The Boy Ranchers in Death Valley - BestLightNovel.com
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"You take it now----"
d.i.c.k's remarks were suddenly interrupted for, at that moment, his pony felt its left forefoot slipping into the burrow of a prairie dog. And in s.h.i.+fting and struggling to keep from going down the pony neatly shook d.i.c.k from the saddle and deposited him in a heap alongside the trail.
"Ride 'im, cowboy!" shouted Yellin' Kid.
"Say, this is no rodeo!" chuckled Bud.
"Are you hurt?" Nort anxiously inquired, spurring to his brother, who was scrambling to his feet. The pony, after running on a little way, came to a stop for the reins slipped down over its head and this was sufficient signal to cause a halt.
"Hurt? Shucks, no!" cried d.i.c.k. "'Tisn't the first time I've had a fall." Nor was it. Suddenly leaving the saddle was something a cowboy must count on any time of the night or day. And there are ways of falling off gracefully, and without damage, just as there are in submitting to a football tackle. d.i.c.k and Nort had learned how to protect themselves.
"Well, something happened then all right!" chuckled Bud as he rode on to capture d.i.c.k's pony and lead him back to the unseated ranch lad.
"Thanks, but I don't care for just that kind of happening," and d.i.c.k laughed as he vaulted into the saddle and the travelers kept on their way. Because of the fact that they had with them several led horses, carrying packs containing food and other supplies, their progress was necessarily slow.
"Well, we're half way there, I guess, aren't we, Billee?" asked Bud when, late that afternoon, they reached a place in a grove of trees amid the foothills where it seemed a good place to make camp for the night.
"Leetle more'n half way," admitted the old puncher.
"That's good!" sighed d.i.c.k. "I'm anxious to see what we'll find in Death Valley."
"Do you know, Billee, I've got another idea," remarked Bud as the horses were picketed and preparations begun for cooking supper. "I mean about the mysterious deaths of men and cattle you say you saw while you were a hand on Dot and Dash."
"Yes, I seen 'em all right!" declared Billee with more force than grammar.
"I'm not doubting that," admitted Bud. "Though you don't know what killed 'em. But I got an idea."
"What?" chorused Nort and d.i.c.k.
"A poison spring!" exclaimed Bud. "I mean bad water. You know there's a lot of it out this way, and especially as we get into the mineral district, where dad's new ranch is located. Maybe there were poison springs on Dot and Dash, Billee, and the men you saw lying dead, and also the cattle, might have drunk from them. Couldn't it happen that way?"
"Yes, it _could_," admitted Billee with an emphasis which showed his doubt. "But I never heard tell of no bad water on Dot and Dash."
"But maybe we can find some," went on Bud.
"Find bad water--poison springs! Sufferin' horned toads, what you want to do that for?" roared Yellin' Kid.
"To prove my point," answered Bud, "and to locate such places and fence 'em off so there won't be any more deaths. If dad is going to develop this ranch he doesn't want bad water on it."
"You're right! I didn't think of that," admitted the cowboy. "The kid may be right, Billee," he went on.
"Yes, he _may_ be," admitted the veteran with that same emphasis of doubt. "And it's true enough the Boss wants to develop this new ranch.
He said, if we could get it going, he'd buy a big herd and raise cattle down there. But first Death Valley has got to be cleaned up, and that's certain!"
"And cleaning up Death Valley and solving the mystery is just what we are going to do!" declared Bud. "How about it, boys?" and he turned to his cousins.
"We're with you!" echoed Nort and d.i.c.k in chorus.
After the meal, and as darkness began to fall, the travelers sat about the campfire, the dancing flames of which cast flickering shadows over their faces. The men were smoking and the boys talked among themselves, speculating over the mystery and occasionally listening to the conversation of Billee, Snake and Yellin' Kid.
"Well, I'm goin' to turn in!" Billee announced at last as he rose and started for his blankets. As the air was warm and dry they had not erected the small tent which was carried.
"Shall we stand guard?" asked Nort.
"What in the name of Tunket for?" asked Snake. "What good did it do you to have sentry-go the other nights?"
"None," admitted Bud. "Guess there isn't much sense in it."
"What do you say, Billee?" asked Nort.
"Anybody what wants to stay awake all night listenin' to them pesky coyotes has my permission!" chuckled the old man. "As for me, I'm going to pound my ear," and he prepared to crawl into his bed.
"We'll let it go," Bud decided and his cousins were not at all averse to this, for it was no fun for one member of the trio to lose even a few hours' sleep while waiting to call his relief to take the nest trick.
Accordingly, a little later, all six of the travelers were peacefully slumbering, while the restless horses moved about the length of their picket ropes, picking what herbage they could reach.
It happened to be d.i.c.k who was suddenly awakened at what he judged to be the middle of the night. And the manner of his awakening was this.
He seemed to be dreaming that he was buying a new pair of shoes and, after having tried on several tentative pairs in a shop, the salesman, who was attired in the full regalia of a cowboy, gave d.i.c.k's left foot a sharp kick as if to indicate that he should remove the shoe from it.
This kick was so realistic that it awakened the youth and he sat up, his eyes barely open, but feeling a distinct pain in his left foot.
"That was some vivid dream," d.i.c.k was murmuring to himself when he suddenly became aware that some one was moving away from him--a dark figure barely seen in the shadows of the night--shadows cast by the flickering embers of the fire. And then, in a rush, there came to the young rancher the meaning of this night alarm. It had been partly a dream and partly an actual happening.
Some one had stepped over him as he lay in his blankets and had kicked his foot, causing the dream to merge into reality.
"Who are you?" cried d.i.c.k sharply, reaching for his gun.
CHAPTER V
THE WARNING
Flaring up suddenly, a stick, in the embers of the fire which had long been smoldering, burst into blaze. By the light of this d.i.c.k saw the figure hurrying out of the maze of sleeping bodies in the camp. And there was light enough to see, though dimly, that the figure was that of an old man.
"Billee Dobb, is that you?" cried d.i.c.k, lowering the gun with which he had begun to draw a bead on the moving figure. "What's the matter?"
But, even as he asked the question his eyes roved to the place where the old puncher had spread his blankets. And a huddled form there told d.i.c.k that Billee was still sleeping.
Then, before the boy rancher could again get his gun up, the mysterious figure that had caused the night alarm slipped out of the circle of firelight and into the shadows of darkness.
Hardly sure, even yet, that it was not all a dream, part of the queer, fantastic vision of the cowboy shoe salesman kicking his foot, d.i.c.k sat there on his blankets, fingering his gun and wondering what would happen next.
"Did I see an old man or didn't I?" the boy was asking himself when two other things happened simultaneously, in the end convincing him that it was not all a dream.
One thing that happened was that Billee Dobb himself awakened and sat up as d.i.c.k was doing.
"What's the row?" the veteran cattle puncher demanded.