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XVII - The Swoop Of The Hawk

   Jack! the saddle's slipping!" cried Mescal, clinging closer to him. "What luck!" Hare muttered through clinched teeth, and pulled hard on the bridle.  But the mouth of the stallion was iron; regardless of the sawing bit, he galloped on.  Hare called steadily: "Whoa there, Silver! Whoa– slow now–whoa–easy!" and finally halted him.  Hare swung down, and as he lifted Mescal off, the saddle slipped to the ground.

  "Lucky not to get a spill! The girth snapped.  It was wet, and dried out." Hare hurriedly began to repair the break with buckskin thongs that he found in a saddle-bag.

  "Listen!  Hear the yells!"  Oh! hurry!" cried Mescal.

  "I've never ridden bareback.  Suppose you go ahead with Silver, and I'll hide in the cedars till dark, then walk home!"

  "No–No.  There's time, but hurry."

  "It's got to be strong," muttered Hare, holding the strap over his knee and pulling the laced knot with all his strength, "for we'll have to ride some.  If it comes loose–Good-bye!"

  Silvermane's broad chest muscles rippled and he stamped restlessly.  The dog whined and looked back.  Mescal had the blanket smooth on the gray when Hare threw the saddle over him.  The yells had ceased, but clattering hoofs on the stony trail were a greater menace.  While Hare's brown hands worked swiftly over buckle and strap Mescal climbed to a seat behind the saddle.

  "Get into the saddle," said Hare, leaping astride and pressing forward over the pommel.  "Slip down–there! and hold to me.  Go! Silver!"

  The rapid pounding of the stallion's hoofs drowned the clatter coming up the trail.  A backward glance relieved Hare, for dust-clouds some few hundred yards in the rear showed the position of the pursuing horsemen. He held in Silvermane to a steady gallop.  The trail was up-hill, and steep enough to wind even a desert racer, if put to his limit.

  "Look back!" cried Mescal.  "Can you see them?  Is Snap with them?"

  "I can't see for trees," replied Hare, over his shoulder.  "There's dust–we're far in the lead–never fear, Mescal.  The lead's all we want."

  Cedars grew thickly all the way up the steeper part of the divide, and ended abruptly at a pathway of stone, where the ascent became gradual. When Silvermane struck out of the grove upon this slope Hare kept turning keen glances rearward.  The dust cloud rolled to the edge of the cedars, and out of it trooped half-a-dozen horsemen who began to shoot as soon as they had reached the open.  Bullets zipped along the red stone, cutting little puffs of red dust, and sung through the air.

  "Good God!" cried Hare.  "They're firing on us! They'd shoot a woman!"

  "Has it taken you so long to learn that?"

  Hare slashed his steed with the switch.  But Silvermane needed no goad or spur; he had been shot at before, and the whistle of one bullet was sufficient to stretch his gallop into a run.  Then distance between him and his pursuers grew wider and wider and soon he was out of range.  The yells of the rustlers seemed at first to come from baffled rage, but Mescal's startled cry shoveled their meaning.  Other horsemen appeared ahead and to the right of him, tearing down the ridge to the divide. Evidently they had been returning from the western curve of Coconina.

  The direction in which Silvermane was stretching was the only possible one for Hare.  If he swerved off the trail to the left it would be upon rough rising ground.  Not only must he outride this second band to the point where the trail went down on the other side of the divide, but also he must get beyond it before they came within rifle range.

  "Now! Silver! Go! Go!" Fast as the noble stallion was speeding he answered to the call.  He was in the open now, free of stones and brush, with the span" of rifles in the air.  The wind rushed into Hare's ears, filling them with a hollow roar; the ground blurred by in reddish sheets. The horsemen cut down the half mile to a quarter, lessened that, swept closer and closer, till Hare recognized Chance and Culver, and Snap Naab on his cream-colored pinto.  Seeing that they could not head the invincible stallion they sheered more to the right.  But Silvermane thundered on, crossing the line ahead of them at full three hundred yards, and went over the divide, drawing them in behind dime

  Then, at the sharp crack of the rifles, leaden messengers whizzed high in the air over horse and riders, and skipped along the red shale in front of the running dog.

  "Oh–Silvermane!" cried Hare.  It was just a call, as if the horse were human, and knew what that pace meant to his master.  The stern business of the race had ceased to rest on Hare.  Silvermane was out to the front! He was like a level-rushing thunderbolt.  Hare felt the instantaneous pause between his long low leaps, the gather of mighty muscles, the strain, the tension, then the quivering expulsion of force.  It was a perilous ride down that red slope, not so much from the hissing bullets as from the washes and gullies which Silvermane sailed over in magnificent leaps.  Hare thrilled with savage delight in the wonderful prowess of his desert king, in the primal instinct of joy at escaping with the woman he loved.

  "Outrun!" he cried, with blazing eyes.  Mescal's white face was pressed close to his shoulder.  "Silver has beaten them.  They'll hang on till we reach the sand-strip, hoping the slow-down will let them come up in time. But they'll be far too late."

  The rustlers continued on the trail, firing desultorily, till Silvermane so far distanced them that even the necessary lapse into a walk in the red sand placed him beyond range when they arrived at the strip.

  "They've turned back, Mescal.  We're safe.  Why, you look as you did the day the bear ran for you."

  "I'd rather a bear got me than Snap.  Jack, did you see him?"

  "See him?  Rather! I'll bet he nearly killed his pinto.  Mescal, what do you think of Silvermane now?  Can he run?  Can he outrun Bolly?"

  "Yes–yes.  Oh! Jack! how I'll love him! Look back again.  Are we safe? Will we ever be safe?"

  It was still daylight when they rounded the portal of the oasis and entered the lane with the familiar wall on one side, the peeled fence-pickets on the other.  Wolf dashed on ahead, and presently a chorus of barks announced that he had been met by the other dogs.  Silvermane neighed shrilly, and the horses and mustangs in the corrals trooped noisily to the lower sides and hung inquisitive heads over the top bars.

  A Navajo whom Hare remembered stared with axe idle by the woodpile, then Judith Naab dropped a bundle of sticks and with a cry of gladness ran from the house.  Before Silvermane had come to a full stop Mescal was off.  She put her arms around his neck and kissed him, then she left Judith to dart to the corral where a little black mustang had begun to whistle and stamp and try to climb over the bars.

  August Naab, bareheaded, with shaggy locks shaking at every step, strode off the porch and his great hands lifted Hare from the saddle.

  "Every day I've watched the river for you," he said.  His eyes were warm and his grasp like a vise.

  '<Mescal–child!" he continued, as she came running to him.  "Safe and well.  He's brought you back.  Thank the Lord!" He took her to his breast and bent his gray head over her.

  Then the crowd of big and little Naabs burst from the house and came under the cottonwoods to offer noisy welcome to Mescal and Hare.

  "Jack, you look done up," said Dave Naab solicitously, when the first greetings had been spoken, and Mother Ruth had led Mescal indoors. "Silvermane, too–he's wet and winded.  He's been running?"

  "Yes, a little," replied Hare, as he removed the saddle from the weary horse.

  "Ah! What's this?" questioned August Naab, with his hand on Silvermane's flank.  He touched a raw groove, and the stallion flinched.  "Hare, a bullet made that!"