The Indian's Hand1892
forgot her boy," said the bearded man, as he gravely picked up his gun.     

       They started off in the morning cool, toward the mountains where the trees grew. And the long shadows lessened as the sun crept up the sky.     

       The woman in black stood silent by her door. No one bade her good-by. The other women went back to their houses to work. The children played in the dust; clouds rose as they shouted and ran. A day's freedom lay before them.     

       But the woman in black still stood by her door, like a spectre in the sunshine, her thin hands clasped together as she gazed away over the plain toward Mexico.     

       Her face was parched and drawn, as if the sun from the sand had burned into the bone. Her eyes alone seemed to live; they were hard and bright.     

       Her house was a little away from the rest, on the crest of a hill facing the desert plain.     

       She had heard the words of the bearded man: "Small harm the Indians did."       Had he forgotten her boy? How could he forget, while she was there to       remind them of the dead? Near her house was a small rock roughly marked. The rude letters "Will, gone, '69," she had cut on it with her own hands. It marked the last place where her boy had played. She remembered how she went away softly—so he should not cry to follow her—without a word, without a kiss.     

       Here her hands beat the side of the house.     

       "Oh, to have that kiss now and die!" But she had gone, unthinking, up the road where the pale woman lived, then a rosy-cheeked happy bride, not a widow like herself. They laughed and discussed the newcomers at the settlement. It was a holiday, for the men were away over the hills, cutting down trees to build their houses with.     

       As they talked there idly, they heard what they thought was the shrill bark of dogs running up the hill. Startled, they went to the window. Round the curve of the road came horses wildly galloping, and upon their backs—Here the pale woman shrieked and fled. They were Indians, beating their horses with their bare legs, their black hair streaming in the wind.     

       Like a flash, she had bolted the door and barred the 
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