Tad laughed merrily.
"Always a humorist, aren"t you?"
"Except when I fall in somewhere," replied Stacy.
"How does the bread go?"
"Fine!"
"Aren"t you glad you didn"t eat it up back there in the hermit"s cave?"
"Oh, I dunno. If I"d eaten it then, I wouldn"t have to eat it now."
"Oh, Chunky, you"re hopeless. I shall have to give you up----"
"What do you think has become of those ponies?" interrupted the fat boy.
"Guess they must have gotten away and gone home--at least one of them,"
answered Tad.
"Wrong."
"Why?"
"One went one way and the other another, didn"t he?"
"Yes. What of that?"
"If they"d gotten away they"d both traveled together. One of them was ridden away and I"m thinking the hermit was on his back. I"ll bet he carried my broncho off."
"You mean you think your broncho carried him off?" laughed Tad. "I didn"t give you credit for so much sense, Chunky. I guess you are right at that. The ponies surely would have left together. Seems to be our luck to lose horses. Guess my gun has gone, too, but I picked up the rope back by the mountain."
"Glad I didn"t bring my rifle along," chuckled Stacy. "I"ll bet I"d be throwing good-bye kisses after it now if I had."
"I don"t understand what that old man meant by making us prisoners unless it was that he wanted a horse to get out of the Desert Maze. If that was his reason, I don"t blame him," laughed Tad. "Mr. Parry did us a real service when he advised us to leave our stallions back in camp. They surely would have been gone by this time, and we never could have caught them again."
"Yes; I can see Satan legging it for the hills," replied Stacy.
"Legging it is his strong point."
They had finished their slender meal by this time and drunk their fill of water from the canteens. As a result, they felt better than they had felt at any time during the past three days.
"We have a long, hot walk ahead of us to-morrow, unless they come out to look for us, Chunky," averred Tad.
"Yes. And I love to walk," replied Stacy, with droll humor.
"Especially when the sun is one hundred and fifty in the shade, or where the shade ought to be. If ever I come down in this baked country again, I"m going to bring that sweet apple tree out of uncle"s orchard, even if I have to drag it all over the desert with me."
"Think we"d better make our beds and turn in?" suggested Tad.
"I guess. I"ll take a drink of water first; then I"m ready."
In a few moments the plucky lads had stretched out on the still hot ground, without feeling the least fear. They were too self-reliant to feel any fear, and they had pa.s.sed so many nights in the open that the mysterious darkness of the outside world held no terrors for them.
They knew there was nothing to harm them.
Tad was beginning to doze off when Stacy nudged him in the ribs.
"What is it?" asked Tad sharply.
"I think the girl forgot to put a fresh pillow case on my pillow to-day. The pillow feels awful rough."
"Oh, go to sleep. Dream all the funny things you wish to, but don"t bother me till daylight."
From that moment until long past midnight the boys slept soundly, neither having moved since he lay down for his night"s rest. Even when the coyotes began to howl, off on the desert, the lads merely stirred, only half conscious of what the sound meant. But when the howls gradually drew nearer, Chunky cautiously opened one eye. The night was so dark that he could not see anything about him.
The beasts drew nearer. Tad was awake now.
"Keep still, don"t scare them until I give the word," he said in answer to Stacy"s poke.
Emboldened by the quietness, the coyotes kept creeping closer and closer, their mournful howls increasing in volume every minute. All at once Tad reached down for his rope. He lay still for a few minutes until satisfied that the animals had not observed his movement.
Suddenly the great loop shot from his hand.
A quick, violent tug at the other end, a wild, frightened howl from the cowardly beasts, and all but one, with tails between their legs, fled over the desert.
"I"ve got one, Chunky," yelled Tad. "Quick! Help me here, or he"ll get away!"
It required all the strength of the two boys to hold the animal that Tad had roped in the dark. Gradually they shortened up on the rope, Tad standing in front of his companion until he felt the animal dangerously near. Then he let out a swift kick. By good luck, it laid the coyote flat.
Tad was upon the beast before, in its half-dazed condition, it could rise. Together they tied the animal"s feet, its jaws snapping at them viciously before their task was completed.
There was no more sleep for the lads that night. They feared the coyote would gnaw the rope in two, if left alone. All during the night the boys were obliged continually to jerk on the line about its neck to keep the beast from doing this very thing.
Morning came at last. Making a harness from a piece of the rope, they bound up one of the animal"s forefeet, just as Bud Stevens had done with wild horses. Then they released the hind feet. Mr. Coyote hopped about like a rabbit for a time, snarling and snapping, to their keen delight. They felt no fear of him, though Mr. Coyote had several times expressed a willingness to fight his captors.
After eating their remaining crumbs of bread, the boys decided to move on. Tad, believing that he knew the direction to follow, did not wait for the sun to rise. Yet, although they were not aware of the fact, they already had strayed far from the trail.
"I"m afraid the coyote is going to be a drag on us, much as I should like to take him along," said Tad.
Stacy begged to keep the animal, and Tad decided to try it. The next question was, how to move it. It was finally decided that one boy should lead the coyote while the other prodded it from the rear when the animal lagged.
At noon they halted to rest, draining the last drop from their canteens. Then they started on again, suffering more and more from the heat as they proceeded. About the middle of the afternoon Tad halted, gazing helplessly about him.
"Chunky, we"re lost in the Desert Maze. I don"t know where I am any more than if I were in the middle of an ocean. I"m pretty nearly exhausted, too."
"So"s the coyote," comforted Stacy.
"But we"ve got to keep on going. My watch is missing. I must have lost it where we slept last night. I can only guess at the direction we ought to take. Have you any idea where we are?"
Stacy gazed at the sky meditatively.
"On a rough guess, I should say we were on the Nevada Desert."