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  August cautioned Jack to step stealthily, and slip from cedar to cedar, to use every bunch of sage and juniper to hide his advance.

  "Watch sharp, Jack.  I've seen two already.  Look for moving things. Don't try to see one quiet, for you can't till after your eye catches him moving.  They are gray, gray as the cedars, the grass, the ground.  Good! Yes, I see him, but don't shoot.  That's too far.  Wait.  They sneak away, but they return.  You can afford to make sure.  Here now, by that stone–aim low and be quick."

  In the course of a mile, without keeping the sheep near at hand, they saw upward of twenty coyotes, five of which Jack killed in as many shots.

  "You've got the hang of it," said Naab, rubbing his hands.  "You'll kill the varmints.  Piute will skin and salt the pelts.  Now I'm going up on the high range to look for bear sign.  Go ahead, on your own hook."

  Hare was regardless of time while he stole under the cedars and through the thickets, spying out the cunning coyotes.  Then Naab's yell pealing out claimed his attention; he answered and returned.  When they met he recounted his adventures in mingled excitement and disappointment.

  "Are you tired?" asked Naab.

  "Tired?  No," replied Jack.

  "Well, you mustn't overdo the very first day.  I've news for you.  There are some wild horses on the high range.  I didn't see them, but found tracks everywhere.  If they come down here you send Piute to close the trail at the upper end of the bench, and you close the one where we came up.  There are only two trails where even a deer can get off this plateau, and both are narrow splits in the wall, which can be barred by the gates.  We made the gates to keep the sheep in, and they'll serve a turn.  If you get the wild horses on the bench send Piute for me at once."

  They passed the Indian herding the sheep into a corral built against an uprising ridge of stone.  Naab dispatched him to look for the dead coyotes.  The three burros were in camp, two wearing empty pack-saddles, and Noddle, for once not asleep, was eating from Mescal's hand.

  "Mescal, hadn't I better take Black Bolly home?" asked August.

  "Mayn't I keep her?"

  "She's yours.  But you run a risk.  There are wild horses on the range. Will you keep her hobbled?"

  "Yes," replied Mescal, reluctantly.  "Though I don't believe Bolly would run off from me."

  "Look out she doesn't go, hobbles and all.  Jack, here's the other bit of news I have for you.  There's a big grizzly camping on the trail of our sheep.  Now what I want to know is–shall I leave him to you, or put off work and come up here to wait for him myself?"

  "Why–" said Jack, slowly, "whatever you say.  If you think you can safely leave him to me–I'm willing."

  "A grizzly won't be pleasant to face.  I never knew one of those sheep-killers that wouldn't run at a man, if wounded."

  "Tell me what to do."

  "If he comes down it's more than likely to be after dark.  Don't risk hunting him then.  Wait till morning, and put Wolf on his trail.  He'll be up in the rocks, and by holding in the dog you may find him asleep in a cave.  However, if you happen to meet him by day do this.  Don't waste any shots.  Climb a ledge or tree if one be handy.  If not, stand your ground.  Get down on your knee and shoot and let him come.  Mind you, he'll grunt when he's hit, and start for you, and keep coming till he's dead.  Have confidence in yourself and your gun, for you can kill him. Aim low, and shoot steady.  If he keeps on coming there's always a fatal shot, and that is when he rises.  You'll see a bare spot on his breast. Put a forty-four into that, and he'll go down."

  August had spoken so easily, quite as if he were explaining how to shear a yearling sheep, that Jack's feelings fluctuated between amazement and laughter.  Verily this desert man was stripped of all the false fears of civilization.

  "Now, Jack, I'm off.  Good-bye and good luck.  Mescal, look out for him....  So-ho! Noddle! Getup! Biscuit!" And with many a cheery word and slap he urged the burros into the forest, where they and his tall form soon disappeared among the trees.

  Piute came stooping toward camp so burdened with coyotes that he could scarcely be seen under the gray pile.With a fervent "damn" he tumbled them under a cedar, and trotted back into the forest for another load. Jack insisted on assuming his share of the duties about camp; and Mescal assigned him to the task of gathering firewood, breaking red-hot sticks of wood into small pieces, and raking them into piles of live coals. Then they ate, these two alone.  Jack did not do justice to the supper; excitement had robbed him of appetite.  He told Mescal how he had crept upon the coyotes, how so many had eluded him, how he had missed a gray wolf.  He plied her with questions about the sheep, and wanted to know if there would be more wolves, and if she thought the "silvertip" would come.  He was quite carried away by the events of the day.

  The sunset drew him to the rim.  Dark clouds were mantling the desert like rolling smoke from a prairie-fire.  He almost stumbled over Mescal, who sat with her back to a stone.  Wolf lay with his head in her lap, and he growled.

  "There's a storm on the desert," she said." Those smoky streaks are flying sand.  We may have snow to-night.  It's colder, and the wind is north.  See, I've a blanket.  You had better get one."

  He thanked her and went for it.  Piute was eating his supper, and the peon had just come in.  The bright campfire was agreeable, yet Hare did not feel cold.  But he wrapped himself in a blanket and returned to Mescal and sat beside her.  The desert lay indistinct in the foreground, inscrutable beyond; the canyon lost its line in gloom.  The solemnity of the scene stilled his unrest, the strange freedom of longings unleashed that day.  What had come over him?  He shook his head; but with the consciousness of self returned a feeling of fatigue, the burning pain in his chest, the bitter-sweet smell of black sage and juniper.

  "You love this outlook?" he asked.

  "Yes."

  "Do you sit here often?"

  "Every evening."

  "Is it the sunset that you care for, the roar of the river, just being here high above it all?"

  "It's that last, perhaps; I don't know."

  "Haven't you been lonely?"

  "No."

  "You'd rather be here with the sheep than be in Lund, or Salt Lake City, as Esther and Judith want to be?"

  "Yes."

  Any other reply from her would not have been consistent with the impression she was making on him.  As yet he had hardly regarded her as a young girl; she had been part of this beautiful desert-land.  But he began to see in her a responsive being, influenced by his presence.  If the situation was wonderful to him what must it be for her?  Like a shy, illusive creature, unused to men, she was troubled by questions, fearful of the sound of her own voice.  Yet in repose, as she watched the lights and shadows, she was serene, unconscious; her dark, quiet glance was dreamy and sad, and in it was the sombre, brooding strength of the desert.

  Twilight and falling dew sent them back to the camp.  Piute and Peon were skinning coyotes by the blaze of the fire.  The night wind had not yet risen; the sheep were quiet; there was no sound save the crackle of burning cedar sticks.  Jack began to talk; he had to talk, so, addressing Piute and the dumb peon, he struck at random into speech, and words flowed with a rush.  Piute approved, for he said "damn" whenever his intelligence grasped a meaning, and the peon twisted his lips and fixed his diamond eyes upon Hare in rapt gaze.  The sound of a voice was welcome to the sentinels of that lonely sheep-range.  Jack talked of cities, of ships, of people, of simple things in the life he had left, and he discovered that Mescal listened.  Not only did she listen; she became absorbed; it was romance to her, fulfilment of her vague dreams. Nor did she seek her tent till he ceased; then with a startled "good-night" she was gone.