"I haven"t got any dust," piped Stacy. "I--I had a bath--a hot bath."
"Are we anywhere near the horse-hunters, Mr. Parry?" inquired Tad, as the boys began unpacking the burros, some devoting their attention to the kitchen outfit, the rest spreading the canvas on the ground preparatory to erecting the tents.
"They are supposed to be further up the range. They will be down this way to-morrow, probably, to pick us up. They were not certain where they would make their permanent camp, Stevens said. All depends upon where the wild horses are grazing."
"I don"t see any wild horses, nor any other wild anything," objected Ned.
The guide dropped the ridge pole that he was about to carry to the place where the cook tent had been laid out ready to be raised.
"Come with me," he said, taking Ned by the arm and leading him to the left of their camping place. "Do you see that?"
"What?"
"Use your eyes. If you"re going to be a plainsman you"ll have to depend on your sense of sight. Take the desert for instance. It"s a desert maze if you are unable to read its signs; no maze at all if you do."
"What is it you were going to show Ned?" asked the rest of the boys, who had followed them out.
"See if you can tell, Master Tad."
But Master Tad had already been using his eyes. He nodded as he caught the guide"s eye.
"There has been a bunch of unshod ponies along here, if that is what you mean," he said.
"How do you know?" demanded Stacy.
"I see their tracks there. Saw them the minute I got over here."
"Maybe that"s the crowd that called at our camp the other day,"
suggested Walter.
The guide shook his head.
"There was no one on these horses," said Tad.
"Right," emphasized the guide. "That"s observation, young men. You will notice, by examining these hoofprints carefully, that the weight of the animal is thrown more on the toe----"
"How do you know that?" cut in Stacy.
"Because the toe sinks into the soil more than it would if the animals were loaded. In the latter event, the heels would dig deeper. Now if you will follow along a little further I may be able to show you the hoofprints of the leader of the band of wild horses, for that is what they are----"
"Wild horses?" marveled the boys.
"Wish we could see them," said Tad.
"I"ll wager they have seen us already, for they surely are in this neighborhood," replied Parry. "But a wild horse is as sharp as an old fox. The herd have been down in the foothills and, by the hoofprints, you will observe that they have returned to the mountain fastness."
"Perhaps they saw us coming," suggested Tad.
"More than likely," agreed the guide. "They were in a hurry and moving rapidly--there! There"s the leader"s trail. Look carefully and you will see where he leaped up to this little b.u.t.te here. Reaching it, he turned about and took a quick, comprehensive look at the desert."
"And at us," added Stacy.
"Yes, I think so. Come up here. You see this little ridge gave him a very good view of the desert maze. See if you can tell how many wild horses there were in the bunch," suggested Tom Parry.
Instantly the boys went down on all fours, crawling along the trail seeking to read the story that it told.
"Well, how many?" queried the guide, after they had finished their inspection.
"Fifty!" shouted Stacy.
"Forty-five!" answered Ned and Walter at the same time.
"What do you say, Master Tad?"
"I am afraid I must have missed some, then. I only make out twenty-one old ones and a colt. I take it the old mare was with the colt, for the prints show that the little animal was hugging the other closely," was Tad"s decision.
"Very good. Very good," nodded Parry. "There were twenty-two. You didn"t get the trailer, probably an old mare. She traveled along off to the right yonder a little. But I should like to know how you made fifty, Master Stacy!" twinkled the guide.
"Counted "em," answered the fat boy.
"Show me?"
Stacy did so, going over the hoofprints carefully, pointing to them with his index finger as he did so, the guide making mental calculations at the same time.
"And that makes fifty--fifty--fifty-four this time. There"s more of them than I thought."
Parry laughed softly.
"I"m afraid you"d make a poor Indian, young man. You not only have counted the hoof-prints, but you have counted the foot marks of yourself and your companions as well. Master Tad, let me see if you can run the trail up the mountain side a little way. It will be good practice. I want you boys to be able to follow a trail as keenly as the best of them before you have finished this trip. You never know when it"s going to be useful--when it"s going to get you out of serious difficulties, even to the extent of saving your lives."
Tad was off on a trot, stooping well over, with eyes fixed on the foot marks.
"Tad could hunt jack rabbits without a dog, couldn"t he?" questioned Stacy innocently. His companions laughed.
"Is that a joke?" asked Ned. "If it is, I"ll cry. Your jokes would make a Texas steer weep."
Tad was picking his way up the rough mountain side, now losing the trail, then picking it up again. The marks left by the wild horses were almost indistinguishable after the animals had reached the rocks, but here and there a broken twig told the lad they had pa.s.sed that way.
Once he appeared to leave the trail, moving sharply to the right, where on a shelving ridge, he straightened up and looked down into the valley.
Tom Parry nodded encouragingly.
"Know what you"ve found?"
"Yes, this is where the leader came to make another observation,"
answered Tad.
"That"s right. He"s a plainsman already, boys. Go on. Run the trail up to the top of this first ridge. It will not be a bad idea for us to know which way they"ve gone. If the hunters don"t show up by to-morrow we can take a little run after the herd on our own hook."