Title: Vanguards of the Plains: A Romance of the Old Santa Fé Trail
Author: Margaret Hill McCarter
Release date: August 31, 2004 [eBook #13345]
                Most recently updated: October 28, 2024
Language: English
Credits: Produced by Bryan Ness and PG Distributed Proofreaders

PART I
  CLEARING THE
  TRAIL
I. THE BEGINNINGS OF A
  PLAINSMAN
  II. A DAUGHTER OF CANAAN
  III. THE WIDENING HORIZON
  IV. THE MAN IN THE DARK
  V. WOMEN AND CHILDREN FIRST
  VI. SPYING OUT THE LAND
  VII. "SANCTUARY"
  VIII. THE WILDERNESS
  CROSSROADS
  PART II
  BUILDING THE
  TRAIL
IX. IN THE MOON OF THE PEACH
  BLOSSOM
  X. THE HANDS THAT CLING
  XI. "OUR FRIENDS--THE
  ENEMY"
  XII. THE BROTHERHOOD OF THE
  PLAINS
  XIII. IN THE SHELTER OF SAN
  MIGUEL
  XIV. OPENING THE RECORD
  XV. THE SANCTUARY ROCKS OF SAN
  CHRISTOBAL
  XVI. FINISHING TOUCHES
  XVII. SWEET AND BITTER
  WATERS
  PART III
  DEFENDING THE
  TRAIL
XVIII.
  WHEN THE SUN WENT DOWN
  XIX. A MAN'S PART
  XX. GONE OUT
  XXI. IN THE SHADOW OF THE
  INFINITE
  PART IV
  REMEMBERING THE
  TRAIL
XXII. THE GOLDEN WEDDING
 Through the
  veins
    Of whose vast Empire flows, in strength'ning
  tides,
    Trade, the calm health of nations.
* * * * *
And sometimes I would doubt
    If statesmen, rocked and dandled into power,
    Could leave such legacies to kings.
    There came a time in the law of life
      When over the nursing sod
    The shadows broke, and the soul awoke
      In a strange, dim dream of God.
         --LANGDON SMITH.
It might have been but yesterday that I saw it all: the
  glinting sunlight on the yellow Missouri boiling endlessly along
  at the foot of the bluff; the flood-washed sands across the
  river; the tangle of tall, coarse weeds fringing them, edged by
  the scrubby underbrush. And beyond that the big trees of the
  Missouri woodland, so level against the eastern horizon that I
  used to wonder if I might not walk upon their solid-looking tops
  if I could only reach them. I wondered, too, why the trees on our
  side of the river should vary so in height when those in the
  eastern distance were so evenly grown. One day I had asked Jondo
  the reason for this, and had learned that it was because of the
  level ground on the farther side of the valley. I began then to
  love the level places of the earth. I love them still. And,
  always excepting that one titanic rift, where the world stands
  edgewise, with the sublimity of the Almighty shimmering through
  its far depths, I love them more than any other thing that nature
  has yet offered to me.
  
  But to come back to that picture of yesterday: old Fort
  Leavenworth on the bluff; the little and big ravines that billow
  the landscape about it; the faint lines of trails winding along
  the hillsides toward the southwest; the unclouded skies so
  everlastingly big and intensely blue; and, hanging like a spray
  of glorious blossoms flung high above me, the swaying folds of
  the wind-caressed flag, now drooping on its tall staff, now
  swelling full and free, straight from its gripping halyards.
  
  Between me and the fort many people were passing to and fro, some
  of whom were to walk with me down the long trail of years.
  Evermore that April day stands out as the beginning of things for
  me. Dim are the days behind it, a jumble of happy childish hours,
  each keen enough as the things of childhood go; but from that one
  day to the present hour the unforgotten deeds of busy years run
  clearly in my memory as I lift my pen to write somewhat of their
  dramatic record.
  
  And that this may not seem all a backward gaze, let me face about
  and look forward from the beginning--a stretch of canvas, lurid
  sometimes, sometimes in glorious tinting, sometimes intensely
  dark, with rifts of lightning cleaving through its blackness. But
  nowhere dull, nowhere without design in every brush-stroke.
  
  I had gone out on the bluff to watch for the big fish that Bill
  Banney, a young Kentuckian over at the fort, had told me were to
  be seen only on those April days when the Missouri was running
  north instead of south. And that when little boys kept very
  still, the fish would come out of the water and play leap-frog on
  the sand-bars.
  
  If I failed to see them this morning, I meant to run back to the
  parade-ground and play leap-frog myself with my cousin Beverly,
  who wanted proof for most of Bill Banney's stories. Beverly was
  growing wise and lanky for his age. I was still chubby, and in
  most things innocent, and inclined to believe all that I heard,
  or I should not have been taken in by that fish story.
  
  We were orphans with no recollection of any other home than the
  log house near the fort. We had been fathered and mothered by our
  uncle, Esmond Clarenden, owner of the little store across the
  square from our house, and a larger establishment down at
  Independence on the Missouri River.
  
  Always a wonderful man to me was that Esmond Clarenden, product
  of one of the large old New England colleges. He found time to
  guard our young years with the same diplomatic system by which he
  controlled all of his business affairs. He laid his plans
  carefully and never swerved from carrying them through afterward;
  he insisted on order in everything; he rendered value for value
  in his contracts; he chose his employees carefully, and trusted
  them fully; he had a keen sense of humor, a genial spirit of
  good-will, and he loved little children. Fitted as he was by
  culture and genius to have entered into the greater opportunities
  of the Eastern States, he gave himself to the real up-building of
  the West, and in the larger comfort and prosperity and peace of
  the Kansas prairies of to-day his soul goes marching on.
  
  The waters, as I watched them, were all running south toward that
  vague, down-stream world shut off by trees at a bend of the
  course. I waited a long time there for the current to shift to
  the north, wondering meanwhile about those level-topped forests,
  and what I might see beyond them if I were sitting on their flat
  crests. And, as I wondered, the first dim sense of being shut
  in came filtering through my childish consciousness. I could
  not cross the river. Big as my playground had always been, I had
  never been out of sight of the fort's flagstaff up-stream, nor
  down-stream. The wooded ravines blocked me on the southwest. What
  lay beyond these limits I had tried to picture again and again. I
  had been a dreamer all of my short life, and this new feeling of
  being shut in, held back, from something slipped upon me
  easily.
  
  As I sat on the bluff in the April sunshine, I turned my face
  toward the west and stretched out my chubby arms for larger
  freedom. I wanted to see the open level places, wanted
  till it hurt me. I could cry easily enough for some things. I
  could not cry for this. It was too deep for tears to reach.
  Moreover, this new longing seemed to drop down on me suddenly and
  overwhelm me, until I felt almost as if I were caught in a
  net.
  
  As I stared with half-seeing eyes toward the wooded ravines
  beyond the fort, suddenly through the budding branches I caught
  sight of a horseman riding down a half-marked trail into a deep
  hollow. Horsemen were common enough to forget in a moment, but
  when this one reappeared on the hither side of the ravine, I saw
  that the rider's face was very dark, that his dress, from the
  sombrero to the spurred heel, was Mexican, and that he was
  heavily armed, even for a plainsman. When he reached the top of
  the bluff he made straight across the square toward my uncle
  Esmond Clarenden's little storehouse, and I lost sight of
  him.
  
  Something about him seemed familiar to me, for the gift of
  remembering faces was mine, even then. A fleeting childish memory
  called up such a face and dress somewhere back in the dim days of
  babyhood, with the haunting sound of a low, musical voice,
  speaking in the soft Castilian tongue.
  
  But the memory vanished and I sat a long time gazing at the
  wooded west that hid the open West of my day-dreams.
  
  Suddenly Jondo came riding up on his big black horse to the very
  edge of the bluff.
  
  "You are such a little mite, I nearly forgot to see you," he
  called, cheerily. "Your Uncle Esmond wants you right away. Mat
  Nivers, or somebody else, sent me to run you down," he added,
  leaning over to lift me up to a seat on the horse behind him.
  
  Few handsomer men ever graced a saddle. Big, broad-shouldered,
  muscular, yet agile, a head set like a Greek statue, and a
  face--nobody could ever make a picture of Jondo's face for
  me--the curling brown hair, soft as a girl's, the broad forehead,
  deep-set blue eyes, heavy dark brow, cheeks always ruddy through
  the plain's tan, strong white teeth, firm square chin, and a
  smile like sunshine on the gray prairies. Eyes, lips, teeth--aye,
  the big heart behind them--all made that smile. No grander prince
  of men ever rode the trails or dared the dangers of the untamed
  West. I did not know his story for many years. I wish I might
  never have known it. But as he began with me, so he ended--brave,
  beloved old Jondo!
  
  Down on the parade-ground Beverly Clarenden and Mat Nivers were
  sitting with their feet crossed under them, tailor fashion,
  facing each other and talking earnestly. Over by the fort, Esmond
  Clarenden stood under a big elm-tree. A round little, stout
  little man he was, whose sturdy strength and grace of bearing
  made up for his lack of height. Like a great green tent the
  boughs of the elm, just budding into leaf, drooped over him. A
  young army officer on a cavalry horse was talking with him as we
  came up.
  
  "Run over there to Beverly now. Gail," my uncle said, with a wave
  of his hand.
  
  I was always in awe of shoulder-straps, so I scampered away
  toward the children. But not until, child-like, I had stared at
  the three men long enough to take a child's lasting estimate of
  things.
  
  I carry still the keen impression of that moment when I took,
  unconsciously, the measure of the three: the mounted army man,
  commander of the fort, big in his official authority and force;
  Jondo on his great black horse, to me the heroic type of
  chivalric courage; and between the two, Esmond Clarenden,
  unmounted, with feet firmly planted, suggesting nothing heroic,
  nothing autocratic. And yet, as he stood there, square-built,
  solid, certain, he seemed in some dim way to be the real man of
  whom the other two were but shadows. It took a quarter of a
  century for me to put into words what I learned with one glance
  that day in my childhood.
  
  As I came running toward the parade-ground Beverly Clarenden
  called out:
  
  "Come here, Gail! Shut your little mouth and open your big ears,
  and I'll tell you something. Maybe I'd better not tell you all at
  once, though. It might make you dizzy," he added, teasingly.
  
  "And maybe you better had," Mat Nivers said, calmly.
  
  "Maybe you'd better tell him yourself, if you feel that way,"
  Beverly retorted.
  
  "I guess I'll do that," Mat began, with a twinkle in her big gray
  eyes; but my cousin interrupted her.
  
  Beverly loved to tease Mat through me, but he never got far, for
  I relied on her to curb him; and she was not one to be ruffled by
  trifles. Mat was an orphan and, like ourselves, a ward of Esmond
  Clarenden, but there were no ties of kinship between us. She was
  three years older than Beverly, and although she was no taller
  than he, she seemed like a woman to me, a keen-witted,
  good-natured child-woman, neat, cleanly, and contented. I wonder
  if many women get more out of life in these days of luxurious
  comforts than she found in the days of frontier hardships.
  
  "Well, it's this way, Gail. Mat doesn't know the straight of it,"
  Beverly began, dramatically. "There's going to be a war, or
  something, in Mexico, or somewhere, and a lot of soldiers are
  coming here to drill, and drill, and drill. And then--"
  
  The boy paused for effect.
  
  "And then, and then, and then--or some time," Mat Nivers
  mimicked, jumping into the pause. "Why, they'll go to Mexico, or
  somewhere. And what Bev is really trying to tell hasn't anything
  to do with it--not directly, anyhow," she added, wisely. "The
  only new thing is that Uncle Esmond is going to Santa Fé
  right away. You know he has bought goods of the Santa Fé
  traders since we couldn't remember. And now he's going down there
  himself, and he's going to take you boys with him. That's what
  Bev is trying to get out, or keep back."
  
  "Whoopee-diddle-dee!" Beverly shouted, throwing himself backward
  and kicking up his heels.
  
  I jumped up and capered about in glee at the thought of such a
  journey. But my heart-throb of childish delight was checked,
  mid-beat.
  
  "Won't Mat go, too?" I asked, with a sudden pain at my throat.
  Mat Nivers was a part of life to me.
  
  The smile fell away from the girl's lips. Her big, sunshiny gray
  eyes and her laughing good nature always made her beautiful to
  Beverly and me.
  
  "I don't want to go and leave Mat," I insisted.
  
  "Oh, I do," Beverly declared, boastingly. "It would be real nice
  and jolly without her. And what could a little girl do 'way out
  on the prairies, and no mother to take care of her, while we were
  shooting Indians?"
  
  He sprang up and took aim at the fort with an imaginary bow and
  arrow. But there was a hollow note in his voice as if it covered
  a sob.
  
  "She can shoot Indians as good as you can, Beverly Clarenden,
  and, besides, there isn't anybody to mother her here but Jondo,
  and I reckon he'll go with us, won't he?" I urged.
  
  Mothering was not in my stock of memories. The heart-hunger of
  the orphan child had been eased by the gentleness of Jondo, the
  championship of Mat Nivers, and the sure defense of Esmond
  Clarenden, who said little to children, and was instinctively
  trusted by all of them.
  
  With Beverly's banter the smile came back quickly to Mat's eyes.
  It was never lost from them long at a time.
  
  "Beverly Clarenden, you keep your little mouth shut and
  your big ears open," she began, laughingly. "I know the
  whole sheboodle better 'n any of you, and I'm not teasing and
  whimpering both at the same time, neither. Bev doesn't know
  anything except what I've told him, and I wasn't through when you
  got here, Gail. There is going to be a big war in Texas, and our
  soldiers are going to go, and to win, too. Just look up at that
  flag there, and remember now, boys, that wherever the Stars and
  Stripes go they stay."
  
  "Who told you all that?" Beverly inquired.
  
  "The stars up in the sky told me that last night," Mat replied,
  pulling down the corners of her mouth solemnly. "But Uncle Esmond
  hasn't anything to do with the war, nor soldiers, only like he
  has been doing here," the girl went on. "He's a store-man, a
  merchant, and I guess he's just about as good as a general--a
  colonel, anyhow. But he's too short to fight, and too fat to
  run."
  
  "He isn't any coward," Beverly objected.
  
  "Who said he was?" Mat inquired. "He's one of them usefulest men
  that keeps things going everywhere."
  
  "I saw a real Mexican come up out of the ravine awhile ago and go
  straight over toward Uncle Esmond's store. What do you suppose he
  came here for? Is he a soldier from down there?" I asked.
  
  "Oh, just one Mexican don't mean anything anywhere, but the war
  in Mexico has something to do with our going to Santa Fé,
  even if Uncle Esmond is just a nice little store-man. That's all
  a girl knows about things," Beverly insisted.
  
  Mat opened her big eyes wide and looked straight at the boy.
  
  "I don't pretend to know what I don't know, but I'll bet a
  million billion dollars there is something else besides just all
  this war stuff. I can't tell it, I just feel it. Anyhow, I'm to
  stay here with Aunty Boone till you come back. Girls can be
  trusted anywhere, but it may take the whole Army of the West,
  yet, to follow up and look after two little runty boys. And let
  me tell you something, Bev, something I heard Aunty Boone
  say this morning." She said: "Taint goin' to be more 'n a minnit
  now till them boys grows up an' grows together, same size, same
  age. They been little and big, long as they goin' to be. Now you
  know what you're coming to."
  
  Mat was digging in the ground with a stick, and she flipped a
  clod at Beverly with the last words. Both of us had once expected
  to marry her when we grew up, unless Jondo should carry her away
  as his bride before that time. He was a dozen years older than
  Mat, who was only fourteen and small for her age. A flush always
  came to her cheeks when we talked of Jondo in that way. We didn't
  know why.
  
  We sat silent for a little while. A vague sense of desolateness,
  of the turning-places of life, as real to children as to older
  folk, seemed to press suddenly down upon all three of us. Ours
  was not the ordinary child-life even of that day. And that was a
  time when children had no world of their own as they have to-day.
  Whatever developed men and women became a part of the younger
  life training as well. And while we were ignorant of much that
  many children then learned early, for we had lived mostly beside
  the fort on the edge of the wilderness, we were alert, and
  self-dependent, fearless and far-seeing. We could use tools
  readily: we could build fires and prepare game for cooking; we
  could climb trees, set traps, swim in the creek, and ride horses.
  Moreover, we were bound to one another by the force of isolation
  and need for playmates. Our imagination supplied much that our
  surroundings denied us. So we felt more deeply, maybe, than many
  city-bred children who would have paled with fear at dangers that
  we only laughed over.
  
  No ripple in the even tenor of our days, however, had given any
  hint of the coming of this sudden tense oppression on our young
  souls, and we were stunned by what we could neither express nor
  understand.
  
  "Whatever comes or doesn't come," Beverly said at last,
  stretching himself at full length, stomach downward, on the bare
  ground, "whatever happens to us, we three will stand by each
  other always and always, won't we, Mat?"
  
  He lifted his face to the girl's. Oh, Beverly! I saw him again
  one day down the years, stretched out on the ground like this,
  lifting again a pleading face. But that belongs--down the
  years.
  
  "Yes, always and always," Mat replied, and then because she had a
  Spartan spirit, she added: "But let's don't say any more that
  way. Let's think of what you are going to see--the plains, the
  Santa Fé Trail, the mountains, and maybe bad Indians. And
  even old Santa Fé town itself. You are in for 'the big
  shift,' as Aunty Boone says, and you've got to be little men and
  take whatever comes. It will come fast enough, you can bet on
  that."
  
  Yesterday I might have sobbed on her shoulder. I did not know
  then that out on the bluff an hour ago I had come to the first
  turn in my life-trail, and that I could not look back now. I did
  know that I wanted to go with Uncle Esmond. I looked away
  from Mat's gray eyes, and Beverly's head dropped on his arms,
  face downward--looked at nothing but blue sky, and a graceful
  drooping flag; nothing but a half-sleepy, half-active fort;
  nothing but the yellow April floods far up-stream, between wooded
  banks tenderly gray-green in the spring sunshine. But I did not
  see any of these things then. Before my eyes there stretched a
  vast level prairie, with dim mountain heights beyond them. And
  marching toward them westward, westward, past lurking danger,
  Indians here and wild beasts there, went three men: the officer
  on his cavalry mount; Jondo on his big black horse; Esmond
  Clarenden, neither mounted nor on foot, it seemed, but going
  forward somehow. And between these three and the misty mountain
  peaks there was a face--not Mat Nivers's, for the first time in
  all my day-dreams--a sweet face with dark eyes looking straight
  into mine. And plainly then, just as plainly as I have heard it
  many times since then, came a call--the first clear bugle-note of
  the child-soul--a call to service, to patriotism, and to
  love.
  
  All that afternoon while Mat Nivers sang about her tasks Beverly
  and I tried to play together among the elm and cottonwood trees
  about our little home, but evening found us wide awake and
  moping. Instead of the two tired little sleepy-heads that could
  barely finish supper, awake, when night came, we lay in our
  trundle-bed, whispering softly to each other and staring at the
  dark with tear-wet eyes--our spiritual barometers warning us of a
  coming change. Something must have happened to us that night
  which only the retrospect of years revealed. In that hour Beverly
  Clarenden lost a year of his life and I gained one. From that
  time we were no longer little and big to each other--we were
  comrades.
  
  It must have been nearly midnight when I crept out of bed and
  slipped into the big room where Uncle Esmond and Jondo sat by the
  fireplace, talking together.
  
  "Hello, little night-hawk! Come here and roost," Jondo said,
  opening his arms to me.
  
  I slid into their embrace and snuggled my head against his broad
  shoulder, listening to all that was said. Three months later the
  little boy had become a little man, and my cuddling days had
  given place to the self-reliance of the fearless youngster of the
  trail.
  
  "Why do you make this trip now, Esmond?" Jondo asked at length,
  looking straight into my uncle's face.
  
  "I want to get down there right now because I want to get a grip
  on trade conditions. I can do better after the war if I do. It
  won't last long, and we are sure to take over a big piece of
  ground there when it is over. And when that is settled commerce
  must do the real building-up of the country. I want to be a part
  of that thing and grow with it. Why do you go with me?"
  
  My uncle looked directly at Jondo, although he asked the question
  carelessly.
  
  "To help you cross the plains. You know the redskins get worse
  every trip," Jondo answered, lightly.
  
  I stared at both of them until Jondo said, laughingly:
  
  "You little owl, what are you thinking about?"
  
  "I think you are telling each other stories," I replied,
  frankly.
  
  For somehow their faces made me think of Beverly's face out on
  the parade-ground that morning, when he had lifted it and looked
  at Mat Nivers; and their voices, deep bass as they were, sounded
  like Beverly's voice whispering between his sobs, before he went
  to sleep.
  
  Both men smiled and said nothing. But when I went to my bed again
  Jondo tucked the covers about me and Uncle Esmond came and bade
  me good night.
  
  "I guess you have the makings of a plainsman," he said, with a
  smile, as he patted me on the head.
  
  "The beginnings, anyhow," Jondo added. "He can see pretty far
  already."
  
  For a long time I lay awake, thinking of all that Uncle Esmond
  and Jondo had said to me. It is no wonder that I remember that
  April day as if it were but yesterday. Such days come only to
  childhood, and oftentimes when no one of older years can see
  clearly enough to understand the bigness of their meaning to the
  child who lives through them.
  
  All of my life I had heard stories of the East, of New York and
  St. Louis, where there were big houses and wonderful stores. And
  of Washington, where there was a President, and a Congress, and a
  strange power that could fill and empty Fort Leavenworth at will.
  I had heard of the Great Lakes, and of cotton-fields, and
  tobacco-plantations, and sugar-camps, and ships, and steam-cars.
  I had pictured these things a thousand times in my busy
  imagination and had longed to see them. But from that day they
  went out of my life-dreams. Henceforth I belonged to the prairies
  of the West. No one but myself took account of this, nor guessed
  that a life-trend had had its commencement in the small events of
  one unimportant day. 
  One stone the more swings to her place
      In that dread Temple of Thy worth;
    It is enough that through Thy grace
      I saw naught common on Thy earth.
The next morning I was wakened by the soft voice of Aunty
  Boone, our cook, saying:
  
  "You better get up! Revilly blow over at the fort long time ago.
  Wonder it didn't blow your batter-cakes clear away. Mat and
  Beverly been up since 'fore sunup."
  
  Aunty Boone was the biggest woman I have ever seen. Not the
  tallest, maybe--although she measured up to a height of six feet
  and two inches--not the fattest, but a woman with the biggest
  human frame, overlaid with steel-hard muscles. Yet she was not,
  in her way, clumsy or awkward. She walked with a free stride, and
  her every motion showed a powerful muscular control. Her face was
  jet-black, with keen shining eyes, and glittering white teeth. In
  my little child-world she was the strangest creature I had ever
  known. In the larger world whither the years of my manhood have
  led me she holds the same place.
  
  She had been born a princess of royal blood, heir to a queenship
  in her tribe in a far-away African kingdom. In her young
  womanhood, so the tale ran, the slave-hunter had found her and
  driven her aboard a slave-ship bound for the American coast. He
  never drove another slave toward any coast. In Virginia her first
  purchaser had sold her quickly to a Georgia planter whose
  heirs sent her on to Mississippi. Thence she soon found
  her way to the Louisiana rice-fields. Nobody came to take her
  back to any place she had quitted. "Safety first," is not a
  recent practice. She had enormous strength and capacity for
  endurance, she learned rapidly, kept her own counsel, obeyed no
  command unless she chose to do so, and feared nothing in the
  Lord's universe. The people of her own race had little in common
  with her. They never understood her and so they feared her. And
  being as it were outcast by them, she came to know more of the
  ways and customs, and even the thoughts, of the white people
  better than of her own. Being quick to imitate, she spoke in the
  correcter language of those whom she knew best, rather than the
  soft, ungrammatical dialect of the plantation slave or the grunt
  and mumble of the isolated African. Realizing that service was to
  be her lot, she elected to render that service where and to whom
  she herself might choose.
  
  One day she had walked into New Orleans and boarded a Mississippi
  steamer bound for St. Louis. It took three men to eject her
  bodily from the deck into a deep and dangerous portion of the
  stream. She swam ashore, and when the steamer made its next stop
  she walked aboard again. The three men being under the care of a
  physician, and the remainder of the crew burdened with other
  tasks, she was not again disturbed. Some time later she appeared
  at the landing below Fort Leavenworth, and strode up the slope to
  the deserted square where Esmond Clarenden stood before his
  little store alone in the deepening twilight.
  
  I have heard that she had had a way of appearing suddenly, like a
  beast of prey, in the dusk of the evening, and that few men cared
  to meet her at that time alone.
  
  My uncle was a snug-built man, sixty-two inches high, with small,
  shapely hands and feet. Towering above him stood this great,
  strange creature, barefooted, ragged, half tiger, half
  sphinx.
  
  "I'm hungry. I'll eat or I kill. I'm nobody's slave!"
  
  The soft voice was full of menace, the glare of famine and fury
  was in the burning eyes, and the supple cruelty of the wild beast
  was in the clenched hands.
  
  Esmond Clarenden looked up at her with interest. Then pointing
  toward our house he said, calmly:
  
  "Neither are you anybody's master. Go over there to the kitchen
  and get your supper. If you can cook good meals, I'll pay you
  well. If you can't, you'll leave here."
  
  Possibly it was the first time in her strange and varied career
  that she had taken a command kindly, and obeyed because she must.
  And so the savage African princess, the terror of the terrible
  slave-ship, the untamed plantation scourge, with a record for
  deeds that belong to another age and social code, became the
  great, silent, faithful, fearless servant of the plains; with us,
  but never of us, in all the years that followed. But she fitted
  the condition of her day, and in her place she stood, where the
  beloved black mammy of a gentler mold would have fallen.
  
  She announced that her name was Daniel Boone, which Uncle Esmond
  considered well enough for one of such a westward-roving nature.
  But Jondo declared that the "Daniel" belonged to her because,
  like unto the Bible Daniel, no lion, nor whole den of lions,
  would ever dine at her expense. To us she became Aunty Boone.
  With us she was always gentle--docile, rather; and one day we
  came to know her real measure, and--we never forgot her.
  
  I bounced out of bed at her call this morning, and bounced my
  breakfast into a healthy, good-natured stomach. The sunny April
  of yesterday had whirled into a chilly rain, whipped along by a
  raw wind. The skies were black and all the spring verdure was
  turned to a sickish gray-green.
  
  "Weather always fit the times," Aunty Boone commented as she
  heaped my plate with the fat buckwheat cakes that only she could
  ever turn off a griddle. "You packin' up for somepin' now. What
  you goin' to get is fo'casted in this here nasty day."
  
  "Why, we are going away!" I cried, suddenly recalling the
  day before. "I wish, though, that Mat could go. Wouldn't you like
  to go, too, Aunty? Only, Bev says there's deserts, where there's
  just rocks and sand and everything, and no water sometimes. You
  and Mat couldn't stand that 'cause you are women-folks."
  
  I stiffened with importance and clutched my knife and fork
  hard.
  
  "Couldn't!" Aunty Boone gave a scornful grunt. "Women-folks
  stands double more 'n men. You'll see when you get older. I know
  about you freightin' off to Santy Fee. You don't know what
  desset is. You never see sand. You never
  feel what it is to want watah. Only folks 'cross
  the ocean in the real desset knows that. Whoo-ee!"
  
  I remembered the weird tales she had told us of her
  girlhood--tales that had thrilled me with wonder--told sometimes
  in the twilight, sometimes by the kitchen fire on winter nights,
  sometimes on long, still, midsummer afternoons when the air
  quivered with heat and the Missouri hung about hot sand-bars,
  half asleep.
  
  "What do you know about this trip, Aunty Boone?" I asked,
  eagerly; for although she could neither read nor write, she had a
  sponge-like absorbing power for keeping posted on all that
  happened at the fort.
  
  "Cla'n'den"--the woman never called my uncle by any other
  name--"he's goin' to Santy Fee, an' you boys with him,
  'cause--"
  
  She paused and her shining eyes grew dull as they had a way of
  doing in her thoughtful or prophetic moments.
  
  "He knows what for--him an' Jondo. One of 'em's storekeeper an'
  t'other a plainsman, but they tote together always--an' they
  totin' now. You can't see what, but they totin', they totin',
  just the same. Now run out to the store. Things is stirrin'.
  Things is stirrin'."
  
  I bolted my cakes, sodden with maple syrup, drank my mug of milk,
  and hurried out toward the storehouse.
  
  Fort Leavenworth in the middle '40's was sometimes an indolent
  place, and sometimes a very busy one, depending upon the activity
  of the Western frontier. On this raw April morning everything was
  fairly ajerk with life and motion. And I knew from
  child-experience that a body of soldiers must be coming up the
  river soon. Horses were rushed to-day where yesterday they had
  been leisurely led. Orders were shouted now that had been half
  sung a week ago. Military discipline took the place of fatigue
  attitudes. There was a banging of doors, a swinging of brooms, a
  clatter of tin, and a clanging of iron things. And everywhere
  went that slapping wind. And every shallow place in the ground
  held a chilly puddle. The government buildings always seemed big
  and bare and cold to me. And this morning they seemed drearier
  than ever, beaten upon by the fitful swish of the rain.
  
  In contrast with these were my uncle's snug quarters, for warmth
  was a part of Esmond Clarenden's creed. I used to think that the
  little storeroom, filled with such things as a frontier fort
  could find use for, was the biggest emporium in America, and the
  owner thereof suffered nothing, in my eyes, in comparison with
  A.T. Stewart, the opulent New York merchant of his day.
  
  As I ran, bareheaded and coatless, across the wide wet space
  between our home and the storehouse a soldier came dashing by on
  horseback. I dodged behind him only to fall sprawling in a
  slippery pool under the very feet of another horseman, riding
  swiftly toward the boat-landing.
  
  Neither man paid any attention to me as I slowly picked myself up
  and started toward the store. The soldier had not seen me at all.
  The other man's face was dark, and he wore the dress of the
  Mexican. It was only by his alertness and skill that his horse
  missed me, but as he hurried away he gave no more heed to me than
  if I had been a stone in his path.
  
  I had turned my ankle in the fall and I could only limp to the
  storehouse and drop down inside. I would not cry out, but I could
  not hold back the sobs as I tried to stand, and fell again in a
  heap at Jondo's feet.
  
  "Things were stirrin'" there, as Aunty Boone had said, but withal
  there was no disorder. Esmond Clarenden never did business in
  that way. No loose ends flapped about his rigging, and when a
  piece of work was finished with him, there was nothing left to
  clear away. Bill Banney, the big grown-up boy from Kentucky, who,
  out of love of adventure, had recently come to the fort, was
  helping Jondo with the packing of certain goods. Mat and Beverly
  were perched on the counter, watching all that was being done and
  hearing all that was said.
  
  "What's the matter, little plainsman?" Jondo cried, catching me
  up and setting me on the counter. "Got a thorn in your shoe, or a
  stone-bruise, or a chilblain?"
  
  "I slipped out there behind a soldier on horseback, right in
  front of a little old Mexican who was just whirling off to the
  river," I said, the tears blinding my eyes.
  
  "Why, he's turned his ankle! Looks like it was swelling already,"
  Mat Nivers declared, as she slid from the counter and ran toward
  me.
  
  "It's a bad job," Jondo declared. "Just when we want to get off,
  too."
  
  "Can't I go with you to Santa Fé, Uncle Esmond?" I
  wailed.
  
  "Yes, Gail, we'll fix you up all right," my uncle said, but his
  face was grave as he examined my ankle.
  
  It was a bad job, much worse than any of us had thought at first.
  And as they all gathered round me I suddenly noticed the same
  Mexican standing in the doorway, and I heard some one, I think it
  was Uncle Esmond, say:
  
  "Jondo, you'd better take Gail over to the surgeon right away--"
  His voice trailed off somewhere and all was blank nothingness to
  me. But my last impression was that my uncle stayed behind with
  the strange Mexican.
  
  In the excitement everybody forgot that I had on neither hat nor
  coat as they carried me through the raw wet air to the army
  surgeon's quarters beyond the soldiers' barracks.
  
  A chill and fever followed, and for a week there was only pain
  and trouble for me. Nothing else hurt quite so deeply, however,
  as the fear of being left behind when the Clarendens should start
  for Santa Fé. I would ask no questions, and nobody
  mentioned the trip, for which everything was preparing. I began
  at last to have a dread of being left in the night, of wakening
  some morning to find only Mat and myself with Aunty Boone in the
  little log house. Uncle Esmond had already been away for three
  days, but nobody told me where he had gone, nor why he went, nor
  when he would come back. It kept me awake at night, and the loss
  of sleep made me nervous and feverish.
  
  One afternoon about a week after my accident, when Beverly and
  Mat were putting the room in order and chattering like a couple
  of squirrels, Beverly said, carelessly:
  
  "Gail, it's been a half a week since Uncle Esmond went down to
  our other store in Independence, and we are going to start on our
  trip just as soon as he gets back, unless he sends for me and
  Jondo."
  
  I knew that he was trying to tell me that they meant to go
  without me, for he hurried out with the last words. No boy wants
  to talk to a disappointed boy, and I had to clinch my teeth hard
  to keep back the tears.
  
  "I want to get well quicker, Mat. I want to go to Santa Fé
  with Beverly," I wailed, making a desperate effort to get out of
  bed.
  
  "You cuddle right down there, Gail Clarenden, if you want to get
  well at all. If you're real careful you'll be all right in a day
  or two. Let's wait for Uncle Esmond to come home before we start
  any worries."
  
  It was in her voice, girl or woman, that comforting note that
  could always soothe me.
  
  "Mat, won't you try to get them to let me go?" I pleaded.
  
  She made no promises, but busied herself with getting my foot
  into its place again, singing softly to herself all the while.
  Then she read me stories from our few story-books till I fell
  asleep.
  
  It was twilight when I wakened. Where I lay I could hear Esmond
  Clarenden and Aunty Boone talking in the kitchen, and I listened
  eagerly to all they said.
  
  "But it's no place for a woman," my uncle was urging,
  gravely.
  
  "I ain't a woman, I'm a cook. You want cooks if you eats. Mat
  ain't a woman, she's a girl. But she's stronger 'n Beverly. If
  you can't leave him, how can you leave her? An' Gail never get
  well if he's left here, Cla'n'den, now he's got the goin' fever.
  Never! An' if you never got back--"
  
  "I don't believe he would get well, either." Then Uncle Esmond
  spoke lower and I could not hear any more.
  
  Pretty soon Mat and Beverly burst open the door and came dancing
  in together, the sweet air of the warm April evening coming in
  with them, and life grew rose-colored for me in a moment.
  
  "We are all going to Santa Fé over the long trail. Every
  last gun of us. Aunty Boone, and Mat, and you, and me, and Jondo,
  and Uncle Esmond, rag-tag and bobtail. Whoop-ee-diddle-dee!"
  Beverly threw up his cap, and, catching Mat by the arms, they
  whirled around the room together.
  
  "Who says so, Bev?" I asked, eagerly.
  
  "Them as knows and bosses everything in this world. Jondo told
  me, and he's just the boss's shadow. Now guess who," Beverly
  replied.
  
  "It's all true, Gail," Mat assured me. "Esmond Clarenden
  is going to Santa Fé in spite of 'war, pestilence,
  famine, and sword,' as my History of the World says, and
  he is going to take son Beverly, and son Gail to watch son
  Beverly; and Miss Mat Nivers to watch both of them and shoo
  Indians away; and Aunt Daniel Boone to scare the Mexicans into
  the Gulf of California, if they act ugly, see!"
  
  She capered about the room, and as she passed me she stooped and
  patted me on the forehead. I didn't want her to do that. I had
  taken a long jump away from little-boy-dom a week ago, but I was
  supremely content now that all of us were to take the long trail
  together.
  
  That evening while Mat and Beverly went to look after some
  fishing-lines they had set--Mat and Bev were always going
  fishing--and Jondo was down at the store, the officer in command
  of the fort came in. He paid no attention to me lying there, all
  eyes and ears whenever shoulder-straps were present.
  
  "What did you decide to do about the trip to Santa Fé?" he
  asked, as he tipped back in his chair and settled down to cigars
  and an evening chat.
  
  "We shall be leaving on the boat in the morning," my uncle
  replied.
  
  The colonel's chair came down with a crack. "You don't mean it!"
  he exclaimed.
  
  "I told you a week ago that I would be starting as soon as
  possible," Esmond Clarenden said, quietly.
  
  "But, man, the war is raging, simply raging, down in Mexico right
  now. Our division will be here to commence drill in a few weeks,
  and we start for the border in a few months. You are mad to take
  such a risk." The commander's voice rose.
  
  "We must go, that's all!" my uncle insisted.
  
  "We? We? Who the devil are 'we'? None of my companies mutinied, I
  hope."
  
  The words did not sound like a joke, and there was little humor
  in the grim face.
  
  "'We' means Jondo, Banney, a young fellow from Kentucky--" Uncle
  Esmond began.
  
  "Humph! Banney's father carried a gun at Fort Dearborn in 1812. I
  thought that young fellow came here for military service," the
  colonel commented, testily.
  
  "Rather say he came for adventure," Esmond Clarenden
  suggested.
  
  "He'll get a deuced lot of it in a hurry, if you persuade him off
  with you."
  
  A flush swept over Esmond Clarenden's face, but his good-natured
  smile did not fail as he replied:
  
  "I don't persuade anybody. The rest of the company are my two
  nephews and the little girl, my ward, with our cook, Daniel
  Boone, as commander-in-chief of the pots and pans and any Indian
  meat foolish enough to fall in her way."
  
  Then came the explosion. Powder would have cost less than the
  energy blown off there. The colonel stamped and swore, and sprang
  to his feet in opposition, and flung himself down in disgust.
  
  "Women and children!" he gasped. "Why do you sacrifice helpless
  innocent ones?"
  
  Just then Aunty Boone strode in carrying a log of wood as big as
  a man's body, which she deftly threw on the fire. As the flame
  blazed high she gave one look at the young officer sitting before
  it, and then walked out as silently and sturdily as she had
  entered. It was such a look as a Great Dane dog full of
  superiority and indifference might have given to a terrier puppy,
  and from where I lay I thought the military man's face took on a
  very strange expression.
  
  "I 'sacrifice my innocent ones,'" my uncle answered the query,
  "because they will be safer with me than anywhere else. Young as
  they are, there are some forces against them already."
  
  "Well, you are going to a perilous place, over a most perilous
  trail, in a most perilous time of national affairs, to meet such
  treacherously villainous men as New Mexico offers in her
  market-places right now? And all for the sake of the commerce of
  the plains? Why do you take such chances to do business with such
  people, Clarenden?"
  
  Esmond Clarenden had been staring at the burning logs in the big
  fireplace during this conversation. He turned now and faced the
  young army officer squarely as he said in that level tone that we
  children had learned long ago was final:
  
  "Colonel, I'd go straight to hell and do business with the devil
  himself if I had any business dealings with him."
  
  The colonel's face fell. Slowly he relighted his cigar, and
  leaned back again in his chair, and with that diplomacy that
  covers a skilful retreat he said, smilingly:
  
  "If any man west of the Missouri River ever could do that it
  would be you, Clarenden. By the holy Jerusalem, the military lost
  one grand commander when you chose a college instead of West
  Point, and the East lost one well-bred gentleman from its circles
  of commerce and culture when you elected to do business on the
  old Santa Fé Trail instead of Broadway. But I reckon the
  West will need just such men as you long after the frontier fort
  has become a central point in the country's civilized area. And,
  blast you, Clarenden, blast your very picture! No man can help
  liking you. Not even the devil if he had the chance. Not one man
  in ten thousand would dare to make that trip right now. You've
  got the courage of a colonel and the judgment of a judge. Go to
  Santa Fé! We may meet you coming back. If we do, and you
  need us, command us!"
  
  He gave a courteous salute, and the two began to talk of other
  things; among them the purposes that were bringing young men
  westward.
  
  "So Banney, right out of old blue-grassy Kentucky, is going to
  back out of here and go with you," the colonel remarked.
  
  "I've hired him to drive one team. It's a lark for him, but the
  army would be a lark just the same," Esmond Clarenden declared.
  "He says he is to kill rattlesnakes and Mexicans, while Jondo
  kills Indians and I sit tight on top of the bales of goods to
  keep the wind from blowing them away. And the boys are to be made
  bridle-wise, plains-broke for future freighting. That's
  all that life means to him right now."
  
  I do not know what else was said, nor what I heard and what I
  dreamed after that. If this journey meant a lark to a grown-up
  boy, it meant a pilgrimage through fairyland to a young boy like
  myself.
  
  And so the new life opened to us; and if the way was fraught with
  hardship and danger, it also taught us courage and endurance. Nor
  must we be measured by the boy life of to-day. Children lived the
  grown-up life then. It was all there was for them to live.
  
  The yellow Missouri boiled endlessly along by the foot of the
  bluff. The flag flapped broadly in the strong breeze that blew in
  from the west; the square log house--the only home we had ever
  known--looked forlornly after us, with its two front windows with
  blinds half drawn, like two half-closed, watching eyes; the
  cottonwoods and elms, the tiny storehouse--everything--grew
  suddenly very dear to us. The fort buildings throwing long
  shadows in the early morning, the level-topped forests east of
  the Missouri River, and the budding woodland that overdraped the
  ravines to the west, even in their silence, seemed like sentient
  things, loving us, as we loved them.
  
  We children had gone all over the place before sunrise and
  touched everything, in token of good-by; from some instinct
  tarrying longest at the flagpole, where we threw kisses to the
  great, beautiful banner high above us. Now, at the moment of
  leaving all these familiar things of all our years, a choking
  pain came to our throats. Mat's eyes filled with tears and she
  looked resolutely forward. Beverly and I clutched hands and shut
  our teeth together, determined to overcome this home-grip on our
  hearts. Aunty Boone sat in a corner of the deck as the boat swung
  out into the stream, her eyes dull and unseeing. She never spoke
  of her thoughts, but I have wondered often, since that big day of
  my young years, if she might not have recalled other voyages: the
  slave-ship putting out to sea with the African shores fading
  behind her; and the big river steamer at the New Orleans dock
  where brutal hands had hurled her from the deck into the
  dangerous floods of the Mississippi. This was her third voyage, a
  brief run from Fort Leavenworth to Independence. She was apart
  from her fellow-passengers as in the other two, but now nobody
  gave her a curse, nor a blow. 
    Whose furthest footsteps never strayed
      Beyond the village of his birth,
    Is but a lodger for the night
      In this old Wayside Inn of Earth.
  The broad green prairies of the West roll back in huge billows
  from the Missouri bluffs, and ripple gently on, to melt at last
  into the level grassy plains sloping away to the foothills of the
  Rocky Mountains. Up and down these land-waves, and across these
  ripples, the old Santa Fé Trail, the slender pathway of a
  wilderness-bridging commerce, led out toward the great
  Southwest--a thousand weary miles--to end at last, where the
  narrow thoroughfare reached the primitive hostelry at the corner
  of the plaza in the heart of the capital of a Spanish-Mexican
  demesne.
  
  It was a strange old highway, tying the western frontier of a
  new, self-reliant American civilization to the eastern limit of
  an autocratic European offshoot, grafted upon an ancient Indian
  stock of the Western Hemisphere. In language, nationality, social
  code, political faith, and prevailing spiritual creed, the
  terminals of this highway were as unlike as their geographical
  naming. For the trail began at Independence, in Missouri,
  and ended at Santa Fé, the "City of the Holy
  Faith," in New Mexico.
  
  The little trading town of Independence was a busy place in the
  frontier years of the Middle West. Ungentle and unlovely as it
  was, it was the great gateway between the river traffic on the
  one side, and the plains commerce of the far Southwest on the
  other. At the wharf at Westport, only a few miles away, the
  steamers left their cargoes of flour and bacon, coffee and
  calicoes, jewelry and sugar--whatever might have a market value
  to merchants beyond the desert lands. And here these same
  steamers took on furs, and silver bullion, and such other produce
  of the mountains and mines and open plains as the opulently laden
  caravans had toiled through long days, overland, to bring to the
  river's wharf.
  
  To-day the same old gateway stands as of yore. But it may be
  given only to men who have seen what I have seen, to know how
  that our Kansas City, the Beautiful, could grow up from that old
  wilderness outpost of commerce threescore and more years ago.
  
  The Clarenden store was the busiest spot in the center of this
  busy little town. Goods from both lines of trade entered and
  cleared here. In front of the building three Conestoga wagons
  with stout mule teams stood ready. A fourth wagon, the Dearborn
  carriage of that time, filled mostly with bedding, clothing, and
  the few luxuries a long camping-out journey may indulge in,
  waited only for a team, and we would be off to the plains.
  
  Jondo and Bill Banney were busy with the last things to be done
  before we started. Aunty Boone sat on a pile of pelts inside the
  store, smoking her pipe. Beverly and Mat stood waiting in the big
  doorway, while I sat on a barrel outside, because my ankle was
  still a bit stiff. A crowd had gathered before the store to see
  us off. It was not such a company as the soldier-men at the fort.
  The outlaw, the loafer, the drunkard, the ruffian, the gambler,
  and the trickster far outnumbered the stern-faced men of affairs.
  When the balance turns the other way the frontier disappears.
  Mingling with these was a pale-faced invalid now and then, with
  the well-appointed new arrivals from the East.
  
  "What are we waiting for, Bev?" I asked, as the street filled
  with men.
  
  "Got to get another span of moolies for our baby-cart. Uncle
  Esmond hadn't counted on the nurse and the cook going, you know,
  but he rigged this littler wagon out in a twinkle."
  
  "That's the family carriage, drawn by spirited steeds. Us
  children are to ride in it, with Daniel Boone to help with the
  driving," Mat added.
  
  Just then Esmond Clarenden appeared at the door.
  
  "How soon do you start, Clarenden?" some one in the crowd
  inquired.
  
  "Just as soon as I can get a pair of well-broken mules," he
  replied. "I'm looking for the man who has them to sell quick. I'm
  in a hurry."
  
  "What's your great rush?" a well-dressed stranger asked. "They
  tell me things look squally out West."
  
  "All the more reason for my being in a hurry then," Uncle Esmond
  returned.
  
  "They ain't but three men of you, is they? What do you want of
  more mules?" put in an inquisitive idler of the trouble-loving
  class who sooner or later turn arguments into bitter brawls.
  
  "These three children and the cook in there have this wagon. They
  are all fair drivers, if I can get the right mules," my uncle
  said.
  
  Women and children did not cross the plains in those days, nor
  could public welfare allow that so valuable a piece of property
  as Aunty Boone would be in the slave-market should be lost to
  commerce, and the storm of protest that followed would have
  overcome a less determined man. It was not on account of sympathy
  for the weak and defenseless that called out all this abuse, but
  the lawless spirit that stirs up a mob on the slightest
  excuse.
  
  I slid away to the door, where, with Mat and Beverly, I watched
  Esmond Clarenden, who was listening with his good-natured smile
  to all of that loud street talk.
  
  "No man's life is insurable in these troublesome times, with our
  troops right now down in Mexico," a suave Southern trader urged.
  "Better sell your slave and put that nice little gal in a
  boardin'-school somewhere in the South."
  
  "I'll give you a mighty good bargain for that wench, Clarenden.
  She might be worth a clare fortune in New Orleans. What d'ye say
  to a cool thousand?" another man declared, with a slow. Southern
  drawl.
  
  Aunty Boone took the pipe from her lips and looked at the
  stranger.
  
  "Y'would!" she grunted, stretching her big right hand across her
  lap, like a huge paw with claws ready underneath.
  
  "Them plains Injuns never was more hostile than they air
  right now. I just got in from the mountains an' I know. An'
  they're bein' set on by more hostile Mexican devils, and
  political intrigs," a bearded mountaineer trapper
  argued.
  
  "'Sides all that," interposed the suave Southern gentleman, "it's
  too early in the spring. Freightin's bound to be delayed by
  rains--and a nice little gal with only a nigger--" He was not
  quite himself, and he did not try to say more.
  
  "Seems like some of these gentlemen consider you are some sort of
  a fool," a tall, lean Yankee youth observed, as he listened to
  the babble.
  
  I had climbed back on the barrel again to see the crowd better,
  and I stared at the last speaker. His voice was not unpleasant,
  but he appeared pale and weak and spiritless in that company of
  tanned, rugged men. Evidently he was an invalid in search of
  health. We children had seen many invalids, from time to time, at
  the fort harmless folk, who came to fuss, and stayed to flourish,
  in our gracious land of the open air.
  
  "You are a dam' fool," roared a big drunken loafer from the edge
  of the crowd. "An' I'd lick you in a minnit if you das step into
  the middle of the street onct. Ornery sneak, to take innocent
  children into such perils. Come on out here, I tell ye!"
  
  A growl followed these words. Many men in that company were less
  than half sober, and utterly irresponsible.
  
  "Le's jes' hang the fool storekeepin' gent right now; an' make a
  free-fur-all holiday. I'll begin," the drunken ruffian bawled. He
  was of the sort that always leads a mob.
  
  The growl deepened, for blood-lust and drunkenness go
  together.
  
  Terrified for my uncle's safety, I stood breathless, staring at
  the evil-faced crowd of men going suddenly mad, without excuse.
  At the farthest edge of the insipient mob, sitting on his horse
  and watching my uncle's face intently, was the very Mexican whom
  I had twice seen at Fort Leavenworth. At the drunken rowdy's
  challenge, I thought that he half-lifted a threatening hand. But
  Esmond Clarenden only smiled, with a mere turn of his head as if
  in disapproval. In that minute I learned my first lesson in
  handling ruffians. I knew that my uncle was not afraid, and
  because of that my faith in his power to take care of himself
  came back.
  
  "I want to leave here in half an hour. If you have any good
  plains-broke mules you will sell for cash, I can do business with
  you right now. If not, the sooner you leave this place the
  better."
  
  He lifted his small, shapely hand unclenched, his good-natured
  smile and gentlemanly bearing unchanged, but his low voice was
  stronger than all the growls of the crowd that fell back like
  whipped dogs.
  
  As he spoke a horse-dealer, seeing the gathering before the
  store, came galloping up.
  
  "I'm your man. Money talks so I can understand it. Wait five
  minutes and ten seconds and I'll bring a whole strand of
  mules."
  
  A rattling of wagons and roar of voices at the far end of the
  street told of the arrival of a company coming in from the wharf
  at Westport, and the crowd whirled about and made haste toward
  the next scene of interest.
  
  Only two men remained behind, the tall New England youth and the
  Mexican on the farther side of the street sitting motionless on
  his horse. A moment later he was gone, and the street was empty
  save for the pale-faced invalid who had come over to the doorway
  where Mat and Beverly and I waited together.
  
  "Why don't you youngsters stay home with your mother, or is she
  going with you?" he asked, a gleam of interest lighting his dull
  face as he looked at Mat Nivers.
  
  "We haven't any of us got a mother," Mat replied, timidly,
  lifting her gray eyes to his.
  
  "Mother! Ain't you all one family?" the young man questioned in
  surprise.
  
  "No, we are three orphan children that Uncle Esmond has adopted
  all our lives, I guess." Beverly informed him.
  
  A wave of sympathy swept over his face.
  
  "You poor, lonely, unhappy cubs! You've never had a mother to
  love you!" he exclaimed, in kindly pity.
  
  "We aren't poor nor lonely nor unhappy. We have always had Uncle
  Esmond and we didn't need a mother," I exclaimed, earnestly.
  
  The young man stared at me as I spoke. "What's he, a bachelor or
  married man?" he inquired.
  
  "He couldn't be married and keep us, I reckon, and he's taking us
  with him so nothing will happen to us while he's gone. He's
  really truly Bev's uncle and mine, but he's just the same as
  uncle to Mat, who hasn't anybody else," I declared,
  enthusiastically. Uncle Esmond was my pride, and I meant that he
  should be fully appreciated.
  
  The Yankee gazed at all three of us, his eyes resting longest on
  Mat's bright face. The listlessness left his own that minute and
  a new light shone on his countenance. But when he turned to my
  uncle the seeming lack of all interest in living returned to his
  face again.
  
  "Say," he drawled, looking down at the stubborn little merchant
  from his slim six feet of altitude, "you are such a dam' fool as
  our friend, the tipsy one, says, that I believe I'll go along
  'cross the plains with you, if you'll let me. I've not got a
  darned thing to lose out there but a sick carcass that I'm pretty
  tired of looking after," he went on, wearily. "I reckon I might
  as well see the fun through if I never set a hoof on old Plymouth
  Rock again. My granddaddy was a minute-man at Lexington. Say"--he
  paused, and his sober face turned sad--"if all the bean-eaters
  who claim their grandpas were minute-men tell the truth, there
  wasn't no glory in winning at Lexington, there was such a
  tremendous sight of 'em. I've heard about eight million men
  myself make the same claim. But my granddad was the real article
  in the minute-men business. And I've always admired his grit most
  of any man in the world. He was about your shape, I reckon, from
  his picture that old man Copley got out. But, man! he wasn't a
  patchin' on your coat-sleeve. You are the preposterous-est
  unlawful-est infamous-est man I ever saw. It's just straight
  murder and suicide you are bent on, takin' this awful chance of
  plungin' into a warrin', snake-eatin' country like New Mexico,
  and I like you for it. Will you take me as an added burden? If
  you will, I'll deposit the price of my state-room right now. I've
  got only a little wad of money to get well on or die on. I can
  spend it either way--not much difference which. My name is Krane,
  Rex Krane, and in spite of such a floopsy name I hail from
  Boston, U.S.A."
  
  There was a hopeless sagging about the young man's mouth,
  redeemed only by the twinkle in his eye.
  
  Esmond Clarenden gave him a steady measuring look. He estimated
  men easily, and rarely failed to estimate truly.
  
  "I'll take you on your face value," he answered, "and if you want
  to turn back there will be a chance to do it out a hundred miles
  or more on the trail. You can try it that far and see how you
  like it. I'll furnish you your board. There are always plenty of
  bedrooms on the ground floor and in one of the wagons on rainy
  nights. You can take a shift driving a team now and then, and
  every able-bodied man has to do guard duty some of the time. You
  understand the dangers of the situation by this time. Here comes
  my man," he added, as the horse-dealer appeared, leading a string
  of mules up the street.
  
  "Here's your critters. Take your choice," the dealer urged.
  
  "I'll take the brown one," my uncle replied, promptly. And the
  bargain was closed.
  
  Mat and Beverly and I had already climbed into our wagon, and
  Aunty Boone appeared now at the store door, ready to join us.
  
  "You takin' that nigger?" the trader asked.
  
  "Yes. Lead out your best offer now. I want another mule," Esmond
  Clarenden replied.
  
  But the horse-merchant proved to be harder to deal with than the
  crowd had been. The foolish risk of losing so valuable a piece of
  property as Daniel Boone ought to be in the slave-market taxed
  his powers of understanding, profanity, and abuse.
  
  "Cussin' solid, an' in streaks," Aunty Boone chuckled, softly, as
  she listened to him unmoved.
  
  Equally unmoved was Esmond Clarenden. But his genial smile and
  diplomatic power of keeping still did not prevent him from being
  as set as the everlasting hills in his own purpose.
  
  "This here critter is all I'll sell you," the trader declared at
  last, pulling a big white-eyed dun animal out of the group. "An'
  nobody's goin' to drive her easy."
  
  "I'll take it," Uncle Esmond said, promptly, and the
  vicious-looking beast was brought to where Aunty Boone stood
  beside the wagon-tongue.
  
  It was a clear case of hate at first sight, for the mule began to
  plunge and squeal the instant it saw her. The woman hesitated not
  a minute, but lifting her big ham-like foot, she gave it one
  broadside kick that it must have mistaken for a thunderbolt, and
  in that low purr of hers, that might frighten a jungle tiger, she
  laid down the law of the journey.
  
  "You tote me to Santy Fee, or be a dead mule. Take yo' choice
  right now! Git up!"
  
  For fifty days the one dependable, docile servant of the
  Clarendens was the big dun mule, as gentle and kitten-like as a
  mule can be.
  
  And so, in spite of opposing conditions and rabble protest and
  doleful prophecy and the assurance of certain perils, we turned
  our faces toward the unfriendly land of the sunset skies, the
  open West of my childish day-dreams.
  
* * * * *
  The prairies were splashed with showers and the warm black soil
  was fecund with growths as our little company followed the
  windings of the old trail in that wondrous springtime of my own
  life's spring. There were eight of us: Clarenden, the merchant;
  Jondo, the big plainsman; Bill Banney, whom love of adventure had
  lured from the blue grass of Kentucky to the prairie-grass of the
  West; Rex Krane, the devil-may-care invalid from Boston; and the
  quartet of us in the "baby cab," as Beverly had christened the
  family wagon. Uncle Esmond had added three swift ponies to our
  equipment, which Jondo and Bill found time to tame for riding as
  we went along.
  
  We met wagon-trains, scouts, and solitary trappers going east,
  but so far as we knew our little company was the only
  westward-facing one on all the big prairies.
  
  "It's just like living in a fairy-story, isn't it, Gail?" Beverly
  said to me one evening, as we rounded a low hill and followed a
  deep little creek down to a shallow fording-place. "All we want
  is a real princess and a real giant. Look at these big trees all
  you can, for Jondo says pretty soon we won't see trees at
  all."
  
  "Maybe we'll have Indians instead of giants," I suggested. "When
  do you suppose we'll begin to see the real bad Indians;
  not just Osages and Kaws and sneaky little Otoes and Pot'wat'mies
  like we've seen all our lives?"
  
  "Sooner than we expect," Beverly replied. "Could Mat Nivers ever
  be a real princess, do you reckon?"
  
  "I know she won't," I said, firmly, the vision of that fateful
  day at Fort Leavenworth coming back as I spoke--the vision of
  level green prairies, with gray rocks and misty mountain peaks
  beyond. And somewhere, between green prairies and misty peaks, a
  sweet child face with big dark eyes looking straight into mine. I
  must have been a dreamer. And in my young years I wondered often
  why things should be so real to me that nobody else could ever
  understand.
  
  "I used to think long ago at the fort that I'd marry Mat some
  day," Beverly said, reminiscently, as if he were looking across a
  lapse of years instead of days.
  
  "So did I," I declared. "But I don't want to now. Maybe our
  princess will be at the end of the trail, Bev, a real princess.
  Still, I love Mat just as if she were my sister," I hastened to
  add.
  
  "So do I," Beverly responded, heartily.
  
  A little grain of pity for her loss of prestige was mingling with
  our subconscious feeling of a need for her help in the day of the
  giant, if not in the reign of the princess.
  
  We were trudging along behind our wagon toward the camping-place
  for the night, which lay beyond the crossing of the stream. We
  had lived much out of doors at Fort Leavenworth, but the real out
  of doors of this journey was telling on us already in our sturdy,
  up-leaping strength, to match each new hardship. We ate like
  wolves, slept like dead things, and forgot what it meant to be
  tired. And as our muscles hardened our minds expanded. We were no
  longer little children. Youth had set its seal upon us on the day
  when our company had started out from Independence toward the
  great plains of the Middle West. Little care had we for the
  responsibility and perils of such a journey; and because our
  thoughts were buoyant our bodies were vigorous.
  
  Our camp that night was under wide-spreading elm-trees whose
  roots struck deep in the deep black loam. After supper Mat and
  Beverly went down to fish in the muddy creek. Fishing was
  Beverly's sport and solace everywhere. I was to follow them as
  soon as I had finished my little chores. The men were scattered
  about the valley and the camp was deserted. Something in the
  woodsy greenness of the quiet spot made it seem like home to
  me--the log house among the elms and cottonwoods at the fort. As
  I finished my task I wondered how a big, fine house such as I had
  seen in pictures would look nestled among these beautiful trees.
  I wanted a home here some day, a real home. It was such a
  pleasant place even in its loneliness.
  
  To the west the ground sloped up gently toward the horizon-line,
  shutting off the track of the trail beyond the ridge. A sudden
  longing came over me to see what to-morrow's journey would offer,
  bringing back the sense of being shut in that had made me
  lose interest in fishes that wouldn't play leap-frog on the
  sand-bars. And with it came a longing to be alone.
  
  Instead of following Mat and Beverly to the creek I went out to
  the top of the swell and stood long in the April twilight,
  looking beyond the rim of the valley toward the darkening
  prairies with the great splendor of the sunset's afterglow
  deepening to richest crimson above the purpling shadows.
  
  Oh, many a time since that night have I looked upon the Kansas
  plains and watched the grandeur of coloring that only the
  Almighty artist ever paints for human eyes. And always I come
  back, in memory, to that April evening. The soul of a man must
  have looked out through the little boy's eyes on that night, and
  a new mile-stone was set there, making a landmark in my life
  trail. For when I turned toward the darkening east and the
  shadowy camp where the evening fires gleamed redly in the dusk, I
  knew then, as well as I know now, if I could only have put it
  into words, that I was not the same little boy who had run up the
  long slope to see what lay next in to-morrow's journey.
  
  I walked slowly back to the camp and sat down beside Esmond
  Clarenden.
  
  "What are you thinking about, Gail?" he asked, as I stared at the
  fire.
  
  "I wish I knew what would happen next," I replied.
  
  Jondo was lying at full length on the grass, his elbow bent, and
  his hand supporting his head. What a wonderful head it was with
  its crown of softly curling brown hair!
  
  "I wonder if we have done wrong by the children, Clarenden," the
  big plainsman said, slowly.
  
  Uncle Esmond shook his head as he replied:
  
  "I can't believe it. They may not be safe with us, but we know
  they would not have been safe without us."
  
  Just then Beverly and Mat came racing up from the creek bank.
  
  "Let us stay up awhile," Mat pleaded. "Maybe we'll be less
  trouble some of these days if we hear you talk about what's
  coming."
  
  "They are right, Jondo. Gail here wants to know what is coming
  next, and Mat wants a share in our councils. What do you want,
  Beverly?"
  
  "I want to practise shooting on horseback. I can hit a mark now
  standing still. I want to do it on the run," Beverly replied.
  
  I can see now the earnest look in Esmond Clarenden's eyes as he
  listened. I've seen it in a mother's eyes more than once since
  then, as she kissed her eldest-born and watched it toddle off
  alone on its first day of school; or held her peace, when,
  breaking home ties, the son of her heart bade her good-by to
  begin life for himself in the world outside.
  
  The last light of day was lost over the western ridge. The moon
  was beginning to swell big and yellow through the trees. Twilight
  was darkening into night. Bill Banney and Rex Krane had joined us
  now, for every hour we were learning to keep closer together.
  Jondo threw more wood on the fire, and we nestled about it in
  snug, homey fashion as if we were to listen to a
  fairy-tale--three children slipping fast out of childhood into
  the stern, hard plains life that tried men's souls. As we
  listened, the older men told of the perils as well as the
  fascinating adventures of trail life, that we might understand
  what lay before us in the unknown days. And then they told us
  stories of the plains, and of the quaint historic things of Santa
  Fé; of El Palacio, home of all the Governors of New
  Mexico; an Indian pueblo first, it may have been standing there
  when William the Norman conquered Harold of the Saxon dynasty of
  England; or further back when Charlemagne was hanging heathen by
  the great great gross to make good Christians of them; or even
  when old Julius Cæsar came and saw and conquered, on either
  side of the Rubicon, this same old structure may have sheltered
  rulers in a world unknown. They told us of the old, old church of
  San Miguel, a citadel for safety from the savage foes of Spain, a
  sanctuary ever for the sinful and sorrowing ones. And of the
  Plaza--sacred ground whereon by ceremonial form had been
  established deeds that should change the destinies of tribes and
  shape the trend of national pride and power in a new continent.
  And of La Garita, place of execution, facing whose blind wall the
  victims of the Spanish rule made their last stand, and, helpless,
  fell pierced by the bullets of the Spanish soldiery.
  
  And we children looked into the dying camp-fire and builded there
  our own castles in Spain, and hoped that that old flag to which
  we had thrown good-by kisses such a little while ago would one
  day really wave above old Santa Fé and make it ours to
  keep. For, young as we were, the flag already symbolized to us
  the protecting power of a nation strong and gentle and
  generous.
  
  "The first and last law of the trail is to 'hold fast,'" Jondo
  said, as we broke up the circle about the camp-fire.
  
  "If you can keep that law we will take you into full partnership
  to-night," Esmond Clarenden added, and we knew that he meant what
  he said. 
  A stone's throw from either hand,
  From that well-ordered road we tread,
  And all the world is wide and strange.
                                  --KIPLING
"We shall come to the parting of the ways to night if we make
  good time, Krane," Esmond Clarenden said to the young Bostonian,
  as we rested at noon beside the trait. "To-night we camp at
  Council Grove and from there on there is no turning back. I had
  hoped to find a big crowd waiting to start off from that place.
  But everybody we have met coming in says that there are no
  freighters going west now. Usually there is no risk in coming
  alone from Council Grove to the Missouri River, and there is
  always opportunity for company at this end of the trail."
  
  We were sitting in a circle under the thin shade of some
  cottonwood-trees beside a little stream; the air of noon, hot
  above our heads, was tempered with a light breeze from the
  southwest. As my uncle spoke, Rex glanced over at Mat Nivers,
  sitting beside him, and then gazed out thoughtfully across the
  stream. I had never thought her pretty before. But now her face,
  tanned by the sun and wind, had a richer glow on cheek and lip.
  Her damp hair lay in little wavelets about her temples, and her
  big, sunny, gray eyes were always her best feature.
  
  Girls made their own dresses on the frontier, and I suppose that
  anywhere else Mat would have appeared old-fashioned in the neat,
  comfortable little gowns of durable gingham and soft woolen
  stuffs that she made for herself. But somehow in all that long
  journey she was the least travel-soiled of the whole party.
  
  At my uncle's words she looked up questioningly and I saw the
  bloom deepen on her cheek as she met the young man's eyes.
  Somebody else saw that shadow of a blush--Bill Banney lying on
  the ground beside me, and although he pulled his hat cautiously
  over his face, I thought he was listening for the answer.
  
  The young New-Englander stared long at the green prairie before
  he spoke. I never knew whether it was ignorance, or a lack of
  energy, that was responsible for his bad grammar in those early
  days, for Rex Krane was no sham invalid. The lines on his young
  face told of suffering, and the thin, bony hands showed bodily
  weakness. At length he turned to my uncle.
  
  "I started out sort of reckless on this trip," he said, slowly.
  "I'm nearly twenty and never been worth a dang to anybody
  anywhere on God's earth; so I thought I might as well be where
  things looked interestin'. But"--he hesitated--"I'm gettin' a lot
  stronger every day, a whole lot stronger. Mebby I'd be of some
  use afterwhile--I don't know, though. I reckon I'd better wait
  till we get to that Council Grove place. Sounds like a nice
  locality to rest and think in. Are you goin' on, anyhow,
  Clarenden, crowd or no crowd?"
  
  "Though the heavens fall," my uncle answered, simply.
  
  Jondo had turned quickly to hear this reply and a great light
  leaped into his deep-set blue eyes. I glanced over at Aunty
  Boone, sitting apart from us, as she ever chose to do, her own
  eyes dull, as they always were when she saw keenest; and I
  remembered how, back at Fort Leavenworth, she had commented on
  this journey, saying: "They tote together always, an' they're
  totin' now." Child though I was, I felt that a something more
  than the cargo of goods was leading my uncle to Santa Fé.
  What I did not understand was his motive for taking Beverly and
  Mat and me with him. I had been satisfied before just to go, but
  now I wanted very much to know why I was going.
  
  Council Grove by the Neosho River was the end of civilization for
  the freighter. Beyond it the wilderness spread its untamed
  lengths, and excepting Bent's Fort far up the Arkansas River on
  the line of the first old trail, rarely followed now, it held not
  a sign of civilization for the traveler until he should reach the
  first outposts of the Mexican almost in the shadow of Santa
  Fé. It is no wonder that wagon-trains mobilized here,
  waiting for an increase in numbers before they dared to start on
  westward. And now there were no trains waiting for our coming.
  Only a gripping necessity could have led a man like Esmond
  Clarenden to take the trail alone in the certain perils of the
  plains during the middle '40's. I did not know until long
  afterward how brave was the loving heart that beat in that little
  merchant's bosom. A devotee of ease and refinement, he walked the
  prairie trails unafraid, and made the desert serve his will.
  
  The dusk of evening had fallen long before we pitched camp that
  night under the big oak-trees in the Neosho River valley outside
  of the little trading-post. Up in the village a light or two
  gleamed faintly. From somewhere in the darkness came the sound of
  a violin, mingling with loud talking and boisterous laughter in a
  distant drinking-den. It would be some time until moon-rise, and
  the shadowy places thickened to blackness.
  
  In fair weather all of us except Mat Nivers slept in the open. On
  stormy nights the younger men occupied one of the wagons, Jondo
  and Beverly another, and my uncle and myself the third. Mat had
  the "baby-cab" as Beverly called it, with Aunty Boone underneath
  it. The ground was Aunty Boone's kingdom. She sat upon it, ate
  from it, slept on it, and seemed no more soiled than a snake
  would be by the contact with it.
  
  "Some day I goes plop under it, and be ground myself," she used
  to say. "Good black soil I make, too," she always added, with her
  low chuckle.
  
  To-night we were all in the wagons, for the spring rains had made
  the Neosho valley damp and muddy. I was just on the edge of
  dreamless slumber when a low voice that seemed to cut the
  darkness caught my ear.
  
  "Cla'nden! Cla'nden!" it hissed, softly.
  
  My uncle slipped noiselessly out to where Aunty Boone stood, her
  head so near to the canvas wagon-cover inside of which I lay that
  I could hear all that was said.
  
  She was always a night prowler. What other women learn now from
  the evening newspaper or from neighborly gossip she, being
  created without a sense of fear, went forth in her time and
  gathered at first hand.
  
  "I been prospectin' up 'round the saloon, Cla'nden. They's a
  nasty mess of Mexicans in town, all gettin' drunk."
  
  Then I heard a faint rustle of the bushes and I knew that the
  woman was slipping away to her place under the wagon. I
  remembered the Mexican whom I had last seen across the street
  from the Clarenden store in Independence. These were bad
  Mexicans, as Aunty Boone had said, and that man had seemed in a
  silent way a friend of my uncle. I wondered what would happen
  next. It soon happened. My uncle Esmond came inside the wagon and
  called, softly:
  
  "Gail, wake up."
  
  "I'm awake," I replied, in a half-whisper, as alert as a
  mystery-loving boy could be.
  
  "Slip over to Jondo and tell him there are Mexicans in town, and
  I'm going across the river to see what's up. Tell him to wake up
  everybody and have them stay in the wagons till I get back."
  
  He slid away and the shadows ate him. I followed as far as
  Jondo's wagon, and gave my message. As I came back something
  seemed to slip away before me and disappear somewhere. I dived
  into our wagon and crouched down, waiting with beating heart for
  Uncle Esmond to come back. Once I thought I heard the sound of a
  horse's feet on the trail to the eastward, but I was not
  sure.
  
  All was still and black in the little camp for a long time, and
  then Esmond Clarenden and Rex Krane crept into the wagon and
  dropped the flap behind them.
  
  "Krane, have you decided about this trip yet?" Uncle Esmond
  asked. "If not, you'd better get right up into town and forget
  us. You can't be too quick about it, either."
  
  "Ain't we going to stay here a few days? Why do you want to know
  to-night?"
  
  Rex Krane, Yankee-like, met the query with a query.
  
  "Because there's a pretty strong party of Mexican desperadoes
  here who are going on east, and they mean trouble for somebody. I
  shouldn't care to meet them with our strength alone. They are all
  pretty drunk now and getting wilder every minute. Listen to
  that!"
  
  A yell across the river broke the night stillness.
  
  "There is no telling how soon they may be over here, hunting for
  us. We must get by them some way, for I cannot risk a fight with
  them here. Which chance will you choose, the possibility of being
  overtaken by that Mexican gang going east, or the perils of the
  plains and the hostility of New Mexico right now? It's about as
  broad one way as the other for safety, with staying here for a
  time as the only middle course at present. But that is a
  perfectly safe one for you."
  
  "I am going on with you," Rex Krane said, with his slow Yankee
  drawl. "When danger gets close, then I scatter. There's more
  chance in seven hundred miles to miss somethin' than there is in
  a hundred and fifty. And even a half-invalid might be of some
  use. Say, Clarenden, how'd you get hold of this information? You
  turned in before I did."
  
  "Daniel Boone went out on scout duty--self-elected. You know she
  considers that the earth was made for her to walk on when she
  chooses to use it that way. She spied trouble ahead and came
  back, and gave me the key to the west door of Council Grove so I
  could get out early," my uncle replied.
  
  "I reckoned as much," Rex declared.
  
  In the dark I could feel Esmond Clarenden give a start.
  
  "What do you mean?" he inquired.
  
  "Oh, I saw the fat lady start out, so I followed her, but I
  located the nest of Mexicans before she did, and got a good deal
  out of their drunken jargon. And then I cat-footed it back after
  a snaky-looking, black Spaniard that seemed to be following her.
  There were three of us in a row, but the devil hasn't got the
  hindmost one, not yet--that's me."
  
  "You saw some one follow Daniel into camp?" my uncle broke in,
  anxiously. But no threatening peril ever hurried Rex Krane's
  speech.
  
  "Yes, and I also followed some one; but I lost him in this
  ink-well of a hole, and I was waitin' till he left so I could put
  the cat out, an' shut the door, when you cut across the river.
  I've been sittin' round now to see that nothin' broke loose till
  you got back. Meantime, the thing sort of faded away. I heard a
  horse gallopin' off east, too. Mebby they are outpostin' to
  surround our retreat. I didn't wake Bill. He's got no more
  imagination than Bev. If I had needed anybody I'd have stirred up
  Gail, here."
  
  In the dark I fairly swelled with pride, and from that moment Rex
  Krane was added to my little list of heroes that had been made
  up, so far, of Esmond Clarenden and Jondo and any army officer
  above the rank of captain.
  
  "Krane, you'll do. I thought I had your correct measure back in
  Independence," Uncle Esmond said, heartily. "As to the boys, I
  can risk them; they are Clarendens. My anxiety is for the little
  orphan girl. She is only a child. I couldn't leave her behind us,
  and I must not let a hair of her head be harmed."
  
  "She's a right womanly little thing," Rex Krane said, carelessly;
  but I wondered if in the dark his eyes might not have had the
  same look they had had at noon when he turned to Mat sitting
  beside my uncle. Maybe back at Boston he had a little sister of
  his own like her. Anyhow, I decided then that men's words and
  faces do not always agree.
  
  Again the roar of voices broke out, and we scrambled from the
  wagon and quickly gathered our company together.
  
  "What did you find out?" Jondo asked.
  
  "We must clear out of here right away and get through to the
  other side of town and be off by daylight without anybody knowing
  it. They are a gang of ugly Mexicans who would not let us cross
  the river if we should wait till morning. They have already sent
  a spy over here, and they are waiting for him to report."
  
  "Where is he now?" Bill Banney broke in.
  
  "They's two of him--I know there is," Rex Krane declared. "One of
  him went east, to cut us off I reckon; an' t'other faded into
  nothin' toward the river. Kind of a double deal, looks to
  me."
  
  Both men looked doubtingly at the young man; but without further
  words, Jondo took command, and we knew that the big plainsman
  would put through whatever Esmond Clarenden had planned. For
  Aunty Boone was right when she said, "They tote together."
  
  "We must snake these wagons through town, as though we didn't
  belong together, but we mustn't get too far apart, either. And
  remember now, Clarenden, if anybody has to stop and visit with
  'em, I'll do it myself," Jondo said.
  
  "Why can't we ride the ponies? We can go faster and scatter
  more," I urged, as we hastily broke camp.
  
  "He is right, Esmond. They haven't been riding all their lives
  for nothing," Jondo agreed, as Esmond Clarenden turned
  hesitatingly toward Mat Nivers.
  
  In the dim light her face seemed bright with courage. It is no
  wonder that we all trusted her. And trust was the large commodity
  of the plains in those days, when even as children we ran to meet
  danger with courageous daring.
  
  "You must cross the river letting the ponies pick their own
  ford," Jondo commanded us. "Then go through to the ridge on the
  northwest side of town. Keep out of the light, and if anybody
  tries to stop you, ride like fury for the ridge."
  
  "Lemme go first," Aunty Boone interposed. "Nobody lookin' for me
  this side of purgatory. 'Fore they gets over their surprise I'll
  be gone. Whoo-ee!"
  
  The soft exclamation had a breath of bravery in it that stirred
  all of us.
  
  "You are right, Daniel. Lead out. Keep to the shadows. If you
  must run make your mules do record time," Uncle Esmond said.
  
  "You'll find me there when you stop," Rex Krane declared. No sick
  man ever took life less seriously. "I'm goin' ahead to
  John-the-Baptist this procession and air the parlor
  bedrooms."
  
  "Krane, you are an invalid and a fool. You'd better ride in the
  wagon with me," Bill Banney urged.
  
  "Mebby I am. Don't throw it up to me, but I'm no darned coward,
  and I'm foot-loose. It's my job to give the address of welcome
  over t'other side of this Mexican settlement."
  
  The tall, thin young man slouched his cap carelessly on his head
  and strode away toward the river. Youth was reckless in those
  days, and the trail was the home of dramatic opportunity. But
  none of us had dreamed hitherto of Rex Krane's degree of daring
  and his stubborn will.
  
  The big yellow moon was sailing up from the east; the Neosho
  glistened all jet and silver over its rough bed; the great
  shadowy oaks looked ominously after us as we moved out toward the
  threatening peril before us. Slowly, as though she had time to
  kill, Aunty Boone sent the brown mule and trusty dun down to the
  river's rock-bottom ford. Slowly and unconcernedly she climbed
  the slope and passed up the single street toward the saloon she
  had already "prospected." Pausing a full minute, she swung toward
  a far-off cabin light to the south, jogging over the rough ground
  noisily. The door of the drinking-den was filled with dark faces
  as the crowd jostled out. Just a lone wagon making its way
  somewhere about its own business, that was all.
  
  As the crowd turned in again three ponies galloped up the street
  toward the slope leading out to the high level prairies beyond
  the Neosho valley. But who could guess how furiously three young
  hearts beat, and how tightly three pairs of young hands clutched
  the bridle reins as we surged forward, forgetting the advice to
  keep in the shadow.
  
  Just after we had crossed the river, a man on horseback fell in
  behind us. We quickened our speed, but he gained on us. Before we
  reached the saloon he was almost even with us, keeping well in
  the shadow all the while. In the increasing moonlight, making
  everything clear to the eye, I gave one quick glance over my
  shoulder and saw that the horseman was a Mexican. I have lived a
  life so fraught with danger that I should hardly remember the
  feeling of fear but for the indelible imprint of that one
  terrified minute in the moonlit street of Council Grove.
  
  Two ruffians on watch outside the saloon sprang up with yells.
  The door burst open and a gang of rowdies fairly spilled out
  around us. We three on our ponies had the instinctive security on
  horseback of children born to the saddle, else we should never
  have escaped from the half-drunken crew. I recall the dust of
  striking hoofs, the dark forms dodging everywhere, the Mexican
  rider keeping between us and the saloon door, and most of all I
  remember one glimpse of Mat Nivers's face with big, staring eyes,
  and firm-set mouth; and I remember my fleeting impression that
  she could take care of herself if we could; and over all a sudden
  shadow as the moon, in pity of our terror, hid its face behind a
  tiny cloud.
  
  When it shone out again we were dashing by separate ways up the
  steep slope to the west ridge, but, strangely enough, the Mexican
  horseman with a follower or two had turned away from us and was
  chasing off somewhere out of sight.
  
  Up on top of the bluff, with Rex Krane and Aunty Boone, we
  watched and waited. The wooded Neosho valley full of inky
  blackness seemed to us like a bottomless gorge of terror which no
  moonlight could penetrate. We strained our ears to catch the
  rattle of the wagons, but the noise from the saloon, coming
  faintly now and then, was all the sound we could hear save the
  voices of the night rising up from the river, and the whisperings
  of the open prairie to the west.
  
  In that hour Rex Krane became our good angel.
  
  "Keep the law, 'Hold fast'! You made a splendid race of it, and
  if Providence made that fellow lose you gettin' out, and led him
  and his gang sideways from you, I reckon she will keep on takin'
  care of you till Clarenden resumes control, so don't you
  worry."
  
  But for his brave presence the terror of that lonely watch would
  have been harder than the peril of the street, for he seemed more
  like a gentle mother than the careless, scoffing invalid of the
  trail.
  
  Midnight came, and the chill of midnight. We huddled together in
  our wagon and still we waited. Down in the village the lights
  still burned, and angry voices with curses came to our ears at
  intervals.
  
  Meantime the three men across the river moved cautiously, hoping
  that we were safe on the bluff, and knowing that they dared not
  follow us too rapidly. The wagons creaked and the harness rattled
  noisily in the night stillness, as slowly, one by one, they
  lumbered through the darkness across the river and up the bank to
  the village street. Here they halted and grouped together.
  
  "We must hide out and wait, Clarenden," Jondo counciled. "I
  hope the ponies and the wagon ahead are safe, but they stirred
  things up. If we go now we'll all be caught."
  
  The three wagons fell apart and halted wide of the trail where
  the oak-trees made the blackest shade. The minutes dragged out
  like hours, and the anxiety for the unprotected group on the
  bluff made the three men frantic to hurry on. But Jondo's
  patience equaled his courage, and he always took the least risk.
  It was nearly midnight, and every noise was intensified. If a
  mule but moved it set up a clatter of harness chains that seemed
  to fill the valley.
  
  At last a horseman, coming suddenly from somewhere, rode swiftly
  by each shadow-hidden wagon, half pausing at the sound of the
  mules stamping in their places, and then he hurried up the
  street.
  
  "Three against the crowd. If we must fight, fight to kill," Jondo
  urged, as the ready firearms were placed for action.
  
  In a minute or two the crew broke out of the saloon and filled
  the moonlit street, all talking and swearing in broken
  Spanish.
  
  "Not come yet!"
  
  "Pedro say they be here to-morrow night!" "We wait till to-morrow
  night!"
  
  And with many wild yells they fell back for a last debauch in the
  drinking-den.
  
  "I don't understand it," Jondo declared. "That fellow who rode by
  here ought to have located every son of us, but if they want to
  wait till to-morrow night it suits me."
  
  An hour later, when the village was in a dead sleep, three wagons
  slowly pulled up the long street and joined the waiting group at
  the top, and the crossing over was complete.
  
  Dawn was breaking as our four wagons, followed by the ponies,
  crept away in the misty light. As we trailed off into the unknown
  land, I looked back at the bluff below which nestled the last
  houses we were to see for seven hundred miles. And there,
  outlined against the horizon, a Mexican stood watching us. I had
  seen the same man one day riding up from the ravine southwest of
  Fort Leavenworth. I had seen him dashing toward the river the
  next day. I had watched him sitting across the street from the
  Clarenden store in Independence.
  
  I wondered if it might have been this man who had hung about our
  camp the evening before, and if it might have been this same man
  who rode between us and the saloon mob, leading the crowd after
  him and losing us on the side of the bluff. And as we had eluded
  the Council Grove danger, I wondered what would come next, and if
  he would be in it. 
  "So I draw the world together, link by link."
                                          --KIPLING.
Day after day we pushed into the unknown wilderness. No
  wagon-trains passed ours moving eastward. No moccasined track in
  the dust of the trail gave hint of any human presence near. Where
  to-day the Pullman car glides in smooth comfort, the old Santa
  Fé Trail lay like a narrow brown ribbon on the green
  desolation of Nature's unconquered domain. Out beyond the region
  of long-stemmed grasses, into the short-grass land, we pressed
  across a pathless field-of-the-cloth-of-green, gemmed with
  myriads of bright blossoms--broad acres on acres that the young
  years of a coming century should change into great wheat-fields
  to help fill the granaries of the world. How I reveled in
  it--that far-stretching plain of flower-starred verdure! It was
  my world--mine, unending, only softening out into lavender mists
  that rimmed it round in one unbroken fold of velvety vapor.
  
  At last we came to the Arkansas River--flat-banked,
  sand-bottomed, wide, wandering, impossible thing--whose shallow
  waters followed aimlessly the line of least resistance, back and
  forth across its bed. Rivers had meant something to me. The big
  muddy Missouri for Independence and Fort Leavenworth, that its
  steamers might bring the soldiers, and my uncle's goods to their
  places. The little rivers that ran into the big ones, to feed
  their currents for down-stream service. The creeks, that boys
  might wade and swim and fish, else Beverly would have lived
  unhappily all his days. But here was a river that could neither
  fetch nor carry. Nobody lived near it, and it had no deep waters
  like our beloved, ugly old Missouri. I loved the level prairies,
  but I didn't like that river, somehow. I felt exposed on its
  blank, treeless borders, as if I stood naked and defenseless,
  with no haven of cover from the enemies of the savage plains.
  
  The late afternoon was hot, the sky was dust-dimmed, the south
  wind feverish and strength-sapping. At dawn we had sighted a peak
  against the western horizon. We were approaching it now--a single
  low butte, its front a sheer stone bluff facing southward toward
  the river, it lifted its head high above the silent plains; and
  to the north it stretched in a long gentle slope back to a
  lateral rim along the landscape. The trail crept close about its
  base, as if it would cling lovingly to this one shadow-making
  thing amid all the open, blaring, sun-bound miles stretching out
  on either side of it.
  
  As Beverly and I were riding in front of Mat's wagon, of which we
  had elected ourselves the special guardians, Rex Krane came up
  alongside Bill Banney's team in front of us. The young men were
  no such hard-and-fast friends as Beverly and I. For some reason
  they had little to say to each other.
  
  "Is that what you call Pike's Peak, Bill?" Rex asked.
  
  "No, the mountains are a month away. That's Pawnee Rock, and I'll
  breathe a lot freer when we get out of sight of that infernal
  thing," Bill replied.
  
  "What's its offense?" Rex inquired.
  
  "It's the peak of perdition, the bottomless pit turned inside
  out," Bill declared.
  
  "I don't see the excuse for a rock sittin' out here, sayin'
  nothin', bein' called all manner of unpleasant names," the young
  Bostonian insisted.
  
  "Well, I reckon you'd find one mighty quick if you ever heard the
  soldiers at Fort Leavenworth talk about it once. All the
  plainsmen dread it. Jondo says more men have been killed right
  around this old stone Sphinx than any other one spot in North
  America, outside of battle-fields."
  
  "Happy thought! Do their ghosts rise up and walk at midnight?
  Tell me more," Rex urged.
  
  "Nobody walks. Everybody runs. There was a terrible Indian fight
  here once; the Pawnees in the king-row, and all the hosts of the
  Midianites, and Hivites, and Jebusites, Kiowa, Comanche, and Kaw,
  rag-tag and bobtail, trying to get 'em out. I don't know who won,
  but the citadel got christened Pawnee Rock. It took a fountain
  filled with blood to do it, though."
  
  Rex Krane gave a long whistle.
  
  "I believe Bill is trying to scare him, Bev," I murmured.
  
  "I believe he's just precious wasting time," Beverly replied.
  
  "And so," Bill continued, "it came to be a sort of rock of
  execution where romances end and they die happily ever afterward.
  The Indians get up there and, being able to read fine print with
  ease as far away as either seacoast, they can watch any
  wagon-train from the time it leaves Council Grove over east to
  Bent's Fort on the Purgatoire Creek out west; and having counted
  the number of men, and the number of bullets in each man's pouch,
  they slip down and jump on the train as it goes by. If the men
  can make it to beat them to the top of the rock, as they do
  sometimes, they can keep the critters off, unless the Indians are
  strong enough to keep them up there and sit around and wait till
  they starve for water, and have to come down. It's a grim old
  fortress, and never needs a garrison. Indians or white men up
  there, sometimes they defend and sometimes attack. But it's a bad
  place always, and on account of having our little girl along--"
  Bill paused. "A fellow gets to see a lot of country out here," he
  added.
  
  "Banney, just why didn't you join the army? You'd have a chance
  to see a lot more of the country, if this Mexican War goes on,"
  Rex Krane said, meditatively.
  
  "I'd rather be my own captain and order myself to the front, and
  likewise command my rear-guard to retire, whenever I doggone
  please," Bill said. "It isn't the soldiers that'll do this
  country the most good. They are useful enough when they are
  useful, Lord knows. And we'll always need a decent few of 'em
  around to look after women and children, and invalids," he went
  on. "I tell you, Krane, it's men like Clarenden that's going to
  make these prairies worth something one of these days. The men
  who build up business, not them that shoot and run to or from.
  That's what the West's got to have. I'm through going crazy about
  army folks. One man that buys and sells, if he gives good weight
  and measure, is, himself, a whole regiment for civilization."
  
  Just then Jondo halted the train, and we gathered about him.
  
  "Clarenden, let's pitch camp at the rock. The horses are dead
  tired and this wind is making them nervous. There's a storm due
  as soon as it lays a bit, and we would be sort of protected here.
  A tornado's a giant out in this country, you know."
  
  "This tavern doesn't have a very good name with the traveling
  public, does it, Clarenden?" Rex Krane suggested.
  
  "Not very," my uncle replied. "But in case of trouble, the top of
  it isn't a bad place to shoot from."
  
  "What if the other fellow gets there first?" Bill Banney
  inquired.
  
  "We can run from here as easily as any other place," Jondo
  assured us. "I haven't seen a sign of Indians yet. But we've got
  to be careful. This point has a bad reputation, and I naturally
  begin to feel Indians in the air as soon as I come in
  sight of it. If we need the law of the trail anywhere, we need it
  here," he admonished.
  
  Beverly and I drew close together. We were in the land of
  bad Indians, but nothing had happened to us yet, and we
  could not believe that any danger was near us now, although we
  were foolishly half hoping that there might be, for the
  excitement of it.
  
  "There's no place in a million miles for anybody to hide, Bill.
  Where would Jondo's Indians be?" Beverly asked, as we were
  getting into camp order for the night.
  
  Beverly's disposition to demand proof was as strong here as it
  had been in the matter of rivers turning their courses, and
  fishes playing leap-frog.
  
  "They might be behind that ridge out north, and have a scout
  lying flat on the top of old Pawnee Rock, up there, lookin'
  benevolently down at us over the rim of his spectacles right
  now," Bill replied, as he pulled the corral ropes out of the
  wagon.
  
  "What makes you think so?" I asked, eagerly.
  
  "What Jondo said about his feeling Indians, I guess, but
  he reads these prairie trails as easy as Robinson Crusoe read
  Friday's footprints in the sand, and he hasn't read anything in
  'em yet. Indians don't fight at night, anyhow. That's one good
  thing. Get hold of that rope, Bev, and pull her up tight," Bill
  replied.
  
  Every night our four wagons in camp made a hollow square, with
  space enough allowed at the corners to enlarge the corral inside
  for the stock. These corners were securely roped across from
  wagon to wagon. To-night, however, the corral space was reduced
  and the quartet of vehicles huddled closer together.
  
  At dusk the hot wind came sweeping in from the southwest, a wild,
  lashing fury, swirling the sand in great spirals from the river
  bed. Our fire was put out and the blackness of midnight fell upon
  us. The horses were restless and the mules squealed and stamped.
  All night the very spirit of fear seemed to fill the air.
  
  Just before daybreak a huge black storm-cloud came boiling up out
  of the southwest, with a weird yellow band across the sky before
  it. Overhead the stars shed a dim light on the shadowy face of
  the plains. A sudden whisper thrilled the camp, chilling our
  hearts within us.
  
  "Indians near!" We all knew it in a flash.
  
  Jondo, on guard, had caught the sign first. Something creeping
  across the trail, not a coyote, for it stood upright a moment,
  then bent again, and was lost in the deep gloom. Jondo had
  shifted to another angle of the outlook, had seen it again, and
  again at a third point. It was encircling the camp. Then all of
  us, except Jondo, began to see moving shapes. He saw nothing for
  a long time, and our spirits rose again.
  
  "You must have been mistaken, Jondo," Rex Krane ventured, as he
  stared into the black gloom. "Maybe it was just this infernal
  wind. It's one darned sea-breeze of a zephyr."
  
  "I've crossed the plains before. I wasn't mistaken," the big
  plainsman replied. "If I had been, you'd still see it. The
  trouble is that it is watching now. Everybody lay low. It will
  come to life again. I hope there's only one of it."
  
  We had hardly moved after the first alarm, except to peer about
  and fancy that dark objects were closing in upon us.
  
  It did come to life again. This time on Jondo's side of the camp.
  Something creeping near, and nearer.
  
  The air was motionless and hot above us, the upper heavens were
  beginning to be threshed across by clouds, and the silence hung
  like a weight upon us. Then suddenly, just beyond the camp, a
  form rose from the ground, stood upright, and stretched out both
  arms toward us. And a low cry, "Take me. I die," reached our
  ears.
  
  Still Jondo commanded silence. Indians are shrewd to decoy their
  foes out of the security of the camp. The form came nearer--a
  little girl, no larger than our Mat--and again came the low call.
  The voice was Indian, the accent Spanish, but the words were
  English.
  
  "Come to us!" Esmond Clarenden answered back in a clear, low
  tone; and slowly and noiselessly the girl approached the
  camp.
  
  I can feel it all now, although that was many years ago: the soft
  starlight on the plains; the hot, still air holding its breath
  against the oncoming tornado; the group of wagons making a deeper
  shadow in the dull light; beyond us the bold front of old Pawnee
  Rock, huge and gray in the gloom; our little company standing
  close together, ready to hurl a shower of bullets if this proved
  but the decoy of a hidden foe; and the girl with light step
  drawing nearer. Clad in the picturesque garb of the Southwest
  Indian, her hair hanging in a great braid over each shoulder, her
  dark eyes fixed on us, she made a picture in that dusky setting
  that an artist might not have given to his brush twice in a
  lifetime on the plains.
  
  A few feet from us she halted.
  
  "Throw up your hands!" Jondo commanded.
  
  The slim brown arms were flung above the girl's head, and I
  caught the glint of quaintly hammered silver bracelets, as she
  stepped forward with that ease of motion that generations of
  moccasined feet on sand and sod and stone can give.
  
  "Take me," she cried, pleadingly. "The Mexicans steal me from my
  people and bring me far away. They meet Kiowa. Kiowa beat me;
  make me slave."
  
  She held up her hands. They were lacerated and bleeding. She
  slipped the bright blanket from her brown shoulder. It was
  bruised and swollen.
  
  "You go to Santa Fé? Take me. I do you good, not bad."
  
  "What would these Kiowas do to us, then?"
  
  It was Bill Banney who spoke.
  
  "They follow you--kill you."
  
  "Oh, cheerful! I wish you were twins," Rex Krane said,
  softly.
  
  Jondo lifted his hand.
  
  "Let me talk to her," he said.
  
  Then in her own language he got her story.
  
  "Here we are." He turned to us. "Stolen from her people by the
  Mexicans, probably the same ones we passed in Council Grove;
  traded to the Kiowas out here somewhere, beaten, and starved, and
  held for ransom, or trade to some other tribe. They are over
  there behind Pawnee Rock. They got sight of us somehow, but they
  don't intend to bother us. They are on the lookout for a bigger
  train. She has slipped away while they sleep. If we send her back
  she will be beaten and made a slave. If we keep her, they will
  follow us for a fight. They are fifty to our six. What shall we
  do?"
  
  "We don't need any Indians to help us get into trouble. We are
  sure enough of it without that," Bill Banney declared. "And
  what's one Indian, anyhow? She's just--"
  
  "Just a little orphan girl like Mat," Rex Krane finished his
  sentence.
  
  Bill frowned, but made no reply.
  
  The Indian girl was standing outside the corral, listening to all
  that was said, her face giving no sign of the struggle between
  hope and despair that must have striven within her.
  
  "Uncle Esmond, let's take her, and take our chances." Beverly's
  boyish voice had a defiant tone, for the spirit of adventure was
  strong within him. The girl turned quickly and a great light
  leaped into her eyes at the boy's words.
  
  "Save a life and lose ours. It's not the rule of the plains,
  but--there's a higher law like that somewhere, Clarenden," Jondo
  said, earnestly.
  
  The girl came swiftly toward Uncle Esmond and stood upright
  before him.
  
  "I will not hide the truth. I go back to Kiowas. They sell me for
  big treasure. They will not harm you," she said. "I stay with
  you, they say you steal me, and they come at the first bird's
  song and kill you every one. They are so many."
  
  She stood motionless before him, the seal of grim despair on her
  young face.
  
  "What's your name?" Esmond Clarenden asked. "Po-a-be. In your
  words, `Little Blue Flower,'" the girl said.
  
  "Then, Little Blue Flower, you must stay with us."
  
  She pointed toward the eastern sky where a faint light was
  beginning to show above the horizon. "See, the day comes!"
  
  "Then we will break camp now," my uncle said.
  
  "Not in the face of this storm, Clarenden," Jondo declared. "You
  can fight an Indian. You can't do a thing but 'hold fast' in one
  of these hurricanes."
  
  The air was still and hot. The black cloud swept swiftly onward,
  with the weird yellow glow before it. In the solitude of the
  plains the trail showed like a ghostly pathway of peril. Before
  us loomed that grim rock bluff, behind whose crest lay the
  sleeping band of Kiowas. It was only because they slept that
  Little Blue Flower could steal away in hope of rescue.
  
  Hotter grew the air and darker the swiftly rolling clouds; black
  and awful stood old Pawnee Rock with the silent menace of its
  sleeping enemy. In the stillness of the pause before the storm
  burst we heard Jondo's voice commanding us. With our first care
  for the frightened stock, we grouped ourselves together as he
  ordered close under the bluff.
  
  Suddenly an angry wind leaped out of the sky, beating back the
  hot dead air with gigantic flails of fury. Then the storm broke
  with tornado rage and cloudburst floods, and in its track terror
  reigned. Beverly and I clung together, and, holding a hand of
  each, Mat Nivers crouched beside us, herself strong in this
  second test of courage as she had been in the camp that night at
  Council Grove.
  
  I have never been afraid of storms and I can never understand why
  timid folk should speak of them as of a living, self-directing
  force bent purposely on human destruction. I love the splendor of
  the lightning and the thunder's peal. From our earliest years,
  Beverly and Mat and I had watched the flood-waters of the
  Missouri sweep over the bottomlands, and we had heard the winds
  rave, and the cannonading of the angry heavens. But this mad
  blast of the prairie storm was like nothing we had ever seen or
  heard before. A yellow glare filled the sky, a half-illumined,
  evil glow, as if to hide what lay beyond it. One breathed in fine
  sand, and tasted the desert dust. Behind it, all copper-green, a
  broad, lurid band swept up toward the zenith. Under its weird,
  unearthly light, the prairies, and everything upon them, took on
  a ghastly hue. Then came the inky-black storm-cloud--long,
  funnel-shaped, pendulous--and in its deafening roar and the thick
  darkness that could be felt, and the awful sweep of its
  all-engulfing embrace, the senses failed and the very breath of
  life seemed beaten away. The floods fell in streams, hot, then
  suddenly cold. And then a fusillade of hail bombarded the flat
  prairies, defenseless beneath the munitions of the heavens. But
  in all the wild, mad blackness, in the shriek and crash of maniac
  winds, in the swirl of many waters, and chill and fury of the
  threshing hail, the law of the trail failed not: "Hold fast." And
  with our hands gripped in one another's, we children kept the
  law.
  
  Just at the moment when destruction seemed upon us, the long
  swinging cloud--funnel lifted. We heard it passing high above us.
  Then it dropped against the face of old Pawnee Rock, that must
  have held the trail law through all the centuries of storms that
  have beaten against its bold, stern front. One tremendous blast,
  one crashing boom, as if the foundations of the earth were broken
  loose, and the thing had left us far behind.
  
  Daylight burst upon us in a moment, and the blue heavens smiled
  down on the clean-washed prairies. No homes, no crops, no
  orchards were left in ruins in those days to mark the cyclone's
  wrath on wilderness trails. As the darkness lifted we gathered
  ourselves together to take hold of life again and to defend
  ourselves from our human enemy.
  
  A shower of arrows from the top of the bluff might rain upon us
  at any moment, yelling warriors might rush upon us, or a ring of
  riders encircle us. It was in times like this that I learned how
  quickly men can get the mastery.
  
  Jondo and Esmond Clarenden did not delay a minute in protecting
  the camp and setting it in order, taking inventory of the lost
  and searching for the missing. Three of our number, with one of
  the ponies, were missing.
  
  Aunty Boone had crouched in a protected angle at the base of the
  bluff, and when we found her she was calmly smoking her pipe.
  
  "Yo' skeered of this little puff?" she queried. "Yo' bettah see a
  simoon on the desset, then. This here--just a racket. What's come
  of that little redskin?"
  
  She was not to be found. Nor was there any trace of Rex Krane
  anywhere. In consternation we scanned the prairies far and wide,
  but only level green distances were about us, holding no sign of
  life. We lived hours in those watching minutes.
  
  Suddenly Beverly gave a shout, and we saw Little Blue Flower
  running swiftly from the sloping side of the bluff toward the
  camp. Behind her stalked the young New-Englander.
  
  "I went up to see what she was in such a hurry for to see," he
  explained, simply. "I calculated it would be as interestin' to me
  as to her, and if anything was about to cut loose"--he laid a
  hand carelessly on his revolver--"why, I'd help it along. The
  little pink pansy, it seems, went to look after our friends, the
  enemy," Rex went on. "The hail nearly busted that old rock open.
  I thought once it had. The ponies are scattered and likewise the
  Kiowas. Gone helter-skelter, like the--tornado. The thing hit
  hard up there. Some ponies dead, and mebby an Indian or two. I
  didn't hunt 'em up. I can't use 'em that way," he added. "So I
  just said, 'Pax vobiscum!' and a lot of it, and came kittering
  back."
  
  Little Blue Flower's eyes glistened.
  
  "Gone, all gone. The rain god drove them away. Now I know I may
  go with you. The rain god loves you."
  
  It was to Beverly, and not to my uncle, that her eyes turned as
  she spoke, but he was not even listening to her. To him she was
  merely an Indian. She seemed more than that to me, and therein
  lay the difference between us.
  
  If she had been interesting under the starlight, in the light of
  day she became picturesque, a beautiful type of her race, silent,
  alert of countenance, with big, expressive, black eyes, and long,
  heavy braids of black hair. With her brilliant blanket about her
  shoulders, a turquoise pendant on a leather band at her throat,
  silver bracelets on her brown arms, she was as pleasing as an
  Indian maiden could be--adding a touch of picturesque life to
  that wonderful journey westward from Pawnee Rock to Santa
  Fé. Aunty Boone alone resented her presence among us.
  
  "You can trust a nigger," she growled, "'cause you know they none
  of 'em no 'count. But you can't tell about this Injun, whether
  she's good or bad. I lets that sort of fish alone."
  
  Little Blue Flower looked up at her with steady gaze and made no
  reply.
  
  Out of that morning's events I learned a lasting lesson, and I
  know now that the influence of Rex Krane on my life began that
  day, as I recalled how he had followed Aunty Boone about the dark
  corners of the little trading-post on the Neosho; and how he had
  looked at Mat Nivers once when Uncle Esmond had suggested his
  turning back to Independence; and how he had gone before all of
  us, the vanguard, to the top of the bluff west of Council Grove;
  and now he had followed this Indian girl. From that time I knew
  in my boy heart that this tall, careless Boston youth had a
  zealous care for the safety of women and children. How much care,
  events would run swiftly on to show me. But welded into my life
  from that hour was the meaning of a man's high, chivalric duty.
  And among all the lessons that the old trail taught to me, none
  served me more than this one that came to me on that sweet May
  morning beneath the shadow of Pawnee Rock. 
    City of the Holy Faith,
      In thy streets so dim with age,
    Do I read not Faith's decay,
      But the Future's heritage.
              -LILIAN WHITING.
Day was passing and the shadows were already beginning to grow
  purple in the valleys, long before the golden light had left the
  opal-crowned peaks of the Sangre-de-Christo Mountains beyond
  them.
  
  On the wide crest of a rocky ridge our wagons halted. Behind us
  the long trail stretched back, past mountain height and
  cañon wall, past barren slope and rolling green prairie,
  on to where the wooded ravines hem in the Missouri's yellow
  floods.
  
  Before us lay a level plain, edged round with high mesas, over
  which snowy-topped mountain peaks kept watch. A sandy plain,
  checkered across by verdant-banded arroyos, and splotched with
  little clumps of trees and little fields of corn. In the heart of
  it all was Santa Fé, a mere group of dust-brown adobe
  blocks--silent, unsmiling, expressionless--the city of the
  Spanish Mexican, centuries old and centuries primitive.
  
  As our tired mules slackened their traces and drooped to rest
  after the long up-climb, Esmond Clarenden called out:
  
  "Come here, children. Yonder is the end of the trail."
  
  We gathered eagerly about him, a picture in ourselves, maybe, in
  an age of picturesque things; four men, bronzed and bearded; two
  sturdy boys; Mat Nivers, no longer a little girl, it seemed now,
  with the bloom of health on her tanned cheeks, and the smile of
  good nature in wide gray eyes; beside her, the Indian maiden,
  Little Blue Flower, slim, brown, lithe of motion, brief of
  speech; and towering back of all, the glistening black face of
  the big, silent African woman.
  
  So we stood looking out toward that northwest plain where the
  trail lost itself among the low adobe huts huddled together
  beside the glistening waters of the Santa Fé River.
  
  Rex Krane was the first to speak.
  
  "So that's what we've come out for to see, is it?" he mused,
  aloud. "That's the precious old town that we've dodged Indians,
  and shot rattlesnakes, and sunburnt our noses, and rain-soaked
  our dress suits for! That's why we've pillowed our heads on the
  cushiony cactus and tramped through purling sands, and blistered
  our hands pullin' at eider-down ropes, and strained our
  leg-muscles goin' down, and busted our lungs comin' up, and
  clawed along the top edge of the world with nothin' but healthy
  climate between us and the bottom of the bottomless pit. Humph!
  That's what you call Santa Fé! 'The city of the Holy
  Faith!' Well, I need a darned lot of 'holy faith' to make me see
  any city there. It's just a bunch of old yellow brick-kilns to
  me, and I 'most wish now I'd stayed back at Independence and
  hunted dog-tooth violets along the Big Blue."
  
  "It's not Boston, if that's what you were looking for; at least
  there's no Bunker Hill Monument nor Back Bay anywhere in sight.
  But I reckon it's the best they've got. I'm tired enough to take
  what's offered and keep still," Bill Banney declared.
  
  I, too, wanted to keep still. I had only a faint memory of a real
  city. It must have been St. Louis, for there was a wharf, and a
  steamboat and a busy street, and soft voices--speaking a foreign
  tongue. But the pictures I had seen, and the talk I had heard,
  coupled with a little boy's keen imagination, had built up a very
  different Santa Fé in my mind. At that moment I was
  homesick for Fort Leavenworth, through and through homesick, for
  the first time since that April day when I had sat on the bluff
  above the Missouri River while the vision of the plains descended
  upon me. Everything seemed so different to-night, as if a gulf
  had widened between us and all the nights behind us.
  
  We went into camp on the ridge, with the journey's goal in plain
  view. And as we sat down together about the fire after supper we
  forgot the hardships of the way over which we had come. The pine
  logs blazed cheerily, and as the air grew chill we drew nearer
  together about them as about a home fireside.
  
  The long June twilight fell upon the landscape. The piñon
  and scrubby cedars turned to dark blotches on the slopes. The
  valley swam in a purple mist. The silence of evening was broken
  only by a faint bird-note in the bushes, and the fainter call of
  some wild thing stealing forth at nightfall from its daytime
  retreat. Behind us the mesas and headlands loomed up black and
  sullen, but far before us the Sangre-de-Christo Mountains lifted
  their glorified crests, with the sun's last radiance bathing them
  in crimson floods.
  
  We sat in silence for a long time, for nobody cared to talk.
  Presently we heard Aunty Boone's low, penetrating voice inside
  the wagon corral:
  
  "You pore gob of ugliness! Yo' done yo' best, and it's green corn
  and plenty of watah and all this grizzly-gray grass you can stuff
  in now. It's good for a mule to start right, same as a man.
  Whoo-ee!"
  
  The low voice trailed off into weird little whoops of approval.
  Then the woman wandered away to the edge of the bluff and sat
  until late that night, looking out at the strange, entrancing New
  Mexican landscape.
  
  "To-morrow we put on our best clothes and enter the city," my
  uncle broke the silence. "We have managed to pull through so far,
  and we intend to keep on pulling till we unload back at
  Independence again. But these are unsafe times and we are in an
  unsafe country. We are going to do business and get out of it
  again as soon as possible. I shall ask you all to be ready to
  leave at a minute's notice, if you are coming back with me!"
  
  "Now you see why I didn't join the army, don't you, Krane?" Bill
  Banney said, aside. "I wanted to work under a real general."
  
  Then turning to my uncle, he added:
  
  "I'm already contracted for the round trip, Clarenden."
  
  "You are going to start back just as if there were no dangers to
  be met?" Rex Krane inquired.
  
  "As if there were dangers to be met, not run from," Esmond
  Clarenden replied.
  
  "Clarenden," the young Bostonian began, "you got away from that
  drunken mob at Independence with your children, your mules, and
  your big Daniel Boone. You started out when war was ragin' on the
  Mexican frontier, and never stopped a minute because you had to
  come it alone from Council Grove. You shook yourself and family
  right through the teeth of that Mexican gang layin' for you back
  there. You took Little Trailing Arbutus at Pawnee Rock out of
  pure sympathy when you knew it meant a fight at sun-up, six
  against fifty. And there would have been a bloody one, too, but
  for that merciful West India hurricane bustin' up the show. You
  pulled us up the Arkansas River, and straddled the Gloriettas,
  with every danger that could ever be just whistlin' about our
  ears. And now you sit there and murmur softly that 'we are in an
  unsafe country and these are unsafe times,' so we'd better be
  toddlin' back home right soon. I want to tell you
  something now."
  
  He paused and looked at Mat Nivers. Always he looked at Mat
  Nivers, who since the first blush one noonday long ago, so it
  seemed, now, never appeared to know or care where he looked. He
  must have had such a sister himself; I felt sure of that now.
  
  "I want to tell you," Rex repeated, "that I'm goin' to
  stay with you. There's something safe about you. And
  then," he added, carelessly, as he gazed out toward the darkening
  plain below us, "my mother always said you could tie to a man who
  was good to children. And you've been good to this infant
  Kentuckian here."
  
  He flung out a hand toward Bill Banney without looking away from
  the open West. "When you want to start back to God's country and
  the land of Plymouth Rocks and Pawnee Rocks, I'm ready to trot
  along."
  
  "I'm glad to hear you say that, Krane," Esmond Clarenden said. "I
  shall need all the help I can get on the way back. Because we got
  through safely we cannot necessarily count on a safe return. I
  may need you in Santa Fé, too."
  
  "Then command me," Rex replied.
  
  He looked toward Mat again, but she and Little Blue Flower were
  coiling their long hair in fantastic fashion about their heads,
  and laughing like school-girls together.
  
  Little Blue Flower was as a shy brown fawn following us. She had
  a way of copying Mat's manner, and she spoke less of Indian and
  Spanish and more of English from day to day. She had laid aside
  her Indian dress for one of Mat's neat gingham gowns. I think she
  tried hard to forget her race in everything except her prayers,
  for her own people had all been slain by Mexican ruffians. We
  could not have helped liking her if we had tried to do so. Yet
  that invisible race barrier that kept a fixed gulf between us and
  Aunty Boone separated us also from the lovable little Indian
  lass, albeit the gulf was far less deep and impassable.
  
  To-night when she and Mat scampered away to the family wagon
  together, she seemed somehow to really belong to us.
  
  Presently Jondo and Rex Krane and Bill and Beverly rolled their
  blankets about them and went to sleep, leaving Esmond Clarenden
  and myself alone beside the dying fire. The air was sharp and the
  night silence deepened as the stars came into the skies.
  
  "Why don't you go to bed, Gail?" my uncle asked.
  
  "I'm not sleepy. I'm homesick," I replied. "Come here, boy." He
  opened his arms to me, and I nestled in their embrace.
  
  "You've grown a lot in these two months, little man," he said,
  softly. "You are a brave-hearted plainsman, and a good, strong
  little limb when it comes to endurance, but just once in a while
  all of us need a mothering touch. It keeps us sweet, my boy. It
  keeps us sweet and fit to live."
  
  Oh, many a time in the years that followed did the loving embrace
  and the gentle words of this gentle, strong man come back to
  comfort me.
  
  "Let me tell you something, Gail. I'm going to need a boy like
  you to help me a lot before we leave Santa Fé, and I shall
  count on you."
  
  Just then a noise at the far side of the corral seemed to disturb
  the stock. A faint stir of awakening or surprise--just a hint in
  the air. All was still in a moment. Then it came again. We
  listened. Something, an indefinite something, somewhere, was
  astir. The surprise became unrest, anxiety, fear, among the
  mules.
  
  "Wait here, Gail. I'll see what's up," Uncle Esmond said, in a
  low voice.
  
  He hurried away toward the corral and I slipped back in the
  shadow of a rock and leaned against it to wait.
  
  In the dim beams of a starlit New Mexican sky I could see clearly
  out toward the valley, but behind the camp all was darkness. As I
  waited, hidden by the shadows, suddenly the flap of the
  family-wagon cover lifted and Little Blue Flower slid out as
  softly as a cat walks in the dust. She was dressed in her own
  Indian garb now, with her bright blanket drawn picturesquely
  about her head and shoulders. Silently she moved about the camp,
  peering toward the shadows hiding me. Then with noiseless step
  she slipped toward where Beverly Clarenden lay, his boyish face
  upturned to the stars, sleeping the dreamless sleep of youth and
  health. I leaned forward and stared hard as the girl approached
  him. I saw her drop down on one knee beside him, and, bending
  over him, she gently kissed his forehead. She rose and gave one
  hurried look around the place and then, like a bird lifting its
  wings for flight, she threw up her arms, and in another moment
  she sprang to the edge of the ridge and slipped from view. I
  followed, only to see her gliding swiftly away, farther and
  farther, along the dim trail, until the shadows swallowed her
  from my sight.
  
  A low whinny from the corral caught my ear, followed by a rush of
  horses' feet. As I slipped into my place again to wait for my
  uncle to return, the smoldering logs blazed out suddenly,
  lighting up the form of a man who appeared just beyond the fire,
  so that I saw the face distinctly. Then he, too, was gone,
  following the way the Indian girl had taken, until he lost
  himself in the misty dullness of the plains.
  
  Presently Esmond Clarenden came back to the camp-fire.
  
  "Gail, the pony we lost in that storm at Pawnee Rock has come
  back to us. It was standing outside the corral, waiting to get
  in, just as if it had lost us for a couple of hours. It is in
  good condition, too."
  
  "How could it ever get here?" I exclaimed.
  
  "Any one of a dozen ways," my uncle replied. "It may have run far
  that stormy morning when it broke out of the corral, and possibly
  some party coming over the Cimarron Trail picked it up and roved
  on this way. There is no telling how it got here, since it keeps
  still itself about the matter. Losing and finding and losing
  again is the law of events on the plains."
  
  "But why should it find us right here to-night, like it had been
  led back?" I insisted.
  
  "That's the miracle of it, Gail. It is always the strange thing
  that really happens here. In years to come, if you ever tell the
  truth about this trip, it will not be believed. When this isn't
  the frontier any longer, the story of the trail will be accounted
  impossible."
  
  Everything seemed impossible to me as I sat there staring at the
  dying fire. Presently I remembered what I had seen while my uncle
  was away.
  
  "Little Blue Flower has run away," I said, "and I saw the Mexican
  that came to Fort Leavenworth the day before I twisted my ankle.
  He slipped by here just a minute ago. I know, for I saw his face
  when the logs flared up."
  
  Esmond Clarenden gave a start. "Gail, you have the most
  remarkable memory for faces of any child I ever knew," he
  said.
  
  "Did he follow us, too, like the pony, or did he ride the pony
  after us?" I asked. "He's just everywhere we go, somehow. Did I
  ever see him before he came to the fort, or did I dream it?"
  
  "You are a little dreamer, Gail," my uncle said, kindly. "But
  dreams don't hurt, if you do your part whenever you are
  needed."
  
  "Bev and Bill Banney make fun of dreams," I said.
  
  "Yes, they don't have 'em; but Bev and Bill are ready when it
  comes to doing things. They are a good deal alike, daring, and a
  bit reckless sometimes, with good hard sense enough to keep them
  level."
  
  "Don't I do, too?" I inquired.
  
  "Yes, you do and dream, both. That's all the better. But you
  mustn't forget, too, that sometimes the things we long for in our
  dreams we must fight for, and even die for, maybe, that those who
  come after us may be the better for our having them. What was it
  you said about Little Blue Flower?" Uncle Esmond had forgotten
  her for the moment.
  
  "She's gone to Santa Fé, I reckon. Is she bad, Uncle
  Esmond? Tell me all about things," I urged.
  
  "We are all here spying out the land, Mexican, Indian, trader,
  freighter, adventurer, invalid," Uncle Esmond replied. "I don't
  know what started the little Indian girl off, unless she just
  felt Indian, as Jondo would say; but I may as well tell you,
  Gail, that it may have been the Mexican who got our pony for us.
  He is a strange fellow, walks like a cat, has ears like a timber
  wolf, and the cunning of a fox."
  
  "Is he our friend?" I asked, eagerly.
  
  "Listen, boy. He came to Fort Leavenworth on purpose to bring me
  an important message, and he waited at Independence to see us
  off. Do you remember the two spies Krane talked about at Council
  Grove? I think he followed the Mexican spy across the river to
  our camp and sent him on east. Then he went back and got the
  crowd all mixed up by his report, while their own man scouted the
  trail out there for miles all night. He is the man who put you
  through town and decoyed the ruffians to one side. He located us
  after we had crossed the river, and then broke up their meeting
  and put the fellows off to wait till the next night. That is the
  way I worked out that Council Grove puzzle. He has a wide range,
  and there are big things ahead for him in New Mexico.
  
  "Sooner or later however," my uncle went on, "we will have to
  reckon with that Kiowa tribe for stealing their captive. They
  meant to return her for a big ransom price.... Great Heavens,
  Gail! You seem like a man to me to-night instead of my little boy
  back at the fort. The plains bring years to us instead of months,
  with just one crossing. I am counting on you not to tell all
  you've been told and all you've seen. I can be sure of you if you
  can keep things to yourself. You'd better get to sleep now. There
  will be plenty to see over in Santa Fé. And there is
  always danger afoot. But remember, it is the coward who finds the
  most trouble in this world. Do your part with a gentleman's heart
  and a hero's hand, and you'll get to the end of every trail
  safely. Now go to bed."
  
  Where I lay that night I could see a wide space of star-gemmed
  sky, the blue night-sky of the Southwest, and I wondered, as I
  looked up into the starry deeps, how God could keep so many
  bright bodies afield up there, and yet take time to guard all the
  wandering children of men.
  
  With the day-dawn the strange events of the night seemed as
  unreal as the vanishing night-shadows. The bluest skies of a
  blue-sky land curved in fathomless majesty over the yellow valley
  of the Santa Fé. Against its borders loomed the silent
  mountain ranges--purple-shaddowed, silver-topped Ortiz and
  Jemez, Sandia and Sangre-de-Christo. Dusty and deserted lay the
  trail, save that here and there a group of dark-faced carriers of
  firewood prodded on their fagot-laden burros toward the distant
  town. As our wagons halted at the sandy borders of an arroyo the
  brown-clad form of a priest rose up from the shade of a group of
  scrubby piñon-trees beside the trail.
  
  Esmond Clarenden lifted his hat in greeting.
  
  "Are you going our way? We can give you a ride," he paused to
  say.
  
  The man's face was very dark, but it was a young, strong face,
  and his large, dark eyes were full of the fire of life. When he
  spoke his voice was low and musical.
  
  "I thank you. I go toward the mountains. You stay here long?"
  
  "Only to dispose of my goods. My business is brief," Esmond
  Clarenden declared.
  
  The good man leaned forward as if to see each face there,
  sweeping in everything at one glance. Then he looked down at the
  ground.
  
  "These are troublesome days. War is only a temporary evil, but it
  makes for hate, and hate kills as it dies. Love lives and gives
  life." A smile lighted his eyes, though his lips were firm. "I
  wish you well. Among friends or enemies the one haven of safety
  always is the holy sanctuary."
  
  Uncle Esmond bowed his head reverently.
  
  "You will find it beside the trail near the river. The walls are
  very old and strong, but not so old as hate, nor so strong as
  love. A little street runs from it, crooked--six houses away.
  Peace be to all of you." He broke off suddenly and his last
  sentence was spoken in a clear, strong tone unlike the gentler
  voice.
  
  "I thank you, Father!" Jondo said, as the priest passed his
  wagon.
  
  The holy man gave him one swift, searching glance. Then lifting
  his right hand as if in blessing, and slowly dropping it until
  the forefinger pointed toward the west, he passed on his way.
  
  Jondo's brown cheek flushed and the lines about his mouth grew
  hard.
  
  "Take my place, Bev," he said, as he left his wagon and joined
  Esmond Clarenden.
  
  The two spoke earnestly together. Then Jondo mounted Beverly's
  pony.
  
  "If you need me--" I heard him say, and he turned away and rode
  in the direction the priest had taken.
  
  Uncle Esmond offered no explanation for this sudden action, and
  his sunny face was stern.
  
  Usually wagon-trains were spied out long before they reached the
  city, and a rabble attended their entry. To-day we moved along
  quietly until the trail became a mere walled lane. On either side
  one-story adobe huts sat with their backs to the street. No
  windows opened to the front, and only a wooden door or a closed
  gateway stared in blank unfriendliness at the passer-by. Little
  straggling lanes led off aimlessly on either side, as narrow and
  silent as the strange terminal of the long trail itself.
  
  I was only a boy, with the heart of a boy and the eyes of a boy.
  I could only feel; I could not understand the spell of that hour.
  But to me everything was alluring, wrapt as it was in the mystery
  of a civilization old here when Plymouth Rock felt the first
  Pilgrim's foot, or Pawnee Rock stared at the first bold plainsman
  of the pale face and the conquering soul.
  
  I was riding beside Beverly's wagon as we neared the quaint,
  centuries-old, adobe church of San Miguel, rising tall and silent
  above the low huts about it, its rough walls suggesting a
  fortress of strength, while its triple towers might be an outlook
  for a guardsman.
  
  "Look at that church. Bev, I wonder how old it is," I
  exclaimed.
  
  "I should say about a thousand years and a day," Beverly
  declared. "See that flopsy steeple thing! It looks like
  building-blocks stacked up there."
  
  "Maybe this is the sanctuary that priest was talking about," I
  suggested. "He said the walls were old as hate and strong as
  love, with a crooked street beside it somewhere."
  
  "Oh, you sponge! Soaking up everything you see and hear. I wonder
  you sleep nights for fear the wind will tell the pine trees
  something you'll miss," Beverly declared. "I can tell a horse's
  age by its teeth, but churches don't have teeth. Go and ask Mat
  about it. She knows when the De Sotos and Cortéses and all
  the other Spanish grandaddees came to Mexico."
  
  I had just turned back alongside of Mat's wagon--she was always
  our book of ready reference--when a little girl suddenly dashed
  out of a walled lane opening into the street behind us. She
  stopped in the middle of the road, almost under my pony's feet,
  then with a shout of laughter she dashed into the deep doorway of
  the church and stood there, peering out at me with eyes brimful
  of mischief.
  
  I brought my pony back on its haunches suddenly. I had seen this
  girl before. The big dark eyes, the straight little nose, the
  curve of the pink cheek, the china-smooth chin and neck, and,
  crowning all, the cloud of golden hair shading her forehead and
  falling in tangled curls behind.
  
  I did not notice all these features now. It was only the eyes,
  dark eyes, somewhere this side of misty mountain peaks, and maybe
  the halo of hair that had been in my vision on that day when
  Beverly and Mat Nivers and I sat on the parade-ground facing a
  sudden turn in our life trail.
  
  I stared at the eyes now, only half conscious that the girl was
  laughing at me.
  
  "You big brown bob-cat! You look like you had slept in the Hondo
  'royo all your life," she cried, and turned to run away
  again.
  
  As she did so a dark face peered round the corner of the church
  from the crooked street beside it. A sudden gleam of white teeth
  and glistening eyes, a sudden leap and grip, and a boy, larger
  than Beverly, caught the little girl by the shoulders and shook
  her viciously.
  
  She screamed and struggled. Then, with a wild shriek as he
  clutched at her curls, she wrenched herself away and plunged
  inside the church. The boy dived in after her. Another scream,
  and I had dropped from my pony and leaped across the road. I
  pushed open the door against the two struggling together. With
  one grip at his coat-collar I broke his hold on the little girl
  and flung him outside.
  
  I have a faint recollection of a priest hurrying down the aisle
  toward the fighting children, as the little girl, freed from her
  assailant, dashed out of the door.
  
  "He jumped at her first, and shook her and pulled her hair," I
  cried, as the priest caught me by the shoulder. "I'm not going to
  see anybody pitched into, not a little girl, anyhow."
  
  I jerked myself free from his grasp and ran out to my pony. At
  the corner of the church stood the girl, her cheeks flushed, her
  eyes blazing defiance, her rumpled curls in a tangle about her
  face.
  
  "I hate Marcos, he's so cruel, and"--her voice softened and the
  defiant eyes grew mischievous--"you aren't a bob-cat. You're
  a--Look out!"
  
  She shouted the last words and disappeared up the narrow, crooked
  street, just as a fragment of rock whizzed over my shoulder. I
  jumped on my pony to dash away, when another rock just missed my
  head, and I saw the boy, Marcos, beside the church, ready for a
  third hurl. His black eyes flashed fire, and the grin of malice
  on his face showed all his fine white teeth.
  
  I was as mad as a boy can be. Instead of fleeing, I spurred my
  pony straight at him.
  
  "You little beast, I dare you to throw that rock at me! I dare
  you!" I cried.
  
  The boy dropped the missile and sped away after the girl. I
  followed in time to see them enter a doorway, six or seven houses
  up the way. Then I turned back, and in a minute I had overtaken
  our wagons trailing down to the ford of the Santa Fé
  River.
  
  "I thought mebby you'd gone back after Jondo and that holy
  podder," Rex Krane greeted me. "Better begin to wink naturally
  and look a little pleasanter now. We'll be in the Plazzer in two
  or three minutes."
  
  The drivers flourished their whips, the mules caught their
  spirit, and with bump and lurch and rattle we swung down the
  narrow crack between adobe walls that ended before the old
  Exchange Hotel at the corner of the Plaza.
  
  This open square in the center of the city was shaded by trees
  and littered with refuse. The Palace of the Governors fronted it
  along the entire north side, a long, low, one-story structure
  whose massive adobe walls defy the wearing years. Compared to the
  kingly palaces of my imagination, this royal dwelling seemed a
  very commonplace thing, and the wide portal, or veranda, that ran
  along its front looked like one of the sheds about the barracks
  at the fort rather than an entranceway for rulers. Yet this was
  the house of a ruler hostile to that flag to which I had thrown a
  good-by kiss, up at Fort Leavenworth.
  
  On the other three sides of the Plaza were other low adobe
  buildings, for the business of the city faced this central
  square.
  
  A crowd was gathered there when we reached it. Somebody standing
  before the Palace of the Governors was haranguing in fiery
  Spanish, if gesture and oral vehemence are true tokens.
  
  As our wagons rumbled up to the corner of the square the crowd
  broke up with a shout.
  
  "Los Americanos! Los Carros!"
  
  The cry went up everywhere as the rabble left the speaker to
  flock about us--men, women, children, Mexican, Spanish, Indian,
  with now and then a Saxon face among them. Our outfit was as well
  appointed as such a journey's end permitted. We were in our best
  clothes--clean-shaven gentlemen, well-dressed boys, and one girl,
  neat and comely in a dark-blue gown of thin stuff with white lace
  at throat and wrist; and last, and biggest of all, Aunty Boone,
  in a bright-green lawn with little white dots all over it.
  
  As I sat on my pony beside my uncle's wagon, I caught sight of
  the slim figure of Little Blue Flower, well back in the shade of
  the Plaza. She was watching Beverly, who sat in Jondo's wagon,
  staring at the crowd and seeing no one in particular. A minute
  later a tall young Indian boy stepped in front of her, and when
  he moved away she was gone.
  
  Many men came forward to greet Esmond Clarenden, and there were
  many inquiries regarding his goods and many exclamations of
  surprise that he had come alone with so valuable a cargo.
  
  It was the first time that Beverly and I had seen him among his
  equals. At Fort Leavenworth, where the army overruled everything
  else, men stood above him in authority or below him in business
  affairs; and while he never cringed to the one, nor patronized
  the other, where there are no competitors there are no true
  measures. That day in the Plaza of Santa Fé the merchant
  was in his own kingdom, where commerce stood above everything
  else.
  
  Moreover, this American merchant, following a danger-girt trail,
  had come in fearlessly, and those men of the Plaza knew that he
  was one to exact value for value in all his dealings. But I
  believe that his real power lay in his ready smile, his courtesy,
  his patience, and his up-bubbling good nature that made him a
  friendship-builder.
  
  Among the men who came to make acquaintance with the American
  trader was a Mexican merchant. Evidently he was a man of some
  importance, for an interpreter hastened to introduce him,
  explaining that this man had been away on a journey of some weeks
  among the mines of New Mexico and the Southwest, and only the day
  before he had come in from Taos.
  
  "You will find him a prince of merchants, a sound, unprejudiced
  business man. His name is Felix Narveo," the American interpreter
  added.
  
  The two men shook hands, greeting each other in the Spanish
  tongue. This Felix Narveo was well dressed and well groomed, but
  I recognized him at once as the Mexican of Fort Leavenworth and
  Independence and Council Grove.
  
  There was one man in that company, however, who did not come
  forward at all. When I first caught sight of him he was looking
  at me. I stared back at him with a boy's curiosity, but he did
  not take his eyes from me until I had dropped my own. After that
  I watched him keenly. He seemed almost too fair for a Mexican--a
  tall, spare-built man with black hair, and eyes so steely blue
  that they were almost black. Everywhere I saw him--at the corners
  of the little crowd and in the thick of it. He was an easy mark,
  for he towered above the rest, and, being slender, he seemed to
  worm his way quickly from place to place. At sight of him, Aunty
  Boone, who had been peering out with shining eyes, drew her head
  in as quick as a snake, under the shadow of the wagon cover, and
  her eyes grew dull. He had not seen her, but I could see that he
  was watching the remainder of us, and especially my uncle; and I
  began to feel afraid of him and to wish that he would leave the
  Plaza. It was years ago that all this happened, and yet to-day my
  fear of that man still sticks in my memory.
  
  When he turned away, suddenly I caught sight of the boy, whom I
  had flung out of the church, standing behind him, the boy whom
  the little girl had called Marcos. Although his face was dark and
  the man's was fair, there was a strong likeness between the
  two.
  
  This Marcos stared insolently at all of us. Then with a laugh and
  a grimace at me, he ran after the man and they disappeared
  together around the corner of the Palace of the Governors. And in
  the rush of strange sights I forgot them both for a time. 
  Our dwelling-place in all generations.--Psalms xc, 1.
  They are wonderful to me still--those few brief days that
  followed. While Esmond Clarenden was forcing his business
  transactions to a speedy climax, he was all the time foreseeing
  Santa Fé under the United States Government. He had not
  come here as a spy, nor a speculator, but as a commerce-builder,
  knowing that the same business life would go on when the war
  cloud lifted, and that the same men who had made the plains
  commerce profitable under the Mexican flag would not be exiled
  when the Stars and Stripes should float above the old Palace of
  the Governors. Belief in the ethics of his calling and trust in
  manhood were ever a large part of his stock in trade, making him
  dare to go where he chose to go, and to do what he willed to
  do.
  
  But no concern for commerce nor extension of national territory
  disturbed our young minds in those sunlit days, as Mat and
  Beverly and I looked with the big, quick-seeing eyes of youth on
  this new strange world at the end of the trail.
  
  We were all together in the deserted dining-room on our first
  evening in Santa Fé when the man whom I had seen on the
  Plaza strolled leisurely in. He sat down at one of the farthest
  tables from us, and his eyes, glistening like blue-black steel,
  were fixed on us.
  
  Once at Fort Leavenworth I had watched in terror as a bird
  fluttered helplessly toward a still, steel-eyed snake holding it
  in thrall. And just at the moment when its enemy was ready to
  strike, Jondo had happened by and shot the snake's head off. The
  same terror possessed me now, and I began half-consciously to
  long for Jondo.
  
  In the midst of new sights I had hardly thought of him since he
  had left us out beyond the big arroyo. He had come into town at
  dusk, but soon after supper he had disappeared. His face was very
  pale, and his eyes had a strange look that never left them again.
  Something was different in Jondo from that day, but it did not
  change his gentle nature toward his fellow-men. During our short
  stay in Santa Fé we hardly saw him at all. We children
  were too busy with other things to ask questions, and everybody
  but Rex Krane was too busy to be questioned. Having nothing else
  to do, Rex became our chaperon, as Uncle Esmond must have
  foreseen he would be when he measured the young man in
  Independence on the day we left there.
  
  To-night Esmond Clarenden, smiling and good-natured, paid no heed
  to the sharp eyes of this stranger fixed on him.
  
  "What's the matter now, little weather-vane? You are always first
  to sense a coming change," he declared.
  
  "Uncle Esmond, I saw that man watching us like he knew us, out
  there on the Plaza to-day. Who is he?" I asked, in a low
  tone.
  
  "His name is Ferdinand Ramero. You will find him watching
  everywhere. Let that man alone as you would a snake," my uncle
  warned us.
  
  "Is that his boy?" I asked.
  
  "What boy?" Uncle Esmond inquired.
  
  "Marcos, the boy I pitched endways out of the church. He's bigger
  than Bev, too," I declared, proudly.
  
  "Gail Clarenden, are you crazy?" Uncle Esmond exclaimed.
  
  "No, I'm not," I insisted, and then I told what had happened at
  the church, adding, "I saw Marcos with that man in the Plaza, and
  they went away together."
  
  Esmond Clarenden's face grew grave.
  
  "What kind of a looking child was she, Gail?" he asked, after a
  pause.
  
  "Oh, she had yellow hair and big sort of dark eyes! She could
  squeal like anything. She wasn't a baby girl at all, but a
  regular little fighter kind of a girl."
  
  I grew bashful all at once and hesitated, but my uncle did not
  seem to hear me, for he turned to Rex Krane and said, in low,
  earnest tones:
  
  "Krane, if you can locate that child for me you will do me an
  invaluable service. It was largely on her account that I came
  here now, and it's a god-send to have a fellow like you to save
  time for me. Every man has his uses. Your service will be a big
  one to me."
  
  The young man's face flushed and his eyes shone with a new
  light.
  
  "If any of you happen to see that girl let me know at once," my
  uncle said, turning to us, "but, remember, don't act as if you
  were hunting for her."
  
  "I know now right where she lives. It's up a crooked street by
  that church. I saw her run in there," I insisted.
  
  "Every hut looks like every other hut, and every little Mex looks
  like every other little Mex," Beverly declared.
  
  Uncle Esmond smiled, but the stern lines in his face hardly broke
  as he said, earnestly, "Keep your eyes open and, whatever you do,
  stay close to Krane while Bill helps me here, and don't forget to
  watch for that little girl when you are sight-seeing."
  
  "There's not much to see, as Bev says, but the outside of 'dobe
  walls five feet thick," Rex Krane observed. "But if you know
  which wall to look through, the lookin' may be easy enough.
  Seein' things is my specialty, and we'll get this princess if we
  have to slay a giant and an ogre and take a few dozen Mexican
  scalps first. The plot just thickens. It's a great game." The
  tall New-Englander would not take life seriously anywhere, and,
  with our trust in his guardianship, we could want no better
  chaperon.
  
  That night Beverly Clarenden and I were in fairyland.
  
  "It's the princess, Bev, the princess we were looking for," I
  joyously asserted. "And, oh, Bev, she is beautiful, but
  snappy-like, too. She called me a 'big brown bob-cat', and then
  she apologized, just as nice as could be."
  
  "And this little Marcos cuss, he'll be the ogre," Beverly
  declared. "But who'll we have for the giant? That priest, footing
  it out by that dry creek-thing they call a 'royo?"
  
  "Oh no, no! He and Jondo made up together, and Jondo's nobody's
  bad man even in a story. It will be that Ferdinand Ramero," I
  insisted. "But, say, Bev, Jondo wrote a new name on the register
  this evening, or somebody wrote it for him, maybe. It wasn't his
  own writing. 'Jean Deau.' I saw it in big, round, back-slanting
  letters. Why did he do that?"
  
  "Well, I reckon that's his real name in big, round, back-slanting
  letters down here," Beverly replied. "It's French, and we have
  just been spelling it like it sounds, that's all."
  
  "Well, maybe so," I commented, and when I fell asleep it was to
  dream of a princess and Jondo by a strange name, but the same
  Jondo.
  
  The air of New Mexico puts iron into the blood. The trail life
  had hardened us all, but the finishing touch for Rex Krane came
  in the invigorating breath of that mountain-cooled, sun-cleansed
  atmosphere of Santa Fé. Shrewd, philosophic, brave-hearted
  like his historic ancestry, he laid his plans carefully now, sure
  of doing what he was set to do. And the wholesome sense of really
  serving the man who had measured his worth at a glance gave him a
  pleasure he had not known before. Of course, he moved slowly and
  indifferently. One could never imagine Rex Krane hurrying about
  anything.
  
  "We'll just 'prospect,' as Daniel Boone says," he declared, as he
  marshaled us for the day. "We are strangers, sight-seein', got no
  other business on earth, least of all any to take us up to this
  old San Miguel Church for unholy purposes. 'Course if we see a
  pretty little dark-eyed, golden-haired lassie anywhere, we'll
  just make a diagram of the spot she's stand'n' on, for future
  reference. We're in this game to win, but we don't do no foolish
  hurryin' about it."
  
  So we wandered away, a happy quartet, and the city offered us
  strange sights on every hand. It was all so old, so different, so
  silent, so baffling--the narrow, crooked street; the solid
  house-walls that hemmed them in; the strange tongue, strange
  dress, strange customs; the absence of smiling faces or friendly
  greetings; the sudden mystery of seeking for one whom we must not
  seem to seek, and the consciousness of an enemy, Ferdinand
  Ramero, whom we must avoid--that it is small wonder that we lived
  in fairyland.
  
  We saw the boy, Marcos, here and there, sometimes staring
  defiantly at us from some projected angle; sometimes slipping out
  of sight as we approached; sometimes quarreling with other
  children at their play. But nowhere, since the moment when I had
  seen the door close on her up that crooked street beside the old
  church, could we find any trace of the little girl.
  
  In the dim morning light of our fifth day in Santa Fé, a
  man on horseback, carrying a big, bulky bundle in his arms,
  slipped out of the crooked, shadow-filled street beside the old
  church of San Miguel. He halted a moment before the structure and
  looked up at the ancient crude spire outlined against the sky,
  then sped down the narrow way by the hotel at the end of the
  trail. He crossed the Plaza swiftly and dashed out beyond the
  Palace of the Governors and turned toward the west.
  
  Aunty Boone, who slept in the family wagon--or under it--in the
  inclosure at the rear of the hotel, had risen in time to peer out
  of the wooden gate just as the rider was passing. It was still
  too dark to see the man's face distinctly, but his form, and the
  burden he carried, and the trappings of the horse she noted
  carefully, as was her habit.
  
  "Up to cussedness, that man is. Mighty long an' slim. Lemme see!
  Humph! I know him. I'll go wake up somebody."
  
  As the woman leaned far out of the gate she caught sight of a
  little Indian girl crouching outside of the wall.
  
  "You got no business here, you, Little Blue Flower! Where do you
  live when you do live?"
  
  Little Blue Flower pointed toward the west.
  
  "Why you come hangin' 'round here?" the African woman
  demanded.
  
  "Father Josef send me to help the people who help me," she said,
  in her soft, low voice.
  
  "Go back to your own folks, then, and tell your Daddy Joseph a
  man just stole a big bunch of something and rode south with it.
  He can look after that man. We can get along somehow. Now
  go."
  
  The voice was like a growl, and the little Indian maiden shrank
  back in the shadow of the wall. The next minute Aunty Boone was
  rapping softly on the door of the room whose guest had registered
  as Jean Deau. Ten minutes later another horseman left the street
  beside the hotel and crossed the Plaza, riding erect and
  open-faced as only Jondo could ride. Then the African woman
  sought out Rex Krane, and in a few brief sentences told him what
  had been taking place. All of which Rex was far too wise to
  repeat to Beverly and me.
  
  That afternoon it happened that we left Mat Nivers at the hotel,
  while Rex Krane and Beverly and I strolled out of town on a
  well-beaten trail leading toward the west.
  
  "It looks interestin'. Let's go on a ways," Rex commented,
  lazily.
  
  Nobody would have guessed from his manner but that he was
  indulgently helping us to have a good time with certain
  restriction as to where we should go, and what we might say, nor
  that, of the three, he was the most alert and full of definite
  purpose.
  
  We sat down beside the way as a line of burros loaded with
  firewood from the mountains trailed slowly by, with their
  stolid-looking drivers staring at us in silent
  unfriendliness.
  
  The last driver was the tall young Indian boy whom I had seen
  standing in front of Little Blue Flower in the crowd of the
  Plaza. He paid no heed to our presence, and his face was
  expressionless as he passed us.
  
  "Stupid as his own burro, and not nearly so handsome," Beverly
  commented.
  
  The boy turned quietly and stared at my cousin, who had not meant
  to be overheard. Nobody could read the meaning of that look, for
  his face was as impenetrable as the adobe walls of the Palace of
  the Governors.
  
  "Bev, you are laying up trouble. An Indian never forgets, and
  you'll be finding that fellow under your pillow every night till
  he gets your scalp," Rex Krane declared, as we went on our
  way.
  
  Beverly laughed and stiffened his sturdy young arms.
  
  "He's welcome to it if he can get it," he said, carelessly. "How
  many million miles do we go to-day, Mr. Krane?"
  
  "Yonder is your terminal," Rex replied, pointing to a little
  settlement of mud huts huddling together along the trail. "They
  call that little metropolis Agua Fria--'pure water'--because
  there ain't no water there. It's the last place to look for
  anybody. That's why we look there. You will go in like gentlemen,
  though--and don't be surprised nor make any great noise over
  anything you see there. If a riot starts I'll do the
  startin'."
  
  Carelessly as this was said, we understood the command behind
  it.
  
  Near the village, I happened to glance back over the way we had
  come, and there, striding in, soft-footed as a cat behind us, was
  that young Indian. I turned again just as we reached the first
  straggling houses at the outskirts of the settlement, but he had
  disappeared.
  
  It was a strange little village, this Agua Fria. Its squat
  dwellings, with impenetrable adobe walls, had sat out there on
  the sandy edge of the dry Santa Fé River through many and
  many a lagging decade; a single trail hardly more than a
  cart-width across ran through it. A church, mud-walled and
  ancient, rose above the low houses, but of order or uniformity of
  outline there was none. Hands long gone to dust had shaped those
  crude dwellings on this sunny plain where only man decays, though
  what he builds endures.
  
  Nobody was in sight and there was something awesome in the very
  silence everywhere. Rex lounged carelessly along, as one who had
  no particular aim in view and was likely to turn back at any
  moment. But Beverly and I stared hard in every direction.
  
  At the end of the village two tiny mud huts, separated from each
  other by a mere crack of space, encroached on this narrow way
  even a trifle more than the neighboring huts. As we were passing
  these a soft Hopi voice called:
  
  "Beverly! Beverly!" And Little Blue Flower, peeping shyly out
  from the narrow opening, lifted a warning hand.
  
  "The church! The church!" she repeated, softly, then darted out
  of sight, as if the brown wall were but thick brown vapor into
  which she melted.
  
  "Why, it's our own little girl!" Beverly exclaimed, with a smile,
  just as Little Blue Flower turned away, but I am sure she caught
  his words and saw his smile.
  
  We would have called to her, but Rex Krane evidently did not hear
  her, for he neither halted nor turned his head. So, remembering
  our command to be quiet, we passed on.
  
  "I guess we are about to the end of this 'pure water' resort.
  It's gettin' late. Let's go back home now," our leader said,
  dispiritedly. So we turned back toward Santa Fé.
  
  At the narrow opening where we had seen Little Blue Flower the
  young Indian boy stood upright and motionless, and again he gave
  no sign of seeing us.
  
  "Let's just run over to that church a minute while we are here.
  Looks interestin' over there," Rex suggested.
  
  I wondered if he could have heard Little Blue Flower, and thought
  her suggestion was a good one, or if this was a mere whim of
  his.
  
  The church, a crude mission structure, stood some distance from
  the trail. As we entered a priest came forward to meet us.
  
  "Can I serve you?" he asked.
  
  The voice was clear and sweet--the same voice that we had heard
  out beyond the arroyo southeast of town, the same face, too, that
  we had seen, with the big dark eyes full of fire. Involuntarily I
  recalled how his hand had pointed to the west when he had
  pronounced a blessing that day.
  
  "Thank you, Father--" Rex began.
  
  "Josef," the holy man said.
  
  "Yes, thank you, Father Josef. We are just looking at things. No
  wish to be rude, you know."
  
  Rex lifted his cap and stood bareheaded in the priestly
  presence.
  
  Father Josef smiled.
  
  "Look here, then."
  
  He led us up the aisle to where, cuddled down on a crude seat, a
  little girl lay asleep. Her golden hair fell like a cloud about
  her face, flowing over the edge of the seat almost to the floor.
  Her cheeks were pink and warm, and her dimpled white hands were
  clasped together. I had caught Mat Nivers napping many a time,
  but never in my life had I seen anything half so sweet as this
  sleeping girl in the beauty of her innocence. And I knew at a
  glance that this was the same girl whom I had seen before at the
  door of the old Church of San Miguel.
  
  "Same as grown-ups when the sermon is dull. Thank you, Father
  Josef. It's a pretty picture. We must be goin' now." Rex Krane
  dropped some silver in the priest's hand and we left the
  church.
  
  At the door we passed the Indian boy again, and a third time he
  gave no sign of seeing us. I was the only one who was troubled,
  however, for Rex and Beverly did not seem to notice him. As we
  left the village I caught sight of him again following behind
  us.
  
  "Look there, Bev," I said, in a low voice. Beverly glanced back,
  then turned and stared defiantly at the boy.
  
  "Maybe Rex knows about Indians," he said, lightly. "That's three
  times I found him fooling around in less than an hour, but my
  scalp is still hanging over one ear."
  
  He pushed back his cap and pulled at his bright brown locks.
  Happy Bev! How headstrong, brave, and care-free he walked the
  plains that day.
  
  The evening shadows were lengthening and the peaks of the
  Sangre-de-Christo range were taking on the scarlet stains of
  sunset when we raced into town at last. Rex Krane went at once to
  find Uncle Esmond, and Beverly and I hurried to the hotel to tell
  Mat of all that we had seen.
  
  Her gray eyes were glowing when she met us at the door and led us
  into a corner where we could talk by ourselves.
  
  "Uncle Esmond has sold everything to that Mexican merchant, Felix
  Narveo, and we are going to start home just as soon as he can
  find that little girl."
  
  "Oh, we've found her! We've found her!" Beverly burst out. But
  Mat hushed him at once.
  
  "Don't yell it to the sides, Beverly Clarenden. Now listen!" Mat
  dropped her voice almost to a whisper. "He's going to take that
  little girl back with us as far as Fort Leavenworth, and then
  send her on to St. Louis where she has some folks, I guess."
  
  "Isn't he a clipper, though," Beverly exclaimed.
  
  "But what if the Indians should get us?" I asked, anxiously. "I
  heard the colonel at Fort Leavenworth just give it to Uncle
  Esmond one night for bringing us."
  
  "You are safe or you are not safe everywhere. And if we got in
  here I reckon we can get out," Mat reasoned, philosophically.
  "And Uncle Esmond isn't afraid and he's set on doing it. We
  aren't going to take any goods back, so we can travel lots
  faster, and everything will be put in the wagons so we can grab
  out what's worth most in a hurry if we have to."
  
  So we talked matters over now as we had done on that April day
  out on the parade-ground at Fort Leavenworth. But now we knew
  something of what might be before us on that homeward journey.
  Thrilling hours those were. It is no wonder that, schooled by
  their events, young as we were, we put away childish things.
  
  That night while we slept things happened of which we knew
  nothing for many years. There was no moon and the glaring yellow
  daytime plain was full of gray-edged shadows, under the far stars
  of a midnight blue sky, as Esmond Clarenden took the same trail
  that we had followed in the afternoon. On to the village of Agua
  Fria, black and silent, he rode until he came to the church door.
  Here he dismounted, and, quickly securing his horse, he entered
  the building. The chill midnight wind swept in through the open
  door behind him, threatening to blot out the flickering candles
  about the altar. Father Josef came slowly down the aisle to meet
  him, while a tall man, crouching like a beast about to spring,
  rather than a penitent at prayer, shrank down in the shadowy
  corner inside the doorway.
  
  The merchant, solid and square-built and fearless, stood before
  the young priest baring his head as he spoke.
  
  "I come on a grave errand, good Father. This afternoon my two
  nephews and a young man from New England came in here and saw a
  child asleep under protection of this holy sanctuary. That
  child's name is Eloise St. Vrain. I had hoped to find her mother
  able to care for her. She--cannot do it, as you know. I must do
  it for her now. I come here to claim what it is my duty to
  protect."
  
  At these words the crouching figure sprang up and Ferdinand
  Ramero, his steel-blue eyes blazing, came forward with cat-like
  softness. But the sturdy little man before the priest stood, hat
  in hand, undisturbed by any presence there.
  
  "Father Josef," the tall man began, in a voice of menace, "you
  will not protect this American here. I have confessed to you and
  you know that this man is my enemy. He comes, a traitor to his
  own country and a spy to ours. He has risked the lives of three
  children by bringing them across the plains. He comes alone where
  large wagon-trains dare not venture. He could not go back to the
  States now. And lastly, good Father, he has no right to the child
  that he claims is here."
  
  "To the child that is here, asleep beside our sacred altar,"
  Father Josef said, sternly.
  
  Ferdinand Ramero turned upon the priest fiercely.
  
  "Even the Church might go too far," he muttered,
  threateningly.
  
  "It might, but it never has," the holy man agreed. Then turning
  to Esmond Clarenden, he continued: "You must see that these
  charges do not stand against you. Our Holy Church offers no
  protection, outside of these four walls, to a traitor or a spy or
  even an unpatriotic speculator seeking to profit by the needs of
  war. Nor could it sanction giving the guardianship of a child to
  one who daringly imperils his own life or the lives of children,
  nor can it sanction any rights of guardianship unless due cause
  be given for granting them."
  
  Ferdinand Ramero smiled as the priest concluded. He was a
  handsome man, with the sort of compelling magnetism that gives
  controlling power to its possessor. But because I knew my uncle
  so well in after years, I can picture Esmond Clarenden as he
  stood that night before the young priest in the little mud-walled
  church of Agua Fria. And I can picture the tall, threatening man
  in the shadows beside him. But never have I held an image of him
  showing a sign of fear.
  
  "Father Josef, I am willing to make any explanation to you. As
  for this man whom you call Ramero here--up in the States he bears
  another name and I finished with him there six years ago--I have
  no time nor breath to waste on him. Are these your demands?" my
  uncle asked.
  
  "They are," Father Josef replied.
  
  "Do I take away the little girl, Eloise, unmolested, if you are
  satisfied?" Esmond Clarenden demanded, first making sure of his
  bargain, like the merchant he was.
  
  Ferdinand Ramero stiffened insolently at these words, and looked
  threateningly at Father Josef.
  
  "You do," the holy man replied, something of the flashing light
  in his eyes alone revealing what sort of a soldier the State had
  lost when this man took on churchly orders.
  
  "I am no traitor to my flag, since my full commerical
  purpose was known and sanctioned by the military authority at
  Fort Leavenworth before I left there. I brought no aid to my
  country's enemy because my full cargo was bargained for by your
  merchant, Felix Narveo, before the declaration of war was made. I
  merely acted as his agent bringing his own to him. I have come
  here as a spy only in this--that I shall profit in strictly
  legitimate business by the knowledge I hold of commercial
  conditions and my acquaintance with your citizens when this war
  for territory ends, no matter how its results may run. I deal in
  wholesome trade, not in human hate. I offer value for value, not
  blood for blood."
  
  Up to this time a smile had lighted the merchant's eyes. But now
  his voice lowered, and the lines about his mouth hardened.
  
  "As to the guardianship of children, Father Josef, I am a
  bachelor who for nearly nine years have given a home, education,
  support, and affection to three orphan children, until, though
  young in years, they are wise and capable. So zealous was I for
  their welfare, that when word came to me--no matter how--that a
  company of Mexicans were on their way to Independence, Missouri,
  ostensibly to seek the protection of the United States Government
  and to settle on the frontier there, but really to seize these
  children in my absence, and carry them into the heart of old
  Mexico, I decided at once that they would be safer with me in New
  Mexico than without me in Missouri.
  
  "In the night I passed this Mexican gang at Council Grove,
  waiting to seize me in the morning. At Pawnee Rock a storm
  scattered a band of Kiowa Indians to whom these same Mexicans had
  given a little Indian slave girl as a reward for attacking our
  train if the Mexicans should fail to get us themselves. Through
  every peril that threatens that long trail we came safely because
  the hand of the Lord preserved us."
  
  Esmond Clarenden paused, and the priest bowed a moment in
  prayer.
  
  "If I have dared fate in this journey," the merchant went on, "it
  was not to be foolhardy, nor for mere money gains, but to keep my
  own with me, and to rescue the daughter of Mary St. Vrain, of
  Santa Fé, and take her to a place of safety. It was her
  mother's last pleading call, as you, Father Josef, very well
  know, since you yourself heard her last words and closed her dead
  eyes. Under the New Mexican law, the guardianship of her property
  rests with others. Mine is the right to protect her and, by the
  God of heaven, I mean to do it!"
  
  Esmond Clarenden's voice was deep and powerful now, filling the
  old church with its vehemence.
  
  Up by the altar, the little girl sat up suddenly and looked about
  her, terrified by the dim light and the strange faces there.
  
  "Don't be afraid, Eloise."
  
  How strangely changed was this gentle tone from the vehement
  voice of a moment ago.
  
  The little girl sprang up and stared hard at the speaker. But no
  child ever resisted that smile by which Esmond Clarenden held
  Beverly and me in loving obedience all the days of our lives with
  him.
  
  Shaking with fear as she caught sight of Ferdinand Ramero, the
  girl reached out her hands toward the merchant, who put his arm
  protectingly about her. The big, dark eyes were filled with
  tears; the head with its sunny ripples of tangled hair leaned
  against him for a moment. Then the fighting spirit came back to
  her, so early in her young life had the need for defending
  herself been forced upon her.
  
  "Where have I been? Where am I going?" she demanded.
  
  "You are going with me now," Uncle Esmond said, softly.
  
  "And never have to fight Marcos any more? Oh, good, good, good!
  Let's go now!"
  
  She frowned darkly at Ferdinand Ramero, and, clutching tightly at
  Esmond Clarenden's hands, she began pulling him toward the open
  door.
  
  "Eloise," Father Josef said, "you are about to go away with this
  good man who will be a father to you. Be a good child as your
  mother would want you to be." His musical voice was full of
  pathos.
  
  Eloise dropped her new friend's hand and sprang down the
  aisle.
  
  "I will be good, Father Josef," she said, squeezing his dark hand
  between her fair little palms. Then, tossing back the curls from
  her face, she reached up a caressing hand to his cheek.
  
  Father Josef stooped and kissed her white forehead, and turned
  hastily toward the altar.
  
  "Esmond Clarenden!" It was Ferdinand Ramero who spoke, his sharp,
  bitter voice filling the church.
  
  "By order of this priest Eloise St. Vrain is yours to protect so
  long as you stay within these walls. The minute you leave them
  you reckon with me."
  
  Father Josef whirled about quickly, but the man made a scoffing
  gesture.
  
  "I brought this child here for protection this morning. But for
  that sickly Yankee and two inquisitive imps of boys she would
  have been safe here. I acknowledge sanctuary privilege. Use it as
  long as you choose in the church of Agua Fria. Set but a foot
  outside these walls and I say again you reckon with me."
  
  His tall form thrust itself menacingly before the little man and
  his charge clinging to his arm.
  
  "Set but a foot outside these walls and you will reckon
  with me."
  
  It was Jondo's clear voice, and the big plainsman, towering up
  suddenly behind Ferdinand Ramero, filled the doorway.
  
  "You meant to hide in the old Church of San Miguel because it is
  so near to the home where you have kept this little girl. But
  Gail Clarenden blocked your game and found your house and this
  child in the church door before our wagon-train had reached the
  end of the trail. You found this church your nearest refuge,
  meaning to leave it again early in the morning. I have waited
  here for you all day, protected by the same means that brought
  word to Santa Fé this morning. Come out now if you wish.
  You dare not follow me to the States, but I dare to come to your
  land. Can you meet me here?" Jondo was handsome in his sunny
  moods. In his anger he was splendid.
  
  Ferdinand Ramero dropped to a seat beside Father Josef.
  
  "I have told you I cannot face that man. I will stay here now,"
  he said, in a low voice to the priest. "But I do not stay here
  always, and I can send where I do not follow," he added,
  defiantly.
  
  Esmond Clarenden was already on his horse with his little charge,
  snugly wrapped, in his arms.
  
  Father Josef at the portal lifted his hand in sign of
  blessing.
  
  "Peace be with you. Do not tarry long," he said. Then, turning to
  Jondo, he gazed into the strong, handsome face. "Go in peace. He
  will not follow. But forget not to love even your enemies."
  
  In the midnight dimness Jondo's bright smile glowed with all its
  courageous sweetness.
  
  "I finished that fight long ago," he said. "I come only to help
  others."
  
  Long these two, priest and plainsman, stood there with clasped
  hands, the gray night mists of the Santa Fé Valley round
  about them and all the far stars of the midnight sky gleaming
  above them. Then Jondo mounted his horse and rode away up the
  trail toward Santa Fé. 
  I will even make a way in the wilderness. --ISAIAH.
  Bent's fort stood alone in the wide wastes of the upper Arkansas
  valley. From the Atlantic to the Pacific shores there was in
  America no more isolated spot holding a man's home. Out on the
  north bank of the Arkansas, in a grassy river bottom, with
  rolling treeless plains rippling away on every hand, it reared
  its high yellow walls in solitary defiance, mute token of the
  white man's conquering hand in a savage wilderness. It was a
  great rectangle built of adobe brick with walls six feet through
  at the base, sloping to only a third of that width at the top,
  eighteen feet from the ground. Round bastions, thirty feet high,
  at two diagonal corners, gave outlook and defense. Immense wooden
  doors guarded a wide gateway looking eastward down the Arkansas
  River. The interior arrangement was after the Mexican custom of
  building, with rooms along the outer walls all opening into a big
  patio, or open court. A cross-wall separated this court
  from the large corral inside the outer walls at the rear. A
  portal, or porch, roofed with thatch on cedar poles, ran around
  the entire inner rectangle, sheltering the rooms somewhat from
  the glare of the white-washed court. A little world in itself was
  this Bent's Fort, a self-dependent community in the solitary
  places. The presiding genius of this community was William Bent,
  whose name is graven hard and deep in the annals of the eastern
  slopes of the Rocky Mountain country in the earlier decades of
  the nineteenth century.
  
  Hither in the middle '40's the wild trails of the West converged:
  northward, from the trading-posts of Bent and St. Vrain on the
  Platte; south, over the Raton Pass from Taos and Santa Fé;
  westward, from the fur-bearing plateaus of the Rockies, where
  trappers and traders brought their precious piles of pelts down
  the Arkansas; and eastward, half a thousand miles from the
  Missouri River frontier--the pathways of a restless, roving
  people crossed each other here. And it was toward this wilderness
  crossroads that Esmond Clarenden directed his course in that
  summertime of my boyhood years.
  
  The heat of a July sun beat pitilessly down on the scorching
  plains. The weary trail stretched endlessly on toward a somewhere
  in the yellow distance that meant shelter and safety. Spiral
  gusts of air gathering out of the low hills to the southeast
  picked up great cones of dust and whirled them zigzagging across
  the brown barren face of the land. Every draw was bone dry; even
  the greener growths along their sheltered sides, where the last
  moisture hides itself, wore a sickly sallow hue.
  
  Under the burden of this sun-glare, and through these stifling
  dust-cones, our little company struggled sturdily forward.
  
  We had left Santa Fé as suddenly and daringly as we had
  entered it, the very impossibility of risking such a journey
  again being our, greatest safeguard. Esmond Clarenden was doing
  the thing that couldn't be done, and doing it quickly.
  
  In the gray dawn after that midnight ride to Agua Fria a little
  Indian girl had slipped like a brown shadow across the Plaza.
  Stopping at the door of the Exchange Hotel, she leaned against
  the low slab of petrified wood that for many a year served as a
  loafer's roost before the hotel doorway. Inside the building
  Jondo caught the clear twitter of a bird's song at daybreak,
  twice repeated. A pause, and then it came again, fainter this
  time, as if the bird were fluttering away through the Plaza
  treetops.
  
  In that pause, the gate in the wall had opened softly, and Aunty
  Boone's sharp eyes peered through the crack. The girl caught one
  glimpse of the black face, then, dropping a tiny leather bag
  beside the stone, she sped away.
  
  A tall young Indian boy, prone on the ground behind a pile of
  refuse in the shadowy Plaza, lifted his head in time to see the
  girl glide along the portal of the Palace of the Governors and
  disappear at the corner of the structure. Then he rose and
  followed her with silent moccasined feet.
  
  And Jondo, who had hurried to the hotel door, saw only the lithe
  form of an Indian boy across the Plaza. Then his eye fell on the
  slender bag beside the stone slab. It held a tiny scrap of paper,
  bearing a message:
Take long trail QUICK. Mexicans follow
  far. Trust bearer anywhere.
  JOSEF.
An hour later we were on our way toward the open prairies and
  the Stars and Stripes afloat above Fort Leavenworth.
  
  In the wagon beside Mat Nivers was the little girl whose face had
  been clear in the mystic vision of my day-dreams on the April
  morning when I had gone out to watch for the big fish on the
  sand-bars; the morning when I had felt the first heart-throb of
  desire for the trail and the open plains whereon my life-story
  would later be written.
  
  We carried no merchandise now. Everything bent toward speed and
  safety. Our ponies and mules were all fresh ones--secured for
  this journey two hours after we had come into Santa
  Fé--save for the big sturdy dun creature that Uncle
  Esmond, out of pure sentiment, allowed to trail along behind the
  wagons toward his native heath in the Missouri bottoms.
  
  We had crossed the Gloriettas and climbed over the Raton Pass
  rapidly, and now we were nearing the upper Arkansas, where the
  old trail turns east for its long stretch across the
  prairies.
  
  As far as the eye could see there was no living thing save our
  own company in all the desolate plain aquiver with heat and ashy
  dry. The line of low yellow bluffs to the southeast hardly cast a
  shadow save for a darker dun tint here and there.
  
  At midday we drooped to a brief rest beside the sun-baked
  trail.
  
  "You all jus' one color," Aunty Boone declared. "You all like the
  dus' you made of 'cep' Little Lees an' me. She's white and I'm
  black. Nothin' else makes a pin streak on the face of the
  earth."
  
  Aunty Boone flourished on deserts and her black face glistened in
  the sunlight. Deep in the shadow of the wagon cover the face of
  Eloise St. Vrain--"Little Lees," Aunty Boone had named
  her--bloomed pink as a wild rose in its frame of soft hair. She
  had become Aunty Boone's meat and drink from the moment the
  strange African woman first saw her. This regard, never expressed
  in caress nor word of tenderness, showed itself in warding from
  the little girl every wind of heaven that might visit her too
  roughly. Not that Eloise gave up easily. Her fighting spirit made
  her rebel against weariness and the hardships of trail life new
  to her. She fitted into our ways marvelously well, demanding
  equal rights, but no favors. By some gentle appeal, hardly put
  into words, we knew that Uncle Esmond did not want us to talk to
  her about herself. And Beverly and Mat and I, however much we
  might speculate among ourselves, never thought of resisting his
  wishes.
  
  Eloise was gracious with Mat, but evidently the boy Marcos had
  made her wary of all boys. She paid no attention to Beverly and
  me at first. All her pretty smiles and laughing words were for
  Uncle Esmond and Jondo. And she was lovely. Never in all these
  long and varied years have I seen another child with such a
  richness of coloring, nor such a mass of golden hair rippling
  around her forehead and falling in big, soft curls about her
  neck. Her dark eyes with their long black lashes gave to her face
  its picturesque beauty, and her plump, dimpled arms and sturdy
  little form bespoke the wholesome promise of future years.
  
  But the life of the trail was not meant for such as she, and I
  know now that the assurance of having saved her from some greater
  misfortune alone comforted Uncle Esmond and Jondo in this
  journey. For Aunty Boone was right when she declared, "They tote
  together always."
  
  As we grouped together under that shelterless glare, getting what
  comfort we could out of the brief rest, Jondo sprang up suddenly,
  his eyes aglow with excitement.
  
  "What's the matter? Because if it isn't, this is one hot day to
  pretend like it is," Rex Krane asserted.
  
  He was lying on the hot earth beside the trail, his hat pulled
  over his face. Beverly and Bill Banney were staring dejectedly
  across the landscape, seeing nothing. I sat looking off toward
  the east, wondering what lay behind those dun bluffs in the
  distance.
  
  "Something is wrong back yonder," Jondo declared, making a
  half-circle with his hand toward the trail behind us.
  
  My heart seemed to stop mid-beat with a kind of fear I had never
  known before. Aunty Boone had always been her own defender. Mat
  Nivers had cared for me so much that I never doubted her bigger
  power. It was for Eloise, Aunty Boone's "Little Lees," that my
  fear leaped up.
  
  I can close my eyes to-day and see again the desolate land banded
  by the broad white trail. I can see the dusty wagons and our
  tired mules with drooping heads. I can see the earnest, anxious
  faces of Esmond Clarenden and Jondo; Beverly and Bill Banney
  hardly grasping Jondo's meaning; Rex Krane, half asleep on the
  edge of the trail. I can see Mat Nivers, brown and strong, and
  Aunty Boone oozing sweat at every pore. But these are only the
  setting for that little girl on the wagon-seat with white face
  and big dark eyes, under the curl-shadowed forehead.
  
  Jondo stared hard toward the hills in the southeast. Then he
  turned to my uncle with grim face and burning eyes; His was a
  wonderful voice, clear, strong and penetrating. But in danger he
  always spoke in a low tone.
  
  "I've watched those dust-whirls for an hour. The wind isn't
  making all of them. Somebody is stirring them up for cover. Every
  whirl has an Indian in it. It's all of ten miles to Bent's. We
  must fight them off and let the others run for it, before they
  cut us off in front. Look at that!"
  
  The exclamation burst from the plainsman's lips.
  
  That was my last straight looking. The rest is ever a
  kaleidoscope of action thrilled through with terror. What I saw
  was a swiftly moving black splotch coming out of the hills, with
  huge dust-heaps flying here and there before it. Then a yellow
  cloud spiral blinded our sight as a gust of hot wind swept round
  us. I remember Jondo's stern face and blazing eyes and his
  words:
  
  "Mexicans behind the Indians!"
  
  And Uncle Esmond's voice:
  
  "Narveo said they would get us, but I hoped we had outrun
  them."
  
  The far plains seemed spotted with Indians racing toward us, and
  coming at an angle from the southeast a dozen Mexicans swept in
  to cut us off from the trail in front.
  
  I remember a quick snatching of precious things in boxes placed
  for such a moment as this, a quick snapping of halter ropes
  around the ponies' necks, a gleaming of gun-barrels in the hot
  sunlight; a solid cloud of dust rolling up behind us, bigger and
  nearer every second; and the urgent voice of Jondo: "Ride for
  your lives!"
  
  And the race began. On the trail somewhere before us was Bent's
  Fort. We could only hope to reach it soon. We did not even look
  behind as we tore down that dusty wilderness way.
  
  At the first motion Aunty Boone had seized Eloise St. Vrain with
  one hand and the big dun mule's neck-strap with the other.
  
  "Go to the devil, you tigers and cannibals!" She roared with the
  growl of a desert lioness, shaking her big black fist at the band
  of Mexicans pouring out of the hills.
  
  And dun mule and black woman and white-faced, terror-stricken
  child became only a dust-cloud far in front of us. Mat and
  Beverly and I leaped to the ponies and followed the lead of the
  African woman. Nearest to us was Rex Krane, always a shield for
  the younger and less able. And behind him, as defense for the
  rear and protection for the van, came Esmond Clarenden and Bill
  Banney, with Jondo nearest the enemy, where danger was
  greatest.
  
  I tell it calmly, but I lived it in a blind whirl. The swift
  hoof-beat, the wild Indian yells, the whirl of arrows and whiz of
  bullets, the onrush to outrun the Mexicans who were trying to cut
  us off from the trail in front. Lived it! I lived ages in it. And
  then an arrow cut my pony's flank, making him lurch from the
  trail, a false step, the pony staggering, falling. A sharp pain
  in my shoulder, the smell of fire, a shriek from demon throats,
  the glaring sunlight on the rocking plain, searing my eyes in a
  mad whirlpool of blinding light, the fading sounds--and then--all
  was black and still.
When I opened my eyes again I was lying on a cot. Bare adobe
  walls were around me, and a high plastered roof resting on cedar
  poles sheltered that awful glare from my eyes. Through the open
  door I could see the rain falling on the bare ground of the
  court, filling the shallow places with puddles.
  
  I tried to lift myself to see more as shrieks of childish
  laughter caught my ear, but there was a sickish heat in my dry
  skin, an evil taste in my throat, and a sharp pain in my left
  shoulder; and I fell back again.
  
  Another shriek, and Eloise St. Vrain came before my doorway,
  pattering with bare white feet out into the center of the
  patio puddles and laughing at the dashing summer shower.
  Her damp hair, twisted into a knot on top of her head, was
  curling tightly about her temples and neck, her eyes were
  shining; her wet clothes slapping at her bare white knees--a
  picture of the delicious happiness of childhood. A little child
  of three or four years was toddling after her. He was brown as a
  berry, and at first I thought he was a little Indian. I could
  hear Mat and Beverly splashing about safe and joyous somewhere,
  and I forgot my fever and pain and the dread of that awful glare
  coming again to sear my burning eyeballs as I watched and
  listened. A louder shriek as the little child ran behind Eloise
  and gave her a vigorous shove for one so small.
  
  "Oh, Charlie Bent, see what you've done," Mat cried; and then
  Beverly was picking up "Little Lees," sprawling, all mud-smeared
  and happy, in the very middle of the court.
  
  The child stood looking at her with shining black eyes full of a
  wicked mischief, but he said not a word.
  
  Just then a dull grunt caught my ear, and I half-turned to see a
  cot beyond mine. An Indian boy lay on it, looking straight at me.
  I stared back at him and neither of us spoke. His head was
  bandaged and his cheek was swollen, but with my memory for faces,
  even Indian faces, I knew him at once for the boy who had
  followed us into Agua Fria and out of it again.
  
  Just then the frolickers came to the door and peered in at
  me.
  
  "Are you awake?" Eloise asked.
  
  Then seeing my face, she came romping in, followed by Mat and
  Beverly and little Charlie Bent, all wet and hilarious. They gave
  no heed to the Indian boy, who pretended to be asleep. Once,
  however, I caught him watching Beverly, and his eyes were like
  dagger points.
  
  "We are having the best times. You must get well right away,
  because we are going to stay." They all began to clatter,
  noisily.
  
  Rex Krane appeared at the door just then and they stopped
  suddenly.
  
  "Clear out of here, you magpies," he commanded, and they scuttled
  away into the warm rain and the puddles again.
  
  "Do you want anything, Gail?" Rex asked, bending over me.
  
  I drew his head down with my right arm.
  
  "I want that Indian out of here," I whispered.
  
  "Out he goes," Rex returned, promptly, and almost before I knew
  it the boy was taken away. When we were alone the tall young man
  sat down beside me.
  
  "You want to ask me a million questions. I'll answer 'em to save
  you the trouble," he began, in his comfortable way.
  
  "You are wounded in your shoulder. Slight, bullet, that's
  Mexican; deep, arrow, that's Indian. But you are here and pretty
  much alive and you will be well soon."
  
  "And Uncle Esmond? Jondo? Bill?" I began, lifting myself up on my
  well arm.
  
  "Keep quiet. I'll answer faster. Everybody all right. Clarenden
  and Jondo leave for Independence the minute you are better, and a
  military escort permits."
  
  I dropped down again.
  
  "The U.S. Army, en route for perdition, via Santa Fé, is
  camping in the big timbers down-stream now. Jondo and Esmond
  Clarenden will leave you boys and girls here till it's safe to
  take you out again. And I and Daniel Boone, vestal god and
  goddess of these hearth-fires, will keep you from harm till that
  time. Bill's joining the army for sure now, and our happy family
  life is ended as far as the Santa Fé Trail is concerned.
  I'm a well man now, but not quite army-well yet, they tell
  me."
  
  "Tell me about this." I pointed to my shoulder.
  
  "All in good time. It was a nasty mess of fish. A dozen Mexicans
  and as many Indians had followed us all the way from the sunny
  side of the Gloriettas. You and Bev and Mat had got by the
  Mexics. Daniel Boone and 'Little Lees' were climbing the North
  Pole by that time. The rest of us were giving battle straight
  from the shoulder; and someway, I don't know how, just as we had
  the gang beat back behind us--you had a sniff of a bullet just
  then--an Indian slipped ahead in the dust. I was tendin' to mite
  of an arrow wound in my right calf, and I just caught him in
  time, aimin' at Bev; but he missed him for you. I got him,
  though, and clubbed his scalp a bit loose."
  
  Rex paused and stared at his right leg.
  
  "How did that boy get here, Rex? Is he a friendly Indian?" I
  asked.
  
  "Oh, Jondo brought him in out of the wet. Says the child was made
  to come along, and as soon as he could get away from the gang he
  had to run with up here; he came right into camp to help us
  against them. Fine young fellow! Jondo has it from them in
  authority that we can trust him lyin' or tellin' the truth.
  He's all right."
  
  "How did he get hurt?" I inquired, still remembering in my own
  mind the day at Agua Fria.
  
  "He'd got into our camp and was fightin' on our side when it
  happened," Rex replied.
  
  "Some of them shot at him, then?" I insisted. "No, I beat him up
  with the butt of my gun for shootin' you," Rex said, lazily.
  
  "At me! Why don't you tell Jondo?"
  
  "I tried to," Rex answered, "but I can't make him see it that
  way. He's got faith in that redskin and he's going to see that he
  gets back to New Mexico safely--after while."
  
  "Rex, that's the same boy that was down in Agua Fria, the one Bev
  laughed at. He's no good Indian," I declared.
  
  "You are too wise, Gail Clarenden," Rex drawled, carelessly. "A
  boy of your brains had ought to be born in Boston. Jondo and I
  can't agree about him. His name, he says, is Santan. There's one
  'n' too many. If you knock off the last one it makes him
  Santa--'holy'; but if you knock out the middle it's Satan. We
  don't knock out the same 'n', Jondo and me."
  
  Just then the little child came tumbling noisily into the
  room.
  
  "Look here, youngun. You can't be makin' a racket here," Rex
  said.
  
  The boy stared at him, impudently.
  
  "I will, too," he declared, sullenly, kicking at my cot with all
  his might.
  
  Rex made no reply but, seizing the child around the waist, he
  carried him kicking and screaming outside.
  
  "You stay out or I'll spank you!" Rex said, dropping him to the
  ground.
  
  The boy looked up with blazing eyes, but said nothing.
  
  "That's little Charlie Bent. His daddy runs this splendid fort.
  His mother is a Cheyenne squaw, and he's a grim clinger of a
  half-breed. Some day he'll be a terror on these plains. It's in
  him, I know. But that won't interfere with us any. And you
  children are a lot safer here than out on the trail. Great God! I
  wonder we ever got you here!" Rex's face was very grave. "Now go
  to sleep and wake up well. No more thinkin' like a man. You can
  be a child again for a while."
  
  Those were happy days that followed. Safe behind the strong walls
  of old Fort Bent, we children had not a care; and with the stress
  and strain of the trail life lifted from our young minds, we
  rebounded into happy childhood living. Every day offered a new
  drama to our wonder-loving eyes. We watched the big hide-press
  for making buffalo robes and furs into snug bales. We climbed to
  the cupola of the headquarters department and saw the soldiers
  marching by on their way to New Mexico. We saw the Ute and the
  Red River Comanche come filing in on their summer expeditions
  from the mountains. We saw the trade lines from the far north
  bearing down to this wilderness crossroads with their early fall
  stock for barter.
  
  Our playground was the court off which all the rooms opened. And
  however wild and boisterous the scenes inside those walls in that
  summer of 1846, in four young lives no touch of evil took root.
  Stronger than the six-feet width of wall, higher than the
  eighteen feet of adobe brick guarding us round about, was the
  stern strength of the young Boston man interned in the fort to
  protect us from within, as the strength of that structure
  defended us from without.
  
  And yet he might have failed sometimes, had it not been for Aunty
  Boone. Nobody trifled with her.
  
  "You let them children be. An give 'em the run of this shack,"
  she commanded of the lesser powers whose business was to domineer
  over the daily life there. "The man that makes trouble wide as a
  needle is across is goin' to meet me an' the Judgment Day the
  same minute."
  
  "When Daniel gets on her crack-o'-doom voice, the mountains goin'
  to skip like rams and the little hills like lambs, an' the Army
  of the West won't be necessary to protect the frontier," Rex
  declared. But he knew her worth to his cause, and he welcomed
  it.
  
  And so with her brute force and his moral strength we were
  unconsciously intrenched in a safety zone in this far-isolated
  place.
  
  With neither Uncle Esmond nor Jondo near us for the first time in
  our remembrance, we gained a strength in self-dependence that we
  needed. For with the best of guardianship, there are many ways in
  which a child's day may be harried unless the child asserts
  himself. We had the years of children but the sturdy defiance of
  youth. So we were happy within our own little group, and we paid
  little heed to the things that nobody else could forestall for
  us.
  
  Outside of our family, little Charlie Bent, the half-breed child
  of the proprietor of the fort, was a daily plague. He entered
  into all of our sports with a quickness and perseverance and
  wilfulness that was thoroughly American. He took defeat of his
  wishes, and the equal measure of justice and punishment, with the
  silent doggedness of an Indian; and on the edge of babyhood he
  showed a spirit of revenge and malice that we, in our rollicking,
  affectionate lives, with all our teasing and sense of humor,
  could not understand; so we laughed at his anger and ignored his
  imperious demands.
  
  Behind him always was his Cheyenne mother, jealously defending
  him in everything, and in manifold ways making life a burden--if
  we would submit to the making, which we seldom did.
  
  And lastly Santan, the young boy who had deserted his Mexican
  masters for Jondo's command, contrived, with an Indian's
  shrewdness, never to let us out of his sight. But he gave us no
  opportunity to approach him. He lived in his own world, which was
  a savage one, but he managed that it should overlap our world and
  silently grasp all that was in it. Beverly had persistently tried
  to be friendly for a time, for that was Beverly's way. Failing to
  do it, he had nick-named the boy "Satan" for all time.
  
  "We found Little Blue Flower a sweet little muggins," Beverly
  told the Indian early in our stay at the fort. "We like good
  Indians like her. She's one clipper."
  
  Santan had merely looked him through as though he were air, and
  made no reply, nor did he ever by a single word recognize Beverly
  from that moment.
  
  The evening before we left Fort Bent we children sat together in
  a corner of the court. The day had been very hot for the season
  and the night was warm and balmy, with the moonlight flooding the
  open space, edging the shadows of the inner portal with silver.
  There was much noise and boisterous laughter in the billiard-room
  where the heads of affairs played together. Rex Krane had gone to
  bed early. Out by the rear gate leading to the fort corral, Aunty
  Boone was crooning a weird African melody. Crouching in the deep
  shadows beside the kitchen entrance, the Indian boy, Santan,
  listened to all that was said.
  
  To-night we had talked of to-morrow's journey, and the strength
  of the military guard who should keep us safe along the way.
  Then, as children will, we began to speculate on what should
  follow for us.
  
  "When I get older I'm going to be a freighter like Jondo, Bill
  and me. We'll kill every Indian who dares to yell along the
  trail. I'm going back to Santa Fé and kill that boy that
  stared at me like he was crazy one day at Agua Fria."
  
  In the shadows of the porchway, I saw Santan creeping nearer to
  us as Beverly ran on flippantly:
  
  "I guess I'll marry a squaw, Little Blue Flower, maybe, like the
  Bents do, and live happily ever after."
  
  "I'm going to have a big fine house and live there all the time,"
  Mat Nivers declared. Something in the earnest tone told us what
  this long journey had meant to the brave-hearted girl.
  
  "I'm going to marry Gail when I grow up," Eloise said,
  meditatively. "He won't ever let Marcos pull my hair." She shook
  back the curly tresses, gold-gleaming in the moonlight, and
  squeezed my hand as she sat beside me.
  
  "What will you be, Gail?" Mat asked.
  
  "I'll go and save Bev's scalp when he's gunning too far from
  home," I declared.
  
  "Oh, he'll be 'Little Lees's' husband, and pull that Marcos
  cuss's nose if he tries to pull anybody's curls. Whoo-ee! as
  Aunty Boone would say," Beverly broke in.
  
  I kept a loving grip on the little hand that had found mine, as I
  would have gripped Beverly's hand sometimes in moments when we
  talked together as boys do, in the confidences they never give to
  anybody else.
  
  A gray shadow dropped on the moon, and a chill night wind crept
  down inside the walls. A sudden fear fell on us. The noises
  inside the billiard room seemed far away, and all the doors
  except ours were closed. Santan had crept between us and the two
  open doorways leading to our rooms. What if he should slip
  inside. A snake would have seemed better to me.
  
  A silence had fallen on us, and Eloise still clung to my hand. I
  held it tightly to assure her I wasn't afraid, but I could not
  speak nor move. Aunty Boone's crooning voice was still, and
  everything had grown weird and ghostly. The faint wailing cry of
  some wild thing of the night plains outside crept to our ears,
  making us shiver.
  
  "When the stars go to sleep an' the moon pulls up the gray
  covers, it's time to shut your eyes an' forget." Aunty Boone's
  soft voice broke the spell comfortingly for us. "Any crawlin'
  thing that gits in my way now, goin' to be stepped on."
  
  At the low hissing sound of the last sentence there was a swift
  scrambling along the shadows of the porch, and a door near the
  kitchen snapped shut. The big shining face of the African woman
  glistened above us and the court was flooded again with the
  moon's silvery radiance. As we all sprang up to rush for our
  rooms, "Little Lees" pulled me toward her and gently kissed my
  cheek.
  
  "You never would let Marcos in if he came to Fort Leavenworth,
  would you?" she whispered.
  
  "I'd break his head clear off first," I whispered back, and then
  we scampered away.
  
  That night I dreamed again of the level plains and Uncle Esmond
  and misty mountain peaks, but the dark eyes were not there,
  though I watched long for them.
  
  The next day we left Fort Bent, and when I passed that way again
  it was a great mass of yellow mounds, with a piece of broken wall
  standing desolately here and there, a wreck of the past in a
  solitary land. 
    Love took me softly by the hand,
      Love led me all the country o'er,
    And showed me beauty in the land,
      That I had never seen before.
                  --ANONYMOUS.
You might not be able to find the house to-day, nor the high
  bluff whereon it stood. So many changes have been wrought in half
  a century that what was green headland and wooded valley in the
  far '50's may be but a deep cut or a big fill for a new roadway
  or factory site to-day. So diligently has Kansas City fulfilled
  the scriptural prophecy that "every valley shall be exalted, and
  every mountain and hill shall be made low."
  
  Where the great stream bends to the east, the rugged heights
  about its elbow, Aunty Boone, in those days, was wont to declare,
  did not offer enough level ground to set a hen on. Small reason
  was there then to hope that a city, great and gracious, would one
  day cover those rough ravines and grace those slopes and hilltops
  in the angle between the Missouri and the Kaw.
  
  Aunty Boone had resented leaving Fort Leavenworth when the
  Clarenden business made the young city at the Kaw's mouth more
  desirable for a home. But Esmond Clarenden foresaw that a
  military post, when the protection it offers is no longer needed,
  will not, in itself, be a city-builder. The war had brought New
  Mexico into United States territory; railroads were slowly
  creeping westward toward the Mississippi River; steamboats and
  big covered wagons were bringing settlers into Kansas, where
  little cabins were beginning to mark the landscape with new
  hearth-stones. Congress was wrangling over the great slavery
  question. The Eastern lawmakers were stupidly opposing the
  efforts of Missouri statesmen to extend mail routes westward, or
  to spend any energy toward developing that so-called worthless
  region which they named "the great American desert." And the old
  Santa Fé Trail was now more than ever the highway for the
  commerical treasures of the Rocky Mountains and the great
  Southwest.
  
  It was the time of budding things. In the valley of the Missouri
  the black elm boughs, the silvery sycamores and cottonwoods, and
  the vines on the gray rock-faced cliffs were veiled in shimmering
  draperies of green, with here and there a little group of orchard
  trees faintly pink against the landscape's dainty verdure.
  
  Beverly Clarenden and I stood on the deck of a river steamer as
  it made the wharf at old Westport Landing, where Esmond Clarenden
  waited for us. And long before the steamer's final bump against
  the pier we had noted the tall, slender girl standing beside him.
  We had been away three years, the only schooling outside of Uncle
  Esmond's teaching we were ever to have. We were big boys now,
  greatly conscious of hands and feet in our way, "razor broke,"
  Aunty Boone declared, brimful of hilarity and love of adventure,
  and eager for the plains life, and the dangers of the old trail
  by which we were to conquer or be conquered. In the society of
  women we were timid and ill at ease. Aside from this we were
  self-conceited, for we knew more of the world and felt ourselves
  more important on that spring morning than we ever presumed to
  know or dared to feel in all the years that followed.
  
  "Who is she, Gail, that tall one by little fat Uncle Esmond?"
  Beverly questioned, as we neared the wharf. "You don't reckon
  he's married, Bev? He's all of twenty-four or five years older
  than we are, and we aren't calves any more." I replied, scanning
  the group on the wharf.
  
  But we forgot the girl in our eagerness to bound down the
  gang-plank and hug the man who meant all that home and love could
  mean to us. In our three growing years we had almost eliminated
  Mat Nivers, save as a happy memory, for mails were slow in those
  days and we were poor letter-writers; and we had wondered how to
  meet her properly now. But when the tall, slender girl on the
  wharf came forward and we looked into the wide gray eyes of our
  old-time playmate whom, as little boys, we had both vowed to
  marry, we forgot everything in our overwhelming love for our
  comrade-in-arms, our jolliest friend and counselor.
  
  "Oh, Mat, you miserable thing!" Beverly bubbled, hugging her in
  his arms.
  
  "You are just bigger and sweeter than ever. I mistook you for
  Aunty Boone at first," I chimed in, kissing her on each cheek.
  And we all bundled away in an old-fashioned, low-swung carriage,
  happy as children again, with no barrier between us and the dear
  playmate of the past.
  
  The new home, on the high crest overlooking the Missouri valley,
  nestled deep in the shade of maple and elm trees, a mansion,
  compared to that log house of blessed memory at Fort Leavenworth.
  A winding road led up the steep slope from a wooded ravine where
  a trail ran out from the little city by the river's edge. Vistas
  of sheer cliff and stretches of the muddy on-sweeping Missouri
  and the full-bosomed Kaw, with scrubby timbered ravines and
  growing groves of forest trees, offered themselves at every turn.
  And from the top of the bluff the world unrolled in a panorama of
  nature's own shaping and coloring.
  
  The house was built of stone, with vines climbing about its thick
  walls, and broad veranda. And everywhere Mat's hands had put
  homey touches of comfort and beauty. An hundredfold did she
  return to Esmond Clarenden all the care and protection he had
  given to her in her orphaned childhood. And, after all, it was
  not military outposts, nor railroads, nor mail-lines alone that
  pushed back the wilderness frontier. It was the hand of woman
  that also builded empire westward.
  
  "Mat's got her wish at last," I said, as we sat with Uncle Esmond
  after dinner under a big maple tree and looked out at the far
  yellow Missouri, churning its spring floods to foam against the
  snags along its high-water bound.
  
  "What's Mat's wish?" Uncle Esmond asked.
  
  "To have a good home and stay there. She wished that one
  night, years ago back in old Fort Bent. Don't you remember, Bev,
  when we were out in the court, and how scared blue we all were
  when the moon went under a cloud, and that Indian boy, Santan,
  was creeping between us and the home base?"
  
  "No, I don't remember anything except that we were in Fort Bent.
  Got in by the width of a hair ahead of some Mexicans and Indians,
  and got out again after a jolly six weeks. What's the real job
  for us now, Uncle Esmond?"
  
  Uncle Esmond was staring out toward the Kaw valley, rimmed by
  high bluffs in the distance.
  
  "I don't know about Mat having her wish," he said, thoughtfully,
  "but never mind. Trade is booming and I'm needing help on the
  trail this spring. Jondo starts west in two weeks."
  
  Beverly and I sprang up. Six feet of height, muscular,
  adventure-loving, fearless, we had been made to order for the
  Santa Fé Trail. And if I was still a dreamer and caught
  sometimes the finer side of ideals, where Beverly Clarenden saw
  only the matter-of-fact, visible things, no shrewder, braver,
  truer plainsman ever walked the long distances of the old Santa
  Fé Trail than this boy with his bright face and
  happy-go-lucky spirit unpained by dreams, untrammeled by
  fancies.
  
  "Two weeks! We are ready to start right after supper," we
  declared.
  
  "Oh, I have other matters first," Uncle Esmond said. "Beverly,
  you must go up to Fort Leavenworth and arrange a lot of things
  with Banney for this trip. He's to go, too, because military
  escort is short this season."
  
  "Suits me!" Beverly declared. "Old Bill Banney and I always could
  get along together. And this infant here?"
  
  "I'm going to send Gail down to the Catholic Mission, in Kansas.
  You remember little Eloise St. Vrain, of course?" Uncle Esmond
  asked.
  
  "We do!" Beverly assured him. "Pretty as a doll, gritty as a
  sand-bar, snappy as a lobster's claw--she dwells within my memory
  yet."
  
  All girls were little children to us, for the scheme of things
  had not included them in our affairs.
  
  I threw a handful of grass in the boy's face, and Uncle Esmond
  went on.
  
  "She's been at St. Ann's School at the Osage Mission down on the
  Neosho River for two or three years, and now she is going to St.
  Louis. In these troublesome times on the border, if I have a
  personal interest, I feel safer if some big six-footer whom I can
  trust comes along as an escort from the Neosho to the Missouri,"
  Uncle Esmond explained.
  
  And then we spoke of other things: the stream of emigration
  flowing into the country, the possibilities of the prairies, the
  future of the city that should hold the key to the whole
  Southwest, and especially of the chance and value of the trail
  trade.
  
  "It's the big artery that carries the nation's life-blood here,"
  Esmond Clarenden declared. "Some day when the West is full of
  people, and dowered with prosperity, it may remember the men who
  built the highway for the feet of trade to run in. And the West
  may yet measure its greatness somewhat by the honesty and
  faithfulness of the merchant of the frontier, and more by the
  courage and persistence of the boys who drove the ox-teams across
  the plains. Don't forget that you yourselves are State-builders
  now."
  
  He spoke earnestly, but his words meant little to me. I was
  looking out toward the wide-sweeping Kaw and thinking of the
  journey I must make, and wondering if I should ever feel at ease
  in the society of women. Wondering, too, what I should say, and
  how I should really take care of "Little Lees," who had crossed
  the plains with us almost a decade ago; the girl who had held my
  hand tightly one night at old Fort Bent when the shadow had
  slipped across the moon and filled the silvery court with a gray,
  ghostly light.
  
  That night the old heart-hunger of childhood came back to me, the
  visions of the day-dreaming little boy that were almost forgotten
  in the years that had brought me to young manhood. And clearly
  again, as when I heard Uncle Esmond's voice that night on the
  tableland above the valley of the Santa Fé, I heard his
  gentle words:
  
  "Sometimes the things we long for in our dreams we must fight
  for, and even die for, that those who come after us may be the
  better for our having them."
  
  But these thoughts passed with the night, and in my youth and
  inexperience I took on a spirit of fatherly importance as I went
  down to St. Ann's to safeguard a little girl on her way through
  the Kansas territory to the Missouri River.
  
  It had been a beautiful day, and there was a freshness in the
  soft evening breeze, and an up-springing sweetness from the
  prairies. A shower had passed that way an hour before, and the
  spirit of growing things seemed to fill the air with a voiceless
  music.
  
  Just at sunset the stage from the north put me down in front of
  St. Ann's Academy in the little Osage Mission village on the
  Neosho.
  
  A tall nun, with commanding figure and dignified bearing, left
  the church steps across the road and came slowly toward me.
  
  "I am looking for Mother Bridget, the head of this school," I
  said, lifting my hat.
  
  "I am Mother Bridget." The voice was low and firm. One could not
  imagine disobedience under her rule.
  
  "I come from Mr. Esmond Clarenden, to act as escort for a little
  girl, Eloise St. Vrain, who is to leave here on the stage for
  Kansas City to-morrow," I hesitatingly offered my letter of
  introduction, which told all that I had tried to say, and
  more.
  
  The woman's calm face was gentle, with the protective gentleness
  of the stone that will not fail you when you lean on it. One felt
  sure of Mother Bridget, as one feels sure of the solid rock to
  build upon. She looked at me with keen, half-quizzical eyes. Then
  she said, quietly:
  
  "You will find the little girl down by Flat Rock Creek. The
  Indian girl, Po-a-be, is with her. There may be several Indian
  girls down there, but Po-a-be is alone with little Eloise."
  
  I bowed and turned away, conscious that, with this good nun's
  sincerity, she was smiling at me back of her eyes somehow.
  
  As I followed the way leading to the creek I passed a group or
  two of Indian girls--St. Ann's, under the Loretto Sisterhood, was
  fundamentally a mission school for these--and a trio of young
  ladies, pretty and coquettish, with daring, mischievous eyes,
  whose glances made me flush hot to the back of my neck as I
  stumbled by them on my way to the stream.
  
  The last sun rays were glistening on the placid waters of the
  Flat Rock, and all the world was softly green, touched with a
  golden glamour. I paused by a group of bushes to let the spell of
  the hour have its way with me. I have always loved the beautiful
  things of earth; as much now as in my childhood days, when I felt
  ashamed to let my love be known; as now I dare to tell it only on
  paper, and not to that dear, great circle of men and women who
  know me best to-day.
  
  The sound of footsteps and the murmur of soft voices fitted into
  the sweetness of that evening hour as two girls, one of them an
  Indian, came slowly down a well-worn path from the fields above
  the Flat Rock Valley. They did not see me as they sat down on
  some broad stones beside the stream.
  
  I started forward to make myself known, but caught myself
  mid-step, for here was a picture to make any man pause.
  
  The Indian girl facing me was Little Blue Flower, the Kiowas'
  captive, whom we had rescued at Pawnee Rock. Her heavy black hair
  was coiled low on her neck, a headband of fine silverwork with
  pink coral pendants was bound about her forehead and gleaming
  against her jetty hair. With her well-poised head, her pure
  Indian features, her lustrous dark eyes, her smooth brown skin,
  her cheeks like the heart of those black-red roses that grow only
  in richest soil--surely there was no finer type of that vanishing
  race in all the Indian pueblos of the Southwest. But the girl
  beside her! Was it really so many years ago that I stood by the
  bushes on the Flat Rock's edge and saw that which I see so
  clearly now? Then these years have been gracious indeed to me.
  The sun's level beams fell on the masses of golden waves that
  swept in soft little ripples back from the white brow to a coil
  of gold on the white neck, held, like the Indian girl's, with a
  headband of wrought silver, and goldveined turquoise; it fell on
  the clear, smooth skin, the pink bloom of the cheek, the red
  lips, the white teeth, the big dark eyes with their fringe of
  long lashes beneath straight-penciled dark brows; on the curves
  of the white throat and the round white arms. Only a master's
  hand could make you see these two, beautiful in their sharp
  contrast of deep brown and scarlet against the dainty white and
  gold.
  
  "Oh, Little Blue Flower, it will not make me change."
  
  I caught the words as I stepped toward the two, and the Indian's
  soft, mournful answer:
  
  "But you are Miss St. Vrain now. You go away in the morning--and
  I love you always."
  
  The heart in me stopped just when all its flood had reached my
  face.
  
  "Miss St. Vrain," I repeated, aloud.
  
  The two sprang up. That afternoon they had been dressed for a
  girls' frolic in some Grecian fashion. I cannot tell a Watteau
  pleat from window-curtain. I am only a man, and I do not name
  draperies well. But these two standing before me were gowned
  exactly alike, and yet I know that one was purely and
  artistically Greek, and one was purely and gracefully Indian.
  
  "I beg your pardon. I am Mr. Clarenden," I managed to say.
  
  At the name Little Blue Flower's eyes looked as they did on that
  hot May night out at Pawnee Rock when she heard Beverly
  Clarenden's boyish voice ring out, defiantly:
  
  "Uncle Esmond, let's take her, and take our chances."
  
  But the great light that had leaped into the girl's eyes died
  slowly out as she gazed at me.
  
  "You are not Beverly Clarenden," she said, in a low voice.
  
  "No, I'm Gail, the little one. Bev is up at Fort Leavenworth
  now," I replied.
  
  She turned away without a word and, gathering her draperies about
  her, sped up the pathway toward the fields above the
  creek.
  And we two were alone together--the dark-eyed girl of my boyhood
  vision, deep-shrined in the boy-heart's holy of holies, and I who
  had waited for her coming. It was the hour of golden sunset and
  long twilight afterglow on the glistening Flat Rock waters and
  the green prairies beyond the Neosho.
  
  A sudden awakening came over me, and in one swift instant I
  understood my boyhood dreams and hopes and visions.
  
  "You will pardon me for coming so abruptly, Miss St. Vrain," I
  said. "Mother Bridget told me I would find you here."
  
  The girl listened to my stumbling words with eyes full of
  laughter.
  
  "Don't call me Miss St. Vrain, please. Let me be Eloise, and I
  can call you Gail. Even with your height and your broad shoulders
  you haven't changed much. And in all these years I was always
  thinking of you growing up just as you are. Let's sit down and
  get acquainted again."
  
  She offered me her hand and we sat down together. I could not
  speak then, for one sentence was ringing in my ears--"I was
  always thinking of you." In those years when Beverly and I had
  put away all thoughts of sweethearts--they could not be a part of
  the plainsman's life before us--sweethearts such as older boys in
  school boasted about, "she was always thinking of me." The
  thought brought a keen hurt as if I had done her some great
  wrong, and it held me back from words.
  
  She could not interpret my silence, and a look of timidity crept
  over her young face.
  
  "I didn't mean to be so--so bold with a stranger," she began.
  
  "You aren't bold, and we aren't strangers. I was just too stupid
  to think anybody else could get out of childhood except old Bev
  Clarenden and myself," I managed to say at last. "I even forgot
  Mat Nivers, who is a young lady now, and Aunty Boone, who hasn't
  changed a kink of her woolly hair. But we couldn't be strangers.
  Not after that trip across the plains and living at old Fort Bent
  as we did."
  
  I paused, and the memory of that last night at the fort made me
  steal a glance at Eloise to see if she, too, remembered.
  
  She was fair to see just then, with the pink clouds mirrored on
  the placid waters reflected in the pink of her cheeks.
  
  "Do you remember what I called you the first time I saw you?" She
  looked up with shining eyes.
  
  "You called me a big brown bob-cat, and you said I looked like
  I'd slept in the Hondo 'royo all my life. I know I looked it,
  too. I'll forgive you if you will excuse my blunder to-day. What
  became of that boy, Marcos? Have you ever seen him since you left
  Santa Fé?" I asked.
  
  The fair face clouded, and a look of longing crept into the big,
  dark eyes lifted pleadingly a moment to mine. I wanted to take
  her in my arms right then and look about for something to kill
  for her sake. Yet I would not, for the gold of all the Mexicos,
  have touched the hem of her Grecian robe.
  
  "Yes, I have seen Marcos many times. His father went to old
  Mexico after the war, but the Rameros do not stay long anywhere.
  Marcos made life miserable for me sometimes." She paused
  suddenly.
  
  "The Rameros. Then he was the son of the man who was my uncle's
  enemy. Maybe you did as much for him, too, sometimes. You had the
  spirit to do it, anyhow," I said, lightly, to hide my real
  feeling.
  
  "I was a little cat. I'm a lot better now. Let's not go too much
  into that time. Tell me where you have been and where you are
  going." Eloise changed the subject easily.
  
  "I've been in Cincinnati, attending a boys' school for three
  years. I start for Santa Fé in two weeks. My uncle's store
  is doing a big over land business, and he keeps the ox-teams just
  fanning one another, coming and going across the prairies. I'm
  crazy to go and see the open plains again. Cincinnati is a city
  on stilts, and our little Independence-Westport Landing-Kansas
  City place, as the Cincinnati of the great American desert, is
  also pretty bumpy, the last place on earth to put a town--only we
  can see almost to Santa Fé, New Mexico, from the hilltops.
  Won't it be great to view that mud-walled town again? Bev is
  going, too--to kill a few Indians for our winter's meat, he says,
  in his wicked, blood-thirsty way." So I ran on, glad to be alive
  in the delicious beauty of that spring evening as we together
  went back over the days of our young years.
  
  "Gail, may we take another passenger to-morrow?" Eloise asked,
  suddenly.
  
  "Why, as many as the stage will hold! There's to be a nun and a
  priest and yourself. I'm chaperon. I could take the priest on my
  lap if he isn't too bulky," I answered.
  
  "I want to take Po-a-be. I can't tell you why now." The lashes
  dropped over the brown eyes, and I wondered how she could think
  that I could refuse her anything.
  
  "Oh, we'll take her on faith and the stage-coach. She can come
  right to Castle Clarenden and stay till she gets ready to hurdle
  off to her own 'wickie up'. She has grown into a beautiful Indian
  woman, though I couldn't call her a squaw."
  
  "She isn't a squaw. I'm glad to hear you say that. I think it
  will make her very happy to stay at your home for a while. She
  will miss me a little when we leave here, maybe," Eloise said,
  looking at me with a grateful smile that sent a tingle to my
  fingertips.
  
  "Won't you stay, too?" I asked, suddenly realizing that this
  beautiful girl might slip away as easily as she had come into my
  life here.
  
  Eloise laughed at my earnestness.
  
  "I couldn't stay long," she said, lightly.
  
  "And why not?" I burst in, eagerly. "What have you in Santa
  Fé?"
  
  "A little money and a lot of memories," she replied,
  seriously.
  
  "Oh, I can bring the money up to Kansas for you in an ox-train
  easily enough, and you could blow up the old mud-box of a town
  and not hurt a hair on the head of a single memory. You know you
  can take them anywhere you go. I do mine."
  
  "I'm going to St. Louis, anyhow," Eloise returned, "and you have
  no sacred memories--boys don't care for things like girls
  do."
  
  "They don't? They don't? And I have forgotten the little girl who
  was afraid one moonlit night out in the court at Fort Bent and
  asked me that I shouldn't ever let Marcos pull her hair. Yes,
  boys forget."
  
  I laid my hand on her arm and bent forward to look into her face.
  For just one flash those big dark eyes looked straight at me,
  with something in their depths that I shall never forget.
  
  Then she moved lightly from me.
  
  "Oh, all children remember, I suppose. I do, anyhow--a thousand
  things I'd like to forget. It is lovely by the river. Suppose we
  go down there for a little while. I must not stay out here too
  long."
  
  I took her arm and we strolled down the quiet path in the
  twilight sweetness to where the broad Neosho, brim full from the
  spring rains, swept on between picturesque banks. The afterglow
  of sunset was flaming gorgeously above the western prairies, and
  the mists along the Neosho were lavender and mother-of-pearl. And
  before all this had deepened to purple darkness the full moon
  would swing up the sky, swathing the earth with a softened
  radiance. All the beauty of this warm spring night seemed but a
  setting for this girl in her graceful Greek draperies, with the
  waving gold of her hair and her dainty pink-and-white
  coloring.
  
  A new heaven and a new earth had begun for me, and a delicious
  longing, clean and sweet, that swept every commoner feeling far
  away. What matter that the life before me be filled with danger,
  and all the coarse and cruel things of the hard days of the Santa
  Fé Trail? In that hour I knew the best of life that a
  young man can know. Its benediction after all these years of
  change is on me still. Awhile we watched the flashing ripples on
  the river, and the sky's darkening afterglow. Then we turned to
  the moonlit east.
  
  "Do you know what the people of Hopi-land call this month?"
  Eloise asked.
  
  "I don't know Hopi words for what is beautiful," I replied.
  
  "They call it 'the Moon of the Peach Blossom', and they cherish
  the time in their calendar."
  
  "Then we will be Hopi people," I declared, "for it was in their
  Moon of the Peach Blossom that you grew up for me from the little
  girl who called me a bob-cat down in the doorway of the old San
  Miguel Church in Santa Fé, and from Aunty Boone's 'Little
  Lees' at old Fort Bent, to the Eloise of St. Ann's by the Kansas
  Neosho."
  
  The sound of a sweet-toned bell told us that we must not stay
  longer, and together we followed the path from the Flat Rock up
  to the academy door. And all the way was like the ways of
  Paradise to me, for I was in the peach-blossom moon of my own
  life. 
      The hands that take
    No weight from your sad cross, oh, lighter far
    It were but for the burden that they bring!
    God only knows what hind'ring things they are--
      The hands that cling.
                      --ESTHER M. CLARK
The next morning three of us waited in the stage before the
  door of St. Ann's Academy. A thin-faced nun, who was called
  Sister Anita, sat beside Eloise St. Vrain, her snowy head-dress,
  with her black veil and somber garments, contrasting sharply with
  the silver-gray hat and traveling costume of her companion. Hints
  of pink-satin linings to coat-collar and pocket-flaps, and the
  pink facing of the broad hat-brim, seemed borrowed from the
  silver and pink of misty morning skies, with the golden hair
  catching the glint of all the early sunbeams. There was a
  tenderness in the bright face, the sadness which parting puts
  temporarily into young countenances. The girl looked lovingly at
  the church, and St. Ann's, and the green fields reaching up to
  the edge of the mission premises.
  
  As we waited, Mother Bridget and Little Blue Flower came slowly
  out of the academy door. The good mother's arm was around the
  Indian girl, and her eyes filled with tears as she looked down
  affectionately at the dark face.
  
  Little Blue Flower, true to her heritage, gave no sign of grief
  save for the burning light in her big, dry eyes. She listened
  silently to Mother Bridget's parting words of advice and
  submitted without response to the embrace and gentle good-by kiss
  on her brown forehead.
  
  The good woman gazed into my face with penetrating eyes, as if to
  measure my trustworthiness.
  
  "You will see that no harm comes to my little Po-a-be. The wolves
  of the forest are not the only danger for the unprotected lambs,"
  she said, earnestly.
  
  "I'll do my best, Mother Bridget," I responded, feeling a
  swelling pride in my double charge.
  
  Mother Bridget patted Eloise's hand and turned away. She loved
  all of her girls, but her heart went out most to the Indian
  maidens whom she led toward her civilization and her sacred
  creed.
  
  As she turned away, the priest who was to go with us came out of
  the church door to the stage.
  
  Little Blue Flower sat with the other two women, facing us, her
  dark-green dress with her rich coloring making as strong a
  contrast as the nun's black robe against the pink-touched
  silver-gray gown. And the Indian face, strong, impenetrable, with
  a faintly feminine softening of the racial features, and the
  luminous black eyes, gave setting to the pure Saxon type of her
  companion.
  
  I turned from the three to greet the priest and give him a place
  beside me. His face seemed familiar, but it was not until I heard
  his voice, in a courteous good-morning, that I knew him to be the
  Father Josef who had met us on the way into Santa Fé years
  before, and who later had shown us the little golden-haired girl
  asleep on the hard bench in the old mission church of Agua Fria.
  A page of my boyhood seemed suddenly to have opened there, and I
  wondered curiously at the meaning of it all. Life, that for three
  years had been something of a monotonous round of action for a
  boy of the frontier, was suddenly filling each day with events
  worth while. I wondered many things concerning Father Josef's
  presence there, but I had the grace to ask no questions as we
  five journeyed over the rolling green prairies of Kansas in the
  pleasant time of year which the Hopi calls the Moon of the Peach
  Blossom.
  
  The priest appeared hardly a day older than when I had first seen
  him, and he chatted genially as we rode along.
  
  "We are losing two of our stars," he said, with a gallant little
  bow. "Miss St. Vrain goes to St. Louis to relatives, I believe,
  and Little Blue Flower, eventually, to New Mexico. St. Ann's
  under Mother Bridget is doing a wonderful work among our people,
  but it is not often that a girl comes here from such a distance
  as New Mexico."
  
  I tried to fancy what the Indian girl's thoughts might be as the
  priest said this, but her face, as usual, gave no clue to her
  mind's activity.
  
  Where the Santa Fé Trail crossed the Wakarusa Father Josef
  left us to join a wagon-train going west. Sister Anita, who was
  hurrying back to Kentucky, she said, on some churchly errand,
  took a steamer at Westport Landing, and the three of us came to
  the Clarenden home on the crest of the bluff.
  
  We had washed off our travel stains and come out on the veranda
  when we saw Beverly Clarenden standing in the sunlight, waiting
  for us. I had never seen him look so handsome as he did that day,
  dressed in the full regalia of the plains: a fringed and beaded
  buckskin coat, dark pantaloons held inside of high-topped boots,
  a flannel shirt, with a broad black silk tie fastened in a big
  bow at his throat, and his wide-brimmed felt hat set back from
  his forehead. Clean-shaven, his bright brown hair--a trifle long,
  after the custom of the frontier--flung back from his brow, his
  blooming face wearing the happy smile of youth, his tall form
  easily erect, he seemed the very embodiment of that defiant power
  that swept the old Santa Fé Trail clean for the feet of
  its commerce to run swiftly along. I am glad that I never envied
  him--brother of my heart, who loved me so.
  
  He was not as surprised as I had been to find the grown-up girl
  instead of the little child. That wasn't Beverly's way.
  
  "I'm mighty glad to meet you again," he said, with jaunty air,
  grasping Eloise by the hand. "You look just as--shall I say
  promising, as ever."
  
  "I'm glad to see you, Beverly. You and Gail have been my biggest
  assets of memory these many years." Eloise was at ease with him
  in a moment. Somehow they never misunderstood each other.
  
  "Oh, I'm always an asset, but Gail here gets to be a liability if
  you let him stay around too long."
  
  "Here is somebody else. Don't you remember Little Blue Flower?"
  Eloise interrupted him.
  
  "Little Blue Flower! Why, I should say I do! And are you that
  little blossom?"
  
  Beverly's face beamed, and he caught the Indian girl's hand in
  both of his in a brotherly grasp. He wasn't to blame that nature
  had made him frank and unimaginative.
  
  "I haven't forgotten the last time I saw your face in a wide
  crack between two adobe shacks. A 'flower in the crannied wall'
  in that 'pure water' sand-pile in New Mexico. I'd have plucked
  you out of the cranny right then, if old Rex Krane hadn't given
  us our 'forward march!' orders, and an Indian boy, ten feet high
  and sneaky as a cat, hadn't been lurking in the middle distance
  to pluck me as a brand for the burning. And now you
  are a St. Ann's girl, a good little Catholic. How did you ever
  get away up into Kansas Territory, anyhow?"
  
  Beverly had unconsciously held the girl's hand as he spoke, but
  at the mention of the Indian boy she drew back and her bright
  face became expressionless.
  
  Just then Mat Nivers joined us--Mat, whom the Lord made to smooth
  the way for everybody around her--and we sat down for a
  visit.
  
  "We are all here, friends of my youthful days," Beverly went on,
  gaily. "Bill Banney and Jondo are down in the Clarenden warehouse
  packing merchandise for the Santa Fé trade. Even big black
  Aunty Boone, getting supper in there, is still a feature of this
  circus. If only that slim Yankee, Rex Krane, would appear here
  now. Uncle Esmond tells me he is to be here soon, and if all goes
  well he will go with us to Santa Fé again. How about it,
  Mat? Can't you hurry his coming a bit?"
  
  But Mat was staring at the roadway leading to the ravine below
  us. Her wide gray eyes were full of eagerness and her cheeks were
  pink with excitement. For, sure enough, there was Rex Krane
  striding up the hill, with the easy swing of vigorous health. No
  longer the slender, slouching young idol of my boyhood days, with
  Eastern cut of garment and devil-may-care dejection of manner,
  all hiding a loving tenderness for the unprotected, and a daring
  spirit that scorned danger.
  
  "It's the old settlers' picnic, eh! The gathering of the wild
  tribes--anything you want to call it, so we smoke the peace
  pipe."
  
  Rex greeted all of us as we rushed upon him. But the first hands
  he reached for were the hands of our loving big sister Mat. And
  he held them close in his as he looked down into her beautiful
  eyes.
  
  A sudden rush of memories brought back to me the long days on the
  trail in the middle '40's, and I knew now why he had always
  looked at Mat when he talked to all of us. And I used to think
  that he must have had a little sister like her. Now I knew in an
  instant why Mat could not meet his eyes to-day with that
  unconcern with which she met them when she was a child to me, and
  he, all of five years ahead of her, was very grown up. I knew
  more, for I had entered a new land myself since the hour by the
  shimmering Flat Rock in the Moon of the Peach Blossom, and I was
  alive to every tint and odor and musical note for every other
  wayfarer therein.
  
  That was a glorious week that followed, and one to remember on
  the long trail days coming to us. I have no quarrel with the
  happy youth of to-day, but I feel no sense of loss nor spirit of
  envy when they tell me--all young people are my friends--when
  they tell me of golf-links and automobile rides, or even the
  daring hint of airplanes. To the heart of youth the
  gasolene-motor or the thrill of the air-craft to-day is no more
  than the Indian pony and the uncertain chance of the crude old
  canoe on the clear waters of the Big Blue when Kansas City was a
  village and the Kansas prairies were in their virgin glory.
  
  Bill Banney had come out of the Mexican War, no longer an
  adventure lover, but a seasoned frontiersman. His life knew few
  of the gentler touches. He gave it to the plains, where so many
  lives went, unhonored and unsung, into the building of an
  enduring empire.
  
  We would have included him in all the frolic of that wonderful
  week in the Moon of the Peach Blossom--but he gave us no
  opportunity to do so. And we were young, and the society of girls
  was a revelation to us. So with the carelessness of youth we
  forgot him. We forgot many things that week that, in Heaven's
  name, we had cause enough to remember in the years that followed
  after.
  
  "There's a theatrical troupe come up from St. Louis to play here
  to-night," Rex Krane announced, after supper. "Mat, will you let
  me take you down to see the villain get what's due all villains?
  Then if we have to kill off Gail and Bev, it will not be so
  awkward."
  
  "Can't we all go?" Mat suggested.
  
  "Never mind us, Lady Nivers. Little Blue Flower, may I have the
  pleasure of your company? I need protection to-night," Beverly
  said, with much ceremony.
  
  Little Blue Flower was sitting next to him, or it might not have
  begun that way.
  
  "Oh, say yes. He's no poorer company than that company of actors
  down town," Rex urged.
  
  The Indian girl assented with a smile.
  
  She did not smile often and when she did her eyes were full of
  light, and her red lips and perfect white teeth were beautiful
  enough for a queen to envy.
  
  "Little Lees, it seems you are doomed to depend on Gail or jump
  in the Kaw. I'd prefer the Kaw myself, but life is full of
  troubles. One more can be endured." Rex had turned to Eloise St.
  Vrain.
  
  "Seems to me, having first choice, you might have been more
  considerate of my lot yourself," Eloise declared.
  
  "He was. He saved you from a worse fate when he chose Mat," I
  broke in.
  
  "May we have a song by the choir?" Beverly interrupted, and with
  his full bass voice he began to roar our some popular tune of
  that time.
  
  And it went on as it began, the rambles about the rugged bluffs
  and picturesque ravines, where to-day the hard-surfaced Cliff
  Drive makes a scenic highway through the beauty spots of a
  populous city; the daring canoe rides on the rivers; the
  gatherings of the young folk in the town; and the long twilight
  hours on the crest of the bluff overlooking the two great
  waterways. And as by the first selection, Beverly and Little Blue
  Flower were companions. Nobody could be unhappy with Bev, least
  of all the shy Indian girl with a face full of sunshine, now. And
  I? I walked a pathway strewn with rose petals because the
  golden-haired Little Lees was beside me. Each day was a frolic
  day for us, teasing one another and making a joke of life, and
  for the morrow we took no thought at all.
  
  One evening Eloise St. Vrain and I sat together on the bluff. It
  was the twilight hour, and all the far valley of the Kaw was full
  of iridescent misty lights, with gold-tipped clouds of pale
  lavender above, and the glistening silver of the river below. We
  could hear Beverly and Little Blue Flower laughing together in a
  big swing among the maples. Aunty Boone was crooning some African
  melodies in the bushes half-way down the slope. Rex and Mat had
  gone to the ravine below to meet Uncle Esmond.
  
  "Little Lees, the first time I ever saw you you were away out
  there in such a misty light as that, and I saw only your hair and
  your eyes then, but as clearly as I see them now."
  
  Eloise turned questioningly toward me, and the light in her dark
  eyes thrilled to the heart of me. In all her stay with us I had
  hardly spoken earnestly of anything before.
  
  "When was that Gail?" she asked, the frivolous spirit gone from
  her, too.
  
  "When I was a little boy, one day at Fort Leavenworth. And when I
  caught sight of you at the door of old San Miguel I knew you," I
  replied.
  
  The girl turned her face toward the west again and was silent. I
  felt my cheeks flush hotly. I had made her think I was only a
  dream-sick fool, when I had told her of the sacredest moment of
  my life, and I had for the minute foolishly felt that she might
  understand. How could I know that it was I who could not
  understand?
  
  At last she looked up with a smile as full of mischief as on that
  day when she had called me a big brown bob-cat.
  
  "You must have been having a nightmare in your sleep," she
  declared.
  
  "I think I was," I replied, testily. "Let me tell you something,
  Little Lees, something really important."
  
  "I don't believe you know one important thing," Eloise replied,
  "but I'll listen, and then if it is I'll tell you something more
  important."
  
  "I'm willing to hear it now. Tell me first," I replied, wondering
  the while how nature, that gives rough-hewn bearded faces to men,
  could make a face so daintily colored, in its youthful roundness,
  as hers.
  
  "I'm going to start to St. Louis day after to-morrow at six
  o'clock in the morning. Isn't that important?"
  
  Was there a real earnestness under the lightly spoken words, or
  did I imagine it so? If I had only made sure then--but I was
  young.
  
  "Important! It's a tragedy! I start west in three days, at eight
  o'clock in the morning," I said, carelessly.
  
  Sometimes the gray shadows fall on us when neither sunlight nor
  moonlight nor starlight is dimmed by any film of vapor. They fell
  on me then, and I shivered in my soul. How could I speak
  otherwise than carelessly and not show what must not be known?
  And how could the girl beside me know that I was speaking thus to
  keep down the shiver of that cold shadow? I suppose it must
  always be the same old story, year after year-- 
till the leaves of the judgment book unfold.
"What was that important something you were going to tell me?
  What Mat told me last night when we were watching the moon rise?"
  Eloise asked.
  
  "That Rex and Mat are going to be married to-morrow evening at
  early candle-lighting--'early mosquito-biting,' Bev calls it. Rex
  has loved Mat since the day when he joined our little wagon-train
  out of a foolish sort of notion that he could protect us
  children, otherwise his life was useless to him. But something in
  his own boyhood made him pity all orphan children. I think it was
  through neglect in childhood he became an invalid at nineteen. He
  doesn't show the marks of it now."
  
  I paused and looked at the young girl beside me, whose eyes were
  like stars in the deepening gloom of the evening. It was
  delicious to have her look at me and listen to me. It was
  delicious to live in a rose-hued twilight, and I forgot the chill
  of that gray shadow lurking near.
  
  The next evening was entrancing with the soft air of spring, a
  night made purposely for brides. The wedding itself was simple in
  its appointments, as such events must needs be in the frontier
  years. All day we had worked to decorate the plain stone house,
  which the deftness of Little Blue Flower and the artistic touch
  of Little Lees turned into a spring bower, with trailing vines
  and blossoms everywhere.
  
  Mat's wedding-gown was neither new nor elaborate, for the affair
  had been too hastily decided on, but Eloise had made it
  bride-like by draping a filmy veil over Mat's bright brown hair,
  and Little Blue Flower had brought her long strands of turquoise
  beads, "old and borrowed and blue," to fulfil the needs of every
  bride.
  
  In the bridal party Beverly and I walked in front, followed by
  the two girls in the white Greek robes which they had worn at the
  school frolic at St. Ann's, and wearing their headbands, the one
  of silver and turquoise, the other of silver and coral. Then came
  Rex Krane and Bill Banney. Poor Bill! Nobody guessed that night
  that the bridal blossoms were flowers on the coffin of his dead
  hope. And last of all, Esmond Clarenden and Mat Nivers, with
  shining eyes, leaning on his arm. I had never seen Uncle Esmond
  in evening dress before, nor dreamed how splendid a figure he
  could make for a drawing-room in the costume in which he was so
  much at ease. But the handsomest man of all the large company
  gathered there that night was Jondo, big, broad-shouldered Jondo,
  his deep-blue eyes bright with joy for these two. And in the
  background was Aunty Boone, resplendent in a new red calico
  besprinkled with her favorite white dots, her head turbaned in a
  yellow silk bandana, and about her neck a strand of huge green
  glass beads. Her eyes glistened as she watched that night's
  events, and her comfortable ejaculations of approval were like
  the low purr of a satisfied cat. Then came the solemn pledges,
  the benediction and congratulations. There was merrymaking and
  singing, cake and unfermented wine of grapes for refreshing, and
  much good will that night.
  
  When the guests were gone and the lights, save one kitchen
  candle, were all out, I had slipped from the dining-room with the
  last burden of dishes, when I paused a minute beside the open
  kitchen window to let the midnight breeze cool my face.
  
  On the side porch, a little affair made to shelter the doorway, I
  saw Beverly Clarenden and Little Blue Flower. He was speaking
  gently, but with his blunt frankness, as he patted the two brown
  hands clinging to his arm. The Indian girl's white draperies were
  picturesque anywhere. In this dramatic setting they were
  startlingly beautiful, and her face, outlined in the dim light,
  was a thing rare to see. I could not hear her words, but her soft
  Hopi voice had a tender tone.
  
  I was waiting to let them pass in when I heard Beverly's voice,
  and I saw him bend over the little maiden, and, putting one arm
  around her, he drew her close to him and kissed her forehead. I
  knew it was a brother's sympathetic act--and all men know how
  dangerous a thing that is; that there are no ties binding brother
  to sister except the bonds of kindred blood. The girl slipped
  inside the dining-room door, and a minute later a candle
  flickered behind her bedroom window-blind in the gable of the
  house. I waited for Beverly to go, determined never to mention
  what I had seen, when I caught the clear low voice whose tones
  could make my pulse thresh in its walls.
  
  "Beverly, Beverly, it breaks my heart--" I lost the remainder of
  the sentence, but Beverly's words were clear and direct and full
  of a frank surprise.
  
  "Eloise, do you really care?"
  
  I turned away quickly that I might not hear any more. The rest of
  that night I sat wide awake and staring at the misty valley of
  the Kaw, where silvery ripples flashed up here and there against
  the shadowy sand-bars.
The steamboat for St. Louis left the Westport Landing wharf at six o'clock in the morning, before the mists had lifted over the big yellow Missouri. From our bluff I saw the smoke belch from its stacks as it pulled away and started down-stream; but only Uncle Esmond and Jondo waited to wave good-by to the sweet-faced girl looking back at them from its deck. Beverly had overslept, and Little Blue Flower had left an hour earlier with a wagon-train starting west toward Council Grove. In her room lay the white Grecian robe and the headband of wrought silver with coral pendants. On the little white pin-cushion on the dressing-table the bright pin-heads spelled out one Hopi word that carries all good will and blessing
LOLOMI.
Twenty-four hours later Rex Krane left his bride, and he and Bill Banney and Beverly and I, under command of Jondo, started on our long trip overland to Santa Fé. And two of us carried some memories we hoped to lose when new scenes and certain perils should surround us.
  And you all know security
  Is mortal's chiefest enemy.
                              SHAKESPEARE.
  
  In St. Louis and Kansas City men of Esmond Clarenden's type were
  sending out great caravans of goods and receiving return cargoes
  across the plains--pioneer trade-builders, uncrowned sovereigns
  of national expansion--against whose enduring power wars for
  conquest are as flashlight to daylight. And Beverly Clarenden and
  I, with the whole battalion of plainsmen--"bull-whackers," in the
  common parlance of the Santa Fé Trail--who drove those
  caravans to and fro, may also have been State-builders, as Uncle
  Esmond had declared we would be. Yet we hardly looked like makers
  of empire in those summer days when we followed the great
  wagon-trains along the prairies and over the mountain passes.
  
  Two of us had come home from school hilariously eager for the
  trail service. But the silent plains made men thoughtful and
  introspective. Days of endless level landscapes under
  wide-arching skies, and nights in the open beneath the
  everlasting silent stars, give a man time to get close to
  himself, to relive his childhood, to measure human values, to
  hear the voice in the storm-cloud and the song of low-purring
  winds, to harden against the monotonous glare of sunlight, to
  defy the burning heat, and to feel--aye, to feel the spell of
  crystal day-dawns and the sweetness of velvet-shadowed twilights.
  Beverly and I were typical plainsmen in that we never spoke of
  these things to each other--that is not the way of the
  plainsman.
  
  Our company had been organized at Council Grove--three trains of
  twenty-six wagons each, drawn by three or four spans of mules or
  yoke of oxen, guarded by eightscore of "bull-whackers." And there
  were a dozen or more ponies trained for swift riding in cases of
  emergency. There were also half a dozen private outfits under
  protection of the large body.
  
  The usual election before starting had made Jondo captain of the
  whole company. His was the controlling type of spirit that could
  have bent a battalion or swayed a Congress. For all the
  commanders and lawmakers of that day were not confined to the
  army and to Congress. Some of them escaped to the West and became
  sovereigns of service there. And Jondo had need for an intrepid
  spirit to rule that group of men, as that journey across the
  plains proved.
  
  On the day before we left Council Grove he was sitting with the
  heads of the other wagon-trains under a big oak-tree, perfecting
  final plans for the journey.
  
  "Gail, I want you to sign some papers here," he said. "It is the
  agreement for the trip among the three companies owning the
  trains."
  
  I read aloud the contract setting forth how one Jean Deau,
  representing Esmond Clarenden, of Kansas City, with Smith and
  Davis, representing two other companies from St. Louis, together
  agreed to certain conditions regarding the journey.
  
  Smith and Davis had already signed, and as I took the pen, a
  white-haired old trapper who was sitting near by burst out:
  
  "Jean Deau! Jean Deau! Who the devil is Jean Deau?"
  
  Jondo did not look up, but the lines hardened about his
  mouth.
  
  "It's a sound. Don't get in the way, old man. Go ahead,
  Clarenden," Smith commanded.
  
  Few questions were asked in those days, for most men on the
  plains had a history, and it was what a man could do here, not
  what he had done somewhere else, that counted.
  
  So I, representing Esmond Clarenden, signed the paper and the two
  managers hurried away. But the old trapper sat staring at
  Jondo.
  
  "Say, I'm gittin' close to the end of the trail, and the divide
  ain't fur off for me. D'ye mind if I say somethin'?" he asked at
  last.
  
  Jondo looked up with that smile that could warm any man's
  heart.
  
  "Say on," he commanded, kindly.
  
  "You aint never signin' your own name nowhere, it sorter
  seems."
  
  Jondo shook his head.
  
  "Didn't you and this Clarenden outfit go through here 'bout ten
  years ago one night? Some Mexican greasers was raisin' hell and
  proppin' it up with a whisky-bottle that night, layin' fur you
  vicious."
  
  Jondo smiled and nodded assent.
  
  "Well, them fellers comin' in had a bargain with a passel of
  Kioways to git you plenty if they missed you themselves; to
  clinch their bargain they give 'em a pore little Hopi Injun girl
  they'd brung along with a lot of other Mexicans and squaws."
  
  "I had that figured out pretty well at the time," Jondo said,
  with a smile.
  
  "But, Jean Deau--" the old man began.
  
  "No, Jondo. Go on. I'm busy," Jondo interrupted.
  
  The old man's watery eyes gleamed.
  
  "I just want to say friendly-like, that them Kioways never forgot
  the trick you worked on 'em, an' the tornydo that busted
  'em at Pawnee Rock they laid to your bad medicine. They went
  clare back to Bent's Fort to fix you. Them and that rovin' bunch
  of Mexicans that scattered along the trail with 'em in time of
  the Mexican War. They'd 'a' lost you but fur a little Apache cuss
  they struck out there who showed 'em to you."
  
  Jondo looked up quickly now. Santan, Beverly's "Satan," whom our
  captain had defended, flashed to my mind, but I knew by Jondo's
  face that he did not believe the old trapper's story.
  
  "Them Kioways is still layin' fur you ever' year, I tell you, an'
  they're bound to git you sooner or later. I'm tellin' ye in
  kindness."
  
  The old man's voice weakened a little.
  
  "And I'm taking you in kindness," Jondo said. "You may be doing
  me a great service."
  
  "I shore am. Take my word an' keep awake. Keep awake!"
  
  In spite of his drink-bleared eyes and weakened frame, there was
  a hint of the commander in him, a mere shadow of the energy that
  had gone years ago into the wild, solitary life of the trapper
  who foreran the trail days here.
  
  "One more trip to the ha'nts of the fur-bearin' and it's good-by
  to the mountain trails and the river courses fur me," he said, as
  he rose and stalked unsteadily away, and--I never saw him
  again.
  
  At daybreak the next morning we were off for Santa Fé. Our
  wagons, loaded with their precious burdens, moved forward six
  abreast along the old sun-flower bordered trail. Morning, noon,
  and evening, pitching camp and breaking camp, yoking oxen and
  harnessing mules, keeping night vigil by shifts, hunting buffalo,
  killing rattlesnakes, watching for signs of hostile Indians,
  meeting incoming trains, or solitary trappers, at long intervals,
  breathing the sweet air of the prairies, and gathering rugged
  strength from sleep on the wholesome earth--these things, with
  the jolliest of fellowship and perfect discipline of our captain,
  Jondo, made this hard, free life of the plains a fascinating one.
  We were unshaven and brown as Indians. We lost every ounce of
  fat, but we were steel-sinewed, and fear, that wearing element
  that disintegrates the soul, dropped away from us early on the
  trail.
  
  But when the full moon came sweeping up the sky, and all the
  prairie shadows lay flat to earth under its surge of clear light,
  in the stillness of the great lonely land, then the battle with
  home-sickness was not the least of the plains' perils.
  
  One midnight watch of such a night, Jondo sat out my vigil with
  me. Our eighty or more wagons were drawn up in a rude ellipse
  with the stock corraled inside, for we were nearing the danger
  zone. And yet to-night danger seemed impossible in such a
  peaceful land under such clear moonlight.
  
  "Gail, you were always a far-seeing youngster, even in your cub
  days," Jondo said, after we had sat silent for a long time. "We
  are moving into trouble from to-night, and I'll need you
  now."
  
  "What makes you think so, Jondo?" I asked.
  
  "That train we met going east at noon."
  
  "Mexicans with silver and skins worth double our stuff, what have
  they to do with us?" I inquired.
  
  "One of the best men I have ever known is a Mexican in Santa
  Fé. The worst man I have ever known is an American there.
  But I've never yet trusted a Mexican when you bunch them
  together. They don't fit into American harness, and it will be a
  hundred years before the Mexican in our country will really love
  the Stars and Stripes. Deep down in his heart he will hate
  it."
  
  "I remember Felix Narveo and Ferdinand Ramero mighty well," I
  commented.
  
  Jondo stared at me.
  
  "Can't a boy remember things?" I inquired.
  
  "It takes a boy to remember; and they grow up and we forget they
  have had eyes, ears, feelings, memories, all keener than we can
  ever have in later years. Gail, the Mexican train comes from
  Felix Narveo, and Narveo is a man of a thousand. They bring word,
  however, that the Kiowas are unusually friendly and that we have
  nothing to fear this side of the Cimarron. They don't feel sure
  of the Utes and Apaches."
  
  "Good enough!" I exclaimed.
  
  "Yes, only they lie when they say it. It's a trap to get us. No
  Kiowa on the plains will let a Clarenden train through
  peacefully, because we took their captive, Little Blue Flower.
  It's a hatred kept alive in the Kiowas by one man in Santa
  Fé through his Mexican agents with Narveo's train."
  
  "And that man is Ramero?" I questioned.
  
  "That man is Ramero, and his capacity for hate is appalling.
  Gail, there's only one thing in the world that is stronger than
  hate, and that is love."
  
  Jondo looked out over the moonlit plains, his fine head erect,
  even in his meditative moods.
  
  "When a Mexican says a Kiowa has turned friendly, don't believe
  him. And when a Kiowa says it himself--kill him. It's your only
  safe course," Jondo said, presently.
  
  "Jondo, why does Ramero stir up the Indians and Mexicans against
  Uncle Esmond?" I asked.
  
  "Because Clarenden drove him into exile in New Mexico before it
  was United States territory," Jondo replied.
  
  "What did he do that for?" I asked.
  
  "Because of what Ramero had done to me," Jondo replied.
  
  "Well, New Mexico is United States territory now. What keeps this
  Ramero in Santa Fé, if he is there?"
  
  "I keep him there. It's safer to know just where a man like that
  is. So I put a ring around the town and left him inside of
  it."
  
  Jondo paused and turned toward me.
  
  "Yonder comes Banney to go on guard now. Gail, I'll tell you all
  about it some day. I couldn't on a night like this."
  
  The deep voice sent a shiver through me. There was a pathos in
  it, too manly for tears, too courageous for pity.
  
  The days that followed were hard ones. Word had gotten through
  the camp that the Indians were very friendly, and that we need
  not be uneasy this side of the Cimarron country. Smith and Davis
  agreed with the train captain, Jondo, in taking no chances, but
  most of the one hundred sixty bull-whackers stampeded like cattle
  against precaution, and rebelled at his rigid ruling. He had
  begun to tighten down upon us as we went farther and farther into
  the heart of a savage domain. The night guard was doubled and
  every precaution for the stock was demanded, giving added cause
  for grumbling and muttered threats which no man had the courage
  to speak openly to Jondo's face. I knew why he had said that he
  would need me. Bill Banney was always reliable, but growing more
  silent and unapproachable every day. Rex Krane's mind was on the
  girl-wife he had left in the stone house on the bluff above the
  Missouri. Beverly was too cock-sure of himself and too
  light-hearted, too eager for an Indian fight. Jondo could counsel
  with Smith and Davis of the St. Louis trains, but only as a last
  resort would he dictate to them. So he turned to me.
  
  We were nearing Pawnee Rock, but as yet no hint of an Indian
  trail could we find anywhere. Advance-guards and rear-guards had
  no news to report when night came, and the sense of security grew
  hourly. The day had been very warm, but our nooning was shortened
  and we went into camp early. Everything had gone wrong that day:
  harness had broken; mules had grown fractious; a wagon had upset
  on a rough bit of the trail; half a dozen men, including Smith
  and Davis of the St. Louis trains, had fallen suddenly ill;
  drinking-water had been warm and muddy; and, most of all, the
  consciousness of wide-spread opposition to Jondo's strict ruling
  where there were no signs of danger made a very ugly-spirited
  group of men who sat down together to eat our evening meal. Bets
  were openly made that we wouldn't see a hostile redskin this side
  of Santa Fé. Covert sneers pointed many comments, and grim
  silence threatened more than everything else. Jondo's face was
  set, but there was a calmness about his words and actions, and
  even the most rebellious that night knew he was least afraid of
  any man among us.
  
  At midnight he wakened me. "I want you to help me, Gail," he
  said. "The Kiowas will gather for us at Pawnee Rock. They missed
  us there once because they were looking for a big train, and it
  was there we took their captive girl. The boys are ready to
  mutiny to-night. I count on you to stand by me." Stand by Jondo!
  In my helpless babyhood, my orphaned childhood, my sturdy growing
  years toward young manhood, Jondo had been father, mother,
  brother, playmate, guardian angel. I would have walked on red-hot
  coals for his sake.
  
  "I want you to slip away to-night, when Rex and Bev are on guard,
  and find out what's over that ridge to the north. Don't come back
  till you do find out. We'll get to Pawnee Rock to-morrow. I must
  know to-night. Can you do it? If you aren't back by sunrise, I'll
  follow your trail double quick."
  
  "I'll go," I replied, proud to show both my courage and my
  loyalty to my captain.
  
  The night was gray, with a dying moon in the west, and the north
  ridge loomed like a low black shadow against the sky. There was a
  weird chanting voice in the night wind, pouring endlessly across
  the open plains. And everywhere an eyeless, voiceless, motionless
  land, whereon my pony's hoof-beats were big and booming. Nature
  made my eyes and ears for the trail life, and matched my soul to
  its level spaces. To-night I was alert with that love of mastery
  that made me eager for this task. So I rode forward until our
  great camp was only a dull blot on the horizon-line, melting into
  mere nothingness as it grew farther away. And I was alone on the
  earth. God had taken out every other thing in it, save the sky
  over my head and the uneven short-grass sod under my feet.
  
  On I went, veering to the northwest from instinct that I should
  find my journey's end soonest that way. Over the divide which hid
  the wide valley of the Arkansas, and into the deep draws and low
  bluffs of a creek with billowy hills beyond, I found myself still
  instinctively smelling my way. I grew more cautious with
  each step now, knowing that the chance for me to slip along
  unseen gave also the chance for an enemy to trail me unseen.
  
  At last I caught that low breathing sound that goes with the
  sense of nearness to life. Leaving my pony by the stream, I
  climbed to the top of a little swell, and softly as a cat walks
  on a carpet, I walked straight into an Indian camp. It was well
  chosen for outlook near, and security from afar. There was a
  growing light in the sky that follows the darkness of moonset and
  runs before the break of dawn. Everything in the camp was dead
  still. I saw evidences of war-paint and a recent war-dance that
  forerun an Indian attack. I estimated the strength of the
  enemy--possibly four hundred warriors, and noted the symbols of
  the Kiowa tribe. Then, thrilled with pride at my skill and
  success, I turned to retrace my way to my pony--and looked full
  into the face of an Indian brave standing motionless in my path.
  A breath--and two more braves evolved out of gray air, and the
  three stood stock-still before me. Out of the tail of my eye, I
  caught sight of a drawn bow on either side of me. I had learned
  quickness with firearms years ago, but I knew that two swift
  arrows would cut my life-line before the sound of my ready
  revolver could break the stillness of the camp. Three pairs of
  snaky black eyes looked steadily at me, and I stared back as
  directly into them. Two arrow-points gently touched my ears.
  Behind me, a tomahawk softly marked a ring around my scalp
  outside of my hat. I was standing in a circle of death. At last
  the brave directly before me slowly drew up his bow and pointed
  it at me; then dropping it, he snapped the arrow shaft and threw
  away the pieces. Pointing to my cocked revolver, he motioned to
  me to drop it. At the same time the bows and tomahawks, of the
  other warriors were thrown down. It was a silent game, and in
  spite of the danger I smiled as I put down my firearms.
  
  "Can't any of you talk?" I asked. "If you are friendly, why don't
  you say so?"
  
  The men did not speak, but by a gesture toward the tallest
  tepee--the chief's, I supposed--I understood that he alone would
  talk to me.
  
  "Well, bring him out." I surprised myself at my boldness. Yet no
  man knows in just what spirit he will face a peril.
  
  One of the braves ran to the chief's tent, but the remaining five
  left me no chance for escape. It was slowly growing lighter. I
  thought of Jondo and his search at sunrise, and the moments
  seemed like hours. Yet with marvelous swiftness and stillness a
  score of Indians with their chief were mounted, and I, with my
  pony in the center of a solid ring, was being hurried away,
  alive, with friendly captors daubed with war-paint.
  
  There was a growing light in the east, while the west was still
  dark. I thought of the earth as throwing back the gray shadowy
  covers from its morning face and piling them about its feet; I
  thought of some joke of Beverly's; and I wondered about one of
  the oxen that had seemed sick in the evening. I tried to think of
  nothing and a thousand things came into my mind. But of life and
  death and love and suffering, I thought not at all.
  
  Meantime, Jondo waited anxiously for my coming. Rex and Beverly
  had gone to sleep at the end of their watch and nobody else in
  camp knew of my going. At dawn a breeze began to swing in from
  the north, and with its refreshing touch the weariness and
  worries of yesterday were swept away. Everybody wakened in a good
  humor. But Jondo had not slept, and his face was sterner than
  ever as the duties of the day began.
  
  Before sunrise I began to be missed.
  
  "Where's Gail?" Bill Banney was the first to ask.
  
  "That's Clarenden's job, not mine," another of the bull-whackers
  resented a command of Jondo's.
  
  "Gail! Gail! Anybody on earth seen Gail Clarenden this morning?"
  came from a far corner of the camp.
  
  "Have you lost a man, Jondo?" Smith, still sick in his wagon,
  inquired.
  
  And the sun was filling the eastern horizon with a roseate glow.
  It would be above the edge of the plains in a little while, and
  still I had not returned.
  
  Breakfast followed, with many questions for the absent one. There
  was an eagerness to be off early and an uneasiness began to
  pervade the camp.
  
  "Jondo, you'll have to dig up Gail now. I saw him putting out
  northwest about one o'clock," Rex Krane said, aside to the train
  captain.
  
  "If he isn't here in ten minutes. I'll have to start out after
  him," Jondo replied.
  
  Ten minutes are long to one who waits. The boys were ready for
  the camp order. "Catch up!" to start the harnessing of teams. But
  it was not given. The sun's level rays, hot and yellow, smote the
  camp, and a low murmur ran from wagon to wagon. Jondo waited a
  minute longer, then he climbed to the wagon tongue at the head of
  the ellipse of vehicles, his commanding form outlined against the
  open space, his fine face illumined by the sunlight.
  
  "Boys, listen to me."
  
  Men listened when Jondo spoke.
  
  "I believe we are in danger, but you have doubted my word. I
  leave the days to prove who is right. At midnight I sent Gail
  Clarenden to find out what is beyond that ridge--a band of men
  running parallel with us that shadows us day by day. If he is not
  here in ten minutes, we must go after him."
  
  A hush fell on the camp. The oxen switched at the first nipping
  insects of the morning, and the ponies and mules, with that
  horse-sense that all horsemen have observed in them at times,
  stood as if waiting for a decision to be made.
  
  Beverly Clarenden was first to speak.
  
  "If anybody goes after Gail, it's me, and I'll not stop
  till I get him," he cried, all the brotherly love of a lifetime
  in his ringing voice.
  
  "And me!" "And me!" "And me!" came from a dozen throats.
  Plainsmen were always the truest of comrades in the hour of
  danger. Nobody questioned Jondo's wisdom now. All thought was for
  the missing man.
  
  Rex Krane had leaped up on the wagon next to Jondo's and stood
  gazing toward the northwest. At this outburst of eagerness he
  turned to the crowd in the corral.
  
  "You wait five minutes and Gail will be here. He's gettin' into
  sight out yonder now," he declared.
  
  Another shout, a rush for the open, and a straining of eyes to
  make sure of the lone rider coming swiftly down the trail I had
  followed out at midnight. And amid a wild swinging of hats and
  whoops of joy I rode into camp, hugged by Beverly and questioned
  by everybody, eager for my story from the time I left the camp
  until I rode into it again.
  
  "They took me to Pawnee Rock before they let me know anything,
  except that my scalp would hang to the old chief's war-spear if I
  tried one eye-wink to get away from them. But they let me keep my
  gun, and I took it for a sign," I told the company. "They had a
  lot of ceremony getting seated, and then, without any
  smoking-tobacco or peace-pipe, they gave their message."
  
  "Who said the Kiowas wasn't friendly? They already sent us word
  enough," one man broke in.
  
  Jondo's face, that had been bright and hopeful, now grew
  grave.
  
  "They said they mean us no harm. They were grateful to Uncle Sam
  for the favors he had given them. That the prairies were wide,
  and there was room for all of us on it," I continued. "In proof,
  they said that we would pass that old rock to-day unharmed where
  once they would have counted us their enemies. And they let me go
  to bring you all this word. They are going northeast into the big
  hunting-ground, and we are safe."
  
  No man could take defeat better than Jondo.
  
  "I am glad if I was wrong in my opinion," he said. "Fifteen years
  on that trail have made me cautious. I shall still be cautious if
  I am your captain. They did not smoke the peace-pipe. In my
  judgment the Kiowas lied. Two or three days will prove it. Choose
  now between me and my unchanged opinion, and some new train
  captain."
  
  "Oh, every man makes some bad guesses, Jondo. We'll keep you, of
  course, and it's a joke on you, that's all." So ran the comment,
  and we hurriedly broke camp and moved on.
  
  But with all of our captain's anxiety Pawnee Rock stood like a
  protecting shield above us when we camped at its base, and the
  long bright days that followed were full of a sense of security
  and good cheer as we pulled away for the Cimarron crossing of the
  Arkansas River, miles ahead.
  
  All day Jondo rode wide of the trail, sometimes on one side and
  sometimes on the other, watching for signs of an enemy. And the
  bluff, jovial crowd of bull-whackers laughed together at his
  holding on to his opinion out of sheer stubbornness.
  
  On the second night he asked for a triple guard and nobody
  grumbled, for everybody really liked the big plainsman and they
  could afford to be good-natured with him, now that he was
  unquestioningly in the wrong.
  
  The camp was in a little draw running down to the river, bordered
  by a mere ripple of ground on either side, growing deeper as it
  neared the stream and flattening out toward the level prairie in
  its upper portion. In spite of the triple guard, Jondo did not
  sleep that night; and, strangely enough, I, who had been dull to
  fear in the hands of the Indians two nights before, felt nervous
  and anxious, now when all seemed secure.
  
  Just at daybreak a light shower with big bullet-like drops of
  rain pattered down noisily on our camp and a sudden flash of
  lightning and a thunderbolt startled the sleepy stock and brought
  us to our feet, dazed for an instant. Another light volley of
  rain, another sheet of lightning and roar of thunder, and the
  cloud was gone, scattering down the Arkansas Valley. But in that
  flash all of Jondo's cause for anxiety was justified. The
  widening draw was full of Kiowas, hideous in war-paint, and the
  ridges on either side of us were swarming with Indians beating
  dried skins to frighten and stampede our stock, and all yelling
  like fiends, while a perfect rain of arrows swept our camp. With
  the river below us full of holes and quicksands, our enemies had
  only to hold the natural defense on either side while they drove
  us in a harrowing wedge back to the water. If our ponies and
  mules should break from the corral they would rush for the river
  or be lost in the widening space back from the deeper draw, where
  a well-trained corps of thieves knew how to capture them. I had
  estimated the Kiowas' strength at four hundred, two nights
  before, which was augmented now by a roving band of Dog
  Indians--outcasts from all tribes, who knew no law of heaven or
  hell that they must obey. And so we stood, shocked wide awake,
  with the foe four to one, man for man against us.
  
  Men remember details acutely in the face of danger. As I write
  these words I can hear the sound of Jondo's voice that morning,
  clear and strong above the awful din, for nature made him to
  command in moments of peril. In a flash we were marshalled, one
  force to guard the corral, one to seize and hold either bank and
  one to charge on the advance of the Indians down the draw. We
  were on the defensive, as our captain had planned we should be,
  and every man of us realized bitterly now how much he had done
  for us, in spite of our distrust of his judgment.
  
  On came the yelling horde, with rifle-rip and singing arrow. And
  the sharp cry of pain and the fierce oath told where these shots
  had sped home. Four to one, with every advantage of well-laid
  plan of action against an unsuspecting sleeping force, the odds
  and gods were with them. Dark clouds hung overhead, but the
  eastern sky was aflame, casting a lurid glare across the edges of
  the draw as a stream of savages with painted faces and naked
  bedaubed bodies poured down against the corral. In an instant the
  chains and ropes holding the stock were severed, and our mules
  and oxen and ponies stampeded wildly. By some adroit movement
  they were herded over the low bank, and a cloud of dust hid the
  entire battleground as the animals, mad with fright and goaded by
  arrows, tossed against one another, stumbled blindly until they
  had cleared the ridge. A shriek of savage glee and the thunder of
  hoofs on the hard earth told how well the thing had been done and
  how furiously our animals were being whirled away.
  
  "Go, get 'em, Gail! Stay by 'em! Run!"
  
  Jondo's voice sounded far away, but my work was near. With a
  dozen bull-whackers I made a dash out of the draw and, circling
  wide, we rode like demons to outflank the cloud of dust that hid
  our precious property. On we swept, fleet and sure, in a mad
  burst of speed to save our own. We were gaining now, and turning
  the cloud toward the river. Another spurt, and we would have them
  checked, faced about, subdued. I saw the end, and as the boys
  swung forward I urged them on.
  
  "To the river. To the river. Head 'em south!" I cried.
  
  And Rex Krane, like a centaur, swirled by me to do the thing I
  ordered. Behind me rode Beverly Clarenden bareheaded, his face
  aglow with power. As I looked back the dust engulfed him for a
  moment, and then I heard an arrow sing, and a sharp cry of pain.
  The dust had lifted and Beverly and a huge Indian, the tallest I
  have ever seen, were grappling together, a scalping-knife
  gleaming in the morning light. I dashed forward and felled the
  savage with the butt of my revolver. He leaped to his feet and
  sprang at me just as Beverly, with unerring aim, sent a blaze of
  fire between us. As the savage fell again, my cousin seized his
  pony; and with an arrow still swinging to his arm, dashed into
  the chase, and left it only when the stock, with the loss of less
  than a fourth, was driven up the river's sandy bank and over the
  swell into the camp inclosure.
  
  Meantime, Jondo at the front of his men charged into the very
  center of the savage battle-line as, furious for blood, they
  threshed across the narrow draw--the disciplined arm and
  courageous heart against a blood-thirsty foe. A charge, a falling
  back, another surge to win the lost ground, a steady holding on
  and sure advance, and then Jondo, with one triumphant shout of
  victory, struck the last fierce blow that sent the Kiowas into
  full flight toward the northwest, and the day was won.
  
  Out by the river, a sudden dullness seized me. I lifted my eyes
  to see Beverly free and Rex directing the charge; cattle, mules,
  and ponies turned back toward safety, and something crawling and
  writhing about my feet; Jondo's great shout of victory far away,
  it seemed, miles and miles to the north; a cloud of dust sweeping
  toward me; the crimson east aflame like the Day of judgment; the
  dust cloud rolling nearer; the yellow sands and slow-moving
  waters of the Arkansas; and six silent stalwart Kiowa braves,
  with snaky black eyes, looking steadily at me. Shadows, and the
  dust cloud upon me. Then all was night. 
  Deeper than speech our love, stronger than life our tether,
  But we do not fall on the neck, nor kiss when we come
  together.
                                          --"A SONG OF THE
  ENGLISH."
The whole thing was clear now, clear as the big white day that
  suddenly beamed along the prairies, scattering the clouds into
  gray strands against the upper heavens. The treachery of the
  Kiowas had been cleverly executed. Word of their friendliness had
  come to us through the Mexican caravan which could have no object
  in deceiving us, since it was on its way to Kansas City to do
  business with the Clarenden house there. And Jondo had sent a spy
  by night into the Kiowa camp as if they were not to be trusted.
  Yet they had taken no offense; but, letting me keep my firearms,
  had led me into their council on the top of Pawnee Rock, where
  they had told me in clear English that they had nothing but love
  for the white brothers of the plains. And to prove it we should
  pass unharmed along the trail where once we had wronged them by
  stealing their captive. The prairies were wide enough for all of
  us and they had forgotten--as an Indian always forgets--all
  malice against us. They had sent me back to camp with greetings
  to my captain, and had gone on their way to the heart of the
  Grand Prairie in the northeast.
  
  It was only Jondo, as he rode wide of the trail for two days, who
  could see any mark of an Indian's track. And we had not believed
  Jondo. We never made that mistake again: But trust in his
  shrewdness now, however, would not bring back the oxen lost and
  the mules and ponies captured by the thieving band of Dog
  Indians. But there was a greater loss than these. The Kiowas had
  come for revenge. It was blood, not plunder, they wanted. A dozen
  men with arrow wounds reported at roll call, and six men lay
  stark dead under the pitiless sky. Among them Davis of the St.
  Louis train, who had been too ill to take part in the struggle.
  One more loss was there to report, but it was not discovered
  until later.
  
  Indians seldom leave their dead on the field of battle, but the
  blood-stained sod beside their fallen ponies told a story of
  heavy toll. Blood marked the trail of hoofprints to the northwest
  in their wild rout thither. One comrade they had missed in their
  flight. He lay down near the river where the ground had been
  threshed over by the stampeded stock. He must have been a giant
  in life, for his was the longest grave made in the prairie sod
  that day. At the river's edge the sands were pricked with
  hoofprints, where the struggle to carry away the dead seemed to
  have reached clear into the thin yellow current of the Arkansas,
  although no trail led out on the far side of the stream.
  
  "That's the very copper cuss with yellow trimmings who had me
  down when that arrow stopped me," Beverly exclaimed. "He was
  seven feet tall and streaked with yellow just that way. I thought
  ten million rattlesnakes and eight billion polecats had hit me.
  His club was awful. Then I caught sight of old Gail's face in the
  dust-storm, coming back to help me. He gave the Indian one dose
  and got one back, a good hard bill, and then the dust closed in
  and Gail was off again to the northwest out there, like a
  hurricane. I could hear him a mile away. Couldn't I Gail? Where
  is Gail?"
  
  Where?
  
  "Oh, back there with the stock!"
  
  No?
  
  "Out there looking over the draw for things that's got all
  scattered."
  
  No? Not there?
  
  "Oh, he's getting breakfast. And we are all hungry enough to eat
  raw Kiowas now."
  
  No? No?
  
  "Gail would be helping the wounded, anyhow, or straightening out
  dead men's limbs. Poor fellows--to lose six! It's awful!"
  
  No? No? No?
  
  "Bathing in the river? Where? Over there across the
  sand-bar?"
  
  Nowhere! Nowhere!
  
  "By the eternal God, they've got him!" Jondo's agonized voice
  rang through the camp.
  
  "We can take care of the wounded, and those fellows lying over
  there don't need us. But, oh, Gail! They'll torture him to
  death!" Rex Krane's voice choked and he ground his teeth.
  
  "Gail, my Gail!" Beverly sat down white and desparingly
  calm--Beverly, whose up-bubbling spirits nobody could
  repress.
  
  The others wrung their hands and cursed and groaned aloud. Only
  Bill Banney, the unimaginative and stern-hearted, stood
  motionless with set jaws and black-frowning brows. Bill, whom the
  plains had made hard and unfeeling.
  
  "We won't give up Gail, will we, Bill?" Jondo spoke sternly, but
  his face--they said his face was bright with courage and that his
  eyes shone with the inspiration of his will. In all that crowd of
  eager, faithful men, he turned now to Bill Banney. Every man had
  his place on the plains, and Jondo out of the chrism of his own
  life-struggle knew that Bill was bearing a cross in silence, and
  that his was the martyr spirit that finds salvation only in
  deeds. Bill was the man for the place.
  
  And so while straying animals were slowly recovered, while the
  camp was set in order, while the dead were laid with simple
  reverence in un-coffined graves, and the sick were crudely
  ministered to, while Beverly grew feverish and his arrow wound
  became a festering sore, and Rex Krane, master of the company,
  cared for every thing and everybody with that big mother-heart of
  his--Jondo and Bill Banney pushed alone across the desolate
  plains toward where the Smoky Hills wrapped in their dim
  gray-blue mist mark the low watershed that rims the western
  valley of the Kaw.
  
  They went alone because skill, and not numbers, could save a
  captive from the hands of the Kiowas, and the sight of a force
  would mean death to the victim before he could be rescued.
  
  A splash of water against a hot hand hanging down; a sense of
  light, of motion; a glimpse of coarse sands and thin straggling
  weeds beside the edge of the stream down which the pathway ran; a
  sharp aching at the base of the brain; an agony of strained
  muscles--thus slowly I came to my senses, to memory, to the
  knowledge that I was bound hand and foot to a pony's back; that
  the sun was hot, and the sands were hotter, and the glare on the
  waters blinding; that every splash of the pony's hoofs sent up
  glittering sparkles that stabbed my aching eyes like white-hot
  dagger-points; that the black and clotted dirt on the pony's
  shoulder was not mud, but blood; that before and behind were
  other splashing feet, all hiding the trail in the thin current of
  the wide old Arkansas; that the quick turns to follow the water
  and the need for speed gave no consideration to the helpless
  rider. The image of six pairs of snaky black eyes came to help
  the benumbed brain, and I knew with whom I was again captive. But
  there was no question about the friendly motive now, for there
  was no friendly motive now. And as we pushed on east, Jondo and
  Bill Banney were hurrying toward the northwest, and the space
  between us widened every minute. A wave of helplessness and
  despair swept over me; then a wild up-leaping prayer for
  deliverance to a far-away unpitying Heaven; a sudden sense of the
  futility of prayer in a land the Lord had forgotten; and then
  anger, hot and wholesome, and an unconquered, dominant will to
  gain freedom or to die game, swept every other feeling away,
  marvelously mastering the sense of pain that had ground
  mercilessly at every nerve. Then came that small voice which a
  man hears sometimes in the night stillness and sometimes in the
  blare of daylight wrangle. And all suddenly I knew that He who
  notes the sparrow's fall knew that I was alone with death,
  slow-lingering, inch-creeping death, out on that wide, lonely
  plain. The glare on the waters softened. The heat fell away. The
  despair and agony lifted. In all the world--my world--there was
  only one, God; not a far, unpitying, book-made Lord beyond the
  height of the glaring blue dome above me. God beside me on, the
  yellow waters of the Arkansas. His hand in my hot hand! His
  strength about me, invisible, unbreakable, infinite. When a man
  enters into that shielding Presence, nothing else matters.
  
  I do not know how many miles we went down-stream, leaving no
  trail in the shallow water or along its hard-baked edges. But by
  the time we dropped that line I had begun to think coherently and
  to take note of everything possible to me, bound as I was, face
  downward, on the pony's back. It was when we had left the river
  that the hard riding began, and a merciful unconsciousness,
  against which I fought, softened some stretches of that long
  day's journey. We crossed the Santa Fé Trail and were
  pushing eastward out of sight of it to the north. No stop, no
  word, nothing but ride, ride, ride. Truly, I needed the Presence
  that went with me on the way.
  
  At sunset we stopped, and I was taken from my pony and thrown to
  the ground. I managed, in spite of my bonds, to sit up and look
  about me.
  
  We were on the top of Pawnee Rock. The heat of the day was spent
  and all the radiant tints of evening were making the silent
  prairies unspeakably beautiful. I do not know why I should have
  noted or remembered any of this, save that the mind sometimes
  gathers impressions under strange stress of suffering. I had had
  no food all day, and when our ponies stopped to drink, the agony
  of thirst was maddening. My tongue was swollen and my lips were
  cracked and bleeding. The leather thongs that bound me cut deep
  now. But--only the men who lived it can know what all this meant
  to the pioneer of the trail.
  
  I have sat on the same spot at sunset many a time in these my
  sunset years; have gazed in tranquil joy at the whole panorama of
  the heavens that hang over the prairies in the opalescent
  splendor of the after-sunset hour; have looked out over the
  earthly paradise of waving grain, all glowing with the golden
  gleam of harvest, in the heart of the rich Kansas
  wheat-lands--and somehow I'm glad of soul that I foreran this day
  and--maybe--maybe I, too, helped somewhat to build the way--the
  way that Esmond Clarenden had helped to clear a decade before and
  was building then.
  
  The six Indians gathered near me. One of them with unmerciful
  mercy loosened my bonds a trifle and gave me a sup of water. They
  did not want me to die too soon. Then they sat down to eat and
  drink. I did not shut my eyes, nor turn my head. I defied their
  power to crush me, and the very defiance gave me strength.
  
  The chill air of evening blew about the brow of the rock, the
  twilight deepened, and down in the valley the shadows were
  beginning to hide the landscape. But the evening hour is long on
  the headlands. And there was ample time for another kind of
  council than that to which I had listened three mornings ago,
  when I had been set free to bear a friendly message to my
  chief.
  
  They carried me--helpless in their hands--to where, unseen
  myself, and secured by rock fragment and rawhide thong, I could
  see far up the trail to the eastward. But I could give no signal
  of distress, save for the feeble call of my swollen,
  thirst-parched throat. Then the six bronze sons of the plains sat
  down before me, and looked at me. Looked! I never see a pair of
  beady black eyes to-day--and there are many such--that I do not
  long to kill somebody, so vivid yet is the memory of those
  murdering eyes looking at me.
  
  At last they spoke--plains English, it is true--but clear to give
  their meaning.
  
  "Chief Clarenden thinks Kiowas forget. He comes with little train
  across the prairies; Kiowas go to meet big train east and fight
  fair for Mexican brothers who hate Chief Clarenden. They do not
  stop to look for little sneaking coyotes when they seek big game.
  Clarenden steals away Kiowas' captive Hopi. Cheat Kiowas of big
  pay that white Medicine-man Josef would give for her. Mexican
  brothers and Kiowa tribe hate Clarenden. They take his son,
  you, to show Clarenden they can steal, too. Hopi girl!
  white brave! all the same."
  
  The speaker's words came deliberately, and he gave a contemptuous
  wave of the hand as he closed. And the six sat silent for a time.
  Then another voice broke the stillness.
  
  "Yonder is your trail. Chief Clarenden and big white chiefs go by
  to Santa Fé to buy and sell and grow rich. Indian sell
  captives to grow rich! No! White chief not let Indians buy and
  sell. But we do not kill white dogs. We leave you here to watch
  the trail for wagon-trains. They may not come soon. They may not
  see you nor hear you. You can see them pass on their way to get
  rich. You can watch them. Hopi girl would have brought us big
  money. We get no richer. Watch white men go get rich. You may
  watch many days till sun dries your eyes. Nothing trouble you
  here. Watch the trail. No wild animal come here. No water drown
  you here. No fine meat make you ache with eating here.
  Watch."
  
  The six looked long at me, and as the light faded their black
  eyes and dark faces seemed like the glittering eyes and hooked
  bills of six great dark birds of prey.
  
  When the last sunset glow was in the west the six rose up and
  walked backward, still looking at me, until they passed my range
  of vision and I could only feel their eyes upon me. Then I heard
  the clatter of ponies' feet on the hard rock, the fainter stroke
  on the thin, sandy soil, the thud on the thickening sod. Thump,
  thump, thump, farther and farther and farther away. The west grew
  scarlet, deepened to purple and melted at last into the dull gray
  twilight that foreruns the darkness of night. One ray of pale
  gold shimmered far along toward the zenith and lost itself in the
  upper heavens, and the stars came forth in the blue-black eastern
  sky. And I was alone with the Presence whose arm is never
  shortened and whose ear grows never heavy.
  
  The trail to the east was only a dull line along the darker
  earth. I looked up at the myriad stars coming swiftly out of
  space to greet me. The starlit sky above the open prairie speaks
  the voice of the Infinite in a grandeur never matched on land or
  sea.
  
  I thought of Little Blue Flower on that dim-lighted dawning when
  she had showed us her bleeding hands and lashed shoulders. And
  again I heard Beverly's boyish voice ring out:
  
  "Let's take her and take our chances."
  
  And then I was beside the glistening waters of the Flat Rock, and
  Little Blue Flower was there in her white Grecian robe and the
  wrought-silver headband with coral pendants. And Eloise. The
  golden hair, the soft dark eyes, the dainty peach-bloom cheek.
  Eloise whom I had loved always and always. Eloise who loved
  Beverly--good, big-hearted, sunny-faced Beverly, who never had
  visions. Any girl would love him. Most of all, Little Blue
  Flower. What a loving message she had left us in the one word,
  Lolomi. God pity her.
  
  A thousand sharp pains racked my body. I tried to move. I longed
  for water. Then a merciful darkness fell upon me--not sleep, but
  unconsciousness. And the stars watched over me through that black
  night, lying there half dead and utterly alone.
  
  Out to the northwest Jondo and Bill Banney rode long on the trail
  of the fleeing Kiowas. A picture for an artist of the West, these
  two rough men in the garb and mount and trappings of the
  plainsman, with eyes alert and strong faces, riding only as men
  can ride who go to save a life more eagerly than they would save
  their own. Not in rash haste, but with unchecked speed, losing no
  mark along the trail that should guide them more quickly to their
  goal, so they passed side by side, and neither said a word for
  hours along the way. Night came, and the needs of their ponies
  made them pause briefly. The trail, too, was harder to follow
  now. They might lose it in the darkness and so lose time. And
  those two men were going forth to victory. Not for one single
  heart-beat did they doubt their power to win, and the stead-fast
  assurance made them calm.
  
  Daylight again, and a fresher trail made them hurry on. They
  drank at every stream and ate a snatch of food as they rode. They
  reached the hurriedly quitted Kiowa camp, and searched for the
  sign of vengeance on a captive there. Jondo knew those signs, and
  his heart beat high with hope.
  
  "They haven't done it yet," he said to his companion. "They want
  to get away first. We are safe for a day."
  
  And they rode swiftly on again.
  
  "There's trouble here," Bill Banney declared as he watched the
  ground. "Too many feet. Could it be here?"
  
  His voice was hardly audible. The two men halted and read the
  ground with piercing eyes. Something had happened, for there had
  been a circling and chasing in and out, and the sod was cut deep
  with hoofprints.
  
  "No council nor ceremony, no open space for anything." Jondo
  would not even speak the word he was bound not to know.
  
  "They've divided, Jondo. Here goes the big crowd, and there a
  smaller one," Bill declared.
  
  "There were a lot of Dog Indians along for thieving. They've
  split here. Seem to have fussed a bit over it, too. And yonder
  runs the Kiowa trail to the north. Here go the Dogs east." Jondo
  replied. "We'll follow the Kiowas a spell," he added, after a
  thoughtful pause.
  
  And again they were off. It was nearing noon now, and the trail
  was fresher every minute. At last the plainsmen climbed a low
  swell, halting out of sight on the hither side. Then creeping to
  the crest, they looked down on the Indian camp lying in a little
  dry valley of a lost stream whose course ran underground beneath
  them.
  
  Lying flat on the ground, each with his head behind a low bush on
  the top of the swell, the men read the valley with searching
  eyes. Then Jondo, with Bill at his heels, slid swiftly down the
  slope.
  
  "Gail Clarenden isn't there. We must take the trail east, and
  ride hard," he said, in a hoarse voice.
  
  And they rode hard until they were beyond the range of the Kiowa
  outposts.
  
  "What's your game, Jondo?" Bill asked, at length.
  
  "They quarreled back there. Either the Dogs have Gail, or he's
  lost somewhere. The Kiowas are waiting for something. I can't
  quite understand, but we'll go on."
  
  It was mid-afternoon and the two riders were faint from the
  hardship of the chase, but nobody who knew Jondo ever expected
  him to give up. The sun blazed down in the heat of the late
  afternoon, and the baking earth lay brown and dry beneath the
  heat-quivering air. There was no sound nor motion on the plains
  as the two faithful brothers--in purpose--followed hard on the
  track of the Dog Indian band.
  
  Ahead of them the trail grew clearer until they saw the object of
  their chase, a band nearly a hundred strong, riding slowly, far
  ahead. Jondo and Bill halted and dropped to the ground. No cover
  was in sight, but if the Indians were unsuspicious they might not
  be discovered. On went the outlaw band, and the two white men
  followed after. Suddenly the Indians halted and grouped
  themselves together. The plainsmen watched eagerly for the cause.
  Out of the south six Indians came riding swiftly into view. They,
  too, halted, but neither group seemed aware that the two dull,
  motionless spots to the west were two white men watching them.
  White men didn't belong there.
  
  The six rode forward. There was much parleying and pointing
  eastward. Then the six rode rapidly northward and the Dog band
  spurted east as rapidly.
  
  Jondo looked at Bill.
  
  "I see it clear as day. God help us not to be too late!" he
  cried, triumphantly, leaping to his saddle.
  
  "What in Heaven's name to you see?" Bill asked eagerly.
  
  "Gail wasn't with the Kiowas back there. He wasn't with the Dogs
  out yonder. Don't you remember he told us about six of the devils
  getting him in their friendly camp that morning? Yonder go the
  six. They have left Gail somewhere to die and they are cutting
  back to join the tribe. They have sent the Dogs on east. We'll
  run down this trail to the south. Hurry, Bill! For God's sake,
  hurry! It's the Lord's mercy they didn't see us back here."
  
  That day Pawnee Rock saw the same old beauty of sunrise; the same
  clear sweeping breeze; the same long shining hours on the green
  prairies; but it all meant nothing to me, racked with pain and
  choking with thirst through the awful lengths of that summer day.
  Fitful unconsciousness, with fever and delirium, seeing mocking
  faces with snaky black eyes, looking long at me; food almost
  touching my lips, and floods of crystal waters everywhere just
  out of reach. I was on the bluff above the river at Fort
  Leavenworth again, watching for the fish on the sand-bars. They
  were Indians instead of fish, and they laughed at me and called
  me a big brown bob-cat. Then Mother Bridget and Aunty Boone would
  have come to me if I could only make them hear me. But the sun
  beat hot upon my burning face, and my swollen lips refused to
  moan.
  
  And then I looked to the eastward and hope sprang to life within
  me. A wagon-train was crawling slowly toward Pawnee Rock. Tears
  drenched my eyes until I could hardly count the wagons--twenty,
  thirty, forty. It must be far in the afternoon now, and they
  might encamp here. But they seemed to be hurrying. I could not
  see for pain, but I knew they were near the headland now. I could
  hear the rattle of the wagon-chains and the tramp of feet and
  shouts of the bull-whackers. I tugged masterfully at my bonds. It
  was a useless effort. I tried to shout, but only low moans came
  forth from my parched lips. I strove and raged and prayed. The
  wagons hurried on and on, a long time, for there were many of
  them. Then the rattling grew fainter, the voices were far off,
  the thud of hoof-beats ceased. The train had passed the Rock,
  never dreaming that a man lay dying in sight of the succor they
  would so gladly have given.
  
  The sun began to strike in level rays across the land, and the
  air was cooler, but I gave no heed to things about me. Death was
  waiting--slow, taunting death. The stars would be kind again
  to-night as they had been last night, but death crouching between
  me and the starlight, was slowly crawling up Pawnee Rock. Oh, so
  slowly, yet so surely creeping on. The sun was gone and a tender
  pink illumined the sky. The light was soft now. If death would
  only steal in before the glare burst forth. I forgot that night
  must come first. Pity, God of heaven, pity me!
  
  And then the Presence came, and a sweet, low voice--I hear it
  still sometimes, when sunsets soften to twilight, "My presence
  shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest." I felt
  a thrill of triumph pulse through my being. Unconquered, strong,
  and glad is he who trusts.
  
  "I shall not die. I shall live, and in God's good time I shall be
  saved." I tried to speak the words, but I could not hear my
  voice. My pains were gone and I lay staring at the evening sky
  all mother-of-pearl and gold above my head. And on my lips a
  smile.
  
  And so they found me at twilight, as a tired child about to fall
  asleep. They did not cry out, nor fall on my neck, nor weep. But
  Bill Banney's strong arms carried me tenderly away. Water, food,
  unbound swollen limbs, bathed in the warm Arkansas flow, soft
  grass for a bed, and the eyes of the big plainsman, my childhood
  idol, gentle as a girl's, looking unutterable things into my
  eyes.
  
  I've never known a mother's love, but for that loss the Lord gave
  me--Jondo. 
  Fear not, dear love, thy trial hour shall be
  The dearest bond between my heart and thee.
                              --ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
  When we reached the end of the trail and entered a second time
  into Santa Fé the Stars and Stripes were floating lazily
  above the Palace of the Governors. Out on the heights beyond the
  old Spanish prison stood Fort Marcy, whose battlements told of a
  military might, strong to control what by its strength it had
  secured. In its shadow was La Garita, of old the place of
  execution, against whose blind wall many a prisoner had started
  on the long trail at the word of a Spanish bullet, La Garita
  changed now from a thing of legalized horror to a landmark of
  history.
  
  But the city itself seemed unchanged, and there was little
  evidence that Yankee thrift and energy had entered New Mexico
  with the new government. The narrow street still marked the
  trail's end before the Exchange Hotel. San Miguel, with its dun
  walls and triple-towered steeple, still good guard over the soul
  of Santa Fé, as it had stood for three sunny centuries.
  The Mexican still drove down the loaded burro-train of firewood
  from the mountains. The Indian basked in the sunny corners of the
  Plaza. The adobe dwellings clustered blindly along little lanes
  leading out to nowhere in particular. The orchards and
  cornfields, primitively cultivated, made tiny oases beside the
  trickling streams and sandy beds of dry arroyos. The sheep grazed
  on the scant grasses of the plain. The steep gray mesa slopes
  were splotched with clumps of evergreen shrubs and piñon
  trees. And over all the silent mountains kept watch.
  
  The business house of Felix Narveo, however, did not share in
  this lethargy. The streets about the Plaza were full of Conestoga
  wagons, with tired ox-teams lying yoked or unyoked before them.
  Most of the traffic borne in by these came directly or indirectly
  to the house of Narveo. And its proprietor, the same silent,
  alert man, had taken advantage of a less restricted government,
  following the Mexican War, to increase his interests. So mine and
  meadow, flock and herd, trappers' snare and Indian loom and
  forge, all poured their treasures into his hands--a
  clearing-house for the products of New Mexico to swell the great
  overland commerce that followed the Santa Fé Trail.
  
  For all of which the ground plan had been laid mainly by Esmond
  Clarenden, when with tremendous daring he came to Santa Fé
  and spied out the land for these years to follow.
  
  A boy's memory is keen, and all the hours of that other journey
  hither, with their eager anticipation and youthful curiosity, and
  love of surprise and adventure, came back to Beverly Clarenden
  and me as we pulled along the last lap of the trail.
  
  "Was it really so long ago, Bev, that we came in here, all eyes
  and ears?" I asked my cousin.
  
  "No, it was last evening. And not an eyebrow in this Rip Van
  Winkle town has lifted since," Beverly replied. "Yonder stands
  that old church where the gallant knight on a stiff-legged pony
  spied Little Lees and knocked the head off of that tormenting
  Marcos villain, and kicked it under the door-step. Say, Gail, I'd
  like mighty well to see the grown-up Little Lees, wouldn't you?
  And I'd as soon this was Saint Louis as Santa Fé."
  
  Since the night of Mat's wedding, I had been resolutely putting
  away all thought of Eloise St. Vrain. I belonged to the plains.
  All my training had been for this. I thought I was very old and
  settled now. But the mention of her pet name sent a thrill
  through me; and these streets of Santa Fé brought back a
  flood of memories and boyhood dreams and visions.
  
  "Bev, how many auld-lang-syners do you reckon we'll meet in this
  land of sunshine and chilly beans?" I asked,
  carelessly.
  
  "Well, how many of them do you remember, Mr. Cyclopedia of
  Prominent Men and Pretty Women?" Beverly inquired.
  
  "Oh, there was Felix Narveo and Father Josef--and Little Blue
  Flower"--A shadow flitted across my cousin's face for a moment,
  leaving it sunny as ever again.
  
  "And there was that black-eyed Marcos boy everywhere, and
  Ferdinand Ramero whom we were warned to step wide of," I went
  on.
  
  "Oh, that tall thin man with blue-glass eyes that cut your
  fingers when he looked at you. Maybe he went out the back door of
  New Mexico when General Kearny peeped in at the front transom.
  There wasn't any fight in that man."
  
  "Jondo says he is still in Santa Fé." Just as I spoke an
  Indian swept by us, riding with the ease of that
  born-to-the-horseback race.
  
  "Beverly, do you remember that Indian boy that we saw out at Agua
  Fria?" I asked.
  
  "The day we found Little Lees asleep in the church?" Beverly
  broke in, eagerly.
  
  In our whole journey he had hardly spoken of Eloise, and, knowing
  Beverly as I did, I had felt sure for that reason that she had
  not been on his mind. Now twice in five minutes he had called her
  name. But why should he not remember her here, as well as I?
  
  "Yes, I remember there was an Indian boy, sort of sneaky like,
  and deaf and dumb, that followed us until I turned and stared him
  out of it. That's the way to get rid of 'em, Gail, same as a
  savage dog," Beverly said, lightly.
  
  "What if there are six of them all staring at you?" I asked.
  
  "Oh, Gail, for the Lord's sake forget that!"
  
  Beverly cried, affectionately. "When you've got an arrow wound
  rotting your arm off and six hundred and twenty degrees of fever
  in your blood, and the son of your old age is gone for three days
  and nights, and you don't dare to think where, you'll know why a
  fellow doesn't want to remember." There were real tears in the
  boy's eyes. Beverly was deeper than I had thought.
  
  "Well, to change gradually, I wonder if that centaur who just
  passed us might be that same Indian of Agua Fria of long
  ago."
  
  "He couldn't be," Beverly declared, confidently. "That boy got
  one square look at my eagle eye and he never stopped running till
  he jumped into the Pacific Ocean. 'I shall see him again over
  there.'" Half chanting the last words, Beverly, boy-hearted and
  daring and happy, cracked his whip, and our mule-team began to
  prance off in mule style the journey's latter end.
  
  Oh, Beverly! Beverly! Why did that day on the parade-ground at
  Fort Leavenworth and a boy's pleading face lifted to mine, come
  back to me at that moment? Strange are the lines of life. I shall
  never clearly read them all.
  
  Down in the Plaza a tall, slender young man was sitting in the
  shade, idly digging at the sod with an open pocket-knife. There
  was something magnetic about him, the presence that even in a
  crowd demands a second look.
  
  He was dressed in spotless white linen, and with his handsome
  mustache, his well-groomed black hair, and sparkling black eyes,
  he was a true type of the leisure son of the Spanish-Mexican
  grandee. He stared at our travel-stained caravan as it rolled
  down the Plaza's edge, but his careless smile changed to an
  insolent grin, showing all his perfect teeth as he caught sight
  of Beverly and me.
  
  We laid no claims to manly beauty, but we were stalwart young
  fellows, with the easy strength of good health, good habits,
  clear conscience, and the frank faces of boys reared on the
  frontier, and accustomed to its dangers by men who defied the
  very devil to do them harm. But even in our best clothes, saved
  for the display at the end of the trail, we were uncouth compared
  to this young gentleman, and our tanned faces and hard brown
  hands bespoke the rough bull-whacker of the plains.
  
  As our train halted, the young man lighted a cigar and puffed the
  smoke toward us, as if to ignore our presence.
  
  "Its mamma has dressed it up to go and play in the park, but it
  mustn't speak to little boys, nor soil its pinafore, nor listen
  to any naughty words. And it couldn't hold its own against a
  kitten. Nice little clothes-horse to hang white goods on!"
  
  Beverly had turned his back to the Plaza and was speaking in a
  low tone, with the serious face and far-away air of one who
  referred to a thing of the past.
  
  "Bev, you are a mind-reader, a character-sketcher--" I began, but
  stopped short to stare into the Plaza beyond him.
  
  The young man had sprung to his feet and stood there with
  flashing eyes and hands clenched. Behind him was the same young
  Indian who had passed us on the trail. He was lithe, with every
  muscle trained to strength and swiftness and endurance.
  
  He had muttered a word into the young white man's ear that made
  him spring up. And while the face of the Indian was
  expressionless, the other's face was full of surprise and anger;
  and I recognized both faces in an instant.
  
  "Beverly Clarenden, there are two auld-lang-syners behind you
  right now. One is Marcos Ramero, and the other is Santan of
  Bent's Fort," I said, softly.
  
  Beverly turned quickly, something in his fearless face making the
  two men drop their eyes. When we looked again they had left the
  Plaza by different ways.
  
  After dinner that evening Jondo and Bill Banney hurried away for
  a business conference with Felix Narveo. Rex and Beverly also
  disappeared and I was alone.
  
  The last clear light of a long summer day was lingering over the
  valley of the Rio Grande, and the cool evening breeze was
  rippling in from the mountains, when I started out along the
  narrow street that made the terminal of the old Santa Fé
  Trail. I was hardly conscious of any purpose of direction until I
  came to the half-dry Santa Fé River and saw the spire of
  San Miguel beyond it. In a moment the same sense of loss and
  longing swept over me that I had fought with on the night after
  Mat's wedding, when I sat on the bluff and stared at the waters
  of the Kaw flowing down to meet the Missouri. And then I
  remembered what Father Josef had said long ago out by the sandy
  arroyo:
  
  "Among friends or enemies, the one haven of safety always is the
  holy sanctuary."
  
  I felt the strong need for a haven from myself as I crossed the
  stream and followed the trail up to the doorway of San
  Miguel.
  
  The shadows were growing long, few sounds broke the stillness of
  the hour, and the spirit of peace brooded in the soft light and
  sweet air. I had almost reached the church when I stopped
  suddenly, stunned by what I saw. Two people were strolling up the
  narrow, crooked street that wanders eastward beside the
  building--a tall, slender young man in white linen clothes and a
  girl in a soft creamy gown, with a crimson scarf draped about her
  shoulders. They were both bareheaded, and the man's heavy black
  hair and curling black mustache, and the girl's coronal of golden
  braids and the profile of her fair face left no doubt about the
  two. It was Marcos Ramero and Eloise St. Vrain. They were talking
  earnestly; and in a very lover-like manner the young man bent
  down to catch his companion's words.
  
  Something seemed to snap asunder in my brain, and from that
  moment I knew myself; knew how futile is the belief that miles of
  prairie trail and strength of busy days can ever cast down and
  break an idol of the heart.
  
  In a minute they had passed a turn in the street, and there was
  only sandy earth and dust-colored walls and a yellow glare above
  them, where a moment ago had been a shimmer of sunset's gold.
  
  "The one haven of safety always is the holy sanctuary."
  
  Father Josef's words sounded in my ears, and the face of old San
  Miguel seemed to wear a welcoming smile. I stepped into the deep
  doorway and stood there, aimless and unthinking, looking out
  toward where the Jemez Mountains were outlined against the
  southwest horizon. Presently I caught the sound of feet, and
  Marcos Ramero strode out of the narrow street and followed the
  trail into the heart of the city.
  
  I stared after him, noting the graceful carriage, the
  well-fitting clothes, and the proud set of the handsome head.
  There was no doubt about him. Did he hold the heart of the
  golden-haired girl who had walked into my life to stay? As he
  passed out of my sight Eloise St. Vrain came swiftly around the
  corner of the street to the church door, and stopped before me in
  wide-eyed amazement. Eloise, with her clinging creamy draperies,
  and the vivid red of her silken scarf, and her glorious hair.
  
  "Oh, Gail Clarenden, is it really you?" she cried, stretching out
  both hands toward me with a glad light in her eyes.
  
  "Yes, Little Lees, it is I."
  
  I took both of her hands in mine. They were soft and white, and
  mine were brown and horny, but their touch sent a thrill of joy
  through me. She clung tightly to my hands for an instant. Then a
  deeper pink swept her cheeks, and she dropped her eyes and
  stepped back.
  
  "They told me you were--lost--on the way; that some Kiowas had
  killed you."
  
  She lifted her face again, and heaven had not anything better for
  me than the depths of those big dark eyes looking into mine.
  
  "Who told you, Eloise?"
  
  The girl looked over her shoulder apprehensively, and lowered her
  voice as she replied:
  
  "Marcos Ramero."
  
  "He's a liar. I am awfully alive, and Marcos Ramero knows I am,
  for he saw me and recognized me down in the Plaza this
  afternoon," I declared.
  
  Just then the church door opened and a girl in Mexican dress came
  out. I did not see her face, nor notice which way she took, for a
  priest following her stepped between us. It was Father Josef.
  
  "My children, come inside. The holy sanctuary offers you a better
  shelter than the open street."
  
  I shall never forget that voice, nor hear another like it.
  Inside, the candles were burning dimly at the altar. The last
  rays of daylight came through the high south windows, touching
  the carved old rafters and gray adobe with a red glow. Long ago
  human hands, for lack of trowels, had laid that adobe surface on
  the rough stone--hands whose imprint is graven still on those
  crudely dented walls.
  
  We sat down on a low seat inside of the doorway, and Father Josef
  passed up the aisle to the altar, leaving us there alone.
  
  "Eloise, Marcos Ramero is your friend, and I beg your pardon for
  speaking of him as I did."
  
  I resented with all my soul the thought of this girl caring for
  the son of the man who in some infamous way had wronged Jondo,
  but I had no right to be rude about him.
  
  "Gail, may I say something to you?" The voice was as a pleading
  call and the girl's farce was full of pathos.
  
  "Say on, Little Lees," was all that I could venture to
  answer.
  
  "Do you remember the day you came in here and threw Marcos Ramero
  out of that door?"
  
  "I do," I replied.
  
  "Would you do it again, if it were necessary? I mean--if--" the
  voice faltered.
  
  I had heard the same pleading tone on the night of Mat's wedding
  when Eloise and Beverly were in the little side porch together. I
  looked up at the red light on the old church rafters and the
  rough gray walls. How like to those hand-marked walls our
  memories are, deep-dented by the words they hold forever! Then I
  looked down at the girl beside me and I forgot everything else.
  Her golden hair, her creamy-white dress, and that rich crimson
  scarf draped about her shoulders and falling across her knees
  would have made a Madonna's model that old Giovanni Cimabue
  himself would have joyed to copy.
  
  "Is it likely to be necessary? Be fair with me, Eloise. I saw you
  two strolling up that little goat-run of a street out there just
  now. Judging from the back of his head, Marcos looked satisfied.
  I shouldn't want to interfere nor make you any trouble," I said,
  earnestly.
  
  "It is I who should not make you any trouble, but, oh, Gail, I
  came here this evening because I was afraid and I didn't know
  where else to go, and I found you. I thought you were dead
  somewhere out on the Kansas prairie. Maybe it was to help me a
  little that you came here to-night."
  
  Her hands were gripped tightly and her mouth was firm-set in an
  effort to be brave.
  
  "Why, Eloise, I'd never let Marcos Ramero, nor anybody else, make
  you one little heart-throb afraid. If you will only let me help
  you, I wouldn't call it trouble; I'd call it by another name."
  The longing to say more made me pause there.
  
  The light was fading overhead, but the church lamps gave a soft
  glow that seemed to shield off the shadowy gloom.
  
  "Father Josef came all the way from New Mexico to St. Ann's to
  have me come back here, and Mother Bridget sent Sister Anita, you
  remember her, up to St. Louis to come with me by way of New
  Orleans. I didn't tell you that I might be here when your train
  came in overland because--because of some things about my own
  people--"
  
  The fair head was bowed and the soft voice trembled.
  
  "Don't be afraid to tell me anything, Little Lees," I whispered,
  assuringly.
  
  "I never saw my father, but my mother was very beautiful and
  loving, and we were so happy together. I was still a very little
  girl when she fell sick and they took me away from her. I never
  knew when she died nor where she was buried. Ferdinand Ramero had
  charge of her property. He controlled everything after she went
  away, and I have always lived in fear of his word. I am helpless
  when he commands, for he has a strange power over minds; and as
  to Marcos--you know what a little cat I was. I had to be to live
  with him. It wasn't until we were all at Bent's Fort that I got
  over my fear of you and Beverly. The day you threw Marcos out of
  here was the first time I ever had a champion to defend me."
  
  I wanted to take her in my arms and tell her what I dared not
  think she would let me say. So I listened in sympathetic
  silence.
  
  "Then came an awful day out at Agua Fria, and Father Josef took
  me in his arms as he would take a baby, and sang me to sleep with
  the songs my mother loved to sing. I think it must have been
  midnight when I wakened. It was dreary and cold, and Esmond
  Clarenden and Ferdinand Ramero were there, and Father Josef and
  Jondo."
  
  And then she told me, as she remembered them, the happenings of
  that night at Agua Fria, the same story that Jondo told me later.
  But until that evening I had known nothing of how Eloise had come
  to us.
  
  "You know the rest," Eloise went on "I have had a boarding-school
  life, and no real friends, except the Clarenden family, outside
  of these schools."
  
  "You poor little girl! One of the same Clarenden family is ready
  to be your friend now," I said, tenderly, remembering keenly how
  Uncle Esmond and Jondo had loved and protected three orphan
  children.
  
  "The Rameros think nobody but a Ramero can do that now. Marcos is
  very much changed. He has been educated in Europe, is handsome,
  and courtly in his manners, and as his father's heir he will be
  wealthy. He came to-night to ask me, to urge and plead with me,
  to marry him." Eloise paused.
  
  "Do you need the defense of a bull-whacker of the plains against
  these things?" I asked.
  
  "Oh, I could depend on myself if it were only Marcos. He comes
  with polished ways and pleasing words," Eloise replied. "It is
  his father's iron fist back of him that strikes at me through his
  graciousness. He tells me that all the St. Vrain money, which he
  controls by the terms of my father's will, he can give to the
  Church, if he chooses, and leave me disinherited."
  
  "We don't mind that a bit as a starter up in Kansas. Come out on
  our prairies and try it," I suggested.
  
  "But, Gail, that isn't all. There is something worse, dreadfully
  worse, that I cannot tell you, that only the Rameros know, and
  hold like a sword over my head. If I marry Marcos his father will
  destroy all evidence of it and I shall have a handsome, talented,
  rich husband." Eloise bowed her head and clasped her hands,
  crushed by the misery of her lot.
  
  "And if you refuse to marry this scoundrel?" I asked,
  bluntly.
  
  "Then I will be a penniless outcast. The Rameros are powerful
  here, and the Church will be with them, for it will get my
  inheritance. I am helpless and alone and I don't know what to
  do."
  
  I think I had never known what anger meant before. This beautiful
  girl, homeless, and about to be robbed of her fortune, reared in
  luxury, with no chance for developing self-reliance and courage,
  was being hemmed in and forced to a marriage by threats of
  poverty and a secret something against which she was powerless.
  All the manhood in me rallied to her cause, and she was an
  hundredfold dearer to me now, in her helplessness.
  
  "Eloise, I'm a horny-handed driver of a bull-team on the Santa
  Fé Trail, but you will let me help you if I can. So far as
  your money is concerned, there's a lot of it on earth, even if
  the Church should grab up your little bit because Ferdinand
  Ramero says your father's will permits it. There are evil
  representatives in every Church, no matter what its name may be,
  Catholic, Protestant, Indian, or Jew, but Father Josef up there
  is bigger than his priestly coat, and you can trust that size
  anywhere. And as to the knowledge of this 'something' known just
  to Ferdinand Ramero, if he is the only one who knows it, it is
  too small to get far, if it were turned loose. And any man who
  would use such infamous means to get what he wants is too small
  to have much influence if he doesn't get it. This is a big, wide,
  good world, Little Lees, and the father of Marcos Ramero, with
  all his power and wealth, has a short lariat that doesn't let him
  graze wide. Jondo holds the other end of that lariat, and he
  knows."
  
  Eloise listened eagerly, but her face was very white.
  
  "Gail, you don't know the Ramero blood. I am helpless and
  terrified with them in spite of their suave manners and
  flattering words. Why did Father Josef bring me back here if the
  Church is not with them? And then that awful shadow of some
  hidden thing that may darken my life. I know their cruel,
  pitiless hearts. They stop at nothing when they want their way. I
  have known them to do the most cold-blooded deeds."
  
  Poor Eloise! The net about her had been skilfully drawn.
  
  "I don't know Father Josef's motive, but I can trust him. And no
  shadow shall trouble you long, Little Lees. Jondo and Uncle
  Esmond `tote together,' Aunty Boone said long ago. They know
  something about the Ramero blood, and Jondo has promised to tell
  me his story some day. He must do it to-night, and to-morrow
  we'll see the end of this tangle. Trust me, Eloise," I said,
  comfortingly.
  
  "But, Gail, I'm afraid Ferdinand will kill you if you get in his
  way." Eloise clung to my arm imploringly.
  
  "Six big Kiowas got fooled at that job. Do you think this thin
  streak of humanity would try it?" I asked, lightly.
  
  Eloise stood up beside me.
  
  "I must go away now," she said.
  
  "Then I'll go with you. Thank you, Father Josef, for your
  kindness," I said as the priest came toward us.
  
  "You are welcome, my son. In the sanctuary circle no harm can
  come. Peace be with both of you."
  
  There was a world of benediction in his deep tones, and his smile
  was genial, as he followed us to the street and stood as if
  watching for some one.
  
  "I will meet you at San Miguel's to-morrow afternoon, Gail,"
  Eloise said, as we reached a low but pretentious adobe dwelling.
  "This is my home now."
  
  "Your new Mexican homes are thick-walled, and you live all on the
  inside," I said, as we paused at the doorway. "They make me think
  of the lower invertebrates, hard-shelled, soft-bodied animals. Up
  on the Kansas prairies and the Missouri bluffs we have a central
  vetebra--the family hearth-stone--and we live all around it. That
  is the people who have them do. There isn't much home life for a
  freighter of the plains anywhere. Good by, Little Lees." I took
  her offered hand. "I'm glad you have let me be your friend, a
  hard-shelled bull-whacker like me."
  
  The street was full of shadows and the evening air was chill as
  the door closed on that sweet face and cloud of golden hair. But
  the pressure of warm white fingers lingered long in my sense of
  touch as I retraced my steps to the trail's end. At the church
  door I saw Father Josef still waiting, as if watching for
  somebody.
  
  All that Eloise had told me ran through my mind, but I felt sure
  that neither financial nor churchly influence in Santa Fé
  could be turned to evil purposes so long as men like Felix Narveo
  and Father Josef were there. And then I thought of Esmond
  Clarenden, himself neither Mexican nor Roman Catholic, who,
  nevertheless, drew to himself such fair-dealing, high-minded men
  as these, always finding the best to aid him, and combating the
  worst with daring fearlessness. Surely with the priest and the
  merchant and Jondo as my uncle's representative, no harm could
  come to the girl whom I knew that I should always love.
  
  And with my mind full of Eloise and her need I sought out Jondo
  and listened to his story. 
  Fighting for leave to live and labor well,
  God flung me peace and ease.
                              --"A SONG OF THE ENGLISH."
  I found Jondo in the little piazza opening into the hotel
  court.
  
  "Where did you leave Krane and Bev?" he asked, as I sat down
  beside him.
  
  "I didn't leave them; they left me," I answered.
  
  "Oh, you young bucks are all alike. You know just enough to be
  good to yourselves. You don't think much about anybody else,"
  Jondo said, with a smile.
  
  "I think of others, Jondo, and for that reason I want you to tell
  me that story about Ferdinand Ramero that you promised to tell me
  one night back on the trail."
  
  Jondo gave a start.
  
  "I'd like to forget that man, not talk about him," he
  replied.
  
  "But it is to help somebody else, not just to be good to myself,
  that I want to know it," I insisted, using his own terms. And
  then I told him what Eloise had told me in the San Miguel
  church.
  
  "Are the Ramero's so powerful here that they can control the
  Church in their scheme to get what they want?" I asked.
  
  "It would be foolish to underestimate the strength of Ferdinand
  Ramero," Jondo replied, adding, grimly, "It has been my lot to
  know the best of men who could make me believe all men are good,
  and the worst of men who make me doubt all humanity." He clenched
  his fists as if to hold himself in check, and something, neither
  sigh nor groan nor oath nor prayer, but like them all, burst from
  his lips.
  
  "If you ever have a real cross, Gail, thank the Lord for the
  green prairies and the open plains, and the danger-stimulus of
  the old Santa Fé Trail. They will seal up your wounds, and
  soften your hard, rebellious heart, and make you see things big,
  and despise the narrow little crooks in your path."
  
  One must have known Jondo, with his bluff manner and sunny smile
  and daring spirit, to feel the force, of these brave sad words. I
  felt intuitively that I had laid bare a wound of his by my
  story.
  
  "It is for Eloise, not for my curiosity, that I have come to
  you," I said, gently. "And you didn't come too soon, boy." Jondo
  was himself in a moment. "It is another cruel act in the old
  tragedy of Ramero against Clarenden and others."
  
  "Will the Church be bribed by the St. Vrain estate and urge this
  wedding?" I asked.
  
  "The Church considers money as so much power for the Kingdom. I
  have heard that the St. Vrain estate was left in Ramero's hands
  with the proviso that if Eloise should marry foolishly before she
  was twenty-five she, would lose her property. Do you see the
  trick in the game, and why Ramero can say that if he chooses he
  can take her heritage away from her? But as he keeps everything
  in his own hands it is hard to know the truth about anything
  connected with money matters."
  
  "Would Father Josef be party to such a transaction?" I asked,
  angrily.
  
  "Ramero thinks so, but he is mistaken," Jondo replied.
  
  "What makes you think he won't be?" I insisted.
  
  "Because I knew Father Josef before he became a priest, and why
  he took the vows," Jondo declared. "Unless a man brings some
  manhood to the altar, he will not find it in the title nor the
  dress there, it makes no difference whether he be Catholic,
  Protestant, Hebrew, or heathen. Father Josef was a gentleman
  before he was a priest."
  
  "Well, if he's all right, why did he bring Eloise back here into
  the heart of all this trouble?" I questioned.
  
  Jondo sat thinking for a little while, then he said,
  assuringly:
  
  "I don't know his motive, unless he felt he could protect her
  here himself; but I tell you, my boy, he can be trusted. Let me
  tell you something, Gail. When Esmond Clarenden and I were boys
  back in a New England college we knew two fellows from the
  Southwest whose fathers were in official circles at Washington.
  One was Felix Narveo, thoroughbred Mexican, thoroughbred
  gentleman, a bit lacking in initiative sometimes, for he came
  from the warmer, lazier lands, but as true as the compass in his
  character. The other fellow was Dick Verra, French father,
  English mother; I think he had a strain of Indian blood farther
  back somewhere, but he would have been a prince in any tribe or
  nation. A happy, wholesome, red-blooded, young fellow, with the
  world before him for his conquest.
  
  "We knew another fellow, too, Fred Ramer, self-willed, imperious,
  extravagant in his habits, greedy and unscrupulous; but he was
  handsome and masterful, with a compelling magnetism that made us
  admire him and bound us to him. He had never known what it meant
  to have a single wish denied him. And with his make-up, he would
  stop at nothing to have his own way, until his wilful pride and
  stubbornness and love of luxury ruined him. But in our college
  days we were his satellites. He was always in debt to all of us,
  for money was his only god and we never dared to press him for
  payment. The only one of us who ever overruled him was Dick
  Verra. But Dick was a born master of men. There was one other
  chum of ours, but I'll tell you about him later. Boys together,
  we had many escapades and some serious problems, until by the
  time our college days were over we were bound together by those
  ties that are made in jest and broken with choking voices and
  eyes full of tears."
  
  Jondo paused and I waited, silent, until he should continue.
  
  "Things happened to that little group of college men as time went
  on. You know your uncle's life, leading merchant of Kansas City
  and the Southwest; and mine, plainsman and freighter on the Santa
  Fé Trail. Felix Narveo's history is easily read. Esmond
  Clarenden came down here at the outbreak of the Mexican War, and
  together he and Narveo laid the foundation for the present trail
  commerce that is making the country at either end of it rich and
  strong. Dick Verra is now Father Josef." Jondo paused as if to
  gather force for the rest of the story. Then he said:
  
  "Back at college we all knew Mary Marchland, a beautiful
  Louisiana girl who visited in Washington and New England, and all
  of us were in love with her. When our life-lines crossed again
  Clarenden had come to St. Louis. About that time his two older
  brothers and their wives died suddenly of yellow fever, leaving
  you and Beverly alone. It was Felix Narveo who brought you up to
  St. Louis to your uncle."
  
  "I remember that. The steamboat, and the Spanish language, and
  Felix Narveo's face. I recalled that when I saw him years ago," I
  exclaimed.
  
  "You always were all eyes and ears, remembering names and faces,
  where Beverly would not recall anything," Jondo declared.
  
  "And what became of your Fred Ramer?" I asked.
  
  "He is Ferdinand Ramero here. He married Narveo's sister later.
  She is not the mother of Marcos, but a second wife. She owned a
  tract of land inherited from the Narveo estate down in the San
  Christobal country. There is a lonely ranch house in a
  picturesque cañon, and many acres of grazing-land. She
  keeps it still as hers, although her stepson, Marcos, claims it
  now. It is for her sake that Narveo doesn't dare to move openly
  against Ramero. And in his masterful way he has enough influence
  with a certain ring of Mexicans here, some of whom are Narveo's
  freighters, to reach pretty far into the Indian country. That's
  why I knew those Mexicans were lying to us about the Kiowas at
  Pawnee Rock. I could see Ramero's gold pieces in their hands. He
  joined the Catholic Church, and plays the Pharisee generally. But
  the traits of his young manhood, intensified, are still his. He
  is handsome, and attractive, and rich, and influential, but he is
  also cold-blooded, and greedy for money until it is his ruling
  passion, villainously unscrupulous, and mercilessly unforgiving
  toward any one who opposes his will; and his capacity for undying
  hatred is appalling."
  
  And this was the man who was seeking to control the life of
  Eloise St. Vrain. I fairly groaned in my anger.
  
  "The failure to win Mary Marchland's love was the first time in
  his life that Fred Ramer's will had ever been thwarted, and he
  went mad with jealousy and anger. Gail, they are worse masters
  than whisky and opium, once they get a man down."
  
  Jondo paused, and when he spoke again he did it hurriedly, as one
  who, from a sense of duty, would glance at the dead face of an
  enemy and turn away.
  
  "When Fred lost his suit with Mary, he determined to wreck her
  life. He came between her and the man she loved with such adroit
  cruelty that they were separated, and although they loved each
  other always, they never saw each other again. Through a terrible
  network of misunderstandings she married Theron St. Vrain. He, by
  the way, was the other college chum I spoke of just now. He and
  his foster-brother, Bertrand, were wards of Fred Ramer's father.
  But their guardian, the elder Ramer, had embezzled most of their
  property and there was bitter enmity between them and him. Theron
  and Mary were the parents of Eloise St. Vrain. It is no wonder
  that she is beautiful. She had Mary Marchland for a mother.
  Theron St. Vrain died early, and the management of his property
  fell into Fred Ramer's hands. At Mary's death it would descend to
  Eloise, with the proviso I just mentioned of an unworthy
  marriage. In that case, Ramer, at his own discretion, could give
  the estate to the Church. Nobody knows when Mary Marchland died,
  nor where she is buried, except Fred and his confessor, Father
  Josef."
  
  "How far can a man's hate run, Jondo?" I asked.
  
  "Oh, not so far as a man's love. Listen, Gail." Never a man had a
  truer eye and a sweeter smile than my big Jondo.
  
  "Fred Ramer was desperately in need of money when he was plotting
  to darken the life of Mary Marchland--that was just before the
  birth of Eloise--and through her sorrow to break the heart of the
  man whom she loved--I said we college boys were all in love with
  her, you remember. Let me make it short now. One night Fred's
  father was murdered, by whom was never exactly proven. But he was
  last seen alive with his ward, Theron St. Wain, who, with his
  foster-brother, Bertrand, thoroughly despised him for his plain
  robbery of their heritage.
  
  "The case was strong against Theron, for the evidence was very
  damaging, and it would have gone hard with him but for the
  foster-brother. Bertrand St. Wain took the guilt upon himself by
  disappearing suddenly. He was supposed to have drowned himself in
  the lower Mississippi, for his body, recognized only by some
  clothing, was recovered later in a drift and decently buried. So
  he was effaced from the records of man."
  
  In the dim light Jondo's blue eyes were like dull steel and his
  face was a face of stone, but he continued:
  
  "Just here Clarenden comes into the story. He learned it through
  Felix Narveo, and Felix got it from the Mexicans themselves, that
  Fred Ramer had plotted with them to put his father out of the
  way--I said he was desperately in need of money--and to lay the
  crime on Theron St. Vrain, by whose disgrace the life of Mary
  Marchland would be blighted, and Fred would have his revenge and
  his father's money. Narveo was afraid to act against Ramer, but
  nothing ever scared Esmond Clarenden away from what he wanted to
  do. Through his friendship for St. Vrain, to whom some suspicion
  still clung, and that lost foster-brother, Bertrand, he turned
  the screws on Fred Ramer that drove him out of the country. He
  landed, finally, at Santa Fé, and became Ferdinand Ramero.
  He managed by his charming manners to enchant the sister of Felix
  Narveo--and you know the rest."
  
  Jondo paused.
  
  "Didn't Felix Narveo go to Fort Leavenworth once, just before
  Uncle Esmond brought us with him to Santa Fé?" I
  asked.
  
  "Yes, he went to warn Clarenden not to leave you there
  unprotected, for a band of Ramero's henchmen were on their way
  then to the Missouri River--we passed them at Council Grove--to
  kidnap you three and take you to old Mexico," Jondo said. "An
  example of Fred's efforts to get even with Clarenden and of the
  loyalty of Narveo to his old college chum. The same gang of
  Mexicans had kidnapped Little Blue Flower and given her to the
  Kiowas."
  
  "You told me that Uncle Esmond forced Ferdinand Ramero out of the
  country on account of a wrong done to you, Jondo," I reminded the
  big plainsman.
  
  "He did," Jondo replied. "I told you that we all loved Mary
  Marchland. Fred Ramer broke under his loss of her, and became the
  devil's own tool of hate and revenge, and what generally gets
  tied up with these sooner or later, a passion for money and
  irregular means of getting it. Money is as great an asset for
  hate as for love, and Fred sold his soul for it long ago.
  Clarenden came to the frontier and lost himself in the building
  of the plains commerce, and his heart he gave to the three orphan
  children to whom he gave a home. When New Mexico came under our
  flag Narveo came with it, a good citizen and a loyal patriot. He
  married a Mexican woman of culture and lives a contented life.
  Dick Verra went into the Church. I came to the plains, and the
  stimulus of danger, and the benediction of the open sky, and the
  healing touch of the prairie winds, and the solemn stillness of
  the great distances have made me something more of a man than I
  should have been. Maybe I was hurt the worst. Clarenden thought I
  was. Sometimes I think Dick Verra got the best of all of us."
  
  Jondo's voice trailed off into silence and I knew what his hurt
  was--that he was the man whom Mary Marchland had loved, from whom
  Fred Ramer, by his cruel machinations, had separated her--"and
  although they loved each other always, they never saw each other
  again." Poor Jondo! What a man among men this unknown
  freighter of the plains might have been--and what a loss to the
  plains in the best of the trail years if Jondo had never dared
  its dangers for the safety of the generations to come.
  
  But the thought of Eloise, driven out momentarily by Jondo's
  story, came rushing in again.
  
  "You said you put a ring around Ramero to keep him in Santa
  Fé. Can't we get Eloise outside of it?" I urged,
  anxiously.
  
  "Maybe I should have said that Father Josef put it around him for
  me," Jondo replied. "He confessed his crimes fully to the Church.
  He couldn't get by Father Josef. Here he is much honored and
  secure and we let him alone. The disgrace he holds the secret
  of--he alone--is that the father of Eloise killed his father, the
  crime for which the foster-brother fell. Ramero as guardian of
  Eloise and her property legally could have kept her here. Only a
  man like Clarenden would have dared to take her away, though he
  had the pleading call of her mother's last wish. Gail, I have
  told you the heart-history of half a dozen men. If this had
  stopped with us we could forgive after a while, but it runs down
  to you and Beverly and Eloise and Marcos, who will carry out his
  father's plans to the letter. So the battle is all to be fought
  over again. Let me leave you a minute or two. I'll not be gone
  long."
  
  I sat alone, staring out at the shadowy court and, above it, the
  blue night-sky of New Mexico inlaid with stars, until a rush of
  feet in the hall and a shout of inquiry told me that Beverly
  Clarenden was hunting for me.
  
  Meantime the girl in Mexican dress, who had come out of the
  church with Father Josef when he came to greet Eloise and me, had
  passed unnoticed through the Plaza and out on the way leading to
  the northeast. Here she came to the blind adobe wall of La
  Garita, whose olden purpose one still may read in the many
  bullet-holes in its brown sides. Here she paused, and as the
  evening shadows lengthened the dress and wall blended their dull
  tones together.
  
  Beverly Clarenden, who had gone with Rex Krane up to Fort Marcy
  that evening, had left his companion to watch the sunset and
  dream of Mat back on the Missouri bluff, while he wandered down
  La Garita. He did not see the Mexican woman standing motionless,
  a dark splotch against a dun wall, until a soft Hopi voice
  called, eagerly, "Beverly, Beverly."
  
  The black scarf fell from the bright face, and Indian garb--not
  Po-a-be, the student of St. Ann's and the guest of the Clarenden
  home, with the white Grecian robe and silver headband set with
  coral pendants, as Beverly had seen her last in the side porch on
  the night of Mat's wedding, but Little Blue Flower, the Indian of
  the desert lands, stood before him.
  
  "Where the devil--I mean the holy saints and angels, did you come
  from?" Beverly cried, in delight, at seeing a familiar face.
  
  "I came here to do Father Josef some service. He has been good to
  me. I bring a message."
  
  She reached out her hand with a letter. Beverly took the letter
  and the hand. He put the message in his pocket, but he did not
  release the hand.
  
  "That's something for Jondo. I'll see that he gets it, all right.
  Tell me all about yourself now, Little
  Run-Off-and-Never-Come-Back." It was Beverly's way to make people
  love him, because he loved people.
  
  It was late at last, too late for prudence, older heads would
  agree, when these two separated, and my cousin came to pounce
  upon me in the hotel court to tell me of his adventure.
  
  "And I learned a lot of things," he added. "That Indian in the
  Plaza to-day is Santan, or Satan, dead sure; and you'd never
  guess, but he's the same redskin--Apache red--that was out at
  Agua Fria that time we were there long ago. The very same little
  sneak! He followed us clear to Bent's Fort. He put up a good
  story to Jondo, but I'll bet he was somebody's tool. You know
  what a critter he was there. But listen now! He's got his eye on
  Little Blue Flower. He's plain wild Injun, and she's a Saint
  Ann's scholar. Isn't that presumption, though! She's afraid of
  him, too. This country fairly teams with romance, doesn't
  it?"
  
  "Bev, don't you ever take anything seriously?" I asked.
  
  "Well, I guess I do. I found that Santan, dead loaded with
  jealousy, sneaking after us in the dark to-night when I took
  Little Blue Flower for a stroll. I took him seriously, and told
  him exactly where he'd find me next time he was looking for me.
  That I'd stand him up against La Garita and make a sieve out of
  him," Beverly said, carelessly.
  
  "Beverly Clarenden, you are a fool to get that Apache's
  ill-will," I cried.
  
  "I may be, but I'm no coward," Beverly retorted. "Oh, here comes
  Jondo. I've got a letter from Father Josef. Invitation to some
  churchly dinner, I expect."
  
  Beverly threw the letter into Jondo's hands and turned to leave
  us.
  
  "Wait a minute!" Jondo commanded, and my cousin halted in
  surprise.
  
  "When did you get this? I should have had it two hours ago,"
  Jondo said, sternly. "Father Josef must have waited a long time
  up at the church door for his messenger to come back and bring
  him word from me."
  
  Beverly frankly told him the truth, as from childhood we had
  learned was the easiest way out of trouble.
  
  Jondo's smile came back to his eyes, but his lips did not smile
  as he said: "Gail, you can explain things to Bev. This is serious
  business, but it had to come sooner or later. The battle is on,
  and we'll fight it out. Ferdinand Ramero is determined that
  Eloise and his son shall be married early to-morrow morning. The
  bribe to the Church is one-half of the St. Vrain estate. The club
  over Eloise is the shame of some disgrace that he holds the key
  to. He will stop at nothing to have his own way, and he will
  stoop to any brutal means to secure it. He has a host of fellows
  ready at his call to do any crime for his sake. That's how far
  money and an ungovernable passion can lead a man. If I had known
  this sooner, we would have acted to-night."
  
  Beverly groaned.
  
  "Let me go and kill that man. There ought to be a bounty on such
  wild beasts," he declared.
  
  "He'd do that for you through a Mexican dagger, or an Apache
  arrow, if you got in his way," Jondo replied. "But what we must
  do is this: Twenty miles south on the San Christobal Arroyo there
  is a lonely ranch-house on the old Narveo estate, a forgotten
  place, but it is a veritable fort, built a hundred years ago,
  when every house here was a fort. To-morrow at daybreak you must
  start with Eloise and Sister Anita down there. I will see Father
  Josef later and tell him where I have sent you. Little Blue
  Flower will show you the way. It is a dangerous ride, and you
  must make it as quickly and as silently as possible. A bullet
  from some little cañon could find you easily if Ramero
  should know your trail. Will you go?"
  
  There was no need for the question as Jondo well knew, but his
  face was bright with courage and hope, and a thankfulness he
  could not express shone in his eyes as he looked at us, big,
  stalwart, eager and unafraid. 
  Mark where she stands! Around her form I draw
  The awful circle of our solemn church!
  Set but a foot within that holy ground,
  And on thy head--yea, though it wore a crown--
  launch the curse of Rome.
                                          --"RICHELIEU."
  The faint rose hue of early dawn was touching the highest peaks
  of the Sandia and Jemez mountain ranges, while the valley of the
  Rio Grande still lay asleep under dull night shadows, when five
  ponies and their riders left the door of San Miguel church and
  rode southward in the slowly paling gloom. In the stillness of
  the hour the ponies' feet, muffled in the sand of the way, seemed
  to clatter noisily, and their trappings creaked loudly in the
  dead silence of the place. Little Blue Flower, no longer in her
  Mexican dress, led the line. Behind her Beverly and the
  white-faced nun of St. Ann's rode side by side; and behind these
  came Eloise St. Vrain and myself. From the church door Jondo had
  watched us until we melted into the misty shadows of the
  trail.
  
  "Go carefully and fearlessly and ride hard if you must. But the
  struggle will be here with me to-day, not where you are," he
  assured us, when we started away.
  
  As he turned to leave the church, an Indian rose from the shadows
  beyond it and stepped before him.
  
  "You remember me, Santan, the Apache, at Fort Bent?" he
  questioned.
  
  Jondo looked keenly to be sure that his memory fitted the man
  before him.
  
  "Yes, you are Santan. You brought me a message from Father Josef
  once."
  
  The Indian's face did not change by the twitch of an eyelash as
  he replied.
  
  "I would bring another message from him. He would see you an hour
  later than you planned. The young riders, where shall I tell him
  they have gone?"
  
  "To the old ranch-house on the San Christobal Arroyo," Jondo
  replied.
  
  The Indian smiled, and turning quickly, he disappeared up the
  dark street. A sudden thrill shook Jondo.
  
  "Father Josef said I could trust that boy entirely. Surely old
  Dick Verra, part Indian himself, couldn't be mistaken. But that
  Apache lied to me. I know it now; and I told him where our boys
  are taking Eloise. I never made a blunder like that before.
  Damned fool that I am!"
  
  He ground his teeth in anger and disgust, as he sat down in the
  doorway of the church to await the coming of Ferdinand Ramero and
  his son, Marcos.
  
  Out on the trail our ponies beat off the miles with steady gait.
  As the way narrowed, we struck into single file, moving silently
  forward under the guidance of Little Blue Flower, now plunging
  into dark cañons, where the trail was rocky and perilous,
  now climbing the steep sidling paths above the open plain.
  Morning came swiftly over the Gloriettas. Darkness turned to
  gray; shapeless masses took on distinctness; the night chill
  softened to the crisp breeze of dawn. Then came the rare June day
  in whose bright opening hour the crystal skies of New Mexico hung
  above us, and about us lay a landscape with radiant lights on the
  rich green of the mesa slopes, and gray levels atint with
  mother-of-pearl and gold.
  
  The Indian pueblos were astir. Mexican faces showed now and then
  at the doorways of far-scattered groups of adobe huts. Outside of
  these all was silence--a motionless land full of wild, rugged
  beauty, and thrilling with the spell of mystery and glamour of
  romance. And overbrooding all, the spirit of the past, that made
  each winding trail a footpath of the centuries; each sheer cliff
  a watch-tower of the ages; each wide sandy plain, a
  rallying-ground for the tribes long ago gone to dust; each narrow
  valley a battle-field for the death-struggle between the dusky
  sovereigns of a wilderness kingdom and the pale-faced conquerors
  of the coat of mail and the dominant soul. The sense of danger
  lessened with distance and no knight of old Spain ever rode more
  proudly in the days of chivalry than Beverly Clarenden and I rode
  that morning, fearing nothing, sure of our power to protect the
  golden-haired girl, thrilled by this strange flight through a
  land of strange scenes fraught with the charm of daring and
  danger. Beverly rode forward now with Little Blue Flower. I did
  not wonder at her spell over him, for she was in her own land
  now, and she matched its picturesque phases with her own
  picturesque racial charm.
  
  I rode beside Eloise, forgetting, in the sweet air and glorious
  June sunlight, that we were following an uncertain trail away
  from certain trouble.
  
  The white-faced nun in her somber dress, rode between, with
  serious countenance and downcast eyes.
  
  "What happened to you, Little Lees, after I left you?" I asked,
  as we trotted forward toward the San Christobal valley.
  
  "Everything, Gail," she replied, looking up at me with shy, sad
  eyes. "First Ferdinand Ramero came to me with the command that I
  should consent to be married this morning. By this time I would
  have been Marcos' wife." She shivered as she spoke. "I can't tell
  you the way of it, it was so final, so cruel, so impossible to
  oppose. Ferdinand's eyes cut like steel when they look at you,
  and you know he will do more than he threatens. He said the
  Church demanded one-half of my little fortune and that he could
  give it the other half if he chose. He is as imperious as a
  tyrant in his pleasanter moods; in his anger he is a maniac. I
  believe he would murder Marcos if the boy got in his way, and his
  threats of disgracing me were terrible."
  
  "But what else happened?" I wanted to turn her away from her
  wretched memory.
  
  "I have not seen anybody else except Little Blue Flower. She has
  an Indian admirer who is Ferdinand's tool and spy. He let her
  come in to see me late last night or I should not have been here
  now. I had almost given up when she brought me word that you and
  Beverly would meet me at the church at daylight. I have not slept
  since. What will be the end of this day's work? Isn't there
  safety for me somewhere?" The sight of the fair, sad face with
  the hunted look in the dark eyes cut me to the soul.
  
  "Jondo said last night that the battle was on and he would fight
  it out in Santa Fé to-day. It is our work to go where the
  Hopi blossom leads us, and Bev Clarenden and I will not let
  anything happen to you."
  
  I meant what I said, and my heart is always young when I recall
  that morning ride toward the San Christobal Arroyo and my
  abounding vigor and confidence in my courage and my powers.
  
  Our trail ran into a narrow plain now where a yellow band marked
  the way of the San Christobal River toward the Rio Grande. On
  either hand tall cliffs, huge weather-worn points of rock, and
  steep slopes, spotted with evergreen shrubs, bordered the river's
  course. The silent bigness of every feature of the landscape and
  the beauty of the June day in the June time of our lives, and our
  sense of security in having escaped the shadows and strife in
  Santa Fé, all combined to make us free-spirited. Only
  Sister Anita rode, alert and sorrowful-faced, between Beverly and
  the gaily-robed Indian girl, and myself with Eloise, the
  beautiful.
  
  As we rounded a bend in the narrow valley, Little Blue Flower
  halted us, and pointing to an old half-ruined rock structure
  beside the stream, she said:
  
  "See, yonder is the chapel where Father Josef comes sometimes to
  pray for the souls of the Hopi people. The house we go to find is
  farther up a cañon over there."
  
  "I remember the place," Eloise declared. "Father Josef brought me
  here once and left me awhile. I wasn't afraid, although I was
  alone, for he told me I was always safe in a church. But I was
  never allowed to come back again."
  
  Sister Anita crossed herself and, glancing over her shoulder,
  gave a sharp cry of alarm. We turned about to see a group, of
  horsemen dashing madly up the trail behind us. The wind in their
  faces blew back the great cloud of dust made by their horses
  hoofs, hiding their number and the way behind them. Their steeds
  were wet with foam, but their riders spurred them on with
  merciless fury. In the forefront Ferdinand Ramero's tall form,
  towering above the small statured evil-faced Mexican band he was
  leading, was outlined against the dust-cloud following them, and
  I caught the glint of light on his drawn revolver. "Ride! Ride
  like the devil!" Beverly shouted.
  
  At the same time he and the Hopi girl whirled out and, letting us
  pass, fell in as a rear guard between us and our pursuers. And
  the race was on.
  
  Jondo had said the lonely ranch-house whither we were tending was
  as strong as a fort. Surely it could not be far away, and our
  ponies were not spent with hard riding. Before us the valley
  narrowed slightly, and on its rim jagged rock cliffs rose through
  three hundred feet of earthquake-burst, volcanic-tossed confusion
  to the high tableland beyond.
  
  As we strained forward, half a dozen Mexican horsemen suddenly
  appeared on the trail before us to cut off our advance. Down
  between us and the new enemy stood the old stone chapel, like the
  shadow of a great rock in a weary land, where for two hundred
  long years it had set up an altar to the Most High on this lonely
  savage plain.
  
  "The chapel! The chapel! We must run to that now," cried Sister
  Anita.
  
  Her long veil was streaming back in the wind, and her rosary and
  crucifix beating about her shoulders with the hard riding, but
  her white face was brave with a divine trust. Yet even as she
  urged us I saw how imposible was her plea, for the men in
  front were already nearer to the place than we were. At the same
  time a pony dashed up beside me, and Little Blue Flower's voice
  rang in my ears.
  
  "The rocks! Climb up and hide in the rocks!" She dropped back on
  one side of Beverly, with Sister Anita on the other, guarding our
  rear. As I turned our flight toward the cliff, I caught sight of
  an Indian in a wedge of rock just across the river, and I heard
  the singing flight of an arrow behind me, followed almost
  instantly by another arrow. I looked back to see Sister Anita's
  pony staggering and rearing in agony, with Little Blue Flower
  trying vainly to catch its bridle-rein, and Sister Anita,
  clutching wildly at her rosary, a great stream of blood flowing
  from an arrow wound in her neck.
  
  Men think swiftly in moments like these. The impulse to halt, and
  the duty to press on for the protection of the girl beside me,
  holding me in doubt. Instantly I saw the dark crew, with
  Ferdinand Ramero leading fiercely forward, almost upon us, and I
  heard Beverly Clarenden's voice filling the valley--"Run, Gail,
  run! You can beat 'em up there."
  
  It was a cry of insistences and assurances and power, and withal
  there was that minor tone of sympathy which had sounded in the
  boy's defiant voice long ago in the gray-black shadows below
  Pawnee Rock, when his chivalric soul had been stirred by the
  cruel wrongs of Little Blue Flower and he had cried:
  
  "Uncle Esmond, let's take her, and take our chances."
  
  I knew in a flash that the three behind us were cut off, and
  Eloise St. Vrain and I pressed on alone. We crossed the narrow
  strip of rising ground to where the first rocks lay as they had
  fallen from the cliff above, split off by some titanic agony of
  nature. Up and up we went, our ponies stumbling now and then, but
  almost as surefooted as men, as they climbed the narrow way. Now
  the rocks hid us from the plain as we crept sturdily through
  narrow crevices, and now we clambered up an open path where
  nothing concealed our way. But higher still and higher, foot, by
  foot we pressed, while with oath and growl behind us came our
  pursuers.
  
  At last we could ride no farther, and the miracle was that our
  ponies could have climbed so far. Above us huge slabs of stone,
  by some internal cataclysm hurled into fragments of unguessed
  tons of weight, seemed poised in air, about to topple down upon
  the plain below. Between these wild, irregular masses a narrow
  footing zigzagged upward to still other wild, irregular masses, a
  footing of long leaps in cramped spaces between sharp edges of
  upright clefts, all gigantic, unbending, now shielding by their
  immense angles, now standing sheer and stark before us, casting
  no shadows to cover us from the great white glare of the
  New-Mexican day.
  
  I have said no man knows where his mind will run in moments of
  peril. As we left our ponies and clambered up and up in hope of
  safety somewhere, the face of the rocks cut and carved by the
  rude stone tools of a race long perished, seemed to hold groups
  of living things staring at us and pointing the way. And there
  was no end to these crude pictographs. Over and over and
  over--the human hand, the track of the little road-runner bird,
  the plumed serpent coiled or in waving line, the human form with
  the square body and round head, with staring circles for eyes and
  mouth, and straight-line limbs.
  
  We were fleeing for safety through the sacred aisles of a people
  God had made; and when they served His purpose no longer, they
  had perished. I did not think of them so that morning. I thought
  only of some hiding-place, some inaccessible point where nothing
  could reach the girl I must protect. But these crawling serpents,
  cut in the rock surfaces, crawled on and on. These human hands,
  poor detached hands, were lifted up in mute token of what had
  gone before. These two-eyed, one-mouthed circles on heads fast to
  body-boxes, from which waved tentacle limbs, jigged by us, to
  give place to other coiled or crawling serpents and their
  companion carvings, with the track of the swift road-runner
  skipping by us everywhere.
  
  At last, with bleeding hands and torn clothing, we stood on a
  level rock like a tiny mesa set out from the high summit of the
  cliff.
  
  Eloise sat down at my feet as I looked back eagerly over the
  precipitous way we had come, and watched the band of Mexicans
  less rapidly swarming up the same steep, devious trail.
  
  Three hundred feet below us lay the plain with the thin current
  of the San Christobal River sparkling here and there in the
  sunlight. The black spot on the trail that scarcely moved must be
  Beverly and Little Blue Flower with Sister Anita. No, there was
  only the Indian girl there, and something moving in and out of
  the shadow near them. I could not see for the intervening
  rocks.
  
  "Gail! Gail! You will not let them take you. You will not leave
  me," Eloise moaned.
  
  And I was one against a dozen. I stooped to where she sat and
  gently lifted her limp white hand, saying:
  
  "Eloise, I was on a rock like this a night and a day alone on the
  prairie. I could not move nor cry out. But something inside told
  me to 'hold fast'--the old law of the trail. You must do that
  with me now."
  
  A shout broke over the valley and the rocks about us seemed
  suddenly to grow men, as if every pictograph of the old stone age
  had become a sentient thing, a being with a Mexican dress, and
  the soul of a devil. Just across a narrow chasm, a little below
  us, Ferdinand Ramero stood in all the insolence of a conqueror,
  with a smile that showed his white teeth, and in his steely eyes
  was the glitter of a snake about to spring.
  
  "You have given us a hard race. By Jove, you rode magnificently
  and climbed heroically. I admire you for it. It is fine to bring
  down game like you, Clarenden. You have your uncle's spirit, and
  a six-foot body that dwarfs his short stature. And we come as
  gentlemen only, if we can deal with a gentleman. It wasn't our
  men who struck your nun down there. But if you, young man, dare
  to show one ounce of fighting spirit now, behind you on the
  rocks--don't look--as I lift my hand are my good friends who will
  put a bullet into the brain beneath that golden hair, and you
  will follow. Being a game-cock cannot help you now. It will only
  hasten things. Deliver that girl to me at once, or my men will
  close in upon you and no power on earth can save you."
  
  Eloise had sprung to her feet and stood beside me, and both of us
  knew the helplessness of our plight. A startling picture it must
  have been, and one the cliffs above the San Christobal will
  hardly see again: the blue June sky arched overhead, unscarred by
  a single cloud-fleck, the yellow plain winding between the high
  picturesque cliffs, where silence broods all through the long
  hours of the sunny day; the pictured rocks with their
  furnace-blackened faces white--outlined with the story of the dim
  beginnings of human strivings. And standing alone and defenseless
  on the little table of stone, as if for sacrifice, the tall,
  stalwart young plainsman and the beautiful girl with her golden
  hair in waving masses about her uncovered head, her sweet face
  white as the face of the dying nun beside the sandy arroyo below
  us, her big dark eyes full of a strange fire.
  
  "I order you to close in and take these two at once." The
  imperious command rang out, and the rocks across the valley must
  have echoed its haughty tone.
  
  "And I order you to halt."
  
  The voice of Father Josef, clear and rich and powerful, burst
  upon the silence like cathedral music on the still midnight air.
  The priest's tall form rose up on a great mass of rock across the
  cleft before us--Father Josef with bared head and flashing eyes
  and a physique of power.
  
  Ferdinand Ramero turned like a lion at bay. "You are one man. My
  force number a full dozen. Move on," he ordered.
  
  Again the voice of Father Josef ruled the listening ears.
  
  "Since the days of old the Church has had the power to guard all
  that come within the shelter of the holy sanctuary. And to the
  Church of God was given also long ago the might to protect, by
  sanctuary privilege, the needy and the defenseless. Ferdinand
  Ramero, note that little table of rock where those two stand
  helpless in your grasp. Around them now I throw, as I have power
  to throw, the sacred circle of our Holy Church in sanctuary
  shelter. Who dares to step inside it will be accursed in the
  sight of God."
  
  Never, never will I live through another moment like to that, nor
  see the power of the Unseen rule things that are seen with such
  unbreakable strength.
  
  The Mexicans dropped to their knees in humble prayer, and
  Ferdinand Ramero seemed turned to a man of stone. A hand was
  gently laid upon my arm and Jondo and Rex Krane stood beside us.
  A voice far off was sounding in my ears.
  
  "Go back to your homes and meet me at the church to-morrow night.
  You, Ferdinand Ramero, go now to the chapel yonder and wait until
  I come."
  
  What happened next is lost in misty waves of forgetfulness. 
  "Yet there be certain times in a young man's life when through
  great sorrow or sin all the boy in him is burnt and seared away
  so that he passes at one step to the more sorrowful state of
  manhood."
  --KIPLING.
  The heat of midday was tempered by a light breeze up the San
  Christobal Valley, and there was not a single cloud in the June
  skies to throw a softening shadow on the yellow plain. A little
  group of Mexicans, riding northward with sullen faces, urged on
  their jaded ponies viciously as they thought of the gold that was
  to have been paid them for this morning's work, and of the gold
  that to-morrow night must go to pay the priest who should shrive
  them; and they had nothing gained wherewith to pay. Their leader,
  whom they had served, had been trapped in his own game, and they
  felt themselves abused and deceived.
  
  Down by the brown sands of the river Father Josef waited at the
  door of the half-ruined little stone chapel for the strange group
  coming slowly toward him: Ferdinand Ramero, riding like a
  captured but unconquered king, his head erect, his flashing eyes
  seeing nobody; Jondo who could make the shabbiest piece of
  horseflesh take on grace when he mounted it, his tanned cheek
  flushed, and the spirit of supreme sacrifice looking out through
  his dark-blue eyes; Eloise, drooping like a white flower, but
  brave of spirit now, sure that her grief and anxiety would be
  lifted somehow. I rode beside her, glad to catch the faint smile
  in her eyes when she looked at me. And last of all, Rex Krane,
  with the same old Yankee spirit, quick to help a fellow-man and
  oblivious to personal danger. So we all came to the chapel, but
  at the door Rex wheeled and rode away, muttering, as he passed
  me:
  
  "I've got business to look after, and not a darned thing to
  confess."
  
  And Beverly! He was not with us.
  
  When Rex Krane told his bride good-by up in the Clarenden home on
  the Missouri bluff, Mat had whispered one last request:
  
  "Look after Bev. He never sees danger for himself, nor takes
  anything seriously, least of all an enemy, whom he will befriend,
  and make a joke of it."
  
  And so it happened that Rex had stayed behind to care for
  Beverly's arrow wound when Bill Banney had gone out with Jondo on
  the Kiowa trail to search for me this side of Pawnee Rock.
  
  So also it happened that Rex had strolled down from Fort Marcy
  the night before, in time to see Beverly and the girl in the
  Mexican dress loitering along the brown front of La Garita. And
  his keen eyes had caught sight of Santan crouching in an angle of
  the wall, watching them.
  
  "Indians and Mexes don't mix a lot. And Bev oughtn't mix with
  either one," Rex commented. "I'll line the boy up for review
  to-morrow, so Mat won't say I've neglected him."
  
  But the Yankee took the precaution to follow the trail to the
  Indian's possible abiding-place on the outskirts of Santa
  Fé. And it was Rex who most aided Jondo in finding that
  the Indian had gone with Ramero's men northward.
  
  "That fellow is Santan, of Fort Bent, Rex," Jondo said.
  
  "Yes, you thought he was Santa and I took him for
  Satan then. We missed out on which to knock out of him.
  Bev won't care nothin' about his name. He will knock hell out of
  him if he gets in that Clarenden boy's way," Rex had replied.
  
  At the chapel door now the Yankee turned away and rode down the
  trail toward the little angle where an Indian arrow had whizzed
  at our party an hour before.
  
  In the shadow of a fallen mass of rock below the cliff Little
  Blue Flower had spread her blanket, with Beverly's coat tucked
  under it in a roll for a pillow, and now she sat beside the dying
  nun, holding the crucifix to Sister Anita's lips. The Indian
  girl's hands were blood-stained and the nun's black veil and gown
  were disheveled, and her white head-dress and coif were soaked
  with gore. But her white face was full of peace as the light
  faded from her eyes.
  
  And Beverly! The boy forgot the rest of the world when one of the
  Apache's arrows struck down the pony and the other pierced Sister
  Anita's neck. Tenderly as a mother would lift a babe he quickly
  carried the stricken woman to the shelter of the rock, and with
  one glance at her he turned away.
  
  "You can do all that she needs done for her. Give her her cross
  to hold," he said, gently, to Little Blue Flower.
  
  Then he sprang up and dashed across the river, splashing the
  bright waters as he leaped to the farther side where Santan stood
  concealed, waiting for the return of Ramero's Mexicans.
  
  At the sound of Beverly's feet he leaped to the open just in time
  to meet Beverly's fist square between the eyes.
  
  "Take that, you dirty dog, to shoot down an innocent nun. And
  that!" Beverly followed his first blow with another.
  
  The Apache, who had reeled back with the weight of the boy's iron
  fist, was too quick for the second thrust, struggling to get hold
  of his arrows and his scalping-knife. But the space was too
  narrow and Beverly was upon him with a shout.
  
  "I told you I'd make a sieve or you the next time you tried to
  see me, and I'm going to do it."
  
  He seized the Indian's knife and flung it clear into the river,
  where it stuck upright in the sands of the bed, parting the
  little stream of water gurgling against it; and with a powerful
  grip on the Apache's shoulders he wrenched the arrows from their
  place and tramped on them with his heavy boot.
  
  The Indian's surprise and submission were gone in a flash, and
  the two clinched in combat.
  
  On the one hand, jealousy, the inherited hatred of a mistreated
  race, the savage instinct, a gloating joy in brute strife,
  blood-lust, and a dogged will to trample in the dirt the man who
  made the sun shine black for the Apache. On the other hand, a mad
  rage, a sense of insult, a righteous greed for vengeance for a
  cruel deed against an innocent woman, and all the superiority of
  a dominant people. The one would conquer a powerful enemy, the
  other would exterminate a despicable and dangerous pest.
  
  Back and forth across the narrow space hidden from the trail by
  fallen rock they threshed like beasts of prey. The Apache had the
  swiftness of the snake, his muscles were like steel springs, and
  there was no rule of honorable warfare in his code. He bit and
  clawed and pinched and scratched and choked and wrenched, with
  the grim face and burning eyes of a murderer. But the Saxon
  youth, slower of motion, heavier of bone and muscle, with a grip
  like iron and a stony endurance, with pride in a conquest by
  sheer clean skill, and with a purpose, not to take life, but to
  humble and avenge, hammered back blow for blow; and there was
  nothing for many minutes to show which was offensive and which
  defensive.
  
  As the struggle raged on, the one grew more furious and the other
  more self-confident.
  
  "Oh, I'll make you eat dust yet!" Beverly cried, as Santan in
  triumph flung him backward and sprang upon his prostrate
  form.
  
  They clinched again, and with a mighty surge of strength my
  cousin lifted himself, and the Indian with him, and in the next
  fall Beverly had his antagonist gripped and helpless.
  
  "I can choke you out now as easy as you shot that arrow. Say your
  prayers." He fairly growled out the words.
  
  "I didn't aim at her," the Apache half whined, half boasted. "I
  wanted you."
  
  At that moment Beverly, spent, bruised, and bleeding with
  fighting and surcharged with the lust of combat, felt all the
  instinct of murder urging him on to utterly destroy a
  poison-fanged foe to humanity. At Santan's words he paused and,
  flinging back the hair from his forehead, he caught his breath
  and his better self in the same heart-beat. And the instinct of
  the gentleman--he was Esmond Clarenden's brother's son--held the
  destroying hand.
  
  "You aimed at me! Well, learn your lesson on that right now.
  Promise never to play the fool that way again. Promise the
  everlasting God's truth, or here you go."
  
  The boy's clutch tightened on Santan's throat. "By all that's
  holy, you'll go to your happy hunting-ground right now, unless
  you do!" He growled out the words, and his blazing eyes
  glared threateningly at his fallen enemy.
  
  "I promise!" Santan muttered, gasping for breath.
  
  "You didn't mean to kill the nun? Then you'll go with me and ask
  her to forgive you before she dies. You will. You needn't try to
  get away from me. I let you thrash your strength out before we
  came to this settlement. Be still!" Beverly commanded, as Santan
  made a mad effort to release himself.
  
  "Hurry up, and remember she is dying. Go softly and speak gently,
  or by the God of heaven, you'll go with her to the Judgment Seat
  to answer for that deed right now!"
  
  Slowly the two rose. Their clothes were torn, their hair
  disheveled, the ground at their feet was red with their blood.
  They were as bitter, as distrustful now as when their struggle
  began. For brute force never conquers anything. It can only hold
  in check by fear of its power to destroy the body. Above the iron
  fist of the fighter, and the sword and cannon of the soldier,
  stands the risen Christ who carried his own cross up Mount
  Calvary--and "there they crucified him."
  
  The two young men, spent with their struggle, their faces stained
  with dirt and bloody sweat, crossed the river and sought the
  shadowy place where Little Blue Flower sat beside Sister Anita.
  Twice Santan tried to escape, and twice Beverly brought him
  quickly to his place. It must have been here that I caught sight
  of them from the rock above.
  
  "One more move like that and the ghost of Sister Anita will walk
  behind you on every trail you follow as long as your flat feet
  hit the earth," Beverly declared.
  
  "All Indians are afraid of ghosts and I was just too tired to
  fight any more," he said to me afterward when he told me the
  story of that hour by the San Christobal River.
  
  Sister Anita lay with wide-open eyes, her hands moving feebly as
  she clutched at her crucifix. Her hour was almost spent.
  
  Santan stood motionless before her, as Beverly with a grip on his
  arm said, firmly:
  
  "Tell her you did not aim at her, and ask her to forgive you. It
  will help to save your own soul sometime, maybe."
  
  Santan looked at Little Blue Flower. But she gave no heed to him
  as she put the dropped crucifix into the weakening fingers.
  Murder, as such, is as horrifying to the gentle Hopi tribe as it
  is sport for the cruel Apache.
  
  Beverly loosed his hold now.
  
  "I did not want to hurt you. Forgive me!" Santan said, slowly, as
  though each word were plucked from him by red-hot pincers.
  
  Sister Anita heard and turned her eyes.
  
  "Kneel down and tell her again," Beverly said, more gently.
  
  The Apache dropped on his knees beside the dying woman and
  repeated his words. Sister Anita smiled sweetly.
  
  "Heaven will forgive you even as I do," she murmured, and closed
  her eyes.
  
  "Go softly. This is sacred ground," my cousin said.
  
  The Indian rose and passed silently down the trail, leaving
  Little Blue Flower and Beverly Clarenden together with the dead.
  At the stream he paused and pulled his knife from the sands
  beneath the trickling waters, and then went on his way.
  
  But an Indian never forgets.
  
  Rex Krane, who had hurried hither from the chapel, closed the
  eyes and folded the thin hands of the martyred woman, and sent
  Beverly forward for help to dispose of the garment of clay that
  had been Sister Anita. From that day something manly and serious
  came into Beverly Clarenden's face to stay, but his sense of
  humor and his fearlessness were unchanged.
  
  That was a solemn hour in the shadow of the rock down in that
  yellow valley, but beautiful in its forgiving triumph. We who had
  gathered in the dimly lighted chapel had an hour more solemn for
  that it was made up of such dramatic minutes as change the trend
  of life-trails for all the years to come.
  
  The chapel was very old. They tell me that only a broken portion
  of the circular wall about the altar stands there to-day, a
  lonely monument to some holy padre's faith and courage and
  sacrifice in the forgotten years when, in far Hesperia, men
  dreamed of a Quivera and found only a Calvary.
  
  It may be that I, Gail Clarenden, was also changed as I listened
  to the deliberations of that day; that something of youth gave
  place for the stronger manhood that should stay me through the
  years that came after.
  
  Eloise sat where I could see her face. The pink bloom had come
  back to it, and the golden hair, disordered by our wild ride and
  rough climb among the pictured rocks of the cliff, curled
  carelessly on her white brow and rippled about her shapely head.
  I used to wonder what setting fitted her beauty best--why wonder
  that about any beautiful woman?--but the gracious loveliness of
  this woman was never more appealing to me than in the soft light
  and sacred atmosphere of the church.
  
  Father Josef's first thought was for her, but he brought water
  and coarse linen towels, so that, refreshed and clean-faced, we
  came in to his presence.
  
  "Eloise," his voice was deep and sweet, "so long as you were a
  child I tried to protect and direct you. Now that you are a
  woman, you must still be protected, but you must live your own
  life and choose for yourself. You must meet sorrow and not be
  crushed by it. You must take up your cross and bear it. It is for
  this that I have called you back to New Mexico at this time. But
  remember, my daughter, that life is not given to us for defeat,
  but for victory; not for tears, but for smiles; not for idle
  cringing safety, but for brave and joyous struggle."
  
  I thought of Dick Verra, the college man, whose own young years
  were full of hope and ambition, whose love for a woman had
  brought him to the priesthood, but as I caught the rich tones of
  Father Josef's voice, somehow, to me, he stood for success, not
  failure.
  
  Eloise bowed her head and listened.
  
  "You must no longer be threatened with the loss of your own
  heritage, nor coerced into a marriage for which the Church has
  been offered a bribe to help to accomplish. Blood money purifies
  no altars nor extends the limits of the Kingdom of the Christ.
  Your property is your own to use for the holy purposes of a
  goodly life wherever your days may lead you; and whatever the
  civil law may grant of power to control it for you, you shall no
  longer be harassed or annoyed. The Church demands that it shall
  henceforth be yours."
  
  Father Josef's dark eyes were full of fire as he turned to
  Ferdinand Ramero.
  
  "You will now relinquish all claim upon the control of this
  estate, whose revenue made your father and yourself to be
  accounted rich, and upon which your son has been allowed to build
  up a life expectation; and though on account of it, you go forth
  a poor man in wordly goods, you may go out rich in the blessing
  of restoration and repentance."
  
  Ferdinand Ramero's steel eyes were fixed like the eyes of a snake
  on the holy man's face. Restoration and repentance do not belong
  behind eyes like that.
  
  "I can fight you in the courts. You and your Church may go to the
  devil;" he seemed to hiss rather than to speak these words.
  
  "We do go to him every day to bring back souls like yours,"
  Father Josef's voice was calm. "I have waited a long time for you
  to repent. You can go to the courts, but you will not do it. For
  the sake of your wife, Gloria Ramero, and Felix Narveo, her
  brother, we do not move against you, and you dare not move for
  yourself, because your own record will not bear the light of
  legal investigation."
  
  Ferdinand Ramero sprang up, the blaze of passion, uncontrolled
  through all his years, bursting forth in the tragedy of the hour.
  Eloise was right. In his anger he was a maniac.
  
  "You dare to threaten me! You pen me in a corner to stab me to
  death! You hold disgrace and miserable poverty over my head, and
  cant of restoration and repentance! Not until here you name each
  thing that you count against me, and I have met them point by
  point, will I restore. I never will repent!"
  
  In the vehemence of anger, Ramero was the embodiment of the
  dramatic force of unrestraint, and withal he was handsome, with a
  controlling magnetism even in his hour of downfall.
  
  Jondo had said that Father Josef had somewhere back a strain of
  Indian blood in his veins. It must have been this that gave the
  fiber of self control to his countenance as he looked with
  pitying eyes at Jondo and Eloise St. Vrain.
  
  "The hour is struck," he said, sadly. "And you shall hear your
  record, point by point, because you ask it now. First: you have
  retained, controlled, misused, and at last embezzled the fortune
  of Theron St. Vrain, as it was retained, controlled, misused, and
  embezzled by your father, Henry Ramer, in his lifetime. Any case
  in civil courts must show how the heritage of Eloise St. Vrain,
  heir to Theron St. Vrain at the death of her mother--"
  
  "Not until the death of her mother--" Ferdinand Ramero broke in,
  hoarsely.
  
  For the first time to-day the priest's cheek paled, but his voice
  was unbroken as he continued:
  
  "I would have been kinder for your own sake. You desire
  otherwise. Yes, only after the death of Mary Marchland St. Vrain
  could you dictate concerning her daughter's affairs, with most
  questionable legality even then. Mary Marchland St. Vrain is not
  dead."
  
  The chapel was as silent as the grave. My heart stood still.
  Before me was Jondo, big, strong, self-controlled, inured to the
  tragic deeds of the epic years of the West. No pen of mine will
  ever make the picture of Jondo's face at these words of Father
  Josef.
  
  Eloise turned deathly pale, and her dark eyes opened wide, seeing
  nothing. It was not I who comforted her, but Jondo, who put his
  strong arm about her, and she leaned against his shoulder. Father
  and daughter in spirit, stricken to the heart.
  
  "For many years she has lived in that lonely ranch-house on the
  Narveo grant in the little cañon up the San Christobal
  Arroyo. When the fever left her with memory darkened forever, you
  recorded her as dead. But your wife, Gloria Ramero, spared no
  pains to make her comfortable. She has never known a want, nor
  lived through one unhappy hour, because she has forgotten."
  
  "A priest, confessor for men's inmost souls, who babbles all he
  knows! I wonder that this roof does not fall on you and strike
  you dead before this altar." Ferdinand Ramero's voice rose to a
  shout.
  
  "It was too strongly built by one who knew men's inmost souls,
  and what they needed most," Father Josef replied. "You drove me
  to this by your insistence. I would have shielded you--and
  these."
  
  He turned to Eloise and Jondo as he spoke.
  
  "One more point, since you hold it ready to spring when I am
  through. You stand accused of plotting for your father's murder.
  The evidence still holds, and some men who rode with you to-day
  to seize this gentle girl and drag her back to a marriage with
  your son--and save your ill-gotten gold thereby--some of these
  men who will confess to me and do penance to-morrow night, are
  the same men who long ago confessed to other crimes--you can
  guess what they were.
  
  "It pays well to repent before such a holy tattler as yourself."
  Ramero's blue eyes burned deep as their fire was centered on the
  priest.
  
  "These are the counts against you," Father Josef said in review,
  ignoring the last outburst of wrath. "A life of ease and
  inheritance through money not your own, nor even rightly yours to
  control. A stricken woman listed with the dead, whose memory
  might have come again--God knows--if but the loving touch of
  childish hands had long ago been on her hands. It is years too
  late for all that now. A brave young ward rescued from your
  direct control by Esmond Clarenden's force of will and daring to
  do the right. You know that last pleading cry of Mary
  Marchland's, for Jondo to protect her child, and how Clarenden,
  for love of this brave man, came to New Mexico on perilous trails
  to take the little Eloise from you. And lastly in this matter,
  the threats to force a marriage unholy in God's sight, because no
  love could go with it. Your mad chase and villainous intention to
  use brute force to secure your will out yonder on the rocks above
  the cliff. You have debauched an Apache boy, making him your tool
  and spy. You sanctioned the seizing of a Hopi girl whose parents
  you permitted to be murdered, and their child sold into slavery
  among foreign tribes. You have stirred up and kept alive a feud
  of hatred and revenge among the Kiowa people against the life and
  property of Esmond Clarenden and all who belong to him. And,
  added to all these, you stand to-day a patricide in spirit,
  accused of plotting for the murder of your own father. Do not
  these things call for restoration and repentance?"
  
  Ferdinand Ramero rose to his feet and stood in the aisle near the
  door. His face hardened, and all the suave polish and cool
  concentration and dominant magnetism fell away. What remained was
  the man as shaped by the ruling passions of years, from whose
  control only divine power could bring deliverance. And when he
  spoke there was a remorseless cruelty and selfishness in his low,
  even tones.
  
  "You have called me a plotter for my father's life--based on some
  lying Mexican's love of blackmail. You do not even try to prove
  your charge. The man who would have killed him was Theron St.
  Vrain, and his brother, Bertrand. That Theron was disgraced by
  the fact you know very well, and the blackness of it drove him to
  an early grave. So this young lady here, whom I would have
  shielded from this stain upon her name in the marriage to my son,
  may know the truth about her father. He was what you, Father
  Josef, try to prove me to be."
  
  He paused as if to gather venom for his last shaft.
  
  "These two, Theron and Bertrand, were equally guilty, but through
  tricks of their own, Theron escaped and Bertrand took the whole
  crime on himself. He disappeared and paid the penalty by his
  death. His body was recovered from the river and placed in an
  unmarked grave. Why go back to that now? Because Bertrand St.
  Vrain's clothes alone on some poor drowned unknown man were
  buried. Bertrand himself sits here beside his niece, Eloise St.
  Vrain. John Doe to the world, the man who lives without a name,
  and dares not sign a business document, a walking dead man. I
  could even pity him if he were real. But who can pity
  nothing?"
  
  A look of defiance came into the man's glittering eyes as he took
  one step nearer to the door and continued:
  
  "Esmond Clarenden drove me out of the United States with threats
  of implicating me in the death of my father, and I knew his power
  and brutal daring to do anything he chose to do. It was but his
  wish to have revenge for this nameless thing--"
  
  The scorn of Ramero's eyes and voice as he looked at Jondo were
  withering.
  
  "And this thing keeps me here by threats of attacks, even when he
  knows that by such attacks he will reveal himself. It has been a
  grim game." Something of a grin showed all of the man's fine
  teeth. "A grim game, and never played to a finish till now. I
  leave it to you, Father Josef, to judge who has been the stronger
  and who comes out of it victor. I make restoration--of what? I
  leave the St. Vrain money that I have guarded for Eloise, the
  daughter of the man who killed, or helped to kill, my father. You
  can control it now, among you: Clarenden, already rich; your
  Church, notorious in its robbery of the poor by enriching its
  coffers; or this uncle here, who is dead and buried in an unknown
  grave. That is all the restoration I can make. Repentance, I do
  not know what that word means. Keep it for the poor devils you
  will gather in to-morrow night to be shriven. They need it. I do
  not."
  
  He turned and strode out of the church and, mounting his horse,
  rode like a madman up the yellow valley of the San Christobal. In
  after years I could find no term to so well describe that last
  act as the words of Beverly Clarenden, who came to the chapel
  just in time to hear Ferdinand Ramero's closing declaration, and
  to see his black scowl and scornful air, as, in a royal madness,
  he defied the power of man and denounced the all-pitying love
  that is big enough for the most sinful.
  
  "It was Paradise lost," Beverly declared, "and Satan falling
  clear to hell before the Archangel's flaming sword. Only he went
  east and the real Satan dropped down to his place. But they will
  meet up somewhere, Ramero and the real one, and not be able to
  tell each other apart."
  
  And Jondo. My boyhood idol, brave, gentle, unselfish, able
  everywhere! Jondo, who had kept my toddling feet from stumbling,
  who had taught me to ride and swim and shoot, who had made me
  wise in plains lore, and manly and clean among the rough and
  vulgar things of the Missouri frontier. Jondo, whose big, cool
  hand had touched my feverish face, whose deep blue eyes had
  looked love into my eyes when I lay dying on Pawnee Rock! A man
  without a name! A murderer who had by a trick escaped the law,
  and must walk evermore unknown among his fellow-men! Something
  went out of my life as I looked at him. The boy in me was burned
  and seared away, and only the man-to-be, was left.
  
  He offered no word of defense from the accusation against him,
  nor made a plea of innocence, but sat looking straight at Father
  Josef, who looked at him as if expecting nothing. And as they
  gazed into each other's eyes, a something strong and beautiful
  swept the face of each. I could not understand it, and I was
  young. My lifetime hero had turned to nothingness before my eyes.
  The world was full of evil. I hated it and all that in it was, my
  trusting, foolish, short-sighted self most of all.
  
  But Eloise--the heart of woman is past understanding--Eloise
  turned to the man beside her and, putting both arms around his
  neck, she pressed one fair cheek against his brown bearded one,
  and kissed him gently on the forehead. Then turning to Father
  Josef, no longer the dependent, clinging maiden, but the loving
  woman, strong and sure of will, she said:
  
  "I must go to my mother. So long as she lives I will never leave
  her again."
  
  She did not even look at me, nor speak a word of farewell, as if
  I were the murderer instead of that man, Jondo, whom she had
  kissed.
  
  I saw her ride away, with Little Blue Flower beside her. I saw
  the green mesa, the red cliffs above the growing things, the
  glitter of the San Christobal water on yellow sands, the level
  plain where the narrow white trail crept far away toward Gloria
  Narveo's lonely ranch-house, strong as a fort built a hundred
  years ago, in a little cañon of the valley. I saw a young,
  graceful figure on horseback, and the glint of sunlight on golden
  hair. But the rider did not turn her head and I could not get one
  glance of those beautiful dark eyes. A great mass of rock hid the
  line of the trail, and the two, Eloise and Little Blue Flower,
  rounded the angle and rode on out of my sight.
  
  I helped to dig open the curly mesquite and to shovel out the
  sand. I heard the burial service, and saw a rudely coffined form
  lowered into an open grave. I saw Rex Krane at the head, and
  Jondo at the foot, and Beverly's bleeding hands as he scraped the
  loose earth back and heaped it over that which had been called
  Sister Anita; I heard Father Josef's voice of music repeating the
  "Ashes to ashes, and dust to dust." And then we turned away and
  left the spot, as men turn every day to the common affairs of
  life.
  
  Four days later Little Blue Flower came to me as I, still numb
  and cold and blankly unthinking, sat beside Fort Marcy and looked
  out with unseeing eyes at the glory of a New-Mexican sunset.
  
  "I come from Eloise." The sadness of her face and voice even the
  Indian's self-control could not conceal.
  
  "She is sad, but brave, and her mother loves her and calls her
  'Little One.' She will never grow up to her mother. But"--Little
  Blue Flower's voice faltered and she gazed out at the far Sandia
  peaks wrapped in the rich purple folds of twilight, with the
  scarlet of the afterglow beyond them--"Eloise loves Beverly. She
  will always love him. Heaven meant him for her." There were some
  other broken sentences, but I did not grasp them clearly
  then.
  
  The world was full of gray shadows. The finishing touches had
  been put on life for me. I looked out at the dying glow in the
  west, and wondered vaguely if the sun would ever cross the
  Gloriettas again, or ever the Sangre-de-Christo grow radiant with
  the scarlet stain of that ineffable beauty that uplifts and
  purifies the soul of him who looks on it. 
  Trust me, it is something to be cast
  Face to face with one's self at last,
  To be taken out of the fuss and strife,
  The endless clatter of plate and knife,
  The bore of books, and the bores of the street,
  And to be set down on one's own two feet
      So nigh to the great warm heart of God,
  You almost seem to feel it beat
      Down from the sunshine, and up from the sod.
                              JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
  My hair is very white now, and my fingers hold a pen more easily
  than they could hold the ox-goad or the rifle, and mine to-day is
  all the backward look. Which look is evermore a satisfying thing
  because it takes in all of life behind in its true proportion,
  where the forward look of youth sees only what comes next and
  nothing more. And looking back to-day it seems that, of the many
  times I walked the long miles of that old Santa Fe Trail, no
  journey over it stands out quite so clear-cut in my memory as the
  home trip after I had watched the going away of Eloise, and
  witnessed the flight of Ferdinand Ramero, and listened to the
  story of Jondo's life.
  
  When Little Blue Flower left me sitting beside Fort Marcy's wall
  my mind went back in swift review over the flight of days since
  Beverly Clarenden and I had come from Cincinnati. I recalled the
  first meeting of Eloise with my cousin. How easily they had
  renewed acquaintance. I had been surprised and embarrassed and
  awkward when I found her and Little Blue Flower down by the Flat
  Rock below St. Ann's, in the Moon of the Peach Blossom. I
  remembered how I had monopolized all of her time in the days that
  followed, leaving good-natured Bev to look after the little
  Indian girl who never really seemed like an Indian to him. And
  keen-piercing as an arrow came now the memory of that midnight
  hour when I had seen the two in the little side porch of the
  Clarenden home, and again I heard the sorrowful words:
  
  "Oh, Beverly, it breaks my heart."
  
  Eloise had just seen Beverly kiss Little Blue Flower in the
  shadows of the porch. And all the while, good-hearted, generous
  boy that he was, he had never tried to push his suit with her,
  had made her love him more, no doubt, by letting me have full
  command of all of her time, while he forgot himself in showing
  courtesy to the Indian girl, because Bev was first of all a
  gentleman. I thought of that dear hour in the church of San
  Miguel. Of course, Eloise was glad to find me there--poor,
  hunted, frightened child! She would have been as glad, no doubt,
  to have found big Bill Banney or Rex Krane, and I had thought her
  eyes held something just for me that night. She had not seen
  Beverly at the chapel beside the San Christobal River, and to me
  she had not given even a parting glance when she went away. If
  she had cared for me at all she would not have left me so. And I
  had climbed the tortuous trail with her and stood beside her in
  the zone of sanctuary safety that Father Josef had thrown about
  us two.
  
  These things were clear enough to me, but when I tried to think
  again of all that Little Blue Flower had said an hour ago my mind
  went numb:
  
  "Her mother knew her, but only as the little Eloise long lost and
  never missed till now. The mother, too, was very beautiful, and
  young in face, and child-like in her helplessness. The lonely
  ranch-house, old, and strong as a fort, girt round by tall
  cañon walls, nestled in a grassy open place; and not a
  comfort had been denied the woman there. For Gloria Ramero,
  Ferdinand's wife, had governed that. And Eloise had entered there
  to stay. This much was clear enough. But that which followed
  seemed to twist and writhe about in my mind with only one thing
  sure--Eloise loved Beverly, would always love him. And he could
  not love any one else. He could be kind to any girl, but he would
  not be happy. Some day when he was older--a real man--then he
  would long for the girl of his heart and his own choice, and he
  would find her and love her, too, and she would love him and
  those who stood between them they both would hate. And Eloise
  loved Beverly. She could not send Gail any words herself, but he
  would understand."
  
  So came the Indian girl's interpretation of the case, but the
  conclusion was the message meant for me. I wondered vaguely, as I
  sat there, if the vision had come to Beverly years ago as it had
  come to me: three men--the soldier on his cavalry mount, Jondo,
  the plainsman, on his big black horse, and between the two,
  Esmond Clarenden, neither mounted nor on foot, but going forward
  somehow, steady and sure. And beyond these three, this side of
  misty mountain peaks, the cloud of golden hair, the sweet face,
  with dark eyes looking into mine. I had not been a dreamer, I had
  been a fool.
  
  Through Beverly I learned the next day that Ferdinand Ramero had
  come into Santa Fé late at night and had left early the
  next morning. Marcos Ramero, faultlessly dressed, lounged about
  the gambling-halls, and strolled through the sunny Plaza, idly
  and insolently, as was his custom. But Gloria Ramero, to whom
  Marcos long ago ceased to be more than coldly courteous, had left
  the city at once for the San Christobal Valley, to devote herself
  to the care of the beautiful woman whom her brother Felix Narveo
  in his college days had admired so much.
  
  As for Jondo, years ago when we had met Father Josef out by the
  sandy arroyo, he had left us to follow the good man somewhere,
  and had not come back to the Exchange Hotel until nightfall.
  Something had come into his face that day that never left it
  again. And now that something had deepened in the glance of his
  eye and the firm-set mouth. It was through that meeting with
  Father Josef that he had first heard of the supposed death of
  Mary Marchland St. Vrain, and it was through the priest in the
  chapel he had heard that she was still alive.
  
  Neither Beverly nor Bill Banney nor Rex Krane knew what I had
  heard in the church concerning Jondo's early career, and I never
  spoke of it to them. But to all of us, outside of that
  intensified something indefinable in his face, he was unchanged.
  He met my eye with the open, frank glance with which he met the
  gaze of all men. His smile was no less engaging and his manner
  remained the same--fearless, unsuspicious, definite in serious
  affairs, good-natured and companionable in everything. I could
  not read him now, by one little line, but back of everything lay
  that withering, grievous thought--he was a murderer. Heaven pity
  the boy when his idol falls, and if he be a dreaming idealist the
  hurt is tenfold deeper.
  
  And yet--the trail was waiting there to teach me many things, and
  Jondo's words rang through the aisles of my brain:
  
  "If you ever have a real cross, Gail, thank the Lord for the open
  plains and the green prairies, and the danger stimulus of the old
  Santa Fé Trail. They will seal up your wounds, and soften
  your hard, rebellious heart, and make you see things big, and
  despise the little crooks in your path."
  
  Our Conestoga wagons, with their mule-teams, and the few ponies
  for scout service, followed the old trail out of the valley of
  the Rio Grande to the tablelands eastward, up the steep sidling
  way into the passes of the Glorietta Mountains, down through
  lone, wind-swept cañons, and on between wild, scarred
  hills, coming, at last, beyond the picturesque ridges,
  snow-crowned and mesa-guarded, into the long, gray, waterless
  lands of the Cimmarron country. Here we journeyed along
  monotonous levels that rose and fell unnoted because of lack of
  landmarks to measure by, only the broad, beaten Santa Fé
  Trail stretched on unbending, unchanging, uneffaceable.
  
  As the distance from spring to spring decreased, every drop of
  water grew precious, and we pushed on, eager to reach the richer
  prairies of the Arkansas Valley. Suddenly in the monotony of the
  way, and the increasing calls of thirst, there came a sense of
  danger, the plains-old danger of the Comanche on the Cimarron
  Trail. Bill Banney caught it first--just a faint sign of one
  hostile track. All the next day Jondo scouted far, coming into
  camp at nightfall with a grave report.
  
  "The water-supply is failing," he told us, "and there is
  something wrong out there. The Comanches are hovering near,
  that's certain, and there is a single trail that doesn't look
  Comanche to me that I can't account for. All we can do is to
  'hold fast,'" he added, with his cheery smile that never failed
  him.
  
  That night I could not sleep, and the stars and I stared long at
  each other. They were so golden and so far away. And one, as I
  looked, slipped from its place and trailed wide across the sky
  until it vanished, leaving a stream of golden light that lingered
  before my eyes. I thought of the trail in the San Christobal
  Valley, and again I saw the sunlight on golden hair as Eloise
  with Little Blue Flower passed out of sight around the shoulder
  of a great rock beside the way. At last came sleep, and in my
  dreams Eloise was beside me as she had been in the church of San
  Miguel, her dark eyes looking up into mine. I knew, in my dream,
  that I was dreaming and I did not want to waken. For, "Eloise
  loved Beverly, would always love him." Little Blue Flower had
  said it. The face was far away, this side of misty mountain
  peaks, and farther still. I could see only the eyes looking at
  me. I wakened to see only the stars looking at me. I slept again
  deeply and dreamlessly, and wakened suddenly. We were far and
  away from the Apache country, but there, for just one instant, a
  face came close to mine--the face of Santan--the Apache. It
  vanished instantly as it had come. The night guard passed by me
  and crossed the camp. The stars held firm above me. I had had
  another dream. But after that I did not sleep till dawn.
  
  The day was very hot, with the scorching breeze of the plains
  that sears the very eyeballs dry. Through the dust and glare we
  pressed on over long, white, monotonous miles. Hovering near us
  somewhere were the Comanches--waiting; with us was burning
  thirst; ahead of us ran the taunting mirage--cool, sparkling
  water rippling between green banks--receding as we approached,
  maddening us by the suggestion of its refreshing picture, the
  while we knew it was only a picture. For it is Satan's own
  painting on the desert to let men know that Dante's dream is mild
  compared to the real art of torment. Men and animals began to
  give way under the day's burden, and we moved slowly. In times
  like these Jondo stayed with the train, sending Bill Banney and
  Beverly scouting ahead. That was the longest day that I ever
  lived on the Santa Fé Trail, although I followed its miles
  many times in the best of its freighting years.
  
  The weary hours dragged at last toward evening, and a dozen signs
  in plains lore told us that water must be near. As we topped a
  low swell at the bottom of whose long slide lay the little oasis
  we were seeking, we came upon Bill Banney's pony lying dead
  across the trail. And near it Bill himself, with bloated face and
  bleared eyes, muttering half-coherently:
  
  "Water-hole! Poison! Don't drink!"
  
  And then he babbled of the muddy Missouri, and the Kentucky blue
  grass, and cold mountain springs in the passes of the Gloriettas,
  warning us thickly of "death down there."
  
  "Down there," beside the little spring shelved in by shale at the
  lower edge of the swell, we found a tiny cairn built of clumps of
  sod and bits of shale. Fastened on it was a scrap from Bill's
  note-book with the words 
Spring poisoned. Bev gone for water not very far on.--BILL.
So Bill had drunk the poisoned water and had tried to reach
  us. But for fear he might not do it, he had scrawled this warning
  and left it here. Brave Bill! How madly he had staggered round
  the place and threshed the ground in agony when he tried to mount
  his poisoned pony, and his first thought was for us. The plains
  made men see big. Jondo had told me they could do it. Poor Bill,
  moaning for water now and tossing in agony in Jondo's wagon! The
  Comanches had been cunning in their malice. How we hated them as
  we stood looking at the waters of that poisoned spring!
  
  Rex Krane's big, gentle hands were holding Bill's. Rex always had
  a mother's heart; while Jondo read the ground with searching
  glance.
  
  "We will wait here a little while. Bev will report soon, I hope.
  Come, Gail," he said to me. "Here is something we will follow
  now."
  
  A single trail led far away from the beaten road toward a stretch
  of coarse dry yucca and loco-weeds that hid a little steep-sided
  draw across the plains. At the bottom of it a man lay face
  downward beside a dead pony. We scrambled down, shattering the
  dry earth after us as we went. Jondo gently lifted the body and
  turned it face upward. It was Ferdinand Ramero.
  
  The big plainsman did not cry out, nor drop his hold, but his
  face turned gray, and only the dying man saw the look in the blue
  eyes gazing into his. Ramero tried to draw away, fear, and hate,
  and the old dominant will that ruled his life, strong still in
  death. As he lay at the feet of the man whose life hopes he had
  blasted, he expected no mercy and asked for none.
  
  "You have me at last. I didn't put the poison in that spring. I
  would not have drunk it if I had. It was the one below I fixed
  for you. And I'm in your power now. Be quick about it."
  
  For one long minute Jondo looked down at his enemy. Then he
  lifted his eyes to mine with the victory of "him that overcometh"
  shining in their blue depths.
  
  "If I could make you live, I'd do it, Fred. If you have any word
  to say, be quick about it now. Your time is short."
  
  The sweetness of that gentle voice I hear sometimes to-day in the
  low notes of song-birds, and the gentle swish of refreshing
  summer showers.
  
  Ferdinand Ramero lifted his cold blue eyes and looked at the man
  bending over him.
  
  "Leave me here--forgotten--"
  
  "Not of God. His Mercy endureth forever," Jondo replied.
  
  But there was no repentance, no softening of the hard, imperious
  heart.
  
  We left him there, pulling down the loose earth from the steep
  sides of the draw to cover him from all the frowning elements of
  the plains. And when we went back to the waiting train Jondo
  reported, grimly:
  
  "No enemy in sight."
  
  We laid Bill Banney beside the poisoned spring, from whose bitter
  waters he had saved our lives. So martyrs filled the unknown
  graves that made the milestones of the way in the days of
  commerce-building on the old Santa Fé Trail.
  
  The next spring was not far ahead, as Bill's note had said, but
  the stars were thick above us and the desolate land was full of
  shadows before we reached it--a thirst-mad, heart-sore crowd
  trailing slowly on through the gloom of the night.
  
  Beverly was waiting for us and the refreshing moisture of the air
  above a spring seemed about him.
  
  "I thought you'd never come. Where's Bill? There's water here. I
  made the spring myself," he shouted, as we came near.
  
  The spring that he had digged for us was in the sandy bed of a
  dry stream, with low, earth-banks on either side. It was full of
  water, hardly clear, but plentiful, and slowly washing out a
  bigger pool for itself as it seeped forth.
  
  "There is poison in the real spring down there." Beverly pointed
  toward the diminished fountain we had expected to find. "I've
  worked since noon at this."
  
  We drank, and life came back to us. We pitched camp, and then
  listened to Beverly's story of the sweet and bitter waters of the
  trail that day. And all the while it seemed as if Bill Banney was
  just out of sight and might come galloping in at any moment.
  
  "You know what happened up the trail," my cousin said, sadly.
  "Bill was ahead of me and he drank first, and galloped back to
  warn me and beg me to come on for water. I thought I could get
  down here and take some water back to Bill in time. It's all
  shale up there. No place to dig above, nor below, even if one
  dared to dig below that poison. But I found a dead coyote that
  had just left here, and all springs began to look Comanche to me.
  I lariated my pony and crept down under the bank there to think
  and rest. Everything went poison-spotted before my eyes."
  
  "Where's your pony now, Bev?" Jondo asked.
  
  "I don't know sure, but I expect he is about going over the Raton
  Pass by this time," Beverly replied. "Down there things seemed to
  swim around me like water everywhere and I knew I'd got to stir.
  Just then an Indian came slipping up from somewhere to the spring
  to drink. He didn't look right to me at all, but I couldn't sit
  still and see him kill himself. If he needed killing I could have
  done it for him, for he never saw me. Just as he stooped I saw
  his face. It was that Apache--Santan--the wander-foot, for I
  never heard of an Apache getting so far from the mountains. I
  ought to have kept still, Jondo"--Beverly's ready smile came to
  his face--"but I'd made that fellow swear he'd let me eternally
  alone when we had our little fracas up by the San Christobal
  Arroyo, so something like conscience, mean as the stomach-ache,
  made me call out:
  
  "'Don't drink there; it's poison.'
  
  "He stopped and stared at me a minute, or ten minutes--I didn't
  count time on him--and then he said, slow-like:
  
  "'It's the spring west that is poisoned. I put it there for you.
  You will not see your men again. They will drink and die. Who put
  this poison here?'
  
  "'Lord knows. I didn't,' I told him. 'Two of you carrying poison
  are two too many for the Cimarron country.'
  
  "And I hadn't any more conscience after that, but I was faint and
  slow, and my aim was bad for eels. He could have fixed me right
  then, but for some reason he didn't."
  
  Beverly's face grew sad.
  
  "He made six jumps six ways, and caught my pony's lariat. I can
  hear his yell still as he tore a hole in the horizon and jumped
  right through. Then I began on that spring. 'Dig or die. Dig or
  die.' I said over and over, and we are all here but Bill. I wish
  I'd got that Apache, though."
  
  Jondo and I looked at each other.
  
  "The thing is clear now," he said, aside to me. "That single
  trail I found back yonder day before yesterday was Santan's
  running on ahead of us to poison the water for us and then steal
  a horse and make his way back to the mountains. An Apache can
  live on this cactus-covered sand the same as a rattlesnake. He
  fixed the upper spring and came down here to drink. Only
  Beverly's conscience saved him here. Heaven knows how Fred Ramer
  got out here. He may have come with some Mexicans on ahead of us
  and left them here to drop his poison in this lower spring. Then
  he turned back toward Santa Fé and found his doom up there
  at Santan's spring.
  
  "I'm like Bev. I wish he had gotten the Apache, now. I don't know
  yet how I was fooled in him, for he has always been Fred Ramer's
  tool, and Father Josef never trusted him. And to think that Bill
  Banney, in no way touching any of our lives, should have been
  martyred by the crimes of Fred and this Apache! But that's the
  old, old story of the trail. Poor Bill! I hope his sleep will be
  sweet out in this desolate land. We'll meet him later
  somewhere."
  
  The winds must have carried the tale of poisoned water across the
  Cimarron country, for the Comanches' trail left ours from that
  day. Through threescore and ten miles to the Arkansas River we
  came, and there was not a well nor spring nor sign of water in
  all that distance. What water we had we carried with us from the
  Cimarron fountains. But the sturdy endurance of the days was not
  without its help to me. And the wide, wind-swept prairies of
  Kansas taught me many things. In the lonely, beautiful land,
  through long bright days and starlit nights, I began to see
  things bigger than my own selfish measure had reckoned. I thought
  of Esmond Clarenden and his large scheme of business; Felix
  Narveo, the true-hearted friend; and of Father Josef and his life
  of devotion. And I lived with Jondo every day. I could not forget
  the hour in the little ruined chapel in the San Christobal
  Valley, and how he himself had made no effort to clear his own
  name. But I remembered, too, that Father Josef, mercilessly just
  to Ferdinand Ramero, had not even asked Jondo to defend himself
  from the black charge against him.
  
  The sunny Kansas prairies, the far open plains, and the wild
  mountain trails beyond, had brought their blessing to Jondo,
  whose life had known so much of tragedy. And my cross was just my
  love for a girl who could not love me. That was all. Jondo had
  never forgotten nor ceased to love the mother of Eloise St.
  Vrain. I should be like Jondo in this. But the world is wide.
  Life is full of big things. Henceforth, while I would not forget,
  I, too, would be big and strong, and maybe, some time, just as
  sunny-faced as my big Jondo.
  
  The trail life, day by day, did bring its blessing to me. The
  clear, open land, the far-sweeping winds, the solitude for
  thought, the bravery and gentleness of the rough men who walked
  the miles with me, the splendor of the day-dawn, the beauty of
  the sunset, the peace of the still starlit night, sealed up my
  wounds, and I began to live for others and to forget myself; to
  dream less often, and to work more gladly; to measure men, not by
  what had been, but by how they met what was to be done.
  
  From all the frontier life, rough-hewn and coarse, the elements
  came that helped to make the big brave West to-day, and I know
  now that not the least of source and growth of power for these
  came out of the strength and strife of the things known only to
  the men who followed the Santa Fé Trail. 
  The mind hath a thousand eyes,
  And the heart but one.
                              --BOURDILLON.
  Busy years, each one a dramatic era all its own, made up the
  annals of the Middle West as the nation began to feel the thrill
  for expansion in its pulse-beat. The territorial days of Kansas
  were big with the tragic events of border warfare, and her birth
  into statehood marked the commencement of the four years of civil
  strife whose record played a mighty part in shaping human
  destiny.
  
  Meanwhile the sunny Kansas prairies lay waiting for the
  hearthstone and the plow. And young men, trained in camp and
  battle-field, looked westward for adventure, fortune, future
  homes and fame. But the tribes, whose hunting-grounds had been
  the green and grassy plains, yielded slowly, foot by foot, their
  stubborn claim, marking in human blood the price of each acre of
  the prairie sod. The lonely homesteads were the prey of savage
  bands, and the old Santa Fé Trail, always a way of danger,
  became doubly perilous now to the men who drove the vans of
  commerce along its broad, defenseless miles. The frontier forts
  increased: Hays and Harker, Larned and Zarah, and Lyon and Dodge
  became outposts of power in the wilderness, whose half-forgotten
  sites to-day lie buried under broad pasture-lands and fields of
  waving grain.
  
  One June day, as the train rolled through the Missouri woodlands
  along rugged river bluffs, Beverly Clarenden and I looked eagerly
  out of the car window, watching for signs of home. It was two
  years after the close of the Civil War. We had just finished six
  years of Federal service and were coming back to Kansas City. We
  were young men still, with all the unsettled spirit that follows
  the laying aside of active military life for the wholesome but
  uneventful life of peace.
  
  The time of our arrival had been uncertain, and the Clarenden
  household had been taken by surprise at our coming.
  
  "I wonder how it will seem to settle down in a store, Bev, after
  toting shooting-irons for six years," I said to my cousin, as the
  train neared Kansas City.
  
  "I don't know," Beverly replied, with a yawn, "but I'm thinking
  that after we see all the folks, and play with Mat's little boys
  awhile, and eat Aunty Boone's good stuff till we begin to get
  flabby-cheeked and soft-muscled, and our jaws crack from smiling
  so much when we just naturally want to get out and cuss
  somebody--about that time I'll be ready to run away, if I have to
  turn Dog Indian to do it."
  
  "There's a new Clarenden store at a place called Burlingame out
  in Kansas now, somewhere on the old trail. Maybe it will be far
  enough away to let you get tamed gradually to civil life there,
  if Uncle Esmond thinks you are worth it," I suggested.
  
  "Rex Krane is to take charge of that as soon as we get home.
  Yonder are the spires and minarets and domes of Kansas City. Put
  on your company grin, Gail," Beverly replied, as we began to run
  by the huts and cabins forming the outworks of the little city at
  the Kaw's mouth.
  
  Six years had made many changes in the place, but the same old
  welcome awaited us, and we became happy-hearted boys again as we
  climbed the steep road up the bluff to the Clarenden house. On
  the wide veranda overlooking the river everybody except one--Bill
  Banney, sleeping under the wind-caressed sod beside the Cimarron
  spring--was waiting to greet us. There were Esmond Clarenden and
  Jondo, in the prime of middle life, the one a little bald, and
  more than a little stout; the other's heavy hair was streaked
  with gray, but the erect form and tremendous physical strength
  told how well the plains life had fortified the man of fifty for
  the years before him. The prairies had long since become his
  home; but whether in scout service for the Government, or as
  wagon-master for a Clarenden train on the trail, he was the same
  big, brave, loyal Jondo.
  
  And there was Rex Krane, tall, easy-going old Rex, with his wife
  beside him. Mat was a fair-faced young matron now, with something
  Madonna-like in her calm poise and kindly spirit. Two little
  boys, Esmond, and Rex, Junior, clinging to her gown, smiled a shy
  welcome at us.
  
  In the background loomed the shining face and huge form of Aunty
  Boone. She had never seemed bigger to me, even in my little-boy
  days, when I considered her a giant. Her eyes grew dull as she
  looked at us.
  
  "Clean faces and finger-nails now. Got to stain 'em up 'bout once
  more 'fore you are through. Hungry as ever, I'll bet. I'll get
  your supper right away. Whoo-ee!"
  
  As she turned away, Mat said:
  
  "There is somebody else here, boys, that you will be glad to
  meet. She has just come and doesn't even know that you are
  expected. It is 'Little Lees.'"
  
  A rustle of silken skirts, a faint odor of blossoms, a footfall,
  a presence, and Eloise St. Vrain stood before us. Eloise, with
  her golden hair, the girlish roundness of her fair face, her big
  dark eyes and their heavy lashes and clear-penciled brows, her
  dainty coloring, and beyond all these the beauty of womanly
  strength written in her countenance.
  
  Her dress was a sort of pale heliotrope, with trimmings of a
  deeper shade, and in her hands she carried a big bunch of June
  roses. She stopped short, and the pink cheeks grew pale, but in
  an instant the rich bloom came back to them again.
  
  "I tried to find you, Eloise. The boys have just come in almost
  unannounced," Mat said.
  
  "You didn't mean to hide from us, of course," Beverly broke in,
  as he took the girl's hand, his face beaming with genuine joy at
  meeting her again.
  
  Eloise met him with the same frank delight with which she always
  greeted him. Everything seemed so simple and easy for these two
  when they came together. Little Blue Flower was right about them.
  They seemed to fit each other.
  
  But when she turned to me her eyes were downcast, save for just
  one glance. I feel it yet, and the soft touch of her hand as it
  lay in mine a moment.
  
  I think we chatted all together for a while. I had a wound at
  Malvern Hill that used to make me dizzy. That, or an older wound,
  made my pulse frantic now. I know that it was a rare June day,
  and the breeze off the river came pouring caressingly over the
  bluff. I remember later that Uncle Esmond and Jondo and Rex Krane
  went to the Clarenden store, and that Mat was helping Aunty Boone
  inside, while Beverly let the two little Kranes take him down the
  slope to see some baby squirrels or something. And Eloise and I
  were left alone beneath the trees, where once we had sat together
  long ago in the "Moon of the Peach Blossom." For me, all the
  strength of the years wherein I had built a wall around my
  longing love, all my manly loyalty to my cousin's claims, were
  swept away, as I have seen the big Missouri floods, joined by the
  lesser Kaw, sweep out bridges, snapping like sticks before their
  power.
  
  "Eloise, it seems a hundred years since I saw you and Little Blue
  Flower ride away up the San Christobal River trail out of my
  sight," I said.
  
  "It has been a long time, but we are not yet old. You seem the
  same. And as for me, I feel as if the clock had stopped awhile
  and had suddenly started to ticking anew."
  
  It was wonderful to sit beside her and hear her voice again. I
  did not dare to ask about her mother, but I am sure she read my
  thoughts, for she went on:
  
  "My mother is gone now. She was as happy as a child and never had
  a sorrow on her mind after her dreadful fever, although the
  doctors say she might have been restored if I had only been with
  her then. But it is all ended now."
  
  Eloise paused with saddened face, and looked out toward the
  Missouri River, boiling with June rains and melted snows.
  
  "It is all right now," she went on, bravely. "Sister Gloria--you
  know who she was--stayed with me to the last. And I have a real
  mound of earth in the cemetery beside my father." The last two
  words were spoken softly. "Sister Gloria is in the convent now.
  Marcos is a common gambler. His father disappeared and left him
  penniless. Esmond Clarenden says that his father died out on the
  plains somewhere."
  
  "And Father Josef?" I inquired.
  
  "Is still the same strong friend to everybody. He spends much
  time among the Hopi people. I don't know why, for they are
  hopelessly heathen. Their own religion has so many beautiful
  things to offset our faith that they are hard to convert."
  
  "And Little Blue Flower--what became of her?" I asked. "Is she a
  squaw in some hogan or pueblo, after all that the Sisterhood of
  St. Ann's did for her?"
  
  A shadow fell on the bright face beside me.
  
  "Let's not talk of her to-day." There was a pleading note in
  Eloise's voice. "Life has its tragedies everywhere, but I
  sometimes think that none of them--American, English, Spanish,
  French, Mexican, nor any others of our pale-faced people, have
  quite such bitter acts as the Indian tragedy among a gentle race
  like the people of Hopi-land."
  
  "I hope you will stay with us now."
  
  I didn't know what I really did hope for. I was no longer a boy,
  but a young man in the very best of young manhood's years. I had
  seen this girl ride away from me without one good-by word or
  glance. I had heard her message to me through Little Blue Flower.
  I had suffered and outgrown all but the scar. And now one touch
  of her hand, one smile, one look from her beautiful eyes, and all
  the barrier of the years fell down. I wondered vaguely now about
  Beverly's wish to turn Dog Indian if things became too
  monotonous. I wondered about many things, but I could not think
  anything.
  
  "I have no present plans. Father Josef and Esmond Clarenden
  thought it would be well for me to come up to Kansas and look at
  green prairies instead of red mesas for a while; to rest my eyes,
  and get my strength again--which I have never lost," Eloise said,
  with a smile. "And Jondo says--"
  
  She did not tell me what Jondo had said, for Beverly and Mat and
  the two rollicking boys joined us just then and we talked of many
  things of the earlier years.
  
  I cannot tell how that June slipped by, nor how Eloise, in the
  full bloom of her young womanhood, with the burdens lifted from
  her heart and hands, was no more the clinging, crushed Eloise who
  had sat beside me in the church of San Miguel, but a self-reliant
  and deliciously companionable girl-woman. With Beverly she was
  always gay, matching him, mood for mood; and if sometimes I
  caught the fleeting edge of a shadow in her eyes, it was gone too
  soon to measure. I did not seek her company alone, because I knew
  that I could not trust myself. Over and over, Jondo's words, when
  he had told me the story of Mary Marchland, came back to me:
  
  "And although they loved each other always, they never saw each
  other again."
  
  Nobody, outside of those touched by it, knew Jondo's story,
  except myself. He was Theron St. Vrain's brother, yet Eloise
  never called him uncle, and, except for the one mention of her
  father's grave, she did not speak of him. He was not even a
  memory to her. And both men's names were forever stained with the
  black charge against them.
  
  One evening in late June, Uncle Esmond called me into
  council.
  
  "Gail, Rex leaves to-morrow for the new store at Burlingame,
  Kansas. It is two days out on the Santa Fé Trail. Bev will
  go with him and stay for a while. I want you to drive through
  with Mat and the children and Eloise a day or two later."
  
  "Eloise?" I looked up in surprise.
  
  "Yes; she will visit with Mat for a while. She has had some
  trying years that have taxed her heavily. The best medicine for
  such is the song of the prairie winds," Uncle Esmond replied.
  
  "And after that?" I insisted.
  
  "We will wait for 'after that' till it gets here," my uncle
  smiled as he spoke. "There are more serious things on hand than
  where out Little Lees will eat her meals. She seems able to take
  care of herself anywhere. Wonderfully beautiful and charming
  young woman she is, and her troubles have strengthened her
  character without robbing her of her youth and happy
  spirits."
  
  Esmond Clarenden spoke reminiscently, and I stared at him in
  surprise until suddenly I remembered that Jondo had said, "We
  were all in love with Mary Marchland." Eloise must seem to him
  and Jondo like the Mary Marchland they had known in their young
  manhood. But my uncle's mood passed quickly, and his face was
  very grave as he said:
  
  "The conditions out on the frontier are serious in every way
  right now. The Indians are on the war-path, leaving destruction
  wherever they set foot. Something must be done to protect the
  wagon-trains on the Santa Fé Trail. I have already lost
  part of two valuable loads this season, and Narveo has lost
  three. But the appalling loss of property is nothing compared to
  the terror and torture to human life. The settlers on the
  frontier claims are being massacred daily. The Governor of Kansas
  is doing all he can to get some action from the army leaders at
  Washington. But you haven't been in military service for six
  years without finding out that some army leaders are flesh and
  blood, and some are only wood--plain wooden wood. Meantime, the
  story of one butchery doesn't get to the Missouri River before
  the story of another catches up with it. It's bad enough when
  it's ruinous to just my own commercial business--but in cases
  like this, humanity is my business."
  
  What a man he was--that Esmond Clarenden! They still say of him
  in Kansas City that no sounder financier and no bigger-hearted
  humanitarian ever walked the streets of that "Gateway to the
  Southwest" than the brave little merchant-plainsman who builded
  for the generations that should follow him.
  
  "What will be the outcome, Uncle Esmond? Are we to lose all we
  have gained out here?" I asked.
  
  "Not if we are real Westerners. It's got to be stopped. The
  question is, how soon," my uncle replied.
  
  That night in a half-waking dream I remembered Aunty Boone's
  prophetic greeting a few days before, and how her eyes had
  narrowed and grown dull as she said, "One more stainin' of your
  hands 'fore you are through."
  
  I had given six good years to army service--the years which young
  men give to college and to establishing themselves in their
  life-work. But the vision of the three men whom I had seen under
  the elm-tree at Fort Leavenworth came back to me, and only
  one--the cavalry man--moved westward now. I knew that I was
  dreaming, but I did not want to waken till the vision of a fair
  face whose eyes looked into mine should come to make my dream
  sweet and restful.
  
  But in my waking hours, in spite of the gravity of conditions
  that troubled Esmond Clarenden, in spite of the terrible tidings
  of daily killings on the unprotected plains, I forgot everything
  except the girl beside me as I went with her and Mat and the
  children to the new home in the village of Burlingame beside the
  Santa Fé Trail.
  
  Eloise St. Vrain had come up to Kansas to let the green prairies
  shut out the memory of tall red mesas. About the little town of
  Burlingame the prairies were waiting for her eyes to see. It
  nestled beside a deep creek under the shelter of forest trees,
  with the green prairie lapping up to its edges on every side. The
  trail wound round the shoulder of a low hill, and, crossing the
  stream, it made the main street of the town, then wandered on
  westward to where a rim of ground shut the view of its way from
  the settlement under the trees by the creek. A stanch little
  settlement it was, and, like many Kansas towns of the '60's, with
  big, but never-to-be realized, ambition to become a city. Into
  its life and up-building Rex Krane was to throw his good-natured
  Yankee shrewdness, and Mat her calm, generous spirit; vanguards
  they were, among the home-makers of a great State.
  
  My stay in the place was brief, and I saw little of Eloise until
  the evening before I was to return to Kansas City. I had meant to
  go away, as she had left me in the San Christobal Valley, without
  one backward look, but I couldn't do it; and at the close of my
  last day I went to the Krane home, where I found her alone. It
  was the long after-sunset hour, with the refreshing evening
  breezes pouring in from all the green levels about us.
  
  "Rex is at the store, and the others are all gone fishing,"
  Eloise said, in answer to my inquiry for the family.
  
  "Mat and Bev always did go fishing on every occasion that I can
  remember, and they will make fishermen of little Esmond and Rex
  now. Would you like to go up to the west side of town and look
  into New Mexico?" I asked, wondering why Beverly should go
  fishing with Mat when Eloise was waiting for his smile.
  
  But I was desperately lonely to-night, and I might not see Eloise
  again until after she and Beverly--I could not go farther. She
  smiled and said, lightly:
  
  "I'm just honin' for a walk, as Aunty Boone would say, but I'm
  not quite ready to see New Mexico yet."
  
  "Oh, it's only a thing made of evening mists rising from the
  meadows, and bits of sunset lights left over when the day was
  finished," I assured her.
  
  So we left the shadow of the tall elms and strolled up the main
  street toward the west.
  
  Where the one cross-street cut the trail in the center of the
  village there was a public well. The ground around it was
  trampled into mud by many hoofs. A Mexican train had just come in
  and was grouped about this well, drinking eagerly.
  
  "What news of the plains?" I asked their leader as we passed.
  
  "I cannot tell you with the lady here," he replied, bowing
  courteously. "It is too awful. A spear hung with a scalp of
  pretty baby hair like hers. I see it yet. The plains are all
  alive--alive with hostile red men; and the worst one of
  all--he that had the golden scalp--is but a half-breed Cheyenne
  Dog. Never the Apaches were so bad as he."
  
  The cattle horned about the well, with their drivers shouting and
  struggling to direct them, as we went wide to avoid the mud, then
  passed up to the rise beyond which lay the old trail's westward
  route.
  
  The mists were rising from the lowlands; along the creek the
  sunset sky was all a flaming glory, under whose deep splendor the
  June prairies lay tenderly green and still; down in the village
  the sounds of the Mexicans settling into camp; the shouting of
  children, romping late; and out across the levels, the mooing
  call of milking-time from some far-away settler's barn-yard; a
  robin singing a twilight song in the elms; crickets chirping in
  the long grass; and the gentle evening breeze sweet and cool out
  of the west--such was the setting for us two. We paused on the
  crest of the ridge and sat down to watch the afterglow of a
  prairie twilight. We did not speak for a long time, but when our
  eyes met I knew the hour had been made for me. In such an hour we
  had sat beside the glistening Flat Rock down in the Neosho
  Valley. I was a whole-hearted boy when I went down there, full of
  eagerness for the life of adventure on the trail, and she a girl
  just leaving boarding-school. And now--life sweetens so with
  years.
  
  "I think I can understand why your uncle thought it would be well
  for me to come to Kansas," Eloise said at last. "There is an
  inspiration and soothing restfulness in a thing like this. Our
  mountains are so huge and tragical; and even their silences are
  not always gentle. And our plains are dry and gray. And yet I
  love the valley of the Santa Fé, and the old Ortiz and
  Sandia peaks, and the red sunset's stain on the
  Sangre-de-Christo. Many a time I have lifted up my eyes to them
  for help, as the shepherd did to his Judean hills when he sang
  his psalms of hope and victory."
  
  "Yes, Nature is kind to us if we will let her be. Jondo told me
  that long ago, and I've proved it since. But I have always loved
  the prairies. And this ridge here belongs to me," I replied.
  
  Eloise looked up inquiringly.
  
  "I'll tell you why. When I was a little boy, years ago, a
  day-dreaming, eager-hearted little boy, we camped here one night.
  That was my first trip over the trail to Santa Fé. You
  haven't forgotten it and what a big brown bob-cat I looked like
  when I got there. I grew like weeds in a Kansas corn-field on
  that trip."
  
  "Oh, I remember you. Go on," Eloise said, laughingly.
  
  "That night after supper, everybody had left camp--Mat and Bev
  were fishing--and I was alone and lonely, so I came up here to
  find what I could see of the next day's trail. It was such an
  hour as this. And as I watched the twilight color deepen, my own
  horizon widened, and I think the soul of a man began, in that
  hour, to look out through the little boy's eyes; and a new
  mile-stone was set here to make a landmark in my life-trail. The
  boy who went back slowly to the camp that night was not the same
  little boy that had run up here to spy out the way of the next
  day's journey."
  
  The afterglow was deepening to purple; the pink cloud-flecks were
  turning gray in the east, and a kaleidoscope of softest rose and
  tender green and misty lavender filled the lengthening shadows of
  the twilight prairie.
  
  "Eloise, I had a longing that night, still unfulfilled. I wish I
  dared to tell you what it was."
  
  I turned to look at the fair girl-woman beside me. In the
  twilight her eyes were always like stars; and the golden hair and
  the pink bloom of her cheeks seemed richer in their shadowy
  setting. To-night her gown was white--like the Greek dress she
  had worn at Mat's wedding, on the night when she met Beverly in
  the little side porch at midnight. Why did I recall that
  here?
  
  "What was your wish, Gail?" The voice was low and sweet.
  
  I took her hand in mine and she did not draw away from me.
  
  "That I might some day have a real home all my own down there
  among the trees. I was a little homesick boy that night, and I
  came up here to watch the sunset and see the open level lands
  that I have always loved. Eloise, Jondo told me once of three
  young college men who loved your beautiful mother, and because of
  that love they never married anybody, but they lived useful,
  happy lives. I can understand now why they should love her, and
  why, because they could not have her love, they would not marry
  anybody else. One was my uncle Esmond, and one was Father
  Josef."
  
  "And the third?" The voice was very low and a tremor shook the
  hand I held.
  
  "He did not tell me. And I speak of it now only to show you that
  in what I want to say I am not altogether selfish and unkind. I
  love you, Eloise. I have loved you since the day, long ago, when
  your face came before me on the parade-ground at Fort
  Leavenworth. I told you of that once down on the bluff by the
  Clarenden home at Kansas City. I shall love you, as the Bedouin
  melody runs,
Til the sun grows cold,
  And the stars are old,
  And the leaves of the judgment
            Book unfold!
"But I know that it will end as Uncle Esmond's and Father
  Josef's loving did, in my living my life alone."
  
  Eloise quickly withdrew her hand, and the pain in her white face
  haunts me still.
  
  "I do not want to hurt you, oh, Eloise. I know I do wrong to
  speak, but to-night will be the last time. I thought that night
  in the church at San Miguel, and that next day when we rode for
  our lives together, that you cared for me who would have walked
  through fire for you. But in that hour in the little chapel a
  barrier came between us. You rode away without one word or
  glance. And I turned back feeling that my soul was falling into
  ruins like that half-ruined little pile of stone that some holy
  padre had built his heart into years and years ago. Then Little
  Blue Flower brought your message to me and I knew as I sat beside
  Fort Marcy's wall that night, and saw the sun go down, that the
  light of my life was going out with it."
  
  "But, Gail," Eloise exclaimed, "I said I could not send you any
  word, but you would understand. I--I couldn't say any more than
  that." Her voice was full of tears and she turned away from me
  and looked at the last radiant tints edging the little
  cloud-flecks above the horizon.
  
  "Of course I understand you, Eloise, and I do not blame you. I
  never could blame you for anything." I sprang to my feet. "You'll
  hate me if I say another word," I said, savagely.
  
  She rose up, too, and put her hand on my arm. Oh, she was
  beautiful as she stood beside me. So many times I have pictured
  her face, I will not try to picture it as it looked now in this
  sweet, sacred moment of our lives.
  
  "Gail, I could never hate you. You do not understand me. I cannot
  help what is past now. I hoped you might forget. And yet--" She
  paused.
  
  All men are humanly alike. In spite of my strong love for Beverly
  and my sense of right, the presence of the woman whose image for
  so many years had been in the sacredest shrine of my heart,
  Eloise, in all her beauty and her womanly strength and purity,
  standing beside me, her hand still on my arm--all overpowered
  me.
  
  I put my arms about her and held her close to me, kissing her
  forehead, her cheek, her lips. The world for one long moment was
  rose-hued like the sunset's afterglow; and sky and prairie,
  lowlands along the winding creek, and tall elm-trees above the
  deepening shadows, were all engulfed in a mist of golden glory,
  shot through with amethyst and sapphire, the dainty coraline pink
  of summer dawns, and the iridescent shimmer of
  mother-of-pearl.
  
  Heaven opens to us here and there such moments on the way of
  life. And the memory of them lingers like perfume through all the
  days that follow.
  
  We turned our faces toward the darkening village street and the
  tall elms above the gathering shadows, and neither spoke a word
  until we reached the door where I must say good night.
  
  "I cannot ask you to forgive me, Little Lees, because you let me
  have a bit of heaven up there. I shall go away a better man. And,
  remember, that no blessing in your life can be greater than I
  would wish for you to have."
  
  The brave white face was before my eyes and the low voice was in
  my ears long after I had left her door.
  
  "Gail, I cannot help what has been, but I do not blame you. I
  should almost wish myself shut in again by the tall red mesas;
  but maybe, after all, the prairies are best for me. I am glad I
  have known you. Good night."
  
  "Goodnight," I said, and turned away.
  
  And that was all. The last light of day had gone from the sky,
  and the stars overhead were hidden by the thick leafage of the
  Burlingame elms. 
  Don't you guess that the things we're seeing now will haunt us
  through the years;
  Heaven and hell rolled into one, glory and blood and tears;
  Life's pattern picked with a scarlet thread, where once we wove
  with a gray,
  To remind us all how we played our part in the shock of an epic
  day?
                                          --ROBERT W. SERVICE.
  However darkly the sun may go down on hope and love, the real sun
  shines on, day after day, with its inexorable call to duty. In
  less than a week after I had left Eloise and the vague hope of a
  home of my own under the big elm-trees of Burlingame, Governor
  Crawford of Kansas sent forth a call for a battalion of four
  companies of soldiers, and I heard the call and answered it.
  
  It was to be known as the Eighteenth Kansas Cavalry, with Col.
  Horace L. Moore, a veteran soldier of tried mettle, at the head.
  We were to go at once to Fort Harker, in the valley of the Smoky
  Hill River, to begin a campaign against the Indians, who were
  laying waste the frontier settlements and attacking wagon-trains
  on the Sante Fé Trail.
  
  On the evening before I left home I sat on the veranda of the
  Clarenden house, waiting for Uncle Esmond to join me, when
  suddenly Beverly Clarenden strode over the edge of the hill. The
  sunny smile and the merry twinkle of his eye were Bev's own, and
  there wasn't a line on his face to show whether it belonged to
  the happy lover or the rejected suitor. I thought I could always
  read his moods when he had any. He had none to-night.
  
  "I just got in from Burlingame. At what hour do you leave
  to-morrow? I'm going along to chaperon you, as usual," he
  declared.
  
  "Why, Beverly Clarenden, I thought you were fixed at Burlingame,
  selling molasses and calico by the gallon," I exclaimed, but my
  real thought was not given to words.
  
  "And let the Cheyennes, and Kiowas, and Arapahoes, and other
  desperadoes of the plains gnaw clear into the heart of us? Not
  your uncle Esmond Clarenden's nephew. And, Gail, this won't be
  anything like we have had since those six Kiowas staked you out
  on Pawnee Rock once. The thoroughbred Indians are bad enough, but
  there is a half-breed leader of a band of Dog Indians that's
  worst of all. He's of the yellow kind, with wolf's fangs. A
  Mexican on the trail told me that this half-breed ties up with
  the worst of every tribe from the Coast Range mountains to
  Tecumseh, Kansas," Beverly declared.
  
  "I remember that Mexican. I saw him at the well in Burlingame," I
  replied, turning to look at the Kaw winding far away, for the
  memory of everything in Burlingame was painful to me.
  
  Aunty Boone's huge form appearing around the corner of the house
  shut off my view of the river just then. Her face was glistening,
  but her eyes were dull as she looked us over.
  
  "You stainin' your hands again," she purred. "Yes, Aunty. We are
  going to lick the redskins into ribbons," Beverly replied.
  
  "You never get that done. Lickin' never settles nobody. You just
  hold 'em down till they strong enough to boost you off their
  heads again, and up they come. Whoo-ee!"
  
  The black woman gave a chuckle.
  
  "Well, I'd rather sit on their heads than have them sitting on
  mine, or yours, Aunty Boone," Beverly returned, laughingly.
  
  Aunty Boone's eyes narrowed and there was a strange light in them
  as she looked at us, saying:
  
  "You get into trouble, Mr. Bev, you see me comin', hot streaks,
  to help you out. Whoo-ee!"
  
  She breathed her weird, African whoop and turned away.
  
  "I'll depend on you." Beverly's face was bright, and there was no
  shadow in his eyes, as he called after her retreating form.
  
  We chatted long together, and I hoped--and feared--to have him
  tell me the story of his suit with Eloise, and why in such a day,
  of all the days of his life, he should choose to run away to the
  warfare of the frontier. He could not have failed, I thought.
  Never a disappointed lover wore a smile like this. But Beverly
  had no story to tell me that night.
  
  The mid-July sun was shining down on a treeless landscape, across
  which the yellow, foam-flecked Smoky Hill River wound its sinuous
  way. Beside this stream was old Fort Harker, a low quadrangle of
  quarters, for military man and beast, grouped about a
  parade-ground for companionship rather than for protection. The
  frontier fort had little need for defensive strength. About its
  walls the Indian crawled submissively, fearful of munitions and
  authority. It was not here, but out on lonely trails, in sudden
  ambush, or in overwhelming numbers, or where long miles, cut off
  from water, or exhausting distance banished safe retreat, that
  the savage struck in all his fury.
  
  Eastward from Harker the scattered frontier homesteads crouched,
  defenseless, in the river valleys. Far to the northwest spread
  the desolate lengths of a silent land where the white man's foot
  had hardly yet been set. Miles away to the southwest the Santa
  Fé Trail wound among the Arkansas sand-hills, never, in
  all its history, less safe for freighters than in that summer of
  1867.
  
  In this vast demesne the raiding Cheyenne, the cruel Kiowa, the
  blood-thirsty Arapahoe, with bands of Dog Indians and outlaws
  from every tribe, contested, foot by foot, for supremacy against
  the out-reaching civilization of the dominant Anglo-American. The
  lonely trails were measured off by white men's graves. The
  vagrant winds that bear the odor of alfalfa, and of orchard bloom
  to-day, were laden often with the smoke of burning homes, and
  often, too, they bore that sickening smell of human flesh, once
  caught, never to be forgotten. The story of that struggle for
  supremacy is a tragic drama of heroism and endurance. In it the
  Eighteenth Kansas Cavalry played a stirring part.
  
  It seems but yesterday to me now, that July day so many years
  ago, when our four companies, numbering fewer than four hundred
  men, detrained from the Union Pacific train at Fort Harker on the
  Smoky Hill. And the faces of the men who were to lead us are
  clear in memory. Our commander, Colonel Moore, always brave and
  able; and our captains, Henry Lindsay, and Edgar Barker, and
  George Jenness, and David Payne, with the shrewd, courageous
  scout, Allison Pliley, and the undaunted, clear-thinking, young
  lieutenant, Frank Stahl. Ours was not to be a record of unfading
  glory, as national military annals show, yet it may count
  mightily when the Great Records are opened for final estimates.
  Those men who marched two thousand miles, back and forth, upon
  the trackless plains in that four months' campaign, have been
  forgotten in the debris of uneventful years. Our long-faded
  trails lie buried under wide alfalfa-fields and the paved streets
  of western Kansas towns. From the far springs that quenched our
  burning thirst comes water, trickling through a nickel faucet
  into a marble basin, now. Where the fierce sun seared our
  eyeballs, in a treeless, barren waste, green groves, atune with
  song-birds, cast long swaths of shade on verdant sod. The perils
  and the hardships of the Eighteenth Kansas Cavalry are now but as
  a tale that is told.
  
  And yet of all the heroes whose life-trails cut my own, I account
  among the greatest those men under whose command, and with whose
  comradeship, I went out to serve the needs of my generation among
  the vanguards of the plains. And if in a sunset hour on the west
  ridge beyond the little town of Burlingame I had left a hopeless
  love behind me, I put a man's best energy into the thing before
  me.
  
  The battle-field alone is not the soldier's greatest test. I had
  kept step with men who charge an enemy on an open plain or storm
  a high defense in the face of sure defeat. I had been ordered
  with my company to take redoubts against the flaming throats of
  bellowing cannon in the life-and-death grip before Richmond. I
  had felt the awful thrill of carnage as my division surged back
  and forth across the blood-soaked lengths of Gettysburg, and I
  never once fell behind my comrades. The battle-field breeds
  courage, and self-forgetfulness, and exaltation, from the sense
  of duty squarely met.
  
  There were no battle-fields in 1867, where Greek met Greek in
  splendid gallantry, out on the Kansas plains. Over Fort Harker
  hung the pall of death, and in the July heat the great black
  plague of Asiatic cholera stalked abroad and scourged the land.
  Men were dying like rats, lacking everything that helps to drive
  death back. The volunteer who had offered himself to save the
  settlers from the scalping-knife had come here only to look into
  an open grave, and then, in agony, to drop into it. Such things
  test soldiers more than battle-fields. And our men turned back in
  fear, preferring the deserter's shame to quick, inglorious
  martyrdom by Asiatic cholera. I had a battle of my own the first
  night at Fort Harker. There was a growing moon and the night
  breeze was cool after the heat of the day. Beverly Clarenden and
  I went down to the river, whose tawny waters hardly hid the tawny
  sands beneath them. The plains were silent, but from all the
  hospital tents about the fort came the sharp, agonized cries of
  pain that forerun the last collapse of the plague-stricken
  sufferers. To get away from the sound of it all we wandered down
  the stream to where the banks of soft, caving earth on the
  farther side were higher than a man's head, and their shadow hid
  the current. We sat down and stared silently at the waters,
  scarcely whispering as they rolled along, and at the still shade
  of the farther bank upon them. The shadows thickened and moved a
  little, then grew still. We also grew still. Then they moved
  again just opposite us, and fell into three parts, as three men
  glided silently along under the bank's protecting gloom. We
  waited until they had reached the edge of the moonlight, and saw
  three soldiers pass swiftly out across the unprotected sands to
  other shadowy places further on.
  
  "Deserters!" Beverly said, half aloud. "You can stay here if you
  want to, Gail. I'd rather go up and listen to those poor wretches
  groan than stick down here and listen to the fiend inside of me
  to-night."
  
  He rose and stalked away, and I sat listening to myself. I could
  join those three men easily enough. The world is wide. I had no
  bond to hold me to one single place in it. I was young and
  strong, and life is sweet. Why let the black plague snuff me out
  of it? I had come here to serve the State. I should not serve it
  in a plague-marked grave. I rose to follow down the stream, to go
  to where the Smoky Hill joins the big Republican to make the Kaw,
  and on to where the Kaw reaches to the Missouri. But I would not
  stop there. I'd go until I reached the ocean somewhere.
  
  Would I?
  
  The memory of Jondo's eyes when they looked into mine on Pawnee
  Rock came unbidden across my mind. Jondo had lived a nameless
  man. How strong and helpful all his years had been! How starved
  had been my life without his love! I would be another Jondo,
  somewhere on earth.
  
  I stared after three faintly moving shadows down the stream.
  'Twas well I waited, for Esmond Clarenden came to me now,
  clean-cut, honest, everybody's friend. How firm his life had
  been; and he had built into me a hatred of deceit and lies. And
  Jondo was another Uncle Esmond. In spite of the black shadow on
  his name, he walked the prairies like a prince always. I could
  not be like him if I were a deserter. Up-stream death was waiting
  for me; down-stream, disgrace. I turned and followed up the
  river's course, but the strength that forced me to it was greater
  than that which made me brave on battle-fields. And ever since
  that night beside the Smoky Hill I have felt gentler toward the
  man who falls.
  
  We were not idle long for Fort Harker had just been informed of
  an assault on a wagon-train on the Santa Fé Trail and our
  cavalry squadron hurried away at once to overtake and punish the
  assailants.
  
  We came into camp on the bank of Walnut Creek, at the close of a
  long summer day of blazing light and heat over the barren trails
  where there was no water; a day of long hours in the saddle; a
  day of nerve-wearing watchfulness. But we believed that we had
  left the plague-cursed region behind us, so we were light-hearted
  and good-natured; and we ate, and drank, and took our lot
  cheerfully.
  
  Among the men at mess that night I saw a new face which was
  nothing remarkable, except that something in it told me that I
  had already seen that face somewhere, some time. It is my gift
  never to forget a face, once seen, no matter how many years may
  pass before I see it twice. This soldier was a pleasant fellow,
  too, and, in a story he was telling, clever at imitating
  others.
  
  "Who is that man, Bev? The third one over there?" I asked my
  cousin.
  
  "Stranger to me. I don't believe I ever saw him before. Who is
  the fellow with the smile, Captain?" Beverly asked the officer
  beside him.
  
  "I don't know. He's not in my company. I'm finding new faces
  every day," the captain replied.
  
  As twilight fell I saw the man again at the edge of the camp. He
  smiled pleasantly as he passed me, turning to look at Beverly,
  who did not see him, and in a minute he was cantering down to the
  creek beside our camp. I saw him cross it and ride quickly out of
  sight. But that smile brought to the face the thing that had
  escaped me.
  
  "I know that fellow now," I said to Beverly and the officer who
  came up just then. "He's Charlie Bent, the son of Colonel Bent.
  Don't you remember the little sinner at old Fort Bent, Bev?"
  
  "I do, and what a vicious little reptile he was," Beverly
  replied. "But Uncle Esmond told me that his father took him away
  early and had him schooled like a gentleman in the best Saint
  Louis had to give. I wonder whose company he is in."
  
  The officer stared at us.
  
  "You mean to say you know that cavalryman to be Charlie Bent?" he
  fairly gasped.
  
  "Of course it's Charlie. I never missed a face in all my life.
  That's his own," I replied.
  
  "The worst Indian on the plains!" the captain declared. "He stirs
  up more fiendishness than a whole regiment of thoroughbred
  Cheyennes could ever think of. He's led in every killing here
  since March."
  
  "Not Colonel Bent's son!" I exclaimed.
  
  "Yes, he's the half-breed devil that we'll have to fight, and
  here he comes and eats with us and rides away."
  
  "He must be the fellow that the Mexican told us about back at
  Burlingame, Gail. I remember now he did say the brute's name was
  Bent, but I didn't rope him up with our Fort Bent chum. Gail
  would have run him down in half a minute if he had heard the
  name. I never could remember anything," Beverly said, in disgust.
  But the smile was peeping back of his frown, and he forgot the
  boy he was soon to have cause enough to remember.
  
  "We must run that rascal down to-night," the Captain declared, as
  he hurried away to consult with the other officers.
  
  But Charlie Bent was not run down that night. Before we had time
  to get over our surprise a scream of pain rang through the camp.
  Another followed, and another, and when an hour had passed a
  third of our forces was writhing in the clutches of the
  cholera.
  
  I shall never forget the long hours of that night beside the
  Walnut, nor Beverly Clarenden's face as he bent over the
  suffering men. For all of us who were well worked mightily to
  save our plague-stricken comrades, whose couches were of prairie
  grass and whose hospital roof was the starlit sky. However
  forgetful Beverly might be of names and faces, his strong hand
  had that soothing firmness that eased the agony of cramping
  limbs. Dear Bev! He comforted the sick, and caught the dying
  words, and straightened the relaxed bodies of the dead, and
  smiled next day, and forgot that he had done it.
  
  At last the night of horror passed, and day came, wan and hot and
  weary out of the east. But five of our comrades would see no
  earthly day again; and three dozen strong men of the day before
  lay stretched upon the ground, pulseless and shrunken and purple,
  with wrinkled skin and wide, unseeing eyes.
  
  Before the sun had risen our dead, coffined only by their army
  blankets, lay in unmarked graves. Our helpless living were placed
  in commissary wagons, and we took the trail slowly and painfully
  toward the Arkansas River.
  
  If Charley Bent had gathered up his band to strike that night
  there would have been a different chapter in the annals of the
  plains.
  
  I cannot follow with my pen the long marches of that campaign,
  and there was no honorable nor glorious warfare in it. It is a
  story of skirmishes, not of battles; of attack and repulse; of
  ambush and pursuit and retreat. It is a story of long days under
  burning skies, by whose fierce glare our brains seemed shriveling
  up and the world went black before our heat-bleared eyes. A story
  of hard night-rides, when weary bodies fought with watchful minds
  the grim struggle that drowsiness can wage, though sleep, we
  knew, meant death. It is a story of fevered limbs and bursting
  pulse in hospitals whose walls were prairie distances. A story of
  hunger, and exhausted rations; of choking thirst, with only
  alkali water mocking at us. And never could the story all be
  told. There is no rest for cavalrymen in the field. We did not
  suffer heavy loss, but here and there our comrades fell, by ones,
  and twos, at duty's post; and where they fell they lie, in
  wayside graves, waiting for glorious mention until the last
  reveille shall sound above the battlements of heaven.
  
  And I was one among these vanguards of the plains, making the old
  Santa Fé Trail safe for the feet of trade; and the wide
  Kansas prairies safe for homes, and happiness, and hope, and
  power. I lived the life, and toughened in its grind. But in my
  dreams sometimes my other life returned to me, and a sweet face,
  with a cloud of golden hair, and dark eyes looking into mine,
  came like a benediction to me. Another face came sometimes
  now--black, big, and glistening, with eyes of strange, far vision
  looking at me, and I heard, over and over, the words of Esmond
  Clarenden's cook:
  
  "If you get into trouble, Mr. Bev, I'll come, hot streaks, to
  help you."
  
  But trouble never stuck to "Mr. Bev," because he failed to know
  it when it came.
  
  Mid-August found us at Fort Hays on the Smoky Hill, beyond whose
  protecting guns the wilderness ruled. A wilderness checkered by
  faint trails of lawless feet, a wilderness set with bloody claws
  and poison stings and cruel fangs, and slow, agonizing death. And
  with all a wilderness of weird, fascinating distances and danger,
  charm and beauty. The thrill of the explorer of new lands
  possessed us as we looked far into the heart of it. Here in these
  August days the Cheyenne and Arapahoe and Kiowa bands were riding
  trails blood-stained by victims dragged from lonely homesteads,
  and butchered, here and there, to make an Indian holiday. The
  scenes along the valleys of the Sappa and the Beaver and the
  Prairie Dog creeks were far too brutal and revolting to belong to
  modern life. Against these our Eighteenth Kansas, with a small
  body of United States cavalry, struck northward from Fort Hays.
  We rested through the long, hot days and marched by night. The
  moon was growing toward the full, and in its clear, white
  splendor the prairies lay revealed for miles about us. Our
  command was small and meagerly equipped, and we were moving on to
  meet a foe of overwhelming numbers. Men took strange odds with
  Fate upon the plains.
  
  Beyond the open, level lands lay a rugged region hemming in the
  valley of the Prairie Dog Creek. Here picturesque cliffs and
  deep, earth-walled cañons split the hills, affording easy
  ambush for a regiment of red men. And here, in a triangle of a
  few miles area, a new Thermopylae, with no Leonidas but Kansas
  plainsmen, was staged through two long August days and nights.
  One hundred and fifty of us against fifteen hundred fighting
  braves.
  
  In the early morning of a long, hot August day, we came to an
  open plain beyond the Prairie Dog Creek. Our supply-wagons and
  pack-mules were separated from us somewhere among the bluffs. We
  had had no food since the night before, and our canteens were
  empty--all on account of the blundering mismanagement of the
  United States officer who cammanded us. I was only a
  private, and a private's business is not to question, but to
  obey. And that major over us, cashiered for cowardice later, was
  not a Kansas man. Thank heaven for that!
  
  A score of us, including my cousin and myself, under a sergeant,
  and with good Scout Pliley, were suddenly ordered back among the
  hills.
  
  "Where do we go, and why?" Beverly asked me as we rode along.
  
  "I don't know," I replied. "But Captain Jenness and a file of men
  were lost out here somewhere last night. And Indian tracks step
  over one another all around here. I guess we are out to find
  what's lost, maybe. It isn't a twenty minutes' job, I know
  that."
  
  "And all our canteens empty, too! Why cut off all visible means
  of support in a time like this? Look at these bluffs and
  hiding-places, will you! A handful of Indians could scoop our
  whole body up and pitch us into the Prairie Dog Creek, and not be
  missed from a set in a war-dance," Beverly insisted. "Keep it
  strictly in the Clarenden family, Gail, but our honorable
  commander is a fool and a coward, if he is a United States
  major."
  
  "You speak as one expecting a promotion, Bev," I suggested.
  
  "I'd know how to use it if I got it," he smiled brightly at me as
  we quickened our pace not to fall behind.
  
  Every day of that campaign Beverly grew dearer to me. I am glad
  our lives ran on together for so many years.
  
  The cañons deepened and the whole region was bewildering,
  but still we struggled on, lost men searching for lost men. The
  sun blazed hotly, and the soft yellow bluffs of bone-dry earth
  reached down to the dry beds of one-time streams.
  
  High noon, and still no food, no water, and no lost men
  discovered. We had pushed out to a little opening, ridged in on
  either side by high, brown bluffs, when a whoop came from the
  head of the line.
  
  "Yonder they are! Yonder they are!"
  
  Half a dozen men, led by Captain Jenness, were riding swiftly to
  join us and we shouted in our joy. For some among us that was the
  last joyous shout. At that moment a yell from savage throats
  filled the air, and the thunder of hoofs shook the ground. Over
  the west ridge, half a mile away, five hundred Indians came
  swooping like a hurricane down upon us. And we numbered,
  altogether, twenty-nine. I can see that charge to-day: the
  blinding, yellow sky, the ridge melting into a cloud of tawny
  dust, the surge of ponies with their riders bending low above
  them; fronting them, our little group of cavalrymen formed into a
  hollow square, on foot, about our mounts; the Indians riding, in
  a wide circle around us, with blankets flapping, and
  streamer-decked lances waving high. And as I see, I hear again
  that wild, unearthly shriek and taunting yell and fiendish
  laughter. From every point the riflle-balls poured in upon
  us, while out of buffalo wallow and from behind each prairie-dog
  hillock a surge of arrows from unmounted Indians swept up against
  us. I had been on battle-fields before, but this was a circle out
  of hell set 'round us there. And every man of of knew, as we sent
  back ball for ball, what capture here would mean for us before
  the merciful hand of death would seal our eyes.
  
  Suddenly, as we moved forward, the frantic circle halted and a
  hundred braves came dashing in a fierce charge upon us. Their
  leader, mounted on a great, white horse, rode daringly ahead,
  calling his men to follow him, and taunting us with cowardice. He
  spoke good English, and his voice rang clear and strong above the
  din of that strange struggle. Straight on he came, without once
  looking back, a revolver in each hand, firing as he rode. A
  volley from our carbines made his fellows stagger, then waver,
  break, and run. Not so the rider of the splendid white horse, who
  dared us to strike him down as he dashed full at us.
  
  "Come on, you coward Clarenden boys, and I'll fight you both.
  I've waited all these years to do it. I dare you. Oh, I dare
  you!"
  
  It was Charlie Bent.
  
  Nine balls from Clarenden carbines flew at him. Beverly and I
  were listed among the cleverest shots in Kansas, but not one ball
  brought harm to the daring outlaw. A score of bullets sung about
  his insolent face, but his seemed a charmed life. Right on he
  forged, over our men, and through the square to the Indian's
  circle on the other side, his mocking laughter ringing as he
  rode. A bloody scalp hung from his spear, and, turning 'round
  just out of range of our fire, shaking his trophy high, he
  shouted back:
  
  "We got all of the balance of your men. We'll get you yet."
  
  The sun glared fiercely on the bare, brown earth. A burning
  thirst began to parch our lips. We had had no food nor drink for
  more than twenty hours. Our horses, wounded with many arrows,
  were harder to care for than our brave, stricken men.
  
  Night came upon the cañons of the Prairie Dog, and with
  the darkness the firing ceased. Somewhere, not far away, there
  might be a wagon-train with food for us. And somewhere near there
  might be a hundred men or more of our command trying to reach us.
  But, whether the force and supplies were safe or the wagons were
  captured and all our comrades killed, as Charlie Bent had said,
  we could not know. We only knew that we had no food; that one
  man, and all but four of our cavalry horses lay dead out in the
  valley; that two men in our midst were slowly dying, and a dozen
  others suffering from wounds of battle, among these our captain
  and Scout Pliley; that we were in a wild, strange land, with
  Indians perching, vulture-like, on every hill-top, waiting for
  dawn to come to seize their starving prey.
  
  We heard an owl hoot here and there, and farther off an answering
  hoot; a coyote's bark, a late bird's note, another coyote, and a
  fainter hoot, all as night settled. And we knew that owl and
  coyote and twilight song-bird were only imitations--sentinel
  signals from point to point, where Indian videttes guarded every
  height, watching the trail with shadow-piercing eyes.
  
  The glossy cottonwood leaves, in the faint night breeze, rippled
  like pattering rain-drops on dry roofs in summertime, and the
  thin, willow boughs swayed gently over us. The full moon swept
  grandly up the heavens, pouring a flood of softened light over
  the valley of the Prairie Dog, whose steep bluffs were guarded by
  a host of blood-lusting savages, and whose cañons locked
  in a handful of intrepid men.
  
  If we could only slip out, undiscovered, in the dark we might
  find our command somewhere along the creek. It was a perilous
  thing to undertake, but to stay there was more perilous.
  
  "Say, Gail," Beverly whispered, when we were in motion, "somebody
  said once, 'There have been no great nations without
  processions,' but this is the darndest procession I ever saw to
  help to make a nation great. Hold on, comrade. There! Rest on my
  arm a bit. It makes it softer."
  
  The last words to a wounded soldier for whom Bev's grip eased the
  ride.
  
  It was a strange procession, and in that tragic gloom the boy's
  light-hearted words were balm to me.
  
  Silently and slowly we moved forward. The underbrush was thick on
  either side of the narrow, stony way that wound between sheer
  cliffs. We had torn up our blankets and shirts to muffle the
  horses' feet, that no sound of hoofs, striking upon the rocky
  path, might reach the ears of the Cheyenne and his allies
  crouching watchfully above us. At the head marched Captain
  Jenness and Scout Pliley, each with his carbine for a crutch and
  leaning on each other for support. Followed five soldiers as
  front guard through the defile. And then four horses, led by
  careful hands, bearing nine suffering, silent men upon their
  backs. Two of the horses carried three, and one bore two, and the
  last horse, one--a dying boy, whispering into my ear a message
  for his mother, as I held his hand. Behind us came the sergeants
  with the remainder, for rear-guard. And so we passed, mile after
  mile, winding in and out, to find some sheltering spot where,
  sinking in exhaustion, we might sleep.
  
  The midnight winds grew chill, and the tense strain of that slow
  march was maddening, but not a groan came from the wounded men.
  The vanguards of the plains knew how to take perilous trails and
  hold their peace.
  
  When the sun rose on the second day the hills about us swarmed
  with savages, whose demoniac yells rent the air. Leonidas had his
  back against a rock at old Thermopylae, but our Kansas plainsmen
  fought in a ring of fire.
  
  At day-dawn, our brave scout, Pliley, slipped away, and, after
  long hours among the barren hills, he found the main command.
  
  Men never gave up hope in the plains warfare, but each of us had
  saved one bullet for himself, if we must lose this game. The time
  for that last bullet had almost come when the sight of cavalrymen
  on a distant ridge told us that our scout was on its way to us
  again. It took a hero's heart to thread unseen the dangerous
  trails and find our comrades with the cavalry major and bring
  back aid, but Pliley did it for us--a man's part. May the sod
  rest lightly where he sleeps to-day. Meantime, on the day before,
  the main force of our cavalry, who had given us up for lost, had
  had their own long, fearful struggle. In the early morning,
  Lieutenant Stahl, scouting forward in an open plain, rushed back
  to give warning of Indians everywhere. And they were
  everywhere--a thousand strong against a feeble hundred caught in
  their midst. They rode like centaurs, and their aim was deadly
  true as they poured down, a murderous avalanche, from every
  hillslope. Their ponies' tails, sweeping the ground, lengthened
  by long horse-hair braids, with sticks thrust through at
  intervals by way of ornament; their waving blankets, and
  streamered lances held aloft; the savage roar from ten hundred
  throats; the mad impetus of their furious charge through clouds
  of dust and rifle smoke--all made the valley of the Prairie Dog
  seem but a seething hell bursting with fiendins shouts,
  shot through with quivering arrows, shattered by bullets, rocked
  with the thunderous beat of horses' hoofs, trampling it into one
  great maelstrom of blood and dirt.
  
  All day, with neither food nor water, amid bewildering bluffs and
  gorges, alive with savage warriors, the cavalrymen had striven
  desperately. Night fell, and in the clear moonlight they forced
  their way across the Prairie Dog, and neither man nor horse dared
  to stop to drink because an instant's pause meant death.
  
  And the evening and the morning were the first day. And the
  second was like unto it, albeit we were no longer a triangle,
  made up of wagon-train here and main command there, and our
  twenty-nine--less two lost ones--under Captain Jenness, at a
  third point. Before noon, our force was all united and we joined
  hands for the finish.
  
  Beverly and I rode side by side all day. Everywhere around us the
  half-breed, Charlie Bent, dashed boldly on his big, white horse
  calling us cowardly dogs and taunting us with lack of
  marksmanship.
  
  "I'm getting tired of that fellow, Gail. I'll pick his horse out
  from under him pretty soon, see if I don't." My cousin called to
  me as Bent's insolent cry burst forth:
  
  "Come out, and let me show you how to shoot."
  
  Beverly leaped out toward the Indian horde surrounding Bent. He
  raised his carbine, and with steady aim, fired far across the
  field of battle, the cleanest shot I ever saw. Years ago my
  cousin had urged Uncle Esmond to let him practise shooting on
  horseback. He was a master of the art now. Charlie Bent's
  splendid white steed fell headlong, hurling its rider to the
  ground and dragging him, face downward, in the dirt.
  
  I cannot paint that day's deeds with my pen, nor ever artist
  lived whose brush could reproduce it. If we should lose here, it
  meant the turning of the clock from morning back to midnight on
  the Kansas plains.
  
  Between this and the safety of the prairies stood fewer than a
  hundred and fifty men, against a thousand warriors, led by
  cunning half-breeds skilled in the white man's language and the
  red man's fiendishness.
  
  If we should lose--We did not go out there to lose. When each man
  does a man's part there is no failure possible at last.
  
  As the sun sank toward late afternoon, the savage force massed
  for its great, crushing blow that should annihilate us. The
  strong center, made up of the flower of every tribe engaged, was
  on the crest of a long, westward-reaching slope, a splendid
  company of barbaric warriors--strong, eager, vengeful, doggedly
  determined to finish now the struggle with the power they
  hated.
  
  The air was very clear, and in its crystal distances we could see
  every movement and hear each command.
  
  The valley rang with the taunts and jeers and threats and mocking
  laughter of our foes, daring us to come out and meet them face to
  face, like men. And we went out and met them face to face, like
  men.
  
  A little force of soldiery fighting, not for ourselves, but for
  the hearthstones of a nobler people, our cavalry swung up that
  long, western slope in the face of a murderous fire, into the
  very heart of Cheyenne strength, enforced by all the iron of the
  allied tribes. I marvel at it now, when, in solid phalanx, our
  foes might easily have mowed us down like a thin line of standing
  grain; for their numbers seemed unending, while flight on flight
  of arrows and fierce sheets of rifle-fire swept our ranks as we
  rode on to death or victory. But each man's face among us there
  was bright with courage, and with our steady force unchecked we
  swept right on to the very crest of the high slope, scattering
  the enemy, at last, like wind-blown autumn leaves, until upon our
  guidons victory rested and the long day was won. 
  I wander alone at dead of night,
  But ever before me I see a light,
  In darkest hours more clear, more bright;
      And the hope that I bear fails never.
                      FREDRICH RÜCKERT.
  The waters of the Smoky Hill flowed yellow, flecked with foam,
  beside our camp, where, in a little grove of cottonwood trees, we
  rested from a long day's march. The heat of a late Kansas summer
  day was fanned away at twilight by the cool prairie breeze. There
  was an appealing something in the air that evening hour that made
  me homesick. So I went down beside the river to fight out my
  daily battle and let the wide spaces of the landscape soothe me,
  and all the opal tints of sunset skies and the soft radiance of a
  prairie twilight bring me their inspiration.
  
  Each day my heart-longing for the girl I must not love grew
  stronger. I wondered, as I sat here to-night, what trail would
  open for me when Beverly and Eloise should meet again, as lovers
  must meet some time. We had not once spoken her name between us,
  Bev and I, in all the days and nights since we had been in
  service on the plains.
  
  As I sat lonely, musing vaguely of a score of things that all ran
  back to one fair face, Beverly dropped down beside me. His face
  was grave and his eyes had a gentle, pleading look, something
  strange and different from the man whose moods I knew.
  
  "I'm homesick, Gail." He smiled as he spoke, and all the boy of
  all the years was in that smile.
  
  "So am I, Bev. It must be in the water here," I replied,
  lightly.
  
  But neither one misunderstood the other.
  
  "I'd like to see Little Lees to-night. Wouldn't you?" he asked,
  suddenly.
  
  The question startled me. Maybe my cousin wanted to confide in me
  here. I would not be selfish with him.
  
  "Yes, I always like to see her. Why to-night, though?" I asked,
  encouragingly.
  
  Beverly looked steadily into my face.
  
  "I want to tell you something, Gail. I haven't dared to speak
  before, but something tells me I should speak to-night," he said
  slowly.
  
  I looked away along the winding valley of the Smoky Hill. I must
  hear it some time. Why be a coward now?
  
  "Say on, I'm always ready to hear anything from you,
  Beverly."
  
  I tried to speak firmly, and I hoped my voice did not seem
  faltering to him. He sat silent a long while. Then he rose and
  straightened to his full height--a splendid form of strength and
  wholesomeness and grace.
  
  "I'll tell you some time soon, but not to-night. Honor is
  something with me yet."
  
  And so he left me.
  
  I dreamed of him that night with Eloise. And all of us were glad.
  I wakened suddenly. Beverly was standing near me. He turned and
  walked away, his upright form and gait, even in the faint light,
  individually Bev's own. I saw him lie down and draw his blanket
  about him, then sit up a moment, then nestle down again.
  Something went wrong with sleep and me for a long time, and once
  I called out, softly:
  
  "Bev, can't you sleep?"
  
  "Oh, shut up! Not if you fidget about me," he replied, with the
  old happy-go-lucky toss of the head and careless tone.
  
  It was dim dawn when I wakened. My cousin was sleeping calmly
  just a few feet away. An irresistible longing to speak to him
  overcame me and I slipped across and gently kicked the slumbering
  form. Two cavalry blankets rolled apart. A note pinned to the
  edge of one caught my eye. I stooped to read:
DEAR GAIL, Don't hate me. I'm sick of army
  life. They will call me a coward and if they get me they will
  shoot me for a deserter. I have disgraced the Clarenden name.
  You'll never see me again. Good-bye, old boy.
  
  BEV.
Deserter!
  
  The yells of all the tribes in the battle on the Prairie Dog
  Creek shrieked not so fiercely in my ears as that word rang now.
  And all the valley of the Smoky Hill echoed and re-echoed it.
  
  Deserter!
  
  My Beverly--who never told a lie, nor feared a danger, nor ever,
  except in self-defense, hurt a creature God had made. I could
  bury Bev, or stand beside him on his wedding-day. But Beverly
  disgraced! O, God of mercy toward all cowards, pity him!
  
  I sat down beside the blankets I had kicked apart and looked back
  over my cousin's life. It offered me no help. I thought of
  Eloise--and his longing to see her on the night before; of his
  struggle to tell me something. I knew now what that something
  was. Poor boy!
  
  He was not a boy, he was a man--strong, fearless, happy-hearted.
  How could the plains make cowards out of such as he? They had
  made a man of Jondo, who had all excuse to play the coward. The
  mystery of the human mind is a riddle past my reading--and I had
  always thought of Beverly's as an open book. The only one to whom
  I could turn now was not Eloise, nor my uncle, nor Mat nor Rex,
  but Jondo, John Doe, the nameless man, with whom Esmond Clarenden
  had walked all these years and for whose sake he had rescued
  Eloise St. Vrain. They had "toted together," as Aunty Boone had
  said. Oh, Aunty Boone with dull eyes of prophecy! I could hear
  her soft voice saying:
  
  "If you get into trouble, Mr. Bev, I come, hot streaks, to help
  you."
  
  She could not come "hot streaks" now, for Beverly had deserted.
  But there was Jondo.
  
  I wrote at once to him, inclosing the crumpled note, and then, as
  one who walks with neither sight nor feeling any more, I rode the
  plains and did a man's part in that Eighteenth Cavalry campaign
  of '67. The days went slowly by, bringing the long, bright autumn
  beauty to the plains and turning all the elms to gold along the
  creek at Burlingame. Time took away the sharp edge from our grief
  and shame, and left the dull pain that wears deeper and deeper,
  unnoticed by us; and all of us who had loved Beverly lived on and
  were cheerful for one another's sake.
  
  When Jondo--as only Jondo could--bore the news of my letter to
  Esmond Clarenden, he made no reply, but sat like an image of
  stone. Rex Krane broke down and sobbed as if his heart would
  break. But Mat, calm, poised, and always merciful, merely
  said:
  
  "We must wait awhile."
  
  It was many days before she broke the news to Eloise St. Vrain,
  who only smiled and said:
  
  "Gail is mistaken. Beverly couldn't desert."
  
  It was when the word came to Aunty Boone that the storm broke.
  They told me afterward that her face was terrible to see, and
  that her eyes grew dull and narrow. She went out to the bluff's
  edge and sat staring up the valley of the Kaw as if to see into
  the hidden record of the coming years.
  
  One October day, when the Kranes and Eloise sat with my uncle and
  Jondo in the soft afternoon air, looking out at the beauty of the
  Missouri bluffs, Aunty Boone loomed up before them suddenly.
  
  "I got somebody's fortune, just come clear before me," she
  declared, in her soft voice. "Lemme see you' hand, Little
  Lees!"
  
  Eloise put her shapely white hand upon the big, black paw.
  
  Aunty Boone patted it gently, the first and last caress she ever
  gave to any of us.
  
  "You' goin' to get a letter from a dark man. You' goin' to take a
  long journey. And somebody goin' with you. An' the one tellin'
  this is goin' away, jus' one more voyage to desset sands again,
  and see Africy and her own kingdom. Whoo-ee!"
  
  Never before, in all the years that we had known her, had she
  expressed a wish for her early home across he seas. Her voice
  trailed off weirdly, and she gazed at the Kaw Valley for a long
  moment. Then she said, in a low tone that thrilled her listeners
  with its vibrant power:
  
  "Bev ain't no deserter. He's gone out! Jus' gone out.
  Whoo-ee!"
  
  She disappeared around the corner of the house and stood long in
  the little side porch where Beverly had kissed Little Blue Flower
  one night in the "Moon of the Peach-Blossom," and Eloise had
  found them there, and I had unwittingly heard what was said.
  
  "Is there no variation in palmistry?" Rex Krane asked. "I never
  knew a gypsy in all my life who read a different set of
  prophecies. It's always the dark man--I'm light (darn the
  luck)--and a journey and a letter. But I thought maybe an African
  seer, a sort of Voodo, hoodoo, bugaboo, would have it a light man
  and a legacy and company coming, instead of you taking a journey,
  Eloise."
  
  Eloise smiled.
  
  "You musn't envy me my good fortune, Rex," she declared. "Aunty
  Boone says she is going back to Africa, too. You'll need a new
  cook, Uncle Esmond. Let me apply for the place right now."
  
  My uncle smiled affectionately on her.
  
  "I could give you a trial, as I gave her. I remember I told her
  if she could cook good meals I'd keep her; if not, she'd leave.
  Do you want to take the risk?"
  
  "That's where you'll get your journey of the prophecy, Eloise,"
  Jondo suggested.
  
  "Well, you leave out the best part of it all," Mat broke in. "She
  added that Beverly isn't a deserter, he's just 'gone out.' Why
  don't you believe it all, serious or frivolous?"
  
  A shadow lifted from the faces there as a glimpse of hope came
  slowly in.
  
  "And as to letters, Eloise," Uncle Esmond said, "I must beg your
  pardon. I have one here for you that I had forgotten. It came
  this morning."
  
  "See if it isn't from a dark man, inviting you to take a
  journey," Rex suggested.
  
  "It must be, it's from Santa Fé," Eloise said, opening the
  letter eagerly.
  
  Aunty Boone had come back again and was standing by the corner of
  the veranda, half hidden by vines, watching Eloise with steady
  eyes. The girl's face grew pale, then deadly white, and her big,
  dark eyes were opened wide as she dropped the letter and looked
  at the faces about her.
  
  "It is from Father Josef," she gasped. "He writes of Little Blue
  Flower somewhere in Hopi-land. He asks me to go to Santa
  Fé at once for her sake. And it says, too--" The voice
  faltered and Eloise turned to Esmond Clarenden. "It says that
  Beverly is there somewhere and he wants you. Read it, Uncle
  Esmond."
  
  As Eloise rose and laid the letter in my uncle's hand, Aunty
  Boone, hidden by the vines, muttered in her soft, strange
  tone:
  
  "He's jus' gone out. Thank Jupiter! He's jus' gone out. I'm
  goin', hot streaks, to help him, too. Then I go to my own desset
  where I'm honin' o to be, an' stay there till the judgment Day.
  Whoo-ee!"
  
  In the early morning of a rare October day upon the plains I sat
  on my cavalry horse beside Fort Hays, waiting for one last word
  from my superior officer, Colonel Moore. He was my uncle's
  friend, and he had been kind to the Clarenden boys, as military
  kindness runs.
  
  "You are honorably discharged," he said. "Take these letters to
  Fort Dodge. You will meet your friends there, and have some
  safeguard from there on, by order of General Sheridan. God bless
  you, Gail. You have ridden well. I wish you a safe journey, and I
  hope you'll find your cousin soon. He was a splendid boy until
  this happened. He may be cleared some day."
  
  "He is splendid still to me in spite of everything," I
  replied.
  
  "Yes, yes," my colonel responded. "Never a Clarenden disgraced
  the name before. That is why General Sheridan is granting you a
  squad to help you. It is a great thing to have a good name.
  Good-by."
  
  "Good-by. I thank you a thousand times," I said, saluting
  him.
  
  "And I thank you. A chain, you know, is as strong as its weakest
  link. A cavalry troop is as able as its soldiers make it."
  
  He turned his horse about, and I rode off alone across the lonely
  plains a hundred miles away toward old Fort Dodge, beside the
  Arkansas River. Jondo and Rex were to meet me there for one more
  trip on the long Santa Fé Trail.
  
  Late September rains had blessed the valley of the Arkansas. The
  level land about Fort Dodge showed vividly green against the
  yellow sand-hills across the river, and the brown, barren bluffs
  westward, where a little city would one day rise in pretty
  picturesqueness. The scene was like the Garden of Eden to my eyes
  when I broke through the rough ridges to the north on the last
  lap of my long ride thither and hurried down to the fort. I grant
  I did not appear like one who had a right to enter Eden, for I
  was as brown as a Malayan. Nearly four months of hard riding,
  sleeping on the ground, with a sky-cover, eating buffalo meat,
  and drinking the dregs of slow-drying pools, had made a plainsman
  of me, of the breed that long since disappeared. Golf-sticks and
  automobile steering-wheels are held by hands to-day no less
  courageous than those that swung the carbine into place, and
  flung aside the cavalry bridle-rein in a wild onslaught in our
  epic day. Each age grows men, flanked by the coward and the
  reckless daredevil.
  
  Rex Krane was first to recognize me when I reached the fort.
  
  "Oh, we are all here but Mat: Clarenden, Jondo, Aunty Boone, and
  Little Lees; and a squad of half a dozen cavalry men are ready to
  go with us." Rex drawled in his old Yankee fashion, hiding an
  aching heart underneath his jovial greeting.
  
  "All of us!" I exclaimed.
  
  "Yes. Here they all come!" Rex retorted.
  
  They all came, but I saw only one, veiling the joy in my eyes as
  best I could. For with the face of Eloise before me, I knew the
  hardest battle of my life was calling me to colors. I had
  forgotten how womanly she was, or else her summer by the blessed
  prairies that lap up to the edge of the quiet town of Burlingame
  had brought her peace and helped her to put away sad memories of
  her mother.
  
  Behind her--a black background for her fair, golden head--was
  Aunty Boone.
  
  "Our girl was called to Santa Fé, and Daniel here goes
  with her. I couldn't stay behind, of course," my uncle said. "The
  Comanches are making trouble all along the Cimarron, and we will
  go up the Arkansas by the old trail route. It is farther, but the
  soldiers say much safer right now, and maybe just as quick for
  us. There is no load of freight to hinder us--two wagons and our
  mounts. Besides, the cavalrymen have some matters to look after
  near the mountains, or we might not have had their protection
  granted us."
  
  The beauty of that early autumn on the plains and mountains
  lingers in my memory still, though half a century has passed
  since that journey on the old, long trail to Santa Fé.
  
  At the closing of an Indian summer day we pitched our camp
  outside the broken walls of old Fort Bent. Every day found me
  near Eloise, although the same barrier was between us that had
  risen up the day she left me in the ruined chapel by the San
  Christobal River. Every day I longed to tell her what Beverly had
  said to me the night he--went out. It was due her that she should
  know how tenderly he had thought of her.
  
  The night was irresistible, soft and balmy for the time of year,
  as that night had been long ago when we children were marooned
  inside this stronghold. A thin, growing moon hung in the crystal
  heavens and all the shadowy places were softened with gray tones.
  Jondo and Uncle Esmond and Rex Krane were talking together. Aunty
  Boone was clearing up after the evening meal. The soldiers were
  about their tasks or pastimes. Only Eloise and I were left beside
  the camp-fire.
  
  "Let's go and find the place where we spent our last evening
  here, Little Lees," I said, determined to-night to tell her of
  Beverly.
  
  "And just as many other places as we can remember," Eloise
  replied.
  
  We clambered over heaps of fallen stone in the wide doorway, and
  stood inside the half-roofless ruin that had been a stronghold at
  the wilderness crossroads.
  
  The outer walls were broken here and there. The wearing elements
  were slowly separating the inner walls and sagging roofs. Heaps
  of debris lay scattered about. Over the caving well the
  well-sweep stuck awry, marking a place of danger. Everywhere was
  desolation and slow destruction.
  
  We sat down on some fallen timbers in the old court and looked
  about us.
  
  "It was a pity that Colonel Bent should have blown up this
  splendid fortress, and all because the Government wouldn't pay
  him his price for it," I declared.
  
  "Destroyed what he had built so carefully, and what was so
  useful," Eloise commented. "Sometimes we wreck our lives in the
  same way."
  
  I have said the twilight seemed to fit her best, although at all
  times she was fair. But to-night she was a picture in her
  traveling dress of golden brown, with soft, white folds about her
  throat. I wondered if she thought of Beverly as she spoke. It
  hurt me so to be harsh with his memory.
  
  "Yes, Charlie Bent blew up all that the Colonel built into him,
  of education and the ways of cultured folks--a leader of a Dog
  Indian band, he is a piece of manhood wrecked. And by the way," I
  went on, "Beverly shot his beautiful white horse on the Prairie
  Dog Creek. You should have seen that shot. It was the cleanest
  piece of long-range marksmanship I ever saw. He hated Bev for
  that."
  
  "Maybe he gloats over our lost Beverly to-day. He is only 'gone
  out' to me," Eloise said softly.
  
  "Let me tell you something, Little Lees. Beverly and I never
  spoke of you--you can guess why--until that last night beside the
  Smoky Hill. He wanted to tell me something that night."
  
  "And did he?" Eloise asked, eagerly.
  
  "No. He said honor was something with him still. I thought he
  meant to tell me of himself and you. Forgive me. I do not want
  any confidences not freely given. But now I know it was the
  struggle in which he went down that night that he wanted to tell
  me about. He said first, 'I'm homesick. I'd like to see Little
  Lees.' And his eyes were full of sympathy as he looked at
  me."
  
  "Did he say anything more?" Eloise's voice was almost a
  whisper.
  
  "That was all. I thought that night I should hunt a lonely
  trail--when he went home to claim--happiness. But now I feel that
  I could live beside him always--to have him safe with us
  again."
  
  As I turned to look at Eloise something was in her big, dark
  eyes--something that disappeared at once. I caught only a
  fleeting glimpse of it, and I could not understand why a thrill
  of something near to happiness should sweep through me. It was
  but the shadow of what might have been for me and was not.
  
  "Do you recall our prophecies here that night when we were
  children?" Eloise asked.
  
  "Yes, every one. Mat wanted a home, Bev to fight the Indians, and
  you wanted me to keep Marcos Ramero in his place. I tried to do
  it," I replied.
  
  And both of us recalled, but did not speak of, the warm, childish
  kiss of Little Lees upon my lips, and how we gripped hands in the
  shadows when the moon went cold and grey. Life was so simple
  then.
  
  "It may be, if our problems and our tragedies crowd into our
  younger years, they clear the way for all the bright, unclouded
  years to follow," Eloise said, as we rose to go back to the
  camp-fire.
  
  "I hope they will leave us strong to meet the bright, unclouded
  years," I answered her.
  
  On the next day the cavalrymen left us for a time, and we went on
  alone southward toward our journey's end.
  
  Autumn on the mountain slopes, and in the mesa-girdled valleys of
  New Mexico hung rainbow-tinted lights by day, with star-beam
  pointed paths trailing across the blue night-sky. And all the
  rugged beauty of a picturesque land, basking in lazy warmth,
  out-breathing sweet, pure air, made the old trail to Santa
  Fé an enchanting highway to me, despite the burden of a
  grief that weighed me down. For I could not shut from my mind the
  pitiful call of Little Blue Flower that had come to Eloise, nor
  all the uncertainty surrounding my cousin somewhere in the
  Southwest wanting us.
  
  The little city of adobe walls seemed not to have changed a
  hair's turn in the six years since I had seen it last. Out beyond
  the sandy arroyo again Father Josef waited for us. The same
  strong face and dark eyes, full of fire, the same erect form and
  manly bearing were his. Except for a few streaks of gray in his
  close-cropped hair the years had wrought no change in him, save
  that his countenance betokened the greater benediction of a godly
  life upon it. As we rode slowly to the door of San Miguel I fell
  behind. The years since that day when the saucy little girl had
  called me a big, brown, bob-cat here came back upon my mind, and,
  though my hope had vanished, still I loved the old church.
  
  Before we had passed the doorway Eloise left her wagon and stood
  beside my horse.
  
  "Gail, let us stop here with Father Josef while the others go
  down to Felix Narveo's. It always seems so peaceful here."
  
  "You are always welcome here, my children," Father Josef said,
  graciously, as I leaped from my horse and stuck its lariat pin
  down beside the doorway.
  
  Inside there were the same soft lights from the high windows, the
  same rare old paintings about the altar, the same seat beside the
  door.
  
  The priest spoke to us in low tones befitting sanctuary
  stillness. "You have come on a long journey, but it is one of
  mercy. I only pray you do not come too late," he said.
  
  "Tell us about it, Father," Eloise urged. "The men will get the
  story from Felix Narveo, but Gail and I seem to belong up here."
  She smiled up at me with the words.
  
  I could have almost hoped anew just then, but for the thought of
  Beverly.
  
  "Let us pray first," the holy man replied.
  
  Beverly and I had been confirmed in the Episcopalian faith once
  long ago, but the plains were hard on the religion of a
  high-church man. And yet, all sacred forms are beautiful to me,
  and I always knew what reverence means.
  
  "You may not know," Father Josef said, "that I have Indian blood
  in my veins--a Hopi strain from some French ancestors. Po-a-be,
  our Little Blue Flower, is my heathen cousin, descended from the
  same chief's daughter. The Hopi's faith is a part of him, like
  his hand or eye, and I have never gained much with the tribe save
  through blood-ties. But because of that I have their
  confidence."
  
  "You have all men's confidence, Father Josef," I said,
  warmly.
  
  "Thank you, my son," the priest replied. "When Santan, the
  Apache, came back from a long raid eastward, he told Little Blue
  Flower that Beverly had spared his life beside a poisoned spring
  in the Cimarron valley, urging him to go back and marry her; life
  had other interests now to white men who must forget all about
  Indian girls, he declared, and with Apache adroitness he pressed
  his claims upon her. But Santan had slain Sister Anita beside the
  San Christobal Arroyo. A murderer is abhorrent to a Hopi, who
  never takes life, save in self-defense or in legitimate
  warfare--if warfare ever is legitimate," he added, gravely.
  
  "My little cousin was heart-broken, for all the years since her
  rescue at Pawnee Rock she had cherished one face in memory; and
  maybe Beverly in his happy, careless way had given her cause to
  do so."
  
  "We understand, I think," Eloise said, turning inquiringly to
  me.
  
  I nodded, and Father Josef went on. "She knew her love was
  foolish, but few of us are always wise in love. So Santan's suit
  seemed promising for a time. But the Hopi type ran true in her,
  and she put off the Apache year after year. It is a strange case
  in Indian romance, but romance everywhere is strange enough. The
  Apache type also ran true to dogged purpose. Besides being an
  Apache, Santan has some Ramero blood in his veins, to be
  accounted for in the persistence of an evil will. He was as
  determined to win Po-a-be as she that he should fail. And he was
  cunning in his schemes."
  
  Father Josef paused and looked at Eloise.
  
  "To make the story short," he began again, "Santan could not make
  the Hopi woman hate Beverly, although she knew that her love was
  hopeless, as it should be. Pardon me, daughter," Father Josef
  said, gently. "She heard you two talking in a little porch one
  night at the Clarenden home, and she has believed ever since that
  you are lovers. That is why she sent for you to come to help her
  now."
  
  "I saw Beverly give Little Blue Flower a brotherly kiss that
  night, and I told him, frankly, how it grieved me, because I had
  known at St. Ann's about her love for him. I had urged her to go
  with me to the Clarendens', hoping that when she saw Beverly
  again she would quit dreaming of him."
  
  I looked away, at the paintings and the crucifix above the altar,
  and the long shafts of light on gray adobe walls, wondering,
  vaguely, what the next act of this drama might reveal.
  
  "Beverly was always lovable," Father Josef said. "But now the
  message comes that he is out in the heart of Hopi-land, and
  because Little Blue Flower is protecting him her people may turn
  against her. For Beverly's sake, and for her sake, too, my
  daughter, we must start at once to find her and maybe save his
  life. She wants you. It is the call of sisterhood. Sister Gloria
  and I will go with you. I have much influence with my Hopi
  people."
  
  "Will they put Beverly to death?" I asked.
  
  "I cannot tell, but--see how long the arm of hate can be, my
  son--Santan, the Apache, has been informed of Beverly's coming by
  Marcos Ramero, gambler and debauchee. And Marcos got it in some
  way from Charlie Bent, a Cheyenne half-breed, son of old Colonel
  Bent, a fine old gentleman. Maybe you knew young Bent?"
  
  "Yes, he holds a grudge against the Clarenden name because we
  made him play square with us at the old fort when we were
  children," I told the priest. "He yelled defiance at us in the
  battle on the Prairie Dog Creek last August. Bev shot his horse
  from under him just to humble the insolent dog! Beverly never was
  a coward," I insisted, all my affection for my cousin
  overwhelming me.
  
  "This makes it clearer," Father Josef said. "Through Bent to
  Ramero and Ramero to Santan, the word went, somehow. The Apache
  has gathered up a band of the worst of his breed and they are
  moving against the Hopis to get Beverly. You and Jondo and
  Clarenden and Krane will join the little squad of cavalry you
  left up in the mountains, and turn the Apache back, and all of us
  must start at once, or we may be too late. May heaven bless our
  hands and make them strong."
  
  We bowed in reverence for a moment. When we hurried from the dim
  church into the warm October sunlight, Aunty Boone sat on the
  door-step beside my horse.
  
  "'He's jus' gone out,' I told 'em so, back there on the Missouri
  River. He's gone out an' I'm goin', hot streaks, to find him,
  Little Lees. Whoo-ee!" 
  And though there's never a grave to tell,
  Nor a cross to mark his fall,
  Thank God! we know that he "batted well"
  In the last great Game of all.
                                  --SERVICE.
  We left Santa Fé within an hour, and struck out toward the
  unknown land where Beverly Clarenden, in the midst of uncertain
  friends, was being hunted down by an Apache band. As our little
  company passed out on the trail toward Agua Fria, I recalled the
  day when we had gone with Rex Krane to this little village beside
  the Santa Fé River. Eloise and Father Josef and Santan and
  Little Blue Flower were all there that day; and Jondo, although
  we did not know it then. Rex Krane had told Beverly, going out,
  that an Indian never forgets. In all the years Santan had not
  forgotten.
  
  To-day we covered the miles rapidly. Jondo and Father Josef rode
  ahead, with Esmond Clarenden and Felix Narveo following them;
  then came Eloise St. Vrain with Sister Gloria; behind them, Aunty
  Boone, with Rex and myself bringing up the rear. Three pack-mules
  bearing our equipment went tramping after us with bobbing ears
  and sturdy gait.
  
  I looked down the line of our little company ahead. The four men
  in the lead were college chums once, and all of them had loved
  the mother of the girl behind them. I have said the girl looked
  best by twilight. I had not seen her in a coarse-gray
  riding-dress when I said that. I had seen her when she needed
  protection from her enemies. I had not seen her until to-day,
  going out to meet hardship fearlessly, for the sake of one who
  wanted her--only an Indian maiden, but a faithful friend. In the
  plainest face self-forgetfulness puts a beauty all its own. That
  beauty shone resplendent now in the beautiful face of Mary
  Marchland's daughter.
  
  The world can change wonderfully in sixty minutes. As we rode out
  toward the Rio Grande, the yellow sands, the gray gramma grass,
  the purple sage, the tall green cliffs, and, high above, the
  gleaming snow-crowned peaks, took on a beauty never worn for me
  before. Why should a hope spring up within me that would die as
  other hopes had died? But back of all my thought was the longing
  to help Beverly, and a faith in Aunty Boone's weird, prophetic
  grip on things unseen. He had just "gone out" to her--why not to
  all of us? I could not understand Little Blue Flower's part in
  this tragedy, so I let it alone.
  
  A day out from Santa Fé we were joined by the little squad
  of cavalrymen with whom we had parted company back at the Fort
  Bent camping-place. With these we had little cause to dread
  personal danger. The Apache band was a small, vicious gang that
  could do much harm to the Hopis, but it seemed nothing for us to
  fear.
  
  Our care was to reach Beverly before the Hopis should rise up
  against Little Blue Flower, or the band led by Santan should fall
  upon them. Father Josef had sent a runner on to tell them of our
  coming and to warn them of the Apache raid. But runners sometimes
  come to grief.
  
  It is easy enough now to sleep most of the hours away across the
  and lands that lie between the Rockies and the Coast Range
  mountains, where the great "through limiteds," swinging down
  their long trail of steel, sweep farther in one day than we crept
  in two long, weary weeks in that October fifty years ago. Only
  Father Josef's unerring Indian accuracy brought us through.
  
  We crawled up rugged mountain trails and skirted the rims of
  dizzy chasms; we wound through cañons, with only narrow
  streams for paths, between sheer walls of rock; we pitched our
  camp at the bases of great, red sand stone mesas, barren of life;
  we followed long, yellow ways over stretches of unending plain;
  we wandered in the painted-desert lands, where all the colors God
  has made bewilder with their beauty, in the barest, dreariest,
  most unlovely bit of unfinished world that our great continent
  holds; the lands forgotten, maybe, when, in Creation's busy week,
  the evening and the morning were the sixth day, and the Great
  Builder looked on His work and called it good.
  
  We found the Hopi trails, but not the Hopi clan that we were
  seeking. We found Apache trails behind them, but only dimly
  marked, as if they blew one moccasin track full of sand before
  they made another.
  
  The October days were dreams of loveliness, and dawn and sunset
  on the desert were indescribably beautiful. But the nights were
  bitterly cold. Eloise and Sister Gloria were native to the
  Southwest and they knew how to dress warmly for it. Aunty Boone
  had never felt such chilling night breezes, but not one word of
  complaint came from her lips in all that journey.
  
  One night we gathered into camp beneath the shelter of a little
  butte. We had overtaken Father Josef's Indian runner an hour
  before. He had not found the Hopis yet, and so we held a
  council.
  
  "The Hopi is ahead of us northwest," the Indian declared.
  
  "Is the Apache following?" Jondo asked.
  
  The runner nodded. "They have been pursued, but they have slipped
  away; the Apache goes north, they turn north-west. They take the
  dry lands and the pine forests beyond; their last chance. If they
  hold out till the Apache leaves, they will return safely. You
  follow them, wait for them, or go back without them. It is your
  choice."
  
  We turned toward the three women, one in the bloom of her young
  womanhood, one with the patient endurance of the nun, one black
  and strong and always unafraid.
  
  "I do not want to leave Little Blue Flower in her hour of peril,"
  Eloise said.
  
  "I can go where I am needed," Sister Gloria declared.
  
  "This is my land, I never know Africa was right out here. I
  thought they was oceans on both sides of it. I go where Bev's
  gone out an then I come here and stay. Whoo-ee!"
  
  We smiled at her mistaken dream of her far African home, and,
  cheering one another on, when morning came we moved
  northwest.
  
  Jondo rode beside me all that day, and we talked of many
  things.
  
  "Gail," he said, "Aunty Boone is right. This is her Africa. I
  don't believe she will ever leave it."
  
  "She can't stay here, Jondo," I replied.
  
  "She will, though. You will see. Did she ever fail to have her
  way?"
  
  "No. She is a type of her own, never to be reproduced, but like a
  great dog in her faithful loyalty," I declared.
  
  "And shrewder than most men," Jondo went on. "She supplied the
  lost link with Santan for me last night. Years ago, when Little
  Blue Flower brought me a message from Father Josef on the morning
  that we took Eloise from Santa Fé, I caught a glimpse of
  the Apache across the plaza and read the message--'trust the
  bearer anywhere'--to mean that boy. Aunty Boone had just
  peered out and scared the little girl away. She told me all about
  it last night, when she was bewailing Beverly's hard fate. How
  small a thing can open the road to a big tragedy. I trusted that
  whelp till that day at San Christobal."
  
  "I hope we will finish this soon," I said. "I don't understand
  Beverly at all and I marvel at Little Blue Flower's love for him.
  Don't you?"
  
  Jondo looked up with a pathos in his dark-blue eyes.
  
  "Don't hurry, Gail. The trails all end somewhere soon. Life is a
  stranger thing from day to day, but the one thing that no man
  will ever fully understand is a woman's love for man. There is
  only one thing higher, and that is mother-love."
  
  "The kind that you and Uncle Esmond have," I said.
  
  "Oh, I am only a man, but Clarenden has a woman's heart, as you
  and Beverly and my sister's child all know."
  
  "Your sister's child?" I gasped.
  
  "Yes. When her parents went with yellow fever, too, I could not
  adopt Mat--you know why. Clarenden did it for me. She has always
  known that I am her uncle, but Mat was always a self-contained
  child."
  
  I loved Mat more than ever from that hour.
  
  The next day our trail ran into pine forests, where tall, shapely
  trees point skyward. Not a dense woodland, but a seemingly
  endless one. Snows lay in the darker places, and here and there
  streams trickled out into the sunlight, whose only sources were
  these melting snows. It was a land of silence and loneliness--a
  land forgotten or unknown to record. The Hopi trail was stronger
  here and we followed it eagerly, but night overtook us early in
  the forest.
  
  That evening we gathered about a huge fire of pine boughs beneath
  a low stone ridge covered with evergreen trees that sheltered us
  warmly from the sharp west winds. We heard the cries of
  night-roving beasts, and in the darkness, now and then, a pair of
  gleaming eyes, seen for an instant, and then the rush of feet,
  told us that some wild creature had looked for the first time on
  fire.
  
  "To-morrow night will see our journey's end," Jondo declared.
  "The Hopi can't be far away, and I'm sure they are safe yet, and
  we shall reach them before the Apache does."
  
  The Indian runner's face did not change its blankness, but I felt
  that he doubted Jondo's judgment. That night he slipped away and
  we never saw him again.
  
  We were all hopeful that night, and hopeful the next morning when
  we broke camp early. A trail we had not seen the night before ran
  up the low ridge to the west of us. Eloise and I followed it up a
  little way, riding abreast. The ridge really was a narrow, rocky
  tableland, and beyond it was another higher slope, up which the
  same trail ran. The trees were growing smaller and the sky flowed
  broad and blue above their tops. The ground was only rock, with a
  thin veneer of soil here and there. Gnarled, stunted cedars and
  gray, twisted cypress clung for a roothold to these barren
  ledges. The morning breeze swept, sharp and invigorating, out of
  a broad open space beyond the edge of this rocky woodland height.
  Eloise and I pushed on a little farther, leaving the others still
  on the narrow shelf above our camping-place.
  
  Suddenly, as we rode out of the closer timber to where the
  scattered growths were hardly higher than our heads, the first
  heaven and the first earth seemed to pass away--not in
  irreverence I write it--and we stood face to face with a new
  heaven and a new earth--where, in the Grand Cañon of the
  Colorado River, the sublimity of the Almighty Builder's beauty
  and omnipotence was voiced in one stupendous Word, wrought in
  enduring color in everlasting stone. Cleaving its way westward to
  some far-off sea, a wide abyss, a dozen miles across from lip to
  lip, yawned down to the very vitals of the earth. We stood upon
  the rim of it--a sheer cliff that dropped a thousand feet of
  solid limestone, in one plummet line, to other cliffs below, that
  dropped again through furlongs of black gneiss, red sandstone,
  and gray granite.
  
  Beyond this mighty chasm great forest trees were, to our eyes,
  only as weeds along its rim. Between that rim and ours we could
  look down upon high mountain buttes and sloping red tablelands,
  and dizzy gorges with pinnacled walls and towers and domes--vast
  forms no pen will ever picture--not hurled in wild confusion by
  titan fury, but symmetrical and purposeful and calm.
  
  Through slowly crawling millions of patiently wearing years,
  while stars grew old and perished from the firmament, with cloud,
  and frost, and wind, and water, and sharp cutting sands, these
  strata of the old earth's crust were chiseled into gigantic
  outlines, and all the worn-down, crumbled atoms of debris were
  swept through long, tortuous leagues of distance toward the sea
  by a mad river swirling through the lowest depths. A mile
  straight down, as the crow never flies here, it rushes, but to us
  the river was a mere creek, seen only where the lower gorges open
  to the channel.
  
  In the early light of that October morning the weird, vast shapes
  that filled, the abyss were bathed in a bewildering opulence of
  color. Pale gold along the farther rim, with pink and amber, blue
  and gray, and heliotrope and rose--all blending softly, tone on
  tone. Deeper, the heart of every rift and chasm that flows into
  the one stupendous mother-rift was full of purple shadows. Not
  the thin lavender of the upper world where we must live, but
  tensely, richly regal, beyond words to paint; with silvery mists
  above, soft, filmy veils that draped the jutting rocks and
  rounded each harsh edge, melting pink to rose and gray to violet.
  Eternal silence brooded over all this symbol, wrought in visible
  form, of His Almightiness, to whom a thousand years are as a day,
  and in the hollow of whose hand He holds the universe.
  Measureless, motionless, voiceless, it seemed as if all the
  cañons of all the mountains of our great contienent
  might have given to it here their awful depth and height and
  rugged strength; their picturesqueness, color, graceful outlines,
  dizzy steeps and awe-inspiring lengths and breadths. And fusing
  all these into itself, height on height, and breadth on breadth,
  entrancing charm on charm, with all the hues that the Great
  Alchemist can throw from His vast prism, it seemed to say:
  
  "'Twas only in a vision that St. John saw the four-square city
  whose twelve gates are each a single pearl! whose walls are
  builded on foundation stones of jasper, sapphire, and chalcedony,
  emerald and topaz, chrysolite and amethyst; whose streets are of
  pure gold, like unto clear glass; whose light is ever like unto a
  stone most precious.
  
  "To you who may not dream the vision beautiful, the Mighty Maker
  of all things sublime has given me a token here in finite stone
  and earthly coloring of that undreamed sublimity of all things
  omnipotent."
  
  My companion and I sat on our horses speechless, gazing down at
  this overwhelming marvel below us. We forgot ourselves, each
  other, our companions of the journey, its purpose, Beverly, and
  his enemy Santan, the desert, the brown plains, green prairies,
  rivers, mountains, the earth itself, as we stood there in the
  shadow of the Infinite.
  
  At last we turned and looked into each other's eyes for one long
  moment. In its space we read the old, old story through, and a
  great, up-leaping joy illumined our faces. God, who had let us
  know each other, had let us stand by this to feel the
  barrier of misunderstanding fall away.
  A sound of horses' hoofs on the rocky slope below us, a weird
  Indian call, and a great shout from our calverymen drew us
  to earth again. The Hopis were coming. Father Josef knew the
  signal. Our Indian runner had found them in the night and sent
  them toward us. We dashed into the forest, keeping close
  together; and here, a mile away, under green pines, surrounded by
  a little group of a desert Hopi clan, was Beverly Clarenden--big,
  strong, unhurt and joyful. And Little Blue Flower.
  
  The years since that far night when I had seen two maidens in
  Grecian robes beside the Flat Rock in the "Moon of the Peach
  Blossom," had left no trace on Eloise St. Vrain, save to imprint
  the graces of womanliness on her girlish face. But the
  picturesque Indian maiden of that night looked aged and sorrowful
  in the pine forest of her native land, bent, as she was, with the
  dull existence of her own people; she, who had known and loved a
  different form of life. Only the big, luminous eyes held their
  old charm.
  
  We came together in a little open space with pine-trees all about
  us. The minutes went swiftly then--and I must hurry to what came
  hurrying on, for much of it is lost in mist and wonder.
  
  In the moment of glad reunion Aunty Boone suddenly gave a whoop
  the like of which I had never heard before, and, dashing wildly
  toward Eloise and Sister Gloria, she drove them in a fierce
  charge straight back into the shelter of the pine-trees.
  
  At the same time a sudden rain of bullets, like a swift
  hail-storm, and a yell--the Apache cry of vengeance--filled the
  air. Long afterward we learned that our Indian runner had met
  this band and tried to turn it back--and failed. He would have
  saved us if he could.
  
  It was over soon--that encounter in the forest where each tree
  was a shield. The cavalrymen and maybe, too, we who had been
  plainsmen, knew how to drive back a villianous handful of
  Apaches. In any other moment since we had ridden out of Sante
  Fé we would have laughed at such a struggle. They
  took us in the most unguarded instant of that fortnight's
  journey.
  
  The Hopis fled wildly out of sight. Here and there, from the
  defeated, scattered band, an Apache warrior sprang back and lost
  himself quickly in the shadows. But Santan, plunging into our
  very midst, seized Little Blue Flower in his iron grip, and the
  bullet from a cavalry carbine, meant for him, struck her.
  
  He laughed and threw her back and, whirling, dashed--into the
  arms of Aunty Boone--and stopped.
  
  We carried our wounded tenderly up the steep wooded slope and out
  into the sweet sunlight of its crest, where we laid them down
  beside that wondrous rift with its shimmering mist and velvet
  shadows, and colorings of splendor, folded all in the
  magnificence of its immensity and its eternal silence.
  
  We knew that Jondo's wound was mortal, and Father Josef and
  Eloise and Rex Krane sat beside him, as the brave eyes looked out
  across the sublimity of earthly beauty toward the far land no eye
  hath seen, facing, unafraid, the outward-leading trail.
  
  But Beverly was in the prime of young manhood, and we felt sure
  of him, as Esmond Clarenden and Sister Gloria; and I ministered
  to his wants.
  
  "It's no use, Gail." My cousin lifted a pleading face to mine a
  moment, as on that day, years ago on the parade-ground at Fort
  Leavenworth. Then the bright smile came back to stay.
  
  "Why, Bev, you have a life before you, and you aren't the only
  Eighteenth Kansas man who deserted. We can pull you through
  somehow--and people will forget. Even General Sheridan was
  willing to send a squad with us, on the possibility of a mistake
  somewhere."
  
  "Deserted!" Beverly's voice was too strong for a dying man's.
  "Uncle Esmond, Jondo, Eloise--all of you--Gail calls me a
  deserter. Me! Knock him over that precipice, won't some of
  you?"
  
  We listened eagerly as he went on:
  
  "Why, don't you know that Charlie Bent and his renegade dogs
  crawled into camp like snakes and carried me out by force. They
  had a time of it, too, but never mind. Bent told me he left a
  note for you. I supposed he would say I was dead. And when Gail
  stirred, half awake, he went pacing around the camp, looking so
  near like me I thought it was myself and I was Charlie Bent. I
  was roped and gagged then, but I could see. Deserter! I'm glad I
  got that white horse of his on the Prairie Dog Creek,
  anyhow."
  
  Beverly's face paled suddenly and he lay still a little
  while.
  
  "I'd better hurry." The smile was winsome. "They didn't give me a
  ghost of a chance to escape, but they didn't harm a hair. They
  kept me for a meaner purpose, and, well, I was landed, finally,
  at Santan's door-step in the Apache-land. Santan offered to let
  me go free if I'd persuade Little Blue Flower--dead down
  there--to marry him. He had her come to me on pretense of my
  sending for her. She hated the brute, and she was a woman, if she
  was an Indian. I told him I'd see him in hell first, and I told
  her never to give in. Poor girl! It was a cruel test, but Santan
  knew how to be cruel. He said he'd fix me, and I guess he has
  done it."
  
  "Oh no, Bev. You are good for a century," I declared,
  affectionately, holding his head on my knee.
  
  "Little Blue Flower managed, somehow, to fool the Apache dog, and
  we escaped and got away to her people," Beverly continued,
  speaking more slowly, "then she sent word to Father Josef. But
  the Hopi folks were scared about the Apaches coming against them
  on account of harboring me, like a Jonah, among 'em; and they
  were going to make it hard for Little Blue Flower. I don't know
  heathen ethics in such things, but a handful of us had to cut for
  it. I'm no deserter, though. Don't forget that. As soon as I
  could be sure the little Indian woman's life was safe I was going
  to get away and come home. I could not leave her to be sacrificed
  after she had saved me from Santan's scalping-knife."
  
  Beverly paused and looked at us. His voice seemed weaker when he
  spoke again:
  
  "I thought, sometimes, that even if I wasn't to blame for it, I
  ought to take Little Blue Flower with me when I got away. Dear
  little girl! she gave me one smile and whispered 'Lolomi'
  before she went just now. I told her long ago I was just
  everybody's friend. I never meant to spoil anybody's life, and I
  can meet her down at the end of the trail and never fear."
  
  Just then a half-wailing, half-purring cry came from Aunty Boone,
  who was standing beside a gnarled cypress-tree.
  
  "I knowed the morning we picked up Little Blue Flower, back at
  Pawnee Rock, we was pickin' up trouble for the rest of the trail.
  I see it then. You can trust a nigger 'cause they never no
  'count, but you don't know what you gettin' when you trust an
  Indian. But, Cla'nden, that Apache Indian, Santan, ain't goin' to
  trouble you no more. When the world ain't no fit place for folks
  they needs helpin' out of it, and I sees to it they gets it, too.
  Whoo-ee!" She paused and leaned against the crooked cypress. Half
  turning her face toward us, she continued in a clear, soft
  voice:
  
  "That man they call Ramero down in Santy Fee--I knowed him when
  he was just Fred Ramer back in the rice-fields country. His
  father, old man Ramer, tried to kill me once, 'cause he said I
  knowed too much. I helped him into kingdom come right then and
  saved a lot of misery. They blamed some other folks, I guess, but
  they never hunted me up at all. Good-by, Clan'den, and you, too,
  Felix, and Dick Verra. I've knowed you all these years, but
  nobody takes no 'count of niggers' knowin's. Good-by, Little
  Lees, and all you boys. I'll see you again pretty soon, I'm goin'
  back to my desset now. It's over yonder just a little way.
  Jondo--but you won't be John Doe then. Whoo-ee!"
  
  Aunty Boone slowly settled down beside the cypress, with her face
  toward her beloved "desset," and when we went to her a little
  later, her eyes, still looking eastward, saw nothing earthly any
  more forever.
  
  Jondo's face seemed glorified as he caught Aunty Boone's last
  words, and his voice was sweet and clear as he looked up at
  Eloise bending over him.
  
  "Thank God! It is all made right at last. Eloise, the charge of
  murder against your father's name would have broken the heart of
  the woman that I always loved--your mother. One of us had to bear
  the shame. I took the guilt on myself for her sake--and for
  yours. I have walked the trails of my life a nameless man, but I
  have kept my soul clean in God's sight, and I know His name will
  soon be written on my forehead over there."
  
  He gazed out toward the glorious beauty of the view beyond him,
  then closed his eyes, and, bravely as he had lived, so bravely he
  went forth on the Long Trail, leaving a name sweet with the
  perfume of self-sacrifice and love.
  
  We did not speak of him to Beverly, for our boy had suddenly
  grown restless, and his blood was threshing furiously in his
  veins, and he was in pain, but only briefly.
  
  Presently he said, "Let us be alone a little." The others drew
  away.
  
  "Lean down, Gail. I want to tell you something." He smiled
  sweetly upon me as I bent over him.
  
  "I tried to tell you back on the Smoky Hill, but I'd promised not
  to. And honor was something to me still. But I'm going pretty
  soon. So listen! I loved Eloise always--always. But she never
  cared for me. She was only my good chum. I've been too
  happy-hearted all my days, though, Gail, to make a cross of
  anything that would break me down. Men differ so, you know, and I
  never was a dreamer like you. Turn me a little, won't you, so
  that I can see that awful beauty down there."
  
  I lifted his shoulders gently and placed him where his eyes could
  rest on the majestic scene spread out before him.
  
  "Eloise loves you, but she thinks you would not marry her because
  they say her father was a murderer. I don't believe that, Gail. I
  told her that you didn't, either, not one little minute. You care
  for her, I know, and losing her will break your heart. I tried to
  tell you long ago, but Little Lees made me promise not to say a
  word that night at Burlingame when you had gone away and I
  thought maybe I had a half-chance with her. Tell me you'll make
  her happy, Gail."
  
  "Oh, Beverly, I'll do my best," I murmured, softly.
  
  "Come closer, Gail. Look at those colors there. Is it so far
  across, or only seeming so? And see the soft white clouds drop
  purple shadows down. Is that the way the trail runs? How
  beautiful it must be farther on. Good-by, old boy of my heart's
  heart, and don't forget, however long the years, and wide away
  your feet may go, to keep the old trail law. 'Hold fast.'"
  
  We laid them away in the deep pine forest--Aunty Boone, of
  strange, prophetic vision; Santan, the cruel Indian; the loyal
  Hopi maiden; Jondo and Beverly. God made them all and in His
  heaven they will be rightly placed.
  
  Beside the cañon's rim, in the soft twilight hour of that
  October day, Eloise St. Vrain and I plighted our troth, till
  death us do part--for just a little while. Plighted it not in
  happy, selfish affection, such as youth and maiden give,
  sometimes, each to each; but in the deep, marvelous love of man
  and woman pledged where, in sacred moments on that day, we had
  seen the mortal put on immortality. To us there could be no
  grander, richer, lovelier setting for life's best and holiest
  hour than here, where, upon things finite, there rests the
  beneficent uplifting beauty that shadows forth the Infinite. 
  The heart that's never old! Oh the heart that's never old!--
  'Tis a vision of the lavender, the crimson and the gold
  Of an airy, fairy morning, when the sky is all ablaze
  With an ever-changing splendor, driving back the gloom and
  haze!
  
  'Tis the vision of an orchard in the balmy month of May,
  Where the birds are ever singing, and the leaves are ever
  gay;
  Where the sun is ever shining with a glory never told,
  And the trees are ever blooming--for the heart that's never
  old!
  
                                          --JAMES E. HILKEY.
  The summers and winters of fifty golden years have brought to the
  plains their balmy breezes and blazing heat, their soft,
  life-giving showers, and their fierce, blizzard anger. And down
  through these fifty years Eloise St. Vrain and I have walked the
  love trails of the plains together.
  
  In the early spring of this, our "golden-wedding" year, we sat on
  the veranda of our suburban home in Kansas City, above the
  picturesque Cliff Drive, rippling with automobiles. The same
  drive winds in its course somewhere near the old, rough road that
  once led from the Clarenden home, above the valley of the Kaw,
  down to the little city of great promise--now fulfilled.
  
  "Eloise, youth may have a charm that is all its own," I said to
  my wife, "but I wonder if it really matches the enduring charm of
  age when one looks back on busy years of service."
  
  Eloise smiled up at me--the same gracious smile that has lighted
  all my days with her.
  
  "You are a dreamer still, Gail. But dreams do so sweeten life and
  keep the fires of romance forever burning."
  
  "When did romance begin with you, Little Lees?" I asked.
  
  "I think it was on that day when I came bounding up to the door
  of the old San Miguel church," Eloise replied, "and saw you
  looking like a big, brown bob-cat, or something else, that might
  have slept in the Hondo 'Royo all your life. But withal a boy so
  loyal to the helpless that you were willing to fight for me
  against an assailant bigger than yourself. You became my prince
  in that hour, and all my dreams since then have been of you. When
  did romance begin with you, or have you forgotten in the busy
  years of a life swallowed up in mercantile pursuits?"
  
  "My life may have been, as you say, swallowed up in building
  trade that builds empire, but I have never forgotten the things
  that make it fine to me," I answered her. "Romance for me began
  one day, long ago, out on the parade-ground at Fort Leavenworth.
  I've been a Vanguard of the Plains since then, bull-whacker for
  the ox-teams that hauled the commerce of the West; cavalryman in
  hard-wearing Indian campaigns that defended the frontier; and
  merchant, giving measure for measure always, like that grand man
  who taught me the worth of business--Esmond Clarenden."
  
  "On the parade-ground? How there?" Eloise asked.
  
  "It came the day that I first knew we were to go with Uncle
  Esmond to Santa Fé--for you. We didn't know that it was
  for you then. I think I was born again that day into a daring
  plainsman, who had been a sort of baby-boy before. I sat with Mat
  and Beverly on the edge of the parade-ground, when I looked up to
  see, with a boy's day-dreaming eyes, somewhere this side of misty
  mountain peaks, a vision of a cloud of golden hair about a sweet
  child face, with dark eyes looking into mine. That vision stayed
  with me until, one morning, fifty years ago, on the rim of the
  Grand Cañon--you looked into my eyes again and I knew my
  life dream had come true."
  
  I rose and, bending over my wife's cloud of beautiful silvery
  hair, I kissed her gently on each fair cheek.
  
  "Gail, why not take the old trail for our golden-wedding
  anniversary--a long journey, clear to the mountains?" Eloise
  suggested.
  
  "There is no trail now; only its ghost haunting the way," I
  replied, "but, Little Lees, I don't believe that we who look back
  on so many happy years, after the stormy ones of early life,
  could find any other path half so dear to us as that long path we
  knew in childhood and early youth, and the one we followed
  together in our first years of mature womanhood and manhood."
  
  And so we did not celebrate one October day with all of our
  children and grandchildren and friends coming to offer us gold
  coins, gold-headed canes--which I do not use--and gold-rimmed
  glasses for eyes that see farther and clearer than my spectacled
  grandsons at the university can see to-day. We made a golden
  summer of the thing and followed where, like a will-o'-the-wisp
  of memory, the Santa Fé Trail of threescore years ago
  reached from the raw frontier at Independence on to the Missouri
  bluffs, clear to the sunny valley of the Holy Faith.
  
  Only a headstone at long intervals shows the way now--a stone
  that well might read:
Here ran the old Santa Fé Trail. This
  stone, set here, is sacred to
  the memory of the Vanguards of the Plains who followed it.
They stand, these "markers" now, on hilltops and in deep
  valleys; by country crossroads and where main streets cut each
  other in the towns and villages. They ornament the city parks,
  they show where splendid concrete bridges, re-enforced with
  structural steel, span streams that once the ox-teams doubled and
  trebled strength to ford. They gleam where corn grows tall and
  black on fertile prairies; where seas of wheat have flooded
  barren, burning plains, and perfumey alfalfa sweetens the air
  above what was once grassless desolation. They whisper of a day
  gone by among the silent mountains, where tunnels let the iron
  trail run easily under the old trail's dizzy path. They nestle in
  the shadows of gray-green cliffs and by red mesa heights; until
  the last monument, sacred to the memory of a day forgotten,
  speaks at the corner of the old Plaza in the heart of Santa
  Fé.
  
  That was a journey long to be remembered--the long,
  golden-wedding journey of Gail Clarenden with his wife, Eloise
  St. Vrain, and all of it was sweet with memories of other days.
  Not in peril and privation and uncertainty did we follow the
  trail now. The Pullman has replaced the Conestoga wagon, dainty
  viands the coarse food smoke-blackened over camp-fires, and never
  fear of Kiowa nor Comanche broke our slumber. The long shriek
  that cuts the air of dawn was not from wild marauders on a
  daybreak raid down lonely cañons, but from the throats of
  splendid, steel-wrought engines swinging forth upon their solid,
  certain course.
  
  The prairies still lap up to the edges of the little town of
  Burlingame, whose main street is still the old trail's path. The
  well has long since disappeared from the center of the place.
  Where once the thirsty gathered here to drink, there stands a
  monument sacred to the memory of the old trail days. And sacred,
  too, to the memory of the one far-visioned woman, Fannie Geiger
  Thompson, who first conceived the thought of marking for the
  coming generations the course of commerce that built up the West
  in years gone by.
  
  We never lived in Burlingame, where once--a heart-hungry little
  boy--I longed to have a home. But the Krane children and their
  children's children still make it an abiding-place for us.
  
  To Council Grove, and old Pawnee Rock, the Cimarron Crossing of
  the Arkansas River, the open plain about the site of old Fort
  Bent--where only ghosts of walls and the court remain, and on to
  Santa Fé, dreamy and picturesque--hoary with age, and
  sweet with sacred memories, we wandered on our golden-wedding
  trail.
  
  The name of Narveo in New Mexico still stands for gentleman. The
  old church of San Miguel still shelters troubled hearts, and in
  the San Christobal valley the Pictured Rocks still build up a
  rude stair for feet that still may need the sanctuary rim of
  safety set about them. Along the length of the old trail a
  marvelous fifty years have enriched a history whose epic days
  record the deeds of vanguards, who foreran and builded for the
  softer days of golden-wedding years. The last lap of all that
  wondrous journey bore us in ease and comfort beyond the
  desert--the Africa, of Aunty Boone's weird fancy--to the Grand
  Cañon of the Colorado. Here, as of old, the riven crust,
  in its eternal silence, and sublimity, and beauty indescribable,
  calmly, year by year, reveals its mighty purpose:
To quarry the heart of earth,
      Till, in the rock's red rise,
    Its age and birth, through an awful girth
    Of strata, should show the wonder-worth
      Of patience to all eyes.
Amid luxurious surroundings we lived the October days upon the
  cañon's rim, where, half a century ago, we had gone in
  hardship and looked on tragedy. We crept down all the dizzy
  lengths to the very heart of it, and ate and slept in easy
  comfort, and gazed upward at the sky-cleaving edges thousands of
  feet above us; we stood beside the raging Colorado River, which
  no man had explored when we first looked upon it here. In the
  serene hours of our sunset years we went back in memory over the
  long way our feet had come. Life is easy for us now, made so by
  all the splendid, simple forces of those who, in justice,
  honesty, and broad human sympathy build enduring empire. Not
  empire gained by bomb and liquid fire, defended by sharp
  entanglement and cross-trenched to shut out enemies; but empire
  builded on the commerce of the land, value for value; empire of
  bridged rivers, quick transportation on steel-marked trails that
  girdle harvest fields and fruitful pastures; empire of homes and
  schools and sacred shrines.
  
  Our fifty golden years have seen such empire rise and grow before
  our eyes, made great by thrift and business sense, swayed by the
  Golden Rule. An empire rich in love and sweet romance and
  thrilling deeds of courage and self-sacrifice. Glad am I to have
  been a vanguard of its trails upon the Kansas prairies and the
  far Western plains, sure now, as always down the years, that its
  old law is still a righteous one: To that which is good--
"HOLD FAST."
| THE WORLD FOR SALE THE MONEY MASTER THE JUDGMENT HOUSE THE RIGHT OF WAY THE LADDER OF SWORDS THE WEAVERS THE BATTLE OF THE STRONG WHEN VALMOND CAME TO PONTIAC THE LANE THAT HAD NO TURNING NORTHERN LIGHTS PIERRE AND HIS PEOPLE AN ADVENTURER OF THE NORTH A ROMANY OF THE SNOWS CUMNER'S SON, AND OTHER SOUTH SEA FOLK | 
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In this book of leisurely wanderings the author journeys among the various holiday resorts of the United States from Maine to Atlantic City, Newport, Bar Harbor, the Massachusetts beaches, Long Island Sound, the Great Lakes, Niagara, ever-young Greenbriar White and other Virginia Springs, Saratoga, White Mountains, the winter resorts of Florida, the Carolinas and California. Illustrated in Color
All those who are on the lookout for an unusual way to spend a vacation will find suggestions here. This book of leisurely travel in New Hampshire and Vermont has been reprinted to meet the demand for a work that has never failed to charm since its first publication more than a decade ago. Illustrated
In this book the author gives a chatty account of his trip along the outskirts of Australian civilization. The big cities were merely passed through, and the journeying was principally by stage-coach, on camel-back, or by small coastal steamers from Western Australia to New Guinea. Illustrated in Tint
The California of to-day and the
  California of yesterday with its picturesque story, are set forth
  in this book by the one writer who could bring to it the skill
  united with that love for the task of a Californian-born,
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  to the California of 1915. Illustrated
[Transcriber's note: The spelling irregularities of the original have been preserved in this etext.]