was abundantly covered with a long grass, still partly green.  Mesquites and palo verdes dotted the arroyo and gradually closed in thickets that obstructed the view.  'Shore it all beats me,' exclaimed Ladd.  'What a place to hole-up in!  We could have hid here for a long time.  Boys, I saw mountain sheep, the real old genuine Rocky Mountain bighorn.  What do you think of that?'

  'I reckon it's a Yaqui hunting-ground,' replied Lash.  'That trail we hit must be hundreds of years old.  It's worn deep and smooth in iron lava.'

  'Well, all I got to say is–Beldin' was shore right about the Indian.  An' I can see Rojas's finish somewhere up along that awful hell-hole.'

  Camp was made on a level spot.  Yaqui took the horses to water, and then turned them loose in the arroyo.  It was a tired and somber group that sat down to eat.  The strain of suspense equaled the wearing effects of the long ride.  Mercedes was calm, but her great dark eyes burned in her white face.  Yaqui watched her.  The others looked at her with unspoken pride.  Presently Thorne wrapped her in his blankets, and she seemed to fall asleep at once.  Twilight deepened.  The campfire blazed brighter.  A cool wind played with Mercedes's black hair, waving strands across her brow.

  Little of Yaqui's purpose or plan could be elicited from him.  But the look of him was enough to satisfy even Thorne.  He leaned against a pile of wood, which he had collected, and his gloomy gaze pierced the campfire, and at long intervals strayed over the motionless form of the Spanish girl.

  The rangers and Thorne, however, talked in low tones.  It was absolutely impossible for Rojas and his men to reach the waterhole before noon of the next day.  And long before that time the fugitives would have decided on a plan of defense.  What that defense would be, and where it would be made, were matters over which the men considered gravely.  Ladd averred the Yaqui would put them into an impregnable position, that at the same time would prove a death-trap for their pursuers.  They exhausted every possibility, and then, tired as they were, still kept on talking.

  'What stuns me is that Rojas stuck to our trail,' said Thorne, his lined and haggard face expressive of dark passion.  'He has followed us into this fearful desert.  He'll lose men, horses, perhaps his life.  He's only a bandit, and he stands to win no gold.  If he ever gets out of here it 'll be by herculean labor and by terrible hardship.  All for a poor little helpless woman–just a woman! My God, I can't understand it.'

  'Shore–just a woman,' replied Ladd, solemnly nodding his head.

  Then there was a long silence during which the men gazed into the fire.  Each, perhaps, had some vague conception of the enormity of Rojas's love or hate–some faint and amazing glimpse of the gulf of human passion.  Those were cold, hard, grim faces upon which the light flickered.

  'Sleep,' said the Yaqui.

  Thorne rolled in his blanket close beside Mercedes.  Then one by one the rangers stretched out, feet to the fire.  Gale found that he could not sleep.  His eyes were weary, but they would not stay shut; his body ached for rest, yet he could not lie still.  The night was so somber, so gloomy, and the lava-encompassed arroyo full of shadows.  The dark velvet sky, fretted with white fire, seemed to be close.  There was an absolute silence, as of death.  Nothing moved–nothing outside of Gale's body appeared to live.  The Yaqui sat like an image carved out of lava.  The others lay prone and quiet.  Would another night see any of them lie that way, quiet forever?  Gale felt a ripple pass over him that was at once a shudder and a contraction of muscles.  Used as he was to the desert and its oppression, why should he feel to-night as if the weight of its lava and the burden of its mystery were bearing him down?

  He sat up after a while and again watched the fire.  Nell's sweet face floated like a wraith in the pale smoke– glowed and flushed and smiled in the embers.  Other faces shone there–his sister's –that of his mother.  Gale shook off the tender memories.  This desolate wilderness with its forbidding silence and its dark promise of hell on the morrow–this was not the place to unnerve oneself with thoughts of love and home.  But the torturing paradox of the thing was that this was just the place and just the night for a man to be haunted.

  By and by Gale rose and walked down a shadowy aisle between the mesquites.  On his way back the Yaqui joined him. Gale was not surprised.  He had become used to the Indian's strange guardianship.  But now, perhaps because of Gale's poignancy of thought, the contending tides of love and regret, the deep, burning premonition of deadly strife, he was moved to keener scrutiny of the Yaqui.  That, of course, was futile.  The Indian was impenetrable, silent, strange.  But suddenly, inexplicably, Gale felt Yaqui's human quality.  It was aloof, as was everything about this Indian; but it was there.  This savage walked silently beside him, without glance or touch or word.  His thought was as inscrutable as if mind had never awakened in his race.  Yet Gale was conscious of greatness, and, somehow, he was reminded of the Indian's story.  His home had been desolated, his people carried off to slavery, his wife and children separated from him to die.  What had life meant to the Yaqui?  What had been in his heart?  What was now in his mind?  Gale could not answer these questions.  But the difference between himself and Yaqui, which he had vaguely felt as that between savage and civilized men, faded out of his mind forever.  Yaqui might have considered he owed Gale a debt, and, with a Yaqui's austere and noble fidelity to honor, he meant to pay it.  Nevertheless, this was not the thing Gale found in the Indian's silent presence.  Accepting the desert with its subtle and inconceivable influence, Gale felt that the savage and the white man had been bound in a tie which was no less brotherly because it could not be comprehended.

  Toward dawn Gale managed to get some sleep.  Then the morning broke with the sun hidden back of the uplift of the plateau.  The horses trooped up the arroyo and snorted for water.  After a hurried breakfast the packs were hidden in holes in the lava.  The saddles were left where they were, and the horses allowed to graze and wander at will.  Canteens were filled, a small bag of food was packed, and blankets made into a bundle.

  Then Yaqui faced the steep ascent of the lava slope.

  The trail he followed led up on the right side of the fissure, opposite to the one he had come down.  It was a steep climb, and encumbered as the men were they made but slow progress.  Mercedes had to be lifted up smooth steps and across crevices.  They passed places where the rims of the fissure were but a few yards apart. At length the rims widened out and the red, smoky crater yawned beneath.  Yaqui left the trail and began clambering down over the rough and twisted convolutions of lava which formed the rim. Sometimes he hung sheer over the precipice.  It was with extreme difficulty that the party followed him.  Mercedes had to be held on narrow, foot-wide ledges.  The choya was there to hinder passage. Finally the Indian halted upon a narrow bench of flat, smooth lava, and his followers worked with exceeding care and effort down to his position.

  At the back of this bench, between bunches of choya, was a niche, a shallow cave with floor lined apparently with mold.  Ladd said the place was a refuge which had been inhabited by mountain sheep for many years.  Yaqui spread blankets inside, left the canteen and the sack of food, and with a gesture at once humble, yet that of a chief, he invited Mercedes to enter.  A few more gestures and fewer words disclosed his plan.  In this inaccessible nook Mercedes was to be hidden.  The men were to go around upon the opposite rim, and block the trail leading down to the waterhole.

  Gale marked the nature of this eyrie.  It was the wildest and most rugged place he had ever stepped upon.  Only a sheep could have climbed up the wall above or along the slanting shelf of lava beyond.  Below glistened a

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