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<h2> CHAPTER XIV. THE STRANGE CAMP </h2>
<p>The Apaches, however, were not quarreling. They were engaged in a dispute,
or rather argument, which concerned them all, and about which it was
all-important that no blunder should be made.</p>
<p>Fred Munson, the instant he found himself upon the ground, moved timidly
back, so as to be out of the way when the expected clash of arms would
come, and he watched the three men with an intensity of interest which can
scarcely be imagined. He now noticed, for the first time, that as the
disputants talked, they all three pointed and looked, at intervals, up the
mountain, showing that the all-absorbing topic was located there.</p>
<p>Following the direction indicated, the boy noticed the smoke of a
camp-fire rising from the side of the mountain, about a quarter of a mile
in advance. It could be seen plainly and distinctly, although the fire
itself from which the smoke came was imperceptible. It was evident,
therefore, that the discovery of this camp-fire had produced the
excitement among the Apaches.</p>
<p>And why should such be the case?</p>
<p>The fact of it was, that the three Apaches were upon territory which could
by no means be considered the exclusive tramping-ground of their tribe.
Immediately to the eastward roamed the Kiowas and Comanches, and it was no
more than natural that their warriors should come into occasional
collision, especially when none of them were disposed to recognize any of
the presumed rights of the other.</p>
<p>The dispute, therefore, was regarding the campfire, which had suddenly
appeared to plague them. Did it belong to their friends or enemies?</p>
<p>Lone Wolf, in sending his three warriors homeward with the captive,
dispatched them by a round-about method through the mountains, for the
reason that it would be more difficult to trail them. The advantage which
they had gained in the start, he was confident, placed it out of the power
of Sut Simpson, or any of his friends, to do them injury. But here, while
carrying out the directions of their chief, they found themselves
confronted by an unexpected danger.</p>
<p>If the Kiowas or Comanches, as the case might be, discerned the little
company, they would not fail to observe that they had a prize in their
possession, and they very probably would show a disposition to interfere.
The wrangle was as to whether it was best to go directly ahead upon the
route they were pursuing, trusting not only to the possibility that the
strangers there were friends, but to the prospect of their getting by
without detection, or whether they should go to the trouble of a flank
movement.</p>
<p>Waukko was inclined to go directly ahead, while the others were opposed,
and, as is frequently the case with such people, the dispute was excited
and hot for awhile; but the hideous Apache triumphed by virtue of his
official position. Lone Wolf had placed the lad in his charge, and he was
bent upon managing the business in his own fashion.</p>
<p>It was agreed, therefore, that they should continue on up the ravine, as
this offered so much the better chance for their mustangs to make good
progress. Waukko took the lead, his horse walking at a steady gait, while
he scrutinized the camp-fire as closely and searchingly as if his life
depended on the result.</p>
<p>The flame seemed to have been started directly behind a mass of rocks,
large and compact enough to shelter a dozen men, if they wished to conceal
themselves. The smoke showed that it was burning so vigorously that fuel
must have been placed upon it but a short time before. It would seem that,
if set going by hostile hands, the owners were short-sighted in thus
exposing their location; but the mischief of such a thing is that the
smoke of a camp-fire in an Indian country may have one or more of a dozen
dangerous meanings.</p>
<p>In the West and Southwest the Indians have a system of telegraphy,
conducted entirely by means of signal fires from mountain top to mountain
top. Treaties signed in Washington in one day have been known hundreds of
miles away at night, by the redskins chiefly concerned, who had no means
of gaining the news except by some system of telegraphy, understood only
by themselves. The most cunning and effective war movements, where the
success depends upon the cooperation of widely separated parties, have
been managed and conducted by the smoke curling upward from hills and
mountain peaks. Still further, a camp-fire is frequently used as a way of
confusing an approaching enemy, for by what means could the latter judge
whether the parties who had kindled it were in the immediate neighborhood?</p>
<p>Was there not, in this instance, one stealthy Kiowa carefully keeping up
the blaze, while his companions had stolen around and across the chasm,
where they were ambushed and awaiting the coming of their victims? Were
not the sly dogs successful in hiding their positions by the very means
which would generally be supposed to betray it?</p>
<p>At any rate, Waukko was not yet abreast of the dangerous point when he
again checked his mustang, and the three Apaches consulted in a low voice
and with every appearance of suppressed excitement. There was something in
the wind which made all three feel anything but comfortable.</p>
<p>The consultation was brief and decisive. Waukko and one of his warriors
dismounted, leaving Fred and his guardian upon the remaining horse. Waukko
moved off to the right, as though he meant to reconnoiter the camp-fire,
while the other savage stole off to the left. Very evidently there was
something which needed looking after, and it may have been that Waukko was
in quest of information for his leader, Lone Wolf.</p>
<p>Be that as it may, before Fred Munson fairly suspected it he found himself
alone with another mounted Apache, both the others having vanished as
effectually as if the ground had opened and swallowed them up.</p>
<p>“Now is my chance, if I could only get an opening,” was the truthful
conclusion of the lad, whose heart suddenly beat with an awakened hope.
“If I can manage to get this old fellow off, or if I could steal a little
march on him, so as to gain a chance, I could escape. Anyhow, I'm going to
try it,” he added, and his boyish heart was fired with a renewed
determination to make a desperate leap for liberty.</p>
<p>One Apache, however, if he attended to his business, could guard him as
effectually as a dozen, and it all depended upon the disposition this
warrior should manifest. Just now his great and all absorbing interest was
in the efforts of his comrades to detect the meaning of the signal fire.</p>
<p>Fred sat behind him upon the horse, and he stealthily looked to the right
and left, in the hope of detecting some place which offered an opportunity
for concealment, for he felt that there would be but the single chance
offered him. If he should fail in that, the savages would guard him too
closely to permit a second effort.</p>
<p>The ravine at this place was about a hundred feet in width. The sides
sloped abruptly downward, growing nearly perpendicular further ahead, so
that the Apaches, if caught in any trap at all, would be caught in the
worst possible manner. Hence the extreme caution they displayed before
committing themselves.</p>
<p>There were rocks and stones on the right and left, and here and there some
stunted vegetation. A few minutes start would give any one a chance to
hide, but just there was the whole difficulty. How was the start to be
obtained? It seemed, at this juncture, as if the fates were unusually
propitious. Everything conspired to invite the attempt which the boy was
so anxious to make.</p>
<p>Waukko and his companion had not been gone more than ten minutes when one
of them signaled to the Indian left behind. It came in the shape of a soft
low whistle, which could easily be mistaken for the call of a bird. The
horseman started and turned his head sidewise to listen the instant it
fell upon his ear, and this caused Fred to notice it. The Indian held his
head a moment in the attitude of deep attention, and then he replied in
precisely the same manner without turning his head. A full minute passed.
Then a second call was heard, emitted in precisely the same manner as
before. This was the one which did the business.</p>
<p>The trained ear of the veteran scout could have detected no difference
that had been made, but there was, for all that, and a very wide one, so
far as meaning was concerned. The red-skin had no sooner caught it than he
dismounted and moved carefully forward, his mustang quietly following him,
bearing the lad upon his back.</p>
<p>The warrior glanced backward only once, to satisfy himself that his steed
was there, and understood what was required of it. In the meantime, the
heart of Fred was throbbing painfully with hope. He felt as if Providence
was interfering directly in his behalf.</p>
<p>“Now is my time,” he added, a moment later.</p>
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