The Rangeland Avenger
ping, hunting, cooking, and all the lore of the trail, Lowrie stood as a valuable resource; and Sandersen was the dreamy, resolute spirit, who had hoped for gold in th
orning mist. He was the very spirit of lost causes, full of apprehensions, foreboding, superstitions. A hunch
o parched by that day's ride that he dared not open his lips to sing, as he usually did. He compromised by humming songs new and old, and when his companions
o days before, the blow had fallen. They found Sawyer's water hole nearly dry, just a little pool in the center, with caked, dead mud all around it. They drained that water dry and struck on. Since then the wa
nce of the desert would have crushed them; otherwise the lure of the mountains would have maddened them and made them push on until the horses would have died within five miles of the labor
wled at Hal Sinclair wh
I'll bet the rest of you I can drill
iciency with firearms where a man is apt to reach for his gun to decide an argument. Now Lowrie followed the direction of Sincl
"Save your wind and your ammunition
der. But a grin spread on the broad, ugly face of
you for
op
doll
op
raid to tr
Lowrie flushed. He had a childis
t, kid. G
it dexterously, swinging it back and forth between h
ed Hal Sincl
forgot to look for the results of Lowrie's shot. They reined their horses away from the pitching broncho disgustedly. Sinclair was a fool to use up the last of his mustang's strength in this manner. But Hal Sinclair had for
tugged at a leg that seemed glued to the ground, and then buckled suddenly and collapsed on one sid
mount. The huge strength of Quade sufficed to budge the writhing mustang. Lowrie a
ie who shot
y to the prostrate figure of Sinclair. "Four men a
. "Do something for
turned out the foot. It was painfully twi
!" said Sincl
ead horse, at the white-hot deser
do? You've spoiled all
! But tie up that foot befo
oked across at the skull of the steer. It was still there, very close. It seemed to have grown larger, with a horrible significance. And each instinctively put a man's skull beside it, bleached and
e said, "might
put him into Quade's saddle. Quade was the largest, and it was mutely accepted that he should be the first to walk, while Sinclair rode. It was ac
on the back of the thigh, and then the ball of the foot slipped back in the midst of a stride. Also
was barely
the desert. Now it was low in the sky, but bitterly hot. And their mourn
half an hour at a time, walking and then changing horses, and, as each
the moment; and, as far as lay in his cheery, thoughtless nature, he had come to regret it. The work of the trail had taught him that he wa
dersen's tu
e a turn walking,"
ef prayer for Riley Sinclair. There was a man who would have walked all day that his brother might ride, and at the end of the day that man of iron would be as fresh as those who ha
: "Maybe I could take a
o a stirrup and h
ed, and Sandersen reto
ssible, but I ought
s not possible. The twisted
sen to mount, and Lowrie to take his turn on foot. Sandersen snatc
d take it easy. Me and the rest has to go through hell. You take some of the hell y
at the others. Their faces
endless hours, it seemed, pouring down a fiercer heat. And the foothill
He lifted his arms to the cloud of dust as if it were a vision of mercy. To Hal Sinclair it seemed that cold water was already running over his tong
in't riders; it comes too fast for that. And it ain't the wi
ing along at a steady lope. They sighted the men and veered swiftly to the left. A moment later there was only a thin trai
ng at water," he said.
ole fifty miles away. N
r. Quade was cursing thickly with every other step. When it came his turn to ride he d
and vaguely he suspected their treacherous meanness.
dersen, and again, with the wolfish side glances, they eyed the injured man, w
t you got to be dropped behind for a time. We're going on to fin
ned his lips, b
dden passion. "Say, do you want three men to
you don't mean it! Not alone out here! You boys can'
to Lowrie, and the latter stared a
in his powerful arms and lowered him to the sands. "
t's all of us or none of us," he said.
s hastily to the hills,
r them, not one da
f all the work we've done
ised the weary brutes into a gallop; the voice faded in
the position of the sun. Once Sandersen, in the grip of some passion of remorse or of fear of death, bowed his head with a strange moan
had scented drink, and they became unmanageable. Five minutes later the animals were up to their
t one another in a stunned fashion. There see
appy gent when he sees us coming bac
thers for a moment. Then they be
your ide
you glad to take the idea? Are
ed Lowrie. "Ain't we go
left him? We'd have to l
tell. We'll
pretty sudden," said Lowrie, t
e puts that brother
rd. "Well-" he bega
ould make them lose the position of their comrade. When they were quite near the place, the semidarkness had come, and Quade began to sho
one the wrong way. He should have
nted and found Hal Sinclair dead and cold. Perhaps the insanity of thirst had taken him; perhaps he had figured it out methodically that it was better to end things before the madness c
ie with curious quiet. "Take a
seized on Sandersen. "W
d'you
r Riley Sinclair. And, you mark me, we're all going
id. "Who knows except us? And will one o
, gents. But we done an awful thing, and