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time you ketchum this?” he asked, tapping the message with his finger.

      “Mebbyso one hour.” The buck pulled a brass watch ostentatiously from under his blanket, held it to his ear a moment, as if he needed auricular assurance that it was running properly, and pointed to the hour of three. “Ketchum one dolla, mebbyso pikeway quick. No stoppum,” he said virtuously.

      “You see Peaceful in Hartley?” Good Indian asked the question from an idle impulse; in reality, he was wondering what it was that Miss Georgie had to tell him.

      “Peacefu’, him go far off. On train. All same heap fat man go ’long. Mebbyso Shoshone, mebbyso Pocatello.”

      Good Indian looked down at the note, and frowned; that, probably, was what she had meant to tell him, though he could not see where the knowledge was going to help him any. If Peaceful had gone to Shoshone, he was gone, and that settled it. Undoubtedly he would return the next day—perhaps that night, even. He was beginning to feel the need of a quiet hour in which to study the tangle, but he had a suspicion that Baumberger had some reason other than a desire for peace in wanting the jumpers left to themselves, and he started toward the orchard, as he had at first intended.

      “Mebbyso ketchum one dolla, yo’,” hinted Charlie, the buck.

      But Good Indian went on without paying any attention to him. At the road he met Jack and Wally, just returning from the orchard.

      “No use going down there,” Jack informed him sulkily. “They’re just laying in the shade with their guns handy, doing nothing. They won’t let anybody cross their line, and they won’t say anything—not even when you cuss ’em. Wally and I got black in the face trying to make them come alive. Baumberger got back yet? Wally and I have got a scheme—”

      “He and your dad took the train for Shoshone. Say, does anyone know what that bunch over in the meadow is up to?” Good Indian leaned his back against a tree, and eyed the two morosely.

      “Clark and Gene are over there,” said Wally. “But I’d gamble they aren’t doing any more than these fellows are. They haven’t started to pan out any dirt—they haven’t done a thing, it looks like, but lay around in the shade. I must say I don’t sabe their play. And the worst of it is,” he added desperately, “a fellow can’t do anything.”

      “I’m going to break out pretty darned sudden,” Jack observed calmly. “I feel it coming on.” He smiled, but there was a look of steel in his eyes.

      Good Indian glanced at him sharply.

      “Now, you fellows’ listen to me,” he said. “This thing is partly my fault. I could have prevented it, maybe, if I hadn’t been so taken up with my own affairs. Old Peppajee told me Baumberger was up to some devilment when he first came down here. He heard him talking to Saunders in Pete Hamilton’s stable. And the first night he was here, Peppajee and I saw him down at the stable at midnight, talking to someone. Peppajee kept on his trail till he got that snake bite, and he warned me a plenty. But I didn’t take much stock in it—or if I did—” He lifted his shoulders expressively.

      “So,” he went on, after a minute of bitter thinking, “I want you to keep out of this. You know how your mother would feel—You don’t want to get foolish. You can keep an eye on them—tonight especially. I’ve an idea they’re waiting for dark; and if I knew why, I’d be a lot to the good. And if I knew why old Baumberger took your father off so suddenly, why—I’d be wiser than I am now.” He lifted his hat, brushed the moisture from his forehead, and gave a grunt of disapproval when his eyes rested on Jack.

      “What yuh loaded down like that for?” he demanded. “You fellows better put those guns in cold storage. I’m like Baumberger in one respect—we don’t want any violence!” He grinned without any feeling of mirth.

      “Something else is liable to be put in cold storage first,” Wally hinted, significantly. “I must say I like this standing around and looking dangerous, without making a pass! I wish something would break loose somewhere.”

      “I notice you’re packing yours, large as life,” Jack pointed out. “Maybe you’re just wearing it for an ornament, though.”

      “Sure!” Good Indian, feeling all at once the utter futility of standing there talking, left them grumbling over their forced inaction, without explaining where he was going, or what he meant to do. Indeed, he scarcely knew himself. He was in that uncomfortable state of mind where one feels that one must do something, without having the faintest idea of what that something is, or how it is to be done. It seemed to him that they were all in the same mental befuddlement, and it seemed impossible to stay on the ranch another hour without making a hostile move of some sort—and he knew that, when he did make a move, he at least ought to know why he did it.

      The note in his pocket gave him an excuse for action of some sort, even though he felt sure that nothing would come of it; at least, he thought, he would have a chance to discuss the thing with Miss Georgie again—and while he was not a man who must have everything put into words, he had found comfort and a certain clarity of thought in talking with her.

      “Why don’t you invite me to go along?” Evadna challenged from the gate, when he was ready to start. She laughed when she said it, but there was something beneath the laughter, if he had only been close enough to read it.

      “I didn’t think you’d want to ride through all that dust and heat again today,” he called back. “You’re better off in the shade.”

      “Going to call on ‘Squaw-talk-far-off’—again?” She was still laughing, with something else beneath the laugh.

      He glanced at her quickly, wondering where she had gotten the name, and in his wonder neglected to make audible reply. Also he passed over the change to ride back to the gate and tell her good-by—with a hasty kiss, perhaps, from the saddle—as a lover should have done.

      He was not used to love-making. For him, it was settled that they loved each other, and would marry some day—he hoped the day would be soon. It did not occur to him that a girl wants to be told over and over that she is the only woman in the whole world worth a second thought or glance; nor that he should stop and say just where he was going, and what he meant to do, and how reluctant he was to be away from her. Trouble sat upon his mind like a dead weight, and dulled his perception, perhaps. He waved his hand to her from the stable, and galloped down the trail to the Point o’ Rocks, and his mind, so far as Evadna was concerned, was at ease.

      Evadna, however, was crying, with her arms folded upon the top of the gate, before the cloud which marked his passing had begun to sprinkle the gaunt, gray sagebushes along the trail with a fresh layer of choking dust. Jack and Wally came up, scowling at the world and finding no words to match their gloom. Wally gave her a glance, and went on to the blacksmith shop, but Jack went straight up to her, for he liked her well.

      “What’s the matter?” he asked dully. “Mad because you can’t smoke up the ranch?”

      Evadna fumbled blindly for her handkerchief, scoured her eyes well when she found it, and put up the other hand to further shield her face.

      “Oh, the whole place is like a graveyard,” she complained. “Nobody will talk, or do anything but just wander around! I just can’t stand it!” Which was not frank of her.

      “It’s too hot to do much of anything,” he said apologetically. “We might take a ride, if you don’t mind the heat.”

      “You don’t want to ride,” she objected petulantly. “Why didn’t you go with Good Indian?” he countered.

      “Because I didn’t want to. And I do wish you’d quit calling him that; he has a real name, I believe.”

      “If you’re looking for a scrap,” grinned Jack, “I’ll stake you to my six gun, and you can go down and kill off a few of those claim-jumpers. You seem to be in just about the proper frame uh mind to murder the whole bunch. Fly at it!”

      “It begins to look as if we women would have to do something,”

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