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Heart thudding, Karla held her breath, straining her ears to listen.

Outside the cave rose sibilant sniffing and panting sounds. A rock rattled, and a scratching, tapping sounded, punctuated by the clinks of shale being knocked together.

A shadow appeared in the opening’s far right edge—a coyote or a fox, head low, ears pricked. It sniffed busily, a musky, urinelike smell wafting from its coat.

“Shoo!” Karla whispered.

The beast squealed softly, a clipped howl. It withdrew its head and vanished, its hurried footsteps quickly fading with distance.

Karla’s heart skipped a beat. She exhaled and lowered the Winchester. She sat with her wool blanket over her legs, her saddle and saddlebags behind her, for nearly a minute. When her heart had regained its normal rhythm, she set the rifle down, tossed aside the blanket, felt around for her low-heeled, high-topped riding boots, and pulled them on.

She retrieved the Winchester, climbed to her knees, and ducked through the opening, straightening and holding the rifle across her thighs. She wore tight denims and a cream flannel shirt, the tails untucked. Her brown hair fell straight across her shoulders, mussed from sleep. As she stood staring silently across the narrow, dark canyon opening before her, and at the patch of gray sky streaking the serrated rim, the cool morning air shoved against her, fresh from last night’s rain.

There was barely a breath of breeze.

She hardened her jaw, tensed her back against the doubt, the apprehension and loneliness squeezing her lungs.

“Taos” Tommy Navarro had taught her how to survive in the desert. He’d taught her where to look for water and game. How to shoot and ride. How to track and cover her trail.

She would not return to her arrogant, meddling grandfather. That was what he was expecting her to do, with her tail between her legs, begging for his forgiveness. She meant to find Juan, and that was what she’d do.

Juan’s uncle owned a rancho fifty miles south of the Mexican border, in a small canyon feeding the San Pedro. Hopefully, Karla would catch up to him later today or early tomorrow. What she and Juan would do then, she hadn’t thought through entirely. All she knew was that she loved him, that he loved her—she’d seen it in his eyes even when he was telling her good-bye—and that her grandfather would have no say in their future.

Sitting against the cave wall, the rifle between her raised knees, she waited until the murky dawn light spilled over the ridges and down into the canyon, showing the crannies and hollows, the rocks and the spiky shrubs. She pinned her hair under her man’s range hat, gathered her gear from the cave, and stole down the narrow trail winding through boulders to the grassy hollow where the Arabian stood, double-tied to a mesquite and hobbled so it couldn’t bolt during last night’s storm.

Before she’d left the ranch, Karla had filled one side of her saddlebags with grain. Now she placed a feedbag over the Arabian’s head. As she saddled the horse, the grinding of its teeth filled the quiet air—a reassuring sound amid the eerie quiet after the storm.

Her imagination kept conjuring Apaches stealing down the slopes around her, but she resisted them, forcing instead the more pleasant memories of listening to her flint-haired vaquero beau read his love sonnets to her in Spanish while nearby their tethered horses cropped the meadow grass or a spring murmured through rocks.

A half hour later, she rode west along the spongy canyon floor, the Arabian’s hooves making sucking sounds in the freshly eroded silt and sand. Around noon, she picked up the stage road cleaving a valley between two bald mountain ranges. She was about to rein the horse off the trail, toward a distant cottonwood copse, where she’d probably find a spring keeping the trees so green, when the smell of something burning touched her nostrils.

She peered around. A mile or more ahead, a thin column of black smoke rose above a rocky knoll. She stared at the smoke warily. Tom had told her that, if she ever found herself alone in the desert, to regard smoke with caution. Smoke often meant an Indian attack, and the Indians might still be around.

Finally, Karla batted her heels to the Arabian’s sides, moving slowly ahead. She shucked the carbine from the saddle boot, jacked a shell into the magazine, lowered the hammer to half cock, and rode with the rifle across her thighs.

She’d ridden three-quarters of a mile and was rounding a wide bend when the Arabian stopped abruptly and, sniffing the air, pricked its ears and whinnied.

“Easy, boy, easy,” Karla said, running a hand down the animal’s fine neck and urging it forward.

She moved around the bend and stared across a low jumble of rock and cactus. Urging the reluctant horse closer, she studied the mound of fire-blackened wood as small flames licked here and there from the wreckage, black smoke swirling and rising.

On a flat panel tilted against a high wagon wheel half buried in ash and sand were the words, in gold-leaf lettering, BUTTERFIELD OVERLAND EXPRESS. Strewn about the rubble were the oblong remains of charred bodies, marked by half-burned hats and boots. A silver-plated revolver, untouched by the flames, shone between the still burning spokes of a wheel.

The wagon tongue was still burning, the horses gone, probably led off by the Apaches.

The Arabian whinnied and sidestepped, fighting the bit. Karla leaned over the horse’s neck, cooing gently, as she studied the deep ruts the stage had carved in the sand when it had left the main trail, bulling over cactus and scattering rocks. All around were the relatively fresh prints of unshod hooves.

A chill engulfing her, Karla peered back along the powder white trail obscured by shimmering heat waves and the glaring sun. What looked like a body lay sprawled on the trail fifty yards away.

Karla was about to ride on and investigate when a high-pitched bark rose on her right. With a start, she turned that way, swinging the rifle out before her.

Two enormous black turkey buzzards, with faces like ancient bald men, stared at her furiously from fifteen feet away. Near them a small man with short gray whiskers and thin brown hair lay on his back among small stones and a barrel cactus. He wore faded blue denims, suspenders, and a cartridge belt and holster, the revolver missing.

Five arrows protruded from the man’s chest, each centered over his heart. Two more jutted from his thighs. His ankles were crossed as though he were only napping; one arm was flung wide while the other gloved hand lay upon his bloody chest, loosely wrapped around the base of an arrow.

His blue eyes stared unflinching at the sky. His lips formed a perfect “O” of frozen shock and horror.

One of the buzzards, standing near the man’s empty holster, gave another angry squawk and leapt in the air, beating its dusty wings. The other skitter-hoppped several feet away, its skinny throat swelling as it breathed. Shadows glanced across the sand, and Karla looked up to see three more of the big carrion eaters swirling amid the smoke from the burning stage.

Feeling sick and making a conscious effort to keep in her stomach the jerky she’d eaten for breakfast, Karla gigged her horse back toward the trail. She looked cautiously around as the Arabian walked tensely, its tail swishing anxiously. Karla held the carbine’s butt against her hip socket. She felt as though a crouching Apache were centering an arrow on her back.

Ten yards from the trail, she reined back abruptly. She’d heard something. Her gloved hand fingering the Winchester’s trigger, she raked her gaze across the desert scuffed by the stage and a dozen horses.

“Kar-la.” It was a wheezy rasp, like her name spoken by two yucca blades scraping together.