"Don"t want to join us, do you, kiddie?" asked Bud quizzically.
"I"d like to, of course. But it is not possible," answered Tad.
"We"ll be off in the morning with our stock, you know. Better come along. You"ll dry up and blow away down on the desert. It"s had medicine where you"re headed for."
"We"re used to taking our medicine," laughed Tom Parry. "You probably have noticed as much in the short time you"ve known our bunch."
"You bet I have," laughed Bud. "And you take it in big doses, too."
"Allopathic doses," interjected the Professor.
"Don"t know what they might be," answered Bud. "Sounds as though it might be something hard to swallow, though."
This bit of pleasantry caused a general laugh. The fun continued until late in the evening. Next morning the camp was astir at an early hour.
The captured horses were found to be considerably subdued after being roped all night. Bud"s first work in the morning, after breakfast, was to take the two stallions in hand. They were freed of their bonds, and after a battle during which nearly every member of the party had been more or less mauled by the spirited beasts, the horse hunters succeeded in saddling and bridling Satan and the Angel.
Bud Stevens rode them about in turn, to the delight of the Pony Rider Boys who had never seen such bucking.
"Let me ride now," begged Stacy, after Stevens had to some extent subdued Satan.
The horseman permitted the lad to take to the saddle, but no sooner had Chunky done so, than Satan hurled him clear over the corral. Chunky, nothing daunted, came back smiling and tried it again, this time with entire success. Satan did not again succeed in unseating him.
Tad mastered the Angel without being thrown, and amid the cheers of the cowboys, who shouted their approval of his horsemanship.
All was now in readiness for the start of the cowboy band and their great herd of horses. Stevens had directed his men to take the two stallions outside the corral and stake them down securely. Then the men began driving the rest of the captured stock from the canvas prison. At first the animals evinced an inclination to run away. But with one leg in a sling this was not an easy task, and the hors.e.m.e.n rounded up the bunch with little difficulty.
"Here, here!" cried Tad. "You"re forgetting the stallions, Mr.
Stevens. You"ve left them staked down out back of the corral."
"Have I?" grinned Bud. "What did you want me to do with them?"
"Take them with you, of course," answered Tad, as yet failing to understand the horse-hunter"s plan.
"Don"t you want them, kiddie?"
"Want them--want them?" stammered Tad.
"Yes. They"re yours, yours and the fat boy"s."
"Oh, no, no, Mr. Stevens! I couldn"t think of such a thing."
"Master Tad is right," approved the Professor. "We have not the least claim in the world on those animals. We----"
"Say, Professor, who"s running this side show?" demanded Bud.
"Why--why, of course it"s your hunt, but----"
"All right then, seeing as it"s my outfit, I"ve decided that I don"t want the stallions. Look here! We"d have lost part of that bunch, at least, if it hadn"t been for your kids. Master Tad alone saved the herd from scattering all over the Ralston Desert. No, sir, I"m getting off cheaply. The stallions belong to the boys, and that"s all there is to be said. S"long everybody. Come up to Eureka on your way out, and if I don"t cut the town wide open for you, my name ain"t Bud Stevens."
With a wave of his sombrero, Bud put spurs to his mount and galloped away to join his companions, who had started the herd on its way to Eureka, where the animals were to be shipped East.
Tad and Stacy were too full of surprise to express their feelings.
CHAPTER XX
VISITED BY A HALO
The Pony Rider Boys turned again to the Desert Maze. A week had elapsed since Bud Stevens and his party had left them. One evening, after a hard day in the saddle, the guide was sitting thoughtfully in his tent, when Professor Zepplin entered.
"Sit down?" asked the guide.
"For a moment only," answered the Professor.
"Weather"s fine to-night."
"Yes, even though we have no water to speak of. Do you consider our situation at all serious, Mr. Parry?"
"Same old story, Professor. Sage brush and alkali. Tanks full one day, dry the next. There"s no accounting for the desert. Every time I get out of the Desert Maze, as somebody has called it, I chalk down a mark on the wall."
"I am beginning to understand that it does hold perils of its own,"
answered Professor Zepplin, thoughtfully.
"Traveling over the desert is no picnic--that"s a fact. Got to take it as it comes, though. If we go dry one day, most likely we fill up the next, or the day after that. Don"t pay to get down in the mouth and fret."
"Yes, I understand all that. But I don"t wish to take any great chances on account of the boys."
"The boys?" Tom Parry laughed. "Don"t you worry about them. Those boys would thrive where a coyote would die at sight of his own eternal starvation shadow."
The Professor shook his head doubtfully.
"Turn "em loose on the desert and they"d swim ash.o.r.e somehow.
Especially young Butler. He"s quiet--he doesn"t say much, but when he gets busy there"s something doing. For sheer pluck he"s got it over anything I ever saw--like a circus tent. Well, don"t lose any sleep worrying about water. We"ll catch a drop or two of dew out of a cactus plant some of these nights. See you in the morning. Good night,"
concluded the guide, rising and knocking the ashes from his pipe on his boot heel.
They had been working slowly toward the Death Valley region, and water was becoming more and more scarce as they proceeded. Indeed, the problem of where to find sufficient water for their needs had become a serious one. For the last three days all the water holes that the guide had depended upon to replenish their supply had failed them.
What lay before them none knew.
When the camp awakened, late the next morning, the guide was nowhere to be seen. His pony likewise had disappeared. But they did not trouble themselves over Parry"s absence, knowing that he had not left them without good reason and with many a sharp joke at each other"s expense proceeded to get the breakfast ready. They had just sat down to the table when Tom Parry came riding in, covered with dust.
"Morning, boys. Fine day," he greeted, with his usual inscrutable smile, which might indicate either good or bad tidings.
"Prospecting?" questioned Tad.
"Taking my morning const.i.tutional. Going to be hot enough to singe the pin feathers off a bald-headed sage hen to-day," he informed them, slipping from his saddle. After beating a cloud of alkali dust from his clothes he joined the party at the breakfast table.