"Certainly not, certainly not."
"I will bid you good day. I"ll see you again when I may have something more to say."
With that McKay ran to his pony, and leaping into the saddle tore through the brush at a perilous pace. Tad observed what the others failed to see. He noted that the Ranger had returned in the direction from which he had come, rather than riding off toward the direction from which the shot had sounded. This struck Tad as a peculiar thing for a Texas Ranger to do.
"That"s queer," muttered Butler.
"What is queer, Tad?" questioned the professor.
"The way he went."
"His leave taking was rather abrupt. But we know that is a way these Rangers have. Besides he thought there was trouble in the air,"
guessed the professor.
"Yes, but then why did he run away from it?" urged Butler.
"That"s so, he did go the wrong way," wondered Ned.
"Maybe he"s going to take a roundabout course," suggested Stacy.
"Exactly. You do think now and then, don"t you?" smiled the professor.
"However, it is not for us to criticize. Captain McKay knows his business perhaps much better than do we. And now, if you are ready we had better be on our way. We have lost no little time here."
The packing up was not a long job for not much of their equipment had been unloaded. The rest of the day pa.s.sed uneventfully, the Pony Rider Boys continuing along the range of mountains.
About five o"clock they decided to make camp in a valley, beside a stream of clear, cold water. The place was thickly covered with brush and small trees, excepting for a small open s.p.a.ce on which the gra.s.s grew high and green.
They pitched their tent near the stream. This done the boys began gathering dry wood for the campfire which would need a lot of it before the evening came to an end. Wood was scarce and darkness had overtaken them ere they succeeded in getting enough for their needs. In the meantime the professor had been laboring with the tent.
He had finished his job quickly, rather to the surprise of the boys, who were chuckling over the mess Professor Zepplin would make of it.
The professor, however, was far from helpless. He might not be suspicious of every one he met, but he was a man of brains. He knew how to get along with his young charges, as perhaps few men would have done. And he did get along, without friction, retaining the love of every one of the Pony Rider Boys. They were always ready to play pranks on the professor, yet there was not a lad of them but would have laid down his life, if necessary, for him.
He insisted on getting the supper, "just to keep my hand in," as he expressed it. No one offered strenuous objection to this, though no cook ever had a more appreciative audience. The professor"s biscuits were beautiful to behold, but when the boys came to sample them they shouted.
"Too much soda, Professor," cried Tad.
"No, baking powder," corrected Ned.
"Wow! I know what you"re trying to do. You"re trying to blow us up!"
howled Stacy. "Why don"t you use dynamite in the biscuit while you are about it? I think I"ll go out and browse with the ponies. It"s much safer and I"ll bet will taste better."
"Young man, if you don"t like the cooking, you don"t have to eat, you know," rebuked Professor Zepplin.
"Yes, I do, too. What, not eat, and with an appet.i.te like mine? Why, I"d eat my pistol holster if I couldn"t get anything else. Speaking of eating that reminds me of a story---"
"Will some one please muzzle the fat boy?" begged Ned.
"You can go out and hide in the bushes while I"m telling the story,"
returned Chunky. "This is a nice ladylike story. It"s about a fellow---a clerk who was out with a party of surveyors, running a line across the desert. The water holes had gone dry and they were choking for water when the clerk saved them and---"
"Ring the bell! Ring the bell!" shouted Ned Rector.
"Yes, you have told us that story twice to my positive knowledge,"
spoke up the professor.
"Of course he has," agreed Walter. "The clerk found water for them and they were saved," added Tad, laughing immoderately.
"Did he?" demanded Chunky eyeing them soulfully.
"Yes, of course he did. You ought to remember the story. You have told it often enough."
"How did he save them?"
"He had a fountain pen, of course, silly! Have you forgotten your own story?" scoffed Tad.
"He didn"t have anything of the sort. This was another clerk. This one had a watch."
Stacy glanced around expectantly. Not a face was smiling. All were as solemn as owls.
"He had a watch," nodded Rector.
"He had a watch," added Tad.
"I wonder if the watch was running?" piped Walter.
"No, it was stagnant," retorted Stacy.
"Young gentlemen, for the sake of bringing a long-winded discussion to a close, I will offer myself as---as what you call a "mark." What had the watch to do with their thirst?" asked the professor gazing sternly at Stacy.
The boys shouted.
"Come down with the answer, Chunky."
"The watch had a spring in it," answered the fat boy solemnly.
"I think it"s going to snow," observed Tad consulting the skies reflectively.
"Yes, the air is very chill," returned Ned Rector solemnly. "Shouldn"t be surprised if some one perished in this outfit."
CHAPTER XV
MAKING A STARTLING DISCOVERY
Stacy Brown looked from one to the other of his companions in disgust.