<h2>CHAPTER XLIV</h2>
<h3>CRAWLING STONE WASH</h3></div>
<p>Where the Little Crawling Stone River
tears out of the Mission Mountains it has
left a grayish-white gap that may be seen for many
miles. This is the head of the North Crawling
Stone Valley. Twenty miles to the right the big
river itself bursts through the Mission hills in the
canyon known as the Box. Between the confluence
of Big and Little Crawling Stone, and on the east
side of Little Crawling Stone, lies a vast waste.
Standing in the midst of this frightful eruption
from the heart of the mountains, one sees, as far
as the eye can reach, a landscape utterly forbidding.
North for sixty miles lie the high chains
of the Mission range, and a cuplike configuration
of the mountains close to the valley affords a resting-place
for the deepest snows of winter and a
precipitous escape for the torrents of June. Here,
when the sun reaches its summer height or a sweet-grass
wind blows soft or a cloudburst above the
peaks strikes the southerly face of the range, winter
unfrocks in a single night. A glacier of snow
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_404' name='page_404'></SPAN>404</span>
melts within twenty-four hours into a torrent
of lava and bursts with incredible fury from a
thousand gorges.</p>
<p>When this happens nothing withstands. Whatever
lies in the path of the flood is swept from the
face of the earth. The mountains, assailed in a
moment with the ferocity of a hundred storms, are
ripped and torn like hills of clay. The frosted
scale of the granite, the desperate root of the
cedar, the poised nest of the eagle, the clutch of the
crannied vine, the split and start of the mountainside,
are all as one before the June thaw. At its
height Little Crawling Stone, with a head of forty
feet, is a choking flood of rock. Mountains, torn
and bleeding, vomit bowlders of thirty, sixty, a
hundred tons like pebbles upon the valley. Even
there they find no permanent resting-place. Each
succeeding year sees them torn groaning from their
beds in the wash. New masses of rock are hurled
upon them, new waters lift them in fresh caprice,
and the crash and the grinding echo in the hills
like a roar of mountain thunder.</p>
<p>Where the wash covers the valley nothing lives;
the fertile earth has long been buried under the
mountain <i>débris</i>. It supports no plant life beyond
the scantiest deposit of weed-plant seed, and the
rocky scurf, spreading like a leprosy over many
miles, scars the face of the green earth. This is the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_405' name='page_405'></SPAN>405</span>
Crawling Stone wash. Exhausted by the fury of
its few yearly weeks of activity, Little Crawling
Stone runs for the greater part of the year a winding,
shallow stream through a bed of whitened
bowlders where lizards sun themselves and trout
lurk in shaded pools.</p>
<p>When Whispering Smith and his companions
were fairly started on the last day of their ride, it
was toward this rift in the Mission range that the
trail led them. Sinclair, with consummate cleverness,
had rejoined his companions; but the attempt
to get into the Cache, and his reckless ride into
Medicine Bend, had reduced their chances of escape
to a single outlet, and that they must find up Crawling
Stone Valley. The necessity of it was spelled
in every move the pursued men had made for
twenty-four hours. They were riding the pick of
mountain horseflesh and covering their tracks by
every device known to the high country. Behind
them, made prudent by unusual danger, rode the
best men the mountain division could muster for
the final effort to bring them to account. The fast
riding of the early week had given way to the pace
of caution. No trail sign was overlooked, no point
of concealment directly approached, no hiding-place
left unsearched.</p>
<p>The tension of a long day of this work was
drawing to a close when the sun set and left the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_406' name='page_406'></SPAN>406</span>
big wash in the shadow of the mountains. On
the higher ground to the right, Kennedy and Scott
were riding where they could command the gullies
of the precipitous left bank of the river. High
on the left bank itself, worming his way like a
snake from point to point of concealment through
the scanty brush of the mountainside, crawled
Wickwire, commanding the pockets in the right
bank. Closer to the river on the right and following
the trail itself over shale and rock and between
scattered bowlders, Whispering Smith, low
on his horse’s neck, rode slowly.</p>
<p>It was almost too dark to catch the slight discolorations
where pebbles had been disturbed on a
flat surface or the calk of a horseshoe had slipped
on the uneven face of a ledge, and he had halted
under an uplift to wait for Wickwire on the distant
left to advance, when, half a mile below him,
a horseman crossing the river rode slowly past a
gap in the rocks and disappeared below the next
bend. He was followed in a moment by a second
rider and a third. Whispering Smith knew he
had not been seen. He had flushed the game, and,
wheeling his horse, rode straight up the river-bank
to high ground, where he could circle around
widely below them. They had slipped between
his line and Wickwire’s, and were doubling back,
following the dry bed of the stream. It was impossible
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_407' name='page_407'></SPAN>407</span>
to recall Kennedy and Scott without giving
an alarm, but by a quick <i>détour</i> he could at
least hold the quarry back for twenty minutes with
his rifle, and in that time Kennedy and Scott could
come up.</p>
<p>Less than half an hour of daylight remained. If
the outlaws could slip down the wash and out into
the Crawling Stone Valley they had every chance
of getting away in the night; and if the third man
should be Barney Rebstock, Whispering Smith
knew that Sinclair thought only of escape. Smith
alone, of their pursuers, could now intercept them,
but a second hope remained: on the left, Wickwire
was high enough to command every turn in
the bed of the river. He might see them and could
force them to cover with his rifle even at long
range. Casting up the chances, Whispering Smith,
riding faster over the uneven ground than anything
but sheer recklessness would have prompted,
hastened across the waste. His rifle lay in his
hand, and he had pushed his horse to a run. A
single fearful instinct crowded now upon the long
strain of the week. A savage fascination burned
like a fever in his veins, and he meant that they
should not get away. Taking chances that would
have shamed him in cooler moments, he forced his
horse at the end of the long ride to within a hundred
paces of the river, threw his lines, slipped like
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_408' name='page_408'></SPAN>408</span>
a lizard from the saddle, and, darting with incredible
swiftness from rock to rock, gained the water’s
edge.</p>
<p>From up the long shadows of the wash there
came the wail of an owl. From it he knew that
Wickwire had seen them and was warning him, but
he had anticipated the warning and stood below
where the hunted men must ride. He strained
his eyes over the waste of rock above. For one
half-hour of daylight he would have sold, in that
moment, ten years of his life. What could he do
if they should be able to secrete themselves until
dark between him and Wickwire? Gliding under
cover of huge rocks up the dry watercourse, he
reached a spot where the floods had scooped a
long, hollow curve out of a soft ledge in the bank,
leaving a stretch of smooth sand on the bed of the
stream. At the upper point great bowlders pushed
out in the river. He could not inspect the curve
from the spot he had gained without reckless exposure,
but he must force the little daylight left
to him. Climbing completely over the lower point,
he advanced cautiously, and from behind a sheltering
spur stepped out upon an overhanging table of
rock and looked across the river-bottom. Three
men had halted on the sand within the curve. Two
lay on their rifles under the upper point, a hundred
and twenty paces from Whispering Smith.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_409' name='page_409'></SPAN>409</span>
The third man, Seagrue, less than fifty yards away,
had got off his horse and was laying down his
rifle, when the hoot-owl screeched again and he
looked uneasily back. They had chosen for
their halt a spot easily defended, and needed
only darkness to make them safe, when Smith,
stepping out into plain sight, threw forward his
hand.</p>
<p>They heard his sharp call to pitch up, and the
men under the point jumped. Seagrue had not
yet taken his hand from his rifle. He threw it to
his shoulder. As closely together as two fingers
of the right hand can be struck twice in the palm
of the left, two rifle-shots cracked across the wash.
Two bullets passed so close in flight they might
have struck. One cut the dusty hair from Smith’s
temple and slit the brim of his hat above his
ear; the other struck Seagrue under the left eye,
ploughed through the roof of his mouth, and,
coming out below his ear, splintered the rock at
his back.</p>
<p>The shock alone would have staggered a bullock,
but Seagrue, laughing, came forward pumping
his gun. Sinclair, at a hundred and twenty
yards, cut instantly into the fight, and the ball from
his rifle creased the alkali that crusted Whispering
Smith’s unshaven cheek. As he fired he sprang
to cover.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_410' name='page_410'></SPAN>410</span></div>
<p>For Seagrue and Smith there was no cover: for
one or both it was death in the open and Seagrue,
with his rifle at his cheek, walked straight into it.
Taking for a moment the fire of the three guns,
Whispering Smith stood, a perfect target, outlined
against the sky. They whipped the dust from his
coat, tore the sleeve from his wrist, and ripped
the blouse collar from his neck; but he felt no
bullet shock. He saw before him only the buckle
of Seagrue’s belt forty paces away, and sent bullet
after bullet at the gleam of brass between the
sights. Both men were using high-pressure guns,
and the deadly shock of the slugs made Seagrue
twitch and stagger. The man was dying as he
walked. Smith’s hand was racing with the lever,
and had a cartridge jammed, the steel would have
snapped like a match.</p>
<p>It was beyond human endurance to support the
leaden death. The little square of brass between
the sights wavered. Seagrue stumbled, doubled on
his knees, and staggering plunged loosely forward
on the sand. Whispering Smith threw his fire
toward the bowlder behind which Sinclair and
Barney Rebstock had disappeared.</p>
<p>Suddenly he realized that the bullets from the
point were not coming his way. He was aware
of a second rifle-duel above the bend. Wickwire,
worming his way down the stream, had uncovered
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_411' name='page_411'></SPAN>411</span>
Sinclair and young Rebstock from behind. A yell
between the shots rang across the wash, and the
cringing figure of a man ran out toward Whispering
Smith with his hands high in the air, and
pitched headlong on the ground. It was the
skulker, Barney Rebstock, driven out by Wickwire’s
fire.</p>
<p>The, shooting ceased. Silence fell upon the
gloom of the dusk. Then came a calling between
Smith and Wickwire, and a signalling of pistol-shots
for their companions. Kennedy and Bob
Scott dashed down toward the river-bed on their
horses. Seagrue lay on his face. Young Rebstock
sat with his hands around his knees on the
sand. Above him at some distance, Wickwire and
Smith stood before a man who leaned against the
sharp cheek of the bowlder at the point. In his
hands his rifle was held across his lap just as he
had dropped on his knee to fire. He had never
moved after he was struck. His head, drooping
a little, rested against the rock, and his hat lay on
the sand; his heavy beard had sunk into his chest
and he kneeled in the shadow, asleep. Scott and
Kennedy knew him. In the mountains there was
no double for Murray Sinclair.</p>
<p>When he jumped behind the point to pick Whispering
Smith off the ledge he had laid himself
directly under Wickwire’s fire across the wash.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_412' name='page_412'></SPAN>412</span>
The first shot of the cowboy at two hundred yards
had passed, as he knelt, through both temples.</p>
<p>They laid him at Seagrue’s side. The camp
was made beside the dead men in the wash. “You
had better not take him to Medicine Bend,” said
Whispering Smith, sitting late with Kennedy before
the dying fire. “It would only mean that
much more unpleasant talk and notoriety for her.
The inquest can be held on the Frenchman. Take
him to his own ranch and telegraph the folks in
Wisconsin––God knows whether they will want
to hear. But his mother is there yet. But if half
what Barney has told to-night is true it would be
better if no one ever heard.”</p>
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<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_413' name='page_413'></SPAN>413</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XLV_BACK_TO_THE_MOUNTAINS' id='CHAPTER_XLV_BACK_TO_THE_MOUNTAINS'></SPAN>
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