Though Champ Lee had business in Mesa next day that would not be denied,

he was singularly loath to leave the ranch. He wanted to stay close to

Melissy until the dénouement of the hunt for the stage robber. On the

other hand, it was well known that his contest with Morse for the Monte

Cristo was up for a hearing. To stay at home would have been a confession

of his anxiety that he did not want to make. But it was only after

repeated charges to his daughter to call him up by telephone immediately

if anything happened that he could bring himself to ride away.

He was scarcely out of sight when a Mexican vaquero rode in with the

information that old Antonio, on his way to the post at Three Pines with a

second drove of sheep, had twisted his ankle badly about fifteen miles

from the ranch. After trying in vain to pick up a herder at Mesa by

telephone, Melissy was driven to the only feasible course left her, to

make the drive herself in place of Antonio. There were fifteen hundred

sheep in the bunch, and they must be taken care of at once by somebody

competent for the task. She knew she could handle them, for it had amused

her to take charge of a herd often for an hour or two at a time. The long

stretch over the desert would be wearisome and monotonous, but she had the

slim, muscular tenacity of a half-grown boy. It did not matter what she

wanted to do. The thing to which she came back always was that the sheep

must be taken care of.

She left directions with Jim for taking care of the place, changed to a

khaki skirt and jacket, slapped a saddle on her bronco, and disappeared

across country among the undulations of the sandhills. A tenderfoot would

have been hopelessly lost in the sameness of these hills and washes, but

Melissy knew them as a city dweller does his streets. Straight as an arrow

she went to her mark. The tinkle of distant sheep-bells greeted her after

some hours' travel, and soon the low, ceaseless bleating of the herd.

The girl found Antonio propped against a piñon tree, solacing himself

philosophically with cigarettes. He was surprised to see her, but made

only a slight objection to her taking his place. His ankle was paining him

a good deal, and he was very glad to get the chance to pull himself to her

saddle and ride back to the ranch.

A few quick words sent the dog Colin out among the sheep, by now

scattered far and wide over the hill. They presently came pouring toward

her, diverged westward, and massed at the base of a butte rising from a

dry arroyo. The journey had begun, and hour after hour it continued

through the hot day, always in a cloud of dust flung up by the sheep,

sometimes through the heavy sand of a wash, often over slopes of shale,

not seldom through thick cactus beds that shredded her skirt and tore like

fierce, sharp fingers at her legging-protected ankles. The great gray

desert still stretched before her to the horizon's edge, and still she

flung the miles behind her with the long, rhythmic stride that was her

birthright from the hills. A strong man, unused to it, would have been

staggering with stiff fatigue, but this slender girl held the trail with

light grace, her weight still carried springily on her small ankles.




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