IT was night. The oil lamps were burning
brightly in the barroom of the Hog Ranch.
The games were being well patronized. The
girls were circulating among the customers, registering
thirst. It looked like a large night.
In the back room two men, seated at opposite
sides of a table, were conversing in low tones.
A bottle, two glasses, and a mutilated jack of
spades lay between them. One of the men was
Cheetim, the other was Kreff.
“How much longer does thet feller think we
kin hold them critters without hevin’ every galoot
in the Territory ridin’ onto ’em an’ blowin’ the
whole business?” demanded Kreff.
“I been tellin’ him to see you,” said Cheetim.
Kreff pushed the jack of spades across the table
to the other man. “You take this,” he said.
“You see him oftener than I do. Don’t turn this
over to him ’til you git the money, but tell him
that ef he don’t get a hump on hisself we’ll drive
the bunch north an’ sell ’em up there. They can’t
stay around here much longer—the girl’s wise
now thet somethin’s wrong. Two of the hands
has told her they been missin’ stock lately.”
Cheetim sat in silence, thinking. Slowly he
filled Kreff’s glass and poured another drink for
himself.
“Here’s how!” he said and drank.
“How!” replied Kreff.
“I been thinkin’,” said Cheetim.
“Don’t strain yourself, ‘Dirty,’ ” Kreff admonished
him.
“It’s this-a-way,” continued the other, ignoring
Kreff’s pleasantry. “Ef it warnt for the girl we
could clean up big on thet herd. This here
Agent’ll buy anything an’ not ask no questions.”
“What do you want me to do,” inquired Kreff,
“kill her?”
“I want you to help me get her. Ef I kin get
her fer a few days she’ll be glad enough to marry
me. Then I’ll give you half what I get out of
the cattle.”
“Ride your own range, ‘Dirty,’ ” said Kreff,
rising, “and keep off o’ mine.”
“What do you mean?”
“Ef either one of us gets her it’s me, that’s
what I mean.” There was an ugly edge to his
voice that Cheetim did not fail to note.
“Oh, hell,” he said, “I didn’t know you was
sweet on her.”
“You know it now—keep off the grass.”
A pinto stallion, tied to a stunted cedar, dozed
in the mid-day heat. His master, sprawled at
the summit of a rocky knoll, looked down upon
the other side at a bunch of cattle resting until
it should be cooler, the while they pensively
chewed their cuds. A youth lay upon his back
beneath the shade of a tree. A saddled pony,
with drooping head and ears, stood nearby lazily
switching its tail in mute remonstrance against
the flies. Bridle reins, dragging on the ground,
suggested to the pony that it was tethered and
were all-sufficient.
Somnolence, silence, heat—Arizona at high
noon.
Shoz-Dijiji surveyed the scene. With a reward
of a thousand dollars on his head it behooved
him to survey all scenes in advance. The reward,
however, was but a secondary stimulus. Training
and environment had long since fixed upon
him the habit of reconnaissance.
Immediately he had recognized Luis Mariel.
If he were surprised he gave no evidence of it,
for his expression did not change. His eyes wandered
over the herd. They noted the various
brands, ear-marks, wattles, jug-handles; and
though Shoz-Dijiji could not have been termed a
cattle man he read them all and knew the ranch
and range of every animal in the bunch, for there
was no slightest thing from one end of Apacheland
to the other that an Apache let pass as of
too slight importance to concern him.
He saw that most of the cattle belonged to
Wichita Billings; but he knew that it was not a
Crazy B cowboy that was herding them, for the
Crazy B outfit employed no Mexicans.
Long before Luis Mariel was aware of the
fact Shoz-Dijiji knew that several horsemen
were approaching; but he did not change his position
since, if they continued in the direction they
were going, they would pass without seeing him.
Presently four men rode into view. He recognized
them all. Two of them were Navajoes,
one a half-breed and the fourth a white man—the
Indian Agent.
Shoz-Dijiji did not like any of them, especially
the Indian Agent. He fingered his rifle and
wished that Geronimo had not made that treaty
with General Miles in Skeleton Canyon.
Presently Luis heard the footfalls of the approaching
horses and sat up. Seeing the men,
he arose. They rode up to him, and the Agent
spoke. Shoz-Dijiji saw him take a bit of paper
from his pocket and show it to Luis. Luis took
another similar bit of paper from his own pocket
and compared it with the one that the Agent
now handed him. Shoz-Dijiji could not quite
make out what the bits of paper were—from
a distance they looked like two halves of a playing
card.
Luis mounted his pony and helped the men
round up the cattle, but after they had started
them in the direction of the Agency Luis waved
his adios and reined his pony southward toward
the Hog Ranch.
Shoz-Dijiji remained motionless until all were
well out of sight, then he wormed his way below
the brow of the hill, rose and walked down to
Nejeunee. He had spent the preceding night
in the hogan of friends on the reservation. They
had talked of many things, among them being the
fact that the Agent was still buying stolen cattle
at a low price and collecting a high price for
them from the Government.
Shoz-Dijiji knew that he had seen stolen cattle
delivered to the Agent, which would not, of itself,
have given him any concern; but the fact that
most of these cattle had evidently been stolen
from Wichita Billings put an entirely different
aspect on the matter.
The fact that she hated him, that she had offered
a reward for him, dead, could not alter the
fact that he loved her; and, loving her, he must
find a way to inform her of what he had discovered.
Naturally, the first means to that end which
occurred to him was Luke Jensen. He would
ride back to where Luke Jensen rode and find him.
It is a long way from where Cheetim and Kreff
had hidden the stolen herd to the Billings east
range, and when one is a fair target for every
rifle and six-shooter in the world it behooves one
to move warily; so Shoz-Dijiji lay up until night
and then rode slowly toward the east.
Luis Mariel had ridden directly to the Hog
Ranch and reported to Cheetim, handing him
both halves of the jack of spades as evidence that
the herd had been turned over to the proper
party in accordance with Luis’ instructions.
“That’s jest what I been waitin’ fer,” said
Cheetim. “Now I got some more work fer you,
if you’re game. They’s fifty dollars extra in it
fer you.”
“What is it?” asked Luis.
“It ain’t none o’ your business what it is,” replied
Cheetim. “All you got to know is thet they
may be some shootin’ in it, an’ all you got to do
is do what I tell you. If you’re skeered I don’t
want you.”
“I am not afraid, Senor,” replied Luis. The
fifty dollars appeared a fortune.
“All right. You savvy the Crazy B Ranch?”
“Si, Senor.”
“I want you to take a note to ‘Smooth’ Kreff,
the foreman o’ thet outfit.”
“Is that all?”
“No. After you deliver the note you hang
around and see what happens. They’s a girl
there. When I come I’ll want to know where
she is and how many men there are left at the
ranch. There’ll be four or five fellers with me.
After that I’ll tell you what to do.”
“When does the shooting happen?” asked Luis.
“Oh, maybe they won’t be no shootin’,” replied
Cheetim. “I was jest warnin’ you in case
they was. I’ll write the letter now an’ then you
hit the trail. Ef you ride hard you’ll make it
before sun up. I want you there before the hands
start out fer the day. Savvy?”
Laboriously, with the stub of a pencil that he
constantly wet with his tongue, “Dirty” Cheetim
wrote. It appeared to Luis that Senor Cheetim
was not accustomed to writing—he seemed to be
suffering from mental constipation—but at last
the agony was over and Cheetim handed Luis a
sheet of soiled paper folded many times into a
small wad.
“If Kreff asks you about the cattle you say that
when you went up this mornin’ the bars o’ the
c’rral was down an’ the cattle gone, an’ don’t you
tell him nothin’ different. If you do you won’t get
no fifty dollars ’cause you won’t need ’em where
I’ll send you.” Cheetim slapped the six-shooter
at his hip.
“I understand,” said Luis. He did not like
Senor Cheetim, but fifty dollars are fifty dollars.
The sun was but a few minutes high when Luis
Mariel reined into the Billings ranch yard. From
a slight eminence a mile or two away, beyond the
east pasture fence, Shoz-Dijiji saw him come and
wondered.
The Apache had taken his position just before
dawn and at the first flush of the new day had
fixed his field glasses upon the ranch yard. He
wished to get in touch with Jensen as quickly as
possible and saw in this plan the surest method
of determining when and in what direction Luke
rode that morning.
Luis went at once to the bunk house, where the
men were already astir, and delivered the letter
to Kreff, whom he at once recognized as the tall,
sandy haired man who had taken him to the herd
and given him the torn playing card and his instructions.
Kreff recognized Luis, too, but he
only frowned.
Almost as laboriously as Cheetim had written
it, Kreff deciphered the note.
“Frend Kref:” he read. “Sum fellers stole
the herd bring al yore hands & help Me round
them up they will think the fellers stol them &
That will let us out doan fetch the greser i think
he wus in on it dirty yours truely.”
“Hell!” ejaculated Kreff.
“What’s eatin’ you?” inquired “Kansas.”
“ ‘Dirty’ Cheetim says a bunch of rustlers is
runnin’ off some of our stock. He seen ’em
headin’ past his place. Luke! Rustle up that
‘cavvy,’ pronto. You fellers feed while Luke’s
gone. We’re all hittin’ the trail after them
lousy thieves.”
“I reckon ‘Dirty’ is jest sore ’cause he didn’t
git to the bunch ahead o’ them other fellers,”
drawled “Kansas.”
Luke tucked his shirt tails into his trousers,
grabbed his Stetson, and bolted for the corral.
When Kreff had finished dressing he went to the
cook house and told the Chinese cook to hurry
breakfast. Then he walked over to the ranch
house and stopping under Wichita’s window
called her name aloud.
A moment later, a Navajo blanket about her
shoulders, the girl appeared at the window.
“What is it, ‘Smooth?’ ” she asked.
“You was right about the rustling,” he said.
“Cheetim jest sent a Greaser with a note sayin’
he’d seen some fellers runnin’ off a bunch of our
stock. I’m takin’ all the men an’ ridin’ after ’em.
They can’t git away.”
“Good!” cried the girl. “I’ll go with you.”
“No, you better not. They’s almost sure to
be shootin’.”
“I can shoot,” she replied.
“I know thet; but please don’t do it, Chita.
We’d all be lookin’ after you an’ couldn’t do like
we would if they wasn’t a woman along.”
“Perhaps you are right,” she admitted. “Gosh!
Why wasn’t I born a boy?”
“I’m shore glad you wasn’t.”
Shoz-Dijiji, seeing Luke riding early and alone
straight in his direction, felt that once again,
after long forgetfulness, Usen had remembered
him. He knew that the youth would come only
as far as the horses pastured in the east pasture,
and so he rode down and came through the gate
to meet the cowboy. The willows in the draw
screened them from each other’s sight until Luke
spurred up the steep bank of the wash and came
face to face with the Apache.
“Hello, there!” he exclaimed in surprise.
“What you doin’ here?”
“I want you take word to Wichita,” said Shoz-Dijiji.
“The Indian Agent is buying cattle that
are stolen from her. I saw it yesterday, on the
reservation. You tell her?”
“We jest got word of the same bunch, I
reckon,” replied Luke. “We’re all ridin’ out after
’em now. Which way was they headin’ when you
saw them?”
“Toward the Agency.”
“Thanks a lot, Shoz-Dijiji,” said Luke. “I’ll
tell her anyway when I see her about your sendin’
the word to her.”
“No,” said the Apache. “Do not tell her who
sent the word.”
“All right. I got to be movin’. The boys is
waitin’ fer these broncs. So long, Shoz-Dijiji!”
“Adios!” replied the Apache, and as Jensen
herded the horses toward the corrals Shoz-Dijiji
rode away, out through the pasture gate, onto the
east range.
Something was troubling Shoz-Dijiji’s mind.
He had seen Luis Mariel guarding the stolen
herd and yet it was he who brought word to the
ranch concerning these same cattle. What did
it mean?
Through his glasses the Apache watched the
departure of the Crazy B cow hands. Apparently
all had left the ranch with the exception
of Luis Mariel. Why was Luis remaining? He
had seen Wichita come into the yard and talk
with some of the men as they were mounting,
and he had seen her wave them godspeed. She
had spoken to Luis, too, and then gone into the
house. Luis was hanging around the corrals.
Shoz-Dijiji shook his head. Luis was a good
boy. He would not harm anyone. There was
something else to think about and that was breakfast.
Shoz-Dijiji rode a short distance to the east,
dismounted and with bow and arrows set forth
in search of his breakfast. In half an hour he
had a cottontail and a quail. Returning to Nejeunee
he sought a secluded spot and cooked his
breakfast.
Ten minutes after Luis Mariel had departed
from the Hog Ranch the previous evening
Cheetim with four others had ridden out along
the same trail; and when Kreff and the other
men of the Crazy B rode away in the morning
in search of the rustlers, from the hills south of
the ranch these five had watched them depart.
“We got lots of time,” said Cheetim, “an’
we’ll wait until they are plenty far away before
we ride down. You four’ll hev to git the girl.
Ef she seen me comin’ she’d start shootin’ before
we was inside the gate, but she don’t know none
of you. I was damn sure to pick fellers she
didn’t know. You ride in an’ ask fer grub an’
a job. The Greaser’ll be there to tell you ef they
is any men left around an’ where the girl is. You
won’t have no trouble. Jes’ grab her an’ don’t
give her no chance to draw thet gun o’ hers, fer
I’m here to state thet ol’ man Billings’ girl
wouldn’t think no more o’ perforatin’ your ornery
hides then she would of spittin’.”
The ride ahead of Kreff and his men was, the
foremen knew, a long and hard one. There was
some slight chance of borrowing a change of
horses at a ranch near Cheetim’s place; but it was
only a chance, and so Kreff conserved his horse
flesh and did not push on too rapidly.
As he rode he had time to think things out a
little more clearly than he had in the excitement
and rush of preparation, and he wondered why
it had been that Cheetim had not organized a
party to go after the rustlers and save the cattle
for themselves. He could easily have done it,
as there were always several tough gun-men hanging
around his place who would commit murder
for a pint of whiskey. Yes, that did seem peculiar.
And if he had mistrusted the Mexican,
why had he intrusted the message to him? Kreff
did not trust Cheetim to any greater extent than
a cottontail would trust a rattler, and now that
he had an opportunity to consider the whole matter
carefully he grew suspicious.
Suddenly it occurred to him that he had left
Wichita alone on the ranch with only the Chinese
cook, and that the Mexican had remained
behind after they had left. The more he thought
about it the more it worried him. He called Luke
to his side.
“Kid,” he said, “we left thet Greaser there
on the ranch. I don’t guess we should have. You
ride back an’ look after things—an’ don’t let
no grass grow under you while you’re doin’ it.”
Luke, though disappointed at the thought of
missing the excitement of a brush with the rustlers,
reined in, wheeled his pony, and spurred
back toward the ranch.
Wichita, coming from the office door after
breakfast, saw four strange men ride into the
ranch yard. She saw the Mexican youth who
had brought word of the stolen cattle ride up to
them, but she could not hear what they said,
nor was it apparent that the Mexican was acquainted
with the newcomers.
The four rode toward her presently, and as
they neared her one of them removed his hat
and asked if he could see the boss.
“I’m the boss,” she replied.
“We’re lookin’ fer work,” said the man; and
as he spoke he dismounted and walked close to
her, the others reining near as though to hear
what her answer would be.
When the man was quite close he suddenly
seized her, whirled her about and held her hands
behind her. At the same instant another of his
fellows dismounted and stepped quickly to her.
She struggled and fought to free herself; but she
was helpless, and in another moment they had
bound her wrists behind her.
As they were lifting her to one of the horses
the Chinese ran from the cook house, calling to
them to stop; but one of the men drew his six-shooter,
and a single, menacing shot was enough
to send the unarmed domestic back into his
kitchen.
Cheetim, watching from the hills south of the
ranch, saw all that transpired within the yard
and was highly elated at the ease with which his
nefarious plan was being carried out; but, alas,
things were running far too smoothly.
What was that? He bent an attentive ear
toward the west and recognized the cadenced
pounding of the hoofs of a rapidly galloping horse—the
little rift within the lute.
In the ranch yard the men had stopped to
argue. Cheetim could see them but he could not
understand the delay. He could only curse silently,
dividing his attention between them and
the road to the west, along which he could hear
the approaching hoof beats.
“What’s the use of packin’ this girl double?”
the man who had been assigned to carry Wichita
demanded. “We got plenty time an’ they’s a
hoss standin’ right down there in the c’ral.”
“ ‘Dirty’ said not to waste no time,” demurred
another.
The mention of Cheetim’s descriptive nickname
was the first intimation Wichita had received
of the origin and purpose of the plan to
abduct her. Now she understood—it was all
clear, horribly clear. For years the man had
hounded and annoyed her. Twice before he had
tried to take her forcibly. It looked now as
though he might succeed. Who was there to succor
her? Her father dead and every man in her
employ gone, for how long she could not guess.
There was no one. She wondered why it was
that at that moment the figure of an almost naked,
bronze savage filled her thoughts to the exclusion
of every other source of salvation, and that while
she nursed her hatred of him she involuntarily
almost prayed that some miracle might bring him
to her.
The man who had suggested a separate horse
for Wichita insisted. “It won’t take two minutes,”
he said, “an’ if we are follered we kin make
better time than if one of the hosses is packin’
double.”
“Hell, then,” exclaimed one of his fellows,
“instead of chawin’ the fat let’s git a hoss. Here,
you!” he addressed Luis. “Fetch that hoss.
Throw a saddle onto him an’ a lead rope.”
As Luis hastened to obey, Cheetim, seeing the
further delay, became frantic. The horseman
was approaching rapidly along the road from the
west, and the men in the ranch yard were wasting
valuable time.
Out on the east range Shoz-Dijiji, having finished
his breakfast, mounted Nejeunee and turned
the pony’s head toward the east, toward the distant
mountains where the Gila rises, toward the
ancient stamping grounds of the Be-don-ko-he.
He had no plans for the future. He wanted
only to get away. He had seen Wichita Billings
through his field glasses, and the sight of her had
but aggravated the old hurt. Sad and lonely,
the war chief rode toward the deserted camp
grounds of his vanished people, where now were
only brooding memories.
Luke Jensen galloped into sight of the ranch.
Cheetim, lying behind a boulder at the top of a
hill, covered him with his rifle sights and fired.
Luke heard the bullet scream past his ear. Forewarned
of some danger, he knew not what, he
was prepared. He took two flying shots at the
puff of smoke at the hill top where his unknown
assailant lay, dug the rowels into his pony’s sides,
and raced for the ranch gate that he saw was
standing open.
Cheetim fired once more; but again he missed,
and then Luke was inside the yard. Coming toward
him from the corrals he saw five men and
Wichita, and he knew that something was radically
wrong even before one of the men drew his
gun and opened fire on him. Unable to return
the man’s fire without endangering Wichita, Jensen
spurred in the direction of an out-building
that would give him shelter until he could get
his rifle into action.
The five men spurred toward the gate, quirting
Wichita’s horse to equal speed. Three of them
were firing at Luke; and just as he reached the
out-building, just when he was within a second
of safety, Wichita saw him lunge from his saddle,
hit.
Then her captors raced through the gate and
into the hills south of the ranch, whirling Wichita
Billings away with them.
