yet, sunk but hoof deep. He drew rein in thick cover and waited.
Suddenly the horse threw up his head, curved his neck backward, cocked his ears and whinnied. The Wolf could hear a splashing, sucking sound of hoofs back on the tell-tale trail he had left.
With a curse he drove his spurs into the horse’s flanks, and the startled animal sprang from the cutting rowels, the ooze throwing up in a shower.
A dozen yards and the horse stumbled, almost coming to his knees; he recovered at the lash of Jack’s quirt, and struggled on; now going half the depth of his cannon bones in the yielding muck, he was floundering like a drunken man; in ten feet his legs went to the knees.
Quirt and spur drove him a few feet; then he lurched heavily, and with a writhing struggle against the sucking sands stood trembling; from his spread mouth came a scream of terror—he knew.
And now the Wolf knew. With terrifying dread he remembered—he had ridden into the “Lakes of the Shifting Sands.” This was the country they were in and he had forgotten. The sweat of fear stood out on the low forehead; all the tales that he had heard of men who had disappeared from off the face of the earth, swallowed up in these quicksands, came back to him with numbing force. To spring from the horse meant but two or three wallowing strides and then to be sucked down in the claiming quicksands.
The horse’s belly was against the black muck. The Wolf had drawn his feet up; he gave a cry for help. A voice answered, and twisting his head about he saw, twenty yards away, Carney on the buckskin. About the man’s thin lips a smile hovered. He sneered:
“You’re up against it, Mister Policeman; what name’ll I turn in back at barracks?”
Jack knew that it was Carney, and that Carney might know Heath by sight, so he lied:
“I’m Sergeant Phillips; for God’s sake help me out.”
Bulldog sneered. “Why should I—God doesn’t love a sneaking police hound.”
The Wolf pleaded, for his horse was gradually sinking; his struggles now stilled for the beast knew that he was doomed.
“All right,” Carney said suddenly. “One condition—never mind, I’ll save you first—there isn’t too much time. Now break your gun, empty the cartridges out and drop it back into the holster,” he commanded. “Unsling your picket line, fasten it under your armpits, and if I can get my cow-rope to you tie the two together.”
He slipped from the saddle and led the horse as far out as he dared, seemingly having found firmer ground a little to one side. Then taking his cowrope, he worked his way still farther out, placing his feet on the tufted grass that stuck up in little mounds through the treacherous ooze. Then calling, “Look out!” he swung the rope. The Wolf caught it at the first throw and tied his own to it. Carney worked his way back, looped the rope over the horn, swung to the saddle, and calling, “Flop over on your belly—look out!” he started his horse, veritably towing the Wolf to safe ground.
The rope slacked; the Wolf, though half smothered with muck, drew his revolver and tried to slip two cartridges into the cylinder.
A sharp voice cried, “Stop that, you swine!” and raising his eyes he was gazing into Carney’s gun. “Come up here on the dry ground,” the latter commanded. “Stand there, unbuckle your belt and let it drop. Now take ten paces straight ahead.” Carney salvaged the weapon and belt of cartridges.
“Build a fire, quick!” he next ordered, leaning casually against his horse, one hand resting on the butt of his revolver.
He tossed a couple of dry matches to the Wolf when the latter had built a little mound of dry poplar twigs and birch bark.
When the fire was going Carney said: “Peel your coat and dry it; stand close to the fire so your pants dry too—I want that suit.”
The Wolf was startled. Was retribution so hot on his trail? Was Carney about to set him afoot just as he had set afoot Sergeant Heath? His two hundred dollars and Lucy Black’s five hundred were in the pocket of that coat also. As he took it off he turned it upside down, hoping for a chance to slip the parcel of money to the ground unnoticed of his captor.
“Throw the jacket here,” Carney commanded; “seems to be papers in the pocket.”
When the coat had been tossed to him, Carney sat down on a fallen tree, took from it two packets—one of papers, and another wrapped in strong paper. He opened the papers, reading them with one eye while with the other he watched the man by the fire. Presently he sneered: “Say, you’re some liar—even for a government hound; your name’s not Phillips, it’s Heath. You’re the waster who fooled the little girl at Golden. You’re the bounder who came down from the Klondike to gather Bulldog Carney in; you shot off your mouth all along the line that you were going to take him singlehanded. You bet a man in Edmonton a hundred you’d tie him hoof and horn. Well, you lose, for I’m going to rope you first, see? Turn you over to the Government tied up like a bag of spuds; that’s just what I’m going to do, Sergeant Liar. I’m going to break you for the sake of that little girl at Golden, for she was my friend and I’m Bulldog Carney. Soon as that suit is dried a bit you’ll strip and pass it over; then you’ll get into my togs and I’m going to turn you over to the police as Bulldog Carney. D’you get me, kid?” Carney chuckled. “That’ll break you, won’t it, Mister Sergeant Heath? You can’t stay in the Force a joke; you’ll never live it down if you live to be a thousand—you’ve boasted too much.”
The Wolf had remained silent—waiting. He had an advantage if his captor did not know him. Now he was frightened; to be turned in at Edmonton by Carney was as bad as being taken by Sergeant Heath.
“You can’t pull that stuff, Carney,” he objected; “the minute I tell them who I am and who you are they’ll grab you too quick. They’ll know me; perhaps some of them’ll know you.”
A sneering “Ha!” came from between the thin lips of the man on the log. “Not where we’re going they won’t, Sergeant. I know a little place over on the rail”—and he jerked his thumb toward the west—“where there’s two policemen that don’t know much of anything; they’ve never seen either of us. You ain’t been at Edmonton more’n a couple of months since you came from the Klondike. But they do know that Bulldog Carney is wanted at Calgary and that there’s a thousand dollars to the man that brings him in.”
At this the Wolf pricked his ears; he saw light—a flood of it. If this thing went through, and he was sent on to Calgary as Bulldog Carney, he would be turned loose at once as not being the man. The police at Calgary had cause to know just what Carney looked like for he had been in their clutches and escaped.
But Jack must bluff—appear to be the angry Sergeant. So he said: “They’ll know me at Calgary, and you’ll get hell for this.”
Now Carney laughed out joyously. “I don’t give a damn if they do. Can’t you get it through your wooden police head that I just want this little pleasantry driven home so that you’re the goat of that nanny band, the Mounted Police; then you’ll send in your papers and go back to the farm?”
As Carney talked he had opened the paper packet. Now he gave a crisp “Hello! what have we here?” as a sheaf of bills appeared.
The Wolf had been watching for Carney’s eyes to leave him for five seconds. One hand rested in his trousers pocket. He drew it out and dropped a knife, treading it into the sand and ashes.
“Seven hundred,” Bulldog continued. “Rather a tidy sum for a policeman to be toting. Is this police money?”
The Wolf hesitated; it was a delicate situation. Jack wanted that money but a slip might ruin his escape. If Bulldog suspected that Jack was not a policeman he would jump to the conclusion that he had killed the owner of the horse and clothes. Also Carney would not believe that a policeman on duty wandered about with seven hundred in his pocket; if Jack claimed it all Carney would say he lied and keep it as Government money.
“Five hundred is Government money I was bringin’ in from a post, and