The man was on the rack. Tiny beads of perspiration stood out on his

forehead. But he got a lip smile into working order.

"Just what do you mean, Miss Lee?"

"You had better get your story more pat. I've punched a dozen holes in it

already. First you tell me you are from the East, and even while you were

telling me I knew you were a Southerner from the drawl. No man ever got

lost from Mammoth. You gave a false name. You said you had been herding

sheep, but you didn't know what an outfit is. You wobbled between the

Galiuros and the Catalinas."

"I'm not a native. I told you I couldn't remember Spanish names."

"It wasn't necessary to tell me," she countered quickly. "A man that can't

recall even the name of his boss!"

"I'm not in the witness box, Miss Lee," he told her stiffly.

"Not yet, but you're liable to be soon, I reckon."

"In a cattle rustling case, I suppose you mean."

"No, I don't." She went on with her indictment of his story, though his

thrust had brought the color to her cheek. "When I offered you Antonio

Valdez for an employer you jumped at him. If you want to know, he happens

to be our herder. He doesn't own a sheep and never will."

"You know all about it," he said with obvious sarcasm.

"I know you're not who you say you are."

"Perhaps you know who I am then."

"I don't know or care. It's none of my business. But others may think it

is theirs. You can't be so reckless with the truth without folks having

notions. If I were you I'd get a story that will hang together."

"You're such a good detective. Maybe I could get you to invent one for

me," he suggested maliciously.

Her indignation flashed. "I'm no such thing. But I'm not quite a fool. A

babe in arms wouldn't swallow that fairy tale."

Awkward as her knowledge might prove, he could not help admiring the

resource and shrewdness of the girl. She had virtually served notice that

if she had a secret that needed keeping so had he.

They looked down over a desert green with bajadas, prickly pears, and

mesquit. To the right, close to a spur of the hills, were the dwarfed

houses of a ranch. The fans of a windmill caught the sun and flashed it

back to the travelers.




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