Through the hills he went with her, walking ahead as a brave should, until they came within sight of the ranch house. Some cavalry mounts were tied to a corral fence; troopers were lolling in the shade of the bunk house swapping lies with the cowhands. An officer leaned in a back-tilted chair beside the doorway of the ranch house talking with Billings.
Only Shoz-Dijiji’s eyes and forehead showed above the top of the last hill above the wagon road where it entered the little flat in which stood the main ranch buildings, and they were screened from view by a small bush.
“Go,” he said to the girl. “You will be safe now.”
“Where will you wait?” she asked. “Here?”
“Yes.”
She hesitated, her brow puckered in thought. “If I bring you a horse you will return at once to your tribe?” she demanded.
“Yes.”
“If you meet any lone whites on the way will you promise me that you will not kill them?”
“Why?”
“I cannot bring you a horse to use in murdering my own people,” she said.