Before d.i.c.k could reply there was a disturbance among the tethered ponies as though something had alarmed them. In a flash it came to d.i.c.k that the intruder he had seen was trying to steal a horse. The ponies did not dream. When they saw anything they knew it was real.
Accordingly the boy sharply called:
"A horse thief, Billee!"
This warning was enough to set any Westerner on the alert in an instant, for, in spite of the progress of automobiles, the horse is still, in the cattle reaches of the west, a thing most vitally needed.
"Horse thieves, eh?" cried Billee in ringing tones. "The varmints!
Come on, boys! We"ll get "em!"
His cries and the voice of d.i.c.k served to rouse the others in camp and in a few moments Nort, Bud, Yellin" Kid and Snake Purdee had unrolled from their warm blankets and had grabbed their guns. Bud threw some light cottonwood on the embers and the blaze that at once resulted showed objects up fairly plainly, though there was sufficient shadow to make the picking out of any particular horse thief very difficult.
"Where is he--which way did he go?" shouted Yellin" Kid.
"Over there!" and d.i.c.k pointed the trail along which they had ridden that day. Quickly he told his story--how he had been awakened by the midnight visitor kicking the boy"s foot as he strode over him.
"Come on!" called Snake and in a moment the entire camp was trailing after him in the direction where d.i.c.k had seen the old man vanish.
But it was like pursuing one of the shadows of the night, and it did not take long, after emerging from the circle of illumination of the fire into the blackness of the surrounding night, to impress all with the idea that a capture was out of the question.
"How many horses did he get?" asked Bud. "Gee! Why didn"t you wake me, d.i.c.k?"
"I did as soon as I got my wits about me," was the answer. "It all happened so suddenly."
"Horse thieves don"t generally send word they"re comin"!" chuckled Billee. "But it strikes me you"ve made a mistake, d.i.c.k."
"A mistake, how?"
"Callin" this old man, as you say he was, a horse thief."
"What else was he?"
"I"m not sayin" he wasn"t. But he didn"t take any of our ponies.
Count for yourself."
It took only a few moments to enumerate the riding and pack animals tethered near the camp and the count was found to total correctly. Not an animal was missing.
"Guess you were too quick for him," commented Nort to his brother.
"It"s lucky you woke up."
"It"s lucky he kicked my foot!" chuckled d.i.c.k. "Lucky for us and unlucky for him."
"Somewhat," admitted Billee Dobb. "Well, he come here and he went away, and we aren"t none the worse off as far as I can make out. Guess I was a little out when I said not to stand guard. But I didn"t imagine we were in horse-thieves" country."
"Hadn"t we better have sentry-go from now on?" suggested Bud.
""Twouldn"t be a bad idea," admitted Billee.
"I"ll take first shot at it," said d.i.c.k. "I"m wide awake now and since I saw this old man I"ll know him again if he comes sneaking back."
Nort and Bud were as eager to take the first watch as was d.i.c.k, but he insisted that it go to him. So, after another supply of light wood was placed near the fire in readiness to throw on and produce a quick blaze, in case of another alarm, the others retired to their blankets and d.i.c.k was left on guard.
Once more the silence of the night settled over the camp, a silence broken only by the occasional howl of a distant coyote. d.i.c.k made himself as comfortable as possible and at first he was able to keep widely awake. Then as the fatigues of the day manifested themselves in a desire to go to sleep once more he found himself wishing that the intruder would come back again to furnish excitement to keep him awake.
But nothing like that happened. The night continued quiet and in due time it came the turn of Bud to relieve d.i.c.k. Later Nort relieved Bud and finished the night watch which came to an end when a rosy tint in the east announced, the coming of a new day.
"Well, you didn"t catch anybody I see!" chuckled Billee as he sauntered down to the water hole to wash for breakfast.
"No, nothing happened while I was on duty," announced Bud.
"He knew better than to come while I was sitting up waiting for him,"
added Nort.
"You didn"t see anything; did you, d.i.c.k?" asked Yellin" Kid of the remaining sentry. "I mean after the first scare."
"No, nothing. He didn"t come back--whoever he was."
"Wonder what he came for, anyhow?" mused Bud who had started to follow Billee to the water hole.
Suddenly Nort, who was walking near his cousin, stooped and picked something up off the ground. It was a soiled bit of paper, evidently part of what had once been a grocery bag.
"Maybe he came to leave this!" suggested Nort as he turned the paper over.
"Came to leave that--what is it?" asked Bud.
"It"s some sort of a warning, I guess," was the answer. "Look!"
He held the soiled sc.r.a.p out to the others. The writing was large and straggling, but it was plain. The warning said:
KEEP AWAY FROM DEATH VALLEY IF YOU KNOW WHAT"S GOOD FOR YOU.
S. T.
CHAPTER VI
AT DOT AND DASH
Silently the little circle of ranchers, young and old, gazed at the ominous warning Nort had picked up. Yellin" Kid was the first to speak, following the reading of the message on the dirty piece of bag paper.
"Well, I"ll be horn-swoggled!" voiced the Kid in his usual loud tones.
Billee Dobb looked sharply from Nort to d.i.c.k and then at Bud.
"This any of your doin"s?" he asked.
"Our doings! What do you mean?" challenged Bud.