knocked him over th' eege! One of these days some of us may be quittin' Kane, an' then there'll be one struttin' half-breed less in Mesquite. Tell you one thing: I won't make this drive many more times before I know th' way as well as he does; an' from here on we could stake it out.'
Soft, derisive laughter replied to him and the trail-boss thoughtfully repacked his pipe. 'It ain't in you,' he said. 'You got to be born with it.'
'You holdin' that a white man ain't got as much brains as a mongrel with nobody knows how many different kinds of blood in him?' indignantly demanded Sandy.
'He's got generations behind him, like a setter or a pointer, an' it ain't a question of brains. It's instinct, an' th' lower down yore stock runs th' better it'll be. There ain't no human brains can equal an animal's in things like that. I doubt if you could leave here an' get off this desert, plumb west or not. You got a big target, for it's all around you behind th' horizon; but I don't think you'd live till you hit it at th' right place. Don't forget that th' horizon moves with you. If there wasn't no tracks showin' you th' way you'd die out on this fryin' pan.'
'An' th' wind'll wipe them out before mornin',' said one of the others.
The doubter laughed outright. 'Wait till we come back. I'll give you a chance to back up yore convictions. Don't forget that I ain't sayin' that I'd try it afoot. I'd ride an' give th' horse it's head. There ain't nothin' to be gained arguin' about it now. An' I'm free to admit that I'm cussed glad to be settin' here lookin' out instead of out there some'ers tryin' to get here to look in. Gimme a match, Jud.'
The trail-boss snorted. 'Now yo're tak 'n'
'I'll take that when we start back,' retorted Sandy, 'if you'll give me a fair number of canteens. I'm fig' gerin' on outfittin' right.'
'Take all you want at Cimarron corrals,' rejoined the trail-boss. 'After we leave there I'm bettin' nobody will part with any of theirs.' He looked keenly at the boaster and took no further part in the conversation, his mind busy with a new problem; the grudge he already had.
HOPALONG and Red liked their camp and were pleased that they could stay in it another day and night. They jerked the bear meat in the sun and smoke and took a much-needed bath in the creek, where the gentle application of sand freed them from the unwelcome guests which the jail had given them. Clothing washed and inspected quickly dried in the sun and wind. Neither of them had anything on but a sombrero and the effect was somewhat startling. Red picked up his saddle pad to fling it over a rock for a sun bath and was about to let go of it when he looked closer.
'Hey, did you rip open this pad?' he asked, eying his friend speculatively.
Hopalong added his armful of fuel to the pile near the fire and eyed his friend. 'For a growed man you shore do ask some childish questions,' he retorted. 'Of course I did. I allus rip open saddle pads. All my life I been rippin' open every saddle pad I saw. Many a time I got mad when I found a folded blanket instead of a pad. I've got up nights an' gone wanderin' around looking for pads to rip open. You look like you had sense, but looks shore is deceivin'. Why'n blazes would I rip open yore saddle pad? I reckon it's plumb wore out an' just nat'rally come apart. You've had it since Adam made th' sun stand still.'
'You must 'a' listened to some sky pilot with yore feet!' retorted Red. 'Adam didn't make th' sun stand still. That was Moses, so they'd have longer light for to hunt for him in. An' you needn't get steamed up, neither. Somebody ripped this pad, with a knife, too. Seein' that it was in th' same camp all night with you, I nat'rally asked. I'm shore
Hopalong's amusement at the ripping of his companion's pad faded out as he grabbed his own and looked at it. 'Well, I'm cussed!' he muttered. 'It shore was ripped, all right. It never come apart by itself.
'They didn't play no favorites, anyhow,' growled Red. 'Wonder what they thought they'd find? Jewels?'
Hopalong pushed back his hat and gently scratched a scalp somewhat tender from the sand treatment. 'Things like that don't just happen,' he said, reflectively. 'There's allus a reason for things.' He grew thoughtful again and studied the pad. 'Mebby they wasn't lookin' for anythin',' he muttered, suspiciously.
Red snorted. 'Just doin' it for practice, mebby?' he asked, sarcastically. 'Not havin' nothin' else
'We was accused of robbin' th' bank, Reddie,' said Hopalong in patient explanation. 'They knowed we didn't do it—so they must 'a' wanted us to be blamed for it. Th' best proof they could have, not seein' us do it, was to plant somethin' to be found on us. This is past yore ABC eddication, but I'll try to hammer it into you. If it makes you dizzy, hold up yore hand. What does a bank have that everybody wants? Money! Why do people rob banks? To get money, you sage-hen! What would bank robbers have after they robbed a bank? Money, you locoed cow! Now, Reddie, there's
'Too bad they got us out of jail—
'Now,' continued his companion, looking into the pad, 'if some of them numbered bills was found on us they'd have us, wouldn't they? We wasn't supposed to have no friends. An' where would a couple of robbers be likely to carry dangerous money? On their hats? No, Reddie;
'It started some time ago,' said Red innocently.
'What did?'
'Th' bakin'. You didn't get that hat on quick enough,' his friend jeered. 'I've heard of people eatin' cooked calves' brains, but they'd get little nourishment an' only a moldy flavor out of yourn. An' you'd shore look better with
Hopalong mumbled something and slid into his underwear. 'Gee!' he exulted. 'These clean clothes shore do feel good!'
'
'They're its edge,' grunted Hopalong, rearranging the strips of meat over the fire. Both became silent, going back in their memories to the events of years before, when the Staked Plain had been very real and threatening to them.
At daylight the following morning they arose and not much later were riding slowly southward and as near the creek as the nature of its banks would allow. When the noon sun blazed down on them they found the creek dwindling rapidly and, glancing ahead down the sandy valley they could make out the dark, moist place where the last of it disappeared in the sands. They watered their horses, drank their fill and went on again toward the place where they were to meet Johnny, riding on a curving course which led them closer and closer to the forbidding hills. In mid-afternoon they came to a salt pond and instead of arguing about the matter with their thirsty mounts, let