An Apache Princess - Page 123/162

Sandy again. Four of the days stipulated by Lieutenant Blakely had run

their course. The fifth was ushered in, and from the moment he rode

away from the bivouac at the tanks no word had come from the

Bugologist, no further trace of Angela. In all its history the

garrison had known no gloom like this. The hospital was filled with

wounded. An extra surgeon and attendants had come down from Prescott,

but Graham was sturdily in charge. Of his several patients Wren

probably was now causing him the sorest anxiety, for the captain had

been grievously wounded and was pitiably weak. Now, when aroused at

times from the lassitude and despond in which he lay, Wren would

persist in asking for Angela, and, not daring to tell him the truth,

Janet, Calvinist that she was to the very core, had to do fearful

violence to her feelings and lie.

By the advice of bluff old Byrne and

the active connivance of the post commander, they had actually, these

stern Scotch Presbyterians, settled on this as the deception to be

practiced--that Angela had been drooping so sadly from anxiety and

dread she had been taken quite ill, and Dr. Graham had declared she

must be sent up to Prescott, or some equally high mountain resort,

there to rest and recuperate. She was in good hands, said these

arch-conspirators. She might be coming home any day. As for the troop

and the campaign, he mustn't talk or worry or think about them. The

general, with his big field columns, had had no personal contact with

the Indians. They had scattered before him into the wild country

toward the great Colorado, where Stout, with his hickory-built

footmen, and Brewster, with most of Wren's troop, were stirring up

Apaches night and day, while Sanders and others were steadily driving

on toward the old Wingate road.

Stout had found Brewster beleaguered,

but safe and sound, with no more men killed and few seriously wounded.

They had communicated with Sanders's side scouts, and were finding and

following fresh trails with every day, when Stout was surprised to

receive orders to drop pursuit and start with Brewster's fellows and

to scout the west face of the mountains from the Beaver to the heights

opposite the old Indian reservation. There was a stirring scene at

bivouac when that order came, and with it the explanation that Angela

Wren had vanished and was probably captured; that Blakely had followed

and was probably killed. "They might shoot Blakely in fair fight,"

said Stout, who knew him, and knew the veneration that lived for him

in the hearts of the Indian leaders, "but they at least would never

butcher him in cold blood. Their unrestrained young men might do it."

Stout's awful dread, like that of every man and woman at Sandy, and

every soldier in the field, was for Angela. The news, too, had been

rushed to the general, and his orders were instant. "Find the chiefs

in the field," said he to his interpreter and guide. "Find Shield's

people, and say that if a hair of her head is injured I shall hunt

them down, braves, women, and children--I shall hunt them anyhow until

they surrender her unharmed."