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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Cave in the Mountain, by Lieut. R. H. Jayne</title>
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+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Cave in the Mountain, by Lieut. R. H.
+Jayne</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Cave in the Mountain</p>
+<p>Author: Lieut. R. H. Jayne</p>
+<p>Release Date: January 10, 2005 [eBook #14647]</p>
+<p>Language: english</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CAVE IN THE MOUNTAIN***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3 class="pg">E-text prepared by Bill Tozier, Barbara Tozier,<br />
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team</h3>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h1>The Cave in the Mountain</h1>
+<h3>A Sequel to <i>In the Pecos Country</i></h3>
+<h4>by</h4>
+<h2>Lieut. R. H. Jayne</h2>
+<h4>Author of <i>Lost in the Wilderness</i>, <i>Through
+Apache Land</i>, <i>In the Pecos Country</i>, etc.</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="short" />
+<h6 class="pg">New York<br />
+The Mershon Company</h6>
+<h5>1894</h5>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2><a id="Contents" name="Contents">Contents.</a></h2>
+<h3>Chapter.</h3>
+<ol>
+<li><a href="#Ch_1">A Strange Guide</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_2">Alone in the Gloom</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_3">Strange Experiences</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_4">Sunlight and Hope</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_5">Mining and Countermining</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_6">A Daring Exploit</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_7">Fishing for a Friend</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_8">Fishing for a Prize</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_9">Groping in Darkness</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_10">&ldquo;Here We are Again!&rdquo;</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_11">Through the Mountains</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_12">Through the Mountains&mdash;Continued</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_13">In the Nick of Time</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_14">Between Two Fires</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_15">On the Defensive</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_16">Friend or Enemy?</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_17">Fortunate Diversion</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_18">An Old Acquaintance</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_19">How it was Done</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_20">Sut&rsquo;s Camp-Fire</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_21">Safety and Sleep</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_22">Two Old Acquaintances</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_23">Border Chivalry</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_24">Night Visitors</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_25">Hunting a Steed</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_26">Lone Wolf&rsquo;s Tactics</a></li>
+<li><a href="#Ch_27">The End</a></li>
+</ol>
+<hr class="full" />
+<h2>The Cave in the Mountain.</h2>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_1" name="Ch_1">Chapter I.</a></h3>
+<h2>A Strange Guide.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if he doesn&rsquo;t beat any one I ever heard
+of!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney and Fred Munson were stretched on the
+Apache blanket, carefully watching the eyes of the wild beast
+whenever they showed themselves, and had been talking in guarded
+tones. The Irishman had been silent for several minutes, when the
+lad asked him a question and received no answer. When the thing was
+repeated several times, he crawled over to his friend, and, as he
+expected, found him sound asleep.</p>
+<p>This was not entirely involuntary upon the part of Mickey. He
+had shown himself, on more than one occasion, to be a faithful
+sentinel, when serious danger threatened; but he believed that
+there was nothing to be feared on the present occasion, and, as he
+was sorely in need of sleep, he concluded to indulge while the
+opportunity was given him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sleep away, old fellow,&rdquo; said Fred. &ldquo;You seem
+to want it so bad that I won&rsquo;t wake you up again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy&rsquo;s curiosity having been thoroughly aroused, all
+tendency to slumber upon his part had departed, and he determined
+that if there was any way by which he could profit any by that
+wolf, he would do it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He may hang around here for a day or two,&rdquo; he
+mused, as he heard the faint tappings upon the sand,
+&ldquo;thinking all the time that he&rsquo;ll get a chance to make
+a meal off of us. So he will, if we don&rsquo;t keep a bright
+look-out. It seems to me that he might be driven out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The more he reflected upon this suggestion of his own, the more
+reasonable did it become. His plan was to drive out the wolf, to
+compel him to show up, as a card player might say. Considering the
+dread which all wild animals have of fire, the plan was simple, and
+would have occurred to anyone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The camp-fire seems to be all out, but there must be some
+embers under the ashes. Mickey threw down his torch somewhere near
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Carefully raking off the ashes with a stick, he found plenty of
+coals beneath. These were brought together, and some of the twigs
+laid over, the heat causing them at once to burst into a crackling
+flame. This speedily radiated enough light for his purpose, which
+was simply to find one of those &ldquo;fat&rdquo; pieces of pine,
+which make the best kind of torches. A few minutes search brought
+forth the one he needed, and then, shoving his revolver down in his
+belt, he was ready.</p>
+<p>The light revealed the large beautiful Apache blanket, stretched
+out upon the ground, while the Irishman lay half upon it and half
+upon the earth, sleeping as soundly as if in his bed at home.
+Beyond him and in every direction was the blackness of night. But,
+looking to his right, he discovered the two eyes staring at him and
+glowing like balls of fire.</p>
+<p>The animal was evidently puzzled at the sight before him. Fred
+dreaded a shot from the Indians above, and, as soon as he had his
+torch ready and had taken all his bearings, he drew the ashes over
+the spluttering flame. Save for the torch, all was again wrapped in
+impenetrable gloom.</p>
+<p>The glowing orbs were still discernible, and, holding the
+smoking torch above his head, Fred began moving slowly toward them.
+The animal did not stir until the lad was within twenty feet, when
+the latter concluded that it would be a good thing for him, also,
+to take a rest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wonder if he&rsquo;s been trained not to be afraid of
+torches,&rdquo; mused the little fellow. &ldquo;I hope he
+hasn&rsquo;t, and I hope too there won&rsquo;t be any trouble in
+scaring him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad dreaded another possibility,&mdash;that his torch might
+be suddenly extinguished. If that should go out, leaving them in
+utter darkness, the wolf would immediately rise to a superior
+plane, and speedily demonstrate who was master of the
+situation.</p>
+<p>Fred swung the torch several times around his head, until it was
+fanned into a bright flame, after which he resumed his advance upon
+his foe. At the very first step the beast vanished. He had wheeled
+about and made off in a twinkling.</p>
+<p>The lad pressed onward at the same deliberate gait, watching
+carefully for the reappearance of the guiding orbs. It was not long
+before they were observed a dozen yards or so further on. The wolf
+was manifestly retreating. He had no fancy for that terrible torch
+bearing down on him, and he was falling back by forced marches.
+This being precisely what Fred desired, he was greatly
+encouraged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is making his way out, and after awhile he will reach
+the place, and away he&rsquo;ll go. If he&rsquo;s a wolf or fox,
+the hole may be so small that Mickey can&rsquo;t squeeze through,
+but I think I can follow one of the animals anywhere.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After going some distance further, Fred noticed that the animal
+was not proceeding in a straight line. He would appear on his
+right, where he would stare at the advancing torch until it was
+quite close, when he would scamper off to the left, and go through
+the same performance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He knows the route better than I do, so I won&rsquo;t try
+to disturb him,&rdquo; reflected the boy as he followed up his
+advantage, with high hopes of discovering the secret which was so
+important to himself and friend. &ldquo;I won&rsquo;t crowd him too
+hard, either, for I may scare him off the track and
+fail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The wolf was evidently a prey to curiosity&mdash;the same
+propensity which has caused the death of many bipeds and
+quadrupeds. The action of the torch puzzled him, no doubt. He had
+seen fire before, and probably had been burnt&mdash;so he knew
+enough to give it a wide berth; but it is doubtful whether he ever
+saw a flaring torch held over the head of a boy and solemnly
+bearing down upon him.</p>
+<p>Fred&rsquo;s absorbing interest in the whole affair made him
+wholly unmindful of the distance he was traveling. He had already
+advanced several hundred yards, and had no idea that he was so far
+away from his slumbering friend. The fact was that the singular
+cave was only one among a thousand similar ones found among the
+wilds of the West and Southwest. Its breadth was not great, but the
+distance which it ran back into the mountains was amazing.</p>
+<p>The wolf was leading the lad a long distance from the camp, and,
+what was more important (and which fact, unfortunately, Fred had
+failed to notice), the route was anything but a direct one. It
+could not have been more sinuous or winding. The course of the
+cavern, in reality, was as winding as that of the ravine in which
+he had effected his escape from the Apaches, and from which it
+seemed he had irrevocably strayed. Had he attempted to make his
+return, he would have found it impossible to rejoin Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney, unless the two should call and signal to each
+other.</p>
+<p>However, the attention of the lad was taken up so entirely with
+the task he had laid hold of, and which seemed in such a fair way
+of accomplishment, that he took no note of his danger. The wolf was
+leading him forward as the <em>ignis fatuus</em> lures the wearied
+traveler through swamps and thickets to renewed disappointment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has some way of reaching the outer world which the
+Indians haven&rsquo;t been able to find. Of course not; for, if
+they knew, they would have been in here long ago. They
+wouldn&rsquo;t stay fooling around that opening, where
+they&rsquo;re likely to get a shot from Mickey when they
+ain&rsquo;t expecting it. Now, if the wolf will only behave
+himself, all will come out all right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fearful of being caught with an extinguished torch, the lad kept
+up the practice of swinging it rapidly round his head every few
+minutes. When he ceased each performance, the flame was so bright
+that he was able to penetrate the darkness much further upon every
+hand.</p>
+<p>On one or two of these occasions he caught a glimpse of the
+creature as it bounded away into the darkness. In shape and action
+it was so much like the mountain wolves which had besieged him some
+nights before that all doubts were removed. He knew it was one of
+those terrible animals beyond question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wonder how it is he&rsquo;s alone? It wasn&rsquo;t long
+after I saw that old fellow the other night, when there was about
+fifty of them under the tree. One of them is enough for me, if he
+doesn&rsquo;t give us the slip. Maybe he has come in to find out
+how the land lies, and is going back to report to the
+rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred could not help reflecting every few minutes on the terrible
+situation in which he would be should his torch fail, and the other
+bring a pack of ravenous creatures about him. They would make
+exceedingly short work of a dozen like him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems good for hours yet,&rdquo; he said as he held it
+before him, and examined it for the twentieth time.</p>
+<p>The stick was a piece of a limb about as thick as his arm, and
+fully a yard in length. It felt as heavy as <em>lignum vitae</em>,
+and, by looking at the end held in his hand and that which was
+burning, it could be seen that it was literally surcharged with
+resin&mdash;so much so that, after being cut, it had overflowed,
+and was sticky on the outside. No doubt this, with others, had been
+gathered for that express purpose, and there was no reason to doubt
+its capacity.</p>
+<p>As Fred advanced he caught occasional glimpses of the jagged
+overhanging rocks, which in some places were wet, the water
+dripping down upon him as he passed. The fact, too, that more than
+once both sides of the cave were visible at the same time, told him
+that the dimensions of their prison were altogether different from
+what he had supposed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There must be an end of this somewhere,&rdquo; he
+muttered, beginning to suspect that he had gone quite a distance,
+&ldquo;and I&rsquo;m getting tired of this tramping. I hope the
+wolf hasn&rsquo;t gone beyond the door he came in by, and I hope he
+has nearly reached it, for it will take me some time before I can
+find my way back to Mick.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_2" name="Ch_2">Chapter II.</a></h3>
+<h2>Alone in the Gloom.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Before Fred could complete the sentence his foot struck an
+obstruction and he was precipitated headlong over and down a chasm
+which had escaped his notice. He fell with such violence that he
+was knocked senseless.</p>
+<p>When he recovered he was in darkness, his torch having been
+extinguished. The smell of the burning resin recalled him to
+himself, and it required but a moment for him to remember the
+accident which had befallen him. For a time he scarcely dared to
+stir, fearing that he might pitch headlong over some precipice. He
+felt of his face and hands, but could detect nothing like blood.
+The boy had received quite a number of severe bruises, however, and
+when he ventured to stir there were sharp, stinging pains in his
+shoulders, neck and legs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank God I am alive!&rdquo; was his fervent ejaculation,
+after he had taken his inventory. &ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t know
+where I am or how I can get back again. I wonder what has become of
+the torch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He could find nothing of his flambeau, although he was confident
+that it was near at hand. Fred believed that he had fallen about
+twenty feet, striking upon his chest and shoulders. At this
+juncture, he thought of the wolf which had drawn him into the
+mishap, and he turned his head so suddenly to look for him that the
+sharp pain in his neck caused him to cry out. But nothing of the
+beast was to be seen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe he went over here ahead of me, and got
+killed,&rdquo; he thought; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t think that can
+be, for a wolf is a good deal spryer than a boy can be, and he
+wouldn&rsquo;t have tumbled down as I did.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred recollected that he had several matches about him, and he
+carefully struck one upon the rock beside him. The tiny flame
+showed that he had stumbled into a rocky pit. It was a dozen feet
+in length, some three or four in width, and, when he stood erect,
+his head was level with the surface of the ground above. In
+consequence, it would be a very easy matter for him to climb out
+whenever he chose to do so; but above all things he was desirous of
+regaining his torch. Just as the match between his fingers burned
+out, he caught sight of it, lying a short distance away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s queer what became of that wolf,&rdquo; he said
+to himself, as he recovered the precious fagot and painfully
+climbed up out of the pit. &ldquo;Maybe he thought I was killed,
+and went off to tell the rest of his friends, so that they can all
+have a feast over me. I must fire up the torch as soon as I can,
+for I&rsquo;m likely to need it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This did not prove a very difficult matter, on account of the
+fatness of the torch, which ignited readily, and quickly spread
+into the same thick, smoking flame as before. But Fred noted that
+it was about half burned up, and he could not expect it to hold out
+many hours longer, as it had already done good service.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish I could see the wolf again,&rdquo; he said to
+himself, looking longingly around in the darkness, &ldquo;for I
+believe he entered the cave somewhere near here, and it was a great
+pity that I had the accident just at the moment I was about to
+learn all about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He moved carefully about the cave, and soon found that he had
+reached the furtherest limit. Less than twenty feet away it
+terminated, the jagged walls shutting down, and offering an
+impassable barrier to any further progress in that direction.</p>
+<p>All that he could do, after completing his search, was to turn
+back in quest of his friend Mickey. The belief that he was in the
+immediate neighborhood of the outlet delayed the lad&rsquo;s return
+until he could assure himself that it was impossible to find that
+for which he was hunting, and which had been the means of his
+wandering so far away from camp.</p>
+<p>Fred occupied fully an hour in the search. Here and there he
+observed scratches upon the surface of the rocks in some places. He
+was confident that they had been made by the feet of the wolves;
+but in spite of these encouraging signs, he was baffled in his main
+purpose, and how the visitor made his way in and out of the cave
+remained an impenetrable mystery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Too bad, too bad!&rdquo; he muttered, with a great sigh.
+&ldquo;I shall have to give it up, after all. I only wish Mickey
+was here to help me. I will call to him, so that he will be sure to
+hear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As has been intimated in another place, the two friends had a
+code of signals understood by both. When they were separated by
+quite a distance, and one wished to draw the other to him, he had a
+way of placing two of his fingers against his tongue, and emitting
+a shrill screech which might well be taken for the scream of a
+locomotive whistle, so loud and piercing was its character.</p>
+<p>When the lad uttered his signal, he was startled by the result.
+A hundred echoes were awakened within the cavern, and the uproar
+fairly deafened him. It seemed to him that ten thousand little imps
+were perched all around the cavern, with their fingers thrust in
+their mouths, waiting for him to start the tumult, when they joined
+in, with an effect that was overwhelming and overpowering.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good gracious!&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;I never heard
+anything like that. I thought all the rocks were going to tumble
+down upon my head, and I believe some must have been
+loosened.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He looked apprehensively at the dark, jagged points overhead.
+But they were as grim and motionless as they had been during the
+many long years that had rolled over them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mickey must have heard that, if he is anywhere within
+twenty miles,&rdquo; he concluded.</p>
+<p>But, if such was the case, he sent back no answering signal, as
+was his invariable custom, when that of his friend reached him.
+Fred listened long and attentively, but caught no reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess I&rsquo;ll have to try it again,&rdquo; he added,
+with a mingled laugh and shudder. &ldquo;I think these walls can
+stand a little more such serenading.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He threw his whole soul in the effort, and the screeching
+whistle that he sent out was frightful, followed, as it was, by the
+innumerable echoes. It seemed as if the walls took up the wave of
+sound as if it were a foot-ball and hurled it back and forth, from
+side to side, and up and down, in furious sport. The dread of
+losing his torch alone prevented the lad from throwing it down and
+clapping his hands to his ears, to shut out the horrid din. Some of
+the distant echoes, coming in after the others were exhausted, gave
+an odd, dropping character to the volleys of sound.</p>
+<p>Had the expected reply of Mickey been the same as the call to
+him, the lad would have been deceived thereby, for the echoes, as
+will be understood, were precisely the same as answering whistles,
+uttered in the same manner. But Fred understood that, if the
+Irishman heard him, he would reply with a series of short signals,
+such as are heard on some railroads when danger is detected. But
+none such came, and he knew, therefore, that the ears which he
+intended to reach were not reached at all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t understand that,&rdquo; he mused,
+perplexedly, &ldquo;unless he&rsquo;s asleep yet. When I left him,
+it didn&rsquo;t seem as though he&rsquo;d wake up in a week.
+Perhaps he can hear me better if I shout.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A similar racket was produced when the boy strained his lungs,
+but his straining ear could detect no other result. It never once
+occurred to Fred that he and his friend were separated by such a
+distance that they could not communicate by sound or signal. And
+yet such was the case, he having traveled much further than he
+suspected.</p>
+<p>Having been forced to the disheartening conclusion that it was
+impossible to find the outlet by which the wolf had escaped, Fred
+had but one course left. That was, to find his way back to the
+camp-fire in the shortest time and by the best means at his
+command. If the mountain would not go to Mohammed, then Mohammed
+would have to go to the mountain.</p>
+<p>The lad began to feel that a great deal of responsibility was on
+his shoulders. The remembrance of Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney going to
+sleep was alarming to him. He looked upon him as one regards a
+sentinel who sinks into slumber when upon duty. Knowing the cunning
+of the redskins, Fred feared that they would discover the fact, and
+descend into the cave in such numbers that escape would be out of
+the question.</p>
+<p>And then again, suppose that their enemies did not disturb them,
+what was to be their fate? The venison in the possession of the
+Irishman could not last a great deal longer, and, when that was
+gone, no means of obtaining food would be left. What were the two
+prisoners then to do?</p>
+<p>Mickey had hinted to Fred what his intention was, but the lad
+felt very little faith in its success. It appeared like throwing
+life away to make such a foolhardy attempt to reach the outside as
+diving into a stream of water from which there was no withdrawal,
+and the length of whose flow beneath the rock could only be
+conjectured, with all the chances against success. But Fred
+recalled in what a marked manner Providence had favored him in the
+past, and he could but feel a strong faith that He would still hold
+him in his remembrance. &ldquo;I wouldn&rsquo;t have believed I
+could go through all that I have had in the last few days; and yet
+God remembered me, and I am sure He will not forget me so long as I
+try to do His will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the eve of starting he fancied he heard a slight rustling on
+his right, and he paused, hoping that the wolf would show himself
+again; but he could not discern anything, and concluded that it was
+the dropping of a stone or fragment of earth. The lad was further
+pleased to find, upon examination, that the revolver in his
+possession was uninjured by his fall. In short, the only one that
+had received any injuries was himself, and his were not of a
+serious character, being simply bruises, the effects of which would
+wear off in a short time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hate to leave here without seeing that wolf,&rdquo; he
+said, as he stood hesitating, with his torch in hand. &ldquo;He may
+be sneaking somewhere among these rocks, popping in and out
+whenever he has a chance; and if I could only get another sight of
+him, I would stick to him till he told me his secret.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He awaited awhile longer, but the hope was an illusive one, and
+he finally started on his return to camp.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_3" name="Ch_3">Chapter III.</a></h3>
+<h2>Strange Experiences.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Young Munson was destined to learn ultimately that he had
+undertaken an impossible task. The hunter, in the flush and
+excitement attending the pursuit of game, can form no correct idea
+of the distance passed, and so he, in attempting to run the shadowy
+wolf to earth, had traveled twice as far as he supposed. The case
+is altogether different when the hunter starts to return. It is
+then that the furlongs become miles, and the wearied pursuer feels
+disgusted with the enthusiasm which led him so far away from
+headquarters.</p>
+<p>When the lad was certain that he had labored far enough on the
+back track to take him fully to the camp-fire, he really had not
+gone more than one-half the distance. Worse than this, he saw, from
+the nature of the ground, that he was &ldquo;off soundings.&rdquo;
+Several times he was forced to leap over openings, or rents,
+similar to that into which he had stumbled, and the broadening out
+of the cave made it out of his power to confine his path to
+anything like reasonable limits. The appearance of unexpected
+obstructions directly in his way compelled numerous detours, with
+the inevitable result of disarranging the line he intended to
+pursue, and causing his course to be a zigzag one of the most
+marked character.</p>
+<p>There were no landmarks to afford him the least guidance. In
+short, he was like the ill-fated steamer caught on a dangerous
+coast by an impenetrable fog, where no observations can be made,
+and the captain is compelled to &ldquo;go it blind.&rdquo; He was
+forcibly reminded of this difficulty by unexpectedly finding
+himself face to face with the side of the cavern. When he thought
+that he was pursuing the right direction, here was evidence that he
+was at least going at right angles, and, to all intents and
+purposes, he might as well have been going in exactly the opposite
+course.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, things are getting mixed,&rdquo; he exclaimed, more
+amused than frightened at this discovery. &ldquo;I never tramped
+over such a place before, and if I ever get out of this, I&rsquo;ll
+never try it again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But there was little cause for mirth, and when he had struggled
+an hour longer, something like despair began to creep into his
+heart. Worse than all, he became aware that his torch was nearly
+exhausted, and, under the most favorable circumstances, could not
+last more than an hour longer.</p>
+<p>While toiling in this manner, he had continued to signal to
+Mickey in his usual manner, but with no other result than that of
+awakening the same deafening din of echoes. By this time he was
+utterly worn out. He had been traveling for hours, or, rather,
+working, for nearly every step was absolute labor, so precipitous
+was the ground and so frequent were his detours. He had
+accomplished nothing. When he expected to find himself in the
+immediate vicinity of the campfire, there were no signs of it, and
+the loudest shout he could make to his friend brought no reply.</p>
+<p>This fact filled the mind of Fred with a hundred misgivings. He
+had given up the belief that it was possible for Mickey to remain
+asleep all this time. He was sure the night had passed, and, great
+as was the capacity of the Irishman in the way of slumber, he could
+not remain unconscious all the time. And then nothing seemed more
+probable than that he was placed for ever beyond the power of
+response. If a dozen Indians quietly let themselves down through
+the opening during the darkness of the night, they could easily
+discover the sleeping figure, and dispatch him before he could make
+any kind of resistance.</p>
+<p>It was this fear of the Indians being in the cave that made the
+lad apprehensive every time he gave utterance to his signals. He
+believed they were as likely to reach the ears of the Apaches as
+those of Mickey, and his faith of the extraordinary shrewdness of
+those people was such that he did not doubt but that, by some means
+or other, they would learn the true signal with which to reply. As
+yet, however, no such attempt had been made, so far as his ears
+informed him, but his misgivings were none the less on that
+account. What was the use of their taking the trouble to answer
+when he was walking directly into their hands? There was a
+cowering, shrinking sensation from his own noise, caused by the
+expectation that a half-dozen crouching figures would leap up and
+swoop down upon him.</p>
+<p>The darkness remained impenetrable, and, as Fred toiled forward,
+he was continually recalling the words of Byron, which he had read
+frequently when at school, and had learned to recite for his
+father. He found himself repeating them, and there was no doubt
+that he realized more vividly than do boys generally of his age the
+meaning of the author:</p>
+<div class="poem">
+<div class="stanza">
+<p class="i10">&ldquo;The world was void:</p>
+<p>The populous and powerful was a lump,</p>
+<p>Seasonless, herbless, treeless, manless, lifeless;</p>
+<p>A lump of death, a chaos of hard clay.</p>
+<p>The rivers, lakes and ocean, all stood still,</p>
+<p>And nothing stirr&rsquo;d within their silent depths.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<p>Such fancies as these were not calculated to make him feel
+particularly comfortable while carrying the torch. Such a person in
+such a situation makes an especially inviting target of himself,
+and, although Fred dreaded to see it burn itself out, when the
+chances were that he was likely to be in sore need of the same, yet
+he had wrought himself up to such a pitch that he more than once
+meditated extinguishing it altogether, with the purpose of putting
+himself on an equality with those of his enemies who might be
+prowling in the night around him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder whether Mickey would be more likely to hear my
+pistol than a shout or whistle?&rdquo; he said, as he drew the
+weapon from his belt and held it up to inspect it in the light of
+the flaring torch. &ldquo;It seems to be all right, although
+there&rsquo;s no telling how long since it has been loaded. Here
+goes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With this, he pointed the muzzle toward the cavern and pulled
+the trigger.</p>
+<p>The response was as prompt as though he had charged the chamber
+but a short time before, proving not only that the weapon was of
+the best quality, but that the ammunition was equally so, and the
+slight moisture that characterized the atmosphere of the cave had
+not been sufficient to injure the charge. It seemed as if he had
+fired a cannon, the echoes rolling, doubling, and repeating on
+themselves in the most bewildering and terrifying fashion.</p>
+<p>Fred could not understand how it was that such a pandemonium of
+sound could escape filling the subterranean world from one end to
+the other, and so he sat down on a ledge of rock to listen for some
+reply from his friend.</p>
+<p>It was several seconds before the trickeries of nature, in the
+way of echoes, terminated and matters settled down to their natural
+quiet. And then, when quiet came again, it was like that of a
+tomb&mdash;deep, profound, and impressive. The bent and listening
+ear could detect nothing that could be supposed to resemble the
+noise of the cascade, which had excited his wonder when he was
+stretched out upon the ground directly above it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This must be about forty miles round,&rdquo; he said to
+himself, when he had waited for the reply until convinced that it
+was not forthcoming, &ldquo;and I have strayed away
+altogether.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The luxury of rest was so great, after his long, wearying toil,
+that he concluded that he might as well spend a half hour in that
+fashion as in any other. The echoes and pains of his bruises had
+departed,&mdash;or, more properly, perhaps they were consolidated
+with the aches and pains following upon the overtaxing of his
+limbs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, dear! How tired I am!&rdquo; he sighed, as he
+stretched out his limbs. &ldquo;It seems to me that I won&rsquo;t
+be able to walk again for a week. I must rest awhile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His fatigue was so great that he was not conscious of any desire
+for food or rest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe I will need that torch more after a time than I do
+now,&rdquo; he added, as he looked listlessly at it. &ldquo;It
+seems good for a half hour yet, and I don&rsquo;t want it.&rdquo;
+With this he thrust the burning end in the sand at his feet, and
+held it there until it was entirely extinguished, and he was
+wrapped again in the same impenetrable darkness. So far as
+possible, he had become accustomed to this dreadful state of
+affairs. He had been viewing and breathing the atmospheric
+blackness for many hours, although it may be doubted whether one
+who had spent so much of his life in the sunshine could ever become
+accustomed to the total deprivation of it.</p>
+<p>Fred had assumed an easy position, where he could lay his head
+back, and, straightening out his legs, he made up his mind to enjoy
+the rest which he needed so badly. When a lad is thoroughly and
+completely tired, it is difficult for him to think of anything
+else; and although, while walking, the fugitive was tormented by
+all manner of wild fancies and fears, yet when his efforts ceased,
+something like a reaction followed, and he sighed for rest, content
+to wait until he should be forced to face the difficulties
+again.</p>
+<p>When he closed his eyes all sorts of lights danced before him,
+and strange, indescribable noises filled the air. It seemed that
+impish figures were frolicking all around, sometimes grinning in
+his face, and then skurrying far away through the aisles of the
+gloom. At last he slept. The slumber was sweet and dreamless,
+carrying him through the entire night, and affording him the very
+rest and refreshment which he so sorely needed.</p>
+<p>This sleep was nearly completed when Fred was aroused by some
+animal licking his face. He arose with a start of exclamation and
+terror, and the animal growled and darted back several feet. A pair
+of gleaming eyes flashed in the darkness&mdash;the same pair which
+he had seen before. The wolf had come back to him.</p>
+<p>Fred drew his revolver with the purpose of giving him a shot,
+when he reflected that it would be wisdom not to kill the animal
+until he was forced to do it in self defense. So he shoved the
+weapon back in its place, where it could be seized at a
+moment&rsquo;s warning, and sat still. In a few moments the wolf
+ventured softly up to him, and preparing to begin his feast. The
+boy, yielding to a strange whim, threw out his arms and made a grab
+at him.</p>
+<p>The affrighted creature made a leap to escape the embrace, and
+Fred grasped his tail with both hands. This made the wolf wild with
+terror, and away he leaped. The boy hung on, running with might and
+main in his efforts to keep up. The brute, not knowing what he had
+in tow, was only intent upon getting away, and he plunged ahead as
+furiously as if a blazing torch was tied to his tail. Fred was
+fully imbued with the &ldquo;spirit of the occasion,&rdquo; and
+resolved not to part company with his guide, unless the caudal
+appendage should detach itself from its owner. The wolf was
+naturally much more fleet of foot, but his efforts of speed only
+increased that of the lad, who, still clinging to his support,
+labored with might and main.</p>
+<p>Away, away they went!</p>
+<p>Now he was down on his knees; then clambering up again; then
+banging against the rocks&mdash;still onward, until he found
+himself flat on his face, still holding to his support, while the
+wolf was clutching and clawing to get away. They were in such a
+narrow passage way that Fred could not rise. Unclasping one hand,
+he held on with the other, while he worked along after him. For a
+long time this savage scratching, struggling and toiling continued,
+and then, all at once, Fred was dazzled by the overpowering flood
+of light.</p>
+<p>He had escaped from the cave in the mountain, and was in the
+outside world again.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_4" name="Ch_4">Chapter IV.</a></h3>
+<h2>Sunlight and Hope.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>By clinging to the tail of the terrified wolf, Fred Munson had
+been assisted, dragged, and pulled from the Cimmerian gloom of the
+mountain cave into the glorious sunlight again. When the glare of
+light burst upon him, he let go of the queer aid to freedom, and
+the mystified animal skurried away with increased speed.</p>
+<p>For a time the lad was so dazed and bewildered that he scarcely
+comprehended his good fortune. His eyes had been totally
+unaccustomed to light for so long a time that the retina was
+overpowered by the sudden flood of it and required time to
+accommodate itself to the new order of things. A few minutes were
+sufficient. And then, when he looked about and saw that he was
+indeed outside of the cave which had been such an appalling prison
+to him, Fred was fairly wild with joy.</p>
+<p>It was all he could do to restrain himself from shouting,
+whooping and hurrahing at the top of his voice. It was only the
+recollection that there were a number of Apaches near at hand that
+sufficed to keep his voice toned down. But he danced and swung his
+arms, and threw himself here and there in a way that would have
+made a spectator certain that he was hilariously crazy. Not until
+he was thoroughly used up did he consent to pause and take a
+breathing spell. Then he gasped out, as well as he could, during
+his hurried breathing:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank the good Lord! I knew He would not forget me. He
+let me hunt around for a while, long enough to make me feel I
+couldn&rsquo;t do anything, and then He stepped in. The wolf came.
+I didn&rsquo;t think I could make anything out of him, but I
+grabbed his tail. I held on and here I am. Thank the good Lord
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When able to control himself still further, Fred made a survey
+of his surroundings. In the first place, he observed that the
+forenoon was only fairly under way, the sun having risen just high
+enough to be visible. The sky was clear of clouds and the day
+promised to be a beautiful one, without being oppressively
+warm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is strange that I could not find the opening when the
+wolf scampered straight to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>However, he did not stop to puzzle over the matter. It was
+sufficient to know and feel that he was back again in the busy,
+bustling world, saved from being buried in a living tomb.</p>
+<p>An examination of the point where he had debouched from these
+Plutonian regions showed Fred that he was considerably below the
+general regions of the earth. He was in a sort of valley,
+surrounded by rocks and boulders, and the opening through which he
+had scrambled was situated sidewise, so that at a distance of ten
+feet it could not be seen. This accounted for the fact that none of
+the Indians knew any other means of ingress and egress excepting
+the opening in the roof of the cave. It was almost impossible to
+discover, except by accident or long continued and systematic
+search.</p>
+<p>Fred&rsquo;s next thought was regarding Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney,
+and he questioned himself as to the best means of reaching him, and
+assisting him to the same remarkably good fortune which had
+attended himself. The immediate suggestion, naturally, was to
+re-enter the cave and, after hunting up his old friend, conduct
+Mickey to the outer world, but it required only brief deliberation
+to convince him of the utter folly of such an attempt. In the first
+place, should he re-enter the cave, he would be lost again, not
+knowing in what direction to turn to find his friend and entirely
+unable to communicate with him by signal, as had been their custom
+when separated and looking for each other. Should he venture away
+from the tunnel to renew his search, it was scarcely possible that
+he could find his way back again. He would not only lose Mickey,
+but he would lose himself, with not the remotest chance of finding
+his way into the outer world again. So it was clearly apparent
+that, having been delivered from prison, it would not do for him to
+go back under any circumstances. He must remain where he was, and
+whatever assistance he could render his friend, must be given from
+the outside. How was this to be done?</p>
+<p>To begin with, he felt the necessity of getting out of the
+circumscribing valley and of taking his bearings. He wished to
+learn where the opening through which he had fallen was situated.
+It was no difficult matter to work his way upward until he found
+himself up on a level with the main plateau. There, his view,
+although broken and interrupted in many directions, was quite
+extended in others, and his eye roamed over a large extent of that
+broken section of the country. He was utterly unable to recognize
+anything he saw, but he was confident that he was no great distance
+from the spot for which he was searching. It was only through the
+entrance that he could hold communication with Mickey, whenever the
+way should be left clear for him to do so. But he was fully mindful
+of the necessity for caution in every movement.</p>
+<p>It was not to be supposed that the Apaches, having struck what
+might be called a gold-mine, intended to abandon it at the very
+time the richest of results were promised. And so, after long
+deliberation, the boy decided upon the direction in which the
+opening lay, and he made toward a small peak from which, in case
+his calculations were correct, he knew he would see it. Strange to
+say, his reckoning was correct in this instance; and when he
+stealthily made his way to the elevation and looked down over the
+slope, he saw the clump of bushes covering the
+&ldquo;skylight,&rdquo; not more than a hundred yards distant.</p>
+<p>He saw something else, which was not quite so pleasant. Six
+Apache warriors were guarding the same entrance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder if they think Mickey expects to make a jump up
+through there!&rdquo; was the thought which came to Fred, as he
+peered down upon the savages, and counted them over several times.
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t see what they are to gain by waiting there,
+unless they mean to go down pretty soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He could not be too careful in the vicinity of such characters,
+and, stretching out flat upon his face, he peeped over the top,
+taking the precaution first to remove his cap, and then to permit
+no more of his head than was indispensable to appear above the
+surface. The six redskins were lounging in as many different lazy
+attitudes. One seemed sound asleep, with his face turned to the
+ground, and looking like a warrior that had fallen from some
+balloon, and, striking on his stomach, lay just as he was flattened
+out. Another was half-sitting and half-reclining, smoking a pipe
+with a very long stem. His face was directly toward Fred, who
+noticed that his eyes were cast downward, as though he were gazing
+into the bowl of his pipe, while Fred could plainly see the ugly
+lips, as they parted at intervals and emitted their pulls in a
+fashion as indolent as that of some wealthy Turk. A third was
+seated a little further off, examining his rifle, which he had
+probably injured in some way, and which occupied his attention to
+the exclusion of everything else.</p>
+<p>The bushes surrounding the opening had been torn away, although
+it was difficult to conceive what the Indians expected to
+accomplish by such an act, as it only served to make them plainer
+targets to the Irishman, whenever he chose to crack away from
+below.</p>
+<p>The remaining trio of Apaches were occupied in some way with the
+cavern. They were stretched out upon the ground, with their heads
+close to the orifice, down which they seemed to be peering, and
+doing something, the nature of which the lad could not even
+guess.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That don&rsquo;t look as though they had caught
+Mickey,&rdquo; he muttered, with a feeling of inexpressible relief;
+&ldquo;for, if they had, they wouldn&rsquo;t be loafing around
+there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nothing of their horses could be seen, although he knew they
+must have a number of them somewhere in the neighborhood. An Apache
+or Comanche without his mustang would be like a soldier in battle
+without weapons.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d like to find them,&rdquo; thought Fred,
+lowering his head, and looking back of him. &ldquo;I&rsquo;d take
+one and start all the others away, and then there would be
+fun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad had it in his power to take an important step toward his
+return to his friends. Nothing was more likely than that a little
+search through the immediate neighborhood would discover the
+mustangs of his enemies, which, as a matter of course, were
+unguarded, the owners anticipating no trouble from any such source.
+Mounted upon the fleetest of prairie rangers, it would not require
+long to reach the open country, when he could speed away
+homeward.</p>
+<p>But to do this required the abandonment of his friend, Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney, who would not have been within the cavern at that
+minute but for his efforts to rescue him from the same prison. It
+was hard to tell in what way the lad expected to benefit him by
+staying, and yet nothing would have persuaded him to do
+otherwise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I may get a chance to do something for him, and if I
+should be gone and never see him again, I should blame myself
+forever. So I&rsquo;ll wait here and watch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The three redskins on the edge of the opening remained occupied
+with something, but the curiosity of the lad continued unsatisfied
+until one of them raised up and moved backward several steps. Then
+Fred saw that he had a lasso in his hand, and was drawing it up
+from the cave. He pulled it up with one hand, while he caught and
+looped it with the other, until he had nearly a score of the coils
+in his grasp. This could not have been the cord which held the
+blanket when the shot of Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney cut it and let the
+bundle drop, for that was much smaller, while this was sufficient
+to bear a weight of several hundred pounds, it having been used to
+lasso the fleet-footed and powerful mustangs of the prairies.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve been fishing with it,&rdquo; concluded the
+youngster; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t believe that Mickey would bite.
+What are they going to do now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After drawing up the rope, the whole half dozen Apaches seemed
+to become very attentive. They gathered in a group and began
+discussing matters in their earnest fashion, gesticulating and
+grunting so loud that Fred distinctly heard them from where he lay.
+This discussion, however, speedily resulted in action.</p>
+<p>Another of the blankets already described was very artistically
+doubled and folded into the resemblance of a man, and then the
+lasso was attached to it. The Apaches experimented with it for
+several minutes before putting it to the test, but at last
+everything was satisfactory, and it was launched. The aborigines
+seemed to comprehend what the trouble was with the other, and they
+avoided repeating the error.</p>
+<p>When they began cautiously lowering the bundle, the six gathered
+as close to the margin as was prudent to await the result. Their
+interest was intense, for they had mapped out their programme, and
+much depended upon the result of this venture. But among the half
+dozen there was no one who was more nervously interested than Fred
+Munson, who felt that the fate of Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney was
+trembling in the balance.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_5" name="Ch_5">Chapter V.</a></h3>
+<h2>Mining and Countermining</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Fred expected every moment to catch the dull crack of the rifle
+from the subterranean regions as a signal that Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney had neither closed his eyes to the impending peril,
+nor had given way to despair at the trying position in which he was
+placed. But the stillness remained unbroken, while the lasso was
+steadily paid out by the dusky hands of the swarthy warrior, whose
+motions were closely watched by the others.</p>
+<p>Lower and lower it descended as the coils lying at his knees
+were steadily unwound, until the disturbed lad was certain the
+bottom of the cavern was nearly reached, and still all was silent
+as the tomb.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I would hear his gun if he fired
+it,&rdquo; he said, worried and distressed by what was taking place
+before his eyes; &ldquo;and if I did not, I could tell by the way
+they acted whenever he pulled trigger. What can he be
+doing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad thought it possible that his friend was absent in some
+distant part of the cave hunting for him, and was, therefore,
+totally unaware of the flank movement that was under way. It could
+not be that he was still asleep; he had no fears on that score. It
+might be, too, that the Irishman had arrived at the conclusion that
+the situation had grown so desperate as to warrant him in the
+<em>dernier resorte</em> he had fixed upon. If such was the case,
+then, as Mickey himself might have said, &ldquo;the jig was
+up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Two or three coils still remained upon the ground when the
+Apache stopped lowering the lasso, and, looking in the faces of his
+companions, said something.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has either reached the bottom of the cave, or else
+Mickey has fired at it,&rdquo; said Fred, who became more excited
+than ever.</p>
+<p>He had caught no sound resembling a shot, and he concluded that
+it must be the former, as was really the case. In a few seconds the
+Indian began drawing up the lasso again, and a short time
+thereafter the roll of blanket was brought to the surface. It was
+carefully examined by all the group. The dirt on it proved that it
+had rested on the bottom of the cave, but there were no marks to
+show that it had received any attention at the hands of any one
+there.</p>
+<p>There were grunts of pleasure, as this fact was gathered by the
+redskins. The experiments had been satisfactory and they were
+prepared to venture upon the more dangerous and decisive
+one&mdash;the one which they intended should bring matters to a
+focus.</p>
+<p>Fred was in doubt what this plan was to be until he saw the
+blanket unfolded and as carefully wrapped around the form of one of
+the Apaches, encasing him from head to foot. Great pains were taken
+to hide his head and feet from view, the warrior lying upon his
+back, and suffering himself to be &ldquo;done up&rdquo; with as
+much thoroughness as if he were a choice sample of dry-goods.
+Viewed from a disinterested stand-point, the wonder was how he was
+to breathe in such wrappings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They have tried the blanket, and finding that was not
+disturbed, they&rsquo;re going to send down one of their number,
+thinking that if Mickey does see it he&rsquo;ll believe it is the
+same blanket, and won&rsquo;t fire at it, because he didn&rsquo;t
+fire at the other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It looked very venturesome upon the part of the warrior thus to
+enter the lion&rsquo;s den. But while, as a rule, the Indians of
+the Southwest are treacherous and cowardly, there are occasional
+instances in which they show an intrepidity equal to that of the
+most daring white scouts.</p>
+<p>When everything was arranged to the satisfaction of all, three
+of the most stalwart Apaches braced themselves, with the lasso
+grasped between them, while a fourth carefully piloted the body
+over the edge of the opening, and began slowly lowering it to the
+bottom.</p>
+<p>The bravest man, placed in the position of the enwrapped redskin
+could not have avoided some tremor, when he knew that he was
+hanging in midair, in plain view of the rifleman who had separated
+the thong which supported the blanket in the first attempt. The
+Indian must have experienced strange emotions; but if he did, he
+gave no evidence. He remained as passive as a log, his purpose
+being to imitate the appearance of the first bundle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, if Mickey let&rsquo;s that go down without sending a
+bullet through it, he hasn&rsquo;t got one half the sense that I
+think he has.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred was hasty and impatient at the seeming success which marked
+everything that the red-skins undertook. He looked and listened for
+some evidence that the Irishman was &ldquo;there;&rdquo; but no
+dull, subterranean report told him of the fatal rifle-shot, while
+the three Apaches continued steadily lowering their comrade with as
+much coolness and deliberation as if not the slightest particle of
+danger threatened. Minute after minute passed, and the lad was in
+deep despair. It could not be, he was compelled to think, that
+Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney was anywhere in the vicinity. He must be a
+long distance away, searching for his young friend, not knowing,
+and, perhaps, not caring about the Apaches. He might consider that,
+within the darkness of the cave, they all had an equal advantage,
+and he could hold his own against each and every one. There was no
+denying that the defender had a vast advantage over those who might
+come into his &ldquo;castle,&rdquo; provided he was really aware of
+their movements, but it was this doubt that caused the boy his
+uneasiness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be near the bottom,&rdquo; he concluded, when
+this paying-out process had continued some minutes longer, and he
+thought he saw very little of the lasso left.</p>
+<p>Such was the fact. Only a few seconds more passed, when there
+was a general loosening up on the part of the redskins, as in the
+case of men who have just finished a laborious job. They looked
+into each others faces, and there were guttural exclamations, as if
+they were congratulating themselves upon what had been
+accomplished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And, now, what next?&rdquo; asked the disgusted watcher.
+&ldquo;Good luck seems to go with everything they undertake, and I
+suppose they&rsquo;ll bring Mickey up by the heels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But such was not the sequel, and probably not the expectation of
+the Apaches. They had succeeded in planting a man in the breach,
+and their purpose was to follow him, as they speedily proved. The
+behavior of the group around the opening showed that the Indians
+were holding communication with their ally below, probably by a
+system of signals with the lasso, such as the man in the
+diving-bell employs when below the surface. These, too, must have
+been satisfactory, for, in a very brief time thereafter, the
+decisive operations were taken up and continued.</p>
+<p>There was considerable of the lasso still left above
+ground&mdash;more than Fred imagined&mdash;and this was secured
+about a jutting point in a rock near at hand. It was fixed so
+immovably that it could not fail. &ldquo;I wonder if they mean to
+roll that thing in upon Mickey&rsquo;s head, or what is
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They speedily showed what their intentions were. In less than a
+minute after the lasso was fastened, one of the Apaches caught hold
+of it and slid down through the opening so rapidly, that it looked
+as if he had lost his hold and dropped out of sight. A second did
+precisely the same thing; then a third, fourth and fifth, until
+only one warrior was left above ground.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! I hope he&rsquo;ll go,&rdquo; whispered Fred to
+himself; &ldquo;and then I can do something big.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the Apaches had evidently concluded that it would be an
+imprudent arrangement not to leave any of their friends on
+guard&mdash;not because they expected any interference from outside
+parties, but to provide against accident. If the lasso should fail
+them at a critical moment, they would be in a bad predicament, cut
+off from all means of getting out, as the skylight was the only
+avenue known to them, while, if a comrade remained above, all such
+danger would be escaped. Their purpose had been to send the five
+warriors down into the cave to attend to the case of the parties
+there.</p>
+<p>The redskins were now down below and the whole thing was put in
+shape for operations to begin. All that remained was to find their
+man, and Fred could not tell what the prospects of success were in
+that direction; but he was almost ready to believe that they were
+all that the Indians could ask. The sixth Apache, who remained
+visible, took matters very comfortably. He stretched himself flat
+upon the ground, with his head hanging almost in the opening, so
+that he could catch every sound that came up from below. It was
+plain that he expected to be called upon to render important
+service, and he did not intend to let a signal escape him.</p>
+<p>The hour that succeeded made little change in the situation. The
+action of this redskin showed that he occasionally received and
+sent messages&mdash;most probably by the subterranean
+telegraph&mdash;but he shifted his position very little. While he
+was thus engaged, Fred Munson was intently occupied with another
+scheme, and he had speedily wrought himself into a high pitch of
+excitement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe I can do it,&rdquo; he muttered, more than
+once, as he revolved the desperate scheme in his mind; but,
+whatever his plan was, he waited in the hope that fortune would
+appear more propitious.</p>
+<p>When the Apache had sat thus for some time, he changed his
+position. He had been lying with his side toward the lad, but now
+he sat up, with his back to him, and as close to the edge of the
+opening as was prudent, while he held the lasso in his hand, like
+the fisherman on the bank of a stream, who patiently waits and is
+sensitive to the slightest nibbling at the other end of his
+line.</p>
+<p>He had scarcely settled himself in this position when Fred
+Munson changed his own. Rising from the ground where he had lain so
+long, he stepped over the ridge, and advanced directly toward the
+redskin, who harbored no suspicion that there was any of his race
+in his neighborhood. The plan the lad had resolved upon required
+nerve, resolution and quickness. He stepped as lightly as was
+consistent with speed until he had passed half the distance, when
+he began to slacken his gait and to proceed with greater caution
+than ever.</p>
+<p>All depended upon his ability to keep from being heard or
+detected. Of course, he had no wish to engage in a fight with one
+of these fierce warriors, but he was prepared, even for that. His
+hand rested upon the hilt of his revolver, so that he could whip it
+out at an instant&rsquo;s warning and discharge it, as he meant to
+do if necessary.</p>
+<p>It was while he was yet some distance from the redskin that Fred
+felt that his position was one of frightful peril. His foe had his
+rifle within easy reach, and, if he turned too soon, he could pick
+off his young assailant before he should arrive within striking
+distance,&mdash;but each moment raised the hopes of the lad.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_6" name="Ch_6">Chapter VI.</a></h3>
+<h2>A Daring Exploit.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>A veteran Comanche warrior could not have advanced with greater
+skill than did young Munson approach the unconscious Apache. The
+warriors who had taken this little business in hand seemed to have
+cleared away the treacherous ground surrounding the opening, so
+that it was not likely to give way beneath their weight, even when
+they advanced close to the edge. The single redskin who remained
+seemed to have shifted his position more for the purpose of
+relieving himself from his cramped posture than anything else.</p>
+<p>He was standing erect, about a foot away from the edge, with the
+lasso in both hands, looking down into the cavern of gloom below,
+listening and watching, with the sense of touch also on the alert.
+His blanket and rifle lay at one side, out of the way, but where
+they could be reached at a single leap, if necessary. The end of
+the lasso was still fastened to the rock, but the savage held it
+loosely, so that the slightest twitch upon it would become known to
+him on the instant.</p>
+<p>It is not often that an Indian can be taken off the guard. Years
+of danger have made the senses of the savages preternaturally
+acute, and they are as distant as the timid antelope of the plains.
+But, for all that, there was a boy within a dozen yards of a
+swarthy warrior whose senses were on the alert, and yet had failed
+to detect his proximity.</p>
+<p>Fred gazed upon him with the fixed intensity of the jungle tiger
+stealing upon his prey. With his right hand resting upon the hilt
+of his revolver, he never removed his eyes from the muscular figure
+of the Apache, bending over the entrance to the cavern.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall I shoot, or push him over?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figure"><a href="images/001_full.png" title=
+"&ldquo;Shall I shoot or push him over?&rdquo;" target=
+"_blank"><img src="images/001_small.png" alt=
+"An Indian holds a rope over a hole while another man sneaks up on him."
+id="img001" name="img001" width="360" height="591" /></a>
+<p>&ldquo;SHALL I SHOOT OR PUSH HIM OVER?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<p>This was the question the lad kept revolving in his mind, as he
+advanced step by step. With the pistol he could bury two or three
+balls in the body of the redskin before he could suspect where they
+came from, and thus completely clear the path before him. But there
+were doubts in the way. The revolver might miss fire, in which case
+all hope would be gone. In a hand-to-hand tussle the Apache would
+be more than a match for a dozen such lads. True, the weapon had
+not failed when he pulled the trigger in the cave, but there was no
+certainty that it would not do so when he most needed it.</p>
+<p>Then, too, he felt a natural repugnance against stealing upon a
+foe in this fashion, and shooting him in the back. It had a
+cowardly look, even when certain that the threatened party would
+have done precisely the same thing, had the opportunity come in his
+way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will push him over, if he don&rsquo;t make me shoot
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But to do this necessitated a much closer approach. He must
+literally be within &ldquo;striking distance.&rdquo; Could he place
+himself there without discovery? If the redskin were asleep, or if
+his mind was occupied with something of a different nature, or if
+there were some extraneous noise, the case would be different. The
+blowing of the wind, the murmur of a waterfall (such as Fred had
+heard when lying upon the ground in the same spot) would have been
+a most fortunate diversion. But there was nothing of the kind.
+There was a dead calm, not a breath of air stirring, and the day
+was hot.</p>
+<p>Fred had approached within twenty feet, and still the Apache did
+not stir. How vivid and indelibly his appearance was impressed upon
+the vision of the boy! He could never forget it. The redskin,
+although of powerful build, was anything but pleasing in
+appearance, even when viewed from the rear.</p>
+<p>His blanket being thrown aside, he was naked, with the exception
+of a breech-cloth. His feet were of large size, encased in shabby
+moccasins, while frowsy leggins dangled between the knee and ankle.
+His body, from the breech-cloth to the shoulders, was splashed and
+daubed with a half dozen kinds of paint, while his black, thin hair
+straggled about his shoulders and was smeared in the same fashion.
+Like most of the Indians of the Southwest, he wore no scalp-lock,
+but allowed his hair to hang like a woman&rsquo;s, not even
+permitting it to be gathered with a band, nor ornamenting it with
+the customary stained eagle-feathers. His arms were also bare, with
+the exception of the wrists, around which were tied bracelets,
+which, no doubt, he considered very attractive. The boy could fancy
+what a repulsive face he possessed.</p>
+<p>Step by step, inch by inch, the young hero made his way, his
+eyes fixed upon the savage with a burning intensity, until it
+seemed that he would burn him through and through. And the Apache
+heard him not, although they were no more than ten feet apart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He will hear the thumping of my heart,&rdquo; was the
+constant fear of the boy.</p>
+<p>Slowly lifting one foot, he put in on the ground as softly as if
+it were held in a slipper of eiderdown. He was treading upon a thin
+growth of grass, interspersed plentifully with gravel, but he never
+once looked to see what he was stepping upon. Indeed, he could not
+remove his eyes from the one central figure of his thoughts and
+vision.</p>
+<p>One obstruction, no matter how slight&mdash;the turning of a
+pebble, a slip, even the most trivial, and the Apache would turn
+like lightning, and be upon him in a flash. Two more steps were
+taken, and only eight feet separated the lad and the Indian, and
+still the latter remained all unconscious of what was going on.
+Fred&rsquo;s heart was throbbing violently, but he retained control
+of himself. He felt that the critical moment was close at hand. A
+slight advance more, and the attempt was to be made.</p>
+<p>He grasped the handle of the revolver more firmly than ever, but
+he raised his foot for another step, feeling that the distance was
+still too great. At this juncture the Indian moved!</p>
+<p>He stepped one pace backward directly toward the boy, and he
+looked up and away. But not behind him. The glance was a mere
+casual one. He had heard nothing, and he expected to see nothing,
+when he looked off in the manner mentioned.</p>
+<p>The Apache remained standing in this attitude for a minute. Then
+he stepped forward and resumed his former position on the edge of
+the opening, still clinging to the lasso, as if in constant
+expectation of some signal.</p>
+<p>During this little episode Fred remained as motionless as if
+cast in bronze. His eyes were still centred upon the Indian, and he
+partially drew his revolver from the girdle he wore about his body,
+with the expectation of using it. But when his foe gave his
+attention to the cave below, the lad softly shoved the weapon back
+in its place, and again raised his foot.</p>
+<p>The movement was slow and painful, but it was accomplished
+successfully. Only a single step more remained to place him where
+he wanted to be. That taken, and one bound was all that he needed
+to make. Finally, and for the last time during the advance, the
+right foot ascended from the ground, was poised for a few seconds
+in the air, and then came down with the same care as before. But it
+touched a loose pebble which turned with the lightest imaginable
+noise.</p>
+<p>As quick as a flash the Apache raised his head, looked in front,
+and then darted his vision from left to right, when his keen eyes
+detected something crouching behind him.</p>
+<p>At the very instant of the discovery, Fred concentrated all his
+energies in one effort, and bounded forward like a catapult. The
+distance was precisely what it should have been, and, as he threw
+out his hands, he struck the Indian squarely in the back with the
+whole momentum of the body. In fact, the daring boy nearly overdid
+the matter. He not only came near driving the Apache to the other
+side of the opening, but he came equally near plunging himself down
+it. As it was, the victim, taken completely off his guard, was
+thrown against the other side, where his wonderful dexterity
+enabled him to throw out his hands and check his downward
+descent.</p>
+<p>Fred, after his narrow escape from going down into the cave,
+scrambled back to his place, and saw the Indian struggling upon the
+opposite side, with a good prospect of saving himself. &ldquo;That
+won&rsquo;t do,&rdquo; was his thought, as he ran round the opening
+so as to bring himself directly before him. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t
+want you up here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thrusting his pistol almost against his painted forehead, he
+fairly shouted:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get down&mdash;let go, or I&rsquo;ll shoot!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whether the Apache possessed much knowledge of the English
+tongue can only be conjectured, but the gestures accompanying the
+command were so expressive that he could not fail to take in the
+whole meaning. The Indian, no doubt, considered it preferable to
+drop down into the pit rather than run against the bullet. At any
+rate, he released his hold, and down he went.</p>
+<p>As he drooped into the gloom he made a clutch at the lasso,
+doubtless for the purpose of creeping up unawares upon the lad,
+who, by a strange providence, had so suddenly become his master.
+But the Indian, although a pretty good athlete, had not practiced
+that sort of thing, and he failed altogether, going down to join
+his comrades much the same as if he had dropped from a balloon.</p>
+<p>Fred proved himself equal to the emergency. The moment he saw
+that he was relieved from the presence of his enemy, he darted back
+to the other side of the opening, caught hold of the lasso, and
+hurriedly drew it up out of reach of those below.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There! they can&rsquo;t come crawling up that when I
+ain&rsquo;t thinking,&rdquo; he said, when the end of the thong was
+in his hand.</p>
+<p>He coiled the whole thing up at his feet, and then, with a
+feeling of relief and pleasure which cannot be described, he looked
+about to see whether he was alone. Alone he was, and master of the
+situation. Where there had been six daring Apache warriors a
+half-hour before, not one was now visible. All were in the cave.
+Five had gone willingly, while it looked very much as if the sixth
+had not been so willing. At any rate, they were all beyond the
+power of injuring Fred Munson, who, after considering over the
+matter, concluded that he had done a pretty good thing.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_7" name="Ch_7">Chapter VII.</a></h3>
+<h2>Fishing for a Friend.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I dumped that Apache down there just as nicely as
+any one could have done it,&rdquo; said Fred, as he sat upon the
+ground. &ldquo;It must have taken him by surprise when I banged
+into his back that way. I&rsquo;d like to know whether he fell on
+his head or feet. He hadn&rsquo;t much time to get ready for the
+fall, and so maybe it wasn&rsquo;t just as he wanted it. I
+don&rsquo;t think it was, either, with Mickey or me. Such things
+ain&rsquo;t generally in this part of the world. Maybe some of the
+others were standing around, and this fellow went down on their
+heads. If he did, it must have shaken all their dinners up.
+That&rsquo;s a pretty good way to fall down there, and although I
+didn&rsquo;t get hurt much, I wouldn&rsquo;t want to try it
+again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred had had remarkable success, but there was a question as to
+what he was going to do with it. He was on the outside of the
+cavern, with the means at command for assisting Mickey to the
+surface, but, the Indians being down below, it was not clear how
+this was to be done, as they were likely to take a hand in the
+matter.</p>
+<p>As preliminary to any elaborate attempts in that direction, it
+was necessary that he should apprise him of his presence, and
+establish some sort of communication with him. This, under the
+circumstances, was exceedingly difficult, as it was not likely that
+the Irishman would suspect that his young friend had succeeded in
+reaching the outside until he had received strong proof of it. Very
+fortunately, however, the couple possessed a code of signals which
+were easily understood, if they were only heard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will try him on our old call,&rdquo; said Fred, as he
+crept as close to the edge as he deemed safe, and emitted a whistle
+that must have extended far within the cave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he hears that, he will understand it,&rdquo; he added,
+turning his ear, so that he could catch any response; but the dim,
+soothing murmur of the cascade was the only sound that came up from
+the cavernous depths.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must be there&mdash;he must be there, and he will come
+back, so he will catch the signal sooner or later.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was one aspect of the business which had not yet occurred
+to Fred, and which was likely to inure to the benefit of Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney, the gentleman who just then stood in need of
+everything that came along in that line. The Apaches were skillful
+and wise enough to learn from the trail which had first told them
+the story, that a boy and man had been caught in the cavern, and it
+was very evident that they all believed that there was no other
+avenue of escape except that by which they had entered. At the same
+time, their knowledge of the peculiarities of their own country
+must have convinced them that it was possible that other openings,
+of which they knew nothing, might exist, and might become known to
+the prisoners.</p>
+<p>The last Indian who went down must have known that the lad who
+assisted him was one of the parties for whom they were yearning,
+and his presence was proof that he had made the fortunate discovery
+which was denied the natives of the territory. If the lad had
+emerged by that means into the outer world, the natural supposition
+would be that his companion had done the same, and that, therefore,
+neither of the fugitives were below, the inevitable conclusion
+being that the tables had been completely turned upon them. Such
+was certain to be the conclusion of the Apaches, and it remained
+for Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney to use ordinary prudence and keep himself
+out of the way of the redskins, to secure a chance of further
+outwitting them by a bold piece of generalship.</p>
+<p>Fred repeated his whistle four or five times, with an interval
+of ten minutes, when his hopes were raised to the highest pitch by
+hearing it answered. In his excitement he thrust his head far over
+the opening, gave the signal again to prevent mistakes, and
+listened.</p>
+<p>A full minute elapsed, when the reply came, sounding faint and
+far away. It showed that Mickey was at a considerable distance from
+the opening, and that he heard and understood the situation. To
+make matters still more certain, the lad now shouted at the top of
+his voice, holding both hands so as to inclose his mouth like a
+tunnel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mickey, I&rsquo;m up here with a lasso! Nobody else is
+here! Whenever you can get the chance, get hold of the lasso, and
+climb up! I will let it down after a while!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It cannot be said that this was a very wise proceeding upon the
+part of the lad; for it was likely that some one of the half dozen
+Apaches understood English well enough to comprehend what he said.
+To clinch the business, Fred yelled a few more words.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you understand me, Mickey, whistle!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words were no more than fairly uttered when the desired
+response was made, faintly, but, nevertheless, distinctly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good,&rdquo; concluded the delighted lad.
+&ldquo;Now all I have to do is to wait for him to get the chance,
+and he will come up the lasso, and then we&rsquo;ll be done with
+the cave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This, certainly, was all that he had to do, but, at the same
+time, this amounted to a good deal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, if I let this rope down,&rdquo; added the lad, as he
+thought the matter over, &ldquo;one of those Apaches will try to
+climb up it, and I will have to cut it, and that will leave it in
+his hands, and then what will become of Mickey?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He debated a long time as to the best plan of overcoming this
+serious difficulty; but none presented itself, and he concluded
+that it was an inevitable contingency, which he must prepare
+himself to defeat, at all hazards.</p>
+<p>Fred had been so absorbed with the business which had succeeded
+admirably up to this hour, that he scarcely noted the passage of
+time. He was not a little amazed when he came to look at the sun
+and to note, from its position, that the afternoon was considerably
+advanced, and that night was much nearer than he supposed. Nearly
+twenty-four hours had elapsed since he had tasted food, and,
+although he felt somewhat faint, he was not troubled with hunger.
+He made up his mind to make no effort to obtain food until he
+should succeed in bringing the Irishman from his prison&mdash;as he
+hoped to do before the night should pass away. But he was thirsty,
+and, believing that he could quench his thirst without going very
+far, and without jeopardizing the safety of his friend, he started
+off on a little hunt for water.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That stream runs out of the cave not very far from here,
+and, if I can find that, it will be just what I want.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fixing in his mind the direction of the stream, he started off,
+taking an almost opposite direction from that which led to the
+ridge, where he had lain so long watching the movements of the
+Apaches. This led him directly behind a mass of boulders and rocks,
+tossed irregularly together, and surrounded by a peculiar growth of
+stunted vegetation, with rich, succulent grass beyond.</p>
+<p>Fred was hurrying along, with no thought of seeing anything
+unusual, when he was startled by coming directly upon a half dozen
+mustangs, all bound to the limbs or trunks of trees with strong
+lariats, while they were lazily cropping the grass where they had
+been left undisturbed for several hours. They were all fine-looking
+animals, every one of them&mdash;not one having saddle or bridle,
+and nothing, indeed, excepting the long thong, which, like the
+lasso, was made of bull&rsquo;s hide, and which prevented them from
+straying beyond their appointed limits. There could be no doubt
+that the animals belonged to the little party taking an airing in
+the cave, and the eyes of the lad sparkled as they rested upon
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! if Mickey were only here!&rdquo; he exclaimed to
+himself; &ldquo;we couldn&rsquo;t want anything nicer. We would
+just pick out two of the best here, stampede the others, and then
+gallop toward home as fast as we could, and we&rsquo;d be there
+inside of two or three days; but I must wait, and so must
+he.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The place selected by the Indians for their horses could not
+have been better chosen. In addition to the rich pasture, a rivulet
+of clear, cold water flowed by, within reach of each and all, so
+that all their wants were supplied in the best manner possible.</p>
+<p>Every one of the mustangs raised their heads and looked up at
+the stranger, and one or two gave a faint whinney, as if to inquire
+the business of such a character with them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t believe any of you can go like my Hurricane
+that I had to leave at home; but I can&rsquo;t have him, and I
+would be mighty glad to take one of you&mdash;that is, if Mickey
+could go along, for I don&rsquo;t intend to leave him, so long as I
+know he&rsquo;s alive. You seem pretty well fixed, so I&rsquo;ll
+let you alone till we get a chance to turn you to account, and you
+can eat and get yourself in good condition.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He took a good long draught of the refreshing water, and then
+made a little survey of his surroundings.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should like to know whether those six Indians were all
+looking for <em>me</em>. Maybe Lone Wolf has found out that I gave
+the three the slip, and he sent a half-dozen fresh ones to look me
+up. They were all strangers to me, and I am sure I never saw them
+before. Lone Wolf seems to want me very bad, and if these
+don&rsquo;t bring me back pretty soon, he may send somebody after
+them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A careful survey of all the suspicious points failed to show him
+anything alarming, and he made his way back to the mouth of the
+cavern, where he sat down to await the moment for him to lower the
+lasso that he hoped was to give Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney a chance for
+his life. It seemed to him that it would not be safe to attempt it
+until the sun went down. His theory was that the Apaches would not
+remain directly beneath the opening all the time, but that there
+would be a chance for the Irishman to creep up without detection.
+He would be looking for the lasso, and in the darkness might be
+able to ascend it without discovery.</p>
+<p>The lad hoped that all the redskins had reached the conclusion
+that both he and the man were outside; and, finding that it was out
+of the question for them to escape by the opening, which was at
+such a distance over their heads, had scattered to search for some
+other egress. It was not impossible that such was the case, and if
+it were, it placed the situation in a light by no means
+discouraging.</p>
+<p>It was hardly dark when Fred Munson carefully shoved the end of
+the rope over the edge of the opening, and let it descend slowly,
+gently and noiselessly to the bottom, permitting it to pass through
+his hands in such a way that he could tell the instant it was
+disturbed. When he knew that it had struck, he waited for a
+&ldquo;bite.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To his astonishment, it came within the next five minutes. He
+was startled by feeling a decided pull repeated several times.</p>
+<p>The situation was so delicately critical that it would not do to
+speak nor whisper, nor even to utter their whistle, no matter how
+cautiously made. So, by way of reply, Fred gave the lasso, several
+responsive jerks, intended to signify that everything was ready,
+and his friend might come ahead.</p>
+<p>A moment later the lariat was jerked from his hand, showing that
+a heavy weight had suddenly fastened upon it, and the man was
+making his way upward from the cave.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_8" name="Ch_8">Chapter VIII.</a></h3>
+<h2>Fishing for a Prize.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>It is no easy task, even for a trained athlete, to climb forty
+or fifty feet of rope. The majority of men, if put to the test of
+making their way out of that cave by shinning up the long lariat
+suspended from the opening above, would have failed altogether.</p>
+<p>Remembering how well his hearing had served him under somewhat
+similar circumstances, young Munson, watching so anxiously for the
+appearance of his friend, pressed his ear against the tough,
+untanned rope and listened. He could hear the scraping of the hands
+and the friction of the limbs against the rope, working steadily
+and in such a manner as to show that the man was succeeding well in
+the excelsior business and was sure to reach the top in time, if
+his strength held out.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess that&rsquo;s Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney climbing
+up,&rdquo; muttered the boy, &ldquo;and yet I can&rsquo;t tell till
+I get a sight of him. It may be an Apache, and I&rsquo;d better get
+ready, for I don&rsquo;t mean to have any of them creeping up on
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred did not wish to cut the rope, as that would have ended the
+operations, so he concluded to resort to his weapon. There were two
+or three chambers of the revolver undischarged and he did not
+believe that it would be necessary to use them. The simple
+presentation of the muzzle had accomplished his purpose some hours
+before, and there was little doubt that it would do the same thing
+again.</p>
+<p>The sky was absolutely free from clouds, and the moon, near her
+full, shed such a light over the scene that the lad almost dreaded
+the result.</p>
+<p>While all remained profoundly dark in the cave, at the moment
+the man reached the surface and was brought into relief against the
+sky beyond, he would be distinctly visible to any one who might be
+looking upward, and half a dozen rifles pointed and fired at that
+juncture could scarcely fail of fatal results. The lad&rsquo;s
+misgivings increased as the man neared the top. When he again
+applied his ear to the lariat, he could understand that the fellow
+was working hard, and could only be a few feet below him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s nothing like being ready,&rdquo; he
+concluded, as he straightened up, and, rising to his feet, stood,
+pistol in hand, ready for the issue.</p>
+<p>He stepped back several feet, where his vision was entirely
+unobstructed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it&rsquo;s an Indian, he won&rsquo;t have a chance of
+showing anything more than his head, and if he don&rsquo;t take
+that out of the way in a hurry, I&rsquo;ll let a ray of moonlight
+through it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stood thus, as rigid as a statue, fully appreciating the
+difficulties of his position and the fatal consequences of allowing
+himself to be outwitted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mickey, is that you?&rdquo; he asked, in a cautions
+whisper, a moment later.</p>
+<p>As he asked the question he noticed that work upon the rope
+instantly ceased.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s Mickey,&rdquo; he said to himself, &ldquo;but
+he doesn&rsquo;t think it safe to speak.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then to him: &ldquo;All right old boy, come ahead, and you may
+do the speaking after you land. Come ahead&mdash;you&rsquo;re near
+the top.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again the toiling climber resumed his labor, and he was within a
+foot or two of the opening. One more hitch and he would emerge into
+the moonlight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come old fellow, give me your hand,&rdquo; he added;
+&ldquo;you&rsquo;ve had pretty hard work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Just then the bronzed face of an Apache Indian, smeared with
+paint and contorted with eager passion, slowly rose in the
+moonlight. The exhausted warrior, feeling that the critical moment
+was at hand, when all depended upon prompt and decisive work, made
+furious efforts to clamber out of the cavern before the lad who
+held the key of the situation could prevent.</p>
+<p>Although Fred had contemplated this issue, and had prepared for
+it, yet he had become so thoroughly imbued with the belief that it
+was Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney who was toiling upward that he was almost
+entirely thrown off his guard. Because of this, the cunning Apache
+would have secured his foothold and clambered out upon the daring
+lad, but for one thing. He had done, tremendous work in climbing a
+rope for such a distance, and his strength was nearly gone when he
+reached the open air.</p>
+<p>Before he could reap the reward of all this labor, Fred
+recovered. Whipping out his revolver as before, he shoved it
+directly into his face, and said: &ldquo;You ain&rsquo;t wanted
+here, and you&rsquo;d better leave mighty quick!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The warrior made a clutch at the weapon so close to him, but his
+exhaustion caused a miscalculation, and he failed altogether. He
+was supporting himself at this moment by one hand, and he acted as
+if the single effort to secure the pistol was to decide the whole
+thing. He failed in that, and gave up.</p>
+<p>Instead of letting go and going to the bottom in one plunge, he
+began sliding downward, his head vanishing from sight almost as
+suddenly as if the lasso had been cut. It is generally easier to go
+down than up hill, and the work of twenty minutes was undone in a
+twinkling. A rattling <em>descendo</em>, and the Apache was down
+the rope again, standing at the bottom of the cave, and Fred was
+again master of the situation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Goodness!&rdquo; exclaimed the lad, when he realized this
+gratifying state of affairs, &ldquo;I had no idea that that was an
+Indian; but I ought to have suspected it when I called to him and
+he didn&rsquo;t make any answer. That stops that little sort of
+thing; but I don&rsquo;t know when Mickey is going to get a chance
+at the rope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad was disheartened by this great disappointment, for it
+looked very much as if the redskins would guard all approaches to
+the lower end of the lasso, and his friend be shut out from all
+participation in the chance that he was so confident was placed at
+his disposal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what they can do with the rope,&rdquo;
+thought the lad, as he carefully took it in hand, &ldquo;but then
+it&rsquo;s no use to them, and I may as well keep it out of their
+reach while I can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He gently pulled it, to test whether it was free.</p>
+<p>No one at that juncture seemed to have hold of it, and, fearful
+that it would not remain so, the lad gave it a sudden jerk, which
+brought it far beyond the reach of any one who might be gathered on
+the sand below.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That upsets all my calculations,&rdquo; said Fred, with a
+sigh. &ldquo;The chance of getting out of here is poorer than ever.
+I am afraid Mickey is in a scrape where there ain&rsquo;t much show
+of his helping himself!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad remembered, however, that his friend still had one
+resort&mdash;the last one&mdash;at his command. When it became
+absolutely apparent that no other way was open, he would make the
+plunge down the stream, and risk all in the single effort to dive
+from the inside to the outside of the cave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want him to try that, just yet,&rdquo;
+added Fred, as he lay upon the ground, carefully considering the
+matter; &ldquo;for I think that will wind up the whole
+thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy seemed to be considering every phase of the question,
+and he debated with himself for a long time whether he
+couldn&rsquo;t do something for his friend. He thought of going
+back to the entrance by which he had escaped&mdash;thanks to the
+assistance of the wolf&mdash;reenter it, without going to a
+distance which would cause any danger of losing his way, and signal
+to him. The great obstacle to this was that, as he could readily
+see from the distance he had gone over since emerging therefrom, it
+would be utterly impossible to send a signal so far, through such a
+chamber of sound as the cave had proven itself to be. There
+remained the same probability that the Apaches would hear it as
+soon as Mickey, and they would be stupid beyond their kind if they
+had not already gained a correct idea of the situation.</p>
+<p>Still, it was possible to see how the Irishman could succeed.
+Men placed in fully as desperate situations as he had pulled
+through by showing nerve and readiness of resource when the
+critical moment should arrive.</p>
+<p>Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney possessed originality and pluck. He had
+acquired considerable experience and knowledge of Indian
+&ldquo;devilments&rdquo; on his way across the plains, and, if the
+Apaches comprehended the situation, it was not to be supposed that
+he was not posted fully as well. If he could see no chance of
+getting a pull at the rope, he could easily keep out of the way of
+the redskins. He had no fear of meeting any of them singly, and if
+he could arrange it so as to encounter them one after another, and
+at his own convenience, he might clear the track in that
+fashion.</p>
+<p>As it was, therefore, Fred Munson could only await for the issue
+of events. He was powerless to do anything until the sign should be
+made by his friend at the other end of the rope.</p>
+<p>For fully two hours things remained in <em>statu quo</em>. The
+lad lay upon the ground close to the opening, listening, looking
+and thinking so intently that there was no danger of his falling
+asleep. The profound stillness remained unbroken during all that
+time. The murmur of the cascade had a faint, distant sound, as if
+it came from the ocean, many long leagues away, but there was
+nothing more&mdash;not even a signal from Mickey, who, if he had
+any plans, was working them with admirable secrecy. At the end of
+that time the lad concluded that it would be best to lower the
+lasso again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he is down there, he must have a chance to get hold of
+the rope, or he can&rsquo;t come up here,&rdquo; was the reasonable
+conclusion of the lad, who passed it downward slowly and in perfect
+silence.</p>
+<p>Fully a score of theories flitted through his head as he lay
+thus speculating upon the situation down below. At one time he was
+sure that it was useless to attempt to help his friend in that
+style. A half-dozen Apaches would not permit a single white to
+climb into safety immediately before their eyes, especially when
+they could cover him with their rifles if he should succeed in
+giving them the slip at the start. Then it appeared anything but
+reasonable to suppose that the Indians would remain directly below
+him, waiting for their chance to try their fortune in the trapeze
+line again. More likely they would scatter and hunt separately for
+the outlet which had permitted their intended victim to gain his
+safety. They could expect to gain nothing by remaining, and they
+were too shrewd to do so.</p>
+<p>When the matter presented itself in this shape, Fred was ready
+to call down to Mickey, instructing him to grasp the lasso, and
+ascend without further delay. Too much precious time was being
+wasted. Fortunately, however, before he acted upon this theory,
+enough doubts arose to prevent his carrying it out.</p>
+<p>He had had enough experience with the rope to know how to gauge
+it very well, and he lowered it until the other end was within two
+or three feet of the bottom. Having placed it thus within easy
+reach, he let it pass over his hand, holding it so delicately
+poised that the slightest disturbance was sure to be detected. He
+was in the position of the fisherman who is angling for some plump
+piscatorial prize, which requires the most skillful kind of
+persuasion to induce him to nibble the hook.</p>
+<p>For a half-hour nothing touched it, and then Fred fancied that
+he felt a slight jerk. He made no response, but instantly became
+all attention and waited. A second later the jerk was repeated so
+distinctly that there could be no mistake. The lad gave it a twitch
+in reply, and then all remained still for a short time. Suddenly
+the thong was snapped from his hand, and instantly became taut.</p>
+<p>Fred applied his ear as before. Yes; some one was climbing up
+the rope again.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_9" name="Ch_9">Chapter IX.</a></h3>
+<h2>Groping in Darkness.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>It is proper, at this point, to introduce some history of the
+movements of Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney, after the separation between
+himself and his young friend. The latter, it will be remembered,
+left him sleeping upon the Apache blanket, at the bottom of the
+cave, while he, the lad, went off in pursuit of the wolf, which
+came so near leading him to destruction, but which, in the end,
+conducted him to freedom and safety.</p>
+<p>The Irishman slept for several hours longer, as soundly as if he
+lay in his own bed at home. He was sorely in need of sleep, and,
+having convinced himself that there was no danger to be
+apprehended, he transferred all his anxiety over to his young
+friend while he sailed off into the land of dreams. When he awoke
+and recalled where he was, he spoke to Fred; but, receiving no
+reply, supposed he was asleep, and passed his hand about in quest
+of him. After groping several minutes in vacancy, he muttered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers! if he hasn&rsquo;t fell out of bed, as me
+brother Tom used to remark to the ould gintleman, after he&rsquo;d
+kicked me out of the same. The fall ain&rsquo;t far enough to hurt
+him seriously, but these laddies have a way of getting hurt, where
+a man couldn&rsquo;t do it, if he tried.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After calling and searching further, he struck a match and held
+it up. A transient glimpse was gained of an area of several hundred
+feet, in which, it is needless to say, he saw nothing of his young
+friend.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers! but he strayed away,&rdquo; added Mickey,
+somewhat impatiently. &ldquo;He thought there was something that it
+would pay to chase, and he&rsquo;s gone off, and, of course, will
+be lost.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With a view to bringing him back, the Irishman called his name,
+whistled, and, after a time, fired his gun. The echoes were not so
+loud as when Fred had fired, but the racket was sufficient to make
+him confident it would reach the ears of the boy, if he were not
+asleep or injured.</p>
+<p>Mickey, as will be seen, formed the right opinion of the action
+of his young friend, and hoped that he would be able to work his
+way back to camp, as they called it, without any mishap or
+assistance from him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He thinks there&rsquo;s another door that opens into the
+sunshine, and that isn&rsquo;t locked, and, if it is, he can pick
+the kay. He may work away till he becomes weary, and then
+he&rsquo;ll be back here, and we&rsquo;ll hare to contrive some
+other way, or it may be that good luck will lead him to the opening
+for which he sighs. Heaven grant that the same may be the
+case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He waited, and watched, and hoped, as the hours passed by, until
+he began to believe that something serious had happened to him. At
+intervals he repeated his signals, but on no occasion was there
+anything like a response.</p>
+<p>It was an odd juxtaposition of events that, at the very moment
+he uttered some of the calls, the despairing kid was doing the same
+thing, and, although each strained his ears to the utmost, yet
+neither suspected the truth.</p>
+<p>The hours and the time passed on, until happening to look up at
+the opening, Mickey saw the prepared blanket slowly descending,
+just as Fred looked upon it from the ridge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m obliged to yees,&rdquo; he said, in an
+undertone, &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t find myself in pressing naad of
+the same. I have one here, but if ye insist on my taking that,
+I&rsquo;ll not quarrel with yees.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He resolved that when it came down within his reach he would cut
+the lasso, and take it, but before it reached the ground he had
+changed his mind.</p>
+<p>He knew what the intention of the Apaches was, but he was not
+deceived for an instant.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not do anything at all,&rdquo; he muttered;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not interfere, where it&rsquo;s so difficult to
+decide upon me duty, as the owld lady obsarved when the bear got
+her husband down. I&rsquo;ll let &rsquo;em think I&rsquo;m aslaap,
+and see what they&rsquo;ll do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And thus, as the reader already knows, the rolled-up blanket was
+lowered and raised again without molestation, almost grazing the
+upturned face of the Irishman as it did so.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the next will be one of the spalpeens himself.
+Begorrah! there he is this minute!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Just as he anticipated, a short time after the blanket began its
+descent, enfolding the form of one of the swarthy warriors, the
+Irishman at once detecting the ruse.</p>
+<p>His rifle was brought to his shoulder, but yielding to a whim,
+which he could hardly explain, he lowered it, without firing,
+resolved that he would do nothing at all, unless compelled to in
+self-defense. About this time an idea began to dawn upon him that
+silence and inaction upon his part might do himself more good than
+the most vigorous defense.</p>
+<p>He might shoot the first Indian, and then the others would only
+keep themselves out of reach, and he would be no nearer escape than
+before. On the other hand, if he studiously forced himself into the
+background, they might begin to believe that he had discovered the
+means of exit which was unknown to them. He had no fear of not
+being able to keep out of their way, where he had such abundant
+room and where no light possibly could reach the interior and
+reveal his presence to a hundred searchers. If they chose to
+attempt to carry torches, then he could pick them off at his own
+convenience.</p>
+<p>And so it came about that Mickey stood quietly by, and permitted
+the whole five Apaches to slide down the rope like so many monkeys,
+while he raised no hand in the way of protest. Not knowing how many
+the party numbered, he could not conjecture how many were left when
+the five had come down, and the business stopped for the time, but
+he knew, as a matter of course, that they would not enter the cave
+without leaving reinforcements upon the surface.</p>
+<p>By the time the last man landed, Mickey had moved back to a
+point a hundred yards away from where the group were gathered,
+where he was seated upon a large rock.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If any of &rsquo;em undertakes to flash a bull&rsquo;s
+eye in me face, I kin dodge down behind the same,&rdquo; was the
+way in which the Irishman reasoned it.</p>
+<p>At such a time, and in such a place, the faculty of hearing was
+about the only one that could be counted upon, and, sliding softly
+off the rock, Mickey applied his ear to the earth. If the Apaches
+were moving about, the noise made by their feet was so slight that
+he could not be certain whether they were actually branching out
+and groping for him, or whether they were the sounds produced by
+the natural shifting of the feet of a group of men standing
+together.</p>
+<p>Matters stood thus for some time, when the last Indian suddenly
+came through the opening and plumped down upon the ground below,
+his start on this journey being such that he was probably
+considerably shaken up by the involuntary trip.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye spalpeens must be more careful in coming
+down-stairs,&rdquo; muttered Mickey, who supposed that the whole
+thing was an accident, as in his own case.</p>
+<p>But it was not long before he heard the voice of Fred Munson,
+calling from above, and, as each word was distinctly heard, there
+was no room for any misunderstanding of the situation. The Irishman
+was literally dumfounded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers! if it isn&rsquo;t the most wonderful thing
+that ever happened, as Mrs. Murphy remarked when Tim came home
+sober one night. That laddy, in hunting around, has struck upon
+some hole that leads out, and he&rsquo;s forgot, or else it was so
+hard to find his way back to me, he has gone round to that place,
+and now hollers down at me.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah,&rdquo; added Mickey, a moment later, &ldquo;it
+must be that he shoved that spalpeen overboard, and there
+isn&rsquo;t anybody left up there in the way of Apaches but one,
+and he ain&rsquo;t an Apache, but a gintleman named Fred Moonson.
+Here&rsquo;s to his health, and if this thing gets any more
+delightful, I&rsquo;ll have to give a whoop and yell, and strike up
+the Tipperary jig.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The exultant fellow had hard work to keep his spirits under
+control when he fairly understood the brilliant exploit that had
+been performed by his young friend.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is almost aqual to my gineral coorse,&rdquo; he he
+added; &ldquo;but I must try and hold in till I can get the laddy
+by himself. Then I&rsquo;ll hammer him, out of pure love, as ye may
+say.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey managed to contain himself, but did not attempt to reply
+to the direct call which was made upon him. That, in one sense,
+would have been fatal, as it would have &ldquo;uncovered&rdquo; his
+position. The Irishman was quick-witted, and it occurred to him
+that the last incident which had happened at the entrance to the
+cave might be turned to good account. If he continued to remain in
+the background, the Apaches were likely to conclude that he, too,
+was beyond their reach.</p>
+<p>Thus matters stood until the signal was made to him, when he
+deemed it wise to make a cautious reply, merely to apprise the lad
+that he was there within call, and understood the situation through
+and through.</p>
+<p>Mickey was very apprehensive when, some time after, he
+discovered that one of the Indians was ascending the rope. He was
+not so apprehensive when he came down again. The result of this
+repulse was much more decisive than Fred had supposed. The warriors
+seemed to suspect that they were throwing away time in attempting
+to outwit one who held such an immense advantage over them, and who
+was too wide-awake to permit them to steal a march upon him.</p>
+<p>The delighted Irishman knew, from the sounds, that the redskins
+were moving away from the spot, not with the idea of staying away
+altogether, but that they might engage upon a little reconnoissance
+which might possibly open the way that they were so anxiously
+seeking. One of the redskins passed almost within arm&rsquo;s
+length of him, never suspecting, as a matter of course, that he was
+brought into such proximity to a mortal enemy. Mickey only breathed
+until assured that there was quite a distance between him and the
+Apaches.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now it begins to look as though there&rsquo;s a chance
+for me,&rdquo; he concluded; &ldquo;and if me laddy will let down
+the lasso, I&rsquo;ll thry the bootiful experiment of shinning up
+it, though I much fear me that it will be the same as a greased
+pole.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He moved with the utmost circumspection toward the spot, being
+able to locate it by means of the moonlit opening overhead, and
+when he was near it he halted and listened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t obsarve that any one is loafing about here,
+getting in the way of honest folks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Just then he ran plump against an Apache, whom he did not
+suspect was so near him.</p>
+<p>The redskin uttered a grunt of anger, no doubt suspecting that
+it was one of his own friends.</p>
+<p>As quick as lightning the Irishman drew back and struck a blow
+that stretched the warrior senseless.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tache ye to be grunting around here when a
+gintleman runs again ye. Ye ought to be ashamed of
+yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey had already strapped his rifle to his back, and, groping
+about, he felt the end of the lasso dangling in front of his face.
+The same instant he grasped it and began the ascent.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_10" name="Ch_10">Chapter X.</a></h3>
+<h2>&ldquo;Here We are Again!&rdquo;</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Fred Munson, having been deceived once by the Apache climbing up
+the rope, was not to be caught again in the same way. When he
+became certain that a second person was coming up, he grasped his
+pistol again, and held himself in readiness to &ldquo;repel
+boarders,&rdquo; the very instant they appeared.</p>
+<p>It soon became evident that this second person, whoever he was,
+had a serious time in climbing up the rope. He frequently paused as
+if resting, and this fact led the lad to feel more hopeful than
+ever that it was his old friend drawing near.</p>
+<p>When it became apparent that he was near the top, the curiosity
+of Fred became so great that he drew himself forward, and, peering
+down the black throat of the cave, asked, in a whisper:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I say, Mickey, is that you? Speak, if it is, or give a
+little whistle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers, but I&rsquo;m so tired I&rsquo;m
+spaachless, wid not even the strength to let out a
+whistle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This established the identity of the climber beyond all
+question, and the words were hardly uttered when the familiar face
+of the Irishman appeared.</p>
+<p>He was exceedingly tired, and the lad reached his hand down to
+assist him out. It was at this juncture that the Apache, who had
+run against the fist of Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney, recovered, and
+seeing his foe in the act of vanishing, gave a whoop of alarm to
+his companions, caught up his rifle and fired away. The hasty aim
+alone prevented a fatal result, the bullet clipping the clothing of
+the Irishman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fire away, ye spalpeens, for all the good it may do
+ye,&rdquo; called out the Irishman, who at this moment clambered
+out of range and sank down upon the ground.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah, I&rsquo;m as tired as Jim O&rsquo;Shaughnessey
+after his friendly match with his wife,&rdquo; gasped Mickey,
+speaking shortly and rapidly, as best he could, while he leaned
+over upon his elbow, until he could regain his strength and
+wind.</p>
+<p>It required but a short time, when he reached his hand to the
+lad, and shook it for the third or fourth time, smiling at the same
+time in his old jolly way, as he rose rather unsteadily upon his
+pins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have to wait a while till the kink gets out of
+me legs, before I give ye the Donnybrook jig, but I make the
+engagement wid ye, and the thing is down for performance, do ye
+mind that? And now, me laddy, we must thravel. Are ye
+hungry?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have a bite saved that&rsquo;ll do ye till the morrow.
+When ye waltzed out the cave and left me to meself, I felt there
+was no knowing how long I&rsquo;d have to stay behind, so I knocked
+off both eating and drinking, with the idea of getting used to
+going without anything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As they were able to talk more understandingly, the two
+explained their experiences since they had parted. They could not
+fail to be interesting in both cases. When they had finished,
+Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney had about recovered from the terrible strain
+he had undergone in clambering out the cave, barring a little ache
+in his arms and legs.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, me laddy, we must emigrate, as there ain&rsquo;t
+anything to be gained by loafing round here, as the gals used to
+tell the chaps when they tried to cut me out. The first thing to
+larn is whether the hoss that I lift some distance away is still
+there cropping the grass. If he is, then we shall have small work
+in making our way back to New Boston; but if he has emigrated ahead
+of us thar, we must hunt for others.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s no need of going that far.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because the mustangs of the Apaches are right over yonder
+behind those rocks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s good; let&rsquo;s take a look at the
+same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They hurried over to the spot where the half dozen mustangs were
+tethered. They were lying upon the ground, taking their sleep,
+having finished a bounteous meal. The intelligent creatures showed
+their training by throwing up their heads the instant the two came
+in sight, and several gave utterance to whinneys, no doubt with the
+purpose of apprising their masters of the approach of strangers.
+None of them rose to their feet, however, and Mickey and Fred moved
+about, inspecting them as best they could in the moonlight, with
+the purpose of selecting the best.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re all a fine lot, as the neighbors used to
+say, after inspicting me father&rsquo;s family, and it&rsquo;s hard
+to make up your mind which is the best, but here is one that
+shtrikes me fancy. Get up wid ye.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The steed, spoken to in this peremptory manner, leaped to his
+feet, and stood in all his graceful and beautiful proportions, an
+equine gem, which could not fail to command admiration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think he&rsquo;ll suit,&rdquo; said the Irishman, after
+a careful examination. &ldquo;I think he can run as well as any of
+&rsquo;em. I&rsquo;ll tell you what we&rsquo;ll do, me laddy.
+We&rsquo;ll both mount this one, and ride till we reach the place
+where I lift mine, when we&rsquo;ll have one apiece.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if yours isn&rsquo;t there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then we&rsquo;ll kaap this one betwaan us, as the gals
+used to say, when they quarreled over me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hadn&rsquo;t I better take one of the horses, and if we
+find yours, why, we can turn one of these loose, and we shall be
+all right, no matter how the things turn out?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s not a bad idaa,&rdquo; assented the Irishman.
+&ldquo;Pick yours out, and then we&rsquo;ll turn the others
+loose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why will you do that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the use of laving them here? Them spalpeens
+will find their way out of the cave before long, and then they will
+strike straight for these animals, and, if they happen to get out
+pretty soon, they&rsquo;ll make trouble with us. We might as well
+let &rsquo;em walk awhile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How are they going to get out?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t ye lave the lasso hanging down into the
+cave?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I declare, I never thought of that!&rdquo; exclaimed the
+affrighted lad. &ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t you tell me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he started to repair the oversight, when Mickey caught his
+arm and checked him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not so, me son; lave it as it is. If we should go away
+and lave the spalpeens down there without the rope, they might
+never find the way out, and would starve to death, and it would
+always grieve me to think I had starved six Apaches to death,
+instead of affording meself some enjoyment by cracking &rsquo;em
+over the head wid a shillelah.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should be sorry to do that,&rdquo; replied Fred, who
+comprehended the cruelty of leaving the poor fellows to perish, as
+they were likely to do if left without the means of escape;
+&ldquo;but, if we leave the rope hanging there, the whole party
+will be up here before we can get out of the way, and then what
+shall we do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Niver fear, niver fear,&rdquo; said Mickey, with a wave
+of his hand and a magisterial shake of the head. &ldquo;The
+spalpeens have got enough of climbing up there for a while.
+They&rsquo;ve gone off on a hunt through the cavern for the place
+where you crawled out, and they&rsquo;ll kaap at that till morning,
+and then, if there&rsquo;s no show for &rsquo;em, they&rsquo;ll
+come back, and begin to fool around the rope again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad had little difficulty in deciding upon his steed, which
+was a coal-black mustang, lithe and willowy, and apparently of a
+good disposition, although that was necessarily a matter of
+conjecture, for the present. There were no saddles upon any of the
+horses, and nothing but the rudest kind of bridle, consisting of a
+thong of twisted bull&rsquo;s hide, and reaching away to some limb
+or tree, so as to give the animal plenty of grazing area. The
+lariats of the other four were cut&mdash;so that, when they arose,
+they would find themselves at liberty to go whither they
+chose&mdash;after which the two approached their respective prizes
+and prepared to mount.</p>
+<p>Both were good riders, although, being compelled to go it
+bareback, they felt some misgivings as to the result. Fred&rsquo;s
+mustang was rather under size, so that he was able to vault upon
+him from the ground without difficulty. After patting him on the
+neck and speaking soothingly to him, with a view to disarming him
+of all timidity, the lad leaped lightly upon his back.</p>
+<p>The steed showed at once that he did not like this familiarity,
+and reared and plunged and shook his head in a vicious way, but he
+toned down somewhat after a time, and seemed disposed to compromise
+matters until he learned something about his rider.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;re going to become a good rider&mdash;that is,
+in the course of twenty or thirty years,&rdquo; remarked Mickey,
+who had been watching his young friend closely, &ldquo;if ye
+practice aich day in those thirty years; but I want you to observe
+<em>my</em> shtyle&mdash;note how complately I bring the animal
+under, how docile he becomes, how mild, how gentle, how
+lamblike.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And with these rather pompous observations, he laid his hand
+upon the mane of his mustang, and at one bound bestrode him,
+catching the lariat after the manner of one who was determined to
+have no nonsense about it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now note how quick I&rsquo;ll subdue him, how afeard
+he&rsquo;ll be, you can&rsquo;t goad him into trying to throw me.
+Talk about Rarey breaking that old horse Cruiser, that used to ate
+his keeper every day for breakfast, he couldn&rsquo;t compare wid
+mesilf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before Mickey had time to finish his observation, the heels of
+the mustang went up almost perpendicularly in the air, and with
+such suddenness that Mickey was thrown a dozen feet over his head,
+alighting upon his hands and knees.</p>
+<p>Fred was amused beyond expression at the discomfiture of his
+boasting friend, who was not a little astonished at the manner in
+which he had been overthrown.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Turns up,&rdquo; he said, as he gathered himself on his
+feet again, &ldquo;that I was a little mistook. Such accidents will
+happen now and then, and it isn&rsquo;t very kind for a spalpeen
+like yourself to laugh at me sorrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t help it, Mickey, but I&rsquo;m afraid I
+can&rsquo;t stick to the back of this horse. He seems scared and
+mad, and his back feels mighty slippery without any saddle or
+blanket.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe, if I get on wid ye, the weight of us both will
+hold him down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The mustang which hard thrown the Irishman continued to flourish
+his heels and disport himself in such a lively style, that his
+spirit became contagious, and the four, who were yet upon the
+ground, now came to their feet, and after some plunging and
+rearing, made a rush down the slope, and were soon out of
+sight.</p>
+<p>The animal ridden by the lad showed a disposition to join them,
+but the rider resisted, and managed to hold him, until at the
+opportune moment, Mickey placed himself on his back, and, as he was
+really a good horseman, and used vigorous means, he speedily
+managed to bring him under control. Turning his head toward the
+ridge, they started him forward, pausing near the mouth of the
+cavern long enough to gather up one of the blankets lying there, as
+it was likely to be useful at no distant time.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_11" name="Ch_11">Chapter XI.</a></h3>
+<h2>Through the Mountains.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>The moon was high in the sky, and it was near midnight.
+O&rsquo;Rooney, who had taken upon himself the task of guiding the
+mustang, continued him on up the ridge, directly toward the spot
+where Fred had lain so long watching the action of the Apaches
+gathered around the opening of the cave.</p>
+<p>The mustang walked along quite obediently, seeming to feel the
+load no more than if it was only one half as great. But those
+animals are like their native masters&mdash;cunning and
+treacherous, ready to take advantage of their riders whenever it
+happens to come in their way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which is the raison I cautions ye to be riddy for a
+fall,&rdquo; said Mickey, after referring to some of the
+peculiarities of these steeds of the Southwest. &ldquo;The minute
+he gits it into his head that we ain&rsquo;t paying attention,
+he&rsquo;ll rear up on his fore-feet, and walk along that way for
+half a mile. Not having any saddle, we&rsquo;ll have to slide over
+his neck, unless I can brace me feet agin his ears, and ride along
+standing straight up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The constant expectation of being flung over the head of a horse
+is not the most comforting sensation that one can have, and the lad
+clung fast to his friend in front, determined not to go, unless in
+his company. Upon reaching the top of the ridge, the horse was
+reined up for a few minutes, as Mickey, like the mariner at sea,
+was desirous of taking an observation, so as to prevent himself
+going astray.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you remember how you were placed?&rdquo; asked the
+lad, after he had spent several minutes in the survey; &ldquo;that
+is, do you know which way to go for the horse you left eating
+grass?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was a little puzzled at first, as me father obsarved to
+the school-teacher when he said I had been a good boy, but I see
+how it is now. It must have been that I got a little turned round
+when I was down in the basemint of these mountains, but I see how
+it is now. Right yonder,&rdquo; he added, pointing toward the
+Northwest, &ldquo;is where I left my hoss, and there is where I
+hope I&rsquo;ll find him again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is the road so that we can ride the mustang all the way
+there, or must we walk?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I remember I come right along some kind of a path, made
+by animals, after leaving the beast. I s&rsquo;pose it&rsquo;s the
+route taken by the crathurs in going to the water, for
+there&rsquo;s a splendid spring right there, and the path that I
+was just tilling you &rsquo;bout leads straight to it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then keep the horse from throwing us off, and we&rsquo;re
+all right. After we find your horse, Mickey, or don&rsquo;t find
+him, what are we to do, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Set sail for New Boston.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But we can&rsquo;t ride through these mountains, if we
+don&rsquo;t find the pass.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And the same is what we&rsquo;re going to do, barring
+that it hasn&rsquo;t been lost yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure you know the way to it from where you left
+your horse? I&rsquo;ve been hunting for it for hours, but
+couldn&rsquo;t any more tell where it was than the man in the moon.
+What course would you have to take to reach it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right off yonder,&rdquo; replied Mickey, pointing to the
+left.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I was sure that it was here,&rdquo; said Fred,
+pointing his hand in nearly an opposite direction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which the same is a good raison why you&rsquo;re wrong.
+When you git lost, and think you&rsquo;re on the right way, ye may
+be sure that ye&rsquo;re wrong; and after figuring the whole thing
+over, and getting sartin of the right coorse, all you&rsquo;ve got
+to do is not to take it, and ye&rsquo;re sartin of saving
+yerself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then, according to that, you ought not to take the route
+which you have said is the right one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m spaking for lost spalpeens like
+yoursilf,&rdquo; said Mickey, severely. &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t been
+lost since I parted company with Soot Simpson, and, begorrah, that
+minds me that we ought to saa something of him. Just look around
+and obsarve whether he is standing anywhere beckoning to
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both used their eyes to the extent of their ability, but were
+unable to discover anything that bore a suspicious resemblance to a
+man.</p>
+<p>So far as they could judge, they were entirely alone in this
+vast solitude.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you expect to meet Sut very soon?&rdquo;&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Av coorse I do; why shouldn&rsquo;t I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But he went another way from you altogether after Lone
+Wolf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s just it. He wint another way, and wint
+wrong, and he has been gone long &rsquo;nough to find out the
+same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When he will turn back and follow you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As soon as he finds he&rsquo;s wrong, he&rsquo;ll go
+right, and as I wint right, he&rsquo;ll be on my heels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you know both of us have strayed a good deal off the
+track, and we have traveled in many places, where we haven&rsquo;t
+made the slightest trail. How is he going to follow us
+then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Irishman gave utterance to a scornful exclamation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been with that Soot Simpson long enough to
+learn something. I&rsquo;ve saan some specimens of what he kin do.
+Rocks don&rsquo;t make no difference to him. When he gits on the
+track of a wild bird, if it don&rsquo;t take extra pains to dodge
+and double, he&rsquo;ll foller its trail through the air. Oh,
+he&rsquo;s there all the time, and the wonder with me is that he
+hasn&rsquo;t turned up before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What would he have done had he come along and found us
+both in the cave, and the Apaches watching?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He would have tracked that wolf back to his hole, come in
+and fetched us out, and then slipped up behind the six, and tumbled
+them all in like so many tenpins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he&rsquo;s such a wonderful man as that, it&rsquo;s a
+pity we couldn&rsquo;t have kept him with us all the time, and if
+we do run against him, we can afford to stop thinking about
+Apaches, as they will be of no account.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yees are right; but the trouble is to find him, as the
+man said when the British Government condemned John Mitchel, and
+him thousands of miles away in Ameriky. This thramping about at
+night in the mountains isn&rsquo;t the aisiest way to diskiver a
+man, and it&rsquo;s him that will have to find us, instead of we
+him. But we&rsquo;ll keep it up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>If the Apache mustang which they were riding meditated any
+mischief, he seemed to be of the opinion that the occasion was not
+the most suitable. He walked along with great docility and care,
+picking his way with a skill that was wonderful. Several times they
+approached places where it seemed impossible for an equine to go
+forward, but the horse scarcely hesitated, toiling onward like an
+Alpine chamois, until, at last, they drew up in a small valley,
+through the middle of which ran a small stream, that sparkled
+brightly in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here we are,&rdquo; said Mickey. &ldquo;here&rsquo;s the
+spot where I left my cratur a couple of days ago, and where I
+don&rsquo;t see him just now. Use your eyes a bit, and tell me
+whether you obsarve him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred was scarcely less anxious than his friend to recover the
+steed, for, recalling his experience in that line, he had good
+reason to mistrust Indian horses. It would be very awkward, when
+they should find a party of Apaches howling and rushing down upon
+them, to have the animal turn calmly about and trot back to his
+former friends, carrying his two riders into captivity, or leaving
+them to shift for themselves.</p>
+<p>Nothing could be seen of the creature, but there was a fringe of
+wood on the opposite side where he might be concealed, and Mickey
+slid off the blanket with the intention of hunting for him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t let this spalpeen give ye the slip,&rdquo; he
+cautioned the lad, as he gave the lariat into his hand; &ldquo;for
+if mine is gone, this is the only one we have to depend on, and we
+can&rsquo;t spare him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred felt a little uncomfortable when he found himself alone and
+astride of the fiery steed, which pricked up his ears as though he
+meditated mischief; but the horse seemed to think better of it, and
+continued so quiet that the young rider ventured to transfer his
+attention from him to Mickey, who was moving across the open space
+in the direction of the wood upon the opposite side.</p>
+<p>The moonlight was so clear that he could be as plainly seen,
+almost, as if it were midday. As he moved along, he brought his
+rifle around to the front, so that he could use it at a
+moment&rsquo;s need, for he could not but see the probability that,
+if his horse had been lately disturbed, it was likely that those
+who did so were still in the vicinity, and no place was more likely
+to be used for a covert than the same patch of timber which he was
+approaching.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers! but it looks a little pokerish!&rdquo; he
+said to himself, slowing his gait, and surveying the wood with no
+little distrust. &ldquo;There might be a dozen of the spalpeens
+slaaping there wid one eye open, or all sitting up and expicting
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had proceeded so far however, that it was as dangerous to
+turn back as it was to go on, for if any enemies were there, they
+were so close at hand that they could easily capture or shoot him
+before he could reach his horse. He was scarcely moving, and doing
+his utmost to penetrate the deep shadow, when, beyond all question,
+he heard a movement among the trees. He paused as if he had been
+shot and cocked his rifle, looking toward the point from whence
+came the noise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aisy there, now,&rdquo; he said in a solemn voice.
+&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t stand any of your thricks. I&rsquo;m savage,
+and when I&rsquo;m that way I&rsquo;m dangerous, so if yees are
+there spake out, or else come out like a man, and tell me your
+name, be the token of which mine is Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney from
+Ireland.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This characteristic summons produced no response, and, feeling
+the peculiar peril of his exposed position, the Irishman determined
+upon changing it and securing the shelter of a tree for himself. It
+was not prudent to move directly toward the spot which gave forth
+the rustling sound, as that would be likely to draw out a shot from
+a foe if he desired to avoid a personal encounter. Accordingly, the
+Irishman made what might be termed a flank movement by turning to
+the right, running rapidly several paces and then diving in among
+the trees, as though he were plunging into the water for a
+bath.</p>
+<p>The few minutes occupied in making this change were those which
+Mickey felt were of great danger; for, if he should reach the wood
+and find himself opposed to but a single man, or even two, the
+situation would not be so uneven by any means. No shots were fired,
+and he drew a great sigh of relief when he gained the desired
+covert.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now I can dodge back and forth, and work me way up to
+them,&rdquo; he concluded; &ldquo;and when they stick their heads
+out from behind the trees, I&rsquo;ll whack &rsquo;em for
+&rsquo;em, just as we used to do at Donnybrook when the fun
+began.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He waited where he was for some time, in the expectation that
+his foe would reveal himself by an attempt to draw out. But if
+there is any one thing which distinguishes a scout, whether white
+or red, at such a time, it is his patience. It is like that of the
+Esquimaux, who will sit for sixteen hours, without stirring, beside
+an airhole in the ice, waiting for a seal to appear. Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney was not burdened with overmuch patience, and acted
+upon the principle of Mohammed going to the mountain. He began
+picking his way through the shadows and among the trees, determined
+to keep forward until the mystery was solved.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_12" name="Ch_12">Chapter XII.</a></h3>
+<h2>Through the Mountains&mdash;Continued.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>When Mickey found himself under the shelter of the trees,
+something like his old confidence returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I obsarved some minutes ago, it&rsquo;s mesilf
+that&rsquo;s not going to stand any fooling,&rdquo; he added, loud
+enough for the redskins to hear. &ldquo;Whither ye&rsquo;re there
+or not, ye ought to spake, and come out and smoke the calomel of
+peace, and give a spalpeen a chance to crack your head, as though
+ye&rsquo;re his brother; but if ye&rsquo;re up to any of your
+thricks, make ready to go to your hunting-grounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By this time he was within a dozen feet of the spot whence came
+the rustling that so disturbed him, and was staring with all his
+eyes in quest of the redskins. In spite of the bright moonlight,
+the Irishman could not be certain of anything he saw. There were
+trees of large size, behind any of which an Indian might have
+shielded himself effectually, and it was useless for Mickey to look
+unless his man chose to show himself.</p>
+<p>The Irishman had all the natural recklessness of his race, but
+he had been in the Apache country long enough to learn to tone it
+down, for that was the country where the most fatal attribute a man
+could have was recklessness or rashness. In many instances of
+conflict with Indians it is worse than cowardice.</p>
+<p>But, in the face of Mickey&rsquo;s assurance to the contrary, he
+did not feel altogether easy about the Apaches he had left at the
+cave. His humanity had prevented him from depriving them of means
+of escape, and although he was inclined to believe that they were
+not likely to climb the lasso until many hours should elapse, there
+could be no certainty about it. They might do so within an hour
+after the departure of the man and boy.</p>
+<p>It was this reflection that caused Mickey to act with something
+of his natural rashness. He felt that he could not afford to wait
+to fight the thing out on scientific principles, so he determined,
+since he was so close, to force it to an issue without delay.
+Accordingly, he prepared himself to charge.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been too kind already in giving ye
+warnings,&rdquo; he added, gathering himself for the effort,
+&ldquo;and if your indifference causes your ruin, it&rsquo;s your
+own fault, as the bull remarked when he come down on a butt agin
+the engine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Compressing his lips, Mickey made his start, forcing out a few
+words, as he would shoot bullets on the way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nobody but a spalpeen of a coward would keep out of sight
+when he saw a head coming down on him in such tempting style as
+mine. I can&rsquo;t understand how he could.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In his furious hunt for antagonists, the belligerent fellow did
+not think of looking upon the ground. He made the blunder of
+Captain John Smith, of the Jamestown Colony, who, in retreating
+from Powhatan&rsquo;s warriors, became mired, with the eventual
+result of making Pocahontas famous, and securing an infinite number
+of namesakes of the captain himself.</p>
+<p>Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney had scarcely begun his charge when his
+feet came into violent collision with a body upon the ground, and
+he turned a complete somersault over it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers! but that&rsquo;s a dirty thrick!&rdquo; he
+exclaimed, gathering himself up as hurriedly as possible, and
+recovering very speedily from his natural bewilderment. &ldquo;A
+man who drops in the ring without a blow is always ruled out, and
+be that token ye&rsquo;re not entitled to the respect of illegant
+gintlemen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>During the utterance of these words the Irishman had carefully
+returned, boiling over with indignation and fight, and at this
+juncture he discovered the obstruction which had brought him to
+grief.</p>
+<p>So far as appearances went, there was no Indian nearer than the
+cave. It was his own horse that had made the noise which first
+alarmed him. While the equine was stretched upon the ground,
+peacefully sleeping, his bumptious owner, in charging over his
+body, had stumbled and fallen.</p>
+<p>Mickey was thrown &ldquo;all in a heap&rdquo; for a minute or
+two, when he found how the case stood, and then he laughed to
+himself as he fully appreciated the situation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well, well, I feel as chape as Jerry McConnell when
+he hugged and kissed a gal for two hours, one evening, and found it
+was his wife, and she felt chaaper yet, for she thought all the
+time that it was Mickey O&rsquo;Shaughnessy. I suppose me old
+swateheart,&rdquo; he added, as he stooped down and patted the head
+of his horse, &ldquo;that ye&rsquo;ve been living so high here for
+two or three days that ye&rsquo;re too fat to be good for anything.
+Come, up wid ye, ye old spalpeen!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The mustang recognized the voice of his master, and obeyed as
+promptly as a child, coming upon his feet with the nimbleness of a
+racer, and ready to do what he was bidden. Mickey led him out into
+the moonlight, when he left him standing, while he went a short
+distance for the saddle and bridle, which he had concealed at the
+time of leaving the spot. They were found just as he had left them,
+and he returned in high feather, secured them in a twinkling upon
+his animal and galloped back to where the lad was waiting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye haven&rsquo;t seen or heard anything of redskins, have
+ye, while I was procuring my cratur?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing at all,&rdquo; replied the lad; &ldquo;but I
+heard you talking pretty loud, so I suppose you must have found
+several.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; answered Mickey, who did not care about
+explaining the whole affair. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m always in the habit
+of exchanging a few words wid the cratur when I maats, and such was
+the case a short time since, when I met him, after being away so
+long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Mickey, we haven&rsquo;t any time to
+spare.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;re right, my laddy; all you&rsquo;ve got to do
+is to folly me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With this he headed his mustang at precisely right angles to the
+course they followed in making their way to the spot; and Fred, who
+expected all sorts of trouble in the way of traveling, noticed that
+he was following some sort of path or trail, along which his horse
+trod as easily as upon the open prairie. While this was an
+advantage in one respect it had its disadvantage in another. The
+presence of a trail in that part of the world implied that it was
+one made and traveled by Indians, who were likely to be encountered
+at any moment, and Mickey was not insensible to the peril. But, in
+the present instance, there seemed to be no other means of getting
+along, and thus, in one sense, they were forced into it. The
+probabilities, however, were that they would soon emerge into safer
+territory, where it would be possible to take some precautions
+against pursuers.</p>
+<p>For some time the two galloped along without speaking. The hoofs
+of their mustangs rang upon the rocks, and rattled over the gravel,
+and, in the still night, could have been heard a long distance
+away. While the Irishman kept as good a lookout ahead as possible,
+Fred Munson did his best to guard their rear. He kept continually
+glancing over his shoulder in the expectation of seeing some of
+their enemies, but nothing of the kind occurred, and before he
+anticipated it, they emerged into what seemed a deep valley, with
+high rocks upon both sides. Mickey drew up, and allowed his young
+friend to move alongside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do ye mind ever having seen this place before?&rdquo; he
+asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t remember anything about this country, and
+all I ask is that we may get out of it as soon as
+possible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But don&rsquo;t ye mind ever having been here
+before?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus questioned, Fred scanned his surroundings as best he could,
+but there was nothing that he could identify, and he so said,
+adding:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sure I&rsquo;ve never been here
+before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I&rsquo;m sure ye have. This is the path that Lone
+Wolf come along, and that ye was hunting for when ye got lost, and
+fell into the basement story of the mountain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, this is the pass, is it?&rdquo; exclaimed the
+delighted lad; &ldquo;then we have a clear road before us straight
+to New Boston.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Clear of all but one thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The red spalpeens; they&rsquo;re always turning up when
+you don&rsquo;t expect &rsquo;em, and don&rsquo;t want
+&rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How far are we away from the cave, where we left the half
+dozen Apaches?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s much more than a mile,
+though it may be a mile and a half.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, that&rsquo;s very good; we&rsquo;ve got that much
+start, and it&rsquo;s worth having.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And there&rsquo;s where ye&rsquo;re mistook, as the gals
+used to obsarve when anybody tried to run down my beauty. The path
+that we come along, ye&rsquo;ll mind, makes many turns and twists,
+and the ind of it all is that it strikes the pass on the other side
+of the cave, and we&rsquo;ve got to ride right by the spot which we
+lift.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This was not cheering information, although, everything
+considered, the two had cause to congratulate themselves upon their
+extraordinary success up to this time.</p>
+<p>The night was about gone, and, while their mustangs halted, they
+observed that it was growing light in the east. They would be
+forced to ride through the dangerous territory by day, so that the
+risk of detection would be proportionately greater if their enemies
+should be in the vicinity. Both the mustangs were fresh and
+vigorous, however, having enjoyed an unusually long rest, with
+plenty of food, and they were good for many hours of speed and
+endurance. The one ridden by Fred had behaved in a very seemly
+fashion, and there was ground for the hope that he would keep up
+the line of conduct to the end. Still there could be no certainty
+of what he would do in the presence of the Apaches.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll take it aisy,&rdquo; said Mickey, as the two
+started off at an easy gallop. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll not be afther
+putting &rsquo;em to a run till we have to do the same, so that
+when there&rsquo;s naad for their spaad, we shall have it at
+command.&rdquo; This prudent suggestion was carried out. Their
+horses dropped into a sweeping gallop that was as easy as an
+ordinary walk. The riders kept their senses awake, talking only a
+little, and then in guarded voices.</p>
+<p>As they galloped along the sun rose, and the day promised to be
+as warm and pleasant as those which had preceded it. The sky was
+obscured only by a few fleecy clouds, while the deep blue beyond
+was as beautiful as that of Italy. Drawing near the cave in the
+mountain, they pulled their horses down to a walk and carefully
+guided them into the softest places, so as to make the noise of
+their hoofs as slight as possible. Nothing occurred until they were
+a short distance beyond the dangerous spot, when Mickey spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you obsarve that stream there?&rdquo; he asked,
+pointing to a rather deep brook which ran across the pass, and lost
+itself in the rocks upon the opposite side. &ldquo;Well,
+that&rsquo;s the water that comes through the cave over the
+cascade, and that I expicted to swim out by, and I&rsquo;m going to
+find out what me chances were.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_13" name="Ch_13">Chapter XIII.</a></h3>
+<h2>In the Nick of Time.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Leaving his mustang in charge of Fred, the Irishman turned to
+the right, and followed the stream into the rocks. The course was
+so winding that he speedily disappeared from sight. The boy, who
+was compelled to sit still and await his return, at perhaps the
+most dangerous portion of the road, felt anything but comfortable
+over the erratic proceeding of his friend. But, fortunately, the
+latter had been gone but a short time when he reappeared, hurrying
+forward as if somebody was at his heels.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; he remarked, as he sprang
+into the saddle, took up the reins, and started on. &ldquo;I think
+the Apaches are there, though I can&rsquo;t be sartin; but I found
+out what I wanted to l&rsquo;arn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then he explained that he followed up the stream to the place
+where it came from beneath the rocks, which formed a part of the
+wall of the cave, where a curious fact attracted his attention. In
+its passage beneath the stone the tunnel widened and flattened, so
+that, where it shot forth to the sunlight again, its width was some
+twenty feet, and its depth only a few inches. The appearance it
+presented was very much like that of the gates of a mill-pond when
+they have been slightly raised to allow a discharge of water
+beneath. Through the passage-way thus afforded no living person
+could have forced his way; and, had Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney attempted
+it, nothing in the world could have saved him from drowning. The
+Irishman himself realized it, and was thankful enough that he had
+refrained from making the desperate attempt.</p>
+<p>The two continued their sweeping gallop for several hours,
+during which they did not catch a glimpse of Indians, but they were
+alarmed by hearing the reports of guns at no great distance on the
+right. The firing was irregular, sometimes several shots being
+heard together, and then they were more of a dropping character.
+This showed that a fight of some kind was going on, but as to its
+precise nature they could only conjecture. It might be that a party
+of Comanches and Apaches, or Kiowas, or hunters were enjoying a hot
+time, but the two friends were glad to get out of the neighborhood
+as speedily as possible. At noon they enjoyed the satisfaction of
+knowing that they had made good and substantial progress on the way
+home. There was an abundance of grass and water, and when the sun
+was overhead they went into camp.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m as hungry as a panther that has been fasting
+for a month,&rdquo; said Mickey, as he dismounted; &ldquo;and I
+haven&rsquo;t got a mouthful of food lift. There ain&rsquo;t any
+use of a chap starving to death to accommodate anybody else, and I
+don&rsquo;t mane to do the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred Munson&rsquo;s hunger was scarcely less than his, but the
+boy would have been willing to have undergone still more, rather
+than incur the risk that was now inevitable. But Mickey saw nothing
+to be gained by such a course and contended that they should give
+their attention to the wants of their bodies, before they were
+weakened by fasting and fatigue.</p>
+<p>Mickey promised not to be absent long, and then started in
+search of provender. Game was abundant in that part of the world,
+and he was confident that much time would not be required to bring
+down some toothsome dainty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has an uncomfortable way of running off and leaving a
+fellow alone,&rdquo; muttered Fred, as he watched the vanishing
+figure of his friend. &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t anything but my
+revolver, and only two shots left in that, and it seems to me that
+this is about the worst place we could stop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The point where they camped was in the pass, which, at that
+point, widened considerably. The right wall curved far inward in a
+semi-circular shape, the opposite remaining the same, the gorge
+looking as if an immense slice had been scooped out of its northern
+boundary. The rocks on every hand ranged from a dozen to a hundred
+feet in height, with numerous openings, through which a horseman
+could easily pick his way. The tops were covered with vegetation,
+the greater portion of which was vigorous and dense.</p>
+<p>Fred found himself standing in an immense amphitheatre, as one
+can imagine how the gladiators of Rome stood in the Coliseum, when
+an audience of over a hundred thousand were seated and looking down
+upon them. He could not but note the helpless situation a party of
+men would be in if caught where he was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If a company of United States Cavalry should camp here,
+and the Indians opened on them from the rocks above, they would
+have to stand and be shot down, one after another, or else run the
+gauntlet and be picked off in the same way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The appearance of the ground showed that the spot was a favorite
+camping-site of the Indians. Fred, for a time, suspected that it
+was the place where Lone Wolf and his band had spent the first
+night out from New Boston; but an examination showed that it did
+not correspond in many points. The remains of charred wood, of
+bleaching bones and ashes proved that many a camp-fire had been
+kindled. And, in all probability, every one of them had warmed the
+shins and toasted the food of the red cut-throats of that
+section.</p>
+<p>The two mustangs were tethered near one side of the space where
+there was grass and water, and the lad set about it to select a
+proper place in which to build their camp-fire. There was no
+trouble in determining this; but, when he started to gather wood,
+he was surprised to discover that there was much less than he
+supposed. The former tenants of the place had cleared it up pretty
+thoroughly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is plenty of wood over yonder,&rdquo; he said to
+himself, looking in the direction taken by Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney;
+&ldquo;and where there is so much growing there must be some upon
+the ground. I&rsquo;ll go over and gather some, and have the fire
+all ready when he comes back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was quite a walk from where he stood to the side of the
+semicircular widening of the pass, and as he went over it he was
+surprised to find it greater than it appeared. When he picked his
+way between the rocks, and began clambering among the trees and
+vegetation, he concluded that he was fully two hundred yards from
+where the mustangs were grazing.</p>
+<p>However, he did not allow himself to lose any time in
+speculation and wonderment, but set to work at once to gather wood
+with which to kindle a fire in readiness for the return of Mickey.
+There was enough around him to afford all he needed and he was
+engaged in leisurely collecting an armful when he was startled by
+the rattling of the leaves behind him.</p>
+<p>The wood was dropped on the instant, and the alarmed lad wheeled
+about to face his new danger. Instead of two or three Indians, as
+he had anticipated, he saw an enormous grizzly bear, about a dozen
+feet in the rear, coming directly toward him, with very little
+doubt of his purpose.</p>
+<p>Fred had no thought of anything of this character, and for a
+time he was paralyzed with terror, unable to speak or stir. These
+precious seconds were improved by the huge animal, which continued
+lumbering heavily forward toward the boy. Bruin had his jaws apart
+and his red tongue lolling out, while a guttural grunt was
+occasionally heard, as if the beast was anticipating the crunching
+of the tender flesh and bones of the lad.</p>
+<p>Before the latter was within reach, however, he had recovered
+his usual activity, and, with a bound and a yell of terror, Fred
+started in the direction of the clearing, where he had left the
+mustangs, and where he had intended to kindle the camp-fire. But
+the enormous, bulky creature, although swinging along in his
+awkward fashion, still made good speed, and gained so rapidly upon
+the boy that he almost abandoned hope of escape.</p>
+<p>At this critical moment Fred thought of his revolver, and he
+whipped it out in a twinkling. Whirling about, he took quick aim
+and discharged both barrels almost in the face of the brute. Then,
+flinging the pistol against his leather nose, he turned back and
+continued his flight at the utmost bent of his speed. Both bullets
+struck the brute and wounded him, but not fatally, nor, indeed,
+enough to check his advance.</p>
+<div class="figure"><a href="images/130_full.png" title=
+"Whirling about he took quick aim." target="_blank"><img src=
+"images/130_small.png" alt="A man aims a gun at a bear." id=
+"img130" name="img130" width="360" height="586" /></a>
+<p>WHIRLING ABOUT HE TOOK QUICK AIM.</p>
+</div>
+<p>The grizzly bear, as found in his native wilds, is killed with
+extreme difficulty, and the only thing that seemed to affect the
+monster in the present instance was the flash of the pistol in his
+eyes. He paused, and, rearing on his hind legs, snorted, snuffed,
+and pawed his nose as if the bullets were splinters which he was
+seeking to displace. Then, with an angry growl, he dropped on all
+fours and resumed his pursuit of the author of his confusion and
+hurts. The wounds incensed the brute, and he plunged along at a
+faster rate than before, gaining so rapidly that there could be no
+doubt as to the result.</p>
+<p>Being without any weapon at all, there seemed but one hope for
+Fred, and that was to reach his mustang in time to mount and avail
+himself of his speed. For a hundred feet or so he ran down a rapid
+slope, between the trees and rocks, until he reached the camping
+site, where he had a run of a couple of hundred yards across a
+comparatively level plain to reach the point where his animal was
+awaiting him.</p>
+<p>In going down this wooded slope, the smaller size of the boy
+gave him considerable advantage. Yet, so well did the grizzly
+succeed that he reached the spot less than twenty feet in his rear,
+and, heading directly for him, at once proceeded to decrease the
+distance still further. This placed the question of escape by
+superior speed upon the part of the lad as among the
+impossibilities, and it began to look very much as if his race were
+run.</p>
+<p>At this juncture, as if all the fates had combined against him,
+Fred, while glancing backward over his shoulder, stumbled and fell.
+He sprang up as hastily as possible, but the loss of ground was
+irreparable. As he looked back he saw that the colossal beast was
+so close that it seemed that one sweep of his paw would smite the
+terrified fugitive from the face of the earth.</p>
+<p>It was a critical moment indeed, and the crack of the rifle from
+the wood, which the pursuer and pursued had just left, was not a
+breath of time too soon. Aimed by one who knew the vulnerable
+points of such a creature, and by someone whose skill was
+unsurpassed, the leaden messenger crashed its way through bone and
+muscle to the seat of life. The brute, which was ready to fall upon
+and devour the young fugitive, pitched heavily forward and rolled
+upon the ground in the throes of death.</p>
+<p>Fred did not realize his delivery until he had gone some
+distance further and looked back and saw the black mass motionless
+upon the ground. After some hesitation, he then turned and walked
+distrustfully back to where it lay.</p>
+<p>He found the beast stone-dead, a rill of blood from beneath the
+fore-leg showing where some one&rsquo;s bullet had done the
+business. The lad recalled the sound of the gun which had reached
+his ear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was the best shot for me that Mickey ever
+made,&rdquo; he muttered, looking around for his friend.</p>
+<p>But he was nowhere to be seen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mickey must always have his fun,&rdquo; added Fred after
+failing to detect him. &ldquo;Instead of coming out at once and
+letting me know how he came to do it, he fires the lucky shot, and
+then waits to see how I will act. My gracious! he is a
+bouncer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This last remark was excited by the carcass, which he kicked,
+and which shook like a mountainous mass of jelly; and as he passed
+around it he gained a fair idea of the immense proportions of the
+bear, in whose grasp he would have been as helpless as in that of a
+royal Bengal tiger.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whew! but he came mighty close to me! When I fell down I
+expected to feel his paws on me before I could get up. In a few
+seconds more it would have been all up with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Several minutes passed, and nothing was seen of the Irishman,
+whereupon the lad concluded he might as well go back and gather the
+wood, which would be needed at the camp-fire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder if there&rsquo;s any more of them,&rdquo; he
+muttered, as he began picking his way among the rocks. &ldquo;If
+there are, why Mickey must look out for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He found the sticks just as he had thrown them down and he
+proceeded to regather them, keeping a careful watch for another
+dangerous visitor. All remained quiet, however, and, making his way
+down the wooded slope into the open area, he looked back and found
+that he was still alone. So it continued until he returned to where
+the two mustangs were tethered. There he carefully adjusted the
+sticks and prepared everything, after which he began to feel some
+impatience at the non-appearance of his friend.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He must see more fun in that kind of thing than I do.
+There&rsquo;s no telling what has become of those six Apaches we
+left down in the cave. I feel sure that they&rsquo;ve got above
+ground again. It won&rsquo;t take long for them to find their
+mustangs, or some other horses, and they may be a mile away, and
+there may be other parties close by. Halloa!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred thought that he had no matches about his person; but he was
+making a sort of aimless hunt when he found a solitary lucifer at
+the bottom of his pocket. This he carefully struck against the rock
+behind him, and in a few minutes the camp-fire was started and
+burning merrily.</p>
+<p>As he sat down to wait he looked toward the point where the
+Irishman had vanished from sight. There he was, bearing on his
+shoulders some choice sections of a young antelope he had shot,
+although Fred recalled that he had not heard the report of his gun,
+except when the grizzly was shot. As Mickey came along over the
+same path taken by the boy, he was forced to make a detour around
+the carcass of the bear. He paused to survey it, his whole manner
+betraying great astonishment, as if he had never beheld anything of
+the kind. He walked around the body several times, punched it with
+his foot, and finally, grasping his twenty pounds of meat in his
+right hand, approached the camp-fire.</p>
+<p>Here he at once began the preparations for broiling it. The
+antelope had been of goodly size and he had cut out the most
+luscious portions, so as to avoid carrying back any waste material.
+He had a great deal more than both could eat, it is true, but it
+was a commendable custom with the Irishman to lay in a stock
+against emergencies that were likely to arise.</p>
+<p>While thus employed, it would have been impossible for Mickey to
+hold his tongue.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah, but it was queer, was the same, the way I came
+to cotch this gintleman. I hunted him a little ways, when he made a
+big jump, and I thought had got a long ways off, but when I came to
+folly him, I found he had cornered himself among the rocks, where
+there was no show of getting out, except by coming back on me. The
+minute I showed mesilf, he made a rush for me arms, just as all the
+purty gals in Tipperary used to do when I came along the street. An
+antelope can&rsquo;t do much, but I don&rsquo;t care about their
+coming down on me in that style, and so I pulled up and let drive.
+He was right on me when I pulled trigger, and he made one big jump
+that carried him clear over my head, and landed him stone dead on
+the other side.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was a good shot, but not as good as when you brought
+down the grizzly bear at my heels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney was particularly busy just then with his
+culinary operations, and he stared at the lad with an expression of
+comical amazement that made the young fellow laugh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah, why don&rsquo;t ye talk sinse?&rdquo; added
+Mickey, impatiently. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve heard Soot Simpson say that
+if ye only put your shot in the right spot, ye don&rsquo;t want but
+one of &rsquo;em to trip the biggest grizzly that ever navigated. I
+was going to obsarve that ye had been mighty lucky to send in your
+two pistol-shots just where they settled the business, though I
+s&rsquo;pose the haythen was so close on ye whin ye fired that ye
+almost shoved the weapon into his carcass.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shot him, Mickey, before I fairly started to run, but
+he didn&rsquo;t mind it any more than if I spit in his face. It was
+your own shot that did the business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Me own shot!&rdquo; repeated Mickey, still staring with
+an astonished expression. &ldquo;I never fired any shot at the
+baste, and never saw him till a few minutes ago, when I was coming
+this way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Fred Munson&rsquo;s turn to be astonished, and he asked,
+in his amazed, wondering way:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who, then, fired the shot that killed him? I
+didn&rsquo;t.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought ye did the same, for it was not
+mesilf.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad was more puzzled than ever. He saw that Mickey was in
+earnest, and was telling him the truth, and each, in fact,
+understood that <em>he</em> had been under a misapprehension as to
+who had slain the grizzly bear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The beast was right on me,&rdquo; continued Fred,
+&ldquo;and I didn&rsquo;t think there was any chance for me, when I
+heard the crack of a rifle from the bushes, and, looking back, saw
+that the bear was down on the ground, making his last
+kick.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey let the meat scorch, while he stopped to scratch his
+head, as was his custom when he was in a mental fog.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah, but that is queer, as me mither used to obsarve
+when she found she had not been desaved by belaving what we childer
+told her. There was somebody who was kind enough to knock over the
+grizzly at the most convanient season for ye, and then he
+doesn&rsquo;t choose to send over his card wid his post-office
+address on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who do you think it was, Mickey?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have been some red spalpeen that took pity on ye.
+Who knows but it was Lone Wolf himself?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Both looked about them in a scared, inquiring way, but could see
+nothing of their unknown friend or enemy, as the case might be.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, Mickey, that it makes me feel as if we ought
+to get out of here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;re right, and we&rsquo;ll just swally some of
+this stuff, and then we&rsquo;ll &rsquo;light out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He tossed the lad a goodly-sized piece of meat, which, if
+anything, was overdone. Both ate more rapidly than was consistent
+with hygiene, their eyes continually wandering over the rocks and
+heights around them, in quest of their seemingly ever-present
+enemies, the Apaches. It required but a few moments for them to,
+complete their dinner. Mickey, in accordance with his custom,
+carefully folded up what was left, and, taking a drink from the
+stream which ran near at hand, they sprang upon the backs of their
+mustangs, and headed westward in the direction of New Boston,
+provided such a settlement was still in existence by the grace of
+Lone Wolf, leader of the Apaches.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Mickey, whose spirits seemed to rise
+when he found himself astride of his trusty mustang again,
+&ldquo;if we don&rsquo;t have any bad luck, we ought to be out of
+the mountains by dark.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And after that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then a good long ride across the prairie, and we&rsquo;ll
+be back again wid the folks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How glad I am that father isn&rsquo;t there, that he
+staid at Fort Aubray, for when he comes along in a few weeks, he
+won&rsquo;t know anything about this trouble till I tell him the
+whole story myself, and then it will be too late for him to
+worry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I&rsquo;m glad it&rsquo;s so, for it saams if I had
+a spalpeen of a son off wid Lone Wolf, among the mountains,
+I&rsquo;d feel as bad as if he&rsquo;d gone in swimming where the
+water was over his head. And then it will be so nice to sit down
+and tell the ould gintleman about it, and have him lambaste ye
+&rsquo;cause you wasn&rsquo;t more respictful to Lone Wolf. All
+them things are cheerful, and make the occasion very plisant.
+Begorrah, I should like to know where that old redskin is, for Soot
+Simpson tells me that he is the greatest redskin down in this part
+of the world. He&rsquo;s the spalpeen that robbed a government
+train and made himself a big blanket out of the new greenbaeks that
+he stole. Soot says that there isn&rsquo;t room on his lodge-pole
+for half the scalps that he has taken. Bad luck to the spalpeen, he
+will peel the topknot from the head of a lovely woman, or swaat
+child, such as I used to be, as quick as he would from the crown of
+a man of my size. He&rsquo;s an old riprobate, is the same, and
+Soot says he can niver die resigned and at pace with all mankind
+till he shoots him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be very glad to keep out of his way, if
+he&rsquo;ll keep out of mine. I wonder why he didn&rsquo;t kill me
+when he had the chance, instead of keeping me so long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I s&rsquo;pose he meant to carry ye up where his little
+spalpeens live, and turn ye over to them for their
+amusement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could I amuse them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There be a good many ways. They might have stuck little
+wooden pegs in your hide, then set fire to &rsquo;em, and then
+walked ye round for fireworks; or they might fill your ears with
+powder, and tech it off, and then watched the iligant exprission of
+your countenance. Or they might lave set ye to running up and down
+between two rows of &rsquo;em, about eight or ten miles long, while
+aich stood with a big shillalah in his hand, and banged ye over the
+head with it as ye passed. There be a good many ways, according to
+what Soot told me, but that&rsquo;s enough to show ye that Lone
+Wolf and his folks wouldn&rsquo;t have been at a loss to find
+delightful ways of giving the little childher the innocent sport
+they must have.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t think they would, if that&rsquo;s the
+kind of fun they like,&rdquo; replied the horrified boy.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve thanked the Lord hundreds of times that He helped
+me get out of Lone Wolf&rsquo;s clutches, and my dread is that he
+may catch us before we can get out of the mountain. I don&rsquo;t
+believe we could find as good a chance as I did the other
+night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;re right; that thing couldn&rsquo;t happen
+ag&rsquo;in. Lightning doesn&rsquo;t strike twice in the same
+place; but we&rsquo;ve got good horses, and if he don&rsquo;t pin
+us up in the pass, I think our chance is as good as could be
+asked.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what troubles me,&rdquo; said Fred, who was
+galloping at his side, and who kept continually glancing from the
+tops of the rocks upon the right to the tops upon the left.
+&ldquo;You know there are Indians all over, and I wonder that some
+of them haven&rsquo;t seen us already. S&rsquo;pose they do, and
+they&rsquo;re behind us, they can signal to somebody ahead, and the
+first thing we know, they&rsquo;ve got us shut in on both
+sides.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That thing may happen,&rdquo; replied Mickey, who did not
+appear as apprehensive as his young friend; &ldquo;but I have the
+best of hope that the same won&rsquo;t. I don&rsquo;t think Lone
+Wolf knows we&rsquo;re anywhere around here, and before he can find
+out, I also hope we shall be beyond his raich.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_14" name="Ch_14">Chapter XIV.</a></h3>
+<h2>Between Two Fires.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Mickey had scarcely given utterance to this hopeful remark when
+he drew up his mustang with a spasmodic jerk and exclaimed, in a
+startled in a startled voice:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you see <em>that</em>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he spoke, he pointed some distance ahead, where a faint, thin
+column of smoke was seen rising from the top of the rocks on the
+opposite side of the canon or pass.</p>
+<p>It will be remembered that the pass of which our two friends
+availed themselves is the only one leading through the section of
+the mountains which lies to the eastward of the Rio Pecos. That
+part over which Fred and Mickey were riding showed numerous winding
+trails, made by the hoofs of the horses, as they passed back and
+forth, bearing Apaches, Comanches, Kiowas, and, very rarely, white
+men. At no very distant intervals were observed human skeletons and
+bones, while they were scarcely ever out of sight of the remains of
+horses or wild animals; all of which told their tale of the scenes
+of violence that had taken place in that highway of the
+mountains.</p>
+<p>Sometimes war-parties of the tribes mentioned encountered each
+other in the gorge, and passed each other in sullen silence, or,
+perchance, they dashed together like so many wild beasts, fighting
+with the fury of a thousand Kilkenny cats. It was as the whim
+happened to rule the leaders.</p>
+<p>The rocks rose perpendicularly on both sides to the height of
+fifty and a hundred feet, the upper contour being irregular, and
+varying in every manner imaginable. Along the upper edge of the
+pass grew vegetation, while here and there, along the side, some
+tree managed to obtain a precarious foothold, and sprouted forth
+toward the sun. The floor of the canon was of a varied
+nature&mdash;rocks, boulders, grass, streams of water, gravel,
+sand, and barren soil, alternating with each other and preventing
+anything like an accurate description of any particular section. A
+survey of this curious specimen of nature&rsquo;s highway suggested
+the idea that the solid mountain had been rent for many leagues by
+an earthquake, which, having opened this great seam or rent, had
+left it gradually to adjust itself to the changed order of things,
+and to be availed of by those who were seeking a safe and speedy
+transit through the almost impassable mountains.</p>
+<p>Mickey and Fred checked their mustangs and carefully scrutinized
+the line of smoke. It was several hundred yards in advance, on
+their left, while they were following a trail that led close to the
+right of the canon. They could distinguish nothing at all that
+could give any additional information.</p>
+<p>The fire which gave rise to the vapor had been kindled just far
+enough back to cause the edge of the gorge to protrude itself in
+such a way as to shut it off from the eyes of those below. Indeed,
+it was not to be supposed that those who had the matter in charge
+would commit any oversight which would reveal themselves or their
+purpose to those from whom they desired to keep them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is the same as the camp-fire which troubled the
+three Apaches so much, and which was the means of my giving them
+the slip.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have been started by some other war-party, so
+that their ca&rsquo;c&rsquo;lations were upsit, and you had a
+chance to get away during the muss. It was a sort of free fight,
+you see, in which, instead of staying and getting your head
+cracked, you stepped down and lift.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Unable to make anything of this particular signal-fire, the two
+friends carefully searched for more. Had they been able to discover
+one in the rear, they would have been assured that signaling was
+going on, and they would not have dared to venture forward. Here
+and there along the sides of the canon were openings or crevices,
+generally filled with some sort of a vegetable growth, and into
+most of which quite a number of men could have taken refuge, but
+which, of course, were inaccessible to their horses.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t find anything that resimbles the
+same,&rdquo; said Mickey, alluding to the camp-fire, &ldquo;though
+there may be some one that is seen by the gintlemen who are cooking
+their shins by yon one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will it do to go on?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t do to do anything else. Like enough the
+spalpeen yonder has obsarved us coming, and he knows that
+there&rsquo;s a party behind us, and, being unable to do anything
+himsilf, he starts up the fire so as to scare us, and turn us back
+into the hands of the spalpeens coming in our rear. Mind, I say
+that such may be the case, but I ain&rsquo;t sure that it
+is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shouldn&rsquo;t wonder a bit, now, if that isn&rsquo;t
+it exactly,&rdquo; said Fred, who was quite taken with the
+ingenious theory of his friend. &ldquo;It seems to me that the best
+thing that we can do is to ride on as fast as we can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got to run the risk of it being all wrong,
+and fetching up in the bosom of the spalpeens; but it&rsquo;s
+moighty sure we don&rsquo;t make anything by standing
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Irishman turned his horse as near the middle of the canon as
+possible. Fred kept close to his side, his mustang behaving so
+splendidly that he gave him his unreserved confidence. The average
+width of the pass was about a hundred yards, so it will be
+understood that if a detachment of men were caught within it they
+would be compelled to fight at a fearful disadvantage.</p>
+<p>The plan of Mickey and Fred, as they discussed it while riding
+along, was to keep up the moderate gallop until close upon the
+fire. They would then put their animals to the highest speed and
+pass the dangerous point as speedily as possible. They felt no
+little misgiving as they drew near the dangerous place, and they
+continually glanced upward at the rocks overhead, expecting that a
+party of Indians would suddenly make their appearance and open
+fire.</p>
+<p>The first plan was, as they drew near, to run in as close as
+possible beneath the rocks on the left, in the belief that, as they
+overhung so much, the Indians above could not reach them with a
+shot. But before the time came to make the attempt, it was seen
+that it would not do. Accordingly, Mickey, who had maintained a
+line as close as possible to the centre of the canon, suddenly
+sheered his mustang to the right, until he nearly grazed the wall
+there. Then he put him on a dead run, Fred Munson doing the same,
+with very little space between the two steeds. A few plunges
+brought them directly opposite the signal-fire, and every nerve was
+strained.</p>
+<p>Both beasts were capable of magnificent speed and the still air
+became like a hurricane as the horsemen cut their way through it.
+Fred glanced upward at the crest of the rocks on the left and
+fancied that he saw figures standing there, preparing to fire. He
+hammered his heels against the ribs of his mustang and leaned
+forward upon his neck, in the hope of making the aim as difficult
+as possible.</p>
+<p>Still no reports of guns were heard; and, after continuing the
+terrific gait for a quarter of a mile, they gradually decreased it
+until it became a moderate walk, and the riders again found
+themselves side by side. Both had looked behind them a dozen times
+since passing the dangerous point, but had not obtained a glimpse
+of an Indian.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought I saw a number just as we were opposite,&rdquo;
+said Fred; &ldquo;but, if so, what has become of them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye didn&rsquo;t obsarve any at all, for I kipt raising me
+eye that way, and they weren&rsquo;t there. The whole thing is a
+moighty <em>puzzle</em>, as our tacher used to remark when the sum
+in addition became so big that he had to set down one number and
+carry anither. The spalpeens must have manufactured that fire for
+our benefit, and where&rsquo;s the good that it has done
+them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t it be that it was for something else?
+Can&rsquo;t it be that they took us for Indians, or perhaps they
+haven&rsquo;t seen us at all, and don&rsquo;t know that we&rsquo;ve
+passed?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It does seem as if something of the kind might be, and
+yet that don&rsquo;t sthrike me as the Injin style of doing
+business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They continued their moderate pace for quite a distance further,
+continually looking back toward the camp-fire, the smoke from which
+continued to ascend with the same distinct regularity as before,
+but nothing resembling a warrior was detected. Finally a curve in
+the gorge shut out the troublesome signal, and they were left to
+continue their way and conjecture as much as they chose as to the
+explanation of what had taken place.</p>
+<p>A little later, and when the afternoon was about half gone, they
+reached a portion of the pass which was remarkably straight, so
+that the eye took in a half mile of it, from the beginning to the
+point where another turn intervened. The two friends were galloping
+over this exact section and speculating as to how soon they would
+strike the open prairie, when all their calculations were knocked
+topsy-turvy. A party of horsemen charged around the bend in front,
+all riding at a sweeping gallop directly toward the alarmed Mickey
+and Fred, who instantly halted and surveyed them. A second glance
+showed them to be Indians, undoubtedly Apaches, and very probably
+Lone Wolf himself and some of his warriors.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We must turn back,&rdquo; said the Irishman, wheeling his
+horse about and striking him into a rapid gait. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve
+got to have a dead run for it, and I think we can win. Holy saints
+presarve us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This ejaculation was caused by seeing, at that moment, another
+party of horsemen appear directly in their front, as they turned on
+the back trail. Thus they were shut in on both sides, and fairly
+caught between two fires.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_15" name="Ch_15">Chapter XV.</a></h3>
+<h2>On the Defensive.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>At the moment of reining up their mustangs, the fugitives were
+about equidistant between the two fires, and it was just as
+dangerous to advance as to retreat. For one second the Irishman
+meditated a desperate charge, in the hope of breaking through the
+company that first appeared in his path, and, had he been alone, or
+accompanied by a man, he would have done so. But, slight as was his
+own prospect of escape, he knew there was absolutely none for the
+boy in such a desperate effort, and he determined that it should
+not be made.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t we make a dash straight through them?&rdquo;
+asked Fred, reading the thought of Mickey, as he glanced from one
+to the other, and noted the fearfully rapid approach of the
+redskins.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be done,&rdquo; replied the Irishman.
+&ldquo;There is only one thing left for us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do as I do. Yonder is an opening that may serve us for
+awhile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he spoke, he slipped off his steed, leaving him to work his
+own will. Fred did not hesitate a moment, for there was not a
+moment to spare.</p>
+<p>As he sprang to the ground, he pulled the beautiful Apache
+blanket from the back of the mustang that had served him so well.
+Dragging that with him, the two hurried to the right, making for a
+wooded crevice between the rocks, which seemingly offered a chance
+for them to climb to the surface above, if, in the order of things,
+they should gain the opportunity to do so. Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney,
+as a matter of course, took the lead and in a twinkling he was
+among the gnarled and twisted saplings, the interlacing vines, and
+the rolling stones and rattling gravel. As soon as he had secured a
+foothold, he reached out his hand to help his young friend.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never mind me. I can keep along behind you. Go as fast as
+you can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me have the blanket,&rdquo; said Mickey, drawing it
+from his grasp. &ldquo;Now come ahead, for we have got to go it
+like monkeys.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned and bent to his task with the recklessness of despair,
+for, even in that dreadful crisis, he thought more of the little
+fellow than he did of himself. If he could have been assured of his
+safety, he would have been ready to wheel about and meet his score
+or more of foes, and fight them single-handed, as Leonidas and his
+band did at Thermopyl&aelig;. But the fate of the two was linked
+together, and, sink or swim, it must be fulfilled in company.</p>
+<p>The narrow, wooded ravine, in which they had taken enforced
+refuge, was only three or four feet in width, the bottom sloping
+irregularly upward, at an angle of forty five degrees. So long as
+this continued, so long could they maintain their laboring ascent
+to the top. Mickey had strong hopes that, with the advantage of the
+start, they might reach that point far enough in advance of their
+pursuers to secure some other concealment that would serve them
+till nightfall, when they could steal out and try their chances
+again.</p>
+<p>The saplings growing at every inclination afforded them much
+assistance, as they were able to seize hold with one or both hands,
+and thus help themselves along. But the vines in many places were
+of a peculiar running nature and they frequently caught their feet
+and stumbled; but they were instantly up and at it again. All at
+once Mickey, who was scarcely an arm&rsquo;s length in advance,
+halted so abruptly that Fred ran plump against him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you go on?&rdquo; asked the panting
+lad.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t. Here&rsquo;s the end.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So it was, indeed. While pressing forward with undiminished
+effort, the Irishman found himself suddenly confronted with a
+solid, perpendicular wall of rock. The narrow chasm, or fissure,
+terminated.</p>
+<p>It was like a fugitive, his heart beating high with hope,
+checked in his flight by the obtrusion of the Great Chinese Wall
+across his path. Mickey looked upward. As he stood, he could, with
+outstretched arms, touch the wall on his right and left, and kick
+the one in front&mdash;the only open route being in the rear, which
+was commanded by the Apache party. As he did so, he saw, through
+the interstices of the interweaving, straggling branches, the
+clear, blue sky, with the edge of the fissure fully forty feet
+above his head. His first hope was that some of the saplings around
+him were lofty enough to permit him to use them as a ladder; but
+the tallest did not approach within a half dozen yards of the top.
+They were shut in on every hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t run any further,&rdquo; said the Irishman,
+after a hasty glance at the situation. &ldquo;We are cotched as
+fairly as ever was a mouse in a trap, and it now remains for us to
+peg away, and go under doing the best we can. Have ye your
+pistol?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; I picked it up again, after throwing it in the face
+of the grizzly, but it isn&rsquo;t loaded.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then it ain&rsquo;t of much account, as me mither used to
+say in her affectionate references to me father; but if one of the
+spalpeens happen to come onto ye too suddent like, ye might scare
+him by shoving that into his eyes. I&rsquo;ve got the powder for
+the same, but the bullets won&rsquo;t fit it, so I&rsquo;ll have to
+do the shooting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They were at bay and the Irishman was right in his declaration
+that they could do nothing but fight it out as best they might. The
+question of further flight was settled by the trap in which they
+were caught.</p>
+<p>They paused, expecting to hear the tramp of the Indians behind
+them, but, as it continued quiet, Mickey ventured upon a more
+critical inspection of their fortress, as it may be termed. He
+found little which has not already been mentioned, except the fact
+that the wall on their left sloped inward, as it ascended, to such
+a degree that the width at the top was several feet less than at
+the bottom. This was an important advantage, for, in case they were
+attacked from above, it was in their power to place themselves
+beyond the immediate reach of a whole war party by any means at
+their command.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do ye hear anything?&rdquo; asked Mickey, bending his
+head to listen.</p>
+<p>They were silent a few minutes, during which the occasional
+tramp of a horse&rsquo;s hoof was noted. Beyond a doubt, the entire
+war-party of Apaches were at the mouth of the fissure and probably
+a number had already entered it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They haven&rsquo;t tried to rush in pell-mell,
+head-over-heels,&rdquo; added Mickey, after they had stood thus a
+short time; but they are sneaking along, just as they always do
+when they&rsquo;re on the thrack of a gintleman.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How soon do you think they will be here?&rdquo; asked
+Fred, who had recovered his breath, and who began to feel something
+like a renewal of hope, faint though it might be, at the continued
+silence of their foes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t say, me laddy; but they may come any minute,
+and we must keep eyes and ears open, and be ready to do the last
+act in style. Don&rsquo;t ye mind that we&rsquo;re very much in the
+same fix that we was when cotched in the cave, barring that
+we&rsquo;re worse off here than we were there? If some one should
+let a lasso down from the top, we might climb up just as we did
+there; but that&rsquo;s one of the things that ain&rsquo;t likely
+to happen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose we creep back a ways to see what the Indians are
+doing,&rdquo; ventured Fred, who was puzzled at the silence of
+their enemies, which had now continued for some time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No need of doing that just yet. They&rsquo;ll let us know
+what they&rsquo;re at and what they mane&mdash;whisht!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At that juncture the Irishman detected a movement among the wood
+and undergrowth of the ravine, and his rifle was at his shoulder
+like a flash. Fred understood, or, rather, suspected, the cause of
+the trouble, though he saw nothing. Only a few seconds elapsed when
+the trigger was pulled. The sharp crack of the weapon had scarcely
+broke the stillness when the shriek of a warrior was heard only a
+few feet away, followed by a threshing of the vines and vegetation,
+as the comrades of the slain brave caught and hurriedly dragged him
+back toward the greater ravine beyond.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;ll taich &rsquo;em to be more respictful in
+the traitment of gintlemen,&rdquo; remarked Mickey, who had
+recovered something of his natural recklessness, and was reloading
+his gun with as much <em>sangfroid</em> as though he had just
+dropped an antelope, and wished to be ready for another that was
+expected along the same path.</p>
+<p>Fred had detected the rustling movement among the shrubbery made
+by the redskin in stealing upon them, but he saw nothing of the
+savage himself, and was not a little startled when his friend fired
+so quickly, and the result was so manifest.</p>
+<p>If the victim of this rather hastily fired shot was unable to
+appreciate the lesson from its having a too personal application to
+himself, his companions appreciated it fully. It taught them that
+the way of pursuit was not open and undisputed by any means, and
+the few who were hurrying forward rather rashly were not only
+checked, but forced backward. Matters, for the moment, were brought
+to a stand still.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ll be back again,&rdquo; added Mickey, after
+reloading his piece, &ldquo;and, as they mean to have our topknots,
+as the hunters say, we&rsquo;ll wipe out as many as we kin before
+they git them. And now, me laddy, will ye allow me to make a
+suggestion?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That ye kaap a little more out of raich. If one of the
+spalpeens craap up, and shoots ye dead, ye&rsquo;ll be sorry ye
+didn&rsquo;t take me advice, when ye come to think the matter over
+coolly. Here&rsquo;s a sort of boulder which seems to have cared in
+from above. Do ye squaze in behind that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what will you do?&rdquo; asked Fred, acting upon his
+advice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Being as there isn&rsquo;t room to squaze in wid ye,
+I&rsquo;ll take my stand a little out here, where I can secure the
+protection of a similar piece of masonry, and where the spalpeens
+can&rsquo;t git by me without giving the countersign and showing a
+pass.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad did not specially like this arrangement, as it really
+retired him, but their quarters were so cramped that they had to
+dispose of themselves as best they could. He was obliged to feel
+that practically he was of no account, as his only pistol had
+become useless hours before. Accordingly, he forced himself in
+behind the boulder pointed out, and found that his position was
+safe against any treacherous shot from the front.</p>
+<p>He was uneasy, however, about the open space above him, for it
+struck him that it would be so easy for any of their foes to roll
+the rocks down upon their heads. When he came to examine the
+situation more critically, he was not a little relieved to find
+that he was protected by the sloping wall, already mentioned. A
+heavy stone heaved over the opening above might really weigh a ton,
+and come crashing downward with terrific force, but no skill could,
+at the start, cause its course to be such as to injure the lad. He
+therefore concluded that his friend Mickey was not unwise in
+placing him in such a refuge.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_16" name="Ch_16">Chapter XVI.</a></h3>
+<h2>Friend or Enemy?</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>It can scarcely be said that either of the fugitives had any
+definite hope of escape, for neither was able to see how the thing
+was possible. Mickey knew that occasionally, in the affairs of the
+world, seemingly providential interferences had occurred, but he
+looked for nothing of the kind. He considered that there would be a
+siege, lasting perhaps several days, then a desperate hand-to-hand
+struggle, and then.</p>
+<p>The summary manner in which the Irishman disposed of the first
+Apache who showed himself brought matters to a standstill. In this
+condition they probably would have remained but for the Irishman
+himself, who saw nothing to be gained by inaction. Turning his
+head, he whispered to Fred:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do ye kape quiet, me laddy, till my return. I am going to
+take a look around.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The boy offered no objection, for he knew it would not be
+heeded, and Mickey moved away. It required the greatest care to
+pick his way down the fissure, as the stones and gravel were liable
+to turn under his feet and betray his approach, and it was much
+easier to go forward than backward.</p>
+<p>The fissure which had afforded this temporary refuge was about
+fifty feet in length, and the vegetation was so thick that at
+almost any portion the view was no greater than three or four
+yards. Mickey was in constant expectation of encountering some of
+the Apaches at every step he took, and, in accordance with his
+principle of hitting a head wherever he saw it, he held his rifle
+so as to fire on the very instant the coppery face presented itself
+to view. But he saw none, and as he advanced he began to believe
+that the place was entirely free of the Apaches, who, if prudent,
+would quietly wait on the outside until their prey dropped into
+their hands.</p>
+<p>It was not to be supposed that they would leave any opening on
+the outside by which the most forlorn chance could be obtained, and
+Mickey had no thought of any such thing. If he had, it would have
+been dissipated by the evidence of his own ears. He could hear
+distinctly their peculiar grunting voices, the tramp of their
+mustangs, and the evidence which a score of Indian warriors might
+be expected to give of their presence, when they had no reason for
+concealment.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may be that the spalpeens mean to make a rush upon
+me,&rdquo; he muttered, as he halted near the end of the fissure,
+&ldquo;in which case I shall have a delightful employment in
+cracking their pates as they come up and take their
+turn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He remained where he was a few minutes longer, and, seeing no
+prospect of learning anything additional, he resumed his advance
+until he reached a point where it was only necessary to draw the
+branches slightly apart to gain a view of the main ravine. And this
+he proceeded to do in the gentlest and most cautious manner
+possible.</p>
+<p>The view was satisfactory, as it showed him that the Apaches
+were gathered at the entrance to the fissure and were taking
+matters very coolly and philosophically. Several were on horses,
+and a number on foot. Among the mustangs moving about, the Irishman
+recognized his own, astride of which was a dirty-looking Apache,
+with a wide mouth and broken nose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye ould spalpeen,&rdquo; muttered the indignant Irishman,
+&ldquo;if it wasn&rsquo;t for fear of spoiling your wonderful
+booty, I&rsquo;d turn you somersets off that hoss of mine, which I
+shall have to whitewash after getting him back, on account of your
+contact wid the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey was strongly tempted to send a bullet after the
+tantalizing horse-thief, but he thought he could wait awhile. He
+was extremely cautious in making his stealthy view, only moving
+enough leaves to permit the service of his eyes and he had not
+enjoyed this prospect long before he believed that he had been
+detected.</p>
+<p>Of the twenty-odd members comprising the Apache party, about a
+dozen were constantly in view, the others being too far to the
+right or left to be seen. The group was an irregular and straggling
+one, the most interesting portion being five or six, who stood
+close together, exactly at the base of the fissure, talking with
+each other. It was impossible that there should be more than one
+subject of discussion; and the dispute, as Mickey suspected, was as
+to the precise method of disposing of the job which had been placed
+in their hands.</p>
+<p>Some, evidently, favored a daring charge directly up the narrow
+ravine, with its short, fierce encounter and sure victory. Others
+had a different plan, and their gestures led the eavesdropper to
+suspect that they advocated reaching them from the roof, while it
+was apparent that there were those who insisted upon waiting until
+the fruit should become ripe enough to fall into their laps without
+shaking. There could be little doubt that the Apaches preferred to
+take both prisoners, instead of shooting or tomahawking them in a
+fight. They were under the inspiration of Lone Wolf, who believed
+that a live man was much more valuable than a dead one.</p>
+<p>While Mickey was watching this group with an interest which may
+be imagined, he noticed that a short, thick, greasy, filthy warrior
+was looking directly toward him, with a steadiness which caused the
+Irishman to suspect that his presence was known. The Indian, like
+all of them, was as homely as he could be. He, too, had gone
+through an attack of smallpox, which had left his broad face so
+deeply pitted that it could be noticed through the vari-colored
+paint which was daubed thereon. There was scarcely any forehead,
+the black, piercing eyes were far apart, and when Mickey saw them
+turned toward him, he felt anything but comfortable under their
+fire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder whether he would keep mum if I should tip him
+the wink?&rdquo; thought Mickey, who suffered the leaves in front
+of his face to close until there was just the smallest space
+through which he could watch his man.</p>
+<p>The latter acted very much as if he suspected the proximity of
+the Irishman, even if he was not assured of it. He continued
+looking directly at the point where the eyes of the white man
+peered out upon him, and by-and-by he raised his arm and pointed in
+the same direction, saying something at the same time to a couple
+of the warriors near him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers, if that doesn&rsquo;t mane <em>me</em>, as
+me friend Larry O&rsquo;Toole said when the judge axed for the
+biggest rascal in coort. I&rsquo;ll have to retire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this juncture a strange occurrence took place. Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney was looking straight at the man, when he saw him
+fling up his arms, yell and pitch forward to the ground, while the
+group instantly scattered, as if a bombshell had dropped at their
+feet.</p>
+<p>Just a second previous to this strange death, Mickey heard the
+report of a rifle, showing that the warrior had been shot by some
+one at quite a distance from the spot, which shot, at the game
+time, caused a temporary panic among the others.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well, now, if that doesn&rsquo;t bate
+everything!&rdquo; exclaimed the amazed Irishman. &ldquo;Just as I
+was thinking of raising my gun to give that spalpeen his
+walking-papers, up steps some gintleman and saves me the trouble;
+<em>but who was the gintleman</em>? is the question.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The inexplicable occurrence naturally recalled Fred
+Munson&rsquo;s adventure with the grizzly bear. When he needed
+assistance most sorely, the shot was fired that saved his life.
+Could it be that the same party had interfered in the present
+instance? There was plenty of ground for speculation, and the
+Irishman was disposed to believe that the diversion came from some
+small party of Kiowas or Comanches, who had a special enmity
+against this company of Apaches, and who, being too weak to attack
+them, took this means of revenging themselves.</p>
+<p>It was unsafe, however, to count upon the well-aimed shot as
+meant in the interest of the whites, although the one that brought
+down the grizzly bear could not have been meant for anything else
+than a direct help to the imperiled lad. The Southwest has been
+noted for what are termed &ldquo;triangular fights.&rdquo; A party
+of Americans have been driven at bay by an overwhelming number of
+Mexicans or greasers, who have suddenly found themselves attacked
+by a party of howling Comanches. The latter have scattered the
+Mexicans like chaff, the Americans acting the part of spectators
+until the rout was complete, when the Comanches turned about and
+sailed into the Americans. The Kiowas, Comanches, Apaches, Mexicans
+and Americans afforded just the elements for a complication of
+guerilla warfare, in which matters frequently became mixed to a
+wonderful degree.</p>
+<p>The hand that had fired this shot against a mortal foe of Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney might be turned against him the next hour. Who could
+tell?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If that gintleman begins the serenade from the other
+side, it&rsquo;s me bounden duty to kaap it up from this,&rdquo;
+concluded the Irishman, as he cocked his rifle and awaited his
+chance.</p>
+<p>It was not long in coming. Only a few minutes had passed after
+the shot, when a couple of Apaches walked rapidly to view, and,
+approaching the remains of their comrade, stooped down to carry him
+away.</p>
+<p>Mickey allowed them to get fairly started, when he blazed away
+at the foremost, and had the satisfaction of seeing the rear Apache
+not only deprived of his assistance, but his duty suddenly doubled.
+The warrior, however, stuck pluckily to the work, and dragged both
+out of view without any assistance from those who were ready to
+rush to his help.</p>
+<p>These two, or rather three, rifle shots produced the strongest
+kind of effect upon the Apaches. They could not well fail to do so,
+for they were not only fired with unerring aim, but they came from
+such diverse points as to show the redskins that instead of having
+their enemies cooped up in this narrow ravine, they had, in one
+sense, placed themselves between two fires.</p>
+<p>Hurriedly reloading his rifle, Mickey waited several minutes,
+determined to fire the instant he got the chance, with the purpose
+of enhancing the demoralization of the wretches. But they had
+received enough to teach them caution, and as the minutes passed,
+they failed to expose themselves. They had taken to shelter
+somewhere, and were not yet ready to uncover.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When Mickey had waited a considerable time, he concluded
+to rejoin Fred Munson, who, no doubt, was anxious over the result
+of his reconnoissance. When he returned he found him seated upon
+the boulder, instead of behind it. The Irishman hastily explained
+what had taken place, and added:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know what they will do next, but
+we&rsquo;ve give the spalpeens a dose that will kaap them in the
+background for a while.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, it won&rsquo;t, either,&rdquo; was the significant
+response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you maan, me laddy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I mean that the Apaches, or some of them, anyway, have
+changed their base. I&rsquo;ve heard something overhead that makes
+me sure they&rsquo;re up there, getting up some kind of
+deviltry.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_17" name="Ch_17">Chapter XVII.</a></h3>
+<h2>A Fortunate Diversion.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney had not thought of the
+&ldquo;opening&rdquo; over their heads since the firing of his
+rifle-shot, and he now started and looked upward, as if fearful
+that he had committed a fatal oversight. But he saw or heard
+nothing to excite alarm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where are they?&rdquo; he asked, in a whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re up there. I&rsquo;ve seen them peep down
+more than once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What were they paaping for?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose to find out where we were.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers, but I showed them where I was when I fired
+me gun!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That maybe; but you didn&rsquo;t stay there, and perhaps
+they were looking for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did they find ye?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t think they did. You know I was in behind
+the boulder, with my head thrown back, so that it was easy for me
+to look up, and there wasn&rsquo;t enough branches and leaves over
+my head to shut out my view; so I lay there looking up, watching
+and listening, when I saw an Indian peep over the top there, as
+though he was looking for us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did ye see more than one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure there were two, and I think three.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They didn&rsquo;t ax ye any question?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t hear any.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What d&rsquo;ye s&rsquo;pose they mean to try?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought they meant to find out where we are hiding, and
+then roll stones down on us. They can do that, you know, without
+our getting a chance to stop them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we squaze in under that same place,&rdquo; said
+Mickey, indicating the inward slope of the rock, they can&rsquo;t
+hit us; but I don&rsquo;t believe that such is their
+intention.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you suppose it to be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s hard to say; but these varmints ain&rsquo;t
+ready to shoot us jist yet. Leastaways, they don&rsquo;t want to do
+so, until they&rsquo;re sure there ain&rsquo;t anything else lift
+for &rsquo;em to&rsquo;do.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They wish to make us prisoners?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s it, exactly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, if they are willing to wait, they&rsquo;ll be sure
+to have us, for there isn&rsquo;t any water here for us to drink,
+and we can&rsquo;t get along without that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Irishman suddenly slapped his chest and side, as though he
+missed something from the pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And be the powers!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve
+lost that mate, and there must have been enough to last us a wake
+or two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could you have lost that?&rdquo; asked Fred, who was
+much disappointed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It must have slid out when we were riding so hard, or
+else when we lift our horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure it wasn&rsquo;t lost somewhere among these
+trees, where we can get it again?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But he was confident that such was not the case, and he was not
+disposed to mourn the loss a great deal. They could do longer
+without food than they could without drink, and he was of the
+opinion that this problem would be solved before they were likely
+to perish from the want of either.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did ye get a fair look at any of the spalpeens that was
+so ill-mannered as to paap down on ye?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; and there was one&mdash;&rsquo;Sh! there he is
+now!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two peered upward through the leaves, and saw the head and
+shoulders of an Apache, who was looking down into the ravine. He
+was not directly above them, but a dozen feet off to the left. He
+seemed to be trying to locate the party that had fired two such
+fatal shots, and therefore could not have known where he was.</p>
+<p>The face of the Indian could be seen very distinctly, and it was
+one with more individual character than any Mickey had as yet
+noticed. It was not handsome nor very homely, but that of a man in
+the prime of life, with a prominent nose&mdash;a regular contour of
+countenance for an Indian. The face was painted, as was the long
+black hair which dangled about his shoulders. His eye was a
+powerful black one, which flitted restlessly, as he keenly searched
+the ravine below.</p>
+<p>Not seeing that which he wished, he arose to his feet, and
+walked slowly along and away from where the fugitives were
+crouching. That is, his face was turned toward the main ravine or
+pass, while he stepped upon the very edge of the fissure, moving
+with a certain deliberation and dignity, as he searched the space
+below for the man and boy whom he was so anxious to secure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder if he ain&rsquo;t the leader?&rdquo; said
+Mickey, in a whisper. &ldquo;I never saw better shtyle than
+that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should think he was the leader. Don&rsquo;t you know
+him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How should I know him? I never traveled much in Injun
+society. Are ye and him acquainted?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s Lone Wolf&mdash;their great
+war-chief.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye don&rsquo;t say so?&rdquo; exclaimed the astonished
+Irishman, staring at him. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s just the spalpeen I
+loaded me gun for, and here goes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Softly raising the hammer of his rifle, he lifted the weapon to
+his shoulder; but before he could make his aim certain, the red
+scamp stepped aside and vanished from view.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, that&rsquo;s enough to break a man&rsquo;s
+heart!&rdquo; wailed the chagrined Mickey. &ldquo;Why wasn&rsquo;t
+the spalpeen thoughtful and kind enough to wait until I could have
+made sartin of him? But sorra and disappointment await us all, as
+Barney Mulligan said when his friend wouldn&rsquo;t fight him.
+Maybe he&rsquo;ll show himsilf agin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Whether or not Lone Wolf learned of the precise location of the
+parties for whom he was searching can only be conjectured; but
+during the ten minutes that Mickey held his weapon ready to shoot
+him at sight, he took good care to keep altogether invisible.</p>
+<p>The Irishman was still looking for his reappearance, when
+another singular occurrence took place. There was a whoop, or
+rather howl, followed by a fall of a warrior, who was so near the
+edge of the narrow ravine that when he came down, a portion of his
+body was seen by those below. The dull and rather distant report of
+a gun told the curious story.</p>
+<p>The same rifle that had picked off one of the Apaches at the
+mouth of the fissure had done the same thing in the case of one at
+the top. The aim in both instances was unerring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Freddy, me lad,&rdquo; said Mickey, a moment later,
+&ldquo;whin we rushed in here wid the spalpeens snapping at our
+heels, I hadn&rsquo;t any more hope that we&rsquo;d ever get clear
+of &rsquo;em than the man who was transported to Botany Bay had of
+cutting out Prince Albert in Queen Victoria&rsquo;s
+graces.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you any more hope <em>now</em>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have; we&rsquo;ve got a friend on the outside, and
+he&rsquo;s doing us good sarvice, as he has already proved. If Lone
+Wolf wasn&rsquo;t among that crowd, I don&rsquo;t belave they would
+stay after what has took place; there&rsquo;s nothing to scare an
+Injun like them things which he don&rsquo;t understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should think that that rifle-shot is proof enough that
+somebody is firing into them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers, but ye know little of Injin devilments, as
+I&rsquo;ve larned &rsquo;em from Soot Simpson. How do ye know but
+that&rsquo;s a thrick to make these Apaches belave that
+there&rsquo;s but a single Kiowa over there popping at them, when
+there may be half a hundred waiting for the chance to clean them
+out?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maybe that is Sut himself; you know you have been
+expecting him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It can&rsquo;t be him,&rdquo; replied Mickey, with a
+shake of his head. &ldquo;He would have showed himself long ago,
+when he could be sure of helping us. There must be some redskins
+over there that have put up a job on Lone Wolf and his
+scamps.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoever it is, whether one or a dozen, they are helping
+us mightily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it looks, though they don&rsquo;t mean it for that,
+and after driving these spalpeens away, they may come over to clean
+us out themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nothing was heard of the redskins above for a considerable time
+after the shot mentioned. Then the body was suddenly whisked out of
+sight. It is a principle with Indians to bring away their dead from
+any fight in which they may have fallen. At the imminent risk of
+losing his own life a warrior had stolen up and drawn away the
+remains of his former comrade.</p>
+<p>The mysterious shots seemed to come from the other side of the
+ravine, and they naturally had a very demoralizing effect upon the
+party. Lone Wolf was not only brave, but sagacious and prudent. He
+was not the chief to allow his warriors to stand idly and permit
+themselves to be picked off one by one by an unseen enemy. But for
+the latter, he would have descended into the fissure, and, with
+several of his most reliable braves, captured and secured Mickey
+and his companion at all hazards. But what assurance could he have
+that after he and his men had entered the little ravine, a whole
+party of Kiowas would not swarm in, overwhelm them, and make off
+with their horses? So the leader concluded for the time being to
+remain outside, where his line of retreat would be open, while he
+could arrange his plans for disposing of the whites at his
+leisure.</p>
+<p>Lone Wolf dispatched two of his most skillful scouts, one to the
+right, the other to the left, with orders to get to the rear of the
+enemy, no matter how long a detour was necessary. In case they were
+unable to extinguish them, they were to signal or return for
+assistance. After sending off his trusty messengers, Lone Wolf
+concluded to hold back until their return, keeping himself and his
+braves pretty well concealed, but guarding against the capture of
+their horses in the ravine below, or the escape of the two
+fugitives, who might attempt to take advantage of the
+diversion.</p>
+<p>At the end of an hour, nothing had been seen or heard of the
+Apache scouts sent out, and the chief dispatched another to learn
+what was going on, and what was the cause of the trouble. During
+this hour not a rifle-shot was detected by the waiting, listening
+ears. Another half hour passed away, and the third man sent out by
+Lone Wolf came back alone, and with astounding tidings.</p>
+<p>He had found both of the warriors lying within a few yards of
+each other, stone dead. He sought for some explanation of the
+strange occurrence, but found none, and returned with the news to
+his leader.</p>
+<p>The latter was about as furious as a wild Indian could be,
+without exploding. Lone Wolf had his own theory of the thing, and
+he inquired particularly as to the manner in which the fatal wounds
+seemed to have been inflicted. When they were described, all doubt
+was removed from the mind of the chieftain.</p>
+<p>He knew where the fatal shots came from, and he determined that
+there was no better time to &ldquo;square accounts.&rdquo; Calling
+the larger portion of his company about him, he started backward
+and away from the ravine, his purpose being to reach the rear of
+his enemy by a long detour.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_18" name="Ch_18">Chapter XVIII.</a></h3>
+<h2>An Old Acquaintance.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>All this was grist for Mickey and Fred. The long silence and
+inaction&mdash;so far as these two were concerned&mdash;of the
+Apaches convinced the fugitives that some important interruption
+was going on, and that it could not fail to operate in the most
+direct way in their favor. It was well into the afternoon when the
+collision occurred between them and the Apaches, and enough time
+had already passed to bring the night quite close at hand. An hour
+or so more, and darkness would be upon them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t belave the spalpeens have found put just
+the precise spot where we&rsquo;ve stowed away,&rdquo; said Mickey,
+in his cautious undertone, to his companion, &ldquo;for I&rsquo;ve
+no evidence that such is the case.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They may take it into their heads to come into the
+fissure again, and then where are we?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right here, every time. We couldn&rsquo;t get a better
+spot, unless it might be at the mouth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you think we had better go there?&rdquo;
+asked the lad, who could not feel the assurance of his friend.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I see nothing to be gained by the same, as Tim
+O&rsquo;Loony said when some one told him that honesty was the best
+policy. If we start to return there, they&rsquo;ll find out where
+we are, and begin to roll stones on us. I don&rsquo;t want to go
+along, dodging rocks as big as a house, wid an occasional
+rifle-shot thrown in, by way of variety.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you fear they will creep in and try to
+surprise us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not before dark, and then we can shift our
+position.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you believe there is any hope at all for us in the way
+of getting out?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Irishman was careful not to arouse too strong hopes in the
+breast of the lad, and he tried to be guarded in his reply:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;An hour ago I would have sworn if there war a half-dozen
+of us in here, there was no show of our getting away wid our
+top-knots, for the raison that there is but one hole through which
+we could sneak, and there&rsquo;s twenty of &rsquo;em sitting round
+there, and watching for us; but I faal that there is some ground
+for hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What reason for your saying there is hope? Isn&rsquo;t it
+just as hard to get out the front without being seen?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It might be just now; but there&rsquo;s no telling what
+them ither spalpeens mane to do arter the sun goes down.
+S&rsquo;pose they get Lone Wolf and his men in such a big fight
+that they&rsquo;d have their hands full, what&rsquo;s to hinder our
+sneaking out the back-door during the rumpus, hunting up our
+mustangs, or somebody else&rsquo;s, and resooming our journey to
+New Boston, which these spalpeens were so impertinent as to
+interrupt a short time since?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred Munson felt that this was about as rose-colored a view as
+could be taken, and indeed a great deal rosier than the situation
+warranted&mdash;at least, in his opinion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mickey, if that isn&rsquo;t counting chickens before
+they&rsquo;re hatched, I don&rsquo;t know what is! While
+you&rsquo;re supposing things, suppose these Indians don&rsquo;t do
+all that, where&rsquo;s going to come our chance of creeping out
+without their knowing it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey scratched his head in his puzzled way, and replied:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry to obsarve that ye persist in axing
+knotty questions, as I reproved me landlord for doing in the ould
+country, when he found me digging praities in his patch.
+There&rsquo;s a good many ways in which we may get a chance to
+craap out, and I&rsquo;m bound to say there be a good many more by
+which we can&rsquo;t; but the good Lord has been so good to us,
+that I can&rsquo;t help belaving He won&rsquo;t let us drop jist
+yet, though He may think that the best thing for us both will be to
+let the varmints come in and scalp us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a good deal of hope in the Irishman, and a certain
+contagion marked it, which Fred Munson felt, but he could not
+entertain as much of it as did his older and more experienced
+friend. Still, he was ready to make any attempt which offered the
+least chance of flight. He was hungry and thirsty, and there was no
+way of supplying the wants, and he dreaded the night of suffering
+to be succeeded by the still more tormenting day.</p>
+<p>It was very warm in the ravine, where not a stir of air could
+reach them. If they suffered themselves to be cooped up there
+through the night, they would be certain to continue there during
+the following day, for it was not to be expected by the wildest
+enthusiast that any way of escape presented itself under the broad
+sunlight. The following night must find them more weakened in every
+respect; for the chewing of leaves, while it might afford temporary
+relief, could not be expected to amount to much in a run of
+twenty-four hours. Clearly, if anything at all was to be done or
+attempted, it should not be deferred beyond the evening, which was
+now so close at hand.</p>
+<p>But the objection again came up that whatever Mickey and Fred
+decided on, hinged upon the action of parties with whom they had
+nothing to do, and with whom, as a matter of course, it was
+impossible to communicate. If the Kiowas, as they were suspected to
+be, should choose to draw off and have nothing further to do with
+the business, the situation of the fugitives must become as
+despairing and hopeless as in the first case.</p>
+<p>There perhaps was some reason for the declaration of Mickey that
+the strangers (their allies for the time being) were a great deal
+more likely to perform their mission before the sun should rise
+again. Consequently, the next few hours were likely to settle the
+question one way or the other.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know whether any of the Apaches are still up
+there?&rdquo; asked Fred.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; there be one or two. I&rsquo;ve seen &rsquo;em since
+we&rsquo;ve been talking, but they&rsquo;re a good deal more
+careful of showing their ugly faces. They paap over now and then,
+and dodge back agin, before I can get a chance to pop
+away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Would you try and shoot them if you had the
+chance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not just yet, for it would show &rsquo;em where we are,
+and they would be likely to bother us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two carried out this policy of keeping their precise
+location from the Indians so long as it was possible, which would
+have been a very short time, but for the terror inspired among the
+Apaches from the shots across the pass. Mickey had no suspicion
+that Lone Wolf and his best warriors were absent on a hunt for the
+annoying cause of these shots. Had he known it, he might have been
+tempted upon a reconnoissance of his own before sunset, and so it
+was well, perhaps, that he remained in ignorance.</p>
+<p>Within the next hour night descended, and the ravine, excluding
+the rays of the moon, became so dark that Mickey believed it safe
+to venture out of their niche and approach the pass, into which
+they had no idea of entering until the ground had been thoroughly
+reconnoitered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The spalpeens will be listening,&rdquo; whispered Mickey,
+as they crept out, &ldquo;and so ye naadn&rsquo;t indulge in any
+whistling, or hurrahing, or dancing jigs on the way to our
+destination.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred appreciated their common peril too well to allow any
+betrayal through his remissness. Favored by the darkness, they
+crept carefully along over the rocks and boulders, and through the
+vines and vegetation, until they were so close that the man
+halted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do ye mind and kaap as still as a dead man, for
+we&rsquo;re so close now that it won&rsquo;t do to go any closer
+till we know what the spalpeens are doing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two occupied this position for some time, during which
+nothing caught their ears to betray the presence of men or animals.
+Feeling the great value of time, Mickey was on the point of
+creeping forth, when he became aware that there was somebody moving
+near him. The sound was very slight, but the proof was all the more
+positive on that account; for it is only by such means that the
+professional scout judges of the proceedings of a foe near him.</p>
+<p>His first dread was that the individual was in the rear, having
+entered the fissure while they were at the opposite end, and then
+allowed them to pass by him. But when the faint rustling caught his
+ear again there could be no doubt that it was in front of him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One of the spalpeens&mdash;and maybe Lone Wolf
+himself&mdash;coming in to larn about our health,&rdquo; was his
+conclusion, though the situation was too critical to allow him to
+communicate with the lad behind him.</p>
+<p>Reaching his hand back, he touched his arm, as a warning for the
+most perfect silence.</p>
+<p>The boulder against which he was partly resting was no more
+quiet and motionless than Fred, who had nerved himself to meet the
+worst or best fortune. A few minutes more listening satisfied
+Mickey that the redskin was not a dozen feet in front, and that a
+particularly large boulder, which was partly revealed by some stray
+moonlight that made its way through the limbs and branches, was
+sheltering the scout. Not only that, but he became convinced that
+the Indian was moving around the left side of the rock, hugging it
+and keeping so close to the ground that the faintest shadowy
+resemblance of a human figure could not be detected.</p>
+<p>It was at this juncture that the Irishman determined upon a
+performance perfectly characteristic and amusing in its
+originality. Carefully drawing his knife from his pocket, he
+managed to cut a switch, some five or six feet in length, the end
+of which was slightly split. He next took one of his matches, and
+struck it against the rock, holding and nursing the flame so far
+down behind it that not the slightest sign of it could be seen from
+the outside. Before the match had cleared itself of the brimstone,
+Mickey secured the other end of the stick in his hand. His next
+proceeding was to raise this stick, move it around in front, and
+then suddenly extend it at arms length. This brought the burning
+match into the dense shadow alongside the rock, and directly over
+the head of the amazed scout. The Hibernian character of the act
+was, that while it revealed to him his man, it also, although in a
+less degree, betrayed the location of Mickey himself, whose
+delighted astonishment may be imagined, when, instead of discerning
+a crouching, painted Apache, he recognized the familiar figure of
+Sut Simpson, the scout.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What in thunder are ye driving at?&rdquo; growled the no
+less astonished Sut, as the flame was almost brought against his
+face. &ldquo;Do yer take me for a kag of powder, and do ye want to
+touch me off?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but I was thinking that that long, red nose of yourn
+was so full of whiskey that it would burn, and I wanted to make
+sartin.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_19" name="Ch_19">Chapter XIX.</a></h3>
+<h2>How it was Done.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>From the very depths of despair, Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney and Fred
+Munson were lifted to the most buoyant heights of hope.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I always took yer for a hoodlum,&rdquo; growled the
+scout; &ldquo;but you&rsquo;ve just showed yerself a bigger one
+than I s&rsquo;posed. Yer orter fetched a lantern with yer, so as
+to use nights in walking round the country, and looking for
+folks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah, if that isn&rsquo;t the idaa!&rdquo; responded
+the Irishman, with mock enthusiasm; &ldquo;only I was considering
+wouldn&rsquo;t it be as well to call out the name of me friends. Ye
+know what a swate voice I have. When I used to thry and sing in
+choorch, the ould gintleman always lambasted me for filing the saw
+on Sunday. But why don&rsquo;t ye craap forward and extend me yer
+paw, as the bear said to the man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sut, however, did not move, but retained his crouching position
+beside the large boulder, speaking in the lowest and most guarded
+voice:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It won&rsquo;t do; we haven&rsquo;t any time to fool away
+yerabouts. Is that younker wid yer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Right at me heels, as me uncle concluded when the bulldog
+nabbed him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come ahead, then. Shoot me! but this ain&rsquo;t a
+healthy place to loaf in just now. The &rsquo;Paches are too plenty
+and too close. We must light out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sha&rsquo;n&rsquo;t I shtrike anither match to
+<em>light</em> us out by?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold your tongue, will you? Creep right along behind me,
+without making any noise at all, and don&rsquo;t rise to your feet
+till yer see me do it, and don&rsquo;t open your meat-traps to
+speak till I axes yer a question, if it isn&rsquo;t till a month
+from now. Do yer understand me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey replied that he had a general idea of his meaning, and he
+might as well go ahead with the circus. Fred had caught the
+whispered conversation, and, of course, knew what it meant. As
+Mickey turned round to see where he was, he found him at his
+elbow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sh! Come ahead, now. We&rsquo;re going to creep straight
+across the pass till we reach t&rsquo;other side, when we&rsquo;ll
+go down that some ways, and I&rsquo;ll tell yer the
+rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A second or two afterward the long, wiry frame of the scout
+emerged from the dense shadow at the side of the boulder, and crept
+forward in the direction of the middle of the main ravine or pass.
+Close behind him followed Mickey and Fred, the trio forming a
+curious procession as they carefully picked their way across the
+moonlit gorge, the grass for most of the distance being so dense
+that they were pretty well screened from view.</p>
+<p>The directions of the scout were carefully obeyed to the letter,
+for, indeed, there could have been no excuse for disregarding them.
+He understood perfectly the nature of the task he had undertaken,
+and the risk he ran was entirely for the benefit of his
+friends.</p>
+<p>One of the first and most important requisites of a scout is
+patience, without which he is sure to commit all manner of errors.
+In the present case, it seemed to Fred that much valuable time
+could be saved if they would simply rise to their feet and make a
+dash straight across the ravine. Even Mickey was of the same
+opinion, at least to the extent of varying the pace so as to go
+slowly part of the time and rapidly the rest, as the ground became
+unfavorable or favorable. But it was very clear that Sut Simpson
+held very different views.</p>
+<p>A piece of machinery could not have advanced with a more regular
+movement than did he&mdash;a movement that was excessively trying
+to an impatient person who could not understand his reason for it.
+Mickey could see that he turned his head from side to side, and was
+using his eyes and ears to the extent of their ability. At the end
+of some fifteen or twenty minutes the base of the perpendicular
+wall on the opposite side was reached, and, greatly to the relief
+of his companions, he arose to his feet, they following suit.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah, but that&rsquo;s a swate relief, as me Aunt
+Bridget obsarved, when her ould man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A turn of the head, and an impatient gesture from the scout,
+silenced Mickey before he had time to complete the remark. He
+subsided instantly, and began a debate with himself as to whether
+he ought not to apologize for his forgetfulness, but he concluded
+to wait.</p>
+<p>The long, lank figure of Sut Simpson looked as if it was a
+shadow slowly stealing along the dark face of the rock, followed by
+that of Mickey and the lad. They were as silent as phantoms, each
+walking as tenderly and carefully as though he was a burglar
+breaking into the house of some sleeping merchant, whose slumbers
+were as light as down. Mickey had no doubt that this was continued
+twice as long as necessary, although he conscientiously strove to
+carry out the wishes of the scout in that respect. He stumbled once
+or twice, but that was because of the treacherous nature of the
+ground.</p>
+<p>They must have journeyed fully a quarter of a mile in this
+fashion before Sut held up in the least. During all this time, so
+far as Mickey could judge, nothing had been seen or heard of the
+Apaches, who, supposedly, would have guarded the outlet, in which
+the two had taken refuge, with a closeness that could not have
+permitted such an escape; but not one had been encountered.</p>
+<p>It was a most extraordinary occurrence all through, and Mickey
+found it hard to understand how one man, skilled and brave though
+he was, could perform such a herculean task, for there could be no
+doubt that to him, under Providence, belonged the exclusive credit.
+Of course it was Sut who had fired the shot that saved Fred from a
+terrible death by the grizzly bear, and his well aimed and
+opportune shots had done the fugitives inestimable service when
+they were crouching in the fissure and despairing of all hope. But
+there must have been something back of all this. The scout must
+have possessed a greater power, which had not become manifest to
+his friends as yet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now yer can walk with more ease,&rdquo; he said, as he
+dropped back beside his companions; &ldquo;but, at the same time,
+don&rsquo;t talk too loud. Let us all keep as much in the shadder
+as we kin, for there may be other varmints around, and
+there&rsquo;s no telling when you&rsquo;re likely to run agin
+&rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But where are the spalpeens that shut us up in that split
+in the rocks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re all behind us, every varmint of them, and
+thar they&rsquo;re likely to stay for awhile; but, Mickey, I want
+yer to tell me what happened arter we parted among these mountains,
+and took different routes far the younker here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Irishman related his experience in as brief a manner as
+possible, the scout listening with a great deal of interest, and
+asking a question or two.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The luck was yer&rsquo;s,&rdquo; he said, when the
+narrator concluded, &ldquo;of gettin&rsquo; on the right track,
+while I got on the wrong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey scratched his head in his old quizzical way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The same luck befell the spalpeens and mesilf. I first
+got on their thrack, and then they got on mine, so we&rsquo;ll call
+that square, as Mike Harrigan did when he went back the second
+night and took the other goat so as to make a pair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was nigh onto a bad fix when yer pitched into that
+cave, and couldn&rsquo;t find the way out till the wolf showed the
+younker; but it wasn&rsquo;t so bad as yer think, &rsquo;cause
+I&rsquo;d been sure to find yer war thar. I know the way in and out
+of it, and I could have got into it and fetched you out, but yer
+war lucky &rsquo;nough not to need me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How was it that ye were so long turning up arter we
+separated?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wal, Lone Wolf and his braves rode so fast that it was a
+good while afore I cotched up, and found that he hadn&rsquo;t the
+younker with him. Then, in course, I turned back and found that yer
+had flopped so much, off and on yer trail, that there was a good
+deal of trouble to keep track of yer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did ye first catch the light of Mickey
+O&rsquo;Rooney&rsquo;s illegant and expressive
+countenance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I saw yer stop to camp this morning a good ways up the
+pass, whar yer cooked yer piece of antelope meat, and swallowed
+enough to last yer for a week.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was you that shot the grizzly bear just as he was
+going to kill me?&rdquo; inquired Fred, with a pleased look in the
+scarred face of the scout, who smiled in turn as he answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have a &rsquo;spicion it war me and nobody
+else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t ye come forward and introduce
+yerself?&rdquo; inquired Mickey, &ldquo;it was all a mistake to
+think that we felt too proud to notice ye, even if ye ain&rsquo;t
+as good-looking as meself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wal, I thought I&rsquo;d watch yer awhile, believing I
+could do yer more service than by jining in, as was showed by what
+took place arterwards. Whar would yer have been if I&rsquo;d got
+shet up in that trap with yer? Lone Wolf would&rsquo;ve had our
+ha&rsquo;r long ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how did ye manage to fool the pack into giving us a
+chance to craap out?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was easy enough when yer understand it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I thought it would come aisier to a man who understood
+how to do it than it did to one who didn&rsquo;t know anything
+about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Arter picking off one or two of the varmints, that made
+Lone Wolf mad, and he sent out a couple of his warriors to wipe me
+out. He didn&rsquo;t think I knowed his game, but I did, and when
+they got round to where I was I just slid &rsquo;em under afore
+they knowed what the matter was. When he sent a third varmint arter
+them, and he went back and told the chief that the first two had
+gone to the eternal hunting grounds, he was so all-fired mad that
+he left only a half dozen to watch the hole where you was to come
+out, while he took the rest and come arter me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know a good many of Lone Wolf&rsquo;s signals,&rdquo;
+added the scout, with a chuckle, &ldquo;and arter he had been on
+this side for a while, I dipped down into the pass, and signaled
+for the rest of &rsquo;em to come. They come, every one of
+&rsquo;em, and then I went for you, not certain whether yer war
+mashed or not. We got away in good time to save ourselves running
+agin &rsquo;em.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_20" name="Ch_20">Chapter XX.</a></h3>
+<h2>Sut&rsquo;s Camp-Fire.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;But where are Lone Wolf and his warriors?&rdquo; asked
+Fred.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Back yonder somewhere,&rdquo; replied the scout,
+indifferently. &ldquo;They came over into the woods this side the
+pass to look for the Kiowas that have been picking off thar
+warriors. It&rsquo;ll take &rsquo;em some time to find the
+varmints, I reckon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s mesilf that would like to ax a
+conundrum,&rdquo; said Mickey, &ldquo;provided that none of the
+gintlemin prisent object to the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sut gave the Irishman to understand that he was always pleased
+to hear any inquiry from him, if he asked it respectfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The question is this: How long are we to kape thramping
+along in this shtyle? Is it to be for one wake or two, or for a
+month? The raison of me making this respictful inquiry is that the
+laddy and mesilf have become accustomed to riding upon horses, and
+it goes rather rough to make the change, as Jimmy O&rsquo;Brien
+said when he broke through the ice and was forced to take a wash,
+arter having done without the same thing for several
+months.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This gentle intimation from Mickey that he preferred to ride was
+promptly answered by the scout to the effect that his own mustang
+was some distance away in the wood, but he was unable to locate
+either of theirs, which they abandoned at the time they took such
+hurried refuge in the narrow ravine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what become of all the craturs?&rdquo; persisted
+Mickey, who was anything but satisfied at this plodding along.
+&ldquo;Lone Wolf and his spalpeens did not ride away upon their
+horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, but yer may skulp me if any of &rsquo;em are big
+enough fools to leave their animals where there seems to be any
+danger of other folks layin&rsquo; hands on &rsquo;em. When the
+rest of his band come over arter him, as they s&rsquo;posed in
+answer to their signal, they took mighty good care not to leave
+their hosses where thar war any chance for the Kiowas to put their
+claws onto &rsquo;em. They rode off up the pass till they could
+reach a place whar the brutes could climb up and jine thar
+owners.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I&rsquo;m to consider the question settled,&rdquo;
+responded Mickey, &ldquo;and we&rsquo;re to tramp all the way to
+New Bosting, ef the place is still standing. Av coorse we can do
+the same, which I take to be three or four thousand miles, provided
+we have the time to do it and ain&rsquo;t disturbed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sut, after permitting his friend to hold this opinion for a
+time, corrected it in his own way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thar ain&rsquo;t no use of tryin&rsquo; to reach home on
+foot, any more than thar is of climbing up that wall with yer toes.
+Arter we strike camp, we&rsquo;ll stop long enough to eat two or
+three bufflers, and rest, and while yer at that sort of biz,
+I&rsquo;ll &rsquo;light out, and scare up something in the way of
+hoss flish. Thar&rsquo;s plenty of it in this part of the world,
+and a man needn&rsquo;t hunt long to find it. Are ye satisfied
+Mickey?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Irishman could not feel otherwise, and he expressed his
+profound obligations to the scout for the invaluable services he
+had already rendered them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lone Wolf knows me,&rdquo; said Sut, making a rather
+sudden turn in the conversation. &ldquo;Me and him have had some
+tough scrimmages years ago, as I was tellin&rsquo; that ar
+Barnwell, or Big Fowl, rather, that has had the charge of starting
+the place called New Boston. I&rsquo;ve got &rsquo;nough scars to
+remember him by, and he carries a few that he got from me. I have a
+style of sliding his warriors under, when I run a-foul of
+&rsquo;em, that Lone Wolf understands, and he&rsquo;s larned long
+ago who it was that wiped out them two varmints that he sent out to
+look around arter me. Halloa! here we air!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he spoke, he reached a break in the continuity of the wall to
+which they had been clinging. The opening was somewhat similar to
+that into which Mickey and Fred had been driven in such a hurry,
+except that it was broader and the slope seemed more gradual.</p>
+<p>Simpson turned abruptly to the left, and they began clambering
+upward. It took a considerable time to reach the level, and when
+they did so the scout led them back to the edge of the pass, which
+wound along fifty or a hundred feet below them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thar&rsquo;s whar we&rsquo;ve come from,&rdquo; said he,
+as they looked down in the moonlit gorge; &ldquo;and while
+that&rsquo;s mighty handy at times, yet it&rsquo;s a bad place to
+get cotched in, as yer found out for yerselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one will dispoot ye, Soot, especially when Lone Wolf
+and a score of spalpeens appears in front of ye, and whin ye turn
+about to lave, ye find him and a dozen more in your rear. That was
+a smart thrick was the same; but if he hadn&rsquo;t showed himsilf
+in both places at the same time, we would have stood a chance of
+giving him the slip, as we had good horses under us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t always be sartin of that. Them varmints have
+ways of telegraphing ahead of ye to some of thar friends, so that
+ye&rsquo;r&rsquo;ll run heels over head into some trap, onless yer
+understands thar devilments and tricky ways.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When we were in camp,&rdquo; said Fred, &ldquo;we saw the
+smoke of a little fire near by. Was it yours?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It war,&rdquo; replied Sut, with a curious solemnity.
+&ldquo;I kindled that fire, and nussed it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, it bothered us a good deal. We didn&rsquo;t know
+what to make of it, Mickey and I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It bothered the varmints a good deal more, which war what
+it war intended for. I meant it far a Kiowa signal-fire, and if it
+hadn&rsquo;t been started &rsquo;bout that time, you&rsquo;d had
+some other grizzly b&rsquo;ars down on ye in the shape of
+&rsquo;Paches.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But it didn&rsquo;t help us all the way through; they
+came down on us a little while afterward.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That war accident,&rdquo; said Sut. &ldquo;the purest
+kind of accident&mdash;one of them things that is like to happen,
+and which we don&rsquo;t look for&mdash;a kinder of surprise
+like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As me father obsarved when he found we had twins in the
+family,&rdquo; interrupted Mickey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The chances are ten to one that thing couldn&rsquo;t
+happen ag&rsquo;in; but luck, just then, war t&rsquo;other way.
+Lone Wolf and his men war on their way home, and had no more idea
+of meeting yer folks than he had of axing me to come down and act
+as bridesmaid for his darter, when she gits married.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do ye s&rsquo;pose he knowed us, Soot?&rdquo; asked the
+Irishman.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t likely that he did at first, but the sight
+of the younker must have made him &rsquo;spicious, and arter he
+rammed you into the rocks, I guess he knowed pretty well how things
+stood, and he war bound to have both of yer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What made him want <em>me</em> so bad?&rdquo; asked Fred.
+&ldquo;I never understood how that was.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The tall scout, standing on the edge of the broad, deep ravine,
+looked down at the handsome face of the boy, to whom he felt
+attracted by a stronger affection than either he or the Irishman
+suspected.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bless your soul, my younker, that ere Lone Wolf that they
+call such a great chief (and I may as well own up and say that he
+is), is heavy on ransoms and he ain&rsquo;t the only chief
+that&rsquo;s in that line. That skunk runs off with men, women and
+boys, and his rule is not to give &rsquo;em up ag&rsquo;in till he
+gits a good round price. He calculated on making a good thing off
+you, and I rather think he would.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does he always give up those, then, that their friends
+want to ransom?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not by any means; it&rsquo;s altogether as the notion
+takes him. He sports more skulps and topknots than any of his
+brother-chiefs, and he never lets his stock run low. As them other
+varmints creep up onto him, he shoots ahead by scooping in more
+topknots, and thar&rsquo;s no use of thar trying to butt
+ag&rsquo;in him. He&rsquo;s &rsquo;way ahead of &rsquo;em, and
+there he&rsquo;s bound to stay, and they can&rsquo;t help
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he might have used me the same way, after all the
+pains he took to get me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jest as like as not. He is as ugly as the devil himself.
+Two years ago he stole a good-looking gal up near Santa Fe. He had
+a chance for the biggest kind of ransom; but the poor gal had long,
+golden hair, and the skunk wanted it for an ornament, and he took
+it, too, and thinks more of it than any out of his hundred and
+more. Arter getting yer home among his people, and arter he&rsquo;d
+found out thar&rsquo;s a good show fur a big ransom from yer
+father, jest as like as not he&rsquo;d make up his mind that the
+best thing he could do would be to knock ye on ther head and raise
+yer ha&rsquo;r, and he&rsquo;d do it, too.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, thank heaven, none of us are in his hands now, and
+I pray that he may never get us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The three were still standing as close to the edge of the ravine
+as was prudent, so that the moonlight fell about them. They were
+enabled to see quite a long distance up and down the pass, the
+uncertain light, however, causing objects to assume a fantastic
+contour, which would have made an inexperienced person uncertain
+whether he was looking down upon animate or inanimate objects. They
+were on the point of moving away, when Fred Munson exclaimed, with
+some excitement:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The country seems to be full of camp-fires or
+signal-fires. Yonder is one just started!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He pointed up the ravine, and to the other side, where an
+unusually bright star seemed to be rising over the solitude beyond.
+It was about a quarter of a mile away, and its brightness such as
+to show its nature.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, that&rsquo;s one of &rsquo;em,&rdquo; said the
+scout, in a tone which showed that he had no particular interest in
+it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can ye rade what the same manes?&rdquo; asked Mickey, who
+was gradually accumulating a wonderful faith in the woodcraft of
+the scout.</p>
+<p>But the latter laughed. It would have been the height of
+absurdity for him to have pretended that he could make anything of
+the meaning of a simple fire burning at night. It was only when
+actual signals were made that he could tell what they were intended
+for.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s some of the &rsquo;Paches, I s&rsquo;pose.
+Lone Wolf is in trouble, but I don&rsquo;t know as we&rsquo;ve got
+anything to do with it. The night is getting along, and we ought to
+be back to camp by this time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Without waiting longer, he turned about and moved back into the
+wood, followed by his two friends.</p>
+<p>It seemed strange to both of the latter that he could have left
+his mustang so far away from the place where his self-imposed
+duties had called him to bring to naught the cunning of his great
+enemy, the principal war-chief of the Apaches. But the truth was,
+the camps of the scout and the redskins were not so widely
+separated as Mickey and Fred believed. He had selected the best
+site possible, and took a roundabout course in going to or from it,
+as he had more means given him of concealing his trail. There were
+places where the soil was so rocky and stony that the foot left not
+the slightest imprint of its passage.</p>
+<p>They had gone but a short distance from the ravine when they
+encountered one of the very stretches so valuable to persons in
+their predicament. No grass or vegetation of any kind impeded their
+way, and it was like walking over a hard, uncarpeted floor. Making
+their way across this, they struck into a wood that was denser than
+any they had encountered thus far. There their progress was slow,
+but they continued steadily forward, talking but little, and then
+in guarded tones. About the hour of midnight the camp of Sut
+Simpson was reached.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_21" name="Ch_21">Chapter XXI.</a></h3>
+<h2>Safety and Sleep.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>There was nothing especially noticeable in the site which the
+scout had selected for his camp fire. His principal object had been
+secrecy and he had obtained it beyond all peradventure. The place
+was more like a cavern than anything else, except that it was open
+at the top, but it was walled in on the four sides, so there was
+barely room for the three to enter. As the scout explained, he was
+perfectly familiar with that section of the country, and he lost no
+time in hunting out the spot. He had his horse with him at the time
+the Apaches drove Mickey and Fred in among the rocks, and he staid
+until pretty certain they could keep the Apaches at bay until dark,
+when he made his way to a level spot inclosed by rocks. There he
+kindled a fire, cooked some antelope and left his mustang to graze
+and browse near by, while he returned to the assistance of his
+friends.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did ye shoot that uncleope, or antelope?&rdquo;
+asked Mickey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I didn&rsquo;t shoot him at all; he&rsquo;s the one you
+fetched down. Yer left enough for me, so I didn&rsquo;t run the
+risk of firing my gun when the varmints were so close by, so I
+sliced out a hunk or two from the carcass, and fetched it
+along.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye haven&rsquo;t got any of it about ye?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not enough for yer folks&mdash;no more than three or four
+pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers but ye&rsquo;re right. That&rsquo;s
+&rsquo;nough to stay our stomach, as me sick aunt remarked after
+swallowing her twenty-third dumpling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the moment the party walked in among the rocks the smoldering
+embers of the camp-fire were plainly seen. They needed but a little
+stirring to break forth into flame again, so as to light up the
+interior, which was about a dozen feet square, with a height of a
+dozen feet, more or less. When the Irishman signified that
+something in the way of food would be acceptable, the scout
+produced it from among the leaves near at hand, and it was devoured
+with the heartiest kind of appetite. They had drank all the water
+they needed, and the three assumed easy, lounging attitudes, Mickey
+lighting his pipe and enjoying himself immensely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is what I call comfortable,&rdquo; he remarked,
+&ldquo;as me friend Patsey McFadden observed when the row began at
+the fair and the whacks came from every quarter. I enjoy it;
+it&rsquo;s refining, it&rsquo;s soothing; it makes a man glad that
+he&rsquo;s alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you think of it?&rdquo; asked the scout, turning
+to Fred, who was reclining upon the heavy Apache blanket, with the
+appearance of one who was upon the verge of sleep.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I feel very grateful to you,&rdquo; said he, rousing up,
+&ldquo;and I am more contented than I have been in a long time; but
+I&rsquo;m afraid all the time that Lone Wolf or some of his braves
+might find where we are.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sut smiled in a pitying way, as he replied:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t ye s&rsquo;pose I&rsquo;m old &rsquo;nough to
+fix all that? Haven&rsquo;t I larned &rsquo;nough of the
+&rsquo;Paches and thar devilments to keep &rsquo;em back? Wall, I
+rather guess I have.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As the night remained so warm that no comfort at all was derived
+from the fire, it was agreed that it should be left to burn out
+gradually. It had been kindled originally by Sut for the purpose of
+cooking his meat, and he had renewed it that his friends might see
+exactly where they were, and, at the same time, look into each
+other&rsquo;s faces.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me ax ye,&rdquo; said Mickey, puffing away at his
+pipe, &ldquo;whether, whin we start for home, we&rsquo;re going to
+take the pass, which seems as full of the spalpeens as me head is
+of grand ideas?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t be sartin of that,&rdquo; replied Sut,
+thoughtfully. &ldquo;We can strike the prairie by going off here in
+another course; but it will take a long time, and the road is
+harder to travel. I like the pass a good deal the best, and unless
+the varmints seem too thick, we&rsquo;ll take it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we could get a good, fair start in the pass, we could
+kape ahead of &rsquo;em all the way till we struck the open
+prairie, when it would be illigant to sail away and watch them
+falling behind, like a snail trying to catch a hare.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout pointed to the lad, and, turning his head, Mickey saw
+that he was sound asleep. The poor fellow was so wearied and worn
+that he could not resist the approach &ldquo;tired nature&rsquo;s
+sweet restorer,&rdquo; which carried him off so speedily into the
+land of dreams.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad to obsarve it,&rdquo; said the Irishman,
+&ldquo;for the poor chap needs it. He&rsquo;s too young to be in
+this sort of business, but he couldn&rsquo;t prevint the
+soorcumstances, and we must help him out of the scrape as best we
+can.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m with yer,&rdquo; responded the scout.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s one of the most likely youngsters I&rsquo;ve ever
+met, and I&rsquo;ll risk a good deal to fetch him along. I&rsquo;m
+in hopes that we&rsquo;re purty well out of the woods, though we
+may have some trouble afore we get cl&rsquo;ar of Lone Wolf and the
+rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As soon as we get the critters to ride, I s&rsquo;pose we
+kin be off.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all, and that won&rsquo;t take me long.
+I&rsquo;m used to finding horses that the varmints are fools
+&rsquo;nough to say are thars. One day last spring, I war over near
+the staked plain all alone, when I got cotched in one of them awful
+nor&rsquo;easters, and I never came so near freezin&rsquo; to death
+in all my life. Them sort of winds go right to the marrer of yer
+bones, and it takes yer a week to thaw out. Wall, sir, while I war
+tryin&rsquo; to start a fire, a couple of Comanches managed to slip
+up and steal my mustang. I didn&rsquo;t find it out till three or
+four hours arter, and then I war mad. I couldn&rsquo;t stand no
+such loss, so I took the trail, and started off on a deer-trot
+arter &rsquo;em. Wall, sir, I chased them infernal varmints close
+on to twenty miles afore I run &rsquo;em to earth. Then I found
+&rsquo;em down into a deep holler, where I come nigh tumblin&rsquo;
+heels over head right in atween &rsquo;em afore I knowed who they
+war. Yer see it war a piece of the meanest kind of business on thar
+part, &rsquo;cause they each had a mustang, and I hadn&rsquo;t any,
+and they war leadin&rsquo; mine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I laid low for them varmints till night, when I mounted
+my critter, and struck off over the country leadin&rsquo; thar two
+beasts with me. I expected they&rsquo;d foller, of course, for the
+two animals that I captured were such beauties as you don&rsquo;t
+meet every day, so I kept &rsquo;em on the go purty steady for two
+days and nights, when I struck into the chapparal, tethered all
+three horses, tumbled over onto the ground, and put in four hours
+of straight solid sleep, such as makes a new man of a feller. Wall,
+sir, would you believe it? When I woke up and went to mount my
+hoss, he wasn&rsquo;t thar. Them same three skunks had managed to
+keep so close onto the trail, that, afore I woke, they slipped up,
+took all three of the animals, and were miles away when I opened my
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wall, yer may skulp me if I wasn&rsquo;t mad, and I
+couldn&rsquo;t help laughin&rsquo;, too, to think how nice they had
+come it over me. As the game had begun atween us, I took the trail
+and follered it for half a week. Yer see, them skunks didn&rsquo;t
+mean that I shouldn&rsquo;t get the best of &rsquo;em agin. They
+rode fast, and kept it up as long as thar horses could stand it, by
+which time they had every reason to think they war a hundred miles
+ahead of me, and so they went in for a good rest, intending when
+they had got that to keep up thar flight till they reached thar
+village up near the headwaters of the Canadian. Of course thar
+wouldn&rsquo;t have been any show for me if I hadn&rsquo;t had a
+streak of luck. I know that country like a book, and I war purty
+sartin of the trail them thieves meant to take, so I started to cut
+across and head &rsquo;em off. I hadn&rsquo;t gone far when I come
+upon the camp of a Comanche war-party, numberin&rsquo; a hundred. I
+hadn&rsquo;t any trouble in picking out an animal that suited, and
+then yer see I war all right, and, for fear I might get off the
+track, I come back and took up the trail again, and I kept it so
+hot that when they went into camp I warn&rsquo;t more than two
+miles away; I didn&rsquo;t want to come any closer, for if
+they&rsquo;d found out that I war so near, they wouldn&rsquo;t have
+give me any kind of chance at all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I waited till it was dark, and thar wasn&rsquo;t a bit of
+moon that night, when I sneaked into camp and got thar three
+animals agin, and heading for Port Severn, I made up my mind to
+keep the thing going without giving &rsquo;em the slightest chance
+to pull up. The weather had toned down so that it was comfortable
+to travel, and arter I got out of hearin&rsquo; of the camp, I just
+swung my hat, and kicked and laughed to think how cheap them
+varmints would feel when they&rsquo;d come to wake up in the
+morning, and find out how nice the white man had got ahead of
+&rsquo;em. Yer see, it war just a question as to which of us war
+the smartest. We weren&rsquo;t going for each other&rsquo;s
+hair&mdash;though we&rsquo;d done that any other time&mdash;but for
+each other&rsquo;s hosses, and I&rsquo;d stole thars twice to thar
+stealin&rsquo; mine once, and I still held &rsquo;em, so I had good
+reason to crow over &rsquo;em. Wal, sir, I made up my mind that
+they warn&rsquo;t going to come any shenanigan over me, and I
+struck the shortest line for Fort Severn. I rode through that very
+pass in which you come so near getting cotched, and in fact, the
+place whar I got the hosses warn&rsquo;t ten miles from that big
+cave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had plain sailin&rsquo; all the way into the fort, and
+everything went along well. I had only to ride on my critter, when
+the others galloped along like so many dogs. Yer see, I meant
+business, and I kept a watch for them varmints all the time. When I
+stopped for food or rest, I made sartin that they warn&rsquo;t
+anywhar in sight, and during the three or four days that followed I
+never slept an hour together. I managed to snatch a few minutes
+slumber while riding my mustang on a full gallop, but when I
+stopped to give the animals time to rest, I kept watch, for I felt
+as though it would break my heart to be outwitted again. I made the
+best kind of time, and my last camp was within a dozen miles of
+Fort Severn. I was purty well used up by that time, and making sure
+that the varmints warn&rsquo;t anywhar within a day&rsquo;s ride, I
+put in a good two hours sleep. Well I never rightly understood
+it,&rdquo; added Sut, with a sigh, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;m allers
+ashamed to tell it, but when I went out to mount my mustang, the
+whole four war gone, and the moccasin tracks on the ground showed
+who had took &rsquo;em. I can&rsquo;t understand to this day how
+them varmints kept so close behind me, and how they war ready when
+the chance came into their way; but they war, and they beat me as
+fairly as the thing was ever done in this world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t ye try to folly them?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I thought I might as well give up. I sneaked into the
+fort and tried to keep the thing from &rsquo;em, but I
+couldn&rsquo;t tell a straight story, and they found out how it was
+at last, and I don&rsquo;t suppose I&rsquo;ll ever hear the last of
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A short time afterward, the two laid down and slept.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_22" name="Ch_22">Chapter XXII.</a></h3>
+<h2>Two Old Acquaintances.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>All three of the little party needed rest, and none of them
+opened their eyes until morning. As a simple precaution the scout
+smothered the fire entirely, by scraping the ashes over the embers.
+Not a ray of moonlight could reach them, and they were wrapped in
+the most impenetrable darkness.</p>
+<p>As might be expected, Sut Simpson was the first to open his
+eyes, and by the time the sun was up all three were stirring.
+Enough meat remained over from the feast of the night before to
+furnish them with a substantial breakfast, and cool, refreshing
+water was at hand for drink and ablution. When the preliminaries
+had been completed, Sut went out to learn whether any of the
+Apaches were threateningly near. He wished, too, to prepare his
+horse for a ride to a point a dozen miles away, close to the margin
+of the prairie, where he intended to establish himself until he
+could procure the two animals that were needed by his companions.
+He had not been gone ten minutes when he came back in great
+excitement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My mustang is stole, or may I be skulped!&rdquo; and then
+he added a general wail: &ldquo;Them redskins are getting to be the
+greatest hoss-thieves in the world. I don&rsquo;t know what&rsquo;s
+to become of us if they&rsquo;re going to keep on in that
+way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey laughed heartily, for he recalled the narrative of the
+night before. In the game for horse flesh it looked very much as if
+the Apaches could be Sut&rsquo;s tutors.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;May I respectfully inquire where you got that crathur, in
+the first place?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I bought him of the varmints.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How mooch did you pay?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wall,&rdquo; laughed Sut, in turn, &ldquo;I haven&rsquo;t
+paid anything yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose they&rsquo;ve sint in their account till
+they&rsquo;re tired. Finding yer doesn&rsquo;t pay any attention,
+they&rsquo;ve come to take him back again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you sure that it was done by the Indians?&rdquo;
+asked Fred, a little frightened at learning that they had been so
+close while he slept.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thar ain&rsquo;t a bit of doubt. I&rsquo;ve looked the
+ground over, and thar&rsquo;s the trail, as plain as the nose on
+your face.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How many?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And they did it during the night?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; replied the scout, displaying his wonderful
+woodcraft. &ldquo;The varmints come yesterday arternoon, or just at
+dusk, arter I&rsquo;d took supper and left.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How do you know that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;d be a fool if I couldn&rsquo;t tell by the look
+of the trail how long ago it war made.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It seemed impossible that such was the fact, and yet, young as
+was Fred, he had heard of such things, and the scout spoke after
+the manner of one who meant what he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorra, but it&rsquo;s meself that has it!&rdquo;
+exclaimed Mickey, with a sudden lighting up of the countenance;
+&ldquo;they&rsquo;re the same two spalpeens that took your hoss
+down by the Staked Plain, and then follyed ye up and did the same
+thing over again, just as ye was going into Fort Severn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the scout shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The varmints don&rsquo;t know much about pity, but
+that&rsquo;s too rough a thing even for a Comanche to repeat.
+I&rsquo;ve a s&rsquo;picion that Lone Wolf had a hand in that, and
+I&rsquo;m going for him. Come along.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the indignant Sut strode out of camp, followed by his
+friends. He was not the man to submit to such a loss, and they saw
+that he was in deadly earnest. He neither spoke nor looked behind
+him for the next quarter of an hour, nor were his friends able to
+tell what direction he was following, for he changed so often,
+winding in and out among the trees, that they could form no
+conjecture as to the general course taken.</p>
+<p>They saw that he was following a trail, for he continually
+looked down at the ground in front of him, and then glanced to the
+right and left, occasionally inclining his head, as though he was
+listening for something which he expected to hear. He appeared to
+be altogether unconscious of the fact that he had companions at all
+and they sought to imitate his stealthy, cat-like movement, without
+venturing to speak. After traveling the distance mentioned, and
+while they were moving along in the same cautious way, the scout
+suddenly wheeled on his knee, and faced them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See yer,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;it won&rsquo;t do for you
+to travel any further.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s up?&rdquo; asked Mickey.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the trail&rsquo;s getting too hot. I ain&rsquo;t fur
+from them horses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, doesn&rsquo;t ye want us to stand by and obsarve
+the shtyle in which you are going to scoop them in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Simpson shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye are both too green to try this kind of business. I
+never could get a chance at them varmints if I took yer along. All
+you&rsquo;ve got to do is to stay yer till I get back. That
+won&rsquo;t be long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Suppose you don&rsquo;t get back at all?&rdquo; asked
+Fred, anxiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then yer needn&rsquo;t wait.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But ain&rsquo;t it probable that some of the Apaches will
+visit us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout was quite confident that the contingency would not
+occur; but, as long as they were in that part of the world, so long
+were they in danger of the redskins. It was never prudent to lay
+aside habits of caution; but he did not believe they were liable to
+molestation at that time. He charged them to keep quiet and always
+on the alert, and to expect his return within a couple of hours,
+although he might be delayed until noon. They were not to feel any
+apprehension unless the entire day should pass without his coming.
+Still, even that would be possible, he said, without implying
+anything more than that he had encountered unexpected difficulties
+in regaining his horse. They were still to wait for him until the
+morrow, and if he continued absent they were at liberty to conclude
+that the time had come for him to &ldquo;pass in his checks.&rdquo;
+and they were to make the effort to reach home the best way they
+could. With this understanding they separated.</p>
+<p>At the time Sut left his friends the trail was exceedingly
+&ldquo;hot,&rdquo; as he expressed it, and he was confident that
+within the next half hour he could force matters to an issue. The
+scout was of the opinion that a couple of Apaches had accidently
+struck his trail, or happened directly upon his norse while he was
+grazing, and, without suspecting his ownership, aad taken him away.
+The trail led toward the Apache camp, although by a winding course,
+and that was not far away. He was desirous of coming up with the
+marauders before they joined in with the others. In that case he
+would consider himself fully equal to the task of getting even with
+them; but it was not likely that they would go into camp when they
+were so close to the main body.</p>
+<p>Shortly after, to his great surprise, he came upon his mustang,
+tied by a long lariat to the limb of a tree, and contentedly
+grazing upon the grass, which was quite abundant. There was not the
+sign of an Indian visible.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Skulp me! if that ain&rsquo;t a purty way to manage such
+things!&rdquo; he exclaimed, astonished at the shape the matter had
+taken. &ldquo;Them varmints couldn&rsquo;t have knowed that Sut
+Simpson owned that hoss, or they&rsquo;d have tied him up tighter
+than that, and they&rsquo;d had somebody down yer to watch him; but
+they war a couple of greenys, that&rsquo;s mighty sartin.
+It&rsquo;s a wonder they didn&rsquo;t fetch out some of thar
+mustangs, and leave &rsquo;em whar I could lay my hands onto
+&rsquo;em. But I rather think I&rsquo;ve got my own hoss this time,
+as easy as a chap need expect to get anything in this
+world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was something so curious in the fact of the horse being
+left alone that Sut was a little suspicious, and decided to
+reconnoitre thoroughly before venturing further. He was partly
+hidden behind a large tree and had been so cautious and noiseless
+in his movements that his mustang, which was one of the quickest to
+detect the approach of any one, was unaware of his presence.</p>
+<p>Sut was on the point of going forward, when a movement in the
+wood, on the other side of where the animal was grazing, attracted
+his attention, and he paused. At the same instant his steed lifted
+his head. There could be no doubt as to the cause, for within the
+next minute the figure of an Indian stepped forward toward the
+animal, and proceeded to examine him with a care and minuteness
+which showed that he expected to identify his ownership.</p>
+<p>The eyes of Simpson lit up, and an expression of exultation
+crossed his countenance, not merely because the redskin before him
+was in his power, but because he recognized him as no one else but
+Lone Wolf, the Apache war-chief.</p>
+<p>It looked as if the horse-thieves had approached the vicinity of
+camp with their plunder, and then, securing him to the branch of
+the tree, had gone in and reported what they had done. Lone Wolf,
+suspecting, perhaps, that it was the property of his enemy, Sut
+Simpson, had stolen out quietly and alone to satisfy himself. He
+knew all the &ldquo;trade-marks&rdquo; of the hunter so well that
+he could not be deceived. This was the theory which instantly
+occurred to Sut, who muttered to himself:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, it&rsquo;s <em>mine</em>, and I&rsquo;m
+<em>here</em>, though you don&rsquo;t think it, and we&rsquo;ll
+soon shake hands over it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout speedily assured himself that Lone Wolf was
+alone&mdash;that he had no half-dozen &ldquo;retainers&rdquo; who
+would immediately precipitate themselves upon him the instant a row
+should begin. Lone Wolf had no rifle with him, but carried his huge
+knife at his girdle&mdash;one of the most formidable instruments
+ever seen.</p>
+<p>As he walked slowly about the mustang, scrutinizing him very
+carefully, he brought himself within a yard or two of where Sut
+Simpson crouched. The latter waited until he was the nearest, when
+he stepped forward, with his drawn knife in hand, and, placing
+himself directly in front of the astounded war-chief, said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<em>Now</em>, Lone Wolf, we&rsquo;ll make our accounts
+square!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_23" name="Ch_23">Chapter XXIII.</a></h3>
+<h2>Border Chivalry.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>As the scout uttered these words, the Apache whirled like
+lightning and drew his knife. His swarthy, painted face glowed with
+passion, and his black eyes twinkled with a deadly light. Seeing
+that he had no weapon but the knife, Sut Simpson, with a certain
+rude chivalry that did him credit, left his rifle leaning against
+the tree, while he advanced with a weapon corresponding to that of
+his enemy, so that both stood upon the same footing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lone Wolf is glad to meet the white dog that he has
+hunted so long,&rdquo; said the chieftain, speaking English like a
+native.</p>
+<p>With a sardonic grin Sut replied:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s played out, old
+Pockared&rdquo;&mdash;alluding to the chieftain&rsquo;s pitted
+face. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m just as mad at yer as I kin be, without yer
+getting up any fancy didoes to upset my nerves. I&rsquo;ve come for
+yer this time, and the best thing yer kin do is to proceed to
+business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They were facing each other with drawn knives&mdash;almost toe
+to toe, and each waiting for the other to lead off. It would have
+been hard to tell which stood the best chance of winning.</p>
+<p>Lone Wolf suddenly sprang forward like a panther, and made a
+vicious lunge with his knife, Sut easily avoiding it by leaping
+back, when, in turn, he made a similar attempt upon his adversary,
+who escaped in precisely the same manner. But the scout noticed an
+unaccountable thing. Lone Wolf had dropped his knife!</p>
+<p>True, he picked it up like a flash, and put himself on guard,
+but how it was that a veteran like him could have made such a slip
+was totally inexplainable to his foe. But the explanation came the
+next moment, when the chief, without removing his eyes from those
+of the white man, cautiously changed the knife to his left hand.
+His right arm was injured in some way, so that it was unreliable.
+He had shown this, first by dropping the weapon while attempting to
+use it, and he showed it again by shifting it to his left hand,
+thus placing himself at a frightful disadvantage.</p>
+<p>Sut saw no wound, yet there could be no doubt of the truth, and
+his feelings changed on the instant. He felt himself the meanest of
+men to attempt to overcome an almost helpless foe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lone Wolf,&rdquo; said he, still looking him straight in
+the eyes, &ldquo;why don&rsquo;t yer hold yer knife in the hand
+that yer generally do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lone Wolf can slay the dog of a white man with which hand
+he may choose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yer haven&rsquo;t been able to do it with both hands
+during all these years that you&rsquo;ve been tryin&rsquo;, when
+yer&rsquo;ve had yer whole tribe to help yer; but don&rsquo;t make
+a fool of yerself, Lone Wolf. Are your right arm hurt?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lone Wolf will fight the white dog with his strong
+arm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, yer don&rsquo;t&mdash;that&rsquo;s played out,&rdquo;
+growled the scout, shoving his knife back in his girdle. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t love yer &rsquo;any more than I love the devil, and I
+felt happy to think that I had got a chance at last to git square
+with yer; but when I lift the top-knot of Lone Wolf and slide him
+under, he&rsquo;s got to have the same chance that I have. I
+don&rsquo;t believe you&rsquo;d act that way toward me; but, then,
+you&rsquo;re a redskin, and that makes the difference. Lone Wolf,
+we&rsquo;ll adjourn the fight till you&rsquo;re yerself
+agin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And, deliberately turning away, the scout vaulted upon the back
+of the mustang, cutting the lariat that held him by a sweep of the
+knife.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I s&rsquo;pose you&rsquo;ll own I&rsquo;ve got some claim
+on this beast; so good-by.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figure"><a href="images/236_full.png" title=
+"&ldquo;I s&rsquo;pose you&rsquo;ll own I&rsquo;ve got some claim on this beast.&rdquo;"
+target="_blank"><img src="images/236_small.png" alt=
+"A man on a horse with a gun talks to an Indian standing with a knife."
+id="img236" name="img236" width="360" height="583" /></a>
+<p>&ldquo;I S&rsquo;POSE YOU&rsquo;LL OWN I&rsquo;VE GOT SOME CLAIM
+ON THIS BEAST.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<p>And, without turning to look at him again, he rode deliberately
+away.</p>
+<p>The Apache stood like a statute staring at him until he was
+hidden from view by the intervening trees. Then he turned and
+walked slowly in the opposite direction, no doubt with strange
+thoughts in his brain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know how that scamp will take it,&rdquo;
+muttered Sut, as he rode along. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s one of the
+ugliest dogs that ever wore a painted face; and if he could catch
+me with a broken arm or head, he wouldn&rsquo;t want anything
+better than to chop me up into mincemeat; but, as I told the old
+varmint himself, he&rsquo;s an Injin and I ain&rsquo;t, and
+that&rsquo;s what&rsquo;s the matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The wood was too dense and the ground too uneven to permit him
+to ride at a faster gait than a walk, but long before the appointed
+hour was up, he rejoined his friends, who were as surprised as
+pleased at his prompt reappearance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But where are the bastes that ye promised to furnish
+us?&rdquo; inquired Mickey, who had very little relish for the
+prospect of walking any portion of the distance homeward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;ll have for yer before the sun
+goes down,&rdquo; was the confident reply. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll get
+you one hoss, anyway, which, maybe, is just as good as two, for the
+weight of the younker don&rsquo;t make no difference, and we kin
+git along with one beast better than two.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I submit to your suparior judgment,&rdquo; said the
+Irishman, deferentially, &ldquo;and would suggist that the sooner
+the same quadruped is procured the better all round. I hope the
+thing won&rsquo;t be delayed, as me aunt obsarved when the joodge
+sintenced her husband to be hung.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sut explained that his plan was to ride some distance further,
+to a spot which he had in mind, where they would be safer against
+being trailed. There, consequently, they could wait with more
+security while he went for the much-needed horse. Time was
+precious, and no one realized it more than Sut Simpson. He turned
+the head of his mustang toward the left, and, after he had started,
+leaped to the ground and walked ahead, acting the part of a guide
+for the horse as well as for his friends.</p>
+<p>The surface over which they journeyed was of the roughest
+nature. The fact of it was, the scout was working the party out
+toward the open prairie, without availing himself of the
+pass&mdash;an undertaking which would have been almost impossible
+to any one else. At the same time, by picking his way over the
+rocky surface, and using all means possible to conceal their trail,
+he hoped to baffle any pursuit that might be attempted.</p>
+<p>Lone Wolf was not the redskin to allow such a formidable enemy
+as Sut Simpson to walk away unmolested, even though he had received
+an unexpected piece of magnanimity at his hands. He had learned
+that it was he who had played such havoc among his warriors the day
+before, who had deceived them by cunningly uttered signals, and had
+drawn away the redskins sufficiently to permit his two intended
+victims to walk out of his clutches. It had been a series of
+unparalleled exploits, the results of which would have exasperated
+the mildest tempered Indian ever known.</p>
+<p>These thoughts were constantly in the mind of the scout as he
+picked out the path for his equine and human companions. He took
+unusual pains, for a great deal depended upon his success in hiding
+the trail as much as possible. Perhaps it is not correct to say
+that the Apaches could be thrown entirely off the scent, if they
+should set themselves to work to run the fugitives under cover.
+None knew this better than Sut himself, but he knew also that the
+thing could be partially done, and a partial success could be made
+a perfect one. That is, by adopting all the artifices at his
+command, the work of trailing could be rendered so difficult that
+it would be greatly delayed&mdash;so that it would require hours
+for the Apaches to unearth the hiding-place. And Sut meant to
+accomplish his self-imposed task during those few hours, so as to
+rejoin his friends, and resume their flight before the sharp-witted
+pursuers could overhaul them.</p>
+<p>The journey, therefore, was made one of the most difficult
+imaginable. The mustang was unshod, and yet he clambered up steep
+places, and over rocks, and through gravelly gullies, where the
+ordinary horse would have been powerless. The animal seemed to
+enter into the spirit of the occasion and his performances again
+and again excited the wonder and admiration of Mickey and Fred. The
+creature had undergone the severest kind of training at the hands
+of an unsurpassed veteran of the frontier.</p>
+<p>This laborious journeying continued for a couple of hours,
+during which it seemed to the man and lad that they passed over
+several miles of the roughest traveling they had ever witnessed.
+The mustang had fallen several times, but he sprang up again like a
+dog and showed no signs of injury or fatigue. Finally Sut made a
+halt, just as Mickey was on the point of protesting, and, turning
+about, so as to face his companions, he smiled in his peculiar way
+as he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve stood it pretty well for greenhorns, and now
+I&rsquo;m going to give yer a good rest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you maan to go into camp for a week or a month, or
+until the warm season is over?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to leave yer here, while I go for some
+hoss flesh, and it&rsquo;ll take longer time than
+before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the Irishman insisted that he should be allowed to accompany
+the scout upon this dangerous expedition.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For the raison that ye are going to pick out this animal
+for <em>me</em>,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;how do I know but what
+ye&rsquo;ll pick out some ring-boned, spavined critter that trots
+sideways, and is blind in both eyes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred, who dreaded the long spell of dreary waiting which seemed
+before him, asked that he might make one of the company; but Sut
+would not consent, and he objected to both. He finally compromised
+by agreeing to take the Irishman, but insisted that the lad should
+stay behind with his mustang.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A younker like you couldn&rsquo;t do us a bit of
+good,&rdquo; added Sut, by way of explanation, &ldquo;and like as
+not yer&rsquo;d get us into the worst kind of difficulty. Better
+stay whar you be, rest and be ready to mount your new animal as
+soon as we&rsquo;re back, and scoot away for New Boston.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How soon will you be back?&rdquo; he asked, feeling that
+he ought to make no objection to the decision.</p>
+<p>The forenoon was about half gone, and the scout looked up at the
+sky, removed his coon-skin cap, and thoughtfully wrinkled his
+brows, as though he were solving some important mental problem.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yer may skulp me, younker, but it&rsquo;s a mighty hard
+thing to tell. Now I got back with my own animile a good deal
+sooner than I expected, but that same thing ain&rsquo;t likely to
+happen agin. More likely it&rsquo;ll be t&rsquo;other way, and we
+may be gone all day, and p&rsquo;raps all night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what am I to do all that time?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait; that&rsquo;ll be easy enough, arter such a rough
+tramp as I&rsquo;ve given yer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But suppose some of the Indians come here; I
+haven&rsquo;t got any gun or pistol, so what shall I do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The hoss thar will let you know when any of the varmints
+come sneaking round, and he&rsquo;ll do it, too, afore they know
+whar yer be, so you&rsquo;ll have time to dig out. I ain&rsquo;t
+much in the way of using a knife,&rdquo; added the scout. &ldquo;I
+depends on me gun for a long range, and when I gets into close
+quarters, I throw this yer (tapping the handle of his knife), round
+careless like; but I&rsquo;ve got a little plaything yer that has
+stood me well, once or twice, and if it&rsquo;s any help to yer,
+why, yer are welcome to it. It was give to me by an officer down at
+Fort Massachusetts.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he spoke, the scout drew a small revolver, beautifully
+mounted and ornamented with silver, which he handed to the lad,
+who, as may be supposed, was delighted with the weapon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just the thing, exactly,&rdquo; he said, as he turned it
+over in his hand. &ldquo;There are five barrels.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And every one is loaded,&rdquo; added the scout.
+&ldquo;The pill which it gives a redskin ain&rsquo;t very big, but
+it&rsquo;s sure, and it&rsquo;ll hunt for him a good ways off; so
+the dog is apt to bite better than you expect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sut told him that he expected to return by nightfall, and
+possible before, but they might be kept away until morning. Under
+any circumstances, whether successful or not, they would be back
+within twenty-four hours, for they could better afford to wait and
+repeat the attempt than to stay away longer than that. The reason
+for this decision was that if any of the Apaches should attempt to
+trail them, and there was every reason to believe that they would,
+they would not need more than twenty-four hours to track them to
+this hiding place. It was especially necessary that a collision
+with them should be avoided as long as possible, for the whites had
+everything to gain by such a course. As time was valuable, Sut did
+not delay the departure, and, as he and Mickey gave the lad a
+cheery good-by, they turned off to the right, and a minute later
+disappeared from view.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here I am alone again,&rdquo; he said to himself,
+&ldquo;excepting the horse, and I&rsquo;ve got a loaded revolver.
+Sut don&rsquo;t think those Apaches can get here before to-morrow
+morning, and he knows more than I do about it, so I hope he&rsquo;s
+right. We&rsquo;ve got thus far on our way home, and it would be a
+pity if we should fail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he looked around, he saw nothing in the place or surroundings
+which would have commended it to him. There was water in the shape
+of a trickling stream, and that was plenty everywhere, but there
+was scarcely a spear of grass visible. The vegetation was stunted
+and unthrifty in appearance. There were stones and rocks
+everywhere, with nothing that could serve as a shelter in case of
+storm. He searched for a considerable distance around, but was
+unable to find even a shelving rock, beneath which he might creep
+and gather himself up if one of those terrific tempests peculiar to
+this region should happen to strike him. Nor did there seem to be
+any suitable refuge if the Apaches should attack him before he
+could retreat.</p>
+<p>He might crouch down behind some of the boulders and rocks, but
+the make-up of the surface around him was so similar that three red
+skins could surround him with perfect ease and without any danger
+to themselves. Fred therefore made up his mind that he was in about
+as uncomfortable a situation as a fugitive could well be.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_24" name="Ch_24">Chapter XXIV.</a></h3>
+<h2>Night Visitors.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>As young Munson expected to remain where he was for the rest of
+the day, and perhaps through the succeeding night, and knew that he
+was in great danger, he made it his business to acquaint himself
+thoroughly with his position and with all the approaches thereto.
+The first natural supposition was that the Apaches, in following
+the fugitives to the spot, would, from the force of circumstances,
+keep to the trail, that being their only guide.</p>
+<p>This trail, for the last two hundred yards, led up a slope to
+where he was stationed upon what might have been called a landing
+in the ascent of the mountain. At the bottom of this two hundred
+yards or so was an irregular plateau, beyond which the trail was
+lost.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If the Apaches should show themselves before dark,&rdquo;
+he concluded, as he looked over the ground, &ldquo;there is where
+they will be seen, and that&rsquo;s the spot I must watch so long
+as I can see it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fred was able to hide himself from view for the time being, but
+there was no way in which he could conceal the horse. He was sure
+to be the first object that would attract the eye of the redskins
+from below, revealing to them the precise position of the
+fugitives. This reflection disturbed the lad a good deal, until he
+succeeded in convincing himself that, after all, it was fortunate
+that it was so.</p>
+<p>The redskins, detecting the mustang among the rocks, would
+believe that the three whites were there on the defensive. No
+matter if their force were a half dozen times as great, they would
+make the attack with a great deal of caution, and would probably
+manoeuvre around until dark, in the expectation of a desperate
+fight&mdash;all of which Fred hoped would give him a good chance of
+stealing out and escaping them.</p>
+<p>This, as a matter of course, was based upon the idea that Sut
+Simpson, the veteran scout, had committed a serious error in
+believing that the pursuit would be slow. And such a mistake he had
+indeed made, as the lad discovered in due time.</p>
+<p>The afternoon wore slowly away, and sunset was close at hand,
+when Fred was lying upon his face, peering over the upper edge of a
+rock at the plateau below. The fact of it was, his eyes had been
+roaming over the same place so long, that the stare had become a
+dreary, aimless one. He was suddenly aroused, however, to the most
+intense attention by the discovery of an Apache warrior, who
+drifted very serenely into the field of vision as if he were part
+of a moving panorama upon which the lad was gazing.</p>
+<p>The boy had been waiting so long for his appearance that he
+uttered an exclamation, and half arose to his feet in his
+excitement. But he quickly settled back again, and, with an
+interest which it would be hard to describe, watched every movement
+of the redskin, as the tiger watches the approach of its
+victim.</p>
+<p>The indian stalked up the other side of the plateau, walking
+slowly, looking right and left, in front and rear, and down at the
+ground, his manner showing that he was engaged in trailing the
+party, using all the care and skill of which he was the master.
+Reaching the middle of the plateau, he stopped, looked about, and
+made a gesture to some one behind him. A moment later, a second
+indian appeared, and then a third, the trio meeting near the centre
+of the irregular plot, where they immediately began a
+conversation.</p>
+<p>Each of the three was liberal with his gestures, and now and
+then Fred could catch the sound of their voices. What it was that
+could so deeply interest them at such a time, he was at a loss to
+conjecture, but there could be no doubt that it related to the
+party they were pursuing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That must be all there are of them,&rdquo; he reflected,
+after several minutes had passed, without any other Apaches
+becoming visible; &ldquo;but it seems to me it is a small force to
+chase us with. I&rsquo;ve always understood that the Indians wanted
+double the number of their enemies, whenever they are going to
+attack them, but I suppose they&rsquo;ve got some plan that I
+can&rsquo;t understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They had been talking but a short time, when Fred understood
+from their actions that they had detected the mustang above them on
+the mountain side. They looked up several times, and pointed and
+gesticulated in the same earnest fashion. It suddenly occurred to
+the lad that he might play a good point on the redskins, with the
+idea of delaying any offensive movement they might have under
+discussion. Pointing his revolver over the rock in front of him, he
+pulled the trigger.</p>
+<p>The report was as sharp and loud almost as that of a rifle, but
+the parties against whom it it was aimed were in no more danger
+than if they had been in the city of Newark. The report had no
+sooner reached the ears of the Apaches than they scattered as
+wildly as if they had heard the whizz of a dozen bullets by their
+faces. Fred chuckled over the success of his ruse and made sure to
+keep himself hid from view.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That will make them think that we&rsquo;re holding a
+sharp look-out for them, and they&rsquo;ll be careful before they
+make an attack upon us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It seemed strange to him that the Apaches, who must know of the
+presence of Sut Simpson, who was equal to half a dozen men in such
+a situation, should have sent forward only three of their warriors
+to trail him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may be,&rdquo; he thought, after a while, &ldquo;that
+these men know how to follow a trail faster than the others, and
+they have gone on ahead, while the others are coming after them. I
+should think Lone Wolf would do anything in the world to catch Sut,
+who has done him so much injury.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Night was drawing on apace, darkness being due in less than an
+hour. Fred was naturally perplexed and alarmed, for he could not
+help feeling that he was in a most perilous position, regarding
+which he should have had more advice from the scout before his
+departure. The only thing that seemed prudent for him to do was to
+wait until dark and then quietly steel out and shift his position.
+It looked very much as if he could take care of himself for the
+night, at least, but he did not see how he could take care of the
+mustang, which had already changed hands so often, and which was so
+necessary to their safety.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sut said he expected to be home by dark, and I wish
+he&rsquo;d come,&rdquo; was the thought that passed through his
+mind over and over again as he looked into the gathering darkness
+and listened for the sound of his friends.</p>
+<p>But the stillness remained unbroken and the shadows deepened,
+until he saw that the night was fully come, and he could move about
+without danger of being fired upon from a distance. The moon was
+late in rising, so that the gloom was deep enough to hide one
+person from another, when the distance was extremely slight.
+Although aware of this, Fred was afraid of some flank movement upon
+the part of the Apaches, before he could get out of their reach.
+The suspicion that there were two men besides would make the
+redskins very cautious in their movements, but a little manoeuvring
+on their part might reveal the truth, in which case the situation
+of the lad would be critical in the extreme.</p>
+<p>Fred had nerved himself to the task of stealing around the
+corner of a large rock and off into the darkness, when he was
+startled by a quick, sudden stamp of the horse. There might have
+been nothing in this; but, recalling what the scout had said about
+the skill of the animal as a sentinel, he had no doubt but that it
+meant that he had scented danger and that the redskins were close
+at hand. Scarcely pausing to reflect upon the advisability of the
+step, the lad began crawling in the direction of the animal, not
+more then twenty feet away.</p>
+<p>Before he had passed half the distance he was certain that a
+redskin was at some deviltry, for the horse stamped and snorted,
+and showed such excitement, that Fred forgot his own danger, and,
+springing to his feet, ran rapidly toward the animal. Just as he
+reached him, he saw that an Indian had him by the bridle, and was
+trying to draw him along, the mustang resisting, but still yielding
+a step at a time. In a short time, if the thief was not disturbed,
+he would have gotten him beyond the possibility of rescue, he
+seeming more anxious to secure the steed than the scalp of its
+owner. With never a thought of the consequences, Fred raised his
+revolver and blazed away with both barrels, aiming as best he could
+straight at the marauding Apache, who, with a howl of rage and
+terror, dropped the bridle of the mustang and bounded away among
+the rocks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There! I guess when you want to borrow a horse again,
+you&rsquo;ll ask the owner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lad was reminded of his imprudence by the flash of a rifle
+almost in his face, and the whizz of the bullet which grazed his
+cheek. But he still had two loaded chambers in his revolver, and he
+wheeled for the purpose of sending one of them at least, into the
+warrior that had made an attempt upon his life. At this critical
+juncture the mustang displayed an intelligence that was
+wonderful.</p>
+<p>The Apache who was stealing upon him was near the steed, which,
+without any preliminary warning, let out both his heels, knocking
+the unsuspecting wretch fully a dozen feet and stretching him,
+badly wounded, upon the ground.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder how many more there are?&rdquo; exclaimed the
+lad, looking about him, and expecting to see others rushing forward
+from the gloom.</p>
+<p>But the repulse for the time being was effectual and the way was
+clear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I guess I&rsquo;d better get out of here,&rdquo; was the
+thought of Fred, &ldquo;for it ain&rsquo;t likely they will leave
+me alone very long when they&rsquo;ve found out that I&rsquo;m the
+only one left.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With revolver in hand he moved hurriedly backward among the
+rocks, and, after going a few rods, halted and looked for his
+pursuers, whom he believed to be close behind him. There was
+something coming, but a moment&rsquo;s listening satisfied him that
+it was his mustang, which seemed to comprehend the exigency fully
+as well as he did himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know about that,&rdquo; he reflected.
+&ldquo;They can follow him better then they can me, and he
+can&rsquo;t sneak along like I can. If they catch him,
+they&rsquo;ll be pretty sure to catch me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He started to flee, not from the Indians only, but from the
+mustang as well. But the speed of the latter was greater than his
+own, and, after several attempts to dodge him, he gave it up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you can travel so well,&rdquo; reflected Fred,
+&ldquo;you might as well carry me on your back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Saying this he leaped upon the animal&rsquo;s back and gave him
+free rein. The animal was going it on his own hook and he plunged
+and labored along for some minutes longer, over the rockiest sort
+of surface, until he halted of his own accord. The instant he did
+so Fred leaped to the ground, paused and listened for his pursuers.
+Nothing but the hurried breathing of the mustang could be heard.
+The latter held his head well up, with ears thrown forward, in the
+attitude of attention. But minute after minute passed and the
+stillness remained unbroken. It looked indeed as if the fugitive
+horse and boy had found rest for the time, and, so long as the
+darkness continued, there was no necessity for further flight.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_25" name="Ch_25">Chapter XXV.</a></h3>
+<h2>Hunting a Steed.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Leaving Fred Munson to watch for the approach of the Indians, it
+becomes necessary to follow Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney and Sut Simpson
+on their hunt for a horse with which to continue their flight from
+the mountains and across the prairies. It cannot be said that the
+scout, in starting upon this expedition, had any particular plan in
+view. As he remarked, Indians were around them, and, wherever
+Indians were found, it was safe to look for the best kind of
+horses. Wherever the best opportunity offered, there he intended to
+strike. With this view, the first position of their expedition was
+in the nature of a survey, by which they intended to locate the
+field in which to operate.</p>
+<p>The Irishman could not fail to see the necessity of caution and
+silence, and, leaving his more experienced companion to take the
+lead, he followed him closely, without speaking or halting. The way
+continued rough and broken, being very difficult to travel at
+times; but after they had tramped a considerable distance, Mickey
+noticed that they were going down hill at quite a rapid rate, and
+finally they reached the lowermost level, where the scout faced
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do yer know whar yer be?&rdquo; he asked, in a
+significant tone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Know whar I be?&rdquo; repeated the Irishman, in
+amazement. &ldquo;How should I know, as the spalpeens always said
+arter I knocked them down at the fair? What means of information
+have I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been over this spot afore,&rdquo; continued
+the scout, enjoying the perplexity of his friend.</p>
+<p>The latter scratched his head and looked about him with a more
+puzzled expression than ever.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The only place that it risimbles in my mind, is a hilly
+portion in the north of Ireland. Do you maan to say we&rsquo;ve
+arrived thar?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is the pass which you tramped up and down, and whar
+you got into trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It don&rsquo;t look like any part that I ever obsarved;
+but why do you have such a hankering for this ravine, in which we
+haven&rsquo;t been used very well?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yer&rsquo;s whar the Injuns be, and yer&rsquo;s whar we
+must look for hosses&mdash;sh!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey heard not the slightest sound, but he imitated the action
+of the scout and dodged down in some undergrowth, which was dense
+enough to hide them from the view of any one who did not fairly
+trample upon them. They had crouched but a minute or two in this
+position, when Mickey fancied he heard the tramp of a single horse,
+approaching on a slow walk. He dared not raise his head to look,
+although he noticed that the shoulders of the scout in front of him
+were slowly rising, as he peered stealthily forward.</p>
+<p>The experiences of the last few days had been remarkable in more
+than one respect. The two men had set out to secure a horse,
+neither deeming it probable that the one which was desired above
+all others could be obtained; and yet, while they were crouching in
+the bushes, the very animal&mdash;the one which had been ridden by
+Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney&mdash;walked slowly forth to view, on his way
+up the ravine or pass. The most noticeable feature of the scene was
+that he was bestrode by an Indian warrior, whose head was bent in a
+meditative mood. The redskin, so far as could be seen, was without
+a companion, the steed walking at the slowest possible gait and
+approaching a point which was no more than a dozen feet away.</p>
+<p>The instant Mickey caught sight of the warrior and recognized
+his own horse, there was a slight movement on the part of the
+scout. The Irishman narrowly escaped uttering an exclamation of
+surprise and delight as he identified his property, but he checked
+himself in time to notice that Sut was stealthily bringing his gun
+around to the front, with the unmistakable purpose of shooting the
+Apache. The heart of the Irishman revolted at such a proceeding.
+There seemed something so cowardly in thus killing an adversary
+without giving him an opportunity to defend himself that he could
+not consent to it. Reaching forward, he twitched the sleeve of Sut,
+who turned his head in surprise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it ye&rsquo;re driving at, me laddy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sh!&mdash;him!&rdquo; he whispered, in return, darting
+his head toward the slowly approaching horseman, winking and
+blinking so significantly that it was easy to supply the words
+which were omitted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why don&rsquo;t ye go out and tell him what ye
+intend, so that he can inform his friends, and bid them all
+good-bye? It ain&rsquo;t the thing to pop a man over in that style,
+without giving him a chance to meditate on the chances of his life,
+so be aisy wid him, Soot.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figure"><a href="images/261_full.png" title=
+"&ldquo;Be aisy wid him, Soot.&rdquo;" target="_blank"><img src=
+"images/261_small.png" alt="Two men peek around a tree." id=
+"img261" name="img261" width="360" height="580" /></a>
+<p>&ldquo;BE AISY WID HIM, SOOT.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+<p>The scout seemed at a loss to understand the meaning of his
+companion, whose waggery and drollery cropped out at such
+unexpected times that no one knew when to expect it. The Indian was
+approaching and was already close at hand. Keen-eared, and with
+their senses always about them, Apaches are likely to detect the
+slightest disturbance. The scout glanced at the horseman, and then
+at Mickey, who was in earnest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s the only way to git the hoss, you lunkhead, so
+will yer keep yer meat-trap shet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want a horse if we&rsquo;ve got to murder a
+man to git the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But the only way out here to treat an Injin is to shoot
+him the minute yer see him&mdash;that&rsquo;s sensible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t want ye to do it,&rdquo; said Mickey, so
+pleadingly that the scout could not refuse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wal, keep still and don&rsquo;t interfere, and I promise
+yer I won&rsquo;t slide him under, onless he gits in the way, and
+won&rsquo;t git out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; responded Mickey, not exactly sure that
+he understood him, but willing to trust one who was not without his
+rude traits of manhood.</p>
+<p>All this took place in a few seconds, during which the Apache
+horseman had approached, and another moment&rsquo;s delay would
+have given him a good chance of escape by flight. As noiselessly as
+a shadow the scout arose from his knees to a stooping position,
+took a couple of long, silent strides forward, and then
+straightened up, directly in front of the startled horse, and still
+more startled rider. The former snorted, and partly reared up, but
+seemed to understand, as if by an instinct, that the stranger was
+more entitled to claim him than the one upon his back. Another step
+forward and the scout held the bridle in his left hand, while he
+addressed the astounded Apache in his own tongue, a liberal
+translation being as follows:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let my brother, the dog of an Apache, slide off that
+animile, and vamoose the ranch, or I&rsquo;ll lift his ha&rsquo;r
+quicker&rsquo;n lightning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The savage deemed it advisable to &ldquo;slide.&rdquo; He
+carried a knife at his girdle, and held a rifle in his grasp, but
+the scout had come upon him so suddenly that he felt he was master
+of the situation. So without attempting to argue the matter with
+him, he dropped to the ground, and began retreating up the ravine,
+with his face toward his conquerer, as if he mistrusted
+treachery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our blessing go wid ye,&rdquo; said Mickey, rising to his
+feet, and waving his hand toward the alarmed Apache; &ldquo;we
+don&rsquo;t want to harm ye, and ye may go in pace. There,
+Soot,&rdquo; he added, as he came up beside him, &ldquo;we showed
+that spalpeen marcy whin he scarcely had the right to expict it,
+and he will appreciate the same.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ye&rsquo;re right,&rdquo; grunted the scout.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;ll show ye how he&rsquo;ll appreciate it the minute
+he gets a chance to draw bead onto yer; but ye&rsquo;ve larned that
+thar are plenty of varmints in this section, and if we&rsquo;re
+going to get away with this hoss thar ain&rsquo;t no time to lose.
+Up with yer thar and take the bridle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mickey did as he requested, not exactly understanding what the
+intention was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is to be done?&rdquo; he asked, as the head of the
+animal was turned back over the route that he had just traveled.
+&ldquo;Am I to ride alone, while ye walk beside me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the idea for the present, so as to save the
+strength of the horse. A half mile or so up the pass is a trail
+which leads down inter it. The mustang can go over that like a
+streak of greased lightning, and thar&rsquo;s whar we&rsquo;ll
+leave the pass, and make off through the woods and mountains, till
+we can jine in with the younker and go it without
+trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A few words of hurried consultation completed the plans. As they
+were very likely to encounter danger, it was agreed that the scout
+should go ahead of the horseman, keeping some distance in advance,
+and carefully reconnoitering the way before him with a view of
+detecting anything amiss in time to notify his friend, and prevent
+his running into it. There might come a chance where it would not
+be prudent for Sut Simpson to press forward, but where, if the
+intervening distance was short, Mickey might be able to make a dash
+for the opening in the pass and escape with his mustang. The
+Apache, being unhorsed in the manner described, had fled in the
+opposite direction from that which they intended to follow. Of
+course he could get around in front, and signal those who were
+there of what was coming, provided the two whites were tardy in
+their movements, which they didn&rsquo;t propose to be.</p>
+<p>It required only a few minutes to effect a perfect
+understanding, when the scout went a hundred yards or so ahead,
+moving forward at an ordinary walk, scanning the ravine right, left
+and in front, and on the watch for the first sign of danger. He had
+previously so located and described the opening by which they
+expected to leave the pass, that Mickey was sure he would recognize
+it the instant they came in sight of it. This was a rather curious
+method of procedure, but it was continued for a time, and the
+avenue alluded to was nearly in sight when Sut Simpson, who was a
+little further than usual in advance, suddenly stopped and raised
+his hand as a signal for his friend to stop.</p>
+<p>Mickey did so at once, holding the mustang in check, while he
+watched the scout with the vigilance of a cat. Sut never once
+looked behind him, but his long form gradually sank down in the
+grass, until little more than his broad shoulders and a coon-skin
+cap were visible. The pass at that place was anything but straight,
+so that the view of Mickey was much less than that of the scout;
+and, had it been otherwise, it is not likely that the former would
+have been able to read the signs which were as legible to the
+latter as the printed pages of a book.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Begorrah, but that&rsquo;s onplisant!&rdquo; muttered the
+Irishman to himself, &ldquo;We must be moighty close onto the door,
+when some of the spalpeens stick up their heads and object to our
+going out. Be the powers! but they may object, for all I care.
+I&rsquo;m going to make a run for it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this juncture the figure of the scout was seen approaching in
+the same guarded manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, Soot, me laddy, what do ye make of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thar&rsquo;s a party of the varmints just beyont the
+place we meant to ride out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, what of that? You can lave the pass somewhere along
+here, where there seem plenty of places that ye can climb out,
+while I make a dash out of that, and we&rsquo;ll meet agin after we
+get clear of the spalpeens.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thar&rsquo;s a mighty risk about it, and yer be likelier
+to get shot than to be missed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all right,&rdquo; responded Mickey.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m reddy to take the chances in that kind of
+business. Lead on, and we&rsquo;ll try it. It&rsquo;ll soon be
+dark, and I&rsquo;m getting tired of this fooling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sut liked that kind of talk. There was a business ring about it,
+and he responded:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll go ahead, and when it&rsquo;s time to stop
+I&rsquo;ll make yer the signal. Keep watch of my
+motions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ten minutes later they had reached a spot so near the opening
+that Mickey easily recognized it. He compressed his lips and his
+eyes flashed with a stern determination as he surveyed it. The
+scout was still in the advance, proceeding in the same careful
+manner, all his wits about him, when he again paused, and motioned
+for the Irishman to stop. The latter saw and recognized the
+gesture, but he declined to obey it. He permitted his mustang to
+walk on until he had reached the spot where Sut was crouching,
+making the most furious kind of motions, and telling him to stay
+where he was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why didn&rsquo;t yer stop when I tell yer, blast
+ye?&rdquo; he demanded angrily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that the place where ye expected to go out?&rdquo;
+asked Mickey, without noticing the question, as he pointed off to
+the spot which he had fixed upon as the one for which they were
+searching.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course it is; but what of it? You can&rsquo;t do
+anything thar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll show ye, me laddy; I&rsquo;m going there as
+sure as me name&rsquo;s Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney, and me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yer ain&rsquo;t going to try any such thing; if yer do,
+I&rsquo;ll bore yer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the Irishman had already given the word to his horse. The
+latter bounded forward, passing by the dumbfounded hunter, who
+raised his rifle, angered enough to tumble the reckless fellow from
+the saddle. But, of course, he could not do that, and he stared in
+a sort of a wondering amazement at the course of the Irishman. The
+latter, instead of seeking to conceal his identity, seemed to take
+every means to make it known. He put the mustang on a dead run, sat
+bolt upright on his back, and Sut even fancied that he could see
+that his cap was set a little to one side, so as to give himself a
+saucy, defiant air to whomsoever might look upon him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Skulp me! if he ain&rsquo;t a good rider!&rdquo;
+exclaimed the scout, anxious to assist him in the trouble with
+which he was certain to environ himself. &ldquo;But he is riding to
+his death. Thar! what next? He&rsquo;s crazy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This exclamation was caused by seeing Mickey lift his cap and
+swing it about his head, emitting at the same time a number of
+yells such as no Apache among them all could have surpassed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoop! whoop! ye bloody spalpeens! it&rsquo;s meself,
+Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney, that&rsquo;s on the war-path, and do ye kape
+out of the way, or there&rsquo;ll be some heads broken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Could madness further go? Instead of trying to avoid an
+encounter with the Apaches, the belligerent Irishman seemed
+actually to be seeking it. And there was no danger of his being
+disappointed. Certain of this, Sut Simpson hurried on after him,
+for the purpose of giving what assistance he could in the desperate
+encounter soon to take place.</p>
+<p>Mickey was still yelling in his defiant way, with the long, lank
+figure of the scout trotting along in the rear, when one, two,
+three, fully a half dozen Apaches sprang from the ground ahead of
+the Irishman, and, as if they divined his purpose, all began
+converging toward the opening which was the goal of the fugitive.
+But it would have made no difference to the latter if a score had
+appeared across his path. He hammered the ribs of his mustang with
+his heels, urging him to the highest possible speed of which he was
+capable. Then he replaced his cap, added an extra yell or two,
+raised his rifle and sighted best as he could at the nearest
+Indian. When he pulled the trigger, he missed the mark probably
+twenty feet, for it was a kind of business to which Mickey was
+unaccustomed.</p>
+<p>The Apaches threw themselves across his path, in the hope of
+checking the mustang so as to secure the capture of the rider; but
+the animal abated not a tittle, and strained every nerve to carry
+his owner through the terrible gauntlet. One of the redskins,
+fearful that the fugitive was going to escape in spite of all they
+could do, raised his gun, with the purpose of tumbling him to the
+ground. Before he could do anything, he dropped his gun, threw up
+his arms with a howl, and tumbled over backward. Sut Simpson was
+near enough at hand to send in the shot that wound up his
+career.</p>
+<p>By this time, something like a sober second thought came to
+Mickey, who saw that his horse comprehended what was expected of
+him, and needing do further direction or urging. He realized,
+furthermore, that he had, by the impetuous movement of the animal,
+thrown all his foes in the rear, and they being unmounted, and
+anxious to check his flight, were certain to give him the contents
+of their rifles. Accordingly he threw himself forward upon the neck
+of the steed, scarcely a second before the crack of the rifles were
+heard in every direction. The hurtling bullets passed fearfully
+near, and more than once Mickey believed he was struck. But his
+horse kept on with unabated speed, and a minute after thundered up
+the slope, and he and his rider were beyond the reach of all their
+bullets.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_26" name="Ch_26">Chapter XXVI.</a></h3>
+<h2>Lone Wolf&rsquo;s Tactics.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney gave a yell of defiance as he vanished
+from view, horse and rider unharmed by the scattering shots which
+followed them, even after they were lost to sight. It was well and
+bravely done, and yet it would have failed altogether but for the
+wonderful cunning and shrewd courage of Simpson, who had kept close
+to the heels of the flying horse. It was when the crisis
+came&mdash;when the Apaches were closing around the fugitive, and
+it seemed inevitable that he should reap the natural reward of his
+own foolhardiness that Sut had acted. When the warriors were
+confident of their success, he discharged his rifle with marvelous
+quickness, and with a more important result than the mere tumbling
+over of his man.</p>
+<p>There was a momentary check, a sudden stoppage, lasting but a
+few seconds, when the foe rallied and made for the fugitive. But
+that brief interval of time was precisely what was needed, and it
+secured the safety of Mickey and his steed. It mattered not that
+Sut Simpson as good as threw away his life by his chivalrous act.
+He knew that full well, while awaiting the opportunity, as much as
+he did when he raised his faithful weapon and discharged it into
+the group.</p>
+<p>The moment the piece was fired he knew that his mission was
+accomplished, and he began a retreat, moving stealthily and rapidly
+backward, for the purpose of getting beyond the range of the
+redskins before they should fairly recover from the escape of the
+horseman. But events were proceeding rather too rapidly. Before he
+could cover any appreciable distance, the baffled wretches turned
+upon him and it was flight or fight, or, more likely, both.</p>
+<p>The Apaches were brave, they knew the character of the dreaded
+scout and they were not desirous of rushing, one after another, to
+their doom. Sut was certain that, if he should turn and run, the
+howling horde would be at his heels. The instant there should
+appear any possibility of his escape, they would all open upon him,
+and it was impossible that any such good fortune should attend him
+as had marked the flight of Mickey. It was his purpose, therefore,
+to keep up his retreat with his face to his foe, forcing all to
+maintain their distance, until he could reach the side of the
+ravine, where, possibly, a sudden desperate effort might enable him
+to outwit the redskins.</p>
+<p>The scout had not yet been given time in which to reload his
+piece, but the uncertainty whether it contained another charge
+prevented them from making an impetuous rush upon him. Besides,
+they knew that he carried a formidable knife, and, like every
+border character, he was a professor of the art of using it. All at
+once it occurred to Sut that he might thin out his assailants by
+the use of his revolver. If he could drop three or four, or more,
+and then follow it up with a savage onslaught, he believed he could
+open the way. He felt for the weapon, and was terribly disappointed
+to find it gone.</p>
+<p>He recalled that he had given it to Fred Munson when he was left
+alone with the mustang. So, as he had nothing but his knife, he
+placed his hand upon the haft, glaring defiantly at his enemies,
+while he continued walking slowly backward, and gradually edging
+toward the side of the grove. But Apaches were plenty in that
+latitude, and the business had scarcely opened when three or four
+warriors commenced a stealthy approach upon the scout from the
+rear. He glanced hastily over his shoulder several times, while
+slowly retreating, to guard against this very danger; but the
+Indians, seeing the point for which the fugitive was making,
+ensconced themselves near it and waited.</p>
+<p>At the moment Sut placed his hand upon the knife, he was within
+twenty feet of the three Indians crouching in the grass, with no
+suspicion of their proximity. One of them arose to his feet,
+quietly swung a coiled lasso about his head (the distance being so
+slight that no great effort was necessary), and then with great
+dexterity dropped it over the head of the unsuspicious scout,
+inclosing his arms, when he jerked it taut with the suddenness of
+lightning.</p>
+<p>A few seconds only were necessary for Sut to free himself, but
+ere those seconds could be taken advantage of, he was drawn over
+backward. The entire party sprang upon him and seized his gun and
+knife.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Skulp me, if this don&rsquo;t look as though I&rsquo;d
+made a slip of it this time!&rdquo; muttered Sut, as he bounded
+like lightning to his feet. &ldquo;When yer varmints undertake a
+job of this kind, yer show that yer ain&rsquo;t no slouches, but
+have a good knowledge of the business.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As if anxious to deserve the complimentary opinion of their
+distinguished prisoner, they coiled the lasso again and again about
+him, until he was fastened by a dozen rounds and was no more able
+to contend against his captors then if he were an infant.</p>
+<p>As all the warriors recognized the prisoner, their delight was
+something extraordinary. They danced about him in the most
+grotesque and frantic manner, screeching, yelling, and indulging in
+all sorts of tantalizing gestures and signs at Simpson, who was
+unable to resist them or help himself.</p>
+<p>There was a certain dignity in the carriage of Sut under these
+trying circumstances. Instead of replying by taunts to the taunts
+of his enemies, he maintained silence, permitting them to wag on to
+their heart&rsquo;s content.</p>
+<p>It was wonderful how rapidly the tidings of the capture spread.
+The hootings and yellings that marked the rejoicings of the party
+were heard by those who were further away, and they signaled it to
+the warriors beyond. The redskins came from every direction, and,
+within half an hour from the time Sut Simpson was lassoed, there
+must have been nearly a hundred Apaches gathered around him. These
+all continued their frantic rejoicings, while, as before, the
+prisoner remained silent.</p>
+<p>His eyes were wandering over the company in search of Lone Wolf,
+their great leader; but that redoubtable chieftain was nowhere to
+be seen. Sut was certain that he was somewhere near at hand, and
+must know of all that had happened on this spot.</p>
+<p>Did Simpson expect anything like mercy from the Apaches? Not a
+whit of it. He had fought them too long, had inflicted too much
+injury, and understood them too thoroughly to look for anything of
+the kind. Besides, even if he was innocent of having ever harmed a
+redskin, he would not have received the slightest indulgence at
+their hands. The Apaches are like all the rest of their species, in
+their inherent opposition to mercy on general principles.</p>
+<p>The afternoon was well spent, and, as a means of occupying his
+mind until his case was disposed of, he set himself speculating as
+to what their precise intentions were. Being quite familiar with
+the Apache tongue, he caught the meaning of many of their
+expressions; but for a considerable time these were confined to
+mere exultations over his capture. The excitement was too great for
+anything like deliberation, or concerted council.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It may be the skunks are waitin&rsquo; fur Lone
+Wolf,&rdquo; he muttered, as he stood with his arms bound to his
+side. &ldquo;They wouldn&rsquo;t dare to do much without axing him,
+though I &rsquo;spose they might a skulp any man wharever they got
+the chance, without stopping to ax questions. Helloa! thar he
+comes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This exclamation was caused by the sudden turning of heads, and
+a sort of hush that fell upon the group for the moment, close to
+the approach of someone on horseback. It was already so close to
+dusk that he could not be identified until he came closer, when Sut
+was surprised to find that it was not the chieftain, after all. It
+was a man altogether different in appearance, probably a
+subordinate chief, who had performed some daring deed which had won
+him the admiration of his comrades. The indications, too, were that
+he brought interesting news about something.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That varmint has been away somewhar,&rdquo; concluded
+Sut, carefully noting everything, &ldquo;and they expect him to
+tell something worth hearin&rsquo;, and I guess they&rsquo;re about
+kerrect, so I&rsquo;ll see what I kin do in the way of listening
+myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout was right in his supposition. The Indian was the
+<em>avant courier</em> of a party three or four times as great as
+that which had gathered about him in the ravine. His companions had
+separated and gone in other directions, while he, learning the
+course taken by his chief, Lone Wolf, had hastened to report
+directly to him.</p>
+<p>Sut Simpson suspected what all this meant. He saw a number of
+scalps hanging at the girdle of the Apache, and he had not listened
+long when his fears where more than confirmed. The embryo town of
+New Boston, planted in the valley of the Rio Pecos, was no more.
+Repulsed bloodily at the first, Lone Wolf had gathered together the
+best of his warriors, placed them under one of his youngest and
+most daring chiefs, and sent them forth with orders to clean out
+the settlement that had been planted so defiantly in the heart of
+their country. And now this chief had returned to say that the work
+had been completed, precisely as commanded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knowed it war coming,&rdquo; muttered the scout.
+&ldquo;I told that Barnwell that Lone Wolf would bounce him afore
+he knowed what the the matter was, and I urged &rsquo;em to make
+for Fort Severn, which war only fifty miles away, and save their
+top-knots. He did not say so, but I could see he thought I war a
+big fool, and now he&rsquo;s found out who the fool was. Wonder
+whether any of the poor cusses got away? Thar couldn&rsquo;t have
+been much chance. &rsquo;Twon&rsquo;t do to ax this rooster, cause
+he wouldn&rsquo;t be likely to answer me, and, if he did, he would
+be sartin&rsquo; to tell me a lot of lies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The young chief having communicated his good tidings, and
+exchanged congratulations with those about him, started his mustang
+forward, heading him directly up the ravine or pass. This brought
+him within arm&rsquo;s length of the scout, who was standing mute
+and motionless. The redskin drew up his horse and stared fixedly at
+him, as if, for the moment, uncertain of his identity.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Sut Simpson, the man that has slain so many
+Apache warriors that he cannot number them,&rdquo; said the scout,
+with a view of helping the Indian to recognize him.</p>
+<p>There was no real braggadocio about this. As Sut could not hide
+his personality, the best plan for him was to make an open avowal,
+backed up by a rather high-sounding vaunt. This was more pleasing
+to the Indians, who were addicted to the most extravagant kind of
+expression.</p>
+<p>Rather curiously, the young chief made no reply. The observation
+of the prisoner seemed to have settled all doubts that were in his
+mind, and perhaps he was desirous of seeing Lone Wolf without any
+further delay. His steed struck into a rapid gallop, and speedily
+vanished in the gloom, leaving the captive with the howling
+hundred.</p>
+<p>Sut was brave, but there was a certain feeling of disappointment
+that began to make itself felt. Although he would not have admitted
+it, yet the termination of the recent meeting with Lone Wolf, had
+led him to hope, not that the chieftain would liberate him, but
+that he would give him some kind of a show for his life&mdash;an
+opportunity, no matter how desperate, in which he might make a
+fight for his existence. He had spared Lone Wolf when he was at his
+mercy, refusing to fight the chief because he was so disabled that
+his defeat was assured. It would seem that the chief, in return,
+might offer the scout a chance to fight some of the best warriors;
+and such probably would have been the case with any set of people
+except the American Indians. The absence of Lone Wolf impressed Sut
+very unfavorably. He believed the chief meant to remain away until
+after his important prisoner was killed.</p>
+<p>By the time night was descended, the wild rejoicing in a great
+measure ceased. One of the Apaches started a fire, and the others
+lent their assistance. A roaring, crackling flame lit up a large
+area of the ravine, revealing the figure of every savage, as well
+as that of the scout, who, having grown weary of continual
+standing, seated himself upon the ground. Had Sut possessed the use
+of his arms, he would have made an effort to get away at this time.
+A short run would have carried him to the place which he had in
+mind at the time he began his retreat. Without the aid of his
+hands, however, he was certain to be entrapped again, so he
+concluded to remain where he was, with the hope that something more
+inviting would present itself.</p>
+<p>The frontiersman never despairs; and, although it was difficult
+to figure out the basis of much hope in the present case, yet Sut
+held on, and determined to do so to the end. He made several
+cautious tests of his bonds, but the lariat of buffalo-hide was
+wound around his arms so continuously, and tied so well, that the
+strength of twenty men could not have broken it. The exploit of
+cutting them by abrasion against a sharp stone (which he had once
+done), could not be accomplished in the present instance, for the
+reason that there was no suitable stone at hand, and he was under
+too strict surveillance. And so it only remained for him to wait
+and hope, and hold himself in readiness.</p>
+<p>When the fire had crackled and flamed for a while, the Apaches
+clustered in groups upon the ground, where they smoked and talked
+incessantly. They seemed to be paying no attention to their
+prisoner, and yet they took pains to group themselves around him in
+such a way that if he should attempt flight he would be forced into
+collision with some of them. Sut was surprised that as yet no
+indignity had been offered him. As the Apaches had every reason to
+hate him with the very intensity of hatred, it would have been in
+keeping with their character to have made his lot as uncomfortable
+as possible.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;ll come by-and-bye,&rdquo; he sighed, as the
+cramped position of his arms pained him. &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know
+what they&rsquo;re waitin&rsquo; fur. Mebbe they want to get up
+such a high old time with me that they&rsquo;re writin&rsquo; out a
+programme, and have sent to New Orleans fur a band of music.
+Thar&rsquo;s nothing like doing these things up in style, and I
+s&rsquo;pose Lone Wolf means to honor me in that way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At a late hour, the moon arose, and the light penetrated the
+ravine, where the strange, motley crowd congregated. The fire still
+burned, and no one showed any disposition to sleep. By way of
+relief, the scout lay over upon his side, and was looking up at the
+clear moon-lit sky when he heard the tramp of horses, and
+immediately rose up again.</p>
+<p>He saw the chieftain, whom he had observed a few hours before,
+as he came in with his news of the destruction of New Boston,
+accompanied by two others, all mounted. They rode up in such a
+position that they surrounded the captive, who was suddenly lifted
+by a couple of Apaches, and placed astride of the mustang in front
+of the young chief. The next minute the quartette moved off.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Skulp me! if I know what this means!&rdquo; muttered Sut,
+who felt uneasy over the new turn of affairs. &ldquo;Things are
+getting sort of mixed just now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He hoped that he would learn something of the purpose of the
+three redskins from their conversation as they rode along; but
+unfortunately for that hope, they did not exchange a word. When
+they had ridden a fourth of a mile, Sut caught the flash of a knife
+in the chieftain&rsquo;s hand. The next instant, it moved swiftly
+along his back, and the lariat was cut in many pieces. The arms of
+the scout were freed, although for some minutes they were so
+benumbed that he could scarcely move them.</p>
+<p>What did all this mean? Fully another quarter of a mile was
+ridden in silence, when the three halted, and Sut felt that the
+critical moment had arrived. The chief dismounted from the horse,
+leaving the scout seated thereon. One of the others reached over
+and handed him his own gun, while the third passed him back his
+long knife.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wall, if I&rsquo;m to fight all three of yer, sail
+in!&rdquo; called out Sut, gathering himself for a charge from
+them.</p>
+<p>They made no reply. The chief vaulted upon one of the other
+horses, behind the warrior, and, as he did so, a fourth figure
+advanced and leaped upon the other, so that there were two Indians
+upon each mustang. The scout scrutinized the new comer, as well as
+he could in the moonlight.</p>
+<p>Yes, there was no mistake about his identity. It was Lone Wolf,
+who remained as silent as the others.</p>
+<p>The heads of the mustangs were turned down the ravine again, and
+they struck into a gallop, the sound of their hoofs coming back
+fainter and more faintly, until they died in the night. Sut Simpson
+was free, and free without a fight, as he realized, when he gave
+his horse the word, and he dropped into an easy gait in a direction
+opposite to that taken by the Apaches.</p>
+<hr />
+<h3><a id="Ch_27" name="Ch_27">Chapter XXVII.</a></h3>
+<h2>The End.</h2>
+<p class="returnTOC"><a href="#Contents">Return to Table of
+Contents</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wall, that ere little matter was settled without any hard
+words,&rdquo; muttered the scout, as he rode up the ravine.
+&ldquo;It ain&rsquo;t the way Lone Wolf generally manages them
+things, but that affair me and him had, when I took my hoss away
+from him, I s&rsquo;pose had something to do with it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout had considerable cause to feel grateful and pleased
+over the turn of events. He had his horse and gun, and it now only
+remained for him to rejoin his companions. He had already passed
+the point where Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney had left the ravine, and he
+felt the impropriety of turning back and presuming upon any further
+indulgence of the Apaches.</p>
+<p>Accordingly, he slackened the speed of his mustang until he
+reached an avenue of escape. He was forced to go quite a distance
+before finding one, but he did, at last, and turned his horse into
+it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know whether that ar Irishman can find the
+way back to whar we left the younker, but I suppose he&rsquo;ll
+try, so I&rsquo;ll aim at the same p&rsquo;int.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The night was pretty well gone, and his mustang had struggled
+nobly until he showed signs of weariness, and the scout concluded
+to wait until daylight before pushing his hunt any further. They
+were miles away from the Apache camp, and he had no fears of
+disturbance from that quarter. So he drew rein in a secluded spot,
+and sprang to the ground.</p>
+<p>At the very moment of doing so, his horse gave a whinny, which
+was instantly responded to by a whinny from another horse, less
+than a hundred feet away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s qua&rsquo;ar,&rdquo; muttered the scout, as
+he grasped his rifle. &ldquo;Whar thar&rsquo;s a hoss in these
+parts, thar&rsquo;s generally a man, and whar thar&rsquo;s a man,
+you kin set him down as an Injun. And as this can&rsquo;t be Lone
+Wolf, I&rsquo;ll find out who he is.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His own mustang being a strayer, he managed to tie him to a
+small, scrubby bush, after which he moved forward, with caution and
+stealth, in the direction whence came the whinny that had arrested
+his attention. His purpose was to prevent the other animal
+discovering his approach&mdash;an exceedingly difficult task, as
+the mustangs of the Southwest are among the very best sentinels
+that are known, frequently detecting the approach of danger when
+their masters fail to do so. However, Sut succeeded in getting so
+close, that he could plainly detect the outlines of the animal,
+which was standing motionless, with head erect, and his nose turned
+in the direction of the other mustang, as though he were all
+attention, and on the look-out for danger.</p>
+<p>The scout paused to study the matter, for he did not understand
+the precise situation of things. The mustang which he saw might be
+only one of a dozen others, whose owners were near at hand, with
+possible several searching for him. The conclusion was inevitable
+that it was necessary for him to reconnoitre a little further
+before allowing his own position to be uncovered.</p>
+<p>Before he could advance any further, he caught sight of a man,
+who moved silently forward between him and the horse, where he
+could be seen with greater distinctness. He held his rifle in hand,
+and seemed disturbed at the action of his horse, which was clearly
+an admonition for him to be on his guard.</p>
+<p>The scout studied him for a minute, and then cautiously raised
+the hammer of his rifle. Guarded as was the movement, the faint
+click caught the ear of the other, who started, and was on the
+point of leaping back, when Sut called out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop, or I&rsquo;ll bore a hole through yer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The figure did not move.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come forward and surrender.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The form remained like a statue.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Throw down that gun or I&rsquo;ll shoot.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This brought a response, which came in the shape of a well-known
+voice:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not while I have the spirit of a man left, as me uncle
+obsarved when his wife commanded him to come down from a tree that
+she might pummel him. How are ye, old boy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout had suspected the identity of his friend from the
+first, and had made the attempt to frighten him from the innate
+love of the thing. The two grasped hands cordially and were
+rejoiced beyond measure at this fortunate meeting.</p>
+<p>Mickey explained that he had not been scratched by a bullet, nor
+had his horse suffered injury. It was a most singular escape
+indeed. But no more singular than that of the scout himself, who
+had received mercy at the hands of Lone Wolf, who had never been
+known to be guilty of such a weakness. It had been a providential
+deliverance all around, and the men could not be otherwise than in
+the best sprits.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The next thing is to hunt up the younker,&rdquo; said the
+scout, as they sat upon the the ground discussing incidents of the
+past few days. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a little troubled about him,
+&rsquo;cause we&rsquo;ve been away longer than we expected, and
+some of the varmints may have got on his trail.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How far from this place do ye reckon him to
+be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s powerful hard to tell, but it can&rsquo;t be
+much less than a mile, and that&rsquo;s a good ways in such a hilly
+country as this. Yer can&rsquo;t git over it faster than yer kin
+run.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But ye know the way thar, as I understand ye to
+remark?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout signified that he would have no more trouble in
+reaching it then in making his way across a room. They decided,
+though, that the best thing they could do was to wait where they
+were until daylight, and then take up the hunt. They remained
+talking and smoking for an hour or two longer, neither closing
+their eyes in slumber, although the occasion was improved to its
+utmost by their animals. The scout was capable of losing a couple
+of nights&rsquo; rest without being materially effected thereby,
+while Mickey&rsquo;s experience almost enabled him to do the
+same.</p>
+<p>As soon as it was fairly light the two were on the move, Sut
+leading the course in the direction of the spot where they had left
+Fred Munson the day before, and which he had vacated very suddenly.
+They were picking their way along as best they could, when they
+struck a small stream, when the scout paused so suddenly that his
+comrade inquired the cause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s quar, powerful quar,&rdquo; he said looking
+down at the ground and speaking as if to himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One horse has been &rsquo;long har, and I think it war
+mine, and that he had that younker on his back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Which way was the young spalpeen traveling?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout indicated the course, and then added, in an excited
+undertone:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It looks to me as if he got scared out and had to leave,
+and it ain&rsquo;t no ways likely that anything would have scared
+him short of Injuns&mdash;so it&rsquo;s time we j&rsquo;ined
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Irishman was decidedly of the same opinion, and the trail
+was at once taken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be the powers! do you mind that?&rdquo; demanded Mickey,
+in an excited voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mind what?&rdquo; asked the scout, somewhat startled at
+his manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jes&rsquo; look yonder, will ye?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he spoke, he pointed up the slope ahead of them. There, but a
+comparatively short distance away, was Fred Munson, in plain sight,
+seated upon the back of his mustang, apparently scrutinizing the
+two horsemen, as if in doubt as to their identity. The parties
+recognized each other at the same moment, and Fred waved his hat,
+which salutation was returned by his friends. The scout motioned to
+him to ride down to where he and Mickey were waiting.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s off the trail altogether, and if he keeps on
+that course, he&rsquo;ll fetch up in New Orleans, or
+Galveston,&rdquo; he added, by way of explanation.</p>
+<p>The lad lost no time in rejoining them, and the trio formed a
+joyous party. Not one was injured, each had a good swift horse, and
+a weapon of some kind, and was far better equipped for a homeward
+journey than they had dared to hope.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thar&rsquo;s only one thing to make a slight
+delay,&rdquo; said the Irishman, after pretty much everything had
+been explained.</p>
+<p>His friends looked to him for an explanation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I resaved notice from me family physician in London this
+mornin&rsquo;, that it was dangerous when in this part of the world
+to travel on an empty stomach.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All three felt the need of food and Sut considered the spot
+where they were as good for camping purposes as any they were
+likely to find. So they dismounted, and while Mickey and Fred
+busied themselves in gathering wood, and preparing the fire, the
+scout went off in search of game.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do ye mind,&rdquo; called out Mickey, &ldquo;that ye
+mustn&rsquo;t return till ye bring something wid ye? I&rsquo;m so
+hungry that I&rsquo;m not particular. A biled Apache will answer,
+if ye can&rsquo;t find anything else.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If he gets anything,&rdquo; said Fred, &ldquo;we must
+make away with all we can, and try to eat enough to last us two or
+three days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I always do at each meal,&rdquo;
+promptly replied his friend. &ldquo;Thar&rsquo;s nothing like being
+prepared for emergencies, as me cousin, Butt O&rsquo;Norghoghon,
+remarked when he presented the gal he was coortin&rsquo; with a set
+of teeth and a whig, which she didn&rsquo;t naad any more than does
+me hoss out thar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scout returned before he was expected, and with a
+superabundance of food, which was cooked and fully enjoyed, and as
+speedily as possible they were mounted and on the road again. The
+traveling was exceedingly difficult, and although they struck the
+main pass near noon, and put their horses to their best speed, yet
+it was dark when they succeeded in clearing themselves of the
+mountains and reached the edge of the prairies, which stretched
+away almost unbrokenly for hundreds of miles. They saw Indians
+several times but did not exchange shots during the day. It was not
+a general rule with Sut Simpson to avoid an encounter with
+redskins, but he did it on the present occasion on account of his
+companions, and especially for the lad&rsquo;s sake. A safe place
+for the encampment was selected, the mustangs so placed that they
+would be certain to detect the approach of any enemies during the
+night, and all laid down to slumber.</p>
+<p>Providence, that had so kindly watched over them through all
+their perils, did not forget them when they lay stretched helpless
+upon the ground.</p>
+<p>The night passed away without molestation, and, making a
+breakfast from the cooked meat that they had preserved, they struck
+out upon the prairie in the direction of New Boston.</p>
+<p>They had scarcely started, when a party of Indians, probably
+Comanches, saw them and gave chase. The pursuers were well mounted,
+and, for a time, the danger was critical, as they numbered fully
+twenty; but the mustangs of the fugitives were also fleet of foot,
+and, at last, they carried them beyond all danger from that
+source.</p>
+<p>As the friends galloped along at an easy pace, Sut Simpson
+struck them with horror by telling them the story of the massacre,
+which he had heard discussed among the Apaches when he was a
+prisoner. All were anxious to learn the extent of the horrible
+tale, and they pressed their steeds to the utmost.</p>
+<p>The site of the town was reached late in the afternoon, when it
+was speedily seen that the young chief had told the truth. New
+Boston was among the things of the past, having actually died while
+in the struggles of birth. The unfinished houses had been burned to
+the ground, the stock run off, and most of the inhabitants
+massacred. The fight had been a desperate one, but when Lone Wolf
+sent his warriors a second time they were resistless, and carried
+everything before them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If any of &rsquo;em got away, they&rsquo;ve reached Fort
+Severn,&rdquo; said the scout, who was impressed by the evidences
+of the terrible scenes that had been enacted here, within a
+comparatively few hours; &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t think
+thar&rsquo;s much chance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The remains of those who had fallen on the spot were so
+mutilated, and in many cases partly burned, that they could not be
+recognized. Among the wreck and ruin of matter were discovered a
+number of shovels. The three set themselves to dig a trench, into
+which all these remains were placed and carefully covered over with
+earth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll take a shovel along,&rdquo; said Sut, as he
+threw one over his shoulder, and sprang upon his horse.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;ll be likely to find need for it afore we reach the
+fort.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This prediction was verified. As they rode along they constantly
+came upon bodies of men and women, whose horses had given out, or
+who had been shot while fleeing for life. In every case the poor
+fugitives had been scalped and mutilated. They were gathered up and
+tenderly buried, with no headstone to mark their remains, there to
+sleep until the last trump shall sound.</p>
+<p>Fort Severn was reached in the afternoon of the second day.
+There were found, just six men and two women, the fleetness of
+whose steeds had enabled them to win in the race for life. All the
+others had fallen, among them Caleb Barnwell, the leader of the
+Quixotic scheme, and the founder of the town which died with him.
+The valley of the Rio Pecos was not prepared for any settlement
+unless one organized upon a scale calculated to overawe all
+combinations of the Apaches, Commanches, and Kiowas.</p>
+<p>From Fort Severn, Mickey O&rsquo;Rooney and Fred Munson, under
+the escort, or rather guidance, of Sut Simpson, made their way
+overland to Fort Aubray, where Mr. Munson, the father of Fred, was
+found. The latter thanked heaven for the sickness which had
+detained him and could not fully express his gratitude for the
+wonderful preservation of Mickey and his son. Sut Simpson, the
+scout, was well paid for his services, and, bidding them good-bye,
+he went to his field of duty in the southwest, while Mr. Munson,
+Mickey and Fred were glad enough to return east.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CAVE IN THE MOUNTAIN***</p>
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+</pre>
+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,6580 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Cave in the Mountain, by Lieut. R. H.
+Jayne
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Cave in the Mountain
+
+Author: Lieut. R. H. Jayne
+
+Release Date: January 10, 2005 [eBook #14647]
+
+Language: english
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CAVE IN THE MOUNTAIN***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Bill Tozier, Barbara Tozier, and the Project Gutenberg
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustrations.
+ See 14647-h.htm or 14647-h.zip:
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/6/4/14647/14647-h/14647-h.htm)
+ or
+ (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/6/4/14647/14647-h.zip)
+
+
+
+
+
+THE CAVE IN THE MOUNTAIN
+
+A Sequel to _In the Pecos Country_
+
+by
+
+LIEUT. R. H. JAYNE
+
+Author of _Lost in the Wilderness_, _Through Apache Land_, _In the Pecos
+Country_, etc.
+
+New York
+The Mershon Company
+
+1894
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I. A Strange Guide
+ II. Alone in the Gloom
+ III. Strange Experiences
+ IV. Sunlight and Hope
+ V. Mining and Countermining
+ VI. A Daring Exploit
+ VII. Fishing for a Friend
+ VIII. Fishing for a Prize
+ IX. Groping in Darkness
+ X. "Here We are Again!"
+ XI. Through the Mountains
+ XII. Through the Mountains--Continued
+ XIII. In the Nick of Time
+ XIV. Between Two Fires
+ XV. On the Defensive
+ XVI. Friend or Enemy?
+ XVII. Fortunate Diversion
+ XVIII. An Old Acquaintance
+ XIX. How it was Done
+ XX. Sut's Camp-Fire
+ XXI. Safety and Sleep
+ XXII. Two Old Acquaintances
+ XXIII. Border Chivalry
+ XXIV. Night Visitors
+ XXV. Hunting a Steed
+ XXVI. Lone Wolf's Tactics
+ XXVII. The End
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+A STRANGE GUIDE.
+
+
+"Well, if he doesn't beat any one I ever heard of!"
+
+Mickey O'Rooney and Fred Munson were stretched on the Apache blanket,
+carefully watching the eyes of the wild beast whenever they showed
+themselves, and had been talking in guarded tones. The Irishman had been
+silent for several minutes, when the lad asked him a question and received
+no answer. When the thing was repeated several times, he crawled over to
+his friend, and, as he expected, found him sound asleep.
+
+This was not entirely involuntary upon the part of Mickey. He had shown
+himself, on more than one occasion, to be a faithful sentinel, when
+serious danger threatened; but he believed that there was nothing to be
+feared on the present occasion, and, as he was sorely in need of sleep, he
+concluded to indulge while the opportunity was given him.
+
+"Sleep away, old fellow," said Fred. "You seem to want it so bad that I
+won't wake you up again."
+
+The boy's curiosity having been thoroughly aroused, all tendency to
+slumber upon his part had departed, and he determined that if there was
+any way by which he could profit any by that wolf, he would do it.
+
+"He may hang around here for a day or two," he mused, as he heard the
+faint tappings upon the sand, "thinking all the time that he'll get a
+chance to make a meal off of us. So he will, if we don't keep a bright
+look-out. It seems to me that he might be driven out."
+
+The more he reflected upon this suggestion of his own, the more reasonable
+did it become. His plan was to drive out the wolf, to compel him to show
+up, as a card player might say. Considering the dread which all wild
+animals have of fire, the plan was simple, and would have occurred to
+anyone.
+
+"The camp-fire seems to be all out, but there must be some embers under
+the ashes. Mickey threw down his torch somewhere near here."
+
+Carefully raking off the ashes with a stick, he found plenty of coals
+beneath. These were brought together, and some of the twigs laid over, the
+heat causing them at once to burst into a crackling flame. This speedily
+radiated enough light for his purpose, which was simply to find one of
+those "fat" pieces of pine, which make the best kind of torches. A few
+minutes search brought forth the one he needed, and then, shoving his
+revolver down in his belt, he was ready.
+
+The light revealed the large beautiful Apache blanket, stretched out upon
+the ground, while the Irishman lay half upon it and half upon the earth,
+sleeping as soundly as if in his bed at home. Beyond him and in every
+direction was the blackness of night. But, looking to his right, he
+discovered the two eyes staring at him and glowing like balls of fire.
+
+The animal was evidently puzzled at the sight before him. Fred dreaded a
+shot from the Indians above, and, as soon as he had his torch ready and
+had taken all his bearings, he drew the ashes over the spluttering flame.
+Save for the torch, all was again wrapped in impenetrable gloom.
+
+The glowing orbs were still discernible, and, holding the smoking torch
+above his head, Fred began moving slowly toward them. The animal did not
+stir until the lad was within twenty feet, when the latter concluded that
+it would be a good thing for him, also, to take a rest.
+
+"Wonder if he's been trained not to be afraid of torches," mused the
+little fellow. "I hope he hasn't, and I hope too there won't be any
+trouble in scaring him."
+
+The lad dreaded another possibility,--that his torch might be suddenly
+extinguished. If that should go out, leaving them in utter darkness, the
+wolf would immediately rise to a superior plane, and speedily demonstrate
+who was master of the situation.
+
+Fred swung the torch several times around his head, until it was fanned
+into a bright flame, after which he resumed his advance upon his foe. At
+the very first step the beast vanished. He had wheeled about and made off
+in a twinkling.
+
+The lad pressed onward at the same deliberate gait, watching carefully for
+the reappearance of the guiding orbs. It was not long before they were
+observed a dozen yards or so further on. The wolf was manifestly
+retreating. He had no fancy for that terrible torch bearing down on him,
+and he was falling back by forced marches. This being precisely what Fred
+desired, he was greatly encouraged.
+
+"He is making his way out, and after awhile he will reach the place, and
+away he'll go. If he's a wolf or fox, the hole may be so small that Mickey
+can't squeeze through, but I think I can follow one of the animals
+anywhere."
+
+After going some distance further, Fred noticed that the animal was not
+proceeding in a straight line. He would appear on his right, where he
+would stare at the advancing torch until it was quite close, when he would
+scamper off to the left, and go through the same performance.
+
+"He knows the route better than I do, so I won't try to disturb him,"
+reflected the boy as he followed up his advantage, with high hopes of
+discovering the secret which was so important to himself and friend. "I
+won't crowd him too hard, either, for I may scare him off the track and
+fail."
+
+The wolf was evidently a prey to curiosity--the same propensity which has
+caused the death of many bipeds and quadrupeds. The action of the torch
+puzzled him, no doubt. He had seen fire before, and probably had been
+burnt--so he knew enough to give it a wide berth; but it is doubtful
+whether he ever saw a flaring torch held over the head of a boy and
+solemnly bearing down upon him.
+
+Fred's absorbing interest in the whole affair made him wholly unmindful of
+the distance he was traveling. He had already advanced several hundred
+yards, and had no idea that he was so far away from his slumbering friend.
+The fact was that the singular cave was only one among a thousand similar
+ones found among the wilds of the West and Southwest. Its breadth was not
+great, but the distance which it ran back into the mountains was amazing.
+
+The wolf was leading the lad a long distance from the camp, and, what was
+more important (and which fact, unfortunately, Fred had failed to notice),
+the route was anything but a direct one. It could not have been more
+sinuous or winding. The course of the cavern, in reality, was as winding
+as that of the ravine in which he had effected his escape from the
+Apaches, and from which it seemed he had irrevocably strayed. Had he
+attempted to make his return, he would have found it impossible to rejoin
+Mickey O'Rooney, unless the two should call and signal to each other.
+
+However, the attention of the lad was taken up so entirely with the task
+he had laid hold of, and which seemed in such a fair way of
+accomplishment, that he took no note of his danger. The wolf was leading
+him forward as the _ignis fatuus_ lures the wearied traveler through
+swamps and thickets to renewed disappointment.
+
+"He has some way of reaching the outer world which the Indians haven't
+been able to find. Of course not; for, if they knew, they would have been
+in here long ago. They wouldn't stay fooling around that opening, where
+they're likely to get a shot from Mickey when they ain't expecting it.
+Now, if the wolf will only behave himself, all will come out all right."
+
+Fearful of being caught with an extinguished torch, the lad kept up the
+practice of swinging it rapidly round his head every few minutes. When he
+ceased each performance, the flame was so bright that he was able to
+penetrate the darkness much further upon every hand.
+
+On one or two of these occasions he caught a glimpse of the creature as it
+bounded away into the darkness. In shape and action it was so much like
+the mountain wolves which had besieged him some nights before that all
+doubts were removed. He knew it was one of those terrible animals beyond
+question.
+
+"Wonder how it is he's alone? It wasn't long after I saw that old fellow
+the other night, when there was about fifty of them under the tree. One of
+them is enough for me, if he doesn't give us the slip. Maybe he has come
+in to find out how the land lies, and is going back to report to the
+rest."
+
+Fred could not help reflecting every few minutes on the terrible situation
+in which he would be should his torch fail, and the other bring a pack of
+ravenous creatures about him. They would make exceedingly short work of a
+dozen like him.
+
+"It seems good for hours yet," he said as he held it before him, and
+examined it for the twentieth time.
+
+The stick was a piece of a limb about as thick as his arm, and fully a
+yard in length. It felt as heavy as _lignum vitae_, and, by looking at the
+end held in his hand and that which was burning, it could be seen that it
+was literally surcharged with resin--so much so that, after being cut, it
+had overflowed, and was sticky on the outside. No doubt this, with others,
+had been gathered for that express purpose, and there was no reason to
+doubt its capacity.
+
+As Fred advanced he caught occasional glimpses of the jagged overhanging
+rocks, which in some places were wet, the water dripping down upon him as
+he passed. The fact, too, that more than once both sides of the cave were
+visible at the same time, told him that the dimensions of their prison
+were altogether different from what he had supposed.
+
+"There must be an end of this somewhere," he muttered, beginning to
+suspect that he had gone quite a distance, "and I'm getting tired of this
+tramping. I hope the wolf hasn't gone beyond the door he came in by, and I
+hope he has nearly reached it, for it will take me some time before I can
+find my way back to Mick."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ALONE IN THE GLOOM.
+
+
+Before Fred could complete the sentence his foot struck an obstruction and
+he was precipitated headlong over and down a chasm which had escaped his
+notice. He fell with such violence that he was knocked senseless.
+
+When he recovered he was in darkness, his torch having been extinguished.
+The smell of the burning resin recalled him to himself, and it required
+but a moment for him to remember the accident which had befallen him. For
+a time he scarcely dared to stir, fearing that he might pitch headlong
+over some precipice. He felt of his face and hands, but could detect
+nothing like blood. The boy had received quite a number of severe bruises,
+however, and when he ventured to stir there were sharp, stinging pains in
+his shoulders, neck and legs.
+
+"Thank God I am alive!" was his fervent ejaculation, after he had taken
+his inventory. "But I don't know where I am or how I can get back again. I
+wonder what has become of the torch."
+
+He could find nothing of his flambeau, although he was confident that it
+was near at hand. Fred believed that he had fallen about twenty feet,
+striking upon his chest and shoulders. At this juncture, he thought of the
+wolf which had drawn him into the mishap, and he turned his head so
+suddenly to look for him that the sharp pain in his neck caused him to cry
+out. But nothing of the beast was to be seen.
+
+"Maybe he went over here ahead of me, and got killed," he thought; "but I
+don't think that can be, for a wolf is a good deal spryer than a boy can
+be, and he wouldn't have tumbled down as I did."
+
+Fred recollected that he had several matches about him, and he carefully
+struck one upon the rock beside him. The tiny flame showed that he had
+stumbled into a rocky pit. It was a dozen feet in length, some three or
+four in width, and, when he stood erect, his head was level with the
+surface of the ground above. In consequence, it would be a very easy
+matter for him to climb out whenever he chose to do so; but above all
+things he was desirous of regaining his torch. Just as the match between
+his fingers burned out, he caught sight of it, lying a short distance
+away.
+
+"It's queer what became of that wolf," he said to himself, as he recovered
+the precious fagot and painfully climbed up out of the pit. "Maybe he
+thought I was killed, and went off to tell the rest of his friends, so
+that they can all have a feast over me. I must fire up the torch as soon
+as I can, for I'm likely to need it."
+
+This did not prove a very difficult matter, on account of the fatness of
+the torch, which ignited readily, and quickly spread into the same thick,
+smoking flame as before. But Fred noted that it was about half burned up,
+and he could not expect it to hold out many hours longer, as it had
+already done good service.
+
+"I wish I could see the wolf again," he said to himself, looking longingly
+around in the darkness, "for I believe he entered the cave somewhere near
+here, and it was a great pity that I had the accident just at the moment I
+was about to learn all about it."
+
+He moved carefully about the cave, and soon found that he had reached the
+furtherest limit. Less than twenty feet away it terminated, the jagged
+walls shutting down, and offering an impassable barrier to any further
+progress in that direction.
+
+All that he could do, after completing his search, was to turn back in
+quest of his friend Mickey. The belief that he was in the immediate
+neighborhood of the outlet delayed the lad's return until he could assure
+himself that it was impossible to find that for which he was hunting, and
+which had been the means of his wandering so far away from camp.
+
+Fred occupied fully an hour in the search. Here and there he observed
+scratches upon the surface of the rocks in some places. He was confident
+that they had been made by the feet of the wolves; but in spite of these
+encouraging signs, he was baffled in his main purpose, and how the visitor
+made his way in and out of the cave remained an impenetrable mystery.
+
+"Too bad, too bad!" he muttered, with a great sigh. "I shall have to give
+it up, after all. I only wish Mickey was here to help me. I will call to
+him, so that he will be sure to hear."
+
+As has been intimated in another place, the two friends had a code of
+signals understood by both. When they were separated by quite a distance,
+and one wished to draw the other to him, he had a way of placing two of
+his fingers against his tongue, and emitting a shrill screech which might
+well be taken for the scream of a locomotive whistle, so loud and piercing
+was its character.
+
+When the lad uttered his signal, he was startled by the result. A hundred
+echoes were awakened within the cavern, and the uproar fairly deafened
+him. It seemed to him that ten thousand little imps were perched all
+around the cavern, with their fingers thrust in their mouths, waiting for
+him to start the tumult, when they joined in, with an effect that was
+overwhelming and overpowering.
+
+"Good gracious!" he gasped, "I never heard anything like that. I thought
+all the rocks were going to tumble down upon my head, and I believe some
+must have been loosened."
+
+He looked apprehensively at the dark, jagged points overhead. But they
+were as grim and motionless as they had been during the many long years
+that had rolled over them.
+
+"Mickey must have heard that, if he is anywhere within twenty miles," he
+concluded.
+
+But, if such was the case, he sent back no answering signal, as was his
+invariable custom, when that of his friend reached him. Fred listened long
+and attentively, but caught no reply.
+
+"I guess I'll have to try it again," he added, with a mingled laugh and
+shudder. "I think these walls can stand a little more such serenading."
+
+He threw his whole soul in the effort, and the screeching whistle that he
+sent out was frightful, followed, as it was, by the innumerable echoes. It
+seemed as if the walls took up the wave of sound as if it were a foot-ball
+and hurled it back and forth, from side to side, and up and down, in
+furious sport. The dread of losing his torch alone prevented the lad from
+throwing it down and clapping his hands to his ears, to shut out the
+horrid din. Some of the distant echoes, coming in after the others were
+exhausted, gave an odd, dropping character to the volleys of sound.
+
+Had the expected reply of Mickey been the same as the call to him, the lad
+would have been deceived thereby, for the echoes, as will be understood,
+were precisely the same as answering whistles, uttered in the same manner.
+But Fred understood that, if the Irishman heard him, he would reply with a
+series of short signals, such as are heard on some railroads when danger
+is detected. But none such came, and he knew, therefore, that the ears
+which he intended to reach were not reached at all.
+
+"I don't understand that," he mused, perplexedly, "unless he's asleep yet.
+When I left him, it didn't seem as though he'd wake up in a week. Perhaps
+he can hear me better if I shout."
+
+A similar racket was produced when the boy strained his lungs, but his
+straining ear could detect no other result. It never once occurred to Fred
+that he and his friend were separated by such a distance that they could
+not communicate by sound or signal. And yet such was the case, he having
+traveled much further than he suspected.
+
+Having been forced to the disheartening conclusion that it was impossible
+to find the outlet by which the wolf had escaped, Fred had but one course
+left. That was, to find his way back to the camp-fire in the shortest time
+and by the best means at his command. If the mountain would not go to
+Mohammed, then Mohammed would have to go to the mountain.
+
+The lad began to feel that a great deal of responsibility was on his
+shoulders. The remembrance of Mickey O'Rooney going to sleep was alarming
+to him. He looked upon him as one regards a sentinel who sinks into
+slumber when upon duty. Knowing the cunning of the redskins, Fred feared
+that they would discover the fact, and descend into the cave in such
+numbers that escape would be out of the question.
+
+And then again, suppose that their enemies did not disturb them, what was
+to be their fate? The venison in the possession of the Irishman could not
+last a great deal longer, and, when that was gone, no means of obtaining
+food would be left. What were the two prisoners then to do?
+
+Mickey had hinted to Fred what his intention was, but the lad felt very
+little faith in its success. It appeared like throwing life away to make
+such a foolhardy attempt to reach the outside as diving into a stream of
+water from which there was no withdrawal, and the length of whose flow
+beneath the rock could only be conjectured, with all the chances against
+success. But Fred recalled in what a marked manner Providence had favored
+him in the past, and he could but feel a strong faith that He would still
+hold him in his remembrance. "I wouldn't have believed I could go through
+all that I have had in the last few days; and yet God remembered me, and I
+am sure He will not forget me so long as I try to do His will."
+
+On the eve of starting he fancied he heard a slight rustling on his right,
+and he paused, hoping that the wolf would show himself again; but he could
+not discern anything, and concluded that it was the dropping of a stone or
+fragment of earth. The lad was further pleased to find, upon examination,
+that the revolver in his possession was uninjured by his fall. In short,
+the only one that had received any injuries was himself, and his were not
+of a serious character, being simply bruises, the effects of which would
+wear off in a short time.
+
+"I hate to leave here without seeing that wolf," he said, as he stood
+hesitating, with his torch in hand. "He may be sneaking somewhere among
+these rocks, popping in and out whenever he has a chance; and if I could
+only get another sight of him, I would stick to him till he told me his
+secret."
+
+He awaited awhile longer, but the hope was an illusive one, and he finally
+started on his return to camp.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+STRANGE EXPERIENCES.
+
+
+Young Munson was destined to learn ultimately that he had undertaken an
+impossible task. The hunter, in the flush and excitement attending the
+pursuit of game, can form no correct idea of the distance passed, and so
+he, in attempting to run the shadowy wolf to earth, had traveled twice as
+far as he supposed. The case is altogether different when the hunter
+starts to return. It is then that the furlongs become miles, and the
+wearied pursuer feels disgusted with the enthusiasm which led him so far
+away from headquarters.
+
+When the lad was certain that he had labored far enough on the back track
+to take him fully to the camp-fire, he really had not gone more than
+one-half the distance. Worse than this, he saw, from the nature of the
+ground, that he was "off soundings." Several times he was forced to leap
+over openings, or rents, similar to that into which he had stumbled, and
+the broadening out of the cave made it out of his power to confine his
+path to anything like reasonable limits. The appearance of unexpected
+obstructions directly in his way compelled numerous detours, with the
+inevitable result of disarranging the line he intended to pursue, and
+causing his course to be a zigzag one of the most marked character.
+
+There were no landmarks to afford him the least guidance. In short, he was
+like the ill-fated steamer caught on a dangerous coast by an impenetrable
+fog, where no observations can be made, and the captain is compelled to
+"go it blind." He was forcibly reminded of this difficulty by unexpectedly
+finding himself face to face with the side of the cavern. When he thought
+that he was pursuing the right direction, here was evidence that he was at
+least going at right angles, and, to all intents and purposes, he might as
+well have been going in exactly the opposite course.
+
+"Well, things are getting mixed," he exclaimed, more amused than
+frightened at this discovery. "I never tramped over such a place before,
+and if I ever get out of this, I'll never try it again."
+
+But there was little cause for mirth, and when he had struggled an hour
+longer, something like despair began to creep into his heart. Worse than
+all, he became aware that his torch was nearly exhausted, and, under the
+most favorable circumstances, could not last more than an hour longer.
+
+While toiling in this manner, he had continued to signal to Mickey in his
+usual manner, but with no other result than that of awakening the same
+deafening din of echoes. By this time he was utterly worn out. He had been
+traveling for hours, or, rather, working, for nearly every step was
+absolute labor, so precipitous was the ground and so frequent were his
+detours. He had accomplished nothing. When he expected to find himself in
+the immediate vicinity of the campfire, there were no signs of it, and the
+loudest shout he could make to his friend brought no reply.
+
+This fact filled the mind of Fred with a hundred misgivings. He had given
+up the belief that it was possible for Mickey to remain asleep all this
+time. He was sure the night had passed, and, great as was the capacity of
+the Irishman in the way of slumber, he could not remain unconscious all
+the time. And then nothing seemed more probable than that he was placed
+for ever beyond the power of response. If a dozen Indians quietly let
+themselves down through the opening during the darkness of the night, they
+could easily discover the sleeping figure, and dispatch him before he
+could make any kind of resistance.
+
+It was this fear of the Indians being in the cave that made the lad
+apprehensive every time he gave utterance to his signals. He believed they
+were as likely to reach the ears of the Apaches as those of Mickey, and
+his faith of the extraordinary shrewdness of those people was such that he
+did not doubt but that, by some means or other, they would learn the true
+signal with which to reply. As yet, however, no such attempt had been
+made, so far as his ears informed him, but his misgivings were none the
+less on that account. What was the use of their taking the trouble to
+answer when he was walking directly into their hands? There was a
+cowering, shrinking sensation from his own noise, caused by the
+expectation that a half-dozen crouching figures would leap up and swoop
+down upon him.
+
+The darkness remained impenetrable, and, as Fred toiled forward, he was
+continually recalling the words of Byron, which he had read frequently
+when at school, and had learned to recite for his father. He found himself
+repeating them, and there was no doubt that he realized more vividly than
+do boys generally of his age the meaning of the author:
+
+ "The world was void:
+ The populous and powerful was a lump,
+ Seasonless, herbless, treeless, manless, lifeless;
+ A lump of death, a chaos of hard clay.
+ The rivers, lakes and ocean, all stood still,
+ And nothing stirr'd within their silent depths."
+
+Such fancies as these were not calculated to make him feel particularly
+comfortable while carrying the torch. Such a person in such a situation
+makes an especially inviting target of himself, and, although Fred dreaded
+to see it burn itself out, when the chances were that he was likely to be
+in sore need of the same, yet he had wrought himself up to such a pitch
+that he more than once meditated extinguishing it altogether, with the
+purpose of putting himself on an equality with those of his enemies who
+might be prowling in the night around him.
+
+"I wonder whether Mickey would be more likely to hear my pistol than a
+shout or whistle?" he said, as he drew the weapon from his belt and held
+it up to inspect it in the light of the flaring torch. "It seems to be all
+right, although there's no telling how long since it has been loaded. Here
+goes."
+
+With this, he pointed the muzzle toward the cavern and pulled the trigger.
+
+The response was as prompt as though he had charged the chamber but a
+short time before, proving not only that the weapon was of the best
+quality, but that the ammunition was equally so, and the slight moisture
+that characterized the atmosphere of the cave had not been sufficient to
+injure the charge. It seemed as if he had fired a cannon, the echoes
+rolling, doubling, and repeating on themselves in the most bewildering and
+terrifying fashion.
+
+Fred could not understand how it was that such a pandemonium of sound
+could escape filling the subterranean world from one end to the other, and
+so he sat down on a ledge of rock to listen for some reply from his
+friend.
+
+It was several seconds before the trickeries of nature, in the way of
+echoes, terminated and matters settled down to their natural quiet. And
+then, when quiet came again, it was like that of a tomb--deep, profound,
+and impressive. The bent and listening ear could detect nothing that could
+be supposed to resemble the noise of the cascade, which had excited his
+wonder when he was stretched out upon the ground directly above it.
+
+"This must be about forty miles round," he said to himself, when he had
+waited for the reply until convinced that it was not forthcoming, "and I
+have strayed away altogether."
+
+The luxury of rest was so great, after his long, wearying toil, that he
+concluded that he might as well spend a half hour in that fashion as in
+any other. The echoes and pains of his bruises had departed,--or, more
+properly, perhaps they were consolidated with the aches and pains
+following upon the overtaxing of his limbs.
+
+"Oh, dear! How tired I am!" he sighed, as he stretched out his limbs. "It
+seems to me that I won't be able to walk again for a week. I must rest
+awhile."
+
+His fatigue was so great that he was not conscious of any desire for food
+or rest.
+
+"Maybe I will need that torch more after a time than I do now," he added,
+as he looked listlessly at it. "It seems good for a half hour yet, and I
+don't want it." With this he thrust the burning end in the sand at his
+feet, and held it there until it was entirely extinguished, and he was
+wrapped again in the same impenetrable darkness. So far as possible, he
+had become accustomed to this dreadful state of affairs. He had been
+viewing and breathing the atmospheric blackness for many hours, although
+it may be doubted whether one who had spent so much of his life in the
+sunshine could ever become accustomed to the total deprivation of it.
+
+Fred had assumed an easy position, where he could lay his head back, and,
+straightening out his legs, he made up his mind to enjoy the rest which he
+needed so badly. When a lad is thoroughly and completely tired, it is
+difficult for him to think of anything else; and although, while walking,
+the fugitive was tormented by all manner of wild fancies and fears, yet
+when his efforts ceased, something like a reaction followed, and he sighed
+for rest, content to wait until he should be forced to face the
+difficulties again.
+
+When he closed his eyes all sorts of lights danced before him, and
+strange, indescribable noises filled the air. It seemed that impish
+figures were frolicking all around, sometimes grinning in his face, and
+then skurrying far away through the aisles of the gloom. At last he slept.
+The slumber was sweet and dreamless, carrying him through the entire
+night, and affording him the very rest and refreshment which he so sorely
+needed.
+
+This sleep was nearly completed when Fred was aroused by some animal
+licking his face. He arose with a start of exclamation and terror, and the
+animal growled and darted back several feet. A pair of gleaming eyes
+flashed in the darkness--the same pair which he had seen before. The wolf
+had come back to him.
+
+Fred drew his revolver with the purpose of giving him a shot, when he
+reflected that it would be wisdom not to kill the animal until he was
+forced to do it in self defense. So he shoved the weapon back in its
+place, where it could be seized at a moment's warning, and sat still. In a
+few moments the wolf ventured softly up to him, and preparing to begin his
+feast. The boy, yielding to a strange whim, threw out his arms and made a
+grab at him.
+
+The affrighted creature made a leap to escape the embrace, and Fred
+grasped his tail with both hands. This made the wolf wild with terror, and
+away he leaped. The boy hung on, running with might and main in his
+efforts to keep up. The brute, not knowing what he had in tow, was only
+intent upon getting away, and he plunged ahead as furiously as if a
+blazing torch was tied to his tail. Fred was fully imbued with the "spirit
+of the occasion," and resolved not to part company with his guide, unless
+the caudal appendage should detach itself from its owner. The wolf was
+naturally much more fleet of foot, but his efforts of speed only increased
+that of the lad, who, still clinging to his support, labored with might
+and main.
+
+Away, away they went!
+
+Now he was down on his knees; then clambering up again; then banging
+against the rocks--still onward, until he found himself flat on his face,
+still holding to his support, while the wolf was clutching and clawing to
+get away. They were in such a narrow passage way that Fred could not rise.
+Unclasping one hand, he held on with the other, while he worked along
+after him. For a long time this savage scratching, struggling and toiling
+continued, and then, all at once, Fred was dazzled by the overpowering
+flood of light.
+
+He had escaped from the cave in the mountain, and was in the outside world
+again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+SUNLIGHT AND HOPE.
+
+
+By clinging to the tail of the terrified wolf, Fred Munson had been
+assisted, dragged, and pulled from the Cimmerian gloom of the mountain
+cave into the glorious sunlight again. When the glare of light burst upon
+him, he let go of the queer aid to freedom, and the mystified animal
+skurried away with increased speed.
+
+For a time the lad was so dazed and bewildered that he scarcely
+comprehended his good fortune. His eyes had been totally unaccustomed to
+light for so long a time that the retina was overpowered by the sudden
+flood of it and required time to accommodate itself to the new order of
+things. A few minutes were sufficient. And then, when he looked about and
+saw that he was indeed outside of the cave which had been such an
+appalling prison to him, Fred was fairly wild with joy.
+
+It was all he could do to restrain himself from shouting, whooping and
+hurrahing at the top of his voice. It was only the recollection that there
+were a number of Apaches near at hand that sufficed to keep his voice
+toned down. But he danced and swung his arms, and threw himself here and
+there in a way that would have made a spectator certain that he was
+hilariously crazy. Not until he was thoroughly used up did he consent to
+pause and take a breathing spell. Then he gasped out, as well as he could,
+during his hurried breathing:
+
+"Thank the good Lord! I knew He would not forget me. He let me hunt around
+for a while, long enough to make me feel I couldn't do anything, and then
+He stepped in. The wolf came. I didn't think I could make anything out of
+him, but I grabbed his tail. I held on and here I am. Thank the good Lord
+again."
+
+When able to control himself still further, Fred made a survey of his
+surroundings. In the first place, he observed that the forenoon was only
+fairly under way, the sun having risen just high enough to be visible. The
+sky was clear of clouds and the day promised to be a beautiful one,
+without being oppressively warm.
+
+"It is strange that I could not find the opening when the wolf scampered
+straight to it."
+
+However, he did not stop to puzzle over the matter. It was sufficient to
+know and feel that he was back again in the busy, bustling world, saved
+from being buried in a living tomb.
+
+An examination of the point where he had debouched from these Plutonian
+regions showed Fred that he was considerably below the general regions of
+the earth. He was in a sort of valley, surrounded by rocks and boulders,
+and the opening through which he had scrambled was situated sidewise, so
+that at a distance of ten feet it could not be seen. This accounted for
+the fact that none of the Indians knew any other means of ingress and
+egress excepting the opening in the roof of the cave. It was almost
+impossible to discover, except by accident or long continued and
+systematic search.
+
+Fred's next thought was regarding Mickey O'Rooney, and he questioned
+himself as to the best means of reaching him, and assisting him to the
+same remarkably good fortune which had attended himself. The immediate
+suggestion, naturally, was to re-enter the cave and, after hunting up his
+old friend, conduct Mickey to the outer world, but it required only brief
+deliberation to convince him of the utter folly of such an attempt. In the
+first place, should he re-enter the cave, he would be lost again, not
+knowing in what direction to turn to find his friend and entirely unable
+to communicate with him by signal, as had been their custom when separated
+and looking for each other. Should he venture away from the tunnel to
+renew his search, it was scarcely possible that he could find his way back
+again. He would not only lose Mickey, but he would lose himself, with not
+the remotest chance of finding his way into the outer world again. So it
+was clearly apparent that, having been delivered from prison, it would not
+do for him to go back under any circumstances. He must remain where he
+was, and whatever assistance he could render his friend, must be given
+from the outside. How was this to be done?
+
+To begin with, he felt the necessity of getting out of the circumscribing
+valley and of taking his bearings. He wished to learn where the opening
+through which he had fallen was situated. It was no difficult matter to
+work his way upward until he found himself up on a level with the main
+plateau. There, his view, although broken and interrupted in many
+directions, was quite extended in others, and his eye roamed over a large
+extent of that broken section of the country. He was utterly unable to
+recognize anything he saw, but he was confident that he was no great
+distance from the spot for which he was searching. It was only through the
+entrance that he could hold communication with Mickey, whenever the way
+should be left clear for him to do so. But he was fully mindful of the
+necessity for caution in every movement.
+
+It was not to be supposed that the Apaches, having struck what might be
+called a gold-mine, intended to abandon it at the very time the richest of
+results were promised. And so, after long deliberation, the boy decided
+upon the direction in which the opening lay, and he made toward a small
+peak from which, in case his calculations were correct, he knew he would
+see it. Strange to say, his reckoning was correct in this instance; and
+when he stealthily made his way to the elevation and looked down over the
+slope, he saw the clump of bushes covering the "skylight," not more than a
+hundred yards distant.
+
+He saw something else, which was not quite so pleasant. Six Apache
+warriors were guarding the same entrance.
+
+"I wonder if they think Mickey expects to make a jump up through there!"
+was the thought which came to Fred, as he peered down upon the savages,
+and counted them over several times. "I don't see what they are to gain by
+waiting there, unless they mean to go down pretty soon."
+
+He could not be too careful in the vicinity of such characters, and,
+stretching out flat upon his face, he peeped over the top, taking the
+precaution first to remove his cap, and then to permit no more of his head
+than was indispensable to appear above the surface. The six redskins were
+lounging in as many different lazy attitudes. One seemed sound asleep,
+with his face turned to the ground, and looking like a warrior that had
+fallen from some balloon, and, striking on his stomach, lay just as he was
+flattened out. Another was half-sitting and half-reclining, smoking a pipe
+with a very long stem. His face was directly toward Fred, who noticed that
+his eyes were cast downward, as though he were gazing into the bowl of his
+pipe, while Fred could plainly see the ugly lips, as they parted at
+intervals and emitted their pulls in a fashion as indolent as that of some
+wealthy Turk. A third was seated a little further off, examining his
+rifle, which he had probably injured in some way, and which occupied his
+attention to the exclusion of everything else.
+
+The bushes surrounding the opening had been torn away, although it was
+difficult to conceive what the Indians expected to accomplish by such an
+act, as it only served to make them plainer targets to the Irishman,
+whenever he chose to crack away from below.
+
+The remaining trio of Apaches were occupied in some way with the cavern.
+They were stretched out upon the ground, with their heads close to the
+orifice, down which they seemed to be peering, and doing something, the
+nature of which the lad could not even guess.
+
+"That don't look as though they had caught Mickey," he muttered, with a
+feeling of inexpressible relief; "for, if they had, they wouldn't be
+loafing around there."
+
+Nothing of their horses could be seen, although he knew they must have a
+number of them somewhere in the neighborhood. An Apache or Comanche
+without his mustang would be like a soldier in battle without weapons.
+
+"I'd like to find them," thought Fred, lowering his head, and looking back
+of him. "I'd take one and start all the others away, and then there would
+be fun."
+
+The lad had it in his power to take an important step toward his return to
+his friends. Nothing was more likely than that a little search through the
+immediate neighborhood would discover the mustangs of his enemies, which,
+as a matter of course, were unguarded, the owners anticipating no trouble
+from any such source. Mounted upon the fleetest of prairie rangers, it
+would not require long to reach the open country, when he could speed away
+homeward.
+
+But to do this required the abandonment of his friend, Mickey O'Rooney,
+who would not have been within the cavern at that minute but for his
+efforts to rescue him from the same prison. It was hard to tell in what
+way the lad expected to benefit him by staying, and yet nothing would have
+persuaded him to do otherwise.
+
+"I may get a chance to do something for him, and if I should be gone and
+never see him again, I should blame myself forever. So I'll wait here and
+watch."
+
+The three redskins on the edge of the opening remained occupied with
+something, but the curiosity of the lad continued unsatisfied until one of
+them raised up and moved backward several steps. Then Fred saw that he had
+a lasso in his hand, and was drawing it up from the cave. He pulled it up
+with one hand, while he caught and looped it with the other, until he had
+nearly a score of the coils in his grasp. This could not have been the
+cord which held the blanket when the shot of Mickey O'Rooney cut it and
+let the bundle drop, for that was much smaller, while this was sufficient
+to bear a weight of several hundred pounds, it having been used to lasso
+the fleet-footed and powerful mustangs of the prairies.
+
+"They've been fishing with it," concluded the youngster; "but I don't
+believe that Mickey would bite. What are they going to do now?"
+
+After drawing up the rope, the whole half dozen Apaches seemed to become
+very attentive. They gathered in a group and began discussing matters in
+their earnest fashion, gesticulating and grunting so loud that Fred
+distinctly heard them from where he lay. This discussion, however,
+speedily resulted in action.
+
+Another of the blankets already described was very artistically doubled
+and folded into the resemblance of a man, and then the lasso was attached
+to it. The Apaches experimented with it for several minutes before putting
+it to the test, but at last everything was satisfactory, and it was
+launched. The aborigines seemed to comprehend what the trouble was with
+the other, and they avoided repeating the error.
+
+When they began cautiously lowering the bundle, the six gathered as close
+to the margin as was prudent to await the result. Their interest was
+intense, for they had mapped out their programme, and much depended upon
+the result of this venture. But among the half dozen there was no one who
+was more nervously interested than Fred Munson, who felt that the fate of
+Mickey O'Rooney was trembling in the balance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+MINING AND COUNTERMINING
+
+
+Fred expected every moment to catch the dull crack of the rifle from the
+subterranean regions as a signal that Mickey O'Rooney had neither closed
+his eyes to the impending peril, nor had given way to despair at the
+trying position in which he was placed. But the stillness remained
+unbroken, while the lasso was steadily paid out by the dusky hands of the
+swarthy warrior, whose motions were closely watched by the others.
+
+Lower and lower it descended as the coils lying at his knees were steadily
+unwound, until the disturbed lad was certain the bottom of the cavern was
+nearly reached, and still all was silent as the tomb.
+
+"I'm sure I would hear his gun if he fired it," he said, worried and
+distressed by what was taking place before his eyes; "and if I did not, I
+could tell by the way they acted whenever he pulled trigger. What can he
+be doing?"
+
+The lad thought it possible that his friend was absent in some distant
+part of the cave hunting for him, and was, therefore, totally unaware of
+the flank movement that was under way. It could not be that he was still
+asleep; he had no fears on that score. It might be, too, that the Irishman
+had arrived at the conclusion that the situation had grown so desperate as
+to warrant him in the _dernier resorte_ he had fixed upon. If such was the
+case, then, as Mickey himself might have said, "the jig was up."
+
+Two or three coils still remained upon the ground when the Apache stopped
+lowering the lasso, and, looking in the faces of his companions, said
+something.
+
+"It has either reached the bottom of the cave, or else Mickey has fired at
+it," said Fred, who became more excited than ever.
+
+He had caught no sound resembling a shot, and he concluded that it must be
+the former, as was really the case. In a few seconds the Indian began
+drawing up the lasso again, and a short time thereafter the roll of
+blanket was brought to the surface. It was carefully examined by all the
+group. The dirt on it proved that it had rested on the bottom of the cave,
+but there were no marks to show that it had received any attention at the
+hands of any one there.
+
+There were grunts of pleasure, as this fact was gathered by the redskins.
+The experiments had been satisfactory and they were prepared to venture
+upon the more dangerous and decisive one--the one which they intended
+should bring matters to a focus.
+
+Fred was in doubt what this plan was to be until he saw the blanket
+unfolded and as carefully wrapped around the form of one of the Apaches,
+encasing him from head to foot. Great pains were taken to hide his head
+and feet from view, the warrior lying upon his back, and suffering himself
+to be "done up" with as much thoroughness as if he were a choice sample of
+dry-goods. Viewed from a disinterested stand-point, the wonder was how he
+was to breathe in such wrappings.
+
+"They have tried the blanket, and finding that was not disturbed, they're
+going to send down one of their number, thinking that if Mickey does see
+it he'll believe it is the same blanket, and won't fire at it, because he
+didn't fire at the other."
+
+It looked very venturesome upon the part of the warrior thus to enter the
+lion's den. But while, as a rule, the Indians of the Southwest are
+treacherous and cowardly, there are occasional instances in which they
+show an intrepidity equal to that of the most daring white scouts.
+
+When everything was arranged to the satisfaction of all, three of the most
+stalwart Apaches braced themselves, with the lasso grasped between them,
+while a fourth carefully piloted the body over the edge of the opening,
+and began slowly lowering it to the bottom.
+
+The bravest man, placed in the position of the enwrapped redskin could not
+have avoided some tremor, when he knew that he was hanging in midair, in
+plain view of the rifleman who had separated the thong which supported the
+blanket in the first attempt. The Indian must have experienced strange
+emotions; but if he did, he gave no evidence. He remained as passive as a
+log, his purpose being to imitate the appearance of the first bundle.
+
+"Now, if Mickey let's that go down without sending a bullet through it, he
+hasn't got one half the sense that I think he has."
+
+Fred was hasty and impatient at the seeming success which marked
+everything that the red-skins undertook. He looked and listened for some
+evidence that the Irishman was "there;" but no dull, subterranean report
+told him of the fatal rifle-shot, while the three Apaches continued
+steadily lowering their comrade with as much coolness and deliberation as
+if not the slightest particle of danger threatened. Minute after minute
+passed, and the lad was in deep despair. It could not be, he was compelled
+to think, that Mickey O'Rooney was anywhere in the vicinity. He must be a
+long distance away, searching for his young friend, not knowing, and,
+perhaps, not caring about the Apaches. He might consider that, within the
+darkness of the cave, they all had an equal advantage, and he could hold
+his own against each and every one. There was no denying that the defender
+had a vast advantage over those who might come into his "castle," provided
+he was really aware of their movements, but it was this doubt that caused
+the boy his uneasiness.
+
+"He must be near the bottom," he concluded, when this paying-out process
+had continued some minutes longer, and he thought he saw very little of
+the lasso left.
+
+Such was the fact. Only a few seconds more passed, when there was a
+general loosening up on the part of the redskins, as in the case of men
+who have just finished a laborious job. They looked into each others
+faces, and there were guttural exclamations, as if they were
+congratulating themselves upon what had been accomplished.
+
+"And, now, what next?" asked the disgusted watcher. "Good luck seems to go
+with everything they undertake, and I suppose they'll bring Mickey up by
+the heels."
+
+But such was not the sequel, and probably not the expectation of the
+Apaches. They had succeeded in planting a man in the breach, and their
+purpose was to follow him, as they speedily proved. The behavior of the
+group around the opening showed that the Indians were holding
+communication with their ally below, probably by a system of signals with
+the lasso, such as the man in the diving-bell employs when below the
+surface. These, too, must have been satisfactory, for, in a very brief
+time thereafter, the decisive operations were taken up and continued.
+
+There was considerable of the lasso still left above ground--more than
+Fred imagined--and this was secured about a jutting point in a rock near
+at hand. It was fixed so immovably that it could not fail. "I wonder if
+they mean to roll that thing in upon Mickey's head, or what is it?"
+
+They speedily showed what their intentions were. In less than a minute
+after the lasso was fastened, one of the Apaches caught hold of it and
+slid down through the opening so rapidly, that it looked as if he had lost
+his hold and dropped out of sight. A second did precisely the same thing;
+then a third, fourth and fifth, until only one warrior was left above
+ground.
+
+"Oh! I hope he'll go," whispered Fred to himself; "and then I can do
+something big."
+
+But the Apaches had evidently concluded that it would be an imprudent
+arrangement not to leave any of their friends on guard--not because they
+expected any interference from outside parties, but to provide against
+accident. If the lasso should fail them at a critical moment, they would
+be in a bad predicament, cut off from all means of getting out, as the
+skylight was the only avenue known to them, while, if a comrade remained
+above, all such danger would be escaped. Their purpose had been to send
+the five warriors down into the cave to attend to the case of the parties
+there.
+
+The redskins were now down below and the whole thing was put in shape for
+operations to begin. All that remained was to find their man, and Fred
+could not tell what the prospects of success were in that direction; but
+he was almost ready to believe that they were all that the Indians could
+ask. The sixth Apache, who remained visible, took matters very
+comfortably. He stretched himself flat upon the ground, with his head
+hanging almost in the opening, so that he could catch every sound that
+came up from below. It was plain that he expected to be called upon to
+render important service, and he did not intend to let a signal escape
+him.
+
+The hour that succeeded made little change in the situation. The action of
+this redskin showed that he occasionally received and sent messages--most
+probably by the subterranean telegraph--but he shifted his position very
+little. While he was thus engaged, Fred Munson was intently occupied with
+another scheme, and he had speedily wrought himself into a high pitch of
+excitement.
+
+"I believe I can do it," he muttered, more than once, as he revolved the
+desperate scheme in his mind; but, whatever his plan was, he waited in the
+hope that fortune would appear more propitious.
+
+When the Apache had sat thus for some time, he changed his position. He
+had been lying with his side toward the lad, but now he sat up, with his
+back to him, and as close to the edge of the opening as was prudent, while
+he held the lasso in his hand, like the fisherman on the bank of a stream,
+who patiently waits and is sensitive to the slightest nibbling at the
+other end of his line.
+
+He had scarcely settled himself in this position when Fred Munson changed
+his own. Rising from the ground where he had lain so long, he stepped over
+the ridge, and advanced directly toward the redskin, who harbored no
+suspicion that there was any of his race in his neighborhood. The plan the
+lad had resolved upon required nerve, resolution and quickness. He stepped
+as lightly as was consistent with speed until he had passed half the
+distance, when he began to slacken his gait and to proceed with greater
+caution than ever.
+
+All depended upon his ability to keep from being heard or detected. Of
+course, he had no wish to engage in a fight with one of these fierce
+warriors, but he was prepared, even for that. His hand rested upon the
+hilt of his revolver, so that he could whip it out at an instant's warning
+and discharge it, as he meant to do if necessary.
+
+It was while he was yet some distance from the redskin that Fred felt that
+his position was one of frightful peril. His foe had his rifle within easy
+reach, and, if he turned too soon, he could pick off his young assailant
+before he should arrive within striking distance,--but each moment raised
+the hopes of the lad.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+A DARING EXPLOIT.
+
+
+A veteran Comanche warrior could not have advanced with greater skill than
+did young Munson approach the unconscious Apache. The warriors who had
+taken this little business in hand seemed to have cleared away the
+treacherous ground surrounding the opening, so that it was not likely to
+give way beneath their weight, even when they advanced close to the edge.
+The single redskin who remained seemed to have shifted his position more
+for the purpose of relieving himself from his cramped posture than
+anything else.
+
+He was standing erect, about a foot away from the edge, with the lasso in
+both hands, looking down into the cavern of gloom below, listening and
+watching, with the sense of touch also on the alert. His blanket and rifle
+lay at one side, out of the way, but where they could be reached at a
+single leap, if necessary. The end of the lasso was still fastened to the
+rock, but the savage held it loosely, so that the slightest twitch upon it
+would become known to him on the instant.
+
+It is not often that an Indian can be taken off the guard. Years of danger
+have made the senses of the savages preternaturally acute, and they are as
+distant as the timid antelope of the plains. But, for all that, there was
+a boy within a dozen yards of a swarthy warrior whose senses were on the
+alert, and yet had failed to detect his proximity.
+
+Fred gazed upon him with the fixed intensity of the jungle tiger stealing
+upon his prey. With his right hand resting upon the hilt of his revolver,
+he never removed his eyes from the muscular figure of the Apache, bending
+over the entrance to the cavern.
+
+"Shall I shoot, or push him over?"
+
+[Illustration: "SHALL I SHOOT OR PUSH HIM OVER?"]
+
+This was the question the lad kept revolving in his mind, as he advanced
+step by step. With the pistol he could bury two or three balls in the body
+of the redskin before he could suspect where they came from, and thus
+completely clear the path before him. But there were doubts in the way.
+The revolver might miss fire, in which case all hope would be gone. In a
+hand-to-hand tussle the Apache would be more than a match for a dozen such
+lads. True, the weapon had not failed when he pulled the trigger in the
+cave, but there was no certainty that it would not do so when he most
+needed it.
+
+Then, too, he felt a natural repugnance against stealing upon a foe in
+this fashion, and shooting him in the back. It had a cowardly look, even
+when certain that the threatened party would have done precisely the same
+thing, had the opportunity come in his way.
+
+"I will push him over, if he don't make me shoot him."
+
+But to do this necessitated a much closer approach. He must literally be
+within "striking distance." Could he place himself there without
+discovery? If the redskin were asleep, or if his mind was occupied with
+something of a different nature, or if there were some extraneous noise,
+the case would be different. The blowing of the wind, the murmur of a
+waterfall (such as Fred had heard when lying upon the ground in the same
+spot) would have been a most fortunate diversion. But there was nothing of
+the kind. There was a dead calm, not a breath of air stirring, and the day
+was hot.
+
+Fred had approached within twenty feet, and still the Apache did not stir.
+How vivid and indelibly his appearance was impressed upon the vision of
+the boy! He could never forget it. The redskin, although of powerful
+build, was anything but pleasing in appearance, even when viewed from the
+rear.
+
+His blanket being thrown aside, he was naked, with the exception of a
+breech-cloth. His feet were of large size, encased in shabby moccasins,
+while frowsy leggins dangled between the knee and ankle. His body, from
+the breech-cloth to the shoulders, was splashed and daubed with a half
+dozen kinds of paint, while his black, thin hair straggled about his
+shoulders and was smeared in the same fashion. Like most of the Indians of
+the Southwest, he wore no scalp-lock, but allowed his hair to hang like a
+woman's, not even permitting it to be gathered with a band, nor
+ornamenting it with the customary stained eagle-feathers. His arms were
+also bare, with the exception of the wrists, around which were tied
+bracelets, which, no doubt, he considered very attractive. The boy could
+fancy what a repulsive face he possessed.
+
+Step by step, inch by inch, the young hero made his way, his eyes fixed
+upon the savage with a burning intensity, until it seemed that he would
+burn him through and through. And the Apache heard him not, although they
+were no more than ten feet apart.
+
+"He will hear the thumping of my heart," was the constant fear of the boy.
+
+Slowly lifting one foot, he put in on the ground as softly as if it were
+held in a slipper of eiderdown. He was treading upon a thin growth of
+grass, interspersed plentifully with gravel, but he never once looked to
+see what he was stepping upon. Indeed, he could not remove his eyes from
+the one central figure of his thoughts and vision.
+
+One obstruction, no matter how slight--the turning of a pebble, a slip,
+even the most trivial, and the Apache would turn like lightning, and be
+upon him in a flash. Two more steps were taken, and only eight feet
+separated the lad and the Indian, and still the latter remained all
+unconscious of what was going on. Fred's heart was throbbing violently,
+but he retained control of himself. He felt that the critical moment was
+close at hand. A slight advance more, and the attempt was to be made.
+
+He grasped the handle of the revolver more firmly than ever, but he raised
+his foot for another step, feeling that the distance was still too great.
+At this juncture the Indian moved!
+
+He stepped one pace backward directly toward the boy, and he looked up and
+away. But not behind him. The glance was a mere casual one. He had heard
+nothing, and he expected to see nothing, when he looked off in the manner
+mentioned.
+
+The Apache remained standing in this attitude for a minute. Then he
+stepped forward and resumed his former position on the edge of the
+opening, still clinging to the lasso, as if in constant expectation of
+some signal.
+
+During this little episode Fred remained as motionless as if cast in
+bronze. His eyes were still centred upon the Indian, and he partially drew
+his revolver from the girdle he wore about his body, with the expectation
+of using it. But when his foe gave his attention to the cave below, the
+lad softly shoved the weapon back in its place, and again raised his foot.
+
+The movement was slow and painful, but it was accomplished successfully.
+Only a single step more remained to place him where he wanted to be. That
+taken, and one bound was all that he needed to make. Finally, and for the
+last time during the advance, the right foot ascended from the ground, was
+poised for a few seconds in the air, and then came down with the same care
+as before. But it touched a loose pebble which turned with the lightest
+imaginable noise.
+
+As quick as a flash the Apache raised his head, looked in front, and then
+darted his vision from left to right, when his keen eyes detected
+something crouching behind him.
+
+At the very instant of the discovery, Fred concentrated all his energies
+in one effort, and bounded forward like a catapult. The distance was
+precisely what it should have been, and, as he threw out his hands, he
+struck the Indian squarely in the back with the whole momentum of the
+body. In fact, the daring boy nearly overdid the matter. He not only came
+near driving the Apache to the other side of the opening, but he came
+equally near plunging himself down it. As it was, the victim, taken
+completely off his guard, was thrown against the other side, where his
+wonderful dexterity enabled him to throw out his hands and check his
+downward descent.
+
+Fred, after his narrow escape from going down into the cave, scrambled
+back to his place, and saw the Indian struggling upon the opposite side,
+with a good prospect of saving himself. "That won't do," was his thought,
+as he ran round the opening so as to bring himself directly before him. "I
+don't want you up here."
+
+Thrusting his pistol almost against his painted forehead, he fairly
+shouted:
+
+"Get down--let go, or I'll shoot!"
+
+Whether the Apache possessed much knowledge of the English tongue can only
+be conjectured, but the gestures accompanying the command were so
+expressive that he could not fail to take in the whole meaning. The
+Indian, no doubt, considered it preferable to drop down into the pit
+rather than run against the bullet. At any rate, he released his hold, and
+down he went.
+
+As he drooped into the gloom he made a clutch at the lasso, doubtless for
+the purpose of creeping up unawares upon the lad, who, by a strange
+providence, had so suddenly become his master. But the Indian, although a
+pretty good athlete, had not practiced that sort of thing, and he failed
+altogether, going down to join his comrades much the same as if he had
+dropped from a balloon.
+
+Fred proved himself equal to the emergency. The moment he saw that he was
+relieved from the presence of his enemy, he darted back to the other side
+of the opening, caught hold of the lasso, and hurriedly drew it up out of
+reach of those below.
+
+"There! they can't come crawling up that when I ain't thinking," he said,
+when the end of the thong was in his hand.
+
+He coiled the whole thing up at his feet, and then, with a feeling of
+relief and pleasure which cannot be described, he looked about to see
+whether he was alone. Alone he was, and master of the situation. Where
+there had been six daring Apache warriors a half-hour before, not one was
+now visible. All were in the cave. Five had gone willingly, while it
+looked very much as if the sixth had not been so willing. At any rate,
+they were all beyond the power of injuring Fred Munson, who, after
+considering over the matter, concluded that he had done a pretty good
+thing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+FISHING FOR A FRIEND.
+
+
+"I think I dumped that Apache down there just as nicely as any one could
+have done it," said Fred, as he sat upon the ground. "It must have taken
+him by surprise when I banged into his back that way. I'd like to know
+whether he fell on his head or feet. He hadn't much time to get ready for
+the fall, and so maybe it wasn't just as he wanted it. I don't think it
+was, either, with Mickey or me. Such things ain't generally in this part
+of the world. Maybe some of the others were standing around, and this
+fellow went down on their heads. If he did, it must have shaken all their
+dinners up. That's a pretty good way to fall down there, and although I
+didn't get hurt much, I wouldn't want to try it again."
+
+Fred had had remarkable success, but there was a question as to what he
+was going to do with it. He was on the outside of the cavern, with the
+means at command for assisting Mickey to the surface, but, the Indians
+being down below, it was not clear how this was to be done, as they were
+likely to take a hand in the matter.
+
+As preliminary to any elaborate attempts in that direction, it was
+necessary that he should apprise him of his presence, and establish some
+sort of communication with him. This, under the circumstances, was
+exceedingly difficult, as it was not likely that the Irishman would
+suspect that his young friend had succeeded in reaching the outside until
+he had received strong proof of it. Very fortunately, however, the couple
+possessed a code of signals which were easily understood, if they were
+only heard.
+
+"I will try him on our old call," said Fred, as he crept as close to the
+edge as he deemed safe, and emitted a whistle that must have extended far
+within the cave.
+
+"If he hears that, he will understand it," he added, turning his ear, so
+that he could catch any response; but the dim, soothing murmur of the
+cascade was the only sound that came up from the cavernous depths.
+
+"He must be there--he must be there, and he will come back, so he will
+catch the signal sooner or later."
+
+There was one aspect of the business which had not yet occurred to Fred,
+and which was likely to inure to the benefit of Mickey O'Rooney, the
+gentleman who just then stood in need of everything that came along in
+that line. The Apaches were skillful and wise enough to learn from the
+trail which had first told them the story, that a boy and man had been
+caught in the cavern, and it was very evident that they all believed that
+there was no other avenue of escape except that by which they had entered.
+At the same time, their knowledge of the peculiarities of their own
+country must have convinced them that it was possible that other openings,
+of which they knew nothing, might exist, and might become known to the
+prisoners.
+
+The last Indian who went down must have known that the lad who assisted
+him was one of the parties for whom they were yearning, and his presence
+was proof that he had made the fortunate discovery which was denied the
+natives of the territory. If the lad had emerged by that means into the
+outer world, the natural supposition would be that his companion had done
+the same, and that, therefore, neither of the fugitives were below, the
+inevitable conclusion being that the tables had been completely turned
+upon them. Such was certain to be the conclusion of the Apaches, and it
+remained for Mickey O'Rooney to use ordinary prudence and keep himself out
+of the way of the redskins, to secure a chance of further outwitting them
+by a bold piece of generalship.
+
+Fred repeated his whistle four or five times, with an interval of ten
+minutes, when his hopes were raised to the highest pitch by hearing it
+answered. In his excitement he thrust his head far over the opening, gave
+the signal again to prevent mistakes, and listened.
+
+A full minute elapsed, when the reply came, sounding faint and far away.
+It showed that Mickey was at a considerable distance from the opening, and
+that he heard and understood the situation. To make matters still more
+certain, the lad now shouted at the top of his voice, holding both hands
+so as to inclose his mouth like a tunnel.
+
+"Mickey, I'm up here with a lasso! Nobody else is here! Whenever you can
+get the chance, get hold of the lasso, and climb up! I will let it down
+after a while!"
+
+It cannot be said that this was a very wise proceeding upon the part of
+the lad; for it was likely that some one of the half dozen Apaches
+understood English well enough to comprehend what he said. To clinch the
+business, Fred yelled a few more words.
+
+"If you understand me, Mickey, whistle!"
+
+The words were no more than fairly uttered when the desired response was
+made, faintly, but, nevertheless, distinctly.
+
+"That's good," concluded the delighted lad. "Now all I have to do is to
+wait for him to get the chance, and he will come up the lasso, and then
+we'll be done with the cave."
+
+This, certainly, was all that he had to do, but, at the same time, this
+amounted to a good deal.
+
+"Now, if I let this rope down," added the lad, as he thought the matter
+over, "one of those Apaches will try to climb up it, and I will have to
+cut it, and that will leave it in his hands, and then what will become of
+Mickey?"
+
+He debated a long time as to the best plan of overcoming this serious
+difficulty; but none presented itself, and he concluded that it was an
+inevitable contingency, which he must prepare himself to defeat, at all
+hazards.
+
+Fred had been so absorbed with the business which had succeeded admirably
+up to this hour, that he scarcely noted the passage of time. He was not a
+little amazed when he came to look at the sun and to note, from its
+position, that the afternoon was considerably advanced, and that night was
+much nearer than he supposed. Nearly twenty-four hours had elapsed since
+he had tasted food, and, although he felt somewhat faint, he was not
+troubled with hunger. He made up his mind to make no effort to obtain food
+until he should succeed in bringing the Irishman from his prison--as he
+hoped to do before the night should pass away. But he was thirsty, and,
+believing that he could quench his thirst without going very far, and
+without jeopardizing the safety of his friend, he started off on a little
+hunt for water.
+
+"That stream runs out of the cave not very far from here, and, if I can
+find that, it will be just what I want."
+
+Fixing in his mind the direction of the stream, he started off, taking an
+almost opposite direction from that which led to the ridge, where he had
+lain so long watching the movements of the Apaches. This led him directly
+behind a mass of boulders and rocks, tossed irregularly together, and
+surrounded by a peculiar growth of stunted vegetation, with rich,
+succulent grass beyond.
+
+Fred was hurrying along, with no thought of seeing anything unusual, when
+he was startled by coming directly upon a half dozen mustangs, all bound
+to the limbs or trunks of trees with strong lariats, while they were
+lazily cropping the grass where they had been left undisturbed for several
+hours. They were all fine-looking animals, every one of them--not one
+having saddle or bridle, and nothing, indeed, excepting the long thong,
+which, like the lasso, was made of bull's hide, and which prevented them
+from straying beyond their appointed limits. There could be no doubt that
+the animals belonged to the little party taking an airing in the cave, and
+the eyes of the lad sparkled as they rested upon them.
+
+"Oh! if Mickey were only here!" he exclaimed to himself; "we couldn't want
+anything nicer. We would just pick out two of the best here, stampede the
+others, and then gallop toward home as fast as we could, and we'd be there
+inside of two or three days; but I must wait, and so must he."
+
+The place selected by the Indians for their horses could not have been
+better chosen. In addition to the rich pasture, a rivulet of clear, cold
+water flowed by, within reach of each and all, so that all their wants
+were supplied in the best manner possible.
+
+Every one of the mustangs raised their heads and looked up at the
+stranger, and one or two gave a faint whinney, as if to inquire the
+business of such a character with them.
+
+"I don't believe any of you can go like my Hurricane that I had to leave
+at home; but I can't have him, and I would be mighty glad to take one of
+you--that is, if Mickey could go along, for I don't intend to leave him,
+so long as I know he's alive. You seem pretty well fixed, so I'll let you
+alone till we get a chance to turn you to account, and you can eat and get
+yourself in good condition."
+
+He took a good long draught of the refreshing water, and then made a
+little survey of his surroundings.
+
+"I should like to know whether those six Indians were all looking for
+_me_. Maybe Lone Wolf has found out that I gave the three the slip, and he
+sent a half-dozen fresh ones to look me up. They were all strangers to me,
+and I am sure I never saw them before. Lone Wolf seems to want me very
+bad, and if these don't bring me back pretty soon, he may send somebody
+after them."
+
+A careful survey of all the suspicious points failed to show him anything
+alarming, and he made his way back to the mouth of the cavern, where he
+sat down to await the moment for him to lower the lasso that he hoped was
+to give Mickey O'Rooney a chance for his life. It seemed to him that it
+would not be safe to attempt it until the sun went down. His theory was
+that the Apaches would not remain directly beneath the opening all the
+time, but that there would be a chance for the Irishman to creep up
+without detection. He would be looking for the lasso, and in the darkness
+might be able to ascend it without discovery.
+
+The lad hoped that all the redskins had reached the conclusion that both
+he and the man were outside; and, finding that it was out of the question
+for them to escape by the opening, which was at such a distance over their
+heads, had scattered to search for some other egress. It was not
+impossible that such was the case, and if it were, it placed the situation
+in a light by no means discouraging.
+
+It was hardly dark when Fred Munson carefully shoved the end of the rope
+over the edge of the opening, and let it descend slowly, gently and
+noiselessly to the bottom, permitting it to pass through his hands in such
+a way that he could tell the instant it was disturbed. When he knew that
+it had struck, he waited for a "bite."
+
+To his astonishment, it came within the next five minutes. He was startled
+by feeling a decided pull repeated several times.
+
+The situation was so delicately critical that it would not do to speak nor
+whisper, nor even to utter their whistle, no matter how cautiously made.
+So, by way of reply, Fred gave the lasso, several responsive jerks,
+intended to signify that everything was ready, and his friend might come
+ahead.
+
+A moment later the lariat was jerked from his hand, showing that a heavy
+weight had suddenly fastened upon it, and the man was making his way
+upward from the cave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+FISHING FOR A PRIZE.
+
+It is no easy task, even for a trained athlete, to climb forty or fifty
+feet of rope. The majority of men, if put to the test of making their way
+out of that cave by shinning up the long lariat suspended from the opening
+above, would have failed altogether.
+
+Remembering how well his hearing had served him under somewhat similar
+circumstances, young Munson, watching so anxiously for the appearance of
+his friend, pressed his ear against the tough, untanned rope and listened.
+He could hear the scraping of the hands and the friction of the limbs
+against the rope, working steadily and in such a manner as to show that
+the man was succeeding well in the excelsior business and was sure to
+reach the top in time, if his strength held out.
+
+"I guess that's Mickey O'Rooney climbing up," muttered the boy, "and yet I
+can't tell till I get a sight of him. It may be an Apache, and I'd better
+get ready, for I don't mean to have any of them creeping up on me."
+
+Fred did not wish to cut the rope, as that would have ended the
+operations, so he concluded to resort to his weapon. There were two or
+three chambers of the revolver undischarged and he did not believe that it
+would be necessary to use them. The simple presentation of the muzzle had
+accomplished his purpose some hours before, and there was little doubt
+that it would do the same thing again.
+
+The sky was absolutely free from clouds, and the moon, near her full, shed
+such a light over the scene that the lad almost dreaded the result.
+
+While all remained profoundly dark in the cave, at the moment the man
+reached the surface and was brought into relief against the sky beyond, he
+would be distinctly visible to any one who might be looking upward, and
+half a dozen rifles pointed and fired at that juncture could scarcely fail
+of fatal results. The lad's misgivings increased as the man neared the
+top. When he again applied his ear to the lariat, he could understand that
+the fellow was working hard, and could only be a few feet below him.
+
+"There's nothing like being ready," he concluded, as he straightened up,
+and, rising to his feet, stood, pistol in hand, ready for the issue.
+
+He stepped back several feet, where his vision was entirely unobstructed.
+
+"If it's an Indian, he won't have a chance of showing anything more than
+his head, and if he don't take that out of the way in a hurry, I'll let a
+ray of moonlight through it."
+
+He stood thus, as rigid as a statue, fully appreciating the difficulties
+of his position and the fatal consequences of allowing himself to be
+outwitted.
+
+"Mickey, is that you?" he asked, in a cautions whisper, a moment later.
+
+As he asked the question he noticed that work upon the rope instantly
+ceased.
+
+"It's Mickey," he said to himself, "but he doesn't think it safe to
+speak."
+
+Then to him: "All right old boy, come ahead, and you may do the speaking
+after you land. Come ahead--you're near the top."
+
+Again the toiling climber resumed his labor, and he was within a foot or
+two of the opening. One more hitch and he would emerge into the moonlight.
+
+"Come old fellow, give me your hand," he added; "you've had pretty hard
+work."
+
+Just then the bronzed face of an Apache Indian, smeared with paint and
+contorted with eager passion, slowly rose in the moonlight. The exhausted
+warrior, feeling that the critical moment was at hand, when all depended
+upon prompt and decisive work, made furious efforts to clamber out of the
+cavern before the lad who held the key of the situation could prevent.
+
+Although Fred had contemplated this issue, and had prepared for it, yet he
+had become so thoroughly imbued with the belief that it was Mickey
+O'Rooney who was toiling upward that he was almost entirely thrown off his
+guard. Because of this, the cunning Apache would have secured his foothold
+and clambered out upon the daring lad, but for one thing. He had done,
+tremendous work in climbing a rope for such a distance, and his strength
+was nearly gone when he reached the open air.
+
+Before he could reap the reward of all this labor, Fred recovered.
+Whipping out his revolver as before, he shoved it directly into his face,
+and said: "You ain't wanted here, and you'd better leave mighty quick!"
+
+The warrior made a clutch at the weapon so close to him, but his
+exhaustion caused a miscalculation, and he failed altogether. He was
+supporting himself at this moment by one hand, and he acted as if the
+single effort to secure the pistol was to decide the whole thing. He
+failed in that, and gave up.
+
+Instead of letting go and going to the bottom in one plunge, he began
+sliding downward, his head vanishing from sight almost as suddenly as if
+the lasso had been cut. It is generally easier to go down than up hill,
+and the work of twenty minutes was undone in a twinkling. A rattling
+_descendo_, and the Apache was down the rope again, standing at the bottom
+of the cave, and Fred was again master of the situation.
+
+"Goodness!" exclaimed the lad, when he realized this gratifying state of
+affairs, "I had no idea that that was an Indian; but I ought to have
+suspected it when I called to him and he didn't make any answer. That
+stops that little sort of thing; but I don't know when Mickey is going to
+get a chance at the rope."
+
+The lad was disheartened by this great disappointment, for it looked very
+much as if the redskins would guard all approaches to the lower end of the
+lasso, and his friend be shut out from all participation in the chance
+that he was so confident was placed at his disposal.
+
+"I don't know what they can do with the rope," thought the lad, as he
+carefully took it in hand, "but then it's no use to them, and I may as
+well keep it out of their reach while I can."
+
+He gently pulled it, to test whether it was free.
+
+No one at that juncture seemed to have hold of it, and, fearful that it
+would not remain so, the lad gave it a sudden jerk, which brought it far
+beyond the reach of any one who might be gathered on the sand below.
+
+"That upsets all my calculations," said Fred, with a sigh. "The chance of
+getting out of here is poorer than ever. I am afraid Mickey is in a scrape
+where there ain't much show of his helping himself!"
+
+The lad remembered, however, that his friend still had one resort--the
+last one--at his command. When it became absolutely apparent that no other
+way was open, he would make the plunge down the stream, and risk all in
+the single effort to dive from the inside to the outside of the cave.
+
+"I don't want him to try that, just yet," added Fred, as he lay upon the
+ground, carefully considering the matter; "for I think that will wind up
+the whole thing."
+
+The boy seemed to be considering every phase of the question, and he
+debated with himself for a long time whether he couldn't do something for
+his friend. He thought of going back to the entrance by which he had
+escaped--thanks to the assistance of the wolf--reenter it, without going
+to a distance which would cause any danger of losing his way, and signal
+to him. The great obstacle to this was that, as he could readily see from
+the distance he had gone over since emerging therefrom, it would be
+utterly impossible to send a signal so far, through such a chamber of
+sound as the cave had proven itself to be. There remained the same
+probability that the Apaches would hear it as soon as Mickey, and they
+would be stupid beyond their kind if they had not already gained a correct
+idea of the situation.
+
+Still, it was possible to see how the Irishman could succeed. Men placed
+in fully as desperate situations as he had pulled through by showing nerve
+and readiness of resource when the critical moment should arrive.
+
+Mickey O'Rooney possessed originality and pluck. He had acquired
+considerable experience and knowledge of Indian "devilments" on his way
+across the plains, and, if the Apaches comprehended the situation, it was
+not to be supposed that he was not posted fully as well. If he could see
+no chance of getting a pull at the rope, he could easily keep out of the
+way of the redskins. He had no fear of meeting any of them singly, and if
+he could arrange it so as to encounter them one after another, and at his
+own convenience, he might clear the track in that fashion.
+
+As it was, therefore, Fred Munson could only await for the issue of
+events. He was powerless to do anything until the sign should be made by
+his friend at the other end of the rope.
+
+For fully two hours things remained in _statu quo_. The lad lay upon the
+ground close to the opening, listening, looking and thinking so intently
+that there was no danger of his falling asleep. The profound stillness
+remained unbroken during all that time. The murmur of the cascade had a
+faint, distant sound, as if it came from the ocean, many long leagues
+away, but there was nothing more--not even a signal from Mickey, who, if
+he had any plans, was working them with admirable secrecy. At the end of
+that time the lad concluded that it would be best to lower the lasso
+again.
+
+"If he is down there, he must have a chance to get hold of the rope, or he
+can't come up here," was the reasonable conclusion of the lad, who passed
+it downward slowly and in perfect silence.
+
+Fully a score of theories flitted through his head as he lay thus
+speculating upon the situation down below. At one time he was sure that it
+was useless to attempt to help his friend in that style. A half-dozen
+Apaches would not permit a single white to climb into safety immediately
+before their eyes, especially when they could cover him with their rifles
+if he should succeed in giving them the slip at the start. Then it
+appeared anything but reasonable to suppose that the Indians would remain
+directly below him, waiting for their chance to try their fortune in the
+trapeze line again. More likely they would scatter and hunt separately for
+the outlet which had permitted their intended victim to gain his safety.
+They could expect to gain nothing by remaining, and they were too shrewd
+to do so.
+
+When the matter presented itself in this shape, Fred was ready to call
+down to Mickey, instructing him to grasp the lasso, and ascend without
+further delay. Too much precious time was being wasted. Fortunately,
+however, before he acted upon this theory, enough doubts arose to prevent
+his carrying it out.
+
+He had had enough experience with the rope to know how to gauge it very
+well, and he lowered it until the other end was within two or three feet
+of the bottom. Having placed it thus within easy reach, he let it pass
+over his hand, holding it so delicately poised that the slightest
+disturbance was sure to be detected. He was in the position of the
+fisherman who is angling for some plump piscatorial prize, which requires
+the most skillful kind of persuasion to induce him to nibble the hook.
+
+For a half-hour nothing touched it, and then Fred fancied that he felt a
+slight jerk. He made no response, but instantly became all attention and
+waited. A second later the jerk was repeated so distinctly that there
+could be no mistake. The lad gave it a twitch in reply, and then all
+remained still for a short time. Suddenly the thong was snapped from his
+hand, and instantly became taut.
+
+Fred applied his ear as before. Yes; some one was climbing up the rope
+again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+GROPING IN DARKNESS.
+
+
+It is proper, at this point, to introduce some history of the movements of
+Mickey O'Rooney, after the separation between himself and his young
+friend. The latter, it will be remembered, left him sleeping upon the
+Apache blanket, at the bottom of the cave, while he, the lad, went off in
+pursuit of the wolf, which came so near leading him to destruction, but
+which, in the end, conducted him to freedom and safety.
+
+The Irishman slept for several hours longer, as soundly as if he lay in
+his own bed at home. He was sorely in need of sleep, and, having convinced
+himself that there was no danger to be apprehended, he transferred all his
+anxiety over to his young friend while he sailed off into the land of
+dreams. When he awoke and recalled where he was, he spoke to Fred; but,
+receiving no reply, supposed he was asleep, and passed his hand about in
+quest of him. After groping several minutes in vacancy, he muttered:
+
+"Be the powers! if he hasn't fell out of bed, as me brother Tom used to
+remark to the ould gintleman, after he'd kicked me out of the same. The
+fall ain't far enough to hurt him seriously, but these laddies have a way
+of getting hurt, where a man couldn't do it, if he tried."
+
+After calling and searching further, he struck a match and held it up. A
+transient glimpse was gained of an area of several hundred feet, in which,
+it is needless to say, he saw nothing of his young friend.
+
+"Be the powers! but he strayed away," added Mickey, somewhat impatiently.
+"He thought there was something that it would pay to chase, and he's gone
+off, and, of course, will be lost."
+
+With a view to bringing him back, the Irishman called his name, whistled,
+and, after a time, fired his gun. The echoes were not so loud as when Fred
+had fired, but the racket was sufficient to make him confident it would
+reach the ears of the boy, if he were not asleep or injured.
+
+Mickey, as will be seen, formed the right opinion of the action of his
+young friend, and hoped that he would be able to work his way back to
+camp, as they called it, without any mishap or assistance from him.
+
+"He thinks there's another door that opens into the sunshine, and that
+isn't locked, and, if it is, he can pick the kay. He may work away till he
+becomes weary, and then he'll be back here, and we'll hare to contrive
+some other way, or it may be that good luck will lead him to the opening
+for which he sighs. Heaven grant that the same may be the case."
+
+He waited, and watched, and hoped, as the hours passed by, until he began
+to believe that something serious had happened to him. At intervals he
+repeated his signals, but on no occasion was there anything like a
+response.
+
+It was an odd juxtaposition of events that, at the very moment he uttered
+some of the calls, the despairing kid was doing the same thing, and,
+although each strained his ears to the utmost, yet neither suspected the
+truth.
+
+The hours and the time passed on, until happening to look up at the
+opening, Mickey saw the prepared blanket slowly descending, just as Fred
+looked upon it from the ridge.
+
+"I'm obliged to yees," he said, in an undertone, "but I don't find myself
+in pressing naad of the same. I have one here, but if ye insist on my
+taking that, I'll not quarrel with yees."
+
+He resolved that when it came down within his reach he would cut the
+lasso, and take it, but before it reached the ground he had changed his
+mind.
+
+He knew what the intention of the Apaches was, but he was not deceived for
+an instant.
+
+"I'll not do anything at all," he muttered; "I'll not interfere, where
+it's so difficult to decide upon me duty, as the owld lady obsarved when
+the bear got her husband down. I'll let 'em think I'm aslaap, and see what
+they'll do."
+
+And thus, as the reader already knows, the rolled-up blanket was lowered
+and raised again without molestation, almost grazing the upturned face of
+the Irishman as it did so.
+
+"And the next will be one of the spalpeens himself. Begorrah! there he is
+this minute!"
+
+Just as he anticipated, a short time after the blanket began its descent,
+enfolding the form of one of the swarthy warriors, the Irishman at once
+detecting the ruse.
+
+His rifle was brought to his shoulder, but yielding to a whim, which he
+could hardly explain, he lowered it, without firing, resolved that he
+would do nothing at all, unless compelled to in self-defense. About this
+time an idea began to dawn upon him that silence and inaction upon his
+part might do himself more good than the most vigorous defense.
+
+He might shoot the first Indian, and then the others would only keep
+themselves out of reach, and he would be no nearer escape than before. On
+the other hand, if he studiously forced himself into the background, they
+might begin to believe that he had discovered the means of exit which was
+unknown to them. He had no fear of not being able to keep out of their
+way, where he had such abundant room and where no light possibly could
+reach the interior and reveal his presence to a hundred searchers. If they
+chose to attempt to carry torches, then he could pick them off at his own
+convenience.
+
+And so it came about that Mickey stood quietly by, and permitted the whole
+five Apaches to slide down the rope like so many monkeys, while he raised
+no hand in the way of protest. Not knowing how many the party numbered, he
+could not conjecture how many were left when the five had come down, and
+the business stopped for the time, but he knew, as a matter of course,
+that they would not enter the cave without leaving reinforcements upon the
+surface.
+
+By the time the last man landed, Mickey had moved back to a point a
+hundred yards away from where the group were gathered, where he was seated
+upon a large rock.
+
+"If any of 'em undertakes to flash a bull's eye in me face, I kin dodge
+down behind the same," was the way in which the Irishman reasoned it.
+
+At such a time, and in such a place, the faculty of hearing was about the
+only one that could be counted upon, and, sliding softly off the rock,
+Mickey applied his ear to the earth. If the Apaches were moving about, the
+noise made by their feet was so slight that he could not be certain
+whether they were actually branching out and groping for him, or whether
+they were the sounds produced by the natural shifting of the feet of a
+group of men standing together.
+
+Matters stood thus for some time, when the last Indian suddenly came
+through the opening and plumped down upon the ground below, his start on
+this journey being such that he was probably considerably shaken up by the
+involuntary trip.
+
+"Ye spalpeens must be more careful in coming down-stairs," muttered
+Mickey, who supposed that the whole thing was an accident, as in his own
+case.
+
+But it was not long before he heard the voice of Fred Munson, calling from
+above, and, as each word was distinctly heard, there was no room for any
+misunderstanding of the situation. The Irishman was literally dumfounded.
+
+"Be the powers! if it isn't the most wonderful thing that ever happened,
+as Mrs. Murphy remarked when Tim came home sober one night. That laddy, in
+hunting around, has struck upon some hole that leads out, and he's forgot,
+or else it was so hard to find his way back to me, he has gone round to
+that place, and now hollers down at me.
+
+"Begorrah," added Mickey, a moment later, "it must be that he shoved that
+spalpeen overboard, and there isn't anybody left up there in the way of
+Apaches but one, and he ain't an Apache, but a gintleman named Fred
+Moonson. Here's to his health, and if this thing gets any more delightful,
+I'll have to give a whoop and yell, and strike up the Tipperary jig."
+
+The exultant fellow had hard work to keep his spirits under control when
+he fairly understood the brilliant exploit that had been performed by his
+young friend.
+
+"It is almost aqual to my gineral coorse," he he added; "but I must try
+and hold in till I can get the laddy by himself. Then I'll hammer him, out
+of pure love, as ye may say."
+
+Mickey managed to contain himself, but did not attempt to reply to the
+direct call which was made upon him. That, in one sense, would have been
+fatal, as it would have "uncovered" his position. The Irishman was
+quick-witted, and it occurred to him that the last incident which had
+happened at the entrance to the cave might be turned to good account. If
+he continued to remain in the background, the Apaches were likely to
+conclude that he, too, was beyond their reach.
+
+Thus matters stood until the signal was made to him, when he deemed it
+wise to make a cautious reply, merely to apprise the lad that he was there
+within call, and understood the situation through and through.
+
+Mickey was very apprehensive when, some time after, he discovered that one
+of the Indians was ascending the rope. He was not so apprehensive when he
+came down again. The result of this repulse was much more decisive than
+Fred had supposed. The warriors seemed to suspect that they were throwing
+away time in attempting to outwit one who held such an immense advantage
+over them, and who was too wide-awake to permit them to steal a march upon
+him.
+
+The delighted Irishman knew, from the sounds, that the redskins were
+moving away from the spot, not with the idea of staying away altogether,
+but that they might engage upon a little reconnoissance which might
+possibly open the way that they were so anxiously seeking. One of the
+redskins passed almost within arm's length of him, never suspecting, as a
+matter of course, that he was brought into such proximity to a mortal
+enemy. Mickey only breathed until assured that there was quite a distance
+between him and the Apaches.
+
+"Now it begins to look as though there's a chance for me," he concluded;
+"and if me laddy will let down the lasso, I'll thry the bootiful
+experiment of shinning up it, though I much fear me that it will be the
+same as a greased pole."
+
+He moved with the utmost circumspection toward the spot, being able to
+locate it by means of the moonlit opening overhead, and when he was near
+it he halted and listened.
+
+"I don't obsarve that any one is loafing about here, getting in the way of
+honest folks."
+
+Just then he ran plump against an Apache, whom he did not suspect was so
+near him.
+
+The redskin uttered a grunt of anger, no doubt suspecting that it was one
+of his own friends.
+
+As quick as lightning the Irishman drew back and struck a blow that
+stretched the warrior senseless.
+
+"I'll tache ye to be grunting around here when a gintleman runs again ye.
+Ye ought to be ashamed of yourself."
+
+Mickey had already strapped his rifle to his back, and, groping about, he
+felt the end of the lasso dangling in front of his face. The same instant
+he grasped it and began the ascent.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+"HERE WE ARE AGAIN!"
+
+
+Fred Munson, having been deceived once by the Apache climbing up the rope,
+was not to be caught again in the same way. When he became certain that a
+second person was coming up, he grasped his pistol again, and held himself
+in readiness to "repel boarders," the very instant they appeared.
+
+It soon became evident that this second person, whoever he was, had a
+serious time in climbing up the rope. He frequently paused as if resting,
+and this fact led the lad to feel more hopeful than ever that it was his
+old friend drawing near.
+
+When it became apparent that he was near the top, the curiosity of Fred
+became so great that he drew himself forward, and, peering down the black
+throat of the cave, asked, in a whisper:
+
+"I say, Mickey, is that you? Speak, if it is, or give a little whistle."
+
+"Be the powers, but I'm so tired I'm spaachless, wid not even the strength
+to let out a whistle."
+
+This established the identity of the climber beyond all question, and the
+words were hardly uttered when the familiar face of the Irishman appeared.
+
+He was exceedingly tired, and the lad reached his hand down to assist him
+out. It was at this juncture that the Apache, who had run against the fist
+of Mickey O'Rooney, recovered, and seeing his foe in the act of vanishing,
+gave a whoop of alarm to his companions, caught up his rifle and fired
+away. The hasty aim alone prevented a fatal result, the bullet clipping
+the clothing of the Irishman.
+
+"Fire away, ye spalpeens, for all the good it may do ye," called out the
+Irishman, who at this moment clambered out of range and sank down upon the
+ground.
+
+"Begorrah, I'm as tired as Jim O'Shaughnessey after his friendly match
+with his wife," gasped Mickey, speaking shortly and rapidly, as best he
+could, while he leaned over upon his elbow, until he could regain his
+strength and wind.
+
+It required but a short time, when he reached his hand to the lad, and
+shook it for the third or fourth time, smiling at the same time in his old
+jolly way, as he rose rather unsteadily upon his pins.
+
+"I'll have to wait a while till the kink gets out of me legs, before I
+give ye the Donnybrook jig, but I make the engagement wid ye, and the
+thing is down for performance, do ye mind that? And now, me laddy, we must
+thravel. Are ye hungry?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I have a bite saved that'll do ye till the morrow. When ye waltzed out
+the cave and left me to meself, I felt there was no knowing how long I'd
+have to stay behind, so I knocked off both eating and drinking, with the
+idea of getting used to going without anything."
+
+As they were able to talk more understandingly, the two explained their
+experiences since they had parted. They could not fail to be interesting
+in both cases. When they had finished, Mickey O'Rooney had about recovered
+from the terrible strain he had undergone in clambering out the cave,
+barring a little ache in his arms and legs.
+
+"Now, me laddy, we must emigrate, as there ain't anything to be gained by
+loafing round here, as the gals used to tell the chaps when they tried to
+cut me out. The first thing to larn is whether the hoss that I lift some
+distance away is still there cropping the grass. If he is, then we shall
+have small work in making our way back to New Boston; but if he has
+emigrated ahead of us thar, we must hunt for others."
+
+"There's no need of going that far."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because the mustangs of the Apaches are right over yonder behind those
+rocks."
+
+"That's good; let's take a look at the same."
+
+They hurried over to the spot where the half dozen mustangs were tethered.
+They were lying upon the ground, taking their sleep, having finished a
+bounteous meal. The intelligent creatures showed their training by
+throwing up their heads the instant the two came in sight, and several
+gave utterance to whinneys, no doubt with the purpose of apprising their
+masters of the approach of strangers. None of them rose to their feet,
+however, and Mickey and Fred moved about, inspecting them as best they
+could in the moonlight, with the purpose of selecting the best.
+
+"They're all a fine lot, as the neighbors used to say, after inspicting me
+father's family, and it's hard to make up your mind which is the best, but
+here is one that shtrikes me fancy. Get up wid ye."
+
+The steed, spoken to in this peremptory manner, leaped to his feet, and
+stood in all his graceful and beautiful proportions, an equine gem, which
+could not fail to command admiration.
+
+"I think he'll suit," said the Irishman, after a careful examination. "I
+think he can run as well as any of 'em. I'll tell you what we'll do, me
+laddy. We'll both mount this one, and ride till we reach the place where I
+lift mine, when we'll have one apiece."
+
+"But if yours isn't there?"
+
+"Then we'll kaap this one betwaan us, as the gals used to say, when they
+quarreled over me."
+
+"Hadn't I better take one of the horses, and if we find yours, why, we can
+turn one of these loose, and we shall be all right, no matter how the
+things turn out?"
+
+"It's not a bad idaa," assented the Irishman. "Pick yours out, and then
+we'll turn the others loose."
+
+"Why will you do that?"
+
+"What's the use of laving them here? Them spalpeens will find their way
+out of the cave before long, and then they will strike straight for these
+animals, and, if they happen to get out pretty soon, they'll make trouble
+with us. We might as well let 'em walk awhile."
+
+"How are they going to get out?"
+
+"Didn't ye lave the lasso hanging down into the cave?"
+
+"I declare, I never thought of that!" exclaimed the affrighted lad. "Why
+didn't you tell me?"
+
+And he started to repair the oversight, when Mickey caught his arm and
+checked him.
+
+"Not so, me son; lave it as it is. If we should go away and lave the
+spalpeens down there without the rope, they might never find the way out,
+and would starve to death, and it would always grieve me to think I had
+starved six Apaches to death, instead of affording meself some enjoyment
+by cracking 'em over the head wid a shillelah."
+
+"I should be sorry to do that," replied Fred, who comprehended the cruelty
+of leaving the poor fellows to perish, as they were likely to do if left
+without the means of escape; "but, if we leave the rope hanging there, the
+whole party will be up here before we can get out of the way, and then
+what shall we do?"
+
+"Niver fear, niver fear," said Mickey, with a wave of his hand and a
+magisterial shake of the head. "The spalpeens have got enough of climbing
+up there for a while. They've gone off on a hunt through the cavern for
+the place where you crawled out, and they'll kaap at that till morning,
+and then, if there's no show for 'em, they'll come back, and begin to fool
+around the rope again."
+
+The lad had little difficulty in deciding upon his steed, which was a
+coal-black mustang, lithe and willowy, and apparently of a good
+disposition, although that was necessarily a matter of conjecture, for the
+present. There were no saddles upon any of the horses, and nothing but the
+rudest kind of bridle, consisting of a thong of twisted bull's hide, and
+reaching away to some limb or tree, so as to give the animal plenty of
+grazing area. The lariats of the other four were cut--so that, when they
+arose, they would find themselves at liberty to go whither they
+chose--after which the two approached their respective prizes and prepared
+to mount.
+
+Both were good riders, although, being compelled to go it bareback, they
+felt some misgivings as to the result. Fred's mustang was rather under
+size, so that he was able to vault upon him from the ground without
+difficulty. After patting him on the neck and speaking soothingly to him,
+with a view to disarming him of all timidity, the lad leaped lightly upon
+his back.
+
+The steed showed at once that he did not like this familiarity, and reared
+and plunged and shook his head in a vicious way, but he toned down
+somewhat after a time, and seemed disposed to compromise matters until he
+learned something about his rider.
+
+"Ye're going to become a good rider--that is, in the course of twenty or
+thirty years," remarked Mickey, who had been watching his young friend
+closely, "if ye practice aich day in those thirty years; but I want you to
+observe _my_ shtyle--note how complately I bring the animal under, how
+docile he becomes, how mild, how gentle, how lamblike."
+
+And with these rather pompous observations, he laid his hand upon the mane
+of his mustang, and at one bound bestrode him, catching the lariat after
+the manner of one who was determined to have no nonsense about it.
+
+"Now note how quick I'll subdue him, how afeard he'll be, you can't goad
+him into trying to throw me. Talk about Rarey breaking that old horse
+Cruiser, that used to ate his keeper every day for breakfast, he couldn't
+compare wid mesilf."
+
+Before Mickey had time to finish his observation, the heels of the mustang
+went up almost perpendicularly in the air, and with such suddenness that
+Mickey was thrown a dozen feet over his head, alighting upon his hands and
+knees.
+
+Fred was amused beyond expression at the discomfiture of his boasting
+friend, who was not a little astonished at the manner in which he had been
+overthrown.
+
+"Turns up," he said, as he gathered himself on his feet again, "that I was
+a little mistook. Such accidents will happen now and then, and it isn't
+very kind for a spalpeen like yourself to laugh at me sorrow."
+
+"I can't help it, Mickey, but I'm afraid I can't stick to the back of this
+horse. He seems scared and mad, and his back feels mighty slippery without
+any saddle or blanket."
+
+"Maybe, if I get on wid ye, the weight of us both will hold him down."
+
+The mustang which hard thrown the Irishman continued to flourish his heels
+and disport himself in such a lively style, that his spirit became
+contagious, and the four, who were yet upon the ground, now came to their
+feet, and after some plunging and rearing, made a rush down the slope, and
+were soon out of sight.
+
+The animal ridden by the lad showed a disposition to join them, but the
+rider resisted, and managed to hold him, until at the opportune moment,
+Mickey placed himself on his back, and, as he was really a good horseman,
+and used vigorous means, he speedily managed to bring him under control.
+Turning his head toward the ridge, they started him forward, pausing near
+the mouth of the cavern long enough to gather up one of the blankets lying
+there, as it was likely to be useful at no distant time.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THROUGH THE MOUNTAINS.
+
+
+The moon was high in the sky, and it was near midnight. O'Rooney, who had
+taken upon himself the task of guiding the mustang, continued him on up
+the ridge, directly toward the spot where Fred had lain so long watching
+the action of the Apaches gathered around the opening of the cave.
+
+The mustang walked along quite obediently, seeming to feel the load no
+more than if it was only one half as great. But those animals are like
+their native masters--cunning and treacherous, ready to take advantage of
+their riders whenever it happens to come in their way.
+
+"Which is the raison I cautions ye to be riddy for a fall," said Mickey,
+after referring to some of the peculiarities of these steeds of the
+Southwest. "The minute he gits it into his head that we ain't paying
+attention, he'll rear up on his fore-feet, and walk along that way for
+half a mile. Not having any saddle, we'll have to slide over his neck,
+unless I can brace me feet agin his ears, and ride along standing straight
+up."
+
+The constant expectation of being flung over the head of a horse is not
+the most comforting sensation that one can have, and the lad clung fast to
+his friend in front, determined not to go, unless in his company. Upon
+reaching the top of the ridge, the horse was reined up for a few minutes,
+as Mickey, like the mariner at sea, was desirous of taking an observation,
+so as to prevent himself going astray.
+
+"Can you remember how you were placed?" asked the lad, after he had spent
+several minutes in the survey; "that is, do you know which way to go for
+the horse you left eating grass?"
+
+"I was a little puzzled at first, as me father obsarved to the
+school-teacher when he said I had been a good boy, but I see how it is
+now. It must have been that I got a little turned round when I was down in
+the basemint of these mountains, but I see how it is now. Right yonder,"
+he added, pointing toward the Northwest, "is where I left my hoss, and
+there is where I hope I'll find him again."
+
+"Is the road so that we can ride the mustang all the way there, or must we
+walk?"
+
+"I remember I come right along some kind of a path, made by animals, after
+leaving the beast. I s'pose it's the route taken by the crathurs in going
+to the water, for there's a splendid spring right there, and the path that
+I was just tilling you 'bout leads straight to it."
+
+"Then keep the horse from throwing us off, and we're all right. After we
+find your horse, Mickey, or don't find him, what are we to do, then?"
+
+"Set sail for New Boston."
+
+"But we can't ride through these mountains, if we don't find the pass."
+
+"And the same is what we're going to do, barring that it hasn't been lost
+yet."
+
+"Are you sure you know the way to it from where you left your horse? I've
+been hunting for it for hours, but couldn't any more tell where it was
+than the man in the moon. What course would you have to take to reach it?"
+
+"Right off yonder," replied Mickey, pointing to the left.
+
+"And I was sure that it was here," said Fred, pointing his hand in nearly
+an opposite direction.
+
+"Which the same is a good raison why you're wrong. When you git lost, and
+think you're on the right way, ye may be sure that ye're wrong; and after
+figuring the whole thing over, and getting sartin of the right coorse, all
+you've got to do is not to take it, and ye're sartin of saving yerself."
+
+"Then, according to that, you ought not to take the route which you have
+said is the right one."
+
+"I'm spaking for lost spalpeens like yoursilf," said Mickey, severely. "I
+haven't been lost since I parted company with Soot Simpson, and, begorrah,
+that minds me that we ought to saa something of him. Just look around and
+obsarve whether he is standing anywhere beckoning to us."
+
+Both used their eyes to the extent of their ability, but were unable to
+discover anything that bore a suspicious resemblance to a man.
+
+So far as they could judge, they were entirely alone in this vast
+solitude.
+
+"Do you expect to meet Sut very soon?"'
+
+"Av coorse I do; why shouldn't I?"
+
+"But he went another way from you altogether after Lone Wolf."
+
+"That's just it. He wint another way, and wint wrong, and he has been gone
+long 'nough to find out the same."
+
+"When he will turn back and follow you?"
+
+"As soon as he finds he's wrong, he'll go right, and as I wint right,
+he'll be on my heels."
+
+"But you know both of us have strayed a good deal off the track, and we
+have traveled in many places, where we haven't made the slightest trail.
+How is he going to follow us then?"
+
+The Irishman gave utterance to a scornful exclamation.
+
+"I've been with that Soot Simpson long enough to learn something. I've
+saan some specimens of what he kin do. Rocks don't make no difference to
+him. When he gits on the track of a wild bird, if it don't take extra
+pains to dodge and double, he'll foller its trail through the air. Oh,
+he's there all the time, and the wonder with me is that he hasn't turned
+up before."
+
+"What would he have done had he come along and found us both in the cave,
+and the Apaches watching?"
+
+"He would have tracked that wolf back to his hole, come in and fetched us
+out, and then slipped up behind the six, and tumbled them all in like so
+many tenpins."
+
+"If he's such a wonderful man as that, it's a pity we couldn't have kept
+him with us all the time, and if we do run against him, we can afford to
+stop thinking about Apaches, as they will be of no account."
+
+"Yees are right; but the trouble is to find him, as the man said when the
+British Government condemned John Mitchel, and him thousands of miles away
+in Ameriky. This thramping about at night in the mountains isn't the
+aisiest way to diskiver a man, and it's him that will have to find us,
+instead of we him. But we'll keep it up."
+
+If the Apache mustang which they were riding meditated any mischief, he
+seemed to be of the opinion that the occasion was not the most suitable.
+He walked along with great docility and care, picking his way with a skill
+that was wonderful. Several times they approached places where it seemed
+impossible for an equine to go forward, but the horse scarcely hesitated,
+toiling onward like an Alpine chamois, until, at last, they drew up in a
+small valley, through the middle of which ran a small stream, that
+sparkled brightly in the moonlight.
+
+"Here we are," said Mickey. "here's the spot where I left my cratur a
+couple of days ago, and where I don't see him just now. Use your eyes a
+bit, and tell me whether you obsarve him."
+
+Fred was scarcely less anxious than his friend to recover the steed, for,
+recalling his experience in that line, he had good reason to mistrust
+Indian horses. It would be very awkward, when they should find a party of
+Apaches howling and rushing down upon them, to have the animal turn calmly
+about and trot back to his former friends, carrying his two riders into
+captivity, or leaving them to shift for themselves.
+
+Nothing could be seen of the creature, but there was a fringe of wood on
+the opposite side where he might be concealed, and Mickey slid off the
+blanket with the intention of hunting for him.
+
+"Don't let this spalpeen give ye the slip," he cautioned the lad, as he
+gave the lariat into his hand; "for if mine is gone, this is the only one
+we have to depend on, and we can't spare him."
+
+Fred felt a little uncomfortable when he found himself alone and astride
+of the fiery steed, which pricked up his ears as though he meditated
+mischief; but the horse seemed to think better of it, and continued so
+quiet that the young rider ventured to transfer his attention from him to
+Mickey, who was moving across the open space in the direction of the wood
+upon the opposite side.
+
+The moonlight was so clear that he could be as plainly seen, almost, as if
+it were midday. As he moved along, he brought his rifle around to the
+front, so that he could use it at a moment's need, for he could not but
+see the probability that, if his horse had been lately disturbed, it was
+likely that those who did so were still in the vicinity, and no place was
+more likely to be used for a covert than the same patch of timber which he
+was approaching.
+
+"Be the powers! but it looks a little pokerish!" he said to himself,
+slowing his gait, and surveying the wood with no little distrust. "There
+might be a dozen of the spalpeens slaaping there wid one eye open, or all
+sitting up and expicting me."
+
+He had proceeded so far however, that it was as dangerous to turn back as
+it was to go on, for if any enemies were there, they were so close at hand
+that they could easily capture or shoot him before he could reach his
+horse. He was scarcely moving, and doing his utmost to penetrate the deep
+shadow, when, beyond all question, he heard a movement among the trees. He
+paused as if he had been shot and cocked his rifle, looking toward the
+point from whence came the noise.
+
+"Aisy there, now," he said in a solemn voice. "I won't stand any of your
+thricks. I'm savage, and when I'm that way I'm dangerous, so if yees are
+there spake out, or else come out like a man, and tell me your name, be
+the token of which mine is Mickey O'Rooney from Ireland."
+
+This characteristic summons produced no response, and, feeling the
+peculiar peril of his exposed position, the Irishman determined upon
+changing it and securing the shelter of a tree for himself. It was not
+prudent to move directly toward the spot which gave forth the rustling
+sound, as that would be likely to draw out a shot from a foe if he desired
+to avoid a personal encounter. Accordingly, the Irishman made what might
+be termed a flank movement by turning to the right, running rapidly
+several paces and then diving in among the trees, as though he were
+plunging into the water for a bath.
+
+The few minutes occupied in making this change were those which Mickey
+felt were of great danger; for, if he should reach the wood and find
+himself opposed to but a single man, or even two, the situation would not
+be so uneven by any means. No shots were fired, and he drew a great sigh
+of relief when he gained the desired covert.
+
+"Now I can dodge back and forth, and work me way up to them," he
+concluded; "and when they stick their heads out from behind the trees,
+I'll whack 'em for 'em, just as we used to do at Donnybrook when the fun
+began."
+
+He waited where he was for some time, in the expectation that his foe
+would reveal himself by an attempt to draw out. But if there is any one
+thing which distinguishes a scout, whether white or red, at such a time,
+it is his patience. It is like that of the Esquimaux, who will sit for
+sixteen hours, without stirring, beside an airhole in the ice, waiting for
+a seal to appear. Mickey O'Rooney was not burdened with overmuch patience,
+and acted upon the principle of Mohammed going to the mountain. He began
+picking his way through the shadows and among the trees, determined to
+keep forward until the mystery was solved.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THROUGH THE MOUNTAINS. CONTINUED.
+
+
+When Mickey found himself under the shelter of the trees, something like
+his old confidence returned.
+
+"As I obsarved some minutes ago, it's mesilf that's not going to stand any
+fooling," he added, loud enough for the redskins to hear. "Whither ye're
+there or not, ye ought to spake, and come out and smoke the calomel of
+peace, and give a spalpeen a chance to crack your head, as though ye're
+his brother; but if ye're up to any of your thricks, make ready to go to
+your hunting-grounds."
+
+By this time he was within a dozen feet of the spot whence came the
+rustling that so disturbed him, and was staring with all his eyes in quest
+of the redskins. In spite of the bright moonlight, the Irishman could not
+be certain of anything he saw. There were trees of large size, behind any
+of which an Indian might have shielded himself effectually, and it was
+useless for Mickey to look unless his man chose to show himself.
+
+The Irishman had all the natural recklessness of his race, but he had been
+in the Apache country long enough to learn to tone it down, for that was
+the country where the most fatal attribute a man could have was
+recklessness or rashness. In many instances of conflict with Indians it is
+worse than cowardice.
+
+But, in the face of Mickey's assurance to the contrary, he did not feel
+altogether easy about the Apaches he had left at the cave. His humanity
+had prevented him from depriving them of means of escape, and although he
+was inclined to believe that they were not likely to climb the lasso until
+many hours should elapse, there could be no certainty about it. They might
+do so within an hour after the departure of the man and boy.
+
+It was this reflection that caused Mickey to act with something of his
+natural rashness. He felt that he could not afford to wait to fight the
+thing out on scientific principles, so he determined, since he was so
+close, to force it to an issue without delay. Accordingly, he prepared
+himself to charge.
+
+"I've been too kind already in giving ye warnings," he added, gathering
+himself for the effort, "and if your indifference causes your ruin, it's
+your own fault, as the bull remarked when he come down on a butt agin the
+engine."
+
+Compressing his lips, Mickey made his start, forcing out a few words, as
+he would shoot bullets on the way.
+
+"Nobody but a spalpeen of a coward would keep out of sight when he saw a
+head coming down on him in such tempting style as mine. I can't understand
+how he could."
+
+In his furious hunt for antagonists, the belligerent fellow did not think
+of looking upon the ground. He made the blunder of Captain John Smith, of
+the Jamestown Colony, who, in retreating from Powhatan's warriors, became
+mired, with the eventual result of making Pocahontas famous, and securing
+an infinite number of namesakes of the captain himself.
+
+Mickey O'Rooney had scarcely begun his charge when his feet came into
+violent collision with a body upon the ground, and he turned a complete
+somersault over it.
+
+"Be the powers! but that's a dirty thrick!" he exclaimed, gathering
+himself up as hurriedly as possible, and recovering very speedily from his
+natural bewilderment. "A man who drops in the ring without a blow is
+always ruled out, and be that token ye're not entitled to the respect of
+illegant gintlemen."
+
+During the utterance of these words the Irishman had carefully returned,
+boiling over with indignation and fight, and at this juncture he
+discovered the obstruction which had brought him to grief.
+
+So far as appearances went, there was no Indian nearer than the cave. It
+was his own horse that had made the noise which first alarmed him. While
+the equine was stretched upon the ground, peacefully sleeping, his
+bumptious owner, in charging over his body, had stumbled and fallen.
+
+Mickey was thrown "all in a heap" for a minute or two, when he found how
+the case stood, and then he laughed to himself as he fully appreciated the
+situation.
+
+"Well, well, well, I feel as chape as Jerry McConnell when he hugged and
+kissed a gal for two hours, one evening, and found it was his wife, and
+she felt chaaper yet, for she thought all the time that it was Mickey
+O'Shaughnessy. I suppose me old swateheart," he added, as he stooped down
+and patted the head of his horse, "that ye've been living so high here for
+two or three days that ye're too fat to be good for anything. Come, up wid
+ye, ye old spalpeen!"
+
+The mustang recognized the voice of his master, and obeyed as promptly as
+a child, coming upon his feet with the nimbleness of a racer, and ready to
+do what he was bidden. Mickey led him out into the moonlight, when he left
+him standing, while he went a short distance for the saddle and bridle,
+which he had concealed at the time of leaving the spot. They were found
+just as he had left them, and he returned in high feather, secured them in
+a twinkling upon his animal and galloped back to where the lad was
+waiting.
+
+"Ye haven't seen or heard anything of redskins, have ye, while I was
+procuring my cratur?"
+
+"Nothing at all," replied the lad; "but I heard you talking pretty loud,
+so I suppose you must have found several."
+
+"No," answered Mickey, who did not care about explaining the whole affair.
+"I'm always in the habit of exchanging a few words wid the cratur when I
+maats, and such was the case a short time since, when I met him, after
+being away so long."
+
+"Well, Mickey, we haven't any time to spare."
+
+"Ye're right, my laddy; all you've got to do is to folly me."
+
+With this he headed his mustang at precisely right angles to the course
+they followed in making their way to the spot; and Fred, who expected all
+sorts of trouble in the way of traveling, noticed that he was following
+some sort of path or trail, along which his horse trod as easily as upon
+the open prairie. While this was an advantage in one respect it had its
+disadvantage in another. The presence of a trail in that part of the world
+implied that it was one made and traveled by Indians, who were likely to
+be encountered at any moment, and Mickey was not insensible to the peril.
+But, in the present instance, there seemed to be no other means of getting
+along, and thus, in one sense, they were forced into it. The
+probabilities, however, were that they would soon emerge into safer
+territory, where it would be possible to take some precautions against
+pursuers.
+
+For some time the two galloped along without speaking. The hoofs of their
+mustangs rang upon the rocks, and rattled over the gravel, and, in the
+still night, could have been heard a long distance away. While the
+Irishman kept as good a lookout ahead as possible, Fred Munson did his
+best to guard their rear. He kept continually glancing over his shoulder
+in the expectation of seeing some of their enemies, but nothing of the
+kind occurred, and before he anticipated it, they emerged into what seemed
+a deep valley, with high rocks upon both sides. Mickey drew up, and
+allowed his young friend to move alongside.
+
+"Do ye mind ever having seen this place before?" he asked.
+
+"I don't remember anything about this country, and all I ask is that we
+may get out of it as soon as possible."
+
+"But don't ye mind ever having been here before?"
+
+Thus questioned, Fred scanned his surroundings as best he could, but there
+was nothing that he could identify, and he so said, adding:
+
+"I'm sure I've never been here before."
+
+"And I'm sure ye have. This is the path that Lone Wolf come along, and
+that ye was hunting for when ye got lost, and fell into the basement story
+of the mountain."
+
+"Oh, this is the pass, is it?" exclaimed the delighted lad; "then we have
+a clear road before us straight to New Boston."
+
+"Clear of all but one thing."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"The red spalpeens; they're always turning up when you don't expect 'em,
+and don't want 'em."
+
+"How far are we away from the cave, where we left the half dozen Apaches?"
+
+"I don't think it's much more than a mile, though it may be a mile and a
+half."
+
+"Well, that's very good; we've got that much start, and it's worth
+having."
+
+"And there's where ye're mistook, as the gals used to obsarve when anybody
+tried to run down my beauty. The path that we come along, ye'll mind,
+makes many turns and twists, and the ind of it all is that it strikes the
+pass on the other side of the cave, and we've got to ride right by the
+spot which we lift."
+
+This was not cheering information, although, everything considered, the
+two had cause to congratulate themselves upon their extraordinary success
+up to this time.
+
+The night was about gone, and, while their mustangs halted, they observed
+that it was growing light in the east. They would be forced to ride
+through the dangerous territory by day, so that the risk of detection
+would be proportionately greater if their enemies should be in the
+vicinity. Both the mustangs were fresh and vigorous, however, having
+enjoyed an unusually long rest, with plenty of food, and they were good
+for many hours of speed and endurance. The one ridden by Fred had behaved
+in a very seemly fashion, and there was ground for the hope that he would
+keep up the line of conduct to the end. Still there could be no certainty
+of what he would do in the presence of the Apaches.
+
+"We'll take it aisy," said Mickey, as the two started off at an easy
+gallop. "We'll not be afther putting 'em to a run till we have to do the
+same, so that when there's naad for their spaad, we shall have it at
+command." This prudent suggestion was carried out. Their horses dropped
+into a sweeping gallop that was as easy as an ordinary walk. The riders
+kept their senses awake, talking only a little, and then in guarded
+voices.
+
+As they galloped along the sun rose, and the day promised to be as warm
+and pleasant as those which had preceded it. The sky was obscured only by
+a few fleecy clouds, while the deep blue beyond was as beautiful as that
+of Italy. Drawing near the cave in the mountain, they pulled their horses
+down to a walk and carefully guided them into the softest places, so as to
+make the noise of their hoofs as slight as possible. Nothing occurred
+until they were a short distance beyond the dangerous spot, when Mickey
+spoke.
+
+"Do you obsarve that stream there?" he asked, pointing to a rather deep
+brook which ran across the pass, and lost itself in the rocks upon the
+opposite side. "Well, that's the water that comes through the cave over
+the cascade, and that I expicted to swim out by, and I'm going to find out
+what me chances were."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+IN THE NICK OF TIME.
+
+
+Leaving his mustang in charge of Fred, the Irishman turned to the right,
+and followed the stream into the rocks. The course was so winding that he
+speedily disappeared from sight. The boy, who was compelled to sit still
+and await his return, at perhaps the most dangerous portion of the road,
+felt anything but comfortable over the erratic proceeding of his friend.
+But, fortunately, the latter had been gone but a short time when he
+reappeared, hurrying forward as if somebody was at his heels.
+
+"It's all right," he remarked, as he sprang into the saddle, took up the
+reins, and started on. "I think the Apaches are there, though I can't be
+sartin; but I found out what I wanted to l'arn."
+
+Then he explained that he followed up the stream to the place where it
+came from beneath the rocks, which formed a part of the wall of the cave,
+where a curious fact attracted his attention. In its passage beneath the
+stone the tunnel widened and flattened, so that, where it shot forth to
+the sunlight again, its width was some twenty feet, and its depth only a
+few inches. The appearance it presented was very much like that of the
+gates of a mill-pond when they have been slightly raised to allow a
+discharge of water beneath. Through the passage-way thus afforded no
+living person could have forced his way; and, had Mickey O'Rooney
+attempted it, nothing in the world could have saved him from drowning. The
+Irishman himself realized it, and was thankful enough that he had
+refrained from making the desperate attempt.
+
+The two continued their sweeping gallop for several hours, during which
+they did not catch a glimpse of Indians, but they were alarmed by hearing
+the reports of guns at no great distance on the right. The firing was
+irregular, sometimes several shots being heard together, and then they
+were more of a dropping character. This showed that a fight of some kind
+was going on, but as to its precise nature they could only conjecture. It
+might be that a party of Comanches and Apaches, or Kiowas, or hunters were
+enjoying a hot time, but the two friends were glad to get out of the
+neighborhood as speedily as possible. At noon they enjoyed the
+satisfaction of knowing that they had made good and substantial progress
+on the way home. There was an abundance of grass and water, and when the
+sun was overhead they went into camp.
+
+"I'm as hungry as a panther that has been fasting for a month," said
+Mickey, as he dismounted; "and I haven't got a mouthful of food lift.
+There ain't any use of a chap starving to death to accommodate anybody
+else, and I don't mane to do the same."
+
+Fred Munson's hunger was scarcely less than his, but the boy would have
+been willing to have undergone still more, rather than incur the risk that
+was now inevitable. But Mickey saw nothing to be gained by such a course
+and contended that they should give their attention to the wants of their
+bodies, before they were weakened by fasting and fatigue.
+
+Mickey promised not to be absent long, and then started in search of
+provender. Game was abundant in that part of the world, and he was
+confident that much time would not be required to bring down some
+toothsome dainty.
+
+"He has an uncomfortable way of running off and leaving a fellow alone,"
+muttered Fred, as he watched the vanishing figure of his friend. "I
+haven't anything but my revolver, and only two shots left in that, and it
+seems to me that this is about the worst place we could stop."
+
+The point where they camped was in the pass, which, at that point, widened
+considerably. The right wall curved far inward in a semi-circular shape,
+the opposite remaining the same, the gorge looking as if an immense slice
+had been scooped out of its northern boundary. The rocks on every hand
+ranged from a dozen to a hundred feet in height, with numerous openings,
+through which a horseman could easily pick his way. The tops were covered
+with vegetation, the greater portion of which was vigorous and dense.
+
+Fred found himself standing in an immense amphitheatre, as one can imagine
+how the gladiators of Rome stood in the Coliseum, when an audience of over
+a hundred thousand were seated and looking down upon them. He could not
+but note the helpless situation a party of men would be in if caught where
+he was.
+
+"If a company of United States Cavalry should camp here, and the Indians
+opened on them from the rocks above, they would have to stand and be shot
+down, one after another, or else run the gauntlet and be picked off in the
+same way."
+
+The appearance of the ground showed that the spot was a favorite
+camping-site of the Indians. Fred, for a time, suspected that it was the
+place where Lone Wolf and his band had spent the first night out from New
+Boston; but an examination showed that it did not correspond in many
+points. The remains of charred wood, of bleaching bones and ashes proved
+that many a camp-fire had been kindled. And, in all probability, every one
+of them had warmed the shins and toasted the food of the red cut-throats
+of that section.
+
+The two mustangs were tethered near one side of the space where there was
+grass and water, and the lad set about it to select a proper place in
+which to build their camp-fire. There was no trouble in determining this;
+but, when he started to gather wood, he was surprised to discover that
+there was much less than he supposed. The former tenants of the place had
+cleared it up pretty thoroughly.
+
+"There is plenty of wood over yonder," he said to himself, looking in the
+direction taken by Mickey O'Rooney; "and where there is so much growing
+there must be some upon the ground. I'll go over and gather some, and have
+the fire all ready when he comes back."
+
+It was quite a walk from where he stood to the side of the semicircular
+widening of the pass, and as he went over it he was surprised to find it
+greater than it appeared. When he picked his way between the rocks, and
+began clambering among the trees and vegetation, he concluded that he was
+fully two hundred yards from where the mustangs were grazing.
+
+However, he did not allow himself to lose any time in speculation and
+wonderment, but set to work at once to gather wood with which to kindle a
+fire in readiness for the return of Mickey. There was enough around him to
+afford all he needed and he was engaged in leisurely collecting an armful
+when he was startled by the rattling of the leaves behind him.
+
+The wood was dropped on the instant, and the alarmed lad wheeled about to
+face his new danger. Instead of two or three Indians, as he had
+anticipated, he saw an enormous grizzly bear, about a dozen feet in the
+rear, coming directly toward him, with very little doubt of his purpose.
+
+Fred had no thought of anything of this character, and for a time he was
+paralyzed with terror, unable to speak or stir. These precious seconds
+were improved by the huge animal, which continued lumbering heavily
+forward toward the boy. Bruin had his jaws apart and his red tongue
+lolling out, while a guttural grunt was occasionally heard, as if the
+beast was anticipating the crunching of the tender flesh and bones of the
+lad.
+
+Before the latter was within reach, however, he had recovered his usual
+activity, and, with a bound and a yell of terror, Fred started in the
+direction of the clearing, where he had left the mustangs, and where he
+had intended to kindle the camp-fire. But the enormous, bulky creature,
+although swinging along in his awkward fashion, still made good speed, and
+gained so rapidly upon the boy that he almost abandoned hope of escape.
+
+At this critical moment Fred thought of his revolver, and he whipped it
+out in a twinkling. Whirling about, he took quick aim and discharged both
+barrels almost in the face of the brute. Then, flinging the pistol against
+his leather nose, he turned back and continued his flight at the utmost
+bent of his speed. Both bullets struck the brute and wounded him, but not
+fatally, nor, indeed, enough to check his advance.
+
+[Illustration: WHIRLING ABOUT HE TOOK QUICK AIM.]
+
+The grizzly bear, as found in his native wilds, is killed with extreme
+difficulty, and the only thing that seemed to affect the monster in the
+present instance was the flash of the pistol in his eyes. He paused, and,
+rearing on his hind legs, snorted, snuffed, and pawed his nose as if the
+bullets were splinters which he was seeking to displace. Then, with an
+angry growl, he dropped on all fours and resumed his pursuit of the author
+of his confusion and hurts. The wounds incensed the brute, and he plunged
+along at a faster rate than before, gaining so rapidly that there could be
+no doubt as to the result.
+
+Being without any weapon at all, there seemed but one hope for Fred, and
+that was to reach his mustang in time to mount and avail himself of his
+speed. For a hundred feet or so he ran down a rapid slope, between the
+trees and rocks, until he reached the camping site, where he had a run of
+a couple of hundred yards across a comparatively level plain to reach the
+point where his animal was awaiting him.
+
+In going down this wooded slope, the smaller size of the boy gave him
+considerable advantage. Yet, so well did the grizzly succeed that he
+reached the spot less than twenty feet in his rear, and, heading directly
+for him, at once proceeded to decrease the distance still further. This
+placed the question of escape by superior speed upon the part of the lad
+as among the impossibilities, and it began to look very much as if his
+race were run.
+
+At this juncture, as if all the fates had combined against him, Fred,
+while glancing backward over his shoulder, stumbled and fell. He sprang up
+as hastily as possible, but the loss of ground was irreparable. As he
+looked back he saw that the colossal beast was so close that it seemed
+that one sweep of his paw would smite the terrified fugitive from the face
+of the earth.
+
+It was a critical moment indeed, and the crack of the rifle from the wood,
+which the pursuer and pursued had just left, was not a breath of time too
+soon. Aimed by one who knew the vulnerable points of such a creature, and
+by someone whose skill was unsurpassed, the leaden messenger crashed its
+way through bone and muscle to the seat of life. The brute, which was
+ready to fall upon and devour the young fugitive, pitched heavily forward
+and rolled upon the ground in the throes of death.
+
+Fred did not realize his delivery until he had gone some distance further
+and looked back and saw the black mass motionless upon the ground. After
+some hesitation, he then turned and walked distrustfully back to where it
+lay.
+
+He found the beast stone-dead, a rill of blood from beneath the fore-leg
+showing where some one's bullet had done the business. The lad recalled
+the sound of the gun which had reached his ear.
+
+"That was the best shot for me that Mickey ever made," he muttered,
+looking around for his friend.
+
+But he was nowhere to be seen.
+
+"Mickey must always have his fun," added Fred after failing to detect him.
+"Instead of coming out at once and letting me know how he came to do it,
+he fires the lucky shot, and then waits to see how I will act. My
+gracious! he is a bouncer!"
+
+This last remark was excited by the carcass, which he kicked, and which
+shook like a mountainous mass of jelly; and as he passed around it he
+gained a fair idea of the immense proportions of the bear, in whose grasp
+he would have been as helpless as in that of a royal Bengal tiger.
+
+"Whew! but he came mighty close to me! When I fell down I expected to feel
+his paws on me before I could get up. In a few seconds more it would have
+been all up with me."
+
+Several minutes passed, and nothing was seen of the Irishman, whereupon
+the lad concluded he might as well go back and gather the wood, which
+would be needed at the camp-fire.
+
+"I wonder if there's any more of them," he muttered, as he began picking
+his way among the rocks. "If there are, why Mickey must look out for me."
+
+He found the sticks just as he had thrown them down and he proceeded to
+regather them, keeping a careful watch for another dangerous visitor. All
+remained quiet, however, and, making his way down the wooded slope into
+the open area, he looked back and found that he was still alone. So it
+continued until he returned to where the two mustangs were tethered. There
+he carefully adjusted the sticks and prepared everything, after which he
+began to feel some impatience at the non-appearance of his friend.
+
+"He must see more fun in that kind of thing than I do. There's no telling
+what has become of those six Apaches we left down in the cave. I feel sure
+that they've got above ground again. It won't take long for them to find
+their mustangs, or some other horses, and they may be a mile away, and
+there may be other parties close by. Halloa!"
+
+Fred thought that he had no matches about his person; but he was making a
+sort of aimless hunt when he found a solitary lucifer at the bottom of his
+pocket. This he carefully struck against the rock behind him, and in a few
+minutes the camp-fire was started and burning merrily.
+
+As he sat down to wait he looked toward the point where the Irishman had
+vanished from sight. There he was, bearing on his shoulders some choice
+sections of a young antelope he had shot, although Fred recalled that he
+had not heard the report of his gun, except when the grizzly was shot. As
+Mickey came along over the same path taken by the boy, he was forced to
+make a detour around the carcass of the bear. He paused to survey it, his
+whole manner betraying great astonishment, as if he had never beheld
+anything of the kind. He walked around the body several times, punched it
+with his foot, and finally, grasping his twenty pounds of meat in his
+right hand, approached the camp-fire.
+
+Here he at once began the preparations for broiling it. The antelope had
+been of goodly size and he had cut out the most luscious portions, so as
+to avoid carrying back any waste material. He had a great deal more than
+both could eat, it is true, but it was a commendable custom with the
+Irishman to lay in a stock against emergencies that were likely to arise.
+
+While thus employed, it would have been impossible for Mickey to hold his
+tongue.
+
+"Begorrah, but it was queer, was the same, the way I came to cotch this
+gintleman. I hunted him a little ways, when he made a big jump, and I
+thought had got a long ways off, but when I came to folly him, I found he
+had cornered himself among the rocks, where there was no show of getting
+out, except by coming back on me. The minute I showed mesilf, he made a
+rush for me arms, just as all the purty gals in Tipperary used to do when
+I came along the street. An antelope can't do much, but I don't care about
+their coming down on me in that style, and so I pulled up and let drive.
+He was right on me when I pulled trigger, and he made one big jump that
+carried him clear over my head, and landed him stone dead on the other
+side."
+
+"That was a good shot, but not as good as when you brought down the
+grizzly bear at my heels."
+
+Mickey O'Rooney was particularly busy just then with his culinary
+operations, and he stared at the lad with an expression of comical
+amazement that made the young fellow laugh.
+
+"Begorrah, why don't ye talk sinse?" added Mickey, impatiently. "I've
+heard Soot Simpson say that if ye only put your shot in the right spot, ye
+don't want but one of 'em to trip the biggest grizzly that ever navigated.
+I was going to obsarve that ye had been mighty lucky to send in your two
+pistol-shots just where they settled the business, though I s'pose the
+haythen was so close on ye whin ye fired that ye almost shoved the weapon
+into his carcass."
+
+"I shot him, Mickey, before I fairly started to run, but he didn't mind it
+any more than if I spit in his face. It was your own shot that did the
+business."
+
+"Me own shot!" repeated Mickey, still staring with an astonished
+expression. "I never fired any shot at the baste, and never saw him till a
+few minutes ago, when I was coming this way."
+
+It was Fred Munson's turn to be astonished, and he asked, in his amazed,
+wondering way:
+
+"Who, then, fired the shot that killed him? I didn't."
+
+"I thought ye did the same, for it was not mesilf."
+
+The lad was more puzzled than ever. He saw that Mickey was in earnest, and
+was telling him the truth, and each, in fact, understood that _he_ had
+been under a misapprehension as to who had slain the grizzly bear.
+
+"The beast was right on me," continued Fred, "and I didn't think there was
+any chance for me, when I heard the crack of a rifle from the bushes, and,
+looking back, saw that the bear was down on the ground, making his last
+kick."
+
+Mickey let the meat scorch, while he stopped to scratch his head, as was
+his custom when he was in a mental fog.
+
+"Begorrah, but that is queer, as me mither used to obsarve when she found
+she had not been desaved by belaving what we childer told her. There was
+somebody who was kind enough to knock over the grizzly at the most
+convanient season for ye, and then he doesn't choose to send over his card
+wid his post-office address on."
+
+"Who do you think it was, Mickey?"
+
+"It must have been some red spalpeen that took pity on ye. Who knows but
+it was Lone Wolf himself?"
+
+Both looked about them in a scared, inquiring way, but could see nothing
+of their unknown friend or enemy, as the case might be.
+
+"I tell you, Mickey, that it makes me feel as if we ought to get out of
+here."
+
+"Ye're right, and we'll just swally some of this stuff, and then we'll
+'light out."
+
+He tossed the lad a goodly-sized piece of meat, which, if anything, was
+overdone. Both ate more rapidly than was consistent with hygiene, their
+eyes continually wandering over the rocks and heights around them, in
+quest of their seemingly ever-present enemies, the Apaches. It required
+but a few moments for them to, complete their dinner. Mickey, in
+accordance with his custom, carefully folded up what was left, and, taking
+a drink from the stream which ran near at hand, they sprang upon the backs
+of their mustangs, and headed westward in the direction of New Boston,
+provided such a settlement was still in existence by the grace of Lone
+Wolf, leader of the Apaches.
+
+"Now," said Mickey, whose spirits seemed to rise when he found himself
+astride of his trusty mustang again, "if we don't have any bad luck, we
+ought to be out of the mountains by dark."
+
+"And after that?"
+
+"Then a good long ride across the prairie, and we'll be back again wid the
+folks."
+
+"How glad I am that father isn't there, that he staid at Fort Aubray, for
+when he comes along in a few weeks, he won't know anything about this
+trouble till I tell him the whole story myself, and then it will be too
+late for him to worry."
+
+"Yes, I'm glad it's so, for it saams if I had a spalpeen of a son off wid
+Lone Wolf, among the mountains, I'd feel as bad as if he'd gone in
+swimming where the water was over his head. And then it will be so nice to
+sit down and tell the ould gintleman about it, and have him lambaste ye
+'cause you wasn't more respictful to Lone Wolf. All them things are
+cheerful, and make the occasion very plisant. Begorrah, I should like to
+know where that old redskin is, for Soot Simpson tells me that he is the
+greatest redskin down in this part of the world. He's the spalpeen that
+robbed a government train and made himself a big blanket out of the new
+greenbaeks that he stole. Soot says that there isn't room on his
+lodge-pole for half the scalps that he has taken. Bad luck to the
+spalpeen, he will peel the topknot from the head of a lovely woman, or
+swaat child, such as I used to be, as quick as he would from the crown of
+a man of my size. He's an old riprobate, is the same, and Soot says he can
+niver die resigned and at pace with all mankind till he shoots him."
+
+"I'll be very glad to keep out of his way, if he'll keep out of mine. I
+wonder why he didn't kill me when he had the chance, instead of keeping me
+so long."
+
+"I s'pose he meant to carry ye up where his little spalpeens live, and
+turn ye over to them for their amusement."
+
+"How could I amuse them?"
+
+"There be a good many ways. They might have stuck little wooden pegs in
+your hide, then set fire to 'em, and then walked ye round for fireworks;
+or they might fill your ears with powder, and tech it off, and then
+watched the iligant exprission of your countenance. Or they might lave set
+ye to running up and down between two rows of 'em, about eight or ten
+miles long, while aich stood with a big shillalah in his hand, and banged
+ye over the head with it as ye passed. There be a good many ways,
+according to what Soot told me, but that's enough to show ye that Lone
+Wolf and his folks wouldn't have been at a loss to find delightful ways of
+giving the little childher the innocent sport they must have."
+
+"I shouldn't think they would, if that's the kind of fun they like,"
+replied the horrified boy. "I've thanked the Lord hundreds of times that
+He helped me get out of Lone Wolf's clutches, and my dread is that he may
+catch us before we can get out of the mountain. I don't believe we could
+find as good a chance as I did the other night."
+
+"Ye're right; that thing couldn't happen ag'in. Lightning doesn't strike
+twice in the same place; but we've got good horses, and if he don't pin us
+up in the pass, I think our chance is as good as could be asked."
+
+"That's what troubles me," said Fred, who was galloping at his side, and
+who kept continually glancing from the tops of the rocks upon the right to
+the tops upon the left. "You know there are Indians all over, and I wonder
+that some of them haven't seen us already. S'pose they do, and they're
+behind us, they can signal to somebody ahead, and the first thing we know,
+they've got us shut in on both sides."
+
+"That thing may happen," replied Mickey, who did not appear as
+apprehensive as his young friend; "but I have the best of hope that the
+same won't. I don't think Lone Wolf knows we're anywhere around here, and
+before he can find out, I also hope we shall be beyond his raich."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+BETWEEN TWO FIRES.
+
+
+Mickey had scarcely given utterance to this hopeful remark when he drew up
+his mustang with a spasmodic jerk and exclaimed, in a startled in a
+startled voice:
+
+"Do you see _that_?"
+
+As he spoke, he pointed some distance ahead, where a faint, thin column of
+smoke was seen rising from the top of the rocks on the opposite side of
+the canon or pass.
+
+It will be remembered that the pass of which our two friends availed
+themselves is the only one leading through the section of the mountains
+which lies to the eastward of the Rio Pecos. That part over which Fred and
+Mickey were riding showed numerous winding trails, made by the hoofs of
+the horses, as they passed back and forth, bearing Apaches, Comanches,
+Kiowas, and, very rarely, white men. At no very distant intervals were
+observed human skeletons and bones, while they were scarcely ever out of
+sight of the remains of horses or wild animals; all of which told their
+tale of the scenes of violence that had taken place in that highway of the
+mountains.
+
+Sometimes war-parties of the tribes mentioned encountered each other in
+the gorge, and passed each other in sullen silence, or, perchance, they
+dashed together like so many wild beasts, fighting with the fury of a
+thousand Kilkenny cats. It was as the whim happened to rule the leaders.
+
+The rocks rose perpendicularly on both sides to the height of fifty and a
+hundred feet, the upper contour being irregular, and varying in every
+manner imaginable. Along the upper edge of the pass grew vegetation, while
+here and there, along the side, some tree managed to obtain a precarious
+foothold, and sprouted forth toward the sun. The floor of the canon was of
+a varied nature--rocks, boulders, grass, streams of water, gravel, sand,
+and barren soil, alternating with each other and preventing anything like
+an accurate description of any particular section. A survey of this
+curious specimen of nature's highway suggested the idea that the solid
+mountain had been rent for many leagues by an earthquake, which, having
+opened this great seam or rent, had left it gradually to adjust itself to
+the changed order of things, and to be availed of by those who were
+seeking a safe and speedy transit through the almost impassable mountains.
+
+Mickey and Fred checked their mustangs and carefully scrutinized the line
+of smoke. It was several hundred yards in advance, on their left, while
+they were following a trail that led close to the right of the canon. They
+could distinguish nothing at all that could give any additional
+information.
+
+The fire which gave rise to the vapor had been kindled just far enough
+back to cause the edge of the gorge to protrude itself in such a way as to
+shut it off from the eyes of those below. Indeed, it was not to be
+supposed that those who had the matter in charge would commit any
+oversight which would reveal themselves or their purpose to those from
+whom they desired to keep them.
+
+"That is the same as the camp-fire which troubled the three Apaches so
+much, and which was the means of my giving them the slip."
+
+"It must have been started by some other war-party, so that their
+ca'c'lations were upsit, and you had a chance to get away during the muss.
+It was a sort of free fight, you see, in which, instead of staying and
+getting your head cracked, you stepped down and lift."
+
+Unable to make anything of this particular signal-fire, the two friends
+carefully searched for more. Had they been able to discover one in the
+rear, they would have been assured that signaling was going on, and they
+would not have dared to venture forward. Here and there along the sides of
+the canon were openings or crevices, generally filled with some sort of a
+vegetable growth, and into most of which quite a number of men could have
+taken refuge, but which, of course, were inaccessible to their horses.
+
+"I can't find anything that resimbles the same," said Mickey, alluding to
+the camp-fire, "though there may be some one that is seen by the gintlemen
+who are cooking their shins by yon one."
+
+"Will it do to go on?"
+
+"It won't do to do anything else. Like enough the spalpeen yonder has
+obsarved us coming, and he knows that there's a party behind us, and,
+being unable to do anything himsilf, he starts up the fire so as to scare
+us, and turn us back into the hands of the spalpeens coming in our rear.
+Mind, I say that such may be the case, but I ain't sure that it is."
+
+"I shouldn't wonder a bit, now, if that isn't it exactly," said Fred, who
+was quite taken with the ingenious theory of his friend. "It seems to me
+that the best thing that we can do is to ride on as fast as we can."
+
+"We've got to run the risk of it being all wrong, and fetching up in the
+bosom of the spalpeens; but it's moighty sure we don't make anything by
+standing here."
+
+The Irishman turned his horse as near the middle of the canon as possible.
+Fred kept close to his side, his mustang behaving so splendidly that he
+gave him his unreserved confidence. The average width of the pass was
+about a hundred yards, so it will be understood that if a detachment of
+men were caught within it they would be compelled to fight at a fearful
+disadvantage.
+
+The plan of Mickey and Fred, as they discussed it while riding along, was
+to keep up the moderate gallop until close upon the fire. They would then
+put their animals to the highest speed and pass the dangerous point as
+speedily as possible. They felt no little misgiving as they drew near the
+dangerous place, and they continually glanced upward at the rocks
+overhead, expecting that a party of Indians would suddenly make their
+appearance and open fire.
+
+The first plan was, as they drew near, to run in as close as possible
+beneath the rocks on the left, in the belief that, as they overhung so
+much, the Indians above could not reach them with a shot. But before the
+time came to make the attempt, it was seen that it would not do.
+Accordingly, Mickey, who had maintained a line as close as possible to the
+centre of the canon, suddenly sheered his mustang to the right, until he
+nearly grazed the wall there. Then he put him on a dead run, Fred Munson
+doing the same, with very little space between the two steeds. A few
+plunges brought them directly opposite the signal-fire, and every nerve
+was strained.
+
+Both beasts were capable of magnificent speed and the still air became
+like a hurricane as the horsemen cut their way through it. Fred glanced
+upward at the crest of the rocks on the left and fancied that he saw
+figures standing there, preparing to fire. He hammered his heels against
+the ribs of his mustang and leaned forward upon his neck, in the hope of
+making the aim as difficult as possible.
+
+Still no reports of guns were heard; and, after continuing the terrific
+gait for a quarter of a mile, they gradually decreased it until it became
+a moderate walk, and the riders again found themselves side by side. Both
+had looked behind them a dozen times since passing the dangerous point,
+but had not obtained a glimpse of an Indian.
+
+"I thought I saw a number just as we were opposite," said Fred; "but, if
+so, what has become of them?"
+
+"Ye didn't obsarve any at all, for I kipt raising me eye that way, and
+they weren't there. The whole thing is a moighty _puzzle_, as our tacher
+used to remark when the sum in addition became so big that he had to set
+down one number and carry anither. The spalpeens must have manufactured
+that fire for our benefit, and where's the good that it has done them?"
+
+"Can't it be that it was for something else? Can't it be that they took us
+for Indians, or perhaps they haven't seen us at all, and don't know that
+we've passed?"
+
+"It does seem as if something of the kind might be, and yet that don't
+sthrike me as the Injin style of doing business."
+
+They continued their moderate pace for quite a distance further,
+continually looking back toward the camp-fire, the smoke from which
+continued to ascend with the same distinct regularity as before, but
+nothing resembling a warrior was detected. Finally a curve in the gorge
+shut out the troublesome signal, and they were left to continue their way
+and conjecture as much as they chose as to the explanation of what had
+taken place.
+
+A little later, and when the afternoon was about half gone, they reached a
+portion of the pass which was remarkably straight, so that the eye took in
+a half mile of it, from the beginning to the point where another turn
+intervened. The two friends were galloping over this exact section and
+speculating as to how soon they would strike the open prairie, when all
+their calculations were knocked topsy-turvy. A party of horsemen charged
+around the bend in front, all riding at a sweeping gallop directly toward
+the alarmed Mickey and Fred, who instantly halted and surveyed them. A
+second glance showed them to be Indians, undoubtedly Apaches, and very
+probably Lone Wolf himself and some of his warriors.
+
+"We must turn back," said the Irishman, wheeling his horse about and
+striking him into a rapid gait. "We've got to have a dead run for it, and
+I think we can win. Holy saints presarve us!"
+
+This ejaculation was caused by seeing, at that moment, another party of
+horsemen appear directly in their front, as they turned on the back trail.
+Thus they were shut in on both sides, and fairly caught between two fires.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+ON THE DEFENSIVE.
+
+
+AT the moment of reining up their mustangs, the fugitives were about
+equidistant between the two fires, and it was just as dangerous to advance
+as to retreat. For one second the Irishman meditated a desperate charge,
+in the hope of breaking through the company that first appeared in his
+path, and, had he been alone, or accompanied by a man, he would have done
+so. But, slight as was his own prospect of escape, he knew there was
+absolutely none for the boy in such a desperate effort, and he determined
+that it should not be made.
+
+"Can't we make a dash straight through them?" asked Fred, reading the
+thought of Mickey, as he glanced from one to the other, and noted the
+fearfully rapid approach of the redskins.
+
+"It can't be done," replied the Irishman. "There is only one thing left
+for us."
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"Do as I do. Yonder is an opening that may serve us for awhile."
+
+As he spoke, he slipped off his steed, leaving him to work his own will.
+Fred did not hesitate a moment, for there was not a moment to spare.
+
+As he sprang to the ground, he pulled the beautiful Apache blanket from
+the back of the mustang that had served him so well. Dragging that with
+him, the two hurried to the right, making for a wooded crevice between the
+rocks, which seemingly offered a chance for them to climb to the surface
+above, if, in the order of things, they should gain the opportunity to do
+so. Mickey O'Rooney, as a matter of course, took the lead and in a
+twinkling he was among the gnarled and twisted saplings, the interlacing
+vines, and the rolling stones and rattling gravel. As soon as he had
+secured a foothold, he reached out his hand to help his young friend.
+
+"Never mind me. I can keep along behind you. Go as fast as you can."
+
+"Let me have the blanket," said Mickey, drawing it from his grasp. "Now
+come ahead, for we have got to go it like monkeys."
+
+He turned and bent to his task with the recklessness of despair, for, even
+in that dreadful crisis, he thought more of the little fellow than he did
+of himself. If he could have been assured of his safety, he would have
+been ready to wheel about and meet his score or more of foes, and fight
+them single-handed, as Leonidas and his band did at Thermopylae. But the
+fate of the two was linked together, and, sink or swim, it must be
+fulfilled in company.
+
+The narrow, wooded ravine, in which they had taken enforced refuge, was
+only three or four feet in width, the bottom sloping irregularly upward,
+at an angle of forty five degrees. So long as this continued, so long
+could they maintain their laboring ascent to the top. Mickey had strong
+hopes that, with the advantage of the start, they might reach that point
+far enough in advance of their pursuers to secure some other concealment
+that would serve them till nightfall, when they could steal out and try
+their chances again.
+
+The saplings growing at every inclination afforded them much assistance,
+as they were able to seize hold with one or both hands, and thus help
+themselves along. But the vines in many places were of a peculiar running
+nature and they frequently caught their feet and stumbled; but they were
+instantly up and at it again. All at once Mickey, who was scarcely an
+arm's length in advance, halted so abruptly that Fred ran plump against
+him.
+
+"Why don't you go on?" asked the panting lad.
+
+"I can't. Here's the end."
+
+So it was, indeed. While pressing forward with undiminished effort, the
+Irishman found himself suddenly confronted with a solid, perpendicular
+wall of rock. The narrow chasm, or fissure, terminated.
+
+It was like a fugitive, his heart beating high with hope, checked in his
+flight by the obtrusion of the Great Chinese Wall across his path. Mickey
+looked upward. As he stood, he could, with outstretched arms, touch the
+wall on his right and left, and kick the one in front--the only open route
+being in the rear, which was commanded by the Apache party. As he did so,
+he saw, through the interstices of the interweaving, straggling branches,
+the clear, blue sky, with the edge of the fissure fully forty feet above
+his head. His first hope was that some of the saplings around him were
+lofty enough to permit him to use them as a ladder; but the tallest did
+not approach within a half dozen yards of the top. They were shut in on
+every hand.
+
+"We can't run any further," said the Irishman, after a hasty glance at the
+situation. "We are cotched as fairly as ever was a mouse in a trap, and it
+now remains for us to peg away, and go under doing the best we can. Have
+ye your pistol?"
+
+"Yes; I picked it up again, after throwing it in the face of the grizzly,
+but it isn't loaded."
+
+"Then it ain't of much account, as me mither used to say in her
+affectionate references to me father; but if one of the spalpeens happen
+to come onto ye too suddent like, ye might scare him by shoving that into
+his eyes. I've got the powder for the same, but the bullets won't fit it,
+so I'll have to do the shooting."
+
+They were at bay and the Irishman was right in his declaration that they
+could do nothing but fight it out as best they might. The question of
+further flight was settled by the trap in which they were caught.
+
+They paused, expecting to hear the tramp of the Indians behind them, but,
+as it continued quiet, Mickey ventured upon a more critical inspection of
+their fortress, as it may be termed. He found little which has not already
+been mentioned, except the fact that the wall on their left sloped inward,
+as it ascended, to such a degree that the width at the top was several
+feet less than at the bottom. This was an important advantage, for, in
+case they were attacked from above, it was in their power to place
+themselves beyond the immediate reach of a whole war party by any means at
+their command.
+
+"Do ye hear anything?" asked Mickey, bending his head to listen.
+
+They were silent a few minutes, during which the occasional tramp of a
+horse's hoof was noted. Beyond a doubt, the entire war-party of Apaches
+were at the mouth of the fissure and probably a number had already entered
+it.
+
+"They haven't tried to rush in pell-mell, head-over-heels," added Mickey,
+after they had stood thus a short time; but they are sneaking along, just
+as they always do when they're on the thrack of a gintleman."
+
+"How soon do you think they will be here?" asked Fred, who had recovered
+his breath, and who began to feel something like a renewal of hope, faint
+though it might be, at the continued silence of their foes.
+
+"Can't say, me laddy; but they may come any minute, and we must keep eyes
+and ears open, and be ready to do the last act in style. Don't ye mind
+that we're very much in the same fix that we was when cotched in the cave,
+barring that we're worse off here than we were there? If some one should
+let a lasso down from the top, we might climb up just as we did there; but
+that's one of the things that ain't likely to happen."
+
+"Suppose we creep back a ways to see what the Indians are doing," ventured
+Fred, who was puzzled at the silence of their enemies, which had now
+continued for some time.
+
+"No need of doing that just yet. They'll let us know what they're at and
+what they mane--whisht!"
+
+At that juncture the Irishman detected a movement among the wood and
+undergrowth of the ravine, and his rifle was at his shoulder like a flash.
+Fred understood, or, rather, suspected, the cause of the trouble, though
+he saw nothing. Only a few seconds elapsed when the trigger was pulled.
+The sharp crack of the weapon had scarcely broke the stillness when the
+shriek of a warrior was heard only a few feet away, followed by a
+threshing of the vines and vegetation, as the comrades of the slain brave
+caught and hurriedly dragged him back toward the greater ravine beyond.
+
+"That'll taich 'em to be more respictful in the traitment of gintlemen,"
+remarked Mickey, who had recovered something of his natural recklessness,
+and was reloading his gun with as much _sangfroid_ as though he had just
+dropped an antelope, and wished to be ready for another that was expected
+along the same path.
+
+Fred had detected the rustling movement among the shrubbery made by the
+redskin in stealing upon them, but he saw nothing of the savage himself,
+and was not a little startled when his friend fired so quickly, and the
+result was so manifest.
+
+If the victim of this rather hastily fired shot was unable to appreciate
+the lesson from its having a too personal application to himself, his
+companions appreciated it fully. It taught them that the way of pursuit
+was not open and undisputed by any means, and the few who were hurrying
+forward rather rashly were not only checked, but forced backward. Matters,
+for the moment, were brought to a stand still.
+
+"They'll be back again," added Mickey, after reloading his piece, "and, as
+they mean to have our topknots, as the hunters say, we'll wipe out as many
+as we kin before they git them. And now, me laddy, will ye allow me to
+make a suggestion?"
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"That ye kaap a little more out of raich. If one of the spalpeens craap
+up, and shoots ye dead, ye'll be sorry ye didn't take me advice, when ye
+come to think the matter over coolly. Here's a sort of boulder which seems
+to have cared in from above. Do ye squaze in behind that."
+
+"And what will you do?" asked Fred, acting upon his advice.
+
+"Being as there isn't room to squaze in wid ye, I'll take my stand a
+little out here, where I can secure the protection of a similar piece of
+masonry, and where the spalpeens can't git by me without giving the
+countersign and showing a pass."
+
+The lad did not specially like this arrangement, as it really retired him,
+but their quarters were so cramped that they had to dispose of themselves
+as best they could. He was obliged to feel that practically he was of no
+account, as his only pistol had become useless hours before. Accordingly,
+he forced himself in behind the boulder pointed out, and found that his
+position was safe against any treacherous shot from the front.
+
+He was uneasy, however, about the open space above him, for it struck him
+that it would be so easy for any of their foes to roll the rocks down upon
+their heads. When he came to examine the situation more critically, he was
+not a little relieved to find that he was protected by the sloping wall,
+already mentioned. A heavy stone heaved over the opening above might
+really weigh a ton, and come crashing downward with terrific force, but no
+skill could, at the start, cause its course to be such as to injure the
+lad. He therefore concluded that his friend Mickey was not unwise in
+placing him in such a refuge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+FRIEND OR ENEMY?
+
+
+It can scarcely be said that either of the fugitives had any definite hope
+of escape, for neither was able to see how the thing was possible. Mickey
+knew that occasionally, in the affairs of the world, seemingly
+providential interferences had occurred, but he looked for nothing of the
+kind. He considered that there would be a siege, lasting perhaps several
+days, then a desperate hand-to-hand struggle, and then.
+
+The summary manner in which the Irishman disposed of the first Apache who
+showed himself brought matters to a standstill. In this condition they
+probably would have remained but for the Irishman himself, who saw nothing
+to be gained by inaction. Turning his head, he whispered to Fred:
+
+"Do ye kape quiet, me laddy, till my return. I am going to take a look
+around."
+
+The boy offered no objection, for he knew it would not be heeded, and
+Mickey moved away. It required the greatest care to pick his way down the
+fissure, as the stones and gravel were liable to turn under his feet and
+betray his approach, and it was much easier to go forward than backward.
+
+The fissure which had afforded this temporary refuge was about fifty feet
+in length, and the vegetation was so thick that at almost any portion the
+view was no greater than three or four yards. Mickey was in constant
+expectation of encountering some of the Apaches at every step he took,
+and, in accordance with his principle of hitting a head wherever he saw
+it, he held his rifle so as to fire on the very instant the coppery face
+presented itself to view. But he saw none, and as he advanced he began to
+believe that the place was entirely free of the Apaches, who, if prudent,
+would quietly wait on the outside until their prey dropped into their
+hands.
+
+It was not to be supposed that they would leave any opening on the outside
+by which the most forlorn chance could be obtained, and Mickey had no
+thought of any such thing. If he had, it would have been dissipated by the
+evidence of his own ears. He could hear distinctly their peculiar grunting
+voices, the tramp of their mustangs, and the evidence which a score of
+Indian warriors might be expected to give of their presence, when they had
+no reason for concealment.
+
+"It may be that the spalpeens mean to make a rush upon me," he muttered,
+as he halted near the end of the fissure, "in which case I shall have a
+delightful employment in cracking their pates as they come up and take
+their turn."
+
+He remained where he was a few minutes longer, and, seeing no prospect of
+learning anything additional, he resumed his advance until he reached a
+point where it was only necessary to draw the branches slightly apart to
+gain a view of the main ravine. And this he proceeded to do in the
+gentlest and most cautious manner possible.
+
+The view was satisfactory, as it showed him that the Apaches were gathered
+at the entrance to the fissure and were taking matters very coolly and
+philosophically. Several were on horses, and a number on foot. Among the
+mustangs moving about, the Irishman recognized his own, astride of which
+was a dirty-looking Apache, with a wide mouth and broken nose.
+
+"Ye ould spalpeen," muttered the indignant Irishman, "if it wasn't for
+fear of spoiling your wonderful booty, I'd turn you somersets off that
+hoss of mine, which I shall have to whitewash after getting him back, on
+account of your contact wid the same."
+
+Mickey was strongly tempted to send a bullet after the tantalizing
+horse-thief, but he thought he could wait awhile. He was extremely
+cautious in making his stealthy view, only moving enough leaves to permit
+the service of his eyes and he had not enjoyed this prospect long before
+he believed that he had been detected.
+
+Of the twenty-odd members comprising the Apache party, about a dozen were
+constantly in view, the others being too far to the right or left to be
+seen. The group was an irregular and straggling one, the most interesting
+portion being five or six, who stood close together, exactly at the base
+of the fissure, talking with each other. It was impossible that there
+should be more than one subject of discussion; and the dispute, as Mickey
+suspected, was as to the precise method of disposing of the job which had
+been placed in their hands.
+
+Some, evidently, favored a daring charge directly up the narrow ravine,
+with its short, fierce encounter and sure victory. Others had a different
+plan, and their gestures led the eavesdropper to suspect that they
+advocated reaching them from the roof, while it was apparent that there
+were those who insisted upon waiting until the fruit should become ripe
+enough to fall into their laps without shaking. There could be little
+doubt that the Apaches preferred to take both prisoners, instead of
+shooting or tomahawking them in a fight. They were under the inspiration
+of Lone Wolf, who believed that a live man was much more valuable than a
+dead one.
+
+While Mickey was watching this group with an interest which may be
+imagined, he noticed that a short, thick, greasy, filthy warrior was
+looking directly toward him, with a steadiness which caused the Irishman
+to suspect that his presence was known. The Indian, like all of them, was
+as homely as he could be. He, too, had gone through an attack of smallpox,
+which had left his broad face so deeply pitted that it could be noticed
+through the vari-colored paint which was daubed thereon. There was
+scarcely any forehead, the black, piercing eyes were far apart, and when
+Mickey saw them turned toward him, he felt anything but comfortable under
+their fire.
+
+"I wonder whether he would keep mum if I should tip him the wink?" thought
+Mickey, who suffered the leaves in front of his face to close until there
+was just the smallest space through which he could watch his man.
+
+The latter acted very much as if he suspected the proximity of the
+Irishman, even if he was not assured of it. He continued looking directly
+at the point where the eyes of the white man peered out upon him, and
+by-and-by he raised his arm and pointed in the same direction, saying
+something at the same time to a couple of the warriors near him.
+
+"Be the powers, if that doesn't mane _me_, as me friend Larry O'Toole said
+when the judge axed for the biggest rascal in coort. I'll have to retire."
+
+At this juncture a strange occurrence took place. Mickey O'Rooney was
+looking straight at the man, when he saw him fling up his arms, yell and
+pitch forward to the ground, while the group instantly scattered, as if a
+bombshell had dropped at their feet.
+
+Just a second previous to this strange death, Mickey heard the report of a
+rifle, showing that the warrior had been shot by some one at quite a
+distance from the spot, which shot, at the game time, caused a temporary
+panic among the others.
+
+"Well, well, now, if that doesn't bate everything!" exclaimed the amazed
+Irishman. "Just as I was thinking of raising my gun to give that spalpeen
+his walking-papers, up steps some gintleman and saves me the trouble; _but
+who was the gintleman_? is the question."
+
+The inexplicable occurrence naturally recalled Fred Munson's adventure
+with the grizzly bear. When he needed assistance most sorely, the shot was
+fired that saved his life. Could it be that the same party had interfered
+in the present instance? There was plenty of ground for speculation, and
+the Irishman was disposed to believe that the diversion came from some
+small party of Kiowas or Comanches, who had a special enmity against this
+company of Apaches, and who, being too weak to attack them, took this
+means of revenging themselves.
+
+It was unsafe, however, to count upon the well-aimed shot as meant in the
+interest of the whites, although the one that brought down the grizzly
+bear could not have been meant for anything else than a direct help to the
+imperiled lad. The Southwest has been noted for what are termed
+"triangular fights." A party of Americans have been driven at bay by an
+overwhelming number of Mexicans or greasers, who have suddenly found
+themselves attacked by a party of howling Comanches. The latter have
+scattered the Mexicans like chaff, the Americans acting the part of
+spectators until the rout was complete, when the Comanches turned about
+and sailed into the Americans. The Kiowas, Comanches, Apaches, Mexicans
+and Americans afforded just the elements for a complication of guerilla
+warfare, in which matters frequently became mixed to a wonderful degree.
+
+The hand that had fired this shot against a mortal foe of Mickey O'Rooney
+might be turned against him the next hour. Who could tell?
+
+"If that gintleman begins the serenade from the other side, it's me
+bounden duty to kaap it up from this," concluded the Irishman, as he
+cocked his rifle and awaited his chance.
+
+It was not long in coming. Only a few minutes had passed after the shot,
+when a couple of Apaches walked rapidly to view, and, approaching the
+remains of their comrade, stooped down to carry him away.
+
+Mickey allowed them to get fairly started, when he blazed away at the
+foremost, and had the satisfaction of seeing the rear Apache not only
+deprived of his assistance, but his duty suddenly doubled. The warrior,
+however, stuck pluckily to the work, and dragged both out of view without
+any assistance from those who were ready to rush to his help.
+
+These two, or rather three, rifle shots produced the strongest kind of
+effect upon the Apaches. They could not well fail to do so, for they were
+not only fired with unerring aim, but they came from such diverse points
+as to show the redskins that instead of having their enemies cooped up in
+this narrow ravine, they had, in one sense, placed themselves between two
+fires.
+
+Hurriedly reloading his rifle, Mickey waited several minutes, determined
+to fire the instant he got the chance, with the purpose of enhancing the
+demoralization of the wretches. But they had received enough to teach them
+caution, and as the minutes passed, they failed to expose themselves. They
+had taken to shelter somewhere, and were not yet ready to uncover.
+
+"When Mickey had waited a considerable time, he concluded to rejoin Fred
+Munson, who, no doubt, was anxious over the result of his reconnoissance.
+When he returned he found him seated upon the boulder, instead of behind
+it. The Irishman hastily explained what had taken place, and added:
+
+"I don't know what they will do next, but we've give the spalpeens a dose
+that will kaap them in the background for a while."
+
+"No, it won't, either," was the significant response.
+
+"What do you maan, me laddy?"
+
+"I mean that the Apaches, or some of them, anyway, have changed their
+base. I've heard something overhead that makes me sure they're up there,
+getting up some kind of deviltry."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+A FORTUNATE DIVERSION.
+
+
+Mickey O'Rooney had not thought of the "opening" over their heads since
+the firing of his rifle-shot, and he now started and looked upward, as if
+fearful that he had committed a fatal oversight. But he saw or heard
+nothing to excite alarm.
+
+"Where are they?" he asked, in a whisper.
+
+"They're up there. I've seen them peep down more than once."
+
+"What were they paaping for?"
+
+"I suppose to find out where we were."
+
+"Be the powers, but I showed them where I was when I fired me gun!"
+
+"That maybe; but you didn't stay there, and perhaps they were looking for
+me."
+
+"Did they find ye?"
+
+"I don't think they did. You know I was in behind the boulder, with my
+head thrown back, so that it was easy for me to look up, and there wasn't
+enough branches and leaves over my head to shut out my view; so I lay
+there looking up, watching and listening, when I saw an Indian peep over
+the top there, as though he was looking for us."
+
+"Did ye see more than one?"
+
+"I am sure there were two, and I think three."
+
+"They didn't ax ye any question?"
+
+"I didn't hear any."
+
+"What d'ye s'pose they mean to try?"
+
+"I thought they meant to find out where we are hiding, and then roll
+stones down on us. They can do that, you know, without our getting a
+chance to stop them."
+
+"If we squaze in under that same place," said Mickey, indicating the
+inward slope of the rock, they can't hit us; but I don't believe that such
+is their intention."
+
+"What do you suppose it to be?"
+
+"That's hard to say; but these varmints ain't ready to shoot us jist yet.
+Leastaways, they don't want to do so, until they're sure there ain't
+anything else lift for 'em to'do."
+
+"They wish to make us prisoners?"
+
+"That's it, exactly."
+
+"Well, if they are willing to wait, they'll be sure to have us, for there
+isn't any water here for us to drink, and we can't get along without
+that."
+
+The Irishman suddenly slapped his chest and side, as though he missed
+something from the pocket.
+
+"And be the powers!" he exclaimed, "I've lost that mate, and there must
+have been enough to last us a wake or two."
+
+"How could you have lost that?" asked Fred, who was much disappointed.
+
+"It must have slid out when we were riding so hard, or else when we lift
+our horses."
+
+"Are you sure it wasn't lost somewhere among these trees, where we can get
+it again?"
+
+But he was confident that such was not the case, and he was not disposed
+to mourn the loss a great deal. They could do longer without food than
+they could without drink, and he was of the opinion that this problem
+would be solved before they were likely to perish from the want of either.
+
+"Did ye get a fair look at any of the spalpeens that was so ill-mannered
+as to paap down on ye?"
+
+"Yes; and there was one--'Sh! there he is now!"
+
+The two peered upward through the leaves, and saw the head and shoulders
+of an Apache, who was looking down into the ravine. He was not directly
+above them, but a dozen feet off to the left. He seemed to be trying to
+locate the party that had fired two such fatal shots, and therefore could
+not have known where he was.
+
+The face of the Indian could be seen very distinctly, and it was one with
+more individual character than any Mickey had as yet noticed. It was not
+handsome nor very homely, but that of a man in the prime of life, with a
+prominent nose--a regular contour of countenance for an Indian. The face
+was painted, as was the long black hair which dangled about his shoulders.
+His eye was a powerful black one, which flitted restlessly, as he keenly
+searched the ravine below.
+
+Not seeing that which he wished, he arose to his feet, and walked slowly
+along and away from where the fugitives were crouching. That is, his face
+was turned toward the main ravine or pass, while he stepped upon the very
+edge of the fissure, moving with a certain deliberation and dignity, as he
+searched the space below for the man and boy whom he was so anxious to
+secure.
+
+"I wonder if he ain't the leader?" said Mickey, in a whisper. "I never saw
+better shtyle than that."
+
+"I should think he was the leader. Don't you know him?"
+
+"How should I know him? I never traveled much in Injun society. Are ye and
+him acquainted?"
+
+"He's Lone Wolf--their great war-chief."
+
+"Ye don't say so?" exclaimed the astonished Irishman, staring at him.
+"He's just the spalpeen I loaded me gun for, and here goes!"
+
+Softly raising the hammer of his rifle, he lifted the weapon to his
+shoulder; but before he could make his aim certain, the red scamp stepped
+aside and vanished from view.
+
+"Now, that's enough to break a man's heart!" wailed the chagrined Mickey.
+"Why wasn't the spalpeen thoughtful and kind enough to wait until I could
+have made sartin of him? But sorra and disappointment await us all, as
+Barney Mulligan said when his friend wouldn't fight him. Maybe he'll show
+himsilf agin."
+
+Whether or not Lone Wolf learned of the precise location of the parties
+for whom he was searching can only be conjectured; but during the ten
+minutes that Mickey held his weapon ready to shoot him at sight, he took
+good care to keep altogether invisible.
+
+The Irishman was still looking for his reappearance, when another singular
+occurrence took place. There was a whoop, or rather howl, followed by a
+fall of a warrior, who was so near the edge of the narrow ravine that when
+he came down, a portion of his body was seen by those below. The dull and
+rather distant report of a gun told the curious story.
+
+The same rifle that had picked off one of the Apaches at the mouth of the
+fissure had done the same thing in the case of one at the top. The aim in
+both instances was unerring.
+
+"Freddy, me lad," said Mickey, a moment later, "whin we rushed in here wid
+the spalpeens snapping at our heels, I hadn't any more hope that we'd ever
+get clear of 'em than the man who was transported to Botany Bay had of
+cutting out Prince Albert in Queen Victoria's graces."
+
+"Have you any more hope _now_?"
+
+"I have; we've got a friend on the outside, and he's doing us good
+sarvice, as he has already proved. If Lone Wolf wasn't among that crowd, I
+don't belave they would stay after what has took place; there's nothing to
+scare an Injun like them things which he don't understand."
+
+"I should think that that rifle-shot is proof enough that somebody is
+firing into them."
+
+"Be the powers, but ye know little of Injin devilments, as I've larned 'em
+from Soot Simpson. How do ye know but that's a thrick to make these
+Apaches belave that there's but a single Kiowa over there popping at them,
+when there may be half a hundred waiting for the chance to clean them
+out?"
+
+"Maybe that is Sut himself; you know you have been expecting him."
+
+"It can't be him," replied Mickey, with a shake of his head. "He would
+have showed himself long ago, when he could be sure of helping us. There
+must be some redskins over there that have put up a job on Lone Wolf and
+his scamps."
+
+"Whoever it is, whether one or a dozen, they are helping us mightily."
+
+"So it looks, though they don't mean it for that, and after driving these
+spalpeens away, they may come over to clean us out themselves."
+
+Nothing was heard of the redskins above for a considerable time after the
+shot mentioned. Then the body was suddenly whisked out of sight. It is a
+principle with Indians to bring away their dead from any fight in which
+they may have fallen. At the imminent risk of losing his own life a
+warrior had stolen up and drawn away the remains of his former comrade.
+
+The mysterious shots seemed to come from the other side of the ravine, and
+they naturally had a very demoralizing effect upon the party. Lone Wolf
+was not only brave, but sagacious and prudent. He was not the chief to
+allow his warriors to stand idly and permit themselves to be picked off
+one by one by an unseen enemy. But for the latter, he would have descended
+into the fissure, and, with several of his most reliable braves, captured
+and secured Mickey and his companion at all hazards. But what assurance
+could he have that after he and his men had entered the little ravine, a
+whole party of Kiowas would not swarm in, overwhelm them, and make off
+with their horses? So the leader concluded for the time being to remain
+outside, where his line of retreat would be open, while he could arrange
+his plans for disposing of the whites at his leisure.
+
+Lone Wolf dispatched two of his most skillful scouts, one to the right,
+the other to the left, with orders to get to the rear of the enemy, no
+matter how long a detour was necessary. In case they were unable to
+extinguish them, they were to signal or return for assistance. After
+sending off his trusty messengers, Lone Wolf concluded to hold back until
+their return, keeping himself and his braves pretty well concealed, but
+guarding against the capture of their horses in the ravine below, or the
+escape of the two fugitives, who might attempt to take advantage of the
+diversion.
+
+At the end of an hour, nothing had been seen or heard of the Apache scouts
+sent out, and the chief dispatched another to learn what was going on, and
+what was the cause of the trouble. During this hour not a rifle-shot was
+detected by the waiting, listening ears. Another half hour passed away,
+and the third man sent out by Lone Wolf came back alone, and with
+astounding tidings.
+
+He had found both of the warriors lying within a few yards of each other,
+stone dead. He sought for some explanation of the strange occurrence, but
+found none, and returned with the news to his leader.
+
+The latter was about as furious as a wild Indian could be, without
+exploding. Lone Wolf had his own theory of the thing, and he inquired
+particularly as to the manner in which the fatal wounds seemed to have
+been inflicted. When they were described, all doubt was removed from the
+mind of the chieftain.
+
+He knew where the fatal shots came from, and he determined that there was
+no better time to "square accounts." Calling the larger portion of his
+company about him, he started backward and away from the ravine, his
+purpose being to reach the rear of his enemy by a long detour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+AN OLD ACQUAINTANCE.
+
+
+All this was grist for Mickey and Fred. The long silence and inaction--so
+far as these two were concerned--of the Apaches convinced the fugitives
+that some important interruption was going on, and that it could not fail
+to operate in the most direct way in their favor. It was well into the
+afternoon when the collision occurred between them and the Apaches, and
+enough time had already passed to bring the night quite close at hand. An
+hour or so more, and darkness would be upon them.
+
+"I don't belave the spalpeens have found put just the precise spot where
+we've stowed away," said Mickey, in his cautious undertone, to his
+companion, "for I've no evidence that such is the case."
+
+"They may take it into their heads to come into the fissure again, and
+then where are we?"
+
+"Right here, every time. We couldn't get a better spot, unless it might be
+at the mouth."
+
+"Don't you think we had better go there?" asked the lad, who could not
+feel the assurance of his friend.
+
+"I see nothing to be gained by the same, as Tim O'Loony said when some one
+told him that honesty was the best policy. If we start to return there,
+they'll find out where we are, and begin to roll stones on us. I don't
+want to go along, dodging rocks as big as a house, wid an occasional
+rifle-shot thrown in, by way of variety."
+
+"Don't you fear they will creep in and try to surprise us?"
+
+"Not before dark, and then we can shift our position."
+
+"Do you believe there is any hope at all for us in the way of getting
+out?"
+
+The Irishman was careful not to arouse too strong hopes in the breast of
+the lad, and he tried to be guarded in his reply:
+
+"An hour ago I would have sworn if there war a half-dozen of us in here,
+there was no show of our getting away wid our top-knots, for the raison
+that there is but one hole through which we could sneak, and there's
+twenty of 'em sitting round there, and watching for us; but I faal that
+there is some ground for hope."
+
+"What reason for your saying there is hope? Isn't it just as hard to get
+out the front without being seen?"
+
+"It might be just now; but there's no telling what them ither spalpeens
+mane to do arter the sun goes down. S'pose they get Lone Wolf and his men
+in such a big fight that they'd have their hands full, what's to hinder
+our sneaking out the back-door during the rumpus, hunting up our mustangs,
+or somebody else's, and resooming our journey to New Boston, which these
+spalpeens were so impertinent as to interrupt a short time since?"
+
+Fred Munson felt that this was about as rose-colored a view as could be
+taken, and indeed a great deal rosier than the situation warranted--at
+least, in his opinion.
+
+"Mickey, if that isn't counting chickens before they're hatched, I don't
+know what is! While you're supposing things, suppose these Indians don't
+do all that, where's going to come our chance of creeping out without
+their knowing it?"
+
+Mickey scratched his head in his puzzled way, and replied:
+
+"I'm sorry to obsarve that ye persist in axing knotty questions, as I
+reproved me landlord for doing in the ould country, when he found me
+digging praities in his patch. There's a good many ways in which we may
+get a chance to craap out, and I'm bound to say there be a good many more
+by which we can't; but the good Lord has been so good to us, that I can't
+help belaving He won't let us drop jist yet, though He may think that the
+best thing for us both will be to let the varmints come in and scalp us."
+
+There was a good deal of hope in the Irishman, and a certain contagion
+marked it, which Fred Munson felt, but he could not entertain as much of
+it as did his older and more experienced friend. Still, he was ready to
+make any attempt which offered the least chance of flight. He was hungry
+and thirsty, and there was no way of supplying the wants, and he dreaded
+the night of suffering to be succeeded by the still more tormenting day.
+
+It was very warm in the ravine, where not a stir of air could reach them.
+If they suffered themselves to be cooped up there through the night, they
+would be certain to continue there during the following day, for it was
+not to be expected by the wildest enthusiast that any way of escape
+presented itself under the broad sunlight. The following night must find
+them more weakened in every respect; for the chewing of leaves, while it
+might afford temporary relief, could not be expected to amount to much in
+a run of twenty-four hours. Clearly, if anything at all was to be done or
+attempted, it should not be deferred beyond the evening, which was now so
+close at hand.
+
+But the objection again came up that whatever Mickey and Fred decided on,
+hinged upon the action of parties with whom they had nothing to do, and
+with whom, as a matter of course, it was impossible to communicate. If the
+Kiowas, as they were suspected to be, should choose to draw off and have
+nothing further to do with the business, the situation of the fugitives
+must become as despairing and hopeless as in the first case.
+
+There perhaps was some reason for the declaration of Mickey that the
+strangers (their allies for the time being) were a great deal more likely
+to perform their mission before the sun should rise again. Consequently,
+the next few hours were likely to settle the question one way or the
+other.
+
+"Do you know whether any of the Apaches are still up there?" asked Fred.
+
+"Yes; there be one or two. I've seen 'em since we've been talking, but
+they're a good deal more careful of showing their ugly faces. They paap
+over now and then, and dodge back agin, before I can get a chance to pop
+away."
+
+"Would you try and shoot them if you had the chance?"
+
+"Not just yet, for it would show 'em where we are, and they would be
+likely to bother us."
+
+The two carried out this policy of keeping their precise location from the
+Indians so long as it was possible, which would have been a very short
+time, but for the terror inspired among the Apaches from the shots across
+the pass. Mickey had no suspicion that Lone Wolf and his best warriors
+were absent on a hunt for the annoying cause of these shots. Had he known
+it, he might have been tempted upon a reconnoissance of his own before
+sunset, and so it was well, perhaps, that he remained in ignorance.
+
+Within the next hour night descended, and the ravine, excluding the rays
+of the moon, became so dark that Mickey believed it safe to venture out of
+their niche and approach the pass, into which they had no idea of entering
+until the ground had been thoroughly reconnoitered.
+
+"The spalpeens will be listening," whispered Mickey, as they crept out,
+"and so ye naadn't indulge in any whistling, or hurrahing, or dancing jigs
+on the way to our destination."
+
+Fred appreciated their common peril too well to allow any betrayal through
+his remissness. Favored by the darkness, they crept carefully along over
+the rocks and boulders, and through the vines and vegetation, until they
+were so close that the man halted.
+
+"Do ye mind and kaap as still as a dead man, for we're so close now that
+it won't do to go any closer till we know what the spalpeens are doing."
+
+The two occupied this position for some time, during which nothing caught
+their ears to betray the presence of men or animals. Feeling the great
+value of time, Mickey was on the point of creeping forth, when he became
+aware that there was somebody moving near him. The sound was very slight,
+but the proof was all the more positive on that account; for it is only by
+such means that the professional scout judges of the proceedings of a foe
+near him.
+
+His first dread was that the individual was in the rear, having entered
+the fissure while they were at the opposite end, and then allowed them to
+pass by him. But when the faint rustling caught his ear again there could
+be no doubt that it was in front of him.
+
+"One of the spalpeens--and maybe Lone Wolf himself--coming in to larn
+about our health," was his conclusion, though the situation was too
+critical to allow him to communicate with the lad behind him.
+
+Reaching his hand back, he touched his arm, as a warning for the most
+perfect silence.
+
+The boulder against which he was partly resting was no more quiet and
+motionless than Fred, who had nerved himself to meet the worst or best
+fortune. A few minutes more listening satisfied Mickey that the redskin
+was not a dozen feet in front, and that a particularly large boulder,
+which was partly revealed by some stray moonlight that made its way
+through the limbs and branches, was sheltering the scout. Not only that,
+but he became convinced that the Indian was moving around the left side of
+the rock, hugging it and keeping so close to the ground that the faintest
+shadowy resemblance of a human figure could not be detected.
+
+It was at this juncture that the Irishman determined upon a performance
+perfectly characteristic and amusing in its originality. Carefully drawing
+his knife from his pocket, he managed to cut a switch, some five or six
+feet in length, the end of which was slightly split. He next took one of
+his matches, and struck it against the rock, holding and nursing the flame
+so far down behind it that not the slightest sign of it could be seen from
+the outside. Before the match had cleared itself of the brimstone, Mickey
+secured the other end of the stick in his hand. His next proceeding was to
+raise this stick, move it around in front, and then suddenly extend it at
+arms length. This brought the burning match into the dense shadow
+alongside the rock, and directly over the head of the amazed scout. The
+Hibernian character of the act was, that while it revealed to him his man,
+it also, although in a less degree, betrayed the location of Mickey
+himself, whose delighted astonishment may be imagined, when, instead of
+discerning a crouching, painted Apache, he recognized the familiar figure
+of Sut Simpson, the scout.
+
+"What in thunder are ye driving at?" growled the no less astonished Sut,
+as the flame was almost brought against his face. "Do yer take me for a
+kag of powder, and do ye want to touch me off?"
+
+"No, but I was thinking that that long, red nose of yourn was so full of
+whiskey that it would burn, and I wanted to make sartin."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+HOW IT WAS DONE.
+
+
+From the very depths of despair, Mickey O'Rooney and Fred Munson were
+lifted to the most buoyant heights of hope.
+
+"I always took yer for a hoodlum," growled the scout; "but you've just
+showed yerself a bigger one than I s'posed. Yer orter fetched a lantern
+with yer, so as to use nights in walking round the country, and looking
+for folks."
+
+"Begorrah, if that isn't the idaa!" responded the Irishman, with mock
+enthusiasm; "only I was considering wouldn't it be as well to call out the
+name of me friends. Ye know what a swate voice I have. When I used to thry
+and sing in choorch, the ould gintleman always lambasted me for filing the
+saw on Sunday. But why don't ye craap forward and extend me yer paw, as
+the bear said to the man?"
+
+Sut, however, did not move, but retained his crouching position beside the
+large boulder, speaking in the lowest and most guarded voice:
+
+"It won't do; we haven't any time to fool away yerabouts. Is that younker
+wid yer?"
+
+"Right at me heels, as me uncle concluded when the bulldog nabbed him."
+
+"Come ahead, then. Shoot me! but this ain't a healthy place to loaf in
+just now. The 'Paches are too plenty and too close. We must light out."
+
+"Sha'n't I shtrike anither match to _light_ us out by?"
+
+"Hold your tongue, will you? Creep right along behind me, without making
+any noise at all, and don't rise to your feet till yer see me do it, and
+don't open your meat-traps to speak till I axes yer a question, if it
+isn't till a month from now. Do yer understand me?"
+
+Mickey replied that he had a general idea of his meaning, and he might as
+well go ahead with the circus. Fred had caught the whispered conversation,
+and, of course, knew what it meant. As Mickey turned round to see where he
+was, he found him at his elbow.
+
+"Sh! Come ahead, now. We're going to creep straight across the pass till
+we reach t'other side, when we'll go down that some ways, and I'll tell
+yer the rest."
+
+A second or two afterward the long, wiry frame of the scout emerged from
+the dense shadow at the side of the boulder, and crept forward in the
+direction of the middle of the main ravine or pass. Close behind him
+followed Mickey and Fred, the trio forming a curious procession as they
+carefully picked their way across the moonlit gorge, the grass for most of
+the distance being so dense that they were pretty well screened from view.
+
+The directions of the scout were carefully obeyed to the letter, for,
+indeed, there could have been no excuse for disregarding them. He
+understood perfectly the nature of the task he had undertaken, and the
+risk he ran was entirely for the benefit of his friends.
+
+One of the first and most important requisites of a scout is patience,
+without which he is sure to commit all manner of errors. In the present
+case, it seemed to Fred that much valuable time could be saved if they
+would simply rise to their feet and make a dash straight across the
+ravine. Even Mickey was of the same opinion, at least to the extent of
+varying the pace so as to go slowly part of the time and rapidly the rest,
+as the ground became unfavorable or favorable. But it was very clear that
+Sut Simpson held very different views.
+
+A piece of machinery could not have advanced with a more regular movement
+than did he--a movement that was excessively trying to an impatient person
+who could not understand his reason for it. Mickey could see that he
+turned his head from side to side, and was using his eyes and ears to the
+extent of their ability. At the end of some fifteen or twenty minutes the
+base of the perpendicular wall on the opposite side was reached, and,
+greatly to the relief of his companions, he arose to his feet, they
+following suit.
+
+"Begorrah, but that's a swate relief, as me Aunt Bridget obsarved, when
+her ould man."
+
+A turn of the head, and an impatient gesture from the scout, silenced
+Mickey before he had time to complete the remark. He subsided instantly,
+and began a debate with himself as to whether he ought not to apologize
+for his forgetfulness, but he concluded to wait.
+
+The long, lank figure of Sut Simpson looked as if it was a shadow slowly
+stealing along the dark face of the rock, followed by that of Mickey and
+the lad. They were as silent as phantoms, each walking as tenderly and
+carefully as though he was a burglar breaking into the house of some
+sleeping merchant, whose slumbers were as light as down. Mickey had no
+doubt that this was continued twice as long as necessary, although he
+conscientiously strove to carry out the wishes of the scout in that
+respect. He stumbled once or twice, but that was because of the
+treacherous nature of the ground.
+
+They must have journeyed fully a quarter of a mile in this fashion before
+Sut held up in the least. During all this time, so far as Mickey could
+judge, nothing had been seen or heard of the Apaches, who, supposedly,
+would have guarded the outlet, in which the two had taken refuge, with a
+closeness that could not have permitted such an escape; but not one had
+been encountered.
+
+It was a most extraordinary occurrence all through, and Mickey found it
+hard to understand how one man, skilled and brave though he was, could
+perform such a herculean task, for there could be no doubt that to him,
+under Providence, belonged the exclusive credit. Of course it was Sut who
+had fired the shot that saved Fred from a terrible death by the grizzly
+bear, and his well aimed and opportune shots had done the fugitives
+inestimable service when they were crouching in the fissure and despairing
+of all hope. But there must have been something back of all this. The
+scout must have possessed a greater power, which had not become manifest
+to his friends as yet.
+
+"Now yer can walk with more ease," he said, as he dropped back beside his
+companions; "but, at the same time, don't talk too loud. Let us all keep
+as much in the shadder as we kin, for there may be other varmints around,
+and there's no telling when you're likely to run agin 'em."
+
+"But where are the spalpeens that shut us up in that split in the rocks?"
+
+"They're all behind us, every varmint of them, and thar they're likely to
+stay for awhile; but, Mickey, I want yer to tell me what happened arter we
+parted among these mountains, and took different routes far the younker
+here."
+
+The Irishman related his experience in as brief a manner as possible, the
+scout listening with a great deal of interest, and asking a question or
+two.
+
+"The luck was yer's," he said, when the narrator concluded, "of gettin' on
+the right track, while I got on the wrong."
+
+Mickey scratched his head in his old quizzical way.
+
+"The same luck befell the spalpeens and mesilf. I first got on their
+thrack, and then they got on mine, so we'll call that square, as Mike
+Harrigan did when he went back the second night and took the other goat so
+as to make a pair."
+
+"That was nigh onto a bad fix when yer pitched into that cave, and
+couldn't find the way out till the wolf showed the younker; but it wasn't
+so bad as yer think, 'cause I'd been sure to find yer war thar. I know the
+way in and out of it, and I could have got into it and fetched you out,
+but yer war lucky 'nough not to need me."
+
+"How was it that ye were so long turning up arter we separated?"
+
+"Wal, Lone Wolf and his braves rode so fast that it was a good while afore
+I cotched up, and found that he hadn't the younker with him. Then, in
+course, I turned back and found that yer had flopped so much, off and on
+yer trail, that there was a good deal of trouble to keep track of yer."
+
+"Where did ye first catch the light of Mickey O'Rooney's illegant and
+expressive countenance?"
+
+"I saw yer stop to camp this morning a good ways up the pass, whar yer
+cooked yer piece of antelope meat, and swallowed enough to last yer for a
+week."
+
+"It was you that shot the grizzly bear just as he was going to kill me?"
+inquired Fred, with a pleased look in the scarred face of the scout, who
+smiled in turn as he answered:
+
+"I have a 'spicion it war me and nobody else."
+
+"Why didn't ye come forward and introduce yerself?" inquired Mickey, "it
+was all a mistake to think that we felt too proud to notice ye, even if ye
+ain't as good-looking as meself."
+
+"Wal, I thought I'd watch yer awhile, believing I could do yer more
+service than by jining in, as was showed by what took place arterwards.
+Whar would yer have been if I'd got shet up in that trap with yer? Lone
+Wolf would've had our ha'r long ago."
+
+"But how did ye manage to fool the pack into giving us a chance to craap
+out?"
+
+"That was easy enough when yer understand it."
+
+"I thought it would come aisier to a man who understood how to do it than
+it did to one who didn't know anything about it."
+
+"Arter picking off one or two of the varmints, that made Lone Wolf mad,
+and he sent out a couple of his warriors to wipe me out. He didn't think I
+knowed his game, but I did, and when they got round to where I was I just
+slid 'em under afore they knowed what the matter was. When he sent a third
+varmint arter them, and he went back and told the chief that the first two
+had gone to the eternal hunting grounds, he was so all-fired mad that he
+left only a half dozen to watch the hole where you was to come out, while
+he took the rest and come arter me."
+
+"I know a good many of Lone Wolf's signals," added the scout, with a
+chuckle, "and arter he had been on this side for a while, I dipped down
+into the pass, and signaled for the rest of 'em to come. They come, every
+one of 'em, and then I went for you, not certain whether yer war mashed or
+not. We got away in good time to save ourselves running agin 'em."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+SUT'S CAMP FIRE.
+
+
+"But where are Lone Wolf and his warriors?" asked Fred.
+
+"Back yonder somewhere," replied the scout, indifferently. "They came over
+into the woods this side the pass to look for the Kiowas that have been
+picking off thar warriors. It'll take 'em some time to find the varmints,
+I reckon."
+
+"It's mesilf that would like to ax a conundrum," said Mickey, "provided
+that none of the gintlemin prisent object to the same."
+
+Sut gave the Irishman to understand that he was always pleased to hear any
+inquiry from him, if he asked it respectfully.
+
+"The question is this: How long are we to kape thramping along in this
+shtyle? Is it to be for one wake or two, or for a month? The raison of me
+making this respictful inquiry is that the laddy and mesilf have become
+accustomed to riding upon horses, and it goes rather rough to make the
+change, as Jimmy O'Brien said when he broke through the ice and was forced
+to take a wash, arter having done without the same thing for several
+months."
+
+This gentle intimation from Mickey that he preferred to ride was promptly
+answered by the scout to the effect that his own mustang was some distance
+away in the wood, but he was unable to locate either of theirs, which they
+abandoned at the time they took such hurried refuge in the narrow ravine.
+
+"But what become of all the craturs?" persisted Mickey, who was anything
+but satisfied at this plodding along. "Lone Wolf and his spalpeens did not
+ride away upon their horses."
+
+"No, but yer may skulp me if any of 'em are big enough fools to leave
+their animals where there seems to be any danger of other folks layin'
+hands on 'em. When the rest of his band come over arter him, as they
+s'posed in answer to their signal, they took mighty good care not to leave
+their hosses where thar war any chance for the Kiowas to put their claws
+onto 'em. They rode off up the pass till they could reach a place whar the
+brutes could climb up and jine thar owners."
+
+"Then I'm to consider the question settled," responded Mickey, "and we're
+to tramp all the way to New Bosting, ef the place is still standing. Av
+coorse we can do the same, which I take to be three or four thousand
+miles, provided we have the time to do it and ain't disturbed."
+
+Sut, after permitting his friend to hold this opinion for a time,
+corrected it in his own way.
+
+"Thar ain't no use of tryin' to reach home on foot, any more than thar is
+of climbing up that wall with yer toes. Arter we strike camp, we'll stop
+long enough to eat two or three bufflers, and rest, and while yer at that
+sort of biz, I'll 'light out, and scare up something in the way of hoss
+flish. Thar's plenty of it in this part of the world, and a man needn't
+hunt long to find it. Are ye satisfied Mickey?"
+
+The Irishman could not feel otherwise, and he expressed his profound
+obligations to the scout for the invaluable services he had already
+rendered them.
+
+"Lone Wolf knows me," said Sut, making a rather sudden turn in the
+conversation. "Me and him have had some tough scrimmages years ago, as I
+was tellin' that ar Barnwell, or Big Fowl, rather, that has had the charge
+of starting the place called New Boston. I've got 'nough scars to remember
+him by, and he carries a few that he got from me. I have a style of
+sliding his warriors under, when I run a-foul of 'em, that Lone Wolf
+understands, and he's larned long ago who it was that wiped out them two
+varmints that he sent out to look around arter me. Halloa! here we air!"
+
+As he spoke, he reached a break in the continuity of the wall to which
+they had been clinging. The opening was somewhat similar to that into
+which Mickey and Fred had been driven in such a hurry, except that it was
+broader and the slope seemed more gradual.
+
+Simpson turned abruptly to the left, and they began clambering upward. It
+took a considerable time to reach the level, and when they did so the
+scout led them back to the edge of the pass, which wound along fifty or a
+hundred feet below them.
+
+"Thar's whar we've come from," said he, as they looked down in the moonlit
+gorge; "and while that's mighty handy at times, yet it's a bad place to
+get cotched in, as yer found out for yerselves."
+
+"No one will dispoot ye, Soot, especially when Lone Wolf and a score of
+spalpeens appears in front of ye, and whin ye turn about to lave, ye find
+him and a dozen more in your rear. That was a smart thrick was the same;
+but if he hadn't showed himsilf in both places at the same time, we would
+have stood a chance of giving him the slip, as we had good horses under
+us."
+
+"Can't always be sartin of that. Them varmints have ways of telegraphing
+ahead of ye to some of thar friends, so that ye'r'll run heels over head
+into some trap, onless yer understands thar devilments and tricky ways."
+
+"When we were in camp," said Fred, "we saw the smoke of a little fire near
+by. Was it yours?"
+
+"It war," replied Sut, with a curious solemnity. "I kindled that fire, and
+nussed it."
+
+"Well, it bothered us a good deal. We didn't know what to make of it,
+Mickey and I."
+
+"It bothered the varmints a good deal more, which war what it war intended
+for. I meant it far a Kiowa signal-fire, and if it hadn't been started
+'bout that time, you'd had some other grizzly b'ars down on ye in the
+shape of 'Paches."
+
+"But it didn't help us all the way through; they came down on us a little
+while afterward."
+
+"That war accident," said Sut. "the purest kind of accident--one of them
+things that is like to happen, and which we don't look for--a kinder of
+surprise like."
+
+"As me father obsarved when he found we had twins in the family,"
+interrupted Mickey.
+
+"The chances are ten to one that thing couldn't happen ag'in; but luck,
+just then, war t'other way. Lone Wolf and his men war on their way home,
+and had no more idea of meeting yer folks than he had of axing me to come
+down and act as bridesmaid for his darter, when she gits married."
+
+"Do ye s'pose he knowed us, Soot?" asked the Irishman.
+
+"It isn't likely that he did at first, but the sight of the younker must
+have made him 'spicious, and arter he rammed you into the rocks, I guess
+he knowed pretty well how things stood, and he war bound to have both of
+yer."
+
+"What made him want _me_ so bad?" asked Fred. "I never understood how that
+was."
+
+The tall scout, standing on the edge of the broad, deep ravine, looked
+down at the handsome face of the boy, to whom he felt attracted by a
+stronger affection than either he or the Irishman suspected.
+
+"Bless your soul, my younker, that ere Lone Wolf that they call such a
+great chief (and I may as well own up and say that he is), is heavy on
+ransoms and he ain't the only chief that's in that line. That skunk runs
+off with men, women and boys, and his rule is not to give 'em up ag'in
+till he gits a good round price. He calculated on making a good thing off
+you, and I rather think he would."
+
+"Does he always give up those, then, that their friends want to ransom?"
+
+"Not by any means; it's altogether as the notion takes him. He sports more
+skulps and topknots than any of his brother-chiefs, and he never lets his
+stock run low. As them other varmints creep up onto him, he shoots ahead
+by scooping in more topknots, and thar's no use of thar trying to butt
+ag'in him. He's 'way ahead of 'em, and there he's bound to stay, and they
+can't help it."
+
+"Then he might have used me the same way, after all the pains he took to
+get me."
+
+"Jest as like as not. He is as ugly as the devil himself. Two years ago he
+stole a good-looking gal up near Santa Fe. He had a chance for the biggest
+kind of ransom; but the poor gal had long, golden hair, and the skunk
+wanted it for an ornament, and he took it, too, and thinks more of it than
+any out of his hundred and more. Arter getting yer home among his people,
+and arter he'd found out thar's a good show fur a big ransom from yer
+father, jest as like as not he'd make up his mind that the best thing he
+could do would be to knock ye on ther head and raise yer ha'r, and he'd do
+it, too."
+
+"Well, thank heaven, none of us are in his hands now, and I pray that he
+may never get us."
+
+The three were still standing as close to the edge of the ravine as was
+prudent, so that the moonlight fell about them. They were enabled to see
+quite a long distance up and down the pass, the uncertain light, however,
+causing objects to assume a fantastic contour, which would have made an
+inexperienced person uncertain whether he was looking down upon animate or
+inanimate objects. They were on the point of moving away, when Fred Munson
+exclaimed, with some excitement:
+
+"The country seems to be full of camp-fires or signal-fires. Yonder is one
+just started!"
+
+He pointed up the ravine, and to the other side, where an unusually bright
+star seemed to be rising over the solitude beyond. It was about a quarter
+of a mile away, and its brightness such as to show its nature.
+
+"Yes, that's one of 'em," said the scout, in a tone which showed that he
+had no particular interest in it.
+
+"Can ye rade what the same manes?" asked Mickey, who was gradually
+accumulating a wonderful faith in the woodcraft of the scout.
+
+But the latter laughed. It would have been the height of absurdity for him
+to have pretended that he could make anything of the meaning of a simple
+fire burning at night. It was only when actual signals were made that he
+could tell what they were intended for.
+
+"It's some of the 'Paches, I s'pose. Lone Wolf is in trouble, but I don't
+know as we've got anything to do with it. The night is getting along, and
+we ought to be back to camp by this time."
+
+Without waiting longer, he turned about and moved back into the wood,
+followed by his two friends.
+
+It seemed strange to both of the latter that he could have left his
+mustang so far away from the place where his self-imposed duties had
+called him to bring to naught the cunning of his great enemy, the
+principal war-chief of the Apaches. But the truth was, the camps of the
+scout and the redskins were not so widely separated as Mickey and Fred
+believed. He had selected the best site possible, and took a roundabout
+course in going to or from it, as he had more means given him of
+concealing his trail. There were places where the soil was so rocky and
+stony that the foot left not the slightest imprint of its passage.
+
+They had gone but a short distance from the ravine when they encountered
+one of the very stretches so valuable to persons in their predicament. No
+grass or vegetation of any kind impeded their way, and it was like walking
+over a hard, uncarpeted floor. Making their way across this, they struck
+into a wood that was denser than any they had encountered thus far. There
+their progress was slow, but they continued steadily forward, talking but
+little, and then in guarded tones. About the hour of midnight the camp of
+Sut Simpson was reached.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+SAFETY AND SLEEP.
+
+
+There was nothing especially noticeable in the site which the scout had
+selected for his camp fire. His principal object had been secrecy and he
+had obtained it beyond all peradventure. The place was more like a cavern
+than anything else, except that it was open at the top, but it was walled
+in on the four sides, so there was barely room for the three to enter. As
+the scout explained, he was perfectly familiar with that section of the
+country, and he lost no time in hunting out the spot. He had his horse
+with him at the time the Apaches drove Mickey and Fred in among the rocks,
+and he staid until pretty certain they could keep the Apaches at bay until
+dark, when he made his way to a level spot inclosed by rocks. There he
+kindled a fire, cooked some antelope and left his mustang to graze and
+browse near by, while he returned to the assistance of his friends.
+
+"Where did ye shoot that uncleope, or antelope?" asked Mickey.
+
+"I didn't shoot him at all; he's the one you fetched down. Yer left enough
+for me, so I didn't run the risk of firing my gun when the varmints were
+so close by, so I sliced out a hunk or two from the carcass, and fetched
+it along."
+
+"Ye haven't got any of it about ye?"
+
+"Not enough for yer folks--no more than three or four pounds."
+
+"Be the powers but ye're right. That's 'nough to stay our stomach, as me
+sick aunt remarked after swallowing her twenty-third dumpling."
+
+At the moment the party walked in among the rocks the smoldering embers of
+the camp-fire were plainly seen. They needed but a little stirring to
+break forth into flame again, so as to light up the interior, which was
+about a dozen feet square, with a height of a dozen feet, more or less.
+When the Irishman signified that something in the way of food would be
+acceptable, the scout produced it from among the leaves near at hand, and
+it was devoured with the heartiest kind of appetite. They had drank all
+the water they needed, and the three assumed easy, lounging attitudes,
+Mickey lighting his pipe and enjoying himself immensely.
+
+"This is what I call comfortable," he remarked, "as me friend Patsey
+McFadden observed when the row began at the fair and the whacks came from
+every quarter. I enjoy it; it's refining, it's soothing; it makes a man
+glad that he's alive."
+
+"What do you think of it?" asked the scout, turning to Fred, who was
+reclining upon the heavy Apache blanket, with the appearance of one who
+was upon the verge of sleep.
+
+"I feel very grateful to you," said he, rousing up, "and I am more
+contented than I have been in a long time; but I'm afraid all the time
+that Lone Wolf or some of his braves might find where we are."
+
+Sut smiled in a pitying way, as he replied:
+
+"Don't ye s'pose I'm old 'nough to fix all that? Haven't I larned 'nough
+of the 'Paches and thar devilments to keep 'em back? Wall, I rather guess
+I have."
+
+As the night remained so warm that no comfort at all was derived from the
+fire, it was agreed that it should be left to burn out gradually. It had
+been kindled originally by Sut for the purpose of cooking his meat, and he
+had renewed it that his friends might see exactly where they were, and, at
+the same time, look into each other's faces.
+
+"Let me ax ye," said Mickey, puffing away at his pipe, "whether, whin we
+start for home, we're going to take the pass, which seems as full of the
+spalpeens as me head is of grand ideas?"
+
+"I can't be sartin of that," replied Sut, thoughtfully. "We can strike the
+prairie by going off here in another course; but it will take a long time,
+and the road is harder to travel. I like the pass a good deal the best,
+and unless the varmints seem too thick, we'll take it."
+
+"If we could get a good, fair start in the pass, we could kape ahead of
+'em all the way till we struck the open prairie, when it would be illigant
+to sail away and watch them falling behind, like a snail trying to catch a
+hare."
+
+The scout pointed to the lad, and, turning his head, Mickey saw that he
+was sound asleep. The poor fellow was so wearied and worn that he could
+not resist the approach "tired nature's sweet restorer," which carried him
+off so speedily into the land of dreams.
+
+"I'm glad to obsarve it," said the Irishman, "for the poor chap needs it.
+He's too young to be in this sort of business, but he couldn't prevint the
+soorcumstances, and we must help him out of the scrape as best we can."
+
+"I'm with yer," responded the scout. "He's one of the most likely
+youngsters I've ever met, and I'll risk a good deal to fetch him along.
+I'm in hopes that we're purty well out of the woods, though we may have
+some trouble afore we get cl'ar of Lone Wolf and the rest."
+
+"As soon as we get the critters to ride, I s'pose we kin be off."
+
+"That's all, and that won't take me long. I'm used to finding horses that
+the varmints are fools 'nough to say are thars. One day last spring, I war
+over near the staked plain all alone, when I got cotched in one of them
+awful nor'easters, and I never came so near freezin' to death in all my
+life. Them sort of winds go right to the marrer of yer bones, and it takes
+yer a week to thaw out. Wall, sir, while I war tryin' to start a fire, a
+couple of Comanches managed to slip up and steal my mustang. I didn't find
+it out till three or four hours arter, and then I war mad. I couldn't
+stand no such loss, so I took the trail, and started off on a deer-trot
+arter 'em. Wall, sir, I chased them infernal varmints close on to twenty
+miles afore I run 'em to earth. Then I found 'em down into a deep holler,
+where I come nigh tumblin' heels over head right in atween 'em afore I
+knowed who they war. Yer see it war a piece of the meanest kind of
+business on thar part, 'cause they each had a mustang, and I hadn't any,
+and they war leadin' mine.
+
+"I laid low for them varmints till night, when I mounted my critter, and
+struck off over the country leadin' thar two beasts with me. I expected
+they'd foller, of course, for the two animals that I captured were such
+beauties as you don't meet every day, so I kept 'em on the go purty steady
+for two days and nights, when I struck into the chapparal, tethered all
+three horses, tumbled over onto the ground, and put in four hours of
+straight solid sleep, such as makes a new man of a feller. Wall, sir,
+would you believe it? When I woke up and went to mount my hoss, he wasn't
+thar. Them same three skunks had managed to keep so close onto the trail,
+that, afore I woke, they slipped up, took all three of the animals, and
+were miles away when I opened my eyes.
+
+"Wall, yer may skulp me if I wasn't mad, and I couldn't help laughin',
+too, to think how nice they had come it over me. As the game had begun
+atween us, I took the trail and follered it for half a week. Yer see, them
+skunks didn't mean that I shouldn't get the best of 'em agin. They rode
+fast, and kept it up as long as thar horses could stand it, by which time
+they had every reason to think they war a hundred miles ahead of me, and
+so they went in for a good rest, intending when they had got that to keep
+up thar flight till they reached thar village up near the headwaters of
+the Canadian. Of course thar wouldn't have been any show for me if I
+hadn't had a streak of luck. I know that country like a book, and I war
+purty sartin of the trail them thieves meant to take, so I started to cut
+across and head 'em off. I hadn't gone far when I come upon the camp of a
+Comanche war-party, numberin' a hundred. I hadn't any trouble in picking
+out an animal that suited, and then yer see I war all right, and, for fear
+I might get off the track, I come back and took up the trail again, and I
+kept it so hot that when they went into camp I warn't more than two miles
+away; I didn't want to come any closer, for if they'd found out that I war
+so near, they wouldn't have give me any kind of chance at all.
+
+"I waited till it was dark, and thar wasn't a bit of moon that night, when
+I sneaked into camp and got thar three animals agin, and heading for Port
+Severn, I made up my mind to keep the thing going without giving 'em the
+slightest chance to pull up. The weather had toned down so that it was
+comfortable to travel, and arter I got out of hearin' of the camp, I just
+swung my hat, and kicked and laughed to think how cheap them varmints
+would feel when they'd come to wake up in the morning, and find out how
+nice the white man had got ahead of 'em. Yer see, it war just a question
+as to which of us war the smartest. We weren't going for each other's
+hair--though we'd done that any other time--but for each other's hosses,
+and I'd stole thars twice to thar stealin' mine once, and I still held
+'em, so I had good reason to crow over 'em. Wal, sir, I made up my mind
+that they warn't going to come any shenanigan over me, and I struck the
+shortest line for Fort Severn. I rode through that very pass in which you
+come so near getting cotched, and in fact, the place whar I got the hosses
+warn't ten miles from that big cave.
+
+"I had plain sailin' all the way into the fort, and everything went along
+well. I had only to ride on my critter, when the others galloped along
+like so many dogs. Yer see, I meant business, and I kept a watch for them
+varmints all the time. When I stopped for food or rest, I made sartin that
+they warn't anywhar in sight, and during the three or four days that
+followed I never slept an hour together. I managed to snatch a few minutes
+slumber while riding my mustang on a full gallop, but when I stopped to
+give the animals time to rest, I kept watch, for I felt as though it would
+break my heart to be outwitted again. I made the best kind of time, and my
+last camp was within a dozen miles of Fort Severn. I was purty well used
+up by that time, and making sure that the varmints warn't anywhar within a
+day's ride, I put in a good two hours sleep. Well I never rightly
+understood it," added Sut, with a sigh, "and I'm allers ashamed to tell
+it, but when I went out to mount my mustang, the whole four war gone, and
+the moccasin tracks on the ground showed who had took 'em. I can't
+understand to this day how them varmints kept so close behind me, and how
+they war ready when the chance came into their way; but they war, and they
+beat me as fairly as the thing was ever done in this world."
+
+"Didn't ye try to folly them?"
+
+"No; I thought I might as well give up. I sneaked into the fort and tried
+to keep the thing from 'em, but I couldn't tell a straight story, and they
+found out how it was at last, and I don't suppose I'll ever hear the last
+of it."
+
+A short time afterward, the two laid down and slept.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+TWO OLD ACQUAINTANCES.
+
+
+All three of the little party needed rest, and none of them opened their
+eyes until morning. As a simple precaution the scout smothered the fire
+entirely, by scraping the ashes over the embers. Not a ray of moonlight
+could reach them, and they were wrapped in the most impenetrable darkness.
+
+As might be expected, Sut Simpson was the first to open his eyes, and by
+the time the sun was up all three were stirring. Enough meat remained over
+from the feast of the night before to furnish them with a substantial
+breakfast, and cool, refreshing water was at hand for drink and ablution.
+When the preliminaries had been completed, Sut went out to learn whether
+any of the Apaches were threateningly near. He wished, too, to prepare his
+horse for a ride to a point a dozen miles away, close to the margin of the
+prairie, where he intended to establish himself until he could procure the
+two animals that were needed by his companions. He had not been gone ten
+minutes when he came back in great excitement.
+
+"My mustang is stole, or may I be skulped!" and then he added a general
+wail: "Them redskins are getting to be the greatest hoss-thieves in the
+world. I don't know what's to become of us if they're going to keep on in
+that way."
+
+Mickey laughed heartily, for he recalled the narrative of the night
+before. In the game for horse flesh it looked very much as if the Apaches
+could be Sut's tutors.
+
+"May I respectfully inquire where you got that crathur, in the first
+place?"
+
+"Why, I bought him of the varmints."
+
+"How mooch did you pay?"
+
+"Wall," laughed Sut, in turn, "I haven't paid anything yet."
+
+"I suppose they've sint in their account till they're tired. Finding yer
+doesn't pay any attention, they've come to take him back again."
+
+"Are you sure that it was done by the Indians?" asked Fred, a little
+frightened at learning that they had been so close while he slept.
+
+"Thar ain't a bit of doubt. I've looked the ground over, and thar's the
+trail, as plain as the nose on your face."
+
+"How many?"
+
+"Two."
+
+"And they did it during the night?"
+
+"No," replied the scout, displaying his wonderful woodcraft. "The varmints
+come yesterday arternoon, or just at dusk, arter I'd took supper and
+left."
+
+"How do you know that?"
+
+"I'd be a fool if I couldn't tell by the look of the trail how long ago it
+war made."
+
+It seemed impossible that such was the fact, and yet, young as was Fred,
+he had heard of such things, and the scout spoke after the manner of one
+who meant what he said.
+
+"Begorra, but it's meself that has it!" exclaimed Mickey, with a sudden
+lighting up of the countenance; "they're the same two spalpeens that took
+your hoss down by the Staked Plain, and then follyed ye up and did the
+same thing over again, just as ye was going into Fort Severn."
+
+But the scout shook his head.
+
+"The varmints don't know much about pity, but that's too rough a thing
+even for a Comanche to repeat. I've a s'picion that Lone Wolf had a hand
+in that, and I'm going for him. Come along."
+
+And the indignant Sut strode out of camp, followed by his friends. He was
+not the man to submit to such a loss, and they saw that he was in deadly
+earnest. He neither spoke nor looked behind him for the next quarter of an
+hour, nor were his friends able to tell what direction he was following,
+for he changed so often, winding in and out among the trees, that they
+could form no conjecture as to the general course taken.
+
+They saw that he was following a trail, for he continually looked down at
+the ground in front of him, and then glanced to the right and left,
+occasionally inclining his head, as though he was listening for something
+which he expected to hear. He appeared to be altogether unconscious of the
+fact that he had companions at all and they sought to imitate his
+stealthy, cat-like movement, without venturing to speak. After traveling
+the distance mentioned, and while they were moving along in the same
+cautious way, the scout suddenly wheeled on his knee, and faced them.
+
+"See yer," said he; "it won't do for you to travel any further."
+
+"What's up?" asked Mickey.
+
+"Why, the trail's getting too hot. I ain't fur from them horses."
+
+"Well, doesn't ye want us to stand by and obsarve the shtyle in which you
+are going to scoop them in?"
+
+Simpson shook his head.
+
+"Ye are both too green to try this kind of business. I never could get a
+chance at them varmints if I took yer along. All you've got to do is to
+stay yer till I get back. That won't be long."
+
+"Suppose you don't get back at all?" asked Fred, anxiously.
+
+"Then yer needn't wait."
+
+"But ain't it probable that some of the Apaches will visit us?"
+
+The scout was quite confident that the contingency would not occur; but,
+as long as they were in that part of the world, so long were they in
+danger of the redskins. It was never prudent to lay aside habits of
+caution; but he did not believe they were liable to molestation at that
+time. He charged them to keep quiet and always on the alert, and to expect
+his return within a couple of hours, although he might be delayed until
+noon. They were not to feel any apprehension unless the entire day should
+pass without his coming. Still, even that would be possible, he said,
+without implying anything more than that he had encountered unexpected
+difficulties in regaining his horse. They were still to wait for him until
+the morrow, and if he continued absent they were at liberty to conclude
+that the time had come for him to "pass in his checks." and they were to
+make the effort to reach home the best way they could. With this
+understanding they separated.
+
+At the time Sut left his friends the trail was exceedingly "hot," as he
+expressed it, and he was confident that within the next half hour he could
+force matters to an issue. The scout was of the opinion that a couple of
+Apaches had accidently struck his trail, or happened directly upon his
+norse while he was grazing, and, without suspecting his ownership, aad
+taken him away. The trail led toward the Apache camp, although by a
+winding course, and that was not far away. He was desirous of coming up
+with the marauders before they joined in with the others. In that case he
+would consider himself fully equal to the task of getting even with them;
+but it was not likely that they would go into camp when they were so close
+to the main body.
+
+Shortly after, to his great surprise, he came upon his mustang, tied by a
+long lariat to the limb of a tree, and contentedly grazing upon the grass,
+which was quite abundant. There was not the sign of an Indian visible.
+
+"Skulp me! if that ain't a purty way to manage such things!" he exclaimed,
+astonished at the shape the matter had taken. "Them varmints couldn't have
+knowed that Sut Simpson owned that hoss, or they'd have tied him up
+tighter than that, and they'd had somebody down yer to watch him; but they
+war a couple of greenys, that's mighty sartin. It's a wonder they didn't
+fetch out some of thar mustangs, and leave 'em whar I could lay my hands
+onto 'em. But I rather think I've got my own hoss this time, as easy as a
+chap need expect to get anything in this world."
+
+There was something so curious in the fact of the horse being left alone
+that Sut was a little suspicious, and decided to reconnoitre thoroughly
+before venturing further. He was partly hidden behind a large tree and had
+been so cautious and noiseless in his movements that his mustang, which
+was one of the quickest to detect the approach of any one, was unaware of
+his presence.
+
+Sut was on the point of going forward, when a movement in the wood, on the
+other side of where the animal was grazing, attracted his attention, and
+he paused. At the same instant his steed lifted his head. There could be
+no doubt as to the cause, for within the next minute the figure of an
+Indian stepped forward toward the animal, and proceeded to examine him
+with a care and minuteness which showed that he expected to identify his
+ownership.
+
+The eyes of Simpson lit up, and an expression of exultation crossed his
+countenance, not merely because the redskin before him was in his power,
+but because he recognized him as no one else but Lone Wolf, the Apache
+war-chief.
+
+It looked as if the horse-thieves had approached the vicinity of camp with
+their plunder, and then, securing him to the branch of the tree, had gone
+in and reported what they had done. Lone Wolf, suspecting, perhaps, that
+it was the property of his enemy, Sut Simpson, had stolen out quietly and
+alone to satisfy himself. He knew all the "trade-marks" of the hunter so
+well that he could not be deceived. This was the theory which instantly
+occurred to Sut, who muttered to himself:
+
+"Oh, it's _mine_, and I'm _here_, though you don't think it, and we'll
+soon shake hands over it!"
+
+The scout speedily assured himself that Lone Wolf was alone--that he had
+no half-dozen "retainers" who would immediately precipitate themselves
+upon him the instant a row should begin. Lone Wolf had no rifle with him,
+but carried his huge knife at his girdle--one of the most formidable
+instruments ever seen.
+
+As he walked slowly about the mustang, scrutinizing him very carefully, he
+brought himself within a yard or two of where Sut Simpson crouched. The
+latter waited until he was the nearest, when he stepped forward, with his
+drawn knife in hand, and, placing himself directly in front of the
+astounded war-chief, said:
+
+"_Now_, Lone Wolf, we'll make our accounts square!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+BORDER CHIVALRY.
+
+
+As the scout uttered these words, the Apache whirled like lightning and
+drew his knife. His swarthy, painted face glowed with passion, and his
+black eyes twinkled with a deadly light. Seeing that he had no weapon but
+the knife, Sut Simpson, with a certain rude chivalry that did him credit,
+left his rifle leaning against the tree, while he advanced with a weapon
+corresponding to that of his enemy, so that both stood upon the same
+footing.
+
+"Lone Wolf is glad to meet the white dog that he has hunted so long," said
+the chieftain, speaking English like a native.
+
+With a sardonic grin Sut replied:
+
+"That's played out, old Pockared"--alluding to the chieftain's pitted
+face. "I'm just as mad at yer as I kin be, without yer getting up any
+fancy didoes to upset my nerves. I've come for yer this time, and the best
+thing yer kin do is to proceed to business."
+
+They were facing each other with drawn knives--almost toe to toe, and each
+waiting for the other to lead off. It would have been hard to tell which
+stood the best chance of winning.
+
+Lone Wolf suddenly sprang forward like a panther, and made a vicious lunge
+with his knife, Sut easily avoiding it by leaping back, when, in turn, he
+made a similar attempt upon his adversary, who escaped in precisely the
+same manner. But the scout noticed an unaccountable thing. Lone Wolf had
+dropped his knife!
+
+True, he picked it up like a flash, and put himself on guard, but how it
+was that a veteran like him could have made such a slip was totally
+inexplainable to his foe. But the explanation came the next moment, when
+the chief, without removing his eyes from those of the white man,
+cautiously changed the knife to his left hand. His right arm was injured
+in some way, so that it was unreliable. He had shown this, first by
+dropping the weapon while attempting to use it, and he showed it again by
+shifting it to his left hand, thus placing himself at a frightful
+disadvantage.
+
+Sut saw no wound, yet there could be no doubt of the truth, and his
+feelings changed on the instant. He felt himself the meanest of men to
+attempt to overcome an almost helpless foe.
+
+"Lone Wolf," said he, still looking him straight in the eyes, "why don't
+yer hold yer knife in the hand that yer generally do?"
+
+"Lone Wolf can slay the dog of a white man with which hand he may choose."
+
+"Yer haven't been able to do it with both hands during all these years
+that you've been tryin', when yer've had yer whole tribe to help yer; but
+don't make a fool of yerself, Lone Wolf. Are your right arm hurt?"
+
+"Lone Wolf will fight the white dog with his strong arm."
+
+"No, yer don't--that's played out," growled the scout, shoving his knife
+back in his girdle. "I don't love yer 'any more than I love the devil, and
+I felt happy to think that I had got a chance at last to git square with
+yer; but when I lift the top-knot of Lone Wolf and slide him under, he's
+got to have the same chance that I have. I don't believe you'd act that
+way toward me; but, then, you're a redskin, and that makes the difference.
+Lone Wolf, we'll adjourn the fight till you're yerself agin."
+
+And, deliberately turning away, the scout vaulted upon the back of the
+mustang, cutting the lariat that held him by a sweep of the knife.
+
+"I s'pose you'll own I've got some claim on this beast; so good-by."
+
+[Illustration: "I S'POSE YOU'LL OWN I'VE GOT SOME CLAIM ON THIS BEAST."]
+
+And, without turning to look at him again, he rode deliberately away.
+
+The Apache stood like a statute staring at him until he was hidden from
+view by the intervening trees. Then he turned and walked slowly in the
+opposite direction, no doubt with strange thoughts in his brain.
+
+"I don't know how that scamp will take it," muttered Sut, as he rode
+along. "He's one of the ugliest dogs that ever wore a painted face; and if
+he could catch me with a broken arm or head, he wouldn't want anything
+better than to chop me up into mincemeat; but, as I told the old varmint
+himself, he's an Injin and I ain't, and that's what's the matter."
+
+The wood was too dense and the ground too uneven to permit him to ride at
+a faster gait than a walk, but long before the appointed hour was up, he
+rejoined his friends, who were as surprised as pleased at his prompt
+reappearance.
+
+"But where are the bastes that ye promised to furnish us?" inquired
+Mickey, who had very little relish for the prospect of walking any portion
+of the distance homeward.
+
+"That's what I'll have for yer before the sun goes down," was the
+confident reply. "I'll get you one hoss, anyway, which, maybe, is just as
+good as two, for the weight of the younker don't make no difference, and
+we kin git along with one beast better than two."
+
+"I submit to your suparior judgment," said the Irishman, deferentially,
+"and would suggist that the sooner the same quadruped is procured the
+better all round. I hope the thing won't be delayed, as me aunt obsarved
+when the joodge sintenced her husband to be hung."
+
+Sut explained that his plan was to ride some distance further, to a spot
+which he had in mind, where they would be safer against being trailed.
+There, consequently, they could wait with more security while he went for
+the much-needed horse. Time was precious, and no one realized it more than
+Sut Simpson. He turned the head of his mustang toward the left, and, after
+he had started, leaped to the ground and walked ahead, acting the part of
+a guide for the horse as well as for his friends.
+
+The surface over which they journeyed was of the roughest nature. The fact
+of it was, the scout was working the party out toward the open prairie,
+without availing himself of the pass--an undertaking which would have been
+almost impossible to any one else. At the same time, by picking his way
+over the rocky surface, and using all means possible to conceal their
+trail, he hoped to baffle any pursuit that might be attempted.
+
+Lone Wolf was not the redskin to allow such a formidable enemy as Sut
+Simpson to walk away unmolested, even though he had received an unexpected
+piece of magnanimity at his hands. He had learned that it was he who had
+played such havoc among his warriors the day before, who had deceived them
+by cunningly uttered signals, and had drawn away the redskins sufficiently
+to permit his two intended victims to walk out of his clutches. It had
+been a series of unparalleled exploits, the results of which would have
+exasperated the mildest tempered Indian ever known.
+
+These thoughts were constantly in the mind of the scout as he picked out
+the path for his equine and human companions. He took unusual pains, for a
+great deal depended upon his success in hiding the trail as much as
+possible. Perhaps it is not correct to say that the Apaches could be
+thrown entirely off the scent, if they should set themselves to work to
+run the fugitives under cover. None knew this better than Sut himself, but
+he knew also that the thing could be partially done, and a partial success
+could be made a perfect one. That is, by adopting all the artifices at his
+command, the work of trailing could be rendered so difficult that it would
+be greatly delayed--so that it would require hours for the Apaches to
+unearth the hiding-place. And Sut meant to accomplish his self-imposed
+task during those few hours, so as to rejoin his friends, and resume their
+flight before the sharp-witted pursuers could overhaul them.
+
+The journey, therefore, was made one of the most difficult imaginable. The
+mustang was unshod, and yet he clambered up steep places, and over rocks,
+and through gravelly gullies, where the ordinary horse would have been
+powerless. The animal seemed to enter into the spirit of the occasion and
+his performances again and again excited the wonder and admiration of
+Mickey and Fred. The creature had undergone the severest kind of training
+at the hands of an unsurpassed veteran of the frontier.
+
+This laborious journeying continued for a couple of hours, during which it
+seemed to the man and lad that they passed over several miles of the
+roughest traveling they had ever witnessed. The mustang had fallen several
+times, but he sprang up again like a dog and showed no signs of injury or
+fatigue. Finally Sut made a halt, just as Mickey was on the point of
+protesting, and, turning about, so as to face his companions, he smiled in
+his peculiar way as he spoke.
+
+"You've stood it pretty well for greenhorns, and now I'm going to give yer
+a good rest."
+
+"Do you maan to go into camp for a week or a month, or until the warm
+season is over?"
+
+"I'm going to leave yer here, while I go for some hoss flesh, and it'll
+take longer time than before."
+
+But the Irishman insisted that he should be allowed to accompany the scout
+upon this dangerous expedition.
+
+"For the raison that ye are going to pick out this animal for _me_," he
+added, "how do I know but what ye'll pick out some ring-boned, spavined
+critter that trots sideways, and is blind in both eyes?"
+
+Fred, who dreaded the long spell of dreary waiting which seemed before
+him, asked that he might make one of the company; but Sut would not
+consent, and he objected to both. He finally compromised by agreeing to
+take the Irishman, but insisted that the lad should stay behind with his
+mustang.
+
+"A younker like you couldn't do us a bit of good," added Sut, by way of
+explanation, "and like as not yer'd get us into the worst kind of
+difficulty. Better stay whar you be, rest and be ready to mount your new
+animal as soon as we're back, and scoot away for New Boston."
+
+"How soon will you be back?" he asked, feeling that he ought to make no
+objection to the decision.
+
+The forenoon was about half gone, and the scout looked up at the sky,
+removed his coon-skin cap, and thoughtfully wrinkled his brows, as though
+he were solving some important mental problem.
+
+"Yer may skulp me, younker, but it's a mighty hard thing to tell. Now I
+got back with my own animile a good deal sooner than I expected, but that
+same thing ain't likely to happen agin. More likely it'll be t'other way,
+and we may be gone all day, and p'raps all night."
+
+"And what am I to do all that time?"
+
+"Wait; that'll be easy enough, arter such a rough tramp as I've given
+yer."
+
+"But suppose some of the Indians come here; I haven't got any gun or
+pistol, so what shall I do?"
+
+"The hoss thar will let you know when any of the varmints come sneaking
+round, and he'll do it, too, afore they know whar yer be, so you'll have
+time to dig out. I ain't much in the way of using a knife," added the
+scout. "I depends on me gun for a long range, and when I gets into close
+quarters, I throw this yer (tapping the handle of his knife), round
+careless like; but I've got a little plaything yer that has stood me well,
+once or twice, and if it's any help to yer, why, yer are welcome to it. It
+was give to me by an officer down at Fort Massachusetts."
+
+As he spoke, the scout drew a small revolver, beautifully mounted and
+ornamented with silver, which he handed to the lad, who, as may be
+supposed, was delighted with the weapon.
+
+"Just the thing, exactly," he said, as he turned it over in his hand.
+"There are five barrels."
+
+"And every one is loaded," added the scout. "The pill which it gives a
+redskin ain't very big, but it's sure, and it'll hunt for him a good ways
+off; so the dog is apt to bite better than you expect."
+
+Sut told him that he expected to return by nightfall, and possible before,
+but they might be kept away until morning. Under any circumstances,
+whether successful or not, they would be back within twenty-four hours,
+for they could better afford to wait and repeat the attempt than to stay
+away longer than that. The reason for this decision was that if any of the
+Apaches should attempt to trail them, and there was every reason to
+believe that they would, they would not need more than twenty-four hours
+to track them to this hiding place. It was especially necessary that a
+collision with them should be avoided as long as possible, for the whites
+had everything to gain by such a course. As time was valuable, Sut did not
+delay the departure, and, as he and Mickey gave the lad a cheery good-by,
+they turned off to the right, and a minute later disappeared from view.
+
+"Here I am alone again," he said to himself, "excepting the horse, and
+I've got a loaded revolver. Sut don't think those Apaches can get here
+before to-morrow morning, and he knows more than I do about it, so I hope
+he's right. We've got thus far on our way home, and it would be a pity if
+we should fail."
+
+As he looked around, he saw nothing in the place or surroundings which
+would have commended it to him. There was water in the shape of a
+trickling stream, and that was plenty everywhere, but there was scarcely a
+spear of grass visible. The vegetation was stunted and unthrifty in
+appearance. There were stones and rocks everywhere, with nothing that
+could serve as a shelter in case of storm. He searched for a considerable
+distance around, but was unable to find even a shelving rock, beneath
+which he might creep and gather himself up if one of those terrific
+tempests peculiar to this region should happen to strike him. Nor did
+there seem to be any suitable refuge if the Apaches should attack him
+before he could retreat.
+
+He might crouch down behind some of the boulders and rocks, but the
+make-up of the surface around him was so similar that three red skins
+could surround him with perfect ease and without any danger to themselves.
+Fred therefore made up his mind that he was in about as uncomfortable a
+situation as a fugitive could well be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+NIGHT VISITORS.
+
+
+As young Munson expected to remain where he was for the rest of the day,
+and perhaps through the succeeding night, and knew that he was in great
+danger, he made it his business to acquaint himself thoroughly with his
+position and with all the approaches thereto. The first natural
+supposition was that the Apaches, in following the fugitives to the spot,
+would, from the force of circumstances, keep to the trail, that being
+their only guide.
+
+This trail, for the last two hundred yards, led up a slope to where he was
+stationed upon what might have been called a landing in the ascent of the
+mountain. At the bottom of this two hundred yards or so was an irregular
+plateau, beyond which the trail was lost.
+
+"If the Apaches should show themselves before dark," he concluded, as he
+looked over the ground, "there is where they will be seen, and that's the
+spot I must watch so long as I can see it."
+
+Fred was able to hide himself from view for the time being, but there was
+no way in which he could conceal the horse. He was sure to be the first
+object that would attract the eye of the redskins from below, revealing to
+them the precise position of the fugitives. This reflection disturbed the
+lad a good deal, until he succeeded in convincing himself that, after all,
+it was fortunate that it was so.
+
+The redskins, detecting the mustang among the rocks, would believe that
+the three whites were there on the defensive. No matter if their force
+were a half dozen times as great, they would make the attack with a great
+deal of caution, and would probably manoeuvre around until dark, in the
+expectation of a desperate fight--all of which Fred hoped would give him a
+good chance of stealing out and escaping them.
+
+This, as a matter of course, was based upon the idea that Sut Simpson, the
+veteran scout, had committed a serious error in believing that the pursuit
+would be slow. And such a mistake he had indeed made, as the lad
+discovered in due time.
+
+The afternoon wore slowly away, and sunset was close at hand, when Fred
+was lying upon his face, peering over the upper edge of a rock at the
+plateau below. The fact of it was, his eyes had been roaming over the same
+place so long, that the stare had become a dreary, aimless one. He was
+suddenly aroused, however, to the most intense attention by the discovery
+of an Apache warrior, who drifted very serenely into the field of vision
+as if he were part of a moving panorama upon which the lad was gazing.
+
+The boy had been waiting so long for his appearance that he uttered an
+exclamation, and half arose to his feet in his excitement. But he quickly
+settled back again, and, with an interest which it would be hard to
+describe, watched every movement of the redskin, as the tiger watches the
+approach of its victim.
+
+The indian stalked up the other side of the plateau, walking slowly,
+looking right and left, in front and rear, and down at the ground, his
+manner showing that he was engaged in trailing the party, using all the
+care and skill of which he was the master. Reaching the middle of the
+plateau, he stopped, looked about, and made a gesture to some one behind
+him. A moment later, a second indian appeared, and then a third, the trio
+meeting near the centre of the irregular plot, where they immediately
+began a conversation.
+
+Each of the three was liberal with his gestures, and now and then Fred
+could catch the sound of their voices. What it was that could so deeply
+interest them at such a time, he was at a loss to conjecture, but there
+could be no doubt that it related to the party they were pursuing.
+
+"That must be all there are of them," he reflected, after several minutes
+had passed, without any other Apaches becoming visible; "but it seems to
+me it is a small force to chase us with. I've always understood that the
+Indians wanted double the number of their enemies, whenever they are going
+to attack them, but I suppose they've got some plan that I can't
+understand."
+
+They had been talking but a short time, when Fred understood from their
+actions that they had detected the mustang above them on the mountain
+side. They looked up several times, and pointed and gesticulated in the
+same earnest fashion. It suddenly occurred to the lad that he might play a
+good point on the redskins, with the idea of delaying any offensive
+movement they might have under discussion. Pointing his revolver over the
+rock in front of him, he pulled the trigger.
+
+The report was as sharp and loud almost as that of a rifle, but the
+parties against whom it it was aimed were in no more danger than if they
+had been in the city of Newark. The report had no sooner reached the ears
+of the Apaches than they scattered as wildly as if they had heard the
+whizz of a dozen bullets by their faces. Fred chuckled over the success of
+his ruse and made sure to keep himself hid from view.
+
+"That will make them think that we're holding a sharp look-out for them,
+and they'll be careful before they make an attack upon us."
+
+It seemed strange to him that the Apaches, who must know of the presence
+of Sut Simpson, who was equal to half a dozen men in such a situation,
+should have sent forward only three of their warriors to trail him.
+
+"It may be," he thought, after a while, "that these men know how to follow
+a trail faster than the others, and they have gone on ahead, while the
+others are coming after them. I should think Lone Wolf would do anything
+in the world to catch Sut, who has done him so much injury."
+
+Night was drawing on apace, darkness being due in less than an hour. Fred
+was naturally perplexed and alarmed, for he could not help feeling that he
+was in a most perilous position, regarding which he should have had more
+advice from the scout before his departure. The only thing that seemed
+prudent for him to do was to wait until dark and then quietly steel out
+and shift his position. It looked very much as if he could take care of
+himself for the night, at least, but he did not see how he could take care
+of the mustang, which had already changed hands so often, and which was so
+necessary to their safety.
+
+"Sut said he expected to be home by dark, and I wish he'd come," was the
+thought that passed through his mind over and over again as he looked into
+the gathering darkness and listened for the sound of his friends.
+
+But the stillness remained unbroken and the shadows deepened, until he saw
+that the night was fully come, and he could move about without danger of
+being fired upon from a distance. The moon was late in rising, so that the
+gloom was deep enough to hide one person from another, when the distance
+was extremely slight. Although aware of this, Fred was afraid of some
+flank movement upon the part of the Apaches, before he could get out of
+their reach. The suspicion that there were two men besides would make the
+redskins very cautious in their movements, but a little manoeuvring on
+their part might reveal the truth, in which case the situation of the lad
+would be critical in the extreme.
+
+Fred had nerved himself to the task of stealing around the corner of a
+large rock and off into the darkness, when he was startled by a quick,
+sudden stamp of the horse. There might have been nothing in this; but,
+recalling what the scout had said about the skill of the animal as a
+sentinel, he had no doubt but that it meant that he had scented danger and
+that the redskins were close at hand. Scarcely pausing to reflect upon the
+advisability of the step, the lad began crawling in the direction of the
+animal, not more then twenty feet away.
+
+Before he had passed half the distance he was certain that a redskin was
+at some deviltry, for the horse stamped and snorted, and showed such
+excitement, that Fred forgot his own danger, and, springing to his feet,
+ran rapidly toward the animal. Just as he reached him, he saw that an
+Indian had him by the bridle, and was trying to draw him along, the
+mustang resisting, but still yielding a step at a time. In a short time,
+if the thief was not disturbed, he would have gotten him beyond the
+possibility of rescue, he seeming more anxious to secure the steed than
+the scalp of its owner. With never a thought of the consequences, Fred
+raised his revolver and blazed away with both barrels, aiming as best he
+could straight at the marauding Apache, who, with a howl of rage and
+terror, dropped the bridle of the mustang and bounded away among the
+rocks.
+
+"There! I guess when you want to borrow a horse again, you'll ask the
+owner."
+
+The lad was reminded of his imprudence by the flash of a rifle almost in
+his face, and the whizz of the bullet which grazed his cheek. But he still
+had two loaded chambers in his revolver, and he wheeled for the purpose of
+sending one of them at least, into the warrior that had made an attempt
+upon his life. At this critical juncture the mustang displayed an
+intelligence that was wonderful.
+
+The Apache who was stealing upon him was near the steed, which, without
+any preliminary warning, let out both his heels, knocking the unsuspecting
+wretch fully a dozen feet and stretching him, badly wounded, upon the
+ground.
+
+"I wonder how many more there are?" exclaimed the lad, looking about him,
+and expecting to see others rushing forward from the gloom.
+
+But the repulse for the time being was effectual and the way was clear.
+
+"I guess I'd better get out of here," was the thought of Fred, "for it
+ain't likely they will leave me alone very long when they've found out
+that I'm the only one left."
+
+With revolver in hand he moved hurriedly backward among the rocks, and,
+after going a few rods, halted and looked for his pursuers, whom he
+believed to be close behind him. There was something coming, but a
+moment's listening satisfied him that it was his mustang, which seemed to
+comprehend the exigency fully as well as he did himself.
+
+"I don't know about that," he reflected. "They can follow him better then
+they can me, and he can't sneak along like I can. If they catch him,
+they'll be pretty sure to catch me."
+
+He started to flee, not from the Indians only, but from the mustang as
+well. But the speed of the latter was greater than his own, and, after
+several attempts to dodge him, he gave it up.
+
+"If you can travel so well," reflected Fred, "you might as well carry me
+on your back."
+
+Saying this he leaped upon the animal's back and gave him free rein. The
+animal was going it on his own hook and he plunged and labored along for
+some minutes longer, over the rockiest sort of surface, until he halted of
+his own accord. The instant he did so Fred leaped to the ground, paused
+and listened for his pursuers. Nothing but the hurried breathing of the
+mustang could be heard. The latter held his head well up, with ears thrown
+forward, in the attitude of attention. But minute after minute passed and
+the stillness remained unbroken. It looked indeed as if the fugitive horse
+and boy had found rest for the time, and, so long as the darkness
+continued, there was no necessity for further flight.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+HUNTING A STEED.
+
+
+Leaving Fred Munson to watch for the approach of the Indians, it becomes
+necessary to follow Mickey O'Rooney and Sut Simpson on their hunt for a
+horse with which to continue their flight from the mountains and across
+the prairies. It cannot be said that the scout, in starting upon this
+expedition, had any particular plan in view. As he remarked, Indians were
+around them, and, wherever Indians were found, it was safe to look for the
+best kind of horses. Wherever the best opportunity offered, there he
+intended to strike. With this view, the first position of their expedition
+was in the nature of a survey, by which they intended to locate the field
+in which to operate.
+
+The Irishman could not fail to see the necessity of caution and silence,
+and, leaving his more experienced companion to take the lead, he followed
+him closely, without speaking or halting. The way continued rough and
+broken, being very difficult to travel at times; but after they had
+tramped a considerable distance, Mickey noticed that they were going down
+hill at quite a rapid rate, and finally they reached the lowermost level,
+where the scout faced him.
+
+"Do yer know whar yer be?" he asked, in a significant tone.
+
+"Know whar I be?" repeated the Irishman, in amazement. "How should I know,
+as the spalpeens always said arter I knocked them down at the fair? What
+means of information have I?"
+
+"You've been over this spot afore," continued the scout, enjoying the
+perplexity of his friend.
+
+The latter scratched his head and looked about him with a more puzzled
+expression than ever.
+
+"The only place that it risimbles in my mind, is a hilly portion in the
+north of Ireland. Do you maan to say we've arrived thar?"
+
+"This is the pass which you tramped up and down, and whar you got into
+trouble."
+
+"It don't look like any part that I ever obsarved; but why do you have
+such a hankering for this ravine, in which we haven't been used very
+well?"
+
+"Yer's whar the Injuns be, and yer's whar we must look for hosses--sh!"
+
+Mickey heard not the slightest sound, but he imitated the action of the
+scout and dodged down in some undergrowth, which was dense enough to hide
+them from the view of any one who did not fairly trample upon them. They
+had crouched but a minute or two in this position, when Mickey fancied he
+heard the tramp of a single horse, approaching on a slow walk. He dared
+not raise his head to look, although he noticed that the shoulders of the
+scout in front of him were slowly rising, as he peered stealthily forward.
+
+The experiences of the last few days had been remarkable in more than one
+respect. The two men had set out to secure a horse, neither deeming it
+probable that the one which was desired above all others could be
+obtained; and yet, while they were crouching in the bushes, the very
+animal--the one which had been ridden by Mickey O'Rooney--walked slowly
+forth to view, on his way up the ravine or pass. The most noticeable
+feature of the scene was that he was bestrode by an Indian warrior, whose
+head was bent in a meditative mood. The redskin, so far as could be seen,
+was without a companion, the steed walking at the slowest possible gait
+and approaching a point which was no more than a dozen feet away.
+
+The instant Mickey caught sight of the warrior and recognized his own
+horse, there was a slight movement on the part of the scout. The Irishman
+narrowly escaped uttering an exclamation of surprise and delight as he
+identified his property, but he checked himself in time to notice that Sut
+was stealthily bringing his gun around to the front, with the unmistakable
+purpose of shooting the Apache. The heart of the Irishman revolted at such
+a proceeding. There seemed something so cowardly in thus killing an
+adversary without giving him an opportunity to defend himself that he
+could not consent to it. Reaching forward, he twitched the sleeve of Sut,
+who turned his head in surprise.
+
+"What is it ye're driving at, me laddy?"
+
+"Sh!--him!" he whispered, in return, darting his head toward the slowly
+approaching horseman, winking and blinking so significantly that it was
+easy to supply the words which were omitted.
+
+"But why don't ye go out and tell him what ye intend, so that he can
+inform his friends, and bid them all good-bye? It ain't the thing to pop a
+man over in that style, without giving him a chance to meditate on the
+chances of his life, so be aisy wid him, Soot."
+
+[Illustration: "BE AISY WID HIM, SOOT."]
+
+The scout seemed at a loss to understand the meaning of his companion,
+whose waggery and drollery cropped out at such unexpected times that no
+one knew when to expect it. The Indian was approaching and was already
+close at hand. Keen-eared, and with their senses always about them,
+Apaches are likely to detect the slightest disturbance. The scout glanced
+at the horseman, and then at Mickey, who was in earnest.
+
+"It's the only way to git the hoss, you lunkhead, so will yer keep yer
+meat-trap shet?"
+
+"I don't want a horse if we've got to murder a man to git the same."
+
+"But the only way out here to treat an Injin is to shoot him the minute
+yer see him--that's sensible."
+
+"I don't want ye to do it," said Mickey, so pleadingly that the scout
+could not refuse.
+
+"Wal, keep still and don't interfere, and I promise yer I won't slide him
+under, onless he gits in the way, and won't git out."
+
+"All right," responded Mickey, not exactly sure that he understood him,
+but willing to trust one who was not without his rude traits of manhood.
+
+All this took place in a few seconds, during which the Apache horseman had
+approached, and another moment's delay would have given him a good chance
+of escape by flight. As noiselessly as a shadow the scout arose from his
+knees to a stooping position, took a couple of long, silent strides
+forward, and then straightened up, directly in front of the startled
+horse, and still more startled rider. The former snorted, and partly
+reared up, but seemed to understand, as if by an instinct, that the
+stranger was more entitled to claim him than the one upon his back.
+Another step forward and the scout held the bridle in his left hand, while
+he addressed the astounded Apache in his own tongue, a liberal translation
+being as follows:
+
+"Let my brother, the dog of an Apache, slide off that animile, and vamoose
+the ranch, or I'll lift his ha'r quicker'n lightning."
+
+The savage deemed it advisable to "slide." He carried a knife at his
+girdle, and held a rifle in his grasp, but the scout had come upon him so
+suddenly that he felt he was master of the situation. So without
+attempting to argue the matter with him, he dropped to the ground, and
+began retreating up the ravine, with his face toward his conquerer, as if
+he mistrusted treachery.
+
+"Our blessing go wid ye," said Mickey, rising to his feet, and waving his
+hand toward the alarmed Apache; "we don't want to harm ye, and ye may go
+in pace. There, Soot," he added, as he came up beside him, "we showed that
+spalpeen marcy whin he scarcely had the right to expict it, and he will
+appreciate the same."
+
+"Ye're right," grunted the scout. "He'll show ye how he'll appreciate it
+the minute he gets a chance to draw bead onto yer; but ye've larned that
+thar are plenty of varmints in this section, and if we're going to get
+away with this hoss thar ain't no time to lose. Up with yer thar and take
+the bridle."
+
+Mickey did as he requested, not exactly understanding what the intention
+was.
+
+"What is to be done?" he asked, as the head of the animal was turned back
+over the route that he had just traveled. "Am I to ride alone, while ye
+walk beside me?"
+
+"That's the idea for the present, so as to save the strength of the horse.
+A half mile or so up the pass is a trail which leads down inter it. The
+mustang can go over that like a streak of greased lightning, and thar's
+whar we'll leave the pass, and make off through the woods and mountains,
+till we can jine in with the younker and go it without trouble."
+
+A few words of hurried consultation completed the plans. As they were very
+likely to encounter danger, it was agreed that the scout should go ahead
+of the horseman, keeping some distance in advance, and carefully
+reconnoitering the way before him with a view of detecting anything amiss
+in time to notify his friend, and prevent his running into it. There might
+come a chance where it would not be prudent for Sut Simpson to press
+forward, but where, if the intervening distance was short, Mickey might be
+able to make a dash for the opening in the pass and escape with his
+mustang. The Apache, being unhorsed in the manner described, had fled in
+the opposite direction from that which they intended to follow. Of course
+he could get around in front, and signal those who were there of what was
+coming, provided the two whites were tardy in their movements, which they
+didn't propose to be.
+
+It required only a few minutes to effect a perfect understanding, when the
+scout went a hundred yards or so ahead, moving forward at an ordinary
+walk, scanning the ravine right, left and in front, and on the watch for
+the first sign of danger. He had previously so located and described the
+opening by which they expected to leave the pass, that Mickey was sure he
+would recognize it the instant they came in sight of it. This was a rather
+curious method of procedure, but it was continued for a time, and the
+avenue alluded to was nearly in sight when Sut Simpson, who was a little
+further than usual in advance, suddenly stopped and raised his hand as a
+signal for his friend to stop.
+
+Mickey did so at once, holding the mustang in check, while he watched the
+scout with the vigilance of a cat. Sut never once looked behind him, but
+his long form gradually sank down in the grass, until little more than his
+broad shoulders and a coon-skin cap were visible. The pass at that place
+was anything but straight, so that the view of Mickey was much less than
+that of the scout; and, had it been otherwise, it is not likely that the
+former would have been able to read the signs which were as legible to the
+latter as the printed pages of a book.
+
+"Begorrah, but that's onplisant!" muttered the Irishman to himself, "We
+must be moighty close onto the door, when some of the spalpeens stick up
+their heads and object to our going out. Be the powers! but they may
+object, for all I care. I'm going to make a run for it!"
+
+At this juncture the figure of the scout was seen approaching in the same
+guarded manner.
+
+"Well, Soot, me laddy, what do ye make of it?"
+
+"Thar's a party of the varmints just beyont the place we meant to ride
+out."
+
+"Well, what of that? You can lave the pass somewhere along here, where
+there seem plenty of places that ye can climb out, while I make a dash out
+of that, and we'll meet agin after we get clear of the spalpeens."
+
+"Thar's a mighty risk about it, and yer be likelier to get shot than to be
+missed."
+
+"That's all right," responded Mickey. "I'm reddy to take the chances in
+that kind of business. Lead on, and we'll try it. It'll soon be dark, and
+I'm getting tired of this fooling."
+
+Sut liked that kind of talk. There was a business ring about it, and he
+responded:
+
+"I'll go ahead, and when it's time to stop I'll make yer the signal. Keep
+watch of my motions."
+
+Ten minutes later they had reached a spot so near the opening that Mickey
+easily recognized it. He compressed his lips and his eyes flashed with a
+stern determination as he surveyed it. The scout was still in the advance,
+proceeding in the same careful manner, all his wits about him, when he
+again paused, and motioned for the Irishman to stop. The latter saw and
+recognized the gesture, but he declined to obey it. He permitted his
+mustang to walk on until he had reached the spot where Sut was crouching,
+making the most furious kind of motions, and telling him to stay where he
+was.
+
+"Why didn't yer stop when I tell yer, blast ye?" he demanded angrily.
+
+"Is that the place where ye expected to go out?" asked Mickey, without
+noticing the question, as he pointed off to the spot which he had fixed
+upon as the one for which they were searching.
+
+"Of course it is; but what of it? You can't do anything thar."
+
+"I'll show ye, me laddy; I'm going there as sure as me name's Mickey
+O'Rooney, and me."
+
+"Yer ain't going to try any such thing; if yer do, I'll bore yer."
+
+But the Irishman had already given the word to his horse. The latter
+bounded forward, passing by the dumbfounded hunter, who raised his rifle,
+angered enough to tumble the reckless fellow from the saddle. But, of
+course, he could not do that, and he stared in a sort of a wondering
+amazement at the course of the Irishman. The latter, instead of seeking to
+conceal his identity, seemed to take every means to make it known. He put
+the mustang on a dead run, sat bolt upright on his back, and Sut even
+fancied that he could see that his cap was set a little to one side, so as
+to give himself a saucy, defiant air to whomsoever might look upon him.
+
+"Skulp me! if he ain't a good rider!" exclaimed the scout, anxious to
+assist him in the trouble with which he was certain to environ himself.
+"But he is riding to his death. Thar! what next? He's crazy."
+
+This exclamation was caused by seeing Mickey lift his cap and swing it
+about his head, emitting at the same time a number of yells such as no
+Apache among them all could have surpassed.
+
+"Whoop! whoop! ye bloody spalpeens! it's meself, Mickey O'Rooney, that's
+on the war-path, and do ye kape out of the way, or there'll be some heads
+broken."
+
+Could madness further go? Instead of trying to avoid an encounter with the
+Apaches, the belligerent Irishman seemed actually to be seeking it. And
+there was no danger of his being disappointed. Certain of this, Sut
+Simpson hurried on after him, for the purpose of giving what assistance he
+could in the desperate encounter soon to take place.
+
+Mickey was still yelling in his defiant way, with the long, lank figure of
+the scout trotting along in the rear, when one, two, three, fully a half
+dozen Apaches sprang from the ground ahead of the Irishman, and, as if
+they divined his purpose, all began converging toward the opening which
+was the goal of the fugitive. But it would have made no difference to the
+latter if a score had appeared across his path. He hammered the ribs of
+his mustang with his heels, urging him to the highest possible speed of
+which he was capable. Then he replaced his cap, added an extra yell or
+two, raised his rifle and sighted best as he could at the nearest Indian.
+When he pulled the trigger, he missed the mark probably twenty feet, for
+it was a kind of business to which Mickey was unaccustomed.
+
+The Apaches threw themselves across his path, in the hope of checking the
+mustang so as to secure the capture of the rider; but the animal abated
+not a tittle, and strained every nerve to carry his owner through the
+terrible gauntlet. One of the redskins, fearful that the fugitive was
+going to escape in spite of all they could do, raised his gun, with the
+purpose of tumbling him to the ground. Before he could do anything, he
+dropped his gun, threw up his arms with a howl, and tumbled over backward.
+Sut Simpson was near enough at hand to send in the shot that wound up his
+career.
+
+By this time, something like a sober second thought came to Mickey, who
+saw that his horse comprehended what was expected of him, and needing do
+further direction or urging. He realized, furthermore, that he had, by the
+impetuous movement of the animal, thrown all his foes in the rear, and
+they being unmounted, and anxious to check his flight, were certain to
+give him the contents of their rifles. Accordingly he threw himself
+forward upon the neck of the steed, scarcely a second before the crack of
+the rifles were heard in every direction. The hurtling bullets passed
+fearfully near, and more than once Mickey believed he was struck. But his
+horse kept on with unabated speed, and a minute after thundered up the
+slope, and he and his rider were beyond the reach of all their bullets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+LONE WOLF'S TACTICS.
+
+
+Mickey O'Rooney gave a yell of defiance as he vanished from view, horse
+and rider unharmed by the scattering shots which followed them, even after
+they were lost to sight. It was well and bravely done, and yet it would
+have failed altogether but for the wonderful cunning and shrewd courage of
+Simpson, who had kept close to the heels of the flying horse. It was when
+the crisis came--when the Apaches were closing around the fugitive, and it
+seemed inevitable that he should reap the natural reward of his own
+foolhardiness that Sut had acted. When the warriors were confident of
+their success, he discharged his rifle with marvelous quickness, and with
+a more important result than the mere tumbling over of his man.
+
+There was a momentary check, a sudden stoppage, lasting but a few seconds,
+when the foe rallied and made for the fugitive. But that brief interval of
+time was precisely what was needed, and it secured the safety of Mickey
+and his steed. It mattered not that Sut Simpson as good as threw away his
+life by his chivalrous act. He knew that full well, while awaiting the
+opportunity, as much as he did when he raised his faithful weapon and
+discharged it into the group.
+
+The moment the piece was fired he knew that his mission was accomplished,
+and he began a retreat, moving stealthily and rapidly backward, for the
+purpose of getting beyond the range of the redskins before they should
+fairly recover from the escape of the horseman. But events were proceeding
+rather too rapidly. Before he could cover any appreciable distance, the
+baffled wretches turned upon him and it was flight or fight, or, more
+likely, both.
+
+The Apaches were brave, they knew the character of the dreaded scout and
+they were not desirous of rushing, one after another, to their doom. Sut
+was certain that, if he should turn and run, the howling horde would be at
+his heels. The instant there should appear any possibility of his escape,
+they would all open upon him, and it was impossible that any such good
+fortune should attend him as had marked the flight of Mickey. It was his
+purpose, therefore, to keep up his retreat with his face to his foe,
+forcing all to maintain their distance, until he could reach the side of
+the ravine, where, possibly, a sudden desperate effort might enable him to
+outwit the redskins.
+
+The scout had not yet been given time in which to reload his piece, but
+the uncertainty whether it contained another charge prevented them from
+making an impetuous rush upon him. Besides, they knew that he carried a
+formidable knife, and, like every border character, he was a professor of
+the art of using it. All at once it occurred to Sut that he might thin out
+his assailants by the use of his revolver. If he could drop three or four,
+or more, and then follow it up with a savage onslaught, he believed he
+could open the way. He felt for the weapon, and was terribly disappointed
+to find it gone.
+
+He recalled that he had given it to Fred Munson when he was left alone
+with the mustang. So, as he had nothing but his knife, he placed his hand
+upon the haft, glaring defiantly at his enemies, while he continued
+walking slowly backward, and gradually edging toward the side of the
+grove. But Apaches were plenty in that latitude, and the business had
+scarcely opened when three or four warriors commenced a stealthy approach
+upon the scout from the rear. He glanced hastily over his shoulder several
+times, while slowly retreating, to guard against this very danger; but the
+Indians, seeing the point for which the fugitive was making, ensconced
+themselves near it and waited.
+
+At the moment Sut placed his hand upon the knife, he was within twenty
+feet of the three Indians crouching in the grass, with no suspicion of
+their proximity. One of them arose to his feet, quietly swung a coiled
+lasso about his head (the distance being so slight that no great effort
+was necessary), and then with great dexterity dropped it over the head of
+the unsuspicious scout, inclosing his arms, when he jerked it taut with
+the suddenness of lightning.
+
+A few seconds only were necessary for Sut to free himself, but ere those
+seconds could be taken advantage of, he was drawn over backward. The
+entire party sprang upon him and seized his gun and knife.
+
+"Skulp me, if this don't look as though I'd made a slip of it this time!"
+muttered Sut, as he bounded like lightning to his feet. "When yer varmints
+undertake a job of this kind, yer show that yer ain't no slouches, but
+have a good knowledge of the business."
+
+As if anxious to deserve the complimentary opinion of their distinguished
+prisoner, they coiled the lasso again and again about him, until he was
+fastened by a dozen rounds and was no more able to contend against his
+captors then if he were an infant.
+
+As all the warriors recognized the prisoner, their delight was something
+extraordinary. They danced about him in the most grotesque and frantic
+manner, screeching, yelling, and indulging in all sorts of tantalizing
+gestures and signs at Simpson, who was unable to resist them or help
+himself.
+
+There was a certain dignity in the carriage of Sut under these trying
+circumstances. Instead of replying by taunts to the taunts of his enemies,
+he maintained silence, permitting them to wag on to their heart's content.
+
+It was wonderful how rapidly the tidings of the capture spread. The
+hootings and yellings that marked the rejoicings of the party were heard
+by those who were further away, and they signaled it to the warriors
+beyond. The redskins came from every direction, and, within half an hour
+from the time Sut Simpson was lassoed, there must have been nearly a
+hundred Apaches gathered around him. These all continued their frantic
+rejoicings, while, as before, the prisoner remained silent.
+
+His eyes were wandering over the company in search of Lone Wolf, their
+great leader; but that redoubtable chieftain was nowhere to be seen. Sut
+was certain that he was somewhere near at hand, and must know of all that
+had happened on this spot.
+
+Did Simpson expect anything like mercy from the Apaches? Not a whit of it.
+He had fought them too long, had inflicted too much injury, and understood
+them too thoroughly to look for anything of the kind. Besides, even if he
+was innocent of having ever harmed a redskin, he would not have received
+the slightest indulgence at their hands. The Apaches are like all the rest
+of their species, in their inherent opposition to mercy on general
+principles.
+
+The afternoon was well spent, and, as a means of occupying his mind until
+his case was disposed of, he set himself speculating as to what their
+precise intentions were. Being quite familiar with the Apache tongue, he
+caught the meaning of many of their expressions; but for a considerable
+time these were confined to mere exultations over his capture. The
+excitement was too great for anything like deliberation, or concerted
+council.
+
+"It may be the skunks are waitin' fur Lone Wolf," he muttered, as he stood
+with his arms bound to his side. "They wouldn't dare to do much without
+axing him, though I 'spose they might a skulp any man wharever they got
+the chance, without stopping to ax questions. Helloa! thar he comes!"
+
+This exclamation was caused by the sudden turning of heads, and a sort of
+hush that fell upon the group for the moment, close to the approach of
+someone on horseback. It was already so close to dusk that he could not be
+identified until he came closer, when Sut was surprised to find that it
+was not the chieftain, after all. It was a man altogether different in
+appearance, probably a subordinate chief, who had performed some daring
+deed which had won him the admiration of his comrades. The indications,
+too, were that he brought interesting news about something.
+
+"That varmint has been away somewhar," concluded Sut, carefully noting
+everything, "and they expect him to tell something worth hearin', and I
+guess they're about kerrect, so I'll see what I kin do in the way of
+listening myself."
+
+The scout was right in his supposition. The Indian was the _avant courier_
+of a party three or four times as great as that which had gathered about
+him in the ravine. His companions had separated and gone in other
+directions, while he, learning the course taken by his chief, Lone Wolf,
+had hastened to report directly to him.
+
+Sut Simpson suspected what all this meant. He saw a number of scalps
+hanging at the girdle of the Apache, and he had not listened long when his
+fears where more than confirmed. The embryo town of New Boston, planted in
+the valley of the Rio Pecos, was no more. Repulsed bloodily at the first,
+Lone Wolf had gathered together the best of his warriors, placed them
+under one of his youngest and most daring chiefs, and sent them forth with
+orders to clean out the settlement that had been planted so defiantly in
+the heart of their country. And now this chief had returned to say that
+the work had been completed, precisely as commanded.
+
+"I knowed it war coming," muttered the scout. "I told that Barnwell that
+Lone Wolf would bounce him afore he knowed what the the matter was, and I
+urged 'em to make for Fort Severn, which war only fifty miles away, and
+save their top-knots. He did not say so, but I could see he thought I war
+a big fool, and now he's found out who the fool was. Wonder whether any of
+the poor cusses got away? Thar couldn't have been much chance. 'Twon't do
+to ax this rooster, cause he wouldn't be likely to answer me, and, if he
+did, he would be sartin' to tell me a lot of lies."
+
+The young chief having communicated his good tidings, and exchanged
+congratulations with those about him, started his mustang forward, heading
+him directly up the ravine or pass. This brought him within arm's length
+of the scout, who was standing mute and motionless. The redskin drew up
+his horse and stared fixedly at him, as if, for the moment, uncertain of
+his identity.
+
+"I'm Sut Simpson, the man that has slain so many Apache warriors that he
+cannot number them," said the scout, with a view of helping the Indian to
+recognize him.
+
+There was no real braggadocio about this. As Sut could not hide his
+personality, the best plan for him was to make an open avowal, backed up
+by a rather high-sounding vaunt. This was more pleasing to the Indians,
+who were addicted to the most extravagant kind of expression.
+
+Rather curiously, the young chief made no reply. The observation of the
+prisoner seemed to have settled all doubts that were in his mind, and
+perhaps he was desirous of seeing Lone Wolf without any further delay. His
+steed struck into a rapid gallop, and speedily vanished in the gloom,
+leaving the captive with the howling hundred.
+
+Sut was brave, but there was a certain feeling of disappointment that
+began to make itself felt. Although he would not have admitted it, yet the
+termination of the recent meeting with Lone Wolf, had led him to hope, not
+that the chieftain would liberate him, but that he would give him some
+kind of a show for his life--an opportunity, no matter how desperate, in
+which he might make a fight for his existence. He had spared Lone Wolf
+when he was at his mercy, refusing to fight the chief because he was so
+disabled that his defeat was assured. It would seem that the chief, in
+return, might offer the scout a chance to fight some of the best warriors;
+and such probably would have been the case with any set of people except
+the American Indians. The absence of Lone Wolf impressed Sut very
+unfavorably. He believed the chief meant to remain away until after his
+important prisoner was killed.
+
+By the time night was descended, the wild rejoicing in a great measure
+ceased. One of the Apaches started a fire, and the others lent their
+assistance. A roaring, crackling flame lit up a large area of the ravine,
+revealing the figure of every savage, as well as that of the scout, who,
+having grown weary of continual standing, seated himself upon the ground.
+Had Sut possessed the use of his arms, he would have made an effort to get
+away at this time. A short run would have carried him to the place which
+he had in mind at the time he began his retreat. Without the aid of his
+hands, however, he was certain to be entrapped again, so he concluded to
+remain where he was, with the hope that something more inviting would
+present itself.
+
+The frontiersman never despairs; and, although it was difficult to figure
+out the basis of much hope in the present case, yet Sut held on, and
+determined to do so to the end. He made several cautious tests of his
+bonds, but the lariat of buffalo-hide was wound around his arms so
+continuously, and tied so well, that the strength of twenty men could not
+have broken it. The exploit of cutting them by abrasion against a sharp
+stone (which he had once done), could not be accomplished in the present
+instance, for the reason that there was no suitable stone at hand, and he
+was under too strict surveillance. And so it only remained for him to wait
+and hope, and hold himself in readiness.
+
+When the fire had crackled and flamed for a while, the Apaches clustered
+in groups upon the ground, where they smoked and talked incessantly. They
+seemed to be paying no attention to their prisoner, and yet they took
+pains to group themselves around him in such a way that if he should
+attempt flight he would be forced into collision with some of them. Sut
+was surprised that as yet no indignity had been offered him. As the
+Apaches had every reason to hate him with the very intensity of hatred, it
+would have been in keeping with their character to have made his lot as
+uncomfortable as possible.
+
+"It'll come by-and-bye," he sighed, as the cramped position of his arms
+pained him. "I don't know what they're waitin' fur. Mebbe they want to get
+up such a high old time with me that they're writin' out a programme, and
+have sent to New Orleans fur a band of music. Thar's nothing like doing
+these things up in style, and I s'pose Lone Wolf means to honor me in that
+way."
+
+At a late hour, the moon arose, and the light penetrated the ravine, where
+the strange, motley crowd congregated. The fire still burned, and no one
+showed any disposition to sleep. By way of relief, the scout lay over upon
+his side, and was looking up at the clear moon-lit sky when he heard the
+tramp of horses, and immediately rose up again.
+
+He saw the chieftain, whom he had observed a few hours before, as he came
+in with his news of the destruction of New Boston, accompanied by two
+others, all mounted. They rode up in such a position that they surrounded
+the captive, who was suddenly lifted by a couple of Apaches, and placed
+astride of the mustang in front of the young chief. The next minute the
+quartette moved off.
+
+"Skulp me! if I know what this means!" muttered Sut, who felt uneasy over
+the new turn of affairs. "Things are getting sort of mixed just now."
+
+He hoped that he would learn something of the purpose of the three
+redskins from their conversation as they rode along; but unfortunately for
+that hope, they did not exchange a word. When they had ridden a fourth of
+a mile, Sut caught the flash of a knife in the chieftain's hand. The next
+instant, it moved swiftly along his back, and the lariat was cut in many
+pieces. The arms of the scout were freed, although for some minutes they
+were so benumbed that he could scarcely move them.
+
+What did all this mean? Fully another quarter of a mile was ridden in
+silence, when the three halted, and Sut felt that the critical moment had
+arrived. The chief dismounted from the horse, leaving the scout seated
+thereon. One of the others reached over and handed him his own gun, while
+the third passed him back his long knife.
+
+"Wall, if I'm to fight all three of yer, sail in!" called out Sut,
+gathering himself for a charge from them.
+
+They made no reply. The chief vaulted upon one of the other horses, behind
+the warrior, and, as he did so, a fourth figure advanced and leaped upon
+the other, so that there were two Indians upon each mustang. The scout
+scrutinized the new comer, as well as he could in the moonlight.
+
+Yes, there was no mistake about his identity. It was Lone Wolf, who
+remained as silent as the others.
+
+The heads of the mustangs were turned down the ravine again, and they
+struck into a gallop, the sound of their hoofs coming back fainter and
+more faintly, until they died in the night. Sut Simpson was free, and free
+without a fight, as he realized, when he gave his horse the word, and he
+dropped into an easy gait in a direction opposite to that taken by the
+Apaches.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+THE END.
+
+
+"Wall, that ere little matter was settled without any hard words,"
+muttered the scout, as he rode up the ravine. "It ain't the way Lone Wolf
+generally manages them things, but that affair me and him had, when I took
+my hoss away from him, I s'pose had something to do with it."
+
+The scout had considerable cause to feel grateful and pleased over the
+turn of events. He had his horse and gun, and it now only remained for him
+to rejoin his companions. He had already passed the point where Mickey
+O'Rooney had left the ravine, and he felt the impropriety of turning back
+and presuming upon any further indulgence of the Apaches.
+
+Accordingly, he slackened the speed of his mustang until he reached an
+avenue of escape. He was forced to go quite a distance before finding one,
+but he did, at last, and turned his horse into it.
+
+"I don't know whether that ar Irishman can find the way back to whar we
+left the younker, but I suppose he'll try, so I'll aim at the same p'int."
+
+The night was pretty well gone, and his mustang had struggled nobly until
+he showed signs of weariness, and the scout concluded to wait until
+daylight before pushing his hunt any further. They were miles away from
+the Apache camp, and he had no fears of disturbance from that quarter. So
+he drew rein in a secluded spot, and sprang to the ground.
+
+At the very moment of doing so, his horse gave a whinny, which was
+instantly responded to by a whinny from another horse, less than a hundred
+feet away.
+
+"That's qua'ar," muttered the scout, as he grasped his rifle. "Whar thar's
+a hoss in these parts, thar's generally a man, and whar thar's a man, you
+kin set him down as an Injun. And as this can't be Lone Wolf, I'll find
+out who he is."
+
+His own mustang being a strayer, he managed to tie him to a small, scrubby
+bush, after which he moved forward, with caution and stealth, in the
+direction whence came the whinny that had arrested his attention. His
+purpose was to prevent the other animal discovering his approach--an
+exceedingly difficult task, as the mustangs of the Southwest are among the
+very best sentinels that are known, frequently detecting the approach of
+danger when their masters fail to do so. However, Sut succeeded in getting
+so close, that he could plainly detect the outlines of the animal, which
+was standing motionless, with head erect, and his nose turned in the
+direction of the other mustang, as though he were all attention, and on
+the look-out for danger.
+
+The scout paused to study the matter, for he did not understand the
+precise situation of things. The mustang which he saw might be only one of
+a dozen others, whose owners were near at hand, with possible several
+searching for him. The conclusion was inevitable that it was necessary for
+him to reconnoitre a little further before allowing his own position to be
+uncovered.
+
+Before he could advance any further, he caught sight of a man, who moved
+silently forward between him and the horse, where he could be seen with
+greater distinctness. He held his rifle in hand, and seemed disturbed at
+the action of his horse, which was clearly an admonition for him to be on
+his guard.
+
+The scout studied him for a minute, and then cautiously raised the hammer
+of his rifle. Guarded as was the movement, the faint click caught the ear
+of the other, who started, and was on the point of leaping back, when Sut
+called out:
+
+"Stop, or I'll bore a hole through yer!"
+
+The figure did not move.
+
+"Come forward and surrender."
+
+The form remained like a statue.
+
+"Throw down that gun or I'll shoot."
+
+This brought a response, which came in the shape of a well-known voice:
+
+"Not while I have the spirit of a man left, as me uncle obsarved when his
+wife commanded him to come down from a tree that she might pummel him. How
+are ye, old boy?"
+
+The scout had suspected the identity of his friend from the first, and had
+made the attempt to frighten him from the innate love of the thing. The
+two grasped hands cordially and were rejoiced beyond measure at this
+fortunate meeting.
+
+Mickey explained that he had not been scratched by a bullet, nor had his
+horse suffered injury. It was a most singular escape indeed. But no more
+singular than that of the scout himself, who had received mercy at the
+hands of Lone Wolf, who had never been known to be guilty of such a
+weakness. It had been a providential deliverance all around, and the men
+could not be otherwise than in the best sprits.
+
+"The next thing is to hunt up the younker," said the scout, as they sat
+upon the the ground discussing incidents of the past few days. "I'm a
+little troubled about him, 'cause we've been away longer than we expected,
+and some of the varmints may have got on his trail."
+
+"How far from this place do ye reckon him to be?"
+
+"That's powerful hard to tell, but it can't be much less than a mile, and
+that's a good ways in such a hilly country as this. Yer can't git over it
+faster than yer kin run."
+
+"But ye know the way thar, as I understand ye to remark?"
+
+The scout signified that he would have no more trouble in reaching it then
+in making his way across a room. They decided, though, that the best thing
+they could do was to wait where they were until daylight, and then take up
+the hunt. They remained talking and smoking for an hour or two longer,
+neither closing their eyes in slumber, although the occasion was improved
+to its utmost by their animals. The scout was capable of losing a couple
+of nights' rest without being materially effected thereby, while Mickey's
+experience almost enabled him to do the same.
+
+As soon as it was fairly light the two were on the move, Sut leading the
+course in the direction of the spot where they had left Fred Munson the
+day before, and which he had vacated very suddenly. They were picking
+their way along as best they could, when they struck a small stream, when
+the scout paused so suddenly that his comrade inquired the cause.
+
+"That's quar, powerful quar," he said looking down at the ground and
+speaking as if to himself.
+
+"One horse has been 'long har, and I think it war mine, and that he had
+that younker on his back."
+
+"Which way was the young spalpeen traveling?"
+
+The scout indicated the course, and then added, in an excited undertone:
+
+"It looks to me as if he got scared out and had to leave, and it ain't no
+ways likely that anything would have scared him short of Injuns--so it's
+time we j'ined him."
+
+The Irishman was decidedly of the same opinion, and the trail was at once
+taken.
+
+"Be the powers! do you mind that?" demanded Mickey, in an excited voice.
+
+"Mind what?" asked the scout, somewhat startled at his manner.
+
+"Jes' look yonder, will ye?"
+
+As he spoke, he pointed up the slope ahead of them. There, but a
+comparatively short distance away, was Fred Munson, in plain sight, seated
+upon the back of his mustang, apparently scrutinizing the two horsemen, as
+if in doubt as to their identity. The parties recognized each other at the
+same moment, and Fred waved his hat, which salutation was returned by his
+friends. The scout motioned to him to ride down to where he and Mickey
+were waiting.
+
+"He's off the trail altogether, and if he keeps on that course, he'll
+fetch up in New Orleans, or Galveston," he added, by way of explanation.
+
+The lad lost no time in rejoining them, and the trio formed a joyous
+party. Not one was injured, each had a good swift horse, and a weapon of
+some kind, and was far better equipped for a homeward journey than they
+had dared to hope.
+
+"Thar's only one thing to make a slight delay," said the Irishman, after
+pretty much everything had been explained.
+
+His friends looked to him for an explanation.
+
+"I resaved notice from me family physician in London this mornin', that it
+was dangerous when in this part of the world to travel on an empty
+stomach."
+
+All three felt the need of food and Sut considered the spot where they
+were as good for camping purposes as any they were likely to find. So they
+dismounted, and while Mickey and Fred busied themselves in gathering wood,
+and preparing the fire, the scout went off in search of game.
+
+"Do ye mind," called out Mickey, "that ye mustn't return till ye bring
+something wid ye? I'm so hungry that I'm not particular. A biled Apache
+will answer, if ye can't find anything else."
+
+"If he gets anything," said Fred, "we must make away with all we can, and
+try to eat enough to last us two or three days."
+
+"That's what I always do at each meal," promptly replied his friend.
+"Thar's nothing like being prepared for emergencies, as me cousin, Butt
+O'Norghoghon, remarked when he presented the gal he was coortin' with a
+set of teeth and a whig, which she didn't naad any more than does me hoss
+out thar."
+
+The scout returned before he was expected, and with a superabundance of
+food, which was cooked and fully enjoyed, and as speedily as possible they
+were mounted and on the road again. The traveling was exceedingly
+difficult, and although they struck the main pass near noon, and put their
+horses to their best speed, yet it was dark when they succeeded in
+clearing themselves of the mountains and reached the edge of the prairies,
+which stretched away almost unbrokenly for hundreds of miles. They saw
+Indians several times but did not exchange shots during the day. It was
+not a general rule with Sut Simpson to avoid an encounter with redskins,
+but he did it on the present occasion on account of his companions, and
+especially for the lad's sake. A safe place for the encampment was
+selected, the mustangs so placed that they would be certain to detect the
+approach of any enemies during the night, and all laid down to slumber.
+
+Providence, that had so kindly watched over them through all their perils,
+did not forget them when they lay stretched helpless upon the ground.
+
+The night passed away without molestation, and, making a breakfast from
+the cooked meat that they had preserved, they struck out upon the prairie
+in the direction of New Boston.
+
+They had scarcely started, when a party of Indians, probably Comanches,
+saw them and gave chase. The pursuers were well mounted, and, for a time,
+the danger was critical, as they numbered fully twenty; but the mustangs
+of the fugitives were also fleet of foot, and, at last, they carried them
+beyond all danger from that source.
+
+As the friends galloped along at an easy pace, Sut Simpson struck them
+with horror by telling them the story of the massacre, which he had heard
+discussed among the Apaches when he was a prisoner. All were anxious to
+learn the extent of the horrible tale, and they pressed their steeds to
+the utmost.
+
+The site of the town was reached late in the afternoon, when it was
+speedily seen that the young chief had told the truth. New Boston was
+among the things of the past, having actually died while in the struggles
+of birth. The unfinished houses had been burned to the ground, the stock
+run off, and most of the inhabitants massacred. The fight had been a
+desperate one, but when Lone Wolf sent his warriors a second time they
+were resistless, and carried everything before them.
+
+"If any of 'em got away, they've reached Fort Severn," said the scout, who
+was impressed by the evidences of the terrible scenes that had been
+enacted here, within a comparatively few hours; "but I don't think thar's
+much chance."
+
+The remains of those who had fallen on the spot were so mutilated, and in
+many cases partly burned, that they could not be recognized. Among the
+wreck and ruin of matter were discovered a number of shovels. The three
+set themselves to dig a trench, into which all these remains were placed
+and carefully covered over with earth.
+
+"We'll take a shovel along," said Sut, as he threw one over his shoulder,
+and sprang upon his horse. "We'll be likely to find need for it afore we
+reach the fort."
+
+This prediction was verified. As they rode along they constantly came upon
+bodies of men and women, whose horses had given out, or who had been shot
+while fleeing for life. In every case the poor fugitives had been scalped
+and mutilated. They were gathered up and tenderly buried, with no
+headstone to mark their remains, there to sleep until the last trump shall
+sound.
+
+Fort Severn was reached in the afternoon of the second day. There were
+found, just six men and two women, the fleetness of whose steeds had
+enabled them to win in the race for life. All the others had fallen, among
+them Caleb Barnwell, the leader of the Quixotic scheme, and the founder of
+the town which died with him. The valley of the Rio Pecos was not prepared
+for any settlement unless one organized upon a scale calculated to overawe
+all combinations of the Apaches, Commanches, and Kiowas.
+
+From Fort Severn, Mickey O'Rooney and Fred Munson, under the escort, or
+rather guidance, of Sut Simpson, made their way overland to Fort Aubray,
+where Mr. Munson, the father of Fred, was found. The latter thanked heaven
+for the sickness which had detained him and could not fully express his
+gratitude for the wonderful preservation of Mickey and his son. Sut
+Simpson, the scout, was well paid for his services, and, bidding them
+good-bye, he went to his field of duty in the southwest, while Mr. Munson,
+Mickey and Fred were glad enough to return east.
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CAVE IN THE MOUNTAIN***
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