Cabin Fever - Page 43/118

"They're tough little devils," Bud observed hopefully. "We could take

it easy, traveling when it's coolest. And by packing light, and graining

the whole bunch--"

"Yeah. We can ease 'em through, I guess. It does seem as though it would

be foolish to hang on here any longer." Carefully as he made his tests,

Cash weighed the question of their going. "This last report kills any

chance of interesting capital to the extent of developing the claim on

a large enough scale to make it profitable. It's too long a haul to take

the ore out, and it's too spotted to justify any great investment in

machinery to handle it on the ground. And," he added with an undernote

of fierceness, "it's a terrible place for man or beast to stay in,

unless the object to be attained is great enough to justify enduring the

hardships."

"You said a mouthful, Cash. Well, can you leave your seven radishes and

three hunches of lettuce and pull out--say at daybreak?" Bud turned to

him with some eagerness.

Cash grinned sourly. "When it's time to go, seven radishes can't stop

me. No, nor a whole row of 'em--if there was a whole row."

"And you watered 'em copiously too," Bud murmured, with the corners

of his mouth twitching. "Well, I guess we might as well tie up the

livestock. I'm going to give 'em all a feed of rolled oats, Cash. We

can get along without, and they've got to have something to put a little

heart in 'em. There's a moon to-night--how about starting along

about midnight? That would put us in the Bend early in the forenoon

to-morrow."

"Suits me," said Cash. "Now I've made up my mind about going, I can't go

too soon."

"You're on. Midnight sees us started." Bud went out with ropes to catch

and tie up the burros and their two saddle horses. And as he went, for

the first time in two months he whistled; a detail which Cash noted with

a queer kind of smile.

Midnight and the moon riding high in the purple bowl of sky sprinkled

thick with stars; with a little, warm wind stirring the parched weeds as

they passed; with the burros shuffling single file along the dim trail

which was the short cut through the hills to the Bend, Ed taking the

lead, with the camp kitchen wabbling lumpily on his back, Cora bringing

up the rear with her skinny colt trying its best to keep up, and with

no pack at all; so they started on the long, long journey to the green

country.

A silent journey it was for the most part. The moon and the starry

bowl of sky had laid their spell upon the desert, and the two men rode

wordlessly, filled with vague, unreasoning regret that they must go.

Months they had spent with the desert, learning well every little

varying mood; cursing it for its blistering heat and its sand storms

and its parched thirst and its utter, blank loneliness. Loving it too,

without ever dreaming that they loved. To-morrow they would face the

future with the past dropping farther and farther behind. To-night it

rode with them.