Part 30 (1/2)
”You're about as logical an individual as I ever knew,” was what he said. And with a grunt, at that.
”I never claimed to be logical,” retorted Betty. ”I'm just a girl.”
Even then, while they whispered and fell silent and watched and listened, he began to understand the girl whom he was to come to know very well before many days. She did not pretend at high fearlessness; when she was afraid she was very much afraid, and had no thought to hide the fact. Tonight her fright had come as near killing as fright can. But then she was alone and there was no one but herself to make the fight for her. Now it was different. Since Jim had come she had allowed her own responsibility to s.h.i.+ft to his shoulders. It was instinctive in her to turn to some man, to have some man to trust and to depend upon. Jim was looking out for her and right now, while Zoraida and her men searched up and down, Betty clasped her arms about her gathered-up knees and sat cozily at the side of the man whose sole duty, as she saw it, was to guard her with his life. So Betty, close enough to touch the rifle across Jim's arm, could giggle as she pictured Zoraida rus.h.i.+ng by the very spot where they hid.
”You're not afraid, then?” asked Jim.
”Not now,” whispered Betty.
They did not budge for half an hour. During that time Kendric did a deal of hard thinking. Their plight was still far from satisfactory.
No food, no water, no horses, and in the heart of a land of which they know nothing except that it was hard and bleak and closely patrolled by Zoraida's riders. That they could succeed now in eluding pursuit for the rest of the night seemed a.s.sured. But tomorrow? Where there was one man looking for them now there would be ten tomorrow. And there were the questions of food and water. Above all else, water.
At last, when it was very still all about them, they moved on again.
They climbed over the rocks and further up the canon. Here there were more trees and thicker darkness, and their progress was painfully slow.
They skirted patches of th.o.r.n.y bushes; they went on hands and knees up sharp inclines. They stopped frequently, panting and straining their ears for some sound to tell them of a pursuer; they went on again, side by side or with Kendric ahead, breaking trail.
”We'll have to dig in somewhere before dawn,” said Jim once while they rested. ”Where we can stick close during daylight tomorrow.”
Betty merely nodded; all such details were to be left to him. It was his clear-cut task to take care of her; just how he did it was not Betty's concern. So they went on, left the canon where there was a way out, made their toilsome way over a low ridge and slid and rolled down into the next ravine. And here, at the bottom, they found water. A thin trickle from a spring, wending its way down to the larger stream in the valley. They lay down, side by side, and drank. Then they sat back and looked at each other in the starlight.
”Betty,” said Jim impulsively, ”you're a brick!”
”Am I?” said Betty. And by her voice he knew that she was pleased.
”We're not as far from the house as I'd like,” he said presently. ”But it will take time to locate a decent hiding place, and we've got to stick within reach of water.”
To all of this Betty agreed; personally she'd like to be a thousand miles away from this hideous place, but they would have to make the best of things. That willingness of hers to accept conditions without bemoaning her fate was what had drawn from him his impulsive epithet.
”The thing to do, then,” said Kendric, getting up ”is to look for a likely place to spend a long day. And it may be more than one day.”
Then Betty made her suggestion, offering it timidly, as though she were entering a discussion in which, rightly, she had no part:
”Up yonder,” and she pointed to the abrupt ridge cutting black across the stars, ”are cliffy places. It's not too far from water. There ought to be hiding places among the broken boulders. And,” she concluded, ”we might be able to peek out and look down and see what was happening.”
No; he had not done her justice. He looked toward her, wondering for a moment. Then he said briefly: ”Right,” and they drank again and began climbing.
It was Betty who, fully an hour later, found the retreat which they agreed to utilize. Kendric was somewhere above her, making a hazardous way up a steep bit of cliff, when Betty's voice floated up to him.
”I think I've got it,” were her words, guarded but athrill with her triumph. ”Come see. It's a great hole, hid by bushes. I don't like to go poking into it alone. You can't tell, there might be a bear or a snake or something inside.”
He climbed down to where she stood at the edge of a little level s.p.a.ce, her gown gathered in a hand at each side, her pretty face thrust forward as she sought to peer into the dark before her. He saw the clump of bushes but not immediately the hole of which she spoke, so was it covered and hidden. But at length he made out the irregular opening and, thrusting the bushes aside with his rifle barrel, judged that Betty had done well. Here was a perpendicular cleft in the rock, one of those cracks which not infrequently result from the splitting of gigantic ma.s.ses of rock along a well-defined flaw. In some ancient convulsion this fissure had developed, the two monster fragments of the mountain had been divided, one had slipped a little, and thereafter through the ages they had stood face to face, close together. Kendric could barely squeeze his body through; he found the s.p.a.ce slanting off to the side; he groped forward half a dozen steps, encountered an outjutting k.n.o.b of stone, slipped by it, and found that the split in the cliff now slanted off the other way and widened so that there was a s.p.a.ce five or six feet across. How far ahead the fissure extended he could form no idea yet. He turned back for Betty and b.u.mped into her just inside the entrance.
”It's just the place for us tonight,” he said. ”Though how in the world you stumbled onto it gets me.”
”The bushes grew close to the rocks,” Betty explained. ”I was thinking that we could creep back of them and find a little s.p.a.ce where, with the brush on one side and the cliff on the other, we'd be hidden. And I found this hole.”
”The air gets in and it's clean and fresh,” he went on. ”We couldn't hope for better.”
”The walls are so close,” whispered Betty, with a little shudder.