Part 22 (1/2)
”Digger Foss.”
”Then it was Foss who shot?”
”Yes--and it's he who was following us today. You see, Digger lives closer to this part of the country than any of the rest. He'd be the only one likely to come in afoot.”
”Do you think he tried to lay me out?”
She looked off through the trees, and her face was troubled. ”I'm afraid he did,” she replied in a strained, hushed key. ”Had you been in sight, we might determine that he had shot at the water before your face to put the fear of the Poison Oakers into your heart. But he couldn't see you, in there hidden by the dense growth. It was a fifty-fifty chance whether he got you or not. If he'd merely wished to bully you, he'd never taken the chance of killing you by firing into the growth.”
”I guess that's right,” he said. ”And now what's to be done? I'll never be able to forget the picture of Henry Dodd clutching at White Ann's legs for support in his death struggle. The situation is graver than I thought. I expected to be bullied and tormented; but I didn't expect a deliberate attempt on my life.”
With an impetuous movement she threw her bare forearm horizontally against a tree trunk, and hid her eyes against it.
”Oh, I wish you hadn't come!” she half sobbed. ”But you had to--you had to! And now you can't leave because that would be running away. And you're as good as dead if this side-winder gets the right chance at you.
What _can_ we do!”
Oliver was silent in the face of her distress. What could he do indeed!
All the chances were against him, with his enemies ready and willing to take any unfair advantage, while his manliness would not let him stoop to the use of such tactics. They probably would avoid an out-and-out quarrel, where the chances would be even for a quick draw and quick trigger work. They would ambush him, as the halfbreed had attempted to do. He believed now that only the density of the growth about Sulphur Spring had stood between him and death, for Digger Foss was accounted an expert shot.
He gently pulled Jessamy Selden from the tree.
”There, there!” he soothed. ”Let's not borrow trouble. They haven't got me yet. Let's ride on. And I think you'd better give me a little more of your confidence. I feel that you're keeping me in the dark about some phases of the deal.”
She mounted in silence, and they turned up Clinker Creek toward Oliver's cabin.
”I'd never make a successful vamp, even if I were beautiful,” she smiled at last. ”I can't hide things. I give myself away. I'm always bungling.
But I can play poker, just the same!” she added triumphantly.
”Don't try to hide things, then,” he pleaded. ”Tell me all that's troubling you.”
She shook her head. ”That's the greatest difficulty,” she complained. ”I shouldn't have let you know that I have a secret, but I bungled and let it out. And I must keep it. But just the same, I'm with you heart and soul. I'm on your side from start to finish, and I want you to believe it.”
”I do,” he said simply.
As they reached the cabin he asked: ”Did you feel the end of the pipe under the water in the spring?”
She nodded. Then with the promise to meet him next morning for their ride to the fiesta, she moved her mare slowly up the canon and disappeared in the trees.
CHAPTER XV
THE FIRE DANCE
The round moon looked down upon a scene so weird and compelling that Oliver Drew vaguely wondered if it all were real, or one of those strange dreams that leave in the mind of the dreamer the impression that ages ago he has looked upon the things which his sleeping fancy pictured.
The moon rode low in the heavens. The night was waning. Tall pines and spruce stood black and bar-like against the silver radiance. Away in the distance coyotes lifted their yodel, half jocular, half mournful, as a maudlin drunkard sings dolefully a merry tune.
In a cup of the hills, surrounded by acres and acres of almost impenetrable chaparral and timber, a hundred or more human beings were cl.u.s.tered about a blazing fire. Horses stamped in the corrals. Now and then an Indian dog cast back a vicious challenge at the wild dogs on the hill. White men and women and Indian men and women stood about the fire in a great circle, silent, intent on what was taking place at the fire's edge.