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"I reckon I would 'a' killed him--if I'd 'a' got the chance," he said.
"I meant to. No, it wasn't me or Panhandle that settled that argument: it was somethin' bigger than us. Folks that reads about the fight, knowin' I was in Phoenix, will most like say that I got him. Let 'em say so. I know I didn't; and you know I didn't--and that's good enough for me."
"And Dorothy and Aunt Jane and Little Jim," said Bartley.
"Meanin' Little Jim won't have to grow up knowin' that his father was a killer."
"I was thinking of that."
"Well, right here is where I quit thinkin' about it and talkin' about it. If that dog of yours there was to kill a coyote, in a fair fight, I reckon he wouldn't think about it long."
A few minutes later Cheyenne spoke of the country they were in.
"She's rough and unfriendly, right here," he said. "But north a ways she sure makes up for it. There's big spruce and high mesas and gra.s.s to your pony's knees and water 'most anywhere you look for it. I ain't much on huntin'. But there's plenty deer and wild turkey up that way, and some bear. And with a bent pin and a piece of string a fella can catch all the trout he wants. Arizona is a mighty surprisin' State, in spots.
Most folks from the East think she's sagebrush and sand, except the Grand Canon; but that's kind of rented out to tourists, most of the time. I like the Painted Desert better."
"Where haven't you been?" said Bartley, laughing.
"Well, I ain't been North for quite a spell."
And Cheyenne fell silent, thinking of Laramie, of the broad prairies of Wyoming, of his old homestead, and the days when he was happy with his wife and Little Jim. But he was not silent long. He visioned a plan that he might work out, after he had seen Aunt Jane and Uncle Frank again.
Meanwhile, the sun was s.h.i.+ning, the road wound among the ragged hills, and Filaree and Joshua stepped along briskly, their hoof-beats suggesting the rhythm of a song.
That night they camped in the hill country not far from a crossroads store. In the morning they bought a few provisions and an extra canteen.
"There's a piece of country between here and the real hills that is like to be dry," explained Cheyenne. "We're leavin' the road, this mornin', and cuttin' north. She's some rough, the way we're headed, but you'll like it."
From the sagebrush of the southern slopes they climbed slowly up to a country of scattered juniper. By noon they were among the pinons, following a dim bridle trail that Cheyenne's horses seemed to know.
"In a couple of days, I aim to spring a surprise on you," said Cheyenne as they turned in that night. "I figure to show you somethin' you been wantin' to see."
"Bring on your bears," said Bartley, laughing.
Cheyenne's moodiness had vanished. Frequently he hummed his old trail song as they rode. Next day, as they nooned among the spruce of the high country, Cheyenne suddenly drew the dice from his pocket and, turning them in his hands, finally tossed them over the rim-rock of the canon edging their camp. "It's a fool game," he said. And Bartley knew, by the otter's tone, that he did not alone refer to the game of dice.
The air was thin, clear, and vital with a quality that the air of the lower country lacked. Bartley felt an ambition to settle down and go to writing. He thought that he now had material enough and to spare. They were in a country, vast, fenceless, verdant--almost awesome in its timbered silences. His imagination was stirred.
From their noon camp they rode into the timber and from the timber into a mountain meadow, knee-deep with lush gra.s.s. There was no visible trail across the meadow but the horses seemed to know which way to go. After crossing the meadow, Filaree, leading the cavalcade, turned and took a steep trail down the side of a hidden canon, a mighty chasm, rock-walled and somber. At the bottom the horses drank, and, crossing the stream, climbed the farther side. In an hour they were again on the rim, plodding noiselessly through the sun-flecked shadows of the giant spruce.
"How about that surprise?" queried Bartley.
"Ain't this good enough?" said Cheyenne, gesturing roundabout.
"Gosh, yes! Lead on, Macduff."
About four that afternoon the horses p.r.i.c.ked their ears and quickened their pace. Filaree and Joshua especially seemed interested in getting along the silent trail; and presently the trail merged with another trail, more defined. A few hundred yards down this trail, and Bartley saw a big log cabin; to the left and beyond it a corral, empty, and with the bars down. Bartley had never seen the place before, and did not realize where he was, yet he had noticed that the horses seemed to know the place.
"We won't stop by," said Cheyenne.
"Any one live there?"
"Sneed used to," stated Cheyenne.
Then Bartley knew that they were not far from the San Andreas Valley and--well, the Lawrence ranch.
They dropped down a long trail into another canon which finally spread to a green valley dotted with ranches. The horses stepped briskly.
Presently, rounding a bend, they saw a ranch-house, far below, and sharply defined squares of alfalfa.
"That house with the red roof--" said Bartley.
"That's her," a.s.serted Cheyenne, a trifle ambiguously.
"Then we've swung round in a circle."
"We done crossed the res'avation, pardner. And we didn't see a dog-gone Injun."
Little Jim was the first to catch sight of them as they jogged down the last stretch of trail leaving the foothills. He recognized the horses long before their riders were near enough to be identified as his father and Bartley.
Little Jim did not rush to Aunt Jane and tell her excitedly that they were coming. Instead, he quietly saddled up his pony and rode out to meet them. Part-way up the slope he waited.
His greeting was not effusive. "I just thought I'd ride up and tell you folks that--'that I seen you comin'."
"How goes the hunting?" queried Bartley.
"Fine! I got six rabbits yesterday. Dorry is gittin' so she can shoot pretty good, too. How you makin' it, dad?"
Cheyenne pushed back his hat and gazed at his young son. "Pretty fair, for an old man," said Cheyenne presently. "You been behavin' yourself?"
"Sure."
"How would you like to ride a real hoss, once?"
"You mean _your_ hoss?"
"Uh-huh."
"I'll trade you, even."
"No, you won't, son. But you can ride him down to the ranch, if you like."
Little Jim almost tumbled from his pony in his eagerness to ride Joshua, his father's horse, with the big saddle and rope and the carbine under the stirrup leather.
"You musta made a long ride," declared Jimmy, as he scrambled up on Joshua. "Josh's shoes is worn thin. He'll be throwin' one, next."
Jimmy called attention to the horse's shoes, that his father and Bartley might not see how really pleased he was to ride a "real horse."
"Yes, a long ride. How is Aunt Jane and Dorry?"
"Oh, they're all right. Uncle Frank he cut twenty-two tons of alfalfa off the lower field last week."