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<h2> CHAPTER XXII. RIDERS OF THE PURPLE SAGE </h2>
<p>Black Star and Night, answering to spur, swept swiftly westward along the
white, slow-rising, sage-bordered trail. Venters heard a mournful howl
from Ring, but Whitie was silent. The blacks settled into their fleet,
long-striding gallop. The wind sweetly fanned Venters's hot face. From the
summit of the first low-swelling ridge he looked back. Lassiter waved his
hand; Jane waved her scarf. Venters replied by standing in his stirrups
and holding high his sombrero. Then the dip of the ridge hid them. From
the height of the next he turned once more. Lassiter, Jane, and the burros
had disappeared. They had gone down into the Pass. Venters felt a
sensation of irreparable loss.</p>
<p>"Bern—look!" called Bess, pointing up the long slope.</p>
<p>A small, dark, moving dot split the line where purple sage met blue sky.
That dot was a band of riders.</p>
<p>"Pull the black, Bess."</p>
<p>They slowed from gallop to canter, then to trot. The fresh and eager
horses did not like the check.</p>
<p>"Bern, Black Star has great eyesight."</p>
<p>"I wonder if they're Tull's riders. They might be rustlers. But it's all
the same to us."</p>
<p>The black dot grew to a dark patch moving under low dust clouds. It grew
all the time, though very slowly. There were long periods when it was in
plain sight, and intervals when it dropped behind the sage. The blacks
trotted for half an hour, for another half-hour, and still the moving
patch appeared to stay on the horizon line. Gradually, however, as time
passed, it began to enlarge, to creep down the slope, to encroach upon the
intervening distance.</p>
<p>"Bess, what do you make them out?" asked Venters. "I don't think they're
rustlers."</p>
<p>"They're sage-riders," replied Bess. "I see a white horse and several
grays. Rustlers seldom ride any horses but bays and blacks."</p>
<p>"That white horse is Tull's. Pull the black, Bess. I'll get down and cinch
up. We're in for some riding. Are you afraid?"</p>
<p>"Not now," answered the girl, smiling.</p>
<p>"You needn't be. Bess, you don't weigh enough to make Black Star know
you're on him. I won't be able to stay with you. You'll leave Tull and his
riders as if they were standing still."</p>
<p>"How about you?"</p>
<p>"Never fear. If I can't stay with you I can still laugh at Tull."</p>
<p>"Look, Bern! They've stopped on that ridge. They see us."</p>
<p>"Yes. But we're too far yet for them to make out who we are. They'll
recognize the blacks first. We've passed most of the ridges and the
thickest sage. Now, when I give the word, let Black Star go and ride!"</p>
<p>Venters calculated that a mile or more still intervened between them and
the riders. They were approaching at a swift canter. Soon Venters
recognized Tull's white horse, and concluded that the riders had likewise
recognized Black Star and Night. But it would be impossible for Tull yet
to see that the blacks were not ridden by Lassiter and Jane. Venters noted
that Tull and the line of horsemen, perhaps ten or twelve in number,
stopped several times and evidently looked hard down the slope. It must
have been a puzzling circumstance for Tull. Venters laughed grimly at the
thought of what Tull's rage would be when he finally discovered the trick.
Venters meant to sheer out into the sage before Tull could possibly be
sure who rode the blacks.</p>
<p>The gap closed to a distance of half a mile. Tull halted. His riders came
up and formed a dark group around him. Venters thought he saw him wave his
arms and was certain of it when the riders dashed into the sage, to right
and left of the trail. Tull had anticipated just the move held in mind by
Venters.</p>
<p>"Now Bess!" shouted Venters. "Strike north. Go round those riders and turn
west."</p>
<p>Black Star sailed over the low sage, and in a few leaps got into his
stride and was running. Venters spurred Night after him. It was hard going
in the sage. The horses could run as well there, but keen eyesight and
judgment must constantly be used by the riders in choosing ground. And
continuous swerving from aisle to aisle between the brush, and leaping
little washes and mounds of the pack-rats, and breaking through sage, made
rough riding. When Venters had turned into a long aisle he had time to
look up at Tull's riders. They were now strung out into an extended line
riding northeast. And, as Venters and Bess were holding due north, this
meant, if the horses of Tull and his riders had the speed and the staying
power, they would head the blacks and turn them back down the slope.
Tull's men were not saving their mounts; they were driving them
desperately. Venters feared only an accident to Black Star or Night, and
skilful riding would mitigate possibility of that. One glance ahead served
to show him that Bess could pick a course through the sage as well as he.
She looked neither back nor at the running riders, and bent forward over
Black Star's neck and studied the ground ahead.</p>
<p>It struck Venters, presently, after he had glanced up from time to time,
that Bess was drawing away from him as he had expected. He had, however,
only thought of the light weight Black Star was carrying and of his
superior speed; he saw now that the black was being ridden as never
before, except when Jerry Card lost the race to Wrangle. How easily,
gracefully, naturally, Bess sat her saddle! She could ride! Suddenly
Venters remembered she had said she could ride. But he had not dreamed she
was capable of such superb horsemanship. Then all at once, flashing over
him, thrilling him, came the recollection that Bess was Oldring's Masked
Rider.</p>
<p>He forgot Tull—the running riders—the race. He let Night have
a free rein and felt him lengthen out to suit himself, knowing he would
keep to Black Star's course, knowing that he had been chosen by the best
rider now on the upland sage. For Jerry Card was dead. And fame had
rivaled him with only one rider, and that was the slender girl who now
swung so easily with Black Star's stride. Venters had abhorred her
notoriety, but now he took passionate pride in her skill, her daring, her
power over a horse. And he delved into his memory, recalling famous rides
which he had heard related in the villages and round the camp-fires.
Oldring's Masked Rider! Many times this strange rider, at once well known
and unknown, had escaped pursuers by matchless riding. He had to run the
gantlet of vigilantes down the main street of Stone Bridge, leaving dead
horses and dead rustlers behind. He had jumped his horse over the Gerber
Wash, a deep, wide ravine separating the fields of Glaze from the wild
sage. He had been surrounded north of Sterling; and he had broken through
the line. How often had been told the story of day stampedes, of night
raids, of pursuit, and then how the Masked Rider, swift as the wind, was
gone in the sage! A fleet, dark horse—a slender, dark form—a
black mask—a driving run down the slope—a dot on the purple
sage—a shadowy, muffled steed disappearing in the night!</p>
<p>And this Masked Rider of the uplands had been Elizabeth Erne!</p>
<p>The sweet sage wind rushed in Venters's face and sang a song in his ears.
He heard the dull, rapid beat of Night's hoofs; he saw Black Star drawing
away, farther and farther. He realized both horses were swinging to the
west. Then gunshots in the rear reminded him of Tull. Venters looked back.
Far to the side, dropping behind, trooped the riders. They were shooting.
Venters saw no puffs or dust, heard no whistling bullets. He was out of
range. When he looked back again Tull's riders had given up pursuit. The
best they could do, no doubt, had been to get near enough to recognize who
really rode the blacks. Venters saw Tull drooping in his saddle.</p>
<p>Then Venters pulled Night out of his running stride. Those few miles had
scarcely warmed the black, but Venters wished to save him. Bess turned,
and, though she was far away, Venters caught the white glint of her waving
hand. He held Night to a trot and rode on, seeing Bess and Black Star, and
the sloping upward stretch of sage, and from time to time the receding
black riders behind. Soon they disappeared behind a ridge, and he turned
no more. They would go back to Lassiter's trail and follow it, and follow
in vain. So Venters rode on, with the wind growing sweeter to taste and
smell, and the purple sage richer and the sky bluer in his sight; and the
song in his ears ringing. By and by Bess halted to wait for him, and he
knew she had come to the trail. When he reached her it was to smile at
sight of her standing with arms round Black Star's neck.</p>
<p>"Oh, Bern! I love him!" she cried. "He's beautiful; he knows; and how he
can run! I've had fast horses. But Black Star!... Wrangle never beat him!"</p>
<p>"I'm wondering if I didn't dream that. Bess, the blacks are grand. What it
must have cost Jane—ah!—well, when we get out of this wild
country with Star and Night, back to my old home in Illinois, we'll buy a
beautiful farm with meadows and springs and cool shade. There we'll turn
the horses free—free to roam and browse and drink—never to
feel a spur again—never to be ridden!"</p>
<p>"I would like that," said Bess.</p>
<p>They rested. Then, mounting, they rode side by side up the white trail.
The sun rose higher behind them. Far to the left a low line of green
marked the site of Cottonwoods. Venters looked once and looked no more.
Bess gazed only straight ahead. They put the blacks to the long, swinging
rider's canter, and at times pulled them to a trot, and occasionally to a
walk. The hours passed, the miles slipped behind, and the wall of rock
loomed in the fore. The Notch opened wide. It was a rugged, stony pass,
but with level and open trail, and Venters and Bess ran the blacks through
it. An old trail led off to the right, taking the line of the wall, and
this Venters knew to be the trail mentioned by Lassiter.</p>
<p>The little hamlet, Glaze, a white and green patch in the vast waste of
purple, lay miles down a slope much like the Cottonwoods slope, only this
descended to the west. And miles farther west a faint green spot marked
the location of Stone Bridge. All the rest of that world was seemingly
smooth, undulating sage, with no ragged lines of canyons to accentuate its
wildness.</p>
<p>"Bess, we're safe—we're free!" said Venters. "We're alone on the
sage. We're half way to Sterling."</p>
<p>"Ah! I wonder how it is with Lassiter and Miss Withersteen."</p>
<p>"Never fear, Bess. He'll outwit Tull. He'll get away and hide her safely.
He might climb into Surprise Valley, but I don't think he'll go so far."</p>
<p>"Bern, will we ever find any place like our beautiful valley?"</p>
<p>"No. But, dear, listen. Well go back some day, after years—ten
years. Then we'll be forgotten. And our valley will be just as we left
it."</p>
<p>"What if Balancing Rock falls and closes the outlet to the Pass?"</p>
<p>"I've thought of that. I'll pack in ropes and ropes. And if the outlet's
closed we'll climb up the cliffs and over them to the valley and go down
on rope ladders. It could be done. I know just where to make the climb,
and I'll never forget."</p>
<p>"Oh yes, let us go back!"</p>
<p>"It's something sweet to look forward to. Bess, it's like all the future
looks to me."</p>
<p>"Call me—Elizabeth," she said, shyly.</p>
<p>"Elizabeth Erne! It's a beautiful name. But I'll never forget Bess. Do you
know—have you thought that very soon—by this time to-morrow—you
will be Elizabeth Venters?"</p>
<p>So they rode on down the old trail. And the sun sloped to the west, and a
golden sheen lay on the sage. The hours sped now; the afternoon waned.
Often they rested the horses. The glisten of a pool of water in a hollow
caught Venters's eye, and here he unsaddled the blacks and let them roll
and drink and browse. When he and Bess rode up out of the hollow the sun
was low, a crimson ball, and the valley seemed veiled in purple fire and
smoke. It was that short time when the sun appeared to rest before
setting, and silence, like a cloak of invisible life, lay heavy on all
that shimmering world of sage.</p>
<p>They watched the sun begin to bury its red curve under the dark horizon.</p>
<p>"We'll ride on till late," he said. "Then you can sleep a little, while I
watch and graze the horses. And we'll ride into Sterling early to-morrow.
We'll be married!... We'll be in time to catch the stage. We'll tie Black
Star and Night behind—and then—for a country not wild and
terrible like this!"</p>
<p>"Oh, Bern!... But look! The sun is setting on the sage—the last time
for us till we dare come again to the Utah border. Ten years! Oh, Bern,
look, so you will never forget!"</p>
<p>Slumbering, fading purple fire burned over the undulating sage ridges.
Long streaks and bars and shafts and spears fringed the far western slope.
Drifting, golden veils mingled with low, purple shadows. Colors and shades
changed in slow, wondrous transformation.</p>
<p>Suddenly Venters was startled by a low, rumbling roar—so low that it
was like the roar in a sea-shell.</p>
<p>"Bess, did you hear anything?" he whispered.</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Listen!... Maybe I only imagined—Ah!"</p>
<p>Out of the east or north from remote distance, breathed an infinitely low,
continuously long sound—deep, weird, detonating, thundering,
deadening—dying.</p>
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