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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rainbow Trail, by Zane Grey
+#16 in our series by Zane Grey
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
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+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Rainbow Trail
+
+Author: Zane Grey
+
+Release Date: February, 2004 [EBook #5067]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on April 14, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RAINBOW TRAIL ***
+
+
+
+
+This e-text was created by Doug Levy, _littera scripta manet_
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+In the original text the words "canyon" and "pinyon" are
+spelled in the Spanish form, "canon" and "pinon", with
+tildes above the center "n"s. Since the plain text format
+precludes the use of tildes, I've changed these words to
+the more familiar spelling to make them easier to read.
+--D.L.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE RAINBOW TRAIL, a Romance.
+
+by ZANE GREY.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+FOREWORD
+
+
+CHAPTER.
+
+ I. RED LAKE.
+
+ II. THE SAGI.
+
+ III. KAYENTA.
+
+ IV. NEW FRIENDS.
+
+ V. ON THE TRAIL.
+
+ VI. IN THE HIDDEN VALLEY.
+
+ VII. SAGO-LILIES.
+
+ VIII. THE HOGAN OF NAS TA BEGA.
+
+ IX. IN THE DESERT CRUCIBLE.
+
+ X. STONEBRIDGE.
+
+ XI. AFTER THE TRIAL.
+
+ XII. THE REVELATION.
+
+ XIII. THE STORY OF SURPRISE VALLEY.
+
+ XIV. THE NAVAJO.
+
+ XV. WILD JUSTICE.
+
+ XVI. SURPRISE VALLEY.
+
+ XVII. THE TRAIL TO NONNEZOSHE.
+
+ XVIII. AT THE FOOT OF THE RAINBOW.
+
+ XIX. THE GRAND CANYON OF THE COLORADO.
+
+ XX. WILLOW SPRINGS.
+
+
+EPILOGUE
+
+
+
+
+FOREWORD
+
+
+The spell of the desert comes back to me, as it always will come.
+I see the veils, like purple smoke, in the canyon, and I feel the
+silence. And it seems that again I must try to pierce both and
+to get at the strange wild life of the last American wilderness--
+wild still, almost, as it ever was.
+
+
+While this romance is an independent story, yet readers of "Riders
+of the Purple Sage" will find in it an answer to a question often
+asked.
+
+I wish to say also this story has appeared serially in a different
+form in one of the monthly magazines under the title of "The Desert
+Crucible."
+ ZANE GREY.
+ June, 1915.
+
+
+
+
+THE RAINBOW TRAIL
+
+
+
+I. RED LAKE
+
+
+Shefford halted his tired horse and gazed with slowly realizing eyes.
+
+A league-long slope of sage rolled and billowed down to Red Lake, a
+dry red basin, denuded and glistening, a hollow in the desert, a
+lonely and desolate door to the vast, wild, and broken upland beyond.
+
+All day Shefford had plodded onward with the clear horizon-line a
+thing unattainable; and for days before that he had ridden the wild
+bare flats and climbed the rocky desert benches. The great colored
+reaches and steps had led endlessly onward and upward through dim and
+deceiving distance.
+
+A hundred miles of desert travel, with its mistakes and lessons and
+intimations, had not prepared him for what he now saw. He beheld what
+seemed a world that knew only magnitude. Wonder and awe fixed his
+gaze, and thought remained aloof. Then that dark and unknown northland
+flung a menace at him. An irresistible call had drawn him to this
+seamed and peaked border of Arizona, this broken battlemented
+wilderness of Utah upland; and at first sight they frowned upon him,
+as if to warn him not to search for what lay hidden beyond the ranges.
+But Shefford thrilled with both fear and exultation. That was the
+country which had been described to him. Far across the red valley,
+far beyond the ragged line of black mesa and yellow range, lay the
+wild canyon with its haunting secret.
+
+Red Lake must be his Rubicon. Either he must enter the unknown to
+seek, to strive, to find, or turn back and fail and never know and be
+always haunted. A friend's strange story had prompted his singular
+journey; a beautiful rainbow with its mystery and promise had decided
+him. Once in his life he had answered a wild call to the kingdom of
+adventure within him, and once in his life he had been happy. But
+here in the horizon-wide face of that up-flung and cloven desert he
+grew cold; he faltered even while he felt more fatally drawn.
+
+As if impelled Shefford started his horse down the sandy trail, but he
+checked his former far-reaching gaze. It was the month of April, and
+the waning sun lost heat and brightness. Long shadows crept down the
+slope ahead of him and the scant sage deepened its gray. He watched
+the lizards shoot like brown streaks across the sand, leaving their
+slender tracks; he heard the rustle of pack-rats as they darted into
+their brushy homes; the whir of a low-sailing hawk startled his horse.
+
+Like ocean waves the slope rose and fell, its hollows choked with sand,
+its ridge-tops showing scantier growth of sage and grass and weed. The
+last ridge was a sand-dune, beautifully ribbed and scalloped and lined
+by the wind, and from its knife-sharp crest a thin wavering sheet of
+sand blew, almost like smoke. Shefford wondered why the sand looked
+red at a distance, for here it seemed almost white. It rippled
+everywhere, clean and glistening, always leading down.
+
+Suddenly Shefford became aware of a house looming out of the bareness
+of the slope. It dominated that long white incline. Grim, lonely,
+forbidding, how strangely it harmonized with the surroundings! The
+structure was octagon-shaped, built of uncut stone, and resembled a
+fort. There was no door on the sides exposed to Shefford's gaze, but
+small apertures two-thirds the way up probably served as windows and
+port-holes. The roof appeared to be made of poles covered with red
+earth.
+
+Like a huge cold rock on a wide plain this house stood there on the
+windy slope. It was an outpost of the trader Presbrey, of whom
+Shefford had heard at Flagstaff and Tuba. No living thing appeared
+in the limit of Shefford's vision. He gazed shudderingly at the
+unwelcoming habitation, at the dark eyelike windows, at the sweep
+of barren slope merging into the vast red valley, at the bold, bleak
+bluffs. Could any one live here? The nature of that sinister valley
+forbade a home there, and the, spirit of the place hovered in the
+silence and space. Shefford thought irresistibly of how his enemies
+would have consigned him to just such a hell. He thought bitterly and
+mockingly of the narrow congregation that had proved him a failure in
+the ministry, that had repudiated his ideas of religion and immortality
+and God, that had driven him, at the age of twenty-four, from the
+calling forced upon him by his people. As a boy he had yearned to make
+himself an artist; his family had made him a clergyman; fate had made
+him a failure. A failure only so far in his life, something urged him
+to add--for in the lonely days and silent nights of the desert he had
+experienced a strange birth of hope. Adventure had called him, but
+it was a vague and spiritual hope, a dream of promise, a nameless
+attainment that fortified his wilder impulse.
+
+As he rode around a corner of the stone house his horse snorted and
+stopped. A lean, shaggy pony jumped at sight of him, almost displacing
+a red long-haired blanket that covered an Indian saddle. Quick thuds
+of hoofs in sand drew Shefford's attention to a corral made of peeled
+poles, and here he saw another pony.
+
+Shefford heard subdued voices. He dismounted and walked to an open
+door. In the dark interior he dimly descried a high counter, a
+stairway, a pile of bags of flour, blankets, and silver-ornamented
+objects, but the persons he had heard were not in that part of the
+house. Around another corner of the octagon-shaped wall he found
+another open door, and through it saw goat-skins and a mound of dirty
+sheep-wool, black and brown and white. It was light in this part of
+the building. When he crossed the threshold he was astounded to see
+a man struggling with a girl--an Indian girl. She was straining back
+from him, panting, and uttering low guttural sounds. The man's face
+was corded and dark with passion. This scene affected Shefford
+strangely. Primitive emotions were new to him.
+
+Before Shefford could speak the girl broke loose and turned to flee.
+She was an Indian and this place was the uncivilized desert, but
+Shefford knew terror when he saw it. Like a dog the man rushed after
+her. It was instinct that made Shefford strike, and his blow laid the
+man flat. He lay stunned a moment, then raised himself to a sitting
+posture, his hand to his face, and the gaze he fixed upon Shefford
+seemed to combine astonishment and rage.
+
+"I hope you're not Presbrey," said Shefford, slowly. He felt awkward,
+not sure of himself.
+
+The man appeared about to burst into speech, but repressed it. There
+was blood on his mouth and his hand. Hastily he scrambled to his feet.
+Shefford saw this man's amaze and rage change to shame. He was tall
+and rather stout; he had a smooth tanned face, soft of outline, with a
+weak chin; his eyes were dark. The look of him and his corduroys and
+his soft shoes gave Shefford an impression that he was not a man who
+worked hard. By contrast with the few other worn and rugged desert
+men Shefford had met this stranger stood out strikingly. He stooped
+to pick up a soft felt hat and, jamming it on his head, he hurried out.
+Shefford followed him and watched him from the door. He went directly
+to the corral, mounted the pony, and rode out, to turn down the slope
+toward the south. When he reached the level of the basin, where
+evidently the sand was hard, he put the pony to a lope and gradually
+drew away.
+
+"Well!" ejaculated Shefford. He did not know what to make of this
+adventure. Presently he became aware that the Indian girl was sitting
+on a roll of blankets near the wall. With curious interest Shefford
+studied her appearance. She had long, raven-black hair, tangled and
+disheveled, and she wore a soiled white band of cord above her brow.
+The color of her face struck him; it was dark, but not red nor bronzed;
+it almost had a tinge of gold. Her profile was clear-cut, bold, almost
+stern. Long black eyelashes hid her eyes. She wore a tight-fitting
+waist garment of material resembling velveteen. It was ripped along
+her side, exposing a skin still more richly gold than that of her face.
+A string of silver ornaments and turquoise-and-white beads encircled
+her neck, and it moved gently up and down with the heaving of her full
+bosom. Her skirt was some gaudy print goods, torn and stained and
+dusty. She had little feet, incased in brown moccasins, fitting like
+gloves and buttoning over the ankles with silver coins.
+
+"Who was that man? Did he hurt you?" inquired Shefford, turning to
+gaze down the valley where a moving black object showed on the bare
+sand.
+
+"No savvy," replied the Indian girl.
+
+"Where's the trader Presbrey?" asked Shefford.
+
+She pointed straight down into the red valley.
+
+"Toh," she said.
+
+In the center of the basin lay a small pool of water shining brightly
+in the sunset glow. Small objects moved around it, so small that
+Shefford thought he saw several dogs led by a child. But it was the
+distance that deceived him. There was a man down there watering his
+horses. That reminded Shefford of the duty owing to his own tired and
+thirsty beast. Whereupon he untied his pack, took off the saddle, and
+was about ready to start down when the Indian girl grasped the bridle
+from his hand.
+
+"Me go," she said.
+
+He saw her eyes then, and they made her look different. They were as
+black as her hair. He was puzzled to decide whether or not he thought
+her handsome.
+
+"Thanks, but I'll go," he replied, and, taking the bridle again, he
+started down the slope. At every step he sank into the deep, soft
+sand. Down a little way he came upon a pile of tin cans; they were
+everywhere, buried, half buried, and lying loose; and these gave
+evidence of how the trader lived. Presently Shefford discovered that
+the Indian girl was following him with her own pony. Looking upward
+at her against the light, he thought her slender, lithe, picturesque.
+At a distance he liked her.
+
+He plodded on, at length glad to get out of the drifts of sand to the
+hard level floor of the valley. This, too, was sand, but dried and
+baked hard, and red in color. At some season of the year this immense
+flat must be covered with water. How wide it was, and empty! Shefford
+experienced again a feeling that had been novel to him--and it was
+that he was loose, free, unanchored, ready to veer with the wind.
+From the foot of the slope the water hole had appeared to be a few
+hundred rods out in the valley. But the small size of the figures
+made Shefford doubt; and he had to travel many times a few hundred
+rods before those figures began to grow. Then Shefford made out
+that they were approaching him.
+
+Thereafter they rapidly increased to normal proportions of man and
+beast. When Shefford met them he saw a powerful, heavily built young
+man leading two ponies.
+
+"You're Mr. Presbrey, the trader?" inquired Shefford.
+
+"Yes, I'm Presbrey, without the Mister," he replied.
+
+"My name's Shefford. I'm knocking about on the desert. Rode from
+beyond Tuba to-day."
+
+"Glad to see you," said Presbrey. He offered his hand. He was a
+stalwart man, clad in gray shirt, overalls, and boots. A shock of
+tumbled light hair covered his massive head; he was tanned, but not
+darkly, and there was red in his cheeks; under his shaggy eyebrows
+were deep, keen eyes; his lips were hard and set, as if occasion for
+smiles or words was rare; and his big, strong jaw seemed locked.
+
+"Wish more travelers came knocking around Red Lake," he added.
+"Reckon here's the jumping-off place."
+
+"It's pretty--lonesome," said Shefford, hesitating as if at a loss
+for words.
+
+Then the Indian girl came up. Presbrey addressed her in her own
+language, which Shefford did not understand. She seemed shy and
+would not answer; she stood with downcast face and eyes. Presbrey
+spoke again, at which she pointed down the valley, and then moved
+on with her pony toward the water-hole.
+
+Presbrey's keen eyes fixed on the receding black dot far down that
+oval expanse.
+
+"That fellow left--rather abruptly," said Shefford, constrainedly.
+"Who was he?"
+
+"His name's Willetts. He's a missionary. He rode in to-day with this
+Navajo girl. He was taking her to Blue Canyon, where he lives and
+teaches the Indians. I've met him only a few times. You see, not
+many white men ride in here. He's the first white man I've seen in
+six months, and you're the second. Both the same day! . . . Red Lake's
+getting popular! It's queer, though, his leaving. He expected to
+stay all night. There's no other place to stay. Blue Canyon is fifty
+miles away."
+
+"I'm sorry to say--no, I'm not sorry, either--but I must tell you I
+was the cause of Mr. Willetts leaving," replied Shefford.
+
+"How so?" inquired the other.
+
+Then Shefford related the incident following his arrival.
+
+"Perhaps my action was hasty," he concluded, apologetically. "I didn't
+think. Indeed, I'm surprised at myself."
+
+Presbrey made no comment and his face was as hard to read as one of
+the distant bluffs.
+
+"But what did the man mean?" asked Shefford, conscious of a little
+heat. "I'm a stranger out here. I'm ignorant of Indians--how they're
+controlled. Still I'm no fool. . . . If Willetts didn't mean evil, at
+least he was brutal."
+
+"He was teaching her religion," replied Presbrey. His tone held faint
+scorn and implied a joke, but his face did not change in the slightest.
+
+Without understanding just why, Shefford felt his conviction justified
+and his action approved. Then he was sensible of a slight shock of
+wonder and disgust.
+
+"I am--I was a minister of the Gospel," he said to Presbrey. "What you
+hint seems impossible. I can't believe it."
+
+"I didn't hint," replied Presbrey, bluntly, and it was evident that
+he was a sincere, but close-mouthed, man. "Shefford, so you're a
+preacher? . . . Did you come out here to try to convert the Indians?"
+
+"No. I said I WAS a minister. I am no longer. I'm just a--a
+wanderer."
+
+"I see. Well, the desert's no place for missionaries, but it's good
+for wanderers. . . . Go water your horse and take him up to the corral.
+You'll find some hay for him. I'll get grub ready."
+
+Shefford went on with his horse to the pool. The water appeared thick,
+green, murky, and there was a line of salty crust extending around the
+margin of the pool. The thirsty horse splashed in and eagerly bent his
+head. But he did not like the taste. Many times he refused to drink,
+yet always lowered his nose again. Finally he drank, though not his
+fill. Shefford saw the Indian girl drink from her hand. He scooped up
+a handful and found it too sour to swallow. When he turned to retrace
+his steps she mounted her pony and followed him.
+
+A golden flare lit up the western sky, and silhouetted dark and lonely
+against it stood the trading-post. Upon his return Shefford found the
+wind rising, and it chilled him. When he reached the slope thin gray
+sheets of sand were blowing low, rising, whipping, falling, sweeping
+along with soft silken rustle. Sometimes the gray veils hid his boots.
+It was a long, toilsome climb up that yielding, dragging ascent, and
+he had already been lame and tired. By the time he had put his horse
+away twilight was everywhere except in the west. The Indian girl left
+her pony in the corral and came like a shadow toward the house.
+
+Shefford had difficulty in finding the foot of the stairway. He
+climbed to enter a large loft, lighted by two lamps. Presbrey was
+there, kneading biscuit dough in a pan.
+
+"Make yourself comfortable," he said.
+
+The huge loft was the shape of a half-octagon. A door opened upon the
+valley side, and here, too, there were windows. How attractive the
+place was in comparison with the impressions gained from the outside!
+The furnishings consisted of Indian blankets on the floor, two beds,
+a desk and table, several chairs and a couch, a gun-rack full of
+rifles, innumerable silver-ornamented belts, bridles, and other Indian
+articles upon the walls, and in one corner a wood-burning stove with
+teakettle steaming, and a great cupboard with shelves packed full of
+canned foods.
+
+Shefford leaned in the doorway and looked out. Beneath him on a roll
+of blankets sat the Indian girl, silent and motionless. He wondered
+what was in her mind, what she would do, how the trader would treat
+her. The slope now was a long slant of sheeted moving shadows of sand.
+Dusk had gathered in the valley. The bluffs loomed beyond. A pale
+star twinkled above. Shefford suddenly became aware of the intense
+nature of the stillness about him. Yet, as he listened to this
+silence, he heard an intermittent and immeasurably low moan, a fitful,
+mournful murmur. Assuredly it was only the wind. Nevertheless, it
+made his blood run cold. It was a different wind from that which had
+made music under the eaves of his Illinois home. This was a lonely,
+haunting wind, with desert hunger in it, and more which he could not
+name. Shefford listened to this spirit-brooding sound while he watched
+night envelop the valley. How black, how thick the mantle! Yet it
+brought no comforting sense of close-folded protection, of walls of
+soft sleep, of a home. Instead there was the feeling of space, of
+emptiness, of an infinite hall down which a mournful wind swept
+streams of murmuring sand.
+
+"Well, grub's about ready," said Presbrey.
+
+"Got any water?" asked Shefford.
+
+"Sure. There in the bucket. It's rain-water. I have a tank here."
+
+Shefford's sore and blistered face felt better after he had washed off
+the sand and alkali dust.
+
+"Better not wash your face often while you're in the desert. Bad
+plan," went on Presbrey, noting how gingerly his visitor had gone
+about his ablutions. "Well, come and eat."
+
+Shefford marked that if the trader did live a lonely life he fared
+well. There was more on the table than twice two men could have eaten.
+It was the first time in four days that Shefford had sat at a table,
+and he made up for lost opportunity.
+
+His host's actions indicated pleasure, yet the strange, hard face
+never relaxed, never changed. When the meal was finished Presbrey
+declined assistance, had a generous thought of the Indian girl, who,
+he said, could have a place to eat and sleep down-stairs, and then
+with the skill and despatch of an accomplished housewife cleared the
+table, after which work he filled a pipe and evidently prepared to
+listen.
+
+It took only one question for Shefford to find that the trader was
+starved for news of the outside world; and for an hour Shefford fed
+that appetite, even as he had been done by. But when he had talked
+himself out there seemed indication of Presbrey being more than a
+good listener.
+
+"How'd you come in?" he asked, presently.
+
+"By Flagstaff--across the Little Colorado--and through Moencopie."
+
+"Did you stop at Moen Ave?"
+
+"No. What place is that?"
+
+"A missionary lives there. Did you stop at Tuba?"
+
+"Only long enough to drink and water my horse. That was a wonderful
+spring for the desert."
+
+"You said you were a wanderer. . . . Do you want a job? I'll give
+you one."
+
+"No, thank you, Presbrey."
+
+"I saw your pack. That's no pack to travel with in this country. Your
+horse won't last, either. Have you any money?"
+
+"Yes, plenty of money."
+
+"Well, that's good. Not that a white man out here would ever take a
+dollar from you. But you can buy from the Indians as you go. Where
+are you making for, anyhow?"
+
+Shefford hesitated, debating in mind whether to tell his purpose or
+not. His host did not press the question.
+
+"I see. Just foot-loose and wandering around," went on Presbrey. "I
+can understand how the desert appeals to you. Preachers lead easy,
+safe, crowded, bound lives. They're shut up in a church with a Bible
+and good people. When once in a lifetime they get loose--they break
+out."
+
+"Yes, I've broken out--beyond all bounds," replied Shefford, sadly.
+He seemed retrospective for a moment, unaware of the trader's keen
+and sympathetic glance, and then he caught himself. "I want to see
+some wild life. Do you know the country north of here?"
+
+"Only what the Navajos tell me. And they're not much to talk. There's
+a trail goes north, but I've never traveled it. It's a new trail every
+time an Indian goes that way, for here the sand blows and covers old
+tracks. But few Navajos ride in from the north. My trade is mostly
+with Indians up and down the valley."
+
+"How about water and grass?"
+
+"We've had rain and snow. There's sure to be, water. Can't say about
+grass, though the sheep and ponies from the north are always fat. . . .
+But, say, Shefford, if you'll excuse me for advising you--don't go
+north."
+
+"Why?" asked Shefford, and it was certain that he thrilled.
+
+"It's unknown country, terribly broken, as you can see from here, and
+there are bad Indians biding in the canyon. I've never met a man who
+had been over the pass between here and Kayenta. The trip's been made,
+so there must be a trail. But it's a dangerous trip for any man, let
+alone a tenderfoot. You're not even packing a gun."
+
+"What's this place Kayenta?" asked Shefford.
+
+"It's a spring. Kayenta means Bottomless Spring. There's a little
+trading-post, the last and the wildest in northern Arizona. Withers,
+the trader who keeps it, hauls his supplies in from Colorado and New
+Mexico. He's never come down this way. I never saw him. Know nothing
+of him except hearsay. Reckon he's a nervy and strong man to hold that
+post. If you want to go there, better go by way of Keams Canyon, and
+then around the foot of Black Mesa. It'll be a long ride--maybe two
+hundred miles."
+
+"How far straight north over the pass?"
+
+"Can't say. Upward of seventy-five miles over rough trails, if there
+are trails at all. . . . I've heard rumors of a fine tribe of Navajos
+living in there, rich in sheep and horses. It may be true and it may
+not. But I do know there are bad Indians, half-breeds and outcasts,
+hiding in there. Some of them have visited me here. Bad customers!
+More than that, you'll be going close to the Utah line, and the Mormons
+over there are unfriendly these days."
+
+"Why?" queried Shefford, again with that curious thrill.
+
+"They are being persecuted by the government."
+
+Shefford asked no more questions and his host vouchsafed no more
+information on that score. The conversation lagged. Then Shefford
+inquired about the Indian girl and learned that she lived up the
+valley somewhere. Presbrey had never seen her before Willetts came
+with her to Red Lake. And this query brought out the fact that
+Presbrey was comparatively new to Red Lake and vicinity. Shefford
+wondered why a lonely six months there had not made the trader old in
+experience. Probably the desert did not readily give up its secrets.
+Moreover, this Red Lake house was only an occasionally used branch of
+Presbrey's main trading-post, which was situated at Willow Springs,
+fifty miles westward over the mesa.
+
+"I'm closing up here soon for a spell," said Presbrey, and now his
+face lost its set hardness and seemed singularly changed. It was a
+difference, of light and softness. "Won't be so lonesome over at
+Willow Springs. . . . I'm being married soon."
+
+"That's fine," replied Shefford, warmly. He was glad for the sake of
+this lonely desert man. What good a wife would bring into a trader's
+life!
+
+Presbrey's naive admission, however, appeared to detach him from his
+present surroundings, and with his massive head enveloped by a cloud
+of smoke he lived in dreams.
+
+Shefford respected his host's serene abstraction. Indeed, he was
+grateful for silence. Not for many nights had the past impinged so
+closely upon the present. The wound in his soul had not healed, and
+to speak of himself made it bleed anew. Memory was too poignant; the
+past was too close; he wanted to forget until he had toiled into the
+heart of this forbidding wilderness--until time had gone by and he
+dared to face his unquiet soul. Then he listened to the steadily
+rising roar of the wind. How strange and hollow! That wind was
+freighted with heavy sand, and he heard it sweep, sweep, sweep by in
+gusts, and then blow with dull, steady blast against the walls. The
+sound was provocative of thought. This moan and rush of wind was no
+dream--this presence of his in a night-enshrouded and sand-besieged
+house of the lonely desert was reality--this adventure was not one
+of fancy. True indeed, then, must be the wild, strange story that
+had led him hither. He was going on to seek, to strive, to find.
+Somewhere northward in the broken fastnesses lay hidden a valley
+walled in from the world. Would they be there, those lost fugitives
+whose story had thrilled him? After twelve years would she be alive,
+a child grown to womanhood in the solitude of a beautiful canyon?
+Incredible! Yet he believed his friend's story and he indeed knew
+how strange and tragic life was. He fancied he heard her voice on
+the sweeping wind. She called to him, haunted him. He admitted the
+improbability of her existence, but lost nothing of the persistent
+intangible hope that drove him. He believed himself a man stricken
+in soul, unworthy, through doubt of God, to minister to the people
+who had banished him. Perhaps a labor of Hercules, a mighty and
+perilous work of rescue, the saving of this lost and imprisoned
+girl, would help him in his trouble. She might be his salvation.
+Who could tell? Always as a boy and as a man he had fared forth
+to find the treasure at the foot of the rainbow.
+
+
+
+
+II. THE SAGI
+
+
+Next morning the Indian girl was gone and the tracks of her pony led
+north. Shefford's first thought was to wonder if he would overtake
+her on the trail; and this surprised him with the proof of how
+unconsciously his resolve to go on had formed.
+
+Presbrey made no further attempt to turn Shefford back. But he
+insisted on replenishing the pack, and that Shefford take weapons.
+Finally Shefford was persuaded to accept a revolver. The trader bade
+him good-by and stood in the door while Shefford led his horse down
+the slope toward the water-hole. Perhaps the trader believed he was
+watching the departure of a man who would never return. He was still
+standing at the door of the post when Shefford halted at the pool.
+
+Upon the level floor of the valley lay thin patches of snow which had
+fallen during the night. The air was biting cold, yet stimulated
+Shefford while it stung him. His horse drank rather slowly and
+disgustedly. Then Shefford mounted and reluctantly turned his back
+upon the trading-post.
+
+As he rode away from the pool he saw a large flock of sheep
+approaching. They were very closely, even densely, packed, in a solid
+slow-moving mass and coming with a precision almost like a march.
+This fact surprised Shefford, for there was not an Indian in sight.
+Presently he saw that a dog was leading the flock, and a little later
+he discovered another dog in the rear of the sheep. They were
+splendid, long-haired dogs, of a wild-looking shepherd breed. He
+halted his horse to watch the procession pass by. The flock covered
+fully an acre of ground and the sheep were black, white, and brown.
+They passed him, making a little pattering roar on the hard-caked sand.
+The dogs were taking the sheep in to water.
+
+Shefford went on and was drawing close to the other side of the basin,
+where the flat red level was broken by rising dunes and ridges, when
+he espied a bunch of ponies. A shrill whistle told him that they had
+seen him. They were wild, shaggy, with long manes and tails. They
+stopped, threw up their heads, and watched him. Shefford certainly
+returned the attention. There was no Indian with them. Presently,
+with a snort, the leader, which appeared to be a stallion, trotted
+behind the others, seemed to be driving them, and went clear round
+the band to get in the lead again. He was taking them in to water,
+the same as the dogs had taken the sheep.
+
+These incidents were new and pleasing to Shefford. How ignorant he
+had been of life in the wilderness! Once more he received subtle
+intimations of what he might learn out in the open; and it was with a
+less weighted heart that he faced the gateway between the huge yellow
+bluffs on his left and the slow rise of ground to the black mesa on
+his right. He looked back in time to see the trading-post, bleak
+and lonely on the bare slope, pass out of sight behind the bluffs.
+Shefford felt no fear--he really had little experience of physical
+fear--but it was certain that he gritted his teeth and welcomed
+whatever was to come to him. He had lived a narrow, insulated life
+with his mind on spiritual things; his family and his congregation
+and his friends--except that one new friend whose story had enthralled
+him--were people of quiet religious habit; the man deep down in him
+had never had a chance. He breathed hard as he tried to imagine the
+world opening to him, and almost dared to be glad for the doubt that
+had sent him adrift.
+
+The tracks of the Indian girl's pony were plain in the sand. Also
+there were other tracks, not so plain, and these Shefford decided had
+been made by Willetts and the girl the day before. He climbed a ridge,
+half soft sand and half hard, and saw right before him, rising in
+striking form, two great yellow buttes, like elephant legs. He rode
+between them, amazed at their height. Then before him stretched a
+slowly ascending valley, walled on one side by the black mesa and on
+the other by low bluffs. For miles a dark-green growth of greasewood
+covered the valley, and Shefford could see where the green thinned and
+failed, to give place to sand. He trotted his horse and made good time
+on this stretch.
+
+The day contrasted greatly with any he had yet experienced. Gray
+clouds obscured the walls of rock a few miles to the west, and Shefford
+saw squalls of snow like huge veils dropping down and spreading out.
+The wind cut with the keenness of a knife. Soon he was chilled to the
+bone. A squall swooped and roared down upon him, and the wind that
+bore the driving white pellets of snow, almost like hail, was so
+freezing bitter cold that the former wind seemed warm in comparison.
+The squall passed as swiftly as it had come, and it left Shefford so
+benumbed he could not hold the bridle. He tumbled off his horse and
+walked. By and by the sun came out and soon warmed him and melted
+the thin layer of snow on the sand. He was still on the trail of the
+Indian girl, but hers were now the only tracks he could see.
+
+All morning he gradually climbed, with limited view, until at last he
+mounted to a point where the country lay open to his sight on all
+sides except where the endless black mesa ranged on into the north. A
+rugged yellow peak dominated the landscape to the fore, but it was far
+away. Red and jagged country extended westward to a huge flat-topped
+wall of gray rock. Lowering swift clouds swept across the sky, like
+drooping mantles, and darkened the sun. Shefford built a little fire
+out of dead greasewood sticks, and with his blanket round his shoulders
+he hung over the blaze, scorching his clothes and hands. He had been
+cold before in his life but he had never before appreciated fire.
+This desert blast pierced him. The squall enveloped him, thicker and
+colder and windier than the other, but, being better fortified, he did
+not suffer so much. It howled away, hiding the mesa and leaving a
+white desert behind. Shefford walked on, leading his horse, until
+the exercise and the sun had once more warmed him.
+
+This last squall had rendered the Indian girl's trail difficult to
+follow. The snow did not quickly melt, and, besides, sheep tracks and
+the tracks of horses gave him trouble, until at last he was compelled
+to admit that he could not follow her any longer. A faint path or
+trail led north, however, and, following that, he soon forgot the
+girl. Every surmounted ridge held a surprise for him. The desert
+seemed never to change in the vast whole that encompassed him, yet
+near him it was always changing. From Red Lake he had seen a peaked,
+walled, and canyoned country, as rough as a stormy sea; but when he
+rode into that country the sharp and broken features held to the
+distance.
+
+He was glad to get out of the sand. Long narrow flats, gray with grass
+and dotted with patches of greasewood, and lined by low bare ridges of
+yellow rock, stretched away from him, leading toward the yellow peak
+that seemed never to be gained upon.
+
+Shefford had pictures in his mind, pictures of stone walls and wild
+valleys and domed buttes, all of which had been painted in colorful
+and vivid words by his friend Venters. He believed he would recognize
+the distinctive and remarkable landmarks Venters had portrayed, and he
+was certain that he had not yet come upon one of them. This was his
+second lonely day of travel and he had grown more and more susceptible
+to the influence of horizon and the different prominent points. He
+attributed a gradual change in his feelings to the loneliness and the
+increasing wildness. Between Tuba and Flagstaff he had met Indians
+and an occasional prospector and teamster. Here he was alone, and
+though he felt some strange gladness, he could not help but see the
+difference.
+
+He rode on during the gray, lowering, chilly day, and toward evening
+the clouds broke in the west, and a setting sun shone through the
+rift, burnishing the desert to red and gold. Shefford's instinctive
+but deadened love of the beautiful in nature stirred into life, and
+the moment of its rebirth was a melancholy and sweet one. Too late
+for the artist's work, but not too late for his soul!
+
+For a place to make camp he halted near a low area of rock that lay
+like an island in a sea of grass. There was an abundance of dead
+greasewood for a camp-fire, and, after searching over the rock, he
+found little pools of melted snow in the depressions. He took off
+the saddle and pack, watered his horse, and, hobbling him as well as
+his inexperience permitted, he turned him loose on the grass.
+
+Then while he built a fire and prepared a meal the night came down
+upon him. In the lee of the rock he was well sheltered from the wind,
+but the air, was bitter cold. He gathered all the dead greasewood in
+the vicinity, replenished the fire, and rolled in his blanket, back to
+the blaze. The loneliness and the coyotes did not bother him this
+night. He was too tired and cold. He went to sleep at once and did
+not awaken until the fire died out. Then he rebuilt it and went to
+sleep again. Every half-hour all night long he repeated this, and
+was glad indeed when the dawn broke.
+
+The day began with misfortune. His horse was gone; it had been stolen,
+or had worked out of sight, or had broken the hobbles and made off.
+From a high stone ridge Shefford searched the grassy flats and slopes,
+all to no purpose. Then he tried to track the horse, but this was
+equally futile. He had expected disasters, and the first one did not
+daunt him. He tied most of his pack in the blanket, threw the canteen
+across his shoulder, and set forth, sure at least of one thing--that he
+was a very much better traveler on foot than on horseback.
+
+Walking did not afford him the leisure to study the surrounding
+country; however, from time to time, when he surmounted a bench he
+scanned the different landmarks that had grown familiar. It took
+hours of steady walking to reach and pass the yellow peak that had
+been a kind of goal. He saw many sheep trails and horse tracks in
+the vicinity of this mountain, and once he was sure he espied an
+Indian watching him from a bold ridge-top.
+
+The day was bright and warm, with air so clear it magnified objects he
+knew to be far away. The ascent was gradual; there were many narrow
+flats connected by steps; and the grass grew thicker and longer. At
+noon Shefford halted under the first cedar-tree, a lonely, dwarfed
+shrub that seemed to have had a hard life. From this point the rise
+of ground was more perceptible, and straggling cedars led the eye on
+to a purple slope that merged into green of pinyon and pine. Could
+that purple be the sage Venters had so feelingly described, or was it
+merely the purple of deceiving distance? Whatever it might be, it
+gave Shefford a thrill and made him think of the strange, shy, and
+lovely woman Venters had won out here in this purple-sage country.
+
+He calculated that he had ridden thirty miles the day before and had
+already traveled ten miles today, and therefore could hope to be in
+the pass before night. Shefford resumed his journey with too much
+energy and enthusiasm to think of being tired. And he discovered
+presently that the straggling cedars and the slope beyond were much
+closer than he had judged them to be. He reached the sage to find it
+gray instead of purple. Yet it was always purple a little way ahead,
+and if he half shut his eyes it was purple near at hand. He was
+surprised to find that he could not breathe freely, or it seemed so,
+and soon made the discovery that the sweet, pungent, penetrating
+fragrance of sage and cedar had this strange effect upon him. This
+was an exceedingly dry and odorous forest, where every open space
+between the clumps of cedars was choked with luxuriant sage. The
+pinyons were higher up on the mesa, and the pines still higher.
+Shefford appeared to lose himself. There were no trails; the black
+mesa on the right and the wall of stone on the left could not be seen;
+but he pushed on with what was either singular confidence or rash
+impulse. And he did not know whether that slope was long or short.
+Once at the summit he saw with surprise that it broke abruptly and the
+descent was very steep and short on that side. Through the trees he
+once more saw the black mesa, rising to the dignity of a mountain;
+and he had glimpses of another flat, narrow valley, this time with
+a red wall running parallel with the mesa. He could not help but
+hurry down to get an unobstructed view. His eagerness was rewarded
+by a splendid scene, yet to his regret he could not force himself to
+believe it had any relation to the pictured scenes in his mind. The
+valley was half a mile wide, perhaps several miles long, and it
+extended in a curve between the cedar-sloped mesa and a looming wall
+of red stone. There was not a bird or a beast in sight. He found a
+well-defined trail, but it had not been recently used. He passed a
+low structure made of peeled logs and mud, with a dark opening like a
+door. It did not take him many minutes to learn that the valley was
+longer than he had calculated. He walked swiftly and steadily, in
+spite of the fact that the pack had become burdensome. What lay beyond
+the jutting corner of the mesa had increasing fascination for him and
+acted as a spur. At last he turned the corner, only to be disappointed
+at sight of another cedar slope. He had a glimpse of a single black
+shaft of rock rising far in the distance, and it disappeared as his
+striding forward made the crest of the slope rise toward the sky.
+
+Again his view became restricted, and he lost the sense of a slow and
+gradual uplift of rock and an increase in the scale of proportion.
+Half-way up this ascent he was compelled to rest; and again the sun
+was slanting low when he entered the cedar forest. Soon he was
+descending, and he suddenly came into the open to face a scene that
+made his heart beat thick and fast.
+
+He saw lofty crags and cathedral spires, and a wonderful canyon winding
+between huge beetling red walk. He heard the murmur of flowing water.
+The trail led down to the canyon floor, which appeared to be level and
+green and cut by deep washes in red earth. Could this canyon be the
+mouth of Deception Pass? It bore no resemblance to any place Shefford
+had heard described, yet somehow he felt rather than saw that it was
+the portal to the wild fastness he had traveled so far to enter.
+
+Not till he had descended the trail and had dropped his pack did he
+realize how weary and footsore he was. Then he rested. But his eyes
+roved to and fro, and his mind was active. What a wild and lonesome
+spot! The low murmur of shallow water came up to him from a deep,
+narrow cleft. Shadows were already making the canyon seem full of blue
+haze. He saw a bare slope of stone out of which cedar-trees were
+growing. And as he looked about him he became aware of a singular and
+very perceptible change in the lights and shades. The sun was setting;
+the crags were gold-tipped; the shadows crept upward; the sky seemed
+to darken swiftly; then the gold changed to red, slowly dulled, and
+the grays and purples stood out. Shefford was entranced with the
+beautiful changing effects, and watched till the walls turned black
+and the sky grew steely and a faint star peeped out. Then he set
+about the necessary camp tasks.
+
+Dead cedars right at hand assured him a comfortable night with steady
+fire; and when he had satisfied his hunger he arranged an easy seat
+before the blazing logs, and gave his mind over to thought of his
+weird, lonely environment.
+
+The murmur of running water mingled in harmonious accompaniment with
+the moan of the wind in the cedars--wild, sweet sounds that were balm
+to his wounded spirit! They seemed a part of the silence, rather than
+a break in it or a hindrance to the feeling of it. But suddenly that
+silence did break to the rattle of a rock. Shefford listened, thinking
+some wild animal was prowling around. He felt no alarm. Presently
+he heard the sound again, and again. Then he recognized the crack of
+unshod hoofs upon rock. A horse was coming down the trail. Shefford
+rather resented the interruption, though he still had no alarm. He
+believed he was perfectly safe. As a matter of fact, he had never in
+his life been anything but safe and padded around with wool, hence,
+never having experienced peril, he did not know what fear was.
+
+Presently he saw a horse and rider come into dark prominence on the
+ridge just above his camp. They were silhouetted against the starry
+sky. The horseman stopped and he and his steed made a magnificent
+black statue, somehow wild and strange, in Shefford's sight. Then he
+came on, vanished in the darkness under the ridge, presently to emerge
+into the circle of camp-fire light.
+
+He rode to within twenty feet of Shefford and the fire. The horse was
+dark, wild-looking, and seemed ready to run. The rider appeared to be
+an Indian, and yet had something about him suggesting the cowboy. At
+once Shefford remembered what Presbrey had said about half-breeds. A
+little shock, inexplicable to Shefford, rippled over him.
+
+He greeted his visitor, but received no answer. Shefford saw a dark,
+squat figure bending forward in the saddle. The man was tense. All
+about him was dark except the glint of a rifle across the saddle. The
+face under the sombrero was only a shadow. Shefford kicked the fire-
+logs and a brighter blaze lightened the scene. Then he saw this
+stranger a little more clearly, and made out an unusually large head,
+broad dark face, a sinister tight-shut mouth, and gleaming black eyes.
+
+Those eyes were unmistakably hostile. They roved searchingly over
+Shefford's pack and then over his person. Shefford felt for the gun
+that Presbrey had given him. But it was gone. He had left it back
+where he had lost his horse, and had not thought of it since. Then a
+strange, slow-coming cold agitation possessed Shefford. Something
+gripped his throat.
+
+Suddenly Shefford was stricken at a menacing movement on the part of
+the horseman. He had drawn a gun. Shefford saw it shine darkly in
+the firelight. The Indian meant to murder him. Shefford saw the grim,
+dark face in a kind of horrible amaze. He felt the meaning of that
+drawn weapon as he had never felt anything before in his life. And
+he collapsed back into his seat with an icy, sickening terror. In a
+second he was dripping wet with cold sweat. Lightning-swift thoughts
+flashed through his mind. It had been one of his platitudes that he
+was not afraid of death. Yet here he was a shaking, helpless coward.
+What had he learned about either life or death? Would this dark savage
+plunge him into the unknown? It was then that Shefford realized his
+hollow philosophy and the bitter-sweetness of life. He had a brain
+and a soul, and between them he might have worked out his salvation.
+But what were they to this ruthless night-wanderer, this raw and
+horrible wildness of the desert?
+
+Incapable of voluntary movement, with tongue cleaving to the roof of
+his mouth, Shefford watched the horseman and the half-poised gun. It
+was not yet leveled. Then it dawned upon Shefford that the stranger's
+head was turned a little, his ear to the wind. He was listening. His
+horse was listening. Suddenly he straightened up, wheeled his horse,
+and trotted away into the darkness. But he did not climb the ridge
+down which he had come.
+
+Shefford heard the click of hoofs upon the stony trail. Other horses
+and riders were descending into the canyon. They had been the cause of
+his deliverance, and in the relaxation of feeling he almost fainted.
+Then he sat there, slowly recovering, slowly ceasing to tremble,
+divining that this situation was somehow to change his attitude
+toward life.
+
+Three horses, two with riders, moved in dark shapes across the skyline
+above the ridge, disappeared as had Shefford's first visitor, and
+then rode into the light. Shefford saw two Indians--a man and a woman;
+then with surprise recognized the latter to be the Indian girl he had
+met at Red Lake. He was still more surprised to recognize in the third
+horse the one he had lost at the last camp. Shefford rose, a little
+shaky on his legs, to thank these Indians for a double service. The
+man slipped from his saddle and his moccasined feet thudded lightly.
+He was tall, lithe, erect, a singularly graceful figure, and as he
+advanced Shefford saw a dark face and sharp, dark eyes. The Indian
+was bareheaded, with his hair bound in a band. He resembled the girl,
+but appeared to have a finer face.
+
+"How do?" he said, in a voice low and distinct. He extended his hand,
+and Shefford felt a grip of steel. He returned the greeting. Then
+the Indian gave Shefford the bridle of the horse, and made signs that
+appeared to indicate the horse had broken his hobbles and strayed.
+Shefford thanked him. Thereupon the Indian unsaddled and led the
+horses away, evidently to water them. The girl remained behind.
+Shefford addressed her, but she was shy and did not respond. He then
+set about cooking a meal for his visitors, and was busily engaged at
+this when the Indian returned without the horses. Presently Shefford
+resumed his seat by the fire and watched the two eat what he had
+prepared. They certainly were hungry and soon had the pans and cups
+empty. Then the girl drew back a little into the shadow, while the
+man sat with his legs crossed and his feet tucked under him.
+
+His dark face was smooth, yet it seemed to have lines under the
+surface. Shefford was impressed. He had never seen an Indian who
+interested him as this one. Looked at superficially, he appeared
+young, wild, silent, locked in his primeval apathy, just a healthy
+savage; but looked at more attentively, he appeared matured, even
+old, a strange, sad, brooding figure, with a burden on his shoulders.
+Shefford found himself growing curious.
+
+"What place?" asked Shefford, waving his hand toward the dark opening
+between the black cliffs.
+
+"Sagi," replied the Indian.
+
+That did not mean anything to Shefford, and he asked if the Sagi was
+the pass, but the Indian shook his head.
+
+"Wife?" asked Shefford, pointing to the girl.
+
+The Indian shook his head again. "_Bi-la_," he said.
+
+"What you mean?" asked Shefford. "What _bi-la_?"
+
+"Sister," replied the Indian. He spoke the word reluctantly, as if the
+white man's language did not please him, but the clearness and correct
+pronunciation surprised Shefford.
+
+"What name--what call her?" he went on.
+
+"Glen Naspa."
+
+"What your name?" inquired Shefford, indicating the Indian.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega," answered the Indian.
+
+"Navajo?"
+
+The Indian bowed with what seemed pride and stately dignity.
+
+"My name John Shefford. Come far way back toward rising sun. Come
+stay here long."
+
+Nas Ta Bega's dark eyes were fixed steadily upon Shefford. He
+reflected that he could not remember having felt so penetrating a
+gaze. But neither the Indian's eyes nor face gave any clue to his
+thoughts.
+
+"Navajo no savvy Jesus Christ," said the Indian, and his voice rolled
+out low and deep.
+
+Shefford felt both amaze and pain. The Indian had taken him for a
+missionary.
+
+"No! . . . Me no missionary," cried Shefford, and he flung up a
+passionately repudiating hand.
+
+A singular flash shot from the Indian's dark eyes. It struck Shefford
+even at this stinging moment when the past came back.
+
+"Trade--buy wool--blanket?" queried Nas Ta Bega.
+
+"No," replied Shefford. "Me want ride--walk far." He waved his hand
+to indicate a wide sweep of territory. "Me sick."
+
+Nas Ta Bega laid a significant finger upon his lungs.
+
+"No," replied Shefford. "Me strong. Sick here." And with motions of
+his hands he tried to show that his was a trouble of the heart.
+
+Shefford received instant impression of this Indian's intelligent
+comprehension, but he could not tell just what had given him the
+feeling. Nas Ta Bega rose then and walked away into the shadow.
+Shefford heard him working around the dead cedar-tree, where he had
+probably gone to get fire-wood. Then Shefford heard a splintering
+crash, which was followed by a crunching, bumping sound. Presently he
+was astounded to see the Indian enter the lighted circle dragging the
+whole cedar-tree, trunk first. Shefford would have doubted the ability
+of two men to drag that tree, and here came Nas Ta Bega, managing it
+easily. He laid the trunk on the fire, and then proceeded to break
+off small branches, to place them advantageously where the red coals
+kindled them into a blaze.
+
+The Indian's next move was to place his saddle, which he evidently
+meant to use for a pillow. Then he spread a goat-skin on the ground,
+lay down upon it, with his back to the fire, and, pulling a long-
+haired saddle-blanket over his shoulders, he relaxed and became
+motionless. His sister, Glen Naspa, did likewise, except that she
+stayed farther away from the fire, and she had a larger blanket,
+which covered her well. It appeared to Shefford that they went to
+sleep at once.
+
+Shefford felt as tired as he had ever been, but he did not think he
+could soon drop into slumber, and in fact he did not want to.
+
+There was something in the companionship of these Indians that he had
+not experienced before. He still had a strange and weak feeling--the
+aftermath of that fear which had sickened him with its horrible icy
+grip. Nas Ta Bega's arrival had frightened away that dark and silent
+prowler of the night; and Shefford was convinced the Indian had saved
+his life. The measure of his gratitude was a source of wonder to him.
+Had he cared so much for life? Yes--he had, when face to face with
+death. That was something to know. It helped him. And he gathered
+from his strange feeling that the romantic quest which had brought him
+into the wilderness might turn out to be an antidote for the morbid
+bitterness of heart.
+
+With new sensations had come new thoughts. Right then it was very
+pleasant to sit in the warmth and light of the roaring cedar fire.
+There was a deep-seated ache of fatigue in his bones. What joy it
+was to rest! He had felt the dry scorch of desert thirst and the
+pang of hunger. How wonderful to learn the real meaning of water
+and food! He had just finished the longest, hardest day's work of
+his life! Had that anything to do with a something almost like peace
+which seemed to hover near in the shadows, trying to come to him? He
+had befriended an Indian girl, and now her brother had paid back the
+service. Both the giving and receiving were somehow sweet to Shefford.
+They opened up hitherto vague channels of thought. For years he had
+imagined he was serving people, when he had never lifted a hand. A
+blow given in the defense of an Indian girl had somehow operated to
+make a change in John Shefford's existence. It had liberated a spirit
+in him. Moreover, it had worked its influence outside his mind. The
+Indian girl and her brother had followed his trail to return his horse,
+perhaps to guide him safely, but, unknowingly perhaps, they had done
+infinitely more than that for him. As Shefford's eye wandered over
+the dark, still figures of the sleepers he had a strange, dreamy
+premonition, or perhaps only a fancy, that there was to be more come
+of this fortunate meeting.
+
+For the rest, it was good to be there in the speaking silence, to feel
+the heat on his outstretched palms and the cold wind on his cheek, to
+see the black wall lifting its bold outline and the crags reaching for
+the white stars.
+
+
+
+
+III. KAYENTA
+
+
+The stamping of horses awoke Shefford. He A saw a towering crag, rosy
+in the morning light, like a huge red spear splitting the clear blue
+of sky. He got up, feeling cramped and sore, yet with unfamiliar
+exhilaration. The whipping air made him stretch his hands to the fire.
+An odor of coffee and broiled meat mingled with the fragrance of wood
+smoke. Glen Naspa was on her knees broiling a rabbit on a stick
+over the red coals. Nas Ta Bega was saddling the ponies. The canyon
+appeared to be full of purple shadows under one side of dark cliffs
+and golden streaks of mist on the other where the sun struck high up
+on the walls.
+
+"Good morning," said Shefford.
+
+Glen Naspa shyly replied in Navajo.
+
+"How," was Nas Ta Bega's greeting.
+
+In daylight the Indian lost some of the dark somberness of face that
+had impressed Shefford. He had a noble head, in poise like that of
+an eagle, a bold, clean-cut profile, and stern, close-shut lips. His
+eyes were the most striking and attractive feature about him; they
+were coal-black and piercing; the intent look out of them seemed to
+come from a keen and inquisitive mind.
+
+Shefford ate breakfast with the Indians, and then helped with the few
+preparations for departure. Before they mounted, Nas Ta Bega pointed
+to horse tracks in the dust. They were those that had been made by
+Shefford's threatening visitor of the night before. Shefford explained
+by word and sign, and succeeded at least in showing that he had been
+in danger. Nas Ta Bega followed the tracks a little way and presently
+returned.
+
+"Shadd," he said, with an ominous shake of his head. Shefford did not
+understand whether he meant the name of his visitor or something else,
+but the menace connected with the word was clear enough.
+
+Glen Naspa mounted her pony, and it was a graceful action that pleased
+Shefford. He climbed a little stiffly into his own saddle. Then Nas
+Ta Bega got up and pointed northward.
+
+"Kayenta?" he inquired.
+
+Shefford nodded and then they were off, with Glen Naspa in the lead.
+They did not climb the trail which they had descended, but took one
+leading to the right along the base of the slope. Shefford saw down
+into the red wash that bisected the canyon floor. It was a sheer wall
+of red clay or loam, a hundred feet high, and at the bottom ran a
+swift, shallow stream of reddish water. Then for a time a high growth
+of greasewood hid the surroundings from Shefford's sight. Presently
+the trail led out into the open, and Shefford saw that he was at the
+neck of a wonderful valley that gradually widened with great jagged
+red peaks on the left and the black mesa, now a mountain, running away
+to the right. He turned to find that the opening of the Sagi could no
+longer be seen, and he was conscious of a strong desire to return and
+explore that canyon.
+
+Soon Glen Naspa put her pony to a long, easy, swinging canter and her
+followers did likewise. As they got outward into the valley Shefford
+lost the sense of being overshadowed and crowded by the nearness of
+the huge walls and crags. The trail appeared level underfoot, but at
+a distance it was seen to climb. Shefford found where it disappeared
+over the foot of a slope that formed a graceful rising line up to the
+cedared flank of the mesa. The valley floor, widening away to the
+north, remained level and green. Beyond rose the jagged range of
+red peaks, all strangely cut and slanting. These distant deceiving
+features of the country held Shefford's gaze until the Indian drew
+his attention to things near at hand. Then Shefford saw flocks of
+sheep dotting the gray-green valley, and bands of beautiful long-
+maned, long-tailed ponies.
+
+For several miles the scene did not change except that Shefford
+imagined he came to see where the upland plain ended or at least
+broke its level. He was right, for presently the Indian pointed,
+and Shefford went on to halt upon the edge of a steep slope leading
+down into a valley vast in its barren gray reaches.
+
+"Kayenta," said Nas Ta Bega.
+
+Shefford at first saw nothing except the monotonous gray valley
+reaching far to the strange, grotesque monuments of yellow cliff.
+Then close under the foot of the slope he espied two squat stone
+houses with red roofs, and a corral with a pool of water shining
+in the sun.
+
+The trail leading down was steep and sandy, but it was not long.
+Shefford's sweeping eyes appeared to take in everything at once--the
+crude stone structures with their earthen roofs, the piles of dirty
+wool, the Indians lolling around, the tents, and wagons, and horses,
+little lazy burros and dogs, and scattered everywhere saddles,
+blankets, guns, and packs.
+
+Then a white man came out of the door. He waved a hand and shouted.
+Dust and wool and flour were thick upon him. He was muscular and
+weather-beaten, and appeared young in activity rather than face. A
+gun swung at his hip and a row of brass-tipped cartridges showed in
+his belt. Shefford looked into a face that he thought he had seen
+before, until he realized the similarity was only the bronze and hard
+line and rugged cast common to desert men. The gray searching eyes
+went right through him.
+
+"Glad to see you. Get down and come in. Just heard from an Indian
+that you were coming. I'm the trader Withers," he said to Shefford.
+His voice was welcoming and the grip of his hand made Shefford's ache.
+
+Shefford told his name and said he was as glad as he was lucky to
+arrive at Kayenta.
+
+"Hello! Nas Ta Bega!" exclaimed Withers. His tone expressed a
+surprise his face did not show. "Did this Indian bring you in?"
+
+Withers shook hands with the Navajo while Shefford briefly related
+what he owed to him. Then Withers looked at Nas Ta Bega and spoke
+to him in the Indian tongue.
+
+"Shadd," said Nas Ta Bega. Withers let out a dry little laugh and his
+strong hand tugged at his mustache.
+
+"Who's Shadd?" asked Shefford.
+
+"He's a half-breed Ute--bad Indian, outlaw, murderer. He's in with a
+gang of outlaws who hide in the San Juan country. . . . Reckon you're
+lucky. How'd you come to be there in the Sagi alone?"
+
+"I traveled from Red Lake. Presbrey, the trader there, advised against
+it, but I came anyway."
+
+"Well." Withers's gray glance was kind, if it did express the
+foolhardiness of Shefford's act. "Come into the house. . . . Never
+mind the horse. My wife will sure be glad to see you."
+
+Withers led Shefford by the first stone house, which evidently was
+the trading-store, into the second. The room Shefford entered was
+large, with logs smoldering in a huge open fireplace, blankets
+covering every foot of floor space, and Indian baskets and silver
+ornaments everywhere, and strange Indian designs painted upon the
+whitewashed walls. Withers called his wife and made her acquainted
+with Shefford. She was a slight, comely little woman, with keen,
+earnest, dark eyes. She seemed to be serious and quiet, but she made
+Shefford feel at home immediately. He refused, however, to accept the
+room offered him, saying that he me meant to sleep out under the open
+sky. Withers laughed at this and said he understood. Shefford,
+remembering Presbrey's hunger for news of the outside world, told this
+trader and his wife all he could think of; and he was listened to with
+that close attention a traveler always gained in the remote places.
+
+"Sure am glad you rode in," said Withers, for the fourth time. "Now
+you make yourself at home. Stay here--come over to the store--do
+what you like. I've got to work. To-night we'll talk."
+
+Shefford went out with his host. The store was as interesting as
+Presbrey's, though much smaller and more primitive. It was full of
+everything, and smelled strongly of sheep and goats. There was a
+narrow aisle between sacks of flour and blankets on one side and a
+high counter on the other. Behind this counter Withers stood to wait
+upon the buying Indians. They sold blankets and skins and bags of
+wool, and in exchange took silver money. Then they lingered and with
+slow, staid reluctance bought one thing and then another--flour, sugar,
+canned goods, coffee, tobacco, ammunition. The counter was never
+without two or three Indians leaning on their dark, silver-braceleted
+arms. But as they were slow to sell and buy and go, so were others
+slow to come in. Their voices were soft and low and it seemed to
+Shefford they were whispering. He liked to hear them and to look at
+the banded heads, the long, twisted rolls of black hair tied with
+white cords, the still dark faces and watchful eyes, the silver ear-
+rings, the slender, shapely brown hands, the lean and sinewy shapes,
+the corduroys with a belt and gun, and the small, close-fitting
+buckskin moccasins buttoned with coins. These Indians all appeared
+young, and under the quiet, slow demeanor there was fierce blood and
+fire.
+
+By and by two women came in, evidently squaw and daughter. The former
+was a huge, stout Indian with a face that was certainly pleasant if
+not jolly.
+
+She had the corners of a blanket tied under her chin, and in the folds
+behind on her broad back was a naked Indian baby, round and black of
+head, brown-skinned, with eyes as bright as beads. When the youngster
+caught sight of Shefford he made a startled dive into the sack of the
+blanket. Manifestly, however, curiosity got the better of fear, for
+presently Shefford caught a pair of wondering dark eyes peeping at him.
+
+"They're good spenders, but slow," said Withers. "The Navajos are
+careful and cautious. That's why they're rich. This squaw, Yan As
+Pa, has flocks of sheep and more mustangs than she knows about."
+
+"Mustangs. So that's what you call the ponies?" replied Shefford.
+
+"Yep. They're mustangs, and mostly wild as jack-rabbits."
+
+Shefford strolled outside and made the acquaintance of Withers's
+helper, a Mormon named Whisner. He was a stockily built man past
+maturity, and his sun-blistered face and watery eyes told of the open
+desert. He was engaged in weighing sacks of wool brought in by the
+Indians. Near by stood a framework of poles from which an immense
+bag was suspended. From the top of this bag protruded the head and
+shoulders of an Indian who appeared to be stamping and packing wool
+with his feet. He grinned at the curious Shefford. But Shefford was
+more interested in the Mormon. So far as he knew, Whisner was the
+first man of that creed he had ever met, and he could scarcely hide
+his eagerness. Venters's stories had been of a long-past generation
+of Mormons, fanatical, ruthless, and unchangeable. Shefford did not
+expect to meet Mormons of this kind. But any man of that religion
+would have interested him. Besides this, Whisner seemed to bring him
+closer to that wild secret canyon he had come West to find. Shefford
+was somewhat amazed and discomfited to have his polite and friendly
+overtures repulsed. Whisner might have been an Indian. He was cold,
+incommunicative, aloof; and there was something about him that made
+the sensitive Shefford feel his presence was resented.
+
+Presently Shefford strolled on to the corral, which was full of shaggy
+mustangs. They snorted and kicked at him. He had a half-formed wish
+that he would never be called upon to ride one of those wild brutes,
+and then he found himself thinking that he would ride one of them, and
+after a while any of them. Shefford did not understand himself, but
+he fought his natural instinctive reluctance to meet obstacles, peril,
+suffering.
+
+He traced the white-bordered little stream that made the pool in the
+corral, and when he came to where it oozed out of the sand under the
+bluff he decided that was not the spring which had made Kayenta
+famous. Presently down below the trading-post he saw a trough from
+which burros were drinking. Here he found the spring, a deep well
+of eddying water walled in by stones, and the overflow made a shallow
+stream meandering away between its borders of alkali, like a crust of
+salt. Shefford tasted the water. It bit, but it was good.
+
+Shefford had no trouble in making friends with the lazy sleepy-eyed
+burros. They let him pull their long ears and rub their noses, but
+the mustangs standing around were unapproachable. They had wild eyes;
+they raised long ears and looked vicious. He let them alone.
+
+Evidently this trading-post was a great deal busier than Red Lake.
+Shefford counted a dozen Indians lounging outside, and there were
+others riding away. Big wagons told how the bags of wool were
+transported out of the wilds and how supplies were brought in. A
+wide, hard-packed road led off to the east, and another, not so
+clearly defined, wound away to the north. And Indian trails streaked
+off in all directions.
+
+Shefford discovered, however, when he had walked off a mile or so
+across the valley to lose sight of the post, that the feeling of
+wildness and loneliness returned to him. It was a wonderful country.
+It held something for him besides the possible rescue of an imprisoned
+girl from a wild canyon.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+That night after supper, when Withers and Shefford sat alone before
+the blazing logs in the huge fireplace, the trader laid his hand on
+Shefford's and said, with directness and force:
+
+"I've lived my life in the desert. I've met many men and have been a
+friend to most. . . . You're no prospector or trader or missionary?"
+
+"No," replied Shefford.
+
+"You've had trouble?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Have you come in here to hide? Don't be afraid to tell me. I won't
+give you away."
+
+"I didn't come to hide."
+
+"Then no one is after you? You've done no wrong?"
+
+"Perhaps I wronged myself, but no one else," replied Shefford,
+steadily.
+
+"I reckoned so. Well, tell me, or keep your secret--it's all one
+to me."
+
+Shefford felt a desire to unburden himself. This man was strong,
+persuasive, kindly. He drew Shefford.
+
+"You're welcome in Kayenta," went on Withers. "Stay as long as you
+like. I take no pay from a white man. If you want work I have it
+aplenty."
+
+"Thank you. That is good. I need to work. We'll talk of it later.
+. . . But just yet I can't tell you why I came to Kayenta, what I want
+to do, how long I shall stay. My thoughts put in words would seem
+so like dreams. Maybe they are dreams. Perhaps I'm only chasing a
+phantom--perhaps I'm only hunting the treasure at the foot of the
+rainbow."
+
+"Well, this is the country for rainbows," laughed Withers. "In
+summer from June to August when it storms we have rainbows that'll
+make you think you're in another world. The Navajos have rainbow
+mountains, rainbow canyons, rainbow bridges of stone, rainbow trails.
+It sure is rainbow country."
+
+That deep and mystic chord in Shefford thrilled. Here it was again--
+something tangible at the bottom of his dream.
+
+Withers did not wait for Shefford to say any more, and almost as if
+he read his visitor's mind he began to talk about the wild country
+he called home.
+
+He had lived at Kayenta for several years--hard and profitless years by
+reason of marauding outlaws. He could not have lived there at all but
+for the protection of the Indians. His father-in-law had been friendly
+with the Navajos and Piutes for many years, and his wife had been
+brought up among them. She was held in peculiar reverence and
+affection by both tribes in that part of the country. Probably she
+knew more of the Indians' habits, religion, and life than any white
+person in the West. Both tribes were friendly and peaceable, but there
+were bad Indians, half-breeds, and outlaws that made the trading-post
+a venture Withers had long considered precarious, and he wanted to move
+and intended to some day. His nearest neighbors in New Mexico and
+Colorado were a hundred miles distant and at some seasons the roads
+were impassable. To the north, however, twenty miles or so, was
+situated a Mormon village named Stonebridge. It lay across the Utah
+line. Withers did some business with this village, but scarcely enough
+to warrant the risks he had to run. During the last year he had lost
+several pack-trains, one of which he had never heard of after it left
+Stonebridge.
+
+"Stonebridge!" exclaimed Shefford, and he trembled. He had heard that
+name. In his memory it had a place beside the name of another village
+Shefford longed to speak of to this trader.
+
+"Yes--Stonebridge," replied Withers. "Ever heard the name?"
+
+"I think so. Are there other villages in--in that part of the
+country?"
+
+"A few, but not close. Glaze is now only a water-hole. Bluff and
+Monticello are far north across the San Juan. . . . There used to be
+another village--but that wouldn't interest you."
+
+"Maybe it would," replied Shefford, quietly.
+
+But his hint was not taken by the trader. Withers suddenly showed a
+semblance of the aloofness Shefford had observed in Whisner.
+
+"Withers, pardon an impertinence--I am deeply serious. . . . Are you
+a Mormon?"
+
+"Indeed I'm not," replied the trader, instantly.
+
+"Are you for the Mormons or against them?"
+
+"Neither. I get along with them. I know them. I believe they are a
+misunderstood people."
+
+"That's for them."
+
+"No. I'm only fair-minded."
+
+Shefford paused, trying to curb his thrilling impulse, but it was too
+strong.
+
+"You said there used to be another village. . . . Was the name of
+it--Cottonwoods?"
+
+Withers gave a start and faced round to stare at Shefford in blank
+astonishment.
+
+"Say, did you give me a straight story about yourself?" he queried,
+sharply.
+
+"So far as I went," replied Shefford.
+
+"You're no spy on the lookout for sealed wives?"
+
+"Absolutely not. I don't even know what you mean by sealed wives."
+
+"Well, it's damn strange that you'd know the name Cottonwoods. . . .
+Yes, that's the name of the village I meant--the one that used to be.
+It's gone now, all except a few stone walls."
+
+"What became of it?"
+
+"Torn down by Mormons years ago. They destroyed it and moved away.
+I've heard Indians talk about a grand spring that was there once.
+It's gone, too. Its name was--let me see--"
+
+"Amber Spring," interrupted Shefford.
+
+"By George, you're right!" rejoined the trader, again amazed.
+"Shefford, this beats me. I haven't heard that name for ten years.
+I can't help seeing what a tenderfoot--stranger--you are to the
+desert. Yet, here you are--speaking of what you should know nothing
+of. . . . And there's more behind this."
+
+Shefford rose, unable to conceal his agitation.
+
+"Did you ever hear of a rider named Venters?"
+
+"Rider? You mean a cowboy? Venters. No, I never heard that name."
+
+"Did you ever hear of a gunman named Lassiter?" queried Shefford, with
+increasing emotion.
+
+"No."
+
+"Did you ever hear of a Mormon woman named--Jane Withersteen?"
+
+"No."
+
+Shefford drew his breath sharply. He had followed a gleam--he had
+caught a fleeting glimpse of it.
+
+"Did you ever hear of a child--a girl--a woman--called Fay Larkin?"
+
+Withers rose slowly with a paling face.
+
+"If you're a spy it'll go hard with you--though I'm no Mormon," he
+said, grimly.
+
+Shefford lifted a shaking hand.
+
+"I WAS a clergyman. Now I'm nothing--a wanderer--least of all a spy."
+
+Withers leaned closer to see into the other man's eyes; he looked long
+and then appeared satisfied.
+
+"I've heard the name Fay Larkin," he said, slowly. "I reckon that's
+all I'll say till you tell your story."
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Shefford stood with his back to the fire and he turned the palms of
+his hands to catch the warmth. He felt cold. Withers had affected
+him strangely. What was the meaning of the trader's somber gravity?
+Why was the very mention of Mormons attended by something austere and
+secret?
+
+"My name is John Shefford. I am twenty-four," began Shefford. "My
+family--"
+
+Here a knock on the door interrupted Shefford.
+
+"Come in," called Withers.
+
+The door opened and like a shadow Nas Ta Bega slipped in. He said
+something in Navajo to the trader.
+
+"How," he said to Shefford, and extended his hand. He was stately, but
+there was no mistaking his friendliness. Then he sat down before the
+fire, doubled his legs under him after the Indian fashion, and with
+dark eyes on the blazing logs seemed to lose himself in meditation.
+
+
+"He likes the fire," explained Withers. "Whenever he comes to Kayenta
+he always visits me like this. . . . Don't mind him. Go on with your
+story."
+
+"My family were plain people, well-to-do, and very religious," went on
+Shefford. "When I was a boy we moved from the country to a town called
+Beaumont, Illinois. There was a college in Beaumont and eventually I
+was sent to it to study for the ministry. I wanted to be-- But never
+mind that. . . . By the time I was twenty-two I was ready for my career
+as a clergyman. I preached for a year around at different places and
+then got a church in my home town of Beaumont. I became exceedingly
+good friends with a man named Venters, who had recently come to
+Beaumont. He was a singular man. His wife was a strange, beautiful
+woman, very reserved, and she had wonderful dark eyes. They had money
+and were devoted to each other, and perfectly happy. They owned the
+finest horses ever seen in Illinois, and their particular enjoyment
+seemed to be riding. They were always taking long rides. It was
+something worth going far for to see Mrs. Venters on a horse.
+
+"It was through my own love of horses that I became friendly with
+Venters. He and his wife attended my church, and as I got to see more
+of them, gradually we grew intimate. And it was not until I did get
+intimate with them that I realized that both seemed to be haunted by
+the past. They were sometimes sad even in their happiness. They
+drifted off into dreams. They lived back in another world. They
+seemed to be listening. Indeed, they were a singularly interesting
+couple, and I grew genuinely fond of them. By and by they had a
+little girl whom they named Jane. The coming of the baby made a
+change in my friends. They were happier, and I observed that the
+haunting shadow did not so often return.
+
+"Venters had spoken of a journey west that he and his wife meant to
+take some time. But after the baby came he never mentioned his wife
+in connection with the trip. I gathered that he felt compelled to go
+to clear up a mystery or to find something--I did not make out just
+what. But eventually, and it was about a year ago, he told me his
+story--the strangest, wildest, and most tragic I ever heard. I can't
+tell it all now. It is enough to say that fifteen years before he had
+been a rider for a rich Mormon woman named Jane Withersteen, of this
+village Cottonwoods. She had adopted a beautiful Gentile child named
+Fay Larkin. Her interest in Gentiles earned the displeasure of her
+churchmen, and as she was proud there came a breach. Venters and a
+gunman named Lassiter became involved in her quarrel. Finally Venters
+took to the canyon. Here in the wilds he found the strange girl he
+eventually married. For a long time they lived in a wonderful hidden
+valley, the entrance to which was guarded by a huge balancing rock.
+Venters got away with the girl. But Lassiter and Jane Withersteen and
+the child Fay Larkin were driven into the canyon. They escaped to the
+valley where Venters had lived. Lassiter rolled the balancing rock,
+and, crashing down the narrow trail, it loosened the weathered walls
+and closed the narrow outlet for ever."
+
+
+
+
+IV. NEW FRIENDS
+
+
+Shefford ended his narrative out of breath, pale, and dripping with
+sweat. Withers sat leaning forward with an expression of intense
+interest. Nas Ta Bega's easy, graceful pose had succeeded to one
+of strained rigidity. He seemed a statue of bronze. Could a few
+intelligible words, Shefford wondered, have created that strange,
+listening posture?
+
+"Venters got out of Utah, of course, as you know," went on Shefford.
+"He got out, knowing--as I feel I would have known--that Jane,
+Lassiter, and little Fay Larkin were shut up, walled up in Surprise
+Valley. For years Venters considered it would not have been safe for
+him to venture to rescue them. He had no fears for their lives. They
+could live in Surprise Valley. But Venters always intended to come
+back with Bess and find the valley and his friends. No wonder he and
+Bess were haunted. However, when his wife had the baby that made
+a difference. It meant he had to go alone. And he was thinking
+seriously of starting when--when there were developments that made
+it desirable for me to leave Beaumont. Venters's story haunted me
+as he had been haunted. I dreamed of that wild valley--of little Fay
+Larkin grown to womanhood--such a woman as Bess Venters was. And the
+longing to come was great. . . . And, Withers--here I am."
+
+The trader reached out and gave Shefford the grip of a man in whom
+emotion was powerful, but deep and difficult to express.
+
+"Listen to this. . . . I wish I could help you. Life is a queer deal.
+. . . Shefford, I've got to trust you. Over here in the wild canyon
+country there's a village of Mormons' sealed wives. It's in Arizona,
+perhaps twenty miles from here, and near the Utah line. When the
+United States government began to persecute, or prosecute, the Mormons
+for polygamy, the Mormons over here in Stonebridge took their sealed
+wives and moved them out of Utah, just across the line. They built
+houses, established a village there. I'm the only Gentile who knows
+about it. And I pack supplies every few weeks in to these women.
+There are perhaps fifty women, mostly young--second or third or fourth
+wives of Mormons--sealed wives. And I want you to understand that
+sealed means SEALED in all that religion or loyalty can get out of
+the word. There are also some old women and old men in the village,
+but they hardly count. And there's a flock of the finest children
+you ever saw in your life.
+
+"The idea of the Mormons must have been to escape prosecution. The
+law of the government is one wife for each man--no more. All over
+Utah polygamists have been arrested. The Mormons are deeply concerned.
+I believe they are a good, law-abiding people. But this law is a
+direct blow at their religion. In my opinion they can't obey both.
+And therefore they have not altogether given up plural wives. Perhaps
+they will some day. I have no proof, but I believe the Mormons of
+Stonebridge pay secret night visits to their sealed wives across the
+line in the lonely, hidden village.
+
+"Now once over in Stonebridge I overheard some Mormons talking about a
+girl who was named Fay Larkin. I never forgot the name. Later I heard
+the name in this sealed-wife village. But, as I told you, I never
+heard of Lassiter or Jane Withersteen. Still, if Mormons had found
+them I would never have heard of it. And Deception Pass--that might
+be the Sagi. . . . I'm not surprised at your rainbow-chasing adventure.
+It's a great story. . . . This Fay Larkin I've heard of MIGHT be your
+Fay Larkin--I almost believe so. Shefford, I'll help you find out."
+
+"Yes, yes--I must know," replied Shefford. "Oh, I hope, I pray we can
+find her! But--I'd rather she was dead--if she's not still hidden in
+the valley."
+
+"Naturally. You've dreamed yourself into rescuing this lost Fay
+Larkin. . . . But, Shefford, you're old enough to know life doesn't
+work out as you want it to. One way or another I fear you're in for
+a bitter disappointment."
+
+"Withers, take me to the village."
+
+"Shefford, you're liable to get in bad out here," said the trader,
+gravely.
+
+"I couldn't be any more ruined than I am now," replied Shefford,
+passionately.
+
+"But there's risk in this--risk such as you never had," persisted
+Withers.
+
+"I'll risk anything."
+
+"Reckon this is a funny deal for a sheep-trader to have on his hands,"
+continued Withers. "Shefford, I like you. I've a mind to see you
+through this. It's a damn strange story. . . . I'll tell you what--I
+will help you. I'll give you a job packing supplies in to the village.
+I meant to turn that over to a Mormon cowboy--Joe Lake. The job shall
+be yours, and I'll go with you first trip. Here's my hand on it. . . .
+Now, Shefford, I'm more curious about you than I was before you told
+your story. What ruined you? As we're to be partners, you can tell
+me now. I'll keep your secret. Maybe I can do you good."
+
+Shefford wanted to confess, yet it was hard. Perhaps, had he not been
+so agitated, he would not have answered to impulse. But this trader
+was a man--a man of the desert--he would understand.
+
+"I told you I was a clergyman," said Shefford in low voice. "I didn't
+want to be one, but they made me one. I did my best. I failed. . . .
+I had doubts of religion--of the Bible--of God, as my Church believed
+in them. As I grew older thought and study convinced me of the
+narrowness of religion as my congregation lived it. I preached what I
+believed. I alienated them. They put me out, took my calling from me,
+disgraced me, ruined me."
+
+"So that's all!" exclaimed Withers, slowly. "You didn't believe in
+the God of the Bible. . . . Well, I've been in the desert long enough
+to know there IS a God, but probably not the one your Church worships.
+. . . Shefford, go to the Navajo for a faith!"
+
+Shefford had forgotten the presence of Nas Ta Bega, and perhaps Withers
+had likewise. At this juncture the Indian rose to his full height, and
+he folded his arms to stand with the somber pride of a chieftain while
+his dark, inscrutable eyes were riveted upon Shefford. At that moment
+he seemed magnificent. How infinitely more he seemed than just a
+common Indian who had chanced to befriend a white man! The difference
+was obscure to Shefford. But he felt that it was there in the Navajo's
+mind. Nas Ta Bega's strange look was not to be interpreted. Presently
+he turned and passed from the room.
+
+"By George!" cried Withers, suddenly, and he pounded his knee with his
+fist. "I'd forgotten."
+
+"What?" ejaculated Shefford.
+
+"Why, that Indian understood every word we said. He knows English.
+He's educated. Well, if this doesn't beat me. . . . Let me tell you
+about Nas Ta Bega."
+
+Withers appeared to be recalling something half forgotten.
+
+"Years ago, in fifty-seven, I think, Kit Carson with his soldiers
+chased the Navajo tribes and rounded them up to be put on
+reservations. But he failed to catch all the members of one tribe.
+They escaped up into wild canyon like the Sagi. The descendants of
+these fugitives live there now and are the finest Indians on earth--
+the finest because unspoiled by the white man. Well, as I got the
+story, years after Carson's round-up one of his soldiers guided some
+interested travelers in here. When they left they took an Indian boy
+with them to educate. From what I know of Navajos I'm inclined to
+think the boy was taken against his parents' wish. Anyway, he was
+taken. That boy was Nas Ta Bega. The story goes that he was educated
+somewhere. Years afterward, and perhaps not long before I came in
+here, he returned to his people. There have been missionaries and
+other interested fools who have given Indians a white man's education.
+In all the instances I know of, these educated Indians returned to
+their tribes, repudiating the white man's knowledge, habits, life,
+and religion. I have heard that Nas Ta Bega came back, laid down
+the white man's clothes along with the education, and never again
+showed that he had known either.
+
+"You have just seen how strangely he acted. It's almost certain he
+heard our conversation. Well, it doesn't matter. He won't tell. He
+can hardly be made to use an English word. Besides, he's a noble red
+man, if there ever was one. He has been a friend in need to me. If
+you stay long out here you'll learn something from the Indians. Nas
+Ta Bega has befriended you, too, it seems. I thought he showed unusual
+interest in you."
+
+"Perhaps that was because I saved his sister--well, to be charitable,
+from the rather rude advances of a white man," said Shefford, and he
+proceeded to tell of the incident that occurred at Red Lake.
+
+"Willetts!" exclaimed Withers, with much the same expression that
+Presbrey had used. "I never met him. But I know about him. He's--
+well, the Indians don't like him much. Most of the missionaries are
+good men--good for the Indians, in a way, but sometimes one drifts
+out here who is bad. A bad missionary teaching religion to savages!
+Queer, isn't it? The queerest part is the white people's blindness--
+the blindness of those who send the missionaries. Well, I dare say
+Willetts isn't very good. When Presbrey said that was Willetts's way
+of teaching religion he meant just what he said. If Willetts drifts
+over here he'll be risking much. . . . This you told me explains Nas
+Ta Bega's friendliness toward you, and also his bringing his sister
+Glen Naspa to live with relatives up in the pass. She had been living
+near Red Lake."
+
+"Do you mean Nas Ta Bega wants to keep his sister far removed from
+Willetts?" inquired Shefford.
+
+"I mean that," replied Withers, "and I hope he's not too late."
+
+Later Shefford went outdoors to walk and think. There was no moon,
+but the stars made light enough to cast his shadow on the ground.
+The dark, illimitable expanse of blue sky seemed to be glittering
+with numberless points of fire. The air was cold and still. A
+dreaming silence lay over the land. Shefford saw and felt all these
+things, and their effect was continuous and remained with him and
+helped calm him. He was conscious of a burden removed from his mind.
+Confession of his secret had been like tearing a thorn from his flesh,
+but, once done, it afforded him relief and a singular realization that
+out here it did not matter much. In a crowd of men all looking at him
+and judging him by their standards he had been made to suffer. Here,
+if he were judged at all, it would be by what he could do, how he
+sustained himself and helped others.
+
+He walked far across the valley toward the low bluffs, but they did
+not seem to get any closer. And, finally, he stopped beside a stone
+and looked around at the strange horizon and up at the heavens. He
+did not feel utterly aloof from them, nor alone in a waste, nor a
+useless atom amid incomprehensible forces. Something like a loosened
+mantle fell from about him, dropping down at his feet; and all at once
+he was conscious of freedom. He did not understand in the least why
+abasement left him, but it was so. He had come a long way, in
+bitterness, in despair, believing himself to be what men had called
+him. The desert and the stars and the wind, the silence of the night,
+the loneliness of this vast country where there was room for a thousand
+cities--these somehow vaguely, yet surely, bade him lift his head.
+They withheld their secret, but they made a promise. The thing which
+he had been feeling every day and every night was a strange enveloping
+comfort. And it was at this moment that Shefford, divining whence his
+help was to come, embraced all that wild and speaking nature around
+and above him and surrendered himself utterly.
+
+"I am young. I am free. I have my life to live," he said. "I'll be
+a man. I'll take what comes. Let me learn here!"
+
+When he had spoken out, settled once and for ever his attitude toward
+his future, he seemed to be born again, wonderfully alive to the
+influences around him, ready to trust what yet remained a mystery.
+
+Then his thoughts reverted to Fay Larkin. Could this girl be known to
+the Mormons? It was possible. Fay Larkin was an unusual name. Deep
+into Shefford's heart had sunk the story Venters had told. Shefford
+found that he had unconsciously created a like romance--he had been
+loving a wild and strange and lonely girl, like beautiful Bess Venters.
+It was a shock to learn the truth, but, as it had been only a dream,
+it could hardly be vital.
+
+Shefford retraced his steps toward the post. Halfway back he espied a
+tall, dark figure moving toward him, and presently the shape and the
+step seemed familiar. Then he recognized Nas Ta Bega. Soon they were
+face to face. Shefford felt that the Indian had been trailing him over
+the sand, and that this was to be a significant meeting. Remembering
+Withers's revelation about the Navajo, Shefford scarcely knew how to
+approach him now. There was no difference to be made out in Nas Ta
+Bega's dark face and inscrutable eyes, yet there was a difference to
+be felt in his presence. But the Indian did not speak, and turned to
+walk by Shefford's side. Shefford could not long be silent.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, were you looking for me?" he asked.
+
+"You had no gun," replied the Indian.
+
+But for his very low voice, his slow speaking of the words, Shefford
+would have thought him a white man. For Shefford there was indeed an
+instinct in this meeting, and he turned to face the Navajo.
+
+"Withers told me you had been educated, that you came back to the
+desert, that you never showed your training. . . . Nas Ta Bega, did
+you understand all I told Withers?"
+
+"Yes," replied the Indian.
+
+"You won't betray me?"
+
+"I am a Navajo."
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, you trail me--you say I had no gun." Shefford wanted
+to ask this Indian if he cared to be the white man's friend, but the
+question was not easy to put, and, besides, seemed unnecessary. "I
+am alone and strange in this wild country. I must learn."
+
+"Nas Ta Bega will show you the trails and the water-holes and how to
+hide from Shadd."
+
+"For money--for silver you will do this?" inquired Shefford.
+
+Shefford felt that the Indian's silence was a rebuke. He remembered
+Withers's singular praise of this red man. He realized he must change
+his idea of Indians.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, I know nothing. I feel like a child in the wilderness.
+When I speak it is out of the mouths of those who have taught me. I
+must find a new voice and a new life. . . . You heard my story to
+Withers. I am an outcast from my own people. If you will be my
+friend--be so."
+
+The Indian clasped Shefford's hand and held it in a response that
+was more beautiful for its silence. So they stood for a moment in
+the starlight.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, what did Withers mean when he said go to the Navajo for
+a faith?" asked Shefford.
+
+"He meant the desert is my mother. . . . Will you go with Nas Ta Bega
+into the canyon and the mountains?"
+
+"Indeed I will."
+
+They unclasped hands and turned toward the trading-post.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, have you spoken my tongue to any other white man since
+you returned to your home?" asked Shefford.
+
+"No."
+
+"Why do you--why are you different for me?"
+
+The Indian maintained silence.
+
+"Is it because of--of Glen Naspa?" inquired Shefford.
+
+Nas Ta Bega stalked on, still silent, but Shefford divined that,
+although his service to Glen Naspa would never be forgotten, still
+it was not wholly responsible for the Indian's subtle sympathy.
+
+"Bi Nai! The Navajo will call his white friend Bi Nai--brother," said
+Nas Ta Bega, and he spoke haltingly, not as if words were hard to find,
+but strange to speak. "I was stolen from my mother's hogan and taken
+to California. They kept me ten years in a mission at San Bernardino
+and four years in a school. They said my color and my hair were all
+that was left of the Indian in me. But they could not see my heart.
+They took fourteen years of my life. They wanted to make me a
+missionary among my own people. But the white man's ways and his
+life and his God are not the Indian's. They never can be."
+
+How strangely productive of thought for Shefford to hear the Indian
+talk! What fatality in this meeting and friendship! Upon Nas Ta Bega
+had been forced education, training, religion, that had made him
+something more and something less than an Indian. It was something
+assimilated from the white man which made the Indian unhappy and alien
+in his own home--something meant to be good for him and his kind that
+had ruined him. For Shefford felt the passion and the tragedy of this
+Navajo.
+
+"Bi Nai, the Indian is dying!" Nas Ta Bega's low voice was deep and
+wonderful with its intensity of feeling. "The white man robbed the
+Indian of lands and homes, drove him into the deserts, made him a
+gaunt and sleepless spiller of blood. . . . The blood is all spilled
+now, for the Indian is broken. But the white man sells him rum and
+seduces his daughters. . . . He will not leave the Indian in peace
+with his own God! . . . Bi Nai, the Indian is dying!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+That night Shefford lay in his blankets out under the open sky and the
+stars. The earth had never meant much to him, and now it was a bed.
+He had preached of the heavens, but until now had never studied them.
+An Indian slept beside him. And not until the gray of morning had
+blotted out the starlight did Shefford close his eyes.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+With break of the next day came full, varied, and stirring incidents
+to Shefford. He was strong, though unskilled at most kinds of outdoor
+tasks. Withers had work for ten men, if they could have been found.
+Shefford dug and packed and lifted till he was so sore and tired that
+rest was a blessing.
+
+He never succeeded in getting on a friendly footing with the Mormon
+Whisner, though he kept up his agreeable and kindly advances. He
+listened to the trader's wife as she told him about the Indians, and
+what he learned he did not forget. And his wonder and respect
+increased in proportion to his knowledge.
+
+One day there rode into Kayenta the Mormon for whom Withers had been
+waiting. His name was Joe Lake. He appeared young, and slipped off
+his superb bay with a grace and activity that were astounding in one
+of his huge bulk. He had a still, smooth face, with the color of red
+bronze and the expression of a cherub; big, soft, dark eyes; and a
+winning smile. He was surprisingly different from Whisner or any
+Mormon character that Shefford had naturally conceived. His costume
+was that of the cowboy on active service; and he packed a gun at his
+hip. The hand-shake he gave Shefford was an ordeal for that young man
+and left him with his whole right side momentarily benumbed.
+
+"I sure am glad to meet you," he said in a lazy, mild voice. And he
+was taking friendly stock of Shefford when the bay mustang reached
+with vicious muzzle to bite at him. Lake gave a jerk on the bridle
+that almost brought the mustang to his knees. He reared then, snorted,
+and came down to plant his forefeet wide apart, and watched his master
+with defiant eyes. This mustang was the finest horse Shefford had
+ever seen. He appeared quite large for his species, was almost red
+in color, had a racy and powerful build, and a fine thoroughbred head
+with dark, fiery eyes. He did not look mean, but he had spirit.
+
+"Navvy, you've sure got bad manners," said Lake, shaking the mustang's
+bridle. He spoke as if he were chiding a refractory little boy.
+"Didn't I break you better'n that? What's this gentleman goin' to
+think of you? Tryin' to bite my ear off!"
+
+Lake had arrived about the middle of the forenoon, and Withers
+announced his intention of packing at once for the trip. Indians were
+sent out on the ranges to drive in burros and mustangs. Shefford had
+his thrilling expectancy somewhat chilled by what he considered must
+have been Lake's reception of the trader's plan. Lake seemed to oppose
+him, and evidently it took vehemence and argument on Withers's part to
+make the Mormon tractable. But Withers won him over, and then he
+called Shefford to his side.
+
+"You fellows got to be good friends," he said. "You'll have charge of
+my pack-trains. Nas Ta Bega wants to go with you. I'll feel safer
+about my supplies and stock than I've ever been. . . . Joe, I'll back
+this stranger for all I'm worth. He's square. . . . And, Shefford,
+Joe Lake is a Mormon of the younger generation. I want to start you
+right. You can trust him as you trust me. He's white clean through.
+And he's the best horse-wrangler in Utah."
+
+It was Lake who first offered his hand, and Shefford made haste to
+meet it with his own. Neither of them spoke. Shefford intuitively
+felt an alteration in Lake's regard, or at least a singular increase
+of interest. Lake had been told that Shefford had been a clergyman,
+was now a wanderer, without any religion. Again it seemed to Shefford
+that he owed a forming of friendship to this singular fact. And it
+hurt him. But strangely it came to him that he had taken a liking
+to a Mormon.
+
+About one o'clock the pack-train left Kayenta. Nas Ta Bega led the way
+up the slope. Following him climbed half a dozen patient, plodding,
+heavily laden burros. Withers came next, and he turned in his saddle
+to wave good-by to his wife. Joe Lake appeared to be busy keeping a
+red mule and a wild gray mustang and a couple of restive blacks in the
+trail. Shefford brought up in the rear.
+
+His mount was a beautiful black mustang with three white feet, a white
+spot on his nose, and a mane that swept to his knees. "His name's
+Nack-yal," Withers had said. "It means two bits, or twenty-five cents.
+He ain't worth more." To look at Nack-yal had pleased Shefford very
+much indeed, but, once upon his back, he grew dubious. The mustang
+acted queer. He actually looked back at Shefford, and it was a look
+of speculation and disdain. Shefford took exception to Nack-yal's
+manner and to his reluctance to go, and especially to a habit the
+mustang had of turning off the trail to the left. Shefford had
+managed some rather spirited horses back in Illinois; and though he
+was willing and eager to learn all over again, he did not enjoy the
+prospect of Lake and Withers seeing this black mustang make a novice
+of him. And he guessed that was just what Nack-yal intended to do.
+However, once up over the hill, with Kayenta out of sight, Nack-yal
+trotted along fairly well, needing only now and then to be pulled back
+from his strange swinging to the left off the trail.
+
+The pack-train traveled steadily and soon crossed the upland plain to
+descend into the valley again. Shefford saw the jagged red peaks with
+an emotion he could not name. The canyon between them were purple in
+the shadows, the great walls and slopes brightened to red, and the
+tips were gold in the sun. Shefford forgot all about his mustang and
+the trail.
+
+Suddenly with a pound of hoofs Nack-yal seemed to rise. He leaped
+sidewise out of the trail, came down stiff-legged. Then Shefford shot
+out of the saddle. He landed so hard that he was stunned for an
+instant. Sitting up, he saw the mustang bent down, eyes and ears
+showing fight, and his forefeet spread. He appeared to be looking at
+something in the trail. Shefford got up and soon saw what had been
+the trouble. A long, crooked stick, rather thick and black and yellow,
+lay in the trail, and any mustang looking for an excuse to jump might
+have mistaken it for a rattlesnake. Nack-yal appeared disposed to be
+satisfied, and gave Shefford no trouble in mounting. The incident
+increased Shefford's dubiousness. These Arizona mustangs were unknown
+quantities.
+
+Thereafter Shefford had an eye for the trail rather than the scenery,
+and this continued till the pack-train entered the mouth of the Sagi.
+Then those wonderful lofty cliffs, with their peaks and towers and
+spires, loomed so close and so beautiful that he did not care if Nack-
+yal did throw him. Along here, however, the mustang behaved well, and
+presently Shefford decided that if it had been otherwise he would have
+walked. The trail suddenly stood on end and led down into the deep
+wash, where some days before he had seen the stream of reddish water.
+This day there appeared to be less water and it was not so red. Nack-
+yal sank deep as he took short and careful steps down. The burros and
+other mustangs were drinking, and Nack-yal followed suit. The Indian,
+with a hand clutching his mustang's mane, rode up a steep, sandy slope
+on the other side that Shefford would not have believed any horse could
+climb. The burros plodded up and over the rim, with Withers calling
+to them. Joe Lake swung his rope and cracked the flanks of the gray
+mare and the red mule; and the way the two kicked was a revelation and
+a warning to Shefford. When his turn came to climb the trail he got
+off and walked, an action that Nack-yal appeared fully to appreciate.
+
+From the head of this wash the trail wound away up the widening canyon,
+through greasewood flats and over greasy levels and across sandy
+stretches. The looming walls made the valley look narrow, yet it must
+have been half a mile wide. The slopes under the cliffs were dotted
+with huge stones and cedar-trees. There were deep indentations in the
+walls, running back to form box canyon, choked with green of cedar and
+spruce and pinyon. These notches haunted Shefford, and he was ever on
+the lookout for more of them.
+
+Withers came back to ride just in advance and began to talk.
+
+"Reckon this Sagi canyon is your Deception Pass," he said. "It's sure
+a queer hole. I've been lost more than once, hunting mustangs in here.
+I've an idea Nas Ta Bega knows all this country. He just pointed out
+a cliff-dwelling to me. See it? . . . There 'way up in that cave of
+the wall."
+
+Shefford saw a steep, rough slope leading up to a bulge of the cliff,
+and finally he made out strange little houses with dark, eyelike
+windows. He wanted to climb up there. Withers called his attention
+to more caves with what he believed were the ruins of cliff-dwellings.
+And as they rode along the trader showed him remarkable formations of
+rock where the elements were slowly hollowing out a bridge. They came
+presently to a region of intersecting canyon, and here the breaking of
+the trail up and down the deep washes took Withers back to his task
+with the burros and gave Shefford more concern than he liked with Nack-
+yal. The mustang grew unruly and was continually turning to the left.
+Sometimes he tried to climb the steep slope. He had to be pulled
+hard away from the opening canyon on the left. It seemed strange to
+Shefford that the mustang never swerved to the right. This habit of
+Nack-yal's and the increasing caution needed on the trail took all of
+Shefford's attention. When he dismounted, however, he had a chance
+to look around, and more and more he was amazed at the increasing
+proportions and wildness of the Sagi.
+
+He came at length to a place where a fallen tree blocked the trail.
+All of the rest of the pack-train had jumped the log. But Nack-yal
+balked. Shefford dismounted, pulled the bridle over the mustang's
+head, and tried to lead him. Nack-yal, however, refused to budge.
+Whereupon Shefford got a stick and, remounting, he gave the balky
+mustang a cut across the flank. Then something violent happened.
+Shefford received a sudden propelling jolt, and then he was rising
+into the air, and then falling. Before he alighted he had a clear
+image of Nack-yal in the air above him, bent double, and seemingly
+possessed of devils. Then Shefford hit the ground with no light thud.
+He was thoroughly angry when he got dizzily upon his feet, but he was
+not quick enough to catch the mustang. Nack-yal leaped easily over
+the log and went on ahead, dragging his bridle. Shefford hurried
+after him, and the faster he went just by so much the cunning Nack-yal
+accelerated his gait. As the pack-train was out of sight somewhere
+ahead, Shefford could not call to his companions to halt his mount,
+so he gave up trying, and walked on now with free and growing
+appreciation of his surroundings.
+
+The afternoon had waned. The sun blazed low in the west in a notch
+of the canyon ramparts, and one wall was darkening into purple shadow
+while the other shone through a golden haze. It was a weird, wild
+world to Shefford, and every few strides he caught his breath and
+tried to realize actuality was not a dream.
+
+Nack-yal kept about a hundred paces to the fore and ever and anon he
+looked back to see how his new master was progressing. He varied these
+occasions by reaching down and nipping a tuft of grass. Evidently he
+was too intelligent to go on fast enough to be caught by Withers. Also
+he kept continually looking up the slope to the left as if seeking a
+way to climb out of the valley in that direction. Shefford thought it
+was well the trail lay at the foot of a steep slope that ran up to
+unbroken bluffs.
+
+The sun set and the canyon lost its red and its gold and deepened its
+purple. Shefford calculated he had walked five miles, and though he
+did not mind the effort, he would rather have ridden Nack-yal into
+camp. He mounted a cedar ridge, crossed some sandy washes, turned a
+corner of bold wall to enter a wide, green level. The mustangs were
+rolling and snorting. He heard the bray of a burro. A bright blaze of
+camp-fire greeted him, and the dark figure of the Indian approached to
+intercept and catch Nack-yal. When he stalked into camp Withers wore
+a beaming smile, and Joe Lake, who was on his knees making biscuit
+dough in a pan, stopped proceedings and drawled:
+
+"Reckon Nack-yal bucked you off."
+
+"Bucked! Was that it? Well, he separated himself from me in a new
+and somewhat painful manner--to me."
+
+"Sure, I saw that in his eye," replied Lake; and Withers laughed with
+him.
+
+"Nack-yal never was well broke," he said. "But he's a good mustang,
+nothing like Joe's Navvy or that gray mare Dynamite. All this Indian
+stock will buck on a man once in a while."
+
+"I'll take the bucking along with the rest," said Shefford. Both men
+liked his reply, and the Indian smiled for the first time.
+
+Soon they all sat round a spread tarpaulin and ate like wolves. After
+supper came the rest and talk before the camp-fire. Joe Lake was droll;
+he said the most serious things in a way to make Shefford wonder if he
+was not joking. Withers talked about the canyon, the Indians, the
+mustangs, the scorpions running out of the heated sand; and to Shefford
+it was all like a fascinating book. Nas Ta Bega smoked in silence, his
+brooding eyes upon the fire.
+
+
+
+
+V. ON THE TRAIL
+
+
+Shefford was awakened next morning by a sound he had never heard before
+--the plunging of hobbled horses on soft turf. It was clear daylight,
+with a ruddy color in the sky and a tinge of red along the canyon rim.
+He saw Withers, Lake, and the Indian driving the mustangs toward camp.
+
+The burros appeared lazy, yet willing. But the mustangs and the mule
+Withers called Red and the gray mare Dynamite were determined not to
+be driven into camp. It was astonishing how much action they had, how
+much ground they could cover with their forefeet hobbled together.
+They were exceedingly skilful; they lifted both forefeet at once, and
+then plunged. And they all went in different directions. Nas Ta Bega
+darted in here and there to head off escape.
+
+Shefford pulled on his boots and went out to help. He got too close to
+the gray mare and, warned by a yell from Withers, he jumped back just
+in time to avoid her vicious heels. Then Shefford turned his attention
+to Nack-yal and chased him all over the flat in a futile effort to
+catch him. Nas Ta Bega came to Shefford's assistance and put a rope
+over Nack-yal's head.
+
+"Don't ever get behind one of these mustangs," said Withers, warningly,
+as Shefford came up. "You might be killed. . . . Eat your bite now.
+We'll soon be out of here."
+
+Shefford had been late in awakening. The others had breakfasted. He
+found eating somewhat difficult in the excitement that ensued. Nas Ta
+Bega held ropes which were round the necks of Red and Dynamite. The
+mule showed his cunning and always appeared to present his heels to
+Withers, who tried to approach him with a pack-saddle. The patience
+of the trader was a revelation to Shefford. And at length Red was
+cornered by the three men, the pack-saddle was strapped on, and then
+the packs. Red promptly bucked the packs off, and the work had to be
+done over again. Then Red dropped his long ears and seemed ready to
+be tractable.
+
+When Shefford turned his attention to Dynamite he decided that this
+was his first sight of a wild horse. The gray mare had fiery eyes that
+rolled and showed the white. She jumped straight up, screamed, pawed,
+bit, and then plunged down to shoot her hind hoofs into the air as
+high as her head had been. She was amazingly agile and she seemed mad
+to kill something. She dragged the Indian about, and when Joe Lake got
+a rope on her hind foot she dragged them both. They lashed her with
+the ends of the lassoes, which action only made her kick harder. She
+plunged into camp, drove Shefford flying for his life, knocked down two
+of the burros, and played havoc with the unstrapped packs. Withers ran
+to the assistance of Lake, and the two of them hauled back with all
+their strength and weight. They were both powerful and heavy men.
+Dynamite circled round and finally, after kicking the camp-fire to
+bits, fell down on her haunches in the hot embers. "Let--her--set--
+there!" panted Withers. And Joe Lake shouted, "Burn up, you durn
+coyote!" Both men appeared delighted that she had brought upon herself
+just punishment. Dynamite sat in the remains of the fire long enough
+to get burnt, and then she got up and meekly allowed Withers to throw
+a tarpaulin and a roll of blankets over her and tie them fast.
+
+Lake and Withers were sweating freely when this job was finished.
+
+"Say, is that a usual morning's task with the pack-animals?" asked
+Shefford.
+
+"They're all pretty decent to-day, except Dynamite," replied Withers.
+"She's got to be worked out."
+
+Shefford felt both amusement and consternation. The sun was just
+rising over the ramparts of the canyon, and he had already seen more
+difficult and dangerous work accomplished than half a dozen men of his
+type could do in a whole day. He liked the outlook of his new duty as
+Withers's assistant, but he felt helplessly inefficient. Still, all
+he needed was experience. He passed over what he anticipated would be
+pain and peril--the cost was of no moment.
+
+Soon the pack-train was on the move, with the Indian leading. This
+morning Nack-yal began his strange swinging off to the left, precisely
+as he had done the day before. It got to be annoying to Shefford, and
+he lost patience with the mustang and jerked him sharply round. This,
+however, had no great effect upon Nack-yal.
+
+As the train headed straight up the canyon Joe Lake dropped back to ride
+beside Shefford. The Mormon had been amiable and friendly.
+
+"Flock of deer up that draw," he said, pointing up a narrow side canyon.
+
+Shefford gazed to see a half-dozen small, brown, long-eared objects,
+very like burros, watching the pack-train pass.
+
+"Are they deer?" he asked, delightedly.
+
+"Sure are," replied Joe, sincerely. "Get down and shoot one. There's
+a rifle in your saddle-sheath."
+
+Shefford had already discovered that he had been armed this morning, a
+matter which had caused him reflection. These animals certainly looked
+like deer; he had seen a few deer, though not in their native wild
+haunts; and he experienced the thrill of the hunter. Dismounting, he
+drew the rifle out of the sheath and started toward the little canyon.
+
+"Hyar! Where you going with that gun?" yelled Withers. "That's a
+bunch of burros. . . . Joe's up to his old tricks. Shefford, look
+out for Joe!"
+
+Rather sheepishly Shefford returned to his mustang and sheathed the
+rifle, and then took a long look at the animals up the draw. They,
+resembled deer, but upon second glance they surely were burros.
+
+"Durn me! Now if I didn't think they sure were deer!" exclaimed Joe.
+He appeared absolutely sincere and innocent. Shefford hardly knew how
+to take this likable Mormon, but vowed he would be on his guard in
+the future.
+
+Nas Ta Bega soon led the pack-train toward the left wall of the canyon,
+and evidently intended to scale it. Shefford could not see any trail,
+and the wall appeared steep and insurmountable. But upon nearing the
+cliff he saw a narrow broken trail leading zigzag up over smooth rock,
+weathered slope, and through cracks.
+
+"Spread out, and careful now!" yelled Withers.
+
+The need of both advices soon became manifest to Shefford. The burros
+started stones rolling, making danger for those below. Shefford
+dismounted and led Nack-yal and turned aside many a rolling rock. The
+Indian and the burros, with the red mule leading, climbed steadily.
+But the mustangs had trouble. Joe's spirited bay had to be coaxed to
+face the ascent; Nack-yal balked at every difficult step; and Dynamite
+slipped on a flat slant of rock and slid down forty feet. Withers and
+Lake with ropes hauled the mare out of the dangerous position.
+Shefford, who brought up the rear, saw all the action, and it was
+exciting, but his pleasure in the climb was spoiled by sight of blood
+and hair on the stones. The ascent was crooked, steep, and long, and
+when Shefford reached the top of the wall he was glad to rest. It made
+him gasp to look down and see what he had surmounted. The canyon floor,
+green and level, lay a thousand feet below; and the wild burros which
+had followed on the trail looked like rabbits.
+
+Shefford mounted presently, and rode out upon a wide, smooth trail
+leading into a cedar forest. There were bunches of gray sage in the
+open places. The air was cool and crisp, laden with a sweet fragrance.
+He saw Lake and Withers bobbing along, now on one side of the trail,
+now on the other, and they kept to a steady trot. Occasionally the
+Indian and his bright-red saddle-blanket showed in an opening of the
+cedars.
+
+It was level country, and there was nothing for Shefford to see except
+cedar and sage, an outcropping of red rock in places, and the winding
+trail. Mocking-birds made melody everywhere. Shefford seemed full of
+a strange pleasure, and the hours flew by. Nack-yal still wanted to
+be everlastingly turning off the trail, and, moreover, now he wanted
+to go faster. He was eager, restless, dissatisfied.
+
+At noon the pack-train descended into a deep draw, well covered with
+cedar and sage. There was plenty of grass and shade, but no water.
+Shefford was surprised to see that every pack was removed; however,
+the roll of blankets was left on Dynamite.
+
+The men made a fire and began to cook a noonday meal. Shefford, tired
+and warm, sat in a shady spot and watched. He had become all eyes. He
+had almost forgotten Fay Larkin; he had forgotten his trouble; and the
+present seemed sweet and full. Presently his ears were filled by a
+pattering roar and, looking up the draw, he saw two streams of sheep
+and goats coming down. Soon an Indian shepherd appeared, riding a fine
+mustang. A cream-colored colt bounded along behind, and presently
+a shaggy dog came in sight. The Indian dismounted at the camp, and
+his flock spread by in two white and black streams. The dog went with
+them. Withers and Joe shook hands with the Indian, whom Joe called
+"Navvy," and Shefford lost no time in doing likewise. Then Nas Ta Bega
+came in, and he and the Navajo talked. When the meal was ready all of
+them sat down round the canvas. The shepherd did not tie his horse.
+
+Presently Shefford noticed that Nack-yal had returned to camp and was
+acting strangely. Evidently he was attracted by the Indian's mustang
+or the cream-colored colt. At any rate, Nack-yal hung around, tossed
+his head, whinnied in a low, nervous manner, and looked strangely
+eager and wild. Shefford was at first amused, then curious. Nack-yal
+approached too close to the mother of the colt, and she gave him a
+sounding kick in the ribs. Nack-yal uttered a plaintive snort and
+backed away, to stand, crestfallen, with all his eagerness and fire
+vanished.
+
+Nas Ta Bega pointed to the mustang and said something in his own
+tongue. Then Withers addressed the visiting Indian, and they
+exchanged some words, whereupon the trader turned to Shefford:
+
+"I bought Nack-yal from this Indian three years ago. This mare is
+Nack-yal's mother. He was born over here to the south. That's why
+he always swung left off the trail. He wanted to go home. Just now
+he recognized his mother and she whaled away and gave him a whack for
+his pains. She's got a colt now and probably didn't recognize Nack-
+yal. But he's broken-hearted."
+
+The trader laughed, and Joe said, "You can't tell what these durn
+mustangs will do." Shefford felt sorry for Nack-yal, and when it came
+time to saddle him again found him easier to handle than ever before.
+Nack-yal stood with head down, broken-spirited.
+
+Shefford was the first to ride up out of the draw, and once upon the
+top of the ridge he halted to gaze, wide-eyed and entranced. A
+rolling, endless plain sloped down beneath him, and led him on to a
+distant round-topped mountain. To the right a red canyon opened its
+jagged jaws, and away to the north rose a whorled and strange sea of
+curved ridges, crags, and domes.
+
+Nas Ta Bega rode up then, leading the pack-train.
+
+"Bi Nai, that is Na-tsis-an," he said, pointing to the mountain.
+"Navajo Mountain. And there in the north are the canyon."
+
+Shefford followed the Indian down the trail and soon lost sight of
+that wide green-and-red wilderness. Nas Ta Bega turned at an
+intersecting trail, rode down into the canyon, and climbed out on the
+other side. Shefford got a glimpse now and then of the black dome of
+the mountain, but for the most part the distant points of the country
+were hidden. They crossed many trails, and went up and down the sides
+of many shallow canyon. Troops of wild mustangs whistled at them,
+stood on ridge-tops to watch, and then dashed away with manes and
+tails flying.
+
+Withers rode forward presently and halted the pack-train. He had some
+conversation with Nas Ta Bega, whereupon the Indian turned his horse
+and trotted back, to disappear in the cedars.
+
+"I'm some worried," explained Withers. "Joe thinks he saw a bunch of
+horsemen trailing us. My eyes are bad and I can't see far. The Indian
+will find out. I took a roundabout way to reach the village because
+I'm always dodging Shadd."
+
+This communication lent an added zest to the journey. Shefford could
+hardly believe the truth that his eyes and his ears brought to his
+consciousness. He turned in behind Withers and rode down the rough
+trail, helping the mustang all in his power. It occurred to him that
+Nack-yal had been entirely different since that meeting with his mother
+in the draw. He turned no more off the trail; he answered readily to
+the rein; he did not look afar from every ridge. Shefford conceived a
+liking for the mustang.
+
+Withers turned sidewise in his saddle and let his mustang pick the way.
+
+"Another time we'll go up round the base of the mountain, where you can
+look down on the grandest scene in the world," said he. "Two hundred
+miles of wind-worn rock, all smooth and bare, without a single straight
+line--canyon, caves, bridges--the most wonderful country in the world!
+Even the Indians haven't explored it. It's haunted, for them, and they
+have strange gods. The Navajos will hunt on this side of the mountain,
+but not on the other. That north side is consecrated ground. My wife has
+long been trying to get the Navajos to tell her the secret of Nonnezoshe.
+Nonnezoshe means Rainbow Bridge. The Indians worship it, but as far as
+she can find out only a few have ever seen it. I imagine it'd be worth
+some trouble."
+
+"Maybe that's the bridge Venters talked about--the one overarching the
+entrance to Surprise Valley," Said Shefford.
+
+"It might be," replied the trader. "You've got a good chance of
+finding out. Nas Ta Bega is the man. You stick to that Indian.
+. . . Well, we start down here into this canyon, and we go down some,
+I reckon. In half an hour you'll see sago-lilies and Indian paint-
+brush and vermilion cactus."
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+About the middle of the afternoon the pack-train and its drivers
+arrived at the hidden Mormon village. Nas Ta Bega had not returned
+from his scout back along the trail.
+
+Shefford's sensibilities had all been overstrained, but he had left
+in him enthusiasm and appreciation that made the situation of this
+village a fairyland. It was a valley, a canyon floor, so long that
+he could not see the end, and perhaps a quarter of a mile wide. The
+air was hot, still, and sweetly odorous of unfamiliar flowers. Pinyon
+and cedar trees surrounded the little log and stone houses, and along
+the walls of the canyon stood sharp-pointed, dark-green spruce-trees.
+These walls were singular of shape and color. They were not imposing
+in height, but they waved like the long, undulating swell of a sea.
+Every foot of surface was perfectly smooth, and the long curved lines
+of darker tinge that streaked the red followed the rounded line of the
+slope at the top. Far above, yet overhanging, were great yellow crags
+and peaks, and between these, still higher, showed the pine-fringed
+slope of Navajo Mountain with snow in the sheltered places, and
+glistening streams, like silver threads, running down.
+
+All this Shefford noticed as he entered the valley from round a corner
+of wall. Upon nearer view he saw and heard a host of children, who,
+looking up to see the intruders, scattered like frightened quail. Long
+gray grass covered the ground, and here and there wide, smooth paths
+had been worn. A swift and murmuring brook ran through the middle of
+the valley, and its banks were bordered with flowers.
+
+Withers led the way to one side near the wall, where a clump of cedar-
+trees and a dark, swift spring boiling out of the rocks and banks of
+amber moss with purple blossoms made a beautiful camp site. Here
+the mustangs were unsaddled and turned loose without hobbles. It
+was certainly unlikely that they would leave such a spot. Some of
+the burros were unpacked, and the others Withers drove off into the
+village.
+
+"Sure's pretty nice," said Joe, wiping his sweaty face. "I'll never
+want to leave. It suits me to lie on this moss. . . . Take a drink of
+that spring."
+
+Shefford complied with alacrity and found the water cool and sweet,
+and he seemed to feel it all through him. Then he returned to the
+mossy bank. He did not reply to Joe. In fact, all his faculties were
+absorbed in watching and feeling, and he lay there long after Joe went
+off to the village. The murmur of water, the hum of bees, the songs
+of strange birds, the sweet, warm air, the dreamy summer somnolence
+of the valley--all these added drowsiness to Shefford's weary
+lassitude, and he fell asleep. When he awoke Nas Ta Bega was
+sitting near him and Joe was busy near a camp-fire.
+
+"Hello, Nas Ta Bega!" said Shefford. "Was there any one trailing us?"
+
+The Navajo nodded.
+
+Joe raised his head and with forceful brevity said, "Shadd."
+
+"Shadd!" echoed Shefford, remembering the dark, sinister face of his
+visitor that night in the Sagi. "Joe, is it serious--his trailing us?"
+
+"Well, I don't know how durn serious it is, but I'm scared to death,"
+replied Lake. "He and his gang will hold us up somewhere on the way
+home."
+
+Shefford regarded Joe with both concern and doubt. Joe's words were at
+variance with his looks.
+
+"Say, pard, can you shoot a rifle?" queried Joe.
+
+"Yes. I'm a fair shot at targets."
+
+The Mormon nodded his head as if pleased. "That's good. These outlaws
+are all poor shots with a rifle. So 'm I. But I can handle a six-
+shooter. I reckon we'll make Shadd sweat if he pushes us."
+
+Withers returned, driving the burros, all of which had been unpacked
+down to the saddles. Two gray-bearded men accompanied him. One of
+them appeared to be very old and venerable, and walked with a stick.
+The other had a sad-lined face and kind, mild blue eyes. Shefford
+observed that Lake seemed unusually respectful. Withers introduced
+these Mormons merely as Smith and Henninger. They were very cordial
+and pleasant in their greetings to Shefford. Presently another,
+somewhat younger, man joined the group, a stalwart, jovial fellow with
+ruddy face. There was certainly no mistaking his kindly welcome as
+he shook Shefford's hand. His name was Beal. The three stood round
+the camp-fire for a while, evidently glad of the presence of fellow-
+men and to hear news from the outside. Finally they went away, taking
+Joe with them. Withers took up the task of getting supper where Joe
+had been made to leave it.
+
+"Shefford, listen," he said, presently, as he knelt before the fire.
+"I told them right out that you'd been a Gentile clergyman--that you'd
+gone back on your religion. It impressed them and you've been well
+received. I'll tell the same thing over at Stonebridge. You'll get
+in right. Of course I don't expect they'll make a Mormon of you. But
+they'll try to. Meanwhile you can be square and friendly all the time
+you're trying to find your Fay Larkin. To-morrow you'll meet some of
+the women. They're good souls, but, like any women, crazy for news.
+Think what it is to be shut up in here between these walls!"
+
+"Withers, I'm intensely interested," replied Shefford, "and excited,
+too. Shall we stay here long?"
+
+"I'll stay a couple of days, then go to Stonebridge with Joe. He'll
+come back here, and when you both feel like leaving, and if Nas Ta
+Bega thinks it safe, you'll take a trail over to some Indian hogans
+and pack me out a load of skins and blankets. . . . My boy, you've all
+the time there is, and I wish you luck. This isn't a bad place to
+loaf. I always get sentimental over here. Maybe it's the women. Some
+of them are pretty, and one of them--Shefford, they call her the Sago
+Lily. Her first name is Mary, I'm told. Don't know her last name.
+She's lovely. And I'll bet you forget Fay Larkin in a flash. Only--
+be careful. You drop in here with rather peculiar credentials, so to
+speak--as my helper and as a man with no religion! You'll not only
+be fully trusted, but you'll be welcome to these lonely women. So be
+careful. Remember it's my secret belief they are sealed wives and are
+visited occasionally at night by their husbands. I don't know this,
+but I believe it. And you're not supposed to dream of that."
+
+"How many men in the village?" asked Shefford.
+
+"Three. You met them."
+
+"Have they wives?" asked Shefford, curiously.
+
+"Wives! Well, I guess. But only one each that I know of. Joe Lake is
+the only unmarried Mormon I've met."
+
+"And no men--strangers, cowboys, outlaws--ever come to this village?"
+
+"Except to Indians, it seems to be a secret so far," replied the trader,
+earnestly. "But it can't be kept secret. I've said that time after time
+over in Stonebridge. With Mormons it's 'sufficient unto the day is the
+evil thereof.'"
+
+"What'll happen when outsiders do learn and ride in here?"
+
+"There'll be trouble--maybe bloodshed. Mormon women are absolutely
+good, but they're human, and want and need a little life. And, strange
+to say, Mormon men are pig-headedly jealous. . . . Why, if some of the
+cowboys I knew in Durango would ride over here there'd simply be hell.
+But that's a long way, and probably this village will be deserted
+before news of it ever reaches Colorado. There's more danger of Shadd
+and his gang coming in. Shadd's half Piute. He must know of this
+place. And he's got some white outlaws in his gang. . . . Come on.
+Grub's ready, and I'm too hungry to talk."
+
+Later, when shadows began to gather in the valley and the lofty peaks
+above were gold in the sunset glow, Withers left camp to look after
+the straying mustangs, and Shefford strolled to and fro under the
+cedars. The lights and shades in the Sagi that first night had moved
+him to enthusiastic watchfulness, but here they were so weird and
+beautiful that he was enraptured. He actually saw great shafts of
+gold and shadows of purple streaming from the peaks down into the
+valley. It was day on the heights and twilight in the valley. The
+swiftly changing colors were like rainbows.
+
+While he strolled up and down several women came to the spring and
+filled their buckets. They wore shawls or hoods and their garments
+were somber, but, nevertheless, they appeared to have youth and
+comeliness. They saw him, looked at him curiously, and then, without
+speaking, went back on the well-trodden path. Presently down the path
+appeared a woman--a girl in lighter garb. It was almost white. She
+was shapely and walked with free, graceful step, reminding him of the
+Indian girl, Glen Naspa. This one wore a hood shaped like a huge
+sunbonnet and it concealed her face. She carried a bucket. When she
+reached the spring and went down the few stone steps Shefford saw that
+she did not have on shoes. As she braced herself to lift the bucket
+her bare foot clung to the mossy stone. It was a strong, sinewy,
+beautiful foot, instinct with youth. He was curious enough, he
+thought, but the awakening artist in him made him more so. She
+dragged at the full bucket and had difficulty in lifting it out of
+the hole. Shefford strode forward and took the bucket-handle from her.
+
+"Won't you let me help you?" he said, lifting the bucket. "Indeed--
+it's very heavy."
+
+"Oh--thank you," she said, without raising her head. Her voice seemed
+singularly young and sweet. He had not heard a voice like it. She
+moved down the path and he walked beside her. He felt embarrassed, yet
+more curious than ever; he wanted to say something, to turn and look
+at her, but he kept on for a dozen paces without making up his mind.
+
+Finally he said: "Do you really carry this heavy bucket? Why, it makes
+my arm ache."
+
+"Twice every day--morning and evening," she replied. "I'm very
+strong."
+
+Then he stole a look out of the corner of his eye, and, seeing that
+her face was hidden from him by the hood, he turned to observe her at
+better advantage. A long braid of hair hung down her back. In the
+twilight it gleamed dull gold. She came up to his shoulder. The
+sleeve nearest him was rolled up to her elbow, revealing a fine round
+arm. Her hand, like her foot, was brown, strong, and well shaped. It
+was a hand that had been developed by labor. She was full-bosomed, yet
+slender, and she walked with a free stride that made Shefford admire
+and wonder.
+
+They passed several of the little stone and log houses, and women
+greeted them as they went by and children peered shyly from the
+doors. He kept trying to think of something to say, and, failing in
+that, determined to have one good look under the hood before he left
+her.
+
+"You walk lame," she said, solicitously. "Let me carry the bucket
+now--please. My house is near."
+
+"Am I lame? . . . Guess so, a little," he replied. "It was a hard
+ride for me. But I'll carry the bucket just the same."
+
+They went on under some pinyon-trees, down a path to a little house
+identical with the others, except that it had a stone porch.
+Shefford smelled fragrant wood-smoke and saw a column curling from the
+low, flat, stone chimney. Then he set the bucket down on the porch.
+"Thank you, Mr. Shefford," she said. "You know my name?" he asked.
+"Yes. Mr. Withers spoke to my nearest neighbor and she told me."
+
+"Oh, I see. And you--"
+
+He did not go on and she did not reply. When she stepped upon the
+porch and turned he was able to see under the hood. The face there
+was in shadow, and for that very reason he answered to ungovernable
+impulse and took a step closer to her. Dark, grave, sad eyes looked
+down at him, and he felt as if he could never draw his own glance
+away. He seemed not to see the rest of her face, and yet felt that
+it was lovely. Then a downward movement of the hood hid from him the
+strange eyes and the shadowy loveliness.
+
+"I--I beg your pardon," he said, quickly, drawing back. "I'm rude.
+. . . Withers told me about a girl he called--he said looked like a
+sago-lily. That's no excuse to stare under your hood. But I--I was
+curious. I wondered if--"
+
+He hesitated, realizing how foolish his talk was. She stood a moment,
+probably watching him, but he could not be sure, for her face was
+hidden.
+
+"They call me that," she said. "But my name is Mary."
+
+"Mary--what?" he asked.
+
+"Just Mary," she said, simply. "Good night."
+
+He did not say good night and could not have told why. She took up
+the bucket and went into the dark house. Shefford hurried away into
+the gathering darkness.
+
+
+
+
+VI. IN THE HIDDEN VALLEY
+
+
+Shefford had hardly seen her face, yet he was more interested in a
+woman than he had ever been before. Still, he reflected, as he
+returned to camp, he had been under a long strain, he was unduly
+excited by this new and adventurous life, and these, with the mystery
+of this village, were perhaps accountable for a state of mind that
+could not last.
+
+He rolled in his blankets on the soft bed of moss and he saw the stars
+through the needle-like fringe of the pinyons. It seemed impossible to
+fall asleep. The two domed peaks split the sky, and back of them,
+looming dark and shadowy, rose the mountain. There was something cold,
+austere, and majestic in their lofty presence, and they made him feel
+alone, yet not alone. He raised himself to see the quiet forms of
+Withers and Nas Ta Bega prone in the starlight, and their slow, deep
+breathing was that of tired men. A bell on a mustang rang somewhere
+off in the valley and gave out a low, strange, reverberating echo from
+wall to wall. When it ceased a silence set in that was deader than any
+silence he had ever felt, but gradually he became aware of the low
+murmur of the brook. For the rest there was no sound of wind, no bark
+of dog or yelp of coyote, no sound of voice in the village.
+
+He tried to sleep, but instead thought of this girl who was called
+the Sago Lily. He recalled everything incident to their meeting and
+the walk to her home. Her swift, free step, her graceful poise, her
+shapely form--the long braid of hair, dull gold in the twilight, the
+beautiful bare foot and the strong round arm--these he thought of and
+recalled vividly. But of her face he had no idea except the shadowy,
+haunting loveliness, and that grew more and more difficult to remember.
+The tone of her voice and what she had said--how the one had thrilled
+him and the other mystified! It was her voice that had most attracted
+him. There was something in it besides music--what, he could not tell
+--sadness, depth, something like that in Nas Ta Bega's beauty springing
+from disuse. But this seemed absurd. Why should he imagine her voice
+one that had not been used as freely as any other woman's? She was
+a Mormon; very likely, almost surely, she was a sealed wife. His
+interest, too, was absurd, and he tried to throw it off, or imagine
+it one he might have felt in any other of these strange women of the
+hidden village.
+
+But Shefford's intelligence and his good sense, which became operative
+when he was fully roused and set the situation clearly before his
+eyes, had no effect upon his deeper, mystic, and primitive feelings.
+He saw the truth and he felt something that he could not name. He
+would not be a fool, but there was no harm in dreaming. And
+unquestionably, beyond all doubt, the dream and the romance that
+had lured him to the wilderness were here; hanging over him like the
+shadows of the great peaks. His heart swelled with emotion when he
+thought of how the black and incessant despair of the past was gone.
+So he embraced any attraction that made him forget and think and feel;
+some instinct stronger than intelligence bade him drift.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Joe's rolling voice awoke him next morning and he rose with a singular
+zest. When or where in his life had he awakened in such a beautiful
+place? Almost he understood why Venters and Bess had been haunted by
+memories of Surprise Valley. The morning was clear, cool, sweet; the
+peaks were dim and soft in rosy cloud; shafts of golden sunlight shot
+down into the purple shadows. Mocking-birds were singing. His body
+was sore and tired from the unaccustomed travel, but his heart was
+full, happy. His spirit wanted to run, and he knew there was something
+out there waiting to meet it. The Indian and the trader and the Mormon
+all meant more to him this morning. He had grown a little overnight.
+Nas Ta Bega's deep "Bi Nai" rang in his ears, and the smiles of Withers
+and Joe were greetings. He had friends; he had work; and there was
+rich, strange, and helpful life to live. There was even a difference
+in the mustang Nack-yal. He came readily; he did not look wild; he
+had a friendly eye; and Shefford liked him more.
+
+"What is there to do?" asked Shefford, feeling equal to a hundred
+tasks.
+
+"No work," replied the trader, with a laugh, and he drew Shefford aside,
+"I'm in no hurry. I like it here. And Joe never wants to leave. To-day
+you can meet the women. Make yourself popular. I've already made you
+that. These women are most all young and lonesome. Talk to them. Make
+them like you. Then some day you may be safe to ask questions. Last
+night I wanted to ask old Mother Smith if she ever heard the name Fay
+Larkin. But I thought better of it. If there's a girl here or at
+Stonebridge of that name we'll learn it. If there's mystery we'd better
+go slow. Mormons are hell on secret and mystery, and to pry into their
+affairs is to queer yourself. My advice is--just be as nice as you can
+be, and let things happen."
+
+Fay Larkin! All in a night Shefford had forgotten her. Why? He
+pondered over the matter, and then the old thrill, the old desire,
+came back.
+
+"Shefford, what do you think Nas Ta Bega said to me last night?" asked
+Withers in lower voice.
+
+"Haven't any idea," replied Shefford, curiously.
+
+"We were sitting beside the fire. I saw you walking under the cedars.
+You seemed thoughtful. That keen Indian watched you, and he said to
+me in Navajo, 'Bi Nai has lost his God. He has come far to find a
+wife. Nas Ta Bega is his brother.' . . . He meant he'll find both God
+and wife for you. I don't know about that, but I say take the Indian
+as he thinks he is--your brother. Long before I knew Nas Ta Bega well
+my wife used to tell me about him. He's a sage and a poet--the very
+spirit of this desert. He's worth cultivating for his own sake. But
+more--remember, if Fay Larkin is still shut in that valley the Navajo
+will find her for you."
+
+"I shall take Nas Ta Bega as my brother--and be proud," replied
+Shefford.
+
+"There's another thing. Do you intend to confide in Joe?"
+
+"I hadn't thought of that."
+
+"Well, it might be a good plan. But wait until you know him better
+and he knows you. He's ready to fight for you now. He's taken your
+trouble to heart. You wouldn't think Joe is deeply religious. Yet
+he is. He may never breathe a word about religion to you. . . . Now,
+Shefford, go ahead. You've struck a trail. It's rough, but it'll
+make a man of you. It'll lead somewhere."
+
+"I'm singularly fortunate--I--who had lost all friends. Withers, I am
+grateful. I'll prove it. I'll show--"
+
+Withers's upheld hand checked further speech, and Shefford realized
+that beneath the rough exterior of this desert trader there was fine
+feeling. These men of crude toil and wild surroundings were beginning
+to loom up large in Shefford's mind.
+
+The day began leisurely. The men were yet at breakfast when the women
+of the village began to come one by one to the spring. Joe Lake made
+friendly and joking remarks to each. And as each one passed on down
+the path he poised a biscuit in one hand and a cup of coffee in the
+other, and with his head cocked sidewise like an owl he said, "Reckon
+I've got to get me a woman like her."
+
+Shefford saw and heard, yet he was all the time half unconsciously
+watching with strange eagerness for a white figure to appear. At last
+he saw her--the same girl with the hood, the same swift step. A little
+shock or quiver passed over him, and at the moment all that was
+explicable about it was something associated with regret.
+
+Joe Lake whistled and stared.
+
+"I haven't met her," he muttered.
+
+"That's the Sago Lily," said Withers.
+
+"Reckon I'm going to carry that bucket," went on Joe.
+
+"And queer yourself with all the other women who've been to the spring?
+Don't do it, Joe," advised the trader.
+
+"But her bucket's bigger," protested Joe, weakly.
+
+"That's true. But you ought to know Mormons. If she'd come first, all
+right. As she didn't--why, don't single her out."
+
+Joe kept his seat. The girl came to the spring. A low "good morning"
+came from under the hood. Then she filled her bucket and started home.
+Shefford observed that this time she wore moccasins and she carried the
+heavy bucket with ease. When she disappeared he had again the vague,
+inexplicable sensation of regret.
+
+Joe Lake breathed heavily. "Reckon I've got to get me a woman like
+her," he said. But the former jocose tone was lacking and he appeared
+thoughtful.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Withers first took Shefford to the building used for a school. It was
+somewhat larger than the other houses, had only one room with two doors
+and several windows. It was full of children, of all sizes and ages,
+sitting on rude board benches.
+
+There were half a hundred of them, sturdy, healthy, rosy boys and
+girls, dad in home-made garments. The young woman teacher was as
+embarrassed as her pupils were shy, and the visitors withdrew without
+having heard a word of lessons.
+
+Withers then called upon Smith, Henninger, and Beal, and their wives.
+Shefford found himself cordially received, and what little he did say
+showed him how he would be listened to when he cared to talk. These
+folk were plain and kindly, and he found that there was nothing about
+them to dislike. The men appeared mild and quiet, and when not
+conversing seemed austere. The repose of the women was only on the
+surface; underneath he felt their intensity. Especially in many of the
+younger women, whom he met in the succeeding hour, did he feel this
+power of restrained emotion. This surprised him, as did also the fact
+that almost every one of them was attractive and some of them were
+exceedingly pretty. He became so interested in them all as a whole
+that he could not individualize one. They were as widely different in
+appearance and temperament as women of any other class, but it seemed
+to Shefford that one common trait united them--and it was a strange,
+checked yearning for something that he could not discover. Was it
+happiness? They certainly seemed to be happy, far more so than those
+millions of women who were chasing phantoms. Were they really sealed
+wives, as Withers believed, and was this unnatural wife-hood
+responsible for the strange intensity? At any rate he returned to camp
+with the conviction that he had stumbled upon a remarkable situation.
+
+He had been told the last names of only three women, and their husbands
+were in the village. The names of the others were Ruth, Rebecca,
+Joan--he could not recall them all. They were the mothers of these
+beautiful children. The fathers, as far as he was concerned, were as
+intangible as myths. Shefford was an educated clergyman, a man of the
+world, and, as such, knew women in his way. Mormons might be strange
+and different, yet the fundamental truth was that all over the world
+mothers of children were wives; there was a relation between wife and
+mother that did not need to be named to be felt; and he divined from
+this that, whatever the situation of these lonely and hidden women,
+they knew themselves to be wives. Shefford absolutely satisfied
+himself on that score. If they were miserable they certainly did not
+show it, and the question came to him how just was the criticism of
+uninformed men? His judgment of Mormons had been established by what
+he had heard and read, rather than what he knew. He wanted now to have
+an open mind. He had studied the totemism and exogamy of the primitive
+races, and here was his opportunity to understand polygamy. One wife
+for one man--that was the law. Mormons broke it openly; Gentiles broke
+it secretly. Mormons acknowledged all their wives and protected their
+children; Gentiles acknowledged one wife only. Unquestionably the
+Mormons were wrong, but were not the Gentiles still more wrong?
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+The following day Joe Lake appeared reluctant to start for Stonebridge
+with Withers.
+
+"Joe, you'd better come along," said the trader, dryly. "I reckon
+you've seen a little too much of the Sago Lily."
+
+Lake offered no reply, but it was evident from his sober face that
+Withers had not hit short of the mark. Withers rode off, with a
+parting word to Shefford, and finally Joe somberly mounted his bay
+and trotted down the valley. As Nas Ta Bega had gone off somewhere
+to visit Indians, Shefford was left alone.
+
+He went into the village and made himself useful and agreeable. He
+made friends with the children and he talked to the women until he was
+hoarse. Their ignorance of the world was a spur to him, and never in
+his life had he had such an attentive audience. And as he showed no
+curiosity, asked no difficult questions, gradually what reserve he had
+noted wore away, and the end of the day saw him on a footing with them
+that Withers had predicted.
+
+By the time several like days had passed it seemed from the interest
+and friendliness of these women that he might have lived long among
+them. He was possessed of wit and eloquence and information, which
+he freely gave, and not with selfish motive. He liked these women;
+he liked to see the somber shade pass from their faces, to see them
+brighten. He had met the girl Mary at the spring and along the path,
+but he had not yet seen her face. He was always looking for her,
+hoping to meet her, and confessed to himself that the best of the day
+for him were the morning and evening visits she made to the spring.
+Nevertheless, for some reason hard to divine, he was reluctant to seek
+her deliberately.
+
+Always while he had listened to her neighbors' talk, he had hoped they
+might let fall something about her. But they did not. He received an
+impression that she was not so intimate with the others as he had
+supposed. They all made one big family. Still, she seemed a little
+outside. He could bring no proofs to strengthen this idea. He merely
+felt it, and many of his feelings were independent of intelligent
+reason. Something had been added to curiosity, that was sure.
+
+It was his habit to call upon Mother Smith in the afternoons. From
+the first her talk to him hinted of a leaning toward thought of making
+him a Mormon. Her husband and the other men took up her cue and spoke
+of their religion, casually at first, but gradually opening their minds
+to free and simple discussion of their faith. Shefford lent respectful
+attention. He would rather have been a Mormon than an atheist, and
+apparently they considered him the latter, and were earnest to save
+his soul. Shefford knew that he could never be one any more than the
+other. He was just at sea. But he listened, and he found them simple
+in faith, blind, perhaps, but loyal and good. It was noteworthy that
+Mother Smith happened to be the only woman in the village who had
+ever mentioned religion to him. She was old, of a past generation;
+the young women belonged to the present. Shefford pondered the
+significant difference.
+
+Every day made more steadfast his impression of the great mystery that
+was like a twining shadow round these women, yet in the same time many
+little ideas shifted and many new characteristics became manifest.
+This last was of course the result of acquaintance; he was learning
+more about the villagers. He gathered from keen interpretation of
+subtle words and looks that here in this lonely village, the same as
+in all the rest of the world where women were together, there were
+cliques, quarrels, dislikes, loves, and jealousies. The truth, once
+known to him, made him feel natural and fortified his confidence
+to meet the demands of an increasingly interesting position. He
+discovered, with a somewhat grim amusement, that a clergyman's
+experience in a church full of women had not been entirely useless.
+
+One afternoon he let fall a careless remark that was a subtle question
+in regard to the girl Mary, whom Withers called the Sago Lily. In
+response he received an answer couched in the sweet poisoned honey
+of woman's jealousy. He said no more. Certain ideas of his were
+strengthened, and straightway he became thoughtful.
+
+That afternoon late, as he did his camp chores, he watched for her.
+But she did not come. Then he decided to go to see her. But even
+the decision and the strange thrill it imparted did not change his
+reluctance.
+
+Twilight was darkening the valley when he reached her house, and the
+shadows were thick under the pinyons. There was no light in the door
+or window. He saw a white shape on the porch, and as he came down the
+path it rose. It was the girl Mary, and she appeared startled.
+
+"Good evening," he said. "It's Shefford. May I stay and talk a little
+while?"
+
+She was silent for so long that he began to feel awkward.
+
+"I'd be glad to have you," she replied, finally.
+
+There was a bench on the porch, but he preferred to sit upon a blanket
+on the step.
+
+"I've been getting acquainted with everybody--except you," he went on.
+
+"I have been here," she replied.
+
+That might have been a woman's speech, but it certainly had been made
+in a girl's voice. She was neither shy nor embarrassed nor self-
+conscious. As she stood back from him he could not see her face in
+the dense twilight.
+
+"I've been wanting to call on you."
+
+She made some slight movement. Shefford felt a strange calm, yet he
+knew the moment was big and potent.
+
+"Won't you sit here?" he asked.
+
+She complied with his wish, and then he saw her face, though dimly, in
+the twilight. And it struck him mute. But he had no glimpse such as
+had flashed upon him from under her hood that other night. He thought
+of a white flower in shadow, and received his first impression of the
+rare and perfect lily Withers had said graced the wild canyon. She
+was only a girl. She sat very still, looking straight before her, and
+seemed to be waiting, listening. Shefford saw the quick rise and fall
+of her bosom.
+
+"I want to talk," he began, swiftly, hoping to put her at her ease.
+"Every one here has been good to me and I've talked--oh, for hours and
+hours. But the thing in my mind I haven't spoken of. I've never asked
+any questions. That makes my part so strange. I want to tell why I
+came out here. I need some one who will keep my secret, and perhaps
+help me. . . . Would you?"
+
+"Yes, if I could," she replied.
+
+"You see I've got to trust you, or one of these other women. You're
+all Mormons. I don't mean that's anything against you. I believe
+you're all good and noble. But the fact makes--well, makes a liberty
+of speech impossible. What can I do?"
+
+Her silence probably meant that she did not know. Shefford sensed
+less strain in her and more excitement. He believed he was on the
+right track and did not regret his impulse. Even had he regretted
+it he would have gone on, for opposed to caution and intelligence
+was his driving mystic force.
+
+Then he told her the truth about his boyhood, his ambition to be an
+artist, his renunciation to his father's hope, his career as a
+clergyman, his failure in religion, and the disgrace that had made
+him a wanderer.
+
+"Oh--I'm sorry!" she said. The faint starlight shone on her face,
+in her eyes, and if he ever saw beauty and soul he saw them then.
+She seemed deeply moved. She had forgotten herself. She betrayed
+girlhood then--all the quick sympathy, the wonder, the sweetness of
+a heart innocent and untutored. She looked at him with great, starry,
+questioning eyes, as if they had just become aware of his presence,
+as if a man had been strange to her.
+
+"Thank you. It's good of you to be sorry," he said. "My instinct
+guided me right. Perhaps you'll be my friend."
+
+"I will be--if I can," she said.
+
+"But CAN you be?"
+
+"I don't know. I never had a friend. I . . . But, sir, I mustn't talk
+of myself. . . . Oh, I'm afraid I can't help you."
+
+How strange the pathos of her voice! Almost he believed she was in
+need of help or sympathy or love. But he could not wholly trust a
+judgment formed from observation of a class different from hers.
+
+"Maybe you CAN help me. Let's see," he said. "I don't seek to make
+you talk of yourself. But--you're a human being--a girl--almost a
+woman. You're not dumb. But even a nun can talk."
+
+"A nun? What is that?"
+
+"Well--a nun is a sister of mercy--a woman consecrated to God--who has
+renounced the world. In some ways you Mormon women here resemble nuns.
+It is sacrifice that nails you in this lonely valley. . . . You
+see--how I talk! One word, one thought brings another, and I speak
+what perhaps should be unsaid. And it's hard, because I feel I could
+unburden myself to you."
+
+"Tell me what you want," she said.
+
+Shefford hesitated, and became aware of the rapid pound of his heart.
+More than anything he wanted to be fair to this girl. He saw that she
+was warming to his influence. Her shadowy eyes were fixed upon him.
+The starlight, growing brighter, shone on her golden hair and white
+face.
+
+"I'll tell you presently," he said. "I've trusted you. I'll trust
+you with all. . . . But let me have my own time. This is so strange
+a thing, my wanting to confide in you. It's selfish, perhaps. I have
+my own ax to grind. I hope I won't wrong you. That's why I'm going
+to be perfectly frank. I might wait for days to get better acquainted.
+But the impulse is on me. I've been so interested in all you Mormon
+women. The fact--the meaning of this hidden village is so--so terrible
+to me. But that's none of my business. I have spent my afternoons and
+evenings with these women at the different cottages. You do not mingle
+with them. They are lonely, but have not such loneliness as yours.
+I have passed here every night. No light--no sound. I can't help
+thinking. Don't censure me or be afraid or draw within yourself just
+because I must think. I may be all wrong. But I'm curious. I wonder
+about you. Who are you? Mary--Mary what? Maybe I really don't want
+to know. I came with selfish motive and now I'd like to--to--what
+shall I say? Make your life a little less lonely for the while I'm
+here. That's all. It needn't offend. And if you accept it, how much
+easier I can tell you my secret. You are a Mormon and I--well, I am
+only a wanderer in these wilds. But--we might help each other. . . .
+Have I made a mistake?"
+
+"No--no," she cried, almost wildly.
+
+"We can be friends then. You will trust me, help me?"
+
+"Yes, if I dare."
+
+"Surely you may dare what the other women would?"
+
+She was silent.
+
+And the wistfulness of her silence touched him. He felt contrition.
+He did not stop to analyze his own emotions, but he had an inkling
+that once this strange situation was ended he would have food for
+reflection. What struck him most now was the girl's blanched face,
+the strong, nervous clasp of her hands, the visible tumult of her
+bosom. Excitement alone could not be accountable for this. He had
+not divined the cause for such agitation. He was puzzled, troubled,
+and drawn irresistibly. He had not said what he had planned to say.
+The moment had given birth to his speech, and it had flowed. What
+was guiding him?
+
+"Mary," he said, earnestly, "tell me--have you mother, father, sister,
+brother? Something prompts me to ask that."
+
+"All dead--gone--years ago," she answered.
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+"Eighteen, I think. I'm not sure."
+
+"You ARE lonely."
+
+His words were gentle and divining.
+
+"O God!" she cried. "Lonely!"
+
+Then as a man in a dream he beheld her weeping. There was in her the
+unconsciousness of a child and the passion of a woman. He gazed out
+into the dark shadows and up at the white stars, and then at the bowed
+head with its mass of glinting hair. But her agitation was no longer
+strange to him. A few gentle and kind words had proved her undoing.
+He knew then that whatever her life was, no kindness or sympathy
+entered it. Presently she recovered, and sat as before, only whiter
+of face it seemed, and with something tragic in her dark eyes. She
+was growing cold and still again, aloof, more like those other Mormon
+women.
+
+"I understand," he said. "I'm not sorry I spoke. I felt your trouble,
+whatever it is. . . . Do not retreat into your cold shell, I beg of
+you. . . . Let me trust you with my secret."
+
+He saw her shake out of the cold apathy. She wavered. He felt an
+inexplicable sweetness in the power his voice seemed to have upon her.
+She bowed her head in acquiescence. And Shefford began his story. Did
+she grow still, like stone, or was that only his vivid imagination? He
+told her of Venters and Bess--of Lassiter and Jane--of little Fay
+Larkin--of the romance, and then the tragedy of Surprise Valley.
+
+"So, when my Church disowned me," he concluded, "I conceived the idea
+of wandering into the wilds of Utah to save Fay Larkin from that canyon
+prison. It grew to be the best and strongest desire of my life. I
+think if I could save her that it would save me. I never loved any
+girl. I can't say that I love Fay Larkin. How could I when I've never
+seen her--when she's only a dream girl? But I believe if she were to
+become a reality--a flesh-and-blood girl--that I would love her."
+
+That was more than Shefford had ever confessed to any one, and it
+stirred him to his depths. Mary bent her head on her hands in
+strange, stonelike rigidity.
+
+"So here I am in the canyon country," he continued. "Withers tells me
+it is a country of rainbows, both in the evanescent air and in the
+changeless stone. Always as a boy there had been for me some haunting
+promise, some treasure at the foot of the rainbow. I shall expect the
+curve of a rainbow to lead me down into Surprise Valley. A dreamer,
+you will call me. But I have had strange dreams come true. . . . Mary,
+do you think THIS dream will come true?"
+
+She was silent so long that he repeated his question.
+
+"Only--in heaven," she whispered.
+
+He took her reply strangely and a chill crept over him.
+
+"You think my plan to seek to strive, to find--you think that idle,
+vain?"
+
+"I think it noble. . . . Thank God I've met a man like you!"
+
+"Don't praise me!" he exclaimed, hastily. "Only help me. . . . Mary,
+will you answer a few little questions, if I swear by my honor I'll
+never reveal what you tell me?"
+
+"I'll try."
+
+He moistened his lips. Why did she seem so strange, so far away? The
+hovering shadows made him nervous. Always he had been afraid of the
+dark. His mood now admitted of unreal fancies.
+
+"Have you ever heard of Fay Larkin?" he asked, very low.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Was there only one Fay Larkin?"
+
+"Only one."
+
+"Did you--ever see her?"
+
+"Yes," came the faint reply.
+
+He was grateful. How she might be breaking faith with creed or duty!
+He had not dared to hope so much. All his inner being trembled at the
+portent of his next query. He had not dreamed it would be so hard to
+put, or would affect him so powerfully. A warmth, a glow, a happiness
+pervaded his spirit; and the chill, the gloom were as if they had never
+been.
+
+"Where is Fay Larkin now?" he asked, huskily.
+
+He bent over her, touched her, leaned close to catch her whisper.
+
+"She is--dead!"
+
+Slowly Shefford rose, with a sickening shock, and then in bitter pain
+he strode away into the starlight.
+
+
+
+
+VII. SAGO-LILIES
+
+
+The Indian returned to camp that night, and early the next day, which
+was Sunday, Withers rode in, accompanied by a stout, gray-bearded
+personage wearing a long black coat.
+
+"Bishop Kane, this is my new man, John Shefford," said the trader.
+
+Shefford acknowledged the introduction with the respectful courtesy
+evidently in order, and found himself being studied intently by clear
+blue eyes. The bishop appeared old, dry, and absorbed in thought; he
+spoke quaintly, using in every speech some Biblical word or phrase;
+and he had an air of authority. He asked Shefford to hear him preach
+at the morning service, and then he went off into the village.
+
+"Guess he liked your looks," remarked Withers.
+
+"He certainly sized me up," replied Shefford.
+
+"Well, what could you expect? Sure I never heard of a deal like this--
+a handsome young fellow left alone with a lot of pretty Mormon women!
+You'll understand when you learn to know Mormons. Bishop Kane's a
+square old chap. Crazy on religion, maybe, but otherwise he's a good
+fellow. I made the best stand I could for you. The Mormons over at
+Stonebridge were huffy because I hadn't consulted them before fetching
+you over here. If I had, of course you'd never have gotten here. It
+was Joe Lake who made it all right with them. Joe's well thought of,
+and he certainly stood up for you."
+
+"I owe him something, then," replied Shefford. "Hope my obligations
+don't grow beyond me. Did you leave Joe at Stonebridge?"
+
+"Yes. He wanted to stay, and I had work there that'll keep him awhile.
+Shefford, we got news of Shadd--bad news. The half-breed's cutting up
+rough. His gang shot up some Piutes over here across the line. Then
+he got run out of Durango a few weeks ago for murder. A posse of
+cowboys trailed him. But he slipped them. He's a fox. You know he
+was trailing us here. He left the trail, Nas Ta Bega said. I learned
+at Stonebridge that Shadd is well disposed toward Mormons. It takes
+the Mormons to handle Indians. Shadd knows of this village and that's
+why he shunted off our trail. But he might hang down in the pass and
+wait for us. I think I'd better go back to Kayenta alone, across
+country. You stay here till Joe and the Indian think it safe to leave.
+You'll be going up on the slope of Navajo to load a pack-train, and
+from there it may be well to go down West Canyon to Red Lake, and home
+over the divide, the way you came. Joe'll decide what's best. And
+you might as well buckle on a gun and get used to it. Sooner or later
+you'll have to shoot your way through."
+
+Shefford did not respond with his usual enthusiasm, and the omission
+caused the trader to scrutinize him closely.
+
+"What's the matter?" he queried. "There's no light in your eye to-day.
+You look a little shady."
+
+"I didn't rest well last night," replied Shefford. "I'm depressed this
+morning. But I'll cheer up directly."
+
+"Did you get along with the women?"
+
+"Very well indeed. And I've enjoyed myself. It's a strange, beautiful
+place."
+
+"Do you like the women?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Have you seen much of the Sago Lily?"
+
+"No. I carried her bucket one night--and saw her only once again.
+I've been with the other women most of the time."
+
+"It's just as well you didn't run often into Mary. Joe's sick over
+her. I never saw a girl with a face and form to equal hers. There's
+danger here for any man, Shefford. Even for you who think you've
+turned your back on the world! Any of these Mormon women may fall in
+love with you. They CAN'T love their husbands. That's how I figure
+it. Religion holds them, not love. And the peculiar thing is this:
+they're second, third, or fourth wives, all sealed. That means their
+husbands are old, have picked them out for youth and physical charms,
+have chosen the very opposite to their first wives, and then have hidden
+them here in this lonely hole. . . . Did you ever imagine so terrible
+a thing?"
+
+"No, Withers, I did not."
+
+"Maybe that's what depressed you. Anyway, my hunch is worth taking.
+Be as nice as you can, Shefford. Lord knows it would be good for these
+poor women if every last one of them fell in love with you. That won't
+hurt them so long as you keep your head. Savvy? Perhaps I seem rough
+and coarse to a man of your class. Well, that may be. But human
+nature is human nature. And in this strange and beautiful place
+you might love an Indian girl, let alone the Sago Lily. That's all.
+I sure feel better with that load off my conscience. Hope I don't
+offend."
+
+"No indeed. I thank you, Withers," replied Shefford, with his hand
+on the trader's shoulder. "You are right to caution me. I seem to
+be wild--thirsting for adventure--chasing a gleam. In these unstable
+days I can't answer for my heart. But I can for my honor. These
+unfortunate women are as safe with me as--as they are with you and
+Joe."
+
+Withers uttered a blunt laugh.
+
+"See here, son, look things square in the eye. Men of violent, lonely,
+toilsome lives store up hunger for the love of woman. Love of a
+STRANGE woman, if you want to put it that way. It's nature. It seems
+all the beautiful young women in Utah are corralled in this valley.
+When I come over here I feel natural, but I'm not happy. I'd like to
+make love to--to that flower-faced girl. And I'm not ashamed to own
+it. I've told Molly, my wife, and she understands. As for Joe, it's
+much harder for him. Joe never has had a wife or sweetheart. I tell
+you he's sick, and if I'd stay here a month I'd be sick."
+
+Withers had spoken with fire in his eyes, with grim humor on his lips,
+with uncompromising brutal truth. What he admitted was astounding to
+Shefford, but, once spoken, not at all strange. The trader was a man
+who spoke his inmost thought. And what he said suddenly focused
+Shefford's mental vision clear and whole upon the appalling
+significance of the tragedy of those women, especially of the girl
+whose life was lonelier, sadder, darker than that of the others.
+
+"Withers, trust me," replied Shefford.
+
+"All right. Make the best of a bad job," said the trader, and went off
+about his tasks.
+
+Shefford and Withers attended the morning service, which was held in
+the school-house. Exclusive of the children every inhabitant of the
+village was there. The women, except the few eldest, were dressed in
+white and looked exceedingly well. Manifestly they had bestowed care
+upon this Sabbath morning's toilet. One thing surely this dress
+occasion brought out, and it was evidence that the Mormon women were
+not poor, whatever their misfortunes might be. Jewelry was not
+wanting, nor fine lace. And they all wore beautiful wild flowers of a
+kind unknown to Shefford. He received many a bright smile. He looked
+for Mary, hoping to see her face for the first time in the daylight,
+but she sat far forward and did not turn. He saw her graceful white
+neck, the fine lines of her throat, and her colorless cheek. He
+recognized her, yet in the light she seemed a stranger.
+
+The service began with a short prayer and was followed by the singing
+of a hymn. Nowhere had Shefford heard better music or sweeter voices.
+How deeply they affected him! Had any man ever fallen into a stranger
+adventure than this? He had only to shut his eyes to believe it all a
+creation of his fancy--the square log cabin with its red mud between
+the chinks and a roof like an Indian hogan--the old bishop in his black
+coat, standing solemnly, his hand beating time to the tune--the few old
+women, dignified and stately--the many young women, fresh and handsome,
+lifting their voices.
+
+Shefford listened intently to the bishop's sermon. In some respects
+it was the best he had ever heard. In others it was impossible for an
+intelligent man to regard seriously. It was very long, lasting an hour
+and a half, and the parts that were helpful to Shefford came from the
+experience and wisdom of a man who had grown old in the desert. The
+physical things that had molded characters of iron, the obstacles that
+only strong, patient men could have overcome, the making of homes in a
+wilderness, showed the greatness of this alien band of Mormons.
+Shefford conceded greatness to them. But the strange religion--the
+narrowing down of the world to the soil of Utah, the intimations of
+prophets on earth who had direct converse with God, the austere self-
+conscious omnipotence of this old bishop--these were matters that
+Shefford felt he must understand better, and see more favorably, if
+he were not to consider them impossible.
+
+Immediately after the service, forgetting that his intention had been
+to get the long-waited-for look at Mary in the light of the sun,
+Shefford hurried back to camp and to a secluded spot among the cedars.
+Strikingly it had come to him that the fault he had found in Gentile
+religion he now found in the Mormon religion. An old question returned
+to haunt him--were all religions the same in blindness? As far as he
+could see, religion existed to uphold the founders of a Church, a
+creed. The Church of his own kind was a place where narrow men and
+women went to think of their own salvation. They did not go there
+to think of others. And now Shefford's keen mind saw something of
+Mormonism and found it wanting. Bishop Kane was a sincere, good,
+mistaken man. He believed what he preached, but that would not stand
+logic. He taught blindness and mostly it appeared to be directed at
+the women. Was there no religion divorced from power, no religion as
+good for one man as another, no religion in the spirit of brotherly
+love? Nas Ta Bega's "Bi Nai" (brother)--that was love, if not
+religion, and perhaps the one and the other were the same. Shefford
+kept in mind an intention to ask Nas Ta Bega what he thought of the
+Mormons.
+
+Later, when opportunity afforded, he did speak to the Indian. Nas Ta
+Bega threw away his cigarette and made an impressive gesture that
+conveyed as much sorrow as scorn.
+
+"The first Mormon said God spoke to him and told him to go to a
+certain place and dig. He went there and found the Book of Mormon.
+It said follow me, marry many wives, go into the desert and multiply,
+send your sons out into the world and bring us young women, many young
+women. And when the first Mormon became strong with many followers
+he said again: Give to me part of your labor--of your cattle and sheep
+--of your silver--that I may build me great cathedrals for you to
+worship in. And I will commune with God and make it right and good
+that you have more wives. That is Mormonism."
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, you mean the Mormons are a great and good people blindly
+following a leader?"
+
+"Yes. And the leader builds for himself--not for them."
+
+"That is not religion. He has no God but himself."
+
+"They have no God. They are blind like the Mokis who have the creeping
+growths on their eyes. They have no God they can see and hear and feel,
+who is with them day and night."
+
+It was late in the afternoon when Bishop Kane rode through the camp and
+halted on his way to speak to Shefford. He was kind and fatherly.
+"Young man, are you open to faith?" he questioned gravely.
+
+"I think I am," replied Shefford, thankful he could answer readily.
+
+"Then come into the fold. You are a lost sheep. 'Away on the desert
+I heard its cry.' . . . God bless you. Visit me when you ride to
+Stonebridge."
+
+He flicked his horse with a cedar branch and trotted away beside the
+trader, and presently the green-choked neck of the valley hid them
+from view. Shefford could not have said that he was glad to be left
+behind, and yet neither was he sorry.
+
+That Sabbath evening as he sat quietly with Nas Ta Bega, watching the
+sunset gilding the peaks, he was visited by three of the young Mormon
+women--Ruth, Joan, and Hester. They deliberately sought him and
+merrily led him off to the village and to the evening service of
+singing and prayer. Afterward he was surrounded and made much of. He
+had been popular before, but this was different. When he thoughtfully
+wended his way campward under the quiet stars he realized that the
+coming of Bishop Kane had made a subtle change in the women. That
+change was at first hard to define, but from every point by which he
+approached it he came to the same conclusion--the bishop had not
+objected to his presence in the village. The women became natural,
+free, and unrestrained. A dozen or twenty young and attractive
+women thrown much into companionship with one man. He might become
+a Mormon. The idea made him laugh. But upon reflection it was not
+funny; it sobered him. What a situation! He felt instinctively that
+he ought to fly from this hidden valley. But he could not have done
+it, even had he not been in the trader's employ. The thing was
+provokingly seductive. It was like an Arabian Nights' tale. What
+could these strange, fatally bound women do? Would any one of them
+become involved in sweet toils such as were possible to him? He was
+no fool. Already eyes had flashed and lips had smiled.
+
+A thousand like thoughts whirled through his mind. And when he had
+calmed down somewhat two things were not lost upon him--an intricate
+and fascinating situation, with no end to its possibilities, threatened
+and attracted him--and the certainty that, whatever change the bishop
+had inaugurated, it had made these poor women happier. The latter
+fact weighed more with Shefford than fears for himself. His word was
+given to Withers. He would have felt just the same without having
+bound himself. Still, in the light of the trader's blunt philosophy,
+and of his own assurance that he was no fool, Shefford felt it
+incumbent upon him to accept a belief that there were situations no
+man could resist without an anchor. The ingenuity of man could not
+have devised a stranger, a more enticing, a more overpoweringly fatal
+situation. Fatal in that it could not be left untried! Shefford gave
+in and clicked his teeth as he let himself go. And suddenly he thought
+of her whom these bitter women called the Sago Lily.
+
+The regret that had been his returned with thought of her. The saddest
+disillusion of his life, the keenest disappointment, the strangest
+pain, would always be associated with her. He had meant to see her
+face once, clear in the sunlight, so that he could always remember it,
+and then never go near her again. And now it came to him that if he
+did see much of her these other women would find him like the stone
+wall in the valley. Folly! Perhaps it was, but she would be safe,
+maybe happier. When he decided, it was certain that he trembled.
+
+Then he buried the memory of Fay Larkin.
+
+Next day Shefford threw himself with all the boy left in him into the
+work and play of the village. He helped the women and made games for
+the children. And he talked or listened. In the early evening he
+called on Ruth, chatted awhile, and went on to see Joan, and from her
+to another. When the valley became shrouded in darkness he went unseen
+down the path to Mary's lonely home.
+
+She was there, a white shadow against the black.
+
+When she replied to his greeting her voice seemed full, broken, eager
+to express something that would not come. She was happier to see him
+than she should have been, Shefford thought. He talked, swiftly,
+eloquently, about whatever he believed would interest her. He stayed
+long, and finally left, not having seen her face except in pale
+starlight and shadow; and the strong clasp of her hand remained with
+him as he went away under the pinyons.
+
+Days passed swiftly. Joe Lake did not return. The Indian rode in and
+out of camp, watered and guarded the pack-burros and the mustangs.
+Shefford grew strong and active. He made gardens for the women; he cut
+cords of fire-wood; he dammed the brook and made an irrigation ditch;
+he learned to love these fatherless children, and they loved him.
+
+In the afternoons there was leisure for him and for the women. He had
+no favorites, and let the occasion decide what he should do and with
+whom he should be. They had little parties at the cottages and picnics
+under the cedars. He rode up and down the valley with Ruth, who could
+ride a horse as no other girl he had ever seen. He climbed with
+Hester. He walked with Joan. Mostly he contrived to include several
+at once in the little excursions, though it was not rare for him to be
+out alone with one.
+
+It was not a game he was playing. More and more, as he learned to know
+these young women, he liked them better, he pitied them, he was good
+for them. It shamed him, hurt him, somehow, to see how they tried to
+forget something when they were with him. Not improbably a little of
+it was coquetry, as natural as a laugh to any pretty woman. But that
+was not what hurt him. It was to see Ruth or Rebecca, as the case
+might be, full of life and fun, thoroughly enjoying some jest or play,
+all of a sudden be strangely recalled from the wholesome pleasure of
+a girl to become a deep and somber woman. The crimes in the name of
+religion! How he thought of the blood and the ruin laid at the door
+of religion! He wondered if that were so with Nas Ta Bega's religion,
+and he meant to find out some day. The women he liked best he imagined
+the least religious, and they made less effort to attract him.
+
+Every night in the dark he went to Mary's home and sat with her on the
+porch. He never went inside. For all he knew, his visits were unknown
+to her neighbors. Still, it did not matter to him if they found out.
+To her he could talk as he had never talked to any one. She liberated
+all his thought and fancy. He filled her mind.
+
+As there had been a change in the other women, so was there in Mary;
+however, it had no relation to the bishop's visit. The time came when
+Shefford could not but see that she lived and dragged through the long
+day for the sake of those few hours in the shadow of the stars with
+him. She seldom spoke. She listened. Wonderful to him--sometimes
+she laughed--and it seemed the sound was a ghost of childhood pleasure.
+When he stopped to consider that she might fall in love with him he
+drove the thought from him. When he realized that his folly had become
+sweet and that the sweetness imperiously drew him, he likewise cast
+off that thought. The present was enough. And if he had any treasures
+of mind and heart he gave them to her.
+
+She never asked him to stay, but she showed that she wanted him to.
+That made it hard to go. Still, he never stayed late. The moment
+of parting was like a break. Her good-by was sweet, low music; it
+lingered on his ear; it bade him come to-morrow night; and it sent
+him away into the valley to walk under the stars, a man fighting
+against himself.
+
+One night at parting, as he tried to see her face in the wan glow of
+a clouded moon, he said:
+
+"I've been trying to find a sago-lily."
+
+"Have you never seen one?" she asked.
+
+"No." He meant to say something with a double meaning, in reference
+to her face and the name of the flower, but her unconsciousness made
+him hold his tongue. She was wholly unlike the other women.
+
+"I'll show you where the lilies grow," she said.
+
+"When?"
+
+"To-morrow. Early in the afternoon I'll come to the spring. Then I'll
+take you."
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Next morning Joe Lake returned and imparted news that was perturbing
+to Shefford. Reports of Shadd had come in to Stonebridge from
+different Indian villages; Joe was not inclined to linger long at the
+camp, and favored taking the trail with the pack-train.
+
+Shefford discovered that he did not want to leave the valley, and the
+knowledge made him reflective. That morning he did not go into the
+village, and stayed in camp alone. A depression weighed upon him.
+It was dispelled, however, early in the afternoon by the sight of a
+slender figure in white swiftly coming down the path to the spring.
+He had an appointment with Mary to go to see the sago lilies;
+everything else slipped his mind.
+
+Mary wore the long black hood that effectually concealed her face. It
+made of her a woman, a Mormon woman, and strangely belied the lithe
+form and the braid of gold hair.
+
+"Good day," she said, putting down her bucket. "Do you still want to
+go--to see the lilies?"
+
+"Yes," replied Shefford, with a short laugh.
+
+"Can you climb?"
+
+"I'll go where you go."
+
+Then she set off under the cedars and Shefford stalked at her side.
+He was aware that Nas Ta Bega watched them walk away. This day, so
+far, at least, Shefford did not feel talkative; and Mary had always
+been one who mostly listened. They came at length to a place where
+the wall rose in low, smooth swells, not steep, but certainly at an
+angle Shefford would not of his own accord have attempted to scale.
+
+Light, quick, and sure as a mountain-sheep Mary went up the first
+swell to an offset above. Shefford, in amaze and admiration, watched
+the little moccasins as they flashed and held on to the smooth rock.
+
+When he essayed to follow her he slipped and came to grief. A second
+attempt resulted in like failure. Then he backed away from the wall,
+to run forward fast and up the slope, only to slip, halfway up, and
+fall again.
+
+He made light of the incident, but she was solicitous. When he assured
+her he was unhurt she said he had agreed to go where she went.
+
+"But I'm not a--a bird," he protested.
+
+"Take off your boots. Then you can climb. When we get over the wall
+it'll be easy," she said.
+
+In his stocking-feet he had no great difficulty walking up the first
+bulge of the walls. And from there she led him up the strange waves of
+wind-worn rock. He could not attend to anything save the red, polished
+rock under him, and so saw little. The ascent was longer than he would
+have imagined, and steep enough to make him pant, but at last a huge
+round summit was reached,
+
+From here he saw down into the valley where the village lay. But for
+the lazy columns of blue smoke curling up from the pinyons the place
+would have seemed uninhabited. The wall on the other side was about
+level with the one upon which he stood. Beyond rose other walls and
+cliffs, up and up to the great towering peaks between which the green-
+and-black mountain loomed. Facing the other way, Shefford had only a
+restricted view. There were low crags and smooth stone ridges, between
+which were aisles green with cedar and pinyon. Shefford's companion
+headed toward one of these, and when he had followed her a few steps
+he could no longer see down into the valley. The Mormon village where
+she lived was as if it were lost, and when it vanished Shefford felt
+a difference. Scarcely had the thought passed when Mary removed the
+dark hood. Her small head glistened like gold in the sunlight.
+
+Shefford caught up with her and walked at her side, but could not
+bring himself at once deliberately to look at her. They entered a
+narrow, low-walled lane where cedars and pinyons grew thickly, their
+fragrance heavy in the warm air, and flowers began to show in the
+grassy patches.
+
+"This is Indian paint-brush," she said, pointing to little, low,
+scarlet flowers. A gray sage-bush with beautiful purple blossoms she
+called purple sage; another bush with yellow flowers she named buck-
+brush, and there were vermilion cacti and low, flat mounds of lavender
+daisies which she said had no name. A whole mossy bank was covered
+with lace like green leaves and tiny blossoms the color of violets,
+which she called loco.
+
+"Loco? Is this what makes the horses go crazy when they eat it?" he
+asked.
+
+"It is, indeed," she said, laughing.
+
+When she laughed it was impossible not to look at her. She walked a
+little in advance. Her white cheek and temple seemed framed in the
+gold of her hair. How white her skin! But it was like pearl, faintly
+veined and flushed. The profile, clear-cut and pure, appeared cold,
+almost stern. He knew now that she was singularly beautiful, though
+he had yet to see her full face.
+
+They walked on. Quite suddenly the lane opened out between two rounded
+bluffs, and Shefford looked down upon a grander and more awe-inspiring
+scene than ever he had viewed in his dreams.
+
+What appeared to be a green mountainside sloped endlessly down to a
+plain, and that rolled and billowed away to a boundless region of
+strangely carved rock. The greatness of the scene could not be grasped
+in a glance. The slope was long; the plain not as level as it seemed
+to be on first sight; here and there round, red rocks, isolated and
+strange, like lonely castles, rose out of the green. Beyond the green
+all the earth seemed naked, showing smooth, glistening bones. It
+was a formidable wall of rock that flung itself up in the distance,
+carved into a thousand canyon and walls and domes and peaks, and there
+was not a straight nor a broken nor a jagged line in all that wildness.
+The color low down was red, dark blue, and purple in the clefts, yellow
+upon the heights, and in the distance rainbow-hued. A land of curves
+and color!
+
+Shefford uttered an exclamation.
+
+"That's Utah," said Mary. "I come often to sit here. You see that
+winding blue line. There. . . . That's San Juan Canyon. And the other
+dark line, that's Escalante Canyon. They wind down into this great
+purple chasm--'way over here to the left--and that's the Grand Canyon.
+They say not even the Indians have been in there."
+
+Shefford had nothing to say. The moment was one of subtle and vital
+assimilation. Such places as this to be unknown to men! What
+strength, what wonder, what help, what glory, just to sit there an
+hour, slowly and appallingly to realize! Something came to Shefford
+from the distance, out of the purple canyon and from those dim, wind-
+worn peaks. He resolved to come here to this promontory again and
+again, alone and in humble spirit, and learn to know why he had been
+silenced, why peace pervaded his soul.
+
+It was with this emotion upon him that he turned to find his companion
+watching him. Then for the first time he saw her face fully, and was
+thrilled that chance had reserved the privilege for this moment. It
+was a girl's face he saw, flower-like, lovely and pure as a Madonna's,
+and strangely, tragically sad. The eyes were large, dark gray, the
+color of the sage. They were as clear as the air which made distant
+things close, and yet they seemed full of shadows, like a ruffled pool
+under midnight stars. They disturbed him. Her mouth had the sweet
+curves and redness of youth, but it showed bitterness, pain, and
+repression.
+
+"Where are the sago-lilies?" he asked, suddenly.
+
+"Farther down. It's too cold up here for them. Come," she said.
+
+He followed her down a winding trail--down and down till the green
+plain rose to blot out the scrawled wall of rock, down into a verdant
+canyon where a brook made swift music over stones, where the air was
+sultry and hot, laden with the fragrant breath of flower and leaf.
+This was a canyon of summer, and it bloomed.
+
+The girl bent and plucked something from the grass.
+
+"Here's a white lily," she said. "There are three colors. The yellow
+and pink ones are deeper down in the canyon."
+
+Shefford took the flower and regarded it with great interest. He
+had never seen such an exquisite thing. It had three large petals,
+curving cuplike, of a whiteness purer than new-fallen snow, and a
+heart of rich, warm gold. Its fragrance was so faint as to be almost
+indistinguishable, yet of a haunting, unforgettable sweetness. And
+even while he looked at it the petals drooped and their whiteness
+shaded and the gold paled. In a moment the flower was wilted.
+
+"I don't like to pluck the lilies," said Mary. "They die so swiftly."
+
+Shefford saw the white flowers everywhere in the open, sunny places
+along the brook. They swayed with stately grace in the slow, warm
+wind. They seemed like three-pointed stars shining out of the green.
+He bent over one with a particularly lofty stem, and after a close
+survey of it he rose to look at her face. His action was plainly one
+of comparison. She laughed and said it was foolish for the women to
+call her the Sago Lily. She had no coquetry; she spoke as she would
+have spoken of the stones at her feet; she did not know that she was
+beautiful. Shefford imagined there was some resemblance in her to the
+lily--the same whiteness, the same rich gold, and, more striking than
+either, a strange, rare quality of beauty, of life, intangible as
+something fleeting, the spirit that had swiftly faded from the plucked
+flower. Where had the girl been born--what had her life been?
+Shefford was intensely curious about her. She seemed as different
+from any other women he had known as this rare canyon lily was
+different from the tame flowers at home.
+
+On the return up the slope she outstripped him. She climbed lightly
+and tirelessly. When he reached her upon the promontory there was a
+stain of red in her cheeks and her expression had changed.
+
+"Let's go back up over the rocks," she said. "I've not climbed for--
+for so long."
+
+"I'll go where you go," he replied.
+
+Then she was off, and he followed. She took to the curves of the bare
+rocks and climbed. He sensed a spirit released in her. It was so
+strange, so keen, so wonderful to be with her, and when he did catch
+her he feared to speak lest he break this mood. Her eyes grew dark
+and daring, and often she stopped to look away across the wavy sea of
+stones to something beyond the great walls. When they got high the
+wind blew her hair loose and it flew out, a golden stream, with the
+sun bright upon it. He saw that she changed her direction, which
+had been in line with the two peaks, and now she climbed toward the
+heights. They came to a more difficult ascent, where the stone still
+held to the smooth curves, yet was marked by steep bulges and slants
+and crevices. Here she became a wild thing. She ran, she leaped,
+she would have left him far behind had he not called. Then she
+appeared to remember him and waited.
+
+Her face had now lost its whiteness; it was flushed, rosy, warm.
+
+"Where--did you--ever learn--to run over rocks--this way?" he panted.
+
+"All my life I've climbed," she said. "Ah! it's so good to be up on
+the walls again--to feel the wind--to see!"
+
+Thereafter he kept close to her, no matter what the effort. He would
+not miss a moment of her, if he could help it. She was wonderful. He
+imagined she must be like an Indian girl, or a savage who loved the
+lofty places and the silence. When she leaped she uttered a strange,
+low, sweet cry of wildness and exultation. Shefford guessed she was
+a girl freed from her prison, forgetting herself, living again youthful
+hours. Still she did not forget him. She waited for him at the bad
+places, lent him a strong hand, and sometimes let it stay long in his
+clasp. Tireless and agile, sure-footed as a goat, fleet and wild she
+leaped and climbed and ran until Shefford marveled at her. This
+adventure was indeed fulfilment of a dream. Perhaps she might lead
+him to the treasure at the foot of the rainbow. But that thought, sad
+with memory daring forth from its grave, was irrevocably linked with
+a girl who was dead. He could not remember her, in the presence of
+this wonderful creature who was as strange as she was beautiful. When
+Shefford reached for the brown hand stretched forth to help him in a
+leap, when he felt its strong clasp, the youth and vitality and life
+of it, he had the fear of a man who was running towards a precipice
+and who could not draw back. This was a climb, a lark, a wild race
+to the Mormon girl, bound now in the village, and by the very freedom
+of it she betrayed her bonds. To Shefford it was also a wild race,
+but toward one sure goal he dared not name.
+
+They went on, and at length, hand in hand, even where no steep step
+or wide fissure gave reason for the clasp. But she seemed unconscious.
+They were nearing the last height, a bare eminence, when she broke
+from him and ran up the smooth stone. When he surmounted it she was
+standing on the very summit, her arms wide, her full breast heaving,
+her slender body straight as an Indian's, her hair flying in the wind
+and blazing in the sun. She seemed to embrace the west, to reach for
+something afar, to offer herself to the wind and distance. Her face
+was scarlet from the exertion of the climb, and her broad brow was
+moist. Her eyes had the piercing light of an eagle's, though now
+they were dark. Shefford instinctively grasped the essence of this
+strange spirit, primitive and wild. She was not the woman who had
+met him at the spring. She had dropped some side of her with that
+Mormon hood, and now she stood totally strange.
+
+She belonged up here, he divined. She was a part of that wildness.
+She must have been born and brought up in loneliness, where the wind
+blew and the peaks loomed and silence held dominion. The sinking sun
+touched the rim of the distant wall, and as if in parting regret shone
+with renewed golden fire. And the girl was crowned as with a glory.
+
+Shefford loved her then. Realizing it, he thought he might have
+loved her before, but that did not matter when he was certain of
+it now. He trembled a little, fearfully, though without regret.
+Everything pertaining to his desert experience had been strange--
+this the strangest of all.
+
+The sun sank swiftly, and instantly there was a change in the golden
+light. Quickly it died out. The girl changed as swiftly. She seemed
+to remember herself, and sat down as if suddenly weary. Shefford went
+closer and seated himself beside her.
+
+"The sun has set. We must go," she said. But she made no movement.
+
+"Whenever you are ready," replied he.
+
+Just as the blaze had died out of her eyes, so the flush faded out of
+her face. The whiteness stole back, and with it the sadness. He had
+to bite his tongue to keep from telling her what he felt, to keep from
+pouring out a thousand questions. But the privilege of having seen
+her, of having been with her when she had forgotten herself--that he
+believed was enough. It had been wonderful; it had made him love her
+But it need not add to the tragedy of her life, whatever that was. He
+tried to eliminate himself. And he watched her.
+
+Her eyes were fixed upon the gold-rimmed ramparts of the distant wall
+in the west. Plain it was how she loved that wild upland. And there
+seemed to be some haunting memory of the past in her gaze--some happy
+part of life, agonizing to think of now.
+
+"We must go," she said, and rose.
+
+Shefford rose to accompany her. She looked at him, and her haunting
+eyes seemed to want him to know that he had helped her to forget the
+present, to remember girlhood, and that somehow she would always
+associate a wonderful happy afternoon with him. He divined that
+her silence then was a Mormon seal on lips.
+
+"Mary, this has been the happiest, the best, the most revealing day of
+my life," he said, simply.
+
+Swiftly, as if startled, she turned and faced down the slope. At the
+top of the wall above the village she put on the dark hood, and with
+it that somber something which was Mormon.
+
+Twilight had descended into the valley, and shadows were so thick
+Shefford had difficulty in finding Mary's bucket. He filled it at
+the spring, and made offer to carry it home for her, which she
+declined.
+
+"You'll come to-night--later?" she asked.
+
+"Yes," he replied, hurriedly promising. Then he watched her white form
+slowly glide down the path to disappear in the shadows.
+
+Nas Ta Bega and Joe were busy at the camp-fire. Shefford joined them.
+This night he was uncommunicative. Joe peered curiously at him in the
+flare of the blaze. Later, after the meal, when Shefford appeared
+restless and strode to and fro, Joe spoke up gruffly:
+
+"Better hang round camp to-night."
+
+Shefford heard, but did not heed. Nevertheless, the purport of the
+remark, which was either jealousy or admonition, haunted him with the
+possibility of its meaning.
+
+He walked away from the camp-fire, under the dark pinyons, out into
+the starry open; and every step was hard to take, unless it pointed
+toward the home of the girl whose beauty and sadness and mystery had
+bewitched him. After what seemed hours he took the well-known path
+toward her cabin, and then every step seemed lighter. He divined he
+was rushing to some fate--he knew not what.
+
+The porch was in shadow. He peered in vain for the white form against
+the dark background. In the silence he seemed to hear his heart-beats
+thick and muffled.
+
+Some distance down the path he heard the sound of hoofs. Withdrawing
+into the gloom of a cedar, he watched. Soon he made out moving horses
+with riders. They filed past him to the number of half a score. Like
+a flash of fire the truth burned him. Mormons come for one of those
+mysterious night visits to sealed wives!
+
+Shefford stalked far down the valley, into the lonely silence and the
+night shadows under the walls.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. THE HOGAN OF NAS TA BEGA
+
+
+The home of Nas Ta Bega lay far up the cedared slope, with the craggy
+yellow cliffs and the black canyon and the pine-fringed top of Navajo
+Mountain behind, and to the fore the vast, rolling descent of cedar
+groves and sage flats and sandy washes. No dim, dark range made bold
+outline along the horizon; the stretch of gray and purple and green
+extended to the blue line of sky.
+
+Down the length of one sage level Shefford saw a long lane where the
+brush and the grass had been beaten flat. This, the Navajo said,
+was a track where the young braves had raced their mustangs and had
+striven for supremacy before the eyes of maidens and the old people
+of the tribe.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, did you ever race here?" asked Shefford.
+
+"I am a chief by birth. But I was stolen from my home, and now I
+cannot ride well enough to race the braves of my tribe," the Indian
+replied, bitterly.
+
+In another place Joe Lake halted his horse and called Shefford's
+attention to a big yellow rock lying along the trail. And then he
+spoke in Navajo to the Indian.
+
+"I've heard of this stone--Isende Aha," said Joe, after Nas Ta Bega
+had spoken. "Get down, and let's see." Shefford dismounted, but the
+Indian kept his seat in the saddle.
+
+Joe placed a big hand on the stone and tried to move it. According
+to Shefford's eye measurement the stone was nearly oval, perhaps three
+feet high, by a little over two in width. Joe threw off his sombrero,
+took a deep breath, and, bending over, clasped the stone in his arms.
+He was an exceedingly heavy and powerful man, and it was plain to
+Shefford that he meant to lift the stone if that were possible. Joe's
+broad shoulders strained, flattened; his arms bulged, his joints
+cracked, his neck corded, and his face turned black. By gigantic
+effort he lifted the stone and moved it about six inches. Then as
+he released his hold he fell, and when he sat up his face was wet
+with sweat.
+
+"Try it," he said to Shefford, with his lazy smile. "See if you can
+heave it."
+
+Shefford was strong, and there had been a time when he took pride in
+his strength. Something in Joe's supreme effort and in the gloom of
+the Indian's eyes made Shefford curious about this stone. He bent over
+and grasped it as Joe had done. He braced himself and lifted with all
+his power, until a red blur obscured his sight and shooting stars
+seemed to explode in his head. But he could not even stir the stone.
+
+"Shefford, maybe you'll be able to heft it some day," observed Joe.
+Then he pointed to the stone and addressed Nas Ta Bega.
+
+The Indian shook his head and spoke for a moment.
+
+"This is the Isende Aha of the Navajos," explained Joe. "The young
+braves are always trying to carry this stone. As soon as one of them
+can carry it he is a man. He who carries it farthest is the biggest
+man. And just so soon as any Indian can no longer lift it he is old.
+Nas Ta Bega says the stone has been carried two miles in his lifetime.
+His own father carried it the length of six steps."
+
+"Well! It's plain to me that I am not a man," said Shefford, "or else
+I am old."
+
+Joe Lake drawled his lazy laugh and, mounting, rode up the trail. But
+Shefford lingered beside the Indian.
+
+"Bi Nai," said Nas Ta Bega, "I am a chief of my tribe, but I have
+never been a man. I never lifted that stone. See what the pale-
+face education has done for the Indian!"
+
+The Navajo's bitterness made Shefford thoughtful. Could greater injury
+be done to man than this--to rob him of his heritage of strength?
+
+Joe drove the bobbing pack-train of burros into the cedars where the
+smoke of the hogans curled upward, and soon the whistling of mustangs,
+the barking of dogs, the bleating of sheep, told of his reception.
+And presently Shefford was in the midst of an animated scene. Great,
+woolly, fierce dogs, like wolves, ran out to meet the visitors. Sheep
+and goats were everywhere, and little lambs scarcely able to walk,
+with others frisky and frolicsome. There were pure-white lambs, and
+some that appeared to be painted, and some so beautiful with their
+fleecy white all except black faces or ears or tails or feet. They
+ran right under Nack-yal's legs and bumped against Shefford, and kept
+bleating their thin-piped welcome. Under the cedars surrounding the
+several hogans were mustangs that took Shefford's eye. He saw an iron-
+gray with white mane and tail sweeping to the ground; and a fiery
+black, wilder than any other beast he had ever seen; and a pinto as
+wonderfully painted as the little lambs; and, most striking of all,
+a pure, cream-colored mustang with grace and fine lines and beautiful
+mane and tail, and, strange to see, eyes as blue as azure. This albino
+mustang came right up to Shefford, an action in singular contrast with
+that of the others, and showed a tame and friendly spirit toward him
+and Nack-yal. Indeed, Shefford had reason to feel ashamed of Nack-
+yal's temper or jealousy.
+
+The first Indians to put in an appearance were a flock of children,
+half naked, with tangled manes of raven-black hair and skin like gold
+bronze. They appeared bold and shy by turns. Then a little, sinewy
+man, old and beaten and gray, came out of the principal hogan. He wore
+a blanket round his bent shoulders. His name was Hosteen Doetin, and
+it meant gentle man. His fine, old, wrinkled face lighted with a smile
+of kindly interest. His squaw followed him, and she was as venerable
+as he. Shefford caught a glimpse of the shy, dark Glen Naspa, Nas
+Ta Bega's sister, but she did not come out. Other Indians appeared,
+coming from adjacent hogans.
+
+Nas Ta Bega turned the mustangs loose among those Shefford had
+noticed, and presently there rose a snorting, whistling, kicking,
+plunging melee. A cloud of dust hid them, and then a thudding of
+swift hoofs told of a run through the cedars. Joe Lake began
+picking over stacks of goat-skins and bags of wool that were piled
+against the hogan.
+
+"Reckon we'll have one grand job packing out this load," he growled.
+"It's not so heavy, but awkward to pack."
+
+It developed, presently, from talk with the old Navajo, that this pile
+was only a half of the load to be packed to Kayenta, and the other
+half was round the corner of the mountain in the camp of Piutes.
+Hosteen Doetin said he would send to the camp and have the Piutes
+bring their share over. The suggestion suited Joe, who wanted to
+save his burros as much as possible. Accordingly, a messenger was
+despatched to the Piute camp. And Shefford, with time on his hands
+and poignant memory to combat, decided to recall his keen interest in
+the Navajo, and learn, if possible, what the Indian's life was like.
+What would a day of his natural life be?
+
+In the gray of dawn, when the hush of the desert night still lay deep
+over the land, the Navajo stirred in his blanket and began to chant
+to the morning light. It began very soft and low, a strange, broken
+murmur, like the music of a brook, and as it swelled that weird and
+mournful tone was slowly lost in one of hope and joy. The Indian's
+soul was coming out of night, blackness, the sleep that resembled
+death, into the day, the light that was life.
+
+Then he stood in the door of his hogan, his blanket around him, and
+faced the east.
+
+Night was lifting out of the clefts and ravines; the rolling cedar
+ridges and the sage flats were softly gray, with thin veils like smoke
+mysteriously rising and vanishing; the colorless rocks were changing.
+A long, horizon-wide gleam of light, rosiest in the center, lay low
+down in the east and momentarily brightened. One by one the stars
+in the deep-blue sky paled and went out and the blue dome changed and
+lightened. Night had vanished on invisible wings and silence broke to
+the music of a mockingbird. The rose in the east deepened; a wisp of
+cloud turned gold; dim distant mountains showed dark against the red;
+and low down in a notch a rim of fire appeared. Over the soft ridges
+and valleys crept a wondrous transfiguration. It was as if every blade
+of grass, every leaf of sage, every twig of cedar, the flowers, the
+trees, the rocks came to life at sight of the sun. The red disk rose,
+and a golden fire burned over the glowing face of that lonely waste.
+
+The Navajo, dark, stately, inscrutable, faced the sun--his god. This
+was his Great Spirit. The desert was his mother, but the sun was his
+life. To the keeper of the winds and rains, to the master of light, to
+the maker of fire, to the giver of life the Navajo sent up his prayer:
+
+
+ Of all the good things of the Earth let me always have plenty.
+ Of all the beautiful things of the Earth let me always have plenty.
+ Peacefully let my horses go and peacefully let my sheep go.
+ God of the Heavens, give me many sheep and horses.
+ God of the Heavens, help me to talk straight.
+ Goddess of the Earth, my Mother, let me walk straight.
+ Now all is well, now all is well, now all is well, now all is well.
+
+
+Hope and faith were his.
+
+A chief would be born to save the vanishing tribe of Navajos. A bride
+would rise from a wind--kiss of the lilies in the moonlight.
+
+He drank from the clear, cold spring bubbling from under mossy rocks.
+He went into the cedars, and the tracks in the trails told him of the
+visitors of night. His mustangs whistled to him from the ridge-tops,
+standing clear with heads up and manes flying, and then trooped down
+through the sage. The shepherd-dogs, guardians of the flocks, barked
+him a welcome, and the sheep bleated and the lambs pattered round him.
+
+In the hogan by the warm, red fire his women baked his bread and cooked
+his meat. And he satisfied his hunger. Then he took choice meat to
+the hogan of a sick relative, and joined in the song and the dance and
+the prayer that drove away the evil spirit of illness. Down in the
+valley, in a sandy, sunny place, was his corn-field, and here he turned
+in the water from the ditch, and worked awhile, and went his contented
+way.
+
+He loved his people, his women, and his children. To his son he said:
+"Be bold and brave. Grow like the pine. Work and ride and play that
+you may be strong. Talk straight. Love your brother. Give half to
+your friend. Honor your mother that you may honor your wife. Pray
+and listen to your gods."
+
+Then with his gun and his mustang he climbed the slope of the mountain.
+He loved the solitude, but he was never alone. There were voices on
+the wind and steps on his trail. The lofty pine, the lichened rock,
+the tiny bluebell, the seared crag--all whispered their secrets. For
+him their spirits spoke. In the morning light Old Stone Face, the
+mountain, was a red god calling him to the chase. He was a brother
+of the eagle, at home on the heights where the winds swept and the
+earth lay revealed below.
+
+In the golden afternoon, with the warm sun on his back and the blue
+canyon at his feet, he knew the joy of doing nothing. He did not
+need rest, for he was never tired. The sage-sweet breath of the open
+was thick in his nostrils, the silence that had so many whisperings
+was all about him, the loneliness of the wild was his. His falcon
+eye saw mustang and sheep, the puff of dust down on the cedar level,
+the Indian riding on a distant ridge, the gray walls, and the blue
+clefts. Here was home, still free, still wild, still untainted. He
+saw with the eyes of his ancestors. He felt them around him. They
+had gone into the elements from which their voices came on the wind.
+They were the watchers on his trails.
+
+At sunset he faced the west, and this was his prayer:
+
+
+ Great Spirit, God of my Fathers,
+ Keep my horses in the night.
+ Keep my sheep in the night.
+ Keep my family in the night.
+ Let me wake to the day.
+ Let me be worthy of the light.
+ Now all is well, now all is well,
+ Now all is well, now all is well.
+
+
+And he watched the sun go down and the gold sink from the peaks and
+the red die out of the west and the gray shadows creep out of the
+canyon to meet the twilight and the slow, silent, mysterious approach
+of night with its gift of stars.
+
+Night fell. The white stars blinked. The wind sighed in the cedars.
+The sheep bleated. The shepherd-dogs bayed the mourning coyotes.
+And the Indian lay down in his blankets with his dark face tranquil
+in the starlight. All was well in his lonely world. Phantoms hovered,
+illness lingered, injury and pain and death were there, the shadow of
+a strange white hand flitted across the face of the moon--but now all
+was well--the Navajo had prayed to the god of his Fathers. Now all
+was well!
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+And this, thought Shefford in revolt, was what the white man had
+killed in the Indian tribes, was reaching out now to kill in this
+wild remnant of the Navajos. The padre, the trapper, the trader,
+the prospector, and the missionary--so the white man had come, some
+of him good, no doubt, but more of him evil; and the young brave
+learned a thirst that could never be quenched at the cold, sweet
+spring of his forefathers, and the young maiden burned with a fever
+in her blood, and lost the sweet, strange, wild fancies of her tribe.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Joe Lake came to Shefford and said, "Withers told me you had a mix-up
+with a missionary at Red Lake."
+
+"Yes, I regret to say," replied Shefford.
+
+"About Glen Naspa?"
+
+"Yes, Nas Ta Bega's sister."
+
+"Withers just mentioned it. Who was the missionary?"
+
+"Willetts, so Presbrey, the trader, said."
+
+"What'd he look like?"
+
+Shefford recalled the smooth, brown face, the dark eyes, the weak
+chin, the mild expression, and the soft, lax figure of the missionary.
+
+"Can't tell by what you said," went on Joe. "But I'll bet a peso to
+a horse-hair that's the fellow who's been here. Old Hosteen Doetin
+just told me. First visits he ever had from the priest with the long
+gown. That's what he called the missionary. These old fellows will
+never forget what's come down from father to son about the Spanish
+padres. Well, anyway, Willetts has been here twice after Glen Naspa.
+The old chap is impressed, but he doesn't want to let the girl go.
+I'm inclined to think Glen Naspa would as lief go as stay. She may
+be a Navajo, but she's a girl. She won't talk much."
+
+"Where's Nas Ta Bega?" asked Shefford.
+
+"He rode off somewhere yesterday. Perhaps to the Piute camp. These
+Indians are slow. They may take a week to pack that load over here.
+But if Nas Ta Bega or some one doesn't come with a message to-day I'll
+ride over there myself."
+
+"Joe, what do you think about this missionary?" queried Shefford,
+bluntly.
+
+"Reckon there's not much to think, unless you see him or find out
+something. I heard of Willetts before Withers spoke of him. He's
+friendly with Mormons. I understand he's worked for Mormon interests,
+someway or other. That's on the quiet. Savvy? This matter of him
+coming after Glen Naspa, reckon that's all right. The missionaries
+all go after the young people. What'd be the use to try to convert
+the old Indians? No, the missionary's work is to educate the Indian,
+and, of course, the younger he is the better."
+
+"You approve of the missionary?"
+
+"Shefford, if you understood a Mormon you wouldn't ask that. Did
+you ever read or hear of Jacob Hamblin? . . . Well, he was a Mormon
+missionary among the Navajos. The Navajos were as fierce as Apaches
+till Hamblin worked among them. He made them friendly to the white
+man."
+
+"That doesn't prove he made converts of them," replied Shefford, still
+bluntly.
+
+"No. For the matter of that, Hamblin let religion alone. He made
+presents, then traded with them, then taught them useful knowledge.
+Mormon or not, Shefford, I'll admit this: a good man, strong with his
+body, and learned in ways with his hands, with some knowledge of
+medicine, can better the condition of these Indians. But just as soon
+as he begins to preach his religion, then his influence wanes. That's
+natural. These heathen have their ideals, their gods."
+
+"Which the white man should leave them!" replied Shefford, feelingly.
+
+"That's a matter of opinion. But don't let's argue. . . . Willetts is
+after Glen Naspa. And if I know Indian girls he'll persuade her to go
+to his school."
+
+"Persuade her!" Then Shefford broke off and related the incident that
+had occurred at Red Lake.
+
+"Reckon any means justifies the end," replied Joe, imperturbably. "Let
+him talk love to her or rope her or beat her, so long as he makes a
+Christian of her."
+
+Shefford felt a hot flush and had difficulty in controlling himself.
+From this single point of view the Mormon was impossible to reason
+with.
+
+"That, too, is a matter of opinion. We won't discuss it," continued
+Shefford. "But--if old Hosteen Doetin objects to the girl leaving,
+and if Nas Ta Bega does the same, won't that end the matter?"
+
+"Reckon not. The end of the matter is Glen Naspa. If she wants to go
+she'll go."
+
+Shefford thought best to drop the discussion. For the first time he
+had occasion to be repelled by something in this kind and genial
+Mormon, and he wanted to forget it. Just as he had never talked about
+men to the sealed wives in the hidden valley, so he could not talk of
+women to Joe Lake.
+
+Nas Ta Bega did not return that day, but, next morning a messenger
+came calling Lake to the Piute camp. Shefford spent the morning high
+on the slope, learning more with every hour in the silence and
+loneliness, that he was stronger of soul than he had dared to hope,
+and that the added pain which had come to him could be borne.
+
+Upon his return toward camp, in the cedar grove, he caught sight of
+Glen Naspa with a white man. They did not see him. When Shefford
+recognized Willetts an embarrassment as well as an instinct made him
+halt and step into a bushy, low-branched cedar. It was not his
+intention to spy on them. He merely wanted to avoid a meeting. But
+the missionary's hand on the girl's arm, and her up-lifted head, her
+pretty face, strange, intent, troubled, struck Shefford with an unusual
+and irresistible curiosity. Willetts was talking earnestly; Glen Naspa
+was listening intently. Shefford watched long enough to see that the
+girl loved the missionary, and that he reciprocated or was pretending.
+His manner scarcely savored of pretense, Shefford concluded, as he
+slipped away under the trees.
+
+He did not go at once into camp. He felt troubled, and wished that he
+had not encountered the two. His duty in the matter, of course, was to
+tell Nas Ta Bega what he had seen. Upon reflection Shefford decided to
+give the missionary the benefit of a doubt; and if he really cared for
+the Indian girl, and admitted or betrayed it, to think all the better
+of him for the fact. Glen Naspa was certainly pretty enough, and
+probably lovable enough, to please any lonely man in this desert. The
+pain and the yearning in Shefford's heart made him lenient. He had to
+fight himself--not to forget, for that was impossible--but to keep
+rational and sane when a white flower-like face haunted him and a
+voice called.
+
+The cracking of hard hoofs on stones caused him to turn toward camp,
+and as he emerged from the cedar grove he saw three Indian horsemen
+ride into the cleared space before the hogans. They were superbly
+mounted and well armed, and impressed him as being different from
+Navajos. Perhaps they were Piutes. They dismounted and led the
+mustangs down to the pool below the spring. Shefford saw another
+mustang, standing bridle down and carrying a pack behind the saddle.
+Some squaws with children hanging behind their skirts were standing
+at the door of Hosteen Doetin's hogan. Shefford glanced in to see
+Glen Naspa, pale, quiet, almost sullen. Willetts stood with his hands
+spread. The old Navajo's seamed face worked convulsively as he
+tried to lift his bent form to some semblance of dignity, and his
+voice rolled out, sonorously: "Me no savvy Jesus Christ! Me hungry!
+. . . Me no eat Jesus Christ!"
+
+Shefford drew back as if he had received a blow. That had been Hosteen
+Doetin's reply to the importunities of the missionary. The old Navajo
+could work no longer. His sons were gone. His squaw was worn out. He
+had no one save Glen Naspa to help him. She was young, strong. He was
+hungry. What was the white man's religion to him?
+
+With long, swift stride Shefford entered the hogan. Willetts, seeing
+him, did not look so mild as Shefford had him pictured in memory, nor
+did he appear surprised. Shefford touched Hosteen Doetin's shoulder
+and said, "Tell me."
+
+The aged Navajo lifted a shaking hand.
+
+"Me no savvy Jesus Christ! Me hungry! . . . Me no eat Jesus Christ!"
+
+Shefford then made signs that indicated the missionary's intention to
+take the girl away. "Him come--big talk--Jesus--all Jesus. . . . Me
+no want Glen Naspa go," replied the Indian.
+
+Shefford turned to the missionary.
+
+"Willetts, is he a relative of the girl?"
+
+"There's some blood tie, I don't know what. But it's not close,"
+replied Willetts.
+
+"Then don't you think you'd better wait till Nas Ta Bega returns? He's
+her brother."
+
+"What for?" demanded Willetts. "That Indian may be gone a week. She's
+willing to accompany the missionary."
+
+Shefford looked at the girl.
+
+"Glen Naspa, do you want to go?"
+
+She was shy, ashamed, and silent, but manifestly willing to accompany
+the missionary. Shefford pondered a moment. How he hoped Nas Ta Bega
+would come back! It was thought of the Indian that made Shefford
+stubborn. What his stand ought to be was hard to define, unless he
+answered to impulse; and here in the wilds he had become imbued with
+the idea that his impulses and instincts were no longer false.
+
+"Willetts, what do you want with the girl?" queried Shefford, coolly,
+and at the question he seemed to find himself. He peered deliberately
+and searchingly into the other's face. The missionary's gaze shifted
+and a tinge of red crept up from under his collar.
+
+"Absurd thing to ask a missionary!" he burst out, impatiently.
+
+"Do you care for Glen Naspa?"
+
+"I care as God's disciple--who cares to save the soul of heathen," he
+replied, with the lofty tone of prayer.
+
+"Has Glen Naspa no--no other interest in you--except to be taught
+religion?"
+
+The missionary's face flamed, and his violent tremor showed that under
+his exterior there was a different man.
+
+"What right have you to question me?" he demanded. "You're an
+adventurer--an outcast. I've my duty here. I'm a missionary with
+Church and state and government behind me."
+
+"Yes, I'm an outcast," replied Shefford, bitterly. "And you may be
+all you say. But we're alone now out here on the desert. And this
+girl's brother is absent. You haven't answered me yet. . . . Is
+there anything between you and Glen Naspa except religion?"
+
+"No, you insulting beggar?"
+
+Shefford had forced the reply that he had expected and which damned
+the missionary beyond any consideration.
+
+"Willetts, you are a liar!" said Shefford, steadily.
+
+"And what are you?" cried Willetts, in shrill fury. "I've heard all
+about you. Heretic! Atheist! Driven from your Church! Hated and
+scorned for your blasphemy!"
+
+Then he gave way to ungovernable rage, and cursed Shefford as a
+religious fanatic might have cursed the most debased sinners.
+Shefford heard with the blood beating, strangling the pulse in his
+ears. Somehow this missionary had learned his secret--most likely
+from the Mormons in Stonebridge. And the terms of disgrace were
+coals of fire upon Shefford's head. Strangely, however, he did
+not bow to them, as had been his humble act in the past, when his
+calumniators had arraigned and flayed him. Passion burned in him
+now, for the first time in his life, made a tiger of him. And
+these raw emotions, new to him, were difficult to control.
+
+"You can't take the girl," he replied, when the other had ceased. "Not
+without her brother's consent."
+
+"I will take her!"
+
+Shefford threw him out of the hogan and strode after him. Willetts
+had stumbled. When he straightened up he was white and shaken. He
+groped for the bridle of his horse while keeping his eyes upon
+Shefford, and when he found it he whirled quickly, mounted, and rode
+off. Shefford saw him halt a moment under the cedars to speak with
+the three strange Indians, and then he galloped away. It came to
+Shefford then that he had been unconscious of the last strained moment
+of that encounter. He seemed all cold, tight, locked, and was amazed
+to find his hand on his gun. Verily the wild environment had liberated
+strange instincts and impulses, which he had answered. That he had no
+regrets proved how he had changed.
+
+Shefford heard the old woman scolding. Peering into the hogan, he
+saw Glen Naspa flounce sullenly down, for all the world like any
+other thwarted girl. Hosteen Doetin came out and pointed down the
+slope at the departing missionary.
+
+"Heap talk Jesus--all talk--all Jesus!" he exclaimed, contemptuously.
+Then he gave Shefford a hard rap on the chest. "Small talk--heap man!"
+
+The matter appeared to be adjusted for the present. But Shefford felt
+that he had made a bitter enemy, and perhaps a powerful one.
+
+He prepared and ate his supper alone that evening, for Joe Lake and
+Nas Ta Bega did not put in an appearance. He observed that the three
+strange Indians, whom he took for Piutes, kept to themselves, and, so
+far as he knew, had no intercourse with any one at the camp. This
+would not have seemed unusual, considering the taciturn habit of
+Indians, had he not remembered seeing Willetts speak to the trio.
+What had he to do with them? Shefford was considering the situation
+with vague doubts when, to his relief, the three strangers rode off
+into the twilight. Then he went to bed.
+
+He was awakened by violence. It was the gray hour before dawn. Dark
+forms knelt over him. A cloth pressed down hard over his mouth: Strong
+hands bound it while other strong hands held him. He could not cry
+out. He could not struggle. A heavy weight, evidently a man, held
+down his feet. Then he was rolled over, securely bound, and carried,
+to be thrown like a sack over the back of a horse.
+
+All this happened so swiftly as to be bewildering. He was too
+astounded to be frightened. As he hung head downward he saw the legs
+of a horse and a dim trail. A stirrup swung to and fro, hitting him
+in the face. He began to feel exceedingly uncomfortable, with a rush
+of blood to his head, and cramps in his arms and legs. This kept on
+and grew worse for what seemed a long time. Then the horse was stopped
+and a rude hand tumbled him to the ground. Again he was rolled over on
+his face. Strong fingers plucked at his clothes, and he believed he
+was being searched. His captors were as silent as if they had been
+dumb. He felt when they took his pocketbook and his knife and all that
+he had. Then they cut, tore, and stripped off all his clothing. He
+was lifted, carried a few steps, and dropped upon what seemed a soft,
+low mound, and left lying there, still tied and naked. Shefford heard
+the rustle of sage and the dull thud of hoofs as his assailants went
+away.
+
+His first sensation was one of immeasurable relief. He had not been
+murdered. Robbery was nothing. And though roughly handled, he had
+not been hurt. He associated the assault with the three strange
+visitors of the preceding day. Still, he had no proof of that. Not
+the slightest clue remained to help him ascertain who had attacked him.
+
+It might have been a short while or a long one, his mind was so filled
+with growing conjectures, but a time came when he felt cold. As he lay
+face down, only his back felt cold at first. He was grateful that he
+had not been thrown upon the rocks. The ground under him appeared
+soft, spongy, and gave somewhat as he breathed. He had really sunk
+down a little in this pile of soft earth. The day was not far off, as
+he could tell by the brightening of the gray. He began to suffer with
+the cold, and then slowly he seemed to freeze and grow numb. In an
+effort to roll over upon his back he discovered that his position, or
+his being bound, or the numbness of his muscles was responsible for
+the fact that he could not move. Here was a predicament. It began
+to look serious. What would a few hours of the powerful sun do to his
+uncovered skin? Somebody would trail and find him: still, he might
+not be found soon.
+
+He saw the sky lighten, turn rosy and then gold. The sun shone upon
+him, but some time elapsed before he felt its warmth. All of a sudden
+a pain, like a sting, shot through his shoulder. He could not see what
+caused it; probably a bee. Then he felt another upon his leg, and
+about simultaneously with it a tiny, fiery stab in his side. A
+sickening sensation pervaded his body, slowly moving, as if poison had
+entered the blood of his veins. Then a puncture, as from a hot wire,
+entered the skin of his breast. Unmistakably it was a bite. By dint
+of great effort he twisted his head to see a big red ant on his breast.
+Then he heard a faint sound, so exceedingly faint that he could not
+tell what it was like. But presently his strained ears detected a
+low, swift, rustling, creeping sound, like the slipping rattle of an
+infinite number of tiny bits of moving gravel. Then it was a sound
+like the seeping of wind-blown sand. Several hot bites occurred at
+once. And then with his head twisted he saw a red stream of ants
+pour out of the mound and spill over his quivering flesh.
+
+In an instant he realized his position. He had been dropped
+intentionally upon an ant-heap, which had sunk with his weight,
+wedging him between the crusts. At the mercy of those terrible desert
+ants! A frantic effort to roll out proved futile, as did another and
+another. His violent muscular contractions infuriated the ants, and in
+an instant he was writhing in pain so horrible and so unendurable that
+he nearly fainted. But he was too strong to faint suddenly. A bath
+of vitriol, a stripping of his skin and red embers of fire thrown upon
+raw flesh, could not have equaled this. There was fury in the bites
+and poison in the fangs of these ants. Was this an Indian's brutal
+trick or was it the missionary's revenge? Shefford realized that it
+would kill him soon. He sweat what seemed blood, although perhaps the
+blood came from the bites. A strange, hollow, buzzing roar filled his
+ears, and it must have been the pouring of the angry ants from their
+mound.
+
+Then followed a time that was hell--worse than fire, for fire would
+have given merciful death--agony under which his physical being began
+spasmodically to jerk and retch--and his eyeballs turned and his
+breast caved in.
+
+A cry rang through the roar in his ears. "Bi Nai! Bi Nai!"
+
+His fading sight seemed to shade round the dark face of Nas Ta Bega.
+
+Then powerful hands dragged him from the mound, through the grass
+and sage, rolled him over and over, and brushed his burning skin with
+strong, swift sweep.
+
+
+
+
+IX. IN THE DESERT CRUCIBLE
+
+
+That hard experience was but the beginning of many cruel trials for
+John Shefford.
+
+He never knew who his assailants were, nor their motive other than
+robbery; and they had gotten little, for they had not found the large
+sum of money sewed in the lining of his coat. Joe Lake declared it
+was Shadd's work, and the Mormon showed the stern nature that lay
+hidden under his mild manner. Nas Ta Bega shook his head and would
+not tell what he thought. But a somber fire burned in his eyes.
+
+The three started with a heavily laden pack-train and went down the
+mountain slope into West Canyon. The second day they were shot at from
+the rim of the walls. Lake was wounded, hindering the swift flight
+necessary to escape deeper into the canyon. Here they hid for days,
+while the Mormon recovered and the Indian took stealthy trips to try
+to locate the enemy. Lack of water and grass for the burros drove
+them on. They climbed out of a side canyon, losing several burros on
+a rough trail, and had proceeded to within half a day's journey of
+Red Lake when they were attacked while making camp in a cedar grove.
+Shefford sustained an exceedingly painful injury to his leg, but,
+fortunately, the bullet went through without breaking a bone. With
+that burning pain there came to Shefford the meaning of fight, and his
+rifle grew hot in his hands. Night alone saved the trio from certain
+fatality. Under the cover of darkness the Indian helped Shefford to
+escape. Joe Lake looked out for himself. The pack-train was lost,
+and the mustangs, except Nack-yal.
+
+Shefford learned what it meant to lie out at night, listening for
+pursuit, cold to his marrow, sick with dread, and enduring frightful
+pain from a ragged bullet-hole. Next day the Indian led him down into
+the red basin, where the sun shone hot and the sand reflected the
+heat. They had no water. A wind arose and the valley became a place
+of flying sand. Through a heavy, stifling pall Nas Ta Bega somehow
+got Shefford to the trading-post at Red Lake. Presbrey attended to
+Shefford's injury and made him comfortable. Next day Joe Lake limped
+in, surly and somber, with the news that Shadd and eight or ten of his
+outlaw gang had gotten away with the pack-train.
+
+In short time Shefford was able to ride, and with his companions went
+over the pass to Kayenta. Withers already knew of his loss, and all
+he said was that he hoped to meet Shadd some day.
+
+Shefford showed a reluctance to go again to the hidden village in the
+silent canyon with the rounded walls. The trader appeared surprised,
+but did not press the point. And Shefford meant sooner or later to
+tell him, yet never quite reached the point. The early summer brought
+more work for the little post, and Shefford toiled with the others.
+He liked the outdoor tasks, and at night was grateful that he was
+too tired to think. Then followed trips to Durango and Bluff and
+Monticello. He rode fifty miles a day for many days. He knew how a
+man fares who packs light and rides far and fast. When the Indian
+was with him he got along well, but Nas Ta Bega would not go near the
+towns. Thus many mishaps were Shefford's fortune.
+
+Many and many a mile he trailed his mustang, for Nack-yal never forgot
+the Sagi, and always headed for it when he broke his hobbles. Shefford
+accompanied an Indian teamster in to Durango with a wagon and four
+wild mustangs. Upon the return, with a heavy load of supplies,
+accident put Shefford in charge of the outfit. In despair he had to
+face the hardest task that could have been given him--to take care of
+a crippled Indian, catch, water, feed, harness, and drive four wild
+mustangs that did not know him and tried to kill him at every turn,
+and to get that precious load of supplies home to Kayenta. That he
+accomplished it proved to hint the possibilities of a man, for both
+endurance and patience. From that time he never gave up in the front
+of any duty.
+
+In the absence of an available Indian he rode to Durango and back in
+record time. Upon one occasion he was lost in a canyon for days, with
+no food and little water. Upon another he went through a sand-storm in
+the open desert, facing it for forty miles and keeping to the trail;
+When he rode in to Kayenta that night the trader, in grim praise, said
+there was no worse to endure. At Monticello Shefford stood off a band
+of desperadoes, and this time Shefford experienced a strange,
+sickening shock in the wounding of a man. Later he had other fights,
+but in none of them did he know whether or not he had shed blood.
+
+The heat of midsummer came, when the blistering sun shone, and a hot
+blast blew across the sand, and the furious storms made floods in the
+washes. Day and night Shefford was always in the open, and any one who
+had ever known him in the past would have failed to recognize him now.
+
+In the early fall, with Nas Ta Bega as companion, he set out to the
+south of Kayenta upon long-neglected business of the trader. They
+visited Red Lake, Blue Canyon, Keams Canyon, Oribi, the Moki villages,
+Tuba, Moencopie, and Moen Ave. This trip took many weeks and gave
+Shefford all the opportunity he wanted to study the Indians, and the
+conditions nearer to the border of civilization. He learned the truth
+about the Indians and the missionaries.
+
+Upon the return trip he rode over the trail he had followed alone
+to Red Lake and thence on to the Sagi, and it seemed that years had
+passed since he first entered this wild region which had come to be
+home, years that had molded him in the stern and fiery crucible of
+the desert.
+
+
+
+
+X. STONEBRIDGE
+
+
+In October Shefford arranged for a hunt in the Cresaw Mountains with
+Joe Lake and Nas Ta Bega. The Indian had gone home for a short visit,
+and upon his return the party expected to start. But Nas Ta Bega did
+not come back. Then the arrival of a Piute with news that excited
+Withers and greatly perturbed Lake convinced Shefford that something
+was wrong.
+
+The little trading-post seldom saw such disorder; certainly Shefford
+had never known the trader to neglect work. Joe Lake threw a saddle
+on a mustang he would have scorned to notice in an ordinary moment,
+and without a word of explanation or farewell rode hard to the north
+on the Stonebridge trail.
+
+Shefford had long since acquired patience. He was curious, but he
+did not care particularly what was in the wind. However, when Withers
+came out and sent an Indian to drive up the horses Shefford could not
+refrain from a query.
+
+"I hate to tell you," replied the trader.
+
+"Go on," added Shefford, quickly.
+
+"Did I tell you about the government sending a Supreme Court judge out
+to Utah to prosecute the polygamists?"
+
+"No," replied Shefford.
+
+"I forgot to, I reckon. You've been away a lot. Well, there's been
+hell up in Utah for six months. Lately this judge and his men have
+worked down into southern Utah. He visited Bluff and Monticello a
+few weeks ago. . . . Now what do you think?"
+
+"Withers! Is he coming to Stonebridge?"
+
+"He's there now. Some one betrayed the whereabouts of the hidden
+village over in the canyon. All the women have been arrested and
+taken to Stonebridge. The trial begins to-day."
+
+"Arrested!" echoed Shefford, blankly. "Those poor, lonely, good women?
+What on earth for?"
+
+"Sealed wives!" exclaimed Withers, tersely. "This judge is after the
+polygamists. They say he's absolutely relentless."
+
+"But--women can't be polygamists. Their husbands are the ones wanted."
+
+"Sure. But the prosecutors have got to find the sealed wives--the
+second wives--to find the law-breaking husbands. That'll be a job, or
+I don't know Mormons. . . . Are you going to ride over to Stonebridge
+with me?"
+
+Shefford shrank at the idea. Months of toil and pain and travail had
+not been enough to make him forget the strange girl he had loved. But
+he had remembered only at poignant intervals, and the lapse of time
+had made thought of her a dream like that sad dream which had lured
+him into the desert. With the query of the trader came a bitter-sweet
+regret.
+
+"Better come with me," said Withers. "Have you forgotten the Sago
+Lily? She'll be put on trial. . . . That girl--that child! . . .
+Shefford, you know she hasn't any friends. And now no Mormon man
+are protect her, for fear of prosecution."
+
+"I'll go," replied Shefford, shortly.
+
+The Indian brought up the horses. Nack-yal was thin from his long
+travel during the hot summer, but he was as hard as iron, and the way
+he pointed his keen nose toward the Sagi showed how he wanted to make
+for the upland country, with its clear springs and valleys of grass.
+Withers mounted his bay and with a hurried farewell to his wife
+spurred the mustang into the trail. Shefford took time to get his
+weapons and the light pack he always carried, and then rode out after
+the trader.
+
+The pace Withers set was the long, steady lope to which these Indian
+mustangs had been trained all their lives. In an hour they reached the
+mouth of the Sagi, and at sight of it it seemed to Shefford that the
+hard half-year of suffering since he had been there had disappeared.
+Withers, to Shefford's regret, did not enter the Sagi. He turned off
+to the north and took a wild trail into a split of the red wall, and
+wound in and out, and climbed a crack so narrow that the light was
+obscured and the cliffs could be reached from both sides of a horse.
+
+Once up on the wild plateau, Shefford felt again in a different world
+from the barren desert he had lately known. The desert had crucified
+him and had left him to die or survive, according to his spirit and
+his strength. If he had loved the glare, the endless level, the
+deceiving distance, the shifting sand, it had certainly not been as
+he loved this softer, wilder, more intimate upland. With the red peaks
+shining up into the blue, and the fragrance of cedar and pinyon, and
+the purple sage and flowers and grass and splash of clear water over
+stones--with these there came back to him something that he had lost
+and which had haunted him.
+
+It seemed he had returned to this wild upland of color and canyon and
+lofty crags and green valleys and silent places with a spirit gained
+from victory over himself in the harsher and sterner desert below.
+And, strange to him, he found his old self, the dreamer, the artist,
+the lover of beauty, the searcher for he knew not what, come to meet
+him on the fragrant wind.
+
+He felt this, saw the old wildness with glad eyes, yet the greater part
+of his mind was given over to the thought of the unfortunate women he
+expected to see in Stonebridge.
+
+Withers was harder to follow, to keep up with, than an Indian. For one
+thing he was a steady and tireless rider, and for another there were
+times when he had no mercy on a horse. Then an Indian always found
+easier steps in a trail and shorter cuts. Withers put his mount to
+some bad slopes, and Shefford had no choice but to follow. But they
+crossed the great broken bench of upland without mishap, and came out
+upon a promontory of a plateau from which Shefford saw a wide valley
+and the dark-green alfalfa fields of Stonebridge.
+
+Stonebridge lay in the center of a fertile valley surrounded by pink
+cliffs. It must have been a very old town, certainly far older than
+Bluff or Monticello, though smaller, and evidently it had been built
+to last. There was one main street, very wide, that divided the town
+and was crossed at right angles by a stream spanned by a small natural
+stone bridge. A line of poplar-trees shaded each foot-path. The
+little log cabins and stone houses and cottages were half hidden in
+foliage now tinted with autumn colors. Toward the center of the town
+the houses and stores and shops fronted upon the street and along one
+side of a green square, or plaza. Here were situated several edifices,
+the most prominent of which was a church built of wood, whitewashed,
+and remarkable, according to Withers, for the fact that not a nail had
+been used in its construction. Beyond the church was a large, low
+structure of stone, with a split-shingle roof, and evidently this
+was the town hall.
+
+Shefford saw, before he reached the square, that this day in
+Stonebridge was one of singular action and excitement for a Mormon
+village. The town was full of people and, judging from the horses
+hitched everywhere and the big canvas-covered wagons, many of the
+people were visitors. A crowd surrounded the hall--a dusty, booted,
+spurred, shirt-sleeved and sombreroed assemblage that did not wear
+the hall-mark Shefford had come to associate with Mormons. They were
+riders, cowboys, horse-wranglers, and some of them Shefford had seen
+in Durango. Navajos and Piutes were present, also, but they loitered
+in the background.
+
+Withers drew Shefford off to the side where, under a tree, they
+hitched their horses.
+
+"Never saw Stonebridge full of a riffraff gang like this to-day," said
+Withers. "I'll bet the Mormons are wild. There's a tough outfit from
+Durango. If they can get anything to drink--or if they've got it--
+Stonebridge will see smoke to-day! . . . Come on. I'll get in that
+hall."
+
+But before Withers reached the hall he started violently and pulled
+up short, then, with apparent unconcern, turned to lay a hand upon
+Shefford. The trader's face had blanched and his eyes grew hard and
+shiny, like flint. He gripped Shefford's arm.
+
+"Look! Over to your left!" he whispered. "See that gang of Indians
+there--by the big wagon. See the short Indian with the chaps. He's
+got a face big as a ham, dark, fierce. That's Shadd! . . . You ought
+to know him. Shadd and his outfit here! How's that for nerve? But
+he pulls a rein with the Mormons."
+
+Shefford's keen eye took in a lounging group of ten or twelve Indians
+and several white men. They did not present any great contrast to
+the other groups except that they were isolated, appeared quiet and
+watchful, and were all armed. A bunch of lean, racy mustangs, restive
+and spirited, stood near by in charge of an Indian. Shefford had to
+take a second and closer glance to distinguish the half-breed. At
+once he recognized in Shadd the broad-faced squat Indian who had paid
+him a threatening visit that night long ago in the mouth of the Sagi.
+A fire ran along Shefford's veins and seemed to concentrate in his
+breast. Shadd's dark, piercing eyes alighted upon Shefford and rested
+there. Then the half-breed spoke to one of his white outlaws and
+pointed at Shefford. His action attracted the attention of others
+in the gang, and for a moment Shefford and Withers were treated to
+a keen-eyed stare.
+
+The trader cursed low. "Maybe I wouldn't like to mix it with that
+damned breed," he said. "But what chance have we with that gang?
+Besides, we're here on other and more important business. All the
+same, before I forget, let me remind you that Shadd has had you
+spotted ever since you came out here. A friendly Piute told me
+only lately. Shefford, did any Indian between here and Flagstaff
+ever see that bunch of money you persist in carrying?"
+
+"Why, yes, I suppose so--'way back in Tuba, when I first came out,"
+replied Shefford.
+
+"Huh! Well, Shadd's after that. . . . Come on now, let's get inside
+the hall."
+
+The crowd opened for the trader, who appeared to be known to
+everybody.
+
+A huge man with a bushy beard blocked the way to a shut door.
+
+"Hello, Meade!" said Withers. "Let us in."
+
+The man opened the door, permitted Withers and Shefford to enter, and
+then closed it.
+
+Shefford, coming out of the bright glare of sun into the hall, could
+not see distinctly at first. His eyes blurred. He heard a subdued
+murmur of many voices. Withers appeared to be affected with the same
+kind of blindness, for he stood bewildered a moment. But he recovered
+sooner than Shefford. Gradually the darkness shrouding many obscure
+forms lifted. Withers drew him through a crowd of men and women to
+one side of the hall, and squeezed along a wall to a railing where
+progress was stopped.
+
+Then Shefford raised his head to look with bated breath and strange
+curiosity.
+
+The hall was large and had many windows. Men were in consultation upon
+a platform. Women to the number of twenty sat close together upon
+benches. Back of them stood another crowd. But the women on the
+benches held Shefford's gaze. They were the prisoners. They made a
+somber group. Some were hooded, some veiled, all clad in dark garments
+except one on the front bench, and she was dressed in white. She wore
+a long hood that concealed her face. Shefford recognized the hood and
+then the slender shape. She was Mary--she whom her jealous neighbors
+had named the Sago Lily. At sight of her a sharp pain pierced
+Shefford's breast. His eyes were blurred when he forced them away
+from her, and it took a moment for him to see clearly.
+
+Withers was whispering to him or to some one near at hand, but
+Shefford did not catch the meaning of what was said. He paid more
+attention; however, Withers ceased speaking. Shefford gazed upon the
+crowd back of him. The women were hooded and it was not possible to
+see what they looked like. There were many stalwart, clean-cut, young
+Mormons of Joe Lake's type, and these men appeared troubled, even
+distressed and at a loss. There was little about them resembling the
+stern, quiet, somber austerity of the more matured men, and nothing at
+all of the strange, aloof, serene impassiveness of the gray-bearded
+old patriarchs. These venerable men were the Mormons of the old
+school, the sons of the pioneers, the ruthless fanatics. Instinctively
+Shefford felt that it was in them that polygamy was embodied; they
+were the husbands of the sealed wives. He conceived an absorbing
+curiosity to learn if his instinct was correct; and hard upon that
+followed a hot, hateful eagerness to see which one was the husband
+of Mary.
+
+"There's Bishop Kane," whispered Withers, nudging Shefford. "And
+there's Waggoner with him."
+
+Shefford saw the bishop, and then beside him a man of striking
+presence.
+
+"Who's Waggoner?" asked Shefford, as he looked.
+
+"He owns more than any Mormon in southern Utah," replied the trader.
+"He's the biggest man in Stonebridge, that's sure. But I don't know
+his relation to the Church. They don't call him elder or bishop.
+But I'll bet he's some pumpkins. He never had any use for me or any
+Gentile. A close-fisted, tight-lipped Mormon--a skinflint if I ever
+saw one! Just look him over."
+
+Shefford had been looking, and considered it unlikely that he would
+ever forget this individual called Waggoner. He seemed old, sixty at
+least, yet at that only in the prime of a wonderful physical life.
+Unlike most of the others, he wore his grizzled beard close-cropped,
+so close that it showed the lean, wolfish line of his jaw. All his
+features were of striking sharpness. His eyes, of a singularly
+brilliant blue, were yet cold and pale. The brow had a serious,
+thoughtful cast; long furrows sloped down the cheeks. It was a
+strange, secretive face, full of a power that Shefford had not seen
+in another man's, full of intelligence and thought that had not been
+used as Shefford had known them used among men. The face mystified
+him. It had so much more than the strange aloofness so characteristic
+of his fellows.
+
+"Waggoner had five wives and fifty-five children before the law went
+into effect," whispered Withers. "Nobody knows and nobody will ever
+know how many he's got now. That's my private opinion."
+
+Somehow, after Withers told that, Shefford seemed to understand the
+strange power in Waggoner's face. Absolutely it was not the force, the
+strength given to a man from his years of control of men. Shefford,
+long schooled now in his fair-mindedness, fought down the feelings of
+other years, and waited with patience. Who was he to judge Waggoner or
+any other Mormon? But whenever his glance strayed back to the quiet,
+slender form in white, when he realized again and again the appalling
+nature of this court, his heart beat heavy and labored within his
+breast.
+
+Then a bustle among the men upon the platform appeared to indicate
+that proceedings were about to begin. Some men left the platform;
+several sat down at a table upon which were books and papers, and
+others remained standing. These last were all roughly garbed, in
+riding-boots and spurs, and Shefford's keen eye detected the bulge
+of hidden weapons. They looked like deputy-marshals upon duty.
+
+Somebody whispered that the judge's name was Stone. The name fitted
+him. He was not young, and looked a man suited to the prosecution of
+these secret Mormons. He had a ponderous brow, a deep, cavernous eye
+that emitted gleams but betrayed no color or expression. His mouth
+was the saving human feature of his stony face.
+
+Shefford took the man upon the judge's right hand to be a lawyer,
+and the one on his left an officer of court, perhaps a prosecuting
+attorney. Presently this fellow pounded upon the table and stood up
+as if to address a court-room. Certainly he silenced that hallful of
+people. Then he perfunctorily and briefly stated that certain women
+had been arrested upon suspicion of being sealed wives of Mormon
+polygamists, and were to be herewith tried by a judge of the United
+States Court. Shefford felt how the impressive words affected
+that silent hall of listeners, but he gathered from the brief
+preliminaries that the trial could not be otherwise than a crude,
+rapid investigation, and perhaps for that the more sinister.
+
+The first woman on the foremost bench was led forward by a deputy to
+a vacant chair on the platform just in front of the judge's table.
+She was told to sit down, and showed no sign that she had heard. Then
+the judge courteously asked her to take the chair. She refused. And
+Stone nodded his head as if he had experienced that sort of thing
+before. He stroked his chin wearily, and Shefford conceived an idea
+that he was a kind man, if he was a relentless judge.
+
+"Please remove your veil," requested the prosecutor.
+
+The woman did so, and proved to be young and handsome. Shefford had
+a thrill as he recognized her. She was Ruth, who had been one of his
+best-known acquaintances in the hidden village. She was pale, angry,
+almost sullen, and her breast heaved. She had no shame, but she
+seemed to be outraged. Her dark eyes, scornful and blazing, passed
+over the judge and his assistants, and on to the crowd behind the
+railing. Shefford, keen as a blade, with all his faculties absorbed,
+fancied he saw Ruth stiffen and change slightly as her glance
+encountered some one in that crowd. Then the prosecutor in deliberate
+and chosen words enjoined her to kiss the Bible handed to her and swear
+to tell the truth. How strange for Shefford to see her kiss the book
+which he had studied for so many years! Stranger still to hear the
+low murmur from the listening audience as she took the oath!
+
+"What is your name?" asked Judge Stone, leaning back and fixing the
+cavernous eyes upon her.
+
+"Ruth Jones," was the cool reply.
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+"Twenty."
+
+"Where were you born?" went on the judge. He allowed time for the
+clerk to record her answers.
+
+"Panguitch, Utah."
+
+"Were your parents Mormons?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you a Mormon?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you a married woman?"
+
+"No."
+
+The answer was instant, cold, final. It seemed to the truth. Almost
+Shefford believed she spoke truth. The judge stroked his chin and
+waited a moment, and then hesitatingly he went on.
+
+"Have you--any children?"
+
+"No." And the blazing eyes met the cavernous ones.
+
+That about the children was true enough, Shefford thought, and he
+could have testified to it.
+
+"You live in the hidden village near this town?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What is the name of this village?"
+
+"It has none."
+
+"Did you ever hear of Fre-donia, another village far west of here?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"It is in Arizona, near the Utah line. There are few men there. Is
+it the same kind of village as this one in which you live?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"What does Fre-donia mean? The name--has it any meaning?"
+
+"It means free women."
+
+The judge maintained silence for a moment, turned to whisper to his
+assistants, and presently, without glancing up, said to the woman:
+
+"That will do."
+
+Ruth was led back to the bench, and the woman next to her brought
+forward. This was a heavier person, with the figure and step of a
+matured woman. Upon removing her bonnet she showed the plain face
+of a woman of forty, and it was striking only in that strange, stony
+aloofness noted in the older men. Here, Shefford thought, was the real
+Mormon, different in a way he could not define from Ruth. This woman
+seated herself in the chair and calmly faced her prosecutors. She
+manifested no emotion whatever. Shefford remembered her and could not
+see any change in her deportment. This trial appeared to be of little
+moment to her and she took the oath as if doing so had been a habit
+all her life.
+
+"What is your name?" asked Judge Stone, glancing up from a paper
+he held.
+
+"Mary Danton."
+
+"Family or married name?"
+
+"My husband's name was Danton."
+
+"Was. Is he living?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Where did you live when you were married to him?"
+
+"In St. George, and later here in Stonebridge."
+
+"You were both Mormons?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Did you have any children by him?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How many?"
+
+"Two."
+
+"Are they living?"
+
+"One of them is living."
+
+Judge Stone bent over his paper and then slowly raised his eyes to
+her face.
+
+"Are you married now?"
+
+"No."
+
+Again the judge consulted his notes, and held a whispered colloquy
+with the two men at his table.
+
+"Mrs. Danton, when you were arrested there were five children found
+in your home. To whom do they belong?"
+
+"Me."
+
+"Are you their mother?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Your husband Danton is the father of only one, the eldest, according
+to your former statement. Is that correct?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Who, then, is the father--or who are the fathers, of your other
+children?"
+
+"I do not know."
+
+She said it with the most stony-faced calmness, with utter disregard
+of what significance her words had. A strong, mystic wall of cold
+flint insulated her. Strangely it came to Shefford how impossible
+either to doubt or believe her. Yet he did both! Judge Stone showed
+a little heat.
+
+"You don't know the father of one or all of these children?" he
+queried, with sharp rising inflection of voice.
+
+"I do not."
+
+"Madam, I beg to remind you that you are under oath."
+
+The woman did not reply.
+
+"These children are nameless, then--illegitimate?"
+
+"They are."
+
+"You swear you are not the sealed wife of some Mormon?"
+
+"I swear."
+
+"How do you live--maintain yourself?"
+
+"I work."
+
+"What at?"
+
+"I weave, sew, bake, and work in my garden."
+
+"My men made note of your large and comfortable cabin, even luxurious,
+considering this country. How is that?"
+
+"My husband left me comfortable."
+
+Judge Stone shook a warning finger at the defendant.
+
+"Suppose I were to sentence you to jail for perjury? For a year? Far
+from your home and children! Would you speak--tell the truth?"
+
+"I am telling the truth. I can't speak what I don't know. . . . Send
+me to jail."
+
+Baffled, with despairing, angry impatience, Judge Stone waved the
+woman away.
+
+"That will do for her. Fetch the next one," he said.
+
+One after another he examined three more women, and arrived, by various
+questions and answers different in tone and temper, at precisely the
+same point as had been made in the case of Mrs. Danton. Thereupon the
+proceedings rested a few moments while the judge consulted with his
+assistants.
+
+Shefford was grateful for this respite. He had been worked up to an
+unusual degree of interest, and now, as the next Mormon woman to be
+examined was she whom he had loved and loved still, he felt rise in
+him emotion that threatened to make him conspicuous unless it could be
+hidden. The answers of these Mormon women had been not altogether
+unexpected by him, but once spoken in cold blood under oath, how
+tragic, how appallingly significant of the shadow, the mystery, the
+yoke that bound them! He was amazed, saddened. He felt bewildered.
+He needed to think out the meaning of the falsehoods of women he knew
+to be good and noble. Surely religion, instead of fear and loyalty,
+was the foundation and the strength of this disgrace, this sacrifice.
+Absolutely, shame was not in these women, though they swore to shameful
+facts. They had been coached to give these baffling answers, every
+one of which seemed to brand them, not the brazen mothers of
+illegitimate offspring, but faithful, unfortunate sealed wives. To
+Shefford the truth was not in their words, but it sat upon their
+somber brows.
+
+Was it only his heightened imagination, or did the silence and the
+suspense grow more intense when a deputy led that dark-hooded, white-
+clad, slender woman to the defendant's chair? She did not walk with
+the poise that had been manifest in the other women, and she sank into
+the chair as if she could no longer stand.
+
+"Please remove your hood," requested the prosecutor.
+
+How well Shefford remembered the strong, shapely hands! He saw them
+tremble at the knot of ribbon, and that tremor was communicated to him
+in a sympathy which made his pulses beat. He held his breath while
+she removed the hood. And then there was revealed, he thought, the
+loveliest and the most tragic face that ever was seen in a court-room.
+
+A low, whispering murmur that swelled like a wave ran through the
+hall. And by it Shefford divined, as clearly as if the fact had
+been blazoned on the walls, that Mary's face had been unknown to
+these villagers. But the name Sago Lily had not been unknown;
+Shefford heard it whispered on all sides.
+
+The murmuring subsided. The judge and his assistants stared at Mary.
+As for Shefford, there was no need of his personal feeling to make the
+situation dramatic. Not improbably Judge Stone had tried many Mormon
+women. But manifestly this one was different. Unhooded, Mary appeared
+to be only a young girl, and a court, confronted suddenly with her
+youth and the suspicion attached to her, could not but have been
+shocked. Then her beauty made her seem, in that somber company, indeed
+the white flower for which she had been named. But, more likely, it
+was her agony that bound the court into silence which grew painful.
+Perhaps the thought that flashed into Shefford's mind was telepathic;
+it seemed to him that every watcher there realized that in this
+defendant the judge had a girl of softer mold, of different spirit,
+and from her the bitter truth could be wrung.
+
+Mary faced the court and the crowd on that side of the platform.
+Unlike the other women, she did not look at or seem to see any one
+behind the railing. Shefford was absolutely sure there was not a man
+or a woman who caught her glance. She gazed afar, with eyes strained,
+humid, fearful.
+
+When the prosecutor swore her to the oath her lips were seen to move,
+but no one heard her speak.
+
+"What is your name?" asked the judge.
+
+"Mary." Her voice was low, with a slight tremor.
+
+"What's your other name?"
+
+"I won't tell."
+
+Her singular reply, the tones of her voice, her manner before the
+judge, marked her with strange simplicity. It was evident that she
+was not accustomed to questions.
+
+"What were your parents' names?"
+
+"I won't tell," she replied, very low.
+
+Judge Stone did not press the point. Perhaps he wanted to make the
+examination as easy as possible for her or to wait till she showed
+more composure.
+
+"Were your parents Mormons?" he went on.
+
+"No, sir." She added the sir with a quaint respect, contrasting
+markedly with the short replies of the women before her.
+
+"Then you were not born a Mormon?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"How old are you?"
+
+"Seventeen or eighteen. I'm not sure."
+
+"You don't know your exact age?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Where were you born?"
+
+"I won't tell."
+
+"Was it in Utah?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"How long have you lived in this state?"
+
+"Always--except last year."
+
+"And that's been over in the hidden village where you were arrested?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"But you often visited here--this town Stonebridge?"
+
+"I never was here--till yesterday."
+
+Judge Stone regarded her as if his interest as a man was running
+counter to his duty as an officer. Suddenly he leaned forward.
+
+"Are you a Mormon NOW?" he queried, forcibly.
+
+"No, sir," she replied, and here her voice rose a little clearer.
+
+It was an unexpected reply. Judge Stone stared at her. The low buzz
+ran through the listening crowd. And as for Shefford, he was astounded.
+When his wits flashed back and he weighed her words and saw in her face
+truth as clear as light, he had the strangest sensation of joy. Almost
+it flooded away the gloom and pain that attended this ordeal.
+
+The judge bent his head to his assistants as if for counsel. All of
+them were eager where formerly they had been weary. Shefford glanced
+around at the dark and somber faces, and a slow wrath grew within him.
+Then he caught a glimpse of Waggoner. The steel-blue, piercing
+intensity of the Mormon's gaze impressed him at a moment when all
+that older generation of Mormons looked as hard and immutable as iron.
+Either Shefford was over-excited and mistaken or the hour had become
+fraught with greater suspense. The secret, the mystery, the power, the
+hate, the religion of a strange people were thick and tangible in that
+hall. For Shefford the feeling of the presence of Withers on his left
+was entirely different from that of the Mormon on his other side. If
+there was not a shadow there, then the sun did not shine so brightly
+as it had shone when he entered. The air seemed clogged with nameless
+passion.
+
+"I gather that you've lived mostly in the country--away from people?"
+the judge began.
+
+"Yes, sir," replied the girl.
+
+"Do you know anything about the government of the United States?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+He pondered again, evidently weighing his queries, leading up to the
+fatal and inevitable question.
+
+Still, his interest in this particular defendant had become visible.
+
+"Have you any idea of the consequences of perjury?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Do you understand what perjury is?"
+
+"It's to lie."
+
+"Do you tell lies?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Have you ever told a single lie?"
+
+"Not--yet," she replied, almost whispering.
+
+It was the answer of a child and affected the judge. He fussed
+with his papers. Perhaps his task was not easy; certainly it was
+not pleasant. Then he leaned forward again and fixed those deep,
+cavernous eyes upon the sad face.
+
+"Do you understand what a sealed wife is?"
+
+"I've never been told."
+
+"But you know there are sealed wives in Utah?"
+
+"Yes, sir; I've been told that."
+
+Judge Stone halted there, watching her. The hall was silent except
+for faint rustlings and here and there deep breaths drawn guardedly.
+The vital question hung like a sword over the white-faced girl.
+Perhaps she divined its impending stroke, for she sat like a stone
+with dilating, appealing eyes upon her executioner.
+
+"Are you a sealed wife?" he flung at her.
+
+She could not answer at once. She made effort, but the words would not
+come. He flung the question again, sternly.
+
+"No!" she cried.
+
+And then there was silence. That poignant word quivered in Shefford's
+heart. He believed it was a lie. It seemed he would have known it if
+this hour was the first in which he had ever seen the girl. He heard,
+he felt, he sensed the fatal thing. The beautiful voice had lacked
+some quality before present. And the thing wanting was something
+subtle, an essence, a beautiful ring--the truth. What a hellish
+thing to make that pure girl a liar--a perjurer! The heat deep
+within Shefford kindled to fire.
+
+"You are not married?" went on Judge Stone.
+
+"No, sir," she answered, faintly.
+
+"Have you ever been married?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+"Do you expect ever to be married?"
+
+"Oh! No, sir."
+
+She was ashen pale now, quivering all over, with her strong hands
+clasping the black hood, and she could no longer meet the judge's
+glance.
+
+"Have you--any--any children?" the judge asked, haltingly. It was a
+hard question to get out.
+
+"No."
+
+Judge Stone leaned far over the table, and that his face was purple
+showed Shefford he was a man. His big fist clenched.
+
+"Girl, you're not going to swear you, too, were visited--over there by
+men . . . You're not going to swear that?"
+
+"Oh--no, sir!"
+
+Judge Stone settled back in his chair, and while he wiped his moist
+face that same foreboding murmur, almost a menace, moaned through
+the hall.
+
+Shefford was sick in his soul and afraid of himself. He did not know
+this spirit that flamed up in him. His helplessness was a most hateful
+fact.
+
+"Come--confess you are a sealed wife," called her interrogator.
+
+She maintained silence, but shook her head.
+
+Suddenly he seemed to leap forward.
+
+"Unfortunate child! Confess."
+
+That forced her to lift her head and face him, yet still she did not
+speak. It was the strength of despair. She could not endure much
+more.
+
+"Who is your husband?" he thundered at her.
+
+She rose wildly, terror-stricken. It was terror that dominated her,
+not of the stern judge, for she took a faltering step toward him,
+lifting a shaking hand, but of some one or of some thing far more
+terrible than any punishment she could have received in the sentence
+of a court. Still she was not proof against the judge's will. She
+had weakened, and the terror must have been because of that weakening.
+
+"Who is the Mormon who visits you?" he thundered, relentlessly.
+
+"I--never--knew--his--name.
+
+"But you'd know his face. I'll arrest every Mormon in this country
+and bring him before you. You'd know his face?"
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't. I COULDN'T TELL! . . . _I_--NEVER--SAW HIS FACE--
+IN THE LIGHT!"
+
+The tragic beauty of her, the certainty of some monstrous crime
+to youth and innocence, the presence of an agony and terror that
+unfathomably seemed not to be for herself--these transfixed the
+court and the audience, and held them silenced, till she reached
+out blindly and then sank in a heap to the floor.
+
+
+
+
+XI. AFTER THE TRIAL
+
+
+Shefford might have leaped over the railing but for Withers's
+restraining hand, and when there appeared to be some sign of kindness
+in those other women for the unconscious girl Shefford squeezed
+through the crowd and got out of the hall.
+
+The gang outside that had been denied admittance pressed upon Shefford,
+with jest and curious query, and a good nature that jarred upon him.
+He was far from gentle as he jostled off the first importuning fellows;
+the others, gaping at him, opened a lane for him to pass through.
+
+Then there was a hand laid on his shoulder that he did not shake off.
+Nas Ta Bega loomed dark and tall beside him. Neither the trader nor
+Joe Lake nor any white man Shefford had met influenced him as this
+Navajo.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega! you here, too. I guess the whole country is here. We
+waited at Kayenta. What kept you so long?"
+
+The Indian, always slow to answer, did not open his lips till he drew
+Shefford apart from the noisy crowd.
+
+"Bi Nai, there is sorrow in the hogan of Hosteen Doetin," he said.
+
+"Glen Naspa!" exclaimed Shefford.
+
+"My sister is gone from the home of her brother. She went away alone
+in the summer."
+
+"Blue Canyon! She went to the missionary. Nas Ta Bega, I thought I
+saw her there. But I wasn't sure. I didn't want to make sure. I
+was afraid it might be true."
+
+"A brave who loved my sister trailed her there."
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, will you--will we go find her, take her home?"
+
+"No. She will come home some day."
+
+What bitter sadness and wisdom in his words!
+
+"But, my friend, that damned missionary--" began Shefford,
+passionately. The Indian had met him at a bad hour.
+
+"Willetts is here. I saw him go in there," interrupted Nas Ta Bega,
+and he pointed to the hall.
+
+"Here! He gets around a good deal," declared Shefford. "Nas Ta Bega,
+what are you going to do to him?"
+
+The Indian held his peace and there was no telling from his inscrutable
+face what might be in his mind. He was dark, impassive. He seemed a
+wise and bitter Indian, beyond any savagery of his tribe, and the
+suffering Shefford divined was deep.
+
+"He'd better keep out of my sight," muttered Shefford, more to himself
+than to his companion.
+
+"The half-breed is here," said Nas Ta Bega.
+
+"Shadd? Yes, we saw him. There! He's still with his gang. Nas Ta
+Bega, what are they up to?"
+
+"They will steal what they can."
+
+"Withers says Shadd is friendly with the Mormons."
+
+"Yes, and with the missionary, too."
+
+"With Willetts?"
+
+"I saw them talk together--strong talk."
+
+"Strange. But maybe it's not so strange. Shadd is known well in
+Monticello and Bluff. He spends money there. They are afraid of him,
+but he's welcome just the same. Perhaps everybody knows him. It'd be
+like him to ride into Kayenta. But, Nas Ta Bega, I've got to look out
+for him, because Withers says he's after me."
+
+"Bi Nai wears a scar that is proof," said the Indian.
+
+"Then it must be he found out long ago I had a little money."
+
+"It might be. But, Bi Nai, the half-breed has a strange step on your
+trail."
+
+"What do you mean?" demanded Shefford.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega cannot tell what he does not know," replied the Navajo.
+"Let that be. We shall know some day. Bi Nai, there is sorrow to
+tell that is not the Indian's. . . . Sorrow for my brother!"
+
+Shefford lifted his eyes to the Indian's, and if he did not see sadness
+there he was much deceived.
+
+"Bi Nai, long ago you told a story to the trader. Nas Ta Bega sat
+before the fire that night. You did not know he could understand your
+language. He listened. And he learned what brought you to the country
+of the Indian. That night he made you his brother. . . . All his
+lonely rides into the canyon have been to find the little golden-
+haired child, the lost girl--Fay Larkin. . . . Bi Nai, I have found
+the girl you wanted for your sweetheart."
+
+Shefford was bereft of speech. He could not see steadily, and the
+last solemn words of the Indian seemed far away.
+
+"Bi Nai, I have found Fay Larkin," repeated Nas Ta Bega.
+
+"Fay Larkin!" gasped Shefford, shaking his head. "But--she's dead."
+
+"It would be less sorrow for Bi Nai if she were dead."
+
+Shefford clutched at the Indian. There was something terrible to
+be revealed. Like an aspen-leaf in the wind he shook all over. He
+divined the revelation--divined the coming blow--but that was as far
+as his mind got.
+
+"She's in there," said the Indian, pointing toward hall.
+
+"Fay Larkin?" whispered Shefford.
+
+"Yes, Bi Nai."
+
+"My God! HOW do you know? Oh, I could have seen. I've been blind.
+. . . Tell me, Indian. Which one?"
+
+"Fay Larkin is the Sago Lily."
+
+ . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Shefford strode away into a secluded corner of the Square, where in
+the shade and quiet of the trees he suffered a storm of heart and
+mind. During that short or long time--he had no idea how long--the
+Indian remained with him. He never lost the feeling of Nas Ta Bega
+close beside him. When the period of acute pain left him and some
+order began to replace the tumult in his mind he felt in Nas Ta Bega
+the same quality--silence or strength or help--that he had learned
+to feel in the deep canyon and the lofty crags. He realized then
+that the Indian was indeed a brother. And Shefford needed him. What
+he had to fight was more fatal than suffering and love--it was hate
+rising out of the unsuspected dark gulf of his heart--the instinct to
+kill--the murder in his soul. Only now did he come to understand Jane
+Withersteen's tragic story and the passion of Venters and what had made
+Lassiter a gun-man. The desert had transformed Shefford. The elements
+had entered into his muscle and bone, into the very fiber of his heart.
+Sun, wind, sand, cold, storm, space, stone, the poison cactus, the
+racking toil, the terrible loneliness--the iron of the desert man,
+the cruelty of the desert savage, the wildness of the mustang, the
+ferocity of hawk and wolf, the bitter struggle of every surviving
+thing--these were as if they had been melted and merged together and
+now made a dark and passionate stream that was his throbbing blood.
+He realized what he had become and gloried in it, yet there, looking
+on with grave and earnest eyes, was his old self, the man of reason,
+of intellect, of culture, who had been a good man despite the failure
+and shame of his life. And he gave heed to the voice of warning, of
+conscience. Not by revengefully seeking the Mormon who had ruined
+Fay Larkin and blindly dealing a wild justice could he help this
+unfortunate girl. This fierce, newborn strength and passion must be
+tempered by reason, lest he become merely elemental, a man answering
+wholly to primitive impulses. In the darkness of that hour he mined
+deep into his heart, understood himself, trembled at the thing he
+faced, and won his victory. He would go forth from that hour a man.
+He might fight, and perhaps there was death in the balance, but hate
+would never overthrow him.
+
+Then when he looked at future action he felt a strange, unalterable
+purpose to save Fay Larkin. She was very young--seventeen or eighteen,
+she had said--and there could be, there must be some happiness before
+her. It had been his dream to chase a rainbow--it had been his
+determination to find her in the lost Surprise Valley. Well, he had
+found her. It never occurred to him to ask Nas Ta Bega how he had
+discovered that the Sago Lily was Fay Larkin. The wonder was, Shefford
+thought, that he had so long been blind himself. How simply everything
+worked out now! Every thought, every recollection of her was proof.
+Her strange beauty like that of the sweet and rare lily, her low voice
+that showed the habit of silence, her shapely hands with the clasp
+strong as a man's, her lithe form, her swift step, her wonderful
+agility upon the smooth, steep trails, and the wildness of her upon
+the heights, and the haunting, brooding shadow of her eyes when she
+gazed across the canyon--all these fitted so harmoniously the
+conception of a child lost in a beautiful Surprise Valley and growing
+up in its wildness and silence, tutored by the sad love of broken Jane
+and Lassiter. Yes, to save her had been Shefford's dream, and he had
+loved that dream. He had loved the dream and he had loved the child.
+The secret of her hiding-place as revealed by the story told him and
+his slow growth from dream to action--these had strangely given Fay
+Larkin to him. Then had come the bitter knowledge that she was dead.
+In the light of this subsequent revelation how easy to account for his
+loving Mary, too. Never would she be Mary again to him! Fay Larkin
+and the Sago Lily were one and the same. She was here, near him, and
+he was powerless for the present to help her or to reveal himself.
+She was held back there in that gloomy hall among those somber Mormons,
+alien to the women, bound in some fatal way to one of the men, and now,
+by reason of her weakness in the trial, surely to be hated. Thinking
+of her past and her present, of the future, and that secret Mormon
+hose face she had never seen, Shefford felt a sinking of his heart,
+a terrible cold pang in his breast, a fainting of his spirit. She
+had sworn she was no sealed wife. But had she not lied? So, then,
+how utterly powerless he was!
+
+But here to save him, to uplift him, came that strange mystic insight
+which had been the gift of the desert to him. She was not dead. He
+had found her. What mattered obstacles, even that implacable creed
+to which she had been sacrificed, in the face of this blessed and
+overwhelming truth? It was as mighty as the love suddenly dawning
+upon him. A strong and terrible and deathly sweet wind seemed to fill
+his soul with the love of her. It was her fate that had drawn him;
+and now it was her agony, her innocence, her beauty, that bound him
+for all time. Patience and cunning and toil, passion and blood, the
+unquenchable spirit of a man to save--these were nothing to give--life
+itself were little, could he but free her.
+
+Patience and cunning! His sharpening mind cut these out as his
+greatest assets for the present. And his thoughts flashed like light
+through his brain. . . . Judge Stone and his court would fail to
+convict any Mormon in Stonebridge, just the same as they had failed
+in the northern towns. They would go away, and Stonebridge would fall
+to the slow, sleepy tenor of its former way. The hidden village must
+become known to all men, honest and outlawed, in that country, but
+this fact would hardly make any quick change in the plans of the
+Mormons. They did not soon change. They would send the sealed wives
+back to the canyon and, after the excitement had died down, visit them
+as usual. Nothing, perhaps, would ever change these old Mormons but death.
+
+Shefford resolved to remain in Stonebridge and ingratiate himself
+deeper into the regard of the Mormons. He would find work there, if
+the sealed wives were not returned to the hidden village. In case the
+women went back to the valley Shefford meant to resume his old duty
+of driving Withers's pack-trains. Wanting that opportunity, he would
+find some other work, some excuse to take him there. In due time he
+would reveal to Fay Larkin that he knew her. How the thought thrilled
+him! She might deny, might persist in her fear, might fight to keep
+her secret. But he would learn it--hear her story--hear what had
+become of Jane Withersteen and Lassiter--and if they were alive, which
+now he believed he would find them--and he would take them and Fay out
+of the country.
+
+The duty, the great task, held a grim fascination for him. He had
+a foreboding of the cost; he had a dark realization of the force he
+meant to oppose. There were duty here and pity and unselfish love,
+but these alone did not actuate Shefford. Mystically fate seemed
+again to come like a gleam and bid him follow.
+
+When Shefford and Nas Ta Bega returned to the town hall the trial had
+been ended, the hall was closed, and only a few Indians and cowboys
+remained in the square, and they were about to depart. On the street,
+however, and the paths and in the doorways of stores were knots of
+people, talking earnestly. Shefford walked up and down, hoping to
+meet Withers or Joe Lake. Nas Ta Bega said he would take the horses
+to water and feed and then return.
+
+There were indications that Stonebridge might experience some of the
+excitement and perhaps violence common to towns like Monticello and
+Durango. There was only one saloon in Stonebridge, and it was full
+of roystering cowboys and horse-wranglers. Shefford saw the bunch
+of mustangs, in charge of the same Indian, that belonged to Shadd
+and his gang. The men were inside, drinking. Next door was a tavern
+called Hopewell House, a stone structure of some pretensions. There
+were Indians lounging outside. Shefford entered through a wide door
+and found himself in a large bare room, boarded like a loft, with no
+ceiling except the roof. The place was full of men and noise. Here
+he encountered Joe Lake talking to Bishop Kane and other Mormons.
+Shefford got a friendly greeting from the bishop, and then was well
+received by the strangers, to whom Joe introduced him.
+
+"Have you seen Withers?" asked Shefford.
+
+"Reckon he's around somewhere," replied Joe. "Better hang up here,
+for he'll drop in sooner or later."
+
+"When are you going back to Kayenta?" went on Shefford.
+
+"Hard to say. We'll have to call off our hunt. Nas Ta Bega is here,
+too."
+
+"Yes, I've been with him."
+
+The older Mormons drew aside, and then Joe mentioned the fact that he
+was half starved. Shefford went with him into another clapboard room,
+which was evidently a dining-room. There were half a dozen men at the
+long table. The seat at the end was a box, and scarcely large enough
+or safe enough for Joe and Shefford, but they risked it.
+
+"Saw you in the hall," said Joe. "Hell--wasn't it?"
+
+"Joe, I never knew how much I dared say to you, so I don't talk much.
+But, it was hell," replied Shefford.
+
+"You needn't be so scared of me," spoke up Joe, testily.
+
+That was the first time Shefford had heard the Mormon speak that way.
+
+"I'm not scared, Joe. But I like you--respect you. I can't say so
+much of--of your people."
+
+"Did you stick out the whole mix?" asked Joe.
+
+"No. I had enough when--when they got through with Mary." Shefford
+spoke low and dropped his head. He heard the Mormon grind his teeth.
+There was silence for a little space while neither man looked at the
+other.
+
+"Reckon the judge was pretty decent," presently said Joe.
+
+"Yes, I thought so. He might have--" But Shefford did not finish
+that sentence. "How'd the thing end?"
+
+"It ended all right."
+
+"Was there no conviction--no sentence?" Shefford felt a curious
+eagerness.
+
+"Naw," he snorted. "That court might have saved its breath."
+
+"I suppose. Well, Joe, between you and me, as old friends now, that
+trial established one fact, even if it couldn't be proved. . . . Those
+women are sealed wives."
+
+Joe had no reply for that. He looked gloomy, and there was a stern
+line in his lips. To-day he seemed more like a Mormon.
+
+"Judge Stone knew that as well as I knew," went on Shefford. "Any man
+of penetration could have seen it. What an ordeal that was for good
+women to go through! I know they're good. And there they were
+swearing to--"
+
+"Didn't it make me sick?" interrupted Joe in a kind of growl. "Reckon
+it made Judge Stone sick, too. After Mary went under he conducted that
+trial like a man cuttin' out steers at a round-up. He wanted to get
+it over. He never forced any question. . . . Bad job to ride down
+Stonebridge way! It's out of creation. There's only six men in the
+party, with a poor lot of horses. Really, government officers or not,
+they're not safe. And they've taken a hunch."
+
+"Have they left already?" inquired Shefford.
+
+"Were packed an hour ago. I didn't see them go, but somebody said
+they went. Took the trail for Bluff, which sure is the only trail
+they could take, unless they wanted to go to Colorado by way of
+Kayenta. That might have been the safest trail."
+
+"Joe, what might happen to them?" asked Shefford, quietly, with eyes
+on the Mormon.
+
+"Aw, you know that rough trail. Bad on horses. Weathered slopes--
+slipping ledges--a rock might fall on you any time. Then Shadd's
+here with his gang. And bad Piutes."
+
+"What became of the women?" Shefford asked, 'presently.
+
+"They're around among friends."
+
+"Where are their children?"
+
+"Left over there with the old women. Couldn't be fetched over. But
+there are some pretty young babies in that bunch--need their mothers."
+
+"I should--think so," replied Shefford, constrainedly. "When will
+their mothers get back to them?"
+
+"To-night, maybe, if this mob of cow-punchers and wranglers get out of
+town. . . . It's a bad mix, Shefford, here's a hunch on that. These
+fellows will get full of whisky. And trouble might come if they--
+approach the women."
+
+"You mean they might get drunk enough to take the oaths of those poor
+women--take the meaning literally--pretend to believe the women what
+they swore they were?"
+
+"Reckon you've got the hunch," replied Joe, gloomily.
+
+"My God! man, that would be horrible!" exclaimed Shefford.
+
+"Horrible or not, it's liable to happen. The women can be kept here
+yet awhile. Reckon there won't be any trouble here. It'll be over
+there in the valley. Shefford, getting the women over there safe is
+a job that's been put to me. I've got a bunch of fellows already.
+Can I count on you? I'm glad to say you're well thought of. Bishop
+Kane liked you, and what he says goes."
+
+"Yes, Joe, you can count on me," replied Shefford.
+
+They finished their meal then and repaired to the big office-room of
+the house. Several groups of men were there and loud talk was going
+on outside. Shefford saw Withers talking to Bishop Kane and two other
+Mormons, both strangers to Shefford. The trader appeared to be
+speaking with unwonted force, emphasizing his words with energetic
+movements of his hands.
+
+"Reckon something's up," whispered Joe, hoarsely. "It's been in the
+air all day."
+
+Withers must have been watching for Shefford.
+
+"Here's Shefford now," he said to the trio of Mormons, as Joe and
+Shefford reached the group. "I want you to hear him speak for
+himself."
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Shefford.
+
+"Give me a hunch and I'll put in my say-so," said Joe Lake.
+
+"Shefford, it's the matter of a good name more than a job," replied
+the trader. "A little while back I told the bishop I meant to put you
+on the pack job over to the valley--same as when you first came to me.
+Well, the bishop was pleased and said he might put something in your
+way. Just now I ran in here to find you--not wanted. When I kicked I
+got the straight hunch. Willetts has said things about you. One of
+them--the one that sticks in my craw--was that you'd do anything, even
+pretend to be inclined toward Mormonism, just to be among those Mormon
+women over there. Willetts is your enemy. And he's worse than I
+thought. Now I want you to tell Bishop Kane why this missionary is
+bitter toward you."
+
+"Gentlemen, I knocked him down," replied Shefford, simply.
+
+"What for?" inquired the bishop, in surprise and curiosity.
+
+Shefford related the incident which had occurred at Red Lake and that
+now seemed again to come forward fatefully.
+
+"You insinuate he had evil intent toward the Indian girl?" queried
+Kane.
+
+"I insinuate nothing. I merely state what led to my acting as I did."
+
+"Principles of religion, sir?"
+
+"No. A man's principles."
+
+Withers interposed in his blunt way, "Bishop, did you ever see Glen
+Naspa?"
+
+"No."
+
+"She's the prettiest Navajo in the country. Willetts was after her,
+that's all."
+
+"My dear man, I can't believe that of a Christian missionary. We've
+known Willetts for years. He's a man of influence. He has money back
+of him. He's doing a good work. You hint of a love relation."
+
+"No, I don't hint," replied Withers, impatiently. "I know. It's not
+the first time I've known a missionary to do this sort of thing. Nor
+is it the first time for Willetts. Bishop Kane, I live among the
+Indians. I see a lot I never speak of. My work is to trade with the
+Indians, that's all. But I'll not have Willetts or any other damned
+hypocrite run down my friend here. John Shefford is the finest young
+man that ever came to me in the desert. And he's got to be put right
+before you all or I'll not set foot in Stonebridge again. . . .
+Willetts was after Glen Naspa. Shefford punched him. And later
+threw him out of the old Indian's hogan up on the mountain. That
+explains Willetts's enmity. He was after the girl."
+
+"What's more, gentlemen, he GOT her," added Shefford. "Glen Naspa has
+not been home for six months. I saw her at Blue Canyon. . . . I would
+like to face this Willetts before you all."
+
+"Easy enough," replied Withers, with a grim chuckle. "He's just
+outside."
+
+The trader went out; Joe Lake followed at his heels and the three
+Mormons were next; Shefford brought up the rear and lingered in the
+door while his eye swept the crowd of men and Indians. His feeling
+was in direct contrast to his movements. He felt the throbbing of
+fierce anger. But it seemed a face came between him and his passion--
+a sweet and tragic face that would have had power to check him in
+a vastly more critical moment than this. And in an instant he had
+himself in hand, and, strangely, suddenly felt the strength that had
+come to him.
+
+Willetts stood in earnest colloquy with a short, squat Indian--the
+half-breed Shadd. They leaned against a hitching-rail. Other Indians
+were there, and outlaws. It was a mixed group, rough and hard-looking.
+
+"Hey, Willetts!" called the trader, and his loud, ringing voice, not
+pleasant, stilled the movement and sound.
+
+When Willetts turned, Shefford was half-way across the wide walk. The
+missionary not only saw him, but also Nas Ta Bega, who was striding
+forward. Joe Lake was ahead of the trader, the Mormons followed with
+decision, and they all confronted Willetts. He turned pale. Shadd
+had cautiously moved along the rail, nearer to his gang, and then
+they, with the others of the curious crowd, drew closer.
+
+"Willetts, here's Shefford. Now say it to his face!" declared the
+trader. He was angry and evidently wanted the fact known, as well
+as the situation.
+
+Willetts had paled, but he showed boldness. For an instant Shefford
+studied the smooth face, with its sloping lines, the dark, wine-
+colored eyes.
+
+"Willetts, I understand you've maligned me to Bishop Kane and others,"
+began Shefford, curtly.
+
+"I called you an atheist," returned the missionary, harshly.
+
+"Yes, and more than that. And I told these men WHY you vented your
+spite on me."
+
+Willetts uttered a half-laugh, an uneasy, contemptuous expression of
+scorn and repudiation.
+
+"The charges of such a man as you are can't hurt me," he said.
+
+The man did not show fear so much as disgust at the meeting. He
+seemed to be absorbed in thought, yet no serious consideration of the
+situation made itself manifest. Shefford felt puzzled. Perhaps there
+was no fire to strike from this man. The desert had certainly not
+made him flint. He had not toiled or suffered or fought.
+
+"But _I_ can hurt you," thundered Shefford, with startling suddenness.
+"Here! Look at this Indian! Do you know him? Glen Naspa's brother.
+Look at him. Let us see you face him while I accuse you. . . . You
+made love to Glen Naspa--took her from her home!"
+
+"Harping infidel!" replied Willetts, hoarsely. "So that's your game.
+Well, Glen Naspa came to my school of her own accord and she will say
+so."
+
+"Why will she? Because you blinded the simple Indian girl . . . .
+Willetts, I'll waste little more time on you."
+
+And swift and light as a panther Shefford leaped upon the man and,
+fastening powerful hands round the thick neck, bore him to his knees
+and bent back his head over the rail. There was a convulsive struggle,
+a hard flinging of arms, a straining wrestle, and then Willetts was
+in a dreadful position. Shefford held him in iron grasp.
+
+"You damned, white-livered hypocrite--I'm liable to kill you!" cried
+Shefford. "I watched you and Glen Naspa that day up on the mountain.
+I saw you embrace her. I saw that she loved you. Tell THAT, you liar!
+That'll be enough."
+
+The face of the missionary turned purple as Shefford forced his head
+back over the rail.
+
+"I'll kill you, man," repeated Shefford, piercingly. "Do you want to
+go to your God unprepared? Say you made love to Glen Naspa--tell that
+you persuaded her to leave her home. Quick!"
+
+Willetts raised a shaking hand and then Shefford relaxed the paralyzing
+grip and let his head come forward. The half-strangled man gasped out
+a few incoherent words that his livid, guilty face made unnecessary.
+
+Shefford gave him a shove and he fell into the dust at the feet of the
+Navajo.
+
+"Gentlemen, I leave him to Nas Ta Bega," said Shefford, with a strange
+change from passion to calmness.
+
+Late that night, when the roystering visitors had gone or were deep
+in drunken slumber, a melancholy and strange procession filed out of
+Stonebridge. Joe Lake and his armed comrades were escorting the
+Mormon women back to the hidden valley. They were mounted on burros
+and mustangs, and in all that dark and somber line there was only one
+figure which shone white under the pale moon.
+
+At the starting, until that white-clad figure had appeared, Shefford's
+heart had seemed to be in his throat; and thereafter its beat was
+muffled and painful in his breast. Yet there was some sad sweetness
+in the knowledge that he could see her now, be near her, watch over
+her.
+
+By and by the overcast clouds drifted and the moon shone bright. The
+night was still; the great dark mountain loomed to the stars; the
+numberless waves of rounded rock that must be crossed and circled lay
+deep in shadow. There was only a steady pattering of light hoofs.
+
+Shefford's place was near the end of the line, and he kept well back,
+riding close to one woman and then another. No word was spoken. These
+sealed wives rode where their mounts were led or driven, as blind
+in their hoods as veiled Arab women in palanquins. And their heads
+drooped wearily and their shoulders bent, as if under a burden. It
+took an hour of steady riding to reach the ascent to the plateau, and
+here, with the beginning of rough and smooth and shadowed trail, the
+work of the escort began. The line lengthened out and each man kept
+to the several women assigned to him. Shefford had three, and one of
+them was the girl he loved. She rode as if the world and time and
+life were naught to her. As soon as he dared trust his voice and
+his control he meant to let her know the man whom perhaps she had
+not forgotten was there with her, a friend. Six months! It had been
+a lifetime to him. Surely eternity to her! Had she forgotten? He
+felt like a coward who had basely deserted her. Oh--had he only known!
+
+She rode a burro that was slow, continually blocking the passage for
+those behind, and eventually it became lame. Thus the other women
+forged ahead. Shefford dismounted and stopped her burro. It was a
+moment before she noted the halt, and twice in that time Shefford
+tried to speak and failed. What poignant pain, regret, love made
+his utterance fail!
+
+"Ride my horse," he finally said, and his voice was not like his own.
+
+Obediently and wearily she dismounted from the burro and got up on
+Nack-yal. The stirrups were long for her and he had to change them.
+His fingers were all thumbs as he fumbled with the buckles.
+
+Suddenly he became aware that there had been a subtle change in her.
+He knew it without looking up and he seemed to be unable to go on with
+his task. If his life had depended upon keeping his head lowered he
+could not have done it. The listlessness of her drooping form was no
+longer manifest. The peak of the dark hood pointed toward him. He
+knew then that she was gazing at him.
+
+Never so long as he lived would that moment be forgotten! They were
+alone. The others had gotten so far ahead that no sound came back.
+The stillness was so deep it could be felt. The moon shone with
+white, cold radiance and the shining slopes of smooth stone waved
+away, crossed by shadows of pinyons.
+
+Then she leaned a little toward him. One swift hand flew up to tear
+the black hood back so that she could see. In its place flashed her
+white face. And her eyes were like the night.
+
+"YOU!" she whispered.
+
+His blood came leaping to sting neck and cheek and temple. What dared
+he interpret from that single word? Could any other word have meant so
+much?
+
+"No--one--else," he replied, unsteadily.
+
+Her white hand flashed again to him, and he met it with his own. He
+felt himself standing cold and motionless in the moonlight. He saw
+her, wonderful, with the deep, shadowy eyes, and a silver sheen on her
+hair. And as he looked she released her hand and lifted it, with the
+other, to her hood. He saw the shiny hair darken and disappear--and
+then the lovely face with its sad eyes and tragic lips.
+
+He drew Nack-yal's bridle forward, and led him up the moonlit trail.
+
+
+
+
+XII. THE REVELATION
+
+
+The following afternoon cowboys and horse-wranglers, keen-eyed as
+Indians for tracks and trails, began to arrive in the quiet valley
+to which the Mormon women had been returned.
+
+Under every cedar clump there were hobbled horses, packs, and rolled
+bedding in tarpaulins. Shefford and Joe Lake had pitched camp in the
+old site near the spring. The other men of Joe's escort went to the
+homes of the women; and that afternoon, as the curious visitors began
+to arrive, these homes became barred and dark and quiet, as if they
+had been closed and deserted for the winter. Not a woman showed
+herself.
+
+Shefford and Joe, by reason of the location of their camp and their
+alertness, met all the new-comers. The ride from Stonebridge was a
+long and hard one, calculated to wear off the effects of the whisky
+imbibed by the adventure-seekers. This fact alone saved the situation.
+Nevertheless, Joe expected trouble. Most of the visitors were decent,
+good-natured fellows, merely curious, and simple enough to believe
+that this really was what the Mormons had claimed--a village of free
+women. But there were those among them who were coarse, evil-minded,
+and dangerous.
+
+By supper-time there were two dozen or more of these men in the
+valley, camped along the west wall. Fires were lighted, smoke curled
+up over the cedars, gay songs disturbed the usual serenity of the
+place. Later in the early twilight the curious visitors, by twos
+and threes, walked about the village, peering at the dark cabins and
+jesting among themselves. Joe had informed Shefford that all the
+women had been put in a limited number of cabins, so that they could
+be protected. So far as Shefford saw or heard there was no unpleasant
+incident in the village; however, as the sauntering visitors returned
+toward their camps they loitered at the spring, and here developments
+threatened.
+
+In spite of the fact that the majority of these cowboys and their
+comrades were decent-minded and beginning to see the real relation
+of things, they were not disposed to be civil to Shefford. They were
+certainly not Mormons. And his position, apparently as a Gentile,
+among these Mormons was one open to criticism. They might have been
+jealous, too; at any rate, remarks were passed in his hearing, meant
+for his ears, that made it exceedingly trying for him not to resent.
+Moreover, Joe Lake's increasing impatience rendered the situation more
+difficult. Shefford welcomed the arrival of Nas Ta Bega. The Indian
+listened to the loud talk of several loungers round the camp-fire; and
+thereafter he was like Shefford's shadow, silent, somber, watchful.
+
+Nevertheless, it did not happen to be one of the friendly and sarcastic
+cowboys that precipitated the crisis. A horse-wrangler named Hurley,
+a man of bad repute, as much outlaw as anything, took up the bantering.
+
+"Say, Shefford, what in the hell's your job here, anyway?" he queried
+as he kicked a cedar branch into the camp-fire. The brightening blaze
+showed him swarthy, unshaven, a large-featured, ugly man.
+
+"I've been doing odd jobs for Withers," replied Shefford. "Expect to
+drive pack-trains in here for a while."
+
+"You must stand strong with these Mormons. Must be a Mormon yerself?"
+
+"No," replied Shefford, briefly.
+
+"Wal, I'm stuck on your job. Do you need a packer? I can throw a
+diamond-hitch better 'n any feller in this country."
+
+"I don't need help."
+
+"Mebbe you'll take me over to see the ladies," he went on, with a
+coarse laugh.
+
+Shefford did not show that he had heard. Hurley waited, leering as
+looked from the keen listeners to Shefford.
+
+"Want to have them all yerself, eh?" he jeered.
+
+Shefford struck him--sent him tumbling heavily, like a log. Hurley,
+cursing as he half rose, jerked his gun out. Nas Ta Bega, swift as
+light, kicked the gun out of his hand. And Joe Lake picked it up.
+
+Deliberately the Mormon cocked the weapon and stood over Hurley.
+
+"Get up!" he ordered, and Shefford heard the ruthless Mormon in
+him then.
+
+Hurley rose slowly. Then Joe prodded him in the middle with the
+cocked gun. Shefford startled, expected the gun to go off. So
+did the others, especially Hurley, who shrank in panic from the
+dark Mormon.
+
+"Rustle!" said Joe, and gave the man a harder prod. Assuredly the
+gun did not have a hair-trigger.
+
+"Joe, mebbe it's loaded!" protested one of the cowboys.
+
+Hurley shrank back, and turned to hurry away, with Joe close after
+him. They disappeared in the darkness. A constrained silence was
+maintained around the camp-fire for a while. Presently some of the
+men walked off and others began to converse. Everybody heard the
+sound of hoofs passing down the trail. The patter ceased, and in a
+few moments Lake returned. He still carried Hurley's gun.
+
+The crowd dispersed then. There was no indication of further trouble.
+However, Shefford and Joe and Nas Ta Bega divided the night in watches,
+so that some one would be wide awake.
+
+Early next morning there was an exodus from the village of the better
+element among the visitors. "No fun hangin' round hyar," one of them
+expressed it, and as good-naturedly as they had come they rode away.
+Six or seven of the desperado class remained behind, bent on mischief;
+and they were reinforced by more arrivals from Stonebridge. They
+avoided the camp by the spring, and when Shefford and Lake attempted
+to go to them they gave them a wide berth. This caused Joe to assert
+that they were up to some dirty work. All morning they lounged
+around under the cedars, keeping out of sight, and evidently the
+reinforcement from Stonebridge had brought liquor. When they gathered
+together at their camp, half drunk, all noisy, some wanting to swagger
+off into the village and others trying to hold them back, Joe Lake
+said, grimly, that somebody was going to get shot. Indeed, Shefford
+saw that there was every likelihood of bloodshed.
+
+"Reckon we'd better take to one of the cabins," said Joe.
+
+Thereupon the three repaired to the nearest cabin, and, entering, kept
+watch from the windows. During a couple of hours, however, they did
+not see or hear anything of the ruffians. Then came a shot from over
+in the village, a single yell, and, after that, a scattering volley.
+The silence and suspense which followed were finally broken by hoof-
+beats. Nas Ta Bega called Joe and Shefford to the window he had been
+stationed at. From here they saw the unwelcome visitors ride down the
+trail, to disappear in the cedars toward the outlet of the valley.
+Joe, who had numbered them, said that all but one of them had gone.
+
+"Reckon he got it," added Joe.
+
+So indeed it turned out; one of the men, a well-known rustler named
+Harker, had been killed, by whom no one seemed to know. He had
+brazenly tried to force his way into one of the houses, and the act
+had cost him his life. Naturally Shefford, never free from his
+civilized habit of thought, remarked apprehensively that he hoped
+this affair would not cause the poor women to be arrested again
+and haled before some rude court.
+
+"Law!" grunted Joe. "There ain't any. The nearest sheriff is in
+Durango. That's Colorado. And he'd give us a medal for killing
+Harker. It was a good job, for it'll teach these rowdies a lesson."
+
+Next day the old order of life was resumed in the village. And the
+arrival of a heavily laden pack-train, under the guidance of Withers,
+attested to the fact that the Mormons meant not only to continue to
+live in the valley, but also to build and plant and enlarge. This
+was good news to Shefford. At least the village could be made less
+lonely. And there was plenty of work to give him excuse for staying
+there. Furthermore, Withers brought a message form Bishop Kane to
+the effect that the young man was offered a place as teacher in
+the school, in co-operation with the Mormon teachers. Shefford
+experienced no twinge of conscience when he accepted.
+
+It was the fourth evening after the never-to-be-forgotten moonlight
+ride to the valley that Shefford passed under the dark pinyon-trees
+on his way to Fay Larkin's cottage. He paused in the gloom and
+memory beset him. The six months were annihilated, and it was the
+night he had fled. But now all was silent. He seemed to be trying
+to drag himself back. A beginning must be made. Only how to meet
+her--what to say--what to conceal!
+
+He tapped on the door and she came out. After all, it was a meeting
+vastly different from what his feeling made him imagine it might have
+been. She was nervous, frightened, as were all the other women, for
+that matter. She was alone in the cottage. He made haste to reassure
+her about the improbability of any further trouble such as had befallen
+the last week. As he had always done on those former visits to her,
+he talked rapidly, using all his wit, and here his emotion made him
+eloquent; he avoided personalities, except to tell about his prospects
+of work in the village, and he sought above all to lead her mind from
+thought of herself and her condition. Before he left her he had the
+gladness of knowing he had succeeded.
+
+When he said good night he felt the strange falsity of his position.
+He did not expect to be able to keep up the deception for long. That
+roused him, and half the night he lay awake, thinking. Next day he
+was the life of the work and study and play in that village. Kindness
+and good-will did not need inspiration, but it was keen, deep passion
+that made him a plotter for influence and friendship. Was there a
+woman in the village whom he might trust, in case he needed one? And
+his instinct guided him to her whom he had liked well--Ruth. Ruth
+Jones she had called herself at the trial, and when Shefford used the
+name she laughed mockingly. Ruth was not very religious, and sometimes
+she was bitter and hard. She wanted life, and here she was a prisoner
+in a lonely valley. She welcomed Shefford's visits. He imagined that
+she had slightly changed, and whether it was the added six months with
+its trouble and pain or a growing revolt he could not tell. After a
+time he divined that the inevitable retrogression had set in: she had
+not enough faith to uphold the burden she had accepted, nor the courage
+to cast it off. She was ready to love him. That did not frighten
+Shefford, and if she did love him he was not so sure it would not be
+an anchor for her. He saw her danger, and then he became what he had
+never really been in all the days of his ministry--the real helper.
+Unselfishly, for her sake, he found power to influence her; and
+selfishly, for the sake of Fay Larkin, he began slowly to win her
+to a possible need.
+
+The days passed swiftly. Mormons came and went, though in the
+open day, as laborers; new cabins went up, and a store, and other
+improvements. Some part of every evening Shefford spent with Fay,
+and these visits were no longer unknown to the village. Women
+gossiped, in a friendly way about Shefford, but with jealous tongues
+about the girl. Joe Lake told Shefford the run of the village talk.
+Anything concerning the Sago Lily the droll Mormon took to heart. He
+had been hard hit, and admitted it. Sometimes he went with Shefford
+to call upon her, but he talked little and never remained long.
+Shefford had anticipated antagonism on the part of Joe; however,
+he did not find it.
+
+Shefford really lived through the busy day for that hour with Fay in
+the twilight. And every evening seemed the same. He would find her
+in the dark, alone, silent, brooding, hopeless. Her mood did not
+puzzle him, but how to keep from plunging her deeper into despair
+baffled him. He exhausted all his powers trying to do for her what
+he had been able to do for Ruth. Yet he failed. Something had
+blunted her. The shadow of that baneful trial hovered over her,
+and he came to sense a strange terror in her. It was mostly always
+present. Was she thinking of Jane Withersteen and Lassiter, left
+dead or imprisoned in the valley from which she had been brought so
+mysteriously? Shefford wearied his brain revolving these questions.
+The fate of her friends, and the cross she bore--of these was tragedy
+born, but the terror--that Shefford divined came of waiting for the
+visit of the Mormon whose face she had never seen. Shefford prayed
+that he might never meet this man. Finally he grew desperate. When he
+first arrived at the girl's home she would speak, she showed gladness,
+relief, and then straightway she dropped back into the shadow of her
+gloom. When he got up to go then there was a wistfulness, an unspoken
+need, an unconscious reliance, in her reluctant good night.
+
+Then the hour came when he reached his limit. He must begin his
+revelation.
+
+"You never ask me anything--let alone about myself," he said.
+
+"I'd like to hear," she replied, timidly.
+
+"Do I strike you as an unhappy man?"
+
+"No, indeed."
+
+"Well, how DO I strike you?"
+
+This was an entirely new tack he had veered to.
+
+"Very good and kind to us women," she said.
+
+"I don't know about that. If I am so, it doesn't bring me happiness.
+. . . Do you remember what I told you once, about my being a preacher
+--disgrace, ruin, and all that--and my rainbow-chasing dream out here
+after a--a lost girl?"
+
+"I--remember all--you said," she replied, very low.
+
+"Listen." His voice was a little husky, but behind it there seemed a
+tide of resistless utterance. "Loss of faith and name did not send me
+to this wilderness. But I had love--love for that lost girl, Fay
+Larkin. I dreamed about her till I loved her. I dreamed that I would
+find her--my treasure--at the foot of a rainbow. Dreams! . . . When
+you told me she was dead I accepted that. There was truth in your
+voice. I respected your reticence. But something died in me then. I
+lost myself, the best of me, the good that might have uplifted me. I
+went away, down upon the barren desert, and there I rode and slept and
+grew into another and a harder man. Yet, strange to say, I never
+forgot her, though my dreams were done. As I toiled and suffered and
+changed I loved her--if not her, the thought of her--more and more.
+Now I have come back to these walled valleys--to the smell of pinyon,
+to the flowers in the nooks, to the wind on the heights, to the silence
+and loneliness and beauty. And here the dreams come back and SHE is
+WITH me always. Her spirit is all that keeps me kind and good, as you
+say I am. But I suffer, I long for her alive. If I love her dead,
+how could I love her living! Always I torture myself with the vain
+dream that--that she MIGHT not be dead. I have never been anything
+but a dreamer. And here I go about my work by day and lie awake at
+night with that lost girl in my mind. . . . I love her. Does that
+seem strange to you? But it would not if you understood. Think. I
+had lost faith, hope. I set myself a great work--to find Fay Larkin.
+And by the fire and the iron and the blood that I felt it would cost
+to save her some faith must come to me again. . . . My work is undone
+--I've never saved her. But listen, how strange it is to feel--now--
+as I let myself go--that just the loving her and the living here in the
+wildness that holds her somewhere have brought me hope again. Some
+faith must come, too. It was through her that I met this Indian, Nas
+Ta Bega. He has saved my life--taught me much. What would I ever
+have learned of the naked and vast earth, of the sublimity of the
+wild uplands, of the storm and night and sun, if I had not followed
+a gleam she inspired? In my hunt for a lost girl perhaps I wandered
+into a place where I shall find a God and my salvation. Do you marvel
+that I love Fay Larkin--that she is not dead to me? Do you marvel
+that I love her, when I KNOW, were she alive, chained in a canyon, or
+bound, or lost in any way, my destiny would lead me to her, and she
+should be saved?"
+
+Shefford ended, overcome with emotion. In the dusk he could not see
+the girl's face, but the white form that had drooped so listlessly
+seemed now charged by some vitalizing current. He knew he had spoken
+irrationally; still he held it no dishonor to have told her he loved
+her as one dead. If she took that love to the secret heart of living
+Fay Larkin, then perhaps a spirit might light in her darkened soul.
+He had no thought yet that Fay Larkin might ever belong to him. He
+divined a crime--he had seen her agony. And this avowal of his was
+only one step toward her deliverance.
+
+Softly she rose, retreating into the shadow.
+
+"Forgive me if I--I disturb you, distress you," he said. "I wanted to
+tell you. She was--somehow known to you. I am not happy. And are YOU
+happy? . . . Let her memory be a bond between us. . . . Good night."
+
+"Good night."
+
+Faintly as the faintest whisper breathed her reply, and, though it
+came from a child forced into womanhood, it whispered of girlhood not
+dead, of sweet incredulity, of amazed tumult, of a wondering, frantic
+desire to run and hide, of the bewilderment incident to a first hint
+of love.
+
+Shefford walked away into the darkness. The whisper filled his soul.
+Had a word of love ever been spoken to that girl? Never--not the love
+which had been on his lips. Fay Larkin's lonely life spoke clearly in
+her whisper.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Next morning as the sun gilded the looming peaks and shafts of gold
+slanted into the valley she came swiftly down the path to the spring.
+
+Shefford paused in his task of chopping wood. Joe Lake, on his knees,
+with his big hands in a pan of dough, lifted his head to stare. She
+had left off the somber black hood, and, although that made a vast
+difference in her, still it was not enough to account for what struck
+both men.
+
+"Good morning," she called, brightly.
+
+They both answered, but not spontaneously. She stopped at the spring
+and with one sweep of her strong arm filled the bucket and lifted it.
+Then she started back down the path and, pausing opposite the camp,
+set the bucket down.
+
+"Joe, do you still pride yourself on your sour dough?" she asked.
+
+"Reckon I do," replied Joe, with a grin.
+
+"I've heard your boasts, but never tasted your bread," she went on.
+
+"I'll ask you to eat with us some day."
+
+"Don't forget," she replied.
+
+And then shyly she looked at Shefford. She was like the fresh dawn,
+and the gold of the sun shone on her head.
+
+"Have you chopped all that wood--so early?" she asked.
+
+"Sure," replied Shefford, laughing. "I have to get up early to keep
+Joe from doing all the camp chores."
+
+She smiled, and then to Shefford she seemed to gleam, to be radiant.
+
+"It'd be a lovely morning to climb--'way high."
+
+"Why--yes--it would," replied Shefford, awkwardly. "I wish I didn't
+have my work."
+
+"Joe, will YOU climb with me some day?"
+
+"I should smile I will," declared Joe.
+
+"But I can run right up the walls."
+
+"I reckon. Mary, it wouldn't surprise me to see you fly."
+
+"Do you mean I'm like a canyon swallow or an angel?"
+
+Then, as Joe stared speechlessly, she said good-by and, taking up the
+bucket, went on with her swift, graceful step.
+
+"She's perked up," said the Mormon, staring after her. "Never heard
+her say more 'n yes or no till now."
+
+"She did seem--bright," replied Shefford.
+
+He was stunned. What had happened to her? To-day this girl had not
+been Mary, the sealed wife, or the Sago Lily, alien among Mormon
+women. Then it flashed upon him--she was Fay Larkin. She who had
+regarded herself as dead had come back to life. In one short night
+what had transformed her--what had taken place in her heart? Shefford
+dared not accept, nor allow lodgment in his mind, a thrilling idea that
+he had made her forget her misery.
+
+"Shefford, did you ever see her like that?" asked Joe.
+
+"Never."
+
+"Haven't you--something to do with it?"
+
+"Maybe I have. I--I hope so."
+
+"Reckon you've seen how she's faded--since the trial?"
+
+"No," replied Shefford, swiftly. "But I've not seen her face in
+daylight since then."
+
+"Well, take my hunch," said Joe, soberly. "She's begun to fade like
+the canyon lily when it's broken. And she's going to die unless--"
+
+"Why man!" ejaculated Shefford. "Didn't you see--"
+
+"Sure I see," interrupted the Mormon. "I see a lot you don't. She's
+so white you can look through her. She's grown thin, all in a week.
+She doesn't eat. Oh, I know, because I've made it my business to find
+out. It's no news to the women. But they'd like to see her die. And
+she will die unless--"
+
+"My God!" exclaimed Shefford, huskily. "I never noticed--I never
+thought. . . . Joe, hasn't she any friends?"
+
+"Sure. You and Ruth--and me. Maybe Nas Ta Bega, too. He watches her
+a good deal."
+
+"We can do so little, when she needs so much."
+
+"Nobody can help her, unless it's you," went on the Mormon. "That's
+plain talk. She seemed different this morning. Why, she was alive--
+she talked--she smiled. . . . Shefford, if you cheer her up I'll go
+to hell for you!"
+
+The big Mormon, on his knees, with his hands in a pan of dough, and
+his shirt all covered with flour, presented an incongruous figure of a
+man actuated by pathos and passion. Yet the contrast made his emotion
+all the simpler and stronger. Shefford grew closer to Joe in that
+moment.
+
+"Why do you think _I_ can cheer her, help her?" queried Shefford.
+
+"I don't know. But she's different with you. It's not that you're a
+Gentile, though, for all the women are crazy about you. You talk to
+her. You have power over her, Shefford. I feel that. She's only a
+kid."
+
+"Who is she, Joe? Where did she come from?" asked Shefford, very low,
+with his eyes cast down.
+
+"I don't know. I can't find out. Nobody knows. It's a mystery--to
+all the younger Mormons, anyway."
+
+Shefford burned to ask questions about the Mormon whose sealed wife
+the girl was, but he respected Joe too much to take advantage of him
+in a poignant moment like this. Besides, it was only jealousy that
+made him burn to know the Mormon's identity, and jealousy had become
+a creeping, insidious, growing fire. He would be wise not to add fuel
+to it. He rejected many things before he thought of one that he could
+voice to his friend.
+
+"Joe, it's only her body that belongs to--to . . . . Her soul is lost
+to--"
+
+"John Shefford, let that go. My mind's tired. I've been taught so
+and so, and I'm not bright. . . . But, after all, men are much alike.
+The thing with you and me is this--we don't want to see HER grave!"
+
+Love spoke there. The Mormon had seized upon the single elemental
+point that concerned him and his friend in their relation to this
+unfortunate girl. His simple, powerful statement united them; it gave
+the lie to his hint of denseness; it stripped the truth naked. It was
+such a wonderful thought-provoking statement that Shefford needed time
+to ponder how deep the Mormon was. To what limit would he go? Did he
+mean that here, between two men who loved the same girl, class, duty,
+honor, creed were nothing if they stood in the way of her deliverance
+and her life?
+
+"Joe Lake, you Mormons are impossible," said Shefford, deliberately.
+"You don't want to see her grave. So long as she lives--remains on
+the earth--white and gold like the flower you call her, that's enough
+for you. It's her body you think of. And that's the great and
+horrible error in your religion. . . . But death of the soul is
+infinitely worse than death of the body. I have been thinking of
+her soul. . . . So here we stand, you and I. You to save her life
+--I to save her soul! What will you do?"
+
+"Why, John, I'd turn Gentile," he said, with terrible softness. It
+was a softness that scorned Shefford for asking, and likewise it flung
+defiance at his creed and into the face of hell.
+
+Shefford felt the sting and the exaltation.
+
+"And I'd be a Mormon," he said.
+
+"All right. We understand each other. Reckon there won't be any call
+for such extremes. I haven't an idea what you mean--what can be done.
+But I say, go slow, so we won't all find graves. First cheer her up
+somehow. Make her want to live. But go slow, John. AND DON'T BE WITH
+HER LATE!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+That night Shefford found her waiting for him in the moonlight--a girl
+who was as transparent as crystal-clear water, who had left off the
+somber gloom with the black hood, who tremulously embraced happiness
+without knowing it, who was one moment timid and wild like a half-
+frightened fawn, and the next, exquisitely half-conscious of what it
+meant to be thought dead, but to be alive, to be awakening, wondering,
+palpitating, and to be loved.
+
+Shefford lived the hour as a dream and went back to the quiet darkness
+under the cedars to lie wide-eyed, trying to recall all that she had
+said. For she had talked as if utterance had long been dammed behind
+a barrier of silence.
+
+There followed other hours like that one, indescribable hours, so
+sweet they stung, and in which, keeping pace with his love, was the
+nobler stride of a spirit that more every day lightened her burden.
+
+The thing he had to do, sooner or later, was to tell her he knew she
+was Fay Larkin, not dead, but alive, and that, not love nor religion,
+but sacrifice, nailed her down to her martyrdom. Many and many a time
+he had tried to force himself to tell her, only to fail. He hated to
+risk ending this sweet, strange, thoughtless, girlish mood of hers.
+It might not be soon won back--perhaps never. How could he tell what
+chains bound her? And so as he vacillated between Joe's cautious
+advice to go slow and his own pity the days and weeks slipped by.
+
+One haunting fear kept him sleepless half the nights and sick even in
+his dreams, and it was that the Mormon whose sealed wife she was might
+come, surely would come, some night. Shefford could bear it. But what
+would that visit do to Fay Larkin? Shefford instinctively feared the
+awakening in the girl of womanhood, of deeper insight, of a spiritual
+realization of what she was, of a physical dawn.
+
+He might have spared himself needless torture. One day Joe Lake eyed
+him with penetrating glance.
+
+"Reckon you don't have to sleep right on that Stonebridge trail," said
+the Mormon, significantly.
+
+Shefford felt the blood burn his neck and face. He had pulled his
+tarpaulin closer to the trail, and his motive was as an open page to
+the keen Mormon.
+
+"Why?" asked Shefford.
+
+"There won't be any Mormons riding in here soon--by night--to visit
+the women," replied Joe, bluntly. "Haven't you figured there might
+be government spies watching the trails?"
+
+"No, I haven't."
+
+"Well, take a hunch, then," added the Mormon, gruffly, and Shefford
+divined, as well as if he had been told, that warning word had gone
+to Stonebridge. Gone despite the fact that Nas Ta Bega had reported
+every trail free of watchers! There was no sign of any spies, cowboys,
+outlaws, or Indians in the vicinity of the valley. A passionate
+gratitude to the Mormon overcame Shefford; and the unreasonableness of
+it, the nature of it, perturbed him greatly. But, something hammered
+into his brain, if he loved one of these sealed wives, how could he
+help being jealous?
+
+The result of Joe's hint was that Shefford put off the hour of
+revelation, lived in his dream, helped the girl grow farther and
+farther away from her trouble, until that inevitable hour arrived
+when he was driven by accumulated emotion as much as the exigency
+of the case.
+
+He had not often walked with her beyond the dark shade of the pinyons
+round the cottage, but this night, when he knew he must tell her, he
+led her away down the path, through the cedar grove to the west end
+of the valley where it was wild and lonely and sad and silent.
+
+The moon was full and the great peaks were crowned as with snow. A
+coyote uttered his cutting cry. There were a few melancholy notes
+from a night bird of the stone walls. The air was clear and cold,
+with a tang of frost in it. Shefford gazed about him at the vast,
+uplifted, insulating walls, and that feeling of his which was more
+than a sense told him how walls like these and the silence and shadow
+and mystery had been nearly all of Fay Larkin's life. He felt them
+all in her.
+
+He stopped out in the open, near the line where dark shadow of the
+wall met the silver moonlight on the grass, and here, by a huge flat
+stone where he had come often alone and sometimes with Ruth, he faced
+Fay Larkin in the spirit to tell her gently that he knew her, and
+sternly to force her secret from her.
+
+"Am I your friend?" he began.
+
+"Ah!--my only friend," she said.
+
+"Do you trust me, believe I mean well by you, want to help you?"
+
+"Yes, indeed."
+
+"Well, then, let me speak of you. You know one topic we've never
+touched upon. You!"
+
+She was silent, and looked wonderingly, a little fearfully, at him,
+as if vague, disturbing thoughts were entering the fringe of her mind.
+
+"Our friendship is a strange one, is it not?" he went on.
+
+"How do I know? I never had any other friendship. What do you mean
+by strange?"
+
+"Well, I'm a young man. You're a--a married woman. We are together a
+good deal--and like to be."
+
+"Why is that strange?" she asked.
+
+Suddenly Shefford realized that there was nothing strange in what was
+natural. A remnant of sophistication clung to him and that had spoken.
+He needed to speak to her in a way which in her simplicity she would
+understand.
+
+"Never mind strange. Say that I am interested in you, and, as you're
+not happy, I want to help you. And say that your neighbors are curious
+and oppose my idea. Why do they?"
+
+"They're jealous and want you themselves," she replied, with sweet
+directness. "They've said things I don't understand. But I felt
+they--they hated in me what would be all right in themselves."
+
+Here to simplicity she added truth and wisdom, as an Indian might have
+expressed them. But shame was unknown to her, and she had as yet only
+vague perceptions of love and passion. Shefford began to realize the
+quickness of her mind, that she was indeed awakening.
+
+"They are jealous--were jealous before I ever came here. That's only
+human nature. I was trying to get to a point. Your neighbors are
+curious. They oppose me. They hate you. It's all bound up in the--
+the fact of your difference from them, your youth, beauty, that you're
+not a Mormon, that you nearly betrayed their secret at the trial in
+Stonebridge."
+
+"Please--please don't--speak of that!" she faltered.
+
+"But I must," he replied, swiftly. "That trial was a torture to you.
+It revealed so much to me. . . . I know you are a sealed wife. I know
+there has been a crime. I know you've sacrificed yourself. I know
+that love and religion have nothing to do with--what you are. . . .
+Now, is not all that true?"
+
+"I must not tell," she whispered.
+
+"But I shall MAKE you tell," he replied, and his voice rang.
+
+"Oh no, you cannot," she said.
+
+"I can--with just one word!"
+
+Her eyes were great, starry, shadowy gulfs, dark in the white beauty
+of her face. She was calm now. She had strength. She invited him to
+speak the word, and the wistful, tremulous quiver of her lips was for
+his earnest thought of her.
+
+"Wait--a--little," said Shefford, unsteadily. "I'll come to that
+presently. Tell me this--have you ever thought of being free?"
+
+"Free!" she echoed, and there was singular depth and richness in her
+voice. That was the first spark of fire he had struck from her.
+"Long ago, the minute I was unwatched, I'd have leaped from a wall
+had I dared. Oh, I wasn't afraid. I'd love to die that way. But
+I never dared."
+
+"Why?" queried Shefford, piercingly.
+
+She was silent then.
+
+"Suppose I offered to give you freedom that meant life?"
+
+"I--couldn't--take it."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Oh, my friend, don't ask me any more."
+
+"I know, I can see--you want to tell me--you need to tell."
+
+"But I daren't."
+
+"Won't you trust me?"
+
+"I do--I do."
+
+"Then tell me."
+
+"No--no--oh no!"
+
+The moment had come. How sad, tragic, yet glorious for him! It would
+be like a magic touch upon this lovely, cold, white ghost of Fay
+Larkin, transforming her into a living, breathing girl. He held his
+love as a thing aloof, and, as such, intangible because of the living
+death she believed she lived, it had no warmth and intimacy for them.
+What might it not become with a lightning flash of revelation? He
+dreaded, yet he was driven to speak. He waited, swallowing hard,
+fighting the tumultuous storm of emotion, and his eyes dimmed.
+
+"What did I come to this country for?" he asked, suddenly, in ringing,
+powerful voice.
+
+"To find a girl," she whispered.
+
+"I've found her!"
+
+She began to shake. He saw a white hand go to her breast.
+
+"Where is Surprise Valley? . . . How were you taken from Jane
+Withersteen and Lassiter? . . . I know they're alive. But where?"
+
+She seemed to turn to stone.
+
+"Fay!--FAY LARKIN! . . . I KNOW YOU!" he cried, brokenly.
+
+She slipped off the stone to her knees, swayed forward blindly with
+her hands reaching out, her head falling back to let the moon fall
+full upon the beautiful, snow-white, tragically convulsed face.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. THE STORY OF SURPRISE VALLEY
+
+
+" . . . Oh, I remember so well! Even now I dream of it sometimes. I
+hear the roll and crash of falling rock--like thunder. . . . We rode
+and rode. Then the horses fell. Uncle Jim took me in his arms and
+started up the cliff. Mother Jane climbed close after us. They kept
+looking back. Down there in the gray valley carne the Mormons. I see
+the first one now. He rode a white horse. That was Tull. Oh, I
+remember so well! And I was five or six years old.
+
+"We climbed up and up and into dark canyon and wound in and out. Then
+there was the narrow white trail, straight up, with the little cut
+steps and the great, red, ruined walls. I looked down over Uncle Jim's
+shoulder. I saw Mother Jane dragging herself up. Uncle Jim's blood
+spotted the trail. He reached a flat place at the top and fell with
+me. Mother Jane crawled up to us.
+
+"Then she cried out and pointed. Tull was 'way below, climbing the
+trail. His men came behind him. Uncle Jim went to a great, tall rock
+and leaned against it. There was a bloody hole in his hand. He pushed
+the rock. It rolled down, banging the loose walls. They crashed and
+crashed--then all was terrible thunder and red smoke. I couldn't hear
+--I couldn't see.
+
+"Uncle Jim carried me down and down out of the dark and dust into a
+beautiful valley all red and gold, with a wonderful arch of stone over
+the entrance.
+
+"I don't remember well what happened then for what seemed a long, long
+time. I can feel how the place looked, but not so clear as it is now
+in my dreams. I seem to see myself with the dogs, and with Mother
+Jane, learning my letters, marking with red stone on the walls.
+
+"But I remember now how I felt when I first understood we were shut in
+for ever. Shut in Surprise Valley where Venters had lived so long. I
+was glad. The Mormons would never get me. I was seven or eight years
+old then. From that time all is clear in my mind.
+
+"Venters had left supplies and tools and grain and cattle and burros,
+so we had a good start to begin life there. He had killed off the
+wildcats and kept the coyotes out, so the rabbits and quail multiplied
+till there were thousands of them. We raised corn and fruit, and
+stored what we didn't use. Mother Jane taught me to read and write
+with the soft red stone that marked well on the walls.
+
+"The years passed. We kept track of time pretty well. Uncle Jim's
+hair turned white and Mother Jane grew gray. Every day was like the
+one before. Mother Jane cried sometimes and Uncle Jim was sad because
+they could never be able to get me out of the valley. It was long
+before they stopped looking and listening for some one. Venters would
+come back, Uncle Jim always said. But Mother Jane did not think so.
+
+"I loved Surprise Valley. I wanted to stay there always. I remembered
+Cottonwoods, how the children there hated me, and I didn't want to go
+back. The only unhappy times I ever had in the valley were when Ring
+and Whitie, my dogs, grew old and died. I roamed the valley. I
+climbed to every nook upon the mossy ledges. I learned to run up the
+steep cliffs. I could almost stick on the straight walls. Mother Jane
+called me a wild girl. We had put away the clothes we wore when we got
+there, to save them, and we made clothes of skins. I always laughed
+when I thought of my little dress--how I grew out of it. I think Uncle
+Jim and Mother Jane talked less as the years went by. And after I'd
+learned all she could teach me we didn't talk much. I used to scream
+into the caves just to hear my voice, and the echoes would frighten me.
+
+"The older I grew the more I was alone. I was always running round the
+valley. I would climb to a high place and sit there for hours, doing
+nothing. I just watched and listened. I used to stay in the cliff-
+dwellers' caves and wonder about them. I loved to be out in the wind.
+And my happiest time was in the summer storms with the thunder echoes
+under the walls. At evening it was such a quiet place--after the night
+bird's cry, no sound. The quiet made me sad but I loved it. I loved
+to watch the stars as I lay awake.
+
+"So it was beautiful and happy for me there till--till . . .
+
+"Two years or more ago there was a bad storm, and one of the great
+walls caved. The walls were always weathering, slipping. Many and
+many a time have I heard the rumble of an avalanche, but most of them
+were in other canyon. This slide in the valley made it possible, Uncle
+Jim said, for men to get down into the valley. But we could not climb
+out unless helped from above. Uncle Jim never rested well after that.
+But it never worried me.
+
+"One day, over a year ago, while I was across the valley, I heard
+strange shouts, and then screams. I ran to our camp. I came upon
+men with ropes and guns. Uncle Jim was tied, and a rope was round
+his neck. Mother Jane was lying on the ground. I thought she was
+dead until I heard her moan. I was not afraid. I screamed and flew
+at Uncle Jim to tear the ropes off him. The men held me back. They
+called me a pretty cat. Then they talked together, and some were for
+hanging Lassiter--that was the first time I ever knew any name for him
+but Uncle Jim--and some were for leaving him in the valley. Finally
+they decided to hang him. But Mother Jane pleaded so and I screamed
+and fought so that they left off. Then they went away and we saw
+them climb out of the valley.
+
+"Uncle Jim said they were Mormons, and some among them had been born
+in Cottonwoods. I was not told why they had such a terrible hate for
+him. He said they would come back and kill him. Uncle Jim had no guns
+to fight with.
+
+"We watched and watched. In five days they did come back, with more
+men, and some of them wore black masks. They came to our cave with
+ropes and guns. One was tall. He had a cruel voice. The others ran
+to obey him. I could see white hair and sharp eyes behind the mask.
+The men caught me and brought me before him.
+
+"He said Lassiter had killed many Mormons. He said Lassiter had
+killed his father and should be hanged. But Lassiter would be let
+live and Mother Jane could stay with him, both prisoners there in the
+valley, if I would marry the Mormon. I must marry him, accept the
+Mormon faith, and bring up my children as Mormons. If I refused they
+would hang Lassiter, leave the heretic Jane Withersteen alone in the
+valley, and take me and break me to their rule.
+
+"I agreed. But Mother Jane absolutely forbade me to marry him. Then
+the Mormons took me away. It nearly killed me to leave Uncle Jim and
+Mother Jane. I was carried and lifted out of the valley, and rode a
+long way on a horse. They brought me here, to the cabin where I live,
+and I have never been away except that--that time--to--Stonebridge.
+Only little by little did I learn my position. Bishop Kane was kind,
+but stern, because I could not be quick to learn the faith.
+
+"I am not a sealed wife. But they're trying to make me one. The
+master Mormon--he visited me often--at night--till lately. He
+threatened me. He never told me a name--except Saint George. I
+don't--know him--except his voice. I never--saw his face--in the
+light!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Fay Larkin ended her story. Toward its close Shefford had grown
+involuntarily restless, and when her last tragic whisper ceased
+all his body seemed shaken with a terrible violence of his joy. He
+strode to and fro in the dark shadow of the stone. The receding
+blood left him cold, with a pricking, sickening sensation over his
+body, but there seemed to be an overwhelming tide accumulating deep
+in his breast--a tide of passion and pain. He dominated the passion,
+but the ache remained. And he returned to the quiet figure on the
+stone.
+
+"Fay Larkin!" he exclaimed, with a deep breath of relief that the
+secret was disclosed. "So you're not a wife! . . . You're free!
+Thank Heaven! But I felt it was sacrifice. I knew there had been
+a crime. For crime it is. You child! You can't understand what
+crime. Oh, almost I wish you and Jane and Lassiter had never been
+found. But that's wrong of me. One year of agony--that shall not
+ruin your life. Fay, I will take you away."
+
+"Where?" she whispered.
+
+"Away from this Mormon country--to the East," he replied, and he spoke
+of what he had known, of travel, of cities, of people, of happiness
+possible for a young girl who had spent all her life hidden between
+the narrow walls of a silent, lonely valley--he spoke swiftly and
+eloquently till he lost his breath.
+
+There was an instant of flashing wonder and joy on her white face, and
+then the radiance paled, the glow died. Her soul was the darker for
+that one strange, leaping glimpse of a glory not for such as she.
+
+"I must stay here," she said, shudderingly.
+
+"Fay!--How strange to SAY Fay aloud to YOU!--Fay, do you know the way
+to Surprise Valley?"
+
+"I don't know where it is, but I could go straight to it," she replied.
+
+"Take me there. Show me your beautiful valley. Let me see where you
+ran and climbed and spent so many lonely years."
+
+"Ah, how I'd love to! But I dare not. And why should you want me to
+take you? We can run and climb here."
+
+"I want to--I mean to save Jane Withersteen and Lassiter," he declared.
+
+She uttered a little cry of pain. "Save them?"
+
+"Yes, save them. Get them out of the valley, take them out of the
+country, far away where they and YOU--"
+
+"But I can't go," she wailed. "I'm afraid. I'm bound. It CAN'T be
+broken. If I dared--if I tried to go they would catch me. They would
+hang Uncle Jim and leave Mother Jane alone there to starve."
+
+"Fay, Lassiter and Jane both will starve--at least they will die there
+if we do not save them. You have been terribly wronged. You're a
+slave. You're not a wife."
+
+"They--said I'll be burned in hell if I don't marry him. . . . Mother
+Jane never taught me about God. I don't know. But HE--he said God was
+there. I dare not break it."
+
+"Fay, you have been deceived by old men. Let them have their creed.
+But YOU mustn't accept it."
+
+"John, what is God to you?"
+
+"Dear child, I--I am not sure of that myself," he replied, huskily.
+"When all this trouble is behind us, surely I can help you to
+understand and you can help me. The fact that you are alive--that
+Lassiter and Jane are alive--that I shall save you all--that lifts
+me up. I tell you--Fay Larkin will be my salvation."
+
+"Your words trouble me. Oh, I shall be torn one way and another. . . .
+But, John, I daren't run away. I will not tell you where to find
+Lassiter and Mother Jane."
+
+"I shall find them--I have the Indian. He found you for me. Nas Ta
+Bega will find Surprise Valley."
+
+"Nas Ta Bega! . . . Oh, I remember. There was an Indian with the
+Mormons who found us. But he was a Piute."
+
+"Nas Ta Bega never told me how he learned about you. That he learned
+was enough. And, Fay, he will find Surprise Valley. He will save
+Uncle Jim and Mother Jane."
+
+Fay's hands clasped Shefford's in strong, trembling pressure; the
+tears streamed down her white cheeks; a tragic and eloquent joy
+convulsed her face.
+
+"Oh, my friend, save them! But I can't go. . . . Let them keep me!
+Let him kill me!"
+
+"Him! Fay--he shall not harm you," replied Shefford in passionate
+earnestness.
+
+She caught the hand he had struck out with.
+
+"You talk--you look like Uncle Jim when he spoke of the Mormons," she
+said. "Then I used to be afraid of him. He was so different. John,
+you must not do anything about me. Let me be. It's too late. He--and
+his men--they would hang you. And I couldn't bear that. I've enough
+to bear without losing my friend. Say you won't watch and wait--for--
+for him."
+
+Shefford had to promise her. Like an Indian she gave expression to
+primitive feeling, for it certainly never occurred to her that,
+whatever Shefford might do, he was not the kind of man to wait in
+hiding for an enemy. Fay had faltered through her last speech and
+was now weak and nervous and frightened. Shefford took her back to
+the cabin.
+
+"Fay, don't be distressed," he said. "I won't do anything right away.
+You can trust me. I won't be rash. I'll consult you before I make a
+move. I haven't any idea what I could do, anyway. . . . You must bear
+up. Why, it looks as if you're sorry I found you."
+
+"Oh! I'm glad!" she whispered.
+
+"Then if you're glad you mustn't break down this way again. Suppose
+some of the women happened to run into us."
+
+"I won't again. It's only you--you surprised me so. I used to think
+how I'd like you to know--I wasn't really dead. But now--it's
+different. It hurts me here. Yet I'm glad--if my being alive makes
+you--a little happier."
+
+Shefford felt that he had to go then. He could not trust himself any
+further.
+
+"Good night, Fay," he said.
+
+"Good night, John," she whispered. "I promise--to be good to-morrow."
+
+She was crying softly when he left her. Twice he turned to see the
+dim, white, slender form against the gloom of the cabin. Then he went
+on under the pinyons, blindly down the path, with his heart as heavy
+as lead. That night as he rolled in his blanket and stretched wearily
+he felt that he would never be able to sleep. The wind in the cedars
+made him shiver. The great stars seemed relentless, passionless, white
+eyes, mocking his little destiny and his pain. The huge shadow of the
+mountain resembled the shadow of the insurmountable barrier between
+Fay and him.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Her pitiful, childish promise to be good was in his mind when he went
+to her home on the next night. He wondered how she would be, and he
+realized a desperate need of self-control.
+
+But that night Fay Larkin was a different girl. In the dark, before
+she spoke, he felt a difference that afforded him surprise and relief.
+He greeted her as usual. And then it seemed, though not at all
+clearly, that he was listening to a girl, strangely and unconsciously
+glad to see him, who spoke with deeper note in her voice, who talked
+where always she had listened, whose sadness was there under an
+eagerness, a subdued gaiety as new to her, as sweet as it was
+bewildering. And he responded with emotion, so that the hour passed
+swiftly, and he found himself back in camp, in a kind of dream, unable
+to remember much of what she had said, sure only of this strange
+sweetness suddenly come to her.
+
+Upon the following night, however, he discovered what had wrought this
+singular change in Fay Larkin. She loved him and she did not know it.
+How passionately sweet and sad and painful was that realization for
+Shefford! The hour spent with her then was only a moment.
+
+He walked under the stars that night and they shed a glorious light
+upon him. He tried to think, to plan, but the sweetness of remembered
+word or look made mental effort almost impossible. He got as far as
+the thought that he would do well to drift, to wait till she learned
+she loved him, and then, perhaps, she could be persuaded to let him
+take her and Lassiter and Jane away together.
+
+And from that night he went at his work and the part he played in the
+village with a zeal and a cunning that left him free to seek Fay when
+he chose.
+
+Sometimes in the afternoon, always for a while in the evening, he was
+with her. They climbed the walls, and sat upon a lonely height to look
+afar; they walked under the stars, and the cedars, and the shadows of
+the great cliffs. She had a beautiful mind. Listening to her, he
+imagined he saw down into beautiful Surprise Valley with all its weird
+shadows, its colored walls and painted caves, its golden shafts of
+morning light and the red haze at sunset; and he felt the silence that
+must have been there, and the singing of the wind in the cliffs, and
+the sweetness and fragrance of the flowers, and the wildness of it
+all. Love had worked a marvelous transformation in this girl who had
+lived her life in a canyon. The burden upon her did not weigh heavily.
+She could not have an unhappy thought. She spoke of the village, of
+her Mormon companions, of daily happenings, of Stonebridge, of many
+things in a matter-of-fact way that showed how little they occupied
+her mind. She even spoke of sealed wives in a kind of dreamy
+abstraction. Something had possession of her, something as strong
+as the nature which had developed her, and in its power she, in her
+simplicity, was utterly unconscious, a watching and feeling girl. A
+strange, witching, radiant beauty lurked in her smile. And Shefford
+heard her laugh in his dreams.
+
+The weeks slipped by. The black mountain took on a white cap of snow;
+in the early mornings there was ice in the crevices on the heights and
+frost in the valley. In the sheltered canyon where sunshine seemed to
+linger it was warm and pleasant, so that winter did not kill the
+flowers.
+
+Shefford waited so long for Fay's awakening that he believed it would
+never come, and, believing, had not the heart to force it upon her.
+Then there was a growing fear with him. What would Fay Larkin do when
+she awakened to the truth? Fay was indeed like that white and fragile
+lily which bloomed in the silent, lonely canyon, but the same nature
+that had created it had created her. Would she droop as the lily would
+in a furnace blast? More than that, he feared a sudden flashing into
+life of strength, power, passion, hate. She did not hate yet because
+she did not yet realize love. She was utterly innocent of any wrong
+having been done her. More and more he began to fear, and a foreboding
+grew upon him. He made up his mind to broach the subject of Surprise
+Valley and of escaping with Lassiter and Jane; still, every time he
+was with Fay the girl and her beauty and her love were so wonderful
+that he put off the ordeal till the next night. As time flew by he
+excused his vacillation on the score that winter was not a good time
+to try to cross the desert. There was no grass for the mustangs,
+except in well-known valleys, and these he must shun. Spring would
+soon come. So the days passed, and he loved Fay more all the time,
+desperately living out to its limit the sweetness of every moment with
+her, and paying for his bliss in the increasing trouble that beset him
+when once away from her charm.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+One starry night, about ten o'clock, he went, as was his custom, to
+drink at the spring. Upon his return to the cedars Nas Ta Bega, who
+slept under the same tree with him, had arisen, with his blanket
+hanging half off his shoulder.
+
+"Listen," said the Indian.
+
+Shefford took one glance at the dark, somber face, with its inscrutable
+eyes, now so strange and piercing, and then, with a kind of cold
+excitement, he faced the way the Indian looked, and listened. But
+he heard only the soft moan of the night wind in the cedars.
+
+Nas Ta Bega kept the rigidity of his position for a moment, and then
+he relaxed, and stood at ease. Shefford knew the Indian had made a
+certainty of what must have been a doubtful sound. And Shefford leaned
+his ear to the wind and strained his hearing.
+
+Then the soft night breeze brought a faint patter--the slow trot of
+horses on a hard trail. Some one was coming into the village at a
+late hour. Shefford thought of Joe Lake. But Joe lay right behind
+him, asleep in his blankets. It could not be Withers, for the trader
+was in Durango at that time. Shefford thought of Willetts and Shadd.
+
+"Who's coming?" he asked low of the Indian.
+
+Nas Ta Bega pointed down the trail without speaking.
+
+Shefford peered through the white dim haze of starlight and presently
+he made out moving figures. Horses, with riders--a string of them--
+one--two--three--four--five--and he counted up to eleven. Eleven
+horsemen riding into the village! He was amazed, and suddenly keenly
+anxious. This visit might be one of Shadd's raids.
+
+"Shadd's gang!" he whispered.
+
+"No, Bi Nai," replied Nas Ta Bega, and he drew Shefford farther into
+the shade of the cedars. His voice, his action, the way he kept a
+hand on Shefford's shoulder, all this told much to the young man.
+
+Mormons come on a night visit! Shefford realized it with a slight
+shock. Then swift as a lightning flash he was rent by another
+shock--one that brought cold moisture to his brow and to his heart
+a flame of hell.
+
+He was shaking when he sank down to find the support of a log. Like
+a shadow the Indian silently moved away. Shefford watched the eleven
+horses pass the camp, go down the road, to disappear in the village.
+They vanished, and the soft clip-clops of hoofs died away. There was
+nothing left to prove he had not dreamed.
+
+Nothing to prove it except this sudden terrible demoralization of his
+physical and spiritual being! While he peered out into the valley,
+toward the black patch of cedars and pinyons that hid the cabins,
+moments and moments passed, and in them he was gripped with cold and
+fire.
+
+Was the Mormon who had abducted Fay--the man with the cruel voice--
+was he among those eleven horsemen? He might not have been. What a
+torturing hope! But vain--vain, for inevitably he must be among them.
+He was there in the cabin already. He had dismounted, tied his horse,
+had knocked on her door. Did he need to knock? No, he would go in,
+he would call her in that cruel voice, and then . . .
+
+Shefford pulled a blanket from his bed and covered his cold and
+trembling body. He had sunk down off the log, was leaning back upon
+it. The stars were pale, far off, and the valley seemed unreal. He
+found himself listening--listening with sick and terrible earnestness,
+trying to hear against the thrum and beat of his heart, straining to
+catch a sound in all that cold, star-blanched, silent valley. But he
+could hear no sound. It was as if death held the valley in its perfect
+silence. How he hated that silence! There ought to have been a
+million horrible, bellowing demons making the night hideous. Did the
+stars serenely look down upon the lonely cabins of these exiles? Was
+there no thunderbolt to drop down from that dark and looming mountain
+upon the silent cabin where tragedy had entered? In all the world,
+under the sea, in the abysmal caves, in the vast spaces of the air,
+there was no such terrible silence as this. A scream, a long cry, a
+moan--these were natural to a woman, and why did not one of these
+sealed wives, why did not Fay Larkin, damn this everlasting acquiescent
+silence? Perhaps she would fly out of her cabin, come running along
+the path. Shefford peered into the bright patches of starlight and
+into the shadows of the cedars. But he saw no moving form in the
+open, no dim white shape against the gloom. And he heard no sound--
+not even a whisper of wind in the branches overhead.
+
+Nas Ta Bega returned to the shade of the cedars and, lying down on
+his blankets, covered himself and went to sleep. The fact seemed
+to bring bitter reality to Shefford. Nothing was going to happen.
+The valley was to be the same this night as any other night. Shefford
+accepted the truth. He experienced a kind of self-pity. The night
+he had thought so much about, prepared for, and had forgotten had now
+arrived. Then he threw another blanket round him, and, cold, dark,
+grim, he faced that lonely vigil, meaning to sit there, wide-eyed, to
+endure and to wait.
+
+Jealousy and pain, following his frenzy, abided with him long hours,
+and when they passed he divined that selfishness passed with them.
+What he suffered then was for Fay Larkin and for her sisters in
+misfortune. He grew big enough to pity these fanatics. The fiery,
+racing tide of blood that had made of him only an animal had cooled
+with thought of others. Still he feared that stultifying thing which
+must have been hate. What a tempest had raged within him! This blood
+of his, that had received a stronger strain from his desert life, might
+in a single moment flood out reason and intellect and make him a
+vengeful man. So in those starlit hours that dragged interminably he
+looked deep into his heart and tried to fortify himself against a dark
+and evil moment to come.
+
+Midnight--and the valley seemed a tomb! Did he alone keep wakeful?
+The sky was a darker blue, the stars burned a whiter fire, the peaks
+stood looming and vast, tranquil sentinels of that valley, and the
+wind rose to sigh, to breathe, to mourn through the cedars. It was
+a sad music. The Indian lay prone, dark face to the stars. Joe Lake
+lay prone, sleeping as quietly, with his dark face exposed to the
+starlight. The gentle movement of the cedar branches changed the
+shape of the bright patches on the grass where shadow and light met.
+The walls of the valley waved upward, dark below and growing paler,
+to shine faintly at the rounded rims. And there was a tiny, silvery
+tinkle of running water over stones.
+
+Here was a little nook of the vast world. Here were tranquillity,
+beauty, music, loneliness, life. Shefford wondered--did he alone keep
+watchful? Did he feel that he could see dark, wide eyes peering into
+the gloom? And it came to him after a time that he was not alone in
+his vigil, nor was Fay Larkin alone in her agony. There was some one
+else in the valley, a great and breathing and watchful spirit. It
+entered into Shefford's soul and he trembled. What had come to him?
+And he answered--only added pain and new love, and a strange strength
+from the firmament and the peaks and the silence and the shadows.
+
+The bright belt with its three radiant stars sank behind the western
+wall and there was a paler gloom upon the valley.
+
+Then a few lights twinkled in the darkness that enveloped the cabins;
+a woman's laugh strangely broke the silence, profaning it, giving the
+lie to that somber yoke which seemed to consist of the very shadows;
+the voices of men were heard, and then the slow clip-clop of trotting
+horses on the hard trail.
+
+Shefford saw the Mormons file out into the paling starlight, ride down
+the valley, and vanish in the gray gloom. He was aware that the Indian
+sat up to watch the procession ride by, and that Joe turned over, as
+if disturbed.
+
+One by one the stars went out. The valley became a place of gray
+shadows. In the east a light glowed. Shefford sat there, haggard and
+worn, watching the coming of the dawn, the kindling of the light; and
+had the power been his the dawn would never have broken and the rose
+and gold never have tipped the lofty peaks.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Shefford attended to his camp chores as usual. Several times he was
+aware of Joe's close scrutiny, and finally, without looking at him,
+Shefford told of the visit of the Mormons. A violent expulsion of
+breath was Joe's answer and it might have been a curse. Straightway
+Joe ceased his cheery whistling and became as somber as the Indian.
+The camp was silent; the men did not look at one another. While they
+sat at breakfast Shefford's back was turned toward the village--he had
+not looked in that direction since dawn.
+
+"Ugh!" suddenly exclaimed Nas Ta Bega.
+
+Joe Lake muttered low and deep, and this time there was no mistake
+about the nature of his speech. Shefford did not have the courage to
+turn to see what had caused these exclamations. He knew since today
+had dawned that there was calamity in the air.
+
+"Shefford, I reckon if I know women there's a little hell coming to
+you," said the Mormon, significantly.
+
+Shefford wheeled as if a powerful force had turned him on a pivot. He
+saw Fay Larkin. She seemed to be almost running. She was unhooded and
+her bright hair streamed down. Her swift, lithe action was without its
+usual grace. She looked wild, and she almost fell crossing the
+stepping-stones of the brook.
+
+Joe hurried to meet her, took hold of her arm and spoke, but she did
+not seem to hear him. She drew him along with her, up the little bench
+under the cedars straight toward Shefford. Her face held a white, mute
+agony, as if in the hour of strife it had hardened into marble. But
+her eyes were dark-purple fire--windows of an extraordinarily intense
+and vital life. In one night the girl had become a woman. But the
+blight Shefford had dreaded to see--the withering of the exquisite
+soul and spirit and purity he had considered inevitable, just as
+inevitable as the death of something similar in the flower she
+resembled, when it was broken and defiled--nothing of this was
+manifest in her. Straight and swiftly she came to him back in the
+shade of the cedars and took hold of his hands.
+
+"Last night--HE CAME!" she said.
+
+"Yes--Fay--I--I know," replied Shefford, haltingly.
+
+He was tremblingly conscious of amaze at her--of something wonderful
+in her. She did not heed Joe, who stepped aside a little; she did
+not see Nas Ta Bega, who sat motionless on a log, apparently oblivious
+to her presence.
+
+"You knew he came?"
+
+"Yes, Fay. I was awake when--they rode in. I watched them. I sat up
+all night. I saw them ride away."
+
+"If you knew when he came why didn't you run to me--to get to me before
+he did?"
+
+Her question was unanswerable. It had the force of a blow. It
+stunned him. Its sharp, frank directness sprang from a simplicity
+and a strength that had not been nurtured in the life he had lived.
+So far men had wandered from truth and nature!
+
+"I came to you as soon as I was able," she went on. "I must have
+fainted. I just had to drag myself around. . . . And now I can tell
+you."
+
+He was powerless to reply, as if she had put another unanswerable
+question. What did she mean to tell him? What might she not tell him?
+She loosed her hands from his and lifted them to his shoulders, and
+that was the first conscious action of feeling, of intimacy, which she
+had ever shown. It quite robbed Shefford of strength, and in spite
+of his sorrow there was an indefinable thrill in her touch. He looked
+at her, saw the white-and-gold beauty that was hers yesterday and
+seemed changed to-day, and he recognized Fay Larkin in a woman he
+did not know.
+
+"Listen! He came--"
+
+"Fay, don't--tell me," interrupted Shefford.
+
+"I WILL tell you," she said.
+
+Did the instinct of love teach her how to mitigate his pain? Shefford
+felt that, as he felt the new-born strength in her.
+
+"Listen," she went on. "He came when I was undressing for bed. I
+heard the horse. He knocked on the door. Something terrible happened
+to me then. I felt sick and my head wasn't clear. I remember next--
+his being in the room--the lamp was out--I couldn't see very well. He
+thought I was sick and he gave me a drink and let the air blow in on
+me through the window. I remember I lay back in the chair and I
+thought. And I listened. When would you come? I didn't feel that
+you could leave me there alone with him. For his coming was different
+this time. That pain like a blade in my side! . . . When it came I
+was not the same. I loved you. I understood then. I belonged to
+you. I couldn't let him touch me. I had never been his wife. When
+I realized this--that he was there, that you might suffer for it--I
+cried right out.
+
+"He thought I was sick. He worked over me. He gave me medicine. And
+then he prayed. I saw him, in the dark, on his knees, praying for me.
+That seemed strange. Yet he was kind, so kind that I begged him to
+let me go. I was not a Mormon. I couldn't marry him. I begged him
+to let me go.
+
+"Then he thought I had been deceiving him. He fell into a fury. He
+talked for a long time. He called upon God to visit my sins upon me.
+He tried to make me pray. But I wouldn't. And then I fought him.
+I'd have screamed for you had he not smothered me. I got weak. . . .
+And you never came. I know I thought you would come. But you didn't.
+Then I--I gave out. And after--some time--I must have fainted."
+
+"Fay! For Heaven's sake, how could I come to you?" burst out Shefford,
+hoarse and white with remorse, passion, pain.
+
+"If I'm any man's wife I'm yours. It's a thing you FEEL, isn't it? I
+know that now. . . . But I want to know what to do?"
+
+"Fay!" he cried, huskily.
+
+"I'm sick of it all. If it weren't for you I'd climb the wall and
+throw myself off. That would be easy for me. I'd love to die that
+way. All my life I've been high up on the walls. To fall would be
+nothing!"
+
+"Oh, you mustn't talk like that!"
+
+"Do you love me?" she asked, with a low and deathless sweetness.
+
+"Love you? With all my heart! Nothing can change that!"
+
+"Do you want me--as you used to want the Fay Larkin lost in Surprise
+Valley? Do you love me that way? I understand things better than
+before, but still--not all. I AM Fay Larkin. I think I must have
+dreamed of you all my life. I was glad when you came here. I've been
+happy lately. I forgot--till last night. Maybe it needed that to
+make me see I've loved you all the time. . . . And I fought him like
+a wildcat! . . . Tell me the truth. I feel I'm yours. Is that true?
+If I'm not--I'll not live another hour. Something holds me up. I am
+the same. . . . Do you want me?"
+
+"Yes, Fay Larkin, I want you," replied Shefford, steadily, with his
+grip on her arms.
+
+"Then take me away. I don't want to live here another hour."
+
+"Fay, I'll take you. But it can't be done at once. We must plan. I
+need help. There are Lassiter and Jane to get out of Surprise Valley.
+Give me time, dear--give me time. It'll be a hard job. And we must
+plan so we can positively get away. Give me time, Fay."
+
+"Suppose HE comes back?" she queried, with a singular depth of voice.
+
+"We'll have to risk that," replied Shefford, miserably. "But--he
+won't come soon."
+
+"He said he would," she flashed.
+
+Shefford seemed to freeze inwardly with her words. Love had made her
+a woman and now the woman in her was speaking. She saw the truth as
+he could not see it. And the truth was nature. She had been hidden
+all her life from the world, from knowledge as he had it, yet when
+love betrayed her womanhood to her she acquired all its subtlety.
+
+"If I wait and he DOES come will you keep me from him?" she asked.
+
+"How can I? I'm staking all on the chance of his not coming soon.
+. . . But, Fay, if he DOES come and I don't give up our secret--how
+on earth can I keep you from him?" demanded Shefford.
+
+"If you love me you will do it," she said, as simply as if she were
+fate.
+
+"But how?" cried Shefford, almost beside himself.
+
+"You are a man. Any man would save the woman who loves him from--from
+--Oh, from a beast! . . . How would Lassiter do it?"
+
+"Lassiter!"
+
+"YOU CAN KILL HIM!"
+
+It was there, deep and full in her voice, the strength of the elemental
+forces that had surrounded her, primitive passion and hate and love, as
+they were in woman in the beginning.
+
+"My God!" Shefford cried aloud with his spirit when all that was red
+in him sprang again into a flame of hell. That was what had been wrong
+with him last night. He could kill this stealthy night-rider, and now,
+face to face with Fay, who had never been so beautiful and wonderful
+as in this hour when she made love the only and the sacred thing of
+life, now he had it in him to kill. Yet, murder--even to kill a brute
+--that was not for John Shefford, not the way for him to save a woman.
+Reason and wisdom still fought the passion in him. If he could but
+cling to them--have them with him in the dark and contending hour!
+
+She leaned against him now, exhausted, her soul in her eyes, and they
+saw only him. Shefford was all but powerless to resist the longing to
+take her into his arms, to hold her to his heart, to let himself go.
+Did not her love give her to him? Shefford gazed helplessly at the
+stricken Joe Lake, at the somber Indian, as if from them he expected
+help.
+
+"I know him now," said Fay, breaking the silence with startling
+suddenness.
+
+"What!"
+
+"I've seen him in the light. I flashed a candle in his face. I saw
+it. I know him now. He was there at Stonebridge with us, and I never
+knew him. But I know him now. His name is--"
+
+"For God's sake don't tell me who he is!" implored Shefford.
+
+Ignorance was Shefford's safeguard against himself. To make a name of
+this heretofore intangible man, to give him an identity apart from the
+crowd, to be able to recognize him--that for Shefford would be fatal.
+
+"Fay--tell me--no more," he said, brokenly. "I love you and I will
+give you my life. Trust me. I swear I'll save you."
+
+"Will you take me away soon?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+She appeared satisfied with that and dropped her hands and moved back
+from him. A light flitted over her white face, and her eyes grew dark
+and humid, losing their fire in changing, shadowing thought of
+submission, of trust, of hope.
+
+"I can lead you to Surprise Valley," she said. "I feel the way. It's
+there!" And she pointed to the west.
+
+"Fay, we'll go--soon. I must plan. I'll see you to-night. Then we'll
+talk. Run home now, before some of the women see you here."
+
+She said good-by and started away under the cedars, out into the open
+where her hair shone like gold in the sunlight, and she took the
+stepping-stones with her old free grace, and strode down the path
+swift and lithe as an Indian. Once she turned to wave a hand.
+
+Shefford watched her with a torture of pride, love, hope, and fear
+contending within him.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. THE NAVAJO
+
+
+That morning a Piute rode into the valley.
+
+Shefford recognized him as the brave who had been in love with Glen
+Naspa. The moment Nas Ta Bega saw this visitor he made a singular
+motion with his hands--a motion that somehow to Shefford suggested
+despair--and then he waited, somber and statuesque, for the messenger
+to come to him. It was the Piute who did all the talking, and that
+was brief. Then the Navajo stood motionless, with his hands crossed
+over his breast. Shefford drew near and waited.
+
+"Bi Nai," said the Navajo, "Nas Ta Bega said his sister would come
+home some day. . . . Glen Naspa is in the hogan of her grandfather."
+
+He spoke in his usual slow, guttural voice, and he might have been
+bronze for all the emotion he expressed; yet Shefford instinctively
+felt the despair that had been hinted to him, and he put his hand on
+the Indian's shoulder.
+
+"If I am the Navajo's brother, then I am brother to Glen Naspa," he
+said. "I will go with you to the hogan of Hosteen Doetin."
+
+Nas Ta Bega went away into the valley for the horses. Shefford
+hurried to the village, made his excuses at the school, and then
+called to explain to Fay that trouble of some kind had come to
+the Indian.
+
+Soon afterward he was riding Nack-yal on the rough and winding trail
+up through the broken country of cliffs and canyon to the great league
+-long sage and cedar slope of the mountain. It was weeks since he had
+ridden the mustang. Nack-yal was fat and lazy. He loved his master,
+but he did not like the climb, and so fell far behind the lean and
+wiry pony that carried Nas Ta Bega. The sage levels were as purple
+as the haze of the distance, and there was a bitter-sweet tang on the
+strong, cool wind. The sun was gold behind the dark line of fringe on
+the mountain-top. A flock of sheep swept down one of the sage levels,
+looking like a narrow stream of white and black and brown. It was
+always amazing for Shefford to see how swiftly these Navajo sheep
+grazed along. Wild mustangs plunged out of the cedar clumps and
+stood upon the ridges, whistling defiance or curiosity, and their
+manes and tails waved in the wind.
+
+Shefford mounted slowly to the cedar bench in the midst of which were
+hidden the few hogans. And he halted at the edge to dismount and take
+a look at that downward-sweeping world of color, of wide space, at the
+wild desert upland which from there unrolled its magnificent panorama.
+
+Then he passed on into the cedars. How strange to hear the lambs
+bleating again! Lambing-time had come early, but still spring was
+there in the new green of grass, in the bright upland flower. He
+led his mustang out of the cedars into the cleared circle. It was
+full of colts and lambs, and there were the shepherd-dogs and a few
+old rams and ewes. But the circle was a quiet place this day. There
+were no Indians in sight. Shefford loosened the saddle-girths on
+Nack-yal and, leaving him to graze, went toward the hogan of Hosteen
+Doetin. A blanket was hung across the door. Shefford heard a low
+chanting. He waited beside the door till the covering was pulled in,
+then he entered.
+
+Hosteen Doetin met him, clasped his hand. The old Navajo could not
+speak; his fine face was working in grief; tears streamed from his
+dim old eyes and rolled down his wrinkled cheeks. His sorrow was no
+different from a white man's sorrow. Beyond him Shefford saw Nas
+Ta Bega standing with folded arms, somehow terrible in his somber
+impassiveness. At his feet crouched the old woman, Hosteen Doetin's
+wife, and beside her, prone and quiet, half covered with a blanket,
+lay Glen Naspa.
+
+She was dead. To Shefford she seemed older than when he had last seen
+her. And she was beautiful. Calm, cold, dark, with only bitter lips
+to give the lie to peace! There was a story in those lips.
+
+At her side, half hidden under the fold of blanket, lay a tiny bundle.
+Its human shape startled Shefford. Then he did not need to be told
+the tragedy. When he looked again at Glen Naspa's face he seemed
+to understand all that had made her older, to feel the pain that
+had lined and set her lips.
+
+She was dead, and she was the last of Nas Ta Bega's family. In the old
+grandfather's agony, in the wild chant of the stricken grandmother, in
+the brother's stern and terrible calmness Shefford felt more than the
+death of a loved one. The shadow of ruin, of doom, of death hovered
+over the girl and her family and her tribe and her race. There was
+no consolation to offer these relatives of Glen Naspa. Shefford took
+one more fascinated gaze at her dark, eloquent, prophetic face, at
+the tragic tiny shape by her side, and then with bowed head he left
+the hogan.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Outside he paced to and fro, with an aching heart for Nas Ta Bega,
+with something of the white man's burden of crime toward the Indian
+weighing upon his soul.
+
+Old Hosteen Doetin came to him with shaking hands and words memorable
+of the time Glen Naspa left his hogan.
+
+"Me no savvy Jesus Christ. Me hungry. Me no eat Jesus Christ!"
+
+That seemed to be all of his trouble that he could express to Shefford.
+He could not understand the religion of the missionary, this Jesus
+Christ who had called his granddaughter away. And the great fear of
+an old Indian was not death, but hunger. Shefford remembered a custom
+of the Navajos, a thing barbarous looked at with a white man's mind.
+If an old Indian failed on a long march he was inclosed by a wall of
+stones, given plenty to eat and drink, and left there to die in the
+desert. Not death did he fear, but hunger! Old Hosteen Doetin
+expected to starve, now that the young and strong squaw of his
+family was gone.
+
+Shefford spoke in his halting Navajo and assured the old Indian that
+Nas Ta Bega would never let him starve.
+
+At sunset Shefford stood with Nas Ta Bega facing the west. The Indian
+was magnificent in repose. He watched the sun go down upon the day
+that had seen the burial of the last of his family. He resembled an
+impassive destiny, upon which no shocks fell. He had the light of that
+flaring golden sky in his face, the majesty of the mountain in his
+mien, the silence of the great gulf below on his lips. This educated
+Navajo, who had reverted to the life of his ancestors, found in the
+wildness and loneliness of his environment a strength no white
+teaching could ever have given him. Shefford sensed in him a
+measureless grief, an impenetrable gloom, a tragic acceptance of the
+meaning of Glen Naspa's ruin and death--the vanishing of his race from
+the earth. Death had written the law of such bitter truth round Glen
+Naspa's lips, and the same truth was here in the grandeur and gloom
+of the Navajo.
+
+"Bi Nai," he said, with the beautiful sonorous roll in his voice,
+"Glen Naspa is in her grave and there are no paths to the place of
+her sleep. Glen Naspa is gone."
+
+"Gone! Where? Nas Ta Bega, remember I lost my own faith, and I have
+not yet learned yours."
+
+"The Navajo has one mother--the earth. Her body has gone to the earth
+and it will become dust. But her spirit is in the air. It shall
+whisper to me from the wind. I shall hear it on running waters. It
+will hide in the morning music of a mocking-bird and in the lonely
+night cry of the canyon hawk. Her blood will go to make the red of
+the Indian flowers and her soul will rest at midnight in the lily
+that opens only to the moon. She will wait in the shadow for me, and
+live in the great mountain that is my home, and for ever step behind
+me on the trail."
+
+"You will kill Willetts?" demanded Shefford.
+
+"The Navajo will not seek the missionary."
+
+"But if you meet him you'll kill him?"
+
+"Bi Nai, would Nas Ta Bega kill after it is too late? What good could
+come? The Navajo is above revenge."
+
+"If he crosses my trail I think I couldn't help but kill him,"
+muttered Shefford in a passion that wrung the threat from him.
+
+The Indian put his arm round the white man's shoulders.
+
+"Bi Nai, long ago I made you my brother. And now you make me your
+brother. Is it not so? Glen Naspa's spirit calls for wisdom, not
+revenge. Willetts must be a bad man. But we'll let him live. Life
+will punish him. Who knows if he was all to blame? Glen Naspa was
+only one pretty Indian girl. There are many white men in the desert.
+She loved a white man when she was a baby. The thing was a curse.
+. . . Listen, Bi Nai, and the Navajo will talk.
+
+"Many years ago the Spanish padres, the first white men, came into the
+land of the Indian. Their search was for gold. But they were not
+wicked men. They did not steal and kill. They taught the Indian many
+useful things. They brought him horses. But when they went away they
+left him unsatisfied with his life and his god.
+
+"Then came the pioneers. They crossed the great river and took the
+pasture-lands and the hunting-grounds of the Indian. They drove him
+backward, and the Indian grew sullen. He began to fight. The white
+man's government made treaties with the Indian, and these were broken.
+Then war came--fierce and bloody war. The Indian was driven to the
+waste places. The stream of pioneers, like a march of ants, spread on
+into the desert. Every valley where grass grew, every river, became
+a place for farms and towns. Cattle choked the water-holes where the
+buffalo and deer had once gone to drink. The forests in the hills
+were cut and the springs dried up. And the pioneers followed to the
+edge of the desert.
+
+"Then came the prospectors, mad, like the padres for the gleam of
+gold. The day was not long enough for them to dig in the creeks and
+the canyon; they worked in the night. And they brought weapons and
+rum to the Indian, to buy from him the secret of the places where the
+shining gold lay hidden.
+
+"Then came the traders. And they traded with the Indian. They gave
+him little for much, and that little changed his life. He learned a
+taste for the sweet foods of the white man. Because he could trade
+for a sack of flour he worked less in the field. And the very fiber
+of his bones softened.
+
+"Then came the missionaries. They were proselytizers for converts to
+their religion. The missionaries are good men. There may be a bad
+missionary, like Willetts, the same as there are bad men in other
+callings, or bad Indians. They say Shadd is a half-breed. But the
+Piutes can tell you he is a full-blood, and he, like me, was sent to
+a white man's school. In the beginning the missionaries did well for
+the Indian. They taught him cleaner ways of living, better farming,
+useful work with tools--many good things. But the wrong to the Indian
+was the undermining of his faith. It was not humanity that sent the
+missionary to the Indian. Humanity would have helped the Indian in
+his ignorance of sickness and work, and left him his god. For to
+trouble the Indian about his god worked at the roots of his nature.
+
+"The beauty of the Indian's life is in his love of the open, of all
+that is nature, of silence, freedom, wildness. It is a beauty of mind
+and soul. The Indian would have been content to watch and feel. To
+a white man he might be dirty and lazy--content to dream life away
+without trouble or what the white man calls evolution. The Indian
+might seem cruel because he leaves his old father out in the desert to
+die. But the old man wants to die that way, alone with his spirits and
+the sunset. And the white man's medicine keeps his old father alive
+days and days after he ought to be dead. Which is more cruel? The
+Navajos used to fight with other tribes, and then they were stronger
+men than they are to-day.
+
+"But leaving religion, greed, and war out of the question, contact
+with the white man would alone have ruined the Indian. The Indian and
+the white man cannot mix. The Indian brave learns the habits of the
+white man, acquires his diseases, and has not the mind or body to
+withstand them. The Indian girl learns to love the white man--and
+that is death of her Indian soul, if not of life.
+
+"So the red man is passing. Tribes once powerful have died in the life
+of Nas Ta Bega. The curse of the white man is already heavy upon my
+race in the south. Here in the north, in the wildest corner of the
+desert, chased here by the great soldier, Carson, the Navajo has made
+his last stand.
+
+"Bi Nai, you have seen the shadow in the hogan of Hosteen Doetin. Glen
+Naspa has gone to her grave, and no sisters, no children, will make
+paths to the place of her sleep. Nas Ta Bega will never have a wife--
+a child. He sees the end. It is the sunset of the Navajo. . . . Bi
+Nai, the Navajo is dying--dying--dying!"
+
+
+
+
+XV. WILD JUSTICE
+
+
+A crescent moon hung above the lofty peak over the valley and a train
+of white stars ran along the bold rim of the western wall. A few young
+frogs peeped plaintively. The night was cool, yet had a touch of balmy
+spring, and a sweeter fragrance, as if the cedars and pinyons had
+freshened in the warm sun of that day.
+
+Shefford and Fay were walking in the aisles of moonlight and the
+patches of shade, and Nas Ta Bega, more than ever a shadow of his
+white brother, followed them silently.
+
+"Fay, it's growing late. Feel the dew?" said Shefford. "Come, I
+must take you back."
+
+"But the time's so short. I have said nothing that I wanted to say,"
+she replied.
+
+"Say it quickly, then, as we go."
+
+"After all, it's only--will you take me away soon?"
+
+"Yes, very soon. The Indian and I have talked. But we've made no
+plan yet. There are only three ways to get out of this country. By
+Stonebridge, by Kayenta and Durango, and by Red Lake. We must choose
+one. All are dangerous. We must lose time finding Surprise Valley.
+I hoped the Indian could find it. Then we'd bring Lassiter and Jane
+here and hide them near till dark, then take you and go. That would
+give us a night's start. But you must help us to Surprise Valley."
+
+"I can go right to it, blindfolded, or in the dark. . . . Oh, John,
+hurry! I dread the wait. He might come again."
+
+"Joe says--they won't come very soon."
+
+"Is it far--where we're going--out of the country?"
+
+"Ten days' hard riding."
+
+"Oh! That night ride to and from Stonebridge nearly killed me. But I
+could walk very far, and climb for ever."
+
+"Fay, we'll get out of the country if I have to carry you."
+
+When they arrived at the cabin Fay turned on the porch step and, with
+her face nearer a level with his, white and sweet in the moonlight,
+with her eyes shining and unfathomable, she was more than beautiful.
+
+"You've never been inside my house," she said. "Come in. I've
+something for you."
+
+"But it's late," he remonstrated. "I suppose you've got me a cake or
+pie--something to eat. You women all think Joe and I have to be fed."
+
+"No. You'd never guess. Come in," she said, and the rare smile on her
+face was something Shefford would have gone far to see.
+
+"Well, then, for a minute."
+
+He crossed the porch, the threshold, and entered her home. Her dim,
+white shape moved in the darkness. And he followed into a room where
+the moon shone through the open window, giving soft, mellow, shadowy
+light. He discerned objects, but not clearly, for his senses seemed
+absorbed in the strange warmth and intimacy of being for the first
+time with her in her home.
+
+"No, it's not good to eat," she said, and her laugh was happy.
+"Here--"
+
+Suddenly she abruptly ceased speaking. Shefford saw her plainly, and
+the slender form had stiffened, alert and strained. She was listening.
+
+"What was that?" she whispered.
+
+"I didn't hear anything," he whispered back.
+
+He stepped softly nearer the open window and listened.
+
+Clip-clop! clip-clop! clip-clop! Hard hoofs on the hard path outside!
+
+A strong and rippling thrill went over Shefford. In the soft light her
+eyes seemed unnaturally large and black and fearful.
+
+Clip-clop! clip-clop!
+
+The horse stopped outside. Then followed a metallic clink of spur
+against stirrup--thud of boots on hard ground--heavy footsteps upon
+the porch.
+
+A swift, cold contraction of throat, of breast, convulsed Shefford.
+His only thought was that he could not think.
+
+"Ho--Mary!"
+
+A voice liberated both Shefford's muscle and mind--a voice of strange,
+vibrant power. Authority of religion and cruelty of will--these
+Mormon attributes constituted that power. And Shefford suffered a
+transformation which must have been ordered by demons. That sudden
+flame seemed to curl and twine and shoot along his veins with blasting
+force. A rancorous and terrible cry leaped to his lips.
+
+"Ho--Mary!" Then came a heavy tread across the threshold of the outer
+room.
+
+Shefford dared not look at Fay. Yet, dimly, from the corner of his
+eye, he saw her, a pale shadow, turned to stone, with her arms out.
+If he looked, if he made sure of that, he was lost. When had he drawn
+his gun? It was there, a dark and glinting thing in his hand. He
+must fly--not through cowardice and fear, but because in one more
+moment he would kill a man. Swift as the thought he dove through
+the open window. And, leaping up, he ran under the dark pinyons
+toward camp.
+
+Joe Lake had been out late himself. He sat by the fire, smoking his
+pipe. He must have seen or heard Shefford coming, for he rose with
+unwonted alacrity, and he kicked the smoldering logs into a flickering
+blaze.
+
+Shefford, realizing his deliverance, came panting, staggering into the
+light. The Mormon uttered an exclamation. Then he spoke, anxiously,
+but what he said was not clear in Shefford's thick and throbbing ears.
+He dropped his pipe, a sign of perturbation, and he stared.
+
+But Shefford, without a word, lunged swiftly away into the shadow of
+the cedars. He found relief in action. He began a steep ascent of
+the east wall, a dangerous slant he had never dared even in daylight,
+and he climbed it without a slip. Danger, steep walls, perilous
+heights, night, and black canyon the same--these he never thought of.
+But something drove him to desperate effort, that the hours might
+seem short.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+The red sun was tipping the eastern wall when he returned to camp, and
+he was neither calm nor sure of himself nor ready for sleep or food.
+Only he had put the night behind him.
+
+The Indian showed no surprise. But Joe Lake's jaw dropped and his
+eyes rolled. Moreover, Joe bore a singular aspect, the exact nature
+of which did not at once dawn upon Shefford.
+
+"By God! you've got nerve--or you're crazy!" he ejaculated, hoarsely.
+
+Then it was Shefford's turn to stare. The Mormon was haggard, grieved,
+frightened, and utterly amazed. He appeared to be trying to make
+certain of Shefford's being there in the flesh and then to find reason
+for it.
+
+"I've no nerve and I am crazy," replied Shefford. "But, Joe--what do
+you mean? Why do you look at me like that?"
+
+"I reckon if I get your horse that'll square us. Did you come back
+for him? You'd better hit the trail quick."
+
+"It's you now who're crazy," burst out Shefford.
+
+"Wish to God I was," replied Joe.
+
+It was then Shefford realized catastrophe, and cold fear gnawed at his
+vitals, so that he was sick.
+
+"Joe, what has happened?" he asked, with the blood thick in his heart.
+
+"Hadn't you better tell me?" demanded the Mormon, and a red wave
+blotted out the haggard shade of his face.
+
+"You talk like a fool," said Shefford, sharply, and he strode right up
+to Joe.
+
+"See here, Shefford, we've been pards. You're making it hard for me.
+Reckon you ain't square."
+
+Shefford shot out a long arm and his hand clutched the Mormon's burly
+shoulder.
+
+"Why am I not square? What do you mean?"
+
+Joe swallowed hard and gave himself a shake. Then he eyed his comrade
+steadily.
+
+"I was afraid you'd kill him. I reckon I can't blame you. I'll help
+you get away. And I'm a Mormon! Do you take the hunch? . . . But
+don't deny you killed him!"
+
+"Killed whom?" gasped Shefford.
+
+"Her husband!"
+
+Shefford seemed stricken by a slow, paralyzing horror. The Mormon's
+changing face grew huge and indistinct and awful in his sight. He
+was clutched and shaken in Joe's rude hands, yet scarcely felt them.
+Joe seemed to be bellowing at him, but the voice was far off. Then
+Shefford began to see, to hear through some cold and terrible deadness
+that had come between him and everything.
+
+"Say YOU killed him!" hoarsely supplicated the Mormon.
+
+Shefford had not yet control of speech. Something in his gaze appeared
+to drive Joe frantic.
+
+"Damn you! Tell me quick. Say YOU killed him! . . . If you want to
+know my stand, why, I'm glad! . . . Shefford, don't look so stony!
+. . . For HER sake, say you killed him!"
+
+Shefford stood with a face as gray and still as stone. With a groan
+the Mormon drew away from him and sank upon a log. He bowed his head;
+his broad shoulders heaved; husky sounds came from him. Then with a
+violent wrench he plunged to his feet and shook himself like a huge,
+savage dog.
+
+"Reckon it's no time to weaken," he said, huskily, and with the words
+a dark, hard, somber bitterness came to his face.
+
+"Where--is--she?" whispered Shefford.
+
+"Shut up in the school-house," he replied.
+
+"Did she--did she--"
+
+"She neither denied nor confessed."
+
+"Have you--seen her?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How did--she look?"
+
+"Cool and quiet as the Indian there. . . . Game as hell! She always
+had stuff in her."
+
+"Oh, Joe! . . . It's unbelievable!" cried Shefford. "That lovely,
+innocent girl! She couldn't--she couldn't."
+
+"She's fixed him. Don't think of that. It's too late. We ought to
+have saved her."
+
+"God! . . . She begged me to hurry--to take her away."
+
+"Think what we can do NOW to save her," cut in the Mormon.
+
+Shefford sustained a vivifying shock. "To save her?" he echoed.
+
+"Think, man!"
+
+"Joe, I can hit the trail and let you tell them I killed him," burst
+out Shefford in panting excitement.
+
+"Reckon I can."
+
+"So help me God I'll do it!"
+
+The Mormon turned a dark and austere glance upon Shefford.
+
+"You mustn't leave her. She killed him for your sake. . . . You must
+fight for her now--save her--take her away."
+
+"But the law!"
+
+"Law!" scoffed Joe. "In these wilds men get killed and there's no law.
+But if she's taken back to Stonebridge those iron-jawed old Mormons
+will make law enough to--to . . . Shefford, the thing is--get her away.
+Once out of the country, she's safe. Mormons keep their secrets."
+
+"I'll take her. Joe, will you help me?"
+
+Shefford, even in his agitation, felt the Mormon's silence to be a
+consent that need not have been asked. And Shefford had a passionate
+gratefulness toward his comrade. That stultifying and blinding
+prejudice which had always seemed to remove a Mormon outside the
+pale of certain virtue suffered final eclipse; and Joe Lake stood
+out a man, strange and crude, but with a heart and a soul.
+
+"Joe, tell me what to do," said Shefford, with a simplicity that meant
+he needed only to be directed.
+
+"Pull yourself together. Get your nerve back," replied Joe. "Reckon
+you'd better show yourself over there. No one saw you come in this
+morning--your absence from camp isn't known. It's better you seem
+curious and shocked like the rest of us. Come on. We'll go over.
+And afterward we'll get the Indian, and plan."
+
+They left camp and, crossing the brook, took the shaded path toward
+the village. Hope of saving Fay, the need of all his strength and
+nerve and cunning to effect that end, gave Shefford the supreme
+courage to overcome his horror and fear. On that short walk under
+the pinyons to Fay's cabin he had suffered many changes of emotion,
+but never anything like this change which made him fierce and strong
+to fight, deep and crafty to plan, hard as iron to endure.
+
+The village appeared very quiet, though groups of women stood at the
+doors of cabins. If they talked, it was very low. Henninger and
+Smith, two of the three Mormon men living in the village, were
+standing before the closed door of the school-house. A tigerish
+feeling thrilled Shefford when he saw them on guard there. Shefford
+purposely avoided looking at Fay's cabin as long as he could keep
+from it. When he had to look he saw several hooded, whispering women
+in the yard, and Beal, the other Mormon man, standing in the cabin
+door. Upon the porch lay the long shape of a man, covered with
+blankets.
+
+Shefford experienced a horrible curiosity.
+
+"Say, Beal, I've fetched Shefford over," said Lake. "He's pretty much
+cut up."
+
+Beal wagged a solemn head, but said nothing. His mind seemed absent
+or steeped in gloom, and he looked up as one silently praying.
+
+Joe Lake strode upon the little porch and, reaching down, he stripped
+the blanket from the shrouded form.
+
+Shefford saw a sharp, cold, ghastly face. "WAGGONER!" he whispered.
+
+"Yes," replied Lake.
+
+Waggoner! Shefford remembered the strange power in his face, and, now
+that life had gone, that power was stripped of all disguise. Death, in
+Shefford's years of ministry, had lain under his gaze many times and
+in a multiplicity of aspects, but never before had he seen it stamped
+so strangely. Shefford did not need to be told that here was a man who
+believed he had conversed with God on earth, who believed he had a
+divine right to rule women, who had a will that would not yield itself
+to death utterly. Waggoner, then, was the devil who had come masked
+to Surprise Valley, had forced a martyrdom upon Fay Larkin. And this
+was the Mormon who had made Fay Larkin a murderess. Shefford had hated
+him living, and now he hated him dead. Death here was robbed of all
+nobility, of pathos, of majesty. It was only retribution. Wild
+justice! But alas! that it had to be meted out by a white-soled
+girl whose innocence was as great as the unconscious savagery which
+she had assimilated from her lonely and wild environment. Shefford
+laid a despairing curse upon his own head, and a terrible remorse
+knocked at his heart. He had left her alone, this girl in whom love
+had made the great change--like a coward he had left her alone. That
+curse he visited upon himself because he had been the spirit and the
+motive of this wild justice, and his should have been the deed.
+
+Joe Lake touched Shefford's arm and pointed at the haft of a knife
+protruding from Waggoner's breast. It was a wooden haft. Shefford
+had seen it before somewhere.
+
+Then he was struck with what perhaps Joe meant him to see--the singular
+impression the haft gave of one sweeping, accurate, powerful stroke. A
+strong arm had driven that blade home. The haft was sunk deep; there
+was a little depression in the cloth; no blood showed; and the weapon
+looked as if it could not be pulled out. Shefford's thought went
+fatally and irresistibly to Fay Larkin's strong arm. He saw her flash
+that white arm and lift the heavy bucket from the spring with an ease
+he wondered at. He felt the strong clasp of her hand as she had given
+it to him in a flying leap across a crevice upon the walls. Yes, her
+fine hand and the round, strong arm possessed the strength to have
+given that blade its singular directness and force. The marvel was
+not in the physical action. It hid inscrutably in the mystery of
+deadly passion rising out of a gentle and sad heart.
+
+Joe Lake drew up the blanket and shut from Shefford's fascinated gaze
+that spare form, that accusing knife, that face of strange, cruel
+power.
+
+"Anybody been sent for?" asked Lake of Beal.
+
+"Yes. An Indian boy went for the Piute. We'll send him to
+Stonebridge," replied the Mormon.
+
+"How soon do you expect any one here from Stonebridge?"
+
+"To-morrow, mebbe by noon."
+
+"Meantime what's to be done with--this?"
+
+"Elder Smith thinks the body should stay right here where it fell till
+they come from Stonebridge."
+
+"Waggoner was found here, then?"
+
+"Right here."
+
+"Who found him?"
+
+"Mother Smith. She came over early. An' the sight made her scream.
+The women all came runnin'. Mother Smith had to be put to bed."
+
+"Who found--Mary?"
+
+"See here, Joe, I told you all I knowed once before," replied the
+Mormon, testily.
+
+"I've forgotten. Was sort of bewildered. Tell me again. . . . Who
+found--her?"
+
+"The women folks. She laid right inside the door, in a dead faint.
+She hadn't undressed. There was blood on her hands an' a cut or
+scratch. The women fetched her to. But she wouldn't talk. Then
+Elder Smith come an' took her. They've got her locked up."
+
+Then Joe led Shefford away from the cabin farther on into the village.
+When they were halted by the somber, grieving women it was Joe who did
+the talking. They passed the school-house, and here Shefford quickened
+his step. He could scarcely bear the feeling that rushed over him.
+And the Mormon gripped his arm as if he understood.
+
+"Shefford, which one of these younger women do you reckon your best
+friend? Ruth?" asked Lake, earnestly.
+
+"Ruth, by all means. Just lately I haven't seen her often. But we've
+been close friends. I think she'd do much for me."
+
+"Maybe there'll be a chance to find out. Maybe we'll need Ruth. Let's
+have a word with her. I haven't seen her out among the women."
+
+They stopped at the door of Ruth's cabin. It was closed. When Joe
+knocked there came a sound of footsteps inside, a hand drew aside the
+window-blind, and presently the door opened. Ruth stood there, dressed
+in somber hue. She was a pretty, slender, blue-eyed, brown-haired
+young woman.
+
+Shefford imagined from her pallor and the set look of shock upon her
+face, that the tragedy had affected her more powerfully than it had
+the other women. When he remembered that she had been more friendly
+with Fay Larkin than any other neighbor, he made sure he was right in
+his conjecture.
+
+"Come in," was Ruth's greeting.
+
+"No. We just wanted to say a word. I noticed you've not been out. Do
+you know--all about it?"
+
+She gave them a strange glance.
+
+"Any of the women folks been in?" added Joe.
+
+"Hester ran over. She told me through the window. Then I barred my
+door to keep the other women out."
+
+"What for?" asked Joe, curiously.
+
+"Please come in," she said, in reply.
+
+They entered, and she closed the door after them. The change that came
+over her then was the loosing of restraint.
+
+"Joe--what will they do with Mary?" she queried, tensely.
+
+The Mormon studied her with dark, speculative eyes. "Hang her!" he
+rejoined in brutal harshness.
+
+"O Mother of Saints!" she cried, and her hands went up.
+
+"You're sorry for Mary, then?" asked Joe, bluntly.
+
+"My heart is breaking for her."
+
+"Well, so's Shefford's," said the Mormon, huskily. "And mine's kind of
+damn shaky."
+
+Ruth glided to Shefford with a woman's swift softness.
+
+"You've been my good--my best friend. You were hers, too. Oh, I know!
+. . . Can't you do something for her?"
+
+"I hope to God I can," replied Shefford.
+
+Then the three stood looking from one to the other, in a strong and
+subtly realizing moment drawn together.
+
+"Ruth," whispered Joe, hoarsely, and then he glanced fearfully around,
+at the window and door, as if listeners were there. It was certain
+that his dark face had paled. He tried to whisper more, only to fail.
+Shefford divined the weight of Mormonism that burdened Joe Lake then.
+Joe was faithful to a love for Fay Larkin, noble in friendship to
+Shefford, desperate in a bitter strait with his own manliness, but
+the power of that creed by which he had been raised struck his lips
+mute. For to speak on meant to be false to that creed. Already in
+his heart he had decided, yet he could not voice the thing.
+
+"Ruth"--Shefford took up the Mormon's unfinished whisper--"if we plan
+to save her--if we need you--will you help?"
+
+Ruth turned white, but an instant and splendid fire shone in her eyes.
+
+"Try me," she whispered back. "I'll change places with her--so you
+can get her away. They can't do much to me."
+
+Shefford wrung her hands. Joe licked his lips and found his voice:
+"We'll come back later." Then he led the way out and Shefford
+followed. They were silent all the way back to camp.
+
+Nas Ta Bega sat in repose where they had left him, a thoughtful, somber
+figure. Shefford went directly to the Indian, and Joe tarried at the
+camp-fire, where he raked out some red embers and put one upon the bowl
+of his pipe. He puffed clouds of white smoke, then found a seat beside
+the others.
+
+"Shefford, go ahead. Talk. It'll take a deal of talk. I'll listen.
+Then I'll talk. It'll be Nas Ta Bega who makes the plan out of it
+all."
+
+Shefford launched himself so swiftly that he scarcely talked
+coherently. But he made clear the points that he must save Fay, get
+her away from the village, let her lead him to Surprise Valley, rescue
+Lassiter and Jane Withersteen, and take them all out of the country.
+
+Joe Lake dubiously shook his head. Manifestly the Surprise Valley
+part of the situation presented a new and serious obstacle. It
+changed the whole thing. To try to take the three out by way of
+Kayenta and Durango was not to be thought of, for reasons he briefly
+stated. The Red Lake trail was the only one left, and if that were
+taken the chances were against Shefford. It was five days over sand
+to Red Lake--impossible to hide a trail--and even with a day's start
+Shefford could not escape the hard-riding men who would come from
+Stonebridge. Besides, after reaching Red Lake, there were days and
+days of desert-travel needful to avoid places like Blue Canyon, Tuba,
+Moencopie, and the Indian villages.
+
+"We'll have to risk all that," declared Shefford, desperately.
+
+"It's a fool risk," retorted Joe. "Listen. By tomorrow noon all of
+Stonebridge, more or less, will be riding in here. You've got to get
+away to-night with the girl--or never! And to-morrow you've got to
+find that Lassiter and the woman in Surprise Valley. This valley must
+be back, deep in the canyon country. Well, you've got to come out this
+way again. No trail through here would be safe. Why, you'd put all
+your heads in a rope! . . . You mustn't come through this way. It'll
+have to be tried across country, off the trails, and that means hell--
+day-and-night travel, no camp, no feed for horses--maybe no water.
+Then you'll have the best trackers in Utah like hounds on your trail."
+
+When the Mormon ceased his forceful speech there was a silence fraught
+with hopeless meaning. He bowed his head in gloom. Shefford, growing
+sick again to his marrow, fought a cold, hateful sense of despair.
+
+"Bi Nai!" In his extremity he called to the Indian.
+
+"The Navajo has heard," replied Nas Ta Bega, strangely speaking in his
+own language.
+
+With a long, slow heave of breast Shefford felt his despair leave him.
+In the Indian lay his salvation. He knew it. Joe Lake caught the
+subtle spirit of the moment and looked up eagerly.
+
+Nas Ta Bega stretched an arm toward the east, and spoke in Navajo.
+But Shefford, owing to the hurry and excitement of his mind, could not
+translate. Joe Lake listened, gave a violent start, leaped up with all
+his big frame quivering, and then fired question after question at the
+Indian. When the Navajo had replied to all, Joe drew himself up as if
+facing an irrevocable decision which would wring his very soul. What
+did he cast off in that moment? What did he grapple with? Shefford
+had no means to tell, except by the instinct which baffled him. But
+whether the Mormon's trial was one of spiritual rending or the natural
+physical fear of a perilous, virtually impossible venture, the fact
+was he was magnificent in his acceptance of it. He turned to Shefford,
+white, cold, yet glowing.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega believes he can take you down a canyon to the big river--
+the Colorado. He knows the head of this canyon. Nonnezoshe Boco it's
+called--canyon of the rainbow bridge. He has never been down it. Only
+two or three living Indians have ever seen the great stone bridge. But
+all have heard of it. They worship it as a god. There's water runs
+down this canyon and water runs to the river. Nas Ta Bega thinks he
+can take you down to the river."
+
+"Go on," cried Shefford breathlessly, as Joe paused.
+
+"The Indian plans this way. God, it's great! . . . If only I can do
+my end! . . . He plans to take mustangs to-day and wait with them for
+you to-night or to-morrow till you come with the girl. You'll go get
+Lassiter and the woman out of Surprise Valley. Then you'll strike
+east for Nonnezoshe Boco. If possible, you must take a pack of grub.
+You may be days going down--and waiting for me at the mouth of the
+canyon, at the river."
+
+"Joe! Where will you be?"
+
+"I'll ride like hell for Kayenta, get another horse there, and ride
+like hell for the San Juan River. There's a big flatboat at the
+Durango crossing. I'll go down the San Juan in that--into the big
+river. I'll drift down by day, tie up by night, and watch for you
+at the mouth of every canyon till I come to Nonnezoshe Boco."
+
+Shefford could not believe the evidence of his ears. He knew the
+treacherous San Juan River. He had heard of the great, sweeping,
+terrible red Colorado and its roaring rapids.
+
+"Oh, it seems impossible!" he gasped. "You'll just lose your life
+for nothing."
+
+"The Indian will turn the trick, I tell you. Take my hunch. It's
+nothing for me to drift down a swift river. I worked a ferry-boat
+once."
+
+Shefford, to whom flying straws would have seemed stable, caught the
+inflection of defiance and daring and hope of the Mormon's spirit.
+
+"What then--after you meet us at the mouth of Nonnezoshe Boco?" he
+queried.
+
+"We'll all drift down to Lee's Ferry. That's at the head of Marble
+Canyon. We'll get out on the south side of the river, thus avoiding
+any Mormons at the ferry. Nas Ta Bega knows the country. It's open
+desert--on the other side of these plateaus. He can get horses from
+Navajos. Then you'll strike south for Willow Springs."
+
+"Willow Springs? That's Presbrey's trading-post," said Shefford.
+
+"Never met him. But he'll see you safe out of the Painted Desert.
+. . . The thing that worries me most is how not to miss you all at
+the mouth of Nonnezoshe. You must have sharp eyes. But I forget
+the Indian. A bird couldn't pass him. . . . And suppose Nonnezoshe
+Boco has a steep-walled, narrow mouth opening into a rapids! . . .
+Whew! Well, the Indian will figure that, too. Now, let's put our
+heads together and plan how to turn this end of the trick here.
+Getting the girl!"
+
+After a short colloquy it was arranged that Shefford would go to Ruth
+and talk to her of the aid she had promised. Joe averred that this aid
+could be best given by Ruth going in her somber gown and hood to the
+school-house, and there, while Joe and Shefford engaged the guards
+outside, she would change apparel and places with Fay and let her
+come forth.
+
+"What'll they do to Ruth?" demanded Shefford. "We can't accept her
+sacrifice if she's to suffer--or be punished."
+
+"Reckon Ruth has a strong hunch that she can get away with it. Did
+you notice how strange she said that? Well, they can't do much to
+her. The bishop may damn her soul. But--Ruth--"
+
+Here Lake hesitated and broke off. Not improbably he had meant to say
+that of all the Mormon women in the valley Ruth was the least likely
+to suffer from punishment inflicted upon her soul.
+
+"Anyway, it's our only chance," went on Joe, "unless we kill a couple
+of men. Ruth will gladly take what comes to help you."
+
+"All right; I consent," replied Shefford, with emotion. "And now after
+she comes out--the supposed Ruth--what then?"
+
+"You can be natural-like. Go with her back to Ruth's cabin. Then
+stroll off into the cedars. Then climb the west wall. Meanwhile Nas
+Ta Bega will ride off with a pack of grub and Nack-yal and several
+other mustangs. He'll wait for you or you'll wait for him, as the
+case may be, at some appointed place. When you're gone I'll jump my
+horse and hit the trail for Kayenta and the San Juan."
+
+"Very well; that's settled," said Shefford, soberly. "I'll go at once
+to see Ruth. You and Nas Ta Bega decide on where I'm to meet him."
+
+"Reckon you'd do just as well to walk round and come up to Ruth's from
+the other side--instead of going through the village," suggested Joe.
+
+Shefford approached Ruth's cabin in a roundabout way; nevertheless,
+she saw him coming before he got there and, opening the door, stood
+pale, composed, and quietly bade him enter. Briefly, in low and
+earnest voice, Shefford acquainted her with the plan.
+
+"You love her so much," she said, wistfully, wonderingly.
+
+"Indeed I do. Is it too much to ask of you to do this thing?" he
+asked.
+
+"Do it?" she queried, with a flash of spirit. "Of course I'll do it."
+
+"Ruth, I can't thank you. I can't. I've only a faint idea what you're
+risking. That distresses me. I'm afraid of what may happen to you."
+
+She gave him another of the strange glances. "I don't risk so much as
+you think," she said, significantly.
+
+"Why?"
+
+She came close to him, and her hands clasped his arms and she looked
+up at him, her eyes darkening and her face growing paler. "Will you
+swear to keep my secret?" she asked, very low.
+
+"Yes, I swear."
+
+"I was one of Waggoner's sealed wives!"
+
+"God Almighty!" broke out Shefford, utterly overwhelmed.
+
+"Yes. That's why I say I don't risk so much. I will make up a story
+to tell the bishop and everybody. I'll tell that Waggoner was jealous,
+that he was brutal to Mary, that I believed she was goaded to her mad
+deed, that I thought she ought to be free. They'll be terrible. But
+what can they do to me? My husband is dead . . . and if I have to go
+to hell to keep from marrying another married Mormon, I'll go!"
+
+In that low, passionate utterance Shefford read the death-blow to the
+old Mormon polygamous creed. In the uplift of his spirit, in the joy
+at this revelation, he almost forgot the stern matter at hand. Ruth
+and Joe Lake belonged to a younger generation of Mormons. Their
+nobility in this instance was in part a revolt at the conditions of
+their lives. Doubt was knocking at Joe Lake's heart, and conviction
+had come to this young sealed wife, bitter and hopeless while she had
+been fettered, strong and mounting now that she was free. In a flash
+of inspiration Shefford saw the old order changing. The Mormon creed
+might survive, but that part of it which was an affront to nature, a
+horrible yoke on women's necks, was doomed. It could not live. It
+could never have survived more than a generation or two of religious
+fanatics. Shefford had marked a different force and religious fervor
+in the younger Mormons, and now he understood them.
+
+"Ruth, you talk wildly," he said. "But I understand. I see. You are
+free and you're going to stay free. . . . It stuns me to think of that
+man of many wives. What did you feel when you were told he was dead?"
+
+"I dare not think of that. It makes me--wicked. And he was good to
+me. . . . Listen. Last night about midnight he came to my window and
+woke me. I got up and let him in. He was in a terrible state. I
+thought he was crazy. He walked the floor and called on his saints
+and prayed. When I wanted to light a lamp he wouldn't let me. He
+was afraid I'd see his face. But I saw well enough in the moonlight.
+And I knew something had happened. So I soothed and coaxed him. He
+had been a man as close-mouthed as a stone. Yet then I got him to
+talk. . . . He had gone to Mary's, and upon entering, thought he heard
+some one with her. She didn't answer him at first. When he found her
+in her bedroom she was like a ghost. He accused her. Her silence made
+him furious. Then he berated her, brought down the wrath of God upon
+her, threatened her with damnation. All of which she never seemed to
+hear. But when he tried to touch her she flew at him like a she-
+panther. That's what he called her. She said she'd kill him! And
+she drove him out of her house. . . . He was all weak and unstrung,
+and I believe scared, too, when he came to me. She must have been a
+fury. Those quiet, gentle women are furies when they're once roused.
+Well, I was hours up with him and finally he got over it. He didn't
+pray any more. He paced the room. It was just daybreak when he said
+the wrath of God had come to him. I tried to keep him from going back
+to Mary. But he went. . . . An hour later the women ran to tell me he
+had been found dead at Mary's door."
+
+"Ruth--she was mad--driven--she didn't know what she--was doing," said
+Shefford, brokenly.
+
+"She was always a strange girl, more like an Indian than any one I
+ever knew. We called her the Sago Lily. I gave her the name. She
+was so sweet, lovely, white and gold, like those flowers. . . . And
+to think! Oh, it's horrible for her! You must save her. If you
+get her away there never will be anything come of it. The Mormons
+will hush it up."
+
+"Ruth, time is flying," rejoined Shefford, hurriedly. "I must go
+back to Joe. You be ready for us when we come. Wear something loose,
+easily thrown off, and don't forget the long hood."
+
+"I'll be ready and watching," she said. "The sooner the better, I'd
+say."
+
+He left her and returned toward camp in the same circling route by
+which he had come. The Indian had disappeared and so had his mustang.
+This significant fact augmented Shefford's hurried, thrilling
+excitement. But one glance at Joe's face changed all that to a
+sudden numbness, a sinking of his heart.
+
+"What is it?" he queried.
+
+"Look there!" exclaimed the Mormon.
+
+Shefford's quick eye caught sight of horses and men down the valley.
+He saw several Indians and three or four white men. They were making
+camp.
+
+"Who are they?" demanded Shefford.
+
+"Shadd and some of his gang. Reckon that Piute told the news. By to-
+morrow the valley will be full as a horse-wrangler's corral. . . .
+Lucky Nas Ta Bega got away before that gang rode in. Now things won't
+look as queer as they might have looked. The Indian took a pack of
+grub, six mustangs, and my guns. Then there was your rifle in your
+saddle-sheath. So you'll be well heeled in case you come to close
+quarters. Reckon you can look for a running fight. For now, as soon
+as your flight is discovered, Shadd will hit your trail. He's in with
+the Mormons. You know him--what you'll have to deal with. But the
+advantage will all be yours. You can ambush the trail."
+
+"We're in for it. And the sooner we're off the better," replied
+Shefford, grimly.
+
+"Reckon that's gospel. Well--come on!"
+
+The Mormon strode off, and Shefford, catching up with him, kept at his
+side. Shefford's mind was full, but Joe's dark and gloomy face did
+not invite communication. They entered the pinyon grove and passed
+the cabin where the tragedy had been enacted. A tarpaulin had been
+stretched across the front porch. Beal was not in sight, nor were
+any of the women.
+
+"I forgot," said Shefford, suddenly. "Where am I to meet the Indian?"
+
+"Climb the west wall, back of camp," replied Joe. "Nas Ta Bega took
+the Stonebridge trail. But he'll leave that, climb the rocks, then
+hide the outfit and come back to watch for you. Reckon he'll see you
+when you top the wall."
+
+They passed on into the heart of the village. Joe tarried at the
+window of a cabin, and passed a few remarks to a woman there, and
+then he inquired for Mother Smith at her house. When they left here
+the Mormon gave Shefford a nudge. Then they separated, Joe going
+toward the school-house, while Shefford bent his steps in the
+direction of Ruth's home.
+
+Her door opened before he had a chance to knock. He entered. Ruth,
+white and resolute, greeted him with a wistful smile.
+
+"All ready?" she asked.
+
+"Yes. Are you?" he replied, low-voiced.
+
+"I've only to put on my hood. I think luck favors you. Hester was
+here and she said Elder Smith told some one that Mary hadn't been
+offered anything to eat yet. So I'm taking her a little. It'll be
+a good excuse for me to get in the school-house to see her. I can
+throw off this dress and she can put it on in a minute. Then the hood.
+I
+mustn't forget to hide her golden hair. You know how it flies. But
+this is a big hood. . . . Well, I'm ready now. And--this 's our last
+time together."
+
+"Ruth, what can I say--how can I thank you?"
+
+"I don't want any thanks. It'll be something to think of always--to
+make me happy. . . . Only I'd like to feel you--you cared a little."
+
+The wistful smile was there, a tremor on the sad lips, and a shadow of
+soul-hunger in her eyes. Shefford did not misunderstand her. She did
+not mean love, although it was a yearning for real love that she
+mutely expressed.
+
+"Care! I shall care all my life," he said, with strong feeling. "I
+shall never forget you."
+
+"It's not likely I'll forget you. . . . Good-by, John!"
+
+Shefford took her in his arms and held her close. "Ruth--good-by!" he
+said, huskily.
+
+Then he released her. She adjusted the hood and, taking up a little
+tray which held food covered with a napkin, she turned to the door.
+He opened it and they went out.
+
+They did not speak another word.
+
+It was not a long walk from Ruth's home to the school-house, yet if it
+were to be measured by Shefford's emotion the distance would have been
+unending. The sacrifice offered by Ruth and Joe would have been noble
+under any circumstances had they been Gentiles or persons with no
+particular religion, but, considering that they were Mormons, that
+Ruth had been a sealed-wife, that Joe had been brought up under the
+strange, secret, and binding creed, their action was no less than
+tremendous in its import. Shefford took it to mean vastly more than
+loyalty to him and pity for Fay Larkin. As Ruth and Joe had arisen to
+this height, so perhaps would other young Mormons, have arisen. It
+needed only the situation, the climax, to focus these long-insulated,
+slow-developing and inquiring minds upon the truth--that one wife,
+one mother of children, for one man at one time as a law of nature,
+love, and righteousness. Shefford felt as if he were marching with
+the whole younger generation of Mormons, as if somehow he had been
+a humble instrument in the working out of their destiny, in the
+awakening that was to eliminate from their religion the only thing
+which kept it from being as good for man, and perhaps as true, as
+any other religion.
+
+And then suddenly he turned the corner of school-house to encounter
+Joe talking with the Mormon Henninger. Elder Smith was not present.
+
+"Why, hello, Ruth!" greeted Joe. "You've fetched Mary some dinner.
+Now that's good of you."
+
+"May I go in?" asked Ruth.
+
+"Reckon so," replied Henninger, scratching his head. He appeared to
+be tractable, and probably was good-natured under pleasant conditions.
+"She ought to have somethin' to eat. An' nobody 'pears--to have
+remembered that--we're so set up."
+
+He unbarred the huge, clumsy door and allowed Ruth to pass in.
+
+"Joe, you can go in if you want," he said. "But hurry out before Elder
+Smith comes back from his dinner."
+
+Joe mumbled something, gave a husky cough, and then went in.
+
+Shefford experienced great difficulty in presenting to this mild Mormon
+a natural and unagitated front. When all his internal structure seemed
+to be in a state of turmoil he did not see how it was possible to keep
+the fact from showing in his face. So he turned away and took aimless
+steps here and there.
+
+"'Pears like we'd hev rain," observed Henninger. "It's right warm an'
+them clouds are onseasonable."
+
+"Yes," replied Shefford. "Hope so. A little rain would be good for
+the grass."
+
+"Joe tells me Shadd rode in, an' some of his fellers."
+
+"So I see. About eight in the party."
+
+Shefford was gritting his teeth and preparing to endure the ordeal
+of controlling his mind and expression when the door opened and Joe
+stalked out. He had his sombrero pulled down so that it hid the
+upper half of his face. His lips were a shade off healthy color.
+He stood there with his back to the door.
+
+"Say, what Mary needs is quiet--to be left alone," he said. "Ruth says
+if she rests, sleeps a little, she won't get fever. . . . Henninger,
+don't let anybody disturb her till night."
+
+"All right, Joe," replied the Mormon. "An' I take it good of Ruth an'
+you to concern yourselves."
+
+A slight tap on the inside of the door sent Shefford's pulses to
+throbbing. Joe opened it with a strong and vigorous sweep that
+meant more than the mere action.
+
+"Ruth--reckon you didn't stay long," he said, and his voice rang clear.
+"Sure you feel sick and weak. Why, seeing her flustered even me!"
+
+A slender, dark-garbed woman wearing a long black hood stepped
+uncertainly out. She appeared to be Ruth. Shefford's heart stood
+still because she looked so like Ruth. But she did not step steadily,
+she seemed dazed, she did not raise the hooded head.
+
+"Go home," said Joe, and his voice rang a little louder. "Take her
+home, Shefford. Or, better, walk her round some. She's faintish
+. . . . And see here, Henninger--"
+
+Shefford led the girl away with a hand in apparent carelessness on
+her arm. After a few rods she walked with a freer step and then a
+swifter. He found it necessary to make that hold on her arm a real
+one, so as to keep her from walking too fast. No one, however,
+appeared to observe them. When they passed Ruth's house then
+Shefford began to lose his fear that this was not Fay Larkin. He
+was far from being calm or clear-sighted. He thought he recognized
+that free step; nevertheless, he could not make sure. When they
+passed under the trees, crossed the brook, and turned down along
+the west wall, then doubt ceased in Shefford's mind. He knew this
+was not Ruth. Still, so strange was his agitation, so keen his
+suspense, that he needed confirmation of ear, of eye. He wanted
+to hear her voice, to see her face. Yet just as strangely there
+was a twist of feeling, a reluctance, a sadness that kept off the
+moment.
+
+They reached the low, slow-swelling slant of wall and started to
+ascend. How impossible not to recognize Fay Larkin now in that swift
+grace and skill on the steep wall! Still, though he knew her, he
+perversely clung to the unreality of the moment. But when a long braid
+of dead-gold hair tumbled from under the hood, then his heart leaped.
+That identified Fay Larkin. He had freed her. He was taking her away.
+Then a sadness embittered his joy.
+
+As always before, she distanced him in the ascent to the top. She went
+on without looking back. But Shefford had an irresistible desire to
+took again and the last time at this valley where he had suffered and
+loved so much.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. SURPRISE VALLEY
+
+
+From the summit of the wall the plateau waved away in red and yellow
+ridges, with here and there little valleys green with cedar and pinyon.
+
+Upon one of these ridges, silhouetted against the sky, appeared the
+stalking figure of the Indian. He had espied the fugitives. He
+disappeared in a niche, and presently came again into view round a
+corner of cliff. Here he waited, and soon Shefford and Fay joined
+him.
+
+"Bi Nai, it is well," he said.
+
+Shefford eagerly asked for the horses, and Nas Ta Bega silently
+pointed down the niche, which was evidently an opening into one of
+the shallow canyon. Then he led the way, walking swiftly. It was
+Shefford, and not Fay, who had difficulty in keeping close to him.
+This speed caused Shefford to become more alive to the business,
+instead of the feeling, of the flight. The Indian entered a crack
+between low cliffs--a very narrow canyon full of rocks and clumps
+of cedars--and in a half-hour or less he came to where the mustangs
+were halted among some cedars. Three of the mustangs, including
+Nack-yal, were saddled; one bore a small pack, and the remaining
+two had blankets strapped on their backs.
+
+"Fay, can you ride in that long skirt?" asked Shefford. How strange
+it seemed that his first words to her were practical when all his
+impassioned thought had been only mute! But the instant he spoke
+he experienced a relief, a relaxation.
+
+"I'll take it off," replied Fay, just as practically. And in a
+twinkling she slipped out of both waist and skirt. She had worn
+them over the short white-flannel dress with which Shefford had
+grown familiar.
+
+As Nack-yal appeared to be the safest mustang for her to ride, Shefford
+helped her upon him and then attended to the stirrups. When he had
+adjusted them to the proper length he drew the bridle over Nack-yal's
+head and, upon handing it to her, found himself suddenly looking into
+her face. She had taken off the hood, too. The instant there eyes
+met he realized that she was strangely afraid to meet his glance, as
+he was to meet hers. That seemed natural. But her face was flushed
+and there were unmistakable signs upon it of growing excitement, of
+mounting happiness. Save for that fugitive glance she would have
+been the Fay Larkin of yesterday. How he had expected her to look
+he did not know, but it was not like this. And never had he felt
+her strange quality of simplicity so powerfully.
+
+"Have you ever been here--through this little canyon?" he asked.
+
+"Oh yes, lots of times."
+
+"You'll be able to lead us to Surprise Valley, you think?"
+
+"I know it. I shall see Uncle Jim and Mother Jane before sunset!"
+
+"I hope--you do," he replied, a little shakily. "Perhaps we'd better
+not tell them of the--the--about what happened last night."
+
+Her beautiful, grave, and troubled glance returned to meet his, and he
+received a shock that he considered was amaze. And after more swift
+consideration he believed he was amazed because that look, instead of
+betraying fear or gloom or any haunting shadow of darkness, betrayed
+apprehension for him--grave, sweet, troubled love for him. She was
+not thinking of herself at all--of what he might think of her, of a
+possible gulf between them, of a vast and terrible change in the
+relation of soul to soul. He experienced a profound gladness. Though
+he could not understand her, he was happy that the horror of Waggoner's
+death had escaped her. He loved her, he meant to give his life to her,
+and right then and there he accepted the burden of her deed and meant
+to bear it without ever letting her know of the shadow between them.
+
+"Fay, we'll forget--what's behind us," he said. "Now to find Surprise
+Valley. Lead on. Nack-yal is gentle. Pull him the way you want to
+go. We'll follow."
+
+Shefford mounted the other saddled mustang, and they set off, Fay in
+advance. Presently they rode out of this canyon up to level cedar-
+patched, solid rock, and here Fay turned straight west. Evidently she
+had been over the ground before. The heights to which he had climbed
+with her were up to the left, great slopes and looming promontories.
+And the course she chose was as level and easy as any he could have
+picked out in that direction.
+
+When a mile or more of this up-and-down travel had been traversed
+Fay halted and appeared to be at fault. The plateau was losing its
+rounded, smooth, wavy characteristics, and to the west grew bolder,
+more rugged, more cut up into low crags and buttes. After a long,
+sweeping glance Fay headed straight for this rougher country.
+Thereafter from time to time she repeated this action.
+
+"Fay, how do you know you're going in the right direction?" asked
+Shefford, anxiously.
+
+"I never forget any ground I've been over. I keep my eyes close ahead.
+All that seems strange to me is the wrong way. What I've seen, before
+must be the right way, because I saw it when they brought me from
+Surprise Valley."
+
+Shefford had to acknowledge that she was following an Indian's instinct
+for ground he had once covered.
+
+Still Shefford began to worry, and finally dropped back to question
+Nas Ta Bega.
+
+"Bi Nai, she has the eye of a Navajo," replied the Indian. "Look!
+Iron-shod horses have passed here. See the marks in the stone?"
+
+Shefford indeed made out faint cut tracks that would have escaped
+his own sight. They had been made long ago, but they were
+unmistakable.
+
+"She's following the trail by memory--she must remember the stones,
+trees, sage, cactus," said Shefford in surprise.
+
+"Pictures in her mind," replied the Indian.
+
+Thereafter the farther she progressed the less at fault she appeared
+and the faster she traveled. She made several miles an hour, and
+about the middle of the afternoon entered upon the more broken region
+of the plateau. View became restricted. Low walls, and ruined cliffs
+of red rock with cedars at their base, and gullies growing into canyon
+and canyon opening into larger ones--these were passed and crossed and
+climbed and rimmed in travel that grew more difficult as the going
+became wilder. Then there was a steady ascent, up and up all the
+time, though not steep, until another level, green with cedar and
+pinyon, was reached.
+
+It reminded Shefford of the forest near the mouth of the Sagi. It was
+so dense he could not see far ahead of Fay, and often he lost sight of
+her entirely. Presently he rode out of the forest into a strip of
+purple sage. It ended abruptly, and above that abrupt line, seemingly
+far away, rose a long, red wall. Instantly he recognized that to be
+the opposite wall of a canyon which as yet he could not see.
+
+Fay was acting strangely and he hurried forward. She slipped off Nack-
+yal and fell, sprang up and ran wildly, to stand upon a promontory,
+her arms uplifted, her hair a mass of moving gold in the wind, her
+attitude one of wild and eloquent significance.
+
+Shefford ran, too, and as he ran the red wall in his eager sight
+seemed to enlarge downward, deeper and deeper, and then it merged
+into a strip of green.
+
+Suddenly beneath him yawned a red-walled gulf, a deceiving gulf seen
+through transparent haze, a softly shining green-and-white valley,
+strange, wild, beautiful, like a picture in his memory.
+
+"Surprise Valley!" he cried, in wondering recognition.
+
+Fay Larkin waved her arms as if they were wings to carry her swiftly
+downward, and her plaintive cry fitted the wildness of her manner and
+the lonely height where she leaned.
+
+Shefford drew her back from the rim.
+
+"Fay, we are here," he said. "I recognize the valley. I miss only
+one thing--the arch of stone."
+
+His words seemed to recall her to reality.
+
+"The arch? That fell when the wall slipped, in the great avalanche.
+See! There is the place. We can get down there. Oh, let us hurry!"
+
+The Indian reached the rim and his falcon gaze swept the valley.
+"Ugh!" he exclaimed. He, too, recognized the valley that he had
+vainly sought for half a year.
+
+"Bring the lassos," said Shefford.
+
+With Fay leading, they followed the rim toward the head of the valley.
+Here the wall had caved in, and there was a slope of jumbled rock a
+thousand feet wide and more than that in depth. It was easy to descend
+because there were so many rocks waist-high that afforded a handhold.
+Shefford marked, however, that Fay never took advantage of these. More
+than once he paused to watch her. Swiftly she went down; she stepped
+from rock to rock; lightly she crossed cracks and pits; she ran along
+the sharp and broken edge of a long ledge; she poised on a pointed
+stone and, sure-footed as a mountain-sheep, she sprang to another that
+had scarce surface for a foothold; her moccasins flashed, seemed to
+hold wondrously on any angle; and when a rock tipped or slipped with
+her she leaped to a surer stand. Shefford watched her performance,
+so swift, agile, so perfectly balanced, showing such wonderful accord
+between eye and foot; and then when he swept his gaze down upon that
+wild valley where she had roamed alone for twelve years he marveled
+no more.
+
+The farther down he got the greater became the size of rocks, until he
+found himself amid huge pieces of cliff as large as houses. He lost
+sight of Fay entirely, and he anxiously threaded a narrow, winding,
+descending way between the broken masses. Finally he came out upon
+flat rock again. Fay stood on another rim, looking down. He saw that
+the slide had moved far out into the valley, and the lower part of it
+consisted of great sections of wall. In fact, the base of the great
+wall had just moved out with the avalanche, and this much of it held
+its vertical position. Looking upward, Shefford was astounded and
+thrilled to see how far he had descended, how the walls leaned like
+a great, wide, curving, continuous rim of mountain.
+
+"Here! Here!" called Fay. "Here's where they got down--where they
+brought me up. Here are the sticks they used. They stuck them in
+this crack, down to that ledge."
+
+Shefford ran to her side and looked down. There was a narrow split
+in this section of wall and it was perhaps sixty feet in depth. The
+floor of rock below led out in a ledge, with a sheer drop to the
+valley level.
+
+As Shefford gazed, pondering on a way to descend lower, the Indian
+reached his side. He had no sooner looked than he proceeded to act.
+Selecting one of the sticks, which were strong pieces of cedar, well
+hewn and trimmed, he jammed it between the walls of the crack till it
+stuck fast. Then sitting astride this one he jammed in another some
+three feet below. When he got down upon that one it was necessary for
+Shefford to drop him a third stick. In a comparatively short time
+the Indian reached the ledge below. Then he called for the lassos.
+Shefford threw them down. His next move was an attempt to assist Fay,
+but she slipped out of his grasp and descended the ladder with a
+swiftness that made him hold his breath. Still, when his turn came,
+her spirit so governed him that he went down as swiftly, and even
+leaped sheer the last ten feet.
+
+Nas Ta Bega and Fay were leaning over the ledge.
+
+"Here's the place," she said, excitedly. "Let me down on the rope."
+
+It took two thirty-foot lassos tied together to reach the floor of
+the valley. Shefford folded his vest, put it round Fay, and slipped a
+loop of the lasso under her arms. Then he and Nas Ta Bega lowered
+her to the grass below. Fay, throwing off the loop, bounded away like
+a wild creature, uttering the strangest cries he had ever heard, and
+she disappeared along the wall.
+
+"I'll go down," said Shefford to the Indian. "You stay here to help
+pull us up."
+
+Hand over hand Shefford descended, and when his feet touched the grass
+he experienced a shock of the most singular exultation.
+
+"In Surprise Valley!" he breathed, softly. The dream that had come
+to him with his friend's story, the years of waiting, wondering, and
+then the long, fruitless, hopeless search in the desert uplands--
+these were in his mind as he turned along the wall where Fay had
+disappeared. He faced a wide terrace, green with grass and moss and
+starry with strange white flowers, and dark-foliaged, spear-pointed
+spruce-trees. Below the terrace sloped a bench covered with thick
+copse, and this merged into a forest of dwarf oaks, and beyond
+that was a beautiful strip of white aspens, their leaves quivering
+in the stillness. The air was close, sweet, warm, fragrant, and
+remarkably dry. It reminded him of the air he had smelled in dry
+caves under cliffs. He reached a point from where he saw a meadow
+dotted with red-and-white-spotted cattle and little black burros.
+There were many of them. And he remembered with a start the agony
+of toil and peril Venters had endured bringing the progenitors of
+this stock into the valley. What a strange, wild, beautiful story
+it all was! But a story connected with this valley could not have
+been otherwise.
+
+Beyond the meadow, on the other side of the valley, extended the
+forest, and that ended in the rising bench of thicket, which gave
+place to green slope and mossy terrace of sharp-tipped spruces--and
+all this led the eye irresistibly up to the red wall where a vast,
+dark, wonderful cavern yawned, with its rust-colored streaks of stain
+on the wall, and the queer little houses of the cliff-dwellers, with
+their black, vacant, silent windows speaking so weirdly of the unknown
+past.
+
+Shefford passed a place where the ground had been cultivated, but not
+as recently as the last six months. There was a scant shock of corn
+and many meager standing stalks. He became aware of a low, whining
+hum and a fragrance overpowering in its sweetness. And there round
+another corner of wall he came upon an orchard all pink and white in
+blossom and melodious with the buzz and hum of innumerable bees.
+
+He crossed a little stream that had been dammed, went along a pond,
+down beside an irrigation-ditch that furnished water to orchard and
+vineyard, and from there he strode into a beautiful cove between two
+jutting corners of red wall. It was level and green and the spruces
+stood gracefully everywhere. Beyond their dark trunks he saw caves
+in the wall.
+
+Suddenly the fragrance of blossom was overwhelmed by the stronger
+fragrance of smoke from a wood fire. Swiftly he strode under the
+spruces. Quail fluttered before him as tame as chickens. Big gray
+rabbits scarcely moved out of his way. The branches above him were
+full of mockingbirds. And then--there before him stood three figures.
+
+Fay Larkin was held close to the side of a magnificent woman,
+barbarously clad in garments made of skins and pieces of blanket.
+Her face worked in noble emotion. Shefford seemed to see the ghost
+of that fair beauty Venters had said was Jane Withersteen's. Her
+hair was gray. Near her stood a lean, stoop-shouldered man whose
+long hair was perfectly white. His gaunt face was bare of beard.
+It had strange, sloping, sad lines. And he was staring with mild,
+surprised eyes.
+
+The moment held Shefford mute till sight of Fay Larkin's tear-wet face
+broke the spell. He leaped forward and his strong hands reached for
+the woman and the man.
+
+"Jane Withersteen! . . . Lassiter! I have found you!"
+
+"Oh, sir, who are you?" she cried, with rich and deep and quivering
+voice. "This child came running--screaming. She could not speak.
+We thought she had gone mad--and escaped to come back to us."
+
+"I am John Shefford," he replied, swiftly. "I am a friend of Bern
+Venters--of his wife Bess. I learned your story. I came west. I've
+searched a year. I found Fay. And we've come to take you away."
+
+"You found Fay? But that masked Mormon who forced her to sacrifice
+herself to save us! . . . What of him? It's not been so many long
+years--I remember what my father was--and Dyer and Tull--all those
+cruel churchmen."
+
+"Waggoner is dead," replied Shefford.
+
+"Dead? She is free! Oh, what--how did he die?"
+
+"He was killed."
+
+"Who did it?"
+
+"That's no matter," replied Shefford, stonily, and he met her gaze
+with steady eyes. "He's out of the way. Fay was never his wife.
+Fay's free. We've come to take you out of the country. We must
+hurry. We'll be tracked--pursued. But we've horses and an Indian
+guide. We'll get away. . . . I think it better to leave here at once.
+There's no telling how soon we'll be hunted. Get what things you
+want to take with you."
+
+"Oh--yes--Mother Jane, let us hurry!" cried Fay. "I'm so full--I can't
+talk--my heart hurts so!"
+
+Jane Withersteen's face shone with an exceedingly radiant light, and a
+glory blended with a terrible fear in her eyes.
+
+"Fay! my little Fay!"
+
+Lassiter had stood there with his mild, clear blue eyes upon Shefford.
+
+"I shore am glad to see you--all," he drawled, and extended his hand
+as if the meeting were casual. "What'd you say your name was?"
+
+Shefford repeated it as he met the proffered hand.
+
+"How's Bern an' Bess?" Lassiter inquired.
+
+"They were well, prosperous, happy when last I saw them. . . . They
+had a baby."
+
+"Now ain't thet fine? . . . Jane, did you hear? Bess has a baby. An',
+Jane, didn't I always say Bern would come back to get us out? Shore
+it's just the same."
+
+How cool, easy, slow, and mild this Lassiter seemed! Had the man grown
+old, Shefford wondered? The past to him manifestly was only yesterday,
+and the danger of the present was as nothing. Looking in Lassiter's
+face, Shefford was baffled. If he had not remembered the greatness of
+this old gun-man he might have believed that the lonely years in the
+valley had unbalanced his mind. In an hour like this coolness seemed
+inexplicable--assuredly would have been impossible in an ordinary man.
+Yet what hid behind that drawling coolness? What was the meaning of
+those long, sloping, shadowy lines of the face? What spirit lay in the
+deep, mild, clear eyes? Shefford experienced a sudden check to what
+had been his first growing impression of a drifting, broken old man.
+
+"Lassiter, pack what little you can carry--mustn't be much--and we'll
+get out of here," said Shefford.
+
+"I shore will. Reckon I ain't a-goin' to need a pack-train. We saved
+the clothes we wore in here. Jane never thought it no use. But I
+figgered we might need them some day. They won't be stylish, but I
+reckon they'll do better 'n these skins. An' there's an old coat thet
+was Venters's."
+
+The mild, dreamy look became intensified in Lassiter's eyes.
+
+"Did Venters have any hosses when you knowed him?" he asked.
+
+"He had a farm full of horses," replied Shefford, with a smile. "And
+there were two blacks--the grandest horses I ever saw. Black Star and
+Night! You remember, Lassiter?"
+
+"Shore. I was wonderin' if he got the blacks out. They must be
+growin' old by now. . . . Grand hosses, they was. But Jane had
+another hoss, a big devil of a sorrel. His name was Wrangle. Did
+Venters ever tell you about him--an' thet race with Jerry Card?"
+
+"A hundred times!" replied Shefford.
+
+"Wrangle run the blacks off their legs. But Jane never would believe
+thet. An' I couldn't change her all these years. . . . Reckon mebbe
+we'll get to see them blacks?"
+
+"Indeed, I hope--I believe you will," replied Shefford, feelingly.
+
+"Shore won't thet be fine. Jane, did you hear? Black Star an' Night
+are livin' an' we'll get to see them."
+
+But Jane Withersteen only clasped Fay in her arms, and looked at
+Lassiter with wet and glistening eyes.
+
+Shefford told them to hurry and come to the cliff where the ascent
+from the valley was to be made. He thought best to leave them alone
+to make their preparations and bid farewell to the cavern home they
+had known for so long.
+
+Then he strolled back along the wall, loitering here to gaze into
+a cave, and there to study crude red paintings in the nooks. And
+sometimes he halted thoughtfully and did not see anything. At length
+he rounded a corner of cliff to espy Nas Ta Bega sitting upon the
+ledge, reposeful and watchful as usual. Shefford told the Indian they
+would be climbing out soon, and then he sat down to wait and let his
+gaze rove over the valley.
+
+He might have sat there a long while, so sad and reflective and
+wondering was his thought, but it seemed a very short time till Fay
+came in sight with her free, swift grace, and Lassiter and Jane some
+distance behind. Jane carried a small bundle and Lassiter had a sack
+over his shoulder that appeared no inconsiderable burden.
+
+"Them beans shore is heavy," he drawled, as he deposited the sack upon
+the ground.
+
+Shefford curiously took hold of the sack and was amazed to find that a
+second and hard muscular effort was required to lift it.
+
+"Beans?" he queried.
+
+"Shore," replied Lassiter.
+
+"That's the heaviest sack of beans I ever saw. Why--it's not possible
+it can be. . . . Lassiter, we've a long, rough trail. We've got to
+pack light--"
+
+"Wal, I ain't a-goin' to leave this here sack behind. Reckon I've been
+all of twelve years in fillin' it," he declared, mildly.
+
+Shefford could only stare at him.
+
+"Fay may need them beans," went on Lassiter.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because they're gold."
+
+"Gold!" ejaculated Shefford.
+
+"Shore. An' they represent some work. Twelve years of diggin' an'
+washin'!"
+
+Shefford laughed constrainedly. "Well, Lassiter, that alters the case
+considerably. A sack of gold nuggets or grains, or beans, as you call
+them, certainly must not be left behind. . . . Come, now, we'll tackle
+this climbing job."
+
+He called up to the Indian and, grasping the rope, began to walk up
+the first slant, and then by dint of hand-over-hand effort and climbing
+with knees and feet he succeeded, with Nas Ta Bega's help, in making
+the ledge. Then he let down the rope to haul up the sack and bundle.
+That done, he directed Fay to fasten the noose round her as he had
+fixed it before. When she had complied he called to her to hold
+herself out from the wall while he and Nas Ta Bega hauled her up.
+
+"Hold the rope tight," replied Fay, "I'll walk up."
+
+And to Shefford's amaze and admiration, she virtually walked up that
+almost perpendicular wall by slipping her hands along the rope and
+stepping as she pulled herself up. There, if never before, he saw
+the fruit of her years of experience on steep slopes. Only such
+experience could have made the feat possible.
+
+Jane had to be hauled up, and the task was a painful one for her.
+Lassiter's turn came then, and he showed more strength and agility
+than Shefford had supposed him capable of. From the ledge they turned
+their attention to the narrow crack with its ladder of sticks. Fay
+had already ascended and now hung over the rim, her white face and
+golden hair framed vividly in the narrow stream of blue sky above.
+
+"Mother Jane! Uncle Jim! You are so slow," she called.
+
+"Wal, Fay, we haven't been second cousins to a canyon squirrel all
+these years," replied Lassiter.
+
+This upper half of the climb bid fair to be as difficult for Jane, if
+not so painful, as the lower. It was necessary for the Indian to go
+up and drop the rope, which was looped around her, and then, with him
+pulling from above and Shefford assisting Jane as she climbed, she was
+finally gotten up without mishap. When Lassiter reached the level they
+rested a little while and then faced the great slide of jumbled rocks.
+Fay led the way, light, supple, tireless, and Shefford never ceased
+looking at her. At last they surmounted the long slope and, winding
+along the rim, reached the point where Fay had led out of the cedars.
+
+Nas Ta Bega, then, was the one to whom Shefford looked for every
+decision or action of the immediate future. The Indian said he had
+seen a pool of water in a rocky hole, that the day was spent, that
+here was a little grass for the mustangs, and it would be well to camp
+right there. So while Nas Ta Bega attended to the mustangs Shefford
+set about such preparations for camp and supper as their light pack
+afforded. The question of beds was easily answered, for the mats
+of soft needles under pinyon and cedar would be comfortable places
+to sleep.
+
+When Shefford felt free again the sun was setting. Lassiter and Jane
+were walking under the trees. The Indian had returned to camp. But
+Fay was missing. Shefford imagined he knew where to find her, and upon
+going to the edge of the forest he saw her sitting on the promontory.
+He approached her, drawn in spite of a feeling that perhaps he ought
+to stay away.
+
+"Fay, would you rather be alone?" he asked.
+
+His voice startled her.
+
+"I want you," she replied, and held out her hand.
+
+Taking it in his own, he sat beside her.
+
+The red sun was at their backs. Surprise Valley lay hazy, dusky,
+shadowy beneath them. The opposite wall seemed fired by crimson flame,
+save far down at its base, which the sun no longer touched. And the
+dark line of red slowly rose, encroaching upon the bright crimson.
+Changing, transparent, yet dusky veils seemed to float between the
+walls; long, red rays, where the sun shone through notch or crack in
+the rim, split the darker spaces; deep down at the floor the forest
+darkened, the strip of aspen paled, the meadow turned gray; and all
+under the shelves and in the great caverns a purple gloom deepened.
+Then the sun set. And swiftly twilight was there below while day
+lingered above. On the opposite wall the fire died and the stone
+grew cold.
+
+A canyon night-hawk voiced his lonely, weird, and melancholy cry, and
+it seemed to pierce and mark the silence.
+
+A pale star, peering out of a sky that had begun to turn blue, marked
+the end of twilight. And all the purple shadows moved and hovered and
+changed till, softly and mysteriously, they embraced black night.
+
+Beautiful, wild, strange, silent Surprise Valley! Shefford saw it
+before and beneath him, a dark abyss now, the abode of loneliness.
+He imagined faintly what was in Fay Larkin's heart. For the last
+time she had seen the sun set there and night come with its dead
+silence and sweet mystery and phantom shadows, its velvet blue sky
+and white trains of stars.
+
+He, who had dreamed and longed and searched, found that the hour had
+been incalculable for him in its import.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. THE TRAIL TO NONNEZOSHE
+
+
+When Shefford awoke next morning and sat up on his bed of pinyon boughs
+the dawn had broken cold with a ruddy gold brightness under the trees.
+Nas Ta Bega and Lassiter were busy around a camp-fire; the mustangs
+were haltered near by; Jane Withersteen combed out her long, tangled
+tresses with a crude wooden comb; and Fay Larkin was not in sight.
+As she had been missing from the group at sunset, so she was now at
+sunrise. Shefford went out to take his last look at Surprise Valley.
+
+On the evening before the valley had been a place of dusky red veils
+and purple shadows, and now it was pink-walled, clear and rosy and
+green and white, with wonderful shafts of gold slanting down from the
+notched eastern rim. Fay stood on the promontory, and Shefford did
+not break the spell of her silent farewell to her wild home. A strange
+emotion abided with him and he knew he would always, all his life,
+regret leaving Surprise Valley.
+
+Then the Indian called.
+
+"Come, Fay," said Shefford, gently.
+
+And she turned away with dark, haunted eyes and a white, still face.
+
+The somber Indian gave a silent gesture for Shefford to make haste.
+While they had breakfast the mustangs were saddled and packed. And
+soon all was in readiness for the flight. Fay was given Nack-yal, Jane
+the saddled horse Shefford had ridden, and Lassiter the Indian's roan.
+Shefford and Nas Ta Bega were to ride the blanketed mustangs, and the
+sixth and last one bore the pack. Nas Ta Bega set off, leading this
+horse; the others of the party lined in behind, with Shefford at the
+rear.
+
+Nas Ta Bega led at a brisk trot, and sometimes, on level stretches
+of ground, at an easy canter; and Shefford had a grim realization
+of what this flight was going to be for these three fugitives, now
+so unaccustomed to riding. Jane and Lassiter, however, needed no
+watching, and showed they had never forgotten how to manage a horse.
+The Indian back-trailed yesterday's path for an hour, then headed west
+to the left, and entered a low pass. All parts of this plateau country
+looked alike, and Shefford was at some pains to tell the difference of
+this strange ground from that which he had been over. In another hour
+they got out of the rugged, broken rock to the wind-worn and smooth,
+shallow canyon. Shefford calculated that they were coming to the end
+of the plateau. The low walls slanted lower; the canyon made a turn;
+Nas Ta Bega disappeared; and then the others of the party. When
+Shefford turned the corner of wall he saw a short strip of bare, rocky
+ground with only sky beyond. The Indian and his followers had halted
+in a group. Shefford rode to them, halted himself, and in one
+sweeping glance realized the meaning of their silent gaze. But
+immediately Nas Ta Bega started down; and the mustangs, without
+word or touch, followed him. Shefford, however, lingered on the
+promontory.
+
+His gaze seemed impelled and held by things afar--the great yellow-
+and-purple corrugated world of distance, now on a level with his
+eyes. He was drawn by the beauty and the grandeur of that scene and
+transfixed by the realization that he had dared to venture to find a
+way through this vast, wild, and upflung fastness. He kept looking
+afar, sweeping the three-quartered circle of horizon till his judgment
+of distance was confounded and his sense of proportion dwarfed one
+moment and magnified the next. Then he withdrew his fascinated gaze
+to adopt the Indian's method of studying unlimited spaces in the
+desert--to look with slow, contracted eyes from near to far.
+
+His companions had begun to zigzag down a long slope, bare of rock,
+with yellow gravel patches showing between the scant strips of green,
+and here and there a scrub-cedar. Half a mile down, the slope merged
+into green level. But close, keen gaze made out this level to be a
+rolling plain, growing darker green, with blue lines of ravines, and
+thin, undefined spaces that might be mirage. Miles and miles it swept
+and relied and heaved to lose its waves in apparent darker level. A
+round, red rock stood isolated, marking the end of the barren plain,
+and farther on were other round rocks, all isolated, all of different
+shape. They resembled huge grazing cattle. But as Shefford gazed,
+and his sight gained strength from steadily holding it to separate
+features these rocks were strangely magnified. They grew and grew into
+mounds, castles, domes, crags--great, red, wind-carved buttes. One by
+one they drew his gaze to the wall of upflung rock. He seemed to see
+a thousand domes of a thousand shapes and colors, and among them a
+thousand blue clefts, each one a little mark in his sight, yet which
+he knew was a canyon. So far he gained some idea of what he saw. But
+beyond this wide area of curved lines rose another wall, dwarfing the
+lower, dark red, horizon--long, magnificent in frowning boldness, and
+because of its limitless deceiving surfaces, breaks, and lines,
+incomprehensible to the sight of man. Away to the eastward began a
+winding, ragged, blue line, looping back upon itself, and then winding
+away again, growing wider and bluer. This line was the San Juan Canyon.
+Where was Joe Lake at that moment? Had he embarked yet on the river--
+did that blue line, so faint, so deceiving, hold him and the boat?
+Almost it was impossible to believe. Shefford followed the blue line
+all its length, a hundred miles, he fancied, down toward the west where
+it joined a dark, purple, shadowy cleft. And this was the Grand Canyon
+of the Colorado. Shefford's eye swept along with that winding mark,
+farther and farther to the west, round to the left, until the cleft,
+growing larger and coming closer, losing its deception, was seen to
+be a wild and winding canyon. Still farther to the left, as he swung
+in fascinated gaze, it split the wonderful wall--a vast plateau now
+with great red peaks and yellow mesas. The canyon was full of purple
+smoke. It turned, it gaped, it lost itself and showed again in that
+chaos of a million cliffs. And then farther on it became again a
+cleft, a purple line, at last to fail entirely in deceiving distance.
+
+Shefford imagined there was no scene in all the world to equal that.
+The tranquillity of lesser spaces was not here manifest. Sound,
+movement, life, seemed to have no fitness here. Ruin was there and
+desolation and decay. The meaning of the ages was flung at him, and a
+man became nothing. When he had gazed at the San Juan Canyon he had
+been appalled at the nature of Joe Lake's Herculean task. He had lost
+hope, faith. The thing was not possible. But when Shefford gazed
+at that sublime and majestic wilderness, in which the Grand Canyon was
+only a dim line, he strangely lost his terror and something else came
+to him from across the shining spaces. If Nas Ta Bega led them safely
+down to the river, if Joe Lake met them at the mouth of Nonnezoshe
+Boco, if they survived the rapids of that terrible gorge, then
+Shefford would have to face his soul and the meaning of this spirit
+that breathed on the wind.
+
+He urged his mustang to the descent of the slope, and as he went down,
+slowly drawing nearer to the other fugitives, his mind alternated
+between this strange intimation of faith, this subtle uplift of hid
+spirit, and the growing gloom and shadow in his love for Fay Larkin.
+Not that he loved her less, but more! A possible God hovering near
+him, like the Indian's spirit-step on the trail, made his soul the
+darker for Fay's crime, and he saw with light, with deeper sadness,
+with sterner truth.
+
+More than once the Indian turned on his mustang to look up the slope
+and the light flashed from his dark, somber face. Shefford
+instinctively looked back himself, and then realized the unconscious
+motive of the action. Deep within him there had been a premonition of
+certain pursuit, and the Indian's reiterated backward glance had at
+length brought the feeling upward. Thereafter, as they descended,
+Shefford gradually added to his already wrought emotions a mounting
+anxiety.
+
+No sign of a trail showed where the base of the slope rolled out to
+meet the green plain. The earth was gravelly, with dark patches of
+heavy silt, almost like cinders; and round, black rocks, flinty and
+glassy, cracked away from the hoofs of the mustangs. There was a level
+bench a mile wide, then a ravine, and then an ascent, and after that,
+rounded ridge and ravine, one after the other, like huge swells of a
+monstrous sea. Indian paint-brush vied in its scarlet hue with the
+deep magenta of cactus. There was no sage. Soapweed and meager grass
+and a bunch of cactus here and there lent the green to that barren;
+and it was green only at a distance. Nas Ta Bega kept on a steady,
+even trot. The sun climbed. The wind rose and whipped dust from
+under the mustangs.
+
+Shefford looked back often, and the farther out in the plain he
+reached the higher loomed the plateau they had descended; and as he
+faced ahead again the lower sank the red-domed and castled horizon to
+the fore. The ravines became deeper, with dry rock bottoms, and the
+ridge-tops sharper, with outcroppings of yellow, crumbling ledges.
+Once across the central depression of that plain a gradual ascent
+became evident, and the round rocks grew clearer in sight, began to
+rise shine and grow. And thereafter every slope brought them nearer.
+
+The sun was straight overhead and hot when Nas Ta Bega halted the
+party under the first lonely scrub-cedar. They all dismounted to
+stretch their limbs, and rest the horses. It was not a talkative
+group, Lassiter's comments on the never-ending green plain elicited no
+response. Jane Withersteen looked afar with the past in her eyes.
+Shefford felt Fay's wistful glance and could not meet it; indeed, he
+seemed to want to hide something from her. The Indian bent a falcon
+gaze on the distant slope, and Shefford did not like that intent,
+searching, steadfast watchfulness. Suddenly Nas Ta Bega stiffened
+and whipped the halter he held.
+
+"Ugh!" he exclaimed.
+
+All eyes followed the direction of his dark hand. Puffs of dust rose
+from the base of the long slope they had descended; tiny dark specks
+moved with the pace of a snail.
+
+"Shadd!" added the Indian.
+
+"I expected it," said Shefford, darkly, as he rose.
+
+"An' who's Shadd?" drawled Lassiter in his cool, slow speech.
+
+Briefly Shefford explained, and then, looking at Nas Ta Bega, he added:
+
+"The hardest-riding outfit in the country! We can't get away from
+them."
+
+Jane Withersteen was silent, but Fay uttered a low cry. Shefford did
+not look at either of them. The Indian began swiftly to tighten the
+saddle-cinches of his roan, and Shefford did likewise for Nack-yal.
+Then Shefford drew his rifle out of the saddle-sheath and Joe Lake's
+big guns from the saddle-bag.
+
+"Here, Lassiter, maybe you haven't forgotten how to use these," he
+said.
+
+The old gun-man started as if he had seen ghosts. His hands grew
+clawlike as he reached for the guns. He threw open the cylinders,
+spilled out the shells, snapped back the cylinders. Then he went
+through motions too swift for Shefford to follow. But Shefford heard
+the hammers falling so swiftly they blended their clicks almost in one
+sound. Lassiter reloaded the guns with a speed comparable with the
+other actions. A remarkable transformation had come over him. He did
+not seem the same man. The mild eyes had changed; the long, shadowy,
+sloping lines were tense cords; and there was a cold, ashy shade on
+his face,
+
+"Twelve years!" he muttered to himself. "I dropped them old guns back
+there where I rolled the rock. . . . Twelve years!"
+
+Shefford realized the twelve years were as if they had never been. And
+he would rather have had this old gun-man with him than a dozen
+ordinary men.
+
+The Indian spoke rapidly in Navajo, saying that once in the rocks they
+were safe. Then, after another look at the distant dust-puffs, he
+wheeled his mustang.
+
+It was doubtful if the party could have kept near him had they been
+responsible for the gait of their mounts. The fact was that the way
+the called to his mustang or some leadership in the one rode drew the
+others to a like trot or climb or canter. For a long time Shefford
+did not turn round; he knew what to expect. And when he did turn he
+was startled at the gain made by the pursuers. But he was encouraged
+as well by the looming, red, rounded peaks seemingly now so close.
+He could see the dark splits between the sloping curved walls, the
+pinyon patches in the amphitheater under the circled walls. That was
+a wild place they were approaching, and, once in there, he believed
+pursuit would be useless. However, there were miles to go still,
+and those hard-riding devils behind made alarming decrease in the
+intervening distance. Shefford could see the horses plainly now.
+How they made the dust fly! He counted up to six--and then the dust
+and moving line caused the others to be indistinguishable.
+
+At last only a long, gently rising slope separated the fugitives from
+that labyrinthine network of wildly carved rock. But it was the clear
+air that made the distance seem short. Mile after mile the mustangs
+climbed, and when they were perhaps half-way across that last slope to
+the rocks the first horse of the pursuers mounted to the level behind.
+In a few moments the whole band was strung out in sight. Nas Ta Bega
+kept his mustang at a steady walk, in spite of the gaining pursuers.
+There came a point, however, when the Indian, reaching comparatively
+level ground, put his mount to a swinging canter. The other mustangs
+broke into the same gait.
+
+It became a race then, with the couple of miles between fugitives
+and pursuers only imperceptibly lessened. Nas Ta Bega had saved his
+mustangs and Shadd had ridden his to the limit. Shefford kept looking
+back, gripping his rifle, hoping it would not come to a fight, yet
+slowly losing that reluctance.
+
+Sage began to show on the slope, and other kinds of brush and cedars
+straggled everywhere. The great rocks loomed closer, the red color
+mixed with yellow, and the slopes lengthening out, not so steep, yet
+infinitely longer than they had seemed at a distance.
+
+Shefford ceased to feel the dry wind in his face. They were already
+in the lee of the wall. He could see the rock-squirrels scampering to
+their holes. The mustangs valiantly held to the gait, and at last the
+Indian disappeared between two rounded comers of cliff. The others
+were close behind. Shefford wheeled once more. Shadd and his gang
+were a mile in the rear, but coming fast, despite winded horses.
+
+Shefford rode around the wall into a widening space thick with cedars.
+It ended in a bare slope of smooth rock. Here the Indian dismounted.
+When the others came up with him he told them to lead their horses and
+follow. Then he began the ascent of the rock.
+
+It was smooth and hard, though not slippery. There was not a crack.
+Shefford did not see a broken piece of stone. Nas Ta Bega climbed
+straight up for a while, and then wound around a swell, to turn this
+way and that, always going up. Shefford began to see similar mounds
+of rock all around him, of every shape that could be called a curve.
+There were yellow domes far above, and small red domes far below.
+Ridges ran from one hill of rock to another. There were no abrupt
+breaks, but holes and pits and caves were everywhere, and occasionally,
+deep down, an amphitheater green with cedar and pinyon. The Indian
+appeared to have a clear idea of where he wanted to go, though there
+was no vestige of a trail on those bare slopes. At length Shefford
+was high enough to see back upon the plain, but the pursuers were no
+longer in sight.
+
+Nas Ta Bega led to the top of that wall, only to disclose to his
+followers another and a higher wall beyond, with a ridged, bare, wild,
+and scalloped depression between. Here footing began to be precarious
+for both man and beast. When the ascent of the second wall began it
+was necessary to zigzag up, slowly and carefully, taking advantage of
+every level bulge or depression. They must have consumed half an hour
+mounting this slope to the summit. Once there, Shefford drew a sharp
+breath with both backward and forward glances. Shadd and his gang, in
+single file, showed dark upon the bare stone ridge behind. And to the
+fore there twisted and dropped and curved the most dangerous slopes
+Shefford had ever seen. The fugitives had reached the height of stone
+wall, of the divide, and many of the drops upon this side were
+perpendicular and too steep to see the bottom.
+
+Nas Ta Bega led along the ridge-top and then started down, following
+the waves in the rock. He came out upon a round promontory from which
+there could not have been any turning of a horse. The long slant
+leading down was at an angle Shefford declared impossible for the
+animals. Yet the Indian started down. His mustang needed urging, but
+at last edged upon the steep descent. Shefford and the others had to
+hold back and wait. It was thrilling to see the intelligent mustang.
+He did not step. He slid his fore hoofs a few inches at a time and
+kept directly behind the Indian. If he fell he would knock Nas Ta
+Bega off his feet and they would both roll down together. There was
+no doubt in Shefford's mind that the mustang knew this as well as the
+Indian. Foot by foot they worked down to a swelling bulge, and here
+Nas Ta Bega left his mustang and came back for the pack-horse. It was
+even more difficult to get this beast down. Then the Indian called for
+Lassiter and Jane and Fay to come down. Shefford began to keep a sharp
+lookout behind and above, and did not see how the three fared on the
+slope, but evidently there was no mishap. Nas Ta Bega mounted the
+slope again, and at the moment sight of Shadd's dark bays silhouetted
+against the sky caused Shefford to call out:
+
+"We've got to hurry!"
+
+The Indian led one mustang and called to the others. Shefford stepped
+close behind. They went down in single file, inch by inch, foot by
+foot, and safely reached the comparative level below.
+
+"Shadd's gang are riding their horses up and down these walls!"
+exclaimed Shefford.
+
+"Shore," replied Lassiter.
+
+Both the women were silent.
+
+Nas Ta Bega led the way swiftly to the right. He rounded a huge dome,
+climbed a low, rolling ridge, descended and ascended, and came out upon
+the rim of a steep-walled amphitheater. Along the rim was a yard-wide
+level, with the chasm to the left and steep slope to the right. There
+was no time to flinch at the danger, when an even greater danger
+menaced from the rear. Nas Ta Bega led, and his mustang kept at his
+heels. One misstep would have plunged the animal to his death. But
+he was surefooted and his confidence helped the others. At the apex
+of the curve the only course led away from the rim, and here there was
+no level. Four of the mustangs slipped and slid down the smooth rock
+until they stopped in a shallow depression. It cost time to get them
+out, to straighten pack and saddles. Shefford thought he heard a yell
+in the rear, but he could not see anything of the gang.
+
+They rounded this precipice only to face a worse one. Shefford's
+nerve was sorely tried when he saw steep slants everywhere, all
+apparently leading down into chasms, and no place a man, let alone a
+horse, could put a foot with safety. Nevertheless the imperturbable
+Indian never slacked his pace. Always he appeared to find a way, and
+he never had to turn back. His winding course, however, did not now
+cover much distance in a straight line, and herein lay the greatest
+peril. Any moment Shadd and his men might come within range.
+
+Upon a particularly tedious and dangerous side of rocky hill the
+fugitives lost so much time that Shefford grew exceedingly alarmed.
+Still, they accomplished it without accident, and their pursuers
+did not heave in sight. Perhaps they were having trouble in a
+bad place.
+
+The afternoon was waning. The red sun hung low above the yellow
+mesa to the left, and there was a perceptible shading of light.
+
+At last Nas Ta Bega came to a place that halted him. It did not look
+so bad as places they had successfully passed. Yet upon closer study
+Shefford did not see how they were to get around the neck of the gully
+at their feet. Presently the Indian put the bridle over the head of
+his mustang and left him free. He did likewise for two more mustangs,
+while Lassiter and Shefford rendered a like service to theirs. Then
+the Indian started down, with his mustang following him. The pack-
+animal came next, then Fay and Nack-yal, then Lassiter and his mount,
+with Jane and hers next, and Shefford last. They followed the Indian,
+picking their steps swiftly, looking nowhere except at the stone under
+their feet. The right side of the chasm was rimmed, the curve at the
+head crossed, and then the real peril of this trap had to be faced.
+It was a narrow slant of ledge, doubling back parallel with the course
+already traversed.
+
+A sharp warning cry from Nas Ta Bega scarcely prepared Shefford for
+hoarse yells, and then a rattling rifle-volley from the top of the
+slope opposite. Bullets thudded on the cliff, whipped up red dust,
+and spanged and droned away.
+
+Fay Larkin screamed and staggered back against the wall. Nack-yal was
+hit, and with frightened snort he reared, pawed the air, and came down,
+pounding the stone. The mustang behind him went to his knees, sank
+with his head over the rim, and, slipping off, plunged into the depths.
+In an instant a dull crash came up.
+
+For a moment there was imminent peril for the horses, more in the
+yawning hole than in the spanging of badly aimed bullets. Lassiter
+drew Jane up a little slope out of the way of the frightened mustangs,
+and Shefford, risking his neck, rushed to Fay. She was holding her
+arm, which was bleeding. Unheeding the rain of bullets, he half
+carried, half dragged her along the slope of the low bluff, where
+he hid behind a corner till the Indian drove the mustangs round it.
+Shefford's swift fingers were wet and red with the blood from Fay's
+arm when he had bound the wound with his scarf. Lassiter had gotten
+around with Jane and was calling Shefford to hurry.
+
+It had been Shefford's idea to halt there and fight. But he did not
+want to send Fay on alone, so he hurried ahead with her. The Indian
+had the horses going fast on a long level, overhung by bulging wall.
+Lassiter and Jane were looking back. Shefford, becoming aware of a
+steep slope to his left, looked down to see a narrow chasm and great
+crevices in the cliffs, with bunches of cedars here and there.
+
+Presently Nas Ta Bega disappeared with the mustangs. He had evidently
+turned off to go down behind the split cliffs. Shefford and Fay caught
+up with Lassiter and Jane, and, panting, hurrying, looking backward
+and then forward, they kept on, as best they could, in the Indian's
+course. Shefford made sure they had lost him, when he appeared down
+to the left. Then they all ran to catch up with him. They went around
+the chasm, and then through one of the narrow cracks to come out upon
+the rim, among cedars. Here the Indian waited for them. He pointed
+down another long swell of naked stone to a narrow green split which
+was evidently different from all these curved pits and holes and
+abysses, for this one had straight walls and wound away out of sight.
+It was the head of a canyon.
+
+"Nonnezoshe Boco!" said the Indian.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, go on!" replied Shefford. "When Shadd comes out on
+that slope above he can't see you--where you go down. Hurry on with
+the horses and women. Lassiter, you go with them. And if Shadd
+passes me and comes up with you--do your best. . . . I'm going to
+ambush that Piute and his gang!"
+
+"Shore you've picked out a good place," replied Lassiter.
+
+In another moment Shefford was alone. He heard the light, soft pat and
+slide of the hoofs of the mustangs as they went down. Presently that
+sound ceased.
+
+He looked at the red stain on his hands--from the blood of the girl he
+loved. And he had to stifle a terrible wrath that shook his frame. In
+regard to Shadd's pursuit, it had not been blood that he had feared,
+but capture for Fay. He and Nas Ta Bega might have expected a shot if
+they resisted, but to wound that unfortunate girl--it made a tiger out
+of him. When he had stilled the emotions that weakened and shook him
+and reached cold and implacable control of himself, he crawled under
+the cedars to the rim and, well hidden, he watched and waited.
+
+Shadd appeared to be slow for the first time since he had been
+sighted. With keen eyes Shefford watched the corner where he and the
+others had escaped from that murderous volley. But Shadd did not come.
+
+The sun had lost its warmth and was tipping the lofty mesa to his
+right. Soon twilight would make travel on those walls more perilous
+and darkness would make it impossible. Shadd must hurry or abandon
+the pursuit for that day. Shefford found himself grimly hopeful.
+
+Suddenly he heard the click of hoofs. It came, faint yet clear, on
+the still air. He glued his sight upon that corner where he expected
+the pursuers to appear. More cracks of hoofs pierced his ear, clearer
+and sharper this time. Presently he gathered that they could not
+possibly come from beyond the corner he was watching. So he looked
+far to the left of that place, seeing no one, then far to the right.
+Out over a bulge of stone he caught sight of the bobbing head of a
+horse--then another--and still another.
+
+He was astounded. Shadd had gone below that place where the attack
+had been made and he had come up this steep slope. More horses
+appeared--to the number of eight. Shefford easily recognized a low,
+broad, squat rider to be Shadd. Assuredly the Piute did not know this
+country. Possibly, however, he had feared an ambush. But Shefford
+grew convinced that Shadd had not expected an ambush, or at least did
+not fear it, and had mistaken the Indian's course. Moreover, if he
+led his gang a few rods farther up that slope he would do worse than
+make a mistake--he would be facing a double peril.
+
+What fearless horsemen these Indians were! Shadd was mounted, as were
+three others of his gang. Evidently the white men, the outlaws, were
+the ones on foot. Shefford thrilled and his veins stung when he saw
+these pursuers come passing what he considered the danger mark. But
+manifestly they could not see their danger. Assuredly they were aware
+of the chasm; however, the level upon which they were advancing
+narrowed gradually, and they could not tell that very soon they could
+not go any farther nor could they turn back. The alternative was to
+climb the slope, and that was a desperate chance.
+
+They came up, now about on a level with Shefford, and perhaps three
+hundred yards distant. He gripped his rifle with a fatal assurance
+that he could kill one of them now. Still he waited. Curiosity
+consumed him because every foot they advanced heightened their peril.
+Shefford wondered if Shadd would have chosen that course if he had
+not supposed the Navajo had chosen it first. It was plain that one
+of the walking Piutes stooped now and then to examine the rock. He
+was looking for some faint sign of a horse track.
+
+Shadd halted within two hundred yards of where Shefford lay hidden.
+His keen eye had caught the significance of the narrowing level
+before he had reached the end. He pointed and spoke. Shefford
+heard his voice. The others replied. They all looked up at the
+steep slope, down into the chasm right below them, and across into
+the cedars. The Piute in the rear succeeded in turning his horse,
+went back, and began to circle up the slope. The others entered into
+an argument and they became more closely grouped upon the narrow bench.
+Their mustangs were lean, wiry, wild, vicious, and Shefford calculated
+grimly upon what a stampede might mean in that position.
+
+Then Shadd turned his mustang up the slope. Like a goat he climbed.
+Another Indian in the rear succeeded in pivoting his steed and started
+back, apparently to circle round and up. The others of the gang
+appeared uncertain. They yelled hoarsely at Shadd, who halted on the
+steep slant some twenty paces above them. He spoke and made motions
+that evidently meant the climb was easy enough. It looked easy for
+him. His dark face flashed red in the rays of the sun.
+
+At this critical moment Shefford decided to fire. He meant to kill
+Shadd, hoping if the leader was gone the others would abandon the
+pursuit. The rifle wavered a little as he aimed, then grew still. He
+fired. Shadd never flinched. But the fiery mustang, perhaps wounded,
+certainly terrified, plunged down with piercing, horrid scream. Shadd
+fell under him. Shrill yells rent the air. Like a thunderbolt the
+sliding horse was upon men and animals below.
+
+A heavy shock, wild snorts, upflinging heads and hoofs, a terrible
+tramping, thudding, shrieking melee, then a brown, twisting, tangled
+mass shot down the slant over the rim!
+
+Shefford dazedly thought he saw men running. He did see plunging
+horses. One slipped, fell, rolled, and went into the chasm.
+
+Then up from the depths came a crash, a long, slipping roar. In
+another instant there was a lighter crash and a lighter sliding roar.
+
+Two horses, shaking, paralyzed with fear, were left upon the narrow
+level. Beyond them a couple of men were crawling along the stone.
+Up on the level stood the two Indians, holding down frightened horses,
+and staring at the fatal slope.
+
+And Shefford lay there under the cedar, in the ghastly grip of the
+moment, hardly comprehending that his ill-aimed shot had been a
+thunderbolt.
+
+He did not think of shooting at the Piutes; they, however, recovering
+from their shock, evidently feared the ambush, for they swiftly drew
+up the slope and passed out of sight. The frightened horses below
+whistled and tramped along the lower level, finally vanishing. There
+was nothing left on the bare wall to prove to Shefford that it had
+been the scene of swift and tragic death. He leaned from his covert
+and peered over the rim. Hundreds of feet below he saw dark growths
+of pinyons. There was no sign of a pile of horses and men, and then
+he realized that he could not tell the number that had perished. The
+swift finale had been as stunning to him as if lightning had struck
+near him.
+
+Suddenly it flashed over him what state of suspense and torture Fay
+and Jane must be in at that very moment. And, leaping up, he ran out
+of the cedars to the slope behind and hurried down at risk of limb.
+The sun had set by this time. He hoped he could catch up with the
+party before dark. He went straight down, and the end of the slope
+was a smooth, low wall. The Indian must have descended with the
+horses at some other point. The canyon was about fifty yards wide
+and it headed under the great slope of Navajo Mountain. These smooth,
+rounded walls appeared to end at its low rim.
+
+Shefford slid down upon a grassy bank, and finding the tracks of the
+horses, he followed them. They led along the wall. As soon as he had
+assured himself that Nas Ta Bega had gone down the canyon he abandoned
+the tracks and pushed ahead swiftly. He heard the soft rush of running
+water. In the center of the canyon wound heavy lines of bright-green
+foliage, bordering a rocky brook. The air was close, warm, and sweet
+with perfume of flowers. The walls were low and shelving, and soon
+lost that rounded appearance peculiar to the wind-worn slopes above.
+Shefford came to where the horses had plowed down a gravelly bank into
+the clear, swift water of the brook. The little pools of water were
+still muddy. Shefford drank, finding the water cold and sweet, without
+the bitter bite of alkali. He crossed and pushed on, running on the
+grassy levels. Flowers were everywhere, but he did not notice them
+particularly. The canyon made many leisurely turns, and its size, if
+it enlarged at all, was not perceptible to him yet. The rims above
+him were perhaps fifty feet high. Cottonwood-trees began to appear
+along the brook, and blossoming buck-brush in the corners of wall.
+
+He had traveled perhaps a mile when Nas Ta Bega, appearing to come out
+of the thicket, confronted him.
+
+"Hello!" called Shefford. "Where're Fay--and the others?"
+
+The Indian made a gesture that signified the rest of the party were
+beyond a little way. Shefford took Nas Ta Bega's arm, and as they
+walked, and he panted for breath, he told what had happened back on
+the slopes.
+
+The Indian made one of his singular speaking sweeps of hand, and he
+scrutinized Shefford's face, but he received the news in silence.
+They turned a corner of wall, crossed a wide, shallow, boulder-strewn
+place in the brook, and mounted the bank to a thicket. Beyond this,
+from a clump of cottonwoods, Lassiter strode out with a gun in each
+hand. He had been hiding.
+
+"Shore I'm glad to see you," he said, and the eyes that piercingly
+fixed on Shefford were now as keen as formerly they had been mild.
+
+"Gone! Lassiter--they're gone," broke out Shefford. "Where's Fay--
+and Jane?"
+
+Lassiter called, and presently the women came out of the thick brake,
+and Fay bounded forward with her swift stride, while Jane followed
+with eager step and anxious face. Then they all surrounded Shefford.
+
+"It was Shadd--and his gang," panted Shefford. "Eight in all. Three
+or four Piutes--the others outlaws. They lost track of us. Went
+below the place--where they shot at us. And they came up--on a bad
+slope."
+
+Shefford described the slope and the deep chasm and how Shadd led up
+to the point where he saw his mistake and then how the catastrophe
+fell.
+
+"I shot--and missed," repeated Shefford, with the sweat in beads on
+his pale face. "I missed Shadd. Maybe I hit the horse. He plunged
+--reared--fell back--a terrible fall--right upon that bunch of horses
+and men below. . . . In a horrible, wrestling, screaming tangle they
+slid over the rim! I don't know how many. I saw some men running
+along. I saw three other horses plunging. One slipped and went over.
+. . . I have no idea how many, but Shadd and some of his gang went
+to destruction."
+
+"Shore thet's fine!" said Lassiter. "But mebbe I won't get to use
+them guns, after all."
+
+"Hardly on that gang," laughed Shefford. "The two Piutes and what
+others escaped turned back. Maybe they'll meet a posse of Mormons--
+for of course the Mormons will track us, too--and come back to where
+Shadd lost his life. That's an awful place. Even the Piute got lost
+--couldn't follow Nas Ta Bega. It would take any pursuers some time
+to find how we got in here. I believe we need not fear further
+pursuit. Certainly not to-night or to-morrow. Then we'll be far
+down the canyon."
+
+When Shefford concluded his earnest remarks the faces of Fay and Jane
+had lost the signs of suppressed dread.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, make camp here," said Shefford. "Water--wood--grass--
+why, this 's something like. . . . Fay, how's your arm?"
+
+"It hurts," she replied, simply.
+
+"Come with me down to the brook and let me wash and bind it properly."
+
+They went, and she sat upon a stone while he knelt beside her and
+untied his scarf from her arm. As the blood had hardened, it was
+necessary to slit her sleeve to the shoulder. Using his scarf, he
+washed the blood from the wound, and found it to be merely a cut,
+a groove, on the surface.
+
+"That's nothing," Shefford said, lightly. "It'll heal in a day. But
+there'll always be a scar. And when we--we get back to civilization,
+and you wear a pretty gown without sleeves, people will wonder what
+made this mark on your beautiful arm."
+
+Fay looked at him with wonderful eyes. "Do women wear gowns without
+sleeves?" she asked.
+
+"They do."
+
+"Have I a--beautiful arm?"
+
+She stretched it out, white, blue-veined, the skin fine as satin, the
+lines graceful and flowing, a round, firm, strong arm.
+
+"The most beautiful I ever saw," he replied.
+
+But the pleasure his compliment gave her was not communicated to him.
+His last impression of that right arm had been of its strength, and
+his mind flashed with lightning swiftness to a picture that haunted
+him--Waggoner lying dead on the porch with that powerfully driven
+knife in his breast. Shefford shuddered through all his being.
+Would this phantom come often to him like that? Hurriedly he bound
+up her arm with the scarf and did not look at her, and was conscious
+that she felt a subtle change in him.
+
+The short twilight ended with the fugitives comfortable in a camp that
+for natural features could not have been improved upon. Darkness found
+Fay and Jane asleep on a soft mossy bed, a blanket tucked around them,
+and their faces still and beautiful in the flickering camp-fire light.
+Lassiter did not linger long awake. Nas Ta Bega, seeing Shefford's
+excessive fatigue, urged him to sleep. Shefford demurred, insisting
+that he share the night-watch. But Nas Ta Bega, by agreeing that
+Shefford might have the following night's duty, prevailed upon him.
+
+Shefford seemed to shut his eyes upon darkness and to open them
+immediately to the light. The stream of blue sky above, the gold
+tints on the western rim, the rosy, brightening colors down in the
+canyon, were proofs of the sunrise. This morning Nas Ta Bega proceeded
+leisurely, and his manner was comforting. When all was in readiness
+for a start he gave the mustang he had ridden to Shefford, and walked,
+leading the pack-animal.
+
+The mode of travel here was a selection of the best levels, the best
+places to cross the brook, the best banks to climb, and it was a
+process of continual repetition. As the Indian picked out the course
+and the mustangs followed his lead there was nothing for Shefford to
+do but take his choice between reflection that seemed predisposed
+toward gloom and an absorption in the beauty, color, wildness, and
+changing character of Nonnezoshe Boco.
+
+Assuredly his experience in the desert did not count in it a trip down
+into a strange, beautiful, lost canyon such as this. It did not widen,
+though the walls grew higher. They began to lean and bulge, and the
+narrow strip of sky above resembled a flowing blue river. Huge caverns
+had been hollowed out by some work of nature, what, he could not tell,
+though he was sure it could not have been wind. And when the brook ran
+close under one of these overhanging places the running water made a
+singular, indescribable sound. A crack from a hoof on a stone rang
+like a hollow bell and echoed from wall to wall. And the croak of a
+frog--the only living creature he had so far noted in the canyon--was
+a weird and melancholy thing.
+
+Fay rode close to him, and his heart seemed to rejoice when she spoke,
+when she showed how she wanted to be near him, yet, try as he might,
+he could not respond. His speech to her--what little there was--did
+not come spontaneously. And he suffered a remorse that he could not
+be honestly natural to her. Then he would drive away the encroaching
+gloom, trusting that a little time would dispel it.
+
+"We are deeper down than Surprise Valley," said Fay.
+
+"How do you know?" he asked.
+
+"Here are the pink and yellow sago-lilies. You remember we went once
+to find the white ones? I have found white lilies in Surprise Valley,
+but never any pink or yellow."
+
+Shefford had seen flowers all along the green banks, but he had not
+marked the lilies. Here he dismounted and gathered several. They
+were larger than the white ones of higher altitudes, of the same
+exquisite beauty and fragility, of such rare pink and yellow hues
+as he had never seen. He gave the flowers to Fay.
+
+"They bloom only where it's always summer," she said.
+
+That expressed their nature. They were the orchids of the summer
+canyon. They stood up everywhere starlike out of the green. It was
+impossible to prevent the mustangs treading them under hoof. And as
+the canyon deepened, and many little springs added their tiny volume to
+the brook, every grassy bench was dotted with lilies, like a green sky
+star-spangled. And this increasing luxuriance manifested itself in the
+banks of purple moss and clumps of lavender daisies and great clusters
+of yellow violets. The brook was lined by blossoming buck-rush; the
+rocky corners showed the crimson and magenta of cactus; ledges were
+green with shining moss that sparkled with little white flowers. The
+hum of bees filled the air.
+
+But by and by this green and colorful and verdant beauty, the almost
+level floor of the canyon, the banks of soft earth, the thickets and
+the clumps of cotton-woods, the shelving caverns and the bulging
+walls--these features gradually were lost, and Nonnezoshe Boco began
+to deepen in bare red and white stone steps, the walls sheered away
+from one another, breaking into sections and ledges, and rising higher
+and higher, and there began to be manifested a dark and solemn
+concordance with the nature that had created this rent in the earth.
+
+There was a stretch of miles where steep steps in hard red rock
+alternated with long levels of round boulders. Here one by one
+the mustangs went lame. And the fugitives, dismounting to spare
+the faithful beasts, slipped and stumbled over these loose and
+treacherous stones. Fay was the only one who did not show distress.
+She was glad to be on foot again and the rolling boulders were as
+stable as solid rock for her.
+
+The hours passed; the toil increased; the progress diminished; one
+of the mustangs failed entirely and was left; and all the while the
+dimensions of Nonnezoshe Boco magnified and its character changed.
+It became a thousand-foot walled canyon, leaning, broken, threatening,
+with great yellow slides blocking passage, with huge sections split
+off from the main wall, with immense dark and gloomy caverns.
+Strangely, it had no intersecting canyon. It jealously guarded
+its secret. Its unusual formations of cavern and pillar and half-
+arch led the mind to expect any monstrous stone-shape left by an
+avalanche or cataclysm.
+
+Down and down the fugitives toiled. And now the stream-bed was bare
+of boulders, and the banks of earth. The floods that had rolled down
+that canyon had here borne away every loose thing. All the floor was
+bare red and white stone, polished, glistening, slippery, affording
+treacherous foothold. And the time came when Nas Ta Bega abandoned
+the stream-bed to take to the rock-strewn and cactus-covered ledges
+above.
+
+Jane gave out and had to be assisted upon the weary mustang. Fay was
+persuaded to mount Nack-yal again. Lassiter plodded along. The Indian
+bent tired steps far in front. And Shefford traveled on after him,
+footsore and hot.
+
+The canyon widened ahead into a great, ragged, iron-hued amphitheater,
+and from there apparently turned abruptly at right angles. Sunset
+rimmed the walls. Shefford wondered dully when the India would halt
+to camp. And he dragged himself onward with eyes down on the rough
+ground.
+
+When he raised them again the Indian stood on a point of slope with
+folded arms, gazing down where the canyon veered. Something in Nas Ta
+Bega's pose quickened Shefford's pulse and then his steps. He reached
+the Indian and the point where he, too, could see beyond that vast
+jutting wall that had obstructed his view.
+
+A mile beyond all was bright with the colors of sunset, and spanning
+the canyon in the graceful shape arid beautiful hues of a rainbow was a
+magnificent stone bridge.
+
+"Nonnezoshe!" exclaimed the Navajo, with a deep and sonorous roll in
+his voice.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII. AT THE FOOT OF THE RAINBOW
+
+
+The rainbow bridge was the one great natural phenomenon, the one grand
+spectacle, which Shefford had ever seen that did not at first give
+vague disappointment, a confounding of reality, a disenchantment of
+contrast with what the mind had conceived.
+
+But this thing was glorious. It silenced him, yet did not awe or
+stun. His body and brain, weary and dull from the toil of travel,
+received a singular and revivifying freshness. He had a strange,
+mystic perception of this rosy-hued stupendous arch of stone, as if
+in a former life it had been a goal he could not reach. This wonder
+of nature, though all-satisfying, all-fulfilling to his artist's soul,
+could not be a resting-place for him, a destination where something
+awaited him, a height he must scale to find peace, the end of his
+strife. But it seemed all these. He could not understand his
+perception or his emotion. Still, here at last, apparently, was the
+rainbow of his boyish dreams and of his manhood--a rainbow magnified
+even beyond those dreams, no longer transparent and ethereal, but
+solidified, a thing of ages, sweeping up majestically from the red
+walls, its iris-hued arch against the blue sky.
+
+Nas Ta Bega led on down the ledge and Shefford plodded thoughtfully
+after him. The others followed. A jutting corner of wall again
+hid the canyon. The Indian was working round to circle the huge
+amphitheater. It was slow, irritating, strenuous toil, for the way
+was on a steep slant, rough and loose and dragging. The rocks were
+as hard and jagged as lava. And the cactus further hindered progress.
+When at last the long half-circle had been accomplished the golden
+and rosy lights had faded.
+
+Again the canyon opened to view. All the walls were pale and steely
+and the stone bridge loomed dark. Nas Ta Bega said camp would be
+made at the bridge, which was now close. Just before they reached
+it the Navajo halted with one of his singular actions. Then he stood
+motionless. Shefford realized that Nas Ta Bega was saying his prayer
+to this great stone god. Presently the Indian motioned for Shefford
+to lead the others and the horses on under the bridge. Shefford did
+so, and, upon turning, was amazed to see the Indian climbing the steep
+and difficult slope on the other side. All the party watched him until
+he disappeared behind the huge base of cliff that supported the arch.
+Shefford selected a level place for camp, some few rods away, and here,
+with Lassiter, unsaddled and unpacked the lame, drooping mustangs.
+When this was done twilight had fallen. Nas Ta Bega appeared, coming
+down the steep slope on this side of the bridge. Then Shefford divined
+why the Navajo had made that arduous climb. He would not go under the
+bridge. Nonnezoshe was a Navajo god. And Nas Ta Bega, though educated
+as a white man, was true to the superstition of his ancestors.
+
+Nas Ta Bega turned the mustangs loose to fare for what scant grass
+grew on bench and slope. Firewood was even harder to find than grass.
+When the camp duties had been performed and the simple meal eaten
+there was gloom gathering in the canyon and the stars had begun to
+blink in the pale strip of blue above the lofty walls. The place was
+oppressive and the fugitives mostly silent. Shefford spread a bed of
+blankets for the women, and Jane at once lay wearily down. Fay stood
+beside the flickering fire, and Shefford felt her watching him. He
+was conscious of a desire to get away from her haunting gaze. To
+the gentle good-night he bade her she made no response.
+
+Shefford moved away into a strange dark shadow cast by the bridge
+against the pale starlight. It was a weird, black belt, where he
+imagined he was invisible, but out of which he could see. There was
+a slab of rock near the foot of the bridge, and here Shefford composed
+himself to watch, to feel, to think the unknown thing that seemed to
+be inevitably coming to him.
+
+A slight stiffening of his neck made him aware that he had been
+continually looking up at the looming arch. And he found that
+insensibly it had changed and grown. It had never seemed the same
+any two moments, but that was not what he meant. Near at hand it
+was too vast a thing for immediate comprehension. He wanted to
+ponder on what had formed it--to reflect upon its meaning as to
+age and force of nature, yet all he could do at each moment was to
+see. White stars hung along the dark curved line. The rim of the
+arch seemed to shine. The moon must be up there somewhere. The
+far side of the canyon was now a blank, black wall. Over its
+towering rim showed a pale glow. It brightened. The shades in
+the canyon lightened, then a white disk of moon peered over the dark
+line. The bridge turned to silver, and the gloomy, shadowy belt it
+had cast blanched and vanished.
+
+Shefford became aware of the presence of Nas Ta Bega. Dark, silent,
+statuesque, with inscrutable eyes uplifted, with all that was
+spiritual of the Indian suggested by a somber and tranquil knowledge
+of his place there, he represented the same to Shefford as a solitary
+figure of human life brought out the greatness of a great picture.
+Nonnezoshe Boco needed life, wild life, life of its millions of
+years--and here stood the dark and silent Indian.
+
+There was a surge in Shefford's heart and in his mind a perception of
+a moment of incalculable change to his soul. And at that moment Fay
+Larkin stole like a phantom to his side and stood there with her
+uncovered head shining and her white face lovely in the moonlight.
+
+"May I stay with you--a little?" she asked, wistfully. "I can't
+sleep."
+
+"Surely you may," he replied. "Does your arm hurt too badly, or are
+you too tired to sleep?""
+
+"No--it's this place. I--I--can't tell you how I feel."
+
+But the feeling was there in her eyes for Shefford to read. Had he
+too great an emotion--did he read too much--did he add from his soul?
+For him the wild, starry, haunted eyes mirrored all that he had seen
+and felt under Nonnezoshe. And for herself they shone eloquently of
+courage and love.
+
+"I need to talk--and I don't know how," she said.
+
+He was silent, but he took her hands and drew her closer.
+
+"Why are you so--so different?" she asked, bravely.
+
+"Different?" he echoed.
+
+"Yes. You are kind--you speak the same to me as you used to. But
+since we started you've been different, somehow."
+
+"Fay, think how hard and dangerous the trip's been! I've been worried
+--and sick with dread--with-- Oh, you can't imagine the strain
+I'm under! How could I be my old self?"
+
+"It isn't worry I mean."
+
+He was too miserable to try to find out what she did mean; besides,
+he believed, if he let himself think about it, he would know what
+troubled her.
+
+"I--I am almost happy," she said, softly.
+
+"Fay! . . . Aren't you at all afraid?"
+
+"No. You'll take care of me. . . . Do--do you love me--like you did
+before?"
+
+"Why, child! Of course--I love you," he replied, brokenly, and he drew
+her closer. He had never embraced her, never kissed her. But there
+was a whiteness about her then--a wraith--a something from her soul,
+and he could only gaze at her.
+
+"I love you," she whispered. "I thought I knew it that--that night.
+But I'm only finding it out now. . . . And somehow I had to tell you
+here."
+
+"Fay, I haven't said much to you," he said, hurriedly, huskily. "I
+haven't had a chance. I love you. I--I ask you--will you be my wife?"
+
+"Of course," she said, simply, but the white, moon-blanched face
+colored with a dark and leaping blush.
+
+"We'll be married as soon as we get out of the desert," he went on.
+"And we'll forget--all--all that's happened. You're so young. You'll
+forget."
+
+"I'd forgotten already, till this difference came in you. And pretty
+soon--when I can say something more to you--I'll forget all except
+Surprise Valley--and my evenings in the starlight with you."
+
+"Say it then--quick!"
+
+She was leaning against him, holding his hands in her strong clasp,
+soulful, tender, almost passionate.
+
+"You couldn't help it. . . . I'm to blame. . . . I remember what I
+said."
+
+"What?" he queried in amaze.
+
+"'YOU CAN KILL HIM!' . . . I said that. I made you kill him."
+
+"Kill--whom?" cried Shefford.
+
+"Waggoner. I'm to blame. . . . That must be what's made you different.
+And, oh, I've wanted you to know it's all my fault. . . . But I
+wouldn't be sorry if you weren't. . . . I'm glad he's dead."
+
+"YOU--THINK--I--" Shefford's gasping whisper failed in the shock of
+the revelation that Fay believed he had killed Waggoner. Then with
+the inference came the staggering truth--her guiltlessness; and a
+paralyzing joy held him stricken.
+
+A powerful hand fell upon Shefford's shoulder, startling him. Nas Ta
+Bega stood there, looking down upon him and Fay. Never had the Indian
+seemed so dark, inscrutable of face. But in his magnificent bearing,
+in the spirit that Shefford sensed in him, there were nobility and
+power and a strange pride.
+
+The Indian kept one hand on Shefford's shoulder, and with the other
+he struck himself on the breast. The action was that of an Indian,
+impressive and stern, significant of an Indian's prowess.
+
+"My God!" breathed Shefford, very low.
+
+"Oh, what does he mean?" cried Fay.
+
+Shefford held her with shaking hands, trying to speak, to fight a way
+out of these stultifying emotions.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega--you heard. She thinks--I killed Waggoner!"
+
+All about the Navajo then was dark and solemn disproof of her belief.
+He did not need to speak. His repetition of that savage, almost
+boastful blow on his breast added only to the dignity, and not to
+the denial, of a warrior.
+
+"Fay, he means he killed the Mormon," said Shefford. "He must have,
+for _I_ did not!"
+
+"Ah!" murmured Fay, and she leaned to him with passionate, quivering
+gladness. It was the woman--the human--the soul born in her that
+came uppermost then; now, when there was no direct call to the wild
+and elemental in her nature, she showed a heart above revenge, the
+instinct of a saving right, of truth as Shefford knew them. He took
+her into his arms and never had he loved her so well.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, you killed the Mormon," declared Shefford, with a voice
+that had gained strength. No silent Indian suggestion of a deed would
+suffice in that moment. Shefford needed to hear the Navajo speak--to
+have Fay hear him speak. "Nas Ta Bega, I know I understand. But tell
+her. Speak so she will know. Tell it as a white man would!"
+
+"I heard her cry out," replied the Indian, in his slow English. "I
+waited. When he came I killed him."
+
+A poignant why was wrenched from Shefford. Nas Ta Bega stood silent.
+
+"BI NAI!" And when that sonorous Indian name rolled in dignity from
+his lips he silently stalked away into the gloom. That was his answer
+to the white man.
+
+Shefford bent over Fay, and as the strain on him broke he held her
+closer and closer and his tears streamed down and his voice broke in
+exclamations of tenderness and thanksgiving. It did not matter what
+she had thought, but she must never know what he had thought. He
+clasped her as something precious he had lost and regained. He was
+shaken with a passion of remorse. How could he have believed Fay
+Larkin guilty of murder? Women less wild and less justified than she
+had been driven to such a deed, yet how could he have believed it of
+her, when for two days he had been with her, had seen her face, and
+deep into her eyes? There was mystery in his very blindness. He cast
+the whole thought from him for ever. There was no shadow between Fay
+and him. He had found her. He had saved her. She was free. She
+was innocent. And suddenly, as he seemed delivered from contending
+tumults within, he became aware that it was no unresponsive creature
+he had folded to his breast.
+
+He became suddenly alive to the warm, throbbing contact of her bosom,
+to her strong arms clinging round his neck, to her closed eyes, to the
+rapt whiteness of her face. And he bent to cold lips that seemed to
+receive his first kisses as new and strange; but tremulously changed,
+at last to meet his own, and then to burn with sweet and thrilling
+fire.
+
+"My darling, my dream's come true," he said. "You are my treasure. I
+found you here at the foot of the rainbow! . . . What if it is a stone
+rainbow--if all is not as I had dreamed? I followed a gleam. And it's
+led me to love and faith!"
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Hours afterward Shefford walked alone to and fro under the bridge. His
+trouble had given place to serenity. But this night of nights he must
+live out wide-eyed to its end.
+
+The moon had long since crossed the streak of star-fired blue above
+and the canyon was black in shadow. At times a current of wind, with
+all the strangeness of that strange country in its hollow moan, rushed
+through the great stone arch. At other times there was silence such as
+Shefford imagined dwelt deep under this rocky world. At still other
+times an owl hooted, and the sound was nameless. But it had a mocking
+echo that never ended. An echo of night, silence, gloom, melancholy
+death, age, eternity!
+
+The Indian lay asleep with his dark face upturned, and the other
+sleepers lay calm and white in the starlight.
+
+Shefford saw in them the meaning of life and the past--the illimitable
+train of faces that had shone the stars. There was a spirit in the
+canyon, and whether or not it was what the Navajo embodied in the great
+Nonnezoshe, or the life of this present, or the death of the ages, or
+the nature so magnificently manifested in those silent, dreaming
+waiting walls--the truth for Shefford was that this spirit was God.
+
+Life was eternal. Man's immortality lay in himself. Love of a woman
+was hope--happiness. Brotherhood--that mystic and grand "Bi Nai!" of
+the Navajo--that was religion.
+
+
+
+
+XIX. THE GRAND CANYON OF THE COLORADO
+
+
+The night passed, the gloom turned gray, the dawn stole cool and pale
+into the canyon. When Nas Ta Bega drove the mustangs into camp the
+lofty ramparts of the walls were rimmed with gold and the dark arch
+of Nonnezoshe began to lose its steely gray.
+
+The women had rested well and were in better condition to travel. Jane
+was cheerful and Fay radiant one moment and in a dream the next. She
+was beginning to live in that wonderful future. They talked more than
+usual at breakfast, and Lassiter made droll remarks. Shefford, with
+his great and haunting trouble ended for ever, with now only danger
+to face ahead, was a different man, but thoughtful and quiet.
+
+This morning the Indian leisurely made preparations for the start. For
+all the concern he showed he might have known every foot of the canyon
+below Nonnezoshe. But, for Shefford, with the dawn had returned
+anxiety, a restless feeling of the need of hurry. What obstacles,
+what impassable gorges, might lie between this bridge and the river!
+The Indian's inscrutable serenity and Fay's trust, her radiance, the
+exquisite glow upon her face, sustained Shefford and gave him patience
+to endure and conceal his dread.
+
+At length the flight was resumed, with Nas Ta Bega leading on foot,
+and Shefford walking in the rear. A quarter of a mile below camp
+the Indian led down a declivity into the bottom of the narrow gorge,
+where the stream ran. He did not gaze backward for a last glance at
+Nonnezoshe; nor did Jane or Lassiter. Fay, however, checked Nack-
+yal at the rim of the descent and turned to look behind. Shefford
+contrasted her tremulous smile, her half-happy good-by to this place,
+with the white stillness of her face when she had bade farewell to
+Surprise Valley. Then she rode Nack-yal down into the gorge.
+
+Shefford knew that this would be his last look at the rainbow bridge.
+As he gazed the tip of the great arch lost its cold, dark stone color
+and began to shine. The sun had just arisen high enough over some
+low break in the wall to reach the bridge. Shefford watched. Slowly,
+in wondrous transformation, the gold and blue and rose and pink and
+purple blended their hues, softly, mistily, cloudily, until once again
+the arch was a rainbow.
+
+Ages before life had evolved upon the earth it had spread its grand
+arch from wall to wall, black and mystic at night, transparent and
+rosy in the sunrise, at sunset a flaming curve limned against the
+heavens. When the race of man had passed it would, perhaps, stand
+there still. It was not for many eyes to see. Only by toil, sweat,
+endurance, blood, could any man ever look at Nonnezoshe. So it would
+always be alone, grand, silent, beautiful, unintelligible.
+
+Shefford bade Nonnezoshe a mute, reverent farewell. Then plunging
+down the weathered slope of the gorge to the stream below, he hurried
+forward to join the others. They had progressed much farther than he
+imagined they would have, and this was owing to the fact that the
+floor of the gorge afforded easy travel. It was gravel on rock bottom,
+tortuous, but open, with infrequent and shallow downward steps. The
+stream did not now rush and boil along and tumble over rock-encumbered
+ledges. In corners the water collected in round, green, eddying pools.
+There were patches of grass and willows and mounds of moss. Shefford's
+surprise equaled his relief, for he believed that the violent descent
+of Nonnezoshe Boco had been passed. Any turn now, he imagined, might
+bring the party out upon the river. When he caught up with them he
+imparted this conviction, which was received with cheer. The hopes
+of all, except the Indian, seemed mounting; and if he ever hoped or
+despaired it was never manifest.
+
+Shefford's anticipation, however, was not soon realized. The fugitives
+traveled miles farther down Nonnezoshe Boco, and the only changes were
+that the walls of the lower gorge heightened and merged into those
+above and that these upper ones towered ever loftier. Shefford had
+to throw his head straight back to look up at the rims, and the narrow
+strip of sky was now indeed a flowing stream of blue.
+
+Difficult steps were met, too, yet nothing compared to those of the
+upper canyon. Shefford calculated that this day's travel had advanced
+several hours; and more than ever now he was anticipating the mouth of
+Nonnezoshe Boco. Still another hour went by. And then came striking
+changes. The canyon narrowed till the walls were scarcely twenty paces
+apart; the color of stone grew dark red above and black down low; the
+light of day became shadowed, and the floor was a level, gravelly,
+winding lane, with the stream meandering slowly and silently.
+
+Suddenly the Indian halted. He turned his ear down the canyon lane.
+He had heard something. The others grouped round him, but did not
+hear a sound except the soft flow of water and the heave of the
+mustangs. Then the Indian went on. Presently he halted again.
+And again he listened. This time he threw up his head and upon
+his dark face shone a light which might have been pride.
+
+"Tse ko-n-tsa-igi," he said.
+
+The others could not understand, but they were impressed.
+
+"Shore he means somethin' big," drawled Lassiter.
+
+"Oh, what did he say?" queried Fay in eagerness.
+
+"Nas Ta Bega, tell us," said Shefford. "We are full of hope."
+
+"Grand Canyon," replied the Indian.
+
+"How do you know?" asked Shefford.
+
+"I hear the roar of the river."
+
+But Shefford, listen as he might, could not hear it. They traveled on,
+winding down the wonderful lane. Every once in a while Shefford lagged
+behind, let the others pass out of hearing, and then he listened. At
+last he was rewarded. Low and deep, dull and strange, with some
+quality to incite dread, came a roar. Thereafter, at intervals,
+usually at turns in the canyon, and when a faint stir of warm air
+fanned his cheeks, he heard the sound, growing clearer and louder.
+
+He rounded an abrupt corner to have the roar suddenly fill his ears,
+to see the lane extend straight to a ragged vent, and beyond that, at
+some distance, a dark, ragged, bulging wall, like iron. As he hurried
+forward he was surprised to find that the noise did not increase. Here
+it kept a strange uniformity of tone and volume. The others of the
+party passed out of the mouth of Nonnezoshe Boco in advance of
+Shefford, and when he reached it they were grouped upon a bank of
+sand. A dark-red canyon yawned before them, and through it slid the
+strangest river Shefford had ever seen. At first glance he imagined
+the strangeness consisted of the dark-red color of the water, but at
+the second he was not so sure. All the others, except Nas Ta Bega,
+eyed the river blankly, as if they did not know what to think. The
+roar came from round a huge bulging wall downstream. Up the canyon,
+half a mile, at another turn, there was a leaping rapid of dirty red-
+white waves and the sound of this, probably, was drowned in the
+unseen but nearer rapid.
+
+"This is the Grand Canyon of the Colorado," said Shefford. "We've
+come out at the mouth of Nonnezoshe Boco. . . . And now to wait for
+Joe Lake!"
+
+They made camp on a dry, level sand-bar under a shelving wall. Nas
+Ta Bega collected a pile of driftwood to be used for fire, and then
+he took the mustangs back up the side canyon to find grass for them.
+Lassiter appeared unusually quiet, and soon passed from weary rest on
+the sand to deep slumber. Fay and Jane succumbed to an exhaustion
+that manifested itself the moment relaxation set in, and they, too,
+fell asleep. Shefford patrolled the long strip of sand under the
+wall, and watched up the river for Joe Lake. The Indian returned
+and went along the river, climbed over the jutting, sharp slopes
+that reached into the water, and passed out of sight up-stream
+toward the rapid.
+
+Shefford had a sense that the river and the canyon were too magnificent
+to be compared with others. Still, all his emotions and sensations
+had been so wrought upon, he seemed not to have any left by which he
+might judge of what constituted the difference. He would wait. He
+had a grim conviction that before he was safely out of this earth-
+riven crack he would know. One thing, however, struck him, and it
+was that up the canyon, high over the lower walls, hazy and blue,
+stood other walls, and beyond and above them, dim in purple distance,
+upreared still other walls. The haze and the blue and the purple
+meant great distance, and, likewise, the height seemed incomparable.
+
+The red river attracted him most. Since this was the medium by which
+he must escape with his party, it was natural that it absorbed him,
+to the neglect of the gigantic cliffs. And the more he watched the
+river, studied it, listened to it, imagined its nature, its power, its
+restlessness, the more he dreaded it. As the hours of the afternoon
+wore away, and he strolled along and rested on the banks, his first
+impressions, and what he realized might be his truest ones, were
+gradually lost. He could not bring them back. The river was
+changing, deceitful. It worked upon his mind. The low, hollow
+roar filled his ears and seemed to mock him. Then he endeavored
+to stop thinking about it, to confine his attention to the gap up-
+stream where sooner or later he prayed that Joe Lake and his boat
+would appear. But, though he controlled his gaze, he could not his
+thought, and his strange, impondering dread of the river augmented.
+
+The afternoon waned. Nas Ta Bega came back to camp and said any
+likelihood of Joe's arrival was past for that day. Shefford could
+not get over an impression of strangeness--of the impossibility of
+the reality presented to his naked eyes. These lonely fugitives in
+the huge-walled canyon waiting for a boatman to come down that river!
+Strange and wild--those were the words which, inadequately at best,
+suited this country and the situations it produced.
+
+After supper he and Fay walked along the bars of smooth, red sand.
+There were a few moments when the distant peaks and domes and
+turrets were glorified in changing sunset hues. But the beauty
+was fleeting. Fay still showed lassitude. She was quiet, yet
+cheerful, and the sweetness of her smile, her absolute trust in
+him, stirred and strengthened anew his spirit. Yet he suffered
+torture when he thought of trusting Fay's life, her soul, and her
+beauty to this strange red river.
+
+Night brought him relief. He could not see the river; only the low
+roar made its presence known out there in the shadows. And, there
+being no need to stay awake, he dropped at once into heavy slumber.
+He was roused by hands dragging at him. Nas Ta Bega bent over him.
+It was broad daylight. The yellow wall high above was glistening.
+A fire was crackling and pleasant odors were wafted to him. Fay and
+Jane and Lassiter sat around the tarpaulin at breakfast. After the
+meal suspense and strain were manifested in all the fugitives, even
+the imperturbable Indian being more than usually watchful. His eyes
+scarcely ever left the black gap where the river slid round the turn
+above. Soon, as on the preceding day, he disappeared up the ragged,
+iron-bound shore. There was scarcely an attempt at conversation. A
+controlling thought bound that group into silence--if Joe Lake was
+ever going to come he would come to-day.
+
+Shefford asked himself a hundred times if it were possible, and his
+answer seemed to be in the low, sullen, muffled roar of the river.
+And as the morning wore on toward noon his dread deepened until all
+chance appeared hopeless. Already he had begun to have vague and
+unformed and disquieting ideas of the only avenue of escape left--
+to return up Nonnezoshe Boco--and that would be to enter a trap.
+
+Suddenly a piercing cry pealed down the canyon. It was followed by
+echoes, weird and strange, that clapped from wall to wall in mocking
+concatenation. Nas Ta Bega appeared high on the ragged slope. The
+cry had been the Indian's. He swept an arm out, pointing up-stream,
+and stood like a statue on the iron rocks.
+
+Shefford's keen gaze sighted a moving something in the bend of the
+river. It was long, low, dark, and flat, with a lighter object
+upright in the middle. A boat and a man!
+
+"Joe! It's Joe!" yelled Shefford, madly. "There! . . . Look!"
+
+Jane and Fay were on their knees in the sand, clasping each other,
+pale faces toward that bend in the river.
+
+Shefford ran up the shore toward the Indian. He climbed the jutting
+slant of rock. The boat was now full in the turn--it moved faster--
+it was nearing the smooth incline above the rapid. There! it glided
+down--heaved darkly up--settled back--and disappeared in the frothy,
+muddy roughness of water. Shefford held his breath and watched. A
+dark, bobbing object showed, vanished, showed again to enlarge--to
+take the shape of a big flatboat--and then it rode the swift, choppy
+current out of the lower end of the rapid.
+
+Nas Ta Bega began to make violent motions, and Shefford, taking his
+cue, frantically waved his red scarf. There was a five-mile-an-hour
+current right before them, and Joe must needs see them so that he
+might sheer the huge and clumsy craft into the shore before it drifted
+too far down.
+
+Presently Joe did see them. He appeared to be half-naked; he raised
+aloft both arms, and bellowed down the canyon. The echoes boomed from
+wall to wall, every one stronger with the deep, hoarse triumph in the
+Mormon's voice, till they passed on, growing weaker, to die away in
+the roar of the river below. Then Joe bent to a long oar that appeared
+to be fastened to the stern of the boat, and the craft drifted out of
+the swifter current toward the shore. It reached a point opposite to
+where Shefford and the Indian waited, and, though Joe made prodigious
+efforts, it slid on. Still, it also drifted shoreward, and half-way
+down to the mouth of Nonnezoshe Boco Joe threw the end of a rope to
+the Indian.
+
+"Ho! Ho!" yelled the Mormon, again setting into motion the fiendish
+echoes. He was naked to the waist; he had lost flesh; he was haggard,
+worn, dirty, wet. While he pulled on a shirt Nas Ta Bega made the rope
+fast to a snag of a log of driftwood embedded in the sand, and the
+boat swung to shore. It was perhaps thirty feet long by half as many
+wide, crudely built of rough-hewn boards. The steering-gear was a
+long pole with a plank nailed to the end. The craft was empty save
+for another pole and plank, Joe's coat, and a broken-handled shovel.
+There were water and sand on the flooring. Joe stepped ashore and
+he was gripped first by Shefford and then by the Indian. He was an
+unkempt and gaunt giant, yet how steadfast and reliable, how grimly
+strong to inspire hope!
+
+"Reckon most of me's here," he said in reply to greetings. "I've had
+water aplenty. My God! I've had WATER!" He rolled out a grim laugh.
+"But no grub for three days. . . . Forgot to fetch some!"
+
+How practical he was! He told Fay she looked good for sore eyes, but
+he needed a biscuit most of all. There was just a second of singular
+hesitation when he faced Lassiter, and then the big, strong hand of
+the young Mormon went out to meet the old gunman's. While they fed
+him and he ate like a starved man Shefford told of the flight from
+the village, the rescuing of Jane and Lassiter from Surprise Valley,
+the descent from the plateau, the catastrophe to Shadd's gang--and,
+concluding, Shefford, without any explanation, told that Nas Ta Bega
+had killed the Mormon Waggoner.
+
+"Reckon I had that figured," replied Joe. "First off. I didn't
+think so. . . . So Shadd went over the cliff. That's good riddance.
+It beats me, though. Never knew that Piute's like with a horse. And
+he had some grand horses in his outfit. Pity about them."
+
+Later when Joe had a moment alone with Shefford he explained that
+during his ride to Kayenta he had realized Fay's innocence and who had
+been responsible for the tragedy. He took Withers, the trader, into
+his confidence, and they planned a story, which Withers was to carry
+to Stonebridge, that would exculpate Fay and Shefford of anything more
+serious than flight. If Shefford got Fay safely out of the country at
+once that would end the matter for all concerned.
+
+"Reckon I'm some ferry-boatman, too--a FAIRY boatman. Haw! Haw!" he
+added. "And we're going through. . . . Now I want you to help me
+rig this tarpaulin up over the bow of the boat. If we can fix it up
+strong it'll keep the waves from curling over. They filled her four
+times for me."
+
+They folded the tarpaulin three times, and with stout pieces of split
+plank and horseshoe nails from Shefford's saddle-bags and pieces of
+rope they rigged up a screen around bow and front corners.
+
+Nas Ta Bega put the saddles in the boat. The mustangs were far up
+Nonnezoshe Boco and would work their way back to green and luxuriant
+canyons. The Indian said they would soon become wild and would never
+be found. Shefford regretted Nack-yal, but was glad the faithful
+little mustang would be free in one of those beautiful canyons.
+
+"Reckon we'd better be off," called Joe. "All aboard!" He placed Fay
+and Jane in a corner of the bow, where they would be spared sight of
+the rapids. Shefford loosed the rope and sprang aboard. "Pard," said
+Joe, "it's one hell of a river! And now with the snow melting up
+in the mountains it's twenty feet above normal and rising fast. But
+that's well for us. It covers the stones in the rapids. If it hadn't
+been in flood Joe would be an angel now!"
+
+The boat cleared the sand, lazily wheeled in the eddying water, and
+suddenly seemed caught by some powerful gliding force. When it swept
+out beyond the jutting wall Shefford saw a quarter of a mile of
+sliding water that appeared to end abruptly. Beyond lengthened out
+the gigantic gap between the black and frowning cliffs.
+
+"Wow!" ejaculated Joe. "Drops out of sight there. But that one ain't
+much. I can tell by the roar. When you see my hair stand up straight
+--then watch out! . . . Lassiter, you look after the women. Shefford,
+you stand ready to bail out with the shovel, for we'll sure ship
+water. Nas Ta Bega, you help here with the oar."
+
+The roar became a heavy, continuous rumble; the current quickened;
+little streaks and ridges seemed to race along the boat; strange
+gurglings rose from under the bow. Shefford stood on tiptoe to see
+the break in the river below. Swiftly it came into sight--a wonderful,
+long, smooth, red slant of water, a swelling mound, a huge back-
+curling wave, another and another, a sea of frothy, uplifting crests,
+leaping and tumbling and diminishing down to the narrowing apex of the
+rapid. It was a frightful sight, yet it thrilled Shefford. Joe worked
+the steering-oar back and forth and headed the boat straight for the
+middle of the incline. The boat reached the round rim, gracefully
+dipped with a heavy sop, and went shooting down. The wind blew wet in
+Shefford's face. He stood erect, thrilling, fascinated, frightened.
+Then he seemed to feel himself lifted; the curling wave leaped at the
+boat; there was a shock that laid him flat; and when he rose to his
+knees all about him was roar and spray and leaping, muddy waves. Shock
+after shock jarred the boat. Splashes of water stung his face. And
+then the jar and the motion, the confusion and roar, gradually lessened
+until presently Shefford rose to see smooth water ahead and the long,
+trembling rapid behind.
+
+"Get busy, bailer," yelled Joe. "Pretty soon you'll be glad you have
+to bail--so you can't see!"
+
+There were several inches of water in the bottom of the boat and
+Shefford learned for the first time the expediency of a shovel in
+the art of bailing.
+
+"That tarpaulin worked powerful good," went on Joe. "And it saves the
+women. Now if it just don't bust on a big wave! That one back there
+was little."
+
+When Shefford had scooped out all the water he went forward to see
+how Fay and Jane and Lassiter had fared. The women were pale, but
+composed. They had covered their heads.
+
+"But the dreadful roar!" exclaimed Fay.
+
+Lassiter looked shaken for once.
+
+"Shore I'd rather taken a chance meetin' them Mormons on the way out,"
+he said.
+
+Shefford spoke with an encouraging assurance which he did not himself
+feel. Almost at the moment he marked a silence that had fallen into
+the canyon; then it broke to a low, dull, strange roar.
+
+"Aha! Hear that?" The Mormon shook his shaggy head. "Reckon we're
+in Cataract Canyon. We'll be standing on end from now on. Hang on
+to her, boys!"
+
+Danger of this unusual kind had brought out a peculiar levity in the
+somber Mormon--a kind of wild, gay excitement. His eyes rolled as he
+watched the river ahead and he puffed out his cheek with his tongue.
+
+The rugged, overhanging walls of the canyon grew sinister in Shefford's
+sight. They were jaws. And the river--that made him shudder to look
+down into it. The little whirling pits were eyes peering into his,
+and they raced on with the boat, disappeared, and came again, always
+with the little, hollow gurgles.
+
+The craft drifted swiftly and the roar increased. Another rapid seemed
+to move up into view. It came at a bend in the canyon. When the breeze
+struck Shefford's cheeks he did not this time experience exhilaration.
+The current accelerated its sliding motion and bore the flatboat
+straight for the middle of the curve. Shefford saw the bend, a long,
+dark, narrow, gloomy canyon, and a stretch of contending waters, then,
+crouching low, he waited for the dip, the race, the shock. They came
+--the last stopping the boat--throwing it aloft--letting it drop--
+and crests of angry waves curled over the side. Shefford, kneeling,
+felt the water slap around him, and in his ears was a deafening roar.
+There were endless moments of strife and hell and flying darkness of
+spray all about him, and under him the rocking boat. When they
+lessened--ceased in violence--he stood ankle-deep in water, and then
+madly he began to bail.
+
+Another roar deadened his ears, but he did not look up from his toil.
+And when he had to get down to avoid the pitch he closed his eyes.
+That rapid passed and with more water to bail, he resumed his share in
+the manning of the crude craft. It was more than a share--a tremendous
+responsibility to which he bent with all his might. He heard Joe
+yell--and again--and again. He heard the increasing roars one after
+another till they seemed one continuous bellow. He felt the shock, the
+pitch, the beating waves, and then the lessening power of sound and
+current. That set him to his task. Always in these long intervals of
+toil he seemed to see, without looking up, the growing proportions of
+the canyon. And the river had become a living, terrible thing. The
+intervals of his tireless effort when he scooped the water overboard
+were fleeting, and the rides through rapid after rapid were endless
+periods of waiting terror. His spirit and his hope were overwhelmed
+by the rush and roar and fury.
+
+Then, as he worked, there came a change--a rest to deafened ears--a
+stretch of river that seemed quiet after chaos--and here for the first
+time he bailed the boat clear of water.
+
+Jane and Fay were huddled in a corner, with the flapping tarpaulin now
+half fallen over them. They were wet and muddy. Lassiter crouched
+like a man dazed by a bad dream, and his white hair hung, stained and
+bedraggled, over his face. The Indian and the Mormon, grim, hard,
+worn, stood silent at the oar.
+
+The afternoon was far advanced and the sun had already descended below
+the western ramparts. A cool breeze blew up the canyon, laden with a
+sound that was the same, yet not the same, as those low, dull roars
+which Shefford dreaded more and more.
+
+Joe Lake turned his ear to the breeze. A stronger puff brought a
+heavy, quivering rumble. This time he did not vent his gay and wild
+defiance to the river. He bent lower--listened. Then as the rumble
+became a strange, deep, reverberating roll, as if the monstrous river
+were rolling huge stones down a subterranean canyon, Shefford saw with
+dilating eyes that the Mormon's hair was rising stiff upon his head.
+
+"Hear that!" said Joe, turning an ashen face to Shefford. "We'll
+drop off the earth now. Hang on to the girl, so if we go you can
+go together. . . . And, pard, if you've a God--pray!"
+
+Nas Ta Bega faced the bend from whence that rumble came, and he was
+the same dark, inscrutable, impassive Indian as of old. What was
+death to him?
+
+Shefford felt the strong, rushing love of life surge in him, and it
+was not for himself he thought, but for Fay and the happiness she
+merited. He went to her, patted the covered head, and tried with
+words choking in his throat to give hope. And he leaned with hands
+gripping the gunwale, with eyes wide open, ready for the unknown.
+
+The river made a quick turn and from round the bend rumbled a terrible
+uproar. The current racing that way was divided or uncertain, and
+it gave strange motion to the boat. Joe and Nas Ta Bega shoved
+desperately upon the oar, all to no purpose. The currents had their
+will. The bow of the boat took the place of the stern. Then swift
+at the head of a curved incline it shot beyond the bulging wall.
+
+And Shefford saw an awful place before them. The canyon had narrowed
+to half its width, and turned almost at right angles. The huge clamor
+of appalling sound came from under the cliff where the swollen river
+had to pass and where there was not space. The rapid rushed in
+gigantic swells right upon the wall, boomed against it, climbed and
+spread and fell away, to recede and gather new impetus, to leap madly
+on down the canyon.
+
+Shefford went to his knees, clasped Fay, and Jane, too. But facing
+this appalling thing he had to look. Courage and despair came to him
+at the last. This must be the end. With long, buoyant swing the boat
+sailed down, shot over the first waves, was caught and lifted upon the
+great swell and impelled straight toward the cliff. Huge whirlpools
+raced alongside, and from them came a horrible, engulfing roar.
+Monstrous bulges rose on the other side. All the stupendous power of
+that mighty river of downward-rushing silt swung the boat aloft, up
+and up, as the swell climbed the wall. Shefford, with transfixed
+eyes and harrowed soul, watched the wet black wall. It loomed down
+upon him. The stern of the boat went high. Then when the crash that
+meant doom seemed imminent the swell spread and fell back from the
+wall and the boat never struck at all. By some miraculous chance it
+had been favored by a strange and momentary receding of the huge spent
+swell. Then it slid back, was caught and whirled by the current into
+a red, frothy, up-flung rapids below. Shefford bowed his head over.
+Fay and saw no more, nor felt nor heard. What seemed a long time
+after that the broken voice of the Mormon recalled him to his labors.
+
+The boat was half full of water. Nas Ta Bega scooped out great sheets
+of it with his hands. Shefford sprang to aid him, found the shovel,
+and plunged into the task. Slowly but surely they emptied the boat.
+And then Shefford saw that twilight had fallen. Joe was working the
+craft toward a narrow bank of sand, to which, presently, they came,
+and the Indian sprang out to moor to a rock.
+
+The fugitives went ashore and, weary and silent and drenched, they
+dropped in the warm sand.
+
+But Shefford could not sleep. The river kept him awake. In the
+distance it rumbled, low, deep, reverberating, and near at hand it was
+a thing of mutable mood. It moaned, whined, mocked, and laughed. It
+had the soul of a devil. It was a river that had cut its way to the
+bowels of the earth, and its nature was destructive. It harbored no
+life. Fighting its way through those dead walls, cutting and tearing
+and wearing, its heavy burden of silt was death, destruction, and
+decay. A silent river, a murmuring, strange, fierce, terrible,
+thundering river of the desert! Even in the dark it seemed to wear
+the hue of blood.
+
+All night long Shefford heard it, and toward the dark hours before
+dawn, when a restless, broken sleep came to him, his dreams were
+dreams of a river of sounds.
+
+All the beautiful sounds he knew and loved he heard--the sigh of the
+wind in the pines, the mourn of the wolf, the cry of the laughing-
+gull, the murmur of running brooks, the song of a child, the whisper
+of a woman. And there were the boom of the surf, the roar of the north
+wind in the forest, the roll of thunder. And there were the sounds not
+of earth--a river of the universe rolling the planets, engulfing the
+stars, pouring the sea of blue into infinite space.
+
+Night with its fitful dreams passed. Dawn lifted the ebony gloom out
+of the canyon and sunlight far up on the ramparts renewed Shefford's
+spirit. He rose and awoke the others. Fay's wistful smile still
+held its faith. They ate of the gritty, water-soaked food. Then they
+embarked. The current carried them swiftly down and out of hearing of
+the last rapid. The character of the river and the canyon changed.
+The current lessened to a slow, smooth, silent, eddying flow. The walls
+grew straight, sheer, gloomy, and vast. Shefford noted these features,
+but he was listening so hard for the roar of the next rapid that he
+scarcely appreciated them. All the fugitives were listening. Every
+bend in the canyon--and now the turns were numerous--might hold a rapid.
+Shefford strained his ears. He imagined the low, dull, strange
+rumble. He had it in his ears, yet there was the growing sensation
+of silence.
+
+"Shore this 's a dead place," muttered Lassiter.
+
+"She's only slowed up for a bigger plunge," replied Joe. "Listen!
+Hear that?"
+
+But there was no true sound, Joe only imagined what he expected and
+hated and dreaded to hear.
+
+Mile after mile they drifted through the silent gloom between those
+vast and magnificent walls. After the speed, the turmoil, the
+whirling, shrieking, thundering, the never-ceasing sound and change
+and motion of the rapids above, this slow, quiet drifting, this utter,
+absolute silence, these eddying stretches of still water below, worked
+strangely upon Shefford's mind and he feared he was going mad.
+
+There was no change to the silence, no help for the slow drift, no
+lessening of the strain. And the hours of the day passed as moments,
+the sun crossed the blue gap above, the golden lights hung on the
+upper walls, the gloom returned, and still there was only the dead,
+vast, insupportable silence.
+
+There came bends where the current quickened, ripples widened, long
+lanes of little waves roughened the surface, but they made no sound.
+
+And then the fugitives turned through a V-shaped vent in the canyon.
+The ponderous walls sheered away from the river. There was space and
+sunshine, and far beyond this league-wide open rose vermilion-colored
+cliffs. A mile below the river disappeared in a dark, boxlike passage
+from which came a rumble that made Shefford's flesh creep.
+
+The Mormon flung high his arms and let out the stentorian yell that
+had rolled down to the fugitives as they waited at the mouth of
+Nonnezoshe Boco. But now it had a wilder, more exultant note. Strange
+how he shifted his gaze to Fay Larkin!
+
+"Girl! Get up and look!" he called. "The Ferry! The Ferry!"
+
+Then he bent his brawny back over the steering-oar, and the clumsy
+craft slowly turned toward the left-hand shore, where a long, low
+bank of green willows and cottonwoods gave welcome relief to the
+eyes. Upon the opposite side of the river Shefford saw a boat,
+similar to the one he was in, moored to the bank.
+
+"Shore, if I ain't losin' my eyes, I seen an Injun with a red
+blanket," said Lassiter.
+
+"Yes, Lassiter," cried Shefford. "Look, Fay! Look, Jane! See!
+Indians--hogans--mustangs--there above the green bank!"
+
+The boat glided slowly shoreward. And the deep, hungry, terrible
+rumble of the remorseless river became something no more to dread.
+
+
+
+
+XX. WILLOW SPRINGS
+
+
+Two days' travel from the river, along the saw-toothed range of Echo
+Cliffs, stood Presbrey's trading-post, a little red-stone square house
+in a green and pretty valley called Willow Springs.
+
+It was nearing the time of sunset--that gorgeous hour of color in the
+Painted Desert--when Shefford and his party rode down upon the post.
+
+The scene lacked the wildness characteristic of Kayenta or Red Lake.
+There were wagons and teams, white men and Indians, burros, sheep,
+lambs, mustangs saddled and unsaddled, dogs, and chickens. A young,
+sweet-faced woman stood in the door of the post and she it was who
+first sighted the fugitives. Presbrey was weighing bags of wool on
+a scale, and when she called he lazily turned, as if to wonder at
+her eagerness.
+
+Then he flung up his head, with its shock of heavy hair, in a start
+of surprise, and his florid face lost its lazy indolence to become
+wreathed in a huge smile.
+
+"Haven't seen a white person in six months!" was his extraordinary
+greeting.
+
+An hour later Shefford, clean-shaven, comfortably clothed once more,
+found himself a different man; and when he saw Fay in white again,
+with a new and indefinable light shining through that old, haunting
+shadow in her eyes, then the world changed and he embraced perfect
+happiness.
+
+There was a dinner such as Shefford had not seen for many a day, and
+such as Fay had never seen, and that brought to Jane Withersteen's
+eyes the dreamy memory of the bountiful feasts which, long years ago,
+had been her pride. And there was a story told to the curious trader
+and his kind wife--a story with its beginning back in those past years,
+of riders of the purple sage, of Fay Larkin as a child and then as a
+wild girl in Surprise Valley, of the flight down Nonnezoshe Boco an
+the canyon, of a great Mormon and a noble Indian.
+
+Presbrey stared with his deep-set eyes and wagged his tousled head and
+stared again; then with the quick perception of the practical desert
+man he said:
+
+"I'm sending teamsters in to Flagstaff to-morrow. Wife and I will go
+along with you. We've light wagons. Three days, maybe--or four--and
+we'll be there. . . . Shefford, I'm going to see you marry Fay Larkin!"
+
+Fay and Jane and Lassiter showed strangely against this background of
+approaching civilization. And Shefford realized more than ever the
+loneliness and isolation and wildness of so many years for them.
+
+When the women had retired Shefford and the men talked a while. Then
+Joe Lake rose to stretch his big frame.
+
+"Friends, reckon I'm all in," he said. "Good night." In passing he
+laid a heavy hand on Shefford's shoulder. "Well, you got out. I've
+only a queer notion how. But SOME ONE besides an Indian and a Mormon
+guided you out!. . . Be good to the girl. . . . Good-by, pard!"
+
+Shefford grasped the big hand and in the emotion of the moment did not
+catch the significance of Joe's last words.
+
+Later Shefford stepped outside into the starlight for a few moments'
+quiet walk and thought before he went to bed. It was a white night.
+The coyotes were yelping. The stars shone steadfast, bright, cold.
+Nas Ta Bega stalked out of the shadow of the house and joined Shefford.
+They walked in silence. Shefford's heart was too full for utterance
+and the Indian seldom spoke at any time. When Shefford was ready to
+go in Nas Ta Bega extended his hand.
+
+"Good-by--Bi Nai!" he said, strangely, using English and Navajo in
+what Shefford supposed to be merely good night. The starlight shone
+full upon the dark, inscrutable face of the Indian. Shefford bade
+him good night and then watched him stride away in the silver gloom.
+
+But next morning Shefford understood. Nas Ta Bega and Joe Lake were
+gone. It was a shock to Shefford. Yet what could he have said to
+either? Joe had shirked saying good-by to him and Fay. And the
+Indian had gone out of Shefford's life as he had come into it.
+
+What these two men represented in Shefford's uplift was too great for
+the present to define, but they and the desert that had developed them
+had taught him the meaning of life. He might fail often, since failure
+was the lot of his kind, but could he ever fail again in faith in man
+or God while he had mind to remember the Indian and the Mormon?
+
+Still, though he placed them on a noble height and loved them well,
+there would always abide with him a sorrow for the Mormon and a
+sleepless and eternal regret for that Indian on his lonely cedar
+slope with the spirits of his vanishing race calling him.
+
+ . . . . . . . . . . .
+
+Willow Springs appeared to be a lively place that morning. Presbrey
+was gay and his sweet-faced wife was excited. The teamsters were a
+jolly, whistling lot. And the lean mustangs kicked and bit at one
+another. The trader had brought out two light wagons for the trip,
+and, after the manner of desert men, desired to start at sunrise.
+
+Far across the Painted Desert towered the San Francisco peaks, black-
+timbered, blue-canyoned, purple-hazed, with white snow, like the
+clouds, around their summits.
+
+Jane Withersteen looked at the radiant Fay and lived again in her
+happiness. And at last excitement had been communicated to the old
+gun-man.
+
+"Shore we're goin' to live with Fay an' John, an' be near Venters
+an' Bess, an' see the blacks again, Jane. . . . An' Venters will
+tell you, as he did me, how Wrangle run Black Star off his legs!"
+
+All connected with that early start was sweet, sad, hopeful.
+
+And so they rode away from Willow Springs, through the green fields
+of alfalfa and cotton wood, down the valley with its smoking hogans
+and whistling mustangs and scarlet-blanketed Indians, and out upon
+the bare, ridgy, colorful desert toward the rosy sunrise.
+
+
+
+
+EPILOGUE
+
+
+On the outskirts of a little town in Illinois there was a farm of
+rolling pasture-land. And here a beautiful meadow, green and red
+in clover, merged upon an orchard in the midst of which a brown-tiled
+roof showed above the trees.
+
+One afternoon in May a group of people, strangely agitated, walked
+down a shady lane toward the meadow.
+
+"Wal, Jane, I always knew we'd get a look at them hosses again--I shore
+knew," Lassiter was saying in the same old, cool, careless drawl. But
+his clawlike hands shook a little.
+
+"Oh! will they know me?" asked Jane Withersteen, turning to a stalwart
+man--no other than the dark-faced Venters, her rider of other days.
+
+"Know you? I'll bet they will," replied Venters. "What do you say,
+Bess?"
+
+The shadow brightened in Bess's somber blue eyes, as if his words had
+recalled her from a sad and memorable past.
+
+"Black Star will know her, surely," replied Bess. "Sometimes he points
+his nose toward the west and watches as if he saw the purple slopes and
+smelt the sage of Utah! He has never forgotten. But Night has grown
+deaf and partly blind of late. I doubt if he'd remember."
+
+Shefford and Fay walked arm in arm in the background.
+
+Out in the meadow two horses were grazing. They were sleek, shiny,
+long-maned, long-tailed, black as coal, and, though old, still
+splendid in every line.
+
+"Do you remember them?" whispered Shefford.
+
+"Oh, I only needed to see Black Star," murmured Fay, her voice
+quivering. "I can remember being lifted on his back. . . . How
+strange! It seems so long ago. . . . Look! Mother Jane is going
+out to them."
+
+Jane Withersteen advanced alone through the clover, and it was with
+unsteady steps. Presently she halted. What glorious and bitter
+memories were expressed in her strange, poignant call!
+
+Black Star started and swept up his noble head and looked. But Night
+went on calmly grazing. Then Jane called again--the same strange call,
+only louder, and this time broken. Black Star raised his head higher
+and he whistled a piercing blast. He saw Jane; he knew her as he had
+remembered the call; and he came pounding toward her. She met him,
+encircled his neck with her arms, and buried her face in his mane.
+
+"Shore I reckon I'd better never say any more about Wrangle runnin'
+the blacks off their legs thet time," muttered Lassiter, as if to
+himself.
+
+"Lassiter, you only dreamed that race," replied Venters, with a smile.
+
+"Oh, Bern, isn't it good that Black Star remembered her--that she'll
+have him--something left of her old home?" asked Bess, wistfully.
+
+"Indeed it is good. But, Bess, Jane Withersteen will find a new spirit
+and new happiness here."
+
+Jane came toward them, leading both horses. "Dear friends, I am
+happy. To-day I bury all regrets. Of the past I shall remember
+only--my riders of the purple sage."
+
+Venters smiled his gladness. "And you--Lassiter--what shall you
+remember?" he queried.
+
+The old gun-man looked at Jane and then at his clawlike hands and then
+at Fay. His eyes lost their shadow and began to twinkle.
+
+"Wal, I rolled a stone once, but I reckon now thet time Wrangle--"
+
+"Lassiter, I said you dreamed that race. Wrangle never beat the
+blacks," interrupted Venters. . . . "And you, Fay, what shall you
+remember?"
+
+"Surprise Valley," replied Fay, dreamily.
+
+"And you--Shefford?"
+
+Shefford shook his head. For him there could never be one memory
+only. In his heart there would never change or die memories of the
+wild uplands, of the great towers and walls, of the golden sunsets
+on the canyon ramparts, of the silent, fragrant valleys where the
+cedars and the sago-lilies grew, of those starlit nights when his
+love and faith awoke, of grand and lonely Nonnezoshe, of that red,
+sullen, thundering, mysterious Colorado River, of a wonderful Indian
+and a noble Mormon--of all that was embodied for him in the meaning
+of the rainbow trail.
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Rainbow Trail, by Zane Grey
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE RAINBOW TRAIL ***
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