any day. Youâll not be hired by the U.S. Youâll simply be my ranger, same as Laddy and Jim, who have promised to work for me. Iâll pay you well, give you a room here, furnish everything down to guns, and the finest horse you ever saw in your life. Your job wonât be safe and healthy, sometimes, but itâll be a manâs jobâdonât mistake me! You can gamble on having things to do outdoors. Now, what do you say?â
âI accept, and I thank youâI canât say how much,â replied Gale, earnestly.
âGood! Thatâs settled. Letâs go out and tell Laddy and Jim.â
Both boys expressed satisfaction at the turn of affairs, and then with Belding they set out to take Gale around the ranch. The house and several outbuildings were constructed of adobe, which, according to Belding, retained the summer heat on into winter, and the winter cold on into summer. These gray-red mud habitations were hideous to look at, and this fact, perhaps, made their really comfortable interiors more vividly a contrast. The wide grounds were covered with luxuriant grass and flowers and different kinds of trees. Galeâs interest led him to ask about fig trees and pomegranates, and especially about a beautiful specimen that Belding called palo verde.
Belding explained that the luxuriance of this desert place was owing to a few springs and the dammed-up waters of the Rio Forlorn. Before he had come to the oasis it had been inhabited by a Papago Indian tribe and a few peon families. The oasis lay in an arroyo a mile wide, and sloped southwest for some ten miles or more. The river went dry most of the year; but enough water was stored in flood season to irrigate the gardens and alfalfa fields.
âIâve got one never-failing spring on my place,â said Belding. âFine, sweet water! You know what that means in the desert. I like this oasis. The longer I live here the better I like it. Thereâs not a spot in southern Arizona thatâll compare with this valley for water or grass or wood. Itâs beautiful and healthy. Forlorn and lonely, yes, especially for women like my wife and Nell; but I like itâ¦. And between you and me, boys, Iâve got something up my sleeve. Thereâs gold dust in the arroyos, and thereâs mineral up in the mountains. If we only had water! This hamlet has steadily grown since I took up a station here. Why, Casita is no place beside Forlorn River. Pretty soon the Southern Pacific will shoot a railroad branch out here. There are possibilities, and I want you boys to stay with me and get in on the ground floor. I wish this rebel war was overâ¦. Well, here are the corrals and the fields. Gale, take a look at that bunch of horses!â
Beldingâs last remark was made as he led his companions out of shady gardens into the open. Gale saw an adobe shed and a huge pen fenced by strangely twisted and contorted branches or trunks of mesquite, and, beyond these, wide, flat fields, greenâa dark, rich greenâand dotted with beautiful horses. There were whites and blacks, and bays and grays. In his admiration Gale searched his memory to see if he could remember the like of these magnificent animals, and had to admit that the only ones he could compare with them were the Arabian steeds.
âEvery rancher loves his horses,â said Belding. âWhen I was in the Panhandle I had some fine stock. But these are Mexican. They came from Durango, where they were bred. Mexican horses are the finest in the world, bar none.â
âShore I reckon I savvy why you donât sleep nights,â drawled Laddy. âI see a Greaser out thereâno, itâs an Indian.â
âThatâs my Papago herdsman. I keep watch over the horses now day and night. Lord, how Iâd hate to have Rojas or Salazar any of those bandit rebelsâfind my horses!â¦Gale, can you ride?â
Dick modestly replied that he could, according
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