Part 3 (1/2)

”Sure, if yer bound ter go. I 'll do the best I kin fer yer, an' I reckon ther sooner yer start the better chance ye 'll have o' gittin'

through safe.” He hesitated. ”If we should git bad news at Dodge, is there anybody thar, at the fort, you could stop with?”

”Colonel Carver.”

”He 's not thar now; been transferred to Wallace, but, I reckon, any o'

those army people would look after yer. Ye 've really made up yer mind to try it, then?”

”Yes, yes; I positively cannot stay here. I shall go as far as Dodge at least. If--if we are going to travel together, I ought to know your name.”

”Sure yer had,” with a laugh. ”I fergot all 'bout that--it's Moylan, miss; William Moylan; 'Sutler Bill' they call me mostly, west o' the river. Let's go out an' see 'bout thet stage.”

As he rounded the table, Molly rose to her feet, and held out her hand.

”I am so glad I spoke to you, Mr. Moylan,” she said simply. ”I am not at all afraid now. If you will wait until I get my hat, I 'll be down in a minute.”

”Sutler Bill” stood in the narrow hall watching her run swiftly upstairs, twirling his hat in his hands, his good-natured face flushed.

Once he glanced in the direction of the bar-room, wiping his lips with his cuff, and his feet shuffled. But he resisted the temptation, and was still there when Miss McDonald came down.

CHAPTER IV

THE ATTACK

Slightly more than sixty miles, as the route ran, stretched between old Fort Dodge and the ford crossing the Arkansas leading down to the Cimarron; another sixty miles distant, across a desert of alkali and sand, lay Devere. The main Santa Fe trail, broad and deeply rutted by the innumerable wheels of early spring caravans, followed the general course of the river, occasionally touching the higher level plains, but mostly keeping close beneath the protection of the northern bluffs, or else skirting the edge of the water. Night or day the route was easily followed, and, in other years, the traveller was seldom for long out of sight of toiling wagons. Now scarcely a wheel turned in all that lonely distance.

The west-bound stage left the station at Deer Creek at four o'clock in the afternoon with no intimation of danger ahead. Its occupants had eaten dinner in company with those of the east-bound coach, eighteen miles down the river at Canon Bluff, and the in-coming driver had reported an open road, and no unusual trouble. No Indian signs had been observed, not even signal fires during the night, and the conductor, who had come straight from Santa Fe, reported that troops from Fort Union had driven the only known bunch of raiders back from the neighborhood of the trail, and had them already safely corralled In the mountains. This report, seemingly authentic and official, served to relax the nerves, and the west-bound driver sang to himself as he guided the four horses forward, while the conductor, a sawed-off gun planted between his knees, nodded drowsily. Inside there were but three pa.s.sengers, jerking back and forth, as the wheels struck the deep ruts of the trail, occasionally exchanging a word or two, but usually staring gloomily forth at the monotonous scene. Miss McDonald and Moylan occupied the back seat, some baggage wedged tightly between to keep them more secure on the slippery cus.h.i.+on, while facing them, and clinging to his support with both hands, was a pock-marked Mexican, with rather villainous face and ornate dress, and excessively polite manners. He had joined the little party at Dodge, smiling happily at sight of Miss Molly's face when she unveiled, although his small knowledge of English prevented any extended effort at conversation.

Moylan, however, after careful scrutiny, engaged him shortly in Spanish, and later explained to the girl, in low tones, that the man was a Santa Fe gambler known as Gonzales, with a reputation to be hinted at but not openly discussed.

They were some six miles to the west of Deer Creek, the horses still moving with spirit, the driver's foot on the brake, when the stage took a sudden plunge down a sloping bank where the valley perceptibly narrowed. To the left, beyond a flat expanse of brown, sun-scorched gra.s.s, flowed the widely-spreading waters of the Arkansas, barely covering the treacherous sandy bottom, and from the other side came the more distant gleam of alkali plains; to the right arose the bluffs, here both steep and rugged, completely shutting off the view, barren of vegetation except for a few scattered patches of gra.s.s. Suddenly a man rode out of a rift in the bank, directly in front, and held up his hand. Surprised, startled, the driver instantaneously clamped on his brake, and brought his horses to a quick stop; the conductor, nearly flung from his seat, yanked his gun forward.

”None of that now,” called out the man in saddle quickly, both hands uplifted to show their emptiness. ”This is no hold-up. I 've got news.”

He spurred his pony forward slowly, the animal seemingly barely able to move, and swung out of the saddle beside the front wheel, staggering a bit as though his limbs were cramped as his feet felt the ground.

”I 'm from Fort Union,” he said, ”Seventh Cavalry, sent through by way of Cimarron Springs. There is h.e.l.l to pay west of here; the stations at Arkansas Crossing and Low Water were burned last night.”

”The devil you say,” burst out the driver hoa.r.s.ely, his startled eyes sweeping the horizon. ”Injuns?”

”Sure, plenty of signs, but I have n't seen any bucks myself. As soon as I discovered what had happened at the Crossing I struck out on to the plateau, and came around that way to warn those fellows at Low Water. But when I got sight of that station from off the bluffs yonder it had been wiped out. Then I thought about this stage going west to-day, and came on to meet you. Must have ridden a hundred an' twenty miles since yesterday; the mustang is all in.”

Moylan stuck his head out the nearest window.

”Look like they had much of a fight at the Crossing?” he asked.

”Not much; more like a night raid; two whites killed, and scalped. The third man either was taken away, or his body got burnt in the building.

Horses all gone.”

”What tribe?”