t continually stirred up by white men with
-axes to grind they&rsquo;d soon be able to agree on that
-boundary line.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t mind me, palefaces,&rdquo; said Ralph as he
-spun the wheel to avoid a particularly hard-looking
-stone. &ldquo;But I doubt it. I know both tribes,
-and....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Crash! The jeep bucked like a pinto pony and
-the motor roared.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There goes the second muffler in three
-months,&rdquo; Ralph shouted, pointing backward to a
-heap of junk on the trail.</p>
-<p>After that, all conversation was impossible until
-they pulled into the little town of Chinle&mdash;and
-learned at the trading post that Jones had already
-departed for Tuba City!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Say, John,&rdquo; Ralph said, as they were standing
-around waiting for a &ldquo;shade tree mechanic&rdquo; to
-dig a muffler that would fit out of a rusty pile of
-spare parts that leaned against his hogan, &ldquo;we
-can&rsquo;t possibly drive back to the well tonight.
-Why don&rsquo;t we put up at the Canyon de Chelly
-camp so I can show Sandy where his great-uncle fit
-the Navajos?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_81">81</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Good idea,&rdquo; said his employer. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have
-time to show Sandy the cliff dwellings tomorrow,
-too. Chief Quail lives over in the Canyon de
-Chelly neighborhood. I want to sound him out on
-my idea for a summit conference.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The sun was sinking in golden glory behind
-thousand-foot-high red sandstone buttes when
-they drove up to the Thunderbird guest ranch
-at the entrance of the Canyon de Chelly National
-Monument area. There they obtained two pleasant
-double rooms furnished after the rugged style of
-the Old West. When they had showered most of
-the dust off themselves, they gathered for a fine
-meal in the timbered mess hall. Then, in the cool
-of the mountain evening, they went over to a big
-campfire where a National Park Service Ranger
-was lecturing to a group of tourists.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;These canyons housed one of the great centers
-of the Anasazi, or Basket Maker, civilization,&rdquo; the
-Ranger was explaining. &ldquo;During the first several
-centuries of what we call the Christian era, Basket
-Makers occupied the whole drainage basin of the
-San Juan River. In addition to baskets, they made
-fine pottery and woven sandals, but they used dart
-throwers instead of the later bows and arrows.
-They built peculiar circular homes with floors
-sunk a foot or more into the ground. You&rsquo;ll see
-one of those tomorrow when you visit Mummy
-Cave.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_82">82</div>
-<p>&ldquo;When the Basket Makers vanished early in the
-eighth century, Pueblo Indians occupied the
-canyons. They built many-storied cliff dwellings
-over the old caves. They were farmers, but they
-also made beautiful pottery, cloth, stone tools, and
-ornaments of copper and gold.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Coronado, the Spanish Conquistador, may
-have been looking for this place when he came up
-from Mexico in 1540 to search for the fabulous
-riches of El Dorado and the Seven Cities of Cibola.
-He never found anything but thirst and
-death.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Were the Pueblos and Basket Makers related?&rdquo;
-someone asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, they were both Shoshones, like the modern
-Hopis,&rdquo; answered the Ranger as he threw more
-wood on the fire.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;More distinguished ancestors for us Utes,&rdquo;
-Ralph whispered to Sandy.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_83">83</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Seven or eight centuries ago,&rdquo; the Ranger
-went on, &ldquo;the Pueblos grouped their cliff dwellings
-into large &lsquo;apartment houses&rsquo; situated on sites
-that could easily be defended. Tomorrow you&rsquo;ll
-visit White House, Antelope House, and Standing
-Cow, which are their finest structures. Let me
-warn you, though, that only people accustomed
-to conditions in the canyons should drive cars into
-them. The spring rains are late this year. There is
-very grave danger from flash floods and quicksand.
-In past years, many covered wagons and other
-vehicles drove into the canyons, got caught in a
-sudden storm, and were never found. I suggest
-you rent a car and guide from the Thunderbird
-Ranch operator.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What became of the Pueblos?&rdquo; a tourist asked
-in an awed voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody knows. Some people think a great
-drought hit this part of the country and they had
-to move to an area where there was more rainfall.
-Others believe that an enemy&mdash;possibly the fierce
-Aztecs&mdash;came up from Mexico and killed all the
-inhabitants. Terrible battles were fought here,
-we know, before the end. Sometimes Pueblo
-mummies with weapons still in their hands are
-found when a new cliff dwelling is explored. The
-Navajos say the whole place was deserted when
-they moved in, more than 200 years ago. Now,
-I want to tell you about the troubles that <i>they</i>
-had with the Spaniards and Kit Carson.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;d better go to bed, I think,&rdquo; Hall said to
-the others in his group. &ldquo;Ralph knows a lot more
-about recent history than this fellow does. He&rsquo;ll
-tell you all about it in the morning.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">Sandy and Ralph crawled out of their bunks
-shortly after sunrise, but they found that Hall
-had already departed. A note under their door
-read:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_84">84</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Have located Chief Quail. Don and I have him
-cornered and are trying to talk him over to our
-side. You can use the jeep to explore the canyons
-this morning but be back by lunchtime, so we can
-hunt for Hopi Chief Ponytooth. He&rsquo;s up in this
-neighborhood, Chief Quail says. Happy cliff-hanging.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After a brief argument with the Ranger, who
-repeated his warnings about flash floods and quicksand,
-Sandy and Ralph got under way.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know this territory like the palm of my
-hand,&rdquo; the driller said as he drove carefully into
-dark gorges where the sun shone only around
-noon. &ldquo;There really are four separate canyons,
-you&rsquo;ll notice. From right to left they&rsquo;re Monument
-Canyon, the Canyon de Chelly proper,
-Black Rock, and the famous Canyon del Muerto,
-which means Death Canyon. That&rsquo;s the one where
-the Navajos made their last stand against Kit
-Carson.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How did he ever drive them out of a place
-like this?&rdquo; Sandy marveled as he stared up at
-towering cliffs that rose almost straight up from
-the grass-covered canyon floor. &ldquo;One man on a
-cliff should have been able to stand off a regiment
-by rolling rocks down on their heads.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_85">85</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where your great-uncle was smarter
-than General Custer,&rdquo; answered his guide. &ldquo;He
-didn&rsquo;t try to attack. If he had, the Navajos would
-have massacred his troops. Instead, Kit sent small
-raiding parties of cavalrymen down the centers of
-the canyons where they were fairly safe from rocks
-and arrows. They had orders to shoot every sheep,
-goat and cow in sight. After they did that, they
-retreated and blocked all exits to the canyons.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And the braves and their families just stayed
-inside and starved?&rdquo; Sandy was really shocked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What else could they do? See that big blue-and-white
-picture of a cow drawn on the canyon
-wall over the cliff dwelling to your left? That&rsquo;s a
-sort of monument which the poor old Navajos
-made to remind them of their slaughtered herds.
-After they finished it, they all came out and surrendered.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gee whiz!&rdquo; was all that Sandy could think of
-to say.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We have time to explore just one cliff house,&rdquo;
-Ralph continued. &ldquo;It might as well be Standing
-Cow. Come on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They climbed a swaying ladder to reach one of
-the dwellings. This had been restored by archaeologists
-and looked as though its Indian inhabitants
-had departed the night before, instead of a long
-400 years ago. There was the loom on which
-they had woven their cloth. Graceful pottery with
-decorations in glaze was stacked in a corner. A
-bedboard rested on two timbers cemented into
-the rear wall.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_86">86</div>
-<p>&ldquo;These were de luxe apartments, probably occupied
-by the chief,&rdquo; Ralph explained. &ldquo;They
-have one big drawback&mdash;no hallways. You have to
-go through the living quarters to get to the other
-rooms. Come back here and I&rsquo;ll show you one of
-their kivas, or ceremonial rooms.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He led the way into a much larger cave that had
-a balcony overlooking a round hole some twenty
-feet across by six feet deep. Light filtered into the
-gloomy place through one small window in the
-cliff face.</p>
-<p>The driller turned a flashlight beam into the
-hole. Sandy saw that its bottom could be reached
-by steep stone stairways. A wide bench ran around
-the sides of this strange pit. In its center stood
-several stone tanks about the size of bathtubs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When the cliff dwellers wanted to talk to their
-gods,&rdquo; said Ralph, &ldquo;they climbed down into a kiva
-hole like this and stayed for days without eating,
-drinking or sleeping. They practiced a kind of
-self-hypnotism, I guess.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe,&rdquo; Sandy guessed, &ldquo;they just went down
-there to take their Saturday-night baths. I don&rsquo;t
-see any gods&mdash;idols, I mean.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_87">87</div>
-<p>&ldquo;These people didn&rsquo;t have idols&mdash;just those
-tub things,&rdquo; Ralph answered. For a long time he
-stood staring down into the kiva, as though he
-were trying to picture his dead-and-forgotten
-ancestors there, conducting their silent worship.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;d better be getting back to the ranch,&rdquo; he
-said at last, shaking his handsome head as though
-to clear it of dreams.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was a pretty grim thing Carson did to the
-Indians,&rdquo; Sandy said as they drove back to
-Thunderbird.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It was better than a massacre. Only twenty or
-so Navajos were actually killed by his troops,
-remember. And you should not forget, either, that
-Kit was acting under orders from Washington.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Those Nazi officers who killed innocent people
-in German concentration camps said they were
-acting under orders too,&rdquo; Sandy pointed out
-grimly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, but Carson never tried to excuse his
-actions. At first, he thought he was doing the right
-thing to move the tribe onto a fine new reservation.
-But as soon as he had herded several
-thousand of them over to Bosque Redondo on the
-Pecos River, he changed his mind. Bosque
-Redondo means Round Forest in Spanish, but he
-found there weren&rsquo;t more than half a dozen trees
-on the whole place, while good grazing grass was
-almost as rare. It was a hellhole and the Navajos
-hated it. They ran away or, if they weren&rsquo;t able to
-do that, they just sat down and pined. A thousand
-of them died there from hunger and homesickness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_88">88</div>
-<p>&ldquo;So Carson climbed on a train, went to Washington,
-and told the Great White Father just what
-was happening. When he warned that all the
-Navajos at Bosque Redondo would be dead in a
-few years, nobody seemed to mind very much.
-&lsquo;Good Indian: dead Indian,&rsquo; you know. When he
-added that the government was spending a million
-dollars a year just to help them die, a few ears
-pricked up. But when he said that half the Navajos
-had never left Arizona and that they were
-threatening to go on the warpath to help their
-imprisoned brothers, Carson got action. He was
-ordered to return the tribe to its original reservation&mdash;this
-one&mdash;and was given money to help
-them get a new start.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to tell Miss Gonzales what you just
-told me,&rdquo; said Sandy. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want her to dislike
-me because she thinks my great-uncle was a
-monster.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, why don&rsquo;t you? Her school trailer is
-located only about twenty miles from our well.
-Drop in on her when you get a day off.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gee, I&rsquo;d like to, Ralph,&rdquo; said Sandy as they
-approached the ranch gate where Hall, Donovan
-and Chief Quail were waiting for them, &ldquo;but she
-seemed pretty angry that night at the motel.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_89">89</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Kitty&rsquo;s a fine girl,&rdquo; Ralph answered slowly,
-&ldquo;even though she tries to be more Navajo than
-the Navajos. Fact is, I&rsquo;ll let you in on a secret: My
-last oil royalty check from the wells in the
-Southern Ute reservation amounted to $12,000.
-When I get a few more of them in my bank
-account, so I can give her a big marriage gift, I&rsquo;m
-going to ask my uncle to ask <i>her</i> uncle if she&rsquo;ll
-have me for a husband.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What have uncles got to do with marriage?&rdquo;
-Sandy stared at Ralph in amazement, realizing for
-the first time that he really was an Indian and had
-ways of doing things that were hard to understand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s just an old Navajo custom.&rdquo; Ralph
-grinned uncomfortably. &ldquo;And that reminds me:
-If Kitty gets uppity about Carson again, you tell
-her I said to be nice or I&rsquo;ll ask my great-uncle to
-step on her great-uncle&rsquo;s shadow. That will make
-her behave!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_90">90</div>
-<h2 id="c7"><span class="small">CHAPTER SEVEN</span>
-<br />Back of Beyond</h2>
-<p>After a hurried lunch that ended with flabby
-apple pie, as Sandy had discovered most lunches
-usually did in the Southwest, the five men climbed
-into Quail&rsquo;s pickup truck. (The Chief insisted
-that the jeep couldn&rsquo;t possibly travel the trails
-they would have to follow.) Then they set out for
-the wild Dot Klish Canyon area, to the northwest
-of Chinle, where the Navajo thought Chief Ponytooth
-and his wife were &ldquo;squatting,&rdquo; as he put it.</p>
-<p>Ralph chose to sit on a box in the bed of the
-truck because, as he said frankly, &ldquo;If I&rsquo;m in the
-cab with the Chief, we&rsquo;ll quarrel.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy joined the driller on another box that
-was scantily padded with a piece of blanket. Soon
-both of them were hanging onto the truck body
-for dear life as they bumped and blundered over
-a road that made previous ones they had traveled
-seem like superhighways.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_91">91</div>
-<p>Sometimes their way led through tall thickets
-of mesquite and briars that threatened to tear
-the clothes off their backs. Then they would ford
-a stream so deep that water splashed over them.
-The machine, though still fairly new, groaned
-and knocked like a Model T at the torture it was
-undergoing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This territory is what Australians call &lsquo;back of
-beyond,&rsquo;&rdquo; Ralph shouted at one point as he
-dodged low-hanging tree branches. &ldquo;We need a
-covered wagon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>At another, when they all had to get out and
-push the machine from a gully into which it had
-slid, he made sarcastic remarks about the driving
-abilities of all unprintable Navajos.</p>
-<p>Once he wiped the streaming perspiration from
-his face and neck, pointed to a mass of black
-clouds in the west and muttered, &ldquo;Thunderstorm
-weather. A good day to lie under a tree
-and take siesta.&rdquo; Mostly, though, the Ute gritted
-his teeth and kept silent as the pickup fought its
-lonely way across the fringes of the Painted
-Desert.</p>
-<p>It was midafternoon and the sticky heat was
-stifling when they reached the great box canyon
-where the Hopis were supposed to be living.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_92">92</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like the feel of this place,&rdquo; Quail said
-as he stopped the truck on a high bank that overlooked
-the trout stream pouring out of a narrow
-cleft between two buttes. &ldquo;Look at those thunder
-clouds piling up. I should not wish to lose my car
-in there.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>We</i> don&rsquo;t matter, of course,&rdquo; Ralph grunted.
-&ldquo;How far is it to Ponytooth&rsquo;s place?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;About half a mile, I think,&rdquo; the Navajo
-answered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then let&rsquo;s leave your precious hunk of junk
-out here and walk in.&rdquo; Ralph set off down a
-faint trail at a fast lope that the others found
-hard to match.</p>
-<p>Around a sharp bend in the canyon they came
-at last to a heap of sandstone ruins. The little
-group of circular pueblos looked as old as the
-surrounding hills. Most of the walls had crumbled
-or been knocked apart in some strange manner.
-Only one had a roof of pine or cottonwood beams,
-light poles and bunch grass. In front of it a tiny
-old woman sat smoking a long pipe.</p>
-<p>Her face, brown as chocolate, was a mass of
-wrinkles. But her black eyes, which peered out of
-the folds of a heavy wool blanket, or manta, were
-sharp with intelligence.</p>
-<p>She made no answer to their questions in
-English and Navajo. When Ralph spoke to her in
-the basic Shoshonean language, however, she
-pursed her lips and pointed up the canyon with
-them.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_93">93</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Ponytooth is probably up there hunting
-somewhere,&rdquo; Chief Quail said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;d better find
-him before it gets too dark.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Half a mile farther up the stream they found
-the old Chief. He was stalking a jack rabbit with,
-of all things, a bow and arrows. Slanting rays of
-sunshine that broke through the gathering clouds
-showed that he was dressed in the ancient Hopi
-costume. It consisted of a woolen poncho, or
-blanket, with a hole cut in the center, through
-which he had thrust his white head, baggy trousers
-slit up to the knees on the sides, deerskin
-leggings wrapped round and round his spindly
-shanks, and beautifully woven sandals. Only his
-belt, which was mounted with large silver discs,
-showed that he was a person of importance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t know that clothing like that existed
-any more, except in museums,&rdquo; Ralph said softly.</p>
-<p>The Hopi shot the jack rabbit through the
-heart, retrieved his arrow, and came toward them,
-carrying the animal by its long ears. When Hall
-went forward, with outstretched hand, the Hopi
-showed no surprise whatever.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No spikum English mush,&rdquo; he said gravely in
-return to the oilman&rsquo;s greeting.</p>
-<p>Chief Quail tried him in Navajo&mdash;and got a
-cold stare in return.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think I can make him understand what we
-want, if it&rsquo;s O.K. with you, John,&rdquo; said the driller.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_94">94</div>
-<p>At a nod from Hall he spoke at great length
-in Shoshone clicks and gutturals.</p>
-<p>Chief Ponytooth listened, at first politely, then
-with a growing frown. At last he held up a hand
-and replied with a torrent of words. As he spoke,
-thunder rolled in the far distance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He says,&rdquo; Ralph translated, &ldquo;that he is an old
-man. Soon his body will be placed in a crevice
-in the rocks, and his spirit will go northward to
-join those of his ancestors at a place called Sipapu.
-Meanwhile, however, he has been ordered by the
-Hopi Council to live here in the ruins of Awatobi,
-a pueblo or village that was destroyed by the Spaniards
-hundreds of years ago because the tribe had
-killed all of their Christian missionaries.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Although he knows that the Navajos claim
-this territory as part of their reservation, he declares
-that it is part of Tusayan, an ancient province
-belonging to the Hopi and their cousins,
-the Moqui. So long as he stays here, he believes,
-neither Navajos nor palefaces will dare to steal
-this land.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Tell him we don&rsquo;t want his confounded
-desert,&rdquo; Hall said impatiently. &ldquo;Tell him we
-won&rsquo;t kill a single jack rabbit or harm a piece of
-sagebrush. Try to make him understand that all
-we want to do is to remove oil from far beneath
-the ground. In exchange we will give his people
-money so they may build schools and hospitals.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_95">95</div>
-<p>When this was translated, Ponytooth straightened
-his bent back and glared at them defiantly.
-His face, under its broad white hairband, took on
-a haughty grandeur. Then he spoke again, waving
-his skinny arms and beating his breast for
-emphasis.</p>
-<p>And the thunder rolled nearer with every sentence
-he uttered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He says&mdash;&rdquo; Ralph shrugged&mdash;&ldquo;that neither the
-Navajos nor the palefaces have ever given his people
-anything. They have always taken things away&mdash;cattle,
-wheat, the spirits of young warriors.
-They are his enemies until the end of the world.
-He is weak and old now, but you can only take
-this land by killing him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A spatter of cold rain emphasized the Chief&rsquo;s
-meaning.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We had better leave this place,&rdquo; Quail said
-as he gripped Hall&rsquo;s arm. &ldquo;It must be raining hard
-farther up the canyon.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not yet,&rdquo; Hall snapped. &ldquo;Ralph, tell the Chief
-that we understand how he feels and that we will
-go, if he wishes. But warn him that if he does not
-accept the fair offer we wish to make him, other
-men may come and take this land from him, as
-they took other things from his ancestors. Try to
-make him understand that we are his friends.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Chief understood the last English word.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_96">96</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Frens!&rdquo; he screamed. &ldquo;Frens! Frens! Frens!&rdquo;
-In the rapidly gathering darkness the canyon
-walls echoed with his shouts. &ldquo;Paleface, Navajo,
-never frens to Hopi!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Chief Ponytooth, last of the Pony Clan, burst
-into wild whoops of sarcastic laughter. At the
-same moment, thunder rolled deafeningly above
-their heads, lightning danced about the canyon
-walls like angry spirits, and the rain began coming
-down in bucketfuls.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Out!&rdquo; yelled Chief Quail. In his excitement
-he forgot his careful grammar. &ldquo;Water come. We
-die!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He spoke too late. A roaring sound had begun
-far up the canyon. Before they could move, it
-grew deafening. At the same time a five-foot wall
-of yellow water swept down upon them like an
-express train.</p>
-<p>After that, things happened too fast to be described.
-As he ran madly toward the canyon wall
-with the idea of climbing out of reach of the flash
-flood, Sandy slipped on a bank of wet clay and
-fell headlong. Ralph grabbed him by the collar
-and barely managed to drag him to safety.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
-<p>Hall let out a wild yell as the dry sandbank on
-which he had been standing a moment before
-absorbed water like a sponge, turned to quicksand,
-and began to suck at his legs. Just before
-the wall of water struck, Donovan snatched up a
-long branch and held it out. Hall grasped it and,
-in turn, was pulled to comparative safety.</p>
-<p>By this time the little trout stream had turned
-into a raging torrent. A great pine tree in its bed,
-roots torn loose by the tremendous sudden push
-of the water wall, came crashing down. A branch
-caught Ponytooth across the thighs and dragged
-him from sight beneath the flood.</p>
-<p>Chief Quail, who was nearest to the Hopi,
-acted instinctively. He plunged into the frothing,
-rock-filled water and fought it with all the power
-of his massive shoulders. A moment later he was
-tumbling downstream with the old man held
-tightly in his arms.</p>
-<p>While the others watched spellbound in the
-gathering darkness, the Navajo fought the cloudburst.
-Fifty yards downstream, he managed to
-hook a leg around a rock that still held firm. His
-face purple with effort, he finally succeeded in
-pulling his apparently lifeless burden to the top
-of a dry ledge.</p>
-<p>Almost as quickly as it had come, the flood
-subsided. Dripping, cold and shaken, the little
-party headed back toward the pueblo ruins. Chief
-Quail walked ahead, carrying the Hopi in his
-arms.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
-<p>An hour later Donovan rose from examining
-the Chief and looked across a campfire at the rest
-of them with a worried frown. The geologist
-had found Ponytooth&rsquo;s only apparent injury&mdash;a
-broken leg&mdash;and had set it with expert fingers.
-But the old man failed to return to full consciousness
-thereafter. He threw his arms about
-and shouted wildly. His cheeks burned with sudden
-fever. When his little brown wife crept to
-his side, he ordered her away in a frenzy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t understand it,&rdquo; said Donovan. &ldquo;So far
-as I can tell, he has no internal injuries. But the
-life is running out of him like water out of a sack.
-I&rsquo;m afraid he may be dying.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He <i>is</i> dying,&rdquo; Ralph spoke up softly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
-been listening to his ravings. He thinks he has
-offended the water spirits by even talking to palefaces
-and a Navajo and a Ute about the tribe&rsquo;s
-sacred boundary line. He thinks he must die to
-make his peace with the spirits. And so, he <i>will</i>
-die before the night is out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hosteen Quail,&rdquo; said Hall, &ldquo;Navajo chiefs are
-medicine men as well, aren&rsquo;t they? Can&rsquo;t you
-paint a sand picture or something, and cure Ponytooth
-of his delusion?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; the Chief answered sadly. &ldquo;Navajo magic
-works only for Navajos.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Let me try,&rdquo; Ralph said suddenly. He gripped
-the Hopi&rsquo;s shoulder to get his dazed attention,
-and spoke to him for a long time in Shoshonean.
-The old man shook his head back and forth in
-disagreement, but he stopped picking at the moth-eaten
-buffalo robe which Donovan had thrown
-over him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him that the water spirits were not
-angry,&rdquo; the Ute said at last. &ldquo;He said I lied. I
-told him we are all his friends. He said to prove
-it. So I told him I would prove it by singing him
-well.&rdquo; Ralph stood up slowly and paced around
-the fire three times in a counterclockwise direction.
-&ldquo;My father was a medicine man,&rdquo; he went
-on. &ldquo;As a boy I watched him sing people well, but
-I never was allowed to try it, of course....
-Well, here goes.... Wish me luck, Hosteen
-Quail.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He leaned his head back against the ruined
-pueblo wall for a moment, as though gathering
-strength from the ancient building. Then he began
-to sing in his rich baritone.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_100">100</div>
-<p>At first the chant went slowly, slowly, like the
-beat of buffalo hoofs on the open prairie. Then,
-as Sandy held his breath to listen, the rhythm
-became faster. The words meant nothing to the
-boy, but somehow they painted pictures in his
-mind: A wild charge of naked Indian horsemen,
-dying in a hopeless effort to capture a fort from
-which white rifle smoke wreathed. The thundering
-rapids of some great northern river. Chirping
-of treetoads in the spring. A love song on some
-distant mesa. A bird call. The silence of a summer
-night....</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; Ralph whispered at last, his broad
-face dripping sweat.</p>
-<p>He reached under Ponytooth&rsquo;s robe and fumbled
-there for several moments. Almost, he
-seemed to be withdrawing some object from the
-old man&rsquo;s body&mdash;something red and wet&mdash;like a
-fingernail!</p>
-<p>The Hopi gave a long sigh. &ldquo;Frens,&rdquo; he murmured
-as he sank into peaceful slumber.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll be all right now,&rdquo; said the Ute, &ldquo;providing
-we take him to the hospital at Lukachukai
-quick to get that compound fracture fixed.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He stumbled out into the darkness, which now
-was spangled with stars.</p>
-<p>Her eyes round with faith and wonder, the
-little brown woman followed him. She was carrying
-a pot of steaming coffee.</p>
-<p class="tb">The less said about that awful midnight drive
-to Lukachukai, the better. Hall got them there
-somehow, while Chief Quail and Ralph held
-Ponytooth in their arms during the entire journey
-to protect his leg.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_101">101</div>
-<p>Then they had to go all the way back to Chinle
-for the jeep, but not before Chief Quail had made
-a detour to toss a piece of yellow carnotite ore
-on the wishing pile which stood near the entrance
-to Canyon de Chelly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not that I like Hopis any better than I do
-Utes,&rdquo; he said shamefacedly. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s just that I want
-Ponytooth&rsquo;s leg to get well quick so we can settle
-the boundary dispute.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, here, I&rsquo;ll chuck something on your silly
-pile, too.&rdquo; Ralph twisted a ring off his finger and
-tossed it onto the big mound of stones. &ldquo;Me Boy
-Scout. Always do good turn.&rdquo; But he turned away
-so the others couldn&rsquo;t see his face.</p>
-<p>They got a few hours&rsquo; sleep at Thunderbird,
-but a much-relayed telegram dragged them out
-of bed before sunup. It was from Jack Boyd, the
-diesel engine man at the well, and it read:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="small">SHE&rsquo;S ACTING UP STOP HAVE HER STUFFED FULL
-OF MUD STOP HURRY</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>More dead than alive, they pulled onto Hall&rsquo;s
-property to find that things had calmed down.
-Drilling was proceeding as usual, in fact, and
-Boyd was covered with embarrassment.</p>
-<p>As Ralph and Sandy stood outside the bunk
-trailer, almost too tired to go in and take their
-clothes off, the driller said lazily, &ldquo;See that big
-mountain there to the north? What does it remind
-you of?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
-<p>Sandy blinked the sleep out of his eyes and
-stared. The mountain in question had a big round
-cliff at one end, a long high ridge in its center,
-two branching ridges farther along, and sharply
-pointed cliffs at its other end.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; he said at last, &ldquo;it looks like a man lying
-on his back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good boy. That&rsquo;s what it is.&rdquo; Ralph grinned.
-&ldquo;That mountain is called the Sleeping Ute. It&rsquo;s
-supposed to be a great warrior who will awake
-some day, to unite all the Indians.... And do
-you know what?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; Sandy yawned mightily.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I thought I saw his big toe wiggle just a minute
-ago.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_103">103</div>
-<h2 id="c8"><span class="small">CHAPTER EIGHT</span>
-<br />Cavanaugh Shows His Colors</h2>
-<p>Long before sunup, the screaming of a siren on
-the rig brought off-duty crewmen pouring out of
-their bunks in all stages of undress. When Sandy
-arrived at the brightly lighted well, the night
-foreman was already halfway through his report
-to Hall, Salmon and Donovan.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;She started rumblin&rsquo; an&rsquo; kickin&rsquo; at the drillpipe
-just like she did yesterday.&rdquo; The fat, oil-smeared
-man was puffing. &ldquo;I stepped up the mud
-pressure an&rsquo; pulled the siren. She&rsquo;s calmed down
-now, but the blowout preventers are having all
-they can do to hold her.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good boy,&rdquo; said Hall. &ldquo;If you had pulled the
-siren and waited for orders we might have a gusher
-on our hands and pieces of derrick flying in all
-directions. How far down are we?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Little over 5,500 feet, last time I checked.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_104">104</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the Gallup Pay.&rdquo; Donovan was dancing
-with excitement. &ldquo;I knew we&rsquo;d hit it. Let&rsquo;s
-take a sample and see what we&rsquo;ve got.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The big old diesel roared for a moment. It
-dragged a bar of iron called a &ldquo;kelly&rdquo; out of the
-square hole in the turntable until the top of the
-first section of drillpipe appeared.</p>
-<p>After the pipe had been securely locked in the
-turntable so that it could neither fall back into
-the well nor shoot upward if the underground
-pressure increased suddenly, two floormen
-clamped their six-foot-long tongs, or monkey
-wrenches, around the kelly and unscrewed it from
-the pipe with great care.</p>
-<p>They had eased it off only two or three turns
-when a frothy mixture with the foul odor of
-rotten eggs began to squirt from between kelly
-and pipe.</p>
-<p>Donovan caught some of this in his cupped
-hands. He smelled it, rubbed it between his fingers
-and then <i>tasted</i> it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Beautiful!&rdquo; the geologist crooned. &ldquo;This is
-good, high-gravity oil. The sulphur content is
-high, as you can smell, but refiners know how to
-take that out. I&rsquo;ll tell you more when I&rsquo;ve run
-a full analysis, but it sure looks as if we&rsquo;ve licked
-the law of averages. Two flowing wells in two
-tries is &rsquo;way above par.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_105">105</div>
-<p>The crewmen, who had been holding their
-breaths for his verdict, let out wild rebel yells
-and spun their battered hats into the air. Jack
-Boyd and the night foreman hoisted Hall on their
-shoulders and marched him around the derrick in
-triumph.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right, fellows,&rdquo; the oilman shouted to stop
-the riot. &ldquo;You all get new hats, new shoes and
-bonuses!&rdquo; As they started another cheer he
-mounted the drill platform and held up his hand
-for attention.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;m going to ask you not to wear those
-hats and shoes, or bank your bonuses, for a few
-weeks yet. This has got to be a tight well.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Glory, Mr. Hall,&rdquo; somebody called from the
-edge of the crowd. &ldquo;No celebration? That&rsquo;s a lot
-to ask.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know it is, Bill. But look at it this way: With
-this well under my belt, I can get a big bank loan
-and hire several more rigs to work this property.
-That will take me at least a month. If news gets
-out about this strike in the meantime, what will
-happen?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cavanaugh and the oil companies that hold
-adjoining leases will rush in and drill offset wells
-just outside your boundaries before you can get
-started,&rdquo; Bill answered glumly. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ll drain
-most of the oil out from under your land, like they
-did up at Cortez last year.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_106">106</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Right!&rdquo; said Hall. &ldquo;I know things have been
-tough these last few months. I&rsquo;ve had to hold up
-your pay several times, to make ends meet. But
-you all hold stock in our company. If you hang
-on a little longer, we&rsquo;ll all be in clover. So I&rsquo;m
-sure you&rsquo;ll keep your mouths shut when the spies
-come prowling, as they will.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A roar of agreement went up, but then someone
-said, &ldquo;How about the kid? He don&rsquo;t own no
-stock, does he?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know Sandy, and I know his dad,&rdquo; Hall
-answered. &ldquo;Also, his bonus is going to be twenty
-shares of stock. I&rsquo;ll vouch for him.&rdquo; He slapped
-the surprised boy on the back and added, &ldquo;All
-right, gang. Back to work. We&rsquo;ll pull the string
-and get the well cemented and closed in. Then
-we&rsquo;ll shut down here till I get that bank loan
-arranged. Some of you have vacations coming.
-Take them now. Don will put the rest of you
-to work running surveys and drilling test wells
-on our downriver lease. Tell any snoopers that
-John Hall ran out of cash&mdash;which is no lie. I
-closed out my balance at Farmington last week
-so I could meet the payroll!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>After the drillpipe was withdrawn and stacked,
-the combined crews spent the rest of the day
-mixing an untold number of bags of cement with
-water. This mixture was pumped down the well
-to replace the mud that had filled it to the brim.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_107">107</div>
-<p>Once, when they heard a plane approaching,
-most of the men faded into the trailers while the
-others tried to look as unbusy as possible. The
-ship was Cavanaugh&rsquo;s Bonanza! It circled twice
-and roared away.</p>
-<p>When Salmon estimated that the hole was full
-of cement, the diesel began pumping mud again.
-This forced the cement out of the well and up to
-the surface between the earth walls and the heavy
-steel casing inside which the drillpipe had rotated.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you ever reach the oil again?&rdquo; Sandy
-asked when the operation was completed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Easy.&rdquo; Ralph yawned tiredly. &ldquo;After the
-cement has hardened, we&rsquo;ll pump out the mud.
-That will leave a cement plug twenty feet or so
-thick in the well bottom to keep the pressure
-under control. When we want to start producing,
-we just drill through the plug and away we go.
-Say, why don&rsquo;t you go to bed instead of asking
-foolish questions? You look as if you had been
-dragged through a dustbin.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I was just thinking, Ralph. Since we&rsquo;ll be
-having some time off, why don&rsquo;t we visit Miss
-Gonzales&rsquo; school?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You go,&rdquo; yawned the driller. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to get
-this well capped good and tight tomorrow and
-then drive to Farmington and try to rent a portable
-test rig&mdash;on the cuff. I&rsquo;m going to act so poor-boyish
-that it will break your heart. Casehardened
-drillers will weep in their beer when they hear my
-tale of woe.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_108">108</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Is that exactly honest?&rdquo; Sandy tried to smooth
-down his cement-whitened cowlick, as he always
-did when he was thinking hard. &ldquo;I mean&mdash;we
-<i>have</i> struck oil.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have struck it for somebody else&rsquo;s benefit
-if we don&rsquo;t play our cards close to our chests
-and keep a close guard over our well <i>and</i> our
-tongues.&rdquo; Ralph looked at him shrewdly. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll
-see what I mean in a day or two. And here&rsquo;s some
-good advice: Watch your step, Sandy. There are
-some mighty curly wolves in this oil game. Don&rsquo;t
-try playing Red Riding Hood with them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">Learning that Jack Boyd was one of the men
-assigned to guard the well from all intruders,
-Sandy borrowed the engine man&rsquo;s car the next
-day and headed in the direction of Kitty&rsquo;s school.
-The going was rough, as usual, but the machine
-was equipped with a heavy-duty transmission and
-rear axle, double shock absorbers, an oversized
-gasoline tank and other features which defied the
-chuckholes. He made good time and found the
-school trailer during the noon recess.</p>
-<p>Twenty Navajo children of all ages were playing
-what looked like a fast game of baseball as he
-drove up. They flew into the trailer like a flock
-of frightened chickens, and came out trying to
-hide behind their teacher&rsquo;s skirts.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_109">109</div>
-<p>Kitty greeted her visitor with considerable reserve,
-but when he told her that Ralph had asked
-him to come, she became much more friendly and
-invited him to share her lunch.</p>
-<p>He found that the roomy trailer was well
-equipped for its purpose, with plenty of desks,
-books, a blackboard and other facilities. It was
-parked under tall pine trees near the first brook
-that he had found since he left the well.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A good place to study,&rdquo; he said to make conversation
-as he looked out of the big windows at
-the nearby Chuska Mountains.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But it&rsquo;s the shower that attracts the children
-at first,&rdquo; she admitted. &ldquo;I have a little pump in
-the creek, you see, so we have all the water in the
-world. They&rsquo;ve never seen anything like it. Most
-of them live in gloomy hogans where the only
-light comes through the door and the smoke hole
-in the center of the room, and where water has to
-be brought in in buckets. <i>Hot</i> water is the greatest
-luxury they&rsquo;ve ever known. They&rsquo;d stay under
-the shower all day long, except that they are so
-eager to learn their lessons.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Navajos really like to study?&rdquo; He tried to keep
-the surprise out of his voice.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course they do. They&rsquo;re bright as silver
-dollars. Now that they have schools, they&rsquo;re going
-to surprise everybody with the speed at which
-they learn.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_110">110</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you ever teach them about Kit Carson?&rdquo;
-he took the plunge.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why ...&rdquo; she stared at him uncertainly. &ldquo;I
-mention his name when I have to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I think you&rsquo;re being prejudiced.&rdquo; Sandy
-smoothed his cowlick desperately. Would she
-throw him out of the trailer for being so bold?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So that&rsquo;s why you came!&rdquo; She startled him by
-bursting into a merry peal of laughter. &ldquo;That was
-brave, after the&mdash;after the nasty way I treated
-you at Farmington. Very well, teacher. Tell me
-why you think Great-uncle Kit was a friend of the
-Navajos.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy began haltingly, but soon warmed to his
-subject while the Navajo children came in from
-their play, gathered around him, and listened
-intently. Remembering old stories his mother
-had told him, Sandy related how Kit, an undersized,
-sickly boy of fifteen, had learned to make
-saddles so he could get a job with a wagon train
-that was heading west from his home town in
-Missouri.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
-<p>He went on to tell how his great-uncle had overcome
-endless hardships to become famous as a
-hunter, trapper and scout with Fr&eacute;mont&rsquo;s expedition.
-He described how Kit had driven a flock of
-6,500 sheep across the Rockies to prevent a famine
-that threatened the early settlers in California.
-He explained the happy ending to the blockade
-of the Navajos in the Canyon de Chelly, and
-wound up by telling how Carson had left his
-deathbed to go to Washington and make one
-more plea for government help for &ldquo;his Indians.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s about all,&rdquo; he concluded, &ldquo;except that
-a town and a river in Nevada, and an oil field in
-New Mexico are named after Kit Carson. He <i>must</i>
-have been a good man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Perhaps he was,&rdquo; the girl said softly while her
-pupils smiled and nodded their dark heads. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll
-be kinder to him when I teach a history lesson
-after this. He sounds a lot nicer than some of the
-people I have met recently. That Mr. Cavanaugh,
-for instance....&rdquo; She turned up her snub nose
-and let her voice trail off.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cavanaugh!&rdquo; Sandy cried. &ldquo;Has he been
-prowling around here too?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. He drove through here this morning in
-a truck. Said he was making some sort of ax
-minerals survey of school lands. Also said he&rsquo;d
-stop by again after school. Will you stay here
-until he has gone, Mr. Cars&mdash;Mr. Steele? I can&rsquo;t
-bear him.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I will if you&rsquo;ll call me Sandy,&rdquo; the boy said
-bashfully.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right, Sandy. And you may call me Kitty.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cavanaugh certainly gets around,&rdquo; Sandy
-said. &ldquo;Did he have anyone with him?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, a young man who seemed to worship the
-ground he walked on. <i>He</i> was nice enough, but,
-well, sort of dewy-eyed, if you know what I mean.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; Sandy grunted, &ldquo;and not quite dry
-behind the ears, either. That was Pepper March.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, time to get classes started.&rdquo; Kitty
-jumped up with a flutter of skirts and shooed
-her children to their desks. For the next two
-hours, while Sandy listened admiringly, she was
-an efficient, understanding schoolma&rsquo;am. As he
-followed the recitation he had to admit that, as she
-had said, the Navajo children were &ldquo;bright as
-silver dollars.&rdquo; They displayed an eagerness to
-learn that almost frightened him. Very few
-youngsters showed that hunger for knowledge
-back at Valley View High.</p>
-<p>That got him to thinking about poor old Quiz.
-How he would have enjoyed this visit. What tough
-luck! But maybe he&rsquo;d have a chance to get some
-sort of line on Cavanaugh, the big lug.</p>
-<p>The roar of an approaching truck jerked him
-out of his reverie. Kitty quickly dismissed her
-pupils and she and Sandy were alone in the trailer
-when Cavanaugh strode in, closely pursued by
-Pepper.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; The big man frowned at the unexpected
-visitor until Pepper rushed forward, shouting
-Sandy&rsquo;s name, and shook hands as though his
-school rival were the best friend he had in the
-world.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_113">113</div>
-<p>Then Cavanaugh turned on a smile as bright
-as a neon sign and insisted on shaking hands too.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard a lot about you from Pepper,&rdquo; he
-boomed. &ldquo;Wish you were on my team instead of
-John Hall&rsquo;s. Say! I heard you had a bit of luck at
-your well. Is that right?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Luck?&rdquo; Sandy stammered, wondering how on
-earth he was going to get out of this one.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, sure. Everybody knows about the telegram
-that brought you all tearing back from
-Chinle. Did the well come in?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It.... We....&rdquo; Sandy almost swallowed his
-Adam&rsquo;s apple and his face went white under its
-tan. What on earth could he say?</p>
-<p>Cavanaugh misunderstood the reason for his
-hesitation and lost his momentary advantage by
-rushing on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, come on, son.&rdquo; He pounded the boy&rsquo;s
-shoulder with a great show of affection. &ldquo;You
-don&rsquo;t owe a thing to that old skinflint Hall. Give
-me the real lowdown on the well and I&rsquo;ll make
-it very much worth your while.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy jerked away, his fists clenched in fury,
-but Kitty stepped quickly between him and his
-tormentor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mr. Cavanaugh,&rdquo; she said in a voice that
-dripped ice water, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re new around the oil
-regions, aren&rsquo;t you?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; The electronics man
-pulled in his dimpled chin as though the girl
-had slapped him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Out here in the Southwest,&rdquo; she said slowly,
-&ldquo;folks don&rsquo;t pry into other folks&rsquo; business if they
-know what&rsquo;s good for them.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well.... I.... You....&rdquo; His face turned
-scarlet. &ldquo;You can&rsquo;t talk to me....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I can, and will.&rdquo; Her black eyes flashed fire.
-&ldquo;Your truck is trespassing on school property
-belonging to the state of Utah. Remove it at
-once!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Cavanaugh opened and closed his mouth several
-times, like a fish out of water.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll both be sorry for this,&rdquo; he gritted like
-a stage villain. &ldquo;Come along, Pepper.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do you....&rdquo; Sandy spoke through a dry
-throat after Cavanaugh&rsquo;s truck had thundered
-away. &ldquo;Kitty, do you live here in the trailer?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, of course.&rdquo; She looked at him oddly.
-&ldquo;There&rsquo;s not the slightest danger.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not so sure, now. Couldn&rsquo;t you stay with
-one of the Navajo families in the neighborhood
-for a while?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then who would protect the school? It&rsquo;s more
-important than I am.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_115">115</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you worry, Sandy Carson Steele.&rdquo; She
-patted his arm. &ldquo;The Navajos are my friends, and
-they&rsquo;re no friends of Cavanaugh. I&rsquo;ll tell them
-what&rsquo;s happened and they&rsquo;ll take good care of
-me. Now you had better get back to the well as
-fast as you can. The roads are completely impossible
-after dark.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
-<h2 id="c9"><span class="small">CHAPTER NINE</span>
-<br />Fighting Fire with Fire</h2>
-<p>When he got back to the well Sandy found that
-Hall had already set out on his fund-raising
-campaign while Donovan had locked himself in
-his trailer laboratory and was running analyses
-on oil samples he had taken before the cement
-was poured. Ralph had just finished welding a
-heavy cap to the top of the casing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I defy anybody to find out what&rsquo;s down there
-until we&rsquo;re ready to let them know,&rdquo; he said as he
-grinned at the tired and dirty boy. The grin
-changed to a frown. &ldquo;What have you been up to
-this time, Sandy? You look like something the
-cat refused to drag in!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When he learned about the events at Kitty&rsquo;s
-school, the driller nodded grimly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I warned you about the curly wolves,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;Go get cleaned up and have some supper. Then
-come over to the lab. We&rsquo;ll talk to Don about
-this.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_117">117</div>
-<p>The geologist smoked thoughtfully while Sandy
-reported. Then he knocked out his pipe and
-said, &ldquo;He&rsquo;s impossible.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s impossible?&rdquo; Ralph asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This man Cavanaugh. No man can spread
-himself as thin as he has been doing. Look at it
-this way.&rdquo; He held up a long finger stained with
-chemicals. &ldquo;First, he&rsquo;s bidding for helium leases
-on land where he wouldn&rsquo;t be allowed to drill.
-Second&mdash;&rdquo; another finger went up&mdash;&ldquo;he&rsquo;s bidding
-for uranium leases although the government
-isn&rsquo;t buying ore from companies that don&rsquo;t have
-mills. Third, he&rsquo;s spying on our well. Fourth, he&rsquo;s
-trying to lease land in the disputed San Juan
-River bed. Fifth, he&rsquo;s prospecting on school lands
-without asking anyone&rsquo;s permission. Hmmm! I&rsquo;ll
-run out of fingers pretty soon. Sixth, he&rsquo;s peddling
-electronic exploration equipment that isn&rsquo;t worth
-a hoot when used by itself. Seventh, he&rsquo;s operating
-an unlicensed light beam communications network.
-Eighth&mdash;and here&rsquo;s something I learned
-when I drove over to Farmington with John and
-we called Lukachukai to find out how Chief
-Ponytooth is getting on&mdash;Cavanaugh flew down
-there yesterday and almost pulled the hospital
-apart trying to get permission to talk to the old
-man.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That means he hopes to get in on the ground
-floor if the Navajos and Hopis settle their
-dispute,&rdquo; said Ralph.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Either that or he wants to hurt John by convincing
-the Chief that the tribes shouldn&rsquo;t get
-together.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How is the Chief feeling?&rdquo; Sandy asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just fine, the nurse told me. He&rsquo;s tough as
-shoe leather. Now, is there anything else about
-Cavanaugh&rsquo;s activities that we should consider?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why does he work day and night to convince
-people that he&rsquo;s a heel?&rdquo; Ralph contributed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Quiz thinks there&rsquo;s something wrong with the
-football stories he&rsquo;s always telling,&rdquo; said Sandy.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Donovan went on thoughtfully.
-&ldquo;I suggest that a lot of the things Cavanaugh is
-doing are meant to be camouflage. He&rsquo;s throwing
-up some sort of smoke screen to get people
-confused about his true intentions. And, since
-we&rsquo;re the ones most likely to get hurt by whatever
-he&rsquo;s really up to, I also think we had better do a
-little investigating. Does either of you have any
-suggestions?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If he were sending up smoke signals instead of
-talking on a light beam, I&rsquo;ll bet I could soon find
-out,&rdquo; the Indian said.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s an excellent idea, Ralph.&rdquo; The geologist
-fired up his pipe and sent clouds of smoke
-billowing through the crowded lab. &ldquo;Eavesdroppers
-never hear anything good about themselves,
-they say. Nevertheless, I think we should
-fight fire with fire by listening in on him and
-learning the worst.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But how <i>can</i> we listen in?&rdquo; Sandy objected.
-&ldquo;Even if we got high enough to intercept his
-beam&mdash;in a helicopter, let&rsquo;s say&mdash;he would know
-something had gone wrong when his receiving
-station didn&rsquo;t reply. He&rsquo;d stop talking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s another way to go about it,&rdquo; Donovan
-replied. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a pretty good geophysicist as well as
-a geologist, Sandy. I have to be out here, where
-I may go out looking for oil and find a uranium
-lode if I keep my eyes peeled and my Geiger
-counter turned on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Over on that table&mdash;&rdquo; he nodded toward a
-small electric furnace and a collection of retorts,
-chemicals and test tubes on one corner of his
-work bench&mdash;&ldquo;I have equipment so sensitive that
-I can burn the branch of a pine tree, or even a
-bunch of loco weed and find out whether the roots
-of that tree or weed reach down into a uranium
-ore deposit. With it, I can detect in the ash as
-little as one part in a million of any radioactive
-ore the plant has sucked up from underground in
-its sap. Which reminds me that any time you run
-across a patch of loco weed, let me know immediately.
-The poisonous stuff seems to like to
-grow on ground in the vicinity of uranium.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_120">120</div>
-<p>&ldquo;All right. Any physicist understands the principles
-of electronics, the properties of light, and so
-on, doesn&rsquo;t he?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy nodded with growing excitement.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Also, you may have heard that the FBI has an
-electronic gadget so sensitive that it can eavesdrop
-on the conversations of crooks, even though they
-may be sitting in a boat half a mile from shore.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll bet the Shoshonean water spirits take a
-dim view of that,&rdquo; said Ralph, grinning.</p>
-<p>Donovan waved him to silence with his pipe
-and continued.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now my guess is that Cavanaugh is using a lot
-of power from a portable generator to produce
-a beam bright enough to be seen a hundred or so
-miles away. And it&rsquo;s a lot easier for him to modulate
-that current so it will modulate the beam
-than to use revolving mirrors or some other
-mechanical means to do the job. There is bound
-to be considerable leakage in a circuit of that
-kind. I think I can go to one of the radio supply
-stores in Farmington tomorrow and pick up
-enough parts to make an electronic &lsquo;ear&rsquo; that can
-tune in on that leakage if we get it within a
-hundred feet of Cavanaugh&rsquo;s transmitter.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_121">121</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Sherlock Donovan,&rdquo; said Ralph, &ldquo;I take off my
-hat to you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">The haywire &ldquo;ear&rdquo; that Donovan built during
-the next several days with what little assistance
-Sandy was able to supply didn&rsquo;t look like much.
-It was just a collection of transistors, fixed and
-variable condensers, coils and verniers mounted
-on an old breadboard. But it had the advantage
-of being light and portable. And, when they tried
-it out with the help of their radio receiving set, it
-worked!</p>
-<p>They found that, with the set&rsquo;s loudspeaker
-disconnected, they could place their gadget several
-hundred feet away and hear the programs
-perfectly, either on the short-wave or regular
-broadcasting channels.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That does it,&rdquo; Donovan finally said after a
-careful series of night tests. &ldquo;We don&rsquo;t know the
-frequency that Cavanaugh is using as a modulator,
-but this thing is flexible enough to tune in on
-practically any wave band. Now the question
-becomes, when do we try it out?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why not right now?&rdquo; Ralph asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Boyd has gone in to town, so I&rsquo;m in charge of
-keeping an eye on the well,&rdquo; said the geologist.
-&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t go with you tonight.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sandy and I can handle it,&rdquo; said the driller.
-&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll take the jeep. If we get in a jam we&rsquo;ll send
-up a rocket or something.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>On the slow, twenty-mile drive to Elbow Rock,
-Ralph spun old tales about Ute scouting expeditions
-and buffalo hunts, but Sandy scarcely
-listened. He was feeling miserable, and wished
-for the first time that he was back home in Valley View.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t like what we&rsquo;re doing, do you?&rdquo;
-Ralph said at last.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, gee. Eavesdropping seems sort of sneaking.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know it does, but don&rsquo;t forget that we&rsquo;re
-dealing with a sneak. Tell you what: you stay in
-the car. I&rsquo;ll take the ear in.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Sandy said firmly. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do anything I can
-to help Mr. Hall. Besides, I helped build the ear
-and know just how it works. I&rsquo;ll carry it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They parked as close to Cavanaugh&rsquo;s brightly
-lighted trailer as they dared. Then Sandy strapped
-the detector on his chest and walked slowly up the
-mountain in darkness so intense and silent that it
-could almost be felt. Remembering the lay of the
-land from the time that he and Quiz had visited
-the spot with Pepper, he managed to stay mostly
-on the trail.</p>
-<p>He was still several hundred yards from the
-trailer when the night exploded in a blare of
-savage noise. Several large dogs had started baying
-furiously near the trailer. A door opened. Cavanaugh
-shouted angrily at a pack of long-legged
-animals that leaped and whined in the shaft of
-light.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
-<p>When quiet had been restored, Sandy inched
-forward once more. But it was no use. The chorus
-of barks rose louder than before and several of
-the dogs started in his direction. With mixed
-emotions of annoyance and relief, he returned to
-the jeep and reported.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Dogs!&rdquo; Ralph growled. &ldquo;That means Cavanaugh
-really has something to hide. What did
-they look like?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They had long legs, sharp noses and big white
-teeth.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Doberman pinschers, I&rsquo;ll bet. Say! Tim Robbins
-breeds Dobermans over in Bluff. They make
-better sheep tenders than shepherds, he claims.
-Let&rsquo;s pay him a visit, even if it is late.&rdquo; He started
-the jeep.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What are you planning to do?&rdquo; Sandy asked
-sharply.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If Utes could behave like buffalo, there&rsquo;s no
-reason why I can&rsquo;t be a dog,&rdquo; Ralph answered.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But you don&rsquo;t have a dog skin,&rdquo; Sandy
-objected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to get one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Old man Robbins was in bed when they arrived
-at his home on the outskirts of the little mining
-town. He came downstairs in his nightshirt when
-he recognized Ralph&rsquo;s voice, made coffee for his
-visitors, and listened to their request without
-surprise.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Why, sure, I&rsquo;ve got a few skins,&rdquo; he said.
-&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s one that belonged to poor Maisie. She
-died of distemper last year. I was going to
-upholster a chair with her, but you can have her
-for a dollar.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Mind if I take a look around your runways
-and kennels, Dad?&rdquo; Ralph asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Go ahead, but don&rsquo;t get yourself bit, young
-feller.&rdquo; The old man shook his head at the strange
-ways of all Indians.</p>
-<p>Five minutes later they were headed back
-toward Elbow Rock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Phooey!&rdquo; said Sandy. &ldquo;You smell like dog, all
-right.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I rolled around a bit in the kennels.&rdquo; Ralph&rsquo;s
-grin was just visible in the light from the dash
-bulb. &ldquo;Now I&rsquo;ve got to start thinking like a dog.
-Don&rsquo;t bother me, human!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When they arrived at their destination the
-driller took a brief lesson in the operation of the
-ear, slipped its harness over his shoulders, and
-draped Maisie&rsquo;s hide around his hips.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Keep your fingers crossed and say a prayer to
-the water spirits,&rdquo; he whispered just before he
-faded into the velvety darkness.</p>
-<p>For long moments Sandy held his breath,
-expecting a renewal of that wild barking. But it
-didn&rsquo;t come. High on the Elbow Rock the
-aluminum trailer glowed undisturbed in the soft
-light pouring from its picture windows.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_125">125</div>
-<p>A trout, leaping in the stream nearby, caused
-the boy to start violently. He tried to relax but
-that only made him listen harder. Once he
-thought he heard a strain of music coming from
-the trailer. Hours later, it seemed, an owl&rsquo;s hoot
-made his hair stir on his scalp. He smoothed down
-his cowlick and then gripped the wheel of the
-car with both hands to stop their trembling.
-What if Dobermans didn&rsquo;t always bark before
-they attacked? What if Ralph was up there....</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m back.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy almost yelled with relief as his friend
-materialized out of nowhere and climbed nonchalantly
-into the car. &ldquo;Wha ... what happened?&rdquo;
-gasped the boy, gripping the Indian&rsquo;s arm to see if
-he really was real. &ldquo;You fooled the dogs?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing happened. And your little friends
-never batted an eyelash. I&rsquo;m good, I guess.&rdquo; He
-removed the skin and tossed it into the rear of
-the jeep.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you mean, nothing happened? Didn&rsquo;t
-the ear work?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It worked perfectly.&rdquo; He started the motor
-and jammed the car into gear.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What did you hear?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Music,&rdquo; said the Ute disgustedly. &ldquo;Highbrow
-music. Bach and stuff.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it code of some kind?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_126">126</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Nah!&rdquo; Ralph spat into the night. &ldquo;Your friend
-Pepper would say, &lsquo;Come in, Gallup. I&rsquo;ve got
-something here that you&rsquo;d like: the umpteenth
-symphony by so-and-so.&rsquo; Then he&rsquo;d play a record
-and say, &lsquo;How did that sound, Gallup?&rsquo; And
-Gallup would answer, &lsquo;Clear as a bell, kid. Keep
-it up.&rsquo; Or Window Rock trailer would come in,
-ask for a Belafonte number, and then say it was
-fuzzy and to sharpen up the beam. Craziest
-performance I ever heard.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe they&rsquo;re just lonesome, way up here,&rdquo;
-Sandy said with great relief.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe. But it&rsquo;s a mighty expensive way to be
-lonesome.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Or they could be testing,&rdquo; the boy went on
-with less assurance.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That sounds more like it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Or they&rsquo;re killing time while they wait for a
-message of some kind?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Now you&rsquo;re cooking with LP gas. The
-question remains: where is that message going to
-come from? I don&rsquo;t like this business, Sandy. It
-gets screwier. I wish we could monitor his station
-every night, but that&rsquo;s impossible, of course. Well,
-at least we know our ear works and that Cavanaugh
-keeps a kennel. I wonder what John and
-Don will make of this one.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When will Mr. Hall be back?&rdquo; Sandy was glad
-for a chance to change the subject.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_127">127</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Next week, I think. Keep this under your hat,
-but he has got his loan, and has flown down to
-Houston to put some more rigs under contract.
-Also, I wangled a portable drill rig when I was in
-Farmington today. That means we&rsquo;ll soon be
-heading for the other lease to run some surveys.
-And <i>that&rsquo;s</i> a job that separates the men from the
-boys, I can tell you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;After what happened tonight I feel as if I&rsquo;d
-already been separated.&rdquo; Sandy yawned. &ldquo;Gee,
-don&rsquo;t oilmen ever get any sleep?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_128">128</div>
-<h2 id="c10"><span class="small">CHAPTER TEN</span>
-<br />Pepper Makes a Play</h2>
-<p>A huge truck carrying a light folding drill rig
-and motor rumbled into camp from Farmington
-two days after the Elbow Rock episode. Donovan
-then set about organizing an exploration crew.
-Since the need for secrecy had lessened, only five
-of the older men were selected to act as a token
-guard for the property. Ten others, who had had
-experience in survey work, were directed to take
-tarpaulins off the long-unused instrument and
-&ldquo;shooting&rdquo; trucks, tune up their motors, and get
-the trailers set for travel. After Ralph had checked
-every item on the rented truck and Donovan had
-made sure that his seismograph, magnetometer,
-gravimeter and other scientific apparatus were all
-in perfect working order, the little caravan rolled
-westward toward Hall&rsquo;s other San Juan River
-lease.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_129">129</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We may be going on a wild-goose chase,&rdquo; the
-geologist told Sandy, who was riding with him in
-the jeep that now had the laboratory in tow. &ldquo;I
-had an aerial survey run on the property last fall.
-It shows one anticline that <i>may</i> contain oil, but
-I&rsquo;ll have to do a lot of surface work before I
-recommend that John spends money on a wildcat
-well.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;How do you make an aerial survey, Mr.
-Donovan?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like you to call me Don, if you will, Sandy,&rdquo;
-the geologist said. &ldquo;And you ought to call John by
-his first name, too. Oilmen don&rsquo;t go in for formality
-after they get acquainted.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir ... Mr.&mdash;Don, I mean.&rdquo; Sandy felt
-a warm glow at this mark of friendship.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;One method of making an aerial survey is by
-means of photographs taken from a plane or
-helicopter,&rdquo; the geologist explained. &ldquo;A stereoscopic
-color camera is used to provide a true
-three-dimensional picture of the area in which
-you are interested. Such photographs show the
-pitch and strike of surface rock strata and give you
-some idea of what formations lie beneath them.
-In addition, prospectors use an airborne magnetometer.
-You know what a magnetometer is, don&rsquo;t
-you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It measures small differences in the earth&rsquo;s
-magnetic field.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_130">130</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Right! I see that you listened when your dad
-talked about geology. Well, you fly a magnetometer
-back and forth in a checkerboard pattern
-over any area where photographs have shown
-rock formations favorable for oil deposits. Heavy
-basement strata are more magnetic than the sedimentary
-rocks that cover them. So, when those
-igneous basement rocks bulge toward the surface
-of the earth, your magnetometer reading goes
-up. That gives you a double check because, if the
-basement bulges, the sedimentary rocks that may
-contain oil have to bulge too. And such a bulge,
-or anticline, may trap that oil in big enough
-quantities to make it worth your while to drill
-for it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then, if your money holds out&mdash;aerial surveys
-cost a young fortune&mdash;you may run a triple check
-with a scintillation counter to see whether there&rsquo;s
-a radiation halo around the anticline. One complication
-with that is that you have to remove the
-radium dials from the instrument panel of your
-plane to keep leakage from interfering with your
-scintillation readings.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A loud honking from the rear of the column
-caused Donovan to stop the jeep. Going back,
-they found that the new drill truck had slipped
-into a ditch and was teetering dangerously.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_131">131</div>
-<p>Although they had been traveling through such
-wild and arid country that it seemed impossible
-that even prairie dogs could live there, quite a
-crowd collected while they struggled and sweated
-for half an hour to get the machine back on what
-passed for a road. First came a wagon pulled by
-two scrawny horses and carrying a whole Navajo
-family&mdash;father, mother, two children and a goat.
-An ancient truck with three more Indians aboard
-pulled up in a cloud of dust. Then came two
-Navajos on horseback.</p>
-<p>Ralph recognized one of the riders and gravely
-offered him a cigarette which he held crosswise
-between his first and second fingers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hosteen Buray, we need your help,&rdquo; said the
-driller after his gift had been accepted.</p>
-<p>The rider said a few words to the other bystanders
-and things began to happen. The riders
-galloped away and came back dragging a small
-tree trunk that could be used to raise the truck
-axle. The children gathered sagebrush to stuff
-under the wheels. The woman milked her goat
-into a pan and presented the steaming drink to the
-thirsty oilmen. Finally, everyone got behind the
-machine and pushed with many shouts and grunts.</p>
-<p>With Ralph&rsquo;s expert hand at the wheel, the
-truck struggled back onto the trail.</p>
-<p>After receiving &ldquo;thank yous&rdquo; from all concerned,
-the Navajos stood aside and waved in
-silence as the column drove away.</p>
-<p>This time, Sandy asked to ride with the driller
-because, as he explained, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got a lot of
-questions about things.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_132">132</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Shoot,&rdquo; said Ralph.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t anyone offer to pay those people
-for helping us?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They would have been insulted. That&rsquo;s how
-Cavanaugh got in bad with them in the first place&mdash;by
-insisting that they take money for everything.
-Navajos are proud. Next question.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Why did you hand out cigarettes in that
-funny way, instead of just offering your pack?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You never point anything at an Indian. It
-might be a gun.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Anything else on your mind, Sandy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are all Navajos named Hosteen something-or-other?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hosteen means &lsquo;Mister.&rsquo; Most white men don&rsquo;t
-use the term. The Navajos resent that, too.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess I&rsquo;ve got a lot to learn,&rdquo; the boy sighed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_133">133</div>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re doing all right.&rdquo; Ralph slapped him on
-the knee.</p>
-<p class="tb">They made camp in a forest of pines not far
-from a dry wash that ran into the San Juan River
-gorge, and started work at once. Donovan split the
-party into two groups. One, which he headed,
-loaded the heavy magnetometer and gravimeter
-equipment into a truck and set out to check formations
-revealed by the aerial studies. Ralph and
-Sam Stack, a burly surveyor who had arrived
-with the portable drill rig, took charge of a transit,
-plane table and Brunton compass. They named
-Sandy and three others to carry stadia rods and
-help them make a careful surface survey of the
-vicinity where the oil anticline was believed to
-be.</p>
-<p>Then began one of the hardest weeks of grinding
-labor that Sandy had ever put in. All day long
-he climbed over rocks and fought briary thickets
-while moving his rod to spots where it could be
-seen from the various transit positions. His experience
-on Boy Scout geology field trips kept him
-from getting lost and enabled him to chip a
-number of rock formations for analysis. But it was
-only after he returned to camp at night and
-propped his tired eyes open with his fingers while
-watching Don, Ralph and Stack plot lines on a
-topographical map of the region, that he could
-form any idea of what was being done.</p>
-<p>Hall joined them on the third evening and
-watched without comment as the work went on.
-He looked gray and tired.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You seem bushed, John,&rdquo; said Donovan after
-they had added the day&rsquo;s data to the map. &ldquo;Any
-trouble?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Plenty, Don. At the last minute the bank
-refused a loan. It said that two wells didn&rsquo;t make
-a profitable field, out here in the middle of nowhere.
-I had to trade a two-thirds interest in the
-other lease to Midray before I got my money!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_134">134</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the way the oil squirts,&rdquo; Ralph said
-philosophically. &ldquo;So we&rsquo;re in partnership with a
-big company.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m solvent, anyway.&rdquo; Hall shrugged. &ldquo;But we
-won&rsquo;t make our fortunes unless that first lease
-turns out to have the largest field in San Juan
-County. Of course, if this one pays off, too....&rdquo;
-His voice trailed away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that, John.&rdquo; Donovan bit
-his thin lips. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re finding some underground
-anomalies, but, confound it, I don&rsquo;t feel right
-about the situation. For one thing, the plants that
-usually grow in the neighborhood of a deposit
-just aren&rsquo;t in evidence. We&rsquo;ve found an anticline,
-all right, but I have a hunch there&rsquo;s mighty little
-oil in it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Excuse me,&rdquo; Sandy interrupted from his seat
-at the end of the map table, &ldquo;but if you find a
-dome, or anticline, doesn&rsquo;t it just have to hold
-oil?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Not at all,&rdquo; the geologist answered with a
-wave of his pipe. &ldquo;The oil might have escaped
-before the bulge was formed by movements of the
-earth&rsquo;s crust. Or perhaps the top of the anticline
-had a crack, or fault, through which the oil seeped
-to the surface ages ago.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You are going to run a seismic survey, aren&rsquo;t
-you?&rdquo; Hall asked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_135">135</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, we&rsquo;ll start tomorrow if the weather holds
-out. The radio says thunderstorms are brewing,
-though.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do the best you can.&rdquo; Hall rose and stretched.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to turn in now. I feel lousy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">Sandy didn&rsquo;t sleep well, although he, too, was
-so tired that his bones ached. He was up at sunrise&mdash;except
-that there was no sunrise. The sky
-looked like a bowl of brass and the heat was the
-worst he had met with since his arrival in the
-Southwest.</p>
-<p>After a hurried breakfast they drove the portable
-drill rig, instrument truck and shooting truck
-to the anticline which lay, circled by tall yellow
-buttes, about three miles from the camp site.</p>
-<p>Once there, Ralph used a small diamond drill
-to make a hole through surface dirt and rubble.
-The rest of the crew dug a line of shallow pits
-with their spades. These were evenly spaced from
-&ldquo;ground zero&rdquo; near the hole Ralph had drilled to
-a distance from it of about 2,000 feet. While two
-men tamped a dynamite charge into the &ldquo;shot
-hole,&rdquo; other crew members buried small electronic
-detectors called geophones in the pits, and connected
-them, with long insulated wires, to the
-seismograph in the instrument truck.</p>
-<p>Just as the job was finished, a roaring squall
-sent everyone dashing for cover.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_136">136</div>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re going to set off a man-made earthquake
-in a moment, Sandy,&rdquo; Donovan said when the
-dripping boy climbed into the instrument truck.
-&ldquo;Watch carefully. When I give the word, Ralph
-will explode the dynamite. The shock will send
-vibrations down to the rock layers beneath us.
-Those vibrations will bounce back to the line of
-geophones and be relayed to the seismograph
-here. Since shock waves travel through the ground
-at different speeds and on different paths, depending
-on the strata that they strike, they will
-trace different kinds of lines on this strip of sensitized
-paper. I can interpret those lines and get a
-pretty good picture of what the situation is down
-below.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You mean you can make an earthquake with
-dynamite?&rdquo; Sandy cried.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;A mighty little one. But it will be big enough
-for our purposes. This seismograph measures
-changes of one millionth of an inch in the position
-of the earth&rsquo;s surface.&rdquo; He started the wide tape
-rolling, and picked up a field telephone that connected
-the three trucks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All ready, Ralph?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;Fine! I&rsquo;ll give
-you a ten-second countdown. Ten. Nine. Eight.
-Seven. Six. Five. Four. Three. Two. One. Shoot!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_137">137</div>
-<p>There was a subdued roar deep underground.
-A geyser of earth and splintered rock spouted
-from the shot hole. The seismograph pens, which
-had been tracing steady parallel lines on the
-paper, began tracing jagged lines instead.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;All right, Ralph,&rdquo; Donovan spoke into the
-phone. &ldquo;If the rain lets up, have the boys string
-another line of geophones and we&rsquo;ll cross-check.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They got in one more shot before the increasing
-thunderstorm made further work impossible.
-Then Ralph and Hall sprinted over from the
-shooting truck and spent the next hour listening
-while Donovan explained the squiggles on the
-graph.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So you&rsquo;re not too happy about the situation,
-Don?&rdquo; the producer asked at last.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I hate to say so, John,&rdquo; the geologist answered,
-&ldquo;but things don&rsquo;t look too good. We&rsquo;ve found a
-dome, all right, but I&rsquo;m afraid it has a crack in its
-top. Look at this.&rdquo; He put away his magnifying
-glass, lighted up, and pointed his pipe stem at a
-sharp break in the inked lines. &ldquo;I can&rsquo;t take the
-responsibility for telling you to spend a hundred
-thousand dollars or so drilling five thousand feet
-into a cockeyed formation like that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Once a poor boy, always a poor boy, I guess.&rdquo;
-Hall shrugged.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, I haven&rsquo;t given up yet,&rdquo; said Donovan
-grimly. &ldquo;The aerial survey shows another possible
-anomaly about three miles west of here. I&rsquo;ll do
-some work on that before we call it quits.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_138">138</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Take your time,&rdquo; said his employer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hey!&rdquo; Ralph, who had been standing at the
-trailer window, staring glumly into the sheets of
-rain that swept toward them across the San Juan
-gorge, spoke up sharply. &ldquo;Take a look at that
-river, will you?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They joined him at the window and found that
-the stream had doubled in size since the rain had
-started. Now it was a raging yellow torrent that
-filled the gorge from border to border.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It beats me,&rdquo; said Hall, &ldquo;how it can rain cats
-and dogs in this country one day and flood everything,
-but be dry as dust the next. When the
-government finishes building its series of dams
-around here and all this water is impounded for
-irrigation, you&rsquo;ll see the desert blossom like the
-rose, I&rsquo;ll bet.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The rain all runs off and does no good now,
-that&rsquo;s a sure thing,&rdquo; Donovan agreed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Look,&rdquo; Ralph interrupted. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a boat or
-barge or something coming down the river.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re crazy,&rdquo; said Donovan. &ldquo;Nothing could
-live in that&mdash;Say!&rdquo; He rubbed mist off the
-window and peered out into the downpour.
-&ldquo;Something <i>is</i> coming down. You&rsquo;re right!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_139">139</div>
-<p>They stood shoulder to shoulder and stared in
-horror. Around a bend in the stream a heavily
-laden homemade barge had plunged into view. A
-vivid flash of lightning showed one man standing
-upright in the stern. Blond hair flying, he was
-struggling to steer the bucking craft with a long
-sweep.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s Pepper March!&rdquo; Sandy shouted as
-another flash spotlighted the craft. &ldquo;He must be
-trying to prove that the San Juan is navigable.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He won&rsquo;t last five miles,&rdquo; Ralph snapped.
-&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to go after the young fool. Grab some
-rope, Sandy, and come along.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>There was no rope in the truck, so Sandy
-snatched up a coil of heavy wire cable used to
-lower electric logs into test wells. With it over
-his shoulder, he tore out into the storm after the
-driller.</p>
-<p>They got the jeep going after considerable
-cranking and headed downstream. It was a nip
-and tuck race since there was no trail along the
-gorge. But Ralph put the car in four-wheel drive
-and tore along over rocks and through flooded
-washes while Sandy hung onto the windshield
-frame for dear life. Finally they managed to pull
-ahead of the tossing barge.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_140">140</div>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a rapids about five miles downstream,&rdquo;
-Ralph shouted above the thunder that rolled back
-and forth like cannon shots among the buttes and
-cliffs. &ldquo;He&rsquo;ll never go farther than that. The only
-thing I can do is to stand by there and try to throw
-him a line. It&rsquo;s a long chance. Thank heaven and
-the water spirits that I learned to rope horses
-when I was a kid.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They reached the rapids with only seconds to
-spare. The Indian fastened one end of the cable
-to the power takeoff at the rear of the jeep and
-coiled the rest of it with great care at the edge of
-the gorge. Then he stood, braced against the howling
-wind, swinging the heavy log in his right
-hand.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here he comes,&rdquo; Ralph said. &ldquo;What a shame
-that damned fools often look like heroes. Your
-friend is probably thinking he&rsquo;s Lewis, Clark and
-Paul Revere rolled into one. Stand by to start
-the takeoff and reel him in if I hook him,
-Sandy.... There he goes. There he goes!
-Stand by!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pepper was fighting the rapids now, like some
-yellow-haired Viking out of the past. It was no
-use. Halfway through, the awkward barge hit a
-submerged rock. Slowly its bow reared into the
-air. The heavy pipe with which it had been loaded
-started cascading into the boiling water.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_141">141</div>
-<p>Pepper had enough presence of mind to drop
-the useless sweep, and scramble out of the path of
-the lengths of pipe as they flew like jackstraws. As
-he managed to grab the uptilting rail, Ralph&rsquo;s
-mighty arm swung back and forward. The end of
-the cable carrying the log paid out smoothly.
-Out and down it sped in a long arc.</p>
-<p>It struck the boat and slid slowly along the
-rapidly sinking rail. After one wild look upward,
-Pepper understood what had happened. He
-snatched the wire as it went by and looped it
-twice around his waist.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Haul away,&rdquo; Ralph whooped to Sandy. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve
-caught our fish.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>As the jeep&rsquo;s motor roared and the takeoff
-spun, Pepper was snatched from his perch and
-dragged helter-skelter through the wild waters.
-Minutes later Ralph dragged him over the edge
-of the cliff, choking and half drowned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No real damage except a few nasty bruises,&rdquo;
-the driller grunted after he had applied artificial
-respiration with more vigor than was really
-needed. &ldquo;How do you feel, bud?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Awful!&rdquo; Pepper groaned. Then he amazed
-them by sitting up and glaring at them.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That was ... a stinking trick,&rdquo; he croaked
-after he had spat out a mouthful of dirty water.
-&ldquo;Stringing cable ... capsizing my barge ...
-I&rsquo;d have made it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Whaaat?&rdquo; Sandy hardly believed his ears.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d have made it, I tell you! I would have!&rdquo;
-Pepper wailed hysterically. &ldquo;Then you ... then
-you ...&rdquo; He retched miserably.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_142">142</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Listen, kid,&rdquo; Ralph snapped as he half-carried
-the boy to the jeep. &ldquo;Your Red Cavanaugh
-ought to be strung up for egging you on to try a
-stunt like that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; Tears dripped down Pepper&rsquo;s dirty
-cheeks. &ldquo;My idea. He didn&rsquo;t know.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bunk! You mean he didn&rsquo;t know you had
-built a barge and loaded it with pipe? Don&rsquo;t lie!
-Your boss is a stinking, no-good, lowdown louse.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, no!&rdquo; Pepper tried to pull free, then leaned
-against the side of the car and clung there like a
-half-drowned monkey. &ldquo;Red&rsquo;s best boss a man
-ever had. He&rsquo;s ... he&rsquo;s wonderful.... Likes
-good music ... dogs ... Indians. I&rsquo;d die for
-Red.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the point.&rdquo; Ralph rummaged in the
-back of the jeep, found Maisie&rsquo;s mangy hide, and
-wrapped it around the shivering boy. &ldquo;You almost
-did die. Cavanaugh&rsquo;s next door to a murderer.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Pepper stared at them as if he were waking
-from a dream.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You really believe that, Sandy?&rdquo; he gulped
-weakly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I know it, Pepper.&rdquo; Torn between pity and
-anger, Sandy gripped the blond boy&rsquo;s arm.
-&ldquo;Cavanaugh&rsquo;s a crook!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Crook?&rdquo; Pepper babbled. &ldquo;No, no!&rdquo; His knees
-sagged and they just managed to catch him as he
-fell.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_143">143</div>
-<p>&ldquo;A strange boy,&rdquo; said Ralph as they drove back
-to camp with the would-be Viking sleeping the
-sleep of exhaustion between them. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s in
-trouble, some way. Maybe he was trying to prove
-himself, like young Indians once did before they
-could become braves.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_144">144</div>
-<h2 id="c11"><span class="small">CHAPTER ELEVEN</span>
-<br />Serendipity</h2>
-<p>Pepper was black, blue, stiff and somewhat
-chastened when he ate breakfast with Ralph and
-Sandy the next morning. Also, he was disturbed
-by the fact that Cavanaugh&rsquo;s plane had come over
-at dawn, circled the wrecked barge in the rapids
-for several minutes, and then scooted eastward
-without landing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He must have known I planned to run the
-river,&rdquo; the blond boy admitted. &ldquo;But why do you
-suppose he didn&rsquo;t stop to ask whether you folks
-had seen me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Probably was afraid to.&rdquo; Ralph attacked a big
-plate of ham and scrambled eggs. &ldquo;Figures he may
-be blamed for letting you drown, so he&rsquo;s gone
-home to frame an alibi. Won&rsquo;t he be surprised
-when you show up in one of our supply trucks!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gee whiz! Do you really think he&rsquo;s that bad,
-Mr. Salmon?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_145">145</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I think he&rsquo;s worse. See here, kid. Why don&rsquo;t
-you stop working for that heel and come over
-here? I&rsquo;m sure John will give you a roustabout
-job.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No.&rdquo; Pepper shook his head stubbornly. &ldquo;I
-signed a contract and I can&rsquo;t go back on my word.
-Besides, I haven&rsquo;t seen him do anything really
-bad. I&rsquo;ll admit that some of the things he does
-seem, well, sort of queer. But maybe you&rsquo;re just
-too suspicious.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe.&rdquo; Ralph washed down a hunk of Ching
-Chao&rsquo;s good apple pie with half a cup of steaming
-coffee. &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s your funeral.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll keep my eyes open after this.&rdquo; Pepper rose
-as a honk from the truck told him it was time to
-get going. &ldquo;Thanks for everything. And I really
-do mean for everything.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The Indian stood up and stretched like a lazy
-panther as he watched their visitor depart. &ldquo;Crazy
-kid,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Well, it&rsquo;s time for us to be getting
-back to the mines, Sandy. Don&rsquo;s staying here for a
-few days to run some final tests. He has assigned
-our group to start surveying the other structure.
-So pick up your rock hammer and stadia rod.
-Hike!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The new location proved to be several miles
-north of the river in a tumbled and desolate
-region of weathered buttes and washes that
-already were dry as bone.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_146">146</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Geologists call those buttes &lsquo;diatremes,&rsquo;&rdquo;
-Stack, the surveyor, explained to the crew as they
-unloaded equipment at a central spot. &ldquo;They
-stick up like sore thumbs because they&rsquo;re really
-vents from ancient volcanoes. The lava they&rsquo;re
-made of doesn&rsquo;t erode much although the surrounding
-sedimentary rocks have been worn away
-in the course of ages. There are at least 250 diatremes
-scattered through this Colorado Plateau
-area, and some of them are rich in minerals. So
-keep your eyes open while you&rsquo;re prowling.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Prowling&rdquo; was exactly the word for what the
-crew did, Sandy decided after a few days in the
-broiling sun. He had to admit that the territory
-was beautiful, in its wild way, but he decided that
-it was more fit for mountain goats than human
-beings. More and more, as he slowly worked his
-way from one rod location to another, measured
-the slope of exposed strata with his Brunton
-compass, or chipped rock samples for analysis
-back at camp, he began to dream of the soft green
-hills and winding streams near Valley View.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_147">147</div>
-<p>His homesickness grew worse when Hall
-brought him a letter from Quiz.</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="sc">Dear Sandy</span>,</p>
-<p>I sure do envy you, out there in God&rsquo;s
-country. Things are mighty dull around here,
-although I do get some time for swimming and
-tennis, now that Dad is able to hobble around
-in his cast and help out at the restaurant.</p>
-<p>Last Sunday we had a picnic out by the lake.
-The fishing was swell. And there was a dance
-at the pavilion afterward. I&rsquo;m not much for
-dancing, but I know you like to. Still, you must
-be having plenty of fun out at the well.</p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Fun!&rdquo; Sandy exploded as he reread that
-paragraph. He was bathing his blistered feet in
-the first spring he had found that day and batting
-at deer flies that seemed determined to eat him
-alive. Then he read on:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p>I haven&rsquo;t forgotten about Cavanaugh. Dad
-says he&rsquo;s a lone wolf and that nobody knows
-much about him. He came here about two years
-ago, flashed a lot of money around, and built
-his lab. Joined the Country Club, Rotary, and
-so on. Impressed a lot of people with his football
-talk. Makes good equipment and has
-several research contracts that take him to
-Washington quite frequently. His employees
-think he&rsquo;s a stuffed shirt, too.</p>
-<p>I tried to look up his sports record at the
-library, but the newspapers that should tell
-about his big game are missing from the files.
-When Dad gets better, he says I can take a day
-or two off and see what I can find in the San
-Francisco library. I&rsquo;ll let you know. Funny
-about those newspapers, isn&rsquo;t it?</p>
-<p>Give my regards to the gang. I sure do wish
-I was there instead of here.
-<span class="center">As ever,</span>
-<span class="jr"><span class="sc">Quiz</span></span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_148">148</div>
-<p>After he had finished reading Sandy sat for a
-long time with his chin in his hands, thinking.
-The survey wasn&rsquo;t going well, he knew. Yesterday,
-Hall and Donovan had paid them a visit and
-shaken their heads at the map that Ralph and
-Stack were drawing.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This isn&rsquo;t an anticline, John,&rdquo; the geologist
-had said. &ldquo;What we have here is fault that has
-caused a stratigraphic trap. That is, layers of rock
-on one side of the fault line have been lifted above
-those on the other side of the crack by some old
-earthquake. The slip sealed off the upper end of
-what may be an oil-bearing layer with the edge
-of a layer of hard, impervious rock. If you drill
-here&mdash;&rdquo; he pointed with his pipe stem&mdash;&ldquo;you
-may hit a small pool. Nothing spectacular, you
-understand, but it ought to more than pay expenses.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know whether I should take the
-chance.&rdquo; Hall had shaken his gray head. &ldquo;I need
-something better than this to gamble on, the way
-things are. Tell you what, Don. There&rsquo;s going to
-be a bid session at Window Rock next Monday.
-Keep the crew working here for a few days longer
-while I drive down and see if I can shake loose a
-better lease. Ralph, you&rsquo;d better come along. I
-hear that the Navajo and Hopi Councils will have
-some sort of joint powwow at the Rock and I&rsquo;ll
-want you to keep an eye on it. You come along too,
-Sandy, and bring the &lsquo;ear.&rsquo; I have a hunch that a
-lot of things are about to pop.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_149">149</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Will we have room for Kitty?&rdquo; Ralph asked.
-&ldquo;I dropped over to see her after work yesterday
-and she told me the school is closing Monday and
-Tuesday because there&rsquo;s going to be a big Squaw
-Dance in the neighborhood. She wants to go home
-and get her best clothes to wear to it. She could
-drive her own car, of course....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kitty&rsquo;s good company,&rdquo; Hall had replied. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d
-be glad to have her along.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>A distant hail jerked Sandy out of his reverie.
-He put on his shoes, picked up his rod, hammer
-and compass, and started climbing over jagged
-rocks to the top of a crumbling low butte that was
-to be the next survey location. The going wasn&rsquo;t
-too bad because one side of the cone had collapsed,
-thus providing a slope of debris up which
-he could clamber with fair speed.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_150">150</div>
-<p>When Stack&rsquo;s transit came in sight, Sandy
-placed the stadia rod upright so that it could be
-seen against the skyline and started the slow business
-of moving it about in response to the surveyor&rsquo;s
-hand signals.</p>
-<p>Several times he stopped and listened intently.
-Off to his right, hidden in the underbrush that
-choked the crater, he thought he heard some large
-animal moving. A deer, probably, he tried to reassure
-himself, although he remembered that one
-of the other crewmen had had a nasty brush with a
-bobcat several days previously.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, Sandy,&rdquo; the surveyor in the valley
-bellowed through cupped hands at last. &ldquo;Call it
-a day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The boy was beating a quiet retreat down the
-slope when a tired bleat stopped him in his tracks.
-The animal in there was either a sheep or a calf,
-and it seemed to be in trouble.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Better take a look,&rdquo; said Sandy. (He had got
-into the habit of talking to himself these last few
-lonely weeks. The noise seemed to keep the homesickness
-away.)</p>
-<p>It was a calf, he found, when he had fought his
-way into the thicket. And it seemed to be sick.
-First it would nibble at some plants where it
-stood, then, lifting its feet high and putting them
-down gingerly, it would move slowly to another
-location and repeat the performance. Every so
-often it let out that piteous bleat.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_151">151</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Poor thing,&rdquo; Sandy murmured. &ldquo;Maybe I
-ought to take it back to camp.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He fished a length of cord out of his knapsack,
-looped it around the calf&rsquo;s neck and tugged. The
-animal gave him a glassy stare and wobbled forward.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Probably a Navajo stray,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Its owners
-will be looking for it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When he reached the temporary camp half an
-hour later, Ralph took one look at the calf and
-let out an astonished whoop.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Loco,&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;Hey, gang! Come look
-what Sandy found.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Men came running from all directions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where did you find it?&rdquo; Stack demanded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Up there. On top of that butte.&rdquo; Sandy
-pointed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was it eating anything at the time?&rdquo; Ralph
-snapped.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. Some plants that looked sort of like ferns,
-only they had little bell-like blossoms hanging
-from stalks in their centers.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Locoweed,&rdquo; the Indian crowed. &ldquo;<i>Astragalus
-Pattersoni</i>, Donovan calls it. Sandy, you may have
-found just what the doctor ordered to get John
-out of his pinch. I&rsquo;ll get a Geiger counter. The
-rest of you round up some flashlights, sacks and
-spades. We&rsquo;d better take a look at this right away.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_152">152</div>
-<p>&ldquo;What about my calf?&rdquo; Sandy objected.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, stake it out somewhere and give it some
-water. It may recover. It&rsquo;s just drugged. Indians
-used to chew locoweed when they went down in
-their kivas, you know. They said it made them see
-visions in which they talked to the spirits. Eat too
-much of the stuff, though, and you&rsquo;re a goner.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">Two hours later, after having dug up most of
-the crater, the men tramped wearily back to camp
-in the light of the rising moon. The sacks they
-carried on their backs bulged with loads of black
-earth mixed with yellow carnotite crystals that
-made the Geiger chatter madly.</p>
-<p>Hall was just driving into camp as they arrived.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve found a rich uranium lode or lens, I
-think, John,&rdquo; Ralph shouted to him. For once he
-had lost his Indian calm and was almost dancing
-with excitement.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t say,&rdquo; yawned the producer as he
-dragged himself out of the car.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; Ralph stared, openmouthed, at this
-cool reception. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, boss? Don&rsquo;t
-you care?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Where are we going to sell the ore?&rdquo; Hall
-asked gently.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Ralph wilted. &ldquo;I hadn&rsquo;t thought of that.
-The government only buys from people who have
-mills.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_153">153</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure. A uranium strike these days is just like
-money in a safe for which you have lost the combination.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Excuse me, Mr. Hall,&rdquo; Stack interrupted, &ldquo;but
-doesn&rsquo;t Midray own an interest in a uranium
-mill?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes.&rdquo; Hall smiled grimly at the surveyor.
-&ldquo;Midray owns an interest in most everything. It
-will be delighted to help me develop the lode&mdash;in
-exchange for three-fourths of the profits.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s better than nothing, though.&rdquo; He
-straightened his shoulders. &ldquo;A uranium strike will
-shorten the odds enough so I can take a chance
-on drilling a well here. Why, what am I grousing
-about? This could be a real stroke of luck. How
-did you happen to find it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>When he had heard the story, Hall slapped
-Sandy on the back.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s called serendipity,&rdquo; he said,
-chuckling. &ldquo;You remember the three Princes of
-Serendip in the fairy story: on their travels they
-always found things they weren&rsquo;t looking for. Congratulations,
-Sandy. You have the makings of a
-real wildcatter.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>But, as the boy went off to take care of his sick
-calf, he knew that his employer had been putting
-on an act. Serendipity or no, John Hall was still
-running a poor-boy outfit.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_154">154</div>
-<h2 id="c12"><span class="small">CHAPTER TWELVE</span>
-<br />Cavanaugh Makes a Mistake</h2>
-<p>Hall had completely recovered his good spirits
-by the time that Ralph brought Kitty to camp
-at dawn. Just as the sun rose the little party set
-out for Window Rock in a holiday mood. Hall
-made one stop for a brief conference with Donovan.
-Then he drove on to his base camp, arriving
-in time for breakfast.</p>
-<p>Sandy could hardly recognize the place where
-he had worked such a short time before. Number
-Two well had been opened and connected to the
-feeder pipeline through a Christmas tree, while
-its derrick had been moved to a new location.
-Three big new Midray rigs were being erected at
-other spots on the property. Still more derricks
-were going up on surrounding leases. This was
-rapidly becoming an important field.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_155">155</div>
-<p>Hall had a short talk with the Midray superintendent,
-a big man who reminded Sandy of Cavanaugh
-and who acted as if he owned the place.
-Then they were on their way again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The lease looks like Times Square,&rdquo; Hall
-grunted as he headed the jeep toward Shiprock.
-&ldquo;Makes me uncomfortable. I like to work where
-there&rsquo;s plenty of room to swing a wildcat.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I bet you still prefer to use a burro when you
-go prospecting, you old sourdough,&rdquo; Kitty teased
-him.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, a burro never runs out of gas or breaks
-a spring, and it has a better horn than a jeep,&rdquo;
-Hall said, grinning. &ldquo;When a burro brays, even
-the mountains have to listen. That&rsquo;s why he&rsquo;s
-called a Rocky Mountain canary, I suppose.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They reached Route 666 in good time, turned
-south between Shiprock Peak and Hogback Mountain,
-and sailed down through the picturesque
-Chuskas past road signs that beckoned toward far-off,
-mysterious places like Toadlena, Beautiful
-Mountain, Coyote Wash, Nakaibito, Pueblo Bonito
-(Lovely Village) and Ojo Caliente (Hot Eye).</p>
-<p>Kitty made the time pass quickly by singing the
-praises of the desert, pointing out spots of historic
-interest, and telling them Navajo legends.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_156">156</div>
-<p>&ldquo;The Wind People, who ride the lightning,
-own all of these box canyons and hilltops,&rdquo; she
-said half seriously. &ldquo;No Navajo will build his
-hogan near such places, or where lightning has
-struck. If he did, he thinks the Wind People
-would give him bad headaches.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It gives me a bad headache trying to understand
-why your Navajos love a godforsaken place
-like this,&rdquo; Ralph said.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Your Utes live here too!&rdquo; Kitty&rsquo;s eyes flashed.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Only because white men drove us off our good
-land farther north,&rdquo; Ralph snapped. &ldquo;We put up
-a good fight before they expelled us, too. My
-grandfather was one of Chief Douglas&rsquo; warriors,
-back in 1879, when the Utes surrounded and almost
-destroyed an entire U.S. Army detachment
-that invaded our White River reservation.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Navajos got <i>their</i> reservation back,&rdquo; Kitty
-pointed out.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t squabble, children,&rdquo; Hall said and
-added, to break the tension, &ldquo;I heard a rumor
-that you&rsquo;re going to the Squaw Dance together
-next week. Is that right?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Kitty blushed and Ralph nodded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the same as becoming engaged, isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If our uncles approve,&rdquo; Kitty admitted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well, here&rsquo;s a tip from an old bachelor: Don&rsquo;t
-bicker about things that happened long ago, and
-don&rsquo;t hold grudges. We&rsquo;re all Americans today,
-no matter how our skins are colored.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be good,&rdquo; Kitty promised. &ldquo;And that reminds
-me. Will you all be good and come to dinner
-with Mother and me tonight?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_157">157</div>
-<p>When they pulled up to the motel at Window
-Rock, an Indian wearing a Hopi hairband rose
-from where he had been squatting near the entrance
-and handed Ralph a message. The driller
-read it and turned to the others with a frown.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s from Chief Ponytooth,&rdquo; he explained. &ldquo;He
-says the Hopis and Navajos are having a session
-at the Council Hall tonight and he wants me
-there as a representative of the Utes. Looks as if
-I&rsquo;ll have to eat and run.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Dinner will be early,&rdquo; Kitty promised.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait here till I make a quick visit to the Indian
-Agency,&rdquo; Hall said. &ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll walk over
-to your house. I&rsquo;m tired of riding.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy had expected that Kitty might live in an
-eight-sided wooden hogan such as he had seen in
-other parts of the reservation. Instead, she took
-them to a neat white cottage surrounded by palo-verde
-trees.</p>
-<p>Mrs. Gonzales was an attractive widow who
-might have passed for Kitty&rsquo;s older sister, except
-that she was somewhat heavier and her skin was
-much darker. She greeted the two older men as
-if they were members of the family and made
-Sandy feel at home immediately. First, she showed
-them around the tiny forge and workshop where
-she apparently earned a good living by making
-lovely silver buckles and heavy medallions called
-conchas which she sold to tourists. Then, after
-learning that Ralph had to leave soon, she rushed
-dinner to the table. It featured several highly
-spiced Mexican and Indian dishes and was delicious.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_158">158</div>
-<p>After coffee, they stood under the stars for a
-few minutes on a patio looking toward the great
-black hole in Window Rock.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What is the light that twinkles on the cliff
-these days?&rdquo; Mrs. Gonzales asked as she pointed
-upward with pursed lips.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bad man!&rdquo; she sniffed after Hall explained
-that it was Cavanaugh&rsquo;s light beam.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you know about him, Mother?&rdquo;
-Ralph asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing good.&rdquo; She crossed her arms in the
-wide sleeves of her embroidered blouse to keep
-the evening chill away. &ldquo;He came here in the early
-&rsquo;50s, looking for uranium. Pablo, my poor husband,
-was a prospector too in those days, and
-knew every foot of this reservation. Cavanaugh
-went into partnership with him, but somehow, he
-never got round to signing a contract.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;They made a strike too&mdash;one of the biggest.
-Cavanaugh sold the claim for much money, just
-before the government stopped buying ore. He
-forgot all his promises then, and went away.
-Pablo&rsquo;s heart broke when the man he thought was
-his friend betrayed him.&rdquo; She sighed deeply.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_159">159</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Now Cavanaugh has returned,&rdquo; she went on
-at last, &ldquo;like the Spaniards who used to descend
-on us Indians like locusts when they needed more
-money. He is not good for this country.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He certainly is riding a high horse today,&rdquo;
-Hall agreed. &ldquo;When I was at the Agency he came
-stalking in with Pepper behind him, leading two
-of his big dogs on leashes. He looked just like the
-cat that ate the canary as he submitted a pile of
-sealed bids a foot high. I sure do wish I knew
-what he was up to.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;If I didn&rsquo;t have to attend the Council meeting,&rdquo;
-Ralph said regretfully, &ldquo;I could take the
-&lsquo;ear&rsquo; up to his camp and find out, maybe.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Kitty insisted on walking them back to town.
-She and Ralph went arm-in-arm until Hall met
-another oilman, got into a business discussion,
-and called his driller back to take part in it. Sandy
-and the girl continued on together.</p>
-<p>Cavanaugh came out of the motel as they approached.
-Quite evidently, the redhaired man had
-had a few drinks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well!&rdquo; he said as he recognized them. &ldquo;If it
-isn&rsquo;t the squaw who kicked me out of school, with
-her little squaw man!&rdquo; He stood in their path,
-swaying ever so slightly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Get out of our way, please,&rdquo; Sandy said, fighting
-down his fury at the words.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_160">160</div>
-<p>For answer, Cavanaugh swung a brawny arm
-and struck the boy across the mouth with the back
-of a hairy hand.</p>
-<p>Sandy staggered from the unexpected blow,
-then charged, fists flying. He connected several
-times, but he might as well have hit a brick wall.
-His 155 pounds made no impression on Cavanaugh&rsquo;s
-200-plus.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;So you think you can fight the man who made
-three touchdowns against California,&rdquo; Cavanaugh
-bawled drunkenly. &ldquo;Well, take this for being an
-Injun lover!&rdquo; He swung a short right to the jaw
-that snapped Sandy&rsquo;s head back. &ldquo;And this for
-your Injun-loving boss!&rdquo; He followed with a stunning
-left. &ldquo;And this for your snooty Ute!&rdquo; He
-swung a haymaker that smashed through the boy&rsquo;s
-weakened guard and hit his solar plexus like a
-bolt of lightning.</p>
-<p>As he lay in the gutter, gasping desperately for
-breath, Sandy thought he heard the sound of running
-feet.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And this,&rdquo; Cavanaugh said deliberately, &ldquo;is
-just part of what I owe Donovan for calling me a
-liar. Won&rsquo;t he look like a fool tomorrow if my
-high sign comes through?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Through bleared eyes, Sandy saw his enemy
-push Kitty aside and swing a heavy boot at his
-ribs.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_161">161</div>
-<p>At that moment, Ralph plunged into the little
-circle of lamplight. The Indian gripped Cavanaugh
-by one beefy shoulder and spun him
-around.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This,&rdquo; he raged, &ldquo;is for a skunk who picks on
-people half his size and kicks them when they&rsquo;re
-down!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He dealt the bully a smashing blow under the
-ear.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fight! Fight!&rdquo; somebody in the motel yelled.
-In an instant the building poured forth a mob of
-oilmen. They gathered in a circle around the combatants
-and shouted encouragement. A few of
-them egged Cavanaugh on, but the majority were
-rooting for his opponent.</p>
-<p>Sandy sat up groggily, dabbed at his bleeding
-lips, and watched the battle with growing excitement.
-Ralph was many pounds lighter than the
-redhead, but he made up for that by being fast as
-a rattler. He avoided the big man&rsquo;s efforts to go
-into a clinch that would give him time to clear
-his head of that first murderous punch. He danced
-about as his ancestors must have done at their buffalo
-ceremonials. He struck again and again&mdash;short,
-stabbing blows that soon cut Cavanaugh&rsquo;s
-face to ribbons and closed his right eye.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_162">162</div>
-<p>The bully was no coward though, Sandy was
-surprised to discover. He fought doggedly, and
-managed to get in some damaging blows to the
-body that made his supporters cheer. But Ralph&rsquo;s
-long reach held him too far away. He could not
-use his great strength to advantage. And it was
-plain that he was badly out of condition. Before
-three minutes had passed he was becoming
-winded.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kill the big bum, Fisheater,&rdquo; a Navajo
-whooped from the edge of the crowd. &ldquo;He asked
-for it. Kill &rsquo;im.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;With pleasure,&rdquo; Ralph answered. &ldquo;Watch this,
-benighted Navajo. I learned it in Uncle Sam&rsquo;s
-Navy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He started a right, almost from the pavement.
-Up and up it came, completely under Cavanaugh&rsquo;s
-guard. It landed on the point of his chin with a
-crack like that of a whip!</p>
-<p>The big man threw out his arms wildly, rocked
-back on his heels, and came crashing down, as a
-tree falls, into the gutter beside Sandy. He scrabbled
-about there for a moment, managed to get
-halfway to his knees, then slid forward on his face.
-Out!</p>
-<p>The Navajo threw his big black cowboy hat on
-the street, jumped up and down on it in utter
-joy, and sent warwhoop after warwhoop echoing
-through the little town.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Hand me my coat, John,&rdquo; Ralph said to the
-producer, who had been coaching him from the
-sidelines. &ldquo;If I don&rsquo;t hurry, I&rsquo;ll be late for that
-meeting.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_163">163</div>
-<p>Kitty, who had stood close beside Sandy
-throughout the battle, alternately wringing her
-hands and jumping up and down with excitement
-as Ralph seemed to be getting the worst or best
-of it, now ran forward. As the crowd cheered
-again, she hugged her man until he had to beg
-her to spare his bruised ribs.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kitty,&rdquo; said Hall, when Ralph had been carried
-away on the shoulders of admiring Navajos
-and Hopis who had run over from the Council
-Hall to witness the fracas, &ldquo;will you take Sandy
-home and patch him up? He has a pretty deep cut
-on his cheekbone. Better drive him over in the
-jeep, if he feels like he looks.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got to talk to Ken White about Cavanaugh.
-This situation is getting out of hand. I&rsquo;ll
-come over as soon as I can.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Half an hour later, Sandy pushed aside the cold
-compresses that Mrs. Gonzales had been applying
-to his face and sat bolt upright on the couch where
-he had been lying.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Kitty,&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;I just thought! What was
-it Cavanaugh said about a high sign or something?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When he was getting ready to kick you, you
-mean?&rdquo; she frowned.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes. It had to do with Donovan, I think. I was
-pretty groggy at the time.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_164">164</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh! He said something like &lsquo;Won&rsquo;t Donovan
-feel like a fool tomorrow if my high sign comes
-through!&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it! That&rsquo;s it!&rdquo; Sandy yelled as he pushed
-Mrs. Gonzales&rsquo; fluttering hands away and scrambled
-to his feet. &ldquo;It could only mean that he&rsquo;s
-expecting some sort of message tonight over his
-light beam. Ralph&rsquo;s tied up, so I&rsquo;ve got to go up
-there and try to find out what it is.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t be silly,&rdquo; said Kitty. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve taken a
-bad beating. You&rsquo;re in no condition to go anywhere.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve got to go,&rdquo; he pleaded. &ldquo;This may
-mean everything to John, and Don, and, yes, to
-you and Ralph too. I&rsquo;m the only one who knows
-how to operate the &lsquo;ear.&rsquo; I&rsquo;m going right now. And
-you&rsquo;re going to help me!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_165">165</div>
-<h2 id="c13"><span class="small">CHAPTER THIRTEEN</span>
-<br />Think Like a Dog</h2>
-<p>&ldquo;But <i>how</i> do I go about feeling like a dog?&rdquo; Sandy
-groaned after he had explained his plan of action.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t have any trouble about that.&rdquo;
-Kitty smiled tenderly as she patted the last strip
-of bandage in place on his cheek. &ldquo;You must feel
-awful.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s not what I mean. When Ralph went
-into Cavanaugh&rsquo;s camp at Elbow Rock he wore a
-dog skin and made himself smell like a dog. But
-he said that wasn&rsquo;t enough. He also had to feel and
-think like one. There&rsquo;s a skin in the jeep. And you
-must know a kennel where I can roll around and
-get the smell. But how about the rest of it?</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Of course I&rsquo;ve read <i>The Call of the Wild</i>, but
-that&rsquo;s only Jack London&rsquo;s <i>idea</i> of how dogs think.
-What I&rsquo;ve got to find out quick is how they really
-feel.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I am an Indian,&rdquo; Mrs. Gonzales spoke up suddenly.
-&ldquo;Indians are wise in the ways of animals.
-You have heard that Indians of the old days were
-the world&rsquo;s best horsemen, although they used no
-saddles, and sometimes no bridles. Why? I say it
-was because they could talk with their horses. Yes,
-and they honored their mounts as no other people
-have ever done by printing what was called a
-pat hand on the rumps of those who helped them
-win battles.&rdquo; She held up the palm of her hand
-to show what she meant.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then there are our totems. Animals, all of
-them. To be a member of the buffalo clan, a young
-brave had to study the wild herds until he knew
-their every thought&mdash;what frightened them, what
-pastures they preferred, their mating habits. All
-that.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What of the great cattle and sheep herds in
-which modern Navajos take such pride? They
-thrive where it seems only jack rabbits could live
-because their herdsmen understand their every
-need, care for them as if they were children, and
-weep, as for children, when they are injured or
-die.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And consider the Hopi snake dances. Why
-should the rattlers not bite the dancers, except that
-they are friends? You do not believe me, Sandy?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he gulped, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s just that I am not an
-Indian....&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_167">167</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But white men have been the friends of dogs
-since time began. You can learn to remember how
-a cave man felt when he and his dog slept back to
-back to protect themselves against the howling
-things outside in the night. You want to be among
-dogs, Sandy? Very well, I will call them here.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>She closed her black eyes and sat swaying slowly
-from side to side, making an almost inaudible
-whining, snuffling noise through her nose.</p>
-<p>A dog barked questioningly in the distance.
-Another answered, nearer. Within minutes, three
-scrawny mutts were scratching at the screen door
-of the cottage.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You must remember that dogs are always
-hungry,&rdquo; Mrs. Gonzales said as she let the animals
-in and went to the kitchen to find scraps for them,
-&ldquo;so you must think of food at all times. You must
-remember that they are loyal, even though their
-master beats them, so you must not let your hatred
-or distrust of Cavanaugh into your mind when
-you approach his camp. You must be sleepy ...
-oh so sleepy ... so that you do not wake them
-from their dreams of chasing rabbits, or bigger
-game.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_168">168</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Also,&rdquo; she said thoughtfully, &ldquo;it would be wise
-to remove all your clothing except the dog skin
-before you approach. There will not be so much
-man smell to overcome. Now play with these dogs
-for a time to get their scent on you. Then Kitty
-will drive you as near the camp as she dares.
-And may the blessings of the good Jesus and Mary,
-and the water and wind people, ride with you.&rdquo;</p>
-<p class="tb">Kitty was at the wheel as the jeep skirted the
-town and headed up a steep trail that had been
-chopped through the mesquite for the benefit of
-tourists who liked to snap their everlasting
-cameras from the top of the Rock. It was much too
-late for tourists to be out, however, so they had the
-road to themselves. This was a good thing, since
-they dared not use the car lights and had to depend
-on what little illumination was provided by a half-moon.</p>
-<p>Sandy sat fingering Maisie&rsquo;s hide nervously and
-holding the &ldquo;ear&rdquo; on his lap to protect it from
-bumps. From time to time, as they twisted and
-turned, he got glimpses of Cavanaugh&rsquo;s beam far
-above. It twinkled without interruption and was
-hard to distinguish among the stars.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pepper must be playing music,&rdquo; he said softly
-at last. &ldquo;Ralph says the beam fades up and down
-when a two-way conversation is going on. We&rsquo;re
-still in time.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are you sure you ought to be doing this?&rdquo;
-Kitty asked unhappily. &ldquo;John wouldn&rsquo;t have let
-you go if he had known about it, I&rsquo;m certain.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_169">169</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s why I was in such a hurry to start before
-he returned from the Agency. Ralph isn&rsquo;t here, so
-I&rsquo;m the only person who knows how to operate
-this gadget. I have to go through with it.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But why do you have to?&rdquo; she demanded.
-&ldquo;Why not leave it up to the Agency and the
-Navajo police?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Because I have only a hunch to go on&mdash;the
-kind of hunch that Mother says Kit Carson used
-to have. I haven&rsquo;t any proof that Cavanaugh is
-planning to play some sort of dirty trick on the
-Indians tomorrow, or that his plans may depend
-on what comes over the beam. The police would
-laugh at me. I&rsquo;ve <i>got</i> to do it my way.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I guess you do,&rdquo; the girl agreed. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ll have
-to walk the rest of the way,&rdquo; she added, driving
-the car off the trail and into a thicket as the lights
-shining from Cavanaugh&rsquo;s trailer showed up on
-the skyline ahead.</p>
-<p>When Sandy climbed out, strapped the &ldquo;ear&rdquo;
-to his chest and started away, she called him back
-sharply.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Take your clothes off here and put them in the
-back of the jeep,&rdquo; she commanded. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d never
-find them on the trail.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Do as I say, silly. And hurry. I&rsquo;m scared.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m scareder than you are, I&rsquo;ll bet,&rdquo; Sandy said
-grumpily as he obeyed.</p>
-<p>The cold night wind hit his bare skin and he
-started shivering.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_170">170</div>
-<p>Well, he thought as he started away through
-the darkness, that was all to the good. Dogs
-shivered all the time, didn&rsquo;t they? And the hide
-offered some protection.</p>
-<p>It seemed to take him an age to reach the
-vicinity of the trailer. Once he stubbed his toe
-badly, and once he cut his foot on a sharp rock.
-Confound that Kitty! He needed his shoes. Still,
-shoes did smell pretty strong sometimes. He
-grinned in spite of himself.</p>
-<p>A hundred yards from the trailer he got down
-on hands and knees, started to crawl forward, then
-stopped with a jerk.</p>
-<p>Dogs usually didn&rsquo;t take kindly to strangers of
-their own kind! How many times had he seen
-them set upon an outsider and send him yipping
-for his life. Maybe the foreigner had come looking
-for a fight, though! He, Sandy, would be the
-friendliest doggy in seven states! He did his best
-to imitate the low whimpering that Mrs. Gonzales
-had used as he crept forward. If Ralph could get
-away with this, there was no reason why Sandy
-Carson Steele couldn&rsquo;t!</p>
-<p>He was only a few feet from the trailer when
-three big brutes, who had been sleeping under
-its wheels, rose and advanced toward him, stiff-legged.
-This was it!</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_171">171</div>
-<p>Desperately, Sandy tried to project the idea
-through his soft whining that he was hungry, and
-cold, and wet with dew, and only wanted a quiet
-place where he could spend the night under the
-protection of those splendid humans, Cavanaugh
-and Pepper March.</p>
-<p>For a moment, he thought he had got the idea
-across. The dogs hesitated. They seemed to
-confer among themselves. But they were not quite
-satisfied. The lead animal bared his long white
-teeth and barked a tentative challenge. The others
-followed his example as they sidled toward this
-strange creature who certainly smelled like a dog
-but who looked&mdash;well, looked somewhat queer, to
-say the least.</p>
-<p>A quotation his father once had repeated
-flashed through Sandy&rsquo;s mind: <i>The minds of dogs
-do not benefit by being treated as though they were
-the minds of men.</i> As the barking grew louder, he
-gathered himself and prepared to go away from
-that place as fast as his bare feet could carry him.</p>
-<p>The trailer door banged open. A shaft of light
-illuminated the yard but mercifully did not reach
-to the spot where Sandy crouched.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Shut up, you idiotic mutts!&rdquo; Cavanaugh
-yelled. Then to Pepper, who appeared in the doorway
-behind him, &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you make those confounded
-dogs keep quiet? They&rsquo;re driving me
-insane.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry, Red,&rdquo; Pepper answered. &ldquo;You
-brought the dogs here to guard the trailer.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_172">172</div>
-<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Red. Red. Red,&rsquo;&rdquo; snarled the big man, who
-plainly was feeling the effects of the beating Ralph
-had given him. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sick of your crawling and
-fawning. Why weren&rsquo;t you at Window Rock
-tonight when the whole town ganged up on me?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;When Andy quit today, you told me to stay
-here and take care of the beam, Red,&rdquo; Pepper
-answered patiently. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry, Red.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;From now on, call me Mister Cavanaugh,&rdquo;
-his boss raged.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, <i>Mister</i> Cavanaugh ... sir.&rdquo; Pepper&rsquo;s
-voice still was soft but Sandy could see his fists
-clench.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And stop that confounded record. Highbrow
-music gives me the willies. Always has! Call Elbow
-Rock and see if the message has come through.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes, sir. At once, sir.&rdquo; The door slammed and
-the voices became a mumble.</p>
-<p>Sandy tried to still the beating of his heart as he
-whined canine terror at this outburst. The
-&ldquo;other&rdquo; dogs whimpered uncertainly. Finally they
-crept back to their sleeping places. Evidently their
-master didn&rsquo;t approve of their warning. In that
-case.... Sandy could almost feel them relax as
-they turned round and round in their nests, trying
-to find the most comfortable spots for slumber.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_173">173</div>
-<p>Carefully he edged forward until he was lying
-among them. Then he turned the switch that fed
-power from a series of flashlight batteries into the
-transistors mounted on the &ldquo;ear,&rdquo; adjusted the
-headphones, and listened.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Calling Elbow Rock. Calling Elbow Rock.
-Over,&rdquo; he heard Pepper say.</p>
-<p>There was no answer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Calling Elbow Rock. Window Rock calling
-Elbow Rock. Over,&rdquo; Pepper repeated.</p>
-<p>Still no answer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Come in, Elbow Rock!&rdquo; Cavanaugh&rsquo;s voice
-barked through the phones. &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you
-answer, Elbow Rock?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I read you, Window Rock,&rdquo; a faraway voice
-answered at last. &ldquo;Something&rsquo;s coming in from
-Gallup. Stand by.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;This is it!&rdquo; Cavanaugh&rsquo;s yell almost split
-Sandy&rsquo;s ears. &ldquo;Get out of the way, can&rsquo;t you, Pepper?
-I&rsquo;ll take this. Go to bed or something. It
-makes me sick just to look at your silly face....
-All right, Elbow Rock. I&rsquo;m ready when you are.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The minutes slid by while only the mutter of
-static filled Sandy&rsquo;s earphones. Beside him, he felt
-the Dobermans flinch and shiver in their restless
-sleep. The cold night wind seeped under the
-bottom of the trailer and set his teeth to chattering
-uncontrollably. Now he knew what the phrase
-&ldquo;a dog&rsquo;s life&rdquo; really meant.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Elbow Rock calling Window Rock.&rdquo; The
-phones clattered into life. &ldquo;Over.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_174">174</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I read you loud and clear, Elbow Rock,&rdquo;
-Cavanaugh&rsquo;s voice replied. &ldquo;What is the message
-from Gallup?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You want it coded, like it was relayed from
-Washington, or straight?&rdquo; the distant voice inquired.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Straight, you fool. Nobody listens in on a light
-beam.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;You never know,&rdquo; said the man at Elbow
-Rock. &ldquo;Well, here&rsquo;s your message, as well as I can
-dope it out. It&rsquo;s from your &lsquo;keyhole man,&rsquo; Mr. &mdash;&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Never mind his name,&rdquo; Cavanaugh snapped.
-&ldquo;Just give me the message.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;O.K.! O.K.! Take it easy, will you, boss? Here
-&rsquo;tis: Quote: Have picked up leak from strictly
-official source. Next month U.S. government starts
-buying uranium ore from all comers again. Expanding
-space ship and power reactor program has
-increased demand for atomic fuels to such an
-extent that existing mills no longer can supply it&mdash;Are
-you reading me all right, boss?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Clear as a bell,&rdquo; Cavanaugh crooned. &ldquo;This is
-wonderful. Go on. Go on.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Here&rsquo;s the rest of it: Quote: Announcement of
-policy change withheld until middle of next
-month so it won&rsquo;t upset bids to be opened
-tomorrow at Window Rock and similar places.
-Happy hunting. Unquote. Over.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_175">175</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Whoopee!&rdquo; Cavanaugh yelled the word into
-the microphone so loudly that Sandy&rsquo;s earphones
-rattled. &ldquo;Boy! This came through just in time.
-Otherwise, I&rsquo;d have had to cancel all of those high
-bids I made today or go bankrupt tomorrow. Now
-I&rsquo;ll be in clover with most of the good leases sewed
-up at rock-bottom prices before the boom starts.
-Thank you, Elbow Rock. There&rsquo;s a bonus for you
-in this. Over and out.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Roger!&rdquo; came the delighted answer.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did you hear all of that, Pepper?&rdquo; Cavanaugh
-asked.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Was I supposed to, Mister Cavanaugh ...
-sir?&rdquo; Pepper answered off-mike. His voice was
-bitter.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, don&rsquo;t be sore, boy.&rdquo; Cavanaugh roared
-with laughter. &ldquo;If you&rsquo;d taken the beating I took
-tonight from Hall&rsquo;s gang of toughs, you&rsquo;d have
-been grouchy, too. And no more of that &lsquo;Mister
-Cavanaugh&rsquo; stuff. Just call me &lsquo;Red.&rsquo; We&rsquo;re pals.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Are we?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Sure we are. We&rsquo;ll both get rich out of this.
-And even better, we&rsquo;ll do the Indian Agency and
-the whole Navajo nation in the eye. If they accept
-my bids&mdash;and they&rsquo;ll have to, because they&rsquo;re
-higher than those of anyone else&mdash;we&rsquo;ll get those
-leases for a half, or even a third, of what&rsquo;d they&rsquo;d
-sell for next month when the policy change is
-announced.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_176">176</div>
-<p>In his hiding place under the trailer floor,
-Sandy was boiling with fury. Momentarily he had
-forgotten all about being a dog. The Dobermans
-sensed the difference instantly. Perhaps they
-caught a subtle change in his body odor. His
-anger was making him perspire despite the cold.</p>
-<p>The lead dog barked sharply and scrambled
-to its feet. The others followed suit. Sandy tried
-to croon reassurance to them, but failed. They
-were becoming thoroughly aroused and making
-an awful racket. He had to get out of there&mdash;and
-quickly&mdash;before Cavanaugh came to investigate.</p>
-<p>He scrambled from under the trailer and
-sprinted for the jeep. The dogs broke into full cry
-now, and streaked after him. This was a human!
-And an enemy human too! They were out to
-make him pay dearly for his deceit.</p>
-<p>The trailer door banged open as the bedlam
-rose. Moments later, a spotlight picked up the
-running boy and the dogs that leaped and snapped
-at his bare heels.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop, thief!&rdquo; Cavanaugh yelled. &ldquo;Stop or I&rsquo;ll
-fire!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_177">177</div>
-<h2 id="c14"><span class="small">CHAPTER FOURTEEN</span>
-<br />Showdown</h2>
-<p>At that moment, Sandy tripped over a branch,
-flung up his arms as he fell headlong. The rifle
-bullet meant for his head merely creased him
-instead, from shoulder to elbow.</p>
-<p>He scrambled behind a large rock, managed to
-get to his feet, and faced the gleaming eyes of the
-oncoming dogs. Something that Quiz once had
-read to him out of a sports magazine flashed
-through his mind: &ldquo;If attacked by vicious dogs,
-hold out some object, such as your hat, at waist
-height. They will hesitate while they decide
-whether to leap over it or under it, thus giving
-you an advantage.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_178">178</div>
-<p>His left arm was numb from the shock of the
-bullet, but he managed to use it to rip the dog
-skin from around his waist and hold it forward.
-As the dogs whined and tried to make up their
-minds as to the best method of attack, he tore
-the board on which the &ldquo;ear&rdquo; was mounted from
-his chest with his good hand. Thank heaven, one
-end of the plank had been whittled down into a
-sort of handle, for easier carrying.</p>
-<p>Then he charged, swinging the improvised club
-like a demon.</p>
-<p>Luckily, his first blow landed squarely on the
-snout of a leaping dog!</p>
-<p>Sparks flashed. Pieces of equipment flew in all
-directions. The animal howled and rolled on the
-ground, holding its nose with both paws. Its
-companions backed away.</p>
-<p>Sandy followed up his advantage. He struck
-again and again. The dogs fled, howling, to a safe
-distance.</p>
-<p>To the right of him, the boy now heard the
-pounding of human feet. Cavanaugh had abandoned
-a frontal attack for the moment and was
-sprinting to cut him off from the road leading
-back to the village.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t kill him, Red,&rdquo; Pepper was shouting.
-&ldquo;It would be murder.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nobody&rsquo;s going to kill anybody&mdash;yet,&rdquo; Cavanaugh
-yelled as he ran. &ldquo;But we can&rsquo;t let him get
-away, after what he may have heard. Rig another
-floodlight. Then come over here and help me.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_179">179</div>
-<p>Forgetful of the thorns that tore his skin and
-the rocks that cut his knees, Sandy wriggled,
-Indian fashion, into a darker spot. In his bare
-feet, he had no chance of reaching the road
-ahead of Cavanaugh, or even of staying out of his
-way. Keeping a wary eye on the dogs that still
-followed, whining with uncertainty, he ripped
-Maisie&rsquo;s hide into pieces and bound them under
-his feet. There. That would be better!</p>
-<p>He made a feint for the road now&mdash;and ducked
-as another bullet whispered overhead and smacked
-into a nearby tree.</p>
-<p>He was in a real spot! If he tried to cross the
-bare top of the natural bridge that arched over
-the hole in Window Rock, he would make an ideal
-target, silhouetted against the moon. (Thank
-all the little Navajo gods and demons that Cavanaugh&rsquo;s
-right eye must be swollen shut from
-the beating Ralph had given him. He was in no
-condition to shoot accurately even if he disregarded
-Pepper&rsquo;s warning.)</p>
-<p>Sandy decided that his best strategy lay in hiding
-among the mesquite and sagebrush thickets
-under the pine trees that covered the side of the
-rock nearest the village. Kitty must have heard
-the racket. Perhaps she would understand what
-was happening and head for town to get help.</p>
-<p>A whoop of delight, followed by several quick
-shots, made his heart sink.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_180">180</div>
-<p>&ldquo;That jeep will never move again,&rdquo; he heard
-Cavanaugh yell. The next words made him feel
-much better. &ldquo;Come on out of the woods, driver,
-and give yourself up. I&rsquo;ve got you cut off from the
-road.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy dithered in his hiding place. He was
-feeling decidedly queer all of a sudden. The fact
-that his left hand felt wet and slippery brought
-him up short. He was bleeding steadily from that
-wound in his shoulder. He tried dabbing sand on
-the crease, but it didn&rsquo;t stop the flow. Another
-fifteen or twenty minutes and he would be so
-weak, that he would fall easy prey to his pursuers.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Bring flashlights out here,&rdquo; Cavanaugh was
-shouting to Pepper now. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll beat the woods
-for the driver first.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy bit his cold lips. Time was running out.
-He had to act, and act fast, before he keeled over
-from loss of blood. Should he throw himself on
-Pepper&rsquo;s mercy? But, even granted that his old
-rival wouldn&rsquo;t betray him, what good would that
-do? Cavanaugh had the gun!</p>
-<p>The sight of the blond boy walking reluctantly
-into the woods through the floodlight glare, with
-a heavy flashlight in either hand, gave him an idea.</p>
-<p>Or was it Quiz who told him what to do? He
-shook his head dazedly. Almost, he could hear
-Quiz saying: &ldquo;Where would Professor Moriarty
-least expect to find you, Sherlock Holmes?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Elementary, my dear Dr. Watson,&rdquo; he
-whispered in reply. &ldquo;In the trailer, of course.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_181">181</div>
-<p>Gripping the breadboard in both hands, he
-made a last weak lunge at the circling Dobermans.
-They fled, yelping, from this blood-spattered
-terror.</p>
-<p>Then he crawled frantically toward the open
-trailer door.</p>
-<p>Safe inside, and with the door locked behind
-him, he hung onto a table and stared about him
-with eyes that were beginning to go out of focus.</p>
-<p>He should find a cloth with which to bind up
-his wound, he knew. But he had no time.</p>
-<p>The glittering light-beam mechanism caught
-his attention. That was the key to the whole
-situation! It must project a million candle-power,
-at least, to be seen at Elbow Rock. If he could
-turn it on Window Rock it would light up the
-village as bright as day.</p>
-<p>There must be a wheel or something by which
-the light could be moved.... There it was! On
-the control board to the right!</p>
-<p>He twisted the little chrome wheel frantically,
-watching through a window as he did so. At first
-his aim was wild. Then, every street and building
-in Window Rock leaped into view, as though outlined
-by a lightning stroke.</p>
-<p>There! That would tell them something was
-wrong up here.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_182">182</div>
-<p>He was sleepy and tired after all that effort. So
-sleepy! He sank into a chair in front of the beam
-console and pillowed his head on his bloody arms.</p>
-<p>But something nagged him. What he had done
-wasn&rsquo;t enough. Kitty was out there alone in the
-woods. Cavanaugh might come pounding on the
-trailer door at any moment. He had to tell them
-... tell them ... tell them what? Why, where
-he was, and what was happening, naturally!</p>
-<p>He jerked himself upright and started tearing
-at the mass of wiring that ran to the light beam
-modulator. Finally he got down to the heavy
-insulated lead-in wires ... tore them loose.</p>
-<p>The beam illuminating the village died away.</p>
-<p>He slapped the leads together. The light
-blinked on.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;SOS,&rdquo; he heliographed in Morse code remembered
-from Scouting field trips. &ldquo;SOS. May
-Day. May Day.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Surely somebody at Window Rock would know
-the code. Certainly Ralph did. He repeated the
-international distress calls again and again.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;SOS. May Day!&rdquo; he spelled out, his cold fingers
-making many mistakes. &ldquo;Sandy Steele and Kitty
-on the Rock. Cavanaugh trying to kill us. Send
-help. SOS. May Day! Sandy Steele and Kitty on
-the Rock. Cavanaugh....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He fell forward across the console.</p>
-<p>The smash of some heavy object against the
-door brought him back to semi-consciousness.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_183">183</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Stop that!&rdquo; Cavanaugh was yelling. &ldquo;Stop it
-or I will kill you. Stop it. Stop it!&rdquo; The man
-sounded completely insane now.</p>
-<p>The door bulged, then broke loose from its
-hinges under a rain of blows.</p>
-<p>Cavanaugh stood in the entrance, his good eye
-wild and rolling, his rifle pointed. Behind him,
-Pepper appeared, still holding one of the heavy
-flashlights.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;An Injun,&rdquo; Cavanaugh gloated without recognition
-as he took in Sandy&rsquo;s dirt-smeared, blood-caked
-body. &ldquo;One of Hall&rsquo;s dirty, stinking Injuns.
-This will teach you!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>His finger tightened on the trigger.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Pepper!&rdquo; Sandy gasped with the last remnant
-of his strength. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let him kill me, Pepper!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He slid to the floor as the gun went off.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_184">184</div>
-<h2 id="c15"><span class="small">CHAPTER FIFTEEN</span>
-<br />The Fourth Touchdown</h2>
-<p>Sandy fought his way up from unconsciousness
-like a diver rising from the bottom of a dark sea.
-For a long time he lay without moving as he tried
-to sort out the sounds around him. He was dead,
-of course, he reasoned. Nevertheless, some of the
-voices he seemed to hear sounded familiar.</p>
-<p>He opened one eye experimentally, prepared to
-snap it shut if he didn&rsquo;t like what he saw. Mrs.
-Gonzales was bending over him with one of her
-eternal compresses. So was a man with a goatee
-who had a stethoscope clipped around his neck.</p>
-<p>Sandy opened the other eye and turned his
-head, which seemed to weigh a ton.</p>
-<p>He found that he was in bed and bandaged
-right up to his chin. Kitty, her pretty face badly
-scratched, was watching him too. So were John
-Hall and ... yes, it was Pepper!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I <i>ought</i> to be dead,&rdquo; Sandy whispered in
-great surprise. &ldquo;What happened?&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_185">185</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I conked Cavanaugh with his own flashlight,&rdquo;
-Pepper said with pride. &ldquo;Knocked him out. His
-shot went wild.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Thanks a lot, Pepper. Shake.&rdquo; Sandy tried to
-hold out his hand but found he couldn&rsquo;t quite
-make it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Easy,&rdquo; said the doctor.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Am I badly hurt?&rdquo; Sandy managed to say.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Nothing worse than loss of a lot of blood. I&rsquo;ve
-pumped you full of plasma. You&rsquo;ll be all right in
-a few days, but you mustn&rsquo;t exert yourself for a
-while,&rdquo; said the doctor as he started packing
-instruments into his little black bag.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But I&rsquo;ve <i>got</i> to know what happened,&rdquo; Sandy
-said fretfully. &ldquo;For Pete&rsquo;s <i>sake</i>!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I called Kitty out of the woods after I hit
-Cavanaugh,&rdquo; Pepper explained. &ldquo;We got you into
-his car and brought you home as fast as we could.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And you&rsquo;re all right, Kitty?&rdquo; Sandy persisted.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Just a few scratches and bruises.&rdquo; She came
-forward to prove it and patted his bandaged
-shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And ... and Cavanaugh?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The crazy fool is still up there,&rdquo; Hall spoke
-up. &ldquo;Look.&rdquo; He pointed through the bedroom
-window.</p>
-<p>Sandy worked his head around in that direction.
-The great hump of the Window Rock
-was lit up as bright as day.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_186">186</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Floodlights,&rdquo; Hall explained as he saw the
-boy&rsquo;s surprise. &ldquo;They&rsquo;re set up permanently to
-illuminate the Rock on Frontier Day and for
-other tourist events.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;But....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The Navajo police turned them on. The
-whole force, as well as most of the Indians who
-attended the joint Council meeting, are up there
-trying to flush Cavanaugh out of hiding.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Ralph too?&rdquo; Sandy&rsquo;s eyes were shining.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Did the Council meeting come to anything,
-Mr.&mdash;John?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It broke up before any formal agreement was
-signed when we got your message, but....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Gee, I&rsquo;m sorry about that.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Forget it. I only had the chance to say a few
-words to Ralph while they were organizing the
-posse, but he told me the tribes understand each
-other&rsquo;s position now. It&rsquo;s just a matter of ironing
-out details before they agree to put those
-boundary-line leases up for bids.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;ll be great for you,&rdquo; Sandy said, &ldquo;but I
-sure wish I hadn&rsquo;t had to....&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Forget it, I said.&rdquo; Hall patted his shoulder too.
-(Why did everybody have to pat him as if he were
-a dog? Sandy wondered crossly. Then he burst
-out laughing, although to do so hurt his face and
-chest. Why, he almost <i>was</i> a dog, wasn&rsquo;t he?)</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Young man, you&rsquo;re getting much too excited,&rdquo;
-the doctor warned as he approached the bed,
-hypodermic needle in hand. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d better put you to
-sleep for a while.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy pushed him away.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s something else,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;John, did
-Pepper tell you about the message Cavanaugh
-received from Washington?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;I told him there had been a message, and what
-Cavanaugh said to Elbow Rock,&rdquo; Pepper spoke
-up. &ldquo;But I couldn&rsquo;t hear the message itself.
-Cavanaugh was wearing the earphones.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Better forget all this for a while and go to
-sleep, Sandy,&rdquo; said Hall. His face was gaunt with
-worry.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;No! You must listen now.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Sandy wanted desperately to go to sleep, but
-he wouldn&rsquo;t let himself give in. Slowly, forcing
-each word out of his mouth as though it weighed
-several pounds, he repeated the message to
-Cavanaugh as well as he could remember it.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Good Lord!&rdquo; Hall gasped. &ldquo;This changes the
-whole picture. I must call Ken!&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He rushed to the telephone while Sandy&rsquo;s eyelids
-closed in spite of his efforts to keep them
-open. He just <i>had</i> to have a few minutes&rsquo; sleep.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_188">188</div>
-<p>White&rsquo;s arrival at the cottage jerked him awake
-again. The Agent was wearing heavy boots and
-carried a pair of binoculars slung over his pudgy
-shoulder.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s all this, John?&rdquo; he demanded. &ldquo;I was
-just leaving from the Rock when you called. I
-sent off an inquiry to the Department of Interior
-immediately, of course. Then this message came
-in from San Francisco. That&rsquo;s what took me so
-long getting here. The message is for you, Sandy.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Read it to me, please,&rdquo; the boy said. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m too
-weak to lift a finger.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>White ripped open the yellow envelope, got out
-his glasses, and read:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<p><span class="small">FINALLY GOT HERE STOP NEWSPAPER FILES SHOW
-THERE WAS CAVANAUGH ON STATE TEAM IN 1930
-WHO MADE ALL-AMERICAN STOP BUT HE WAS CALLED
-BRICK NOT RED STOP ALL SPORTS PAGE STORIES ON
-BIG GAME SAY HE MADE FOUR TOUCHDOWNS REPEAT
-FOUR TOUCHDOWNS AGAINST CALIFORNIA STOP QUIZ
-TAYLOR</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>&ldquo;Aw shucks,&rdquo; Pepper said disgustedly. &ldquo;That
-proves our Cavanaugh isn&rsquo;t an impostor after all.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute! Wait a minute!&rdquo; Sandy
-dragged himself up on one elbow despite Mrs.
-Gonzales&rsquo; efforts to make him lie still. &ldquo;It proves
-no such thing!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_189">189</div>
-<p>&ldquo;But if he did make those three touchdowns he
-was always bragging about....&rdquo; Pepper started
-to protest.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;<i>Four</i> touchdowns, the telegram says,&rdquo; Sandy
-panted. &ldquo;Now look, all of you. Maybe a real football
-player might <i>add</i> a touchdown to his record
-if he thought no one would catch him at it. But
-who would <i>subtract</i> a touchdown? Nobody. That&rsquo;s
-who!</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Cavanaugh is a phony, I tell you. Whoever he
-really is, he wanted to impress people, and keep
-them from asking too many personal questions
-when he went to Valley View and started building
-his lab with the money he had stolen from Mr.
-Gonzales. He remembered that there was another
-Cavanaugh on the State team, so he took his
-identity. But the game had been played so many
-years ago that he got the details wrong, see? I&rsquo;ll bet
-that, if we start digging into his past, we&rsquo;ll find
-lots of other queer things.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll need to do a lot of digging, too, to make
-any charges stick against him after we catch him,&rdquo;
-White said grimly.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; Hall exploded. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s
-guilty of attempted homicide, defrauding the
-Indians, disturbing the peace, and I don&rsquo;t know
-what all else.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_190">190</div>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, he&rsquo;s guilty all right,&rdquo; the Agent agreed,
-&ldquo;but could you prove that to a jury, particularly
-out here where so many people still think that the
-only good Indian is a dead Indian?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Oh, you&rsquo;re being an old woman, Ken,&rdquo; the
-oilman snapped.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Maybe so, John. Maybe so. But I&rsquo;ve been in
-this business a long time. If Cavanaugh or whoever
-he is hadn&rsquo;t lost his head, he would have come
-right down here and given himself up. Then his
-lawyers could have claimed that he was only defending
-his property from a prowler. No. No.
-Shut up and listen to me. People are awful touchy
-about property rights out here. Remember what
-they used to do to cattle rustlers&mdash;still do, for that
-matter, on occasion.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;And now about this message that Sandy heard:
-Cavanaugh&rsquo;s lawyers would say &lsquo;Prove it!&rsquo; And
-what real proof have we got? We&rsquo;d be putting up
-the word of a minor who <i>did</i> prowl&mdash;I&rsquo;m not
-blaming you, Sandy. You did the only thing
-possible and your idea of using the light beam to
-call for help was a stroke of pure genius&mdash;but, as
-I say, the word of a minor against the word of an
-established businessman who has a lot of friends
-in these parts.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Then you don&rsquo;t think....&rdquo; Hall was really
-shocked.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_191">191</div>
-<p>&ldquo;I <i>think</i> we have a chance of making our
-charges stick with the help of the information
-Quiz has dug up, but I&rsquo;m not even sure of that.
-Frankly, if the government doesn&rsquo;t act faster than
-it usually does, I&rsquo;m afraid all of Cavanaugh&rsquo;s
-uranium lease bids may have to be accepted
-tomorrow. He can claim, you see, that he put
-them in before the time that he is even <i>accused</i>
-of having received his illegal tip.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Wow!&rdquo; Sandy stared at his employer with
-round eyes. &ldquo;Well anyway,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;the change
-in policy will give you a chance to develop your
-own uranium strike on the San Juan.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>&ldquo;Fat lot of good that will do me if Cavanaugh
-ties us up with a libel and defamation suit,&rdquo; Hall
-grunted. &ldquo;Well, Ken, it looks as if we&rsquo;re all in
-trouble unless ... what was that?&rdquo;</p>
-<p>They all whirled toward the window.</p>
-<p>Far up near the top of Window Rock, pinpoints
-of light were flashing. The clean, thin sound of
-rifle shots came down to them through the still
-desert air.</p>
-<p>White snatched at his binoculars and trained
-them on the mountain. Long moments passed as
-he fiddled with the focus.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The idiot!&rdquo; he almost whispered at last. &ldquo;The
-poor scared, hysterical fool. He&rsquo;s making a run for
-it across the top of the natural bridge!&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_192">192</div>
-<p>Hall snapped off the room light. Somehow,
-Sandy managed, with Kitty&rsquo;s help, to sit up where
-he could get a view of the bare slab of rock where
-he had almost been tempted to do what Cavanaugh
-was now trying.</p>
-<p>They all held their breath in the darkness as
-they strained their eyes.</p>
-<p>There he was! A tiny black shadow, bent
-nearly double as he raced madly through the
-floodlight glare.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s going to make it. He&rsquo;s going to make it!&rdquo;
-Pepper shouted, his old loyalty to his boss coming
-to the fore. &ldquo;Run, Red. <i>Run!</i>&rdquo;</p>
-<p>The fleeing man stumbled. He threw up his
-arms and reeled to the edge of the narrow rock
-bridge. Almost, he recovered his balance....</p>
-<p>Then he fell, turning over and over slowly, for
-a thousand miles, it seemed.</p>
-<p>Kitty and her mother screamed together.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s better so,&rdquo; White murmured at last as he
-put his glasses back in their case. &ldquo;A clean death.
-Cavanaugh made that fourth touchdown after
-all.&rdquo;</p>
-<div class="box">
-<h3 id="c16">SANDY STEELE ADVENTURES</h3>
-<p class="center rubric">1. BLACK TREASURE</p>
-<p>Sandy Steele and Quiz spend an action-filled summer
-in the oil fields of the Southwest. In their search for oil
-and uranium, they unmask a dangerous masquerader.</p>
-<p class="center rubric">2. DANGER AT MORMON CROSSING</p>
-<p>On a hunting trip in the Lost River section of Idaho,
-Sandy and Mike ride the rapids, bag a mountain lion,
-and stumble onto the answer to a hundred-year-old
-mystery.</p>
-<p class="center rubric">3. STORMY VOYAGE</p>
-<p>Sandy and Jerry James ship as deck hands on one of
-the &ldquo;long boats&rdquo; of the Great Lakes. They are plunged
-into a series of adventures and find themselves involved
-in a treacherous plot.</p>
-<p class="center rubric">4. FIRE AT RED LAKE</p>
-<p>Sandy and his friends pitch in to fight a forest fire in
-Minnesota. Only they and Sandy&rsquo;s uncle know that
-there is an unexploded A-bomb in the area to add to
-the danger.</p>
-<p class="center rubric">5. SECRET MISSION TO ALASKA</p>
-<p>A pleasant Christmas trip turns into a startling adventure.
-Sandy and Jerry participate in a perilous dog-sled
-race, encounter a wounded bear, and are taken as
-hostages by a ruthless enemy.</p>
-<p class="center rubric">6. TROUBLED WATERS</p>
-<p>When Sandy and Jerry mistakenly sail off in a stranger&rsquo;s
-sloop instead of their own, they land in a sea of trouble.
-Their attempts to outmaneuver a desperate crew are
-intertwined with fascinating sailing lore.</p>
-<p class="center"><b>PUBLISHED BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER</b></p>
-</div>
-<h2 id="tn">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2><ul><li>Copyright notice provided as in the original&mdash;this e-text is public domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.</li>
-<li>In the text versions, delimited italics text in _underscores_ (the HTML version reproduces the font form of the printed book.)</li></ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Black Treasure, by Roger Barlow
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BLACK TREASURE ***
-
-***** This file should be named 50256-h.htm or 50256-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/5/0/2/5/50256/
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Dave Morgan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will
-be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
-law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works,
-so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United
-States without permission and without paying copyright
-royalties. Special rules, set forth in the General Terms of Use part
-of this license, apply to copying and distributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works to protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
-concept and trademark. Project Gutenberg is a registered trademark,
-and may not be used if you charge for the eBooks, unless you receive
-specific permission. If you do not charge anything for copies of this
-eBook, complying with the rules is very easy. You may use this eBook
-for nearly any purpose such as creation of derivative works, reports,
-performances and research. They may be modified and printed and given
-away--you may do practically ANYTHING in the United States with eBooks
-not protected by U.S. copyright law. Redistribution is subject to the
-trademark license, especially commercial redistribution.
-
-START: FULL LICENSE
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full
-Project Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
-www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or
-destroy all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your
-possession. If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a
-Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound
-by the terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the
-person or entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph
-1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this
-agreement and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the
-Foundation" or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection
-of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual
-works in the collection are in the public domain in the United
-States. If an individual work is unprotected by copyright law in the
-United States and you are located in the United States, we do not
-claim a right to prevent you from copying, distributing, performing,
-displaying or creating derivative works based on the work as long as
-all references to Project Gutenberg are removed. Of course, we hope
-that you will support the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting
-free access to electronic works by freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm
-works in compliance with the terms of this agreement for keeping the
-Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with the work. You can easily
-comply with the terms of this agreement by keeping this work in the
-same format with its attached full Project Gutenberg-tm License when
-you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are
-in a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States,
-check the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this
-agreement before downloading, copying, displaying, performing,
-distributing or creating derivative works based on this work or any
-other Project Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no
-representations concerning the copyright status of any work in any
-country outside the United States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other
-immediate access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear
-prominently whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work
-on which the phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed,
-performed, viewed, copied or distributed:
-
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
- most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the
- United States, you'll have to check the laws of the country where you
- are located before using this ebook.
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is
-derived from texts not protected by U.S. copyright law (does not
-contain a notice indicating that it is posted with permission of the
-copyright holder), the work can be copied and distributed to anyone in
-the United States without paying any fees or charges. If you are
-redistributing or providing access to a work with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the work, you must comply
-either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 or
-obtain permission for the use of the work and the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any
-additional terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms
-will be linked to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works
-posted with the permission of the copyright holder found at the
-beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including
-any word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access
-to or distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format
-other than "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official
-version posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site
-(www.gutenberg.org), you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense
-to the user, provide a copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means
-of obtaining a copy upon request, of the work in its original "Plain
-Vanilla ASCII" or other form. Any alternate format must include the
-full Project Gutenberg-tm License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-provided that
-
-* You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is owed
- to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he has
- agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments must be paid
- within 60 days following each date on which you prepare (or are
- legally required to prepare) your periodic tax returns. Royalty
- payments should be clearly marked as such and sent to the Project
- Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the address specified in
- Section 4, "Information about donations to the Project Gutenberg
- Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-* You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or destroy all
- copies of the works possessed in a physical medium and discontinue
- all use of and all access to other copies of Project Gutenberg-tm
- works.
-
-* You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of
- any money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days of
- receipt of the work.
-
-* You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work or group of works on different terms than
-are set forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing
-from both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and The
-Project Gutenberg Trademark LLC, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-trademark. Contact the Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-works not protected by U.S. copyright law in creating the Project
-Gutenberg-tm collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may
-contain "Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate
-or corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
-intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or
-other medium, a computer virus, or computer codes that damage or
-cannot be read by your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium
-with your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you
-with the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in
-lieu of a refund. If you received the work electronically, the person
-or entity providing it to you may choose to give you a second
-opportunity to receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If
-the second copy is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing
-without further opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO
-OTHER WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT
-LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of
-damages. If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement
-violates the law of the state applicable to this agreement, the
-agreement shall be interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or
-limitation permitted by the applicable state law. The invalidity or
-unenforceability of any provision of this agreement shall not void the
-remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in
-accordance with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the
-production, promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works, harmless from all liability, costs and expenses,
-including legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of
-the following which you do or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this
-or any Project Gutenberg-tm work, (b) alteration, modification, or
-additions or deletions to any Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any
-Defect you cause.
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of
-computers including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It
-exists because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations
-from people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future
-generations. To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation and how your efforts and donations can help, see
-Sections 3 and 4 and the Foundation information page at
-www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent permitted by
-U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is in Fairbanks, Alaska, with the
-mailing address: PO Box 750175, Fairbanks, AK 99775, but its
-volunteers and employees are scattered throughout numerous
-locations. Its business office is located at 809 North 1500 West, Salt
-Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email contact links and up to
-date contact information can be found at the Foundation's web site and
-official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
-
-For additional contact information:
-
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To SEND
-DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any particular
-state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations. To
-donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm concept of a library of electronic works that could be
-freely shared with anyone. For forty years, he produced and
-distributed Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of
-volunteer support.
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as not protected by copyright in
-the U.S. unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not
-necessarily keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper
-edition.
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search
-facility: www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
-</html>
diff --git a/old/50256-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/50256-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index 5d1c5ee..0000000
--- a/old/50256-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/50256-h/images/pic1.jpg b/old/50256-h/images/pic1.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index d838945..0000000
--- a/old/50256-h/images/pic1.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ