en.
That the dog would understand to make the return across the desert to
'where they lived' was also explained. Each man there had his dog,
each man had his friend. These two men, kind to their two dogs,
caressed them, fed them, sheltered them. All other men in the tribe
abused these two beasts on sight, stoned them, drove them away. Hence
every dog had two masters whom he loved with all of the loyalty of a
dog heart and all other men he distrusted and feared and hated. Now,
in the desert, Kish Taka had but to drive his dog from him, shouting at
him, casting a stone at him, and the big brute to whom similar
experiences had come before out of as clear a sky, knew that he had a
friend in the distant camp, one friend only in the world, and as
straight as a dart made off to find him. In three days' time he would
be leaping and fawning upon his other master, sure of food and kind
words. And, when in turn that other master turned upon him and seized
a stick with which to beat him, he would know that Kish Taka would take
him into his arms and give him meat and water. For such things had he
known since he was a roly-poly puppy.
There was but one matter further about which Howard wondered, and he
asked his question point-blank. Point-blank Kish Taka answered it.
Jim Courtot, with lies in his mouth, had come to these desert folk
several months ago. He had tarried with them long, swearing that he
hated all white men, that he had killed a white and that the whites
would kill him, that he would spend his life with the Indians, teaching
them good things. In time they came to trust him. He learned of them
their secrets, he found where they hid the gold they used now and then
to barter with the white men in their towns, he saw their hidden
turquoises. Further, he wronged a maiden who was one day to come to
the _kiva_ of the headman, the Hawk Man, Kish Taka. The maiden now was
dead by her own hand; Courtot that night, full-handed with his
thievings, had fled; and always and always, until the end came, Kish
Taka would follow him.
Howard heard and looked away through the growing dusk and saw, not the
scope of a dimming landscape, but something of the soul of Kish Taka.
He understood that the Indian had given his confidence freely and he
knew that it was, no doubt, the first and last time in his life that he
would so speak with a _bahana_. And it was because Howard had shared
his last water with him and was, therefo
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