XII
THE BROTHERHOOD OF THE PLAINS
Deeper than speech our love, stronger than life our tether,
But we do not fall on the neck, nor kiss when we come
together.
--"A SONG OF THE
ENGLISH."
The whole thing was clear now, clear as the big white day that
suddenly beamed along the prairies, scattering the clouds into
gray strands against the upper heavens. The treachery of the
Kiowas had been cleverly executed. Word of their friendliness had
come to us through the Mexican caravan which could have no object
in deceiving us, since it was on its way to Kansas City to do
business with the Clarenden house there. And Jondo had sent a spy
by night into the Kiowa camp as if they were not to be trusted.
Yet they had taken no offense; but, letting me keep my firearms,
had led me into their council on the top of Pawnee Rock, where
they had told me in clear English that they had nothing but love
for the white brothers of the plains. And to prove it we should
pass unharmed along the trail where once we had wronged them by
stealing their captive. The prairies were wide enough for all of
us and they had forgotten--as an Indian always forgets--all
malice against us. They had sent me back to camp with greetings
to my captain, and had gone on their way to the heart of the
Grand Prairie in the northeast.
It was only Jondo, as he rode wide of the trail for two days, who
could see any mark of an Indian's track. And we had not believed
Jondo. We never made that mistake again: But trust in his
shrewdness now, however, would not bring back the oxen lost and
the mules and ponies captured by the thieving band of Dog
Indians. But there was a greater loss than these. The Kiowas had
come for revenge. It was blood, not plunder, they wanted. A dozen
men with arrow wounds reported at roll call, and six men lay
stark dead under the pitiless sky. Among them Davis of the St.
Louis train, who had been too ill to take part in the struggle.
One more loss was there to report, but it was not discovered
until later.
Indians seldom leave their dead on the field of battle, but the
blood-stained sod beside their fallen ponies told a story of
heavy toll. Blood marked the trail of hoofprints to the northwest
in their wild rout thither. One comrade they had missed in their
flight. He lay down near the river where the ground had been
threshed over by the stampeded stock. He must have been a giant
in life, for his was the longest grave made in the prairie sod
that day. At the river's edge the sands were pricked with
hoofprints, where the struggle to carry away the dead seemed to
have reached clear into the thin yellow current of the Arkansas,
although no trail led out on the far side of the stream.
"That's the very copper cuss with yellow trimmings who had me
down when that arrow stopped me," Beverly exclaimed. "He was
seven feet tall and streaked with yellow just that way. I thought
ten million rattlesnakes and eight billion polecats had hit me.
His club was awful. Then I caught sight of old Gail's face in the
dust-storm, coming back to help me. He gave the Indian one dose
and got one back, a good hard bill, and then the dust closed in
and Gail was off again to the northwest out there, like a
hurricane. I could hear him a mile away. Couldn't I Gail? Where
is Gail?"
Where?
"Oh, back there with the stock!"
No?
"Out there looking over the draw for things that's got all
scattered."
No? Not there?
"Oh, he's getting breakfast. And we are all hungry enough to eat
raw Kiowas now."
No? No?
"Gail would be helping the wounded, anyhow, or straightening out
dead men's limbs. Poor fellows--to lose six! It's awful!"
No? No? No?
"Bathing in the river? Where? Over there across the
sand-bar?"
Nowhere! Nowhere!
"By the eternal God, they've got him!" Jondo's agonized voice
rang through the camp.
"We can take care of the wounded, and those fellows lying over
there don't need us. But, oh, Gail! They'll torture him to
death!" Rex Krane's voice choked and he ground his teeth.
"Gail, my Gail!" Beverly sat down white and desparingly
calm--Beverly, whose up-bubbling spirits nobody could
repress.
The others wrung their hands and cursed and groaned aloud. Only
Bill Banney, the unimaginative and stern-hearted, stood
motionless with set jaws and black-frowning brows. Bill, whom the
plains had made hard and unfeeling.
"We won't give up Gail, will we, Bill?" Jondo spoke sternly, but
his face--they said his face was bright with courage and that his
eyes shone with the inspiration of his will. In all that crowd of
eager, faithful men, he turned now to Bill Banney. Every man had
his place on the plains, and Jondo out of the chrism of his own
life-struggle knew that Bill was bearing a cross in silence, and
that his was the martyr spirit that finds salvation only in
deeds. Bill was the man for the place.
And so while straying animals were slowly recovered, while the
camp was set in order, while the dead were laid with simple
reverence in un-coffined graves, and the sick were crudely
ministered to, while Beverly grew feverish and his arrow wound
became a festering sore, and Rex Krane, master of the company,
cared for every thing and everybody with that big mother-heart of
his--Jondo and Bill Banney pushed alone across the desolate
plains toward where the Smoky Hills wrapped in their dim
gray-blue mist mark the low watershed that rims the western
valley of the Kaw.
They went alone because skill, and not numbers, could save a
captive from the hands of the Kiowas, and the sight of a force
would mean death to the victim before he could be rescued.
A splash of water against a hot hand hanging down; a sense of
light, of motion; a glimpse of coarse sands and thin straggling
weeds beside the edge of the stream down which the pathway ran; a
sharp aching at the base of the brain; an agony of strained
muscles--thus slowly I came to my senses, to memory, to the
knowledge that I was bound hand and foot to a pony's back; that
the sun was hot, and the sands were hotter, and the glare on the
waters blinding; that every splash of the pony's hoofs sent up
glittering sparkles that stabbed my aching eyes like white-hot
dagger-points; that the black and clotted dirt on the pony's
shoulder was not mud, but blood; that before and behind were
other splashing feet, all hiding the trail in the thin current of
the wide old Arkansas; that the quick turns to follow the water
and the need for speed gave no consideration to the helpless
rider. The image of six pairs of snaky black eyes came to help
the benumbed brain, and I knew with whom I was again captive. But
there was no question about the friendly motive now, for there
was no friendly motive now. And as we pushed on east, Jondo and
Bill Banney were hurrying toward the northwest, and the space
between us widened every minute. A wave of helplessness and
despair swept over me; then a wild up-leaping prayer for
deliverance to a far-away unpitying Heaven; a sudden sense of the
futility of prayer in a land the Lord had forgotten; and then
anger, hot and wholesome, and an unconquered, dominant will to
gain freedom or to die game, swept every other feeling away,
marvelously mastering the sense of pain that had ground
mercilessly at every nerve. Then came that small voice which a
man hears sometimes in the night stillness and sometimes in the
blare of daylight wrangle. And all suddenly I knew that He who
notes the sparrow's fall knew that I was alone with death,
slow-lingering, inch-creeping death, out on that wide, lonely
plain. The glare on the waters softened. The heat fell away. The
despair and agony lifted. In all the world--my world--there was
only one, God; not a far, unpitying, book-made Lord beyond the
height of the glaring blue dome above me. God beside me on, the
yellow waters of the Arkansas. His hand in my hot hand! His
strength about me, invisible, unbreakable, infinite. When a man
enters into that shielding Presence, nothing else matters.
I do not know how many miles we went down-stream, leaving no
trail in the shallow water or along its hard-baked edges. But by
the time we dropped that line I had begun to think coherently and
to take note of everything possible to me, bound as I was, face
downward, on the pony's back. It was when we had left the river
that the hard riding began, and a merciful unconsciousness,
against which I fought, softened some stretches of that long
day's journey. We crossed the Santa Fé Trail and were
pushing eastward out of sight of it to the north. No stop, no
word, nothing but ride, ride, ride. Truly, I needed the Presence
that went with me on the way.
At sunset we stopped, and I was taken from my pony and thrown to
the ground. I managed, in spite of my bonds, to sit up and look
about me.
We were on the top of Pawnee Rock. The heat of the day was spent
and all the radiant tints of evening were making the silent
prairies unspeakably beautiful. I do not know why I should have
noted or remembered any of this, save that the mind sometimes
gathers impressions under strange stress of suffering. I had had
no food all day, and when our ponies stopped to drink, the agony
of thirst was maddening. My tongue was swollen and my lips were
cracked and bleeding. The leather thongs that bound me cut deep
now. But--only the men who lived it can know what all this meant
to the pioneer of the trail.
I have sat on the same spot at sunset many a time in these my
sunset years; have gazed in tranquil joy at the whole panorama of
the heavens that hang over the prairies in the opalescent
splendor of the after-sunset hour; have looked out over the
earthly paradise of waving grain, all glowing with the golden
gleam of harvest, in the heart of the rich Kansas
wheat-lands--and somehow I'm glad of soul that I foreran this day
and--maybe--maybe I, too, helped somewhat to build the way--the
way that Esmond Clarenden had helped to clear a decade before and
was building then.
The six Indians gathered near me. One of them with unmerciful
mercy loosened my bonds a trifle and gave me a sup of water. They
did not want me to die too soon. Then they sat down to eat and
drink. I did not shut my eyes, nor turn my head. I defied their
power to crush me, and the very defiance gave me strength.
The chill air of evening blew about the brow of the rock, the
twilight deepened, and down in the valley the shadows were
beginning to hide the landscape. But the evening hour is long on
the headlands. And there was ample time for another kind of
council than that to which I had listened three mornings ago,
when I had been set free to bear a friendly message to my
chief.
They carried me--helpless in their hands--to where, unseen
myself, and secured by rock fragment and rawhide thong, I could
see far up the trail to the eastward. But I could give no signal
of distress, save for the feeble call of my swollen,
thirst-parched throat. Then the six bronze sons of the plains sat
down before me, and looked at me. Looked! I never see a pair of
beady black eyes to-day--and there are many such--that I do not
long to kill somebody, so vivid yet is the memory of those
murdering eyes looking at me.
At last they spoke--plains English, it is true--but clear to give
their meaning.
"Chief Clarenden thinks Kiowas forget. He comes with little train
across the prairies; Kiowas go to meet big train east and fight
fair for Mexican brothers who hate Chief Clarenden. They do not
stop to look for little sneaking coyotes when they seek big game.
Clarenden steals away Kiowas' captive Hopi. Cheat Kiowas of big
pay that white Medicine-man Josef would give for her. Mexican
brothers and Kiowa tribe hate Clarenden. They take his son,
you, to show Clarenden they can steal, too. Hopi girl!
white brave! all the same."
The speaker's words came deliberately, and he gave a contemptuous
wave of the hand as he closed. And the six sat silent for a time.
Then another voice broke the stillness.
"Yonder is your trail. Chief Clarenden and big white chiefs go by
to Santa Fé to buy and sell and grow rich. Indian sell
captives to grow rich! No! White chief not let Indians buy and
sell. But we do not kill white dogs. We leave you here to watch
the trail for wagon-trains. They may not come soon. They may not
see you nor hear you. You can see them pass on their way to get
rich. You can watch them. Hopi girl would have brought us big
money. We get no richer. Watch white men go get rich. You may
watch many days till sun dries your eyes. Nothing trouble you
here. Watch the trail. No wild animal come here. No water drown
you here. No fine meat make you ache with eating here.
Watch."
The six looked long at me, and as the light faded their black
eyes and dark faces seemed like the glittering eyes and hooked
bills of six great dark birds of prey.
When the last sunset glow was in the west the six rose up and
walked backward, still looking at me, until they passed my range
of vision and I could only feel their eyes upon me. Then I heard
the clatter of ponies' feet on the hard rock, the fainter stroke
on the thin, sandy soil, the thud on the thickening sod. Thump,
thump, thump, farther and farther and farther away. The west grew
scarlet, deepened to purple and melted at last into the dull gray
twilight that foreruns the darkness of night. One ray of pale
gold shimmered far along toward the zenith and lost itself in the
upper heavens, and the stars came forth in the blue-black eastern
sky. And I was alone with the Presence whose arm is never
shortened and whose ear grows never heavy.
The trail to the east was only a dull line along the darker
earth. I looked up at the myriad stars coming swiftly out of
space to greet me. The starlit sky above the open prairie speaks
the voice of the Infinite in a grandeur never matched on land or
sea.
I thought of Little Blue Flower on that dim-lighted dawning when
she had showed us her bleeding hands and lashed shoulders. And
again I heard Beverly's boyish voice ring out:
"Let's take her and take our chances."
And then I was beside the glistening waters of the Flat Rock, and
Little Blue Flower was there in her white Grecian robe and the
wrought-silver headband with coral pendants. And Eloise. The
golden hair, the soft dark eyes, the dainty peach-bloom cheek.
Eloise whom I had loved always and always. Eloise who loved
Beverly--good, big-hearted, sunny-faced Beverly, who never had
visions. Any girl would love him. Most of all, Little Blue
Flower. What a loving message she had left us in the one word,
Lolomi. God pity her.
A thousand sharp pains racked my body. I tried to move. I longed
for water. Then a merciful darkness fell upon me--not sleep, but
unconsciousness. And the stars watched over me through that black
night, lying there half dead and utterly alone.
Out to the northwest Jondo and Bill Banney rode long on the trail
of the fleeing Kiowas. A picture for an artist of the West, these
two rough men in the garb and mount and trappings of the
plainsman, with eyes alert and strong faces, riding only as men
can ride who go to save a life more eagerly than they would save
their own. Not in rash haste, but with unchecked speed, losing no
mark along the trail that should guide them more quickly to their
goal, so they passed side by side, and neither said a word for
hours along the way. Night came, and the needs of their ponies
made them pause briefly. The trail, too, was harder to follow
now. They might lose it in the darkness and so lose time. And
those two men were going forth to victory. Not for one single
heart-beat did they doubt their power to win, and the stead-fast
assurance made them calm.
Daylight again, and a fresher trail made them hurry on. They
drank at every stream and ate a snatch of food as they rode. They
reached the hurriedly quitted Kiowa camp, and searched for the
sign of vengeance on a captive there. Jondo knew those signs, and
his heart beat high with hope.
"They haven't done it yet," he said to his companion. "They want
to get away first. We are safe for a day."
And they rode swiftly on again.
"There's trouble here," Bill Banney declared as he watched the
ground. "Too many feet. Could it be here?"
His voice was hardly audible. The two men halted and read the
ground with piercing eyes. Something had happened, for there had
been a circling and chasing in and out, and the sod was cut deep
with hoofprints.
"No council nor ceremony, no open space for anything." Jondo
would not even speak the word he was bound not to know.
"They've divided, Jondo. Here goes the big crowd, and there a
smaller one," Bill declared.
"There were a lot of Dog Indians along for thieving. They've
split here. Seem to have fussed a bit over it, too. And yonder
runs the Kiowa trail to the north. Here go the Dogs east." Jondo
replied. "We'll follow the Kiowas a spell," he added, after a
thoughtful pause.
And again they were off. It was nearing noon now, and the trail
was fresher every minute. At last the plainsmen climbed a low
swell, halting out of sight on the hither side. Then creeping to
the crest, they looked down on the Indian camp lying in a little
dry valley of a lost stream whose course ran underground beneath
them.
Lying flat on the ground, each with his head behind a low bush on
the top of the swell, the men read the valley with searching
eyes. Then Jondo, with Bill at his heels, slid swiftly down the
slope.
"Gail Clarenden isn't there. We must take the trail east, and
ride hard," he said, in a hoarse voice.
And they rode hard until they were beyond the range of the Kiowa
outposts.
"What's your game, Jondo?" Bill asked, at length.
"They quarreled back there. Either the Dogs have Gail, or he's
lost somewhere. The Kiowas are waiting for something. I can't
quite understand, but we'll go on."
It was mid-afternoon and the two riders were faint from the
hardship of the chase, but nobody who knew Jondo ever expected
him to give up. The sun blazed down in the heat of the late
afternoon, and the baking earth lay brown and dry beneath the
heat-quivering air. There was no sound nor motion on the plains
as the two faithful brothers--in purpose--followed hard on the
track of the Dog Indian band.
Ahead of them the trail grew clearer until they saw the object of
their chase, a band nearly a hundred strong, riding slowly, far
ahead. Jondo and Bill halted and dropped to the ground. No cover
was in sight, but if the Indians were unsuspicious they might not
be discovered. On went the outlaw band, and the two white men
followed after. Suddenly the Indians halted and grouped
themselves together. The plainsmen watched eagerly for the cause.
Out of the south six Indians came riding swiftly into view. They,
too, halted, but neither group seemed aware that the two dull,
motionless spots to the west were two white men watching them.
White men didn't belong there.
The six rode forward. There was much parleying and pointing
eastward. Then the six rode rapidly northward and the Dog band
spurted east as rapidly.
Jondo looked at Bill.
"I see it clear as day. God help us not to be too late!" he
cried, triumphantly, leaping to his saddle.
"What in Heaven's name to you see?" Bill asked eagerly.
"Gail wasn't with the Kiowas back there. He wasn't with the Dogs
out yonder. Don't you remember he told us about six of the devils
getting him in their friendly camp that morning? Yonder go the
six. They have left Gail somewhere to die and they are cutting
back to join the tribe. They have sent the Dogs on east. We'll
run down this trail to the south. Hurry, Bill! For God's sake,
hurry! It's the Lord's mercy they didn't see us back here."
That day Pawnee Rock saw the same old beauty of sunrise; the same
clear sweeping breeze; the same long shining hours on the green
prairies; but it all meant nothing to me, racked with pain and
choking with thirst through the awful lengths of that summer day.
Fitful unconsciousness, with fever and delirium, seeing mocking
faces with snaky black eyes, looking long at me; food almost
touching my lips, and floods of crystal waters everywhere just
out of reach. I was on the bluff above the river at Fort
Leavenworth again, watching for the fish on the sand-bars. They
were Indians instead of fish, and they laughed at me and called
me a big brown bob-cat. Then Mother Bridget and Aunty Boone would
have come to me if I could only make them hear me. But the sun
beat hot upon my burning face, and my swollen lips refused to
moan.
And then I looked to the eastward and hope sprang to life within
me. A wagon-train was crawling slowly toward Pawnee Rock. Tears
drenched my eyes until I could hardly count the wagons--twenty,
thirty, forty. It must be far in the afternoon now, and they
might encamp here. But they seemed to be hurrying. I could not
see for pain, but I knew they were near the headland now. I could
hear the rattle of the wagon-chains and the tramp of feet and
shouts of the bull-whackers. I tugged masterfully at my bonds. It
was a useless effort. I tried to shout, but only low moans came
forth from my parched lips. I strove and raged and prayed. The
wagons hurried on and on, a long time, for there were many of
them. Then the rattling grew fainter, the voices were far off,
the thud of hoof-beats ceased. The train had passed the Rock,
never dreaming that a man lay dying in sight of the succor they
would so gladly have given.
The sun began to strike in level rays across the land, and the
air was cooler, but I gave no heed to things about me. Death was
waiting--slow, taunting death. The stars would be kind again
to-night as they had been last night, but death crouching between
me and the starlight, was slowly crawling up Pawnee Rock. Oh, so
slowly, yet so surely creeping on. The sun was gone and a tender
pink illumined the sky. The light was soft now. If death would
only steal in before the glare burst forth. I forgot that night
must come first. Pity, God of heaven, pity me!
And then the Presence came, and a sweet, low voice--I hear it
still sometimes, when sunsets soften to twilight, "My presence
shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest." I felt
a thrill of triumph pulse through my being. Unconquered, strong,
and glad is he who trusts.
"I shall not die. I shall live, and in God's good time I shall be
saved." I tried to speak the words, but I could not hear my
voice. My pains were gone and I lay staring at the evening sky
all mother-of-pearl and gold above my head. And on my lips a
smile.
And so they found me at twilight, as a tired child about to fall
asleep. They did not cry out, nor fall on my neck, nor weep. But
Bill Banney's strong arms carried me tenderly away. Water, food,
unbound swollen limbs, bathed in the warm Arkansas flow, soft
grass for a bed, and the eyes of the big plainsman, my childhood
idol, gentle as a girl's, looking unutterable things into my
eyes.
I've never known a mother's love, but for that loss the Lord gave
me--Jondo.
XIII
IN THE SHELTER OF SAN MIGUEL
Fear not, dear love, thy trial hour shall be
The dearest bond between my heart and thee.
--ALL THE YEAR ROUND.
When we reached the end of the trail and entered a second time
into Santa Fé the Stars and Stripes were floating lazily
above the Palace of the Governors. Out on the heights beyond the
old Spanish prison stood Fort Marcy, whose battlements told of a
military might, strong to control what by its strength it had
secured. In its shadow was La Garita, of old the place of
execution, against whose blind wall many a prisoner had started
on the long trail at the word of a Spanish bullet, La Garita
changed now from a thing of legalized horror to a landmark of
history.
But the city itself seemed unchanged, and there was little
evidence that Yankee thrift and energy had entered New Mexico
with the new government. The narrow street still marked the
trail's end before the Exchange Hotel. San Miguel, with its dun
walls and triple-towered steeple, still good guard over the soul
of Santa Fé, as it had stood for three sunny centuries.
The Mexican still drove down the loaded burro-train of firewood
from the mountains. The Indian basked in the sunny corners of the
Plaza. The adobe dwellings clustered blindly along little lanes
leading out to nowhere in particular. The orchards and
cornfields, primitively cultivated, made tiny oases beside the
trickling streams and sandy beds of dry arroyos. The sheep grazed
on the scant grasses of the plain. The steep gray mesa slopes
were splotched with clumps of evergreen shrubs and piñon
trees. And over all the silent mountains kept watch.
The business house of Felix Narveo, however, did not share in
this lethargy. The streets about the Plaza were full of Conestoga
wagons, with tired ox-teams lying yoked or unyoked before them.
Most of the traffic borne in by these came directly or indirectly
to the house of Narveo. And its proprietor, the same silent,
alert man, had taken advantage of a less restricted government,
following the Mexican War, to increase his interests. So mine and
meadow, flock and herd, trappers' snare and Indian loom and
forge, all poured their treasures into his hands--a
clearing-house for the products of New Mexico to swell the great
overland commerce that followed the Santa Fé Trail.
For all of which the ground plan had been laid mainly by Esmond
Clarenden, when with tremendous daring he came to Santa Fé
and spied out the land for these years to follow.
A boy's memory is keen, and all the hours of that other journey
hither, with their eager anticipation and youthful curiosity, and
love of surprise and adventure, came back to Beverly Clarenden
and me as we pulled along the last lap of the trail.
"Was it really so long ago, Bev, that we came in here, all eyes
and ears?" I asked my cousin.
"No, it was last evening. And not an eyebrow in this Rip Van
Winkle town has lifted since," Beverly replied. "Yonder stands
that old church where the gallant knight on a stiff-legged pony
spied Little Lees and knocked the head off of that tormenting
Marcos villain, and kicked it under the door-step. Say, Gail, I'd
like mighty well to see the grown-up Little Lees, wouldn't you?
And I'd as soon this was Saint Louis as Santa Fé."
Since the night of Mat's wedding, I had been resolutely putting
away all thought of Eloise St. Vrain. I belonged to the plains.
All my training had been for this. I thought I was very old and
settled now. But the mention of her pet name sent a thrill
through me; and these streets of Santa Fé brought back a
flood of memories and boyhood dreams and visions.
"Bev, how many auld-lang-syners do you reckon we'll meet in this
land of sunshine and chilly beans?" I asked,
carelessly.
"Well, how many of them do you remember, Mr. Cyclopedia of
Prominent Men and Pretty Women?" Beverly inquired.
"Oh, there was Felix Narveo and Father Josef--and Little Blue
Flower"--A shadow flitted across my cousin's face for a moment,
leaving it sunny as ever again.
"And there was that black-eyed Marcos boy everywhere, and
Ferdinand Ramero whom we were warned to step wide of," I went
on.
"Oh, that tall thin man with blue-glass eyes that cut your
fingers when he looked at you. Maybe he went out the back door of
New Mexico when General Kearny peeped in at the front transom.
There wasn't any fight in that man."
"Jondo says he is still in Santa Fé." Just as I spoke an
Indian swept by us, riding with the ease of that
born-to-the-horseback race.
"Beverly, do you remember that Indian boy that we saw out at Agua
Fria?" I asked.
"The day we found Little Lees asleep in the church?" Beverly
broke in, eagerly.
In our whole journey he had hardly spoken of Eloise, and, knowing
Beverly as I did, I had felt sure for that reason that she had
not been on his mind. Now twice in five minutes he had called her
name. But why should he not remember her here, as well as I?
"Yes, I remember there was an Indian boy, sort of sneaky like,
and deaf and dumb, that followed us until I turned and stared him
out of it. That's the way to get rid of 'em, Gail, same as a
savage dog," Beverly said, lightly.
"What if there are six of them all staring at you?" I asked.
"Oh, Gail, for the Lord's sake forget that!"
Beverly cried, affectionately. "When you've got an arrow wound
rotting your arm off and six hundred and twenty degrees of fever
in your blood, and the son of your old age is gone for three days
and nights, and you don't dare to think where, you'll know why a
fellow doesn't want to remember." There were real tears in the
boy's eyes. Beverly was deeper than I had thought.
"Well, to change gradually, I wonder if that centaur who just
passed us might be that same Indian of Agua Fria of long
ago."
"He couldn't be," Beverly declared, confidently. "That boy got
one square look at my eagle eye and he never stopped running till
he jumped into the Pacific Ocean. 'I shall see him again over
there.'" Half chanting the last words, Beverly, boy-hearted and
daring and happy, cracked his whip, and our mule-team began to
prance off in mule style the journey's latter end.
Oh, Beverly! Beverly! Why did that day on the parade-ground at
Fort Leavenworth and a boy's pleading face lifted to mine, come
back to me at that moment? Strange are the lines of life. I shall
never clearly read them all.
Down in the Plaza a tall, slender young man was sitting in the
shade, idly digging at the sod with an open pocket-knife. There
was something magnetic about him, the presence that even in a
crowd demands a second look.
He was dressed in spotless white linen, and with his handsome
mustache, his well-groomed black hair, and sparkling black eyes,
he was a true type of the leisure son of the Spanish-Mexican
grandee. He stared at our travel-stained caravan as it rolled
down the Plaza's edge, but his careless smile changed to an
insolent grin, showing all his perfect teeth as he caught sight
of Beverly and me.
We laid no claims to manly beauty, but we were stalwart young
fellows, with the easy strength of good health, good habits,
clear conscience, and the frank faces of boys reared on the
frontier, and accustomed to its dangers by men who defied the
very devil to do them harm. But even in our best clothes, saved
for the display at the end of the trail, we were uncouth compared
to this young gentleman, and our tanned faces and hard brown
hands bespoke the rough bull-whacker of the plains.
As our train halted, the young man lighted a cigar and puffed the
smoke toward us, as if to ignore our presence.
"Its mamma has dressed it up to go and play in the park, but it
mustn't speak to little boys, nor soil its pinafore, nor listen
to any naughty words. And it couldn't hold its own against a
kitten. Nice little clothes-horse to hang white goods on!"
Beverly had turned his back to the Plaza and was speaking in a
low tone, with the serious face and far-away air of one who
referred to a thing of the past.
"Bev, you are a mind-reader, a character-sketcher--" I began, but
stopped short to stare into the Plaza beyond him.
The young man had sprung to his feet and stood there with
flashing eyes and hands clenched. Behind him was the same young
Indian who had passed us on the trail. He was lithe, with every
muscle trained to strength and swiftness and endurance.
He had muttered a word into the young white man's ear that made
him spring up. And while the face of the Indian was
expressionless, the other's face was full of surprise and anger;
and I recognized both faces in an instant.
"Beverly Clarenden, there are two auld-lang-syners behind you
right now. One is Marcos Ramero, and the other is Santan of
Bent's Fort," I said, softly.
Beverly turned quickly, something in his fearless face making the
two men drop their eyes. When we looked again they had left the
Plaza by different ways.
After dinner that evening Jondo and Bill Banney hurried away for
a business conference with Felix Narveo. Rex and Beverly also
disappeared and I was alone.
The last clear light of a long summer day was lingering over the
valley of the Rio Grande, and the cool evening breeze was
rippling in from the mountains, when I started out along the
narrow street that made the terminal of the old Santa Fé
Trail. I was hardly conscious of any purpose of direction until I
came to the half-dry Santa Fé River and saw the spire of
San Miguel beyond it. In a moment the same sense of loss and
longing swept over me that I had fought with on the night after
Mat's wedding, when I sat on the bluff and stared at the waters
of the Kaw flowing down to meet the Missouri. And then I
remembered what Father Josef had said long ago out by the sandy
arroyo:
"Among friends or enemies, the one haven of safety always is the
holy sanctuary."
I felt the strong need for a haven from myself as I crossed the
stream and followed the trail up to the doorway of San
Miguel.
The shadows were growing long, few sounds broke the stillness of
the hour, and the spirit of peace brooded in the soft light and
sweet air. I had almost reached the church when I stopped
suddenly, stunned by what I saw. Two people were strolling up the
narrow, crooked street that wanders eastward beside the
building--a tall, slender young man in white linen clothes and a
girl in a soft creamy gown, with a crimson scarf draped about her
shoulders. They were both bareheaded, and the man's heavy black
hair and curling black mustache, and the girl's coronal of golden
braids and the profile of her fair face left no doubt about the
two. It was Marcos Ramero and Eloise St. Vrain. They were talking
earnestly; and in a very lover-like manner the young man bent
down to catch his companion's words.
Something seemed to snap asunder in my brain, and from that
moment I knew myself; knew how futile is the belief that miles of
prairie trail and strength of busy days can ever cast down and
break an idol of the heart.
In a minute they had passed a turn in the street, and there was
only sandy earth and dust-colored walls and a yellow glare above
them, where a moment ago had been a shimmer of sunset's gold.
"The one haven of safety always is the holy sanctuary."
Father Josef's words sounded in my ears, and the face of old San
Miguel seemed to wear a welcoming smile. I stepped into the deep
doorway and stood there, aimless and unthinking, looking out
toward where the Jemez Mountains were outlined against the
southwest horizon. Presently I caught the sound of feet, and
Marcos Ramero strode out of the narrow street and followed the
trail into the heart of the city.
I stared after him, noting the graceful carriage, the
well-fitting clothes, and the proud set of the handsome head.
There was no doubt about him. Did he hold the heart of the
golden-haired girl who had walked into my life to stay? As he
passed out of my sight Eloise St. Vrain came swiftly around the
corner of the street to the church door, and stopped before me in
wide-eyed amazement. Eloise, with her clinging creamy draperies,
and the vivid red of her silken scarf, and her glorious hair.
"Oh, Gail Clarenden, is it really you?" she cried, stretching out
both hands toward me with a glad light in her eyes.
"Yes, Little Lees, it is I."
I took both of her hands in mine. They were soft and white, and
mine were brown and horny, but their touch sent a thrill of joy
through me. She clung tightly to my hands for an instant. Then a
deeper pink swept her cheeks, and she dropped her eyes and
stepped back.
"They told me you were--lost--on the way; that some Kiowas had
killed you."
She lifted her face again, and heaven had not anything better for
me than the depths of those big dark eyes looking into mine.
"Who told you, Eloise?"
The girl looked over her shoulder apprehensively, and lowered her
voice as she replied:
"Marcos Ramero."
"He's a liar. I am awfully alive, and Marcos Ramero knows I am,
for he saw me and recognized me down in the Plaza this
afternoon," I declared.
Just then the church door opened and a girl in Mexican dress came
out. I did not see her face, nor notice which way she took, for a
priest following her stepped between us. It was Father Josef.
"My children, come inside. The holy sanctuary offers you a better
shelter than the open street."
I shall never forget that voice, nor hear another like it.
Inside, the candles were burning dimly at the altar. The last
rays of daylight came through the high south windows, touching
the carved old rafters and gray adobe with a red glow. Long ago
human hands, for lack of trowels, had laid that adobe surface on
the rough stone--hands whose imprint is graven still on those
crudely dented walls.
We sat down on a low seat inside of the doorway, and Father Josef
passed up the aisle to the altar, leaving us there alone.
"Eloise, Marcos Ramero is your friend, and I beg your pardon for
speaking of him as I did."
I resented with all my soul the thought of this girl caring for
the son of the man who in some infamous way had wronged Jondo,
but I had no right to be rude about him.
"Gail, may I say something to you?" The voice was as a pleading
call and the girl's farce was full of pathos.
"Say on, Little Lees," was all that I could venture to
answer.
"Do you remember the day you came in here and threw Marcos Ramero
out of that door?"
"I do," I replied.
"Would you do it again, if it were necessary? I mean--if--" the
voice faltered.
I had heard the same pleading tone on the night of Mat's wedding
when Eloise and Beverly were in the little side porch together. I
looked up at the red light on the old church rafters and the
rough gray walls. How like to those hand-marked walls our
memories are, deep-dented by the words they hold forever! Then I
looked down at the girl beside me and I forgot everything else.
Her golden hair, her creamy-white dress, and that rich crimson
scarf draped about her shoulders and falling across her knees
would have made a Madonna's model that old Giovanni Cimabue
himself would have joyed to copy.
"Is it likely to be necessary? Be fair with me, Eloise. I saw you
two strolling up that little goat-run of a street out there just
now. Judging from the back of his head, Marcos looked satisfied.
I shouldn't want to interfere nor make you any trouble," I said,
earnestly.
"It is I who should not make you any trouble, but, oh, Gail, I
came here this evening because I was afraid and I didn't know
where else to go, and I found you. I thought you were dead
somewhere out on the Kansas prairie. Maybe it was to help me a
little that you came here to-night."
Her hands were gripped tightly and her mouth was firm-set in an
effort to be brave.
"Why, Eloise, I'd never let Marcos Ramero, nor anybody else, make
you one little heart-throb afraid. If you will only let me help
you, I wouldn't call it trouble; I'd call it by another name."
The longing to say more made me pause there.
The light was fading overhead, but the church lamps gave a soft
glow that seemed to shield off the shadowy gloom.
"Father Josef came all the way from New Mexico to St. Ann's to
have me come back here, and Mother Bridget sent Sister Anita, you
remember her, up to St. Louis to come with me by way of New
Orleans. I didn't tell you that I might be here when your train
came in overland because--because of some things about my own
people--"
The fair head was bowed and the soft voice trembled.
"Don't be afraid to tell me anything, Little Lees," I whispered,
assuringly.
"I never saw my father, but my mother was very beautiful and
loving, and we were so happy together. I was still a very little
girl when she fell sick and they took me away from her. I never
knew when she died nor where she was buried. Ferdinand Ramero had
charge of her property. He controlled everything after she went
away, and I have always lived in fear of his word. I am helpless
when he commands, for he has a strange power over minds; and as
to Marcos--you know what a little cat I was. I had to be to live
with him. It wasn't until we were all at Bent's Fort that I got
over my fear of you and Beverly. The day you threw Marcos out of
here was the first time I ever had a champion to defend me."
I wanted to take her in my arms and tell her what I dared not
think she would let me say. So I listened in sympathetic
silence.
"Then came an awful day out at Agua Fria, and Father Josef took
me in his arms as he would take a baby, and sang me to sleep with
the songs my mother loved to sing. I think it must have been
midnight when I wakened. It was dreary and cold, and Esmond
Clarenden and Ferdinand Ramero were there, and Father Josef and
Jondo."
And then she told me, as she remembered them, the happenings of
that night at Agua Fria, the same story that Jondo told me later.
But until that evening I had known nothing of how Eloise had come
to us.
"You know the rest," Eloise went on "I have had a boarding-school
life, and no real friends, except the Clarenden family, outside
of these schools."
"You poor little girl! One of the same Clarenden family is ready
to be your friend now," I said, tenderly, remembering keenly how
Uncle Esmond and Jondo had loved and protected three orphan
children.
"The Rameros think nobody but a Ramero can do that now. Marcos is
very much changed. He has been educated in Europe, is handsome,
and courtly in his manners, and as his father's heir he will be
wealthy. He came to-night to ask me, to urge and plead with me,
to marry him." Eloise paused.
"Do you need the defense of a bull-whacker of the plains against
these things?" I asked.
"Oh, I could depend on myself if it were only Marcos. He comes
with polished ways and pleasing words," Eloise replied. "It is
his father's iron fist back of him that strikes at me through his
graciousness. He tells me that all the St. Vrain money, which he
controls by the terms of my father's will, he can give to the
Church, if he chooses, and leave me disinherited."
"We don't mind that a bit as a starter up in Kansas. Come out on
our prairies and try it," I suggested.
"But, Gail, that isn't all. There is something worse, dreadfully
worse, that I cannot tell you, that only the Rameros know, and
hold like a sword over my head. If I marry Marcos his father will
destroy all evidence of it and I shall have a handsome, talented,
rich husband." Eloise bowed her head and clasped her hands,
crushed by the misery of her lot.
"And if you refuse to marry this scoundrel?" I asked,
bluntly.
"Then I will be a penniless outcast. The Rameros are powerful
here, and the Church will be with them, for it will get my
inheritance. I am helpless and alone and I don't know what to
do."
I think I had never known what anger meant before. This beautiful
girl, homeless, and about to be robbed of her fortune, reared in
luxury, with no chance for developing self-reliance and courage,
was being hemmed in and forced to a marriage by threats of
poverty and a secret something against which she was powerless.
All the manhood in me rallied to her cause, and she was an
hundredfold dearer to me now, in her helplessness.
"Eloise, I'm a horny-handed driver of a bull-team on the Santa
Fé Trail, but you will let me help you if I can. So far as
your money is concerned, there's a lot of it on earth, even if
the Church should grab up your little bit because Ferdinand
Ramero says your father's will permits it. There are evil
representatives in every Church, no matter what its name may be,
Catholic, Protestant, Indian, or Jew, but Father Josef up there
is bigger than his priestly coat, and you can trust that size
anywhere. And as to the knowledge of this 'something' known just
to Ferdinand Ramero, if he is the only one who knows it, it is
too small to get far, if it were turned loose. And any man who
would use such infamous means to get what he wants is too small
to have much influence if he doesn't get it. This is a big, wide,
good world, Little Lees, and the father of Marcos Ramero, with
all his power and wealth, has a short lariat that doesn't let him
graze wide. Jondo holds the other end of that lariat, and he
knows."
Eloise listened eagerly, but her face was very white.
"Gail, you don't know the Ramero blood. I am helpless and
terrified with them in spite of their suave manners and
flattering words. Why did Father Josef bring me back here if the
Church is not with them? And then that awful shadow of some
hidden thing that may darken my life. I know their cruel,
pitiless hearts. They stop at nothing when they want their way. I
have known them to do the most cold-blooded deeds."
Poor Eloise! The net about her had been skilfully drawn.
"I don't know Father Josef's motive, but I can trust him. And no
shadow shall trouble you long, Little Lees. Jondo and Uncle
Esmond `tote together,' Aunty Boone said long ago. They know
something about the Ramero blood, and Jondo has promised to tell
me his story some day. He must do it to-night, and to-morrow
we'll see the end of this tangle. Trust me, Eloise," I said,
comfortingly.
"But, Gail, I'm afraid Ferdinand will kill you if you get in his
way." Eloise clung to my arm imploringly.
"Six big Kiowas got fooled at that job. Do you think this thin
streak of humanity would try it?" I asked, lightly.
Eloise stood up beside me.
"I must go away now," she said.
"Then I'll go with you. Thank you, Father Josef, for your
kindness," I said as the priest came toward us.
"You are welcome, my son. In the sanctuary circle no harm can
come. Peace be with both of you."
There was a world of benediction in his deep tones, and his smile
was genial, as he followed us to the street and stood as if
watching for some one.
"I will meet you at San Miguel's to-morrow afternoon, Gail,"
Eloise said, as we reached a low but pretentious adobe dwelling.
"This is my home now."
"Your new Mexican homes are thick-walled, and you live all on the
inside," I said, as we paused at the doorway. "They make me think
of the lower invertebrates, hard-shelled, soft-bodied animals. Up
on the Kansas prairies and the Missouri bluffs we have a central
vetebra--the family hearth-stone--and we live all around it. That
is the people who have them do. There isn't much home life for a
freighter of the plains anywhere. Good by, Little Lees." I took
her offered hand. "I'm glad you have let me be your friend, a
hard-shelled bull-whacker like me."
The street was full of shadows and the evening air was chill as
the door closed on that sweet face and cloud of golden hair. But
the pressure of warm white fingers lingered long in my sense of
touch as I retraced my steps to the trail's end. At the church
door I saw Father Josef still waiting, as if watching for
somebody.
All that Eloise had told me ran through my mind, but I felt sure
that neither financial nor churchly influence in Santa Fé
could be turned to evil purposes so long as men like Felix Narveo
and Father Josef were there. And then I thought of Esmond
Clarenden, himself neither Mexican nor Roman Catholic, who,
nevertheless, drew to himself such fair-dealing, high-minded men
as these, always finding the best to aid him, and combating the
worst with daring fearlessness. Surely with the priest and the
merchant and Jondo as my uncle's representative, no harm could
come to the girl whom I knew that I should always love.
And with my mind full of Eloise and her need I sought out Jondo
and listened to his story.
XIV
OPENING THE RECORD
Fighting for leave to live and labor well,
God flung me peace and ease.
--"A SONG OF THE ENGLISH."
I found Jondo in the little piazza opening into the hotel
court.
"Where did you leave Krane and Bev?" he asked, as I sat down
beside him.
"I didn't leave them; they left me," I answered.
"Oh, you young bucks are all alike. You know just enough to be
good to yourselves. You don't think much about anybody else,"
Jondo said, with a smile.
"I think of others, Jondo, and for that reason I want you to tell
me that story about Ferdinand Ramero that you promised to tell me
one night back on the trail."
Jondo gave a start.
"I'd like to forget that man, not talk about him," he
replied.
"But it is to help somebody else, not just to be good to myself,
that I want to know it," I insisted, using his own terms. And
then I told him what Eloise had told me in the San Miguel
church.
"Are the Ramero's so powerful here that they can control the
Church in their scheme to get what they want?" I asked.
"It would be foolish to underestimate the strength of Ferdinand
Ramero," Jondo replied, adding, grimly, "It has been my lot to
know the best of men who could make me believe all men are good,
and the worst of men who make me doubt all humanity." He clenched
his fists as if to hold himself in check, and something, neither
sigh nor groan nor oath nor prayer, but like them all, burst from
his lips.
"If you ever have a real cross, Gail, thank the Lord for the
green prairies and the open plains, and the danger-stimulus of
the old Santa Fé Trail. They will seal up your wounds, and
soften your hard, rebellious heart, and make you see things big,
and despise the narrow little crooks in your path."
One must have known Jondo, with his bluff manner and sunny smile
and daring spirit, to feel the force, of these brave sad words. I
felt intuitively that I had laid bare a wound of his by my
story.
"It is for Eloise, not for my curiosity, that I have come to
you," I said, gently. "And you didn't come too soon, boy." Jondo
was himself in a moment. "It is another cruel act in the old
tragedy of Ramero against Clarenden and others."
"Will the Church be bribed by the St. Vrain estate and urge this
wedding?" I asked.
"The Church considers money as so much power for the Kingdom. I
have heard that the St. Vrain estate was left in Ramero's hands
with the proviso that if Eloise should marry foolishly before she
was twenty-five she, would lose her property. Do you see the
trick in the game, and why Ramero can say that if he chooses he
can take her heritage away from her? But as he keeps everything
in his own hands it is hard to know the truth about anything
connected with money matters."
"Would Father Josef be party to such a transaction?" I asked,
angrily.
"Ramero thinks so, but he is mistaken," Jondo replied.
"What makes you think he won't be?" I insisted.
"Because I knew Father Josef before he became a priest, and why
he took the vows," Jondo declared. "Unless a man brings some
manhood to the altar, he will not find it in the title nor the
dress there, it makes no difference whether he be Catholic,
Protestant, Hebrew, or heathen. Father Josef was a gentleman
before he was a priest."
"Well, if he's all right, why did he bring Eloise back here into
the heart of all this trouble?" I questioned.
Jondo sat thinking for a little while, then he said,
assuringly:
"I don't know his motive, unless he felt he could protect her
here himself; but I tell you, my boy, he can be trusted. Let me
tell you something, Gail. When Esmond Clarenden and I were boys
back in a New England college we knew two fellows from the
Southwest whose fathers were in official circles at Washington.
One was Felix Narveo, thoroughbred Mexican, thoroughbred
gentleman, a bit lacking in initiative sometimes, for he came
from the warmer, lazier lands, but as true as the compass in his
character. The other fellow was Dick Verra, French father,
English mother; I think he had a strain of Indian blood farther
back somewhere, but he would have been a prince in any tribe or
nation. A happy, wholesome, red-blooded, young fellow, with the
world before him for his conquest.
"We knew another fellow, too, Fred Ramer, self-willed, imperious,
extravagant in his habits, greedy and unscrupulous; but he was
handsome and masterful, with a compelling magnetism that made us
admire him and bound us to him. He had never known what it meant
to have a single wish denied him. And with his make-up, he would
stop at nothing to have his own way, until his wilful pride and
stubbornness and love of luxury ruined him. But in our college
days we were his satellites. He was always in debt to all of us,
for money was his only god and we never dared to press him for
payment. The only one of us who ever overruled him was Dick
Verra. But Dick was a born master of men. There was one other
chum of ours, but I'll tell you about him later. Boys together,
we had many escapades and some serious problems, until by the
time our college days were over we were bound together by those
ties that are made in jest and broken with choking voices and
eyes full of tears."
Jondo paused and I waited, silent, until he should continue.
"Things happened to that little group of college men as time went
on. You know your uncle's life, leading merchant of Kansas City
and the Southwest; and mine, plainsman and freighter on the Santa
Fé Trail. Felix Narveo's history is easily read. Esmond
Clarenden came down here at the outbreak of the Mexican War, and
together he and Narveo laid the foundation for the present trail
commerce that is making the country at either end of it rich and
strong. Dick Verra is now Father Josef." Jondo paused as if to
gather force for the rest of the story. Then he said:
"Back at college we all knew Mary Marchland, a beautiful
Louisiana girl who visited in Washington and New England, and all
of us were in love with her. When our life-lines crossed again
Clarenden had come to St. Louis. About that time his two older
brothers and their wives died suddenly of yellow fever, leaving
you and Beverly alone. It was Felix Narveo who brought you up to
St. Louis to your uncle."
"I remember that. The steamboat, and the Spanish language, and
Felix Narveo's face. I recalled that when I saw him years ago," I
exclaimed.
"You always were all eyes and ears, remembering names and faces,
where Beverly would not recall anything," Jondo declared.
"And what became of your Fred Ramer?" I asked.
"He is Ferdinand Ramero here. He married Narveo's sister later.
She is not the mother of Marcos, but a second wife. She owned a
tract of land inherited from the Narveo estate down in the San
Christobal country. There is a lonely ranch house in a
picturesque cañon, and many acres of grazing-land. She
keeps it still as hers, although her stepson, Marcos, claims it
now. It is for her sake that Narveo doesn't dare to move openly
against Ramero. And in his masterful way he has enough influence
with a certain ring of Mexicans here, some of whom are Narveo's
freighters, to reach pretty far into the Indian country. That's
why I knew those Mexicans were lying to us about the Kiowas at
Pawnee Rock. I could see Ramero's gold pieces in their hands. He
joined the Catholic Church, and plays the Pharisee generally. But
the traits of his young manhood, intensified, are still his. He
is handsome, and attractive, and rich, and influential, but he is
also cold-blooded, and greedy for money until it is his ruling
passion, villainously unscrupulous, and mercilessly unforgiving
toward any one who opposes his will; and his capacity for undying
hatred is appalling."
And this was the man who was seeking to control the life of
Eloise St. Vrain. I fairly groaned in my anger.
"The failure to win Mary Marchland's love was the first time in
his life that Fred Ramer's will had ever been thwarted, and he
went mad with jealousy and anger. Gail, they are worse masters
than whisky and opium, once they get a man down."
Jondo paused, and when he spoke again he did it hurriedly, as one
who, from a sense of duty, would glance at the dead face of an
enemy and turn away.
"When Fred lost his suit with Mary, he determined to wreck her
life. He came between her and the man she loved with such adroit
cruelty that they were separated, and although they loved each
other always, they never saw each other again. Through a terrible
network of misunderstandings she married Theron St. Vrain. He, by
the way, was the other college chum I spoke of just now. He and
his foster-brother, Bertrand, were wards of Fred Ramer's father.
But their guardian, the elder Ramer, had embezzled most of their
property and there was bitter enmity between them and him. Theron
and Mary were the parents of Eloise St. Vrain. It is no wonder
that she is beautiful. She had Mary Marchland for a mother.
Theron St. Vrain died early, and the management of his property
fell into Fred Ramer's hands. At Mary's death it would descend to
Eloise, with the proviso I just mentioned of an unworthy
marriage. In that case, Ramer, at his own discretion, could give
the estate to the Church. Nobody knows when Mary Marchland died,
nor where she is buried, except Fred and his confessor, Father
Josef."
"How far can a man's hate run, Jondo?" I asked.
"Oh, not so far as a man's love. Listen, Gail." Never a man had a
truer eye and a sweeter smile than my big Jondo.
"Fred Ramer was desperately in need of money when he was plotting
to darken the life of Mary Marchland--that was just before the
birth of Eloise--and through her sorrow to break the heart of the
man whom she loved--I said we college boys were all in love with
her, you remember. Let me make it short now. One night Fred's
father was murdered, by whom was never exactly proven. But he was
last seen alive with his ward, Theron St. Wain, who, with his
foster-brother, Bertrand, thoroughly despised him for his plain
robbery of their heritage.
"The case was strong against Theron, for the evidence was very
damaging, and it would have gone hard with him but for the
foster-brother. Bertrand St. Wain took the guilt upon himself by
disappearing suddenly. He was supposed to have drowned himself in
the lower Mississippi, for his body, recognized only by some
clothing, was recovered later in a drift and decently buried. So
he was effaced from the records of man."
In the dim light Jondo's blue eyes were like dull steel and his
face was a face of stone, but he continued:
"Just here Clarenden comes into the story. He learned it through
Felix Narveo, and Felix got it from the Mexicans themselves, that
Fred Ramer had plotted with them to put his father out of the
way--I said he was desperately in need of money--and to lay the
crime on Theron St. Vrain, by whose disgrace the life of Mary
Marchland would be blighted, and Fred would have his revenge and
his father's money. Narveo was afraid to act against Ramer, but
nothing ever scared Esmond Clarenden away from what he wanted to
do. Through his friendship for St. Vrain, to whom some suspicion
still clung, and that lost foster-brother, Bertrand, he turned
the screws on Fred Ramer that drove him out of the country. He
landed, finally, at Santa Fé, and became Ferdinand Ramero.
He managed by his charming manners to enchant the sister of Felix
Narveo--and you know the rest."
Jondo paused.
"Didn't Felix Narveo go to Fort Leavenworth once, just before
Uncle Esmond brought us with him to Santa Fé?" I
asked.
"Yes, he went to warn Clarenden not to leave you there
unprotected, for a band of Ramero's henchmen were on their way
then to the Missouri River--we passed them at Council Grove--to
kidnap you three and take you to old Mexico," Jondo said. "An
example of Fred's efforts to get even with Clarenden and of the
loyalty of Narveo to his old college chum. The same gang of
Mexicans had kidnapped Little Blue Flower and given her to the
Kiowas."
"You told me that Uncle Esmond forced Ferdinand Ramero out of the
country on account of a wrong done to you, Jondo," I reminded the
big plainsman.
"He did," Jondo replied. "I told you that we all loved Mary
Marchland. Fred Ramer broke under his loss of her, and became the
devil's own tool of hate and revenge, and what generally gets
tied up with these sooner or later, a passion for money and
irregular means of getting it. Money is as great an asset for
hate as for love, and Fred sold his soul for it long ago.
Clarenden came to the frontier and lost himself in the building
of the plains commerce, and his heart he gave to the three orphan
children to whom he gave a home. When New Mexico came under our
flag Narveo came with it, a good citizen and a loyal patriot. He
married a Mexican woman of culture and lives a contented life.
Dick Verra went into the Church. I came to the plains, and the
stimulus of danger, and the benediction of the open sky, and the
healing touch of the prairie winds, and the solemn stillness of
the great distances have made me something more of a man than I
should have been. Maybe I was hurt the worst. Clarenden thought I
was. Sometimes I think Dick Verra got the best of all of us."
Jondo's voice trailed off into silence and I knew what his hurt
was--that he was the man whom Mary Marchland had loved, from whom
Fred Ramer, by his cruel machinations, had separated her--"and
although they loved each other always, they never saw each other
again." Poor Jondo! What a man among men this unknown
freighter of the plains might have been--and what a loss to the
plains in the best of the trail years if Jondo had never dared
its dangers for the safety of the generations to come.
But the thought of Eloise, driven out momentarily by Jondo's
story, came rushing in again.
"You said you put a ring around Ramero to keep him in Santa
Fé. Can't we get Eloise outside of it?" I urged,
anxiously.
"Maybe I should have said that Father Josef put it around him for
me," Jondo replied. "He confessed his crimes fully to the Church.
He couldn't get by Father Josef. Here he is much honored and
secure and we let him alone. The disgrace he holds the secret
of--he alone--is that the father of Eloise killed his father, the
crime for which the foster-brother fell. Ramero as guardian of
Eloise and her property legally could have kept her here. Only a
man like Clarenden would have dared to take her away, though he
had the pleading call of her mother's last wish. Gail, I have
told you the heart-history of half a dozen men. If this had
stopped with us we could forgive after a while, but it runs down
to you and Beverly and Eloise and Marcos, who will carry out his
father's plans to the letter. So the battle is all to be fought
over again. Let me leave you a minute or two. I'll not be gone
long."
I sat alone, staring out at the shadowy court and, above it, the
blue night-sky of New Mexico inlaid with stars, until a rush of
feet in the hall and a shout of inquiry told me that Beverly
Clarenden was hunting for me.
Meantime the girl in Mexican dress, who had come out of the
church with Father Josef when he came to greet Eloise and me, had
passed unnoticed through the Plaza and out on the way leading to
the northeast. Here she came to the blind adobe wall of La
Garita, whose olden purpose one still may read in the many
bullet-holes in its brown sides. Here she paused, and as the
evening shadows lengthened the dress and wall blended their dull
tones together.
Beverly Clarenden, who had gone with Rex Krane up to Fort Marcy
that evening, had left his companion to watch the sunset and
dream of Mat back on the Missouri bluff, while he wandered down
La Garita. He did not see the Mexican woman standing motionless,
a dark splotch against a dun wall, until a soft Hopi voice
called, eagerly, "Beverly, Beverly."
The black scarf fell from the bright face, and Indian garb--not
Po-a-be, the student of St. Ann's and the guest of the Clarenden
home, with the white Grecian robe and silver headband set with
coral pendants, as Beverly had seen her last in the side porch on
the night of Mat's wedding, but Little Blue Flower, the Indian of
the desert lands, stood before him.
"Where the devil--I mean the holy saints and angels, did you come
from?" Beverly cried, in delight, at seeing a familiar face.
"I came here to do Father Josef some service. He has been good to
me. I bring a message."
She reached out her hand with a letter. Beverly took the letter
and the hand. He put the message in his pocket, but he did not
release the hand.
"That's something for Jondo. I'll see that he gets it, all right.
Tell me all about yourself now, Little
Run-Off-and-Never-Come-Back." It was Beverly's way to make people
love him, because he loved people.
It was late at last, too late for prudence, older heads would
agree, when these two separated, and my cousin came to pounce
upon me in the hotel court to tell me of his adventure.
"And I learned a lot of things," he added. "That Indian in the
Plaza to-day is Santan, or Satan, dead sure; and you'd never
guess, but he's the same redskin--Apache red--that was out at
Agua Fria that time we were there long ago. The very same little
sneak! He followed us clear to Bent's Fort. He put up a good
story to Jondo, but I'll bet he was somebody's tool. You know
what a critter he was there. But listen now! He's got his eye on
Little Blue Flower. He's plain wild Injun, and she's a Saint
Ann's scholar. Isn't that presumption, though! She's afraid of
him, too. This country fairly teams with romance, doesn't
it?"
"Bev, don't you ever take anything seriously?" I asked.
"Well, I guess I do. I found that Santan, dead loaded with
jealousy, sneaking after us in the dark to-night when I took
Little Blue Flower for a stroll. I took him seriously, and told
him exactly where he'd find me next time he was looking for me.
That I'd stand him up against La Garita and make a sieve out of
him," Beverly said, carelessly.
"Beverly Clarenden, you are a fool to get that Apache's
ill-will," I cried.
"I may be, but I'm no coward," Beverly retorted. "Oh, here comes
Jondo. I've got a letter from Father Josef. Invitation to some
churchly dinner, I expect."
Beverly threw the letter into Jondo's hands and turned to leave
us.
"Wait a minute!" Jondo commanded, and my cousin halted in
surprise.
"When did you get this? I should have had it two hours ago,"
Jondo said, sternly. "Father Josef must have waited a long time
up at the church door for his messenger to come back and bring
him word from me."
Beverly frankly told him the truth, as from childhood we had
learned was the easiest way out of trouble.
Jondo's smile came back to his eyes, but his lips did not smile
as he said: "Gail, you can explain things to Bev. This is serious
business, but it had to come sooner or later. The battle is on,
and we'll fight it out. Ferdinand Ramero is determined that
Eloise and his son shall be married early to-morrow morning. The
bribe to the Church is one-half of the St. Vrain estate. The club
over Eloise is the shame of some disgrace that he holds the key
to. He will stop at nothing to have his own way, and he will
stoop to any brutal means to secure it. He has a host of fellows
ready at his call to do any crime for his sake. That's how far
money and an ungovernable passion can lead a man. If I had known
this sooner, we would have acted to-night."
Beverly groaned.
"Let me go and kill that man. There ought to be a bounty on such
wild beasts," he declared.
"He'd do that for you through a Mexican dagger, or an Apache
arrow, if you got in his way," Jondo replied. "But what we must
do is this: Twenty miles south on the San Christobal Arroyo there
is a lonely ranch-house on the old Narveo estate, a forgotten
place, but it is a veritable fort, built a hundred years ago,
when every house here was a fort. To-morrow at daybreak you must
start with Eloise and Sister Anita down there. I will see Father
Josef later and tell him where I have sent you. Little Blue
Flower will show you the way. It is a dangerous ride, and you
must make it as quickly and as silently as possible. A bullet
from some little cañon could find you easily if Ramero
should know your trail. Will you go?"
There was no need for the question as Jondo well knew, but his
face was bright with courage and hope, and a thankfulness he
could not express shone in his eyes as he looked at us, big,
stalwart, eager and unafraid.
XV
THE SANCTUARY ROCKS OF SAN CHRISTOBAL
Mark where she stands! Around her form I draw
The awful circle of our solemn church!
Set but a foot within that holy ground,
And on thy head--yea, though it wore a crown--
launch the curse of Rome.
--"RICHELIEU."
The faint rose hue of early dawn was touching the highest peaks
of the Sandia and Jemez mountain ranges, while the valley of the
Rio Grande still lay asleep under dull night shadows, when five
ponies and their riders left the door of San Miguel church and
rode southward in the slowly paling gloom. In the stillness of
the hour the ponies' feet, muffled in the sand of the way, seemed
to clatter noisily, and their trappings creaked loudly in the
dead silence of the place. Little Blue Flower, no longer in her
Mexican dress, led the line. Behind her Beverly and the
white-faced nun of St. Ann's rode side by side; and behind these
came Eloise St. Vrain and myself. From the church door Jondo had
watched us until we melted into the misty shadows of the
trail.
"Go carefully and fearlessly and ride hard if you must. But the
struggle will be here with me to-day, not where you are," he
assured us, when we started away.
As he turned to leave the church, an Indian rose from the shadows
beyond it and stepped before him.
"You remember me, Santan, the Apache, at Fort Bent?" he
questioned.
Jondo looked keenly to be sure that his memory fitted the man
before him.
"Yes, you are Santan. You brought me a message from Father Josef
once."
The Indian's face did not change by the twitch of an eyelash as
he replied.
"I would bring another message from him. He would see you an hour
later than you planned. The young riders, where shall I tell him
they have gone?"
"To the old ranch-house on the San Christobal Arroyo," Jondo
replied.
The Indian smiled, and turning quickly, he disappeared up the
dark street. A sudden thrill shook Jondo.
"Father Josef said I could trust that boy entirely. Surely old
Dick Verra, part Indian himself, couldn't be mistaken. But that
Apache lied to me. I know it now; and I told him where our boys
are taking Eloise. I never made a blunder like that before.
Damned fool that I am!"
He ground his teeth in anger and disgust, as he sat down in the
doorway of the church to await the coming of Ferdinand Ramero and
his son, Marcos.
Out on the trail our ponies beat off the miles with steady gait.
As the way narrowed, we struck into single file, moving silently
forward under the guidance of Little Blue Flower, now plunging
into dark cañons, where the trail was rocky and perilous,
now climbing the steep sidling paths above the open plain.
Morning came swiftly over the Gloriettas. Darkness turned to
gray; shapeless masses took on distinctness; the night chill
softened to the crisp breeze of dawn. Then came the rare June day
in whose bright opening hour the crystal skies of New Mexico hung
above us, and about us lay a landscape with radiant lights on the
rich green of the mesa slopes, and gray levels atint with
mother-of-pearl and gold.
The Indian pueblos were astir. Mexican faces showed now and then
at the doorways of far-scattered groups of adobe huts. Outside of
these all was silence--a motionless land full of wild, rugged
beauty, and thrilling with the spell of mystery and glamour of
romance. And overbrooding all, the spirit of the past, that made
each winding trail a footpath of the centuries; each sheer cliff
a watch-tower of the ages; each wide sandy plain, a
rallying-ground for the tribes long ago gone to dust; each narrow
valley a battle-field for the death-struggle between the dusky
sovereigns of a wilderness kingdom and the pale-faced conquerors
of the coat of mail and the dominant soul. The sense of danger
lessened with distance and no knight of old Spain ever rode more
proudly in the days of chivalry than Beverly Clarenden and I rode
that morning, fearing nothing, sure of our power to protect the
golden-haired girl, thrilled by this strange flight through a
land of strange scenes fraught with the charm of daring and
danger. Beverly rode forward now with Little Blue Flower. I did
not wonder at her spell over him, for she was in her own land
now, and she matched its picturesque phases with her own
picturesque racial charm.
I rode beside Eloise, forgetting, in the sweet air and glorious
June sunlight, that we were following an uncertain trail away
from certain trouble.
The white-faced nun in her somber dress, rode between, with
serious countenance and downcast eyes.
"What happened to you, Little Lees, after I left you?" I asked,
as we trotted forward toward the San Christobal valley.
"Everything, Gail," she replied, looking up at me with shy, sad
eyes. "First Ferdinand Ramero came to me with the command that I
should consent to be married this morning. By this time I would
have been Marcos' wife." She shivered as she spoke. "I can't tell
you the way of it, it was so final, so cruel, so impossible to
oppose. Ferdinand's eyes cut like steel when they look at you,
and you know he will do more than he threatens. He said the
Church demanded one-half of my little fortune and that he could
give it the other half if he chose. He is as imperious as a
tyrant in his pleasanter moods; in his anger he is a maniac. I
believe he would murder Marcos if the boy got in his way, and his
threats of disgracing me were terrible."
"But what else happened?" I wanted to turn her away from her
wretched memory.
"I have not seen anybody else except Little Blue Flower. She has
an Indian admirer who is Ferdinand's tool and spy. He let her
come in to see me late last night or I should not have been here
now. I had almost given up when she brought me word that you and
Beverly would meet me at the church at daylight. I have not slept
since. What will be the end of this day's work? Isn't there
safety for me somewhere?" The sight of the fair, sad face with
the hunted look in the dark eyes cut me to the soul.
"Jondo said last night that the battle was on and he would fight
it out in Santa Fé to-day. It is our work to go where the
Hopi blossom leads us, and Bev Clarenden and I will not let
anything happen to you."
I meant what I said, and my heart is always young when I recall
that morning ride toward the San Christobal Arroyo and my
abounding vigor and confidence in my courage and my powers.
Our trail ran into a narrow plain now where a yellow band marked
the way of the San Christobal River toward the Rio Grande. On
either hand tall cliffs, huge weather-worn points of rock, and
steep slopes, spotted with evergreen shrubs, bordered the river's
course. The silent bigness of every feature of the landscape and
the beauty of the June day in the June time of our lives, and our
sense of security in having escaped the shadows and strife in
Santa Fé, all combined to make us free-spirited. Only
Sister Anita rode, alert and sorrowful-faced, between Beverly and
the gaily-robed Indian girl, and myself with Eloise, the
beautiful.
As we rounded a bend in the narrow valley, Little Blue Flower
halted us, and pointing to an old half-ruined rock structure
beside the stream, she said:
"See, yonder is the chapel where Father Josef comes sometimes to
pray for the souls of the Hopi people. The house we go to find is
farther up a cañon over there."
"I remember the place," Eloise declared. "Father Josef brought me
here once and left me awhile. I wasn't afraid, although I was
alone, for he told me I was always safe in a church. But I was
never allowed to come back again."
Sister Anita crossed herself and, glancing over her shoulder,
gave a sharp cry of alarm. We turned about to see a group, of
horsemen dashing madly up the trail behind us. The wind in their
faces blew back the great cloud of dust made by their horses
hoofs, hiding their number and the way behind them. Their steeds
were wet with foam, but their riders spurred them on with
merciless fury. In the forefront Ferdinand Ramero's tall form,
towering above the small statured evil-faced Mexican band he was
leading, was outlined against the dust-cloud following them, and
I caught the glint of light on his drawn revolver. "Ride! Ride
like the devil!" Beverly shouted.
At the same time he and the Hopi girl whirled out and, letting us
pass, fell in as a rear guard between us and our pursuers. And
the race was on.
Jondo had said the lonely ranch-house whither we were tending was
as strong as a fort. Surely it could not be far away, and our
ponies were not spent with hard riding. Before us the valley
narrowed slightly, and on its rim jagged rock cliffs rose through
three hundred feet of earthquake-burst, volcanic-tossed confusion
to the high tableland beyond.
As we strained forward, half a dozen Mexican horsemen suddenly
appeared on the trail before us to cut off our advance. Down
between us and the new enemy stood the old stone chapel, like the
shadow of a great rock in a weary land, where for two hundred
long years it had set up an altar to the Most High on this lonely
savage plain.
"The chapel! The chapel! We must run to that now," cried Sister
Anita.
Her long veil was streaming back in the wind, and her rosary and
crucifix beating about her shoulders with the hard riding, but
her white face was brave with a divine trust. Yet even as she
urged us I saw how imposible was her plea, for the men in
front were already nearer to the place than we were. At the same
time a pony dashed up beside me, and Little Blue Flower's voice
rang in my ears.
"The rocks! Climb up and hide in the rocks!" She dropped back on
one side of Beverly, with Sister Anita on the other, guarding our
rear. As I turned our flight toward the cliff, I caught sight of
an Indian in a wedge of rock just across the river, and I heard
the singing flight of an arrow behind me, followed almost
instantly by another arrow. I looked back to see Sister Anita's
pony staggering and rearing in agony, with Little Blue Flower
trying vainly to catch its bridle-rein, and Sister Anita,
clutching wildly at her rosary, a great stream of blood flowing
from an arrow wound in her neck.
Men think swiftly in moments like these. The impulse to halt, and
the duty to press on for the protection of the girl beside me,
holding me in doubt. Instantly I saw the dark crew, with
Ferdinand Ramero leading fiercely forward, almost upon us, and I
heard Beverly Clarenden's voice filling the valley--"Run, Gail,
run! You can beat 'em up there."
It was a cry of insistences and assurances and power, and withal
there was that minor tone of sympathy which had sounded in the
boy's defiant voice long ago in the gray-black shadows below
Pawnee Rock, when his chivalric soul had been stirred by the
cruel wrongs of Little Blue Flower and he had cried:
"Uncle Esmond, let's take her, and take our chances."
I knew in a flash that the three behind us were cut off, and
Eloise St. Vrain and I pressed on alone. We crossed the narrow
strip of rising ground to where the first rocks lay as they had
fallen from the cliff above, split off by some titanic agony of
nature. Up and up we went, our ponies stumbling now and then, but
almost as surefooted as men, as they climbed the narrow way. Now
the rocks hid us from the plain as we crept sturdily through
narrow crevices, and now we clambered up an open path where
nothing concealed our way. But higher still and higher, foot, by
foot we pressed, while with oath and growl behind us came our
pursuers.
At last we could ride no farther, and the miracle was that our
ponies could have climbed so far. Above us huge slabs of stone,
by some internal cataclysm hurled into fragments of unguessed
tons of weight, seemed poised in air, about to topple down upon
the plain below. Between these wild, irregular masses a narrow
footing zigzagged upward to still other wild, irregular masses, a
footing of long leaps in cramped spaces between sharp edges of
upright clefts, all gigantic, unbending, now shielding by their
immense angles, now standing sheer and stark before us, casting
no shadows to cover us from the great white glare of the
New-Mexican day.
I have said no man knows where his mind will run in moments of
peril. As we left our ponies and clambered up and up in hope of
safety somewhere, the face of the rocks cut and carved by the
rude stone tools of a race long perished, seemed to hold groups
of living things staring at us and pointing the way. And there
was no end to these crude pictographs. Over and over and
over--the human hand, the track of the little road-runner bird,
the plumed serpent coiled or in waving line, the human form with
the square body and round head, with staring circles for eyes and
mouth, and straight-line limbs.
We were fleeing for safety through the sacred aisles of a people
God had made; and when they served His purpose no longer, they
had perished. I did not think of them so that morning. I thought
only of some hiding-place, some inaccessible point where nothing
could reach the girl I must protect. But these crawling serpents,
cut in the rock surfaces, crawled on and on. These human hands,
poor detached hands, were lifted up in mute token of what had
gone before. These two-eyed, one-mouthed circles on heads fast to
body-boxes, from which waved tentacle limbs, jigged by us, to
give place to other coiled or crawling serpents and their
companion carvings, with the track of the swift road-runner
skipping by us everywhere.
At last, with bleeding hands and torn clothing, we stood on a
level rock like a tiny mesa set out from the high summit of the
cliff.
Eloise sat down at my feet as I looked back eagerly over the
precipitous way we had come, and watched the band of Mexicans
less rapidly swarming up the same steep, devious trail.
Three hundred feet below us lay the plain with the thin current
of the San Christobal River sparkling here and there in the
sunlight. The black spot on the trail that scarcely moved must be
Beverly and Little Blue Flower with Sister Anita. No, there was
only the Indian girl there, and something moving in and out of
the shadow near them. I could not see for the intervening
rocks.
"Gail! Gail! You will not let them take you. You will not leave
me," Eloise moaned.
And I was one against a dozen. I stooped to where she sat and
gently lifted her limp white hand, saying:
"Eloise, I was on a rock like this a night and a day alone on the
prairie. I could not move nor cry out. But something inside told
me to 'hold fast'--the old law of the trail. You must do that
with me now."
A shout broke over the valley and the rocks about us seemed
suddenly to grow men, as if every pictograph of the old stone age
had become a sentient thing, a being with a Mexican dress, and
the soul of a devil. Just across a narrow chasm, a little below
us, Ferdinand Ramero stood in all the insolence of a conqueror,
with a smile that showed his white teeth, and in his steely eyes
was the glitter of a snake about to spring.
"You have given us a hard race. By Jove, you rode magnificently
and climbed heroically. I admire you for it. It is fine to bring
down game like you, Clarenden. You have your uncle's spirit, and
a six-foot body that dwarfs his short stature. And we come as
gentlemen only, if we can deal with a gentleman. It wasn't our
men who struck your nun down there. But if you, young man, dare
to show one ounce of fighting spirit now, behind you on the
rocks--don't look--as I lift my hand are my good friends who will
put a bullet into the brain beneath that golden hair, and you
will follow. Being a game-cock cannot help you now. It will only
hasten things. Deliver that girl to me at once, or my men will
close in upon you and no power on earth can save you."
Eloise had sprung to her feet and stood beside me, and both of us
knew the helplessness of our plight. A startling picture it must
have been, and one the cliffs above the San Christobal will
hardly see again: the blue June sky arched overhead, unscarred by
a single cloud-fleck, the yellow plain winding between the high
picturesque cliffs, where silence broods all through the long
hours of the sunny day; the pictured rocks with their
furnace-blackened faces white--outlined with the story of the dim
beginnings of human strivings. And standing alone and defenseless
on the little table of stone, as if for sacrifice, the tall,
stalwart young plainsman and the beautiful girl with her golden
hair in waving masses about her uncovered head, her sweet face
white as the face of the dying nun beside the sandy arroyo below
us, her big dark eyes full of a strange fire.
"I order you to close in and take these two at once." The
imperious command rang out, and the rocks across the valley must
have echoed its haughty tone.
"And I order you to halt."
The voice of Father Josef, clear and rich and powerful, burst
upon the silence like cathedral music on the still midnight air.
The priest's tall form rose up on a great mass of rock across the
cleft before us--Father Josef with bared head and flashing eyes
and a physique of power.
Ferdinand Ramero turned like a lion at bay. "You are one man. My
force number a full dozen. Move on," he ordered.
Again the voice of Father Josef ruled the listening ears.
"Since the days of old the Church has had the power to guard all
that come within the shelter of the holy sanctuary. And to the
Church of God was given also long ago the might to protect, by
sanctuary privilege, the needy and the defenseless. Ferdinand
Ramero, note that little table of rock where those two stand
helpless in your grasp. Around them now I throw, as I have power
to throw, the sacred circle of our Holy Church in sanctuary
shelter. Who dares to step inside it will be accursed in the
sight of God."
Never, never will I live through another moment like to that, nor
see the power of the Unseen rule things that are seen with such
unbreakable strength.
The Mexicans dropped to their knees in humble prayer, and
Ferdinand Ramero seemed turned to a man of stone. A hand was
gently laid upon my arm and Jondo and Rex Krane stood beside us.
A voice far off was sounding in my ears.
"Go back to your homes and meet me at the church to-morrow night.
You, Ferdinand Ramero, go now to the chapel yonder and wait until
I come."
What happened next is lost in misty waves of forgetfulness.