She had no fear of losing her way, with the canon walls hemming her in. She still was sobbing softly to herself as she started along the foot of the wall. She tramped steadily for a time, then she stopped abruptly. She would not go on! The sacrifice was too much! She looked back to the canon top. Kut-le had disappeared. Already he must be only a memory to her!
Then of a sudden Rhoda felt a sense of shame that her strength of purpose should be so much less than the Indian’s. At least, she could carry in her heart forever the example of his fortitude. It would be like his warm hand guiding and lifting her through the hard days and years to come. Strangely comforted and strengthened by this thought, Rhoda started on through the familiar wilderness of the desert.
This, she thought, was her last moment alone in the desert, for without Kut-le she would never return to it. She watched the gray-green cactus against the painted rock heaps. She watched the brown, tortured crest of the canon against the violet sky. She watched the melting haze above the monastery, the buzzards sliding through the motionless air, the far multi-colored ranges, as if she would etch forever on her memory the world that Kut-le loved. And she knew that, let her body wander where it must, her spirit would forever belong to the desert.
Rhoda passed the monastery, where she thought she saw men among the olive-trees. But she did not stop. She gradually worked out into an easy trail that led toward the open desert.
The little camp at the canon’s mouth was preparing to move when Jack Newman jumped excitedly to his feet. Coming toward them through the sand was a boyish figure that moved with a beautiful stride, tireless and swift. As the newcomer drew nearer they saw that she was erect and lithe, slender but full-chested and that her face—
“Rhoda!” shouted John DeWitt.
In a moment, Jack was grasping one of her hands and John DeWitt the other, while Billy Porter and Carlos shook each other’s hands excitedly.
“Gee whiz!” cried Jack. “John said you were in superb condition, but I didn’t realize that it meant this! Why, Rhoda, if it wasn’t for your hair and eyes and the dimple in your chin, I wouldn’t know you!”
“Are you all right?” asked DeWitt anxiously. “Where in the world did you come from? Where have you been?”
“Were you hurt much in the fight?” cried Rhoda. “Oh!” looking about at the eager listeners, “that was the most awful thing I ever saw, that fight! And Billy Porter, you are all right, I see. How shall I ever repay you all for what you have done for me!”
“Gosh!” exclaimed Porter. “I’m repaid just by looking at you! If that pison Piute hasn’t made monkeys of us all, I’d like to know who has! How did you get away from him?”
“He let me go,” answered Rhoda simply.
The men gasped.