Ty heard her footsteps and looked over his shoulder. "You're supposed to be sleeping."
"Not likely with all the racket you're making," she said breathlessly.
His smile was rather grim as he turned his attention back to the land beyond the cleft. He fired quickly three times and was answered by a scattering of shots.
"I'm having a little help making noise, as you can see."
"How many?" Janna asked.
"I saw enough dust for an army, but I don't think there are more than ten rifles out there right now, and all of them are single shot."
"For these small blessings, Lord, we are thankful," Janna said beneath her breath. "I think."
Ty's smile was little more than a hard line of white beneath his black mustache. He wasn't sure that it made a difference what kind of rifles the renegades were shooting. The chance of Janna and himself slipping past the Indians-much less of stealing a horse or two on the way by-had dropped to the point that it would be frankly suicidal rather than probably suicidal to try escaping through the cleft.
But there was no other way out.
"I think I found a way out," Janna said.
Her words echoed his thought so closely that for a moment Ty wasn't sure that she really had spoken. His head snapped around.
"What did you say?"
"I think I found how Mad Jack got his gold into the ruins without our seeing him."
A movement beyond the cleft commanded Ty's attention. He turned, got off two quick shots and had the satisfaction of knowing that at least one of them had struck home. There was a flurry of return fire, then silence. As he watched the area beyond the cleft he began reloading methodically.
"How did he do it?" Ty asked.
"You know how the valley narrows out behind the ruins?"
"Yes."
"I followed it," Janna said.
"So did I about two weeks ago. It ends in a stone cliff."
"There's a ravine coming in before that."
"There are at least ten ravines 'before that,' and those ravines branch into others, which branch into others. And they all end against a stone cliff," Ty concluded flatly.
"Even the one with the ledge?" Janna asked, trying to keep the disappointment from her voice.
"What ledge?"
"The one that goes along the western Up of the valley almost to the rim."
"Are you certain?"
"I was on it until I heard rifle fire."
Slowly Ty lowered his carbine and turned toward Janna. "You said 'almost to the rim.' How close is 'almost'?"
"I don't know. Zebra started whinnying when I got out of sight and then Lucifer set up such a ruckus that I came back to calm him down. Then I heard rifle fire and was afraid they were rushing you and you didn't have anyone to cover you while you reloaded." Janna closed her eyes briefly. "I got back here as quick as I could."
"How close is almost?" Ty repeated calmly.
"A hundred feet. Maybe a hundred yards. Maybe a quarter mile. I couldn't see."
"Would you bet your life on that path going through?"
"Do we have a choice?"
"Probably not. If Cascabel isn't out there soon, he will be when word gets to him. Until then, there are at least eight able-bodied warriors and two wounded renegades under cover out there, just waiting for something to show at the cleft."
"What if we wait until dark?"
"We can try it."
"But?" Janna prodded.
"Our chances of getting out alive through that cleft are so slim they aren't worth counting," Ty said bluntly. "The same darkness that would cover our movements also covers theirs. Even now the renegades are moving in closer, finding cover, covering each other, closing in on the cleft. By dark they'll have the cork well and truly in the bottle. After that, it's just a matter of time until I run out of ammunition and they rush me."
Ty said nothing more. He didn't have to. Janna could finish his bleak line of thought as well as he could.
"There's something else to consider," Ty said. "If you can find that trail from this end, sure as God made little green apples, a renegade can find it from the other end if he has a good enough reason to go looking-and your hair is a good enough reason, thanks to Cascabel's vision."
Janna nodded unhappily. The same thought had occurred to her. "We can take the horses most of the way."
"But not all?"
"The ledge was made for men, not horses."
Ty had expected nothing more. He bent, put his arms through the straps of his heavy pack and shrugged it into place. "Let's go. We only have a few hours of light left."
Janna turned to leave, then was struck by a thought. "What happens if the Indians rush the cleft while we're still in the valley?"
"I've made the renegades real wary of showing themselves. But if they do-" Ty shrugged "-I can hold them off in the ruins almost as well as in the cleft. You'll have plenty of time to follow the path."
"If you think I'd leave you to-"
"If I tell you to take that trail," Ty interrupted flatly, "you damn well will take that trail."
Without another word Janna turned and began working her way rapidly back through the cleft. Ty was right on her heels. When they came out into the little valley, Zebra and Lucifer were standing nearby, watching the opening attentively. Janna mounted and waited while Ty pulled the saddlebags full of gold out of a hiding place and secured them on Lucifer's muscular back. As soon as Ty had mounted, Janna urged Zebra into a gallop.
The mustangs quickly covered the distance to the ruins. Janna didn't slow the pace until the valley narrowed and the rubble underfoot made the going too rough for any speed greater than a trot. The sounds of stones rolling beneath the horses' hooves echoed between the narrowing walls of the valley. Walking, trotting, scrambling, always pushing ahead as quickly as possible, Zebra climbed up steeper and steeper byways, urged by Janna through the twisting web of natural and man-made passages. Lucifer kept up easily despite the double load of Ty and the gold. The stallion was powerful, agile and fully recovered from his brush with Joe Troon's rifle.
More than once Ty thought that Janna had lost her way, but each time she found a path past the crumbling head of a ravine or through places where huge sheets of rock had peeled away from the ramparts and smashed to pieces against stone outcroppings farther down the cliff. When Zebra scrambled over a ridge of stone and came to a stop, Ty wondered if Janna had finally lost her way. He hoped not; he had begun to believe there was a way out of the hidden valley that had been first a haven and then a deadly trap.
Janna turned and looked back at Ty. "This is as far as the horses can go."
Before Ty could answer, Janna slid from Zebra's back, adjusted the small pack she wore and set off to traverse the narrow ledge. Ty dismounted, scrambled up the last few feet of trail and saw the ledge-and the sheer drop to the valley below.
"Sweet Jesus," he whispered.
Ty fought against an urge to call out to Janna to come back. All that made him succeed was the fear of distracting her from the trail's demands.
The sound of rifle fire drifted up from the direction of the cleft, telling Ty that the renegades were on the move once more. He turned and looked toward the east. He couldn't see the spot where the cleft opened into the meadow. He could, however, see that once the renegades spread through the valley looking for their prey, it would be just a matter of time until a warrior looked up and saw Janna poised like a fly on the wall of the valley's western ramparts.
Zebra called nervously when Janna vanished around a bulge of stone. The stallion's ringing whinny split the air, reverberating off rocky walls. Ty went back to Lucifer and clamped his hand over the horse's nostrils. The stallion shook his head but Ty only hung on harder. He spoke softly, reassuring the mustang, hoping the horse's neigh hadn't carried over the sound of rifle fire.