"We"ll take it together," was his reply.

But despite her disclaiming, Kate did the guiding and her object was to get a good way from town. Her companion"s frequently repeated effort was to slow down for a talk; hers was to tantalize him by speeding away from one. But she couldn"t speed all of the time, and he eyed either her riding, or her habit, pretty closely for a good while without comment.

Then a chance offered itself and he put a question: "Where did you learn to ride?"

"All mountain girls ride, don"t they?" she suggested.

"You"re not a mountain girl."

"It was a mountain girl that taught me to ride,--away back in the Alleghanies--long before I ever saw this country."

"Your mountain girl"s pupils don"t all ride like that, I"ll gamble."

"I wasn"t very bright." Kate spurred ahead. The dun pony kept after her.

"Compliments don"t set very well on you, do they?" was the shot from her left a moment later.

She turned a full face on her companion: "I hate them," she declared with energy.

In luring this man away from his errand, she had yielded to a really wild impulse and now the spirit of recklessness that ruled her mood seemed to revenge itself by counseling added dangers. She invited riding-hazards, that her victim disdained to comment on, until they must have appeared silly to him. A long way from home they were crossing a high bench above the Falling Wall river, a bench cut by frequent lateral washes--some wide and all very deep. These breaks they jumped one after another without taking serious trouble to head them, though Kate"s companion, riding on the river side, gave her every chance to do so.

"I suppose," he suggested at length, "you"re pushing into rough country because you like it."

She looked at him: "Yes," she said, icily, "I do like it. But," she added, "if it"s too rough for you, we"ll go back." In that much of a challenge she felt safe.

"I"m riding with you," he returned, a little dryly. "I like anything you like."

And at this juncture Kate"s luck deserted her; it always seemed to when she most needed it. Ahead, there lay a stretch of smooth bench and she took a run to cross it. But below a slight rise on the near side an ugly break suddenly faced her. Decision was forced. Recklessness said: "Take it." She spurred. The gray hesitated--almost as if to give his wanton mistress a chance to reconsider; but he got the quirt for his pains.

The wiry beast was almost on the brink--he had hardly a moment to coil, but he shot across the gulf with a convulsive leap that carried his rider over, with nothing--absolutely nothing--to spare. He made the farther side with three feet--the left hind foot slumped on the edge of the bank and down went the leg!

Kate never forgot that moment. It was thirty feet, sheer, to the rocks below. And it would have been poor d.i.c.k on top of his foolish mistress.

Kate really expected nothing better until with a terrific snort the pony scrambled to safety. What a horse will do for thankless man!

The frightened girl hardly dared look around even after she recovered her breath--which she thought would never come back. On the sudden spurt, her companion had been a little behind her. She presumed that the dun with commendable sense had refused the jump for when she glanced half way around--she was afraid her white face would betray her little panic--his rider was galloping him back in an easy circle and heading him the second time for the formidable break. This time, too, the rider was letting his reluctant beast understand who was master; and with enough of authority to force him and enough consideration to give him confidence, he jumped him over the gap as Kate should have jumped d.i.c.k--with room and to spare.

Her cheeks were burning again: "You did it much better," she said coolly, as he joined her. "d.i.c.k is getting slow."

"That wasn"t d.i.c.k"s fault," he remarked, for he appeared a trifle upset himself by the misadventure. "It was yours," he added bluntly.

Her only answer was to push ahead. She could at least keep the man busy--though she felt somewhat diffident about offering him further lessons in horsemanship.

The trail led up a commanding ridge and her companion scanned the valley lying to the north beyond. Through it they could trace a slender water course. "This should be not far from Falling Wall Canyon," he suggested.

"And that creek must be a branch of the Sinking Water."

"Oh, I"ve heard about that wonderful canyon," she exclaimed. "Tell me about it."

"It breaks through that near range," he said, pointing. "There are elk in the park across the next divide. There isn"t a great deal to tell about the canyon--it"s just there, that"s about all."

"How deep is it?"

"Three to six hundred feet."

"Straight up and down, they say."

"As near as the Lord could make it."

"Is there any way of getting to the bottom of it?"

"The easiest way would be to jump from the rim."

"Oh, could we see it?"

"Not tonight unless you want to camp out; and we"re not exactly fixed for that. Up close to the old mine bridge there"s a trail into the canyon.

It"s pretty stiff. A sailor would warp his way down with a rope."

The horses had halted by consent and their riders were contemplating the mountains and valleys surrounding them. Her companion took advantage of the pause to dismount and inspect the legs of the ponies--and while he examined those of his own horse for politeness" sake--he looked more closely at d.i.c.k"s.

"He must have got a wrench in that jump," confessed Kate, watching. "We were riding pretty fast, weren"t we?"

"For that kind of country, yes. I thought for a while," added her companion, in a dry way, "you must be showing me how to ride. Then I figured out you must be showing me how _you_ could ride."

Kate stared straight ahead: "How absurd!" she exclaimed with cold contempt for his conclusions, yet feeble in her sarcasm against his penetration.

"All I want to say is," he continued, remounting, "that I see you can ride. You don"t have to cover much country to prove that. You ride like a Western girl--and talk like an Eastern girl. Which are you?"

She unfeelingly closed all inquiries: "Both," she answered indifferently.

"Let"s head for the bottoms; about two miles from here there"s a spring--good water."

He looked skeptical: "If you can show me good water near here, I"ll be learning something. I didn"t know there was a water hole within ten miles--but I don"t know this lower country as well as my own."

"What is your own?"

He pointed to the Northeast to where a range of snow-capped peaks rose above from the desert: "Those are the Lodge Pole mountains. That"s where the Falling Wall river begins--where you see that snow. It circles clear around the range, crosses the Reservation to the West and opens South into a high basin--that"s my country--the Falling Wall. Then the river cuts out of there through the canyon we"re talking about and gets away to the West again." Coming a step nearer to her he pointed again: "Now look close to the left of that strip of timber. You can just see a break above it--that"s the high point of the canyon. A long time ago there was a mining camp in those mountains--Horsehead--they started to build a railroad up there--did a lot of grading and put in the abutments for a bridge across the canyon. Before they got the road built the camp played out; they never finished it. All that country below there is the Falling Wall."

"Are they all thieves and outlaws over there?"

He started a little in spite of himself and took his time to reply: "It must have been a thief or an outlaw that put that idea in your head," he observed finally.

"Oh, no, it was Tom Stone."

His expression changed into contempt: "I didn"t need but one guess."

Kate asked him to explain, but he did not and she was not in a position to object. She found the trail to the spring. Van Horn had taken her there once. Dismounting at a little distance, the two made their way down to it. "Score one for the rough rider," said her companion after he had drunk. "And I thought I knew every drop of water in this country."

[Ill.u.s.tration: "And I thought I knew every drop of water in this country."]

He produced the sandwiches and they sat down. Kate could judge the hour of the day only from the sun and dared not mention "time." Her companion asked as many questions as he could think of, and she managed her answers with a minimum of information. And she asked herself one question that did not occur to him: "Why was she not frightened to death?" It must have been the duel she felt she was fighting with this man to keep him away from her father that banished her fears. In the saddle, events moved too rapidly to admit of extended misgivings, and she had purposely a.s.signed to him the slower horse.

It was only when they were taking the almost enforced moment of rest together at the water hole--which might as well have been a thousand miles from help as ten--that little chills did run up and down her back.

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