[Illustration: HE SNATCHED UP A BURNING BRAND AND SENT IT WHIZZING
THROUGH THE AIR

 _Frank Allen at Gold Fork_        _Frontispiece_ (Page 121)]




 FRANK ALLEN AT
 GOLD FORK

 OR

 Locating the Lost Claim

 BY

 GRAHAM B. FORBES

 _Author of "Frank Allen and his Motor Boat,"
 "Frank Allen at Rockspur Ranch," etc._

 [Illustration]

 GARDEN CITY          NEW YORK
 GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING CO., INC.
 1926




THE FAMOUS FRANK ALLEN SERIES

BY GRAHAM B. FORBES


_See back of book for list of titles_


 COPYRIGHT, 1926, BY
 GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING COMPANY, INC.

 Frank Allen at Gold Fork
 MADE IN THE U.S.A.




FRANK ALLEN AT GOLD FORK




CHAPTER I

AT THE HORSE CORRAL GATE


"There he is again, Frank! The same queer chap we saw before!"

"That's a dead certainty, Lanky. But lower your voice a bit or he might
take the alarm and vamoose."

"I sure wonder what he's prowling around Rockspur ranch-house for, and
on a moonlight night, at that. But, Frank, it isn't our old enemy, Nash
Yesson, is it?" cried Lanky Wallace explosively.

"No. And I'm just as sure it isn't Lef Seller," came from Frank Allen,
referring to the bully of Columbia, Frank's home town.

The scene was the living room of Rockspur Ranch in the far West, where
so many exciting things had already happened to Frank Allen and his
chums, Lanky Wallace--whose folks owned the ranch--and Paul Bird. Paul
was slumbering peacefully, totally unaware of what was taking place
outside.

"There! You can see him plainer now, Frank!" went on Lanky. "He
seems to be a runt of a man, with a big head and bushy hair. An ugly
customer, I'd say. Do you reckon he's mixed up with the Yesson crowd?"

"Looks that way to me. See him wriggling along now, like a snake in the
grass. He's up to some mischief, all right."

"He's wearing a cowboy hat, you can see now, Frank; must belong over
with that tough gang at the Double Z Ranch."

"Whatever his game is, he'd better watch his eye or he'll find Lige
Smith and his punchers hustling after him. Right now they're all radio
hounds, and bunched inside the bunk-house, listening to jazz dance
music."

"Say, I wonder, Frank!"

"What's struck you now, Lanky? Don't move, for that fellow's staring
straight at this window! Gee, I'm glad our fire's died down! There!
he's moving off again. What were you wondering about?"

Lanky Wallace snickered, as though amused by his thoughts.

"Why, don't you see, Frank? he's trying to find some way of getting
hold of the map we grabbed, along with the gold nuggets when we
watched Nash Yesson and Lef Seller dig up that rusty iron chest in the
underground cellar."

Frank Allen considered the suggestion seriously, waiting a full minute
before replying.

"Sounds reasonable, I must admit," he finally agreed. "We know that
it was the crude map Josh Kinney left hidden there, that pair was so
anxious to lay their hands on."

"Sure! It contains valuable clues that would help a prospector locate
the long-lost gold claim Josh worked years ago."

"Now he's moving off, for some reason or other," went on Frank Allen.
"It might pay us to slip outside and see if we can't get a line on his
scheme."

"Bully! I was just wishing you'd say something that meant action,"
whispered Lanky Wallace. "But I hope you're not thinking of rousing a
hornet's nest around his ears by poking a stick in the bunk-house and
stirring up the Rockspur punchers?"

"Nope. We'll play this game by ourselves, Lanky. Sorry Paul happens
to be asleep and nursing his lame ankle. He's going to miss all the
excitement."

"Lucky for us we chanced to take a squint out of this window in the big
living room before hitting the hay in our cubbyhole bedrooms." This
being followed by a series of boyish chuckles, told plainer than any
words could have done how pleased Lanky felt over the situation.

"Come along, and we'll slip out by the back door." Saying this, Frank
led the way, with his chum trailing at his heels.

Mrs. Wallace and Minnie Cuthbert--a Columbia girl who had come West for
the summer vacation, partly to be companion for Lanky's mother, and who
was also a tried and true pal of Frank Allen's--had retired some time
before, leaving the two boys to sit up and talk over their plans for
the near future.

Softly Frank and Lanky passed into the kitchen, which they found empty
at that late hour of the night, Charlie Gin Sing, the slant-eyed
Chinese cook, having joined the bunch over at the bunk-house to listen
as the loud-speaker sent out weird jazz, which seem to appeal to his
sense of music.

"Wait while I take a peep first and make sure he didn't swing around to
this side of the ranch buildings," Frank cautioned in his companion's
ear.

"Coast Clear?" queried Lanky, with bated breath, a moment later.

"Yes. And I could just make him out moving toward the horse corral!"
Frank informed him.

"Say, you don't reckon he's got some funny game up his sleeve, do you,
Frank?"

"What kind?"

"Oh, such as would set the saddle band of broncos streaking it out on
the prairie, mad with fear, to leave the Rockspur punchers without a
single mount to saddle."

"What good would that do him, Lanky? Though perhaps he might hope to
find a chance to steal that map while the men were all rushing after
the stampeding ponies. But we'll try to look out for that sort of game.
Come on!"

The chums crept outside. One thing Frank Allen had already noticed that
seemed to be in their favor--the rear part of the house was in shadow.
Even the keenest of eyes could not discover that the kitchen door had
opened to give egress to a couple of bent-over figures.

"See him still?" asked Lanky eagerly.

"He ducked into that bunch of cottonwoods over there," Frank informed
him. "Just the same, you must remember that the corral lies at the far
end of that patch of woods. Now for some scout work! And it'll pay us
to keep as close to the ground as we can."

"Whee! hope we don't run across any rattlers out here, Frank?"

"No danger," whiffed the other over his shoulder, for he was advancing
steadily and cautiously; "those who ought to know say that snakes never
move around during the night."

A soft sound like escaping steam told how greatly relieved Lanky felt;
for from early childhood his one horror had been serpents of any kind.
He had even been known to make a wry face when impaling an angleworm on
his hook, as if it reminded him of his pet aversion.

Frank stuck to his original belief that the mysterious prowler was
heading for the horse corral, and he shaped his course so as to come
upon this fenced-in enclosure somewhere near the gate.

The stockade was of such a height that even a prize jumper among the
broncos could never get its forelegs across the upper bar. Besides
this, in order to further insure the safekeeping of the restless
ponies, a hedge of thorny Osage orange had been cultivated, the mature
trees giving the animals considerable shelter from the scorching rays
of an August sun.

Every dozen feet or so Frank would come to a pause, and at such times
seemed to be using both eyes and ears to discover any unusual movement
or sound around the corral.

"You were right, Frank," whispered Lanky, catching hold of his
companion's arm with his fingers and pinching harder than he intended.
"I just glimpsed the fellow going inside. He's left the gate wide open
too! Listen to the ponies snort and plunge, will you?"

"Get a move on, Lanky! We ought to be nearer the gate, so as to turn
the horses back if they try to break loose."

Lanky was only too willing, since such a move promised to bring them to
close grips with the possible horse-thief should the fellow start to
rush from the corral after securing a mount.

The confusion inside the pen grew rapidly worse.

"He's trying to rope a pony he's picked out as a prize!" breathed the
excited Lanky.

"We'd have him in a nice trap if we closed the gate of the corral and
whooped for the boys to come on the jump!" suggested Frank, spurred on
by the apparent necessity of doing something speedily.

"Good idea, too!" the other burst out, no longer caring who heard his
voice, for the matter had by then about reached the crisis.

"Quick! He's coming full tilt, Lanky! Swing the heavy gate around this
way and let me fasten it!"

It might have turned out better, if only they had conceived it a few
seconds sooner. As it was, the rushing pony, urged on by savage kicks
from a pair of spurred heels, was bearing down straight upon the two
boys.

"Look out, Frank!" shrilled Lanky, as he saw a towering form between
his eyes and the bright moon. At the same time he ducked in hopes of
getting out of the way of the bronco's furious rush.

The frightened animal, seeing some moving object in its path, sheered
to one side. That saved Lanky from the full force of a collision; but
even as it was he received a push that sent him sprawling headlong to
the ground.

Scrambling hastily to his feet, somewhat the worse for his upset, Lanky
looked around to see what luck had befallen his partner in the mad
attempt of trying to halt a frightened, galloping bronco.

"Oh, Frank!" he called out; and then his heart seemed to stand still
with dread as he glimpsed a still figure huddled in a heap on the
prairie some ten feet away, showing that Frank Allen had also been
struck down.




CHAPTER II

THE SUDDEN ALARM


Just before Lanky Wallace was struck by the rush of the stolen bronco
and knocked to the ground, he had let out the cowboy whoop for help.

It reached the ears of Hoptoad Atkins, the smallest rustler in the
Rockspur bunch, as he was emerging from the bunk-house to see what the
weather promised for the morning, he having a long gallop before him.
At the same moment he heard the racket over at the horse corral, and
sensing trouble of some sort sprang back into the house with a shout.

"Stampede of the ponies! Get out of here, everybody, with a rush!"

The cowboys came pouring out, and made for the corral in a string, the
longest-legged being in the fore. Lanky, they found bending anxiously
over Frank, who, having been knocked senseless, was just beginning to
show signs of returning consciousness.

"Thief got away with one of our mounts," hurriedly explained Lanky. "He
bowled both of us over when he came out of the corral like a tornado.
Little critter with the biggest head you ever saw--been prowling around
here at night, twice now. We tried to trap him in the circle, but he
was too quick on the get-away!"

"Which way did he lope, Lanky?" demanded Lige Smith, the wiry and
experienced foreman of the ranch.

"Reckon it was over west; but I'm a bit hazy after that knockout,"
returned the boy.

"I sure heard far-off hoofbeats in that quarter when I busted out of
the shack!" announced Zander Forbes emphatically.

"Git ther ponies," broke in old Jerry Brime, a veteran puncher with the
enthusiasm of a man half his age. "Mebbe we kin straddle him yet before
he gits to the Double Z outfit! Whoopee!"

A rush was made into the corral, and lively hustling followed as each
puncher picked out his special mount and roped him by the light of the
moon's bright rays.

"Good luck, boys!" bellowed the still excited Lanky, as the cowboys
galloped madly away. There was a little regret in his heart because he
could not leave Frank Allen and join in the mad chase.

By this time Frank had pretty well recovered after his painful
experience. He would feel a bit sore for some days, but could be
thankful his injuries were no more serious than a few bruises.

"We made a fine mess of it that time, Lanky," he observed, when it was
found that no bones had been broken by his nasty fall.

"Huh! didn't move quick enough! A matter of ten seconds; but that was
plenty to queer the game, all right."

"He meant to stampede the whole bunch of ponies, looked like to me,"
Frank Allen remarked. "I wish we knew just what his scheme was, hanging
around here and taking such big risks."

"I'm still thinking he wanted to have a try for that paper," affirmed
Lanky doggedly, "and when he found he hadn't a ghost of a chance to lay
his paws on the same, why, he got mad, and reckoned he'd have the laugh
on our outfit by stampeding the range ponies."

The two boys made their way to the house, followed by Charlie Gin
Sing. Here they found Mr. and Mrs. Wallace, as well as Minnie Cuthbert
and Paul Bird, up and partly dressed, they having been aroused by the
unusual clamor, and more than curious to understand what it all meant.

"No sleep for me with all this stuff going on," announced Lanky, as
he sat before the resurrected fire in the big living room. "I mean to
stay right here till the cows come home--I mean the cowboys--and have a
close-up look at that skunk, if they overtake him."

None of the others evinced any desire to seek their beds; so half an
hour afterwards when they heard the riders talking and laughing over by
the corral both Lanky and Frank went out to learn what the result of
the chase was.

"Shucks, he got clean away!" Lanky ejaculated, after hearing what some
of the men had to say.

"But, anyway," announced the effeminate-looking puncher with the high
voice, who had come West to build up his health and who rejoiced in the
name of Sally Keating, "the joke is on that coyote, because he had the
bad luck to pick out the worst pony in the whole outfit, with more mean
traits than you can shake a stick at."

"You don't mean that white-eyed terror we call Whitey Knocker, do you
Sally?" shrilled Lanky, in great joy. Upon the other's wagging his head
in the affirmative, he continued with a bit of spite in his voice:
"Then he's in for a peck of trouble! I only hope that bronc will break
his own neck in the bargain when he goes down in a crash with his
rider."

Lanky knew from experience what a pack of tricks Knocker had for all
occasions. There were several sore spots on the boy's person that he
could lay to his determination to beat the pony with that wicked white
eye at his own game, his father having finally been compelled to
forbid any repetition of the dangerous task.

By degrees the excitement died out, and there was an exodus of tired
riders and others to their own quarters.

With the morning the boys went over the ground to revive their
recollection of every incident connected with the previous night's
thievery. They even followed the tracks of Whitey Knocker for some
little distance, which could be done through a certain queer formation
of the pony's off hind hoof.

"No use going any further, Lanky," said Frank finally. "The trail keeps
on getting fainter right along, as the soil changes."

"Then, all we've learned," suggested his chagrined chum, "is that when
he flew the coop he headed about as straight as the bee flies for
Double Z Ranch."

"But our boys all say they've seen every puncher in that outfit, and
what we could tell about this runt's looks with his big head didn't fit
any of that rough bunch. Still, he may be a newcomer, playing a lone
hand in hanging around Rockspur at night."

Frank Allen had always been a leader among his boy friends in the home
town of Columbia in the East, as told in the first volume of this
series called "Frank Allen's School Days."

Rockspur Ranch, a small cattle industry located on the plains, had been
left to Mrs. Wallace by her bachelor brother, George Rockford, and the
Wallaces had come out, partly for the banker's health, but also to
inspect the newly acquired property.

Frank Allen and Paul Bird had been asked to become members of the
party, and Minnie Cuthbert, the prettiest and most sensible girl in all
Columbia--at least so Frank was firmly convinced--was along to keep
Mrs. Wallace company.

A man by the name of Nash Yesson had tried to buy the property from the
new owner. That failing, he had, with the assistance of Lef Seller,
known as the bully and worst boy in Columbia, tried to get possession
of a treasure he knew to be buried in a cellar under the ranch pantry.

The vigilance of Frank Allen and his chums defeated this effort, and
the plotters were chased off, leaving the old rusty iron box they
had dug up in the possession of the rightful owners. All of these
happenings have been narrated in the pages of the book just preceding
this, under the title of "Frank Allen at Rockspur Ranch."

Lanky's uneasiness concerning the possible continued efforts of Yesson
and Lef to steal the valuable paper and chart that, with gold nuggets,
had lain in the iron box so many years, accounted for his suspicions
that the mysterious nightly visits of the man with the big head were
connected in some way with the long-buried treasure.

One of the papers yellowed by age that fell into the Wallaces'
possession had been a rudely drawn chart of a mountainous section of
country where years before gold had been found in paying quantities and
a little mining settlement named Gold Fork was located.

It was understood that this place was now deserted, the shacks in
ruins. So all hope of ever locating the long-lost mine worked in secret
by Josh Kinney, former owner of Rockspur Ranch, died away.

This map had been drawn by Josh Kinney himself. Its existence was
known, but no human eye had ever beheld it save the maker's up to the
time it fell into the possession of Frank Allen and his two chums.

Jerry Brime knew something about the lost claim, for he had worked
alongside Kinney at cattle raising and had himself tried, but without
success, to follow the other when he disappeared. Jerry believed that
Kinney was laying in a fresh stock of gold nuggets from the rich
deposit, or "pocket," in his secret mine when this happened.

Brime and the three boys held many consultations as the days passed.
The boys were bent on making an effort to locate Kinney's source of
treasure-trove, and so asked a multitude of questions. Some of these
Jerry answered readily, but in other cases his memory failed him.

"Wait till we-uns git up thar at Gold Fo'k," he would say. "Mebbe ole
Jerry's mind'll be freshened a bit by seein' the ole place agin. Thet
map's a-goin' to help a heap; an' I do reckon we'll git our paws on the
stuff thet's hidden away in the five-fingered cave."

In the end Frank and Lanky came to believe that they must wait until
Mr. Wallace gave the word for the little expedition to set forth. Then,
if luck favored them, all might yet turn out well.

"There's only one thing that bothers me," Lanky said the afternoon
they gave up trying to squeeze more information from the willing but
helpless Jerry Brime.

"I can guess what it is," chucked Frank. "Nash Yesson?"

"And his crony, Lef Seller," admitted the smiling Lanky Wallace. "They
may be hanging around here; for they are stickers, all right. Then
again, for all we know, the pair may be up at Gold Fork raking the
ground over with a fine-tooth comb, looking for the lost claim."

"What of it?" Frank asked complacently. "A heap of others did that same
thing years ago and only found themselves up against a blank wall. I
tell you, Josh Kinney was a cute one and knew how to keep a secret."

"Glad to see you feel so confident, Frank. With Jerry along to revive
his memory of things and that little chart to help, I guess we've got a
better chance to spot that claim than anybody ever had before. But that
was startling news you had in the last letter from Buster Billings, our
fat chum back in Columbia."

"Well, I'm not much surprised about Lef," said Frank, shaking his head
as he spoke. "We always knew he was a bad egg, up to every kind of
mischief he could think of."

"But to make away with something like two-hundred-and-fifty dollars
which his father had given him to pay some bills!" exclaimed Lanky.
"They said he lost it at the races, betting on losing nags," he added
musingly.

"And now," Frank went on to say, "Buster tells us Mr. Seller reports
five thousand dollars in Liberty Bonds missing; and he adds that
suspicion strongly points to his own son, Lef, as the one who robbed
the home safe."

"Well, Lef is in a section of country right now where Lynch law often
overtakes a rascal; and believe me, Frank, if he's caught red-handed in
any of his ugly tricks out here he'll not have an indulgent dad to help
him out of the fix."

"As long as we have any reason to believe that precious pair still hang
out around here, Lanky, we've got to keep our eyes peeled for trouble.
What under the sun are you sniffing like that for? Think you smell a
skunk around?"

"Made me think of the way we smoked that mountain lion out of his
den--smell of dried grass, all right. I wonder if the boys are burning
off a piece of meadow that's turned brown in this dry spell?"

Frank himself was now busily engaged in "sniffing."

"Well, there must be a fire where there's smoke," he said finally, at
the same time showing a trace of uneasiness. "Strikes me, it comes from
over that way."

"Look at that burst of smoke shoot up on the other side of the house!"
cried Lanky. "Some fire, that must be as sure as-- There, listen to
Charlie Gin Sing giving tongue! The cook's as scared as a singed cat.
Let's scoot over that way, Frank, and see what they're doing. Now
others are yelling to beat the band! We were longing for excitement,
and, sure enough, here she comes full tilt!"

"Lanky, it's the barn on fire, I do believe!" Frank managed to say as
the pair of them went at full speed, swerving so as to pass around the
house, when they would have a full unobstructed view.

"With all that hay and the straw from last year in it, too!" added the
other.

Then as the boys turned the corner where Gin Sing was now beating
wildly on a monster frying pan and making a dreadful din, Lanky
finished with a whoop, and increased his pace, if such a thing were
possible.

No question about its being the barn that was ablaze, for vast
volumes of smoke were already pouring out from several places. These
continually grew in density, while wicked looking red tongues of flame
could be seen playing amidst the dense belching billows.

Frank had gone as white as chalk.

"Your mother--Minnie!" he gasped.

"What of them?" cried the agitated Lanky.

"I saw them go in some time ago! Oh, Lanky! what if they are still
inside the old barn, trapped like rats and blinded with all that
smoke?"




CHAPTER III

TRAPPED IN THE BURNING BARN


Lanky Wallace apparently could find no words to express the feeling of
horror that gripped his heart. Never did any boy have a dearer mother
than his own "Mom." No wonder the possibility of losing her in such a
terrible tragedy seemed to freeze the very blood in his veins.

It was indeed an exciting time at Rockspur Ranch. Men were shouting as
they ran toward the burning barn as only big-lunged cow-punchers can
shout. The excited cook meanwhile continued to whang away with his big
spoon, as though the frying pan he held might be a dinner gong and he
meant to summon those who were a full mile away.

Too, the crackling of the leaping flames told that they were gathering
fresh headway with every passing second, and these sounds began to be a
factor in the conglomeration of noises that had so suddenly sprung into
existence on that sunny afternoon in early summer.

Barns were not always to be found on cattle ranches, for it had
usually been the habit of cattlemen to let their herds shift the best
they could during ordinary winters. Usually there are sheltered nooks
on the range where forage may be found with unusual efforts by the
stock.

But George Rockford, Lanky Wallace's deceased uncle and the late owner
of these hundreds of acres, had a mind of his own. He was not to be
governed by what had been good enough for his predecessors.

So he had built a big barn, though lumber was difficult to secure and
had to be brought many miles, even from the mountain gorges. In this
barn he always kept a certain amount of hay and straw, for emergencies,
he explained to the scoffers.

Several times during his occupancy of the place his forethought had
been rewarded. When an unusually severe winter rolled around, during
which stock out on the ranges suffered grievous losses through deep
snows and blustering blizzards, that reserve stock of feed had saved
the Rockspur herd from much privation.

Lanky could see some of the cowboys bringing up a hose that was
attached to the tank of water meant for household use. The stock were
driven to a never-failing creek about two miles away for watering,
or, if they were loose on the range, they found their way there by
themselves.

In his excitement Lanky made a dive for a bucket, and then gasped in
dismay when a furious burst of angry looking flame darted out from a
crack in the side of the barn, for all the world like the tongue of
some gigantic serpent.

"Oh, Frank! what can we do?" he moaned. Even as he said these words he
realized that Frank was no longer at his side.

Some instinct caused Lanky to turn his anxious gaze once more on the
doomed barn. Knowing Frank Allen as well as he did, he understood what
the other would be doing about that time.

"He's gone--right inside--and I've got to follow my leader!"

Lanky would have dashed blindly forward and despite the peril involved
enter the door where that choking smoke was pouring forth, only that
his father caught hold of him just in time.

Mr. Wallace, on learning that his wife and Minnie had been seen
entering the barn some time before fire was discovered, had become
greatly alarmed and had tried to go in after them, only to be driven
back by the fierce flames. Now he would not listen for a moment the
wild plea of Lanky to be allowed to follow Frank.

"I should have stopped Frank, too," said the gentleman, in a quivering
voice, "had I guessed what he meant to do when I saw him running
forward and taking off his coat. If he is lost it will be terrible!
And your mother, too! The boys have already done everything possible
for human strength and skill to accomplish. We can only pray they may
all be spared."

"Zander Forbes is in there too, they say," blubbered the badly shaken
Lanky.

"I shall never forget his heroism, and Frank's, too," said Mr. Wallace.
"If I thought I could make it--" His voice broke. "I tried it before
you came, but the flames drove me back."

"There's one of the boys coming out now!" quavered Lanky, pointing his
finger as he spoke. "Why, he's leading Bessie, our pet milk cow! He has
put a blanket over her eyes to blind her." The cowboy had used this
covering as a blinder to the cow, knowing that otherwise it would be
utterly impossible to urge her along past shooting lances of flame.

Lanky's voice died away in a low groan, for his suddenly aroused hopes
had been just as speedily shattered. Only a cow saved, while precious
human lives were hanging in the balance!

When Frank was gripped by the feeling that he must make a desperate
attempt to find and save Mrs. Wallace and Minnie Cuthbert, he lost not
a second in debating whether it was safe or not.

He could see that he would be met with considerable of that smothering
smoke the instant he stepped past the open door of the burning barn.
That was why he commenced to tear off his coat as he ran. Frank
wrapped his coat about his head in the endeavor to protect his mouth,
eyes, and nostrils as much as possible.

He knew the die had been cast as soon as he entered the place, since
his retreat was cut off by a fresh burst of scorching flames and all he
could do was to make his way forward.

From time to time he called at the top of his voice, but was staggered
to find what a small amount of noise he could make, owing to the
pungent smoke of the burning hay and straw.

The covering his head gave him some relief at first; but in a very
short time he found his eyes smarting fearfully and tears helping to
blind his vision.

Groping his way and trying as best he could to avoid those places
where the hay was fully in the grip of the fire, Frank presently found
himself falling.

The boy did not know what sort of a hole he had incautiously stepped
into, for he had taken but a cursory view of the inside of the old barn
during his sole visit there. Throwing out both hands, he sought to find
some support, so as to stop the sickening downward movement. He came to
a halt with a thump, one of his feet becoming fast between two upright
timbers.

His situation was now much more desperate than before, since, try as he
did, he seemed utterly unable to get his foot free from that clutch of
the V-shaped timbers. It was as though he had become enmeshed in the
tentacles of some unseen monster, which, gifted with enormous powers,
was bent on holding him there a prisoner until the oncoming flames
reached the spot.




CHAPTER IV

A CLOSE SHAVE


Frank Allen was not one to give up easily. He continued to strive to
free the snared foot, his efforts being accentuated by the fierce heat
of the roaring furnace that ate its way through the tons on tons of
combustibles. In his extremity he shouted at the top of his voice, at
the same time doubtful whether his cries could reach outside of the
barn, with all that noise of crackling flames and roaring draughts.
Still he continued to call.

"Help! Help!"

Although calling for assistance, the youth did not cease his frantic
efforts to dislodge his trapped foot. He knew only too well what a
slender chance there was that any one should be close enough to hear
his cries and come to his rescue, even in the doubtful event of being
able to get through the flames.

Then what was close to an inspiration flashed through his excited
brain, and he lost no time in trying anew to break loose.

Luckily, he was able to bend over far enough to get at his shoe. With
eager fingers he tore the laces open, and then made a last desperate
effort to free his right foot.

A thrill ran through the boy when he found that he could draw the foot
out of his shoe! He was saved--least, he was given a fresh chance to
escape the dreadful fate that threatened to overwhelm him!

Sensible even in such a situation, Frank next tore his shoe loose,
and managed to get it on after a fashion. Then he turned away from
the furious blast of fire and groped through the dense smoke, heading
he knew not in which direction, only that he was fending off the
threatening catastrophe a little longer by fleeing.

The fact that he was not acquainted with the interior of the barn
brought him fresh trouble. An avenue of escape might be close at his
elbow, an opening such as would afford him exit, and Frank would not be
aware of the fact.

He was experiencing for the first time in all his life the sensation
that grips one who realizes he is lost. In the woods or among the
hills, with a sky overhead to give him the points of the compass, no
one could be better than Frank Allen at making his way to safety. But
it was vastly different in that smoke-filled structure.

Once more he gave tongue, in the hope that if Zander Forbes or any
other of his cowboy friends were close by he would catch the call and
cheer the groping wanderer with an answering whoop. Meanwhile, what of
Mrs. Wallace and of Minnie? At thought of Minnie his heart sank.

Once the situation took on new threats. A burst of flame straight ahead
warned Frank that he must sheer aside if he wished to escape being
singed. His heart seemed to be in his throat with the suspense that
continually gripped him. And, oh, how he yearned for a breath of fresh
air!

Then he thought he caught the sound of a husky voice calling his own
name. Could Lanky have followed him into the barn, and was even then
wandering this way and that, chased by the fire, and in as great a
predicament as himself?

Again Frank let out a whoop, and was cheered to catch an answering
cowboy yell. Then it was not his chum after all, but one of the
punchers. Somehow, this thought gave Frank renewed courage, for every
one of the Rockspur outfit must be well acquainted with the barn's
angles that had proved so confusing to him, and could thus lead the way
to an exit.

Nearer came the booming voice, heard despite all the clamor around him.
Now the boy could glimpse a moving figure, pushing in a beeline for
the quarter where he chanced to be.

"Jerry! is it _you_?" Frank shrilled, somehow touched by this evidence
of affection on the part of the old rustler who did not hesitate to
risk his own life in the endeavor to save that of his young friend.

"It sure is, Frank! I'm comin' to git yuh out o' this hot box. Hain't
got much time to waste neither, 'case the hull pesky roof is shore to
drap in on us right quick."

Jerry had taken hold of Frank's left arm while saying this, and
immediately commenced moving backward the way he had come. What a
feeling of confidence came over the imperiled boy when he felt those
friendly fingers in contact with his person. It seemed as though a
tremendous load rolled off his shoulders in the magic of that touch.

Apparently Jerry was leading him toward what looked like a danger point
to be avoided; but, somehow, Frank felt no apprehension. Jerry must
know the barn like a book; indeed, possibly he himself had helped build
it in those days when as a much younger man he had worked on this ranch.

Sure enough, by a sudden turn they managed to put the worst of the fire
behind them. Frank even believed he felt the first whiff of fresh air,
and, oh! how eagerly did he draw it into his tortured lungs.

"Hyar we are, younker!" exclaimed the veteran cowboy as they pushed
past a last nest of fire and reached the open air.

"Look, Dad! There's Frank, safe and sound!" a voice bellowed, and
Lanky, followed by the limping Paul, came rushing toward the pair who
had just emerged from the roaring furnace.

How the other boys did squeeze Frank's hands and almost cried, such was
the tense condition of their strained nerves!

Frank turned and looked back, shuddering. It was not his own narrow
escape that made him feel so weak, but the still haunting dreadful fear
that perhaps Lanky's mother and Minnie had been swallowed up in the
pitiless conflagration.

"Oh! Lanky--is there any news--have you heard--Minnie--your mother?"

His whole soul was in that cry, and although his eyes were still
burning and smarting from the effects of the smoke, he fastened his
gaze on his chum in a most entreating way.

"Cheer up, Frank!" exclaimed Lanky, slapping his chum's shoulder in
what was intended to be an encouraging way. "We've reason to believe
Mom and Minnie weren't in the barn after all when the fire started."

Frank drew a long breath and leaned on Lanky, his sensation of relief
leaving him weak and wobbling.

"But I don't see them anywhere around here!" he exclaimed, looking to
the right and to the left, where the punchers were standing in groups
watching the barn and its contents go up in flames, for no puny human
efforts could now stay the march of destruction.

Lanky was beckoning, and Frank saw that it was Charlie Gin Sing who
started toward them. The Chinaman had apparently managed to get over
the worst of his emotion at seeing such a sight for the first time in
his life; he looked more like his grinning self, Frank noticed, as he
trotted up to where the three boys were standing.

"Charlie," said Lanky, taking hold of the cook's thin arm, "tell Frank
here what you say you saw. He's been afraid the ladies were caught in
the fire. That was what made him rush in there at the risk of his life."

"Me see Missy Wally--young lady come out side door--yep, long time back
till I smell smoke and see barn he ketch fire."

That was lucid, and positive enough to convince Frank that his fears
had after all been groundless. Charlie Gin Sing could be depended on to
tell a straight story.

"Where were you when you saw them come out?" asked Frank.

"Me standee kitchen door--get lungs full air--wave hand at Missy
Wally--she like Charlie his cooking--wave hand back--finest lady in all
land, Missy Wally."

"Which way did they go after coming out of the barn?" continued Frank,
bent on getting at the full facts, for if those who were missing had
returned to the ranch house, it was strange they had not appeared on
the scene, with all that racket going on.

"Walk away--hab lit basket 'long--come from China--ginger like all
Chinese eat."

"Show me the direction they were heading when last you saw them,
Charlie. It's queer they haven't shown up by now, no matter where they
went."

"That's straight goods, Frank," interrupted Lanky, his forehead
wrinkled with anxiety.

"Think Missy Wally she go them woods--me tell her wild flowers grow
there where cattle drink at spring! Look! What tell you? Here come
runnin', you savvy, like in big hurry!"

Lanky gave a whoop.

"He's right, Frank--Paul! There they come, and running, too. Oh! I'm
so glad I could yell my head off. All this while they've been there in
that patch of trees they say Josh Kinney planted fifty years ago."

Frank was about as much relieved as his chum; but, just the same, he
noticed something that apparently Lanky had missed.

"Your mother acts as though exhausted, Lanky," he said. "See how Minnie
tries to buoy her up. Was it because of their fears the ranch house was
burning up and some lives in danger, or did something else happen to
frighten them?"

Mr. Wallace was already hastening toward the approaching pair, and the
three boys started on the run, Paul hobbling bravely along, although
his ankle gave him frequent stabs of pain.

The "woods," as the big clump of trees was called by the punchers, were
some distance away from the ranch buildings, and it took the boys an
appreciable length of time to draw near Mrs. Wallace and Minnie.

"I was right," Frank kept telling himself, as he noted the looks of
both Mrs. Wallace and the girl. "Something dreadful has certainly
happened to make them act that way! Mrs. Wallace seems ready to drop,
and Minnie, too, is as pale as a ghost. But, anyway, they are safe
enough, and not caught in that fire-trap!"

Now they reached the pair, and Lanky threw his arm around his mother.

"Oh, what a scare we've had!" he told her. "We believed you had both
been caught in the burning barn. But Charlie Gin Sing gave us the
right stuff when he said he had seen you come out and head for the
woods."

"But we have been in danger, after all," said his mother, in quivering
tones. "I shall never, never want to visit those awful woods again.
Only for Minnie's presence of mind I might have lost my life!"

"Why, what happened?" asked the astounded and anxious Lanky.

"Snakes--rattlesnakes! A whole den of them!" gasped the still
shuddering Mrs. Wallace.




CHAPTER V

A RATTLESNAKE ROUND-UP


Frank Allen could see now where Lanky got his horror of snakes, since
his mother seemed to have the same detestation and fear of them.

He looked at Minnie, as though wondering whether she would back the
older lady up in that astounding assertion. One prairie rattler would
be bad enough, but to speak of a whole den, and so close to the ranch
house as that, seemed a bit as though Mrs. Wallace unconsciously
magnified things.

But to his surprise Minnie immediately nodded her head.

"Yes, there were ever so many of the nasty wriggling things, Frank,"
she assured him in her convincing way. "Some were monsters, and others
teenty little bits of snakes, but full of fight just the same, big or
little."

Frank could suspect there might be a story connected with their
adventure in which Minnie had played the part of heroine. He realized,
however, he must depend on Lanky's mother to tell the facts, for
Minnie had never been one to boast of anything she did.

"What happened to stir them up so, do you know?" he asked Mrs. Wallace.

"Oh! it was my ignorance--foolishness I'd better call it," she told him
frankly. "I certainly did think it was a locust buzzing, and stepped
over to see the little drummer, when--I almost stood on a bunch of
curled-up baby snakes. Why, Frank, there was a dreadful monster all
coiled with its head drawn back, ready to strike at me and that buzzing
sound going harder than ever."

She shut her eyes as though once again seeing the fear-inspiring sight.

"But--it didn't strike you Mom?" asked Lanky weakly.

"No," replied Mrs. Wallace, turning a fond look on her companion. "Just
in the nick of time this brave girl snatched me back, exactly as if she
had all the strength of Lige Smith in her arm!"

Frank felt prouder of Minnie than ever before--to hear how in time of
an emergency she could act promptly, instead of squealing as some girls
certainly would have done.

"Then I fainted from the shock," the lady continued, "but not before I
saw that snake dart out of coil in the effort to reach me and, failing,
draw back again on the defensive. Minnie actually dragged me, with all
my weight, some distance away from the reptiles' den, and when later on
I came to, there was not a single snake in sight."

"Min, you're just the finest trump ever," exclaimed Lanky. "I sure take
off my hat to a girl like you. But didn't you two hear all the noise
that was going on up around the ranch house?"

"Yes, I heard it, and was puzzled to know what the shouting and all
that black smoke could mean," Minnie admitted. "But your mother still
lay in that swoon, and my first duty was to her."

"She actually went past the den again, so as to get some cold water
from the spring," explained Mrs. Wallace, turning to her husband, who
arrived just then. "It was that that revived me. But I felt so weak and
shaky that although both of us were greatly concerned on account of the
dreadful sounds we heard and all that black smoke, we were some time in
getting started for the house."

Minnie had left the group, knowing that Mrs. Wallace would be telling
it all over again to her husband, and of course repeating her praise.
Frank understand the modesty that could not bear to hear her own
heroism praised, and he hurried after Minnie, walking with her to view
the now almost gutted barn, which would soon be only a blackened pile,
never to be rebuilt.

Great was the surprise of Lige Smith and the other punchers when they
learned from Frank what had happened to alarm the ladies.

"Did you ever hear of such colossal nerve as those snakes showed in
locatin' so close to human beings and actually fixing up a vipers'
nest?" burst out Lige. "Boys, I take it that looks like a deadly
insult. Reckon as how we ain't no use around these diggings, since the
ole barn's a goner. Let's get busy and clean out that snake hole."

Nothing could please the punchers better, and there was an immediate
scurrying around for poles and anything else that was likely to prove
useful in bringing destruction to the "owdacious rattler crowd," as
Jerry Brime remarked.

Of course, all three boys went along with the crowd to see how the
extermination of the prairie rattlesnakes progressed. Lanky smothered
his abject dislike and vowed he would be the death of that big reptile
because of which his mother had just passed through such suffering.

"I'd like to say I'd given one of the wrigglers a stiff crack on the
head so's to break his scaly neck," he confided to Paul, who limped
along, bent on seeing all the fun there was to see.

"And you could get the rattles to show when you tell the yarn,"
suggested Paul. "I've got three of the same at home--used to hunt
snakes every spring, just to know there was one less poisonous
creature laid out stiff."

The crowd were soon on the spot. They found that the nest of snakes was
not a creature of the imagination. Several "bouncers," as Lanky called
them, set up a droning buzz as the party approached, and being quickly
located were attacked with the poles and pistols.

Frank and Lanky were in the midst of the fray. A big rattler came for
Frank, but he caught the reptile in the head with a rock.

"Look out!" yelled Lanky suddenly.

Frank whirled around, to see a medium-sized snake in the act of
dropping from a bush just behind him. He flung another rock and at the
same instant Lanky hit the snake with a club he carried.

"On your guard, boys!" yelled one of the cowboys. "We're in a nest of
'em."

"This is too much for me!" gasped Paul, and lost no time in limping to
a distance.

"Take that!" yelled Frank, and struck at another snake with a pole he
had picked up.

"There you are," came from Lanky, and he quickly dispatched three small
snakes squirming from between some rocks. He had hardly done this when
he gave a mad yell as another snake wound itself around his ankle.

Crack! It was the report of Lige Smith's pistol. He had aimed at the
snake's head. His aim was true and the reptile dropped to the ground
and went whipping out of sight in the bushes.

"Gosh, but that was a narrow escape," murmured Lanky, his face growing
pale.

"I'll say so," was the reply. "But come on, there are more snakes over
yonder."

The work of fighting the reptiles went on, and when the big ones had
been settled even Paul took a hand in cleaning out what remained.

"Say, Frank, did you see me get a crack at that corking big one?"
Lanky exclaimed, beaming with excitement and the knowledge that he was
gradually overcoming his excessive fear of the entire snake family.

"It may be the granddaddy of the whole bunch," Frank told him, "and, as
like as not, the very one that struck at your mother."

"I'm believing in that way, anyhow," affirmed the tall boy. "And now
for getting his rattle box."

"Be sure to cut his head off first," warned Frank. "I've known of cases
where a rattler believed to be done for was able to coil up and strike
a fellow's leg with his poisoned fangs."

When the punchers and the boys got through with their self-imposed job
there was not a live snake, small or large, in all that patch of woods.

"We'll sure keep our eyes peeled after this," said Lige Smith, as they
started back to the ranch house "and it's a pipe cinch no snakes are
ever going to hole out again in our wood patch."

Of course, Mr. Wallace was sorry to lose all the hay and straw that
had gone up in smoke and flames, for it might prove useful during the
coming winter season.

"But for one thing," he told Frank, when on another day they were
talking over numerous plans, "we'll never think of rebuilding that
barn, not having the same apprehension of forage shortage that haunted
Uncle George. Besides, Lige assures me the winters are getting milder
every season up here in the shadow of the Rockies, and that there will
always be plenty of grass for our small herd."

The three boys were by degrees preparing to start on the long cherished
trip to the mountains. Gold Fork and all its traditions of former
glories before the diggings panned out, lured them more and more every
day.

Lanky had persisted in his endeavor to prove himself of real cowboy
caliber. He could ride any bronco that came his way, sticking on as he
called it "like a burr in a darky's wool."

But one thing Frank noticed that roused his curiosity a bit. Somehow,
the often expressed intention on Lanky's part to own and proudly wear
as natty a pair of fringed and decorated "chaps" as any puncher could
boast, seemed to have died out completely.

"What's happened to make you change your mind about those gaudy chaps,
Lanky?" Frank asked one day, as their preparations for their trip
neared completeness.

Lanky grinned good-naturedly.

"Shucks! I've only been looking around and observing some things that I
didn't know before, Frank."

"As what, for instance?" demanded the other smilingly.

"First off the bat, it isn't the chaps that make the genuine puncher.
I've noticed that generally the greenhorn has the niftiest outfit you
ever laid eyes on and struts around when decked out like he owned the
whole world."

"But, Lanky, every puncher does have chaps, and often more than one
pair."

"Sure does, Frank. But--and here's where my argus eyes came in
good--the finest rig he owns he keeps for extra occasions, like going
to a dance or when taking cattle to the station for shipment; because,
don't you see, on those special events he's apt to run across some of
the girls."

Frank laughed at that, and wagged his head in appreciation.

"Your sagacity does you credit, Lanky."

"Look at our bunch at work on the range, rounding up strays, branding
the youngsters, or doing any sort of work like that. Why, some of 'em
even wear plain faded jean overalls, and the only things that would
tell you they were punchers are their cowboy hats and the ropes they
always carry."

"I can see you're making the grade, all right, old chum," chucked
Frank. "And I give you a heap of credit for taking note of such
happenings. Not much gets past your eyes--while they're open, I mean,
Lanky."

As it happened, when they had almost forgotten all about the hovering
peril that had given them so much concern a month and more previously,
it was fated to once more awaken into life to annoy them.

It was Paul this time who made the discovery. He had been unfortunate
on this visit to Rockspur, in having sprained his ankle, which was slow
to heal. This had kept him in the background at times when his two
chums were meeting all sorts of lively adventures.

Frank and Lanky had retired to the room which they shared in common,
and chose to confer regarding what they should take with them and what
leave behind. Paul was in the bunk-house listening-in, there being
something in the air that night which he particularly wished to hear.

"Well, here's our corrected list," Lanky announced, holding up a bit
of paper. "I reckon we've cut it down as close to the bone as we can,
and everything I've not crossed off we believe we'll need. Dad will
do the same, for I happen to know he always used to travel light when
years ago he went into camp. But here comes Paul, so now we can hop
into bed and get some sleep.

"Oh! will you?" said Paul, entering in time to overhear this last
remark from Lanky. "As our old chum, Jack Eastwick, used always to say,
'maybe, maybe not.' I'm bringing you news that may make you sit up and
take notice. That sly little rascal with the bushel head is skulking
around again! I glimpsed him while crossing over from the bunk-house!"




CHAPTER VI

ON GUARD


"Douse the glim, first of all, Lanky!" said Frank Allen without a
second's hesitation. Frank seemed always ready for action, which was
one of his strong points.

Lanky thereupon blew out the lamp, and the three boys found themselves
in vague darkness. The late rising moon was above the horizon, but the
western side of the ranch house was wrapped in the shadows.

"Now, let's keep mum and watch," whispered Frank. "He'll think the last
comer has turned in, and the coast will soon be clear. Pretty near time
for the boys to shut up shop over there in the radio den."

"Getting ready to wind-up when I left," murmured Paul. "Lige has a
rule, you know, that every puncher must hit the hay by eleven, so's to
be up with the sunrise."

Silence fell upon them.

Minutes crept on as the boys crouched by the window, eager for
the first glimpse of the strange little unknown man whose former
mysterious actions had so engrossed their curiosity.

Now and then one of them would stir, or it might be heave a heavy sigh,
as though this pent-up enthusiasm was making serious inroads on his
patience. The cramped position in which they maintained their vigil
added to the discomfort of the situation.

For some little time the boys heard the voices and subdued laughter of
the punchers, as some of them came out, to wander over in the direction
of the horse corral, in order to have a last look, so as to make sure
all was right in that quarter.

Even that died out by degrees, and then absolute silence descended upon
the vicinity of the ranch buildings. Up to the coming of the guests
from the East there had been a pack of mongrel dogs connected with
Rockspur Ranch; but Frank and his pals had seen neither hide nor hair
of any for some time.

The time began to drag terribly, and Frank himself feared none of them
would be able to stand it much longer. But presently Lanky pinched his
arm and breathed into his ear the words:

"Saw something move just then--might have been a slinking coyote, but I
reckon it had only two legs, Frank!"

"Where?" the other whispered back, feeling a thrill of expectation, as
it began to appear as though their weary vigil might meet with some
measure of success.

"See that star low down near the horizon--just to the right of that
bush."

"I get you, Lanky!"

"I hit the bullseye, Frank, because there he is again!" continued the
owner of the eagle vision.

All of the chums had their eyes glued on the point Lanky had mentioned,
for the brilliant setting star was plainly visible. Yes, something was
moving, for a fact, and it must be either a venturesome coyote prowling
around in search of a toothsome bone or else a man down on his knees,
crawling toward the ranch house.

Closer came the object of their scrutiny. Presently Frank gave a low
and suggestive grunt.

"A man, all right," he muttered.

"Heading right this way, too," chucked Lanky, well pleased over the way
things were working out.

A hiss from Frank warned the others that greater caution than ever was
now necessary. It would be too bad if after all some thoughtless act on
their part should frighten off the queer little "sawed-off," as Lanky
refereed to the moonlight visitor.

Every few minutes they could see that he elevated his head as though to
take a wide survey, and thus made doubly certain he was not creeping
into a trap.

"It's the runt, as sure as anything!" Lanky told himself. "Know that
bushy-top anywhere I could glimpse it! Gee whiz! I sure do wonder what
sort of a stunt he's meanin' to pull off this time."

Just then, as the intruder was close enough to be fairly seen in the
moonlight, Lanky made a discovery that added to his keen curiosity. In
one hand the man carried what looked like an ordinary spade, as though
his purpose had something to do with digging.

It was plain to be seen that the fellow meant to approach close to the
boys' shelter. He was heading in a direct line for the magnificent tree
growing near that corner of the low building, the very first one Josh
Kinney had planted, and now highly esteemed during the hot hummer days
for the grateful shade its foliage cast.

Now the prowler reached a spot close to the thick trunk of this tree,
and, after a good look around, he seemed to be measuring with a
tape-line.

The nerves of that trio of watchers so close by quivered with
excitement. As their lookout was bathed in deep shadow there was no
possibility of their being seen by the intruder, even though he looked
directly that way, if only the boys made no movement.

Satisfied at length after several trials that he had struck the exact
location for which he searched, the man, still bending down, started to
push the spade into the turf.

It was soft and pliable so near the house, where the shade of the
foliage above prevented the sun from baking the surface. Consequently,
the dwarf seemed to be having no great difficulty in digging.

He worked in utmost silence. Not once did Frank catch the slightest
sound, as of the spade striking a root or a possible stone. Indeed, in
a way it was uncanny. Lanky, being gifted with a lively imagination,
could easily picture the queer little man as a ghostly grave-digger,
plying his trade at this hour approaching midnight.

It was useless trying to guess what object the fellow had in view, for
the boys had not the remotest clue to guide them. But by exercising
patience they were likely to find the solution of the mystery when he
"struck oil."

His caution still clung to him, it seemed, and he took nothing for
granted. As systematically as clock-work that bushy head would be
raised and turned around in every direction. Then, as if convinced he
had nothing to fear, the digger would once more get down to work and
deepen the hole he had already made.

Apparently, whatever he was after must be buried at some considerable
depth below the surface. Already he had quite a good-sized pile of loam
heaped up.

Then, all of a sudden, he seemed to take the alarm, for the boys saw
him flatten out until he "looked like a flapjack on the ground."

At the same moment a distant sound, as of the regular beat of a pony's
hoofs, was faintly borne to the ears of the watching boys. They all
understood what it meant, knowing that Buster Lightfoot had been
missing at supper and was believed to be far off on the range looking
up strays.

He was now returning on a tired pony, and doubtless himself as hungry
as a wolf. Yes, now the boys knew he was turning Buckskin into the
corral, after which they could see him heading for the bunk-house, his
burly frame looming up in the slanting rays of the failing moon.

Buster knew better than to make any undue racket when returning at so
late an hour, for he would have had the rest of the boys about his ears
like a swarm of angry bees. He would find plenty of food laid aside for
him by the experienced Charlie Gin Sing, and after disposing of the
bread and meat and the hot coffee contained in an enormous thermos jug,
he was expected to turn in for the rest he so sadly needed.

In due time all was quiet again, and the digger once more tackled his
job, with a stubborn spirit worthy of admiration. Lanky liked his nerve
in thus taking such great chances of being discovered and caught, when
he might expect to be given a good hiding.

It would seem as though the man with the spade must attain the object
of his search before long, since the hole was already of some depth. As
a consequence the boys found themselves more worked up than ever.

Lanky discovered that his right arm was feeling prickly all over. He
knew what that meant, for it was not the first time his arm or leg had
gone to sleep from a continuous pressure of some sort.

His intention was to change around and lean with his left arm, if only
it could be managed, for he surely did not wish to lose sight of things
at this critical stage of the affair.

It proved to be rather an unfortunate design on his part for his right
arm was as helpless as though paralyzed so when he tried to move it
played him a most dastardly and treacherous trick, actually crashing
through the window and shattering the pane of glass into a thousand
pieces!




CHAPTER VII

IN THE BLACK BOTTLE


It is astonishing what a tremendous medley of sound usually follows the
smashing of a window, especially in the dead of night, with everything
around gripped in silence.

Frank had a sensation almost of panic, hardly knowing what had
happened. Paul, on his part, involuntarily ducked down, as if under
the impression that the runt outside had hurled his spade through
the window and would possibly follow it with other things still more
dangerous.

Lanky, who was himself the culprit, appeared to grasp the situation
and its undoubted disastrous consequences better than either of his
companions. This was proved when he made a vigorous bolt for the exit
of the room, leading outdoors.

"Let's grab him, fellows!" he shouted back over his shoulder, just
before tearing open the door and leaping headlong through.

In his haste he made some sort of miscalculation, and the next thing he
knew he tripped over some object and went headlong to the ground.

Frank and Paul, having caught his idea, and being nimble enough to
follow close on his heels, also had the experience of taking headers,
so for a few seconds there was something of a mix-up.

When they managed to untie the tangle and gain their feet, look as they
might there was no sign of the little man to be seen. He had vanished
as quietly as the wreaths of fog do in the morning when a puff of air
welcomes the rising of the sun.

"Please somebody kick me for a duffer!" pleaded the disgusted Lanky.

Loud voices attested to the fact that the smash and jingle of falling
fragments of glass had instantly awakened every sleeper in the near-by
bunk-house.

Out they came running, helter-skelter, some in pajamas, others partly
dressed, as was their habit while sleeping, but all wildly excited.

"What happened, boys?" bellowed Lige Smith, racing up barefooted.

"That measly little runt with the big head's been nosing around here
again! But he got scared off when my elbow slipped and broke the
window."

It was Lanky who made this hurried explanation, ready to shoulder all
the blame of the mishap. No one had accepted his invitation to indulge
in kicking him, he felt sure both Frank and Paul must feel as disgusted
as he was himself.

"Which way did the critter vamoose?" asked Hoptoad Atkins, quite
savagely for such a diminutive specimen of a puncher.

"None of us saw him skip out," admitted Lanky, "But say, he came from
over that way," and he pointed toward that part of the sky where some
time before the bright star had set beyond the level horizon.

There was an immediate rush on the part of the rustlers, and Frank, on
noting their scantiness of attire, could not keep from chuckling. He
felt positive he would never see the equal of that picture again, and
its memory would always bring a laugh to his lips.

Of course no vigorous search could be made, for many reasons. In
the first place, none of the punchers were more than half clad;
besides, chasing over the wide stretches of the prairie after such a
will-o'-the-wisp as that unknown but slippery runt, was out of the
question.

Then again it might be he was only "tolling" them away, so that during
their absence he could stampede the horses or accomplish some other
species of mischief, such as might take form in a rattlebox brain.

They went as far as the corral, to make sure the ponies were safe, and
then came drifting back again, their curiosity having been awakened by
seeing Frank hard at work with a spade, enlarging a hole in the ground
that some one had dug.

Some of the punchers had gone back into the bunk-house to get into
warmer garments, sensing that the end of the strange midnight adventure
was not yet. These wise ones came straggling back, to find Frank had
handed over his task to the eager Lanky, who was making the dirt fly.

Then came a sudden rifle shot and the thump of a bullet as it buried
itself in the tree trunk just over Lanky's head.

Frank happened to be looking in a direction that enabled him to glimpse
the distant flash.

"Git tuh kiver!" bawled Jerry Brime.

Some dodged around the house while others flattened themselves out
on the ground, which they hugged assiduously. Frank was one of those
on the ground, while Lanky and Paul hurried around the corner of the
building.

Two of those who had secured weapons as well as clothes when in the
bunk-house started on the run toward the quarter from which the shot
had come. Just then a second shot sounded, and the whine of the
projectile as it winged past close to their heads could be plainly
heard, giving the boys a queer sensation.

Cowboy yells sounded as the pair of runners started directly toward
the marksman's stand, but it was answered by a mocking laugh. Then
followed the rapid pounding of a horse's hoofs, telling them that their
intended quarry was in no hurry for the punishment which they would
only too willingly bestow upon him, could he be overtaken.

Of course, they could not pursue on foot, for cowboys as a rule are
badly handicapped when out of the saddle. After blazing away several
times in the vague hope of crippling the unseen pony or winging its
rider by a lucky shot, the two armed men ran for the corral, to get
astride their mounts.

But all that of course consumed time, and when they were ready to start
it was too late. Listen as they might, the keenest of ears proved
unable to catch the least sound. Even the faint night breeze was
against them, for it came out of the wrong quarter.

It was an angry bunch of punchers that gathered around where Frank once
more assumed the task of digging. He had seen how recklessly Lanky
worked, and considered it the part of wisdom to exercise a little more
caution, not knowing whether there might be dynamite or some other
explosive that lay buried there, and this action of the stranger only a
trap to lure them on to their own sorrow.

It proved a wise move on Frank's part, as succeeding events turned out.
Those hovering close around him, watching with more or less curiosity,
heard a queer clicking sound. Evidently the carefully handled spade had
come in contact with some object.

"Another iron box, I bet my dandy new quirt!" ejaculated Zander Forbes,
showing signs of unusual excitement. Probably he or the rest of the
bunch had never before been at the digging up of a treasure-trove until
that night when Josh Kinney's secret receptacle was unearthed deep down
in the cellar under the ranch pantry.

"Pull off another one, Zander, old hoss!" snorted Hoptoad Atkins.
"Reckon I know the sound of metal hittin' glass."

"Shoot, Frank, and let's see who's got the correct answer!" Buster
urged.

Frank Allen was not to be hurried an atom.

He leaned toward Hoptoad's guess, for the peculiar clink that followed
his gently striking some object made him think of a glass bottle.
The times were such that bootleggers drifted all over the prairie,
disposing of their illegal wares to customers on different ranches.

Could it be possible that there was a regular cache of bottled goods
hidden here so close to the ranch house? He had heard that Lanky's
Uncle George had had more or less trouble with some of his former
employees along these very lines; for they seemed able to get the stuff
and go on protracted sprees in spite of all his precautions.

So when he reached over and lifted a bottle out of the hole it was
with a feeling akin to bitter disappointment. Would this explain the
persistent attempts of the queer little man to carry out some plan?

Low laughter and then grunts came from the group of punchers.

"Nothin' but a leetle moonshine, looks to me," old Jerry remarked, as
he rubbed his pointed chin with finger and thumb.

"No brand on the pesky bottle, you-uns notice," ventured Lige, the
foreman, trying to make the best of a bad bargain.

"Mighty queer that little runt taking such big chances just to get hold
of a bottle of hot stuff," Zander Forbes from Yale remarked shrewdly.

"Jerry, they tell me you used to be a good judge of such things,"
observed Sally Keating. "Take a sniff, and see if you can name the
brand."

"Hold on boys, you're all away off your trolley," Frank told them.
"This bottle has been buried here for a good many years, I'd say; as
long, it might be, as that old chest was in the cellar!"

"Bully boy!" snapped Lanky enthusiastically. "Hit her again, Frank! Put
the pins up on the other alley and make a spare or a strike. Now go on
and tell us _how_ you know?"

"Here, fetch that lantern over, Charlie Gin Sing," Frank called out to
the cook who had just appeared on the scene, understanding that all
firing had stopped and that it was safe for him to venture abroad.

"Say, it does look mighty like the old bottle's been under the soil
for ages, boys," agreed Zander, after a close scrutiny of the object.
"Shake it, Frank, and see if you hear something gurgle."

"Nixey! Never a solitary gurgle!" gloated Lanky. "There's something
else than liquid lightning inside that black bottle. Frank, knock the
head off, or I'll explode, I'm that stuffed with curiosity."

Bang! went the bottle against the edge of the spade. As the glass flew
in a shower a curled paper yellowed with age, fell to the ground. On
this Frank pounced and straightened it out. Everybody crowded around,
eager to see, and among them old Jerry Brime pushed his beak forward,
to immediately cry out something that sent a thrill through the three
boys.




CHAPTER VIII

STARTING FOR GOLD FORK


"By hokey!" Jerry ejaculated, mightily interested in the age-stained
paper. "Sure I've seen thet thar figgerin', 'fore now! Yep! It seems
like I kin' 'member ole Josh Kinney bottlin' the paper up wid a big
grin an' askin' how it looked fur a drawin' prize. I done tole him it
seemed to me a hen went an' crawled acrost the paper wid muddy feet!"

It certainly did look a bit that way, as Frank and Lanky were forced to
admit. They studied their find for a few minutes; then Lanky rubbed his
nose and went on to remark sarcastically:

"And, say, that same hen must have been some loco, to make such a bunch
of crooked tracks."

"Well, it must be some sort of chart, or map," suggested Paul.

"I take it that's right," Frank observed, nodding his head. "Perhaps
you might call it a supplementary one to the first we found."

"Now you're shouting, Frank!" snapped Lanky eagerly. "We know that
other was mostly about the route to the place where Kinney pulled
out his nuggets. All right! Then this tells in some Greek way that he
undersold, but is a mystery to us, how to walk up and help yourself at
the feed-trough, after you get inside the cave."

"About ah I can make out of it," said Mr. Wallace, "is that there seems
to be a five-fingered cave, and the stuff is located in the central
zone."

"Well, that's something of a clue, anyhow," Lanky decided. "Besides
when we get to studying these queer marks closer maybe we'll run across
some sort of key that'll make it all plain as print."

Frank noticed that Minnie was leaning out of the window of the small
room she occupied, clad in a pretty and becoming kimono. She seemed to
be drinking in every word that was being uttered.

"Chances are," Frank told himself shrewdly, "Minnie will beg like
everything to go along with us. But of course that would be out of the
question! There'll be all kinds of danger afoot. Besides, I don't think
it's the trip for a girl to take, good pal as Min is."

Since the enemy had been chased off, and, besides, what he sought to
secure possession of was already safe in their keeping, Mr. Wallace
decided it was useless to cheat themselves any longer of their sleep.

As the boys had been chiefly instrumental in getting hold of this
second chart, buried in such a peculiar fashion by the old pioneer,
just as had been the case with the other, he asked Frank to keep it
safely.

"We'll have plenty of time to pore over them both between now and our
start, as well as while on the trails," he told them, before going back
to his sleeping room.

"How soon can we get a move on, Dad?" asked Lanky eagerly. "Gee whiz!
I'm all cluttered up with thinking about that trip and what strange
things we'll be apt to see in the mountain regions."

"Not many days more, son," was all the reply his father gave, and with
this Lanky had to rest content; though as time passed he would likely
grumble more or less and show signs of ever growing restlessness.

There was no further alarm that night, nor on the succeeding nights. It
seemed as though the activity of the Rockspur crowd had entirely broken
up any plans the conspirators may have formed, and a change of base
became necessary on their part.

"Huh! bet you a cookey they've set out for Gold Fork ahead of us,
and we'll find the whole shooting-match camped on the ground when
we get there," Lanky said to Frank on the third day after the night
disturbance.

"What's the odds if they are?" his chum demanded, unmoved by all this
display of feverish anxiety on Lanky's part. "They are no more apt to
find the location of Kinney's claim than those hundreds of miners were
in the old days, when Gold Fork was a bustling camp and men digging
like wild-fire in the hope of striking a bonanza deposit of nuggets."

"Reckon that's so, Frank," Lanky acknowledged, won over by the coolness
and good judgment of his chum. "If we're going to have trouble getting
our paws on that cache of nuggets with both maps to set us on the right
track, why, those four-flushers haven't even a look-in."

"Well, I've got a little news for you, Lanky, that ought to fetch a
grin to your face. Your father told me not ten minutes ago that it's
all settled."

"Meaning when we start for Gold Forge? Is that the racket, Frank?"

"To-morrow will be Sunday. We say good-by to Rockspur for a little
while on next Tuesday morning!"

Lanky's face lighted up with joy. He threw his hat into the air and
gave a whoop that would have shamed almost any reckless, care-free
puncher.

"That's bully news, Frank Allen!" he burst out. "When dad saps a thing
he sticks to it like a leech. My stuff is all packed, and I've even
knocked off nearly half I laid out in the start to pack along. Dad
told me we'd have to go light, as only one pack horse would be taken."

Great excitement followed, particularly among the younger element at
Rockspur Ranch. Minnie hovered around and listened to everything the
boys said. She examined the two crude maps several times, as though
they held a strong fascination for her.

Frank often shook his head as he noted these things.

"She certainly does want to be one of the bunch, all right!" he told
himself. "I'm dead sure Mr. Wallace will never consent, although his
wife would let Minnie do anything she liked, she's so easy going, and
thinks such a courageous girl could always take care of herself. But
while I'm sorry to see her disappointed, I don't think she ought to go
on what may turn out to be a fighting trip."

Of course the party would ride, and the ponies of the three boys were
carefully groomed, also allowed to rest as much as possible, so they
might be in the best of condition when the time arrived for the start.

It was not to be a large party, just old Jerry Brime, Zander Forbes,
and Mr. Wallace, besides the trio of boys, with a pack animal to carry
such stores and necessities as they must take along in order to insure
a fair degree of comfort.

They had secured all the information possible from Jerry, as well as
any of the other punchers who had by chance set eyes on the deserted
mining camp in the mountains or knew something about the route hither.

To the best of their understanding, the boys figured they would have to
ride something like forty miles toward the southwest, then change to
face the setting sun. After going, possibly, for several days, in the
end they would reach the foothills along the base of the mighty Rocky
Mountains.

It gave them many a thrill, just the picturing in their minds of the
new and wonderful sights that in all probability awaited them, while
making their way to their intended destination.

"Wonder if well see any antelopes or mebbe a stray buffalo," Lanky
said to Paul, as they discussed things on Monday morning--the probable
state of the weather for the great day, now close at hand, how they
would stand the long gallop in the hot sun, whether those persistent
enemies who had pestered them so long would be lying in wait with other
evil designs in view, and kindred topics, of which there seemed to be
legions cropping up.

"Somehow," Paul returned, with a note of yearning in his voice, "I've
been telling myself that I might have the ambition of my life granted
before we left the Rockies."

"Now what could that be, I wonder?" quizzed Lanky.

"Set eyes on a real Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep," explained the other,
with a little laugh. "Sounds queer, I know, Lanky, but I've never
forgotten one I saw in a zoo, and it's haunted me ever since--those big
curving horns on which they say it often alights when bounding from a
cliff to a plateau thirty feet lower down. I've even dreamed of seeing
that marvellous stunt."

Lanky rubbed the tip of his nose reflectively.

"I never thought of seeing a genuine bighorn in its native haunts,
Paul. But if only I could have the glory of knocking a rousing big chap
off his perch and getting a pair of horns to take back to Columbia as a
trophy! Shucks I wouldn't mind going to some trouble over _such_ a job!"

That was the difference between Lanky and Paul. Paul seemed satisfied
just to see and admire objects in Nature's vast domain; but Lanky,
having the hunter instinct developed in his nature, thought only of
possession--the monster bass swimming in the shallow water of the lake
did not interest him one-tenth as much as when it was leaping at the
end of his line and giving him a succession of thrills in a frantic
endeavor to escape.

Tuesday morning dawned with a dear sky. It promised to be a hot day,
as all the weather sharps could easily predict; but then such a minor
detail did not bother any of the members of the expedition a particle.

The boys were keyed up to a high tension, and ready--as Lanky put it,
"to buck up against any old thing that might come along, from cyclones
and waterspouts to attacks from hostile men who might take them for
government agents spying on boot-legger operations."

Every soul on the ranch from Charlie Gin Sing to Mrs. Wallace was on
the spot to wish them a safe and prosperous journey. Minnie hovered
around and smiled in a way that puzzled Frank.

"Now I wonder what kind of a bee that girl has got working in her
brain?" Frank said to himself more than once. Somehow, it made him a
bit uneasy. "I hope she hasn't the feast idea of trying to follow us!
That would be the maddest of pranks."

The good-byes were said, and the little cavalcade rode bravely off,
those in the saddle turning to send back last words to those left
behind, and particularly Minnie and Mrs. Wallace.

The cowboys who were to stay at home and perform the regular routine of
ranch duties accompanied the party for several miles; then at a sign
from Lige Smith they gave a parting yell and turned back.

At last the treasure seekers were off in good shape, with all sorts
of possible adventures lying ahead in the unknown lands they must
traverse. Frank, however, could not keep Minnie's queer manner from
filling his thoughts as he rode on his way.




CHAPTER IX

LANKY'S SCHEME WOBBLES


Knowing the magnitude of the journey they had before them, the
adventurers did not intend to make any attempt at speed. They must
preserve the strength of their mounts for the hard part of the trip
after arriving in the rough region of the mountainous country.

They had a cold snack and rested their mounts at noon. The forty miles
in a southwesterly direction was passed over before a halt was again
made for supper. Jerry and Zander Forbes were in charge, the one as
"big boss," the other in the guise of a guide; though most of Jerry's
work was apt to come after they reached their goal and found themselves
at the old mining camp.

When they put saddles on the ponies, and started off, they faced due
west and a setting sun.

"Only for that heat haze over there," raid Zander to the boys close at
his side, "you might glimpse the tops of the mountains if you happened
to have sharp eyes and knew just where to look. Most green-horns would
be apt to reckon it was only the dim outline of a low-hanging line of
white clouds."

Lanky strained his eyes to stare in that direction. Sometimes he felt
pretty certain he could just discern a faint line above the level
horizon, which he fondly told himself must really be the outline of the
lofty Rockies, the object of their long ride.

When the day was done the sun had finally disappeared and the glorious
bed of crimson and gold that awakened lively feelings of admiration in
the souls of the boys had turned to dark blue, it was decided to camp
for the night on the prairie.

This was now nothing new to Frank and his chums, since they had been
out overnight several times with some of the punchers, riding range
after straying stock.

"I'm glad of one thing, though," Lanky told Paul, as a fire was kindled
of such stuff as they had managed to pick up on the way.

"Shoot!" exclaimed the other, when Lanky held back, as was his habit
when he wanted, to enliven the curiosity of those in his company.

"We didn't run across the rough-house gang of punchers that hold out
over at the Double Z Ranch, nor yet any of the sheep-herders from
over near Skidmore Station. We're trying to mind our own business and
looking for trouble with no outfit, though of course we don't mean to
be stood on."

The night passed in comparative peace, though a pack of coyotes
persisted in keeping up an all-night chorus of yelps and long-drawn
howls that sounded more wolf than otherwise.

With the morning they were early in the saddle. It was so hot that Mr.
Wallace had decided to lay off for several hours toward the middle of
the day, making up for lost time by the early start, also a ride after
nightfall, when the cooler airs would creep down from the mountains
ahead.

They could plainly see these mighty elevations now at any time they
chose to cast their eyes up and down the horizon toward the west.

"But the atmosphere out here on the level plains is mighty deceptive,
you must remember, boys," Zander Forbes had warned them. "A horseman
can keep riding for ten hours steadily in a straight line, and at the
end of that time seem to be hardly any closer to the mountains than
when he started."

"But we understood there'd be only two days of hard riding after we
headed into the west!" remonstrated Lanky.

"Well, by late afternoon to-morrow we ought to be inside of fifteen or
twenty miles of the foothills. But like as not we'll have to make a
third camp on the prairie."

This turned out to be the case; and when the towering Rockies seemed to
be so close, the boys wondered why Mr. Wallace decided to defer the
remainder of their ride until the next morning.

"Fresh mounts in good condition," the gentleman explained, "are worth
much more to us than the gaining of a little time."

In his younger years Mr. Wallace had been considerable of a sportsman,
taking his holidays each fall in a camping trip to the Canada bush,
where he hunted the moose in a primitive wilderness.

Of late he had not taken any such trips, and his health had suffered in
consequence, which helped to bring about this present outing.

The coyotes were as noisy as ever that night. Besides, Lanky heard
a new and more thrilling sound, with which he was making his first
acquaintance. Jerry told them it was the long-drawl howl of the big
gray timber wolf, savage creatures that traveled in packs, and when
beset by hunger seldom hesitated to attack a lone hunter.

"If yuh find yuhself beset by sech a pack o' varmints," was the sage
advice of the veteran range rider and hunter, "don't keer a picayune
'bout showin' the white feather. If so be thar's a tree handy, shin up
it like a streak. Then take yuh pick o' the pesky wolves an' knock 'em
over in a row."

"I tried fighting a pack once," observed Zander, with a grimace. "Got
the marks of them fangs on my legs and arms to this day. I'd have gone
under to boot, only a storm broke and a terrific peal of thunder and
a blinking flash of lightning as a tree was struck close by scared the
graycoats off and gave me a chance to climb a tree."

With the coming of morning the journey was resumed, and the rising sun
saw them almost half-way to the base of the foothills that served as an
advance guard to the mountains themselves.

It was just nine by Frank's wrist watch when they arrived. Jerry showed
them a trail that led over the range of hills to a canyon zigzagging up
the great divide, it having once been the bed of a mighty torrent.

By noon they were fairly over the ridge. Beyond lay a small valley,
and Jerry was able to locate and point out the canyon he expected to
utilize in climbing to the plateau where Gold Fork lay. The place,
they understood, was now the picture of desolation, with tumble-down
shanties and stores marking it as a long since abandoned mining camp,
where an alluring boomlet bubble had burst, to disappoint and ruin
hundreds.

The ponies were somewhat winded after that stiff climb, so when the
ride was continued they took their time in making the descent.

"Shucks! two to one we've got to lay over in this washbowl of a
valley," grumbled Lanky, "and won't get to the old camp till to-morrow
night."

Frank, being more disposed to take things as they came and not show
undue eagerness, only laughed at his disappointed chum.

"Plenty of time, your dad told you, Lanky," he remarked.

"Yes, he's always telling me that Rome wasn't built in a day. But I
certainly hate to waste the hours. What makes you look up at the sky so
often, Frank? Expecting to have a storm break loose on our heads, are
you?"

"Nothing in sight to say so," replied the other. "I was watching the
wheeling movements of those big birds a mile or so high. Jerry tells me
they are vultures, the largest carrion birds we have in this country,
known as California vultures."

"Wow, so _that's_ what they are! I saw them some time ago, but took it
for granted they must be only turkey buzzards skimming around on the
lookout for some eats. Vultures! Are they related to the monster South
American condor?"

"First cousins, Zander Forbes told me, and nearly as big, though not
so powerful. Why, those condors can carry off a good-sized lamb, I've
read. The buzzard of the East and South belongs to the same family, as
does the fish-crow of Florida, though of course they're a lot smaller."

"Vultures! Well, I never expected to set eyes on such birds on this
trip. When Zander was telling that story the other night about an
adventure he had when trying to secure an egg for a big museum and
near losing his eyes from pecks of the mother, he said this California
specimen was hardly ever seen except west of the Rockies; and just now
we're on the east side of the big divide."

"I don't know anything about that, but he seemed a bit surprised to see
them around here. I reckon they go where the feeding is best, even if
it takes them across the snow-capped summits of the Rockies."

Lanky kept looking up frequently after that, as though some freakish
scheme had been hatched in that fertile brain of his which he meant to
try out, if only an opportunity offered.

At least, his guess concerning their camping in that valley turned out
quite true, for when they were half-way across the basin Zander gave
the order to pull up.

They were going to enjoy a hunter's feast that night, for the first
time on the trip. Zander had managed to creep up on a feeding antelope,
by keeping to leeward of the timid animal, and with a remarkably long
and clever shot dropped his quarry.

So they expected to eat fresh venison to their hearts' content, and the
three boys anticipated a delightful meal.

"Say, Frank, they're scooping down closer right now," Lanky observed,
as he caught hold of his chum. "I wonder if they smell our fresh meat
and hope to get the leavings of our supper."

Frank, however, shook his head skeptically.

"More than likely they've sighted some sort of carrion lying in the
valley here, and are making for that. You can see that they keep
wheeling in big circles over a spot lying to the north of us, and not
more than a couple of hundred yards away from here."

"I'm glad it's to the north," said Paul; "for if there's a dead animal
over yonder, so long as the breeze keeps in the southwest we're not
going to hold our breath half the night. See! One of the big birds has
dropped down to the ground. What monster wings they have; and they keep
flapping them up and down as if ready for a scrap as they hop around
sideways."

"Zander told me these vultures are about four feet in length from beak
to the end of their tails, but that they have a wing spread of over ten
feet!"

"Some birds, I'd say," replied Paul. Lanky was only grinning as he
eagerly watched the other scavengers of the air drop down and commence
to copy the gyrations of the first pilgrim.

"Gee! I'd sure like to try it out," Frank heard him mutter. But what
Lanky meant he did not bother to explain, and Frank in the rush of
other things forgot to ask him.

"I wonder now," mused Frank, as he watched the big birds hopping about
with their wings often used in fighting one another over the spoils,
"if he remembers how old Sindbad the Sailor caught a giant roc when a
prisoner in that valley and climbing on its back was carried to safety?
That would be just like harem-scarem Lanky, with his queer schemes for
fun."

A little later he noticed Lanky talking with Zander Forbes, who seemed
to be more or less amused at what the boy was saying. The others were
all busily engaged at various tasks, and so Lanky was left to his own
devices.

Frank's attention was later on attracted to the vultures when he heard
a confused sound as of many great wings in motion. Looking out toward
the spot they had been feeding he saw they had jumped off the ground
and were circling in the air, but keeping within landing distance of
their supper table. And there was Lanky, as big as life, stalking
toward the spot!

Frank whistled softly in surprise, and then chuckled.

"What under the sun is that chum of mine figuring on doing?" he asked
himself. "He's got something on his arm that looks mighty like the
fresh skin Zander peeled from the antelope he shot to-day. Yes, and
that's a rope he's trailing, too. Something's up, it strikes me."

He kept an eye on Lanky, to see the other stretch himself on the earth
and draw the deerskin over him, hair-side down.

"Well, that sticks in my craw," Paul remarked disgustedly as he joined
Frank and stared toward the scene of operations. "That chump must have
a tougher stomach than I happen to own, to deliberately camp down out
there so close to where those monster birds were feeding. Ugh! what
wouldn't Lanky risk just to carry out what he'd call a joke?"

"We can soon get a wrinkle on his game by keeping an eye on the spot,"
vouchsafed Frank. "You see the vultures are already getting over their
alarm and are swinging closer to the place with every circle they make."

"You hit the nail on the head that time for keeps, Frank. He keeps
lying there as if asleep. What's he got covering him, do you happen to
know?"

"Looked to me like the fresh skin of that little deer Zander brought
down at such a long distance to-day." Frank informed Paul. "Besides, I
saw Lanky talking to Zander, who seemed tickled at something our chum
was explaining."

"Oh, well, there's got to be something doing all the time with Lanky,
and when it doesn't come along promptly, trust him to rig up a trick to
fetch out a little excitement."

"All I hope," added Frank uneasily, "is that he doesn't find he's
bitten off more than he can chew this time."

"You don't like the looks of those vultures, then, I take it?" queried
Paul.

"No. They're powerful and ugly-tempered birds, Paul. There, the
boldest in the bunch has dropped down, and is heading up to his feed
trough again, with those queer jumps and his wings flopping, as if in
challenge to the gang to beat him to it."

"Yes, and the rest have forgotten their alarm, for they're dropping
down in hot haste. I reckon they're afraid that chap will gobble the
whole meal before they can carry off a snack. Now one curious bird is
making for that fresh deer-hide, thinking it's manna that dropped down
from the clouds. What fool game has Lanky got up his sleeve?"

"No telling," was the brief reply.

A couple of minutes passed. Then suddenly the entire assemblage of
giant birds once more jumped off the ground, just as the boys had often
seen buzzards do, to start their circling again on wide-spread pinions.

"Look! Oh, look, Frank," cried the excited Paul. "Lanky's slipped a
noose around the leg of that biggest one, for it's only gone up a
short way and is beating its wings like a crazy thing! There's Lanky
now, trailing along the ground. But, Frank, why's he going feet first?"

"He's made a fool play, and got the rope twisted around one of his
legs!" exclaimed the astounded as well as alarmed Frank. "He's being
dragged along by the vulture! Paul, he may be killed!"




CHAPTER X

THE LOCOED BUFFALO


The loud talking of the two boys and the flight of the flock of
scavengers--of all but that lone captive--soon attracted the attention
of the other members of the party.

Mr. Wallace gaped in wonder and annoyance at seeing his son being
dragged along, frantically clutching at every object in sight, in the
hope of anchoring, and thus staying, his progress. Jerry Brime stared,
hardly believing his eyes at witnessing such a curious happening. But
Zander Forbes, who had been made Lanky's confidant in the matter,
stopped laughing and jumped toward the spot where his rifle lay, the
gravity of the situation coming to him like a sudden blow.

Lanky had fortunately succeeded in laying hold of what looked like a
sturdy tuft of wiry buffalo grass, and to this he was clinging with
might and main. At the same time with his other hand he was stretching
down, trying to release his leg from the binding coil of rope.

As long as the strong wings of the frightened and now angry vulture
continued to beat the air so wildly, this was rendered utterly out of
the question; for the rope was kept taut, and all Lanky's desperate
efforts to unfasten it failed.

"The bird's got tired of trying to yank him up into the air, Frank!"
called out Paul. "See, he's dropped back to the ground again, and, as
sure as you live, he's hopping straight at Lanky as if he meant to give
him a licking for his meanness! Wow! I'm glad it isn't me out there."

"Lanky doesn't seem able to get clear of that loop of the rope!"
snapped Frank, "and unless something happens to prevent it he's going
to be in danger of having that terrible bird pecking at his eyes!"

"What can we do, Frank, to stop that?" gasped the aroused and now
alarmed Paul.

"Let's run, and shout to try and scare the bird off!" suggested the
other loyal chum of the reckless Lanky.

"Wait! There's Zander with his gun, Frank. I guess he's got the number
of that bird's mess, all right."

Paul had hardly spoken when there came the sharp report of a rifle.
Frank, to his great joy, saw the angry vulture fall over and kick
as though its finish had indeed come with the pressure of Zander's
fore-finger on the trigger.

"Bully! Bully!" shouted the relieved Paul. "He cooked that old
fighter's goose for him all right! Now Lanky's managed to get his leg
free, and is coming back to camp, carrying the rope and the antelope
hide. His little game worked all to the good, but took a turn he didn't
count on. See him limp, will you? That left leg feels sore, I bet you!"

"I reckon it serves him about right, as his dad will tell him,"
observed Frank. "Of all the fool tricks I've ever known that boy to try
out, this wanting to lasso a live vulture takes the cake! Most people
wouldn't want to touch the horrible things with a ten-foot pole."

Lanky looked foolish as he reached the place where Jerry had a little
cooking fire burning, although he grinned, and tried to pass the whole
thing off as a mere incident.

His father said nothing to him just then. But Frank and Paul knew that
in the end Mr. Wallace would have a confidential talk with his son, in
which Lanky would "eat humble pie," admitting that his had been a silly
scheme that gave him only what he deserved.

Jerry managed to broil enough of the antelope meat for all, even though
the three boys did come back repeatedly for further portions, things
tasted so good to them.

Mr. Wallace understood, for he had eaten in the open many times
himself.

"Food always does taste different when the surroundings are Nature's,"
he said, as they still sat around and "stoked up," as Lanky termed it.

"It does to me, for one," admitted Frank. "Chances are that if we had
this spread at home, with a white tablecloth and china to serve it on,
none of us would care a great deal for this venison. It might seem
tough and dry unless cooked with bacon slices between. But out here,
with appetites like woodchoppers in the cold North, it's a whole lot
different."

Lanky was unusually quiet that evening, Frank noticed. Undoubtedly he
realized that sometimes what are meant to be pranks turn out to border
perilously close to tragedies.

When morning came the boys noticed that no haste was made to get
started, and presently the reason for this was made known.

"Would you believe it," said Frank, coming over to where the other two
boys were sitting after breakfast was over, "that miserable pack pony
has wandered off during the night. It's going to bother us a heap, I
reckon."

"Do you mean we'll be held up here in this little valley while a hunt
is made for the pony?" demanded Lanky, looking anything but pleased
over the possibility of further delay.

"All of us are to start out and search," admitted Frank. "Your father's
given us the job of combing the valley to the north, while the others
head south. We are to get back to camp by noon, and if the beast hasn't
been found by that time we'll have to divide the stores among the
bunch, for your dad says he can't be delayed any longer."

"I know what he's thinking about," said Lanky. "He's expecting a mighty
important letter from New York that means a whole lot to him in the way
of money. It may not arrive before we get back to Rockspur; but if it
does I heard him telling Lige to send along one of the other boys to
find us at Gold Fork."

According to the plan resolved on, the three boys left camp, going to
the north in search of the pack pony, just as Zander and Jerry started
toward the south.

"It'll be a nice little gallop for us, anyway," said Frank, who always
looked at the bright side of things.

Paul, however, shrugged his shoulders and he called out:

"I'm not quite so keen about a side gallop as you fellows. Fact is, I'm
getting pretty well filled up on pony riding. Three days straight is
going some for a greenhorn like me. But I'm game to stick it out to a
finish. Only I do hope we run across that Wandering Willie of a pony
inside of an hour or two, so as to strike back to camp again."

For some time the boys rode along, keeping a lookout on every side.
It kept growing warmer all the while, for the mountains shut off any
breeze from the west, while a ridge called foothills did the same in
the opposite quarter.

An hour passed, and not a single glimpse did the boys get of the
missing pack pony.

"Looks as if he had gone south instead of this way," commented Frank.
"Though it's possible the beast had intelligence enough to head over
the rise and start back home."

"Homesick, you mean, Frank?" laughed Paul.

"Some horses are affected that way, I'm told."

Lanky was unusually quiet all this while. Frank wondered whether the
ludicrous adventure with the lassoed vulture had given him a lesson in
prudence he would not soon forget.

He looked toward the towering peaks to the immediate west, as though
aggrieved because things had happened in such a fashion as to prevent
their ascent of those rugged slopes by way of the friendly canyon.

That was what Frank was thinking, but after all it appeared that he did
Lanky an injustice, for presently the other broke his silence to say:

"Once or twice last evening, just before dark set in, boys, I had a
sort of hunch I could faintly glimpse smoke rising up on the side of
the mountains."

"But you didn't mention a word about it to us, Lanky!" Frank put it to
him reproachfully.

"I didn't, for a fact," admitted the lad. "To tell the truth, I was
feeling kind of punk over the fool game I set out to pull off, and so I
just concluded to keep mum and not jump out of the frying pan into the
fire. But the more I think about it, the stronger is my belief that it
was an occasional wreath of blue smoke I glimpsed."

"That would mean a campfire," said Frank. "And of course you feel dead
certain you could say who'd be sitting near that same blaze, having
supper?"

"Just what I could!" Lanky chuckled. "For one, Nash Yesson. Then, close
by, you'd see a slinking sort of chap known in Columbia as a bully, and
chock full of meanness. Lef Seller, who robbed his own father. Yes, and
just as like as not you'd set eyes on a queer little runt with a head
three sizes too big for his body, name unknown to us, but particularly
fond of trying to find hidden things on moonlight nights."

"Well, I agree with you, Lanky," admitted Frank. "If there was a fire,
those were the three chaps who'd be sitting beside it and talking about
their chances for finding Kinney's secret cave where the gold nuggets
were cached."

"Frank," said Paul just then, "did you hear what Zander was saying
about the report brought to Rockspur one day last week?"

"What was that?"

"That Buffalo Smith's herd of bison had broken from their range and
gone back to the free life of their kind. They skedaddled in a night."

"Yes, I heard about that," came the reply. "And Zander told me as his
own private opinion that Captain Smith would have trouble rounding
up the run-aways, because they'd separated in every direction, each
seeming to want to look out for himself."

"Wasn't that a queer way for buffaloes to act?" queried Lanky. "I
always understood they kept together in a bunch, just as our cattle do
unless they've been stampeded and badly frightened, when they go into a
panic."

"Zander, who seems to know lots about the animals, told me," commented
Frank, "that you never can tell what a buffalo will do. He says they
often seem to get wild and crazy, as if they'd been eating the loco
weed that's found sometimes on the plains. But what made you bring up
that subject, if it's a fair question, Paul?"

"Oh, just because we're pretty close to one of that same run-away herd
right now," came the cool and astonishing reply.

"What's that?" exclaimed Lanky, perking up instantly.

"Where do you see a buffalo?" asked Frank, also interested, although
believing the other must have deceived himself.

Paul pulled in his pony and pointed toward the foot of the mountain
chain.

"Right alongside that patch of trees growing in front of the big
boulder. There, he's raised his shaggy head and is staring straight at
us!"

The others took one good look, and then while Lanky whistled to mark
his surprise, also delight, Frank hastened to give his opinion.

"Good eyes you've certainly got, Paul, for I looked that way myself,
and if I noticed anything at all I must have believed that object was
only a shadow. But it's as plain as print to me now. That's a buffalo
bull--his bulk tells us that."

"Shall we ride over and take a squint at the beast?" asked Lanky.

"For one," Paul told him, "I'd like to say I'd seen a genuine wild
buffalo on his native ground, and me astride a cow pony."

"Let's go!" was Frank's terse way of saying he found himself of the
same mind as the others. No one had to ask Lanky what he wanted to do,
since he invariably proved ready for action of any kind.

Accordingly they turned to the left and cantered forward. Already did
the cow ponies scent the presence of the lumbering beast near by. This
was made evident by the way in which they snorted and took brisk,
chopping steps, indicating their extreme excitement.

"They're not used to coming so close to buffaloes," explained Frank.
"Fact is, I hardly think any one of the three has ever before glimpsed
such a sight as this."

"But their noses have caught the wild animal scent, you can see," Lanky
ventured, he being much at home in the doings of four-footed creatures.

"Why doesn't the silly thing start running off?" cried Paul. "I thought
they were always reckoned a timid bunch in spite of their bulk and
savage-looking mop of hair about their heads."

"Slow up, fellows!" called out Frank just then.

"Why, what's the matter?" demanded Paul, turning toward Frank.

Lanky kept going on, as if to say:

"Shucks! who's afraid of a lonely lost buffalo? Not me!"

"I don't quite like the way old Boss acts," continued Frank. "See him
shake his head and lower his ugly black horns. You've both seen a bull
in the pasture do that many a time, boys, when he was getting primed
for a charge."

"Yes; and I don't like the looks of it!" asserted Paul emphatically.

"Say, do you think he's got the same objection to my red handkerchief
that a tame Jersey bull shows?" and Paul threw up his hand, ready to
tear the offending fiery cowboy neck-piece loose, so he might cram it
into his pocket.

"It might be that," Frank told him. "Then again, wasn't there something
said about the herd of bison having made a meal off that terrible loco
weed that grows in places and affects cows and sends 'em off like mad
dogs?"

Even Lanky pulled up when Frank said that. His recent experience in the
realm of adventure was too fresh for him to forget the humiliation that
followed close on its heels; and prudence, as his father had counseled
him, began to urge that from now on he go a bit slow.

The ponies seemed to understand intuitively that the buffalo was not
the ordinary docile domestic beast, accustomed to the presence of man.
They snorted worse than ever, acting as though eager to whirl about and
leave that part of the valley as fast as four legs could carry them.

"Whoop! here he comes licketty-split!" yelled Lanky. "I've got a
date somewhere else, believe me! I sure haven't lost any buffalo!
Tra-la-la! Old Boss, here's giving you the grand bounce! It's not me
you want!"

He let his frantic pony turn as on a pivot, and shoot away, with Frank
a good second.

Paul, never a good rider, tried to do likewise. He had the ill-fortune
to lose his seat, and be thrown to the ground. He looked back to see
that black-horned and shaggy-headed beast charging wildly toward him!




CHAPTER XI

A CAMP IN THE CANYON


"Hold up, Lanky!"

Hearing these words shouted suddenly by Frank, Lanky Wallace turned
in his saddle. Seeing Paul's peril, he drew his unwilling pony's head
around, and commenced to gallop back again just as fast as he had taken
flight.

"Look lively, Paul!" shrilled Frank, fervently wishing he had his rifle
along, when he might trust everything to a shot, in the hope of at
least crippling the locoed buffalo bull.

"Hi! Paul!" bellowed Lanky. "The tree! Make for the tree! Only chance
to give him the grand laugh! Hey! Side-step it in a hurry! Good jump,
Paul, old boy! See him get over the ground for that tree, will you,
Frank? Talk to me about home-runs, Paul's got it all plastered over his
old mates on the Columbia High team. He's after you, Paul! Dodge those
shiny horns again! One more whirl like that, and you'll arrive! Got him
again, but he's on to your curves. Beat it!"

Paul did, and in great shape. He arrived at the lonesome tree in time
to scramble up amidst its low-hanging branches before the furious
buffalo came lumbering along, foam flecking each corner of his mouth.

"Hold up, Lanky!" cried Frank.

"What's the next thing on the program?" asked the impetuous one,
pulling in his rearing steed and holding the bridle as tight as he
could--one run-away pony was surely sufficient without having the
others take their leave.

"Chase Paul's nag and fetch him back." Frank had assumed charge of the
situation; for he was accustomed to being the captain in baseball and
football games, his companions gladly looking to him for leadership.

"You'll find a way to get Paul out of his fix, will you, Frank? All
right, here goes for a pony chase!"

With that Lanky was off on the jump. He never even bothered to ask
Frank how he meant to maneuver, in order to get Paul out of the bison's
reach.

When Frank next turned his attention to the strange scene before him he
found that Paul, having recovered his breath, was taking things in a
matter-of-fact way that rather amused his chum.

Leaning down from his safe perch he was talking to his guard. The
buffalo bull was staring up at his prisoner in the tree with those
small but wicked-looking eyes and at certain points in Paul's harangue
Frank was highly amused to see the animal scrape the ground violently
with a fore hoof, as if he did not agree with the argument at all.

"Looks as if the old scamp might be saying," chuckled Frank, "'you just
drop down here once, and I'll show you how I can polish you off slicker
than anything you ever saw. Try me, that's all.'"

"Hey! Frank!" called out the boy up in the tree, noticing for the first
time that his chum had drawn somewhat closer and was holding in his
prancing and snorting pony with a firm hand.

"All right, Paul. You sure did climb some that time!"

"Well, anybody would be apt to, with those black horns right behind
him," the other retorted in self-defense.

"They say a miss is as good as a mile, and you did have a close shave."

"But how'm I going to get out of this scrape? That's what's bothering
me!"

"Forget it, and trust to your Dutch uncle to hatch up a scheme to fool
old Woolly Head. Now listen, and I'll unfold the plan."

"Shoot!"

"Notice that Lanky's galloped after your run-away pony?"

"That's mighty fine of him," ventured Paul. "I'd begun to believe I'd
have to do considerable hiking before landing in camp again; or else
double-up with one of you fellows. Well, what's next?"

"I'm going to lure that bison of yours off by his lonesome, if I can
fix things right."

"Sounds good to me," came the reply. "But first of all, don't
denominate this _shaggy_ monster as _my_ property. I don't claim to own
a solitary share in him hair, hide, or horns. He belongs to Buffalo
Smith; though I'd like to convert him into tough steaks, if only I had
a rifle handy."

"I've managed to snatch up that offensive red handkerchief of yours,"
explained Frank, "from where you threw it when chasing for refuge.
It must have been the innocent cause of all your trouble and as
tit-for-tat I mean to make it help you out of this pickle."

"Oh! now I get you! You expect to coax the old lummix to chase after
you for a mile or so, and so give me a chance to climb down?"

"That's the little game, partner. When you see me wave my hat get a
move on, and drop."

"But if he sees me on the ground he's dead sure to come back with a
rush, and I'd have to take to the mountains to keep clear of those
shiny short horns!"

"Oh, I expect to keep him employed till I see that Lanky's shown up,
leading your pony. Get that, Paul?"

"A regular old booster of a scheme, Frank, if only everything works in
a groove. Get busy then, and flag him. I'll lie low, so he'll forget
all about poor little Paul up a tree!"

Frank delayed no longer, but started waving the red neckerchief
violently in the most insolent fashion he could devise. At the same
time he called out tantalizingly at the buffalo, daring him to come out
and have a nice little run for his money.

More pawing at the ground followed, accompanied with low, hollow sounds
that stood for bellows. Evidently the bull was thus engaged in working
himself up to a certain pitch of rage, when he would be unable to
resist the lure of that flaunting and much hated red flag.

"Whoop! he's off. Frank, get going before he takes a whack at you!"
shouted Paul, as the animal suddenly tore away with lowered head, eager
to give battle to the reckless enemy who thus dared him.

If Frank had possessed three hands to pull at the reins he could not
have held in that frantic cow pony when the little beast saw that
lumbering bull charging.

Whirling around, he went off like a shot, only desirous of placing
plenty of ground between himself and the mad creature. Accustomed to
cattle as he must be, nevertheless there was something terrifying about
the bunchy-headed buffalo that sent the pony into equine spasms.

Frank managed to pull him in a bit, so as not to outdistance the
charging bull, lest he go back to his prisoner again. He also continued
to flaunt that offensive red flag and send jeering whoops over his
shoulder that kept his pursuer spurred up to fever heat.

A full mile was covered in a short time. Then a distant shout was
borne to Frank's ears. On investigating he discovered that Lanky had
succeeded in capturing the run-away mount and was already close to the
tree, from which Paul could be seen descending in eager haste.

"Now then, get a move on you, Chestnut!" Frank called out to his pony,
at the same time kicking his heels into the animal's sides.

Gradually he began to gain on the bull, which after another mile lost
heart, and dropped out of the race. Frank, seeing his two chums coming
in a round-about way, waited for them to join him. Paul was grinning
amiably, as if he had rather enjoyed having been in the spotlight.
Things looked different to him, now that it was all over but the
shouting.

They again took up the search for the pony that was so badly needed to
carry the pack, and were fortunate enough to glimpse the animal feeding
on some luxuriant grass that had tempted him to forget his love of
freedom.

Having captured the run-away, the boys once more turned their faces
toward the south, and in due time reached camp. The others did not
return for another hour or more, and were of course pleased to learn of
the recovery of the pack animal.

It was now noon, so they had a bit of cold lunch, and after that a
start was made.

Jerry was in the lead, it being their intention to make for the canyon.
If this was followed up the face of the mountain range it would in due
time take them to the plateau where Gold Fork lay in its desolation.

The boys now had a chance to see a real Rocky Mountain canyon, where
ages ago a torrent used to come tearing down from the snow-capped peaks
above, gradually to wear away the earth lying between solid walls of
rock, until they loomed up a hundred feet or more on either hand.

It was now a dry defile, the lads noticed, although they fancied that
once in a great while, during some cloudburst, there might be a deluge
of water come roaring and tossing down the canyon, carrying everything
before it.

They found it hard work picking their way upward; but Jerry knew pretty
well how to avoid the worst of the difficulties.

"This means we're going to pitch camp in this channel of an old-time
torrent," remarked Frank, as the long afternoon wore away and their
hard-worked ponies gave signs of being very tired.

"It'll be a new experience," observed Lanky, looking around at the
lofty walls that rose on either side. "Gee whiz! but I'd hate to be
caught in this hole if a storm broke and the rain came down as it does
sometimes out here in the Rockies. We'd soon be swimming I reckon."

Paul Bird looked uneasy, but made no remark, for he rather suspected
that Lanky was saying what he did in anticipation of "getting a rise"
from him. As long as Paul had known Lanky, he had never learned to tell
with certainty when the tall fellow was joking and when he was serious.

As evening approached Jerry called a halt. He must have had reasons
for choosing that particular spot to pitch camp, Frank decided, after
noticing how the veteran puncher and prospector looked around him from
time to time, as if renewing old-time recollections of the place.

A fire was made, there being an abundance of dead wood at hand, coming
from the stunted trees that grew out of clefts in the surrounding
walls.

"What makes it seem so hot here?" asked Paul, wiping his reeking
forehead with the same red neckerchief that had excited the buffalo
bull.

"Oh, it's nearly always hot around these mountains," replied the artful
Lanky. "Folks say it's because some of them used to be volcanoes ages
and ages ago, and the fires must still be burning deep down."

But Paul scoffed at the fantastic idea, knowing full well Lanky was
only "drawing the long bow" for his especial benefit.

"If you look," remarked Frank quietly, "you'll notice that it's clouded
up; and with all this high temperature I wouldn't be surprised if we
had some rain before morning."

"Let's hope, then," added Lanky, and really meaning what he said, "that
it isn't to be one of those terrific cloudbursts Zander was telling us
about at supper. I like swimming, all right! But excuse me from being
swept on a boiling torrent down an old canyon half a mile long, to be
kicked out on the prairie like a knocked-about bag of meal."

"Well, Jerry knew what he was about when he picked out this particular
point for our camp," Frank went on to say confidently.

"We'll pin our faith on Jerry, then," said Paul, trying to appear
quite unconcerned, though his heart did beat faster than its wont as
he surveyed the myriad of sharp-pointed rocks and enormous boulders
marking the course of the crooked defile.

Another thing the watchful Frank noticed later on told him Jerry Brime
did not mean to be caught entirely unprepared, should any sort of
impending disaster break over their heads.

He himself took the trouble to do up their pack of stores after supper
was over, a most unusual thing, and arrange so that at a moment's
notice it could be secured on the back of the pony.

The animals, too, were kept saddled and bridled, as though in readiness
for sudden flight. Frank wondered what sort of time they could make
going down that dreadful gap in the face of the mountains in the dead
of night, and with a million obstacles lying in wait to bring about
trouble.

They needed no blaze that night to keep the chill away; it seemed
strangely suffocating, a fact that might account for the unusual
wakefulness on the part of the three boys.

"Don't know what ails me," grumbled Lanky who was stretched out in his
beloved checkered blanket close to Frank. "I keep turning from one side
to the other, and just can't get asleep, tired as I am. Guess mom would
say I'd got the 'fidgets,' while dad'd likely tell me I was too greedy
with that campfire-cooked venison. Shucks! something's going to happen,
I reckon."

"It sure will, if you don't quit that mumbling," chuckled Frank, "for I
can see Zander popping his head up and looking this way, as if he had
half a mind to make you go off and herd by yourself."

"You said it, Frank," came from Paul, on the other side of Lanky. "I'm
no knocker, but he keeps digging his elbows into my ribs every time he
turns over. Please quit it, Lanky, and settle down."

Somehow or other, the uneasy one did manage to control his
restlessness, and he soon lay sprawled out on his back and breathing
hard, which was a pretty good indication that he had passed over into
dream-land.

Frank did not have the slightest idea how long he was lost to the world
after Lanky quieted down. It may have been several hours, for there
was nothing to tell him what the time was when he was aroused by a
frightful crash of thunder that seemed to make the solid rocks under
him tremble with the vibration.

Then came a dash of rain that almost instantly deluged every one, so
that clothes and blankets were soaking wet.

When a flash of lightning lit up the canyon as by bright sunlight,
Lanky was seen threshing around in the endeavor to get free from his
blanket that had crept up about his ears as he slept. At the same came
his triumphant shout:

"What did I tell you? Something's happened all right, hasn't it?"

But Jerry Brime gave them no time to dispute.

"We got to git outen this right smart, 'case that looks like a
cloudburst to me. This hyah canyon she'll be ten feet deep in a flood
afore yuh knows what's comin' down on yuh. Everybody git yuh duffle,
an' foller old Jerry!"




CHAPTER XII

A RACE WITH THE CLOUDBURST


It was a scene of the wildest commotion, as the almost continually
flashing lightning depicted. The three boys had it seared on their
minds so that they would never forget the thrill of the occasion as
long as they lived.

But for that rare forethought and preparedness on the part of Jerry
Brime, it would have been many times worse. His arrangements for sudden
flight allowed the party to make a move without wasting a single minute
of precious time.

The ponies gave them some trouble, for they seemed to sense impending
calamity, and were nearly frantic. But by now even the tenderfeet had
learned how to manage frightened mounts; and as each one had his own
cayuse to lead, once he got a firm grip on tin bridle near the bit it
was not a very difficult task.

At least the lightning, coming so incessantly, proved of immense
advantage to the party. Frank shuddered to think what dreadful
stumbling, with resulting injuries, would have been their portion
had they been compelled to make their way down the defile in utter
darkness, with those flinty and jagged-edged rocks strewing their path.

So the camp was abandoned in much less time than it had taken them to
arrange things. There was great need of haste, too, it soon proved.

"Oh! listen, Frank!" cried Paul, as he turned toward his chum, who
managed to keep close by, ready to give a helping hand should the need
arise.

"Yes, I hear it, Paul!"

"It sounds like a river broken loose!" continued the other, in an
agitated voice.

"Just what it is, I reckon--a fresh river--the flood!" Frank told him.

"Faster, everybody!" called Mr. Wallace, conscious of the magnitude of
their danger.

"Yep, move lively, 'case she's a-tearin' down the mountain like greased
lightning!" Zander Forbes called out; lapsing into cowboy lingo,
college graduate as he claimed to be.

As Jerry had to be in the van to serve as their guide, Zander had taken
it upon himself to tow the pack-pony as well as his own mount. This was
a tremendous responsibility under such conditions, and few punchers
there were who could have managed it; but then Zander seemed to be
little short of a wizard among animals.

The thunder still bellowed, while the rain fell in almost solid sheets,
so that in all there was a hurricane of sound around the fleeing party.
Still above this noise they could plainly distinguish that awful roar
of rushing waters on the rampage, than which there can be no more
terrifying sound possible.

Paul Bird had to clinch his teeth until his lips bled in order to
master the deadly fear that gripped his very soul and made him feel
sick. In imagination he was picturing the scene Lanky had drawn when he
spoke so jokingly about "swimming down on the boiling flood to be swept
out into the little valley with broken bones and life extinct."

So far as Frank could see, those grim and lofty and forbidding walls
continued to hem them in on either side--utterly unscalable, and
looking like the jaws of a trap that was destined to be their doom.
But he felt positive that Jerry knew of some avenue of escape from the
canyon, if only they were given the time required to reach the opening.
Once the flood caught up with them, all would be lost.

He had never looked upon such a spectacle in all his life, but he
understood that the first wave might be something like ten feet high,
and making the descent of the abrupt mountainside with incredible
velocity, so that it was bound to carry horses and human being off
their feet when it struck them, and as the downpour still continued
the chances were that the torrent would gain additional volume with
every rod it rushed along.

On the fugitives pressed, making better time than could have been
attained under any other conditions, for there is nothing equal to the
dread of death to spur men and beasts on to herculean efforts.

Fortunately none of the ponies had thus far stumbled. Although the
time lost by such an accident might be only the fraction of a minute,
even such a brief delay was apt to cost them dear when the race was so
close. Frank's pony seemed to lag a bit, having hit upon a section of
ground that was rougher than the rest, being strewn with more loose
rocks, and in this way the lad found himself the last member of the
sextette.

In a flight such as this, it is usually every one for himself, since
there is no time given to double-up. As Lanky would have stated it,
"Every chap must look out for himself."

Jerry was calling out now at the top of his voice, and despite all the
other booming sounds they could catch the drift of his words, meant
solely to encourage them at this crisis.

"It's right ahead of us! We're bound to git thar all hunk! Keep a-goin'
like hot cakes, fellers! I know whar I'm at, yuh kin bet yuh boots!"

He finished this rush of shouted words with his familiar old cowboy
yell, as if to defy the rush of the flood and the fury of the summer
storm.

If they attained their goal and managed to get out of reach of the
avalanche of water, it would be by the skin of their teeth. Lanky could
not have uttered a word just then, no matter how desperately he tried,
for his lips felt as dry as those of a fever-stricken mule-skinner in a
caravan, and his breath was coming in pants, as of a hound that had run
a long race in chase of a hare.

Just when he was almost on the point of despairing and under the
belief that Jerry must have miscalculated the time required to reach
his escape valve from the canyon trap, Lanky heard the veteran give a
joyous cry:

"Hyah she is, boys, and the kentry's saved!"

Never had such welcome words come to the ears of those fugitive
treasure-seekers. It inspired them to keep up their efforts a fraction
of a minute longer, though the closeness of the coming flood was enough
in itself to urge them to astonishing agility.

Jerry and his mount were turning abruptly to the left. Lanky wondered
how it came he had failed to notice this single break in the continuity
of those cruel granite walls when they were slowly ascending the face
of the mountain chain. But it was there, just the same, and a good
thing for the hard-pressed outfit.

They straggled out of the canyon bed and climbed to higher ground with
all the speed they could muster. There were not half a dozen seconds to
spare, Lanky realized, with a shiver of horror, when he heard the sweep
of the crest of the flood go rushing madly past, and even found his
legs in water up to his ankles.

How thankful they must feel, and with what lighter hearts would they
stick to their isle of safety until the flood went down again. Paul
could not contain himself, even though his wind was scant after his
recent efforts.

"Lanky, look! Oh, look! Here's Frank's pony close at my heels! But
where is Frank?"

At the words all of the party came to an abrupt halt, a feeling like
ice gripping every heart. The roar and sweep of the flood was not quite
so frightful as before, since its crest had gone by but a new terror
now seized them.

Was Frank caught in its terrifying grip?




CHAPTER XIII

WASHED AWAY


What had actually happened to Frank Allen might easily be termed
tragedy. What made it all the stranger was the fact that he owed it to
the frantic eagerness of his pony to escape the clutch of the oncoming
flood.

Having been detained a little because meeting more obstacles than the
others of the party, Frank was still in the canyon when the others
turned out of it. Fascinated by the spectacle behind him, he turned his
head in the act of climbing out to take one last fleeting look up the
cut.

What he saw by the aid of the lightning was a sight that must always
give him a queer chill, because of what followed so closely in its
train.

A mighty wave was pouring down upon him, its crest foamy and leaping as
if in glee. It was eight or ten feet high at most, but to the excited
imagination of the boy it seemed doubly that.

The mere turning of his head as he did caused him to lose a fraction
of his steadiness. At the same instant the pony made such a frantic
leap forward that Frank lost his hold on the bridle. The next thing he
knew something hit him squarely in the chest as with a sledge hammer,
knocking him backward. It must have been one of the pony's recklessly
flung hind hoofs, in the way of which Frank had tumbled.

Before the starred boy could more than struggle to his knees in the
effort to escape his fate he was picked up by that roaring flood and
borne swiftly along.

Fortunately for his own good, Frank managed to retain his wits, awkward
and perilous as his situation now was. He threw out both arms and tried
to clutch hold of such rocks as he came in contact with, usually the
projecting knobs that were connected with the near wall, and perhaps
six or more feet from the bed of the canyon.

Several times he managed to get some sort of a grip on such a welcome
anchor, only to find he was utterly unable to maintain his hold. On
each occasion the fierce current snatched him loose again, after almost
dislocating his shoulder or his elbow.

One thing these several detentions did accomplish, and that was to
retard his downward rush a little each separate time. So he was
gradually falling back a dozen feet or more from the apex of that
leading billow. Thus he presently found the water somewhat less
agitated, though still mighty in its pull.

Buffeted and tossed like a chip, Frank Allen was fast losing the best
of his strength, although his grit still held out. The never-say-die
spirit such as he had exhibited on many a hard fought football field or
a struggle for supremacy on the diamond, was fated to stand back of him
again in this tussle with the on-rushing torrent.

When for the fourth time he managed to fasten his fingers, like the
talons of that vulture Zander had shot on a projecting point of rock,
he summoned every fibre of his whole being to conquer the drag of the
current.

Inch by inch he felt he was succeeding. Past him the torrent still
rushed, but he had reason to believe it did not have him wholly in its
power as before.

So in another minute Frank was able to drag himself on to a friendly
rock. He was so nearly spent by that time that it was with extreme
difficulty he managed to keep his seat. Several times he almost toppled
off his perch, which would have undoubtedly been his end, since he was
now very weak.

By slow degrees his strength and will power came back, and a sense of
deep gratitude filled his heart because of the Hand that seemed to have
thus plucked him directly out of deadly danger.

But what should he do next?

He realized that of course the others of his party would be mystified
on account of his absence and the appearance of his pony among the rest
of the animals. There was no possible way, however, by which he could
acquaint them with his wonderful escape from a terrible fate.

His first plan was to remain where he was until hours had passed and
the flood fully subsided. Then, by dropping down into the canyon's
bed once more, he could ascend its tortuous course until he found the
fissure by means of which the party had climbed as he hoped, to safety.

Moving backward in order to make more certain that he would not slip
and thus get into fresh trouble, Frank found that a crevice opened up
in the wall of the cleft, wide enough for him to pass along.

It ascended, too, which was a plain invitation for him to continue as
long as the going proved to be possible. All the while, he realized, he
must be getting nearer the top of the lofty canyon wall, where he would
find the surface of the mountainside.

One thing he discovered that pleased him--the rain had ceased. Also the
roar of the thunder had dwindled to mere growlings in the distance.

"The storm's gone past," Frank told himself, eager to hear the sound
of his own voice once more, for it would make his strange surroundings
seem less gruesome. "At the worst, I'll only have to spend the rest of
the night by myself on the mountain."

Such a possibility did not much concern a boy who had made many a lone
camp in his days of hiking. Sometimes this had even been across an
entire state, so as to enlarge his faculties and observe the wonders
of nature, as well as rub up against such people as could be found in
country backwoods and charcoal burners' camps.

Then came still another discovery. On looking up to find just how far
above him the surface might be, what was his delight to see a bright
star peeping in between the sides of the cleft in the rocks.

When three minutes afterwards Frank crept out of his "Jacob's Ladder,"
as he meant to call the friendly fissure, he found that the clouds
had begun to roll away to leeward and many stars dotted the heavens
overhead.

At any rate, he had nothing more to fear from the storm. But it had
come close to being an expensive experience for him. As his nerves
quieted down by degrees he felt more like himself, and able to grapple
with any ordinary difficulty that might come along.

Everything was soaking wet, water even running from each outlying
rock's surface. He himself was completely saturated; but as it still
remained fairly warm Frank minded that not at all.

"Now what's to be done?" he asked himself, meaning to form his plan on
the spot and then carry it out as best he could.

Of course, it was utterly useless to dream of attempting to find his
party while darkness lasted. They might be far distant, unable to hear
his shouts in case he raised his voice.

"More than that," Frank added, as an after-thought, "it would be a
crime to tempt Lanky, or any of the others, to come down the face of
this rocky mountain, risking all sorts of dangers they would not see
in the dark. There must be many a precipice between their new camp and
here, where a slip would spell death."

That point settled, Frank decided to try to pick out some half-way
decent camp site and make the best of a bad bargain.

He had much to be grateful for, and, besides that, Frank Allen was
never the boy to grumble because things did not chance to run as
smoothly as he might have wished.

After looking as best he could around the vicinity, he settled on a
certain spot as well adapted for his purposes. For one thing, there
were several stumps of trees near by; and if only he could knock one of
these to flinders by using a big rock in lieu of an ax, he conceived
the idea that he would yet have a cheery blaze started.

Among other symptoms of eternal preparedness that were characteristic
of Frank was his always making sure to carry a waterproof metal
matchsafe, filled with "fire-sticks," in his pocket.

He had not been immersed in the water a great while, and felt
absolutely certain his precious matches would be dry and ready for use.
With this desire for comfort, as well as an opportunity for drying his
clothes, spurring him on, Frank started work on what seemed to be the
most promising of three stumps.

There was an abundance of half-dead wood lying around, wet, of course,
after such a deluge; but he fancied he would have little difficulty
in keeping a fire going, if only he found enough dry stuff to start
kindling it.

His guess in connection with the heart of that stump proved to be a
good one, for he soon had taken out sufficient dry stuff to answer
all purposes. So, striking a match, he applied it to the tinder thus
collected, and had the satisfaction of seeing a flame start up at once.

This he carefully and assiduously cherished and fed until he had
collected quite a nice mess of red embers. Then he began to put on
some of the other wood, and, as he anticipated it soon burst into a
crackling blaze.

How good it felt to the wet boy, words could hardly tell. By degrees he
managed to dry his clothes by keeping turning around like a teetotum,
from one side to another, standing the heat as long as possible.

An hour had perhaps gone--Frank could tell only by the movement of the
heavenly bodies, since water had got into his wrist watch and stopped
the wheels from turning.

He found himself turning every little while toward the east, in the
hope of seeing signs of dawn, even though good common sense told him
that must still be an hour and more away.

Just as he began to feel what he called "dopey," sitting there by the
warm fire, his head nodding, Frank caught a sound that disturbed his
growing confidence that the worst was past. It was a series of queer,
blood-curdling yelps that he guessed came from a pack of those fierce,
mountain gray wolves Jerry had told him about. From the tenor of their
eager howls, the boy knew they must be hunting for something toothsome
with which to sate their ferocious appetites!




CHAPTER XIV

THE TIMBER-WOLF PACK


"That sounds bad to me," Frank told himself, as he listened to the
long-drawn howls of the carniverous wolves, echoing so drearily along
the side of the mountain. "Seems like this is my night for shaking
hands with Old Man Trouble right along. Whew, there must be as many as
half a dozen hungry creatures in that pack!"

He fed more sticks to his snapping blaze, and a minute or two later had
made up his mind.

"Doesn't seem to be a decent-sized tree left around these diggings. I
reckon an avalanche must have carried them all down to the foot of the
mountain, and these saplings are second-growth timber. That means I'm
not going to follow Paul's example, and roost in a tree."

Frank, of course, was well acquainted with the fact that nearly all
wild animals to be found in western wilds are afraid of fire. That
would mean he must have sufficient fuel close at hand to keep his blaze
going for several hours; really until the coming of dawn should send
the ravenous beasts skulking off to their dens, they being creatures of
the night.

"Time I got busy and collected all the stuff that will burn," he said,
after making this decision to stand by the fire as his best resort.
"It might even be I'll have to start a second blaze, to keep them from
creeping up from the rear and taking me off my guard."

He went to the task with great energy, forgetting all about sore arms
in his desire to pile up the wood.

Crash! and down came the heavy rock again and again, breaking the wood
in short lengths suitable for his purpose. It was wonderful how rapidly
his pile grew, but then Frank was fully aware of the tremendous amount
of fuel an open campfire can devour in the course of several hours, and
if his supply gave out just at a critical moment he would be undone.

Now and then he would stop to listen.

"Their keen ears must have heard this noise of my wood-smasher at work,
and chances are they'll get wise," he remarked between his gasps for
breath at one period of his energetic labors. "Yes, their howls are a
whole lot closer than when I first heard them."

That caused a quick return to work, for his wood-pile was not as large
as caution dictated. How Frank wished he had his rifle with him, for
then he could rapidly diminish the pack until the rest took fright and
left for some distant refuge.

The doleful sounds continued to break the silence of the night with
a horrible significance. No one who has never heard the howling of
wolves, with not any weapon other than his hunting-knife to defend
himself against their sharp teeth and terrible claws, can realize what
a strange feeling assails even a valiant heart as the sounds draw
steadily nearer and nearer.

Frank picked out a good stout cudgel, and kept it handy for use in case
it came to a fight with the pack. Still the boy hoped he might fend off
the animals by a judicious use of flaming brands, hurled from time to
time into their midst.

So rapidly had they come that now he felt sure he could hear the rush
of their bodies through the bushes close by. Then he caught sight of a
moving figure seen dimly by the firelight, and which crouched low as it
came toward him.

Frank uttered a yell, and, springing to his fire, stirred it to greater
efforts. Not content with this, since the wolf still lay only thirty
feet or so away, he snatched up a burning brand and sent it whizzing
through the air.

"My old cunning as a baseball pitcher comes in handy on such an
occasion as this," chucked Frank, when he plainly caught the "plunk"
that announced the collision of the whirling faggot of wood with the
crouching beast.

He heard the surprised beast give a snap and a snarl. The hard-flung,
blazing missile had burnt its hide, and Frank saw the animal scuttle
off in great haste.

"So long, Mr. Wolf!" he shouted, in great glee over the success of his
initial effort at bombardment. "Got your number that time, and three
strikes means you're out! Plenty more tricks in the bag, you want to
know. Who's the next victim? Don't be backward about stepping forward;
all coons look alike to me when I'm pitching gilt-edged ball."

Before long he was aware that his enemies had his camp completely
surrounded. Glance whichever way he might, Frank could glimpse a pair
of yellow, wicked-looking eyes fixed hungrily upon him.

"Now I've got to mind myself, all right," he muttered, holding in
readiness for quick action in case the beasts attempted to rush his
fortress in a body. "I don't like them creeping so near, and I'd better
put a few more of these red brands to good use."

He seized upon one, and sent it hurdling through space; then a second
followed in rapid succession, the bombardment being maintained until he
had given the whole circle a share of the blazing faggots.

"All pins down, and a count for me," the undaunted boy called out,
partly because the sound of his own voice helped keep his spirits up.
"Set 'em up in the other alley, boy! Huh! didn't just like having it
rain fire, did you, old Graybacks? Moved back a bit, too. And I'd feel
a whole lot easier, if you'd keep that distance from now till daylight!"

But the scare of the wolves was of short duration. Inside of ten
minutes they had crept back once more to their former advanced line, so
that again the boy could see those glaring orbs whichever way he looked.

He had to repeat the barrage, using up more of his precious wood than
he could well spare.

"Retreated again," he told himself, though with a lack of his former
enthusiasm. "But I can't keep that sort of thing going right along.
I'll hold off longer, and then jump for them with a brand in each hand."

He waited until he could actually glimpse the grim crouching figures
of the determined wolves flattened on the ground, just as he had many
times seen the pet cat at home do when ready to pounce on a robin or
a sparrow. Then he started for them, shouting at the top of his now
hoarse voice, and at the same time flourishing two torches with great
vigor.

The animals could not stand such a display of fireworks, and beat a
retreat once more. Frank was shrewd enough not to be tempted into
going any great distance away from his best friend, the fire.

Time passed on leaden wings as Frank Allen kept up this strange vigil.
By judicious management he succeeded in husbanding his shortening
supply of available fuel. On discovering signs of coming dawn over in
the east Frank took fresh heart, and began to believe he would win his
battle with the wolf pack.

Stronger grew the oncoming daylight.

"Showing signs of meaning to throw up the sponge, are you?" he called
out tauntingly, as he discovered one of the animals turning tail and
slinking away, heading along the mountainside, evidently having a den
in that quarter. "Well, here's wishing you better luck in getting
supper another time, when it's venison you're stalking and not a poor
tenderfoot cowpuncher. Good riddance to bad rubbish. There goes a
second chap, licking his chops like all hungry disappointed animals do."

So the pack disintegrated, until so far as Frank could see there
remained only a solitary sentry out in the scrub.

"Seems to be a whole lot more tenacious than the rest of his bunch,"
chuckled the greatly relieved besieged boy. "I'll fix him, all right.
Plenty of ammunition now, and to spare."

He boldly charged the last member of the once threatening pack, and
pelted him with a number of burning sticks in rapid succession. It was
some gratification to score several "hits," and in the end he had that
wolf running for shelter, with a badly singed hide to make him remember
with regret his close acquaintance with one of the elements that he
held in fear.

"Coast seems to be all clear now, but I'd better hang around for
another half hour or so," Frank told himself. "Gee! what a dandy fire
for cooking bacon and eggs over, if only I had them."

When he took it for granted that the time set had passed, Frank started
off. The sun was already above the low and level horizon beyond the
foothills lying to the east, and Frank gave a fond look that way,
remembering that over in that quarter lay Rockspur Ranch, with its
familiar surroundings and the friends who occupied so much of his
waking thoughts.

He found the going anything but easy, so rough was the mountainside in
every direction. Now and then he was afforded wonderful views, as some
new vista opened up. Frank hoped he was through with adventure for some
time; though remembering that these wild mountain regions were said to
be the hunting-grounds of certain savage animals, such as the grizzly
bear.

"I'd sure hate" he was muttering at one time as he climbed, "to run
smack into one of those old Mountain Charlies, as Jerry said they are
called over on the coast side of the Rockies. I'll try to keep my eye
fixed on some nice tree that I can shin up, in case there's any need of
a change of base."

By slow degrees he was making fair headway up the rugged slope. Several
times he found it necessary to detour, on account of a cliff that
loomed up in his course and that could not be scaled, even should he
take his courage in both hands and make the attempt.

"They do say the longest way around is sometimes the shortest in the
end," he buoyed up his spirits by saying; "and I'd a heap rather go an
extra half-mile than fall from that rocky wall."

He was wondering how much farther he ought to climb and if it might not
be the part of wisdom on his part to start yelling on the chance of
being overheard by the others of his party, when he fancied he caught
the sound of a human voice.

The more he listened the better convinced he felt that he had not been
deceived by his ears. Some one was grumbling, and talking in a fretful
tone.

"Hello!" called Frank, cupping his hands and sending out the shout in
the direction the sounds seemed to come from.

"Oh, help! Help!" came back almost instantly and in piteous tones.

"I ought to know that voice!" snapped Frank.

Thrilled by the anguish which he had caught with Lanky's muffled appeal
for assistance, Frank Allen hurried as much as he dared. As he advanced
he continued to call out reassuring words.

"Hey, Lanky, I'm coming!"




CHAPTER XV

WHAT HAPPENED TO LANKY


"Come as quick as you can--nearly all in, and feel like I'm going
to--faint, you know. Think of _me_, Lanky Wallace, actin' like that!
But--it's awful--being turned upside-down this way! Hurry along!"

Lanky's words greatly mystified Frank, for as yet he had failed to get
the first glimpse of his chum in trouble. Not for long, however, did
this ignorance last.

"Well, Lanky Wallace sure has pulled a stunt I never saw equaled!"
burst from the lips of the amazed and startled Frank, when, bursting
through a barrier of thorny brushwood, he saw a swinging figure hanging
head downward over the edge of a sheer drop that would measure a full
twelve feet.

It was Lanky all right, though few of his friends would be able to
recognize him if discovered in that awkward and ridiculous posture. One
of his feet seemed to be entangled in a vine that grew from a fissure
close to the top of the diminutive cliff, which, of course, assumed
the size of a precipice to the unfortunate human pendulum.

But it was no laughing matter to Lanky. If left too long, he would come
to a dangerous pass, since all the blood would go to his head, and so
encompass his death.

He must have twisted and writhed with might and main in the endeavor to
reach up a groping hand and obtain some sort of grip upon the vine that
was the cause of his stumbling over the edge of that cliff.

Now he had stopped all that useless work and was swinging back and
forth, for all the world like the weight in a great grandfather clock
in the Allen home at Columbia.

Losing not a second in inaction, Frank hastened to make his way up
one side of the rocky wall, which he was able to do by searching for
toe-holds.

These did not always prove as substantial as he would have wished, for
once he slipped and slid backward several feet, amidst a vast falling
of shale and earth.

Poor despairing Lanky gave vent to an agonized howl on hearing the
racket thus made. He naturally fancied, not being able to see a thing
on account of the coat dangling over his head, that his rescuer had
gotten himself into some serious predicament, which would "settle
his--Lanky's--goose," since further delay must drive him frantic.

"Nothing gone wrong, Lanky. Only lost my grip. Be with you in three
shakes of a dog's tail. Don't worry, it's Frank talking to you! Now I'm
at the top, and going over!"

The knowledge that Frank was actually alive after all the dreadful
fears that had oppressed both himself and Paul, helped revive Lanky's
drooping spirits considerably. He stopped groaning, and Frank thought
he heard him say in a fearfully weak voice something like:

"Bully--it's Frank! Oh, bul--ly boy!"

Now Frank was crawling along the edge of the little precipice toward
the spot below which his chum dangled like a mason's plumb-line down
the wall he was building.

"Here I am, Lanky, right above you!" he called out cheeringly. "Yes, I
can see where you went headlong over, your foot trapped in this vine!"

He leaned cautiously over the brink. Lanky was directly below, and
Frank was pleased to see that it would not be difficult for him to get
a firm grip on the other's ankle; though just how he was to raise Lanky
gave him immediate concern.

Some object caught his eye--it looked a bit like a coiled snake of
tremendous proportions, lying there almost on the edge of the abrupt
descent. Then Frank realized that it was a coiled rope. Lanky himself
had undoubtedly fetched it from the temporary camp, under the
impression that he could find a good use for such a thing, if only he
should run across his missing chum.

As a plan flashed into his active mind Frank snatched up the strong
rope, leaned over, and managed to get its end around Lanky's ankle. As
speedily as he could he fastened it securely.

"Listen, Lanky!" he cried out. "I've got the rope fixed so I can lower
you down to the ground, once I've cut that vine apart. Here goes, then!"

First Frank took a single hitch of the rope around a small sapling that
chanced to be within reach, a most fortunate thing. This he did so it
would be doubly easy and safe to lower a heavy weight, without risking
being pulled over the edge himself.

Then out came his knife. How glad he was he had always made it a point
to keep a razor-like edge on his handy blade. Two, three slashes were
all that was required, when the tough vine parted and, by easy little
jerks, Lanky commenced to go down toward the rocks below.

No sooner did Frank see that his chum had landed than he fastened the
rope in a knot, swung himself over the edge and slid down as if he
clasped a greased pole, in the customary doing at the annual Harvest
Home fair at Columbia.

Lanky was groaning and moving a little, as Frank knelt down beside him.
When he drew the other's coat away from his face Frank was alarmed to
discover how black Lanky looked. Evidently a short time longer of that
hanging must have quite finished him.

Hearing water gurgling close by, Frank hastened to the small rivulet
that came leaping and bubbling down from the snow-clad heights
above. He filled Lanky's hat--his own had gone down with that raging
torrent--and was speedily back at the other's side.

First of all he made Lanky drink a little of the icy water. Next he
bathed the flushed and discolored face with some of the same fluid.
The result was gratifying, for by slow degrees that dreadful, purple
hue faded from Lanky's features, and he even smiled wanly, his eyes
kindling with the awakening joy he felt at once more seeing his best
chum bending over him.

"We thought--you must have gone,--Frank!" he managed to say, trying to
lift his hand, which Frank had been patting affectionately.

"Well, I had the closest shave of my whole life," replied the other,
wincing at the vivid recollection of that never-to-be-forgotten
experience. "But you'll hear all about it later on, Lanky; also how
I've been keeping a lively pack of gray wolves at bay for several
hours by throwing burning brands from my fire at them as they hovered
around."

"Whew!" breathed Lanky, gazing at his chum with admiring eyes. "And all
I've managed to do along the line of adventure was to trip over a vine,
hang head down over a precipice and yell for help!"

After a while Lanky felt so much stronger that it was decided to make
a move. He had kept his bearings while starting out at break of day in
the hope of finding Frank so now he was able to serve as guide.

They took their way slowly, for neither of them felt very robust.
Accordingly it was well on to the middle of the morning when at last
Lanky pointed ahead, to remark with a sigh of relief:

"You can see the smoke of their fire right over that big boulder,
Frank. They're sticking close to the place where we came out of the
canyon, because Jerry says there isn't any other trail he knows of by
which to reach Gold Fork camp."

When they were discovered there arose a great shout. Paul waved his hat
enthusiastically. Mr. Wallace did the same while both Jerry Brime and
Zander Forbes joined in the hearty greeting. The latter had just come
back, after combing the lower reaches of the canyon, the flood having
passed away, leaving only a bare trickle of water to hint at the almost
tragic event of the preceding night.

By degrees the story was told, and everybody seemed to think Frank
must surely bear a charmed life, to pass unscathed through two such
exciting and hazardous adventures in one night.

It had been agreed upon between the two boys that they would say
nothing about what had happened to Lanky. For one thing, he felt
ashamed at having been so easily caught napping, and placed in such a
ridiculous position. Then, again, he did not want to worry his father
with such harrowing details as must follow on his being questioned.

"Of course you can tell Paul all about my silliness," Lanky had said at
the time this arrangement was made. "I know he can keep a secret. But
I'd never hear the last of it if the fellows in Columbia ever got wind
of my fool play."

As Lanky had partaken of no breakfast, being in such a hurry to
commence his search, and Frank had fasted since the preceding night, an
early hot lunch was made ready, after which they started on again.

Jerry led the way down into the bed of the canyon, whose treachery none
of these travelers would ever forget. Once more their faces were turned
upward, as the sure-footed ponies made their way among the loose rocks
that dotted the bottom of the defile.

In years long gone past all those headed for the new gold discovery
had covered this identical ground. The boys could easily imagine them
toiling upward--grizzled prospectors and regular miners, some toting
all their possessions on their backs, others enjoying the luxury of a
donkey to carry burdens.

"And like as not every mother's son of the whole bunch," Paul Bird
remarked, on talking with his two chums concerning these things, "was
as enthusiastic and hopeful as we are right now, expecting to be lucky
enough to run across some wonderful pocket of nuggets, like Josh Kinney
had done."

"Yes, that's true enough, Paul," replied Lanky. "But none of them
happened to have a neat little homemade chart made by Kinney himself
and telling where his cache was hidden in that five-fingered cave.
There's a whole lot in having the inside track, you know."

Several hours passed.

They had been making fair and steady progress upward, and Frank could
more than half guess they were presently coming to a break in the
abrupt steepness marking the sheer mountainside.

"We must be close on that plateau, where we understand the deserted
camp lies," he told the other boys.

"What makes you think so?" asked the pleased yet skeptical Paul.

"The lay of the land, for one thing," came the reply. "Then, again,
I've been keeping my weather eye fixed on Jerry."

"Clever idea," admitted Paul; while Lanky grinned, proving that he
himself must have been doing something similar.

"He's been getting more and more worked up right along," continued
Frank, who made it a practice to observe everything around him, and
form his own conception of its meaning.

"Reckons he's back again in the good old days," Lanky broke in just
then, "when Gold Fork was on the boom, with everybody figuring on being
a millionaire before the sun went down six more times. Huh! makes me
laugh, the innocence of those old codgers! Poor sillies!"

Even as Lanky spoke, Jerry turned around with uplifted hand.

"We're right thar, boys, and yuh goin' to set eyes on the remains afore
yuh's five minuits older. Don't laugh, please, 'case to me it's like
a-goin' to a funeral of an old friend. Seen some right lively times
hyah in Gold Fork, an' I sumtimes dream 'bout the real men I nudged
shoulders with in them rushin' days o' the long ago."

"Let's remember that, fellows," said Frank softly, "and respect Jerry's
feelings in the matter. If we have to be amused we can pick out times
when the old man isn't around."

"I'll not forget, Frank," said Paul instantly. "I think I can
understand about how he feels. To see this familiar stamping-ground
again will be like having ghosts walk."

"Ditto here," grunted Lanky, though not quite so given to sentiment.

The stipulated five minutes had not passed when on breaking through a
barrier of wild-looking brush and bushes the party came fully upon the
wreckage of one of the oldest and most talked-of mining camps in all
that region.

To Frank especially, with Jerry and his memories in mind, the picture
was intensely desolate, weird, and impressive. All of the pilgrims drew
in their tired ponies and stared at what was spread there before them.




CHAPTER XVI

AT THE DESERTED MINING CAMP


"Look at the buzzards sitting on that ridge of a two-story building,
will you?" exclaimed Lanky, pointing as he spoke.

"There! They're off, flying," said Paul, "each starting with a queer
little jump that sends the big bird up several feet before its wings
begin to carry it. Always liked to watch turkey-buzzards roosting on a
dead tree or dropping down to feed. Make me think of the clowns at a
circus, they're so comical."

"I'd call this Camp Desolation, if you asked me," observed Frank, in an
aside to his chums.

"Never did set eyes on its equal in all my life," Lanky admitted. "I
reckon nobody's been around here for years, to look at the way those
shacks and stores and huts have decayed."

"That's where you're away off your trolley then," chuckled Frank.

"Seen something, or you wouldn't talk that way," ventured the other, a
bit annoyed because Frank had again beaten him at woodcraft, in which
Lanky fancied himself a master.

"Lots of times, when we were climbing the canyon bed to top the rise,"
Frank told him, with a nod; "especially during the last half hour.
Signs of horses coming and going--lately, too--little stones displaced,
even the plain print of hoofs when there chanced to be a layer of earth
to make them show. I'm a whole lot surprised that _you_ missed them,
Lanky."

"Huh! even the best scouts trip up once in a long time," grunted Lanky.
"I must have been watching Jerry so closely and squinting up at the
rock walls above, thinkin' about what a nice place it'd be for an old
grizzly to make a den."

"There, you can see the tracks as plain as print right now," Frank at
that juncture told his chums, pointing toward the ground just ahead.

Apparently fifty years back many animals and treasure-hunting
prospectors must have made a well-beaten trail, coming up by way of the
canyon and arriving at the open place marking the plateau.

"Easy enough," acknowledged Lanky, one of whose best qualities was
frankness when owning up to being surprised in anything. "But there!
Jerry's started to lead the way into the ghostly camp. Let's go!"

No one joked or laughed as thus solemnly they walked their winded
ponies among those amazing wrecks of old-time life and bustle; it was
too much like passing through a cemetery long since abandoned and
fallen upon evil times.

"Most of them seem to have been roughly built shacks, made out of pinon
trees cut on the side of the mountain, though I can see some cedar
among them--yes, and oak, besides. It's the story of the 'Deserted
Village' all over again, only no pestilence brought about this
desolation."

"The whole bunch was wild to pick up gold nuggets," said Lanky.
"Anyway, that's what Jerry told us; and when the bubble burst they
cleared out bag and baggage."

"What do you suppose that largest building was for?" asked Paul.

"The only two-story one in the whole caboodle, you mean?" Lanky
replied. "I'd judge it might have been used as a hotel, or tavern,
where the fresh arrivals could put up and be fleeced till they found
time to throw a shack together."

"There's an old faded sign over the door," Frank put in. "As near as
I can make out it reads: 'El Dorado Hotel, Accommodations for Man and
Beast.'"

"Lots of good eats served in that place, I'd say," ventured Lanky, who
himself was hungry.

"Here's a place that looks as if it used to be one of those dance
halls, where the miners gathered at night to have a lively time, what
with gambling, carousing, and the like."

Frank felt certain he had struck close to the truth when he made that
assertion; for surely the large room could not have been used for any
other purpose.

So they quietly rode through the whole village, stopping at the farther
end, while Mr. Wallace conferred with the other two men.

"Now I wonder," Paul said as he stared around, sometimes having to
repress an involuntary shudder, everything was so dreadful, "what all
those queer little mounds can mean--they are side by side, too, as if
meant for stepping stones to some temple the miners meant to build,
after they'd all gotten to be millionaires."

Lanky made an odd grimace.

"Hobble your horse, Paul, and take another look. You'll guess then what
they stand for. Every mining camp started a cemetery the first thing;
because, you know, the mortality ran high in those lawless days, when
each man carried a big six-shooter on his hip and the one who could
draw the quickest lived to see another sun rise."

Paul could not hold back the shiver that ran over him.

"Why, there must be all of a hundred graves, if there's one," he said,
and then added weakly, suspicion having awakened in his mind, knowing
Lanky's inveterate liking for playing jokes on innocents: "If you're
not stringing me, I mean."

"Give him the air, Frank! After I vowed not even to _grin_ while in
this haunted camp. Those are what I said, and yet Jerry told us the
camp didn't hold out more than one year. Life was held cheap in such
crazy times, Paul, and they planted somebody every other day, I reckon."

Mr. Wallace just then turned to the three boys; the other men were
dismounting, as though not meaning to use the ponies any more that day.

"I'm going off with Jerry and Zander," said the gentleman, "to scour
the neighborhood for what has always been known as 'Lost Mountain,'
though it's hard to understand how such a vast elevation could escape
notice. Plenty of eyes have doubtless fallen on it, but without knowing
that it was anything out of the ordinary. But we believe it contains
the mine Kinney worked."

"And the five-fingered cave to boot," added Lanky.

"What do you want us to be doing while you're away, Mr. Wallace?"
queried Frank.

"Simply amuse yourselves," replied Mr. Wallace. "But keep a bright
lookout for those scamps we suspect are somewhere around this region,
ready to spy on us, in the hope of snatching the prize away in case we
find it. Yes, and you might take the entire bunch of ponies along that
rocky trail to the right."

"Where does it lead, Dad?" asked Lanky.

"Jerry told me," replied his father, "that there is a queer little
walled-in strip of land about a quarter of a mile further on, where,
strangely enough, the finest of green forage could always be found,
winter and summer. They used to turn their animals in there to feed and
drink at the spring."

"Shall we stake them out?" asked Frank.

"No need of that," he was informed smilingly. "Nature took charge, and
left only one narrow exit and entrance to this highly favored pasture.
There are, it seems, several rocks that can be easily moved, and which
when placed in position form an excellent barrier that the smartest
cow-pony would be unable to jump."

"This sure is the land of marvels," grinned Lanky.

"We'll take all the ponies out there, and shut the gate of the corral
on them," promised Frank.

"You might unload the pack-pony, boys, and put the stuff for our
rations in one of these shacks, covering it all over, so that no
possible curious eyes would suspect its presence."

With these words Mr. Wallace handed over the bridle of his mount,
and in company with the other men made ready to go forth in a first
attempt, under Jerry's reawakened memory of his surroundings, to
locate the Lost Mountain of Gold Fork.

Left to themselves, the boys deposited the stores in one of the huts
that seemed to have a better roof than any of the rest. This had been
proved in the recent cloudburst, for some of the ruined buildings were
soaked, while the earthen floor of their choice seemed quite dry. Then
they set off with the bunch of weary animals.

Sure enough, after leading their four-footed charges along the still
well defined if ancient trail, they presently arrived at the pasture.

"Worth coming a long way to see such a curiosity," announced Lanky,
as they took saddles and bridles off the ponies and turned them into
the rock-surrounded enclosure one by one, to feed and rest. "Beats any
man-made corral I ever set eyes on, and so simple, too."

"All we have to do now," Frank observed, after the last cayuse had
kicked up his heels and galloped off to join its mates, already eagerly
nibbling at the sweet green grass, "is to work these rocks into place
so they'll close the gap, and the bunch is safe from any stampede."

"That wash over there, with the low bank," ventured Lanky, "must be
where some sort of stream passes through. The water would be cold as
ice, for it comes down from the mountain tops, where there's always
heaps of snow, summer and winter."

A short time later the boys again found themselves in the decayed
mining camp, with its numerous wrecks of buildings, in which no man had
laid his head for more than a score of years, perhaps twice that.

Filled with curiosity, the three boys started making the rounds.

"Might as well see everything there is while we have the chance," Lanky
told his mates. "'Tisn't every day you can run across such a thrilling
sight as this. See the bats whirr out of that old shack, will you?
Must have picked it for a place to hang their tired old bodies, after
swinging around the circle all night long."

When the lads peeped cautiously in through the opening which a rotten
door, hanging by its last rusty hinge, faded to shut entirely, it was
indeed a sight worth impressing on their minds.

"Gee whiz!" barked Lanky, his eyes opening unusually wide. "See the
ugly things dangling there from every rafter, will you?"

"Is _that_ the way bats sleep, hanging by their toes with their heads
downward?" exclaimed Paul, intensely interested. "What strange things
you often see when you haven't got a gun. I'll know now what they mean
when they say a fellow has 'bats in his belfry'!"

"Let's have a peep-in at that old hotel," Lanky Wallace suggested.
"That may have sheltered more millionaires--in their mind's eye--than
ever any up-to-the-latest in New York City could claim."

"Second the motion," quickly added Paul.

"Lead me to it," Frank laughed, "for I was just going to put it up to
both of you."

"Come on then," cried Lanky.

Led by the tall boy, the three of them were speedily inside the
abandoned building, possibly once the pride of Gold Fork; but with now
not a shadow of its former grandeur remaining in its skeleton walls,
and the shaky stairs leading to unseen upper regions.

"Huh! a peach of a place this would be for us to camp out in," Lanky
remarked, as they started to look things over.

"Wow! I hope you don't try it," Paul cried out. "I'm dead certain it's
just swarming with rats!"

"Say," demanded Lanky disdainfully, "what could the sillies find to
live on all these years since any meal was served in this dining room?"

"Ask me something easy, Lanky," urged Paul. "But I'm sure there are
rats in plenty around, for I saw one--a monster, too, if as thin as a
rail--when I said what I did."

"All I hope then," continued Lanky, with a shrug, "is that the varmints
don't swarm around our grub and clean us out. We'd have to live off the
country then, and eat all sorts of queer dishes--grizzly bear steaks,
coyote chops, prairie-dog stews, and such delicacies."

"Let up, Lanky," urged Frank. "You know Paul's a bit squeamish about
his stomach, and you'll get him off his feed. Listen! What was that?"

"Sounded like a horse neighing," said Lanky, looking startled.

"I hear hoofs beating the rocks!" Frank ejaculated. "And I'd judge it
was a right big bunch of nags, to boot! We can't pass out of that door
because they're coming from that direction and heading right this way!"

Paul turned his eyes on Frank, who, he realized, must solve the
problem.




CHAPTER XVII

WHEN ZEKE CAME BACK


"The window at the rear!" Frank Allen instantly suggested.

"I get you, Frank!" gasped the relieved Paul.

"Great stuff!" was the energetic way Lanky agreed with the leader.

The sound of many hoofbeats was coming closer, steadily, and what the
boys meant to do must be undertaken without wasting any more precious
seconds.

"Follow me!" With the words the agile and energetic Lanky was already
half-way through the window. This had no sash, time having relieved it
of both glass and frames, leaving only an aperture in the wall.

Frank pushed Paul forward, signifying that it was his intention to be
the last to quit the place, just as all captains of sinking vessels at
sea make sure everybody else has left before they will consent to step
into the last crowded boat that leaves before the foundering occurs.

Once outside, the boys were quick to scurry in among some old junk and
scrambled rocks. This lay but a few feet away from the back of the
tavern, and offered excellent hiding places for them.

Besides, what pleased Lanky considerably, they could doubtless overhear
any talk that came about. Yes, and even catch fleeting glimpses of the
new-comers, if so be they entered the old hotel.

Another minute--less than that, even--and the boys were able to
congratulate themselves over their smartness in leaving in such a
hurry. The ponies came to a halt directly before the door of the former
hostelry. Throwing the lines over the heads of their mounts, cowboy
fashion, so that the animals would remain at a stand under all ordinary
conditions, the riders entered.

Frank and his chums could hear loud and rough voices.

"That was Nash Yesson who spoke then!" whispered Lanky in Paul's ear,
for they were all bunched close together on purpose, and had their ears
doing almost double duty in the endeavor to learn all they could.

"It was Lef Seller he called down, too," observed Frank, with great
caution, for it would invite a ruction little short of a calamity if
those angry men discovered the boys crouching there and listening to
what went on.

"I just glimpsed Lef," Lanky communicated in his softest tone; "and you
ought to see how bad he looks. He's had nothing but hard knocks ever
since he ran up against that Yesson. The tough boys over at Double Z
Ranch must have rubbed it in hard, too."

"He's only getting what he deserves," Paul muttered, half to himself,
thinking of the base duplicity and deceit toward his own father Lef had
been guilty of.

"'Sh! Let's listen for all we're worth, and perhaps we'll pick up some
news," suggested Frank, who disapproved of all this whispering that was
taking place.

He himself had taken several cautious looks, and had learned that
besides Lef Seller and Nash Yesson there were four other persons in the
crowd that had entered the forsaken tavern.

"That queer fish with the body of a runt and the head of a giant seems
to answer to the name of Rick Muddy," Frank told himself. "The name
about fits his crooked body, I'd say. Those other three tough-looking
citizens must hang up their hats at the Double Z when they're at home,
for they've got the make-up of cow-punchers, heavily armed, and out for
business."

One of these men he heard called Malachi and another Zeke, but the
third one's name was never made known.

Nash Yesson was not knuckling down to anybody, it appeared, from the
way he turned from one to another with snarls and hard language.
Continual disappointments while on the way to Rockspur Ranch and
afterwards had roiled him unmercifully, so that, as Lanky afterwards
expressed it in his customary picturesque language "the man was like a
bear with a sore head."

"And as for you, Rick Muddy," the boys could hear Yesson pouring out
his wrath upon the head of the pudgy chap, "even after you'd been given
complete directions you had to go and fizzle the worst kind. Why, those
kids got the better of you and grabbed the second chart after you'd
nearly dug it up! You're a rank failure and ought to be kicked out of
camp for being such a gink."

"I own up they bamboozled me some," grumbled the small man. "But other
dubs livin' in glass houses oughtn't to throw stones."

"What d'you mean by that, you fool?" gritted Yesson threateningly.

"Only that you done the same stuff when you nearly had that first
map," retorted the other, probably relying on the fact that the three
hard-riding cow-punchers were pals of his and would not see him
knocked down by Yesson. "If you'd jumped your claim then we'd be all
fixed right now to walk in on that nugget cache! Ain't that so boys?"

"It sure is," replied the tallest of the wranglers in a voice that
rumbled like the sound of approaching thunder. "But all bets are off,
and we don't want to eat each other up for nothin'. When we grab what
we've got hidden here, we'll be fixed so's to start off fresh again and
locate that Lost Mountain."

"That's the stuff!" chanted the fellow answering to the name of
Malachi. "What Zeke here managed to pick up from that wrinkled old
Indian squaw ought to help us find the cave. And once we get our paws
on the jack, we'll fight anybody to the death who tries to pry it away
from us."

"You said it, Malachi!" retorted Nash Yesson grimly. "I've been
stalkin' that nugget claim too long now to show the white feather to
a dozen pikers who are tryin' to chase me off the trail. We're close
to it right now, and if those other guys come walkin' up to close the
deal, why, here's six little boys ready to say 'hands up, gents!'"

This was all heard by the eagerly listening boys, concealed so close
at hand. Very interesting it all sounded, too; although Frank did not
see that they were really adding to their stock of information, except
that they knew now the number of those who opposed their aims and
to what infamous ends Yesson and his companions were ready to go to
further their schemes.

"Then let's clear out and get busy," suggested Malachi, who seemed to
be an aggressive type of fellow. "Get busy, Rick Muddy, an' hustle that
stock of grub along, to load on your cayuse, you bein' the lightest
built in the whole bunch."

This told the story. It was these men who had visited the deserted
mining camp shortly before Mr. Wallace and his prospecting party
reached Gold Fork. Frank had already discounted this fact. Indeed, he
had reached that decision at the time he first discovered the marks of
hoofs along the upper canyon.

The small man with the big head showed no sign of disobeying orders.
Undoubtedly he knew Malachi's bad qualities, and did not dare rebel.

So the peeping boys in the junk heap among the friendly rocks watched
the men carry forth some packages. These undoubtedly contained their
store of food to carry them over during their stay in that unalluring
vicinity.

When the clatter of hoofs finally announced the men had indeed gone,
every boy from Frank down breathed a sigh of relief and they came out
of hiding.

"A rough crowd, take it from me!" exclaimed Lanky Wallace.

"Are you sure they're all gone?" asked nervous Paul Bird.

Lanky chuckled.

"What do you take me for, Paul--a bonehead?" he asked. "Sure, I counted
'em as they rode off, and there were six in the lot. From the way that
ugly-looking Zeke turned and looked back several times, I kind of
imagined he had some scheme in view that he was half tempted to pull
off."

"Good riddance then to bad rubbish," Paul remarked, showing by his
manner that he had feared there might be a discovery made, when the
results would hardly have been pleasant for the boys from Rockspur
Ranch.

"Lucky for us we hid our stores and took the ponies off to pasture,"
Frank observed, as they re-entered the deserted hotel. "If they'd seen
the bunch it would have been good-bye to our chances for riding back
home. As it is, they've seen nothing to tell them that the Wallace
treasure-hunters are already on the ground and ready to follow their
noses to Josh Kinney's lost claim."

"Why, look here!" burst out Paul just then. "What's this mean?"

He was holding some object up gingerly. It turned out to be a cowboy
hat, once a beautiful Stetson, but now horribly shabby, as though it
must have seen several years' hard usage.

Both Lanky and Frank experienced fresh interest.

"Say, that wasn't on this old three-legged table when we came into this
place!" exclaimed Lanky, frowning, as he took the article in his own
hands, and turned it around.

"I wondered," Frank broke in, "when I noticed that the big,
ugly-looking puncher called Zeke was riding off bare-headed. Still,
I've seen Lige Smith, yes, and Hoptoad Atkins, go off on the range with
bare heads, and the sun scorching hot. But then they both have thick
hair, while Zeke--well, if he wasn't as close to being bald-headed as
any cowboy could be, I'm mistaken."

"I'd say it was a bum go he forgot his hat," ventured Paul.

"Perhaps he didn't!" Lanky told him.

"But here's his old hat, and Frank just said the man rode off
bare-headed! What can you mean by saying that, Lanky?"

"To get you guessing, Paul," chirped the satisfied Lanky. "What I had
in mind was that maybe Zeke left his lid here on purpose."

"Now you're balling me all up again!" complained Paul.

"Didn't you hear me say the man kept looking around as he rode off with
his pals, just as if he had half a notion to turn and come back? Well,
I reckon Zeke's a cute one, and has set up the pins in his alley so he
can knock 'em down with his first roller and make a clean sweep!"

"Do you mean," asked Paul, "that he actually means to come galloping
back here for some reason or other and has left his hat behind so's to
make some sort of excuse for leaving his mates?"

"Listen!"

As Lanky hissed that emphatic word the other boys strained their ears
to catch any sound. Clearly on the gentle breeze that chanced to be
blowing came the unmistakable pounding of a pony's hoofs on the rocks!




CHAPTER XVIII

THE UNSEEN WATCHERS


There was a concerted rush to the window situated on that side of the
building toward which the oncoming rider seemed to be heading.

"Careful!" warned Frank hastily. "He may be looking ahead and see us!"

What he said caused both the others to drop down to the floor and crawl
forward until they could look out. This was easily done, for the reason
that not a single pane of glass remained in any sash.

"I see him just dropping down into that little hollow!" snapped the
keen-eyed Lanky almost instantly.

"Was it Zeke?" asked Paul, in palpitating tones.

"Sure was," came the reply. "Leastways, I glimpsed a shiny bald head,
and as Frank observed he owned to such."

"Then we'd better be getting back to our hiding place in that clump of
rocks, hadn't we?" Paul continued.

"Can't be done! He's coming from that quarter, you notice, and the
chances are we'd be seen," Lanky informed him.

"The door, then! Could we risk that?" demanded the other.

Frank shook his head in the negative.

"Before we could get under shelter he'd be up out of that hollow and
have a square open stretch ahead. We've just got to stick to the
rookery here, that's all."

"Hide, you mean, Frank?"

"Yes, Paul," came the ready answer, as Frank looked hurriedly around,
up and down, and then went on to say: "There may be a cellar under the
tumble-down hotel, but so far we haven't seen anything of it."

"What's wrong with our skipping up-stairs and lying low?" Lanky wanted
to know.

"Our only chance, boys!" jerked out Frank.

"Go to it then, fellows!" said Lanky, acting as if he meant to make a
mad dive for the stairs, and go up helter-skelter. But Frank caught him
by the arm.

"Slow and sure, Lanky!" came the warning. "Take things easy! Plenty of
time to get there! If we all went in a mob those ricketty stairs would
probably come down with a smash and dump us in a heap. You go first,
Lanky, then Paul, and I'll bring up the rear."

"I'm game for anything, even a fight!" retorted the tall boy, as he put
his foot on the first step and started upward.

Paul was listening. The hoofbeats sounded much closer than before, as
if Zeke continued to make good progress toward the old tavern. How
those stairs did wobble and creak and groan, even though Lanky was
trying to climb as softly as possible.

Now he was at the top, and, beckoning for Paul to take his turn, Frank
stood waiting until he saw that the time had come for him to follow. It
was a queer feeling that gripped him as he felt the swaying movement
under his feet, such as one might expect to encounter on a crude
swinging grapevine bridge stretched across some torrent.

He felt considerable satisfaction when he gained the landing above
without any accident spoiling the hastily conceived program.

"Now let's get in the room over that big one below stairs," he
suggested, on the spur of the moment.

"Good scheme, Frank!" whispered Lanky. "It's got open seams in the
floor, and we ought to be able to spy on Zeke. I'm curious to know what
did bring him back, after laying that lid of his on the table and not
seeming to notice he'd left it behind till the crowd had got some way
off. Here he comes!"

A sharp hiss from Frank cut the garrulous one off. After that the
three boys lay there on the floor, hardly daring to stir, since the
slightest movement on any one's part caused the rotten boards to creak
and give ominously.

They heard the pony come close to the door of the tavern, and then
caught the heavy thud of heels as the rider jumped off. It was Zeke,
just as they had expected. He came hurrying through the open door,
going directly to the three-legged table, to pick up his hat and slap
it on his bald head.

At the same time the boys saw him half double-up, bring a hand down
with a slap on his knee, and laugh hoarsely. Evidently Zeke was pleased
with the success of this expedient that permitted him to gallop back to
the mining camp without arousing suspicion on the part of his mates.

Eagerly the unseen watchers in the loft above kept their eyes glued
upon his every movement. Lanky, in particular, was filled with
curiosity to learn the reason for such queer actions on the part of the
gruff and tough-looking puncher.

He moved about as though accomplishing something that had been on his
mind. Once Frank even saw him bend down and lift what seemed to be a
trapdoor in the rotten floor below. Zeke stared down into the cellar
there, and gave evidences of being considerably worked up.

Frank made up his mind, on witnessing the man's grim face, that
whatever secret he had gripping his soul, it was connected with
something that lay hidden down in the cellar of the abandoned inn.

They could hear him moving around after that, but he no longer came
within the radius of their vision; those cracks had served their
purpose fairly well, but there was a limit to their range.

Lanky fussed a bit, moving restlessly, discontented because he could no
longer keep his eyes on the man. Frank almost feared his impetuous chum
might feel inclined to creep over to the head of the stairs, in the
hope of once more glimpsing Zeke and discovering what he was busy doing.

To avoid the possibility of unpleasant consequences, Frank laid a
restraining hand on Lanky's arm.

Just then they again caught a fleeting glimpse of the man, who was
heading toward the outer door. Evidently he had accomplished whatever
mission it was that had brought him hurrying back, and was now making
ready to gallop off.

This caused the boys more or less satisfaction. While Zeke was below
there must always be a chance of discovery. If he had such a deep
interest in what happened to lie in the cellar, why should this concern
not go farther and cause him to start up-stairs?

But the suspense was about over, now that he had commenced to take his
departure. Once again did the trio creep across the shaky floor to the
window, so as to watch his going.

"There he is," whispered Lanky, breaking what had been a long and
agonizing silence for a boy who liked to hear himself talk as much as
he did. "Welcome the coming, speed the parting guest. So long, Zeke!
Your room is better'n your company!"

"Hold on, Lanky," said Paul, very softly. "You're talking through your
hat, I'm afraid. He's stopped right over there, turned his pony, and is
sitting with one leg up over the pommel of his saddle, watching this
same old house like a hawk. Do you think he suspects we're around?"

"Not on your life, Paul! I don't know why he keeps on sitting there,
and looking so mighty well satisfied with himself; but like as not it's
got something to do with his coming back."

"He's got a rifle across his knee," continued Paul, "and you'd think he
was planning to throw a few bullets into this shack."

"Oh, rats! Nothing like that is going to happen!" sneered Lanky, for
the horseman was far enough away to prevent their low voices from
reaching his ears. "He's just taking a last look at the rookery here,
that's all.

"What sort of a crackling sound was that just then?" demanded Paul
suspiciously.

"Didn't happen to catch anything. What did it sound like?" asked Lanky,
carelessly enough and continuing to watch the sitting Zeke.

"Just like you'd started your cooking fire, Lanky. And say, I smell
smoke right now, I tell you!"

"That settles the question of why he's hanging around so!" exclaimed
Frank. "He's set fire to this old hotel, and wants to see it blaze up!"

"Gee, whiz, that makes it look bad!" ejaculated Lanky Wallace, as he
too grasped the serious dilemma by which they were now confronted.




CHAPTER XIX

SEARCHING FOR LOST MOUNTAIN


If the three boys attempted to flee from the burning rookery they would
of course be discovered and possibly fired upon by that grim watcher.

"Frank, do you reckon he guessed we were squatting up here and means to
give us a chance to be roasted?" asked the now thoroughly alarmed Paul,
not so capable of meeting trouble coolly, as Frank Allen had always
shown himself to be.

"I hardly believe it's quite as bad as that," the other replied. "After
firing the shack, he's felt inclined to hold up and watch how his work
gets to moving."

"Then you think he may skip out in time to let us drop out of a window
or slip down those ricketty stairs, do you?"

"Let's hope so, anyhow, Paul."

Lanky, however, was almost boiling over with poorly suppressed disgust.

"Huh! does that Zeke think we're a bunch of Thanksgiving turkeys that
he starts a fire under our feet, which, given a little free scope is
going to make this place feel like a Dutch oven? I object to being
finished in such a cheap way."

He moved his gun menacingly as he said this.

"Do you mean you want to get a crack at Zeke, and tumble him off his
pony out there?" queried Paul.

"Well, maybe it'd do the job just as well if I shot the cayuse
instead," Lanky suggested, drawing the line at taking human life,
something that so far in his existence he had never tried to do.

"Hold your horses, Lanky," advised Frank. "He may be going in another
minute or two, and it'll be some little time before that blaze can
reach us. As a last resort, if all else fails, I'll agree to let you
shoot at Zeke to cripple him or his bronc so that he'll not be able to
ride away to warn Yesson, or, on the other hand, harm us here."

Three minutes more passed. So worked up were Lanky Wallace and Paul
Bird that it seemed double that time to them.

The fire downstairs was now roaring, and the eyes of the boys began to
smart because of the fumes of acrid smoke that ascended the open stairs.

"Oh, bully! Bully! He's whirled his pony around and is going off on a
gallop!" announced Paul.

"About time, if he wanted to save his bacon; because I'd have got a
bead on his pony in another minute," Lanky said in tones that breathed
both jubilation and threats. "Me for the window and a long jump!"

"Take things coolly, Lanky," came from Frank. "You may break a leg if
you go over in a hurry. The fire hasn't done much on this side of the
house so far, and we can take our own time in getting down. Since the
stairs are all ablaze, of course our only road is by way of the window.
Here's a rope on this old bed mattress. If it's strong enough we can
make good use of it."

A test proved this to be a fact, so Frank insisted that Paul go first,
to be followed by Lanky Wallace. Then he himself left the room. His
last glimpse of the interior of the upper story of the doomed hotel
showed him that hungry tongues of flame were beginning to flash through
the open doorway, as though reaching out for victims.

Once safely on the ground, the boys moved back, since the heat of the
burning structure made it uncomfortable.

"Bully bonfire, all right!" declared Lanky. "Wonder if it's bound to
tackle any of these other ghosts of shacks and clean off the whole of
Gold Fork?"

"Let's hope not," Frank told him. "If there's any danger that way,
we've got to get busy and hustle our stores out of the cabin where we
hid the lot."

"You said something that time, Frank," declared Lanky. "After all, I'm
not hankering for a diet of grizzly bear steaks, wolf chops, or gopher
hash," and he looked at Paul with a sparkle in his eyes.

"Lanky," put in Frank, "you do love to stuff any gullible comrade,
whenever the opportunity arises."

It turned out that fortune favored the boys in some ways. First of all,
there was an utter absence of wind, so that the fire did not sweep
wildly out toward the other dry and flimsy structures. Then again the
recent downpour, called by Jerry a cloudburst, had thoroughly saturated
the shacks.

Some three of those nearest the former hotel did succumb to the
tremendous heat and burst into blaze but the boys saw they could not
in turn communicate with the adjoining ones, since a wide space came
between, over which the flames could not possibly jump unless a wind
arose, something very unlikely to happen.

"Reckon that smoke will bring our folks back hot-footed," Lanky
suggested, watching the billowing volumes soaring straight upward just
before the utter collapse of the once busy hotel.

"They'll be all balled up trying to guess what's happened here at the
mining camp," added Paul.

It came to pass that such was the case. Something like an hour
afterwards Mr. Wallace and his two companions were seen coming on a
run, and looking more than anxious.

"No harm done, Dad!" called out Lanky, to relieve his father's mind.

"How did that fire start, son?" asked the other, looking dubiously at
Lanky, who, however, shook his head vigorously as he replied:

"Not this time, Dad! It happened to be a man going by the name of
Zeke--don't know the rest, because we didn't hear it mentioned."

"Zeke Spavin, I'd judge," put in Zander Forbes. "Was he a big
brutish-looking fellow with a shiny bald top-piece?"

"Yes."

"Well, he belongs over with the Double Z outfit. Tell us what you've
run across since we pulled out."

The story was soon told, and the boys found themselves praised for
having handled a delicate situation so cleverly.

"What do you reckon, Zander," asked the curious and wondering Lanky,
"that big gump had hidden down there in the cellar of the old hotel
that he wanted burned forever from any prying eyes?"

The puncher squinted his eyes and frowned before giving his opinion.

"Course, I don't know for sure, and I wouldn't be bothered digging in
the ashes of this shack just to satisfy my curiosity. But as Jerry
here will remember, some years ago there was talk around this section
to the effect that Zeke Spavin had made way with another puncher named
Hick Davis."

"They was seen together jest before Hick he disappeared," Jerry took up
the tale; "an' a heap of us allers did b'lieve Zeke an' his pal must
hev hed words, went firin' mad, clinched, an' thet Hick he got his.
Mebbe now Zeke, bein' clost to this hyah place, done buried his man in
the cellar o' the hotel thar."

"That would seem to explain his scared way of looking down into the
cellar through the trapdoor in the floor," Frank observed. "And
thinking he'd have an easier mind if all evidence was destroyed, the
notion to burn down the hotel came to him. That was why he left his hat
behind."

"What luck did you have, Dad? Found that Lost Mountain, I hope," said
Lanky, after some further talk about the fire.

"I'm sorry to say we didn't meet with much success, son. But we've
decided to go on a new track to-morrow, and hope for better luck."

They found a good place to make camp, avoiding the vicinity of the
deserted town, lest their enemies return on some account and give them
trouble. The ponies were not forgotten, and both Mr. Wallace and Zander
admitted that Jerry's natural corral was the finest freak of nature
they had ever seen.

Another day dawned, and once more the three men set out. It was a long
day to the boys. Lanky put in a portion of his time in fishing for
trout in a noisy stream of icy water that ran down the mountainside not
far away.

When he came back about noon he carried a string of the fattest and
freshest speckled trout Frank and Paul had ever seen.

"Game fighters, every one of 'em, in the bargain!" declared the
fisherman. "You must go along with me this afternoon, boys, and we'll
lay in enough to feed the whole bunch."

This they did, and with such success that the memory of that day's
sport would remain with the young sportsmen as a fragrant memory.

"We sure must ask permission to get busy ourselves to-morrow," said
Lanky, as they once more made camp. "If the men are knocked out
again to-day it'd be only fair to give us a chance to best them.
Our vacation's getting along, and soon we'll be on our way back to
Columbia, to spend the rest of this blooming summer."

When Mr. Wallace listened to the appeal from Lanky, he agreed that
since the three chums had had so much to do with finding the two maps
and advancing the spark of their common cause, it should be as they
wished.

Paul, however, was to be grievously disappointed, for his ankle, which
he had sprained on first coming to Rockspur Ranch, began to trouble him
again.

"Hard luck, Paul," Frank told him, on taking a look at the painful
joint. "You've gone and knocked that ankle against a root or a rock,
and if you're wise you'll lay low for a couple of days."

So when the others started forth with fair hopes of accomplishing
something worth while, poor Paul was left to tend camp.

"Be sure and make your way up to the corral along toward noon," Lanky
told him: "so as to see that our ponies are O.K.--that is, if your
ankle lets you limp that far."

"No trouble about it, I guess," returned the chagrined Paul, who
naturally did not like to be left behind when his chums were going to
be in harness and do some exploring.

"Cook yourself a fat lunch, too," advised Lanky, feeling sorry for the
disappointed boy. "It'll help pass the hours away. At most, we expect
to show up some time before sundown. By-by! Keep an eye out for those
tough men, though I don't believe they mean to return here for days, if
ever."

So Frank and Lanky went off, never dreaming that they were fated to
pass through another wonderful experience before again setting eyes on
the chum they left behind.

Lanky and Frank learned just where the others had done most of their
looking for the so-called Lost Mountain, in the depths of which, they
understood, was the five-fingered cave that Josh Kinney used to visit
regularly, to replenish his depleted treasury by a fresh haul from his
deposit of gold nuggets.

Before leaving the camp Lanky and Frank, between them, had laid out a
plan of campaign. Following this they now set off on a tangent with the
course taken a short time before by Mr. Wallace, Jerry Brime and Zander
Forbes.

"We'll try out our scheme," Lanky declared later on, as they continued
to walk along; "and then if it fails to bring results, why, to-morrow
we can skirmish over in the region they've been combing day after day."

The morning passed, and so far the boys had not run across a single
thing to give them encouragement.

"We don't seem to be getting anywhere," observed Frank.

"Let's swing more to the left, along this dip in the mountain,"
suggested Lanky. "Then we'll be gradually getting back to camp, and at
the same time nearing the region where dad and his gang are working.

"It's mighty wild and leery looking over in that quarter," observed
Frank. "Looks to me as though Nature had tried to turn things upside
down many a time, in days long passed. Been landslides, too, that have
changed the whole face of the country, carrying acres of trees and
rocks down the mountain."

"That's one reason," observed the other eagerly, "I want to hunt there
for the Lost Mountain which, you know, we decided was only a big mound.
Remember, we figured it out from certain marks on the map that they
stood for landslides? Let's go, Frank."

"A snack first, for I'm hungry, and then we're off," came the reply.

"All right. I've never yet declined to eat," laughed Lanky.

The boys found that the going became more difficult as one hour, and
then two hours crept past. Still Lanky seemed to be growing more and
more confident.

"Let me tell you, Frank!" he said later on. "Right now I firmly believe
we're a whole lot closer to Lost Mountain than dad has ever been in
three days' search. Why, any one of the several big humps we've run
across might turn out to be the seat of Kinney's find."

"But, somehow," interjected Frank, who had been gazing anxiously
heavenward, "I don't like the looks of the sky with all those black
wind clouds scudding up so fast. We are bound to get some kind of a
gale before a great while."

"Shucks! it may be only a wind storm," jeered Lanky.

"Maybe. But a wind storm can do as much harm sometimes as anything on
this earth."

Five minutes afterwards an ominous roaring sound that chilled the
blood in their veins came to their ears. The roaring grew in depth and
intensity.




CHAPTER XX

THE AVALANCHE


"What's coming down on us, Frank?" Lanky called out in a voice filled
with apprehension, as the roaring sound rapidly grew more and more
terrible.

"I don't know," came the reply. "Something we've never run up against
before, I take it!"

"An earthquake?"

"Hardly that, Lanky. So far we haven't felt any movement to the
mountain here. That wind, though, is whipping things something fierce.
See that big branch of a cedar tree going off like a balloon! It's
more like a cyclone than anything else, but I never heard of them in a
mountain district."

"Grab hold of something!" bellowed Lanky, alarmed by the growing
darkness and the wild clamor. "Did you ever see such a country for
big things happening--first a cloudburst, and now--this whooper of a
tornado!"

"I'm bothered most about something else," admitted Frank, though he had
to say it in the ear of his chum to make himself heard.

"What is it, Frank?"

"A landslide!" came back, to make Lanky shiver afresh.

"Great Cæsar's ghost! do you reckon we're going to be caught by a slip
of the mountain side, Frank?"

"I hope not, Lanky. But we're unfortunate to be in the path of that
kind of turnover."

"Humph, I always said I'd be willing to try anything _once_," Lanky
admitted, as if in contrition. "But say, I draw the line at getting in
the path of a slide that could bury a whole town like Columbia. Frank,
can't we do something to better our chances?"

"How?" demanded the other, a bit confused himself.

"Run for second base, and slide!" bellowed Lanky, who used this
figurative language without intending any levity in the least, but
because it came handiest to the tongue of a baseball enthusiast.

"If we only knew where the old thing was apt to come whooping down,
Lanky, we might take a chance. But for all we can tell, it's as safe
right here as anywhere else."

"Guess that's so," agreed the distressed Lanky. "But, shucks, it's hard
lines to just hang around and wait to see whether you stick or get a
free ride atop an avalanche!"

Nevertheless, there was absolutely nothing else for them to do. Indeed,
the wind storm was by this time so frightful that had the boys
attempted to move along the side of the steep mountain they were apt to
be snatched up and carried away like thistle-down on a summer's breeze.

"Gettin' worse and worse!" called out Lanky, a few minutes after the
decision had been made to stay where they were and try to "duck" in
case they were given any warning of the coming of a great slide.

From one particular quarter they now heard a dreadful confusion of
noises that in Frank's mind could mean only one thing. There were also
distinct vibrations of the rocks underfoot that convinced him of the
truth.

"That's caused by a slide somewhere over to the right," he told Lanky,
who was clutching a near-by tree in order to keep from being blown away.

"Don't see anything of it, Frank, do you?"

"Air's filled with all sorts of things--dead leaves, branches ripped
from pinon and oak trees, all whirling around like mad," called back
Frank. "But it's over that way, I'm sure."

"I'm glad it's gone past and didn't touch us out between the bases,"
cried Lanky. "Do you think that wind's letting up any?"

"Not a bit! Getting stronger, if anything! Worst's yet to come, I'm
afraid, Lanky."

"Wow, that's tough luck!" shouted the other at the same time trying
to brace himself so as to seem like his old self, ready to snap his
fingers at trouble and grin in the face of big odds. "Wonder if we'll
pull through alive, Frank?"

"Don't talk that way!" he heard his comrade shout, as the gale howled
and the mountain continued to tremble under the shock of thousands of
tons of rock and earth and undermined trees. "We'll set our teeth and
do our level best. Nobody on earth could do more!"

"You said something that time, Frank! But, gee whiz, it's _awful_!"

The boys crouched there and waited, clinging to a hope that the
avalanche they had heard crashing down the side of the mountain not
half a mile away would be the only slip accompanying that storm.

Under most circumstances they could have done something to better their
condition; but such was not the case now. Frank felt like a grain of
sand on the seashore when confronting such convulsions. Earthquakes
and the eruptions of vast volcanoes are the most terrible of all the
convulsions of nature; and before them the bravest shrink, unable to
cope with such colossal happenings.

Minutes appeared like hours to the two cowering lads. Their hearts
seemed to jump into their throats at every fresh outburst of the
warring elements, as though they feared the end had come, and they
would never again see the loved ones far away in the old home town.

"Don't believe I can stand this much longer, Frank!" complained Lanky.
At the same time he realized how foolish it was to say such a thing,
when so absolutely helpless to better conditions.

"Get a fresh grip on yourself, Lanky!" was all the other could say to
comfort the shivering one, for Frank was far from feeling confident as
to the outcome of their new and dreadful adventure.

"It's coming again, Frank!" shrieked Lanky a short time afterwards, as
once more the side of the mountain commenced to tremble under their
feet.

"Seems so," Frank, between stiff lips. "Keep a grip on yourself, Lanky.
It will pass. I guess we'll pull through all right."

There is nothing more apt to carry a feeling of panic to the human
heart than to feel the solid earth, which all his life he had deemed
staple, quiver and writhe as if in agony. Small wonder then that
stout-hearted Lanky Wallace found himself gripped with increasing fear.

Frank caught hold of his chum's arm. He knew that the touch of
reassuring fingers was more apt to steady Lanky than any cheering words
he might utter. Besides, talking under such appalling conditions was
anything but an easy thing.

This second tremor also passed off, and again the two young
prospectors found themselves safe. Lanky began to recover a part of his
customary assurance.

"If only that's the wind-up of these slides, then everything'll look
bright again," he called out. "Oh, Frank, there sure is a break in
those black clouds nearly overhead, for I caught a glimpse of sunlight!"

"Yes, that's so," replied his chum, and then adding hurriedly: "Hold
tight, Lanky, for here's where we get ours!"

The grinding noise came on once more, closer, more dreadful than ever,
and the boys reeled like drunken men and held their breath with awe.
Wildly did the side of the great mountain, home of slides, tremble
and writhe. Above them the lads could hear the deafening noise of the
oncoming mass of dislodged material, rushing down to find rest far
below amidst the remnants of former similar catastrophes.

It seemed as though all creation must be in eruption, with massive
rocks piling over each other and racing down the slide.

Lanky, completely overcome, fell down on his hands and knees as though
exhausted and hopeless. For an indefinite space of time he felt himself
moving, at first swiftly downward, then with diminished speed.

Then things came to an abrupt stop--and he was still alive!

The movement of the slipping mountain had ceased as suddenly as it had
begun. Even the wild howling wind had discontinued, as though the wand
of some magician had subdued its fierce clamor.




CHAPTER XXI

IN LUCK AGAIN


"Frank! Oh, Frank!"

No longer did Lanky feel that sickening sensation in the pit of his
stomach at having the solid ground underfoot heaving and grumbling. So,
almost unconsciously, he had shrieked out that one word--the name of
his faithful chum, on whose arm he had come to lean as though it were
indeed a tower of strength.

"I'm here close by you, Lanky!" he heard.

"But you're not badly hurt, I hope, Frank?" burst out the other, a new
anxiety discernible in his quavering voice.

"Nothing to cripple me--a few bruises, and such things. How about you?"

"Not saying a word, I'm so tickled to be alive. The bumps I got were
just gentle taps to what I might have picked up, if only we hadn't been
just on the outer edge of the slide."

When once more they came in contact the grateful boys shook hands in
mutual congratulation.

"As near a miracle as ever I expect to run across, that's right," Lanky
asserted. "And, Frank, the wind storm that started all this business
going has petered out."

It was indeed a fact, for no longer did the boys catch that roaring
series of noises as the storm rushed over the mountains. The black
clouds hid the heavens, however, and made such a pall that it was
almost dark around them.

"Let's try to have a look-in," suggested the once-more eager Lanky.
"We'll see what sort of new stamping ground we've lit on after our run
down on the avalanche."

All about them great masses of rock and trees that had come down from
above, were piled up in confused heaps, with strange looking gullies
lying between that Lanky started to call coulees, after the Western way.

"One thing's sure," said Frank, after they had climbed around for a
short time, with more or less difficulty; "we're not going to get back
to camp this night. As darkness comes on it would be foolish for us to
keep moving about in this wilderness of upturned things."

"I reckon you told the truth when you said that," admitted the other,
grasping the still serious nature of their predicament. "Why, we might
start another slide on the jump! Some of these boulders seem to be set
on a pivot and the least shove would set 'em rolling, knocking others
off their perch, and--Frank! what's that long split off there that
looks as if the face of the rocks had been burst open?"

"Just what happened here, Lanky; but not with this slide. It might be
a thousand, or ten thousand, years ago when that big fissure was made.
Let's crawl over that way and investigate."

"Well, I'm going to be prepared for anything," ventured the other. "I
want to say that we were some lucky not to lose our guns when coming
down on that toboggan slide. Sometimes these black-looking caves are
dens for wild animals."

"All right," said Frank quickly. "Keep on your guard, then. But you
mustn't forget we're out skirmishing for a cave; and on that account we
ought to look this one over."

A brief investigation convinced the two boys that it was too big an
undertaking for them to handle that afternoon.

"This is as good a place for us to camp in as any," suggested Frank.
"If we're of the same mind in the morning, why, we'll put in some work
here. I don't know just why I should feel that way, but some sort of
hunch seems to tell me we'll find something worth our while if we go
far enough."

"Wow! but it's as black as my pocket inside there, Frank." As he said
this Lanky, on hands and knees, was staring past the guardian jaws of
rock into the ugly looking fissure.

"That's why we'll have to wait for morning before we try to explore
what lies inside the mountain," replied Frank.

"You mean we'll have to lay in some torches, so as to see our way--is
that the idea, Frank?"

"A whole lot of faggots that will burn, but not too fast," the other
answered, having already mapped out this part of the scheme. "You can
understand what a pickle we'd be up against, wandering around in an
unknown cavern with our last torch flickering to its wind-up."

"That would be tough, I own up, Frank; I hope it doesn't come along.
But we sure do seem to get our feet in a heap of stirring happenings.
It's like jumping out of the frying pan into the fire with us these
days. But say, when do we eat, I'd like to know?"

Frank chuckled as he went on to say:

"Finished the last crumb of our lunch at noon, you remember." At the
words his companion in trouble emitted a groan and began to rub the pit
of his stomach sympathetically. "But wait till you hear how manna seems
to come down to us, as it did to the Children of Israel in the Arabian
desert long years ago. Look over yonder, Lanky. What do you see, boy?
Tell me!"

Lanky looked, started, and rubbed his eyes, half suspecting that he
must be "seeing things" that had no actual foundation.

"Frank-- Why, say, it er--looks like a deer!" he exclaimed.

"It is a deer--caught in the big jam and killed clean by that rock
covering its head. A young buck in the bargain, I'd say, and just
begging to be cut into slices for two hungry fellows' supper."

"Lead me to it, Frank!" ejaculated Lanky, as he drew his hunting-knife.
"Talk to me about favorites of fortune, we're sure the luckiest fellows
west of the old Mississippi. Venison for supper--plenty of it for a
whole week--and thrown in front of us like that!" snapping his fingers.
"Whoopee! what's the use worrying when things come tumbling along by
themselves?"

So the two boys settled down to making camp then and there. Frank
started his fire, with a vast abundance of fine fuel to be had for the
picking up, while Lanky undertook to skin the deer. He then cut off
steak and chops until Frank warned him they were only two in the mess,
and not a whole regiment.

As evening drew near they sat down to enjoy a fine spread, cooked
in genuine hunters' style, with no limit to anything save their own
capacity.

The sky cleared as they sat there, and it was difficult for them to
realize that only a few hours before all nature seemed to be reeling
and rocking and being turned upside-down in a vast convulsion.

Morning arrived, and after a good breakfast they cooked quite a lot
of the venison, to carry along with them in their exploration of the
promising cave back of the jaws of the wide fissure.

Next they fashioned a pile of inflammable torches by the aid of Lanky's
handy little camp hatchet, which he always carried attached to his belt
and had often found valuable for use in emergencies like the present.

"All ready, Frank! Let's get a move on!" announced the impatient one,
as he bound a large share of the torches to his back, picked up his
gun, and awaited the word to make the plunge.

One torch at a time was all they intended to use, since it would give
enough illumination for their purpose and almost double the capacity of
their stock in hand.

"Fills the bill like fun," announced Lanky, after Frank had succeeded
in lighting a billet of dry wood, the flare really illuminating the
walled-in space between the rocky barriers. "Now to find out if this is
going to lead two plucky prospectors to the corn-crib where they'll get
their fill."

As the boys proceeded it became evident the strange fissure in the side
of the rocky mountain was but a "breathing space," as Lanky called it,
for much more wonderful things hidden further in the underground depths.

Sometimes Frank held the blazing torch, and then when a fresh one
happened to be needed it would be Lanky who gripped it.

Several times they feared they had come upon the end of the passage.
In each instance, however, a fresh way to continue was found, even
though it was necessary for them to get down flat and wriggle along in
snake-like fashion.

"Huh! we'll remember this last crawl as 'Fat Man's Misery,'" Lanky
granted, after negotiating the difficult place successfully.

"It's got me guessing where we'll be apt to come out, what with all
this twisting and turning," observed Frank, still later on, as they
found themselves looking upon a capacious cavern, with a lofty ceiling
where stalactites hung like immense icicles.

"And it's bothering me," spoke up Lanky, "how we could find any outlet
at all, if our supply of torches or matches should give out. What with
all this hard work, I'm as thirsty as--Frank, we made a foozle play
after all!"

"Forgot to fetch any water along--that's a fact," admitted the other,
realizing the mistake when it was too late to remedy it. Then, on
second thought, he continued: "After all, we hadn't even a canteen
to hold any supply. Besides, I reckon there's aplenty dripping from
these stalactites and trickling down the walls. It ought to quench our
thirst."

Lanky tried the plan and found there was no taste to the cold water,
though it certainly must contain more or less lime, to make those odd
formations.

They had left this monster cavern and were passing along another chain
of queer-shaped pockets, all connected, when Lanky, who held the torch,
came to a sudden pause, so that Frank bumped into him.

"What's the matter?" demanded Frank.

"I glimpsed a pair of yellow eyes ahead! And listen to the growling,
will you?" gasped Lanky.




CHAPTER XXII

AN ENDLESS CAVERN CHAIN


"I see what you mean, Lanky, and hear the growling to boot!" exclaimed
Frank Allen.

"Some sort of wild creature makes its den in these caves!" ejaculated
Lanky. "Maybe it's a wolf, or else a big cat! It might even be a
mountain lion."

"We can't do anything but make a stab at guessing," Frank told him.
"One thing is certain--we've either got to turn tail and quit, or
else----"

"Plug it!" snapped Lanky decidedly. "Here, Frank, hold my light so I
can kneel down and sight between those twin yellow spots."

"It's a risky thing to do, Lanky. But, for one, I don't want to go back
like a whipped cur, just because of a lone cat! Wait a minute! I've got
an idea that may pay."

He took the burning torch and started to fix one end in a crevice about
six feet up from the rocky floor.

"Bully for you, Frank! I get you," cried Lanky, grasping the idea in
a flash. "Two guns ought to make surer work of the spitter than one.
Now, count three when you've got your aim, and we'll fire together."

At the word both reports rang out with a deafening concussion echoing
and re-echoing along the passage. There was no attack, but the boys,
as they pumped another cartridge into each gun chamber, could detect a
strange shuffling noise. Then all became deathly still again.

"Huh! got him that time, all right!" said Lanky triumphantly.

While he took the torch and started forward, cautious Frank held his
gun in readiness for immediate work. But there was no need of another
shot, for they found a wolf of unusual size lying where it had fallen.

"I'm sorry we had to do it," remarked Frank, "because it's a mother
wolf, and like as not she's got a litter of whelps somewhere around
here. If so be we happen to run across the bunch we'll have to knock
them on the head, because they'll starve to death with the mother gone."

As the boys ran across no sign of the wolf's den, however, it was
concluded she must have had it in one of the numerous squatty side
passages they had encountered every little while. These they could not
have searched even had they wished, as they were too low to admit of
their crawling through, though a wolf might be easily able to do so.

Twice they fancied they had been in certain caverns before, because of
familiar signs. So to avoid repetitions, they took to marking their
passage and seeking fresh avenues for making progress.

Hours passed in this way.

Their stock of torch-wood was commencing to lower, and Frank began
to wonder if they would not display wisdom by discontinuing the
exploration of those bewildering caverns until the others of the party
could join in the work.

But there was so much fascination connected with the possibility of
running upon what they sought at any moment, that he allowed himself to
consent to Lanky's eager plea to "go on just a little further." Lanky,
on his part, felt absolutely certain that they must be close to that
mysterious five-fingered cave so plainly marked on the chart and would
stumble on it soon.

"We've got to eat sparingly of this cooked meat," advised Frank, as
they sat on a broken stalactite that had fallen from the roof and
partook of a "snack," their stomachs having been calling for food for
some time.

"Say," breezed Lanky, his mouth full of cold venison, "that sounds as
if you might expect to be marooned down here in all these twists and
turns and big vaulted halls for a whole week!"

"You never can tell," was the rather noncommittal answer he received.
"Better to make it last two whole days, even if we have to keep on
short rations, than to gobble the last scrap and then go hungry."

"Oh, rats, Frank! Something seems to tell me we've reached the end of
our hard luck and are nearly ready to fall in with our own at last.
Anyway, let's find one more big cave, if not more; and after that when
you say the word we'll throw up the sponge. But only for a time! I'm
bound to light on that five-fingered cave, if I keep searching all the
rest of the summer."

So they went along for another stretch of time. Finally Frank came to a
sudden halt.

"Anything doing?" snapped his mate, bringing his gun up and peering
earnestly into the half gloom lying beyond.

"Only that I'm about all in, and we both need rest after all we've gone
through lately," Frank told him decisively.

"Just as you say, Frank," Lanky agreed. To tell the truth his own knees
were shaky from so much crawling and bending down, in negotiating many
of the low and sinuous passages.

"We're coming to another cave, I imagine from the way things run,
Lanky, and no matter what it looks like, we'll manage to get some rest.
While we sleep we'll be saving our stock of torches. After we've got
back our strength will be time enough to think of finding some sort of
outlet to this queer old rambling underground place that makes me think
of what I've read about those catacombs under the city of Rome."

"Sounds as though you didn't want to go back over our course and make
use of that same crevice for an exit, Frank."

"As the cook says," Frank told him, with a little laugh, "when giving
directions for stewing a rabbit: 'First get your rabbit!' That's the
prime thing. With us it would mean find the crevice once more."

Lanky whistled on hearing Frank say that.

"I opine from the way you talk," he observed, "that you don't bank much
on our chances for doing that!"

"Well, to begin with, Lanky, we've used two-thirds of our stock of
fire-sticks up coming here, and long before we could make that crevice
again we'd be groping in pitch darkness, also in danger of falling down
one of the precipices we've been avoiding."

"Wow! that's tough luck I'd say, Frank! I've been so bent on finding
that five-fingered cave I've let everything else slip out of my mind."

"And more than that," continued the other prospector, "I feel pretty
certain we couldn't locate that crevice in a week of hunting!"

"Lost! Lost, like the babes in the wood!" groaned Lanky, in pretended
dismay but some real anxiety.

"Well," Frank informed his chum, "here's our cave, just as I reckoned
would be the case; so after a little look around we'll pick out the
softest rock we can find and say good-bye to all our troubles for a
time."

"I'm all to the good on the proposition," stated Lanky. "Some cave,
believe me! With a low ceiling, too. No stalactites growing downward
here, you notice."

"No. But clap your eyes on all those big bats hanging head downward
from rough places in the roof. Must be hundreds, almost thousands of
the ugly, winged, ratlike creatures. There, some are starting to whirl
around now, seeing our light."

More and more of the bats swung in circles, both big and small. Lanky
struck at them with what remained of his bunch of torches, and several
times let out a screech of triumph when he made a good hit.

By degrees the bats vacated their sleeping chamber, and when quiet had
been restored the boys looked for a promising place to lie down and
sleep.

"We can take a closer survey after we wake up," suggested Frank, with a
reason he did not care to explain just then. But as Lanky was dead for
sleep and tired, he failed to ask questions, as was his custom.

They were not disturbed. If any of those fierce-looking winged denizens
returned to their roost, neither of the boys knew of the fact, so deep
was their slumber for some hours.

Frank felt confident that there was some opening not far away from this
cave, because those hosts of bats could never have come from such a
long distance as that crevice.

When Lanky opened his eyes he saw that Frank had lighted a torch and
was coming toward him, bearing one in his hand.

"What time do you think it can be, Frank?" was his first question, and
a very natural one too, since Frank carried a small wrist watch.

"About sunrise, I'd judge," Lanky was told. He noticed Frank looked
unusually smiling, upon which he pointed a finger at him, and demanded:

"Here, what's all that grinning about? You've got something up your
sleeve, Frank Allen, which you're meaning to tell me right off the
handle. Go to it, now."

"For one thing," said the other impressively, "I noticed something
before we lay down to sleep; but didn't mention it, because we were
both tuckered out and needed rest most of all. Scramble up off your
downy couch and come along with me."

Lanky trotted at his heels, all on edge, as he told himself.

"Is it another exit to this bunch of caves?" he asked.

"No," came the answer. "But I'm dead certain there must be one not a
great way off. Those bats in here told me as much. Then, here's the
other convincing reason. Look down, and not up, Lanky."

"Wow! A heap of ashes, eh? Shows that we're not the only chaps who've
been wandering around for hours and hours in these passages."

"Notice what a lot of wood ashes there are," pursued Frank. "That would
mean a fire has been burned many times. Long ago, too, I figure, though
never a gust of wind disturbs the heap back here."

Lanky grew more deeply absorbed in the way Frank was putting things.

"See here!" he blurted out, "open up an tell a fellow just what you're
hinting at, Frank. Do you think it may have been old Josh Kinney who
used to camp out here from time to time? If that's so, as he must have
toted all his wood from the outside, you're right about there being
another entrance to the caves not a great way off which we can find if
we hunt systematically."

"I've been poking around a bit this morning while you snoozed,"
continued Frank.

"Yes, and what've you discovered to make you look so pleased?"

"I suspected it when I saw these ashes, and now I know it's a dead
open-and-shut thing."

"Whoopee! Do you mean--" blazed out the overjoyed Lanky.

"Just what I do!" broke in Frank. "Right now we're in that
five-fingered cave we saw marked on the map!"




CHAPTER XXIII

KEPT UNDER COVER


"That's bully news you're giving me, Frank!" exclaimed Lanky Wallace,
as he impulsively gripped the hand of his loyal chum and squeezed it.
"Let's get busy and try to locate Kinney's treasure chest."

"After we've had a bite to eat," Frank told him. "Long ago I made it my
habit never, when I could help it, to start a day's work on an empty
stomach."

They made quite a dent in their slender stock of meat, but both were
now quite confident that it was only a matter of a few hours before
they would be once more under the blue sky.

Frank and Lanky consulted that second little chart, and also conferred
together. Then they started to search in the most likely locality.

Hours crept past and still the object of all this peering around and
testing out all likely nooks in the five-fingered cave seemed to be as
far from being discovered as in the beginning of the search.

Their stock of torches was growing gradually less and less, so that it
began to look rather serious. To be left in utter darkness, without
knowing which way to turn in order to gain the outer air, also with
hunger commencing to make them uncomfortable! It was not a pleasant
outlook, Lanky admitted.

Then, just when both boys were of a mind to give up further hunting for
the secret hiding place of Kinney's hoard of nuggets, they ran across
something that filled them with sudden hope.

Lanky managed to stumble over an unseen spur of rock jutting out from
the wall low down, and when he threw out his hand to save himself from
falling he thrust it into what seemed to be a narrow crevice that
neither of them had before noticed.

That hand chanced to be clutching the torch, and almost mechanically
Lanky leaned forward to thrust the blaze inside the crack. He
immediately gave vent to a shout that echoed through the cave and set a
dozen startled bats to swooping in circles overhead.

"Frank, what d'you think! We've hit it plum center!" he yelled. "Just
peep in there and tell me what you see!"

"As sure as you live, Lanky, I do believe you stumbled on purpose
and knew it was here all the while! Reach in, and see whether we're
dreaming or not!"

Lanky hastened to follow the suggestion.

"That's the stuff, I tell you, Frank!" he screamed, holding some
object up in his hand. "A real gold nugget and weighing as much as
three ounces, at that; with plenty more snuggled down in there. Talk to
me about luck! Why, the Wallaces have got them all whipped, hands down!"

"All right, then," said Frank seriously. "We know now where the cache
is. Our business is to get out of this place, find the rest of the
party, come with those strong gunny-sacks, and carry off the whole of
Kinney's hoard."

"Gee whiz!" commented Lanky, "the old man must have been digging those
nuggets right along, carrying a few away with him, and chucking the
rest in his stone bank here. Shall I take this one with me, Frank?"

"Yes, we ought to have some evidence to show we're not bluffing when we
reel off the story of our adventures. Each of us might put a few in our
pockets. But go slow, and don't load yourself down, Lanky, became you
might start another landslide, you know."

They were actually on their last sliver of torch-wood when they turned
their backs on the queer five-fingered cave and plunged into a narrow
passage. Frank, after a close examination, decided this must be the one
the old prospector had used during his periodical visits to his secret
claim.

Before they had gone far they found to their dismay that the light was
failing. Lanky began to worry, but Frank cheered him up.

"I'm certain I can feel fresh air on my cheeks," he announced. "That of
course, would indicate we're close on that exit right now. I've still
got a little stock of matches in my safe, and we'll make them last as
long as we can."

"Who's afraid?" Lanky broke out, with fresh animation. "After such luck
in absolutely falling on to that cache of nuggets, we're not going to
let little things knock us out. You're right, though, about that fresh
air, Frank, because I can sniff the same every breath I draw."

The torch flickered, and went out.

"Look ahead, Lanky. What do you see?" called out Frank.

"Streaks of daylight, looks like to me."

So it proved to be, and a few minutes later the two boys emerged from
the cave to find the sun shining brightly, with nothing in sight to
diminish their overwhelming joy.

"We must mark this spot so we can find it again without any trouble,"
Frank suggested.

"Sure thing," agreed his chum. "And it'd be wise for us to sort of
blaze our way to camp."

This they proceeded to do as they made their way along the side of the
mountain. It was so rough, after that frightful jumble following the
landslides, that they made but tedious progress.

"Never get the ponies in here," Lanky grumbled at one time. "So, like
as not, we'll just have to tote all that stuff out on our backs. Whee!
it's a bit heavy, even three small nuggets of the same."

"But you'd never have been happy if you hadn't found the cache,
remember," Frank told him, at which Lanky grinned.

"That was all bluff, Frank, and you know it," he laughed. "Why, I'm
fairly quivering with happiness, and feel like shouting for all that's
out, to blow off steam. But when I think of that Nash Yesson and his
gang, I shut down on all idea of making a racket."

It took them all of that morning to get close to the plateau where, as
they well knew, Gold Fork was located, the former mining camp, taking
its name from the clear little stream that ran down the side of the
mountain another direction from the great canyon.

Great was the excitement in the camp when the two long overdue boys
came in sight. Mr. Wallace and the men had sought for them all morning
long, and were preparing to search in another direction when shouts
told them the wanderers had been able to get back "under their own
steam," to quote Lanky.

Then the story was told and the precious nuggets passed from hand to
hand, to prove it was an actual fact. Plans were immediately made to
proceed to the cave in the morning in order to bring away the treasure.
Mr. Wallace figured that they could transport it on their backs to the
corral where their ponies were quartered, and then the journey back to
Rockspur Ranch would be next in order.

Every one was to be in the party, even Paul, whose ankle, though still
a bit painful, was not sore enough to keep him from feasting his eyes
on that strange five-fingered cave, also the gold nuggets lying in the
hiding place shrewd old Josh Kinney had chosen many years back as his
treasure cache.

Thanks to the slashes Lanky had made on occasional dwarf oaks, they had
no trouble whatever in attaining their goal. A large assortment of good
torches had been prepared on the previous afternoon, consequently they
lost no time in plunging into the passage so cleverly concealed behind
a screen of thick vines hanging down the face of a small cliff.

When the last nugget had been drawn out from its depository and the
entire collection fastened securely in some six stout gunny-sacks, the
mouths of which were tied with strands of rope, they decided to lose no
time in starting for the camp.

That was where they miscalculated, for something happened to interfere
with their plans.

Zander Forbes, being in the lead, had just stepped out from behind the
vines and turned an outlying rock when the smash of a gun was heard and
he came backing into the hole again.

"Those sneaks have spotted us on the way here, and are lying in wait to
do us up!" he announced.

Every one knew without asking that he meant Nash Yesson, Lef
Sellers--if the Columbia shirk still hung on to the gang that had
been abusing him so shamefully of late--and the rough boys from the
boisterous Double-Z Ranch.

"Shot like they meant business, too," added the indignant and angry
Zander, as he ruefully rubbed a red line on his neck that indicated the
recent passage of a hot bullet.

"Then it's a case of siege with us," said Mr. Wallace, very much
displeased. "We might manage to find that other exit in time, if the
boys can remember the course they took. But the chances would be
against our transporting such heavy weights as these sacks along. What
would you advise, Jerry?"

"Give 'em hot cakes!" was the emphatic retort of the old puncher and
prospector. "If I kin spot that Zeke, I'd git him, an' wipe out a ole
score!"

So the siege began, and hours passed without any change worth while
taking place. Frequently either Jerry or Zander would amuse themselves
by a few old tricks known to pioneers and Indians alike in the days
when caravans used to trek across the plains.

Both of their hats were perforated several times by well-aimed shots,
and it was lucky that their heads did not happen to be in the coverings
at the time, but only the sticks the two punchers used to raise the
hats into the range of vision of their enemies.

The boys were worried to figure just how they could give their enemies
the slip, having suggested, and thrown aside, a number of plans, when
something entirely unexpected came about to lend them a helping hand.

"Well, well, well!" Zander was heard to say, with both wonder are glee
in his voice. "Say, boys, what d'you think? We've got allies up yonder
on the mountain side. Saw a puff of smoke, and, will you believe me?
that skunk of a Nash Yesson jumped out from behind a rock where he'd
been hiding and shooting this way. He's whooping things up and tumbling
all over himself, like he'd been wounded some."

Lanky, already peering out from his cover, gave a wild yell.

"They've had enough already, are getting away in a big hurry, carrying
Nash along like a log. Guess he got his finish that time, for both arms
are dragging on the ground."

"But who can it be willing to give us the glad hand?" Paul asked,
rather bewildered, knowing that in all probability, besides themselves
are the Yesson crowd, there was not a single human being in that
section of the country.

It was speedy Lanky who again made an important discovery.

"Look what's coming down from up there--two men carrying guns! No,
unless my eyes are fooling me, one of them's a girl rigged out like a
regular sport hunter! Frank--don't faint now--but I believe it's Minnie
Cuthbert!"




CHAPTER XXIV

CONCLUSION


It proved to be Minnie Cuthbert, although Frank had to rub his eyes
several times before he could prove to his doubting self they were not
playing him tricks.

With Minnie was no other than the ranch foreman, Lige Smith. Apparently
Lige was mighty well pleased because that shot of his had taken the
wind out of the sails of the persistent Nash Yesson, whom none of them
would, in all probability, ever run across again.

Minnie, after shaking hands with every one, Frank Allen first of all,
produced a letter that she had for Mr. Wallace.

"It came just as you thought it would, Mr. Wallace," she told him,
"and I coaxed Mrs. Wallace to let me come along with Lige, who's been
the finest kind of gentleman and guide. You see, I'd made up my mind I
wanted to see the Rocky Mountain country at close range; and when some
girls set out to accomplish a certain thing that is reasonable,--well,
there are many ways to get there."

Lanky was watching his father closely, anticipating the hearing of
important news.

"I reckon now, Dad," he finally broke out, "by the way you're smiling,
the thing's come out about as you wished. Did they select you instead
of Mr. Ambrose Gilman to be president of the bank when Mr. Carberry
retires next month?"

"So this letter informs me, son," replied the gentleman. "I left my
address at the bank, as a matter of course, for I'd heard rumors you
know, that either Gilman or I were in line for the place. Thank you a
dozen times, Minnie, and you too, Lige, for getting me the news with
the least possible delay."

Before attempting to transport all that gold to the place where it
could be loaded on the ponies, it was decided a reconnaissance should
be made.

Accordingly, Jerry, Zander Forbes and Lige Smith set off to scour the
country and learn if indeed their late enemies had passed down the
canyon and dropped out of the search for the gold in disgust.

This was found to be the case, as the three experienced punchers were
clever hands at discovering and reading signs that those less knowing
in woodcraft might have passed heedlessly by.

One piece of good luck fell their way. In some fashion--they never knew
how--two of the pack ponies belonging to the Nash Yesson outfit were
left behind. Possibly they had wandered away. At any rate, they were
found close to the corral. Some intuition apparently had caused them,
once loose, to go to the place where so many of their species were
gathered.

The addition of this pair made the problem of getting that heavy weight
of gold nuggets to faraway Rockspur Ranch a less knotty one.

It was no easy task to carry such burdens on their backs from the
outlet of the five-fingered cave to the deserted mining camp. By
resting at frequent intervals on the way amidst the wreckage caused by
the slide, they managed the work successfully.

Three days afterwards they started forth, descended the canyon, and
after putting the foothills behind, commenced the long ride toward home.

"We must keep a sharp lookout for signs of that ugly crowd," Mr.
Wallace suggested that night. "Somehow, I have an idea they may hang
around here for a week or two, in the hope of still surprising us and
taking this treasure away. I hope you'll post sentries each night,
Lige."

Lige, being foreman at the ranch and having come to join the party,
must from that time on be reckoned with as the leader of the
expedition. Nor was Zander Forbes in the least unwilling to have the
responsibility shifted to other shoulders.

Nothing happened that night, but on the following day while they were
resting in a patch of timber growing about a dry waterhole, they had
reason to believe they might be in for further trouble. Zander Forbes
sighted a clump of horsemen cantering along, whom he recognized as the
bunch they had outwitted.

"If they try for water here," Mr. Wallace remarked, as he too lay in
the scrub along the border of the cottonwoods and watched to ascertain
which way the wind would blow; "there's going to be a battle royal, and
somebody's likely to get badly hurt."

Fortunately the lawless crowd kept straight ahead.

"They still have Nash along," said Paul. "Anyway, some sort of bundle's
fastened on the back of their single pack-horse. But where can Lef
Seller be?"

"Oh, I'm not worrying about that hard case," chimed in Lanky. "He's the
slipperest fox I ever met, and you can trust him to know when he's got
enough kicking around."

"Do you think, Frank," continued Paul, "he could have started back for
his old home to eat humble pie and, with his mother to back him up, get
another chance to walk straight?"

Frank shook his head.

"You've got me on that, Paul. But he can't cause Lanky's folks any
further trouble, so let's forget Lef and his fortunes. Everybody,
'most, has said for years that he's bound to come to some bad end, and
I'm afraid that's a certainty."

Undisturbed by the reckless crowd, the treasure seekers made a detour,
and in due time reached Rockspur Ranch, where they received a riotous
welcome.

The nuggets were safely shipped to the nearest United States assay
office, and later on Mr. Wallace received a check for almost a
hundred-and-fifty thousand dollars to cover the value of Josh Kinney's
secret cache in the five-fingered cave near Gold Fork.

"I shall put five thousand dollars of this to each of your accounts in
the Columbia bank when we get home," he told the delighted Frank, Paul
and Lanky. "A like sum goes to be divided up among the boys connected
with Rockspur Ranch; for although only three of them participated in
the enterprise, every one here, even Gin Sing, would have been glad to
go."

No wonder that Mr. Wallace promised to be the most popular ranch-owner
in the whole State, and never did punchers work so like beavers to
please such a liberal and high-minded boss.

So the time came when they had to say good-bye to dear old Rockspur
Ranch, for all of them, including Minnie, had by then come to love the
free life of the open places beyond the ability of words to tell.

"I mean to come out West again some day," Frank said earnestly, as he
shook hands with Lige, Jerry, and the rest of the boys on the day of
their departure. Both Lanky and Paul echoed his words with all their
hearts.

Then came the ride to the station in the big car and the boarding
of the east-bound express. Whether Frank would be able to keep that
promise made to the Rockspur boys, the future alone will be able to
tell, but we shall meet him and his chums in the meantime in another
volume to follow this, called "Frank Allen and His Motor Boat; or,
Racing to Save a Life."

On the train, as they sped along, the young folks lived over again the
delightful times spent on the ranch. The thrilling adventures that
happened during their stay would never be forgotten.

To Frank Allen, however, the most wonderful event of all was that
arduous and dangerous long ride made by Minnie Cuthbert, when, with
only Lige Smith, the foreman, for company, she rode forth to carry that
letter to Mr. Wallace and see with her own eyes the lofty range of
mountains of which she had read and heard so much.

"You're sure a pal worth having, Min," he told her, as they sat and
reviewed all the events connected with that happening. And Minnie? Why,
she only laughed in her girlish way, smiled at Frank, and said loftily:

"Well, I hope by this time you three inseparable chums understand that
in these days a girl, given a fair chance, can do a heap of things
that once you believed to be impossible except for boys. But, just the
same," she added, with a sigh, "I'll be mighty glad to be back home and
have some decent clothes to wear."


THE END




The Movie Boys Series

_By_ VICTOR APPLETON


 THE MOVIE BOYS ON CALL, or Filming the Perils of A Great City.

 THE MOVIE BOYS IN THE WILD WEST, or Stirring Days Among the Cowboys
 and Indians.

 THE MOVIE BOYS AND THE WRECKERS, or Facing the Perils of the Deep.

 THE MOVIE BOYS IN THE JUNGLE, or Lively Times Among the Wild Beasts.

 THE MOVIE BOYS IN EARTHQUAKE LAND, or Filming Pictures and Strange
 Perils.

 THE MOVIE BOYS AND THE FLOOD, or Perilous Days on the Mighty
 Mississippi.

 THE MOVIE BOYS IN PERIL, or Strenuous Days Along the Panama Canal.

 THE MOVIE BOYS UNDER THE SEA, or The Treasure of the Lost Ship.

 THE MOVIE BOYS UNDER FIRE, or The Search for the Stolen Film.

 THE MOVIE BOYS UNDER UNCLE SAM, or Taking Pictures for the Army.

 THE MOVIE BOYS' FIRST SHOWHOUSE, or Fighting for a Foothold in
 Fairlands.

 THE MOVIE BOYS AT SEASIDE PARK, or The Rival Photo Houses of the
 Boardwalk.

 THE MOVIE BOYS ON BROADWAY, or The Mystery of the Missing Cash Box.

 THE MOVIE BOYS' OUTDOOR EXHIBITION, or the Film that Solved the
 Mystery.

 THE MOVIE BOYS' NEW IDEA, or Getting the Best of Their Enemies.

 THE MOVIE BOYS AT THE BIG FAIR, or The Greatest Film Ever Exhibited.

 THE MOVIE BOYS' WAR SPECTACLE, or The Film that Won the Prize.


 Garden City Publishing Co., _Inc._
 Garden City      New York




The Frank Allen Series

_By_ GRAHAM B. FORBES


 FRANK ALLEN'S SCHOOLDAYS, or The All Around Rivals of Columbia High

 FRANK ALLEN PLAYING TO WIN, or The Boys of Columbia High on the Ice

 FRANK ALLEN IN WINTER SPORTS, or Columbia High on Skates and Iceboats

 FRANK ALLEN AND HIS RIVALS, or The Boys of Columbia High in Track
 Athletics

 FRANK ALLEN--PITCHER, or The Boys of Columbia High on the Diamond

 FRANK ALLEN--HEAD OF THE CREW, or The Boys of Columbia High on the
 River

 FRANK ALLEN IN CAMP, or Columbia High and the School League Rivals

 FRANK ALLEN AT ROCKSPUR RANCH, or The Old Cowboy's Secret

 FRANK ALLEN AT GOLD FORK, or Locating the Lost Claim

 FRANK ALLEN AND HIS MOTORBOAT, or Racing to Save a Life

 FRANK ALLEN CAPTAIN OF THE TEAM, or The Boys of Columbia High on the
 Gridiron

 _Published Oct. 7, 1926_

 FRANK ALLEN AT OLD MOOSE LAKE, or The Trail in the Snow

 _Published Nov. 7, 1926_


 Garden City Publishing Co., _Inc._
 Garden City       New York




The Dave Fearless Series

_By_ ROY ROCKWOOD


 DAVE FEARLESS AFTER A SUNKEN TREASURE, or The Rival Ocean Divers

 DAVE FEARLESS ON A FLOATING ISLAND, or The Cruise of the Treasure Ship

 DAVE FEARLESS AND THE CAVE OF MYSTERY, or Adrift on the Pacific

 DAVE FEARLESS AMONG THE ICEBERGS, or The Secret of the Eskimo Igloo

 DAVE FEARLESS WRECKED AMONG SAVAGES, or The Captives of the Head
 Hunters

 DAVE FEARLESS AND HIS BIG RAFT, or Alone on the Broad Pacific

 DAVE FEARLESS ON VOLCANO ISLAND, or The Magic Cave of Blue Fire

 DAVE FEARLESS CAPTURED BY APES, or In Gorilla Land

 DAVE FEARLESS AND THE MUTINEERS, or Prisoners on the Ship of Death

 DAVE FEARLESS UNDER THE OCEAN, or The Treasure of the Lost Submarine

 DAVE FEARLESS IN THE BLACK JUNGLE, or Lost Among the Cannibals

 DAVE FEARLESS NEAR THE SOUTH POLE, or The Giant Whales of Snow Island


 Garden City Publishing Co., _Inc._
 Garden City       New York




The New Western Series

Exciting, Thrilling Stories of the Old West


  1. TEXAS MEN AND TEXAS CATTLE               E.E. Harriman

  2. THE SCOURGE OF THE LITTLE "C"           J.E. Grinstead

  3. THE LONE HAND TRACKER                 William W. Winter

  4. WHEN DEATH RODE THE RANGE             William W. Winter

  5. RAW GOLD                                      Clem Yore

  6. DON QUICKSHOT LOOKING FOR TROUBLE      Stephen Chalmers

  7. THE LAST SHOT                     William MacLeod Raine

  8. STRAIGHT SHOOTING                          W.C. Tuttle

  9. SAD SONTAG PLAYS HIS HUNCH                 W.C. Tuttle

 10. THE SENTENCE OF THE SIX GUN              Anthony M. Rud
              Published November 1, 1926

 11. THE OUTLAWS OF FLOWER-POT CANYON     Frank C. Robertson
              Published December 1, 1926

 12. THE CLEAN-UP ON DEAD MAN             Frank C. Robertson
              Published January 1, 1927

 13. THE MASTER SQUATTER                     J.E. Grinstead
              Published February 1, 1927

 14. SIX GUN QUARANTINE                       E.E. Harriman
              Published March 1, 1927

 15. THE VALLEY OF SUSPICION                     J.U. Giesy
              Published April 1, 1927

 16. TREASURE TRAIL                    Robert Russell Strang
              Published May 1, 1927


 Garden City Publishing Co., _Inc._
 Garden City      New York




The Larry Dexter Series

_By_ RAYMOND SPERRY


 LARRY DEXTER AT THE BIG FLOOD, or The Perils of a Reporter

 LARRY DEXTER AND THE LAND SWINDLERS, or Queer Adventures in a Great
 City

 _Published Oct. 10, 1926_

 LARRY DEXTER AND THE MISSING MILLIONAIRE, or The Great Search

 _Published Nov. 10, 1926_

 LARRY DEXTER AND THE BANK MYSTERY or Exciting Days in Wall Street

 _Published Dec. 10, 1926_

 LARRY DEXTER AND THE STOLEN BOY, or A Chase on the Great Lakes

 _Published Jan. 10, 1927_

 LARRY DEXTER AT THE BATTLE FRONT, or A War Correspondent's Double
 Mission

 _Published Feb. 10, 1927_


 Garden City Publishing Co., _Inc._
 Garden City      New York