“Not yet, my dear. First you got to come up to me and put your arms round—”

He broke off with a curse, for she was flying toward the little circle of cottonwoods some forty yards away. She had caught a glimpse of the water-hole and was speeding for it.

“Come back here,” he called, and in a rage let fly a bullet after her.

She paid no heed, did not stop till she reached the spring and threw herself down full length to drink, to lave her burnt face, to drink again of the alkali brackish water that trickled down her throat like nectar incomparably delicious.

She was just rising to her feet when Struve hobbled up.

“Don't you think you can play with me, missie. When I give the word you stop in your tracks, and when I say 'Jump!' step lively.”

She did not answer. Her head was lifted in a listening attitude, as if to catch some sound that came faintly to her from a distance.

“You're mine, my beauty, to do with as I please, and don't you forget it.”

She did not hear him. Her ears were attuned to voices floating to her across the desert. Of course she was beginning to wander in her mind. She knew that. There could be no other human beings in this sea of loneliness. They were alone; just they two, the degenerate ruffian and his victim. Still, it was strange. She certainly had imagined the murmur of people talking. It must be the beginning of delirium.

“Do you hear me?” screamed Struve, striking her on the cheek with his fist. “I'm your master and you're my squaw.”