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inaccessible corner. Going back a little way, he leaped the
stream and headed toward the southern wall. Once out of the oaks

he found again the low terrace of aspens, and above that the
wide, open terrace fringed by silver spruces. This side of the

valley contained the wind or water worn caves. As he pressed on,
keeping to the upper terrace, cave after cave opened out of the

cliff; now a large one, now a small one. Then yawned, quite
suddenly and wonderfully above him, the great cavern of the

cliff-dwellers.
It was still a goodly distance, and he tried to imagine, if it

appeared so huge from where he stood, what it would be when he
got there. He climbed the terrace and then faced a long, gradual

ascent of weathered rock and dust, which made climbing too
difficult for attention to anything else. At length he entered a

zone of shade, and looked up. He stood just within the hollow of
a cavern so immense that he had no conception of its real

dimensions. The curved roof, stained by ages of leakage, with
buff and black and rust-colored streaks, swept up and loomed

higher and seemed to soar to the rim of the cliff. Here again was
a magnificent arch, such as formed the grand gateway to the

valley, only in this instance it formed the dome of a cave
instead of the span of a bridge.

Venters passed onward and upward. The stones he dislodged rolled
down with strange, hollow crack and roar. He had climbed a

hundred rods inward, and yet he had not reached the base of the
shelf where the cliff-dwellings rested, a long half-circle of

connected stone house, with little dark holes that he had fancied
were eyes. At length he gained the base of the shelf, and here

found steps cut in the rock. These facilitated climbing, and as
he went up he thought how easily this vanished race of men might

once have held that stronghold against an army. There was only
one possible place to ascend, and this was narrow and steep.

Venters had visited cliff-dwellings before, and they had been in
ruins, and of no great character or size but this place was of

proportions that stunned him, and it had not been desecrated by
the hand of man, nor had it been crumbled by the hand of time. It

was a stupendous tomb. It had been a city. It was just as it had
been left by its builders. The little houses were there, the

smoke-blackened stains of fires, the pieces of pottery scattered
about cold hearths, the stone hatchets; and stone pestles and

mealing-stones lay beside round holes polished by years of
grinding maize--lay there as if they had been carelessly dropped

yesterday. But the cliff-dwellers were gone!
Dust! They were dust on the floor or at the foot of the shelf,

and their habitations and utensils endured. Venters felt the
sublimity of that marvelous vaulted arch, and it seemed to gleam

with a glory of something that was gone. How many years had
passed since the cliff-dwellers gazed out across the beautiful

valley as he was gazing now? How long had it been since women
ground grain in those polished holes? What time had rolled by

since men of an unknown race lived, loved, fought, and died
there? Had an enemy destroyed them? Had disease destroyed them,

or only that greatest destroyer--time? Venters saw a long line of
blood-red hands painted low down upon the yellow roof of stone.

Here was strange portent, if not an answer to his queries. The
place oppressed him. It was light, but full of a transparent

gloom. It smelled of dust and musty stone, of age and disuse. It
was sad. It was solemn. It had the look of a place where silence

had become master and was now irrevocable and terrible and could
not be broken. Yet, at the moment, from high up in the carved

crevices of the arch, floated down the low, strange wail of
wind--a knell indeed for all that had gone.

Venters, sighing, gathered up an armful of pottery, such pieces
as he thought strong enough and suitable for his own use, and

bent his steps toward camp. He mounted the terrace at an opposite
point to which he had left. He saw the girl looking in the

direction he had gone. His footsteps made no sound in the deep
grass, and he approached close without her being aware of his

presence. Whitie lay on the ground near where she sat, and he
manifested the usual actions of welcome, but the girl did not

notice them. She seemed to be oblivious to everything near at
hand. She made a pathetic figure drooping there, with her sunny

hair contrasting so markedly with her white, wasted cheeks and
her hands listlessly clasped and her little bare feet propped in

the framework of the rude seat. Venters could have sworn and
laughed in one breath at the idea of the connection between this

girl and Oldring's Masked Rider. She was the victim of more than
accident of fate--a victim to some deep plot the mystery of which

burned him. As he stepped forward with a half-formed thought that
she was absorbed in watching for his return, she turned her head

and saw him. A swift start, a change rather than rush of blood
under her white cheeks, a flashing of big eyes that fixed their

glance upon him, transformed her face in that single instant of
turning, and he knew she had been watching for him, that his

return was the one thing in her mind. She did not smile; she did
not flush; she did not look glad. All these would have meant

little compared to her indefinite expression. Venters grasped the
peculiar, vivid, vital something that leaped from her face. It

was as if she had been in a dead, hopeless clamp of inaction and
feeling, and had been suddenly shot through and through with

quivering animation. Almost it was as if she had returned to
life.

And Venters thought with lightningswiftness, "I've saved
her--I've unlinked her from that old life--she was watching as if

I were all she had left on earth--she belongs to me!" The thought
was startlingly new. Like a blow it was in an unprepared moment.

The cheerysalutation he had ready for her died unborn and he
tumbled the pieces of potteryawkwardly on the grass while some

unfamiliar, deep-seated emotion, mixed with pity and glad
assurance of his power to succor her, held him dumb.

"What a load you had!" she said. "Why, they're pots and crocks!
Where did you get them?"

Venters laid down his rifle, and, filling one of the pots from
his canteen, he placed it on the smoldering campfire.

"Hope it'll hold water," he said, presently. "Why, there's an
enormous cliff-dwelling just across here. I got the pottery

there. Don't you think we needed something? That tin cup of mine
has served to make tea, broth, soup--everything."

"I noticed we hadn't a great deal to cook in."
She laughed. It was the first time. He liked that laugh, and

though he was tempted to look at her, he did not want to show his
surprise or his pleasure.

"Will you take me over there, and all around in the
valley--pretty soon, when I'm well?" she added.

"Indeed I shall. It's a wonderful place. Rabbits so thick you
can't step without kicking one out. And quail, beaver, foxes,

wildcats. We're in a regular den. But--haven't you ever seen a
cliff-dwelling?'

"No. I've heard about them, though. The--the men say the Pass is
full of old houses and ruins."

"Why, I should think you'd have run across one in all your riding
around," said Venters. He spoke slowly, choosing his words

carefully, and he essayed a perfectlycasual manner, and
pretended to be busy assorting pieces of pottery. She must have

no cause again to suffer shame for curiosity of his. Yet never in
all his days had he been so eager to hear the details of anyone's

life
"When I rode--I rode like the wind," she replied, "and never had

time to stop for anything."
"I remember that day I--I met you in the Pass--how dusty you

were, how tired your horse looked. Were you always riding?"
"Oh, no. Sometimes not for months, when I was shut up in the

cabin."
Venters tried to subdue a hot tingling.

"You were shut up, then?" he asked, carelessly.
"When Oldring went away on his long trips--he was gone for months

sometimes--he shut me up in the cabin."
"What for?"

"Perhaps to keep me from running away. I always threatened that.
Mostly, though, because the men got drunk at the villages. But

they were always good to me. I wasn't afraid."
"A prisoner! That must have been hard on you?"

"I liked that. As long as I can remember I've been locked up
there at times, and those times were the only happy ones I ever

had. It's a big cabin, high up on a cliff, and I could look out.
Then I had dogs and pets I had tamed, and books. There was a

spring inside, and food stored, and the men brought me fresh
meat. Once I was there one whole winter."

It now required deliberation on Venters's part to persist in his
unconcern and to keep at work. He wanted to look at her, to

volley questions at her.
"As long as you can remember--you've lived in Deception Pass?" he

went on.
"I've a dim memory of some other place, and women and children;

but I can't make anything of it. Sometimes I think till I'm
weary."

"Then you can read--you have books?"
"Oh yes, I can read, and write, too, pretty well. Oldring is

educated. He taught me, and years ago an old rustler lived with
us, and he had been something different once. He was always

teaching me."
"So Oldring takes long trips," mused Venters. "Do you know where

he goes?"
"No. Every year he drives cattle north of Sterling--then does not

return for months. I heard him accused once of living two
lives--and he killed the man. That was at Stone Bridge."

Venters dropped his apparent task and looked up with an eagerness
he no longer strove to hide.

"Bess," he said, using her name for the first time, "I suspected
Oldring was something besides a rustler. Tell me, what's his

purpose here in the Pass? I believe much that he has done was to
hide his real work here."

"You're right. He's more than a rustler. In fact, as the men say,
his rustling cattle is now only a bluff. There's gold in the

canyons!"
"Ah!"

"Yes, there's gold, not in great quantities, but gold enough for
him and his men. They wash for gold week in and week out. Then

they drive a few cattle and go into the villages to drink and
shoot and kill--to bluff the riders."

"Drive a few cattle! But, Bess, the Withersteen herd, the red
herd-- twenty-five hundred head! That's not a few. And I tracked

them into a valley near here."
"Oldring never stole the red herd. He made a deal with Mormons.

The riders were to be called in, and Oldring was to drive the
herd and keep it till a certain time--I won't know when--then

drive it back to the range. What his share was I didn't hear."
"Did you hear why that deal was made?" queried Venters.

"No. But it was a trick of Mormons. They're full of tricks. I've
heard Oldring's men tell about Mormons. Maybe the Withersteen

woman wasn't minding her halter! I saw the man who made the deal.
He was a little, queer-shaped man, all humped up. He sat his

horse well. I heard one of our men say afterward there was no
better rider on the sage than this fellow. What was the name? I

forget."
"Jerry Card?" suggested Venters.

"That's it. I remember--it's a name easy to remember--and Jerry
Card appeared to be on fair terms with Oldring's men."

"I shouldn't wonder," replied Venters, thoughtfully. Verification
of his suspicions in regard to Tull's underhand work--for the

deal with Oldring made by Jerry Card assuredly had its inception


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