The Greatest Works of B. M. Bower - 51 Titles in One Volume (Illustrated Edition). B. M. Bower
going of the sun Applehead and Lite, sitting out their second guard on the pinnacle, discussed seriously the desperate idea of going in the night to the nearest Navajo ranch and helping themselves to what horses they could find about the place. The biggest obstacle was their absolute ignorance of where the nearest ranch lay. Not, surely, that half-day’s ride back towards Albuquerque, where they had seen but one pony and that a poor specimen of horseflesh. Another obstacle would be the dogs, which could be quieted only with bullets.
“We might git hold of something to ride,” Applehead stated glumly, “an’ then agin the chances is we wouldn’t git nothin’ more’n a scrap on our hands. ‘N’ I’m tellin’ yuh right now, Lite, I ain’t hankerin’ fer no fuss till I git a hoss under me.”
“Me either,” Lite testified succinctly. “Say, is that something coming, away up that draw the camp’s in? Seems to me I saw something pass that line of lava, about half a mile over.”
Applehead stood up and peered into the half darkness. In a couple of minutes he said: “Ye better git down an’ tell the boys t’ be on the watch, Lite. They can’t see no hat-wavin’ this time uh day. They’s somethin’ movin’ up to-wards camp, but what er who they be I can’t make out in the dark. Tell Luck—”
“What’s the matter with us both going?” Lite asked, cupping his hands around his eyes that he might see better. “It’s getting too dark to do any good up here—”
“Well, I calc’late mebby yore right,” Applehead admitted, and began to pick his way down over the rocks. “Ef them’s Injuns, the bigger we stack up in camp the better. If it’s Ramon ‘n’ his bunch, I want t’ git m’ hands on ‘im.”
He must have turned the matter over pretty thoroughly in his mind, for when the two reached camp he had his ideas fixed and his plans all perfected. He told Luck that somebody was working down the draw in the dark, and that it looked like a Navvy trick; and that they had better be ready for them, because they weren’t coming just to pass the time of day—“now I’m tellin’ ye!”
The nerves of the Happy Family were raw enough by now to welcome anything that promised action; even an Indian fight would not be so much a disaster as a novel way of breaking the monotony. Applehead, with the experience gathered in the old days when he was a young fellow with a freighting outfit and old Geronimo was terrorizing all this country, sent them back in compact half circle just within the shelter of the trees and several rods away from their campfire and the waterhole. There, lying crouched behind their saddles with their rifles across the seat-sides and with ammunition belts full of cartridges, they waited for whatever might be coming in the dark.
“It’s horses,” Pink exclaimed under his breath, as faint sounds came down the draw. “Maybe—”
“Horses—and an Injun laying along the back of every one, most likely,” Applehead returned grimly. “An old Navvy trick, that is—don’t let ‘em fool ye, boys! You jest wait, ‘n’ I’ll tell ye ‘when t’ shoot, er whether t’ shoot at all. They can’t fool ME—now I’m tellin’ yuh!”
After that they were silent, listening strainedly to the growing sounds of approach. There was the dull, unmistakable click of a hoof striking against a rock, the softer sound of treading on yielding soil. Then a blur of dark objects became visible, moving slowly and steadily toward the camp.
“Aw, it’s just horses,” Happy Jack muttered disgustedly.
Applehead stretched a lean leg in his direction and gave Happy Jack a kick. “They’re cunnin’,” he hissed warningly. “Don’t yuh be fooled—”
“That’s Johnny in the lead,” Pink whispered excitedly. “I’d know the way he walks—”
“‘N’ you THOUGHT yuh knowed how he jingled his dang bell,” Applehead retorted unkindly. “Sh-sh-sh—”
Reminded by the taunt of the clever trick that had been played upon them the night before, the Happy Family stiffened again into strained, waiting silence, their rifles aimed straight at the advancing objects. These, still vague in the first real darkness of early night, moved steadily in a scattered group behind a leader that was undoubtedly Johnny of the erstwhile tinkling bell. He circled the campfire just without its radius of light, so that they could not tell whether an Indian lay along his back, and beaded straight for the water-hole. The others followed him, and not one came into the firelight—a detail which sharpened the suspicions of the men crouched there in the edge of the bushes, and tingled their nerves with the sense of something sinister in the very unconcernedness of the animals.
They splashed into the water-hole and drank thirstily and long. They stood there as though they were luxuriating in the feel of more water than they could drink, and one horse blew the moisture from his nostrils with a sound that made Happy Jack jump.
After a few minutes that seemed an hour to those who waited with fingers crooked upon gun-triggers, the horse that looked vaguely like Johnny turned away from the water-hole and sneezed while he appeared to be wondering what to do next. He moved slowly toward the packs that were thrown down just where they had been taken from the horses, and began nosing tentatively about.
The others loitered still at the water-hole, save one—the buckskin, by his lighter look in the dark—that came over to Johnny. The two horses nosed the packs. A dull sound of clashing metal came to the ears of the Happy Family.
“Hey! Get outa that grain, doggone your fool hide,” Pink called out impulsively, crawling over his saddle and catching his foot in the stirrup leather so that he came near going headlong.
Applehead yelled something, but Pink had recovered his balance and was running to save the precious horsefeed from waste, and Johnny from foundering. There might have been two Indiana on every horse in sight, but Pink was not thinking of that possibility just then.
Johnny whirled guiltily away from the grain bag, licking his lips and blowing dust from his nostrils. Pink went up to him and slipped a rope around his neck. “Where’s that bell?” he called out in his soft treble. “Or do you think we better tie the old son-of-a-gun up and be sure of him?”
“Aw,” said Happy Jack disgustedly a few minutes later, when the Happy Family had crawled out of their ambush and were feeling particularly foolish. “Nex’ time old granny Furrman says Injuns t’ this bunch, somebody oughta gag him.”
“I notice you waited till he’d gone outa hearing before you said that,” Luck told him drily. “We’re going to put out extra guards tonight, just the same. And I guess you can stand the first shift, Happy, up there on the ridge—you’re so sure of things!”
Chapter XV. “Now, Dang it, Ride!”
Indians are Indians, though they wear the green sweater and overalls of civilization and set upon their black hair the hat made famous by John B. Stetson. You may meet them in town and think them tamed to stupidity. You may travel out upon their reservations and find them shearing sheep or hoeing corn or plodding along the furrow, plowing their fields; or you may watch them dancing grotesquely in their festivals, and still think that civilization is fast erasing the savage instincts from their natures. You will be partly right—but you will also be partly mistaken. An Indian is always an Indian, and a Navajo Indian carries a thinner crust of civilization than do some others; as I am going to illustrate.
As you have suspected, the Happy Family was not following the trail of Ramon Chavez and his band. Ramon was a good many miles away in another direction; unwittingly the Happy Family was keeping doggedly upon the trail of a party of renegade Navajos who had been out on a thieving expedition among those Mexicans who live upon the Rio Grande bottomland. Having plenty of reasons for hurrying back to their stronghold, and having plenty of lawlessness to account for, when they realized that they were being followed by nine white men who had four packed horses with them to provide for their needs on a long journey, it was no more than natural that the