Deep down in a ragged cleft of the desert, with shelving rock and

giant bowlder on every side, without a sign of leaf, or sprig of

grass, or tendril of tiny creeping plant, a little party of haggard,

hunted men lay in hiding and in the silence of exhaustion and despond,

awaiting the inevitable. Bulging outward overhead, like the counter of

some huge battleship, a great mass of solid granite heaved unbroken

above them, forming a recess or cave, in which they were secure

against arrow, shot, or stone from the crest of the lofty, almost

vertical walls of the vast and gloomy cañon. Well back under this

natural shelter, basined in the hollowed rock, a blessed pool of fair

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water lay unwrinkled by even a flutter of breeze. Relic of the early

springtime and the melting snows, it had been caught and imprisoned

here after the gradually failing stream had trickled itself into

nothingness.

One essential, one comfort then had not been denied the

beleaguered few, but it was about the only one. Water for drink, for

fevered wounds and burning throats, they had in abundance; but the

last "hardtack" had been shared, the last scrap of bacon long since

devoured. Of the once-abundant rations only coffee grains were left.

Of the cartridge-crammed "thimble belts," with which they had entered

the cañon and the Apache trap, only three contained so much as a

single copper cylinder, stopped by its forceful lead. These three

belonged to troopers, two of whom, at least, would never have use for

them again. One of these, poor Jerry Kent, lay buried beneath the

little cairn of rocks in still another cavelike recess a dozen yards

away, hidden there by night, when prowling Apaches could not see the

sorrowing burial party and crush them with bowlders heaved over the

precipice above, or shoot them down with whistling lead or

steel-tipped arrow from some safe covert in the rocky walls.

Cut off from their comrades while scouting a side ravine, Captain Wren

and his quartette of troopers had made stiff and valiant fight against

such of the Indians as permitted hand or head to show from behind the

rocks. They had felt confident that Sergeant Brewster and the main

body would speedily miss them, or hear the sound of firing and turn

back au secours, but sounds are queerly carried in such a maze of

deep and tortuous clefts as seamed the surface in every conceivable

direction through the wild basin of the Colorado. Brewster's rearmost

files declared long after that never the faintest whisper of affray

had reached their ears, already half deadened by fatigue and the

ceaseless crash of iron-shod hoofs on shingly rock. As for Brewster

himself, he was able to establish that Wren's own orders were to "push

ahead" and try to make Sunset Pass by nightfall, while the captain,

with such horses as seemed freshest, scouted right and left wherever

possible. The last seen of Jerry Kent, it later transpired, was when

he came riding after them to say the captain had gone into the mouth

of the gorge opening to the west, and the last message borne from the

commander to the troop came through Jerry Kent to Sergeant Dusold, who

brought up the rear.




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