Bud Jessup removed a
battered1 stew-pan from the fire and set it aside to cool a little.
"Well, by this time I reckon friend Tex is all worked up over what's become of me," he remarked in a tone of satisfaction,
deftly2 shifting the coffee-pot to a bed of deeper coals. "He's sure tried often enough to get rid of me, but I don't guess he quite
relishes3 my droppin' out of sight like this."
Buck4 Stratton, his back resting comfortably against a rock a little way from the fire, nodded absently.
"You're sure you didn't leave any trace they could pick up?" he asked with a touch of anxiety.
"Certain sure," returned Jessup confidently. "When Miss Mary came in around four, I was in the wagon-shed, the rest of the crowd bein' down in south pasture. Like I told yuh before, she had a good-sized package all done up nice in her hand, an' it didn't take her long to tell me what was up. Then we walks out together an' stops by the kitchen door.
"'Yuh better get yore supper at the hotel,' she says, an' ride back afterwards. 'I meant to send in right after dinner to mail the package, but I got held up out on the range.'
"Then she seems to catch sight of the greaser for the first time jest inside the door, though I noticed him snoopin' there when we first come up.
"'I hope yuh got somethin' left from dinner, Pedro,' she says, with one of them careless natural smiles of hers, like as if she hadn't a care on her mind except food. 'I'm half starved.'"
Bud sighed and finished with a note of
admiration5. "Some girl, all right!"
His appearance had improved surprisingly in the ten days that had passed since his accident. The head-bandage was gone, and his
swollen7 ankle, though still tender at times, had been reduced to almost normal size by constant applications of cold water. His body was still tightly
strapped8 up with yards and yards of bandage, which Mary Thorne had thoughtfully packed, with a number of other first-aid necessities, in the parcel which was Bud's excuse for making a trip to town.
Stratton was not certain that a
rib9 had been broken after all. When Jessup came to examine him he found the flesh terribly
bruised10 and refrained from any unnecessary
prodding11. It was still somewhat painful to the touch, but from the ease with which he could get about, Buck had a notion that at the worst the bone was merely cracked.
"They wouldn't be likely to notice where you left the Paloma trail, would they?" Buck asked, after a brief retrospective silence.
"Not unless they're a whole lot better trackers than I think for," Jessup assured him. "I picked a rocky place this side of the gully, an' cut around the north end of middle pasture, where the land slopes down a bit, an' yuh can't be seen from the south more 'n a quarter of a mile. I kept my eyes peeled, believe me! an' didn't glimpse a soul all the way. I wouldn't
fret12 none about their followin' me here."
"I reckon it is foolish," admitted Stratton. "But lying around not able to do anything makes a fellow think up all kinds of trouble. Lynch isn't a fool, and there's no doubt when you didn't come back that night he'd begin to smell a rat right off."
"Sure. An' next day he likely sent in to town, where he'd find out from old Pop that I never showed up there at all. After that, accordin' to my figgerin', he'd be up against it hard. Yuh can bank on Miss Mary playin' the game, an' registerin' surprise an' worry an' all the rest of it. There ain't a chance in the world of his thinkin' to look for me here."
"I reckon that's true. Of course we've got to remember that so far as he knows I'm out of the way for good."
Bud took up coffee-pot and stew-pan and set them down beside Stratton, where the rest of the meal was spread.
"Sure," he
chuckled13, dropping down against the
ledge14. "Officially, you're a
corpse15. That's yore strong point, old-timer. By golly!" he added, with a sudden, fierce revulsion of spirit. "I only hope I'll be on hand when he gets what's comin' to him, the damn', cowardly
skunk16!"
"Maybe you will," commented Buck grimly. "Well, let's eat. Seems like I do nothing but eat and sleep and loaf around. I've a good notion to
bust18 up the monotony," he added, after a few minutes had passed in the silent consumption of food, "and take that trip to north pasture to-morrow."
"Don't be loco," Bud told him hastily. "Yuh ain't fit for nothin' like that yet."
"I did it a few days ago," Stratton reminded him, "and I'm feeling a hundred per cent. better now."
"Mebbe so; but what's the use in takin' chances? We got plenty of time."
"I'm not so sure of that," Buck said seriously. "You say that Lynch thinks I'm dead and out of the way. Well, maybe he does; but unless he's a lot bigger fool than I think for, he's not going to leave a body around in plain sight for anybody to find. He'll be slipping down into that
gulch19 one of these days to get rid of it, and when he finds there ain't any body--then what?"
"He'll begin to see he's got into one hell of a mess, I reckon," commented Jessup.
"Right. And he'll be willing to do anything on earth to crawl out safe. Like enough he'll connect your
disappearance20 with the business, and that would worry him more than ever. He might even get scared enough to throw up the whole game and beat it; and believe me, that wouldn't suit me at all."
"Yuh said a mouthful!"
snarled21 Jessup. "If that hellion should get away--Say, Buck, why couldn't yuh get him for attempted murder?"
"I might, but the witnesses are all on his side, and there'd be a good chance of his slipping out. Besides, I'm set on finding out first what his game is. I'm dead certain now it's connected somehow with the north pasture, and I've an idea it's something big. That car I told you about, and everything--Well, there's no sense guessing any longer when we can make a stab at finding out. We'll start the first thing to-morrow."
Bud made no further protest, and at dawn next morning they left camp and set out
northward22 through the hills. It was a slow journey, and toward the end of it Buck felt rather seedy. But this was only natural, he told himself, after lying around and doing nothing; and he even wished he had made the move sooner.
Both he and Jessup were conscious of a growing excitement as they neared the goal from which circumstances had held them back so long. Were they going to find out something definite at last? Or would fate thrust another unexpected obstacle in their way? Above all, if fortune proved kind, what would be the character of their discovery?
Immensely
intrigued23 and curious, Bud
chattered24 constantly throughout the ride, suggesting all sorts of solutions of the problem, some of which were rather far-fetched. Gold was his favorite--as it has been the favorite
lure25 for adventurers all down the ages--and he drew an entrancing picture of desert sands sprinkled with the yellow dust. He thought of other precious metals, too, and even gave a passing consideration to a deposit of diamonds or some other precious or semi-precious stones. Once he switched off oddly on the subject of
prehistoric26 remains27, and Stratton's surprised
inquiry28 revealed the fact that three years ago he had worked for a party of scientific excavators in Montana.
"Them bones and skeletons as big as houses bring a pile of money, believe me!" he assured his companion. "The country up there ain't a
mite29 different from this, neither."
Buck himself was unusually silent and abstracted. During the last ten days of enforced idleness he had considered the subject for hours at a time and from every conceivable angle, with the result that a certain possibility occurred to him and persisted in lingering in his mind, in spite of its seeming improbability. It was so vague and unlikely that he said nothing about it to Bud; but now, mounting the steep trail, the thought of it came back with
gathering30 strength, and he wondered whether it could possibly be true.
Advancing with every possible precaution, they gained the summit and passed on down the other side. Before them lay the desert, glittering and glowing in the morning sun, without a sign of alien presence. Keeping a sharp
lookout31, they reached the little, half-circular
recess32 in the cliffs that formed the end of the trail, and paused.
No rain had fallen in the last ten days and the print of motor-tires was almost as clear and unmistakable as the day it had been made. They could make out easily where the car had been driven in, the footprints about it, and the marks left by its turning; and with equal lack of difficulty they picked out the track made as it departed.
The latter headed north, but Stratton was not interested in it. Without
hesitation33 he selected the incoming trail, and the two followed it out into the desert. For a few hundred yards they rode almost due east. Then the wheel-marks turned
abruptly34 to the south, and a little further on Buck
noted35 the prints of a
galloping36 horse beside them.
"Lynch, I reckon," he commented, pointing them out to his companion. "When he saw me up on the cliffs down yonder, he must have
hustled37 to catch up with the car."
Neither of them
spoke38 again until they reached the spot where Buck had seen the car stop and the men get out and walk about. Here they dismounted and followed the footprints with careful
scrutiny39. Bud saw nothing significant, and when they had covered the ground
thoroughly40, he expressed his disappointment freely. Stratton merely
shrugged42 his shoulders.
"We'll follow the back track and see where else they stopped," he said
curtly43.
His voice was a little
hoarse44, and there was an odd gleam in his eyes. When they were in the saddle again, he urged his horse forward at a speed which presently brought a protest from Jessup.
"Yuh better take it easy, old man," he cautioned. "If that cayuse steps in a hole, you're apt to get a
jolt45 that'll put you out of business."
"I don't guess it'll hurt me," returned Stratton with
preoccupied46 brevity.
Bud gave a resigned
shrug41, and for ten minutes the silence remained unbroken. Then all at once Buck gave a muttered
exclamation47 and pulled his horse up with a jerk.
They were on the
rim17 of a wide, shallow depression in the sand. There was nothing
remarkable48 about it at first sight, save, perhaps, the total absence of desert vegetation for some distance all around. But Stratton slid hastily out of his saddle, flung the
reins49 over Pete's head, and walked swiftly forward. Thrilled with a sudden excitement and
suspense50, Bud followed.
"What is it?" he questioned eagerly, as Buck
bent51 down to
scoop52 up a handful of the
trampled53 sand. "What have yuh--"
He broke off abruptly as Stratton turned suddenly on him, eyes
dilated54 and a spot of vivid color glowing on each cheek-bone.
"Don't you see?" he demanded, thrusting his hand toward the boy. "Don't you understand?"
Staring at the open palm, Jessup's eyes widened and his
jaw55 dropped.
"Good Lord!" he
gasped56. "You don't mean that it--it's--"
He paused incredulously, and Buck nodded.
"I'm sure of it," he stated crisply.