These Indians all appeared
young, and under the quiet, slow demeanor there was fierce blood and
fire.
By and by two women came in, evidently squaw and daughter. The former
was a huge, stout Indian with a face that was certainly pleasant if
not jolly.
She had the corners of a blanket tied under her chin, and in the folds
behind on her broad back was a naked Indian baby, round and black of
head, brown-skinned, with eyes as bright as beads. When the youngster
caught sight of Shefford he made a startled dive into the sack of the
blanket. Manifestly, however, curiosity got the better of fear, for
presently Shefford caught a pair of wondering dark eyes peeping at him.
“They’re good spenders, but slow,” said Withers. “The Navajos are
careful and cautious. That’s why they’re rich. This squaw, Yan As
Pa, has flocks of sheep and more mustangs than she knows about.”
“Mustangs. So that’s what you call the ponies?” replied Shefford.
“Yep. They’re mustangs, and mostly wild as jack-rabbits.”
Shefford strolled outside and made the acquaintance of Withers’s
helper, a Mormon named Whisner. He was a stockily built man past
maturity, and his sun-blistered face and watery eyes told of the open
desert. He was engaged in weighing sacks of wool brought in by the
Indians. Near by stood a framework of poles from which an immense
bag was suspended. From the top of this bag protruded the head and
shoulders of an Indian who appeared to be stamping and packing wool
with his feet. He grinned at the curious Shefford. But Shefford was
more interested in the Mormon. So far as he knew, Whisner was the
first man of that creed he had ever met, and he could scarcely hide
his eagerness. Venters’s stories had been of a long-past generation
of Mormons, fanatical, ruthless, and unchangeable. Shefford did not
expect to meet Mormons of this kind. But any man of that religion
would have interested him. Besides this, Whisner seemed to bring him
closer to that wild secret canyon he had come West to find. Shefford
was somewhat amazed and discomfited to have his polite and friendly
overtures repulsed. Whisner might have been an Indian. He was cold,
incommunicative, aloof; and there was something about him that made
the sensitive Shefford feel his presence was resented.
Presently Shefford strolled on to the corral, which was full of shaggy
mustangs. They snorted and kicked at him. He had a half-formed wish
that he would never be called upon to ride one of those wild brutes,
and then he found himself thinking that he would ride one of them, and
after a while any of them. Shefford did not understand himself, but
he fought his natural instinctive reluctance to meet obstacles, peril,
suffering.
He traced the white-bordered little stream that made the pool in the
corral, and when he came to where it oozed out of the sand under the
bluff he decided that was not the spring which had made Kayenta
famous. Presently down below the trading-post he saw a trough from
which burros were drinking. Here he found the spring, a deep well
of eddying water walled in by stones, and the overflow made a shallow
stream meandering away between its borders of alkali, like a crust of
salt. Shefford tasted the water. It bit, but it was good.
Shefford had no trouble in making friends with the lazy sleepy-eyed
burros.
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