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fainted.

The other rider lounged forward, a hat in his hand that he had just picked up close to the fire.

“We seem to have stampeded part of this camping party. I’ll just take a run up this hill and see if I can’t find the missing section and persuade it to stay a while. I don’t reckon you need me hyer, do you?” he grinned, with a glance at Neill and his burden.

“All right. You’ll find me here when you get back, Fraser,” the other answered.

Larry carried the girl to the water-hole and set her down beside it. He sprinkled her face with water, and presently her lids trembled and fluttered open. She lay there with her head on his arm and looked at him quite without surprise.

“How did you find me?”

“Mainly luck. We followed your trail to where we found the rig. After that it was guessing where the needle was in the haystack It just happened we were cutting across country to water when we heard a shot.”

“That must have been when he fired at me,” she said.

“My God! Did he shoot at you?”

“Yes. Where is he now?” She shuddered.

“Cutting over the hills with Steve after him.”

“Steve?”

“My friend, Lieutenant Fraser. He is an officer in the ranger force.”

“Oh!” She relapsed into a momentary silence before she said: “He isn’t my brother at all. He is a murderer.” She gave a sudden little moan of pain as memory pierced her of what he had said. “He bragged to me that he had killed my brother. He meant to kill me, I think.”

“Sho! It doesn’t matter what the coyote meant. It’s all over now. You’re with friends.”

A warm smile lit his steel-blue eyes, softened the lines of his lean, hard face. Never had shipwrecked mariner come to safer harbor than she. She knew that this slim, sun-bronzed Westerner was a man’s man, that strength and nerve inhabited his sinewy frame. He would fight for her because she was a woman as long as he could stand and see.

A touch of color washed back into her cheeks, a glow of courage into her heart. “Yes, it’s all over. The weary, weary hours— and the fear— and the pain— and the dreadful thirst— and worst of all, him!”

She began to cry softly, hiding her face in his coat-sleeve.

“I’m crying because— it’s all over. I’m a little fool, just as— as you said I was.”

“I didn’t know you then,” he smiled. “I’m right likely to make snapshot judgments that are ‘way off.”

“You knew me well enough to—” She broke off in the middle, bathed in a flush of remembrance that brought her coppery head up from his arm instantly.

“Be careful. You’re dizzy yet.”

“I’m all right now, thank you,” she answered, her embarrassed profile haughtily in the air. “But I’m ravenous for something to eat. It’s been twenty-four hours since I’ve had a bite. That’s why I’m weepy and faint. I should think you might make a snapshot judgment that breakfast wouldn’t hurt me.”

He jumped up contritely. “That’s right. What a goat I am!”

His long, clean stride carried him over the distance that separated him from his bronco. Out of the saddlebags he drew some sandwiches wrapped in a newspaper.

“Here, Miss Margaret! You begin on these. I’ll have coffee ready in two shakes of a cow’s tail. And what do you say to bacon?”

He understood her to remark from the depths of a sandwich that she said “Amen!” to it, and that she would take everything he had and as soon as he could get it ready. She was as good as her word. He found no cause to complain of her appetite. Bacon and sandwiches and coffee were all consumed in quantities reasonable for a famished girl who had been tramping actively for a day and a night, and, since she was a child of impulse, she turned more friendly eyes on him who had appeased her appetite.

“I suppose you are a cowboy like everybody else in this country?” she ventured amiably after her hunger had become less sharp.

“No, I belong to the government reclamation service.”

“Oh!” She had a vague idea she had heard of it before. “Who is it you reclaim? Indians, I suppose.”

“We reclaim young ladies when we find them wandering about the desert,” he smiled.

“Is that what the government pays you for?”

“Not entirely. Part of the time I examine irrigation projects and report on their feasibility. I have been known to build dams and bore tunnels,”

“And what of the young ladies you reclaim? Do you bore them?” she asked saucily.

“I understand they have hitherto always found me very entertaining,” he claimed boldly, his smiling eyes on her.

“Indeed!”

“But young ladies are peculiar. Sometimes we think we’re entertaining them when we ain’t.”

“I’m sure you are right.”

“And other times they’re interested when they pretend they’re not.”

“It must be comforting to your vanity to think that,” she said coldly. For his words had recalled similar ones spoken by him twenty-four hours earlier, which in turn had recalled his unpardonable sin.

The lieutenant of rangers appeared over the hill and descended into the draw. Miss Kinney went to meet him.

“He got away?” she asked.

“Yes, ma’am. I lost him in some of these hollows, or rather I never found him. I’m going to take my hawss and swing round in a circle.”

“What are you going to do with me?” she smiled.

“I been thinking that the best thing would be for you to go to the Mal Pais mines with Mr. Neill.”

“Who is Mr. Neill?”

“The gentleman over there by the fire.”

“Must I go with him? I should feel safer in your company, lieutenant.”

“You’ll be safe enough in his, Miss Kinney.”

“You know me then?” she asked.

“I’ve seen you at Fort Lincoln. You were pointed out to me once as a new teacher.”

“But I don’t want to go to the Mal Pais mines. I want to go to Fort Lincoln. As to this gentleman, I have no claims on him and shall not trouble him to burden himself with me.”

Steve laughed. “I don’t reckon he would think, it a terrible burden, ma’am. And about the Mal Pais— this is how it is. Fort Lincoln is all of sixty miles from here as the crow flies. The mines are about seventeen. My notion was you could get there and take the stage to-morrow to your town.”

“What shall I do for a horse?”

“I expect Mr. Neill will let you ride his. He can walk beside the hawss.”

“That won’t do at all. Why should I put him to that inconvenience? I’ll walk myself.”

The ranger flashed his friendly smile at her. He had an instinct that served him with women. “Any way that suits you and him suits me. I’m right sorry that I’ve got to leave you and take out after that hound Struve, but you may take my word for it that this gentleman will look after you all right and bring you safe to the Mal Pais.”

“He is a stranger to me. I’ve only met him once and on that occasion not pleasantly. I don’t like to put myself under an obligation to him. But of course if I must I must.”

“That’s the right sensible way to look at it. In this little old world we got to do a heap we don’t want to do. For instance, I’d rather see you to the Mal Pais than hike over the hills after this fellow,” he concluded gallantly.

Neill, who had been packing the coffee-pot and the frying-pan, now sauntered forward with his horse.

“Well, what’s the program?” he wanted to know.

“It’s you and Miss Kinney for the Mal Pais, me for the trail. I ain’t very likely to find Mr. Struve, but you can’t always sometimes tell. Anyhow, I’m going to take a shot at it,” the ranger answered.

“And at him?” his friend suggested.

“Oh, I reckon not. He may be a sure-enough wolf, but I expect this ain’t his day to howl.”

Steve whistled to his pony, swung to the saddle when it trotted up, and waved his hat in farewell.

His “Adios!” drifted back to them from the crown of the hill just before he disappeared over its edge.

CHAPTER VI SOMEBODY’S ACTING MIGHTY FOOLISH.

Larry Neill watched him vanish and then turned smiling to Miss Kinney.

“All aboard for the Mal Pais,” he sang out cheerfully.

Too cheerfully perhaps. His assurance that all was well between them chilled her manner. He might forgive himself easily if he was that sort of man; she would at least show him she was no party, to it. He had treated her outrageously, had manhandled her with deliberate intent to insult. She would show him no one alive could treat her so and calmly assume to her that it was all right.

Her cool eyes examined the horse, and him.

“I don’t quite see how you expect to arrange it, Mr. Neill. That is your name, isn’t it?” she added indifferently.

“That’s my name— Larry Neill. Easiest thing in the world to arrange. We ride pillion if it suits you; if not, I’ll walk.”

“Neither plan suits me,” she announced curtly, her gaze on the far-away hills.

He glanced at her in quick surprise, then made the mistake of letting himself smile at her frosty aloofness instead of being crestfallen by it. She happened to look round and catch that smile before he could extinguish it. Her petulance hardened instantly to a resolution.

“I don’t quite know what we’re going to do about it— unless you walk,” he proposed, amused at the absurdity of his suggestion.

“That’s just what I’m going to do,” she retorted promptly.

“What!” He wheeled on her with an astonished smile on his face.

This served merely to irritate her.

“I said I was going to walk.”

“Walk seventeen miles?”

“Seventy if I choose.”

“Nonsense! Of course you won’t.”

Her eyebrows lifted in ironic demurrer. “I think you must let me be the judge of that,” she said gently.

“Walk!” he reiterated. “Why, you’re walked out. You couldn’t go a mile. What do you take me for? Think I’m going to let you come that on me.”

“I don’t quite see how you can help it, Mr. Neill,” she answered.

“Help it! Why, it ain’t reasonable. Of course you’ll ride.”

“Of course I won’t.”

She set off briskly, almost jauntily, despite her tired feet and aching limbs.

“Well, if that don’t beat—” He broke off to laugh at the situation. After she had gone twenty steps he called after her in a voice that did not suppress its chuckle: “You ain’t going the right direction, Miss Kinney.”

She whirled round on him in anger. How dared he laugh at her?

“Which is the right way?” she choked.

“North by west is about it.”

She was almost reduced to stamping her foot.

Without condescending to ask more definite instructions she struck off at haphazard, and by chance guessed right. There was nothing for it but to pursue. Wherefore the man pursued. The horse at his heels hampered his stride, but he caught up with her soon.

“Somebody’s acting mighty foolish,” he said.

She said nothing very eloquently.

“If I need punishing, ma’am, don’t punish yourself, but me. You ain’t able to walk and that’s a fact.”

She gave her silent attention strictly to the business of making progress through the cactus and the sand.

“Say I’m all you think I am. You can trample on me proper after we get to the Mal Pais. Don’t have to know me at all if you don’t want to. Won’t you ride, ma’am? Please!”

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