He turned in behind Withers and rode down the rough
trail, helping the mustang all in his power. It occurred to him that
Nack-yal had been entirely different since that meeting with his mother
in the draw. He turned no more off the trail; he answered readily to
the rein; he did not look afar from every ridge. Shefford conceived a
liking for the mustang.
Withers turned sidewise in his saddle and let his mustang pick the way.
“Another time we’ll go up round the base of the mountain, where you can
look down on the grandest scene in the world,” said he. “Two hundred
miles of wind-worn rock, all smooth and bare, without a single straight
line–canyon, caves, bridges–the most wonderful country in the world!
Even the Indians haven’t explored it. It’s haunted, for them, and they
have strange gods. The Navajos will hunt on this side of the mountain,
but not on the other. That north side is consecrated ground. My wife has
long been trying to get the Navajos to tell her the secret of Nonnezoshe.
Nonnezoshe means Rainbow Bridge. The Indians worship it, but as far as
she can find out only a few have ever seen it. I imagine it’d be worth
some trouble.”
“Maybe that’s the bridge Venters talked about–the one overarching the
entrance to Surprise Valley,” Said Shefford.
“It might be,” replied the trader. “You’ve got a good chance of
finding out. Nas Ta Bega is the man. You stick to that Indian.
. . . Well, we start down here into this canyon, and we go down some,
I reckon. In half an hour you’ll see sago-lilies and Indian paint-
brush and vermilion cactus.”
. . . . . . . . . . .
About the middle of the afternoon the pack-train and its drivers
arrived at the hidden Mormon village. Nas Ta Bega had not returned
from his scout back along the trail.
Shefford’s sensibilities had all been overstrained, but he had left
in him enthusiasm and appreciation that made the situation of this
village a fairyland. It was a valley, a canyon floor, so long that
he could not see the end, and perhaps a quarter of a mile wide.
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