El Diablo!
The rider waved his pistol and shouted, “Viva Fiesta!” Then he slipped off his black bandanna to reveal a boyish face full of mischief.
“Come to the Fiesta!” the young man shouted again, turned his horse in mid-air, and galloped off down the highway towards Santa Carla.
The boys stared after him.
“A Fiesta costume!” Pete groaned.
They looked at each other and laughed with relief. Scared by a boy in costume!
“I’ll bet there are ten El Diablos in the Fiesta,” Bob observed.
“Well, I hope we don’t run into any of them in dark alleys,” Pete said.
The boys climbed back on their bikes and began the long descent down the winding road through the pass. Soon they came out of the mountains into the outskirts of Santa Carla. They rode past houses, a golf course, and several outlying shopping centres of the bustling holiday resort.
When they reached the downtown section, they parked their bikes in a rack at the library and walked to Union Street, the main thoroughfare of Santa Carla. The street was blocked by police barriers in preparation for the Fiesta parade. People were already lined up behind the barriers, most of them dressed in the colourful costumes of old Spanish days. A holiday atmosphere filled the air.
Bob and Pete hurried to make their purchases at a little shop selling souvenirs. They bought a dozen thick white candles and three straw sombreros. Then they rushed out to the kerb just as the first band came marching past with a blare of trumpets and banging of drums.
After the band came the floats, decked with flowers and pretty girls and men in costumes. Most depicted important moments of California history. One showed Father Junipero Serra, the Franciscan missionary who had established most of the fine old missions that stretched up the long coast of California. Another represented the day John C. Fremont had raised the American flag over Santa Carla when the city had been taken from Mexico. Another showed El Diablo in his famous escape. At least five El Diablos rode around this float. One of them was the same grinning young rider on the black horse who had startled them at the top of the pass.
“Look at all the horses!” exclaimed Bob.
“I sure wish I could ride like that.” Pete watched the horsemen with admiration.
Both boys were good riders, though not yet perfect, and they watched the horses with great interest. Ranchers in Spanish costumes, along with mounted police posses from up and down the state, went by, riding troops of golden palominos. Some of the horses performed intricate dance steps out in the street.
There were carriages and covered wagons and old stagecoaches, and then a float depicting Gold Rush days. Bob shook Pete’s arm.
“Look!” he whispered, pointing towards two men who were walking beside the Gold Rush float. They had a burro loaded with food and shovels and pickaxes, and one of them was the bearded old man from the cave — Ben Jackson.
“The other one must be his partner, Waldo Turner,” Bob said.
The two old-timers seemed to delight the crowd. They looked like real prospectors, even to the dust and dirt on their mining clothes. Old Ben was obviously the leader, his white beard flowing as he limped proudly along, leading the burro. Waldo Turner, a taller and thinner old man with a white moustache instead of a beard, followed behind.
The floats kept coming, the bands played on, and the boys might have forgotten all about their mission at the library if Pete hadn’t suddenly noticed the man.
“Bob!” he whispered urgently.
Bob looked up and there, a few feet away, was the tall, scar-faced man with the eye patch. The man didn’t seem at all interested in the parade. As the boys watched, he hurried across Union Street and vanished.
“Come on,” Bob said, and the boys quickly followed.
At the corner, they saw the tall man some twenty feet ahead and walking fast. From time to time he slowed down, as if watching something ahead.
“I think he’s following someone,” Bob observed.
“Can you see who it is?” asked Pete.
“No, you’re taller,” Bob said.
Pete stood as tall as he could, but he couldn’t tell who or what the man was following. Then he saw him turn off the pavement.
“He’s going into a building,” Pete reported.
“It’s the library!” said Bob.
The man vanished through the tall double doors, and the boys hurried after him. Inside, they stopped. The library was almost deserted on this Fiesta day, yet the boys could see no trace of the tall man with the eye patch.
The main room was large, with many bookshelves and several exits into other rooms. Quickly the boys looked up and down the aisles between the shelves. Then they explored the exits. To their dismay they found the library had two doors leading to a side street. And the tall man was nowhere in sight.
“He’s gone,” Pete said, crestfallen.
“We should have split up and one of us gone around to the back. Jupiter would have remembered that most libraries have more than one entrance,” Bob said dejectedly. He was unhappy with himself for not thinking of such an obvious point.
“Well,” Pete said. “He’s gone and we might as well get on with that research Jupe wanted.”
Bob agreed, and the two boys inquired about where they would find books on local history. A kindly librarian directed them to a small room that contained a special California history collection. Just as they were walking up to the desk in the smaller room, a heavy hand fell on Pete’s shoulder.
“Well, well, our young investigators!”
Professor Walsh stood behind them, his eyes twinkling behind his thick glasses.
“Doing some research, boys?” he asked.
“Yes, sir,” replied Pete. “We want to find out all about Moaning Valley.”
“Good, good,” Professor Walsh said encouragingly. “That’s just what I’m doing myself. I haven’t had a great deal of luck, though. There doesn’t seem to be much except unreliable legends… Have you been to the Fiesta?”
“Yes, sir,” Pete replied enthusiastically. “Boy, they sure have some great horses.”
“It’s a fine celebration,” the professor agreed. “I think I’ll go take a look since I’m not having much luck here. How are you boys going to get back to the ranch?”
“We have our bikes, sir,” Bob said.
“Well, then, I’ll see you later.” Professor Walsh turned to leave.
Bob hesitated, then asked, “Did you happen to see a tall man with an eye patch while you were in the library?”
Walsh shook his head. “No, boys, I didn’t. You mean that same man you saw last night?”
“Yes, sir,” Pete said.
“Right here in town, eh?” Professor Walsh looked thoughtful. “No, I haven’t seen him.”
After the professor had gone, Bob and Pete went to work. They found three or four books that mentioned Moaning Valley, but none of them added anything to what they already knew. Then Bob discovered a small book, with yellowing, wrinkled pages, which was a complete history of Moaning Valley up to the year 1941. It was on the wrong shelf, which was probably the reason Professor Walsh hadn’t seen it.
They borrowed the book with Mrs. Dalton’s library card. Outside, the afternoon was still hot and sunny and the parade was just ending. People were streaming away from the main part of the town, many of them still in costume. The boys tied their packages on the luggage racks of their bikes and started home. Soon they began the long climb up San Mateo Pass. They rode as far up as they could with ease, then dismounted and continued on foot.
Stopping to rest a moment, they looked out over the water towards the Channel Islands, hazy in the distance.
“Gosh, I’d like to get out to those islands,” Pete said.
“They actually herd cattle on some of them,” Bob said. “Cowboys and all, right out in the ocean.”
Near the islands they could see the slim grey hulls of Navy vessels on manoeuvres.
A car was coming up the highway from the direction of Santa Carla, but the boys were busy gazing out at the ocean. They paid no attention to the car until they suddenly realized, from the rasp of the motor, that it was travelling at top speed.
Whirling around, they discovered that it was partly off the road and heading straight for them.
“Look out, Bob!” Pete shouted.
Both boys leaped out of the path of the onrushing car just in time. It roared past them, veered back on to the road and raced away.
But their desperate leaps had carried them over the edge of the road. Slipping, unable to hold on, they plunged towards the deep chasm far below.
Pete slid down the steep incline over sharp rocks and brush that tore at his clothes. He clawed at the bushes to slow his fall, for the slope ended in an almost sheer drop ahead. But the vegetation was not strong enough to hold him. He was only some four feet from empty space when he crashed into the heavy trunk of a twisted tree.
“Oof!” Pete grunted, as his fingers instinctively closed around the thick trunk.
For a moment he lay still, clinging to the tree-trunk and breathing heavily. Then he realized that he was alone.
“Bob!” he cried.
There was no answer. Below him was nothing but yawning empty space.
“Bob!” he called again frantically.
There was movement just to Pete’s left. Bob’s face peered up through thick bushes.
“I’m all right… I guess,” Bob said weakly. “I’m on a kind of ledge. Only… I can’t move my leg!”
“Try moving it just a little.”
Pete waited while he saw faint movement in the bushes where Bob lay. Then Bob’s voice came more strongly.
“I don’t think it’s bad,” Bob reported. “I can move it. It was just twisted under me. It hurts, but not so much.”
“Do you think you can crawl back up?” Pete asked after a minute.
“I don’t know, Pete. It’s awful steep.”
“And if we slip — ” Pete did not have to finish that statement.
“I guess we’d better try yelling,” Bob said.
“Loud,” agreed Pete.
He opened his mouth to yell, but what came out was only a faint whisper. For just as he started to shout he spied a long face peering down from the edge of the road above. A face with a wicked scar and an eye patch!
The boys and the man with the scarred face stared at each other for a full ten seconds. Then, abruptly, the face vanished and they heard the sound of running feet, a car engine, and the squeal of tyres as the car roared away.
Its motor had scarcely faded out of hearing when the boys heard other vehicles approaching.
“Yell!” Pete cried.
Both boys shouted as loud as they could, and the sound echoed through the mountains. Brakes squealed and gravel crunched above. Two kindly faces peered over the edge of the road.
Soon a thick rope came flying down to Pete. He wrapped it twice around his waist, held the loose end in both hands, and was pulled up to the road. The rope was thrown down again, and a moment later Bob stood beside Pete.
Bob tested his leg and decided it was probably only sprained. The burly truck driver who had supplied the rope was going in the direction of The Crooked-Y, and he insisted that the boys accept a ride with him. Less than fifteen minutes later they were deposited with their bikes at the front gate of the ranch. They waved their thanks to the truck driver, and limped up to the porch of the ranch house.
Mrs. Dalton came out of the house and stared at them. “Good heavens! What happened? Your clothes are a sight!”
Pete started to answer when he felt a light kick from Bob.
“We went downhill too fast and fell off our bikes in the pass, ma’am,” Bob explained, which was more or less true. “I hurt my leg a little, so a man gave us a ride.”
“Your leg?” Mrs. Walton said. “Let me see, Bob.”
Like most ranch women Mrs. Dalton was a good practical nurse. She pronounced Bob’s leg uninjured except for a mild sprain. No doctor would be needed, but Bob would have to rest his leg as much as possible. Mrs. Dalton sat him on the porch in a comfortable chair and brought him a pitcher of lemonade.
“But you can get to work, Pete Crenshaw,” she said. “Mr. Dalton isn’t back yet so you can start by haying the horses in the front corral.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Pete said hastily.
Bob sat in the shade with his leg up on a chair and grinned while his friend worked in the hot sun. Pete glared at the smaller boy, but he didn’t really mind. It felt good to be working with his muscles in the warm sun.
Just before supper-time Jupiter pulled up in the truck from his uncle’s salvage yard with big, blond Konrad at the wheel. Pete helped Jupiter unload the scuba equipment and store it in the barn, along with another small, mysterious bundle.
Konrad stayed for supper, and Mr. Dalton admired the enormous stature and muscles of Titus Jones’s Bavarian helper.
“How would you like to work on a ranch, Konrad?” Mr. Dalton said. “If I had you with me, I could afford to lose ten hands.”
“You need help, maybe for a few weeks,” Konrad said, “Mr. Titus let Hans and me come to help, sure.”
Mr. Dalton thanked him. “I hope it won’t come to that. I’m sure this will all blow over soon. Young Castro says he isn’t frightened, and he’s going to talk to the men when he comes out of the hospital.”
“That’s wonderful, Jess,” Mrs. Dalton said.
Mr. Dalton turned suddenly gloomy. “But I’m not sure there’s time. The men may all be gone by then if these accidents continue. The sheriff hasn’t come up with any ideas about Moaning Valley. He said El Diablo had no children he knows about, and he can’t identify that man the boys saw.”
“I’m sure an explanation will be found soon,” Professor Walsh said encouragingly. “Reason will prevail over superstition as soon as the men start to think. Time — that is the healer.”
“I wish I could be sure of that,” Mr. Dalton said.
The adults started talking about other things, and when supper was over Konrad left to drive back to Rocky Beach. Professor Walsh had to deliver a lecture at the university, and the Daltons had to go over the ranch accounts. The boys went up to their room.
The instant they closed the door, Bob and Pete gathered around Jupiter.
“What’s the plan?” Pete demanded.
“Was it a diamond?” Bob asked.
Jupiter grinned. “It’s a diamond all right, just as I thought. A large industrial-type diamond, not worth much; but the expert in Los Angeles was most surprised when I told him where I had discovered it. He found it pretty difficult to believe. He said he would have thought it was an African stone. I left it with him for various tests. He will call me here as soon as he completes his study.”
“Wow!” Pete exclaimed.
“Did you get the candles and sombreros?” Jupiter asked.
“We sure did,” Pete said.
“And a book about Moaning Valley,” Bob added.
The two boys told Jupiter about their trip to Santa Carla and the car that had forced them off the road.
“Did you get the licence number?” Jupiter asked immediately.
“Believe me, Jupe, there wasn’t time,” Pete said, “but I did notice that it was a different plate — sort of blue and white.”
“Hmmmmm,” Jupiter mused, “probably a Nevada plate. And you say the scar-faced man looked down at you?”
“Probably came back to finish the job, but the other cars scared him off,” Pete said angrily.
“Perhaps,” Jupiter said thoughtfully. “And you also saw the professor in town?”
“And Old Ben and his partner, Waldo,” Bob pointed out.