An Apache Princess - Page 130/162

Resentful of the sudden glare that caused her patient to shrink and

toss complainingly, Angela glanced up almost in rebuke, but was

stilled by the look and attitude of the young savage. He stood with

forefinger on his closed lips, bending excitedly toward her. He was

cautioning her to make no sound, even while his very coming brought

disturbance to her first thought--her fevered patient. Then, seeing

both rebuke and question in her big, troubled eyes, the young Indian

removed his finger and spoke two words: "Patchie come," and, rising,

she followed him out to the flat in front.

Natzie at the moment was still crouching close to the edge, gazing

intently over, one little brown hand nervously grasping the branch of

a stunted cedar, the other as nervously clutching the mirror. So

utterly absorbed was she that the hiss of warning, or perhaps of

hatred, with which Lola greeted the sudden coming of Angela, seemed to

fall unnoted on her ears. Lola, her black eyes snapping and her lips

compressed, glanced up at the white girl almost in fury. Natzie,

paying no heed whatever to what was occurring about her, knelt

breathless at her post, watching, eagerly watching. Then, slowly, they

saw her raise her right hand, still cautiously holding the little

mirror, face downward, and at sight of this the Apache boy could

scarcely control his trembling, and Lola, turning about, spoke some

furious words, in low, intense tone, that made him shrink back toward

the screen. Then the wild girl glared again at Angela, as though the

sight of her were unbearable, and, with as furious a gesture, sought

to drive her, too, again to the refuge of the dark cleft, but Angela

never stirred. Paying no heed to Lola, the daughter of the soldier

gazed only at the daughter of the chief, at Natzie, whose hand was

now level with the surface of the rock. The next instant, far to the

northwest flashed a slender beam of dazzling light, another--another.

An interval of a second or two, and still another flash. Angela could

see the tiny, nebulous dot, like will-'o-the-wisp, dancing far over

among the rocks across a gloomy gorge. She had never seen it before,

but knew it at a glance. The Indian girl was signaling to some of her

father's people far over toward the great reservation, and the tale

she told was that danger menaced. Angela could not know that it told

still more,--that danger menaced not only Natzie, daughter of one

warrior chief, and the chosen of another now among their heroic

dead--it threatened those whom she was pledged to protect, even

against her own people.