CHAPTER FOURTEEN: ONE ALAMO GULCH-2
re, unless by some miracle o buy anoto move like an insect along th.
ting it inland. By time trees the fire, a deep and greedy roar.
quot; t nig; said Lee. quot;t;
quot;I guess t to catc; Grumman replied, stripping a brancs leaves so as a ick, quot;and ting to see ;
And sure enougs and rocks and fallen tree trunks and stopping only to gator, flying o tell t long before trees bereaming banner of flame.
Creatures of t—squirrels, birds, rose around travelers struggled on toree line, er t noy feet into trees blazed like torc tc like napo blossom .
Gasping, Lee and Grumman forced teep slope of rocks and scree. s ed t soo far a o see through binoculars.
tainside rose se out of trap t was a narrow defile ahe cuffs.
Lee pointed, and Grumman said, quot;My ts exactly, Mr. Scoresby.quot;
ipped o t. t pause, climbing on as quickly as t Lee said, quot;Excuse me for asking ts impertinent, but I never kne c youre no c someto do, or did it come natural?quot;
quot;For a urally,quot; said Grumman. quot;e o learn everything we do.
Sayan Kotor is telling me t to a pass. If t.quot;
ter preferred to find ones and moving as sly as ime for ttle gulch.
Lee Grumman, because thing hard.
of ion Lee didnt to face; but rance to tually on the zeppelin.
quot;t; he said.
And it ence of deater stumbled, even surefooted, firm-ed er stumbled and faltered. Grumman leaned on tick o look back, an