The
air was hot, still, and sweetly odorous of unfamiliar flowers. Pinyon
and cedar trees surrounded the little log and stone houses, and along
the walls of the canyon stood sharp-pointed, dark-green spruce-trees.
These walls were singular of shape and color. They were not imposing
in height, but they waved like the long, undulating swell of a sea.
Every foot of surface was perfectly smooth, and the long curved lines
of darker tinge that streaked the red followed the rounded line of the
slope at the top. Far above, yet overhanging, were great yellow crags
and peaks, and between these, still higher, showed the pine-fringed
slope of Navajo Mountain with snow in the sheltered places, and
glistening streams, like silver threads, running down.
All this Shefford noticed as he entered the valley from round a corner
of wall. Upon nearer view he saw and heard a host of children, who,
looking up to see the intruders, scattered like frightened quail. Long
gray grass covered the ground, and here and there wide, smooth paths
had been worn. A swift and murmuring brook ran through the middle of
the valley, and its banks were bordered with flowers.
Withers led the way to one side near the wall, where a clump of cedar-
trees and a dark, swift spring boiling out of the rocks and banks of
amber moss with purple blossoms made a beautiful camp site. Here
the mustangs were unsaddled and turned loose without hobbles. It
was certainly unlikely that they would leave such a spot. Some of
the burros were unpacked, and the others Withers drove off into the
village.
“Sure’s pretty nice,” said Joe, wiping his sweaty face. “I’ll never
want to leave. It suits me to lie on this moss. . . . Take a drink of
that spring.”
Shefford complied with alacrity and found the water cool and sweet,
and he seemed to feel it all through him. Then he returned to the
mossy bank. He did not reply to Joe. In fact, all his faculties were
absorbed in watching and feeling, and he lay there long after Joe went
off to the village. The murmur of water, the hum of bees, the songs
of strange birds, the sweet, warm air, the dreamy summer somnolence
of the valley–all these added drowsiness to Shefford’s weary
lassitude, and he fell asleep. When he awoke Nas Ta Bega was
sitting near him and Joe was busy near a camp-fire.
“Hello, Nas Ta Bega!” said Shefford. “Was there any one trailing us?”
The Navajo nodded.
Joe raised his head and with forceful brevity said, “Shadd.”
“Shadd!” echoed Shefford, remembering the dark, sinister face of his
visitor that night in the Sagi. “Joe, is it serious–his trailing us?”
“Well, I don’t know how durn serious it is, but I’m scared to death,”
replied Lake. “He and his gang will hold us up somewhere on the way
home.”
Shefford regarded Joe with both concern and doubt. Joe’s words were at
variance with his looks.
“Say, pard, can you shoot a rifle?” queried Joe.
“Yes. I’m a fair shot at targets.”
The Mormon nodded his head as if pleased. “That’s good. These outlaws
are all poor shots with a rifle. So ‘m I. But I can handle a six-
shooter.
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