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<h2> CHAPTER V. THE MASKED RIDER </h2>
<p>Venters looked quickly from the fallen rustlers to the canyon where the
others had disappeared. He calculated on the time needed for running
horses to return to the open, if their riders heard shots. He waited
breathlessly. But the estimated time dragged by and no riders appeared.
Venters began presently to believe that the rifle reports had not
penetrated into the recesses of the canyon, and felt safe for the
immediate present.</p>
<p>He hurried to the spot where the first rustler had been dragged by his
horse. The man lay in deep grass, dead, jaw fallen, eyes protruding—a
sight that sickened Venters. The first man at whom he had ever aimed a
weapon he had shot through the heart. With the clammy sweat oozing from
every pore Venters dragged the rustler in among some boulders and covered
him with slabs of rock. Then he smoothed out the crushed trail in grass
and sage. The rustler's horse had stopped a quarter of a mile off and was
grazing.</p>
<p>When Venters rapidly strode toward the Masked Rider not even the cold
nausea that gripped him could wholly banish curiosity. For he had shot
Oldring's infamous lieutenant, whose face had never been seen. Venters
experienced a grim pride in the feat. What would Tull say to this
achievement of the outcast who rode too often to Deception Pass?</p>
<p>Venters's curious eagerness and expectation had not prepared him for the
shock he received when he stood over a slight, dark figure. The rustler
wore the black mask that had given him his name, but he had no weapons.
Venters glanced at the drooping horse, there were no gun-sheaths on the
saddle.</p>
<p>"A rustler who didn't pack guns!" muttered Venters. "He wears no belt. He
couldn't pack guns in that rig.... Strange!"</p>
<p>A low, gasping intake of breath and a sudden twitching of body told
Venters the rider still lived.</p>
<p>"He's alive!... I've got to stand here and watch him die. And I shot an
unarmed man."</p>
<p>Shrinkingly Venters removed the rider's wide sombrero and the black cloth
mask. This action disclosed bright chestnut hair, inclined to curl, and a
white, youthful face. Along the lower line of cheek and jaw was a clear
demarcation, where the brown of tanned skin met the white that had been
hidden from the sun.</p>
<p>"Oh, he's only a boy!... What! Can he be Oldring's Masked Rider?"</p>
<p>The boy showed signs of returning consciousness. He stirred; his lips
moved; a small brown hand clenched in his blouse.</p>
<p>Venters knelt with a gathering horror of his deed. His bullet had entered
the rider's right breast, high up to the shoulder. With hands that shook,
Venters untied a black scarf and ripped open the blood-wet blouse.</p>
<p>First he saw a gaping hole, dark red against a whiteness of skin, from
which welled a slender red stream. Then the graceful, beautiful swell of a
woman's breast!</p>
<p>"A woman!" he cried. "A girl!... I've killed a girl!"</p>
<p>She suddenly opened eyes that transfixed Venters. They were fathomless
blue. Consciousness of death was there, a blended terror and pain, but no
consciousness of sight. She did not see Venters. She stared into the
unknown.</p>
<p>Then came a spasm of vitality. She writhed in a torture of reviving
strength, and in her convulsions she almost tore from Ventner's grasp.
Slowly she relaxed and sank partly back. The ungloved hand sought the
wound, and pressed so hard that her wrist half buried itself in her bosom.
Blood trickled between her spread fingers. And she looked at Venters with
eyes that saw him.</p>
<p>He cursed himself and the unerring aim of which he had been so proud. He
had seen that look in the eyes of a crippled antelope which he was about
to finish with his knife. But in her it had infinitely more—a
revelation of mortal spirit. The instinctive bringing to life was there,
and the divining helplessness and the terrible accusation of the stricken.</p>
<p>"Forgive me! I didn't know!" burst out Venters.</p>
<p>"You shot me—you've killed me!" she whispered, in panting gasps.
Upon her lips appeared a fluttering, bloody froth. By that Venters knew
the air in her lungs was mixing with blood. "Oh, I knew—it would—come—some
day!... Oh, the burn!... Hold me—I'm sinking—it's all dark....
Ah, God!... Mercy—"</p>
<p>Her rigidity loosened in one long quiver and she lay back limp, still,
white as snow, with closed eyes.</p>
<p>Venters thought then that she died. But the faint pulsation of her breast
assured him that life yet lingered. Death seemed only a matter of moments,
for the bullet had gone clear through her. Nevertheless, he tore
sageleaves from a bush, and, pressing them tightly over her wounds, he
bound the black scarf round her shoulder, tying it securely under her arm.
Then he closed the blouse, hiding from his sight that blood-stained,
accusing breast.</p>
<p>"What—now?" he questioned, with flying mind. "I must get out of
here. She's dying—but I can't leave her."</p>
<p>He rapidly surveyed the sage to the north and made out no animate object.
Then he picked up the girl's sombrero and the mask. This time the mask
gave him as great a shock as when he first removed it from her face. For
in the woman he had forgotten the rustler, and this black strip of
felt-cloth established the identity of Oldring's Masked Rider. Venters had
solved the mystery. He slipped his rifle under her, and, lifting her
carefully upon it, he began to retrace his steps. The dog trailed in his
shadow. And the horse, that had stood drooping by, followed without a
call. Venters chose the deepest tufts of grass and clumps of sage on his
return. From time to time he glanced over his shoulder. He did not rest.
His concern was to avoid jarring the girl and to hide his trail. Gaining
the narrow canyon, he turned and held close to the wall till he reached
his hiding-place. When he entered the dense thicket of oaks he was hard
put to it to force a way through. But he held his burden almost upright,
and by slipping side wise and bending the saplings he got in. Through sage
and grass he hurried to the grove of silver spruces.</p>
<p>He laid the girl down, almost fearing to look at her. Though marble pale
and cold, she was living. Venters then appreciated the tax that long carry
had been to his strength. He sat down to rest. Whitie sniffed at the pale
girl and whined and crept to Venters's feet. Ring lapped the water in the
runway of the spring.</p>
<p>Presently Venters went out to the opening, caught the horse and, leading
him through the thicket, unsaddled him and tied him with a long halter.
Wrangle left his browsing long enough to whinny and toss his head. Venters
felt that he could not rest easily till he had secured the other rustler's
horse; so, taking his rifle and calling for Ring, he set out. Swiftly yet
watchfully he made his way through the canyon to the oval and out to the
cattle trail. What few tracks might have betrayed him he obliterated, so
only an expert tracker could have trailed him. Then, with many a wary
backward glance across the sage, he started to round up the rustler's
horse. This was unexpectedly easy. He led the horse to lower ground, out
of sight from the opposite side of the oval along the shadowy western
wall, and so on into his canyon and secluded camp.</p>
<p>The girl's eyes were open; a feverish spot burned in her cheeks she moaned
something unintelligible to Venters, but he took the movement of her lips
to mean that she wanted water. Lifting her head, he tipped the canteen to
her lips. After that she again lapsed into unconsciousness or a weakness
which was its counterpart. Venters noted, however, that the burning flush
had faded into the former pallor.</p>
<p>The sun set behind the high canyon rim, and a cool shade darkened the
walls. Venters fed the dogs and put a halter on the dead rustlers horse.
He allowed Wrangle to browse free. This done, he cut spruce boughs and
made a lean-to for the girl. Then, gently lifting her upon a blanket, he
folded the sides over her. The other blanket he wrapped about his
shoulders and found a comfortable seat against a spruce-tree that upheld
the little shack. Ring and Whitie lay near at hand, one asleep, the other
watchful.</p>
<p>Venters dreaded the night's vigil. At night his mind was active, and this
time he had to watch and think and feel beside a dying girl whom he had
all but murdered. A thousand excuses he invented for himself, yet not one
made any difference in his act or his self-reproach.</p>
<p>It seemed to him that when night fell black he could see her white face so
much more plainly.</p>
<p>"She'll go, presently," he said, "and be out of agony—thank God!"</p>
<p>Every little while certainty of her death came to him with a shock; and
then he would bend over and lay his ear on her breast. Her heart still
beat.</p>
<p>The early night blackness cleared to the cold starlight. The horses were
not moving, and no sound disturbed the deathly silence of the canyon.</p>
<p>"I'll bury her here," thought Venters, "and let her grave be as much a
mystery as her life was."</p>
<p>For the girl's few words, the look of her eyes, the prayer, had strangely
touched Venters.</p>
<p>"She was only a girl," he soliloquized. "What was she to Oldring? Rustlers
don't have wives nor sisters nor daughters. She was bad—that's all.
But somehow... well, she may not have willingly become the companion of
rustlers. That prayer of hers to God for mercy!... Life is strange and
cruel. I wonder if other members of Oldring's gang are women? Likely
enough. But what was his game? Oldring's Mask Rider! A name to make
villagers hide and lock their doors. A name credited with a dozen murders,
a hundred forays, and a thousand stealings of cattle. What part did the
girl have in this? It may have served Oldring to create mystery."</p>
<p>Hours passed. The white stars moved across the narrow strip of dark-blue
sky above. The silence awoke to the low hum of insects. Venters watched
the immovable white face, and as he watched, hour by hour waiting for
death, the infamy of her passed from his mind. He thought only of the
sadness, the truth of the moment. Whoever she was—whatever she had
done—she was young and she was dying.</p>
<p>The after-part of the night wore on interminably. The starlight failed and
the gloom blackened to the darkest hour. "She'll die at the gray of dawn,"
muttered Venters, remembering some old woman's fancy. The blackness paled
to gray, and the gray lightened and day peeped over the eastern rim.
Venters listened at the breast of the girl. She still lived. Did he only
imagine that her heart beat stronger, ever so slightly, but stronger? He
pressed his ear closer to her breast. And he rose with his own pulse
quickening.</p>
<p>"If she doesn't die soon—she's got a chance—the barest chance
to live," he said.</p>
<p>He wondered if the internal bleeding had ceased. There was no more film of
blood upon her lips. But no corpse could have been whiter. Opening her
blouse, he untied the scarf, and carefully picked away the sage leaves
from the wound in her shoulder. It had closed. Lifting her lightly, he
ascertained that the same was true of the hole where the bullet had come
out. He reflected on the fact that clean wounds closed quickly in the
healing upland air. He recalled instances of riders who had been cut and
shot apparently to fatal issues; yet the blood had clotted, the wounds
closed, and they had recovered. He had no way to tell if internal
hemorrhage still went on, but he believed that it had stopped. Otherwise
she would surely not have lived so long. He marked the entrance of the
bullet, and concluded that it had just touched the upper lobe of her lung.
Perhaps the wound in the lung had also closed. As he began to wash the
blood stains from her breast and carefully rebandage the wound, he was
vaguely conscious of a strange, grave happiness in the thought that she
might live.</p>
<p>Broad daylight and a hint of sunshine high on the cliff-rim to the west
brought him to consideration of what he had better do. And while busy with
his few camp tasks he revolved the thing in his mind. It would not be wise
for him to remain long in his present hiding-place. And if he intended to
follow the cattle trail and try to find the rustlers he had better make a
move at once. For he knew that rustlers, being riders, would not make much
of a day's or night's absence from camp for one or two of their number;
but when the missing ones failed to show up in reasonable time there would
be a search. And Venters was afraid of that.</p>
<p>"A good tracker could trail me," he muttered. "And I'd be cornered here.
Let's see. Rustlers are a lazy set when they're not on the ride. I'll risk
it. Then I'll change my hiding-place."</p>
<p>He carefully cleaned and reloaded his guns. When he rose to go he bent a
long glance down upon the unconscious girl. Then ordering Whitie and Ring
to keep guard, he left the camp.</p>
<p>The safest cover lay close under the wall of the canyon, and here through
the dense thickets Venters made his slow, listening advance toward the
oval. Upon gaining the wide opening he decided to cross it and follow the
left wall till he came to the cattle trail. He scanned the oval as keenly
as if hunting for antelope. Then, stooping, he stole from one cover to
another, taking advantage of rocks and bunches of sage, until he had
reached the thickets under the opposite wall. Once there, he exercised
extreme caution in his surveys of the ground ahead, but increased his
speed when moving. Dodging from bush to bush, he passed the mouths of two
canyons, and in the entrance of a third canyon he crossed a wash of swift
clear water, to come abruptly upon the cattle trail.</p>
<p>It followed the low bank of the wash, and, keeping it in sight, Venters
hugged the line of sage and thicket. Like the curves of a serpent the
canyon wound for a mile or more and then opened into a valley. Patches of
red showed clear against the purple of sage, and farther out on the level
dotted strings of red led away to the wall of rock.</p>
<p>"Ha, the red herd!" exclaimed Venters.</p>
<p>Then dots of white and black told him there were cattle of other colors in
this inclosed valley. Oldring, the rustler, was also a rancher. Venters's
calculating eye took count of stock that outnumbered the red herd.</p>
<p>"What a range!" went on Venters. "Water and grass enough for fifty
thousand head, and no riders needed!"</p>
<p>After his first burst of surprise and rapid calculation Venters lost no
time there, but slunk again into the sage on his back trail. With the
discovery of Oldring's hidden cattle-range had come enlightenment on
several problems. Here the rustler kept his stock, here was Jane
Withersteen's red herd; here were the few cattle that had disappeared from
the Cottonwoods slopes during the last two years. Until Oldring had driven
the red herd his thefts of cattle for that time had not been more than
enough to supply meat for his men. Of late no drives had been reported
from Sterling or the villages north. And Venters knew that the riders had
wondered at Oldring's inactivity in that particular field. He and his band
had been active enough in their visits to Glaze and Cottonwoods; they
always had gold; but of late the amount gambled away and drunk and thrown
away in the villages had given rise to much conjecture. Oldring's more
frequent visits had resulted in new saloons, and where there had formerly
been one raid or shooting fray in the little hamlets there were now many.
Perhaps Oldring had another range farther on up the pass, and from there
drove the cattle to distant Utah towns where he was little known But
Venters came finally to doubt this. And, from what he had learned in the
last few days, a belief began to form in Venters's mind that Oldring's
intimidations of the villages and the mystery of the Masked Rider, with
his alleged evil deeds, and the fierce resistance offered any trailing
riders, and the rustling of cattle—these things were only the craft
of the rustler-chief to conceal his real life and purpose and work in
Deception Pass.</p>
<p>And like a scouting Indian Venters crawled through the sage of the oval
valley, crossed trail after trail on the north side, and at last entered
the canyon out of which headed the cattle trail, and into which he had
watched the rustlers disappear.</p>
<p>If he had used caution before, now he strained every nerve to force
himself to creeping stealth and to sensitiveness of ear. He crawled along
so hidden that he could not use his eyes except to aid himself in the
toilsome progress through the brakes and ruins of cliff-wall. Yet from
time to time, as he rested, he saw the massive red walls growing higher
and wilder, more looming and broken. He made note of the fact that he was
turning and climbing. The sage and thickets of oak and brakes of alder
gave place to pinyon pine growing out of rocky soil. Suddenly a low, dull
murmur assailed his ears. At first he thought it was thunder, then the
slipping of a weathered slope of rock. But it was incessant, and as he
progressed it filled out deeper and from a murmur changed into a soft
roar.</p>
<p>"Falling water," he said. "There's volume to that. I wonder if it's the
stream I lost."</p>
<p>The roar bothered him, for he could hear nothing else. Likewise, however,
no rustlers could hear him. Emboldened by this and sure that nothing but a
bird could see him, he arose from his hands and knees to hurry on. An
opening in the pinyons warned him that he was nearing the height of slope.</p>
<p>He gained it, and dropped low with a burst of astonishment. Before him
stretched a short canyon with rounded stone floor bare of grass or sage or
tree, and with curved, shelving walls. A broad rippling stream flowed
toward him, and at the back of the canyon waterfall burst from a wide rent
in the cliff, and, bounding down in two green steps, spread into a long
white sheet.</p>
<p>If Venters had not been indubitably certain that he had entered the right
canyon his astonishment would not have been so great. There had been no
breaks in the walls, no side canyons entering this one where the rustlers'
tracks and the cattle trail had guided him, and, therefore, he could not
be wrong. But here the canyon ended, and presumably the trails also.</p>
<p>"That cattle trail headed out of here," Venters kept saying to himself.
"It headed out. Now what I want to know is how on earth did cattle ever
get in here?"</p>
<p>If he could be sure of anything it was of the careful scrutiny he had
given that cattle track, every hoofmark of which headed straight west. He
was now looking east at an immense round boxed corner of canyon down which
tumbled a thin, white veil of water, scarcely twenty yards wide. Somehow,
somewhere, his calculations had gone wrong. For the first time in years he
found himself doubting his rider's skill in finding tracks, and his memory
of what he had actually seen. In his anxiety to keep under cover he must
have lost himself in this offshoot of Deception Pass, and thereby in some
unaccountable manner, missed the canyon with the trails. There was nothing
else for him to think. Rustlers could not fly, nor cattle jump down
thousand-foot precipices. He was only proving what the sage-riders had
long said of this labyrinthine system of deceitful canyons and valleys—trails
led down into Deception Pass, but no rider had ever followed them.</p>
<p>On a sudden he heard above the soft roar of the waterfall an unusual sound
that he could not define. He dropped flat behind a stone and listened.
From the direction he had come swelled something that resembled a strange
muffled pounding and splashing and ringing. Despite his nerve the chill
sweat began to dampen his forehead. What might not be possible in this
stonewalled maze of mystery? The unnatural sound passed beyond him as he
lay gripping his rifle and fighting for coolness. Then from the open came
the sound, now distinct and different. Venters recognized a hobble-bell of
a horse, and the cracking of iron on submerged stones, and the hollow
splash of hoofs in water.</p>
<p>Relief surged over him. His mind caught again at realities, and curiosity
prompted him to peep from behind the rock.</p>
<p>In the middle of the stream waded a long string of packed burros driven by
three superbly mounted men. Had Venters met these dark-clothed,
dark-visaged, heavily armed men anywhere in Utah, let alone in this
robbers' retreat, he would have recognized them as rustlers. The
discerning eye of a rider saw the signs of a long, arduous trip. These men
were packing in supplies from one of the northern villages. They were
tired, and their horses were almost played out, and the burros plodded on,
after the manner of their kind when exhausted, faithful and patient, but
as if every weary, splashing, slipping step would be their last.</p>
<p>All this Venters noted in one glance. After that he watched with a
thrilling eagerness. Straight at the waterfall the rustlers drove the
burros, and straight through the middle, where the water spread into a
fleecy, thin film like dissolving smoke. Following closely, the rustlers
rode into this white mist, showing in bold black relief for an instant,
and then they vanished.</p>
<p>Venters drew a full breath that rushed out in brief and sudden utterance.</p>
<p>"Good Heaven! Of all the holes for a rustler!... There's a cavern under
that waterfall, and a passageway leading out to a canyon beyond. Oldring
hides in there. He needs only to guard a trail leading down from the
sage-flat above. Little danger of this outlet to the pass being
discovered. I stumbled on it by luck, after I had given up. And now I know
the truth of what puzzled me most—why that cattle trail was wet!"</p>
<p>He wheeled and ran down the slope, and out to the level of the sage-brush.
Returning, he had no time to spare, only now and then, between dashes, a
moment when he stopped to cast sharp eyes ahead. The abundant grass left
no trace of his trail. Short work he made of the distance to the circle of
canyons. He doubted that he would ever see it again; he knew he never
wanted to; yet he looked at the red corners and towers with the eyes of a
rider picturing landmarks never to be forgotten.</p>
<p>Here he spent a panting moment in a slow-circling gaze of the sage-oval
and the gaps between the bluffs. Nothing stirred except the gentle wave of
the tips of the brush. Then he pressed on past the mouths of several
canyons and over ground new to him, now close under the eastern wall. This
latter part proved to be easy traveling, well screened from possible
observation from the north and west, and he soon covered it and felt safer
in the deepening shade of his own canyon. Then the huge, notched bulge of
red rim loomed over him, a mark by which he knew again the deep cove where
his camp lay hidden. As he penetrated the thicket, safe again for the
present, his thoughts reverted to the girl he had left there. The
afternoon had far advanced. How would he find her? He ran into camp,
frightening the dogs.</p>
<p>The girl lay with wide-open, dark eyes, and they dilated when he knelt
beside her. The flush of fever shone in her cheeks. He lifted her and held
water to her dry lips, and felt an inexplicable sense of lightness as he
saw her swallow in a slow, choking gulp. Gently he laid her back.</p>
<p>"Who—are—you?" she whispered, haltingly.</p>
<p>"I'm the man who shot you," he replied.</p>
<p>"You'll—not—kill me—now?"</p>
<p>"No, no."</p>
<p>"What—will—you—do—with me?"</p>
<p>"When you get better—strong enough—I'll take you back to the
canyon where the rustlers ride through the waterfall."</p>
<p>As with a faint shadow from a flitting wing overhead, the marble whiteness
of her face seemed to change.</p>
<p>"Don't—take—me—back—there!"</p>
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