I need to work. We’ll talk of it later.
. . . But just yet I can’t tell you why I came to Kayenta, what I want
to do, how long I shall stay. My thoughts put in words would seem
so like dreams. Maybe they are dreams. Perhaps I’m only chasing a
phantom–perhaps I’m only hunting the treasure at the foot of the
rainbow.”
“Well, this is the country for rainbows,” laughed Withers. “In
summer from June to August when it storms we have rainbows that’ll
make you think you’re in another world. The Navajos have rainbow
mountains, rainbow canyons, rainbow bridges of stone, rainbow trails.
It sure is rainbow country.”
That deep and mystic chord in Shefford thrilled. Here it was again–
something tangible at the bottom of his dream.
Withers did not wait for Shefford to say any more, and almost as if
he read his visitor’s mind he began to talk about the wild country
he called home.
He had lived at Kayenta for several years–hard and profitless years by
reason of marauding outlaws. He could not have lived there at all but
for the protection of the Indians. His father-in-law had been friendly
with the Navajos and Piutes for many years, and his wife had been
brought up among them. She was held in peculiar reverence and
affection by both tribes in that part of the country. Probably she
knew more of the Indians’ habits, religion, and life than any white
person in the West. Both tribes were friendly and peaceable, but there
were bad Indians, half-breeds, and outlaws that made the trading-post
a venture Withers had long considered precarious, and he wanted to move
and intended to some day. His nearest neighbors in New Mexico and
Colorado were a hundred miles distant and at some seasons the roads
were impassable. To the north, however, twenty miles or so, was
situated a Mormon village named Stonebridge. It lay across the Utah
line. Withers did some business with this village, but scarcely enough
to warrant the risks he had to run. During the last year he had lost
several pack-trains, one of which he had never heard of after it left
Stonebridge.
“Stonebridge!” exclaimed Shefford, and he trembled. He had heard that
name. In his memory it had a place beside the name of another village
Shefford longed to speak of to this trader.
“Yes–Stonebridge,” replied Withers. “Ever heard the name?”
“I think so. Are there other villages in–in that part of the
country?”
“A few, but not close. Glaze is now only a water-hole. Bluff and
Monticello are far north across the San Juan. . . .
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