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  "Naab, I'm shore comin' to visit you some day.  Never been over thet range.  Heerd you hed fine water, fine cattle.  An' say, I seen thet little Navajo girl you have, an' I wouldn't mind seein' her again."

  August Naab kicked the fire into brighter blaze.  "Yes fine range," he presently replied, his gaze fixed on Dene.  "Fine water, fine cattle, fine browse.  I've a fine graveyard, too; thirty graves, and not one a woman's.  Fine place for graves, the canyon country.  You don't have to dig.  There's one grave the Indians never named; it's three thousand feet deep."

  "Thet must be in hell," replied Dene, with a smile, Ignoring the covert meaning.  He leisurely surveyed Naab's four sons, the wagons and horses, till his eye fell upon Hare and Mescal.  With that he swung in his saddle as if to dismount.

  "I shore want a look around."

  "Get down, get down," returned the Mormon.  The deep voice, unwelcoming, vibrant with an odd ring, would have struck a less suspicious man than Dene.  The outlaw wrung his leg back over the pommel, sagged in the saddle, and appeared to be pondering the question.  Plainly he was uncertain of his ground.  But his indecision was brief.

  "Two-Spot, you look 'em over," he ordered. The third horseman dismounted and went toward the wagons.

  Hare, watching this scene, became conscious that his fear had intensified with the recognition of Two-Spot as Chance, the outlaw whom he would not soon forget.  In his excitement he moved against Mescal and felt her trembling violently.

  "Are you afraid?" he whispered.

  "Yes, of Dene."

  The outlaw rummaged in one of the wagons, pulled aside the canvas flaps of the other, laughed harshly, and then with clinking spurs tramped through the camp, kicking the beds, overturning a pile of saddles, and making disorder generally, till he spied the couple sitting on the stone in the shadow.

  As the outlaw lurched that way, Hare, with a start of recollection, took Mescal in his arms and leaned his head against hers.  He felt one of her hands lightly brush his shoulder and rest there, trembling.

  Shuffling footsteps scraped the sand, sounded nearer and nearer, slowed and paused.

  "Sparkin'! Dead to the world.  Ham! Haw! Haw!"

  The coarse laugh gave place to moving footsteps.  The rattling clink of stirrup and spur mingled with the restless stamp of horse.  Chance had mounted.  Dene's voice drawled out: "Good-bye, Naab, I shore will see you all some day." The heavy thuds of many hoofs evened into a roar that diminished as it rushed away.

  In unutterable relief Hare realized his deliverance.  He tried to rise, but power of movement had gone from him.

  He was fainting, yet his sensations were singularly acute.  Mescal's hand dropped from his shoulder; her cheek, that had been cold against his, grew hot; she quivered through all her slender length.  Confusion claimed his senses.  Gratitude and hope flooded his soul.  Something sweet and beautiful, the touch of this desert girl, rioted in his blood; his heart swelled in exquisite agony.  Then he was whirling in darkness; and he knew no more.

II - White Sage

   THE night was as a blank to Hare; the morning like a drifting of hazy clouds before his eyes.  He felt himself moving; and when he awakened clearly to consciousness he lay upon a couch on the vine-covered porch of a cottage.  He saw August Naab open a garden gate to admit Martin Cole. They met as friends; no trace of scorn marred August's greeting, and Martin was not the same man who had shown fear on the desert.  His welcome was one of respectful regard for his superior.

  "Elder, I heard you were safe in," he said, fervently.  "We feared–I know not what.  I was distressed till I got the news of your arrival. How's the young man?"

  "He's very ill.  But while there's life there's hope."

  "Will the Bishop administer to him?"

  "Gladly, if the young man's willing.  Come, let's go in."

  "Wait, August," said Cole." Did you know your son Snap was in the village?"

  "My son here!" August Naab betrayed anxiety.  'I left him home with work. He shouldn't have come.  Is–is he–"

  "He's drinking and in an ugly mood.  It seems he traded horses with Jeff Larsen, and got the worst of the deal.  There's pretty sure to be a fight."

  "He always hated Larsen."

  "Small wonder.  Larsen is mean; he's as bad as we've got and that's saying a good deal.  Snap has done worse things than fight with Larsen. He's doing a worse thing now, August–he's too friendly with Dene."

  "I've heard–I've heard it before.  But, Martin, what can I do?"

  "Do?  God knows.  What can any of us do?  Times have changed, August. Dene is here in White Sage, free, welcome in many homes.  Some of our neighbors, perhaps men we trust, are secret members of this rustler's band."

  "You're right, Cole.  There are Mormons who are cattle-thieves.  To my eternal shame I confess it.  Under cover of night they ride with Dene, and here in our midst they meet him in easy tolerance.  Driven from Montana he comes here to corrupt our young men.  God's mercy!"

  "August, some of our young men need no one to corrupt them.  Dene had no great task to win them.  He rode in here with a few outlaws and now he has a strong band.  We've got to face it.  We haven't any law, but he can be killed.  Some one must kill him.  Yet bad as Dene is, he doesn't threaten our living as Holderness does.  Dene steals a few cattle, kills a man here and there.  Holderness teaches out and takes our springs. Because we've no law to stop him, he steals the blood of our life–water– water–God's gift to the desert! Some one must kill Holderness, too!"

  "Martin, this lust to kill is a fearful thing.  Come in, you must pray with the Bishop."

  "No, it's not prayer I need, Elder," replied Cole, stubbornly. "I'm still a good Mormon.  What I want is the stock I've lost, and my fields green again."

  August Naab had no answer for his friend.  A very old man with snow-white hair and beard came out on the porch.

  "Bishop, brother Martin is railing again," said Naab, as Cole bared his head.

  "Martin, my son, unbosom thyself," rejoined the Bishop.

  "Black doubt and no light," said Cole, despondently.  "I'm of the younger generation of Mormons, and faith is harder for me.  I see signs you can't see.  I've had trials hard to bear.  I was rich in cattle, sheep, and water.  These Gentiles, this rancher Holderness and this outlaw Dene, have driven my cattle, killed my sheep, piped my water off my fields.  I don't like the present.  We are no longer in the old days.  Our young men are drifting away, and the few who return come with ideas opposed to Mormonism.  Our girls and boys are growing up influenced by the Gentiles among us.  They intermarry, and that's a death-blow to our creed."

  "Martin, cast out this poison from your heart.  Return to your faith. The millennium will come.  Christ will reign on earth again.  The ten tribes of Israel will be restored.  The Book of Mormon is the Word of God.  The creed will live.  We may suffer here and die, but our spirits will go marching on; and the Ciy of Zion will be builded over our graves."

  Cole held up his hands in a meekness that signified hope if not faith.

  August Naab bent over Hare.  "I would like to have the Bishop administer to you," he said.

  "What's that?" asked Hare.

  "A Mormon custom, 'the laying on of hands.' We know its efficacy in trouble and illness.  A Bishop of the Mormon Church has the gift of tongues, of prophecy, of revelation, of healing.  Let him administer to you.  It entails no obligation.  Accept it as a prayer."

  "I'm willing." replied the young man.