Melissy saw the two prisoners brought in, though she could not tell at

that distance who they were. Her watch told her that it was four-thirty.

She had slept scarcely at all during the night, but now she lay down on

the bed in her clothes.

The next she knew, Rosario was calling her to get up for breakfast. The

girl dressed and followed Rosario to the adjoining cabin. MacQueen was not

there, and Melissy ate alone. She was given to understand that she might

walk up and down in front of the houses for a few minutes after breakfast.

Naturally she made the most of the little liberty allowed her.

The old squaw Sit-in-the-Sun squatted in front of the last hut, her back

against the log wall. The man called Buck sat yawning on a rock a few

yards away. What struck Melissy as strange was that the squaw was figuring

on the back of an old envelope with the stub of a lead pencil.

The young woman walked leisurely past the cabin for perhaps a dozen

yards.

"That'll be about far enough. You don't want to tire yourself, Miss Lee,"

Buck Lane called, with a grin.

Melissy stopped, stood looking at the mountains for a few minutes, and

turned back. Sit-in-the-Sun looked quickly at her, and at the same moment

she tore the paper in two and her fingers opened to release one piece of

the envelope upon which she had been writing. A puff of wind carried it

almost directly in front of the girl. Lane was still yawning sleepily, his

gaze directed toward the spot where he presently expected Rosario to step

out and call him to breakfast. Melissy dropped her handkerchief, stooped

to pick it up, and gathered at the same time in a crumpled heap into her

hand the fragment of an envelope. Without another glance at the squaw, the

young woman kept on her way, sauntered to the porch, and lingered there as

if in doubt.

"I'm tired," she announced to Rosario, and turned to her rooms.

"Si, señorita," answered her attendant quietly.

Once inside, Melissy lay down on her bed, with her back to the window, and

smoothed out the torn envelope. On one side were some disjointed memoranda

which she did not understand.

K. C. & T. 93

D. & R. B. 87

Float $10,000,000 Cortes for extension.

That was all, but certainly a strange puzzle for a Navajo squaw to set

her.

She turned the paper over, to find the other side close-packed with

writing.

Miss Lee: In the last cabin but one is a prisoner, your friend Sheriff Flatray.

He is to be shot in an hour. I have offered any sum for his life and

been refused. For God's sake save him somehow.




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