going to take to it.

A time or two I glanced over at Dorinda Robiseau. She lay quiet, resting easy, as she should have, for that bed of mine was a good one, and the sand I'd spread it on was deep and free of rocks, more comfortable than many a mattress. I could only see the white of her face, the darkness of her loosened hair.

She would be a trial in the days to come, but somehow I felt better just having her there.

It worried me, though ... why were those men chasing her? And were they the law?

Remembering the men at the bar, I doubted it.

They had a bad look about them. One thing was sure: if we faced up to each other out here in this lonely desert I was going to be glad that I was packing a gun.

That big-shouldered man who had stood with his back to me ... he worried me. Why was there something familiar about him?

I awakened with a start, coming from a sound sleep to sharp attention.

Dorinda was sitting up, wide-eyed. 'I heard something,' she whispered.

'What?'

'I don't know. Something woke me.'

My six-shooter was in my hand, and I looked first at the horses. They were standing heads up, looking off across the desert toward the east.

Rolling up, I put my six-shooter down carefully and shook out my boots--scorpions take notions to hide in boots and such like--and tugged them on.

A glance at the stars told me it was shaping up for daybreak. 'Get up, and be very quiet,' I said. 'We're moving out.'

She offered me no argument, and I'll give her this: she made herself ready in quicker time than I'd expected from any tenderfoot woman. By the time I'd saddled fresh horses, she had my bed rolled, and rolled good and tight.

Standing close in the dark, I said, 'There's another spring not more than a mile over to the east.

Sound carries far through a desert night.'

Me, I wasn't alt sure that whoever had made that sound was that far away, but it could be somebody searching for a waterhole.

We stepped into our saddles and I led off, heading due south, and keeping our horses in soft sand wherever I could. The Providence Mountains loomed high on our right, bleak, hard-shouldered mountains.

It was rugged going, but the night was cool and there was enough gray in the sky to enable a man to pick his trail. After riding about eight miles we left the rocks behind and had the Providence Mountains still on our right, with bald and open desert on our left, stretching away for miles toward distant hills.

'We're riding south,' she said.

It was a question more than a statement, so I gave her the answer. 'You want to get to Los Angeles, don't you? Well, I'm leaving the trail to them. We're going south, and then west through another pass.'

What I didn't tell her was that I had only heard of that pass, and had only a rough idea of where it was. I knew that a stage line and a freight road went through that pass to the placer diggings around La Paz, on the Colorado.

The sky turned to lemon over the distant mountains, a warning that the sun would soon be burning over us. Somewhere to the south there were other springs, but I doubted if they would be easily found. The desert has a way of hiding its water in unexpected places, sometimes marked by willows, cottonwood, or palm trees, but often enough right out in a bottom with nothing but low brush around, and not a likely thing to indicate water. And we wouldn't have time to spend looking.

She rode up alongside me. 'You're not a very talkative man.'

'No, ma'am.'

'Are you married?'

'If you're wonderin' about that scar on my cheekbone, I got that in a knife fight in New Orleans.'

'You have no family?'

'Me? I got more family than you could shake a stick at. I got family all over the country ... only I am a lonesome kind of man, given to travel and such. I never was one to abide.'

She looked at me curiously and, it seemed to me, kind of sharp. Then she said, 'Where are you from, Mr. Tell? You hadn't said.'

'No, ma'am. I hadn't.'

We rode on for a couple of miles after that.

A road runner showed up and raced out ahead of us, seeming glad of the company. Overhead there was nothing but sky, a sky changing from gray to brass with the sun coming up. Those mountains on our right, they were cool now, but within two hours they'd be blasting heat back at us.

'A few miles now, you keep your eyes open. We'll come up to a water hole, and I'd prefer not to miss it.'

She offered no comment, and it was just as well. But she was a mighty pretty woman, and I'd have preferred riding easy with her, not worrying about folks coming up on me unexpected.

'You in some kind of trouble, ma'am?'

'I hadn't mentioned it,' she said, coolly enough.

Well, that was fair. Only I was taking a risk, helping her this way.

It grew hot ... and hotter. Not a breath of air stirred. The white sands around us turned to fire.

Heat waves shimmered a veil across the distance.

We saw strange pools of water out there on the desert. Sweat trickled into our eyes. Our horses plodded along slowly; sweat streaked the gray film of dust that lay over them, and over us.

Neither of us was of any mind to talk now.

From time to time I turned to look back, for we were out in the open, masked only by the shimmering heat waves and the wall of the mountain along which we rode.

There was nothing behind us but heat waves and the far-off shoulder of mountain.

Cook's Well was some place along here, but we missed it, and I was of no mind to waste time in search. Blind Spring lay somewhere ahead, and if we missed that, there would be no water until Cottonwood, down at the end of the mountain chain.

Had they cut in after us? Or were they, as I hoped, riding west along the Government Road toward Marl Spring?

'It might make a lot of difference,' I spoke out suddenly, 'if I knew how anxious they were to find you.'

She let her horse go on a few steps before she made answer, and then she said, 'The man who is after me would kill you or a half dozen others to put his hands on me ... and then he would kill me.'

Well, that answered that.

At high noon we drew up and I helped her down. I switched saddles and sponged out the mouths of our horses with water from a canteen.

We each had a drink, and then we mounted up again and started on.

All the long day through we pushed on, and it was coming on to dark when I finally gave up on Blind Spring. We'd been too far out from the mountain or too close in, one or the other. The water in our canteens was low, and I hated to think what would happen if we didn't find water soon. We might make it, but the horses could not; and without the horses we would be helpless.

At dusk we halted and stripped the saddles from our horses and I worked over them, rubbing them down, sponging out their mouths. Whatever Dorinda thought she wasn't inclined to say, nor was I inclined to listen.

The night came on, soft and dark, with the stars hanging easy in the sky. A cool wind blew up from somewhere, just a smidgin of it, but it felt good. When I was finished with the horses I dug into my saddlebags for the last of the bread. It was hard and dry, but when I broke off a chunk and passed it to her, she tied into x like it was cake.

We sat there on a sandbank, chewing away, and finally she said, 'We're in trouble, aren't we?'

'It's like this,' I said. 'According to what I was told, from the point of the mountain we've got a three- cornered chance. Within three or four miles of this place there are three springs, they say, so we've a fair chance of locating one of them.'

Вы читаете Mojave Crossing
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