Two days now he had lived in much distress of mind. Before quitting

the post Major Plume had laboriously gone the rounds, saying good-by

to every officer and lady. Two officers he had asked to see

alone--the captain and first lieutenant of Troop "C." Janet knew of

this, and should have known it meant amende and reconciliation,

perhaps revelation, but because her brother saw fit to sit and ponder,

she saw fit to cling unflinchingly to her preconceived ideas and to

act according to them. With Graham she was exceeding wroth for daring

to defend such persons as Lieutenant Blakely and "that Indian squaw."

It was akin to opposing weak-minded theories to positive knowledge of

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facts. She had seen with her own eyes the ignorant, but no less

abandoned, creature kneeling at Blakely's bedside, her black head

pillowed close to his breast. She had seen her spring up in fury at

being caught--what else could have so enraged her that she should seek

to knife the intruders? argued Janet. She believed, or professed to

believe, that but for the vigilance of poor Todd, now quite happy in

his convalescence, the young savage would have murdered both the major

and herself. She did not care what Dr. Graham said. She had seen, and

seeing, with Janet, was believing.

But she knew her brother well, and knew that since Graham's impetuous

outbreak he had been wavering sadly, and since Plume's parting visit

had been plunged in a mental slough of doubt and distress. Once before

his stubborn Scotch nature had had to strike its colors and surrender

to his own subaltern, and now the same struggle was on again, for what

Plume said, and said in presence of grim old Graham, fairly startled

him: "You are not the only one to whom I owe amende and apology, Captain

Wren. I wronged you, when you were shielding--my wife--at no little

cost to yourself. I wronged Blakely in several ways, and I have had to

go and tell him so and beg his pardon. The meanest thing I ever did

was bringing Miss Wren in there to spy on him, unless it was in

sending that girl to the guard-house. I'd beg her pardon, too, if she

could be found. Yes, I see you look glum, Wren, but we've all been

wrong, I reckon. There's no mystery about it now."

And then Plume told his tale and Wren meekly listened. It might well

be, said he, that Natzie loved Blakely. All her people did. She had

been watching him from the willows as he slept that day at the pool.

He had forbidden her following him, forbidden her coming to the post,

and she feared to wake him, yet when she saw the two prospectors, that

had been at Hart's, ride over toward the sleeping officer she was

startled. She saw them watching, whispering together. Then they rode

down and tied their horses among the trees a hundred yards below, and

came crouching along the bank. She was up in an instant and over the

stream at the shallows, and that scared them off long enough to let

her reach him. Even then she dare not wake him for fear of his anger

at her disobedience, but his coat was open, his watch and wallet easy

to take. She quickly seized them--the little picture-case being within

the wallet at the moment--and sped back to her covert. Then Angela had

come cantering down the sandy road; had gone on down stream, passing

even the prowling prospectors, and after a few minutes had returned

and dismounted among the willows above where Blakely lay--Angela whom

poor Natzie believed to be Blakely's sister. Natzie supposed her

looking for her brother, and wondered why she waited. Natzie finally

signaled and pointed when she saw that Angela was going in

disappointment at not finding him. Natzie witnessed Angela's theft of

the net and her laughing ride away. By this time the prospectors had

given up and gone about their business, and then, while she was

wondering how best to restore the property, Lola and Alchisay had come

with the annoying news that the agent was angered and had sent

trailers after her. They were even then only a little way up stream.

The three then made a run for the rocks to the east, and there

remained in hiding. That night Natzie had done her best to find her

way to Blakely with the property, and the rest they knew. The watch

was dropped in the struggle on the mesa when Mullins was stabbed,

the picture-case that morning at the major's quarters.




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