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Cullison's gaze had never left him. It observed, weighed, appraised. "Good enough. We'll start."
He left Sweeney to answer the telephone while he was away. All of his other riders were already out combing the hills under supervision of Curly. Luck had waited with Sam only to get some definite information before starting. Now he had his lead. Fendrick was either telling the truth or he was lying with some sinister purpose in view. The cattleman meant to know which.
Morning breaks early in Arizona. By the time they had come to the spot where the sheepman said he had met Kate gray streaks were already lightening the sky. The party moved forward slowly toward the canon, spreading out so as to cover as much ground as possible. Before they reached its mouth the darkness had lifted enough to show the track of a horse in the sand.
They pushed up the gulch as rapidly as they could. The ashes of a camp fire halted them a few minutes later. Scattered about lay the feathers and dismembered bones of some birds.
Ca.s.s stooped and picked up some of the feathers. "Quails, I reckon. Miss Cullison had three tied to her saddle horn when I met her."
"Why did she come up here to cook them?" Sam asked.
Luck was already off his horse, quartering over the ground to read what it might tell him.
"She wasn't alone. There was a man with her. See these tracks."
It was Fendrick who made the next discovery. He had followed a draw for a short distance and climbed to a little mesa above. Presently he called to Cullison.
Father and son hurried toward him. The sheep-owner was standing at the edge of a prospect hole pointing down with his finger.
"Someone has been in that pit recently, and he's been there several days."
"Then how did he get out?" Sam asked.
Fendrick knelt on the edge of the pit and showed him where a rope had been dragged so heavily that it had cut deeply into the clay.
"Someone pulled him out."
"What's it mean anyhow? Kate wasn't in that hole, was she?"
Ca.s.s shook his head. "This is my guess. Someone was coming along here in the dark and fell in. Suppose Miss Cullison heard him calling as she came up the gulch. What would she do?"
"Come up and help the fellow out."
"Sure she would. And if he was hungry--as he likely was--she would cook her quail for him."
"And then? Why didn't she come home?"
Luck turned a gray agonized face on him. "Boy, don't you see? The man was Blackwell."
"And if you'll put yourself in Blackwell's place you'll see that he couldn't let her go home to tell where she had seen him," Fendrick explained.
"Then where is she? What did he do with her?"
There came a moment's heavy silence. The pale face of the boy turned from the sheepman to his father. "You don't think that--that----"
"No, I don't," Ca.s.s answered. "But let's look this thing squarely in the face. There were three things he could do with her. First, he might leave her in the pit. He didn't do that because he hadn't the nerve. She might be found soon and set the hunters on his track. Or she might die in that hole and he be captured later with her pinto. I know him. He always plays a waiting game when he can. Takes no chances if he can help it."
"You think he took her with him then," Luck said.
"Yes. There's a third possibility. He may have shot her when he got a good chance, but I don't think so. He would keep her for a hostage as long as he could."
"That's the way I figure it," agreed Cullison. "He daren't hurt her, for he would know Arizona would hunt him down like a wolf if he did."
"Then where's he taking her?" Sam asked.
"Somewhere into the hills. He knows every pocket of them. His idea will be to slip down and cut across the line into Sonora. He's a rotten bad lot, but he won't do her any harm unless he's pushed to the wall. The fear of Luck Cullison is in his heart."
"That's about it," nodded Luck. "He's somewhere in these hills unless he's broken through. Bolt 'phoned me that one of his posse came on the ashes of a camp fire still warm. They're closing in on him. He's got to get food or starve, unless he can break through."
"There's a chance he'll make for one of my sheep camps to lay in a supply.
Wouldn't it be a good idea to keep a man stationed at each one of them?"
"You're talking sense," Cullison approved. "Sam, ride back and get in touch with Curly. Tell him to do that. And rouse the whole country over the wire. We'll run him down and feed him to the coyotes."
CHAPTER XIX
A GOOD SAMARITAN
Fendrick had told the exact truth. After leaving him Kate had ridden forward to the canon and entered it. She did not mean to go much farther, but she took her time. More than once she slipped from under a fold of her waist a letter and reread sentences of it. Whenever she did this her eyes smiled. For it was a love letter from Curly, the first she had ever had.
It had been lying on the inner edge of the threshold of her bedroom door that morning when she got up, and she knew that her lover had risen early to put it there unnoticed.
They were to be married soon. Curly had wished to wait till after his trial, but she had overruled him. Both her father and Sam had sided with her, for she had made them both see what an advantage it would be with a jury for Flandrau to have his bride sitting beside him in the courtroom.
Faintly there came to her a wind-swept sound. She pulled up and waited, but no repet.i.tion of it reached her ears. But before her pony had moved a dozen steps she stopped him again. This time she was almost sure of a far cry, and after it the bark of a revolver.
With the touch of a rein she guided her horse toward the sound. It might mean nothing. On the other hand it might be a call for help. Her shout brought an answer which guided her to the edge of a prospect hole. In the darkness she made out an indistinct figure.
"Water," a husky voice demanded.
She got her canteen from the saddle and dropped it to him. The man glued his lips to the mouth as if he could never get enough.
"For G.o.d's sake get me out of here," he pleaded piteously.
"How long have you been there?"
"Two days. I fell in at night whilst I was cutting acrost country."
Kate fastened her rope to the horn of the saddle, tightened the cinch carefully, and dropped the other end to him. She swung to the back of the horse and braced herself by resting her full weight on the farther stirrup.
"Now," she told him.
The imprisoned man tried to pull himself up, bracing his feet against the rough projections of the rock wall to help him. But he could not manage the climb. At last he gave it up with an oath.
"We'll try another way," the girl told him cheerfully.