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PAGE 16

Well Won; Or, From The Plains To "The Point"
by [?]

“Ay; but there’s Farron and his little kid up there four miles above us.”

“You don’t tell me! Thought he’d taken her down to Denver.”

“So he did, and fetched her back to-day. Sergeant Wells has gone up there to keep watch with them, and we are to signal if we get important news. All you tell me only adds to what we suspected. How I wish we had known it an hour ago! Now, will you stay here with us or go up to Farron’s and tell Wells what you’ve seen?”

“I’ll stay here. My horse can’t make another mile, and you may believe I don’t want any prowling round outside of a stockade this night. No, if you can signal to him go ahead and do it.”

“What say you, Ralph?”

Ralph thought a moment in silence. If he fired his three shots, it meant that the danger was imminent, and that they had certain information that the Indians were near at hand. He remembered to have heard his father and other officers tell of sensational stories this same old trapper had inflicted on the garrison. Sergeant Wells himself used to laugh at “Baker’s yarns.” More than once the cavalry had been sent out to where Baker asserted he had certainly seen a hundred Indians the day before, only to find that not even the vestige of a pony track remained on the yielding sod. If he fired the signal shots it meant a night of vigil for everybody at Farron’s and then how Wells would laugh at him in the morning, and how disgusted he would be when he found that it was entirely on Baker’s assurances that he had acted!

It was a responsible position for the boy. He would much have preferred to mount Buford and ride off over the four miles of moonlit prairie to tell the sergeant of Baker’s report and let him be the judge of its authenticity. It was lucky he had that level-headed soldier operator to advise him. Already he had begun to fancy him greatly, and to respect his judgment and intelligence.

“Suppose we go in and stir up Laramie, and tell them what Mr. Baker says,” he suggested; and, leaving the trapper to stable his jaded horse under Phillips’s guidance, Ralph and his friend once more returned to the station.

“If the Indians are south of the Platte,” said the operator, “I shall no longer hesitate about sending a despatch direct to the troops at Lodge Pole. The colonel ought to know. He can send one or two companies right along to-night. There is no operator at Eagle’s Nest, or I’d have him up and ask if all was well there. That’s what worries me, Ralph. It was back of Eagle’s Nest old Baker says he saw their smokes, and it is somewhere about Eagle’s Nest that I should expect the rascals to slip in and cut our wire. I’ll bet they’re all asleep at Laramie by this time. What o’clock is it?”

The boy stopped at the window of the little telegraph room where the light from the kerosene lamp would fall upon his watch-dial. The soldier passed on around to the door. Glancing at his watch, Ralph followed on his track and got to the door-way just as his friend stretched forth his hand to touch the key.

“It’s just ten-fifty now.”

“Ten-fifty, did you say?” asked the soldier, glancing over his shoulder. “Ralph!” he cried, excitedly, “the wire’s cut!”

“Where?” gasped Ralph. “Can you tell?”

“No, somewhere up above us,–near the Nest, probably,–though who can tell? It may be just round the bend of the road, for all we know. No doubt about there being Indians now, Ralph, give ’em your signal. Hullo! Hoofs!”

Leaping out from the little tenement, the two listened intently. An instant before the thunder of horse’s feet upon wooden planking had been plainly audible in the distance, and now the coming clatter could be heard on the roadway.