“Apache!” he exclaimed
to himself, and gripped his rifle. The band galloped down to the
hollow, and slowing up, piled single file over the bank. The
leader, a short, squat chief, plunged into the brake not twenty
yards from the hidden men. Jones recognized the cream mustang; he
knew the somber, sinister, broad face. It belonged to the Red
Chief of the Apaches.
“Geronimo!” murmured the plainsman through his teeth.
Well for the Apache that no falcon savage eye discovered aught
strange in the little hollow! One look at the sand of the stream
bed would have cost him his life. But the Indians crossed the
thicket too far up; they cantered up the slope and disappeared.
The hoof-beats softened and ceased.
“Gone?” whispered Rude.
“Gone. But wait,” whispered Jones. He knew the savage nature, and
he knew how to wait. After a long time, he cautiously crawled out
of the thicket and searched the surroundings with a plainsman’s
eye. He climbed the slope and saw the clouds of dust, the near
one small, the far one large, which told him all he needed to
know.
“Comanches?” queried Adams, with a quaver in his voice. He was
new to the plains.
“Likely,” said Jones, who thought it best not to tell all he
knew. Then he added to himself: “We’ve no time to lose. There’s
water back here somewhere. The Indians have spotted the buffalo,
and were running the horses away from the water.”
The three got under way again, proceeding carefully, so as not to
raise the dust, and headed due southwest. Scantier and scantier
grew the grass; the hollows were washes of sand; steely gray
dunes, like long, flat, ocean swells, ribbed the prairie. The
gray day declined. Late into the purple night they traveled, then
camped without fire.
In the gray morning Jones climbed a high ride and scanned the
southwest. Low dun-colored sandhills waved from him down and
down, in slow, deceptive descent. A solitary and remote waste
reached out into gray infinitude. A pale lake, gray as the rest
of that gray expanse, glimmered in the distance.
“Mirage!” he muttered, focusing his glass, which only magnified
all under the dead gray, steely sky. “Water must be somewhere;
but can that be it? It’s too pale and elusive to be real. No
life–a blasted, staked plain! Hello!”
A thin, black, wavering line of wild fowl, moving in beautiful,
rapid flight, crossed the line of his vision. “Geese flying
north, and low. There’s water here,” he said. He followed the
flock with his glass, saw them circle over the lake, and vanish
in the gray sheen.
“It’s water.” He hurried back to camp. His haggard and worn
companions scorned his discovery. Adams siding with Rude, who
knew the plains, said: “Mirage! the lure of the desert!” Yet
dominated by a force too powerful for them to resist, they
followed the buffalo-hunter. All day the gleaming lake beckoned
them onward, and seemed to recede. All day the drab clouds
scudded before the cold north wind. In the gray twilight, the
lake suddenly lay before them, as if it had opened at their feet.
The men rejoiced, the horses lifted their noses and sniffed the
damp air.
The whinnies of the horses, the clank of harness, and splash of
water, the whirl of ducks did not blur out of Jones’s keen ear a
sound that made him jump.
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