To tell the truth, n.o.body felt like sleeping, and all huddled together in a hollow, close to where the horses had been tethered. Wags came and rested his head in Tom"s hand.
"Old boy, you know we are worried, don"t you?" said Tom, and the dog looked up as if he understood.
It was a long time before their watches pointed to midnight. Then Songbird stretched himself.
"I am so sleepy I can scarcely keep my eyes open," he said with a yawn.
"Then go to sleep," said Tom.
"I take a leetle nap, too," said Hans, and soon both were slumbering, leaving Tom and Fred on guard. They wished they had a fire--it would make things more cheerful--but they did not dare to indulge themselves, for fear their enemies might see the light.
By the time it was three in the morning, even Fred could hold out no longer. He dropped off, leaving Tom to keep the vigil by himself.
But soon Songbird started up.
"Have they come back, Tom?" he asked.
"Not yet."
"They must be making some wonderful discoveries. Hullo! so the others went to sleep, too? Don"t you want a nap?"
"Well, I"ll take forty winks, if you"ll promise to keep a good lookout."
"I"ll do that. I"m as fresh as a daisy now."
Tom leaned back against a tree, and in a minute more was in slumber-land.
When the others awoke, they did not disturb him, consequently it was some time after sunrise when he opened his eyes.
"I declare! I"ve had a regular sleep!" he cried. "Why didn"t you wake me up?"
"We didn"t think it necessary," said Fred.
"Have they got back?"
"No."
At this, Tom"s face grew serious.
"That"s strange, and I must say I don"t like it."
"Oh, I guess they"ll show up before a great while," answered Fred.
"They couldn"t travel very well in the dark. If they tried it, they"d be sure to get lost."
Once more, they unpacked the provisions they had brought along and made a leisurely break-fast. Then they packed their things again and waited.
"I am going up to the top of a tree and take another look around,"
announced Tom about ten o"clock. He could scarcely stand the suspense.
"I"ll do the same," said Songbird, and soon they were in the top of a tall tree and gazing axiously in the direction of Red Rock ranch.
The place looked to be deserted.
"Not a sign of d.i.c.k and Sam anywhere," said the fun-loving Rover.
For reply, Songbird hummed softly to himself:
"The woods and plains are everywhere, But for those things we do not care.
In every nook and every place We look for a familiar face.
What has become of those we cherish?
Are they alive, or did they perish?"
"Don"t go on that way, Songbird, you give a fellow the blues," cried Tom. "If I thought d.i.c.k and Sam had perished--"
"Merely a figure of speech, Tom. I had to find a word to rhyme with cherish, that"s all."
"And such a word is rarish, I suppose," murmured Tom. "Honest, this is no joking matter," he continued soberly.
"I know it, and I wish Sam and d.i.c.k were back."
They continued to watch the ranch and presently saw a boy come out with a bundle under his arm and a fishing pole over his shoulder.
"There"s a boy, and he is coming this way!" cried the poetic youth.
They watched the boy as long as they could and saw him turn to the northward and take to a trail running close to a fair-sized stream.
"I think he is going fishing," said Tom. "I"d like to run across him and question him."
They watched the boy as long as they could, and then climbed down the tree and told the others of what they had seen.
"I am going after him," said Tom. "You stay here until I get back."
"I am going along," said Songbird, and so it was arranged.
A few minutes of walking brought them to the stream of water, and they walked along the bank of this a distance of quarter of a mile, when Tom called a halt.
"There is the boy now--sitting on a rock, fishing," he whispered.
"Don"t scare him off."
They crept into the shelter of the trees and came out again directly behind the boy, who had just landed a good-sized fish and was baiting up again. He was a small boy, with an old-looking face covered with a fuzz of reddish hair. He had yellowish eyes that had a vacant stare in them.
"Hullo!" cried Tom.
The boy jumped as if a bomb had gone off close to his ear. His fishing pole dropped into the stream and floated off.
"Out for a day"s sport?" asked Tom pleasantly.
The boy stared at him and muttered something neither Tom nor Songbird could understand.
"What did you say?" asked the fun-loving Rover.