Part 22 (1/2)

”Why! I don't know,” returned Ruth, wetting her cleanest handkerchief and folding it to press upon the patient's brow.

”He hollered like a loon and grabbed at it when I tried to straighten it out,” the Indian said, thoughtfully. ”And so he did when you touched it.”

”Yes.”

”He's got something hid there. It bothers him even if he is delirious.”

”Perhaps,” admitted Ruth.

But she was not interested in this suspicion. The condition of the poor fellow was uppermost in her mind.

”You let me have your pistol, Jib,” she said. ”I can use it. It will keep that old coyote away.”

”And anything else, too,” said Jib, handing the gun to her and then stepping back to his pony. ”I'll hobble your critter, Miss. Don't go far from the door. I'll either come back myself or send a couple of the boys from camp. They will bring food, anyway. I reckon the poor chap's hungry as well as thirsty.”

”He is in a very bad way, indeed,” returned Ruth, gravely. ”You'll hurry, Jib?”

”Sure. But you'd better come back with me.”

”No. I'm in for it now,” she replied, trying to smile at him bravely.

”I'd better nurse him till he's better, or--”

”You ain't got no call to do it!” exclaimed the Indian.

”There is more reason for my helping him than you know,” she said, in a low voice. ”Oh! there is a very good reason for my helping him.”

”He's too far gone to be helped much, I reckon,” returned the other, mounting into his saddle. ”But I'll be going. Take care of yourself.”

”I'll be all right, Jib!” she responded, with more cheerfulness, and waved her hand to him as the cow puncher rode away.

But when the patter of the pony's hoofs had died away the silence brooding over the abandoned mining camp seemed very oppressive indeed.

It was not a pleasant prospect that lay before her. Not only was she alone here with the sick man, but she _was_ afraid of catching the fever.

The patient on the couch was indeed helpless. He muttered and rolled his head from side to side, and his wild eyes stared at her as though he were fearful of what she might do to him. Ruth bathed his face and hands again and again; and the cool water seemed to quiet him. Occasionally she raised his head that he might drink. There was nothing else she could do for his comfort or betterment until medicines arrived.

She searched the cabin for anything which might belong to him. She did not find his rifle-the weapon with which he had killed the bear in the canon when Ruth had been in such peril. She did find, however, a worn water-proof knapsack; in it was a handkerchief, or two, a pair of torn socks and an old s.h.i.+rt, beside shaving materials, a comb and brush, and a toothbrush. Not a letter or a sc.r.a.p of paper to reveal his ident.i.ty.

Yet she was confident that this was the man whom she had hoped to meet when she came West on this summer jaunt.

This was the fellow who had encouraged Uncle Jabez to invest his savings in the Tintacker Mine. It was he, too, who had been to Bullhide and recorded the new papers relating to the claim. And if he had made way with all Uncle Jabez's money, and the mining property was worthless, Ruth knew that she would never see Briarwood Hall again!

For Uncle Jabez had let her understand plainly that his resources were so crippled that she could not hope to return to school with her friends when the next term opened. Neither she, nor Aunt Alvirah, nor anybody else, could make the old miller change his mind. He had given her one year at the boarding school according to agreement. Uncle Jabez always did just as he said he would; but he was never generous, and seldom even kind.

However, it was not this phase of the affair that so troubled the girl from the Red Mill. It was the ident.i.ty of this fever-stricken man that so greatly disturbed her. She believed that there was somebody at Silver Ranch who must have a much deeper interest in him than even she felt.

And she was deeply troubled by this suspicion. Was she doing right in not sending word to the ranch at once as to her belief in the ident.i.ty of the man?

The morning was now gone and Ruth would have been glad of some dinner; but in leaving the other herders she and Jib had not expected to remain so many hours from the Rolling River crossing. At least, they expected if they found the man at Tintacker at all, that he would have played the host and supplied them with lunch. Had Jib been here she knew he could easily have shot a bird, or a hare; there was plenty of small game about. But had she not felt it necessary to remain in close attendance upon the sick man she would have hesitated about going to the outskirts of the camp. Even the possession of Jib's loaded pistol did not make the girl feel any too brave.

Already that morning she had been a witness to the fact that savage beasts lurked in the locality. There might be another puma about. She was not positively in fear of the coyotes; she knew them to be a cowardly clan. But what would keep a bear from wandering down from the heights into the abandoned camp? And Ruth had seen quite all the bears at close quarters that she wished to see. Beside, this six-shooter of Jib's would be a poor weapon with which to attack a full-grown bear.