There was a sand-dune just beyond, and he seated himself and leaned against it.
"I am beginning to breathe easier already," he explained. "Sit down here, Miss McDonald. We are safe enough now in this darkness."
"You are all wet, soaking wet."
"That is nothing; the sand is warm yet from yesterday"s sun, and my clothes will dry fast enough. It is beginning to grow light in the east."
The faces of both turned in that direction where appeared the first twilight approach of dawn. Already were visible the dark lines of the opposite sh.o.r.e, across the gleam of water, and beyond appeared the dim outlines of the higher bluffs. The slope between river and hill, however, remained in impenetrable darkness. The minds of both fugitives reverted to the same scene--the wrecked stage with its dead pa.s.sengers within, its savage watchers without. She lifted her head, and the soft light reflected on her face.
"I--I thank G.o.d we are not over there now," she said falteringly.
"Yes," he admitted. "They will be creeping in closer; they will not wait much longer. Hard as I have worked, I can"t realize yet that we are out of those toils."
"You did not expect to succeed?"
"No; frankly I did not; all I could do was hope--take the one chance left. The slightest accident meant betrayal. I am ashamed of being so weak just now, but it was the strain. You see," he explained carefully, "I "ve been scouting through hostile Indian country mostly day and night for nearly a week, and then this thing happened. No matter how iron a man is his nerve goes back on him after a while."
"I know."
"It was n"t myself," he went on doggedly, "but it was the knowledge of having to take care of you. That was what made me worry; that, and knowing a single misstep, the slightest noise, would bring those devils on us, where I could n"t fight, where there was just one thing I could do."
There was silence, her hands pressed to her face, her eyes fixed on him. Then she questioned him soberly.
"You mean, kill me?"
"Sure," he answered simply, without looking around; "I would have had to do it--just as though you were a sister of mine."
Her hands reached out and clasped his, and he glanced aside at her face, seeing it clearly.
"I--I thought you would," she said, her voice trembling. "I--I was going to ask you once before I was hurt, but--but I could n"t, and somehow I trusted you from the first, when you got in." She hesitated, and then asked, "How did you know I was Molly McDonald? You never asked."
The Sergeant"s eyes smiled, turning away from her face to stare out again across the river.
"Because I had seen your picture."
"My picture? But you told us you were from Fort Union?"
"Yes; that is my station, only I had been sent to the cantonment on the Cimarron with despatches. Your father was in command there, and worried half to death about you. He could not leave the post, and the only officer remaining there with him was a disabled cavalry captain.
Every man he could trust was out on scouting service. He took a chance on me. Maybe he liked my looks, I don"t know; more probably, he judged I would n"t be a sergeant and entrusted with those despatches I "d just brought in, if I was n"t considered trustworthy. Anyhow I had barely fallen asleep when the orderly called me, and that was what was wanted--that I ride north and head you off."
"But you were not obliged to go?"
"No; I was not under your father"s orders. I doubt if I would have consented if I had n"t been shown your picture. I could n"t very well refuse then."
She sat with hands clasped together, her eyes shadowed by long lashes.
"I should have thought there would have been some soldiers there--his own men."
"There were," dryly, "but the army just now is recruited out of pretty tough material. To be in the ranks is almost a confession of good-for-nothingness. You are an officer"s daughter and understand this to be true."
"Yes," she answered doubtfully. "I have been brought up thinking so; only, of course, there are exceptions."
"No doubt, and I hope I am already counted one."
"You know you are. My father trusted you, and so do I."
"I have wondered some times," he said musingly, watching her face barely visible in the dawn, "whether those of your cla.s.s actually considered us as being really human, as anything more valuable than mere food for powder. I came into the regular army at the close of the war from the volunteer service. I was accustomed to discipline and all that, and knew my place. But I never suspected then that a private soldier was considered a dog. Yet that was the first lesson I was compelled to learn. It has been pretty hard sometimes to hold in, for there was a time when I had some social standing and could resent an insult."
She was looking straight at him, surprised at the bitterness in his voice.
"They carry it altogether too far," she said. "I have often thought that--mostly the young officers, the West Pointers--and yet you know that the majority of enlisted men are--well, dragged from the slums.
My father says it has been impossible to recruit a good cla.s.s since the war closed, that the right kind had all the army they wanted."
"Which is true enough, but there are good men nevertheless, and every commander knows it. A little considerate treatment would make them better still."
She shook her head questioningly.
"I do not know," she admitted. "I suppose there are two viewpoints.
You were in the volunteers, you said. Why did you enlist in the regulars?"
"Largely because I liked soldiering, or thought I did. I knew there would be plenty of fighting out here, and, I believed, advancement."
"You mean to a commission?"
"Yes. You see, I did not understand then the impossibility, the great gulf fixed. I dreamed that good fortune might give me something to do worth while."
"And fate has been unkind?"
"In a way, yes," and he laughed rather grimly. "I had my chance--twice; honorable mention, and all that, but that ended it.
There is no bridge across the chasm. An enlisted man is not held fit for any higher position; if that was not sufficient to bar me, the fact that I had fought for the South would."
"You were in the Confederate army? You must have been very young."
"Oh, no; little more than a boy, of course, but so were the majority of my comrades. I was in my senior college year when the war broke out.
But, Miss McDonald, this will never do! See how light it is growing.
There, they have begun firing already. We must get back out of sight behind the sand-dunes."
CHAPTER X
THE RIPENING OF ACQUAINTANCE
They needed to retire but a few steps to be entirely concealed, yet so situated as to command a view across the muddy stream. The sun had not risen above the horizon, but the gray dawn gave misty revealment of the sluggish-flowing river, the brown slope opposite, and the darker shadow of bluffs beyond. The popping of those distant guns had ceased by the time they attained their new position, and they could distinguish the Indians--mere black dots against the brown slope--advancing in a semicircle toward the silent stage. Evidently they were puzzled, fearful of some trickery, for occasionally a gun would crack viciously, the brown smoke plainly visible, the advancing savages halting to observe the effect. Then a bright colored blanket was waved aloft as though in signal, and the entire body, converging toward the deserted coach, leaped forward with a wild yell, which echoed faintly across the water.
The girl hid her face in the sand, with a half-stifled sob, but the Sergeant watched grimly, his eyes barely above the ridge. What would they do when they discovered the dead bodies?--when they realized that others had eluded their vigilance during the night? Would they be able to trace them, or would his ruse succeed? Of course their savage cunning would track them as far as the river--there was no way in which he could have successfully concealed the trail made down the gully, or the marks left on the sandy bank. But would they imagine he had dared to cross the broad stream, burdened with the girl, confronting almost certain death in the quicksand? Would they not believe rather that he had waded along the water"s edge headed west, hoping thus to escape to the bluffs, where some hiding-place might be found? Even if they suspected a crossing, would any warriors among them be reckless enough to follow? Would they not be more apt to believe that both fugitives had been sucked down into the treacherous stream? Almost breathless Hamlin watched, these thoughts coursing through his mind, realizing the deadly trap in which they were caught, if the Indians suspected the truth and essayed the pa.s.sage. Behind them was sand, ridge after ridge, as far as the eye could discern, and every step they took in flight would leave its plain trail. And now the test was at hand.