And all this, said Byrne, between his set teeth, because a bumptious

agent sought to lay forceful hands upon the daughter of a chief. Poor

Daly! He had paid dearly for that essay. As for Natzie, and her shadow

Lola, neither one had been again seen. They might indeed have dropped

back from Montezuma Well after the first wild stampede, but only

fruitless search had the soldiers made for them. Even their own

people, said Bridger, at the agency, were either the biggest liars

that ever lived or the poorest trailers. The Apaches swore the girls

could not be found. "I'll bet Sergeant Shannon could nail them," said

Hart, the trader, when told of the general denial among the Indians.

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But Shannon was far away from the field column, leading his moccasined

comrades afoot and in single file long, wearisome climbs up jagged

cliffs or through deep cañons, where unquestionably the foe had been

in numbers but the day before, yet now they were gone. Shannon might

well be needed at the far front, now that most of the Apache scouts

had proved timid or worthless, but Byrne wished he had him closer

home.

It was the Saturday night following the coming of the runners with

confirmation of the grewsome Indian stories. Colonel Byrne, with

Graham, Cutler, and Westervelt, had been at the office half an hour in

consultation when, to the surprise of every soul at Sandy, a four-mule

team and Concord wagon came bowling briskly into the post, and Major

Plume, dust-covered and grave, marched into the midst of the

conference and briefly said: "Gentlemen, I return to resume command."

Nobody had a word to say beyond that of welcome. It was manifestly the

proper thing for him to do. Unable, in face of the stories afloat, to

take his wife away, his proper place in the pressing emergency was at

his post in command.

To Colonel Byrne, who guardedly and somewhat dubiously asked, "How

about Mrs. Plume and that--French thing?" the major's answer was

prompt: "Both at Fort Whipple and in--good hands," said he. "My wife realizes

that my duty is here, and, though her recovery may be retarded, she

declares she will remain there or even join me. She, in fact, was so

insistent that I should bring her back with me that it embarrassed me

somewhat. I vetoed it, however."

Byrne gazed at him from under his shaggy eyebrows. "H'm," said he, "I

fancied she had shaken the dust of Sandy from her shoes for good and

all--that she hoped never to come back."




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