He was taking them in to water,
the same as the dogs had taken the sheep.
These incidents were new and pleasing to Shefford. How ignorant he
had been of life in the wilderness! Once more he received subtle
intimations of what he might learn out in the open; and it was with a
less weighted heart that he faced the gateway between the huge yellow
bluffs on his left and the slow rise of ground to the black mesa on
his right. He looked back in time to see the trading-post, bleak
and lonely on the bare slope, pass out of sight behind the bluffs.
Shefford felt no fear–he really had little experience of physical
fear–but it was certain that he gritted his teeth and welcomed
whatever was to come to him. He had lived a narrow, insulated life
with his mind on spiritual things; his family and his congregation
and his friends–except that one new friend whose story had enthralled
him–were people of quiet religious habit; the man deep down in him
had never had a chance. He breathed hard as he tried to imagine the
world opening to him, and almost dared to be glad for the doubt that
had sent him adrift.
The tracks of the Indian girl’s pony were plain in the sand. Also
there were other tracks, not so plain, and these Shefford decided had
been made by Willetts and the girl the day before. He climbed a ridge,
half soft sand and half hard, and saw right before him, rising in
striking form, two great yellow buttes, like elephant legs. He rode
between them, amazed at their height. Then before him stretched a
slowly ascending valley, walled on one side by the black mesa and on
the other by low bluffs. For miles a dark-green growth of greasewood
covered the valley, and Shefford could see where the green thinned and
failed, to give place to sand. He trotted his horse and made good time
on this stretch.
The day contrasted greatly with any he had yet experienced. Gray
clouds obscured the walls of rock a few miles to the west, and Shefford
saw squalls of snow like huge veils dropping down and spreading out.
The wind cut with the keenness of a knife. Soon he was chilled to the
bone. A squall swooped and roared down upon him, and the wind that
bore the driving white pellets of snow, almost like hail, was so
freezing bitter cold that the former wind seemed warm in comparison.
The squall passed as swiftly as it had come, and it left Shefford so
benumbed he could not hold the bridle. He tumbled off his horse and
walked. By and by the sun came out and soon warmed him and melted
the thin layer of snow on the sand. He was still on the trail of the
Indian girl, but hers were now the only tracks he could see.
All morning he gradually climbed, with limited view, until at last he
mounted to a point where the country lay open to his sight on all
sides except where the endless black mesa ranged on into the north. A
rugged yellow peak dominated the landscape to the fore, but it was far
away. Red and jagged country extended westward to a huge flat-topped
wall of gray rock. Lowering swift clouds swept across the sky, like
drooping mantles, and darkened the sun. Shefford built a little fire
out of dead greasewood sticks, and with his blanket round his shoulders
he hung over the blaze, scorching his clothes and hands. He had been
cold before in his life but he had never before appreciated fire.
This desert blast pierced him. The squall enveloped him, thicker and
colder and windier than the other, but, being better fortified, he did
not suffer so much. It howled away, hiding the mesa and leaving a
white desert behind. Shefford walked on, leading his horse, until
the exercise and the sun had once more warmed him.
This last squall had rendered the Indian girl’s trail difficult to
follow. The snow did not quickly melt, and, besides, sheep tracks and
the tracks of horses gave him trouble, until at last he was compelled
to admit that he could not follow her any longer. A faint path or
trail led north, however, and, following that, he soon forgot the
girl. Every surmounted ridge held a surprise for him. The desert
seemed never to change in the vast whole that encompassed him, yet
near him it was always changing. From Red Lake he had seen a peaked,
walled, and canyoned country, as rough as a stormy sea; but when he
rode into that country the sharp and broken features held to the
distance.
He was glad to get out of the sand.
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