Part 13 (1/2)

Then Peter Drew had gone away with his deed, and for fifteen years she had made the inhabitants of the country think that she still owned the Old Ivison Place simply by saying nothing to the contrary. She had been told to accept any rentals that she might be able to derive from it--to use it as her own. For several years Peter Drew had regularly forwarded her a bank draft to cover the taxes. Then Adam Selden had offered to pay the taxes for the use of the land, and she had written Peter Drew to that effect and told him to send no more tax money until further notice.

Since that date she had heard no more from the mysterious purchaser of the land.

She was surprised to learn that the transfer had at last been recorded, but could throw no light whatever on the proceedings.

She took a motherly interest in Oliver because of his father, whose generosity had greatly benefited her. In fact, she said, she couldn't for the life of her tell how she'd got along without that money.

”And whatever shall I say, dearie, when Adam Selden comes to me today?”

she asked her niece. ”I'm afraid of the man--just afraid of him.”

”Pooh!” Jessamy deprecated. ”He's only a man. Oliver Drew's coming, and the fact that the transfer has at last been placed on record leaves you free to tell all you know. So just tell Old Adam what you've told Mr.

Drew, and say you know nothing more about it. But whatever else you say, don't cheep that we've been here, Auntie.”

”Well, I hope and trust he'll believe me,” she sighed as she showed her callers out.

”Now,” said Jessamy, as they remounted, ”we'll ride away and be at the reservation by the time Old Adam arrives here. What do you think of your mystery by now, Mr. Drew?”

”It grows deeper and deeper,” Oliver mused.

CHAPTER X

JESSAMY'S HUMMINGBIRD

A steep, tall mountain, heavily wooded, reared itself above the Indian reservation. A creek tumbled over the boulders in the mountainside and raced through the village of huts; and the combined millions of all the irrigation and power companies in the West could not have bought a drop of its water until Uncle Sam's charges had finished with it and set it free again.

It was a picturesque spot. Huge liveoaks, centuries old, sprawled over the cabins. Tiny gardens dotted the sunny land. Horses and dogs were anything but scarce, and up the mountainside goats and burros browsed off the chaparral. Wrinkled old squaws washed clothes at the creekside, or pounded last season's acorns into _bellota_--the native dish--in mortars hollowed in solid stone. Some made earthen _ollas_ of red clay; some weaved baskets. Over all hung that weird, indescribable odour which only Indians or their much-handled belongings can produce.

”This is peace,” smiled Oliver to Jessamy, as their horses leaped the stream side by side and cantered toward the cl.u.s.ter of dark, squat huts.

”What do they call this reservation?”

”It is named after an age-old dweller in our midst whom, since you are a Westerner, you must have often met.”

”Who is that?”

”Mr. Rattlesnake.”

”Oh, certainly. I've met him on many occasions--mostly to his sorrow, I fancy. Rattlesnake Reservation, eh?”

”Well, that would be it in English. But in the Pauba tongue Mr.

Rattlesnake becomes Showut Poche-daka.”

”What's that!” Oliver turned quickly in his saddle to find her dark wide eyes fixed on him intently. ”Say that again, please.”

”Showut Poche-daka,” she repeated slowly.

”M'm-m! Strikes me as something of a coincidence--a part of that name.”

”Showut is one word,” she said, still watching him. ”Poche and daka are two words hyphenated.”