Yaqui never consider his debt paid?

  'Go–me?' repeat the Indian, pointing with the singular directness that always made this action remarkable in him.

  'Yes, Yaqui.'

  Gale ran to his room, put on hobnailed boots, filled a canteen, and hurried back to the corral.  Yaqui awaited him.  The Indian carried a coiled lasso and a short stout stick.  Without a word he led the way down the lane, turned up the river toward the mountains.  None of Belding's household saw their departure.

  What had once been only a narrow mesquite-bordered trail was now a well-trodden road.  A deep irrigation ditch, full of flowing muddy water, ran parallel with the road.  Gale had been curious about the operations of the Chases, but bitterness he could not help had kept him from going out to see the work.  He was not surprised to find that the engineers who had contructed the ditches and dam had anticipated him in every particular.  The dammed- up gulch made a magnificent reservoir, and Gale could not look upon the long narrow lake without a feeling of gladness.  The dreaded ano seco of the Mexicans might come again and would come, but never to the inhabitants of Forlorn River.  That stone-walled, stone-floored gulch would never leak, and already it contained water enough to irrigate the whole Altar Valley for two dry seasons.

  Yaqui led swiftly along the lake to the upper end, where the stream roared down over unscalable walls.  This point was the farthest Gale had ever penetrated into the rough foothills, and he had Belding's word for it that no white man had ever climbed No Name Mountains from the west.

  But a white man was not an Indian.  The former might have stolen the range and valley and mountain, even the desert, but his possessions would ever remain mysteries.  Gale had scarcely faced the great gray ponderous wall of cliff before the old strange interest in the Yaqui seized him again.  It recalled the tie that existed between them, a tie almost as close as blood. Then he was eager and curious to see how the Indian would conquer those seemingly insurmountable steps of stone.

  Yaqui left the gulch and clambered up over a jumble of weathered slides and traced a slow course along the base of the giant wall.

  He looked up and seemed to select a point for ascent.  It was the last place in that mountainside where Gale would have thought climbing possible.  Before him the wall rose, leaning over him, shutting out the light, a dark mighty mountain mass.  Innumerable cracks and crevices and caves roughened the bulging sides of dark rock.

  Yaqui tied one end of his lasso to the short, stout stick and, carefully disentangling the coils, he whirled the stick round and round and threw it almost over the first rim of the shelf, perhaps thirty feet up.  The stick did not lodge.  Yaqui tried again. This time it caught in a crack.  He pulled hard.  Then, holding to the lasso, he walked up the steep slant, hand over hand on the rope.  When he reached the shelf he motioned for Gale to follow. Gale found that method of scaling a wall both quick and easy. Yaqui pulled up the lasso, and threw the stick aloft into another crack.  He climbed to another shelf, and Gale followed him.  The third effort brought them to a more rugged bench a hundred feet above the slides.  The Yaqui worked round to the left, and turned into a dark fissure.  Gale kept close to his heels.  They came out presently into lighter space, yet one that restricted any extended view.  Broken sections of cliff were on all sides.

  Here the ascent became toil.  Gale could distance Yaqui going downhill; on the climb, however, he was hard put to it to keep the Indian in sight.  It was not a question of strength or lightness of foot.  These Gale had beyond the share of most men.  It was a matter of lung power, and the Yaqui's life had been spent scaling the desert heights.  Moreover, the climbing was infinitely slow, tedious, dangerous.  On the way up several times Gale imagined he heard a dull roar of falling water. The sound seemed to be under him, over him to this side and to that. When he was certain he could locate the direction from which it came then he heard it no more until he had gone on.  Gradually he forgot it in the physical sensations of the climb.  He burned his hands and knees.  He grew hot and wet and winded.  His heart thumped so that it hurt, and there were instants when his sight was blurred.  When at last he had toiled to where the Yaqui sat awaiting him upon the rim of that great wall, it was none too soon.

  Gale lay back and rested for a while without note of anything except the blue sky.  Then he sat up.  He was amazed to find that after that wonderful climb he was only a thousand feet or so above the valley.  Judged by the nature of his effort, he would have said he had climbed a mile.  The village lay beneath him, with its new adobe structures and tents and buildings in bright contrast with the older habitations.  He saw the green alfalfa fields, and Belding's white horses, looking very small and motionless.  He pleased himself by imagining he could pick out Blanco Sol.  Then his gaze swept on to the river.

  Indeed, he realized now why some one had named it Forlorn River. Even at this season when it was full of water it had a forlorn aspect.  It was doomed to fail out there on the desert–doomed never to mingle with the waters of the Gulf.  It wound away down the valley, growing wider and shallower, encroaching more and more on the gray flats, until it disappeared on its sad journey toward Sonoyta.  That vast shimmering, sun-governed waste recognized its life only at this flood season, and was already with parched tongue and insatiate fire licking and burning up its futile waters.

  Yaqui put a hand on Gale's knww.  It was a bronzed, scarred, powerful hand, always eloquent of meaning.  The Indian was listening. His bent head, his strange dilating eyes, his rigid form, and that close-pressing hand, how these brought back to Gale the terrible lonely night hours on the lava!

  'What do you hear, Yaqui?' asked Gale.  He laughed a little at the mood that had come over him.  But the sound of his voice did not break the spell.  He did not want to speak again.  He yielded to Yaqui's subtle nameless influence.  He listened himself, heard nothing but the scream of an eagle.  Often he wondered if the Indian could hear things that made no sound.  Yaqui was beyond understanding.

  Whatever the Indian had listened to or for, presently he satisfied himself, and, with a grunt that might mean anything, he rose and turned away from the rim.  Gale followed, rested now and eager to go on.  He saw that they great cliff they had climbed was only a stairway up to the huge looming dark bulk of the plateau above.

  Suddenly he again heard the dull roar of falling water.  It seemed to have cleared itself of muffled vibrations.  Yaqui mounted a little ridge and halted.  The next instant Gale stood above a bottomless cleft into which a white stream leaped.  His astounded gaze swept backward along this narrow swift stream to its end in a dark, round, boiling pool.  It was a huge spring, a bubbling well, the outcropping of an underground river coming down from the vast plateau above.

  Yaqui had brought Gale to the source of Forlorn River.

  Flashing thoughts in Gale's mind were no swifter than the thrills that ran over him.  He would stake out a claim here and never be cheated out of it.  Ditches on the benches and troughs on the steep walls would carry water down to the valley.  Ben Chase had build a great dam which would be useless if Gale chose to turn Forlorn River from its natural course.  The fountain head of that mysterious desert river belonged to him.

  His eagerness, his mounting passion, was checked by Yaqui's unusual actins.  The Indian showed wonder, hesitation, even reluctance.  His strange eyes surveyed this boiling well as if they could not believe the sight they

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