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<h2> CHAPTER XVIII. The Search Begins </h2>
<p>As the sun arose it revealed three punchers riding away from civilization.
On all sides, stretching to the evil-appearing horizon, lay vast blotches
of dirty-white and faded yellow alkali and sand. Occasionally a dwarfed
mesquite raised its prickly leaves and rustled mournfully. With the
exception of the riders and an occasional Gila monster, no life was
discernible. Cacti of all shapes and sizes reared aloft their forbidding
spines or spread out along the sand. All was dead, ghastly; all was
oppressive, startlingly repellent in its sinister promise; all was the
vastness of desolation.</p>
<p>Hopalong knew this portion of the desert for ten miles inward—he had
rescued straying cattle along its southern rim—but once beyond that
limit they would have to trust to chance and their own abilities. There
were water holes on this skillet, but nine out of ten were death traps,
reeking with mineral poisons, colored and alkaline. The two mentioned by
Buck could not be depended on, for they came and went, and more than one
luckless wanderer had depended on them to allay his thirst, and had died
for his trust.</p>
<p>So the scouts rode on in silence, noting the half-buried skeletons of
cattle which were strewn plentifully on all sides. Nearly three per cent,
of the cattle belonging to the Double Arrow yearly found death on this
tableland, and the herds of that ranch numbered many thousand heads. It
was this which made the Double Arrow the poorest of the ranches, and it
was this which allowed insufficient sentries in its line-houses. The
skeletons were not all of cattle, for at rare intervals lay the sand-worn
frames of men.</p>
<p>On the morning of the second day the oppression increased with the wind
and Red heaved a sigh of restlessness. The sand began to skip across the
plain, in grains at first and hardly noticeable. Hopalong turned in his
saddle and regarded the desert with apprehension. As he looked he saw that
where grains had shifted handfuls were now moving. His mount evinced signs
of uneasiness and was hard to control.</p>
<p>A gust of wind, stronger than the others, pricked his face and grains of
sand rolled down his neck. The leather of his saddle emitted strange
noises as if a fairy tattoo was being beaten upon it and he raised his
hand and pointed off toward the east. The others looked and saw what had
appeared to be a fog rise out of the desert and intervene between them and
the sun. As far as eye could reach small whirlwinds formed and broke and
one swept down and covered them with stinging sand. The day became
darkened and their horses whinnied in terror and the clumps of mesquite
twisted and turned to the gusts.</p>
<p>Each man knew what was to come upon them and they dismounted, hobbled
their horses and threw them bodily to the earth, wrapping a blanket around
the head of each. A rustling as of paper rubbing together became
noticeable and they threw themselves flat upon the earth, their heads
wrapped in their coats and buried in the necks of their mounts. For an
hour they endured the tortures of hell and then, when the storm had
passed, raised their heads and cursed Creation. Their bodies burned as
though they had been shot with fine needles and their clothes were meshes
where once was tough cloth. Even their shoes were perforated and the
throat of each ached with thirst.</p>
<p>Hopalong fumbled at the canteen resting on his hip and gargled his mouth
and throat, washing down the sand which wouldn't come up. His friends did
likewise and then looked around. After some time had elapsed the loss of
their pack horse was noticed and they swore again. Hopalong took the lead
in getting his horse ready for service and then rode around in a circle
half a mile in diameter, but returned empty handed. The horse was gone and
with it went their main supply of food and drink.</p>
<p>Frenchy scowled at the shadow of a cactus and slowly rode toward the
northeast, followed closely by his friends. His hand reached for his
depleted canteen, but refrained—water was to be saved until the last
minute.</p>
<p>“I'm goin' to build a shack out here an' live in it, I am!” exploded
Hopalong in withering irony as he dug the sand out of his ears and also
from his sixshooter. “I just nachurally dotes on this, I do!”</p>
<p>The others were too miserable to even grunt and he neatly severed the head
of a Gila monster from its scaly body as it opened it venomous jaws in
rage at this invasion of its territory. “Lovely place!” he sneered.</p>
<p>“You better save them cartridges, Hoppy,” interposed Red as his companion
fired again, feeling that he must say something.</p>
<p>“An' what for?” blazed his friend. “To plug sand storms? Anybody what we
find on this God-forsaken lay-out won't have to be shot—they will
commit suicide an' think it's fun! Tell yu what, if them rustlers hangs
out on this sand range they're better men than I reckons they are. Anybody
what hides up here shore earns all he steals.” Hopalong grumbled from
force of habit and because no one else would. His companions understood
this and paid no attention to him, which increased his disgust.</p>
<p>“What are we up here for?” He asked, belligerently. “Why, because them
Double Arrow idiots can't even watch a desert! We have to do their work
for them an' they hangs around home an' gets slaughtered! Yes, sir!” he
shouted, “they can't even take care of themselves when they're in
line-houses what are forts. Why, that time we cleaned out them an' th'
C-80 over at Buckskin they couldn't help runnin' into singin' lead!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” drawled Red, whose recollection of that fight was vivid. “Yas, an'
why?” He asked, and then replied to his own question. “Because yu sat up
in a barn behind them, Buck played his gun on th' side window, Pete an'
Skinny lay behind a rock to one side of Buck, me an' Lanky was across th'
Street in front of them, an' Billy an' Johnny was in th' arroyo on th'
other side. Cowan laid on his stummick on th' roof of his place with a
buffalo gun, an' the whole blamed town was agin them. There wasn't five
seconds passed that lead wasn't rippin' through th' walls of their shack.
Th' Houston House wasn't made for no fort, an' besides, they wasn't like
th' gang that's punchin' now. That's why.”</p>
<p>Hopalong became cheerful again, for here was a chance to differ from his
friend. The two loved each other the better the more they squabbled.</p>
<p>“Yas!” responded Hopalong with sarcasm. “Yas!” he reiterated, drawling it
out. “Yu was in front of them, an' with what? Why, an' old, white-haired,
interfering Winchester, that's what! Me an' my Sharp's—”</p>
<p>“Yu and yore Sharp's!” exploded Red, whose dislike for that rifle was very
pronounced. “Yu and yore Sharp's.”</p>
<p>“Me an' my Sharp's, as I was palaverin' before bein' interrupted,”
continued Hopalong, “did more damage in five min—”</p>
<p>“Says yu!” snapped Red with heat. “All yu an yore Sharp's could do was to
cut yore initials in th' back door of their shack, an'——”</p>
<p>“Did more damage in five minutes,” continued Hopalong, “than all th'
blasted Winchesters in th' whole damned town. Why—”</p>
<p>“An' then they was cut blamed poor. Every time that cannon of yourn
exploded I shore thought th'—”</p>
<p>“Why, Cowan an' his buffalo did more damage (Cowan was reputed to be a
very poor shot) than yu an—”</p>
<p>“I thought th' artillery was comin' into th' disturbance. I could see yore
red head—”</p>
<p>“MY red head!” exclaimed Hopalong, sizing up the crimson warlock of his
companion. “MY red head!” he repeated, and then turned to Frenchy: “Hey,
Frenchy, who's got th' reddest hair, me or Red?”</p>
<p>Frenchy slowly turned in his saddle and gravely scrutinized them. Being
strictly impartial and truthful, he gave up the effort of differentiating
and smiled. “Why, if the tops of yore heads were poked through two holes
in a board an' I didn't know which was which, I'd shore make a mistake if
I tried to name 'em”</p>
<p>But Red had the last word. “Anyhow, you didn't have a Sharp's in that
fight—you had a .45-70 Winchester, just like mine!”</p>
<p>Thereupon the discussion was directed at the judge, and the forenoon
passed very pleasantly, Frenchy even smiling in his misery.</p>
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