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- LOST IN THE CAÑON.
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Title: Lost in the Cañon
-
-Author: Alfred R. Calhoun
-
-Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37466]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CAÑON ***
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37466 ***
Produced by Roger Frank, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
@@ -9043,375 +9022,4 @@ I had no more trouble with my traps.
THE END.
-
-
-
-
- *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CAÑON ***
-
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37466 ***
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- LOST IN THE CAON.
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Title: Lost in the Caon
-
-Author: Alfred R. Calhoun
-
-Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37466]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CAON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
-
- THE STORY OF
- Sam Willett's Adventures on the Great
- Colorado of the West.
-
- _By_ ALFRED R. CALHOUN,
-
- _Author of_
- "Cochise," "Excelsior," "The Californians," etc., etc.
-
- ILLUSTRATED.
-
- NEW YORK:
- A. L. BURT, PUBLISHER.
-
- _Copyright 1888, by A. L. Burt._
-
- ----
-
-[Illustration: _Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping
-rocks._]
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I.--A REMARKABLE CAMP.
- CHAPTER II.--LOOKING BACKWARD AND FORWARD.
- CHAPTER III.--SAM'S TRIALS BEGIN.
- CHAPTER IV.--A PERILOUS SITUATION.
- CHAPTER V.--AT HURLEY'S GULCH.
- CHAPTER VI.--WHY THE PAPERS WERE NOT BROUGHT.
- CHAPTER VII.--THE WONDERFUL VOYAGE BEGINS.
- CHAPTER VIII.--MR. WILLETT AND HANK TIMS.
- CHAPTER IX.--A FRUITLESS EFFORT.
- CHAPTER X.--A NIGHT OF AWFUL GLOOM.
- CHAPTER XI.--A TRYING SITUATION.
- CHAPTER XII.--THE VOYAGE IS RESUMED.
- CHAPTER XIII.--WHIRLED AWAY.
- CHAPTER XIV.--ORDER AND DISORDER.
- CHAPTER XV.--THE PROVISIONS ALL GONE.
- CHAPTER XVI.--DANGER AHEAD.
- CHAPTER XVII.--MR. WILLETT LEARNS THE NEWS.
- CHAPTER XVIII.--IN THE RAPIDS.
- CHAPTER XIX.--AFLOAT AGAIN.
- CHAPTER XX.--THE TRIAL BEGINS.
- CHAPTER XXI.--A BREAK IN THE CLOUDS.
- CHAPTER XXII.--"JOY! JOY! IT IS ULNA AGAIN!"
- CHAPTER XXIII.--THE TRIAL IN PROGRESS.
- CHAPTER XXIV.--OUT OF THE DEPTHS.
- CHAPTER XXV.--FROM SAFETY INTO DANGER.
- CHAPTER XXVI.--THE TRIAL ENDS.
- CHAPTER XXVII.--THE APACHES HAVE THEIR WAY.
- CHAPTER XXVIII.--A BOLD MOVE.
- CHAPTER XXIX.--THE VERDICT AND SENTENCE.
- CHAPTER XXX.--SURPRISE FOR HURLEY'S GULCH.
- CHAPTER XXXI.--HOW IT FARED WITH SAM AND HIS FRIENDS.
- CHAPTER XXXII.--IN GREATER PERIL STILL.
- CHAPTER XXXIII.--IN A TRAP.
- CHAPTER XXXIV.--A BRIEF TRUCE AND WHAT FOLLOWED IT.
- CHAPTER XXXV.--A NIGHT BATTLE.
- CHAPTER XXXVI.--TO THE RESCUE.
- CHAPTER XXVII.--SAM'S DEVOTION IS REWARDED.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.--THE LAST, BUT NOT THE LEAST IMPORTANT.
- LOST.
- FATE OF AN ENTRAPPED BEAR.
- A FIGHT IN THE WOODS.
-
- ----
-
- LOST IN THE CAON.
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.--A REMARKABLE CAMP.
-
-
-The scene of this narrative is laid in Southwestern Colorado, and the
-date is so recent that boys living out there at that time are only just
-beginning to think themselves young men--and it is really astonishing
-how soon boys leap into vigorous manhood in that wild, free land.
-
-"We's 'bleeged to hab 'im, for dah ain't de least scrap ob meat in de
-camp!"
-
-This stirring information was shouted by a stout negro boy of fifteen or
-sixteen years of age, who, with a long, rusty, single-barrel shot-gun in
-his arms, stood at the base of a towering mass of bare rocks, and looked
-eagerly up at two other youths creeping along the giddy heights, and
-evidently in eager search of something that had escaped them, but which
-they were determined to overtake.
-
-The lithe form, long black hair, and copper-colored skin of one of the
-young hunters bespoke him an Indian of the purest type. He wore a
-close-fitting buckskin dress, and slung at his back was a short
-repeating rifle.
-
-The other youth up the rocks, though bronzed on the hands and face to a
-color as dark as the young Ute's, had the blue eyes and curly yellow
-hair that told of a pure white ancestry. His name was Samuel Willett,
-and though not much more than sixteen years of age, his taller form and
-more athletic build made him look several years the senior of his red
-and black companions.
-
-Sam Willett was armed and dressed like a hunter, and his well-worn
-equipments told that he was not out masquerading in the costume of a
-theatrical Nimrod.
-
-The Indian youth, Ulna, and Sam Willett had chased a Rocky Mountain or
-bighorn sheep into the mass of towering rocks which they were now
-searching; and that they were not hunting for mere sport was proven by
-Ike, the black boy's repeated cry:
-
-"We's 'bleeged to hab 'im, foh dar ain't de least scrap ob meat in de
-camp!"
-
-"I want to get the meat as much as you do, Ike, so have patience!" Sam
-shouted down, without stopping in his pursuit an instant.
-
-The two daring hunters disappeared, and Ike, whose desire for meat was
-greater than his love for the chase, began circling about the confused
-pile of rocks so as to keep his companions in sight.
-
-The bighorn "sheep" is in reality not a sheep at all, but a variety of
-powerful mountain antelope, whose strength, speed and daring among the
-rocks and caons are not the least wonderful things about the wonderful
-land in which he makes his exclusive home.
-
-Even old Western hunters believe that these animals can leap from
-immense heights and land on their horns without harm, but this is an
-error.
-
-While Ike was gazing with eager eyes and open mouth at the towering,
-volcanic cliffs, the bighorn came to view on a rock five hundred feet
-overhead.
-
-The hunters were close behind, and the creature's only means of escape
-was to leap across a chasm fully thirty feet wide to another rock of a
-little lower elevation.
-
-"Shoot! shoot!" yelled the excited Ike, as the bighorn gathered himself
-up and eyed the terrific gorge that beset his course.
-
-As if stung to desperation by the shout the creature leaped forward with
-a force that must have cleared the gulf, and an accuracy that would have
-insured a landing on the other side, but just as it sprang into mid-air
-two shots rang out within a small fraction of a second of each other,
-and the bighorn came crashing down and fell dead at the black boy's
-feet.
-
-In his wild excitement Ike discharged the rusty single-barrel shot-gun,
-which he had been hugging in his arms as if it were a baby. All the
-power of the old-fashioned weapon must have been in the report and
-recoil, for the former sounded like the explosion of a howitzer, and the
-latter was so terrific as to send the holder sprawling across the
-carcass of the bighorn.
-
-Sam Willett saw all this as he hurried down the rocks, otherwise he
-might have thought when he had reached the bottom that the animal had
-fallen on his companion and faithful servant and killed him.
-
-"Hello, Ike, old fellow, what's up?" asked Sam, as he helped the owner
-of the shot-gun to his feet.
-
-"Is I all alive, foh shuah, Mistah Sam?" demanded Ike, as he stared
-wildly about him.
-
-"Of course you are, and here is the meat you have been so eager for,"
-said Sam.
-
-"Wa'll, Mistah Sam, it's dat ar gun," said Ike, gazing sadly at the old
-weapon which he still held in his arms. "I ain't used her bad; ain't
-fired her off for more'n six months afore we kem out har from
-Michigan--dat's five months ago--an' now only to tink she's done gone
-back on me in dat are way."
-
-The Indian youth, Ulna, had come down by this time, and when he took in
-the situation his fine, almost effeminate face was wreathed in smiles,
-that displayed a beautiful set of white teeth.
-
-In a low, musical voice and without any accent, he said in excellent
-English:
-
-"The sun is setting and we must hurry if we would reach the camp before
-dark."
-
-"An' more partikler ez we've got to tote dis ar venizon home," said Ike,
-now wide awake to the necessities of the situation.
-
-Each of the youths had a hunting knife in his belt, and they soon proved
-that these weapons were not carried for ornament.
-
-With a rapidity and skill that would have won the admiration of an
-eastern butcher, they skinned and cleaned the animal, severed the
-mammoth head and then divided the meat into three parcels.
-
-Each had to shoulder about fifty pounds, but being sturdy, healthy young
-fellows they did not seem to mind their burdens, as they started off
-with long, vigorous strides toward the west.
-
-The sun in all his course does not look down on a wilder, grander or
-more desolate land than that which met the gaze of the young hunters, no
-matter to which side they turned.
-
-Verdureless mountains of fantastic shapes rose into the cloudless sky on
-every hand.
-
-Here and there in the crevices of the black volcanic rocks, over which
-they hurried, a stunted sagebush or a dwarf cactus suggested the awful
-barrenness of the place rather than told of vegetation.
-
-They were in the land of caons and drought, on the summit of the Great
-American Plateau where rain but seldom falls, where the streams flow
-through frightful gorges, and where men and animals have often perished
-from thirst within sight of waters which they could not reach.
-
-Bleak and sublime as the land was, is, and ever must be, yet the
-belief--a well founded belief by the way--that its gloomy ravines
-contained gold, led hundreds of hardy miners and adventurers to look
-upon it as that El Dorado for which the early Spanish explorers in these
-wilds had sought in vain.
-
-As the leader of the little party, Sam Willett, strode ahead, the
-deepening shadows of the mountains impelled him each instant to a
-quicker pace.
-
-There was no apparent trail, yet Sam never hesitated in his course, but
-kept on as unerringly as a bird of passage, till he came to a great
-black rift that seemed to suddenly open at his feet.
-
-Away down in the shadowy depths he could see a white band that told of
-moving water.
-
-A glow, the source of which could not be seen, indicated a fire down
-near the base of the cliff, and the barking of a dog--the sound appeared
-to come from the depths of a cave--suggested a human habitation.
-
-On reaching the crest of the chasm Sam Willett did not hesitate, but at
-once plunged down to what, to a stranger, would appear certain death.
-
-Along the caon wall there was a steep but well constructed trail that
-afforded secure footing to a traveler who was not troubled with
-giddiness.
-
-Without once stopping, Sam and his companions made their way to the
-bottom of the rift and forded the roaring torrent that thundered over
-its uneven bed.
-
-On the caon wall, opposite to that by which they had descended, they
-saw about a hundred feet above the stream, what seemed like a number of
-illuminated pigeon holes. This was their home, the place to which had
-been given the not inappropriate name of "Gold Cave Camp."
-
-With barks of delight, a big dog met them near the water and joyously
-escorted them up the other side to an irregular plateau, about a hundred
-feet in diameter, that shot out like the once famous Table Rock at
-Niagara.
-
-This plateau was in front of the cave, in which the miners had made
-their home.
-
-The background of light revealed the forms of three men. The dress and
-long cue of one bespoke him a Chinaman, the second was dressed like a
-hunter, and the third, a tall, powerful figure, had only his heavy beard
-and striking stature to distinguish him.
-
-"Is that you, Sam?" called out the tall man, as the foremost of the
-party reached the plateau.
-
-"Yes, father," was the reply, "and we have brought back some meat."
-
-"Wa'll!" exclaimed the second man, "I didn't think thar was a pound of
-live meat left within twenty mile of yar."
-
-"Hoolay! Bully! Now me gettee suppel!" cried the excited Chinaman, who
-was known by the fitting name of Wah Shin.
-
-Preceded by Maj, the dog, Sam and his fellow hunters entered the
-remarkable cave--of which we shall speak hereafter--and laid the meat on
-the floor.
-
-"I began to grow uneasy about you, my boy," said Mr. Willett, as he
-fondly kissed his son, "meat is very desirable, but I would rather
-suffer for it than be worried at your absence."
-
-Sam explained about the delay in the hunt, and then went to a spring
-that rose from the floor of the cave close to the fire, and here he set
-the example of drinking and washing himself.
-
-Meanwhile Wah Shin began to demonstrate his position in that strangely
-mixed company. In nearly no time he had steaks broiling on the coals,
-the savory odor of which made Hank Tims, the old guide, take long
-inhalations with great enjoyment.
-
-Apart from meat there was an abundance of other food in this strange
-camp, so that in a very short time Wah Shin, with Ike's aid, had a most
-excellent supper spread on a table consisting of two roughly-hewn cedar
-slabs, supported at either end by a square stationary stone, that had
-been placed there by the original but unknown cave dwellers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.--LOOKING BACKWARD AND FORWARD.
-
-
-It is not a little remarkable that the six dwellers in Gold Cave Camp
-should represent four of the five types into which scientists divide the
-human race, but this though curious in itself, is not nearly so much so
-as their being residents of this sparsely settled wilderness, and
-living, as it were, in caves in the depths of the earth.
-
-Mr. Willett had been a merchant in Detroit, Michigan, where his only
-child, Sam, was born.
-
-He had been very happy in his married life and very prosperous in his
-business; but, alas, for the stability of human affairs, his wife died.
-Following this awful calamity came a series of reverses in business
-which no human foresight could prevent. His property was swept away, and
-in his fortieth year he found himself a poor man, with a son to educate
-and care for and all life's battle to fight over again.
-
-Mr. Willett had been educated as a mining engineer, and though he had
-never followed his profession he, very naturally, looked to it as a
-means of support when all his other resources were gone.
-
-In the days of his great distress and perplexity he read of sudden
-fortunes being made in the newly-discovered gold fields of the San Juan
-country in Southwestern Colorado, and thither he determined to go.
-
-Although still in the prime of life, Mr. Willett concentrated all the
-love of his brave heart on his son and resolved to devote his time and
-thought to his care and education.
-
-Sam's maternal grandfather, Mr. Shirley, was a very rich, but a very
-morose and eccentric old man, who chose never to become reconciled to
-his daughter's marriage to Mr. Willett. But when Sam's mother died, the
-old gentleman offered to adopt his grandson and make him his sole heir,
-if the father would consent to renounce all claims to him.
-
-In his son's interest Mr. Willett might have considered this proposal
-favorably had not Sam himself upset the scheme by saying stoutly:
-
-"Father, do not ask me to leave you, for I feel it would be sending me
-to death. If you go to the West, I shall go with you. There are only two
-of us left, why should we be parted?"
-
-Mr. Willett replied to this query by kissing his son, and so it was
-settled that they should go to the West together.
-
-Ike was an orphan lad who, in some inexplicable way, had drifted up to
-Michigan from Kentucky. Mr. Willett found and cared for the boy, and he
-repaid this generosity by a fidelity and devotion worthy of all praise.
-
-Mr. Willett could see no use for Ike in the West, but when the time for
-departure came, the black boy appeared at the depot with an old hunting
-bag, containing all his clothing, slung at his back, and a
-remarkable-looking shot-gun folded in his arms.
-
-"Dar's no use a talkin' to me, boss," he said to Mr. Willett, when that
-gentleman expressed his surprise at the boy's appearance. "Ize bound to
-go 'long wid Mistah Sam. Oh, don't yeh feel skeat 'bout de cash foh de
-passage. Ize got ebery cent I ever earned stored away har; its more'n
-fifty dollar, an' I'll foot de bills till de las' red cent's gone."
-
-In proof of this bold statement, Ike drew from the depths of his
-trousers' pockets a bag containing several pounds weight of bronze,
-nickel and silver coins.
-
-Ike found an eloquent advocate in Sam; and so it came about that at the
-very last moment Mr. Willett decided to take the colored boy with him,
-though he could not be made to avail himself of the generous fellow's
-hoardings.
-
-The three went to Denver, thence over the Rocky range to St. Luis Park,
-and over the Sierra Madre mountains to the San Juan country.
-
-They had procured horses to ride on, and two pack mules to carry their
-supplies and mining tools.
-
-While at Port Garland in the St. Luis Park, they met with Hank Tims and
-the Ute boy, Ulna, who was a nephew of the great chief Uray, whom the
-writer of this narrative knew very well and greatly admired.
-
-Hank Tims and Ulna were themselves thinking about going into the San
-Juan country, and, as they were well acquainted with that region and
-appeared to take to Mr. Willett's party at once, they were readily
-induced to join his expedition.
-
-It would be out of place in this brief but essential review to recount
-all the adventures that beset our friends till they reached the scene of
-their proposed labors.
-
-After much wandering, they found Gold Cave Camp, but it was in the
-possession of a wild, dissolute fellow named Tom Edwards.
-
-As Edwards was working his claim all alone and was eager to leave it,
-Mr. Willett bought him out at his own price, and at once made
-preparations to pan for such gold as might be found in the bed of the
-caon.
-
-A few days after the commencement of operations, Wah Shin appeared in
-the camp.
-
-He looked as if he had been blown in from the bleak hills, but he
-managed to explain in his broken English that he had lost himself coming
-up from Santa Fe, and that he was a first-class cook.
-
-He asked for "a job," but even before Mr. Willett had made up his mind
-to hire him, he set to work to give an exhibition of his skill; and the
-result was so entirely satisfactory that he was retained on his own
-terms.
-
-But it is much easier to explain the presence of these people than it is
-to account for the strange home in which they lived.
-
-Learned men claim that long before the coming of the white men to this
-continent, long, indeed, before the coming of the Indians, that there
-was a strange race of people in that Western land, whom, for the want of
-a better name, they call "The Cave Dwellers."
-
-But no matter how formed, or by whom they were first inhabited, these
-caves--they are quite common in that land--made ready and comfortable
-homes for the mining adventurers.
-
-Those occupied by Mr. Willett and his associates, consisted of a series
-of eight apartments, all opening on the plateau and all connected by
-passage ways that must have been the work of human hands.
-
-The apartments were circular in shape, and the largest, which was used
-as a kitchen and general store room, was about twenty feet in diameter
-and ten feet in height.
-
-As before stated there was an ample spring of delicious cool water in
-this apartment, and the original hewers of the caves, no doubt, selected
-the place on this account.
-
-After a hearty supper, Mr. Willett and Hank Tims lit their pipes and sat
-before the fire, for though the days are warm in this land the nights
-are unusually cool.
-
-Drift wood, picked up from the crevices of the rocks in which it had
-been lodged by floods caused by the melting of snow in the mountains,
-constituted the fuel of the camp, and the great pile near the fire
-showed that it was to be had in abundance.
-
-All had been working hard that day, so after a desultory talk about the
-great success that was meeting their search for gold, they lay down on
-their blanket cots in the other apartments and went to sleep--that is,
-all but Sam and his father.
-
-Mr. Willett and his son slept together in the nearest room, but though
-they lay down side by side they did not go to sleep at once.
-
-"Sam," said Mr. Willett in a troubled voice, "since you left this
-morning that fellow, Tom Edwards, has been here again."
-
-"What did he want?" asked Sam.
-
-"He appeared to be drunk, and he threatened to kill me if I did not give
-him more money."
-
-"But you have paid him the price agreed on?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then I should not heed him."
-
-"Still, I am afraid he will cause me trouble, so, to-morrow, I will ride
-over to Hurley's Gulch and consult a lawyer, and as that is our nearest
-market and post-office, I will take Hank and Ulna along with two pack
-mules so as to carry back supplies."
-
-"That is forty miles away, so that you will be gone several days. But if
-you must go, father, I will do the best I can while you are absent,"
-said Sam, laying his hand soothingly on his father's broad breast.
-
-"I know you will, my boy, but there is another matter I wished to speak
-with you about."
-
-"What is that, father?"
-
-"Why, this Tom Edwards brought me a letter from your grandfather's
-lawyer in Michigan. It tells me that the old man is dead, and that in
-his will he leaves all his property to you, but you are not to have a
-cent of it till you are twenty-one years of age----"
-
-"Four years and a half, dear father!" cried the excited Sam.
-
-"But," continued Mr. Willett, "the will further says that if you should
-die in the meantime that the property is to go to your grandfather's
-nephew, Frank Shirley."
-
-"A bad, disreputable man to whom neither you nor mother would speak,"
-said Sam.
-
-"He is all that, I fear, and it troubles me to learn from Edwards that
-Frank Shirley has recently come into this land," said Mr. Willett.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.--SAM'S TRIALS BEGIN.
-
-
-While daylight was flooding the upper world next morning, and the
-shadows were lifting from the gloomy depths of the caon, the modern
-cave dwellers ate their breakfast.
-
-About three hundred yards above the caves the caon widened out into a
-valley some three hundred yards in diameter. The bottom of this valley
-was covered with rich grass, and in it was a grove of cotton-wood trees
-whose bright verdure gave the place the appearance of a rich emerald gem
-in a mighty setting of granite.
-
-In this valley the horses and pack mules were kept, and, as they had but
-little to do, they might be said to "live in clover."
-
-While it was still dusky in these depths, though the glimpses of far-off
-ruddy mountain peaks told that the sun was rising in the upper world,
-Sam and Ike, who were hardly ever apart, went up to the valley and soon
-returned with three horses and two mules, the latter were to carry back
-the necessary supplies from Hurley's Gulch.
-
-It had been Mr. Willett's custom to make this trip once a month, so that
-his going now was not an unusual event, yet his face showed that he was
-much dejected, as if he had a premonition of the awful calamity that was
-so soon to come upon himself and his beloved boy.
-
-His last words, as he kissed Sam, were:
-
-"If anything should happen to detain me longer than four days, I will
-send a letter back by Ulna."
-
-"But we'll be back on time," joined in Hank Tims, "for I don't like
-crowds, an', then, we've struck pay dirt rich up at the head of the
-valley, an' I'm just a spilein' to see how it'll pan out to the ind."
-
-Good-bys were said, and Sam, Ike and Wah Shin stood on the plateau
-before the cave and waved their hats, till the three men had led the
-animals up the giddy trail and disappeared beyond the towering summit of
-the cliff.
-
-Under the teaching of his father and Hank Tims, Sam had become a
-skillful gold miner, that is, so far as panning out the gravel and
-collecting the gold were concerned.
-
-The fact that he was the prospective heir to a large fortune did not
-unfit him for work this morning. With Ike he went up to the sluices
-immediately after his father left, and until the sun was in mid-heaven
-they worked, shoveling gravel into the cradle and rocking it under the
-water, and only stopping to pick out the nuggets and yellow dust and
-scales that rewarded their effort every hour.
-
-By means of an old-fashioned horn, Wah Shin summoned them to dinner. Of
-the fresh meat he had made pies that would have tempted an invalid's
-appetite. And, as the boys ate, sitting before the entrance to the cave,
-the Chinaman's face fairly glowed with delight at the evidence of his
-excellent cooking.
-
-"Ven'zon pie belly good," chuckled Wah Shin, as he produced a second
-when the first had vanished. "But man eatee too muchee, den get mebbe
-sick."
-
-"Dat ar edvice is 'tended foh Mistah Sam," laughed Ike, as he helped
-himself again. "But vanzon pie an' 'possums are two tings I ain't nebber
-got my fill ob up to dis time."
-
-Sam heard but did not heed the talk of his companions, for his attention
-was at the moment attracted to two strange men who were slowly making
-their way down the trail on the opposite side of the caon wall.
-
-As there was danger from prowling bands of Indians who had left the
-reservation, and also from white outlaws who frequently robbed weak
-mining camps, every one at Gold Cave Camp strapped on a belt, with a
-knife and pistols in it, as regularly as he pulled on his boots.
-
-Starting to his feet and followed by Ike, Sam went down to the stream,
-getting there just as the two men reached the bottom.
-
-One of the strangers was a tall, dark-bearded man, with one eye, and the
-other was a short, yellow-skinned man with a mean expression of face,
-whom Sam recognized as his cousin, Frank Shirley.
-
-Sam had never spoken to this man, so he did not greet him like an
-acquaintance now.
-
-Both men were well armed, as is the fashion of the country, and when
-they came within hailing distance, Frank Shirley called out:
-
-"Hello, young man, is this Mr. Willett's camp?"
-
-"It is, sir," was Sam's reply, as he came to a halt.
-
-"Is Mr. Willett home?"
-
-"He is not."
-
-"Where is he?"
-
-"He has gone to Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"When did he leave?"
-
-"This morning."
-
-"Ah, I'm sorry I missed him. When do you expect him back?"
-
-"In a few days. Won't you come over and have some dinner?" asked Sam,
-waving his hand in the direction of the plateau, on which Wah Shin was
-visible.
-
-"Thank you; no. We are going on to Hurley's Gulch, and are in a great
-hurry," said Frank Shirley, turning and whispering to his companion, who
-nodded vigorously in response.
-
-"Who shall I say called?" asked Sam, as the two men turned to ascend the
-trail.
-
-"Friends," was the laconical reply.
-
-"If dem's frien's," said Ike, when the men had gone out of hearing, "den
-Ize de biggest kind ob a foe."
-
-The conversation of the two men when they reached the top of the cliff
-proved the black boy's surmise to be correct.
-
-They had left their horses hitched to a rock, and as they prepared to
-mount, Frank Shirley said to his companion:
-
-"That's the boy, Badger."
-
-"The boy ez stan's atween you an' fortune?" said Badger.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'll, ain't you hired me to help you clear the way?"
-
-"I have, Badger."
-
-"Good; then let us git rid of the father first, an' then all the rest'll
-be ez smooth ez ile."
-
-"You will stick to your contract?"
-
-"I'd be a fool if I didn't. You pay expenses an' give me ten thousand
-dollars to get 'em out of the way. Isn't that it?"
-
-"That's it, Badger," said Frank Shirley, as he mounted and rode along
-beside his companion.
-
-"That ar boy down thar," said Badger, waving his hand back at the caon,
-"ain't no slouch. He'll fight, he will; an' the best way with sich is to
-give 'em no chance."
-
-"No chance," echoed Frank Shirley, "that's it exactly. And now that we
-have them parted our opportunity has come."
-
-"Just ez if 'twas made to order," said Badger.
-
-After the men had gone, Sam and Ike went to work again, but the former
-had lost the cheerfulness that distinguished him in the morning.
-
-He could not get those two men out of his mind, not that he feared their
-return--indeed, he could not account to himself for the strange feeling
-of dread that possessed him for the next three days.
-
-While working, on the afternoon of the fourth day since his father's
-departure, he noticed that the sky had become overcast and that the
-water in the bed of the stream was rapidly rising.
-
-He and Ike quit work earlier than usual, and they had great difficulty
-in making their way to the caves through the swollen torrent.
-
-They had hardly reached cover when a terrific storm came up and the
-caon became as dark as night, while the roar of the waters and the
-crashing of the thunder were ceaseless and appalling.
-
-It was about nine o'clock at night, and the three occupants of the cave
-were sitting with awed faces before the fire, when, to their
-inexpressible surprise, Ulna, the young Ute, stood dripping before them.
-
-"How did you reach here?" asked Sam, springing to his feet and grasping
-Ulna's hand.
-
-"I rode till I killed my horse, then I ran for hours. The flood was up,
-and it is rising, but I managed to swim across----"
-
-"But my father!" interrupted Sam, pleadingly laying his arm on the young
-Indian's shoulders.
-
-"He and Hank Tims are prisoners at Hurley's Gulch," said Ulna.
-
-"Prisoners."
-
-"Yes, and in the hands of the lynchers who charge them with the murder
-of Tom Edwards. Here is a letter from your father that will explain
-all," said Ulna, pulling a damp paper from his pocket and adding, "your
-testimony is wanted at once to clear the accused; but no man can cross
-the caon for a week, and then it will be too late!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.--A PERILOUS SITUATION.
-
-
-Sam Willett had courage and fortitude in no common degree, but the words
-of Ulna, who stood dripping and panting before him, froze him with a
-speechless terror.
-
-He took the wet paper from the Indian boy's hand, but for some seconds
-he had neither the courage nor the strength to open it.
-
-The howling of the wind down the gorge and the hoarse roaring of the
-maddened waters heightened the terror of the situation.
-
-Wah Shin, though not well versed in English, fully understood the import
-of Ulna's message, but realizing his own inability to do or to suggest
-anything, he stood with his lips drawn and his little oblique eyes half
-closed.
-
-Ike was the only one of the party who did not appear to have lost the
-power of speech. Taking the letter from Sam's hand, he said:
-
-"Dat ar paper's powahful damp, an' I reckon, Mistah Sam, yeh kin read it
-bettah if so be I dries it so's it won't fall to pieces."
-
-Ike opened the paper and while he held it before the fire, Ulna briefly
-explained the situation.
-
-He said that Mr. Willett, Hank Tims and himself reached Hurley's Gulch
-without any mishap.
-
-They found the rude mining camp in a great state of commotion owing to a
-robbery and murder that had recently been committed.
-
-The more law-abiding, or rather the more industrious, for there was no
-organized law in the place, had formed a vigilance committee to hang the
-next murderer or robber, under the wild sanction of "lynch law."
-
-"Just as soon as we reached Hurley's Gulch," continued Ulna, "we met Tom
-Edwards, and he was very drunk and very abusive. He shouted to every one
-he met that Mr. Willett had robbed him, and took Gold Cave Camp from him
-without paying a cent, though he had promised fifteen hundred dollars."
-
-"Why, the man lies infamously!" interrupted Sam. "I was a witness to
-Edwards' receipt for the money in full, and I have it here among
-father's papers."
-
-"And that receipt is what your father must have at once in order to
-clear him of the charge of robbery and murder," said Ulna.
-
-"Murder!" repeated Sam.
-
-"Yes. Last night Tom Edwards was found dying with a pistol bullet in his
-breast, and with his last breath he swore to the men who found him that
-your father and Hank Tims shot him to get rid of paying the money they
-owed him. The vigilantes at once arrested Mr. Willett and Tom, and they
-swear they will hang them if they do not prove that Tom Edwards was
-paid. I saw the money paid myself, but they refuse to take the word of
-an Indian," said Ulna, with a flash of indignation in his splendid black
-eyes; then continuing, "but they agreed to let me come here for the
-paper."
-
-"Heah!" cried Ike, springing from beside the fire, "de lettah's dry
-enough to read. Let's know w'at Mistah Willett he has to say foh
-hisself."
-
-Sam took the paper, and kneeling down to get the benefit of the light,
-he read aloud as follows:
-
- "_My Dear Son_:--I do not want you to be at all alarmed at my
- detention. Ulna will explain why neither Tom nor I can return
- till you have brought us the receipt which Tom Edwards signed
- when I paid him the money in full for his claim at Gold Cave
- Camp.
-
- "This receipt you will find among the papers in my saddle-bags.
- Bring it to me with all speed and leave Ulna back in charge of
- the camp; it does not matter if the mining ceases till we
- return.
-
- "I regret to have to tell you that Tom Edwards is dead. He was
- drunk when he received the shot that killed him, and he accused
- Hank and me of the crime. If the people here knew us well they
- would not believe this charge for one instant, but they do not,
- and so we must wait till we can show the vigilance committee who
- hold us prisoners, that we could have no motive for, even if we
- were inclined to do this awful deed.
-
- "I saw Frank Shirley here yesterday afternoon in company with a
- well-known desperado who goes by the name of 'One-Eyed Badger.'
- I cannot but think that these two men are at the bottom of this
- new trouble, but what their reasons can be I cannot even guess;
- certain it is that I have never done them or any one else a
- wrong knowingly.
-
- "Do not lose heart, for I have no fear as to the result: only
- come as soon as you can to your loving father,
-
- "_Samuel Willett._"
-
-Sam read this over rapidly, then he read it a second time with more
-deliberation.
-
-"De boss am in a bad fix," groaned Ike, "an' I jest wish I could take
-his place."
-
-"I shall go to my father at once," said Sam, stoutly.
-
-He went to the saddle-bags, got the necessary papers--the receipt and
-deed--and placed them securely in the inner breast pocket of his
-buckskin tunic.
-
-"You no gettee on holse an' lide such night as deez coz it was so muchee
-stolmy?" said Wah Shin when he saw Sam getting out his saddle, bridle
-and rifle.
-
-"I must get to Hurley's Gulch before another day," was the resolute
-reply, "if I have to go there on my hands and knees."
-
-"But you cannot go to-night," protested Ulna. "Come and see the danger."
-
-He took Sam by the arm and led him out to the plateau before the
-entrance to the cave.
-
-It has been said that it but seldom rains in this land, but when it does
-the watery torrents come down with a continued fury, of which the
-dwellers in more favored climes can have only the faintest conception.
-
-The bare rocks refuse to absorb the rain as it falls, and so the
-ever-accumulating waters sweep into the caons and fill the narrow beds
-between the precipitous banks with wild torrents, that must be once seen
-before an adequate idea can be formed of the tremendous and seemingly
-irresistible power of water in action.
-
-The four occupants of the caves, all fine types of four human races,
-went out to the plateau.
-
-The light, streaming through the cave opening, cut across the inky
-blackness of the caon like a solid yellow shaft, that made the
-surrounding darkness more impenetrable.
-
-Laden with sheets rather than drops of rain, the wind swept down the
-ravine with a force that threatened to tear the observers from the rocks
-and hurl them into the seething torrent.
-
-"Before this time," said Ulna, speaking with the calmness that
-distinguished all he said, "the valley is flooded and the horses up
-there are drowned."
-
-Sam shuddered but made no reply.
-
-He went back to the cave, secured a lighted brand, and, returning to the
-edge of the plateau, he dropped it over.
-
-It went hissing down. If the current were as low as the day before it
-should have fallen sheer down for a hundred feet, but before going half
-that distance, it lit up an expanse of water white with foam, and was
-extinguished.
-
-The result of this experiment brought Sam's heart to his mouth, and he
-could not have uttered a word if the life of the father he so well loved
-depended on it.
-
-"If she keeps on a-climbin' up dat way," groaned Ike, "de watah'll be
-nigh into de cave by mawnin'."
-
-Sam now recalled that he had found drift-wood lodged in the crevices of
-the rocks, even higher than the entrances to the cave, and from this he
-inferred that at the highest water no one could stay in the cave and
-live.
-
-Maj, the fine setter dog, had been moaning beside the fire all the
-evening, but now he came out and crouched at his young master's feet, as
-if his instinct told him of the danger and that he wanted protection.
-
-Fearing that the poor horses were gone, and well knowing that it would
-be madness to attempt to cross the caon that night, Sam turned sadly to
-his companions and said:
-
-"We can do nothing till daylight comes. Let us get in out of the storm."
-
-They returned to the cave and silently sat down on the stones that had
-been placed for seats near the fire.
-
-It was a most trying situation.
-
-Even if Mr. Willett and Hank Tims had been safely there in the cave, the
-ever-increasing storm and the possibility, or rather the certainty of
-its danger if it continued would have been sufficient to drive sleep
-from the eyes of all.
-
-But Sam Willett, brave, unselfish youth that he was, gave no thought to
-the peril of his own surroundings.
-
-With his chin resting between his up-turned palms, he looked steadily at
-the dying fire without seeing it.
-
-His heart and his thoughts were ever with his sorely-tried father at
-Hurley's Gulch, and he groaned as he read in the beating of the storm
-the edict that might bar his going to the rescue.
-
-But though unmindful of himself, it was not in Sam's nature to neglect
-the comfort of others.
-
-"Lie down, all of you," he said to his companions, "and I will stand
-guard till daylight comes."
-
-After a weak protest, Wah Shin, Ulna and Ike brought in their blankets
-and lay down before the fire.
-
-Ike pretended that he did not want to sleep, but, after an attempt at
-desultory talk, his eyes closed and he soon became oblivious to his
-surroundings.
-
-Maj continued to be restless and frightened. Now and then, as if to
-judge for himself how the storm was getting on, he would go to the cave
-opening, and, after whining in a pained way for some seconds, he would
-come back and crouch down near the fire with his nose resting on his
-young master's knees.
-
-To sorrow-stricken Sam Willett that night seemed like an eternity of
-darkness.
-
-He was beginning to feel that the storm had destroyed the sun, when the
-grey light of another day began to creep slowly into the cave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.--AT HURLEY'S GULCH.
-
-
-Hurley's Gulch, though subsequently called "Hurley City," has no right
-on the map if it ever had a place there, for, like many other more
-ambitious and important cities, it has ceased to be the abode of man and
-returned to its original state of barrenness and desolation.
-
-It was at this time a mining camp that had sprung up in a night, as it
-were, when a man named Hurley--after whom the place was named--had
-discovered gold in a little creek near the spot that so suddenly became
-the site of busy mining life.
-
-Though less than six months old and destined not to survive a second
-birthday, Hurley's Gulch had nearly a thousand inhabitants, with stores,
-saloons, assay offices, hotels and all the business establishments that
-characterize such places.
-
-There were a few women in the camp and a sprinkling of Indians, Negroes
-and Mexicans, but the great mass of the inhabitants were miners, rough
-in appearance and even rougher in speech.
-
-A more picturesque and novel settlement than Hurley's Gulch it would be
-impossible to find outside the peculiar mining camps of the West.
-
-Two little streaks of grass could be found growing beside the creek on
-the bluff above which the camp had been established; but beyond this
-there was hardly a sign of vegetation in sight.
-
-All about the place, far as the eye could reach, was a tempest-tossed
-expanse of dry, glistening rocks.
-
-As there was neither timber for building nor material for bricks, the
-dwellings, stores, saloons, hotels and offices were necessarily of
-canvas.
-
-The tents were pitched here and there irregularly, and as all of them
-had seen hard service in other mining camps and "cities," their general
-appearance was patched and dilapidated in the extreme.
-
-The great majority of the men at Hurley's Gulch were industrious miners;
-but as vultures hover over the track of an army in the field and wolves
-follow up a buffalo herd to prey upon the weakest, so crowds of
-well-dressed gamblers and red-faced whisky sellers swarm in prosperous
-mining camps to plunder and demoralize.
-
-Hurley's Gulch had more than its share of these wicked fellows, and as
-there was not the shadow of law there to defend the weak, every man went
-armed as a matter of course.
-
-Until law officers can be elected or appointed and courts of justice
-established in such camps, it is the custom of the more industrious and
-peaceable to form what they call "vigilance committees" for their own
-protection.
-
-It need not be said that, no matter how well-meaning the purpose, many
-men, themselves criminals, get on such committees, and that great wrong
-is often done to the innocent by these rude efforts to do justice.
-
-Mr. Willett's was a case in point.
-
-A few days before he had come over this last time to Hurley's Gulch, a
-hard-working miner had been killed and robbed of the gold-dust which he
-had patiently panned out from the bed of the stream.
-
-This crime made the miners angry, and they held an indignation meeting
-after the poor man's funeral, and organized a committee to ferret out
-and punish the criminals.
-
-As there was no jail in which to detain those guilty of lighter
-offences, there was only one penalty in the code of the vigilantes, and
-that was _death_!
-
-Tom Edwards had not been a favorite with the better class of men at
-Hurley's Gulch.
-
-In his opinion money was made for the sole purpose of gambling away and
-getting drunk on.
-
-It was generally believed that he had been paid for his claim at Gold
-Cave Camp by Mr. Willett, so that many who heard him declare to the
-contrary and say that he had sold on credit, placed no faith in his
-word.
-
-But when Tom Edwards was found dying the night before Mr. Willett was to
-have left the Gulch, his past falsehoods were forgotten in view of the
-nearness of his end and the calmest were inclined to believe him.
-
-It was well known that hot words had passed that very day between Mr.
-Willett and Tom Edwards, and this afforded to many a reason for the act.
-
-It was pitchy dark when the wretched man was shot, and he was very drunk
-at the time, so that when his wound restored him, for a short time, to
-his senses, there can be no doubt but he was honest in the belief that
-"two men," Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were the guilty parties.
-
-The accused men were at once arrested by the vigilance committee and
-placed under guard in a tent.
-
-Both protested their innocence, as well they might, and Mr. Willett
-asked to be permitted to send to his camp for papers that would prove to
-all that he had paid Tom Edwards in full the price at which he valued
-his claim.
-
-A few men were inclined to believe Mr. Willett, but to set all doubts at
-rest, it was decided that further action should be postponed in the case
-till the receipt of the money and the deed of sale had been procured.
-
-The next morning Ulna was dispatched on this mission, and we have seen
-the fidelity with which he performed the duty and the unexpected
-obstacles that prevented the return of the accused man's son with the
-papers.
-
-There were two men at Hurley's Gulch at this time who, if they had
-chosen, could have set at rest all doubts as to the mystery surrounding
-Tom Edwards' death and handed over the guilty parties to the vigilantes;
-but as this act would have resulted in their own swift destruction, they
-kept their awful secret to themselves.
-
-These men were Frank Shirley and the outlaw Badger.
-
-Frank Shirley believed, and with reason, that if Sam Willett was out of
-the way, the last bar between him and a great fortune would be down.
-
-He was a dissolute, thriftless fellow, every faculty of whose low mind
-seemed to have been concentrated into the one mean gift of cunning.
-
-On the way from Gold Cave Camp to Hurley's Gulch, Frank Shirley and the
-man whom he had hired to help him in his wicked purpose, discussed the
-situation from every point of view.
-
-The first thing they decided on was that Mr. Willett and his son must be
-prevented from ever meeting again, but they did not agree so readily as
-to how this was to be done.
-
-More bluff, and possibly more brutal than his employer, Badger urged
-that he be allowed to waylay Mr. Willett and kill him on his return.
-
-But Frank Shirley opposed this, saying, for he was a coward at heart, as
-all such men are:
-
-"Willett will have with him the Indian boy and the old hunter, Hank
-Tims; they are all well-armed, and they would be stronger than us. No,
-Badger, we must hit upon some plan that has less risk in it."
-
-"Wa'al," responded Badger, "hit upon the plan yersel', an' if I don't
-carry it out without flinchin', I'll give you leave to shoot me down
-like a dog."
-
-When these men reached Hurley's Gulch they found Edwards "drunk as
-usual," and loudly declaring wherever he went that Mr. Willett was
-trying to rob him out of fifteen hundred dollars.
-
-Here was the very chance for which Frank Shirley had been looking.
-
-If he could have Edwards put out of the way, in such a manner as to
-fasten the crime on Mr. Willett, a hundred stronger and braver men would
-be ready to accomplish his purpose with their own hands.
-
-He told Badger of his scheme, and that creature, without a moment's
-thought of the awful crime he was about to commit, pledged himself to
-carry it out when the other gave the word.
-
-To add to the evidence against Mr. Willett, as that gentleman was
-arrested, Frank Shirley appeared to be very much cast down.
-
-With tears in his eyes, he explained to the many who were only too eager
-to listen, that Mr. Willett had married his, Shirley's, cousin, that he
-had borne a bad character in Detroit, and that he had recently fled from
-that city to escape the consequences of his many crimes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.--WHY THE PAPERS WERE NOT BROUGHT.
-
-
-Before awaking his companions, all of whom seemed to be sleeping
-heavily, Sam went out to see if the flood in the caon had risen.
-
-He ventured but a few yards beyond the entrance to the cave, for the
-sight that met his eyes appalled him.
-
-The rain was still pouring down in torrents, and the flood had risen
-till it was nearly on a level with the plateau.
-
-"Three feet more and it will be into the cave," he said, speaking aloud.
-
-"Watel littee mole high up no cannee stay, mus' allee die if no can
-swimmee," said a voice behind Sam.
-
-There was no need to ask whose it was.
-
-Wah Shin, with thoughts of breakfast in his mind, had got up, but first
-he decided to satisfy himself of the condition of affairs outside.
-
-"Yes, Wah Shin," said Sam, without turning his head, "even as I look at
-the flood it appears to be rising."
-
-"If it come mole up, wat we allee do?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"No cannee stop dis place?"
-
-"I fear not."
-
-"Way we go den, no can tink."
-
-"Nor can I think either, Wah."
-
-"If no can lib, den no coz wy die hungly," said Wah Shin, and with this
-belief strong in his mind, he re-entered the cave and set about getting
-breakfast with his usual indifference to the state of the weather.
-
-At any other time the sight of the flood and the danger of its coming
-higher would have alarmed Sam greatly, but though he could not ignore
-the danger that threatened him now, his own situation was lost sight of
-as he thought of his father's position.
-
-He was still standing looking at the rushing flood, as if fascinated by
-its power and volume, when Ike and Ulna came out and joined him.
-
-"Foh massy's sake!" exclaimed Ike, when he caught sight of the water.
-"Ain't she jest a bilein' up."
-
-"Do you think the water will rise higher?" asked Sam as he turned to
-Ulna, and tried to find some comfort in his calm, impassive face.
-
-Before replying Ulna looked up at the sky for some seconds, then said:
-
-"The storm is not half over."
-
-"And while it lasts the water will go on rising?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, that is what we must expect."
-
-"Then it will flood the cave?"
-
-"It will surely do that."
-
-"And drive us out?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, if we don't want to drown there."
-
-"Then we must try to leave?"
-
-"Yes, we must try to leave," echoed Ulna.
-
-"But how can we get away?"
-
-"Ah," said Ulna, with something like a sigh, "I cannot now think of how
-that's to be done."
-
-"If so be we was all birds, we could fly," said Ike, very solemnly,
-"it'd come in mighty handy-like jest 'bout dis time."
-
-Sam now realized that he must think and act for his companions as well
-as for himself.
-
-His was a brave, sturdy, self-reliant nature, that grows stronger and
-stronger in the face of increasing trials and responsibilities.
-
-"Let us go in out of the rain and think," he said, while he turned and
-nervously stroked his forehead.
-
-When they went back to the cave they found that Wah Shin had a good
-breakfast ready, and was still busy cooking more food.
-
-When asked by Sam why he was doing this, he said, as if it were a matter
-of course.
-
-"Bime by, watel him come in, puttee out file; file him go out, no can
-cookee; no got tings cookee, no can eat; no eatee den allee mus' die."
-
-"Well, Wah Shin," said Sam with a grim smile, "if there is any hope in
-cooking, keep at it while the food lasts."
-
-Despite their troubles and the dangers that cut them off from the world
-and threatened their lives, all, Maj included, complimented Wah Shin's
-efforts in their behalf by partaking of a hearty breakfast.
-
-During the meal Sam was unusually silent; it was evident he was thinking
-very hard, and the others did not attempt to disturb his deliberations
-till he had risen from his seat, then Ulna asked:
-
-"Have you thought out a way to get across the caon, Sam?"
-
-"I have thought out a way of trying it," he answered.
-
-"How?"
-
-"On a raft."
-
-"But we have no raft."
-
-"Then we must make one."
-
-"Where is the timber?"
-
-"There is some here in the form of slabs and firewood, and there is
-plenty whirling down with the flood. You can handle a lariat, Ulna?"
-
-"I think I can," was the response.
-
-"Then get a rope, we have a lot here in the cave; make a noose and
-secure all the long pieces of timber you can. The water is nearly up to
-the plateau, and Ike will help you pull them out."
-
-"An' watee can me do?" asked Wah Shin.
-
-"Keep right on cooking, for if we cannot cross the flood on the raft,
-we'll be swept into the great caon of the Colorado, and there we shall
-need all the food we can take along."
-
-The others set to work with a will, but even Ulna, who was born out in
-that land, only faintly comprehended the import of what Sam said about
-the great caon.
-
-Indeed, Sam himself had only a vague notion of what was meant by the now
-famous geographical name.
-
-He knew the history and geography of his own country very well, as every
-well-trained youth should, and he was, therefore, aware that the great
-Colorado of the West was formed by the junction of two important rivers,
-the Green and the Grand; he was further aware that the water roaring
-outside entered the latter river about twenty-five miles below the camp.
-
-Had these been ordinary rivers there would be good reason to dread
-venturing out on their currents at flood time, even in a good boat; but
-the Green and the Grand for many score miles above their junction flowed
-through immense rocky defiles or caons, and they united in one mighty
-caon, through which flowed for fully four hundred miles the waters of
-the Colorado on their way to the Gulf of California.
-
-Sam had talked a great deal about this wonderful chasm with Hank Tims,
-and that most reliable authority had assured him that only two parties
-had ever attempted to go through the great caon and returned to tell of
-their perilous adventures and hair-breadth escapes.
-
-Hank claimed to have stood on a cliff that rose straight up from the
-edge of the Colorado at one point, and looked down a sheer perpendicular
-depth of over seven thousand feet, the very thought of which is enough
-to make an ordinary head giddy.
-
-But Sam helped to make a craft that would enable them to cross the two
-hundred feet that separated them from the opposite bank, and this
-accomplished in safety, they could make their way on foot to Hurley's
-Gulch, where he knew his father was eagerly awaiting his coming.
-
-He secured all the gold dust about his own person, and then made up
-bundles of blankets, provisions and ammunition that might be of use if
-they did not succeed in making a crossing.
-
-This done, he went out and found that Ike and Ulna had succeeded in
-staying and landing a great deal of drift-wood, just the thing for a
-raft, and a number of stout poles that might be used in guiding it.
-
-By this time the flood had risen still higher and higher, and was now
-ankle deep on the plateau outside the cave opening, and there was not a
-moment to lose.
-
-With an energy that was all his own, and a skill that surprised himself,
-Sam set about building the raft.
-
-By means of ropes, the longer timbers were securely lashed side by side,
-and over these, like a deck, the lighter slabs taken from the cave were
-nailed.
-
-When this clumsy and insecure structure was completed, Sam saw that the
-food, blankets, arms and ammunition were tied so that they could not be
-swept off by the wash of the waters.
-
-It comforted him somewhat to know that all his companions could swim,
-though the stoutest swimmer could not last long in the mad torrent
-sweeping past.
-
-Sam assigned each one a position, and gave him strict instructions as to
-what he must do under certain circumstances; and Maj seemingly well
-aware of what was up, crouched down in the center of the raft.
-
-"Now," said Sam, as he stood up, pole in hand, at one end of the raft,
-"we must wait for the current to float us off, and trust in God."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.--THE WONDERFUL VOYAGE BEGINS.
-
-
-Under and around the raft the waters surged and poured, as if they were
-testing the strength of the frail structure before lifting it up and
-hurling it away to destruction.
-
-With his feet well apart to balance himself, and the long pole ready in
-his strong hands, Sam stood pale but resolute.
-
-They had only a few minutes to wait.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin sent up a cry of horror as, with the roar of an angry
-monster, the current swept the raft into the stream.
-
-With the grim stoicism of his race, Ulna looked about him without
-seeming to be at all disturbed by the awful situation.
-
-Sam's object was to get across to the other side of the caon and effect
-a landing with his party, for he never for an instant lost sight of the
-fact that his father's freedom if not his life depended on his reaching
-Hurley's Gulch at once with the papers in the Edwards case.
-
-But alas for all the schemes planned by love and executed by courage!
-What was man's strength and daring to the weight of the piled-up, flying
-waters?
-
-The instant the raft swung away from the plateau Sam saw that his pole
-was of no use, for the river bottom was fully one hundred feet below the
-surface.
-
-He tried to use the pole as a paddle, but his efforts had no effect on
-the course of the raft.
-
-It was hurled like a plaything by some mighty, unseen power, into the
-center of the flood; then, with the speed of a racer urged on by whip
-and spur, the frail ark went flying down the caon.
-
-For the life of him Sam could not utter a word. His face was blanched,
-but it was not with fear, though death seemed now inevitable.
-
-"What will become of poor father!" This is what poor Sam would have
-cried out if he could have given expression to the one thought that
-filled his brain and the one feeling that stirred his heart.
-
-But neither Ike nor Wah Shin attempted to restrain their cries, though
-their voices were nearly drowned out by the never-ceasing roar of the
-torrent.
-
-Wah Shin was terror-stricken, and in his fright he forgot his little
-store of defective English and shouted for help in his native tongue.
-
-The effect on Ike was to change the color of his face to a dark grey,
-and to make the whites of his eyes very conspicuous. He was devoutly on
-his knees, though he clung to the logs with both hands, and prayed with
-an earnestness that there was no mistaking.
-
-In much less time than it takes to describe the feelings of the
-passengers they were whirled out of sight of the caves and were rushing
-down between the towering caon walls with a velocity that was truly
-appalling.
-
-It was Sam's belief, as well as the belief of the others, after they saw
-that crossing was impossible, that they would be crushed by the great
-jagged rocks that beset their course, but they soon discovered that they
-were in the middle of the current, and that they were passing in safety
-the obstructions that threatened ruin every instant.
-
-The bravest men tremble on the eve of their first battle, and their
-hearts sink when they hear the first rattle of the skirmishers' rifles.
-But as the time passes without their being shot down, they become
-indifferent to the dangers that at first alarmed and unnerved them, and
-fight with the coolness and confidence of veterans.
-
-A sailor will laugh at a storm that is full of terrors to the landsman,
-for it is certain that familiarity with danger does breed contempt.
-
-After the raft had dashed on for an hour or more, our friends began to
-feel confident and to look at the situation without fear in their eyes.
-
-Ike was the first to speak; perhaps because Wah Shin had not yet
-regained his knowledge of English. After winking very fast for fully a
-half minute, he said:
-
-"It don't seem like's if we was goin' to sink--at least not yet a bit."
-
-He had to shout this out to make himself heard, and Sam, in response,
-had to speak in the same tones.
-
-"If we can find a place where we can make a landing, I don't care how
-soon she sinks after that."
-
-"Dar don't appeah to be much show foh a land in dese ar parts," said
-Ike, as he looked up at the walls that not only formed the sides of the
-caon, but which seemed to block their advance, for the course of the
-river was tortuous in the extreme, so much so, indeed, that they could
-but rarely see more than a few hundred yards in advance.
-
-At length, and after they must have floated more than twenty miles, the
-caon of Gold Cave Creek entered the much greater and more sublime caon
-of Grand River.
-
-Here the bed of the river was so much wider, that though there was more
-water in it, it flowed with a current that was calmness itself when
-compared with the fierce mountain torrent that had recently made the
-raft its plaything.
-
-With a great sigh of relief, Wah Shin now proceeded to show that his
-knowledge of English had come back to him.
-
-"Dees place no so belly bad likee dat place we way back alle come flom."
-
-"This is Grand River," said Ulna, speaking for the first time, and
-seemingly as calm as if he were in a place of safety, as he added: "And
-further down all the caons of the Green and Grand rivers unite to form
-the mighty Colorado."
-
-"I hope we may be able to land before we reach there," said Sam Willett,
-who had now discovered that by means of the pole he could steer the raft
-in the calmer water.
-
-Even the dog regained confidence. Maj had been crouching down on the
-blankets, and wincing and trembling with fear, but he sat up when the
-smoother current was reached, and licked his lips and moved his tail in
-a way that left no doubt as to his approval of the changed condition of
-affairs.
-
-But though the current of Grand River was slow as compared with that of
-Gold Cave Creek, it would be a mistake to imagine that it was at all
-stagnant.
-
-The beds of all its tributaries were swollen at this time, so that the
-waters of Grand River were thirty feet above the average level and
-moving with a speed of four or five miles an hour.
-
-Although continually watching for some place in which he could make a
-landing, it was not till near sunset that Sam found such a spot as he
-wanted.
-
-The river soon widened out into a bowl-shaped valley, on the margin of
-which there were benches of dry ground, covered with stunted little
-cedars that gave a grave-yard appearance to the place.
-
-By means of their poles Sam and Ulna succeeded in forcing the raft to
-the shore, where it was securely fastened, and Wah Shin and Ike sent up
-prayers of thanks, each after his fashion.
-
-This arrangement had been made none too soon, for they had not finished
-removing the cargo from the raft when the black shadows of night seemed
-to rise up from the water, for the glow on the top of the caon walls
-showed that it was still comparatively light in the upper world.
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike when the last of the cargo was safely stored under the
-cedars, "w'at am de nex' t'ing on de programmy?"
-
-"De nex' t'ing," replied Wah Shin as he began getting out his pots, pans
-and supplies, "is dat we makee file, den we has to gettee hot someting
-mebbe fol to eat."
-
-This admirable suggestion met with general approval.
-
-That there had been higher floods than this the drift-wood lodged in the
-crevices of the neighboring rocks abundantly attested.
-
-As it had not only stopped raining by this time, but the clouds had
-exhausted themselves and vanished from the strip of sky visible above
-their heads, they had no difficulty in starting a fire.
-
-In the ruddy glow the yellow current, roaring and sweeping near by, took
-on the hue of blood, but our friends were too hungry, weary and anxious
-to be impressed by this.
-
-Wah Shin had plenty of food cooked, but he very wisely thought that it
-would be more palatable if warmed over and a cup of good coffee added to
-the meal.
-
-Despite the dangers that surrounded them and the woful anxiety about his
-father, that was never absent from Sam Willett's heart, he could not
-help being impressed by the wild weirdness of the situation.
-
-He kept his feelings bravely to himself and expressed pleasure at the
-appetites shown by his friends, while trying to comfort them with a
-half-felt hope that they might be able to escape from the caon on the
-morrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.--MR. WILLETT AND HANK TIMS.
-
-
-Mr. Willett and his friend and fellow prisoner, Hank Tims, were kept
-securely guarded in a tent situated in about the center of the
-straggling habitations that went to make up the camp at Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Hank, who knew the country and the climate better than any white man in
-it, was well aware, from the continuence and violence of the storm, that
-it was spread over a wide area, and that the heavy rainfall and the
-consequent melting of snow on the crests of the higher mountains would
-flood all the streams flowing into the great Colorado.
-
-He did not wish voluntarily to confess his fears to Mr. Willett, and yet
-he felt that it was only right that that gentleman should know what
-effect the storm might have on their own lives.
-
-"Do you know what I have been thinking ever since night came and the
-rain has been dashing on the canvas over our heads, as if determined to
-get in?" said Mr. Willett, along toward morning, on the day following
-the departure of Ulna for Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"Mebbe ye've been thinkin' that this is a powerful stormy night,"
-answered Hank, at a venture.
-
-"Yes, and that the storm will be apt to flood the caon where the boys
-are."
-
-"Wa'al," drawled Hank, as if weighing his words, "this yar rain'll be
-mighty apt to raise the creeks in the bottoms of the caons."
-
-"What if Ulna should not be able to get across?"
-
-"He'll get across, no fear of that," said Hank. "But thar's another
-important pint in the case."
-
-"What is that, Hank?"
-
-"It's can Ulna git back an' fetch yer son with him."
-
-"And what do you think about that, Hank?"
-
-"I don't know what to think."
-
-"But, surely, you have some idea."
-
-"Oh, yes," said Hank, his hand to his ear to measure the sound of the
-pouring rain, and his gray eyes intently fixed on the ceiling, as if he
-were trying to find out when the flood would break through and drench
-them.
-
-"Well," said Mr. Willett, nervously, "what's your opinion?"
-
-"I don't really think that Ulna, or Sam, ken git back to Hurley's for
-days. Cos why, they can't cross the flood to the trail, an' no man
-could, onless he chanced to be rigged with wings, like a bird, an' up to
-this time I ain't run acrost a human mortal fixed in that way, though
-I'll allow that sich an addition would be powerful convenient at times."
-
-"But if my son can't come here, what then?"
-
-"You mean, how will it fare with us?"
-
-"Yes, Hank, that is what I mean."
-
-"Wa'al, it'll depend on many pints."
-
-"Give me some of them."
-
-"If the men in these diggins keep sober, we ken hope for fair treatment,
-but if they don't it'll go hard on us. But all that depends on the
-storm," said Hank, with great deliberation.
-
-"On the storm?" repeated Mr. Willett.
-
-"Yes; that's what I said. Of course, you understand that if the rain
-keeps on an' raises the creek har at Hurley's, then the miners won't be
-able to work for days an' days?"
-
-"I understand that, Hank."
-
-"Wa'al, if they don't work, an' have somethink to okerpy their minds, do
-you know what they will do?"
-
-"I haven't the slightest idea," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Why, they'll crowd into the saloons an' git drunk. When even a
-well-meanin' man is drunk he's a beast, but when these rough fellows
-drink that devil's broth, whisky, why it makes 'em reg'lar out and out
-fiends."
-
-"I understand you," said Mr. Willett sadly.
-
-The two men relapsed into silence and again lay down on the blankets
-that had been given them by the vigilance committee.
-
-Hank Tims was right in his surmise.
-
-Morning brought no cessation to the storm, and as a consequence the
-miners could not work, for Hurley's Gulch was transformed from a little
-stream into a raging torrent.
-
-As has been before stated, a majority of these miners were industrious,
-honest men; and their vigilance committee, though apt to do wrong in its
-efforts to be just, had a repressing effect on the lawless element.
-
-These men were honest in the belief that Mr. Willett and his companion
-were responsible for the death of Tom Edwards, and it must be confessed
-that all the circumstances--circumstances that were strengthened by the
-dying man's statements, pointed that way.
-
-The "Grand Union Hotel," the most important establishment at Hurley's
-Gulch, was composed of three tents, and old dilapidated tents at that.
-
-The front tent was occupied by a bar, the center tent as a kitchen and
-dining room, and the rear canvas afforded space for the guests to spread
-their own blankets and sleep as best they might.
-
-Frank Shirley and Badger had their headquarters at the Grand Union.
-Here, the following day, the miners gathered to discuss the effect the
-storm might have on the return of the messenger with the paper that was
-to show that Mr. Willett had paid Edwards in full for his claim at Gold
-Cave Camp.
-
-A few men believed Mr. Willett's story, but yet, in deference to the
-wishes of the majority they were willing to have a trial, but not till a
-sufficient time had passed for the floods to subside so that the
-messenger might have a chance to return.
-
-Frank Shirley saw the drift of affairs, and, without seeming to do so,
-he made up his mind to direct it.
-
-He was well supplied with money, and feeling that he had a large fortune
-to fall back on, if he managed his game properly, he decided to give
-every man, for nothing, all the whisky he could drink, and then when he
-had the camp crazed with liquor to turn them at once against Mr.
-Willett.
-
-In carrying out this monstrous scheme, Frank Shirley was ably seconded
-by Badger.
-
-The storm continued throughout the day, but the sound of its fury was
-gradually deadened by the uproar of the drunken men in and about the
-Grand Union Hotel.
-
-From being a well-meaning crowd of miners, they gradually became a mob
-of fierce and profane drunken men, with no more moral conception of
-their conduct than the inmates of a mad-house.
-
-By the time night came again, they had forgotten their promise to give
-the accused men a hearing, and were resolved to slay them at once.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.--A FRUITLESS EFFORT.
-
-
-The blankets and bundles carried on the raft were pretty well soaked by
-the rain and the whirling waters of the caon, but as soon as supper was
-over Sam gave orders to have the things spread out and dried before the
-fire.
-
-In this work all took an eager part, and as they had been able to
-collect plenty of fuel, they were enabled to build such a fire as had
-never chased the night shadows from that part of Grand River Caon
-before.
-
-When the blankets were dried they were spread over heaps of cedar boughs
-and made beds that would have tempted a dyspeptic to sleep.
-
-But, though very weary, our friends did not lie down at once, but sat
-before the fire speculating and wondering if they would be able to climb
-out of the caon on the morrow and make their way to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Although there was no danger in this place from wild beasts or savage
-foes, Sam Willett began to-night a system of guard duty which he kept up
-during all the nights of his perilous journey.
-
-His great fear now was that the flood might rise and carry off the raft
-or drown out their camping-place, as it was evident it had done on many
-former occasions.
-
-That they might not be taken by surprise, he divided the night into four
-watches, to begin at nine o'clock and to continue till five, when it
-would be broad daylight.
-
-Each one was to stand guard two hours at a time and to wake the next one
-when his watch had expired. The order was to be changed every night so
-that no one would have to be on duty at the same time two nights in
-succession.
-
-This arrangement met with the approval of all, and Sam took the first
-turn on guard.
-
-The others lay down with the promptness of soldiers when the word of
-command was given, and they were soon sleeping soundly.
-
-Sam had an excellent watch, the gift of his dead mother and valued
-accordingly, and this enabled them to measure the time with military
-exactness.
-
-The flood rose about a foot during the night, but beyond this, nothing
-of a startling nature occurred.
-
-They breakfasted the following morning before it was quite light, and
-when the glow of the rising sun could be seen on the crest of the peaks
-that towered for many hundreds of feet above the bed of the stream, Sam
-and Ulna started off to see if they could find a way to the upper world,
-leaving Ike and Wah Shin in charge of the camp.
-
-These two worthies were the best of friends, and when together they
-talked in a way that would have been very amusing to any one who could
-have overheard it.
-
-"Dis am a mighty queah place," said Ike, glancing about him after Sam
-and Ulna had got out of hearing.
-
-"A belly funny hole, way, way down flom wo'ld," said Wah Shin as he
-imitated Ike's movements.
-
-"Wah Shin."
-
-"Go on chin, me heal you," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Do you t'ink God made all de world?"
-
-"Oh, me t'ink so," said Wah Shin carelessly.
-
-"An' eberyting He made 's got some use?"
-
-"Oh, yes, allee tings got some use--mebbe."
-
-"An' He made dese canyons?"
-
-"Don't know 'bout dem," said Wah Shin dubiously.
-
-"Wa'al, if God didn't make de canyons, who did?" asked Ike, with a
-manner that indicated his appreciation of the great weight of the
-question.
-
-To confess ignorance of a subject is a manly habit which very few are
-addicted to. Wah Shin at once proved that he did not consider himself an
-authority on all matters, for he said, promptly and frankly:
-
-"Me don't know."
-
-"Dey aint got no use, ez I ken see," continued Ike, "an' it's my farm
-belief dat dat oder pusson ez goes roun' like a roarin' lion dug out
-dese yer canawls an' den found ez he had no watah to fill 'em up wid."
-
-"Mebbe so--me don't know."
-
-"Now, if dey was filled wid fire," said Ike, with the same wise manner,
-"I'd call it a fust-rate job--ob de kind."
-
-"Ha, ha!" roared Wah Shin, as if he caught the sharpest point of an
-excellent joke. "'Spose alle file, den wat we do, eh?"
-
-"We wouldn't be har," said Ike.
-
-"But no cannee help oursels."
-
-"Reckon yer right. Ez atween de two, I goes in foh watah ebery day in de
-week an' twice on Sundays. But if I'd had de buildin' ob dese yer
-canyons I wouldn't hab wasted sich a mighty sight ob stone in puttin' in
-de banks. But den eberyting in dis yer world ain't jest as we'd like to
-have it, so it's better to take tings as dey come; what do you say, Wah
-Shin?"
-
-"We gottee take it as it come--no can help oulsels," said Wah Shin
-grimly.
-
-This phase of the situation was so self-evident that even Ike could not
-think of objecting to it, so he began to whistle a hymn tune and to pack
-up the food and blankets so that they might be all ready to start when
-Sam and Ulna returned with the information that they had discovered a
-way out of the caon.
-
-But this hope, after having been strongly cherished for three hours, was
-doomed to disappointment.
-
-Shortly before noon the two explorers returned, and though Sam's face
-told of his failure, Ike could not help asking:
-
-"Wa'al, Mistah Sam, wat luck?"
-
-"Poor luck, Ike," was the sad reply.
-
-"Couldn't find de way out, eh?"
-
-"There is no way to find. Every wall we came to is as high and steep as
-those about the camp," said Sam, with a sigh and an upward glance at the
-perpendicular cliffs that appeared to be bending over them, as if the
-touch of a child's hand might tumble them into the chasm.
-
-"Undah sich sarcumstances ez dem," said Ike, very solemnly, "wat do yeh
-tinks best to be done?"
-
-"We must leave here at once."
-
-"But how's it to be did, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"We must leave as we came."
-
-"On de raft?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'al, dat's a heap sight moah comfotable way dan if we had to swim foh
-it," said Ike, with a sudden display of cheerfulness.
-
-Sam now began to realize that their stock of provisions was small, that
-there was no way of replenishing them in the caon, and that their stay
-in these depths was very indefinite, if, indeed, the chances were not
-all against their ever being able to get out.
-
-He saw that it would be a mistaken kindness if he let the others or
-himself eat all that they desired, and great as his affection was for
-Maj, the dog, he regretted that the animal was along, for it made
-another and a very large mouth to feed.
-
-With force and frankness he laid the case before his companions, and
-without a sign of dissent, they agreed to have the food so divided as to
-make it last for ten days, before which time the least hopeful was
-certain they would again be in the upper world.
-
-A dinner of limited rations was at once eaten, and though it was ample,
-every one of them thought that he could easily eat as much more and not
-feel that he was playing the glutton.
-
-Again the cargo was placed securely on the raft, and Maj walked demurely
-on board and lay down on top of the blankets.
-
-After strengthening the raft by the addition of some pieces of light,
-dry cedar, it was freed from its moorings and pushed into the current.
-
-The four passengers occupied the same relative positions as on the
-previous day, Sam standing in the stern and skilfully steering the float
-from the many angry-looking rocks that jutted into the swift current.
-
-As the light began to fade, Sam gazed eagerly in front and on either
-side in the hope of being able to find some expansion or ledge on which
-they could land for the night. But an impenetrable darkness settled over
-them, and they were still afloat in the caon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.--A NIGHT OF AWFUL GLOOM.
-
-
-Words can convey to the reader an idea of only those things with which
-he is familiar, or of which he can form a picture through his
-imagination, and even when the latter is vivid it must draw largely for
-its creation on things with which it is somewhat acquainted.
-
-No pen or tongue could properly describe the situation and the feelings
-of the four human beings who through the long black hours of that night
-whirled and drifted down through the black depths of the caon.
-
-As it was useless to stand up and attempt to steer, for he could not see
-his hand held close before his face, Sam Willett crouched down on the
-raft, and clung with nervous hands to its trembling timbers.
-
-Now and then they seemed to be floating through quiet waters, but just
-when hope came to cheer them with the belief that they had passed
-through the most dangerous part of the current, the raft would be hurled
-down long lines of rapids, or caught by some projecting rock it would be
-sent spinning around with a velocity that made the occupants sick with
-the whirling motion and the fear that the end had come. Such a situation
-would have tested the strength of the most experienced nerves, even if
-the midday sun was shining into the chasm, but the darkness added to its
-terrors and filled the bravest with alarm.
-
-On and on, and on. It seemed to Sam that they were sinking into the
-bowels of the earth, or flying away through the realms of night and the
-abode of impenetrable darkness.
-
-Now and then he would look up at the few stars visible in the strip of
-sky far overhead, to assure himself that he was yet in the world of life
-and light.
-
-They were floating down a quiet stretch of water when Ike called out in
-a tremulous voice.
-
-"Say, Mistah Sam, ken yeh heah me?"
-
-"Yes, Ike, I can hear," was the reply.
-
-"How does yeh feel, 'bout dis time?"
-
-"I feel hopeful, Ike."
-
-"Why does yeh feel dat way?"
-
-"It is my disposition," said Sam, for want of a better answer.
-
-"Got any ideah wot's de time?"
-
-"I have not, Ike."
-
-"How long does yeh tink it is since _de sun went down foh de last
-time_?"
-
-"About eight hours," said Sam, though, judging by his own feelings, it
-seemed like so many days.
-
-"Eight houahs!" exclaimed Ike. "Oh, Mistah Sam, yeh's away clar off de
-track."
-
-"How long do you think it is since the sun went down?" asked Sam, for
-the sound of their voices seemed to lighten the gloom.
-
-"Jest 'bout fifteen yeahs an' six months ago," said Ike, with the
-greatest solemnity, adding quickly, "an' I don't tink de sun'll eber
-rise agin. It's done gone gin out. My, if we could see our faces 'bout
-dis yer time, do yeh know wot we'd find?"
-
-"What, Ike?"
-
-"Dat we've all growed up in de darkness, and dat we'z ole men."
-
-"Me not feel like ole man," said Wah Shin.
-
-"What do you feel like?" asked Sam, glad to hear them all speaking
-again.
-
-"Me feel belly hungly," was the reply.
-
-"Patience, patience," cried out Ulna, from the forward part of the raft,
-"God's sun is rising now."
-
-"Where!" was the exclamation of all.
-
-"In the east," said the young Ute.
-
-Not one of them could tell in what direction the east was, but all
-turned their heads.
-
-Suddenly Ike called out:
-
-"Oh, I see a light in de sky!"
-
-At the same instant all saw it, high up and directly in front.
-
-The light looked like the glow of a wonderful fire opal, set in the inky
-blackness of the sky.
-
-Brighter and brighter it grew each moment, till the reflected light
-penetrated the profound depths of the caon.
-
-It was the rising sun saluting the highest snow peaks of the mountains,
-a section of which was visible in front.
-
-With the joy of the blind when the blessing of sight is restored, our
-friends watched the increasing light coming down from the sky.
-
-Gradually the towering walls of the caon became more distinct, till at
-length their far-off summits could be seen, with here and there a cedar
-clinging for dear life to the giddy ledges.
-
-"If dis yar day is gwyne to be ez long ez de last night," said Ike, when
-he felt that the coming of the sun was not a false alarm, "why, I reckon
-we'll all be ole men afore it gits dark agin."
-
-Even the dog gained courage by the coming of the day, and sitting up he
-began to bark in a way that proved his interest in the world was
-returning.
-
-There was no means of telling how far they had been borne by the current
-during the long hours of that awful night, but as soon as it was light
-again Sam took the pole and resumed his position as helmsman.
-
-As they were swept on he looked to the right and left in the hope of
-finding a place where they might make a landing.
-
-They were wet, hungry and weary, but the coming sun revived their
-drooping spirits.
-
-It was not till near noon that the precipitous walls expanded into an
-area a quarter of a mile in diameter, that looked, in its flooded state,
-like a subterranean lake.
-
-Here the current was much slower, and with Ulna's help, Sam succeeded in
-gliding the raft to a ledge of sloping rocks, where it was made fast,
-and again the passengers carried the cargo on shore.
-
-The sun shone on their landing place, which, being on the south bank of
-the river, Sam decided to explore thoroughly in the hope of finding a
-way out of the caon, for he did not lose sight for a minute of his
-father's trying situation.
-
-This expansion of the caon walls was much greater than the one from
-which they had come the day before, and there were so many recesses and
-irregularities that getting out appeared to be an easy matter indeed.
-
-They spread their wet blankets and clothing on the rocks, and they found
-enough drift-wood to make a fire, but all were so hungry that they did
-not wait for the fire before eating.
-
-Wah Shin had some cooked food ready, and, although it had not been
-improved by its long soaking, hunger made it very palatable.
-
-After the fire was started, Wah Shin and Ike, thoroughly exhausted, and
-it may be more weary in feeling because unburdened with the
-responsibility of the situation, lay down on the sun-heated rocks and
-were soon asleep.
-
-"You must be tired also, Ulna. Lie down and I will look around and see
-if I can find a way out of this," said Sam, laying his hand on the
-handsome young Indian's shoulder.
-
-"I will not say that I could not lie down and go to sleep at once,"
-replied Ulna, "but if you are going to search I shall go with you. I
-know how you feel about your father, and that thought is always in my
-heart; so if you stay awake to work, I must do the same."
-
-[Illustration: _Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping
-rocks._]
-
-The two youths shook hands, and after seeing that their rifles were in
-order and loaded they slung them over their shoulders and started off.
-
-They clambered over huge masses of white sandstone rock that had fallen
-in from the sides of the caon, like the ruin of a giant's stronghold,
-and at every step they could see by the drift-wood that the present
-flood had been preceded by others much higher.
-
-Compared with the great pillars of stone scattered about them each was
-impressed with the idea that his companion must have shrunk, he looked
-in contrast with his surroundings so much smaller than usual.
-
-After much searching and climbing they came to a great rift in the caon
-wall that led up to the blue sky, and seemed to promise an outlet from
-these awful depths.
-
-At the discovery Sam could not restrain a cry of joy, and even Ulna's
-usually impassive face was illuminated with the light of hope.
-
-"I can see nothing to stop us!" said Sam, as with the activity of a
-mountain lion he sprang up the defile.
-
-But it was three thousand feet to the top of the rift, and from their
-position they could not see all the obstacles that lay in their way.
-
-But like the poet's Alpine climber, the motto was Excelsior!--higher
-up--and with stout hearts they faced the unknown path that promised
-access to the upper world and then to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-They clambered up and on, the way becoming narrower and steeper at each
-step, while here and there their course was made difficult by huge
-bowlders that had fallen in from above.
-
-After fully three hours hard work, and just when it seemed that a little
-more exertion would take them to the summit, the cleft came to an end in
-a precipice fully a hundred feet in height, though from the bottom it
-looked only like a step that a child might overcome.
-
-Sam was so cast down by his discovery that he leaned against the side of
-the cliff and pressing his hands to his eyes, he groaned:
-
-"Oh, my poor father, what will become of him! What will he think of my
-absence?"
-
-"He will know that if you could you would come to him; and those who
-keep him and Hank Tims prisoners need not to be told about the flood.
-They will give us time to get back, I am sure they will give us time,"
-said Ulna, and he took Sam's hand and pressed it affectionately.
-
-They had made a bold attempt and failed, and now there was nothing left
-but to make their way back to the place where they had left the raft
-tied, and Ike and Wah Shin were sleeping on the rocks.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.--A TRYING SITUATION.
-
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were guarded by a number of the vigilantes,
-and with these men, who appeared to be rough but honest fellows, they
-talked about their trying situation.
-
-It will be remembered that Frank Shirley and Badger spent money freely
-during that first rainy day in order to get the miners drunk, believing
-that while they were in that state they could be led to destroy the
-prisoners without even the appearance of a trial.
-
-In addition to making two-thirds of the men drunk, Shirley poisoned
-their minds by telling them what a very bad man Mr. Willett had been in
-Detroit, and he intimated, in a way more powerful than a direct
-accusation, that he had poisoned his wife.
-
-The result of all this was that by the evening of that rainy day a great
-mob, inflamed with liquor and driven into fury by lies, was shouting for
-the lives of Mr. Willett and his companion.
-
-The guards not having been subjected to the influence of the bars were
-calm and determined to do what they believed to be their duty.
-
-Soon after dark one of the guards, a tall, rugged man named Collins came
-into the tent, and, turning up the lamp that hung from the pole in the
-center, he said:
-
-"I'm afraid, gents, we are goin' to have trouble."
-
-"Trouble!" repeated Mr. Willett, as he rose from the blanket on which he
-had been lying. "I don't see how our trouble can be increased."
-
-"I'll tell you how," said Collins, evidently very much excited. "You
-know those of us here at Hurley's Gulch that are in for doin' about
-what's right, want to give you gents a fair show."
-
-"That is what I want to believe," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Well, I'm very much afeerd that things has took a change for the
-worst."
-
-Collins hesitated, and Mr. Willett said:
-
-"For the worse! What do you mean?"
-
-"I mean that this man Frank Shirley, who says he's yer dead wife's
-cousin, has made most of the men crazy drunk, for as it's been stormin'
-and as the krik is up the boys couldn't work to-day. Then Shirley's give
-out that he knowed you in Detroit, and that you was a very bad man back
-there."
-
-"If you men knew this Shirley as well as I do," said Mr. Willett, his
-brown cheeks flushing with indignation, "you would not believe him under
-oath. But what has this to do with my case? Have they not agreed to wait
-till my son comes here with the papers to prove I paid Edwards in full
-for his claim at Gold Cave Gulch?"
-
-"Yes, they agreed to that when they was sober."
-
-"But, surely, Mr. Collins, they do not think differently now," said Mr.
-Willett.
-
-"I'm afeerd they do. Hark! don't you hear 'em a-hollerin' and yellin'
-and shootin' off their pistols?"
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims must have heard the noise even had their
-hearing been less acute, for every minute it came nearer and nearer.
-
-"When men get drunk," said Hank, "they become brutes. But you are here
-to guard us, an' you are sober an' have yer judgment an' senses about
-you. Now, Mr. Collins, do you know what I'd advise?"
-
-"What?" asked Collins, who seemed at a loss what to do under the trying
-circumstances.
-
-"Either protect us till we've had a trial, or else give us back our
-rifles and pistols and let us protect ourselves. What do you say?"
-
-"I want to stand by you," said Collins, "but before I can 'gree to
-anything I must see my friends."
-
-He hurried out, and, blending with the yelling of the intoxicated mob,
-the prisoners could hear the low tones of men in earnest conversation
-just outside the tent.
-
-"What do you think of the situation, Hank?" asked Mr. Willett, when they
-were again alone.
-
-"I think it is mighty bad," was the reply.
-
-"But you surely do not think those men will shoot us down in cold
-blood?"
-
-"They've done such things before. If they was only sober they'd do near
-right as they know how, but they ain't. Just hear how they yell! Talk
-about Injuns an' savages, a drunken white man is meaner and more
-bloodthirsty than all of 'em put together. Ah! It'd be a heap sight
-better world if thar was never a drop of whisky in it," and Hank sighed
-and shook his head.
-
-He had but just ceased speaking when the flap of the tent was again
-raised and Collins re-entered. This time he brought the rifles and
-pistols that had been taken from the prisoners.
-
-"Here!" he said, "we've agreed not to let you be kilt without a show.
-But we may git you to a place where you'll be safe till the mob has a
-chance to cool down. Quick! put on these things and foller me."
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank fastened on their belts, and when they had done so,
-Collins put out the lamp and led the way out of the tent.
-
-It was very dark outside and the rain had been followed by a fierce
-gale.
-
-"Hang on to my arms, so's we won't git parted," said Collins as he
-stepped between the two men whom he was gallantly determined to save
-from the fury of the mob.
-
-They hurried on through the darkness, the yelling of the crowd gradually
-dying out behind them.
-
-It seemed to Mr. Willett that they had walked several miles, and he was
-wondering how their guide could be certain of his way in the inky
-darkness, for from the time of starting he never hesitated for a moment,
-when Collins came to a halt and said:
-
-"This is the place. Now foller behind me and be very keerful, for the
-path is steep and slippery, and if you should chance to lose your
-footin' you'd shoot into the creek whar the water's forty foot deep
-'bout this time."
-
-Bracing themselves they followed Collins down a steep bank till they
-came to the very edge of the seething torrent, then up along the uneven
-shore they went for about a hundred yards and turned sharply to the
-right.
-
-At length they found themselves standing before a rock and wondering
-what would happen next.
-
-They were not long in doubt, for Collins lit a dark-lantern and its
-glance of golden light revealed an opening in the rock very much like
-the entrance to the old abode at Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"This is whar me and Si Brill, my pardner, hold out," said Collins as he
-led the way into the cave.
-
-The place was somewhat contracted, but it had two beds, a fire-place and
-cooking appliances, so that space was not a matter of any importance.
-
-"I must thank you, my friend," said Mr. Willett with a great sense of
-relief, "and I hope to be able to prove to you before long that your
-kindness and courage have been exercised for innocent men."
-
-"Yes," added Hank, "and for two men that would rather do a right, even
-if it put them out of the way, than to think a wrong that paid big."
-
-"I'll stand by you," said Collins, "and you must stand by me, for if it
-was knowed I fotched you har, them fellers would make short work of me
-and Si Brill. Si's back at the tent and I must go and hunt him up. But
-what I was a goin' to say is, don't try to light out. Stay har till we
-can have a fair trial. You'll find lots of grub in this corral, and I
-don't want you to be hungry. When your son comes over from Gold Cave
-Camp, Mr. Willett, I'll fotch him to you at once. And now, good-night,
-for I won't be back again before sun-up."
-
-"We certainly appreciate your kindness, Mr. Collins," said Mr. Willett
-as he took the sturdy miner's hand, "and I can assure you that Hank and
-I will remain here till you say we are free to leave."
-
-"And if we get well out of this scrape an' you should chance to be in
-the same fix," said Hank, "you ken bet your last cent we'll stand by you
-as one good man should stand by another."
-
-Putting out his lamp and warning them not to venture outside the cave
-till they saw him again, Collins scrambled out and made his way back to
-the tent in which the prisoners had been confined.
-
-He found that the canvas had been torn down and slashed to pieces with
-knives in the hands of the furious mob.
-
-The shouting and the occasional pistol shots told that the mob had gone
-back to the saloon, and while Collins was wondering whether he should go
-there or not, he was joined by his partner, Si Brill.
-
-"What's up now, Si?" asked Collins.
-
-"I'm afeerd we're in for it," was the reply.
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"The mob believes we run the prizners off----"
-
-"They do, eh?"
-
-"Yes, and they swear if they ain't brought back by daylight, you and me
-will have to fight for it."
-
-"Well," said Collins slowly, "they ken have a fight."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.--THE VOYAGE IS RESUMED.
-
-
-When Sam Willett and Ulna returned to the camp they found Ike, Wah Shin
-and the dog lying on the rocks near the dying fire.
-
-Although they had been sleeping for nearly five hours, it was with
-difficulty that Ike could be aroused, and when he did sit up and rub his
-eyes, he declared with laughable solemnity that he had only been asleep
-a few minutes.
-
-"If you look at the sun I think you will see you are mistaken," said
-Sam, pointing to the west.
-
-"Dat sun," said Ike, with the fine contempt of one who had lost all
-faith in the luminary that rules the day; "I don't got no use foh it.
-'Tain't like the sun we uster know way back at Detroit. Wy, sometimes he
-gets up and hurries across the sky like a race-horse, an' sometimes he
-don't get up foh weeks an' weeks. He's foolin' us, dat's all I got to
-say." And Ike rose and yawned till he showed every tooth in his
-capacious mouth.
-
-"I gottee heap muchee sleep, me no sleep mole foh twenty-one day," said
-Wah Shin, who seemed determined not to agree with Ike in this matter.
-
-"If ebber I should get out of this yar scrape, an' I should hab lots of
-money an' plenty ob time," said Ike with comical earnestness, "I'll go
-off to some place whar it ain't dark most all de time, an' I'll sleep in
-de sun foh weeks an' weeks an' weeks at a stretch, an' don't you forgit
-it."
-
-As it was now about three o'clock in the afternoon Sam, after consulting
-with Ulna, and recalling their experience of the night before, decided
-not to launch their raft till the following morning.
-
-Wishing more than ever that he was a bird, Ike went off with Wah Shin to
-gather fuel, and Sam and Ulna, both much exhausted, lay down to get a
-little much needed sleep.
-
-When they closed their eyes the western sun was flooding the caon with
-a river of golden glory, when they woke up "night had let her sable
-curtain down and pinned it with a star."
-
-A great fire was blazing near by, and Ike and Wah Shin were preparing
-supper, while Maj sat licking his chops and eagerly watching the
-operations.
-
-Sam had already divided the provisions, so that with care, "an' not
-eatin' nigh's much as they felt like," to use Ike's words, they could
-manage to live without much suffering for another week.
-
-After supper Ike startled the company by saying:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam, I'ze got an offer to make."
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-Before proceeding Ike turned and pointed to the parcels containing their
-little stock of food.
-
-"Ain't I de owner ob one-quarter ob dat grub?"
-
-"You shall have your share, Ike; but why do you ask?" said Sam, who half
-guessed what was coming.
-
-"I've eat my share for to-night."
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"An' I still feel as holler as a drum," and Ike rolled his eyes and
-tightened his belt.
-
-"You have had as much as the rest," said Sam.
-
-"Oh, I ain't a complainin'; no one won't say, Mistah Sam, dat you don't
-tote fair, but heah's de pint I wants to git at----"
-
-"Go on, Ike."
-
-"You let me have all my share now."
-
-"What would you do with it?"
-
-"Do wif it!" echoed Ike. "Wy, I'd sit right down an' gib it all a inside
-passage. I'd a heap sight rudder hab one good, squar meal dan a hundred
-scrimpsy ones. Dar ain't no pleasure in stoppin' jest when yeh wants to
-keep right on eatin'."
-
-"Nevertheless we must all do it, Ike. We are not eating for pleasure,
-but to keep alive till we get out of this place."
-
-"Wa'al, if we ebber does git out, an' I can sit down before grub an' eat
-all I wants, dat grub will suffer--if I has any strent left," and Ike
-sat down and watched Maj with a hungry look that boded no good to that
-faithful creature.
-
-Sam had often been surprised at Ulna's gentle manners and the excellent
-English he spoke; he seemed so little like the wild Indians he had read
-about that he was anxious to know something of his life, but from
-feelings of delicacy he had never asked him about his past up to this
-time. By way of passing the time before setting the guard, he asked Ulna
-where he had learned English so well.
-
-"In the Mission School at Taos," said Ulna. "My father, who was a
-brother of our chief, Uray, was killed in the Sierra Madre Mountains, by
-the Hill, or Arizona, Apaches, when I was a little child."
-
-"And your mother?" suggested Sam.
-
-"She could read and write, and she could speak Spanish and English as
-well as the language of her own people; all this she had learned in the
-school at Taos, to which place the good missionaries took her when she
-was a child; that was long before the white man crowded into this land."
-
-"Is your mother living?"
-
-"Yes, and my sister; she is a year older than I, and she is very good.
-Two years ago my mother, who still lived at Taos, married a white man--a
-Mexican. I did not like him and I ran away and joined the tribe. But I
-did not like the ways of our people, though I felt that their free life
-on the hills and along the great rivers was the only one to live. Yes, I
-have much of the white man's knowledge, and I am glad of it. Still, my
-heart has ever hungered for the free life of the Ute. No matter what
-befalls me, I do not complain; the Great Spirit rules and directs all,"
-and as Ulna ceased speaking, he uncovered his head and raised his
-handsome, expressive face to the stars.
-
-"I thank you for telling me this," said Sam, taking the young Indian's
-hand and pressing it warmly, while he added: "It does not make me love
-you any the less or more, Ulna, but somehow I think that the more good
-people know of each other the warmer friends they become."
-
-"Dem's my sentiments," said Ike, who looked as if he had been sleeping,
-though he must have been wide awake. "Foh instants, when I didn't know
-Mistah Sam, I didn't like him at all; but now dat I does know him
-better'n any one in de world, w'y as a consekence I likes him a heap
-sight more'n I does any one in de world."
-
-Sam had been inclined to feel angry with Ike when he spoke in the way he
-did about dividing the food, but this little expression of genuine
-sentiment on the black boy's part quite touched his heart, and he showed
-his feeling by saying:
-
-"Ah, Ike, you may have a hungry stomach, but it cannot be truthfully
-said that you haven't got a kindly heart."
-
-"Bimeby, mebbe, I tell you sometings all 'bout me, Wah Shin," said the
-Chinaman, who felt that he must add something to the expressions of
-good-fellowship.
-
-After a little further talk, in which they discussed the situation and
-vainly tried to guess where they were, Sam gave the order in which the
-guards should be called and handed his watch to Ike, whose turn came
-first, and lay down on the blankets, which were quite dry and
-comfortable by this time.
-
-To prove that Ike was not in the least selfish, though his display of
-healthy-boy appetite might lead us to a different belief, it is but just
-to him to say that when his two hours guard were up, he did not call
-Sam, whose turn it was next, and who appeared to be sleeping very
-soundly, but he stood the whole four hours on watch and then awoke Wah
-Shin, and, after whispering to him what he had done added:
-
-"Mistah Sam's got the keer of all on his shoulders, an' he needs all de
-sleep he kin git. W'y, I ken sleep any time; he can't, so I sez, let's
-let him sleep his fill w'ile he's at it."
-
-They were up again before daylight, and the allowance of food for
-breakfast made ready, a portion being set apart for Maj, for though the
-dog was not at all a useful member of the little band, indeed, his
-consumption of rations for one made him undesirable, yet Sam could not
-find it in his heart to put the faithful creature out of the way.
-
-There was no need to discuss the course they should next take; there was
-only one avenue that held out the promise of escape, and that was the
-swift stream rushing by their resting place to an unknown landing.
-
-By this time all hands had become quite expert in loading and unloading
-the raft, so that it did not take them long to get under way this
-morning, each one in his accustomed place and Maj crouching down on the
-blankets in the center.
-
-The rope was untied, and, with the pole in his hand, Sam stood up
-behind, and again they were sweeping down on the red waters of this
-wonderful river.
-
-As they drifted between the precipitous banks that seemed to grow higher
-and higher with the passing of each bend, Sam recalled all he had ever
-heard or read about the mighty Colorado of the West and its wonderful
-caon. He remembered that it was four hundred miles of continuous caon
-wall from the point where the Green and Grand Rivers united to the
-Mormon settlement at Virgin River, where the caon walls give place to a
-wide valley.
-
-He shuddered but kept his thoughts to himself, for he wisely reasoned
-that no good could result from frightening his companions by a true
-picture of the dangers that lay before them.
-
-For himself he believed that there must be some opening by which they
-could leave the caon before traversing its length, and this hope was
-not darkened with the thought that such an avenue of escape, if used,
-might not better their condition.
-
-They drifted on till the middle of the afternoon, passing many side
-caons which it was impossible to enter, when they suddenly found their
-raft swept by a whirling current, that boiled about them like the waves
-of a storm-tossed sea.
-
-They looked up, to find that the towering gray walls had broken into
-mighty pillars that rose for thousands of feet into the sky.
-
-It was the junction of the Green and Grand Rivers, and the piled up,
-roaring and irresistible flood was caused by the coming together of the
-two currents.
-
-The scene that presented itself at this point was indescribably sublime,
-and even the dangers of the situation were forgotten for the moment in
-the awful grandeur of their surroundings.
-
-Although Sam still stood bravely up, his pole was useless to control the
-movements of the raft, which was borne with the speed of a swallow's
-flight into the whirlpool, about which the waters circled and danced, as
-if celebrating their meeting in these wild depths.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.--WHIRLED AWAY.
-
-
-As the raft was being swept into the whirlpool, Ike and Wah Shin sent up
-a shriek of alarm that rose high above the roar of the waters, and Maj
-crouched down lower on the blankets and moaned piteously.
-
-Ulna sat in his accustomed place. He did not make a movement, nor did
-the expression of his face change as they were being whirled to what
-seemed certain death.
-
-As nothing could be done to avert the impending catastrophe, Sam uttered
-a prayer, drew in his pole to save himself from being swept off and then
-sat as calmly and stoically down as if he were a young brave.
-
-There was a central vortex about which the waters swept with the speed
-of a mill-stream, and for this point--as if forced on by an irresistible
-power, the raft plunged.
-
-It seemed like going down a hill on a sled. Once fairly under way there
-was nothing to stop it.
-
-With one quick glance from the center of the whirlpool to the pillars
-piercing the sky, Sam closed his eyes expecting the next instant would
-be the last.
-
-But instead of rushing down to death, he was called back to an interest
-in his surroundings by feeling a peculiarly soothing, swinging sensation
-in the raft.
-
-He opened his eyes and looked about him, and to his unutterable surprise
-they were being swept about the mighty whirlpool, like a ball at the end
-of a string in a strong man's hand.
-
-Nearer and nearer to the center, until it seemed that the fraction of a
-second must bring the fatal plunge, and then the raft would be suddenly
-flung to the outer edge of the whirlpool again.
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, as he looked about him and winked very fast,
-"dis am curus."
-
-"Too muchee, swing, swing!" cried Wah Shin, as the raft hung again on
-the edge of the vortex, only to be hurled a second time to the outer
-edge.
-
-This swinging was at first a decidedly pleasant sensation, but soon it
-made the passengers on the raft giddy and then quite sick.
-
-It was only by keeping their eyes shut that they could command their
-senses.
-
-A half an hour of this whirling to the center and being thrown back to
-the edge continued, though it seemed much longer to the tortured
-occupants of the raft, and Sam spoke his thoughts rather than addressed
-any of his companions when he said:
-
-"Will this go on forever?"
-
-"It do look to me powahful-like's if we was a-gwine to sikle round dis
-yar place foheber an' eber, amen," said Ike.
-
-Sam looked up again at the sky, and the crimson hue of the clouds told
-him that the sun would soon sink in the upper world and that darkness
-would soon come to add to their trials.
-
-He felt that whether the raft was swallowed up or continued to swing in
-that giddy dance till morning would make but little difference to
-himself or his companions, for in either case death would come before
-morning.
-
-His brave heart grew heavy, as if the darkness of descending night were
-falling on it.
-
-He thought of his dead mother, thought of the imprisoned father, whom he
-had set out so heroically to save, and the death that threatened was
-only awful to him because he was to see his father nevermore.
-
-While these thoughts were running through his mind he felt a different
-movement in the raft. This was followed by a cheer from Ike and Wah Shin
-and the loud barking of the dog.
-
-Sam looked quickly up.
-
-Joy! joy! In some inexplicable way the raft had been hurled so far
-beyond the circle of the whirlpool's power as to be caught by the
-current and carried into the Colorado, which here begins its journey
-under that name, for the Gulf of California.
-
-Even Ulna was roused from his usual stoicism by the change. Pointing to
-the right, where in the twilight a low peninsula could be seen jutting
-into the river, he called to Sam:
-
-"Let us steer for that point. I think we can make a landing there."
-
-"All right," replied Sam with his habitual cheerfulness.
-
-Ulna now took up his own pole, and after much effort they succeeded in
-getting the raft to the low point, and here, without difficulty, they
-made a landing.
-
-As there was neither tree nor rock to tie to they pulled the raft high
-up on the strip of beach, and then looked around, but without success,
-for the means to make a fire.
-
-It was too dark to see ten feet away, so they sat on the rocks after
-making the discovery that what they supposed to be a peninsula was
-really an island.
-
-But they made another discovery at the same time that was destined to
-affect their progress very seriously, and that was that one-half the
-provisions had in some way been pushed or slipped from the raft; but
-they were lost, and hunger, or rather, starvation was only a few days
-off.
-
-They ate a little of their remaining provisions and then spread the
-blankets on the low, damp ground.
-
-Sam Willett had a military idea of the value of discipline. Having begun
-with having guards at night, he determined to keep it up till the end.
-
-The wisdom of this precaution was shown before another sun came to
-banish the shadows.
-
-About an hour before daylight Ulna, who was then watching, discovered
-that the flood was rising around them, and hastily awoke his companions.
-
-They sprang up to find the water roaring about them, and Sam, holding
-the raft to keep it from floating off, ordered the others to bundle up
-the blankets and get all the things on board.
-
-As soon as this was done they pushed the raft into deeper water, got on
-board and were at once swept away by the current.
-
-Such trials would have crushed the spirits of any but the bravest, and
-with a less resolute leader than Sam, despair would have made the others
-indifferent to their surroundings.
-
-While it was yet as dark as midnight in the caon, they could look up
-and see pink streaks in the far-off sky that told them the light of
-another day was again flushing the upper world.
-
-But the sun only looked into this gloomy abyss for one short hour in the
-twenty-four, and then left it to the gathering shadows and impenetrable
-night.
-
-It was ten o'clock by Sam's watch when they found a ledge of rocks on
-which they could make a landing.
-
-This haven was discovered none too soon, for the severe straining the
-raft had had in the whirlpool had loosened the cords that held the logs
-and they threatened to come apart and let all into the water.
-
-The remaining food was very much soaked, but their appetites were keen
-enough to eat the whole of it just as it was.
-
-Two more days would see all of their provisions gone, and, realizing
-this fact, Sam proposed dividing what was left so as to last over three
-days, but against this arrangement Ike and Wall Shin entered a protest.
-
-"Now, Mistah Sam," said Ike, "I ain't got nigh so much sinse as you has,
-but it'd been a heap sight bettah if you jest took my edvice."
-
-"Your advice about what, Ike?" asked Sam.
-
-"'Bout dat grub."
-
-"What about it?"
-
-"I proposed, night afore last, we should all go in and eat all we
-could--now, didn't I?"
-
-"I believe, Ike, you did say something like that."
-
-"An' you said 'no;' so w'at's the consekence?"
-
-"The consequence is, Ike, that you obeyed me then, and I expect you to
-obey me still," said Sam firmly.
-
-"Yes; an' I'll keep on obeyin' you till I die, but har's de pint," and
-Ike spread out his hand and looked at the palm as if he were reading.
-"If we'd hab eat a lot more ob dat grub, den dar wouldn't have been so
-much lost. Wouldn't it be a heap sight better if we had dat stuff inside
-ob us dan at de bottom ob dat ar whirlpole?"
-
-"We did everything for the best, Ike, and therefore we should not blame
-ourselves," said Sam.
-
-"I no tinkee dat glub's in watel," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Whar is it, den?" asked Ike.
-
-"I tink Maj he lookee muchee fat. Him no so hungly like befole; mebbe
-him eatee glub."
-
-The object of this awful accusation sat near by eyeing the little stock
-of provisions as if he could dispose of the lot without feeling any
-great discomfort.
-
-"No," said Ulna, who usually listened to these conversations without
-taking part in them; "the dog did not eat that food."
-
-"W'y you tinkee no?" asked Wah Shin.
-
-"Because the bag in which the food was placed is gone, and the dog could
-not have eaten that."
-
-"Me no so shule bout lat," said Wah Shin. "W'en dog him heap hungly him
-eat bag too."
-
-Clearly Ike and Wah Shin had formed a conspiracy against the dog, and
-this only confirmed Sam in his attachment to the poor brute, though more
-than once he wished that he was in some other place.
-
-Sam and Ulna at once set about repairing the raft, and while they were
-engaged in this work Ike showed that he had unbounded faith in his young
-master's knowledge by asking these questions:
-
-"Mistah Sam, w'at you tink bout dis time?"
-
-"Nothing, Ike," was the reply.
-
-"Know 'bout whar we is?"
-
-"I do not."
-
-"Know whar we'z goin'?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Nor whin we'll git dar?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Eber heah ob sich a fix?"
-
-"Never."
-
-"If we gits out ob dis yeh won't neber want to try anudder sich scrape,
-I reckon?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Ye've had enough?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"So has I, but dar's no use a gibbin' up so, Mistah Brown!" and then
-with a sudden change of manner that startled all hands, the dog
-included, Ike sang out in a rich tenor voice.
-
- "Oh fust was made de sun,
- An' den was made de sky,
- An' den dey made de earf
- An' hung it up to dry,
- An' den de made de star, outer yalla gals' eyes
- Foh to gib a little light
- W'en de sun don't rise."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.--ORDER AND DISORDER.
-
-
-The storm died out over Hurley's Gulch, and except for the high current
-in the creek there was nothing to indicate that the land had been
-recently deluged.
-
-The bluest of cloudless skies bent over the landscape; the verdureless
-rocks glistened in the light of the sun, as if they had recently been
-subjected to a furnace heat instead of being drenched by a flood.
-
-The lines of the Sierra Madre Mountains, to the east, were so clear and
-sharply defined that they seemed to be but a short walk away instead of
-being seventy miles.
-
-Only the ragged tents and dilapidated cabins showed the effects of the
-storm; perhaps we should include the crowd of red-eyed miners, who, with
-the evidences of unbridled dissipation on their faces, crowded about the
-principal saloon.
-
-Frank Shirley and Badger were disappointed in the work they had planned
-for the night before.
-
-They had spent much money and time in working the mob up to a pitch of
-unreasoning and brutal frenzy, and yet nothing had been done.
-
-"'Tain't the boys' fault," said Badger, as on the following morning he
-and Frank Shirley walked along the banks of the creek.
-
-"Whose fault is it, then?" asked Shirley, sulkily.
-
-"Why, it's the fault of them other two fellers--Collins and Brill--that
-was sot to guard the prizners; they ain't no good; they've gone clar
-back on us," said Badger, with an angry light in his single eye.
-
-"Well, I left the management to you, and I don't understand why you
-failed," said Shirley, who evidently felt that the man he had employed
-to do his vile work was not keeping his part of the contract.
-
-"If a man don't win first time is he agoin' to give up and never try
-again?" and Badger answered his own question by adding: "Not if he's got
-the right kind of stuff in him."
-
-"But what are we to do next? You see, I must have this man out of the
-way. If he lives then I have no show to get the fortune."
-
-"I thought it all depended on the boy's livin'."
-
-"So it does, but you know our plan."
-
-"I do that, and I'm goin' to stick to it. Don't lose patience; this yar
-world wasn't made in a day. Time is allers well-spent on a big job."
-
-By this time they had come in their walk to the tent in which the
-prisoners were confined the night before.
-
-The tent, as has been said, lay torn on the ground, but the knives of
-the mob and not the storm had made the rents.
-
-Collins and Brill, both seemingly very angry, were talking to a lot of
-the miners when Badger pushed through the crowd and said:
-
-"You two is purty guards."
-
-"We didn't ask your opinion," said Brill, hotly.
-
-"Still I feel like givin' it. Whar's the prizners?"
-
-"They are safe," said Collins.
-
-"Safe whar?"
-
-"In my charge."
-
-"But whar have you hid 'em?"
-
-"Where a lot of drunken ruffians can do them no harm till they have had
-a fair trial," said Brill.
-
-"Drunken ruffians!" retorted Badger, with a cool effrontery that won the
-admiration of his employer, "we ain't murderers at any rate. And if we
-did want to do for them two, that you've hid away in yer dugout, as I
-believe, it was to prevent others from doin' like 'em. When you are a
-savin' of them, you'd orter think of poor Tom Edwards, as is dead and
-buried."
-
-"I started out to see that them two men had a fair trial," said Collins,
-stoutly, "and I'm goin' to do it. We've sent other messengers for that
-boy with the paper, and if he don't show up with it, why then, I'll be
-in for trial. But let me warn you fellers that there's men in this camp
-that means to see fair play, and if you don't like our way of doin'
-business, Badger, just step to one side and say so to me, and I'll give
-you all the chance you want to larn who's best man."
-
-As Collins spoke he laid his hand on the stock of his pistol and there
-was a set to his firm lips and a light in his keen gray eyes that there
-was no mistaking.
-
-Like all of his class, Badger was at heart a very great coward, and he
-proved it now.
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed, in a voice that trembled perceptibly, "I don't want
-to quar'l with you. I'm in for doin' what's right. But I tell you this,
-Collins, and you mark my words, that boy of Willett's ain't agoin' to
-show up in this camp with no paper."
-
-"We'll see about that," said Collins.
-
-"I'm willin' to bet on it," said Badger.
-
-"Have you got money to bet?"
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"Then my advise to you, Badger, is to start off and pay your debts
-instead of gambling with other people's money," and with this caustic
-shot, Collins turned on his heel and walked away with his partner,
-Brill.
-
-They had gone about fifty yards when Badger shouted after them:
-
-"See har, Collins!"
-
-"What is it?" asked Collins looking over his shoulder.
-
-"How long are we to wait for the trial?"
-
-"I told you till Mr. Willett's son comes."
-
-"A day?"
-
-"On account of the floods it may take three days."
-
-"Say three days then."
-
-"Wa'al, if it will make you fellers easier, I'll say three days!"
-
-"And then the trial?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Boy or no boy?"
-
-"Boy or no boy," replied Collins.
-
-"And if they're found guilty?"
-
-"Then me an' Brill will be in for punishin them as much as any man in
-your gang. Meantime it might be better if you fellers shut down on
-drinkin'."
-
-With this very sensible opinion Collins and Brill, each active and tall
-and with a rifle at his back, started off in the direction of their
-dugout.
-
-They told Mr. Willett and Hank Tims what had happened, and Brill added:
-
-"You're purty safe for three days, Mr. Willett, yet if I was you I don't
-think I'd leave this place or run the risk of meeting any of the gang
-drunk."
-
-These miners, like all brave fellows, were gentle and generous to the
-two men whom they took pains to treat as guests, so that they might
-forget that they were prisoners.
-
-The day following the events just narrated the man who had been sent by
-the vigilantes to Gold Cave Camp to hurry up Sam Willett with the
-all-important paper, came back on a weary horse, bringing with him a
-very startling report.
-
-The instant he dismounted before the canvas hotel he was greeted from
-all sides by queries like these:
-
-"Got back, Ned?"
-
-"Wot's the news?"
-
-"Whar's the boy?"
-
-"Wouldn't he come?"
-
-"You found thar wasn't any paper to fetch?"
-
-When the messenger had recovered his breath and the silence abated, he
-replied to all these questions in one sentence:
-
-"Thar wasn't no one at the caves!"
-
-"No one!" shouted a number.
-
-"Not a livin' soul."
-
-"Whar had they gone?" asked Badger.
-
-"The flood must have drowned 'em all out," said the messenger.
-
-"Did it rise as high as the caves?" asked one.
-
-"Yes; clear up to the top."
-
-"But they mout have got off afore the flood riz?" said Badger.
-
-"Wa'al," was the reply, "if they did git off, they must have gone inter
-hidin', for I sarched and sarched, and didn't see hair nor hide, nor
-sign nor trace of 'em."
-
-This news startled every one, but it brought intense pleasure to two.
-
-As soon as Frank Shirley and Badger could go off without attracting
-attention, they withdrew from the crowd, and the former asked:
-
-"What do you think of the news, Badger?"
-
-"Couldn't be better," said Badger.
-
-"Think the boy's drowned?"
-
-"He must be."
-
-"But might he not have escaped?"
-
-"How?"
-
-"In a boat or on a raft."
-
-"Wa'al," laughed Badger, "they didn't have no boat, and if they tried a
-raft, why that'd be the same as committin' suicide."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I mean that I've knowed of men as got into the great caon of the
-Colorado, but no one knows of any that came out on a raft. The boy's
-dead as a door nail by this time, and you're a rich man," said Badger,
-reaching out his hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.--THE PROVISIONS ALL GONE.
-
-
-When the raft was repaired, the blankets, arms, and little stock of food
-were put on board and securely fastened, each one took his accustomed
-place, with Maj in the middle, and the voyage was resumed.
-
-How far they had come, Sam had no means of telling, he only knew to his
-sorrow that he was being borne further and further away from his father.
-
-Without this awful anxiety on his mind, the situation would have been
-sufficient to shake the nerves and courage of a strong man.
-
-The brave youth felt that he was not only battling in these depths for
-his own life, but for the lives of those whom fate had thrown with him
-on this most thrilling voyage.
-
-He fully realized the situation, and the fortitude with which he faced
-it redounds the more to his credit.
-
-They were on a shaky raft at the bottom of the mightiest gorge in all
-the world.
-
-Even if they could reach the top, they would find themselves in the
-midst of an arid, trackless desert, cut up by other caons, across which
-naught but the mountain eagle could pass in safety.
-
-The hunger, ever gnawing at his vitals, kept before him the fact that
-their provisions were nearly out.
-
-If by dying, Sam could save his beloved father and return to safety his
-companions in these trials, he would not have hesitated about facing
-death; but as it was, he determined to do his full duty while his
-strength lasted, though no eye but God's appreciated the effort he was
-putting forth.
-
-The caon through which they were now passing, had the highest walls
-they had yet seen. For more than a mile their glistening gray sides shot
-up to the thin belt of dark blue sky, their summits crowned with
-pinnacles that in comparison would dwarf the highest and noblest
-structure ever built by human hands.
-
-As if resting after their mad dance in the whirlpool, the waters flowed
-calmly and silently down, yet with a speed that told Sam they were
-moving at the rate of about four miles an hour.
-
-The most wonderful thing about these depths was the dim twilight, and
-long before the sun went down in the upper world, the stars were visible
-from the bottom of the caon.
-
-As night approached the passengers scanned the shores eagerly, and
-looked ahead to every bend in the tortuous river, hoping they might be
-able to find a strip of shore or a ledge of rocks on which to make a
-landing, but in vain.
-
-"It don't look's if dar was any more shoah," said Ike, in a loud,
-frightened tone, that echoed from rock to rock for nearly a minute after
-he had spoken.
-
-"Not within sight," said Sam, with affected cheerfulness.
-
-"Den wat's we to do?"
-
-"We must keep on."
-
-"On de raft?"
-
-"The only chance is between that and the water."
-
-"Dat's so," said Ike, solemnly.
-
-"Too muchee watel, too lillee glub; no likee dis fix belly muchee," said
-Wah Shin.
-
-"You must try and rest as best you can," said Sam. "Ulna and I will take
-turns in steering the raft."
-
-"All night, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"Yes, Ike, all night."
-
-"Den you done lost faith in dis chile?"
-
-"I have not. Why do you ask?"
-
-"Coz, Mistah Sam, I ain't agoin' to sleep while you weah yorself out. I
-may be purty mean, but I ain't nigh so mean as dat. I ken steer in de
-dark as well as de next man, an' I'm agoin' fer to try, if so be you
-don't objeck."
-
-"Me, too; allee same like Ike. Me no steels so well likee me cookee, but
-I tly, too," said Wah Shin.
-
-"I am glad to see, boys," said Sam, feeling stronger for the spirit
-shown by his two most dependent companions, "that you are willing to do
-your part. If we come out all right, as I believe we shall, it will be
-because we never felt like giving up."
-
-"Dem's my sentiments," said Ike, heartily.
-
-"Me say allee same likee dat," joined in Wah Shin, who showed that he
-was coming out strong as their trials increased.
-
-Ulna spoke not a word, but in the dim and fading light his dark face
-glowed with a pride and pleasure more eloquent in its expression than
-words.
-
-To show that he appreciated their efforts, and with the belief that it
-would be better for all, if each was made to feel that he had an
-important share of the responsibility on his shoulders, Sam decided that
-they should take turns in steering during the night, in the same order
-that they would if on guard.
-
-These arrangements were hardly completed when the impenetrable darkness,
-to which no mortal with eyes could ever grow accustomed, came down on
-the caon.
-
-Sam had matches in a water-proof case, and with the help of these and
-his watch they were enabled to mark the hours during that long, dreary
-night.
-
-During the watches of heavy, painful darkness, the raft swept swiftly
-and silently on, meeting with no mishap but giving to its occupants the
-impression that they were falling down, down through the depths of a
-rayless and fathomless space.
-
-When it became light enough to see the next morning, Sam noticed that
-all his companions looked older, and he reasoned that this was due to
-hunger, mental anxiety and want of sleep.
-
-Even in the days of plenty, Ike was always ready to eat, and, as we have
-seen, the desire for more food was ever on his mind, from the hour when
-Sam thought it prudent to limit the rations.
-
-From the moment it was light enough to see he kept his eyes fastened on
-the little bag containing their remaining stock of provisions. It was
-evident, from the expression of his mouth, that he was trying to
-restrain his feelings, but unable to resist, he at length exclaimed:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam!"
-
-"What is it, Ike?" asked Sam, who already guessed what was coming.
-
-"How does yeh feel 'bout dis time?"
-
-"Pretty well, Ike; how are you?"
-
-"I'ze mighty holler!" groaned Ike, and he pressed his hand over his belt
-and bent himself forward in a most comical way.
-
-"Hungry, Ike?"
-
-"Hungry!" repeated Ike, "dat ar' word don't nigh begin foh to 'spress
-jest how I feel."
-
-"Cheer up, Ike; we'll find a landing-place presently, and then we'll
-have something hot."
-
-"W'en a feller's as holler an' hungry as I am, he ain't so mighty
-partickler whedder do grub's hot or cole. De question wif him is, is dar
-enough to fill up all de emptiness."
-
-"Very true, Ike----"
-
-Sam's sentence was cut short by an exclamation from Ulna, who had risen
-to his feet and was pointing to a line of shore on the left, where grew
-a cluster of stunted bushes.
-
-They succeeded in getting the raft to this point and made a landing
-without any difficulty.
-
-Here they found a great quantity of drift-wood, and Wah Shin and Ike
-started a fire while Sam and Ulna, with an eye to the future, selected
-some stout pieces of timber with which to strengthen their raft.
-
-"Don't you t'ink," asked Ike as he pointed to their little stock of
-food, "dat dar ain't no use in makin' two bites ob a cherry?"
-
-"Why do you ask that, Ike?"
-
-"Coz, dar ain't more'n nuff grub dar foh one right-down, honest, squar
-meal, an' if us was to eat it, we'd all feel a heap sight bettah."
-
-"But the future, Ike?"
-
-"Wa'al, sah, I ain't hungry in de futah; Ize hungry right jest now at
-dis bressed minute."
-
-"Me feel allee same like dat," said Wah Shin.
-
-As this was exactly how Sam and the uncomplaining Ulna felt, the former
-gave orders to warm up all the food and divide it into five shares, one
-of which was to be for Maj.
-
-They had a good supply of coffee left and a few pounds of bread with a
-like quantity of meat.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe that feast. Only those who have long
-endured the pangs of hunger can appreciate it.
-
-Each one rose from the banquet much relieved and refreshed, and in their
-enjoyment of the present they quite lost sight of the fact that their
-last particle of food was gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.--DANGER AHEAD.
-
-
-After their last hearty meal, which finished up the provisions, Sam
-Willett and his friends felt better, stronger and warmer than they had
-since the beginning of this wonderful voyage.
-
-It is one of the blessings and charms of youth that while it enjoys the
-present and anticipates the happiness of the future, it steadily ignores
-all thoughts of coming afflictions.
-
-Ike was boisterous in his hilarity; he danced about the fire, as if "the
-squar meal" had had an intoxicating effect on him; and, at length,
-unable to restrain himself, he burst into the following snatch from an
-old plantation song:
-
- "Oh! don't you know Miss Dinah Crane,
- She's 'gwine to be married;
- Glad am I, an' dat's a fac,
- For berry long she's tarried.
-
- "So fotch along de wine an' de hoe cake too,
- De gumbo an' de cream,
- An' don't fergit de weddin' cake
- On wich we darkies dream!
-
- "For we will larf an' sing all day,
- Hooraw, hooraw, hooraw!
- An' on de banjo sweetly play
- With a zip, yaw, yaw--yaw, yaw!"
-
-Even Ulna smiled at this performance, and Maj chased his tail and barked
-till the caon walls rang with the echoes.
-
-The strip of shore, on which they were encamped, extended from their
-landing place for some distance down the river, so before launching the
-raft again, Sam thought it would be well for Ulna and himself to make an
-examination as far as they could do so on foot.
-
-Taking their rifles, which were loaded with metallic cartridges that the
-water could not injure, they started off, first telling Ike and Wah Shin
-to take advantage of their absence to get some sleep.
-
-They walked and clambered along the shore for about half a mile, when
-there came to their ears a hoarse, deep, monotonous roar.
-
-"What is that?" asked Sam, coming to a sudden halt and laying his hand
-on Ulna's arm.
-
-"I don't know," was the quiet reply.
-
-"From what direction does the sound come?"
-
-"From down the river."
-
-"It must be the water?"
-
-"There is nothing else to make a noise down here."
-
-"I once heard the roar of the great fall at Niagara, and that brings it
-to my mind. Let us move on," said Sam.
-
-Again they resumed their journey.
-
-At times they were forced to creep along the edge, knee deep in water,
-but they did not mind this.
-
-After going about three hundred yards further down, they came to an
-irregular rock, up whose sides they climbed in the hope of getting a
-better view of the river below.
-
-They were not disappointed in their purpose, but the prospect that met
-their gaze was well calculated to dismay the stoutest heart.
-
-Their vision was limited by a bend in the river a quarter of a mile
-below, but between this and the rock on which they stood, the water was
-white with foam as it roared and tumbled over a series of rapids, in the
-midst of which black rocks appeared like the heads of monstrous
-creatures.
-
-This sight was so appalling that neither Sam nor Ulna could utter a word
-for some seconds, but stood looking from the maddened waters into each
-other's frightened face.
-
-Sam was the first to speak:
-
-"Oh, Ulna, that is awful!"
-
-"Bad," was the laconic reply.
-
-"What are we to do?"
-
-"I cannot tell."
-
-"We can't go back the way we came?"
-
-"No," said Ulna, and he emphasized this opinion by a vigorous shake of
-the head.
-
-"We can't get out by climbing up the walls?"
-
-"I wish we could," said Ulna.
-
-"Then," continued Sam, "there are only two courses open to us."
-
-"Only two."
-
-"One is to try and go down the rapids on the raft."
-
-"And the other," added Ulna, "is to remain where the raft now is and
-starve to death."
-
-"And have you a choice, Ulna."
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"If I am to die, I want to die resisting."
-
-"Then you are for trying the rapids?"
-
-"I am; but I shall do as you say."
-
-"I say 'go on.'"
-
-Sam reached out and took Ulna's hand, and so they stood for some minutes
-looking at the frightful rapids which they had decided to face.
-
-It was now about noon, there was fully five hours of daylight left, and
-they decided to avail themselves of it to test the rapids.
-
-Sam reasoned that the thing had to be done, and the sooner the
-experiment was made the better, and in addition to this he knew that
-there was no more food left, and that from this time on himself and his
-companions would grow weaker and weaker for the effort.
-
-They turned to walk back, Sam clambering along the giddy ledge of the
-rock which rose straight up from the water. He was a few yards in
-advance of Ulna, for whose immediate safety he had no fear, when he was
-brought to a sudden stand, and his heart stopped beating, and the cold
-sweat came out on his forehead at hearing a short, quick cry of alarm
-behind him.
-
-The cry was followed by a splash, and turning, Sam saw that Ulna had
-fallen from the rock into the fierce current that roared and foamed
-above its base.
-
-Sam threw aside his rifle and sprang back to the rescue of the young
-Indian, but before he had gone ten feet Ulna was fifty yards away,
-bravely battling with the maddened waters, above whose roar came the
-words:
-
-"God bless you! Farewell!"
-
-Sam stood petrified with horror.
-
-To plunge into the water and attempt to help Ulna in that way would be
-madness.
-
-Even as Sam watched he could see the brave face becoming more and more
-indistinct as it rose and fell on the surges, and then with a wave of
-the arm vanished out of sight behind the distant bend of the river.
-
-Overcome with his emotions, Sam sat down on the rock, and pressing his
-hand to his eyes, he cried as if his heart was breaking.
-
-It was not for himself he grieved, nor would it be just to say that
-these tears were an evidence of weakness in the character of our brave
-young friend.
-
-He loved the handsome Indian youth, as he might have loved a brother;
-but this awful loss came with the memory of his other trials, so that
-his emotion was a proof of his loyal heart and gentle nature.
-
-The man or boy who is incapable of tears, it is safe to say, is also
-incapable of a noble feeling.
-
-Believing that Ulna had gone down the mad river to his death, Sam, as he
-sat there, recalled that he owed a duty to the living.
-
-Slinging his rifle on his back again, he retraced his steps to camp.
-
-He found Ike, Wah Shin and the dog, all sleeping by the fire as
-peacefully as if they were on downy beds in the midst of civilization.
-
-Maj leaped up barking with joy and began to fawn on his young master.
-
-This awoke Ike and Wah Shin, the former of whom declared as usual that
-he had only just closed his eyes, "an' hadn't been asleep at all."
-
-"We must make ready to start at once," said Sam. "Get the things on
-board and tie them securely."
-
-"All right, sah," said Ike, and he went to work with the energy of one
-who had dined abundantly and slept well.
-
-"Ulna, whele him go?" asked Wah Shin, stopping in the midst of loading
-the raft and looking about.
-
-"He has gone down the river," said Sam, and his sad face told the
-Mongolian that something serious had happened.
-
-"Him no gone gettee dlownded," gasped Wah Shin, and his eyes grew more
-oblique with alarm.
-
-"Drownded!" cried Ike. "Why, Ulna kin swim like a whole flock of ducks
-in a mill pond."
-
-"The river is very rough ahead," said Sam, "and after Ulna fell into the
-rapids he could not get back."
-
-"An' whar did he go to?" asked Ike.
-
-"Down the river."
-
-"To de bottom?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, "if de ribber's as rough as dat, den we'd bettah
-stay whar we is."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.--MR. WILLETT LEARNS THE NEWS.
-
-
-Collins, and his partner, Brill, were at heart as tender as they were
-brave.
-
-They reasoned that Mr. Willett should know the news the messenger
-brought back from Gold Cave Camp, yet neither felt like conveying it to
-the unhappy man.
-
-"Somebody's got to tell him," said Brill, to his partner, "and as you've
-got the best gift of gab, Collins, I reckon you're the feller to do it."
-
-"If it comes down whar I've got to speak my mind and tell a sneakin'
-feller jest what I think of him," replied Collins, "I ain't slow, and I
-find I'm flush of words 'bout that time, but tellin' a man his son's
-dead, and that that 'ar paper he sent for to save his own life, ain't
-agoin to be perduced, why, that's an entirely different matter, and I'd
-a sight rather contract out the job to some chap as don't mind sich
-things."
-
-"See har, pard, I've got an idear."
-
-"Let's have it," said Collins, much relieved.
-
-"I think we'd better do this kinder by slow degrees like. What do you
-say?"
-
-"Why, I say, Brill, ole feller, I don't catch on to the drift of your
-ore bed," said Collins.
-
-"I mean through Hank Tims."
-
-"What about him?"
-
-"We must get him to one side, kinder."
-
-"And what then?"
-
-"Why then we must up and tell him the hull story."
-
-"I see yer pint, Brill."
-
-"And then," continued Brill, "he can give it to Mr. Willett, and that'll
-kinder let us out of the scrape."
-
-In token of his approval of this very excellent plan, Collins shook
-hands with his partner, and then Hank Tims was called outside of the
-dugout.
-
-The partners were still in doubt as to which of them should tell the
-story, and noticing that they stood looking at each other Hank asked:
-
-"Is there any fresh trouble up, pards?"
-
-"Wa'al, yes, kinder," said Collins, taking upon himself the painful
-duties of spokesman.
-
-"Let's have it," said Hank, stoutly. "Neither me nor Mr. Willett is
-skeered to hear the worst."
-
-"Jest so," said Collins, "and so we thought we'd better give you the
-news and let you break it to him."
-
-"What news?" asked Hank.
-
-"Why the news that's come from Gold Cave Camp."
-
-"Wa'al, let's have it."
-
-"You know, Hank, we sent a messenger to Gold Cave Camp when we found the
-storm was onto us, and Mr. Willett's son hadn't showed up with that
-paper."
-
-"Yes, I heard of that, Collins."
-
-"Wa'al, the man's back----"
-
-"And the boy--Sam Willett?" cried Hank.
-
-"Couldn't be found," stammered Collins.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He wasn't thar."
-
-"No," added Brill, "he wasn't no whar in sight."
-
-"And the other folks, the black boy, the Chinee and the young Ute, Ulna,
-what came here with me an Mr. Willett and went back again when we was
-took prizners?"
-
-"No one knows; they wasn't in sight."
-
-"Drownded out!" gasped Hank.
-
-"No, the folks think they tried to git away by swimmin' or making a
-raft," said Collins.
-
-"They might as well try to fly. Ah, this is bad news; mighty bad news.
-I'd rather die mysel', and I know Mr. Willett would rather die a
-thousand times over than to lose that boy. Did you ever see young Sam
-Willett, gents?"
-
-The partners shook their heads and said they never had seen young Sam
-Willett.
-
-"Wa'al," continued Hank, with a sob in his voice, "he wasn't what you
-and me mout think a full-growed man, but never a braver nor a handsomer
-lad ever crossed them Sierras off thar to the east. He was a gentleman,
-young Sam was, from the ground up; he couldn't think anything mean, much
-less do it. Ah, why should men like you, and me, and others be left and
-him be took? I don't see how I can bring mysel' to tell his father, for
-he was all Mr. Willett had left, and he won't keer any more for life
-when he hears this."
-
-"It's mighty tough on the old man," coughed Brill, "not to mention his
-other troubles; but as he's got to know it sooner or later, my pard and
-me thought you'd better tell him."
-
-"Wa'al, if I must I 'spose I must; but I tell you what, boys, I'd jest
-as soon you'd order me out to be shot. In fact I'd a heap sight rather
-be shot, if I was only sure that my dyin' would bring back young Sam
-Willett to life."
-
-Brushing his sleeve across his eyes, Hank turned away to hide his
-feelings, and the partners went silently back to the cluster of tents
-and buildings that was known as "the camp."
-
-We have already seen something of the love that existed between Mr.
-Willett and his son.
-
-Apart from the affection natural to their relationship, these two were
-still more strongly attached to each other by the fact that they were
-alone in the world and the exclusive object of each other's most
-profound affections.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe the manner in which Hank Tims
-communicated the news to the already much afflicted father, but it
-should be said that he acquitted himself with a tenderness hardly to be
-expected from one of his rough exterior and rude life.
-
-There are blows so crushing to the human heart that they fall without
-being followed by a sign of pain or a cry of agony.
-
-The sting of a bee will call out a shout from the strongest man, but the
-bullet that taps the fountain of life is received with ashy but silent
-lips.
-
-All the color left Mr. Willett's face, and he fell back on the blankets
-on which he had been sitting.
-
-He looked as if he were dying, and Hank, to redress the effects of the
-blow he had been forced to deal, sprang forward, and putting his arms
-about Mr. Willett's shoulder, he said, though he had not the slightest
-faith in his own words:
-
-"Thar ain't no doubt in my mind but the boys made a raft. Sam was sharp,
-and thar was lots of timber to do it."
-
-"But that would only be going to death," said Mr. Willett faintly and
-slowly.
-
-"Oh, not by a long odds. Thar's lots and lots of places lower down whar
-they might get out easy. Now, let's jest have patience; thar ain't
-nothin' like a good stock of patience. Why, it wouldn't s'prise me not a
-bit if I was to see Sam and the hull caboodle of 'em walk into the door
-of this dugout this blessed minute," and Hank fixed his eyes steadily on
-the opening, as if he were quite prepared for this phenomenon.
-
-Leaving Hank Tims to fan the faint ray of hope he had kindled in the
-afflicted father's heart, let us give a few minutes to reporting the
-conduct of the two men who were the authors of all this trouble.
-
-There were some very bad men at Hurley's Gulch, as there are bad men in
-any gathering the world over, but in justice it should be said that a
-majority aimed to do as near right as they knew how.
-
-Men's ideas of right and wrong vary with their training and their
-natural abilities to weigh evidence and comprehend truth. But even those
-men who are rude in their bearing, or even vicious in their lives, have
-their hearts touched by a death that brings great sorrow to some fond,
-loving heart.
-
-So when the people at Hurley's Gulch began to think over Mr. Willett's
-loss, they forgot for the time the grave offence with which he was
-charged, and expressed themselves as very sorry for the death of his
-boy.
-
-This change of feeling did not escape the ever wide-awake observation of
-Frank Shirley.
-
-He was a pretty good judge of human nature, and so he thought it wiser
-not to say anything at this time. Indeed, he played his part so well
-that he expressed to the crowd, whom he kept attached to him by frequent
-treating, that he was very sorry for young Sam Willett's loss.
-
-"He was a cousin of mine," sighed Shirley, "and not a bit like his
-father."
-
-How could the people know that the death of Sam Willett was the one
-object that brought Shirley to this land, and how could they know that
-the life of the noble youth was the one thing that stood between this
-fellow and a large fortune.
-
-"I tell you, Mr. Shirley," said Badger to his employer the day after the
-reception of the news from Gold Cave Camp, "you're a keen one. Oh, you
-ken play it fine--finer'n any one I ever seed."
-
-"Do you think so, Badger?" said Shirley, flattered by this compliment to
-his talent for crime.
-
-"Yes, I do. In a day or two the boys'll forgit all about the death of
-young Willett. Then you ken swing in on the murder of Tom Edwards again,
-and make them do jest as you please."
-
-"Well, I'll try," replied the jubilant Shirley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.--IN THE RAPIDS.
-
-
-The bravest soldier, no matter how cool his bearing, feels a sense of
-awe and dread when the rattle of rifles along the skirmish line tells
-him that the murderous battle has begun.
-
-If there be men who never felt fear under such nerve-trying
-circumstances, then they certainly deserve no credit, for true courage
-consists in the determination to face a danger while fully comprehending
-its awful possibilities.
-
-Sam Willett wisely decided not to picture to Ike and Wah Shin the
-dangers that lay before them; but while doing this he did not attempt to
-hide from himself the fact that within a few hours himself and his
-faithful companions might be the dead playthings of the wild waters.
-
-As calmly and sternly as the cavalry leader wheels his battalions into
-line in front of the murderous artillery which he intends to charge, Sam
-Willett made his preparations for the passage of the rapids.
-
-He strengthened the raft and fastened to it their arms and blankets, and
-then to prevent their being washed off, or lost if they fell overboard,
-he insisted that each should tie a rope about his waist, the other end
-being fastened to the logs.
-
-It was not until the last precautions against the danger that lay ahead
-were proposed that Ike began to feel greatly alarmed.
-
-"Golly, Mistah Sam," he said, with trembling lips, "hitchin ob oursels
-to dese yar logs wif ropes looks to me kinder skittish."
-
-"I hope they may not be needed," said Sam, as he made ready to push the
-raft off.
-
-"You seed dem currents down de ribber?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"Pooty ugly, ain't dey?"
-
-"We must pass them."
-
-"'Twas dem as drownded Ulna?"
-
-"He fell from a rock into the river."
-
-"Den if he couldn't swim back, dem currents must be mighty bad."
-
-"No can stay hele; no can backee go; den wat we do; allee same we mustee
-glong down ribbel," said Wah Shin, who seemed to have no trouble in
-taking in the situation.
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike, desperately, "I reckon de job's got to be did. I
-don't want to be drowned way down har, when no one won't neber heah ob
-me agin, an' moah 'ticklah, Mistah Sam, I doesn't want you to die, but
-if dat be de good Lor's will, den I says amen, an' goes ahead."
-
-Sam at first thought that he would tie Maj to the raft, but as the
-animal had not the reason to avail himself of this advantage, he decided
-to let him take his chances if he should be washed off.
-
-"Now, I am about to push off," said Sam, standing at the stern with the
-pole in his hand, "and if we get into danger I want you both to keep
-cool and do as I say. Don't yell out, or try to hang on to each other,
-if the raft should go to pieces."
-
-Ike and Wah Shin promised to do as they were told, and then with a
-mental prayer to Heaven to guide and protect him, Sam set one end of the
-pole against the bank and pushed the raft into the current.
-
-"Dis don't seem so powahful bad," said Ike, as he looked ahead and saw a
-smooth expanse extending for nearly a half mile in front.
-
-"Not so bad, Ike," said Sam, his eyes fixed on the bend, beyond which he
-knew the dreaded rapids rolled.
-
-As they drifted on he could not help recalling the mighty falls of
-Niagara which he had visited with his father a few years before.
-
-He remembered that a few miles above the falls the majestic river flowed
-on grandly and swiftly, without a ripple to break its glassy surface, or
-a murmur to suggest the frightful plunge it was soon to take. Then came
-the roaring rapids and the thundering fall.
-
-What if these rapids ended in the same way?
-
-This thought had just flashed through his mind, when the raft shot past
-the rock from which Ulna had fallen, and the next instant it swung round
-the bend, and the thunder of the waters was heard and the seething white
-waves came to view.
-
-Every stick of timber in the raft groaned, as if it were a sentient
-being, trembling at its coming destruction.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin fell flat on the logs and clung to them with all their
-might, not daring to look at the prospect ahead.
-
-Even Sam dropped on his knees and gazed steadily in front, while the dog
-crept towards him, and, with a plaintive whine, thrust his nose into his
-master's breast.
-
-Sam soon discovered that it would not only be useless, but absolutely
-dangerous to attempt to steer the raft, so he hauled in the pole and
-with his hands clung to the logs on either side.
-
-The speed at which they went down soon became so frightfully great that
-the objects along the shore could not be distinguished, but became
-streaked and confused to their sight.
-
-Now and again the raft would strike against one of the black rocks, that
-rose like a monster out of the water, and then it would spin and whirl
-down the torrent as if determined to throw off its occupants.
-
-Bend after bend was passed, and Sam began to think that the rapids
-extended indefinitely, when to his horror the raft struck against
-another rock, and with such force that the ropes, fastening one end,
-snapped and broke like a silken thread in the hands of a giant.
-
-At the same instant the logs parted and spread out like a fan, throwing
-all the occupants into the water.
-
-Now the wisdom of Sam's precaution in tying themselves to the raft
-became evident.
-
-Had it not been for this they would have been swept apart and drowned at
-once, but as it was the ropes not only kept them together, but enabled
-them to haul themselves back to the logs and cling to them for support.
-
-The dog was, of course, thrown out with the others, and was at once
-swept beyond reach, though for some minutes Sam could see the brave
-creature facing the current and making a desperate effort to swim back.
-
-Sam was just beginning to feel that the raft must soon go to pieces,
-when they were suddenly swept around a bend and into a calm expanse of
-water, though a few hundred yards further on he saw the line of white
-foam that indicated other rapids ahead.
-
-Calling to his companions to assist him, and putting forth a superhuman
-effort himself, Sam succeeded in getting the raft out of the current and
-into a little cove where there was shallow water and a ledge of smooth,
-shelving rocks that made a good landing place.
-
-They straightened out the logs, made them fast again, and then they took
-off the arms and frayed blankets that had not been swept from the raft
-by the rocks and rapids.
-
-This done the three clambered up to a dry place, though they were so wet
-that it would not have made any difference if they stood in the water.
-
-Thinking that Ulna might have made a landing at some point along the
-shore of this calm expanse, Sam looked up and down both banks, but
-excepting Ike, Wah Shin and himself there was not a living creature in
-sight, even the dog had been unable to resist the force of the current.
-
-"Dis am a mighty bad fix, sure enuff," were Ike's first words as he
-surveyed his dripping form and then began slowly to take in the
-situation.
-
-"It might be worse," was Sam's comment, though if he had been called on
-to explain how it well could be worse, he would have been at a loss to
-tell.
-
-"Watel we do nex," asked Wah Shin, and he half-raised his hands and let
-them fall again to indicate his utter helplessness.
-
-Sam could not reply. He would have felt a great sense of relief if
-either of the others had made a reasonable suggestion.
-
-It was growing dark, and he knew that it would be madness to attempt the
-river again till the light of another full day lay before them.
-
-In answer to Wah Shin's question, Ike said:
-
-"I'll tell yeh w'at I'd like to do, Wah."
-
-"I can tellee mesel lat too," said Wah Shin.
-
-"In de fust place I'd like some nice dry clothes."
-
-"I too," said Wah.
-
-"Den I wouldn't mind bein' in a nice house."
-
-"Ugh," and Wah shrugged himself as if he thought that a very lovely
-idea.
-
-"Den," continued Ike, as he smacked his lips, "I'd like to be a settin'
-down to a table in dat house."
-
-"Ha!" cried Wah.
-
-"An'--an' I'd like to hab dat table filled way up wid good tings, an' me
-a settin' dar free to pile in all I wanted----"
-
-"Dat am belly nice," said Wah.
-
-"Den arter I'd eat, an' eat an' eat, till I couldn't more'n stan', I'd
-have some one pick me up and tote me off to de wahmest, softest bed----"
-
-At this point Sam interrupted by saying:
-
-"We must all take off our clothes and wring them out, for I am not going
-to try it again till morning."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.--AFLOAT AGAIN.
-
-
-Work is the one certain remedy for a troubled mind. Sam felt that if he
-didn't do something he should go distracted, and judging by his own
-feelings he reasoned that it would be better for Ike and Wah Shin if
-their hands and brains were employed.
-
-He made them wring out their own clothes and the blankets, and spread
-them on the rocks to dry; and then all three set to work to repair the
-damage to the raft.
-
-They found that the ropes that held the logs together had been cut and
-frayed by the keen edges of the rocks, with which they were brought into
-contact.
-
-They took the whole raft to pieces; first having tied the rope till it
-was as strong, though shorter, than it was before, and then they
-refastened the whole structure, making it as secure as possible with the
-material at hand.
-
-They had but just completed their work, and made the raft fast by
-anchoring it to a stone, when it suddenly grew so dark that they could
-hardly see each other.
-
-They next put on their clothes, which were far from being dry, and their
-discomfort was increased by a keen, cold wind, that came driving down
-the caon.
-
-"Wat's to be did de nex'?" asked Ike, his teeth chattering and his voice
-tremulous with the cold.
-
-"We must move about till our clothes get dry. It will never do to have
-rheumatism added to our other troubles," said Sam.
-
-"Wa'al, I dunno dat we'd be much de wuss off, if we had rheumatiz, an'
-measles, an' toothaches, an' dem tings. Fac' is, Mistah Sam, we couldn't
-well be in a badder fix, no matter wat happened to us."
-
-"Oh, yes," drawled Wah Shin, "'spose we hab no clothes, no laftee, no
-gun, no can gettee way, den wat?"
-
-"Keep moving, boys, till you get warm," called out Sam, and he set the
-example by walking about on the flat top of the rock, taking care that
-neither himself nor companions went too close to the perilous edge.
-
-The exertion and the heat of their bodies warmed them up and dried their
-clothes, but by this time it was near midnight.
-
-There was no danger of being disturbed by savage foe or wild beast,
-still Sam thought it better to keep up the system of guards he had first
-established.
-
-He was so weary that he could have dropped on the hard, cold rock on
-which he stood, and been asleep at once, but that fine sense of duty
-that distinguished all his acts, led him to forget or put aside his own
-wants for the safety and comfort of others.
-
-But though Ike loved to eat and sleep as well as any youth, black or
-white, that ever lived, there was a "streek" of thoughtfulness and
-unselfishness in his character that asserted itself now and then.
-
-When the order of the watch was arranged, Ike laid his hand on his young
-master's shoulder and said:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam, does yeh tink I'm blind?"
-
-"Certainly not, Ike. Why should you ask such a question as that?" asked
-Sam, in great surprise.
-
-"Coz, Ize got de reasons."
-
-"Well, what are they?"
-
-"Don't yeh tink I'ze been a watchin' ob yeh?"
-
-"What of it, Ike?"
-
-"Dar's dis ob it. I'ze seed yeh a workin' an' a workin', an' not gettin'
-no rest nur sleep, but jest a layin' yersel' out foh to keer for us
-no-account folks, and make us comf'able. Now, I know I'm mean 'bout
-habin' my share ob grub an' sleepin', an' dem tings, but I ain't so
-mean's not to see an' tink."
-
-"You are a good fellow, Ike, but I really can't see what you are driving
-at," said Sam.
-
-"I'm dribein' at dis, dat you'z got to rest de fust one. Har, de
-blankets ain't so awful wet, an' if you ain't wahm enough, yeh can hab
-my coat. So do lie down an' take a sleep, dat'll make yeh brain more
-clarer foh to tink to-morrow."
-
-When one is inclined to a thing, it does not require much urging.
-
-Sam yielded to Ike's entreaties, which were supported by Wah Shin, in
-the strongest English he could command.
-
-They made him as comfortable as possible under the circumstances, and,
-after promising to wake him when his turn came, they crept off some
-distance, and sitting down side by side they talked in whispers like a
-pair of conspirators.
-
-"Wah Shin?"
-
-"Glang, Ike, me gottee no deaf," said Wah.
-
-"You're a good feller."
-
-"Me tinkee so, too," said the modest Mongolian.
-
-"You like Mistah Sam?"
-
-"Oh, yes; likee him gleat heap."
-
-"I thought so."
-
-"Him belly fine youngee man."
-
-"Now, Wah, you an' me's had a heap sight more sleep dan Mistah Sam since
-we started out on dis yar scrimmidge, ain't we?"
-
-"Oh, yes, heap molee."
-
-"So," continued Ike with the confidential whisper of one about to
-communicate a great secret, "I wants you an' me to play a trick on him."
-
-"Playee tlick!" repeated Wah, puzzled as to the meaning.
-
-"Yes; yeh see he's sleepin' now like a angel."
-
-"Dunno; me nebel see angel. W'at him?"
-
-Without attempting to enlighten Wah as to the nature of angels, of which
-it must be confessed he had only a vague conception himself, Ike said.
-
-"We must let him sleep right straight 'long till de mornin'; den w'en he
-gits up an' rubs his eyes an' sees it's daylight, he'll be dat s'prised
-ho won't know w'at to say. Won't dat be a trick?"
-
-"Him belly nice tlick," chuckled Wah. "Heap muchee fun. Let 'im sleep;
-you, me watchee till sun him come top-side galore. Ike, you gottee heap
-big head," and Wah patted the black boy's head in a way that showed
-affection and approval.
-
-A generous master makes faithful servants. We do not know whether this
-is an adage or not, but it sounds as if it ought to be.
-
-So weary was poor Sam that Ike and Wah Shin might have slept through the
-night without his knowing it, but it did not require his watchful
-presence to make them dutiful.
-
-They divided the night into two reliefs, each taking a half and doing
-his duty with the fine sense of pleasure that came from the knowledge
-that they were cheating Sam into a long and much needed rest.
-
-Sam certainly was much surprised when he got up in the morning and saw
-the flush of day in the strip of sky far overhead and the light coming
-into the depths of the caon.
-
-He was certainly much refreshed by his rest, and when he saw Ike smiling
-near by, he at once guessed what had been done.
-
-"Why didn't you wake me up?" he asked.
-
-Ike laughed and at once told him of "the trick" he and Wah Shin had
-played.
-
-Sam was much touched by this evidence of thoughtfulness and devotion,
-and he fastened it in his memory, that it might be easily recalled if
-the chance ever came to show his appreciation in another form than
-words.
-
-This was the first morning that they were wholly without food since
-starting on their journey.
-
-All were decidedly hungry, but not a word was said about eating. Even
-Ike, always ready to show he had an appetite, felt that it would be
-somewhat personal to talk about "grub," but at heart he blamed himself
-for having eat so much the day before. It would have been the part of
-wisdom, he thought, to have put a little away for this morning.
-
-"Wa'al, Mistah Sam, wat's to be did nex'?" asked Ike, as he looked down
-at the white line that marked the beginning of another series of unknown
-rapids about three hundred yards away.
-
-"We must try it again, Ike," said Sam, bravely.
-
-"Down de ribber?"
-
-"Do you think we could go up?"
-
-"Wa'al, not berry well, an' if we could dis chile wouldn't be in foh
-tryin' it again."
-
-"Then we must go down."
-
-"No cannee help oulsel's, if so we go flom dis," said Wah Shin, with all
-the wisdom of Confucius.
-
-Once more the few remaining things were placed as securely as was
-possible on the raft.
-
-Again, and without the wondering of the day before, Ike and Wah Shin
-imitated Sam by tying themselves to the raft.
-
-With much of that feeling of desperation that stirs an officer who leads
-his men in a hopeless assault against a powerful enemy, Sam pushed the
-raft into the stream.
-
-The current near the shore was slow, but as they got out further it
-became more rapid, until at length they shot down with the speed of a
-race-horse for the white line of foam that flashed between the grim
-walls like the teeth of some fierce monster set in lips of stone.
-
-"Cling tight to the raft, boys!" cried Sam, as the logs began to groan
-and tremble. "Cling fast and keep cool! We are going through all right!"
-
-The brave fellow did not have much faith in his own words, but they had
-an inspiriting effect on the others.
-
-Into the warring rapids shot the raft, and in an instant all were
-drenched in the spray that dashed around them.
-
-Sam could not see ten feet ahead.
-
-His mind, like the waters and the raft, was in a wild whirl; yet, with
-the grip of a drowning man, he clung to the logs and tried to shout
-words of cheer to the others.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.--THE TRIAL BEGINS.
-
-
-At the instigation of Collins and his partner, Si Brill, a number of men
-started off from Hurley's Gulch to see if they could find Sam Willett
-and his companions, or learn anything of their fate.
-
-Neither the searchers nor those who sent them had any great faith in
-their mission, but the very fact that they tried shows that they were
-moved by a feeling of commendable humanity.
-
-Three days passed and the men came back saying they could not find Sam
-Willett, nor the others, and giving it as their opinion, that they had
-all been drowned.
-
-In the meantime Frank Shirley, who had much of that cunning and
-ingenuity for which men of his character are so often noted, sought to
-create the impression that Sam was alive, but that he had run away, in
-order not to be forced to appear against his father.
-
-The night the searchers came back there was a great crowd in the bar of
-the principal saloon, and as Shirley was treating, as usual, he was the
-center of attraction and virtually the chairman of the gathering.
-
-A few of the men had just expressed sorrow for Sam's death, when Shirley
-said:
-
-"I'd be sorrier than any one if I knew the young fellow was dead, but
-I'm happy to say I don't believe he is."
-
-"Of course, you've got reasons for your belief," said one.
-
-"Yes; I always have good reasons for everything I do and say," said
-Shirley, feeling the authority his free use of money had given him.
-
-"Mebbe you'd tell us why you think so," said the man.
-
-"I'll explain by asking you some questions," said Shirley, licking his
-lips, as he always did while speaking.
-
-"Fire ahead," said the man.
-
-"You remember that Indian boy--what's his name?"
-
-"Ulna," suggested the man.
-
-"Yes, Ulna. Well, the day of the arrest of these two men, Willett and
-Tims, for the cruel murder of poor Tom Edwards, this Indian boy was sent
-to Gold Cave Camp to bring back the son of one of the prisoners and a
-certain paper. Isn't that so?" and Shirley looked around for the
-approval of the assembly.
-
-"Yes, that's so!" shouted a number.
-
-"Now," continued Frank Shirley, with the deliberation of a man who had
-carefully weighed what he was about to say, "I ask you gentlemen if this
-Ulna returned to Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"No!" exclaimed half the men in the place.
-
-"Of course he didn't. Now, what should we, as sensible men, infer from
-this fact?"
-
-Again Shirley looked about the room, and as no one attempted to say what
-should be inferred from the fact as stated, he proceeded to enlighten
-them.
-
-"As Ulna did not come back and cannot be found, it is safe to infer that
-he succeeded in delivering his message to Mr. Willett's son."
-
-"Yes," said the man who had drawn Shirley out, "I must say it looks very
-much that way."
-
-"Very well; Mr. Willett's son, who is a wonderfully brave, bright young
-fellow, got that message, and from this fact I make another inference."
-
-Shirley licked his lips and remained silent so long that it was becoming
-painful, and Badger voiced the feeling of the crowd by calling out:
-
-"Go ahead and give us yer p'ints!"
-
-"If Ulna could get to Gold Cave Camp in the night with that message,
-don't you think that young Sam Willett could get away?"
-
-Nearly every one said this looked reasonable.
-
-"Now, my belief," Shirley went on, "is that he and all hands did get
-away. The searchers, who have just come from the camp, say the place was
-cleaned out, rifles and all that being gone, which wouldn't be the case
-if the folks were drowned."
-
-"But," said the man who had started this discussion, "if the young
-feller got away, why didn't he come right straight to Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"Ah, that's the vital question," said Shirley, with a more vigorous lick
-at his lips. "Now, you'd like to know why I think he didn't come here?"
-
-"I certainly should," said the man.
-
-"It was because he had no paper to bring. Oh, he's a bright fellow; he's
-a second cousin of mine, and I can put myself in his place and just see
-how he reasoned about this matter."
-
-"Don't wait, but go right in and tell us all about it," said the
-impatient Badger, whose admiration for his employer was rising every
-moment.
-
-"Why, he reasoned that if he came here without Tom Edwards'
-receipt--which he knew had no existence--that the gentlemen of the
-vigilance committee would make short work of his father----"
-
-"And he was as right as right can be in that guess," interrupted Badger.
-
-"But," continued Shirley, "being a keen young fellow, he made up his
-mind that nothing would be done to his father if he stayed away. He
-believed the vigilantes would wait for several days, as they've already
-done, and that by the end of that time their anger would go down; they
-would look more lightly on the murder of poor Tom Edwards--and that
-would be the last of it. But talking is mighty dry work; step up to the
-bar, boys, and have a drink with me."
-
-Like other invitations of the same kind, from the same source, this one
-was promptly accepted, the effect being to convince nearly every man
-that there was no getting away from Frank Shirley's reasoning.
-
-Before the meeting broke up that night, which it did not do till a late
-hour, it was firmly decided that the trial of Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-should take place the next day, which being Sunday would enable every
-one at Hurley's Gulch to be present.
-
-In addition to its effect on the unfortunate men, the foregoing
-conversation serves admirably to show how a cunning and malicious man
-can pervert facts to suit himself, and while making them seem most like
-truth to the reason, have them exactly opposite to it in fact.
-
-Unobserved by the crowd in the bar, Collins had overheard this
-conversation, and the conclusion to which a majority of the vigilantes
-had come.
-
-Being simple-hearted, Collins was imposed on for the time being by
-Shirley's argument, and while he was listening to it he really believed
-that it might be true; but as he slowly returned to the dugout, his good
-sense asserted itself and he saw the utter falsity of the fellow's
-reasoning.
-
-Knowing how deeply troubled Mr. Willett was by the uncertain fate of his
-beloved son, Collins said nothing to him about the decision of the
-vigilantes till the following morning.
-
-After breakfast Collins repeated the talk at the saloon the night
-before, and added:
-
-"I hope the feller's right 'bout the boy's safety."
-
-"Ah, I wish he were," sighed Mr. Willett. "But if my dear boy were
-living, and he could get to me, sleep would not touch his eyes till he
-was again at my side."
-
-"Thar's one thing in partiklar I'd like to git out of this scrape for,"
-said Hank, and on being asked by Brill what that thing was, he
-continued:
-
-"I'd like to lick that lyin' slanderin' cowardly Shirley. Only to think
-of a critter like him accusin' young Sam Willett of doin' a low, mean
-trick. Ah, he's a dirty dog, if one ever came west of the Sierra
-Madres."
-
-Up to this time Mr. Willett had not explained to Collins and Si Brill,
-Shirley's reasons for desiring to see his son dead and himself out of
-the way. He did so now.
-
-"Wa'al!" exclaimed Brill, "that thar explanation shows the culled pusson
-in the wood-pile, as clar as daylight. Ah, I only wish Bob Sturgis--he
-was a lawyer--didn't leave camp when he did; but I'll see that you have
-a show to defend yourself, if we've got to fight for it?"
-
-While the sturdy miner was speaking, two rough looking men--they were
-the worst element in the vigilance committee--appeared in the doorway
-and one of them called out:
-
-"We've come from the kimitty, and we'er agoin' to fotch up the prizners;
-so trot 'em out."
-
-"We'll trot 'em out," replied Collins, as he took down his rifle from a
-peg, "and we'll trot along with 'em, for neither Si Brill nor me has
-give up our office as guards yet, an' what's more, we ain't agoin' to do
-it till this case is ended, one way or the other."
-
-"We ain't got no objection," growled one of the men, "only don't keep us
-waitin' har all day."
-
-"If yer in a great hurry," retorted Brill, as he also reached for his
-rifle, "go back as you come, for we've got charge of the prizners, and
-you can't take 'em from us without a fight."
-
-The two men stepped back to consult, and Collins whispered, as he handed
-Mr. Willett and Hank two revolvers each:
-
-"Hide those about your clothes, you may find them handy before we get
-through with this scrape."
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims quickly secreted the revolvers in their inside
-breast pockets and then followed the guards out of the dugout.
-
-They clambered up the bank, ignoring the two men who constituted the
-"kimitty" and went on to the hotel, the dining-room of which--it was
-also the kitchen--was set apart by the proprietor for the trial.
-
-The place was already crowded to suffocation, and a curious feature of
-the gathering was the fact that the burly, bearded man, who was to act
-as judge, and every other man in the room, was armed to the teeth and
-looked as if eager for a fight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.--A BREAK IN THE CLOUDS.
-
-
-The second series of rapids, though much more dreaded by Sam than the
-first, proved to be neither very long, nor, by comparison, very
-dangerous.
-
-Within ten minutes from the time of entering them they were passed in
-safety, and the raft was floating down the broadest, smoothest current
-they had experienced since starting on their perilous journey.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin cautiously released their hold on the logs and looked
-about them.
-
-Sam again stood up with the steering pole in his hands.
-
-Straight as an arrow, and for fully three miles, the river could be seen
-flowing down between its towering banks.
-
-This sight brought to Sam a sense of great relief, and its effect on Ike
-was decidedly exhilarating.
-
-Standing up in the front of the raft he waved his arms like a windmill
-and shouted out:
-
-"Bress de Lor! we'z safe! we'z safe!"
-
-Escape from the awful dangers they had just come through so miraculously
-made Ike forget, for the moment, his hunger and the fact that there
-could be no safety to people floating on a shaky raft, down a river
-whose course seemed through the very heart of sterile, towering
-mountains.
-
-Ah, well, this only goes to show that, no matter how desperate the
-situation we always have something to be thankful for; and that no
-matter how bad things are, so long as life, health and hope remain, they
-might be worse.
-
-Another thing very unusual in this experience was the fact that the
-caon walls, instead of rising straight up from the water, stood back,
-leaving on either side a strip on which, amid great masses of detached
-sandstone there grew a number of stunted mezquite and cedar trees.
-
-They were all as wet as they well could be, but they had grown so
-accustomed to this that Sam made up his mind not to go ashore to dry
-their clothes, but to keep right on, when a shout from Ike caused him to
-change his purpose.
-
-"I see a wolf or a deer; way dar to de right!" and Ike pointed down to
-where the bushes hid the rocks.
-
-"Lat no deel," said Wah Shin, as he bent forward and shaded his eyes.
-
-"Mebbe yeh ken tell us wat it is," said Ike, with a touch of sarcasm,
-for having discovered the animal he felt that he had a right to say what
-it was.
-
-"Lat's yalla doggee," said Wah Shin.
-
-And Wah Shin was right, for at that instant the animal sprang into view
-and began a vigorous barking, and a frisking back and forth.
-
-"It's Maj! It's Maj!" cried Ike.
-
-Maj it certainly was, and the joy of the faithful creature at seeing his
-friends was touching.
-
-Sam at once guided the raft to the shore, but while it was yet many
-yards away, the dog swam out, was pulled on board and at once jumped on
-Sam, who if he had not been wet before certainly would have been now.
-
-"Dat ar dog looks to me ez if he had been habin' a big feed some place,"
-said Ike, when they got on shore, and he could examine Maj's rounded
-form, which his dripping coat made more conspicuous.
-
-"Mebbe him full of watel," suggested Wah Shin.
-
-"No," said Ike, as he pressed the dog's sides, "it's grub; good solid
-grub." Then, addressing Maj, he said, in tones intended to be very
-seductive: "See har, ole feller, don't go foh to tell me dat yer hungry,
-like we is. You'se been eatin' meat, don't say 'no' foh I won't stan'
-it; but, like a good dorg, show me de place whar yeh found it, an' if
-ebber I gits out ob dis yeh fix, I'll buy yeh a brass collar, wif yeh
-name on de outside in great big letters."
-
-As if he understood this and was anxious to earn the reward so
-generously offered him, Maj started off with a short, sharp bark, but
-before he had gone very far he turned and came slowly back again, as if
-he had changed his mind.
-
-Meanwhile, Wah Shin got together a pile of dry wood, and, as the matches
-in Sam's water-proof case escaped the water, they soon had a roaring
-fire, before which their cargo and their clothes--the latter well
-tattered--were placed to dry.
-
-At first Sam, who was now very hungry, was inclined to think that it was
-a whim of Ike's that led him to see anything suggestive of food in the
-dog's appearance, but when he came to look carefully at the animal and
-study his contented manner, he was satisfied that he had found something
-to eat since being washed from the raft.
-
-With nearly all his clothes drying before the fire, Sam, followed by
-Ike, started off to examine the shore further down.
-
-He had not gone far when he noticed great clefts in the walls of the
-caon, as if the mighty mass had been cracked by some tremendous power.
-
-These fissures ran up and back for thousands of feet, but the largest
-one visible was not of sufficient width to admit of their getting up in
-that way, neither were these openings on the side of the caon which
-they must ascend in order to reach Hurley's Gulch.
-
-An examination of the point where one of the fissures came down to the
-shore convinced Sam that some creatures had used this passage-way
-recently as an avenue for ascending to the upper world, or coming down
-to this profound and silent valley.
-
-He had just communicated this opinion to Ike, and was about to turn away
-when his attention was attracted to the dog, now standing with his right
-paw raised, his tail extended and his whole form as rigid as if it had
-been cut in marble.
-
-"See!" shouted Ike, "Maj is on de p'int! Whar, whar's de game?"
-
-The words had scarcely passed his lips when there was a squeak and a
-rushing noise, and a score, or more, long-eared rabbits dashed by within
-twenty feet of the party.
-
-"Hooraw! Rabbits! rabbits!" cried Ike. "Let us git our guns! Rabbits
-makes bully grub!"
-
-Sam had not his gun with him, but he at once started back to the fire
-and examined his rifle, which had come through without being damaged.
-
-The water had not affected the metallic cartridges, of which he had a
-good supply left. Filling his belt with these he started off, Ike
-keeping by his side with his remarkable old shot-gun on his shoulder,
-though its utter uselessness had been emphasized by its recent heavy
-rusting.
-
-Ike was useful, however, in holding back the dog, who had evidently been
-feeding on rabbit since his landing at this place.
-
-Sam was an excellent rifleman, having had much practice, and being
-possessed of nerves as true and steady as steel, without which the
-weapon can never be mastered.
-
-He crept ahead, and about three hundred yards below the camp he came
-within sight of a little cove, or pocket, in the caon wall that seemed
-literally to swarm with long-eared rabbits.
-
-He fired with judgment, and kept firing while the creatures remained in
-sight and he was sure of his shots.
-
-The result was that within five minutes he had killed thirteen rabbits.
-
-Everyone that was struck was taken, and to the true hunter, who never
-inflicts an unnecessary wound on the animals he hunts, this is always a
-great satisfaction.
-
-Ike was disappointed that he had not been permitted to try "her," as he
-called his old shot-gun, on the game; but, as he picked up the goodly
-load of rabbits and carried it back to camp, it would be difficult to
-imagine a more delighted fellow.
-
-It is said that "it never rains but it pours," and this seemed to be the
-case with the sudden turn in the tide of good luck that had set in
-toward our unfortunate friends.
-
-When they got back to camp, they found that Wah Shin had been testing
-the fish lines and flies, which they had scarcely thought of up to this
-time, and with such unexpectedly good luck that he had landed two fine
-trout and was in the act of pulling in the third when Ike came to sight
-laden down with game.
-
-The least ray of light is cheering to those who have been long in
-darkness; and the briefest cessation from pain is like Heaven to those
-groaning in agony! so the prospect of food--a prospect made all the more
-delightful by the gnawing hunger each felt so keenly--made them forget
-for the time all the trials they had passed and the uncertain future
-that lay before them.
-
-Even the fire blazed up cheerily as if in sympathy with their feelings,
-and Maj lay down like a faithful scout, who has guided the famished into
-a land--of rabbits.
-
-In almost as short a time as it takes to tell it, the rabbits and the
-fish were cooking.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe that feast, for there are some things
-impossible to even our expressive English tongue.
-
-Suffice it to say, each ate all he could, with a result that "made away"
-with one half the supply on hand.
-
-They had just finished their most enjoyable meal, when Wah Shin, who
-chanced to be looking toward the river, uttered a cry of alarm.
-
-The others quickly turned in that direction, and, to their amazement,
-they saw the spectral figure of a dark man rising from the water.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.--"JOY! JOY! IT IS ULNA AGAIN!"
-
-
-Unlike Ike and Wah Shin, Sam Willett was not the least superstitious,
-yet, as he saw the spectral figure rising from the shore he could not
-imagine it a human being.
-
-"Did you think me dead?" asked the dripping figure.
-
-By this time Sam had leaped to his feet and advanced toward their
-extraordinary visitor.
-
-He was not long in doubt.
-
-There was no mistaking the lithe figure and the now pinched but still
-expressive face.
-
-"Joy! joy! It is Ulna again!" cried Sam, and with a bound he was on the
-shore and the young Ute was in his arms.
-
-As soon as Ike and Wah Shin were convinced that this was Ulna in the
-flesh and not his ghost, they ran down and performed such a war dance
-about him, as they held his hands, as he never witnessed around the camp
-fires of his own tribe.
-
-When Ike could give expression to his delight, he pulled Ulna in the
-direction of the fire, calling out the while:
-
-"Tum along; tum along! you looks if yeh hadn't had nawthin' to eat foh
-years. We kin fix yeh. We kin stuff yeh with rabbits till yeh can't
-stan'; an' w'en dem's gone we knows de place whar we kin go an' git lots
-moah."
-
-Ulna certainly did look famished, but true to himself, neither by word
-nor sign did he give expression to the sufferings he had passed through
-nor the agony of hunger he was now enduring.
-
-The half of a cooked rabbit was left from the recent banquet, and Ulna
-had this placed in his hand and made to sit on a stone before the fire.
-
-"Eat 'em allee up; me gettee nodle one, no time," said Wah Shin, who was
-never so happy as when he was cooking.
-
-"Yes," urged Ike, "wade right in. Dar ain't no stint dis time. We've
-found de head-quahtahs ob all de rabbits, an' we ain't a gwine foh to be
-hungry no moah."
-
-After all these expressions of hospitality and good will, Sam had a
-chance to say, as he took a seat beside Ulna.
-
-"I thought I had seen you for the last time, but thank God you and all
-of us are saved to meet again."
-
-"When I called 'farewell' to you," said Ulna, "I felt the end had come,
-but like the people of my tribe I did not give up----"
-
-"Nevah give up de ship," interjected Ike.
-
-"I made up my mind to resist the flood till my strength was gone,"
-continued Ulna.
-
-"One ain't got much strent, onless he's got plenty to eat an' lots ob
-time to sleep," said Ike, who, though much interested in Ulna, felt that
-he must give expression to his own feelings or choke.
-
-The young Indian explained that he was so weighted down by his rifle and
-cartridges that, after the first rapids had been passed, he had only
-strength left to keep afloat without being able to make the shore.
-
-"When I was swept into the second rapids," he said, "all hope vanished.
-I must have been rendered unconscious by some blow, but be that as it
-may, I have no memory of reaching the bank. When I came to last night I
-was half lying in the water. I drew myself out and walked about, trying
-to find something to eat. I could not sleep for thinking of you, for I
-did not see, after what I had suffered, how you were to get through the
-rapids on the raft."
-
-"I cannot describe to you how my heart beat with joy a few hours ago,
-when I saw the raft shooting out of the foam with all its passengers
-except the dog on board. I saw you making for the shore, and I shouted
-to attract your attention to the opposite side."
-
-"If we'd a heerd yeh, yeh wouldn't ha' had to hollered twice," said Ike.
-
-"I did not feel very strong till I saw you, and then, as there was
-nothing else left me, I made up my mind to try swimming across."
-
-"An' you made it; you made it like a--like a mice, an' yeh fotched yeh
-rifle widge yeh," said Ike, in tones of great approval.
-
-"Ike he heap talkee," said Wah Shin, as he sat another half of a broiled
-rabbit before Ulna. "Me cookee light slate along."
-
-"And now," said Ulna, who had the rare faculty of eating while he spoke,
-"tell me how you made out after we parted in that strange way."
-
-Sam narrated the adventures, already recorded, and after some
-discussion, to Ike's great delight, it was decided to remain here for at
-least another day, and to lay in a supply of rabbits before they faced
-the unknown and dreaded caon again.
-
-After Ulna had appeased his hunger, Sam made him lie down before the
-fire and take a sleep, while he and Ike went off on another hunting
-expedition.
-
-They brought home several loads of rabbits during the day, and Wah Shin,
-who believed the game would keep better if it were cooked, busied
-himself broiling rabbits till the last one was in an edible condition.
-
-Toward evening Ulna got up from the blanket, in which he had been
-wrapped, and when he put on his clothes he looked like an entirely
-different being from the spectre that appeared at the river side some
-hours before.
-
-Now that the immediate danger from hunger was over, Sam would have been
-comparatively happy had it not been for thoughts of his father.
-
-It is well that it is not given to us to lift the veil of the future, or
-to tell what is happening beyond the range of our own vision. Yet, it
-must be confessed, that it would have eased the minds of the loving
-father and the devoted son, if each could have known of the situation of
-the other at this time.
-
-It was not in Ike's nature to feel trouble for any length of time. He
-had all the light-heartedness of his race, and an enviable capacity for
-enjoying the present.
-
-He played with the dog; he laughed and sang, till at length, overcome
-with the excess of enjoyment--and it may be the great quantities of
-broiled rabbit he had eaten, he threw himself on the ground before the
-fire and was asleep in no time.
-
-Again Sam detailed the guards, taking the first watch himself, and when
-another morning dawned they found themselves more rested and refreshed
-than they had been at any time since leaving Gold Cave Camp.
-
-The night before Ulna busied himself cutting the jack-rabbits' skins
-into strips, which he knotted and twisted into ropes, and these ropes
-were found of the greatest use in binding the pieces of the raft
-together before they resumed their journey down the long, dark, watery
-arcade.
-
-They were afloat again soon after daylight, and the thought that they
-were safe and sound and all together again brought unspeakable joy to
-every heart--and we might include Maj in the list, for from his seat in
-the middle of the raft he eyed his friends with an expression of great
-comfort and satisfaction.
-
-Long before the sun rose high enough to look into the caon they had
-drifted many miles away from their camp of the morning.
-
-The current, which Sam estimated at about three miles an hour, was
-unbroken; flowing on in silent majesty, between the cold, gray cliffs
-that rose at points for more than a mile sheer up, till their eyes grew
-giddy in measuring their elevation.
-
-Here and there, to the right and left, they passed side caons, black
-and forbidding, like cells set in the walls of a mighty prison.
-
-In the afternoon these side caons became more frequent, and as they
-approached one Sam saw that a stream of clear water was pouring out from
-between its walls.
-
-As this opening was on the east, or left bank, and in the direction of
-Hurley's Gulch, he determined to try and get the raft into it, and see
-if they could find an avenue to the upper world through its bed.
-
-He told Ulna of his purpose, and in an instant the young Ute had a pole
-in his hand.
-
-They could touch bottom at this point and as the current from the side
-caon was not very strong, they succeeded in getting the raft in.
-
-The bed of the stream was so narrow in places that Ike on one side and
-Wah Shin on the other were enabled to help along by pulling at the
-rocks.
-
-It was growing dark again, and Sam, elated at their success so far,
-began to fear that they might not be able to reach a place where they
-could make fast for the night, when all at once the caon walls, as if
-they had been touched by the wand of a magician, expanded into a
-beautiful bowl-shaped valley.
-
-This valley, in the dim light, looked to be fully a quarter of a mile in
-diameter, and to the great surprise of all it had grassy banks; and as
-their feet touched the sward the delicious odor of wild thyme and Indian
-pinks filled the air.
-
-They found enough dry wood to make a fire to warm up their meat.
-
-"It looks to me," said Sam, as he sat quietly before the fire, for some
-time after supper, "as if the worst is over, and that we can get to
-Hurley's Gulch without much trouble from here."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.--THE TRIAL IN PROGRESS.
-
-
-It cannot be denied that these rude forms of justice, known as "Judge
-Lynch's Courts," have done some good in disorganized conditions of
-society, by deterring, if not in punishing, crime. Indeed, in many cases
-vigilance committees have been of the greatest service, even in places
-where the law is supposed to be in force. At one time these committees
-saved the city of San Francisco from the control of murderers and
-gamblers.
-
-But on the whole they do more harm than good, for, as in the present
-instance at Hurley's Gulch, bad men join them for self-protection or to
-carry out their own selfish ends.
-
-The only men who can properly administer justice are those accustomed to
-weighing evidence, and, no matter how well meaning, rough miners are apt
-to be influenced by their feelings rather than their reason.
-
-It would not have taken a stranger long to see that a majority of the
-men gathered in that canvas-covered apartment, in the hotel at Hurley's
-Gulch, were prejudiced against the prisoners.
-
-To Mr. Willett, who was familiar with the dignified forms of courts of
-justice in the East, the proceedings looked like a burlesque on law, for
-an attempt was made to do things after the manner of long established
-methods.
-
-Before the prisoners were brought in, it was decided by the committee
-having the matter in charge, that a man named Jacks, an ignorant,
-red-faced fellow, who had occupied a similar position on a former
-occasion, should act as judge.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were given camp-chairs directly in front of
-"the judge," who was making a desperate effort to maintain the dignified
-bearing supposed to be essential to the office.
-
-The judge rapped with the bottom of a heavy tumbler--the contents of
-which he had just drank--on a little pine table by his side and called
-out:
-
-"The next thing in order, gents, is to 'lect a sheriff and a clerk, for
-I propose that everything in this court shall be square and reg'lar;
-and, if the prizners has any objections to the officers they must say so
-now, or forever after hold their peace."
-
-When the judge had ceased speaking, a man with a bullet-head, a red
-shirt and no neck to speak of--he was the proprietor of this remarkable
-hotel--pushed himself through the crowd and called out:
-
-"I nominate Badger for sheriff of this here court."
-
-Without waiting for this motion to be seconded, the judge yelled out:
-
-"All in favor of Badger for sheriff say 'aye,' all opposed say 'aye,'
-too."
-
-As this arrangement left no chance for those who might be opposed to
-Badger to say "no," he was declared to be unanimously elected.
-
-"Next thing in order is to 'lect a clerk," said the judge.
-
-The man who had nominated Badger now yelled out:
-
-"I name Frank Shirley for clerk!"
-
-The judge, without waiting for the forms in such cases, would have
-declared Shirley elected had not Mr. Willett leaped to his feet and
-shouted:
-
-"I protest."
-
-"One of the prizners protests," said the judge, and he picked up the
-tumbler with an angry gesture, as if about to hurl it at Mr. Willett's
-head.
-
-Frank Shirley evidently expected to act as clerk of the court without
-any opposition, for as soon as his name was called he pushed himself to
-the front.
-
-"What objection have you got to Mr. Shirley, I'd like to know?" said the
-judge, his face growing redder with anger.
-
-"I have many objections," said Mr. Willett, not at all intimidated by
-the frowns of Shirley's friends.
-
-"Can't the man write?" asked the judge.
-
-"I suppose he can," replied Mr. Willett.
-
-"Wa'al, if he can write what more do you want in a clerk?" said the
-judge.
-
-"Many things."
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"He should be free from prejudices."
-
-"And so he is."
-
-"And so he is not," said Mr. Willett, calmly but firmly. "He is my
-bitter enemy. He has been setting the good men of this place against me
-by his slanders and unblushing falsehoods. If you want this trial to be
-fair you must not begin by making officers of men who may find it to
-their interest to convict me."
-
-"I mean to do what's fair," Shirley managed to say. "And I am not
-seeking this place. If you elect me I will serve, and do my whole duty
-like a man, forgetting the past bad character of this unfortunate man,
-Willett, who married my cousin and sent the poor woman to the grave by
-his cruelties."
-
-This speech had a powerful effect on the mob, for the men began to
-stamp, and some of them yelled:
-
-"Don't pay no heed to the prizner, but go right straight on with the
-trial!"
-
-"Yes, we'll go on with the trial," said the judge, rapping for order, as
-if determined to have it or break the table.
-
-Still cool and undaunted, Mr. Willett stood up till the storm had
-somewhat abated.
-
-"If," he said, "I am to have no voice in my own defence, then this trial
-is a farce and the sooner it ends in the murder of two innocent men the
-better. If the judge did not mean that I could object to the officers
-you were about to elect, why did he say so? I am simply availing myself
-of the privilege you grant me, and I can give you still stronger reasons
-for my opposition to this Frank Shirley, whom I here denounce, as a man
-without manly courage or honest principle, and wholly unworthy of
-belief. He is the one man in this territory who will reap wealth from
-the death of myself and my son; are you willing to let such a man take
-part in a trial that may seal my doom in his interest?"
-
-The judge was about to make an angry comment on this, but he was
-prevented by Collins, who pushed his way through the crowd, and said
-with a flash of the eyes that boded no good to those who opposed him:
-
-"Thar ain't no man in Hurley's Gulch, or out of it either that'll stand
-before my face, or the face of my pard, Si Brill, and say that either of
-us don't always tell the right up and down truth. If thar is sich a man
-har, I'd like him to trot himself out so that I ken git a good square
-look at him for 'bout three seconds and a half."
-
-As Collins said this, he quickly threw his strong right hand back on the
-stock of one of his revolvers and took a calm survey of the sea of
-astonished faces.
-
-If there was any man present who had doubts as to the honesty and
-veracity of Mr. Collins and his partner, he thought it the part of
-prudence to keep them to himself, for the present at least.
-
-"Now," continued Collins, after a half minute of painful silence, "I
-happen to know, and so does my pard, Si Brill, that that sneak, Shirley,
-who has been tryin' to make friends with the honest men and the mean
-ones too, in this camp, by keepin' of 'em howlin' drunk, will fall into
-a big estate over thar in Michigan, if Mr. Willett's son should chance
-to peg out afore he gits to be old enough to vote in politics. So, for
-one, I ain't a goin' to stand by and let that cur have anythin' to do
-with the case. And more than that, you fellers ought to feel ashamed,
-clar down to your boots, at 'lectin' for sheriff of this court a man
-who's known in every minin' camp this side of the Sierras as a drunkard,
-a bummer--yes, and a murderer! that's Badger, and I make the charge
-right here to his face. If he don't deny it, mebbe some of his new found
-friends, Jacks, the judge of the court for instance, might like to take
-it up. If so, I'm just about as ready to back my words now as at any
-other time."
-
-Again Collins drew himself up and looked about him, with his right hand
-gripping the stock of his six-shooter.
-
-"See har, Collins," said the judge, speaking in tones intended to be
-very soothing, "we're not here to fight, but to do our duty as good
-men----"
-
-"But is it doin' yer duty to tell the prizners they kin object, and
-then, when one of 'em does so, to try and choke him off, so's to put in
-an enemy and a sneak as the clerk of this court?"
-
-"Wa'll, Collins, thar's other folks that ken write in this camp," said
-the judge. "So I'll withdraw Mr. Shirley, and let another be named."
-
-Much crest-fallen at this decision of the judge, and the very
-uncomplimentary opinion of himself which he had been forced to listen
-to, Frank Shirley shrunk back into the crowd from which he had lately
-emerged with so much confidence.
-
-Even Badger, usually so ready to assert himself, remained dumb in the
-presence of this strong, brave man.
-
-A young miner, bearing the appropriate name of Clark, was selected as
-clerk of the court, and then the judge said it was in order to swear in
-a jury.
-
-"'Cordin' to law," he added, "the prizners has a right to ax the jury
-questions, and to object to 'em if they doesn't pan out all right. But I
-hope we'll git along faster'n we've been doin' else this yar trial will
-last from July to eternity."
-
-As Mr. Willett did not know any of the men who were called to act as
-jurors, he judged their fitness for the position by their appearance,
-and so he offered objections to only two, and they were drunk.
-
-It was already noon when the judge declared that all the preliminaries
-were over, and that he was now prepared to go on with the trial in
-earnest, "and have justice did to the livin' and the dead."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.--OUT OF THE DEPTHS.
-
-
-The delight of Sam Willett and his friends at being out of the great
-caon compensated them in part for the severe trials through which they
-had recently passed, and with the disappearance of the stupendous walls
-of the Colorado they believed all their troubles would vanish.
-
-Daylight convinced them that they had encamped for the night in a spot
-that seemed like an Eden when compared with their recent resting-places,
-though back from the charming little valley the rocks rose straight up
-to a height nearly as great as those of the main river.
-
-Hungry people care more for the quantity than the variety of their food,
-and so the boys made a hearty breakfast of the goodly supply of broiled
-rabbits, and then started to find a way out of the valley.
-
-Sam and Ulna soon discovered that though they could not take the raft
-much further up the side caon, that they could march along its bed at
-the bottom of which flowed a little stream of clear, cool water.
-
-They came back to camp, made up their arms, blankets and remaining
-supplies into four bundles, and Sam announced that they would follow up
-the stream on foot, for its direction was directly toward Hurley's
-Gulch.
-
-With wise precaution Sam made fast the raft, for though such an event
-was to be dreaded, he wanted to have it within reach if they were again
-forced to go back to the caon in which they had suffered so much.
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, as they took up their line of march along the
-stream, "dis seems like ole times."
-
-"How so?" asked Sam, who was always pleased to see the colored boy in a
-good humor.
-
-"W'y, we're totin' oursels instead of habin' de raft tote us. I 'clar to
-goodness, I nebber wants to see a raft agin the longest day I lib. Ize
-done wif rafts foreber and eber, amen."
-
-"Duno," said Wah Shin, who seemed always very solemn, "dat laft sabe us,
-me no go backe on laft. No laft, den we allee dead."
-
-Maj barked approval of this and began to leap on every one in turn to
-show his delight at the new method of travel.
-
-They found no serious obstacles in the caon, though the sharp grade
-rose in a way that indicated they were rising rapidly to the table lands
-above.
-
-Late in the afternoon they came to a spring near the head of the ravine
-along which they had been marching all day, and, as it was well known to
-all that water and fuel were scarce in the uplands, it was decided to
-stay here for the night.
-
-While Ike and Wah Shin gathered dry cactus and weeds to make a fire,
-Ulna shouted to them not to make a light till he came back; then
-motioning to Sam to follow him he led the way up a steep ascent, the
-summit of which promised a view of the surrounding country.
-
-After a half hour's clambering they reached the top, and after the
-cramped range of vision that recently hemmed them in, the sight that now
-gladdened their eyes was thrilling and inspiring beyond expression.
-
-A table land, nearly devoid of vegetation, broken here and there by
-chasms, or stately pillars of sand rock came to view under a blaze of
-golden sun-light that poured down from a cloudless sky with a splendor
-nearly blinding in its brilliancy.
-
-Away to the east the wall of the Sierra Madre mountains rose up like an
-amethystine rampart, the snow peaks glowing in the light of the
-declining sun like mighty masses of fire opal.
-
-After inhaling a long breath, the better to give expression to his
-surprise and delight, Sam exclaimed in the poetical language of Mrs.
-Hemans:
-
-"For the strength of the hills we bless Thee, my God, our father's God!"
-
-Ulna's fine face, though usually calm and impassive, now showed much
-feeling, but that this was not due to the glorious scenery about them
-was soon evident.
-
-"Sam," he said, "I didn't care to speak to you before Ike and Wah Shin,
-for I did not want to excite them, but I saw something down there at the
-spring that troubles me very much."
-
-"What was that?" asked Sam.
-
-"A track."
-
-"What kind of a track?"
-
-"An Indian's."
-
-"But this is the hunting ground of your people, the Utes, why should we
-fear?"
-
-"There would be no war if the different tribes of men were content to
-stay in their own hunting grounds, but that track was made by an
-Apache," said Ulna, with more than usual seriousness.
-
-"How do you know it was made by an Apache?"
-
-"By the impression of the sole of the moccasin. The Mezcarillas have the
-sole in two pieces, sewed together down the middle; the Utes have
-their's in one."
-
-"But the Apaches have recently made a treaty of peace with the whites;
-why should we fear them?" said Sam.
-
-"The Apaches will break the treaty, or will defy it, if they can do so
-with safety. But they have never made a treaty with the Utes. For
-generations they have been at war with my people, and if they knew I was
-here they would be after my scalp with the hunger of wolves."
-
-"They could not take yours unless they took mine," said Sam, reaching
-out his hand to prove his sincerity.
-
-"I am certain of that, Sam; but I do not want to add to your dangers and
-troubles, if I cannot lessen them."
-
-"Of course not, Ulna, but I do not understand you."
-
-"It may be that the Apaches, and I am not sure they are about, will let
-you and the others go on without harm, while if they discover me they
-will be sure to make an attack on all of us," said Ulna, speaking very
-slowly, but with a strong, steady voice.
-
-"Well, we can't help that. If they attack us we shall be able to show
-that we have rifles and know how to handle them," said Sam, bravely.
-
-"This is what I have been thinking," continued Ulna. "I can make my way
-alone from here faster than the four of us can, and I can elude the
-Apaches as the hawk eludes the wild-cat. If I can reach Hurley's Gulch I
-can start men out to your relief; if I fail you will be none the worse
-off."
-
-"This is too serious a matter to decide at once," said Sam. "Even to
-save the lives of the others, I would not increase your danger----"
-
-"But what if the danger of all is increased by my staying here?"
-
-"Then I should say go, but let us go down to the spring and think it all
-over. I am sure we can tell Ike and Wah Shin about this; they are both
-plucky and faithful."
-
-"As you say," was Ulna's reply, and he cast a quick glance about the
-horizon before descending from the rock on which they had been standing.
-
-"What do you see?" asked Sam, looking eagerly in the direction of Ulna's
-fixed eyes.
-
-"Apaches!" was the whispered reply.
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Off to the south."
-
-Looking in the direction pointed out by Ulna, Sam saw, low down on the
-edge of the horizon, a number of pigmy figures that but for their
-movements might have passed for bunches of cactus.
-
-"Are they coming this way?" asked Sam, unconsciously tightening his grip
-on his rifle, while his heart beat faster.
-
-"I cannot tell that, but if they should come they must not find us
-here."
-
-Ulna sprang down the rocks, followed by Sam, and they found Ike and Wah
-Shin about to start a fire.
-
-"You must make no fire to-night," said Sam.
-
-"What foh?" asked Ike, who had a strong prejudice in favor of hot food.
-
-"Because we are afraid there are Indians near by."
-
-"Injuns!" exclaimed Ike, and he pressed his hands to the top of his
-head, as if to keep down his rising scalp.
-
-"Yes; we must fill our canteens with water and move from here at once."
-
-"But whar to, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"To the shelter of some rocks not far from the head of this ravine. Let
-the fire go, Wah Shin, we can get along without it to-night."
-
-"Me no likee bad Injun; me no kalee fo' fi'," said Wah Shin, as he
-kicked over the pile of fuel, and hurriedly began to fill the four
-canteens.
-
-The sun had set and the chilling shadows were creeping up from the
-caons, in which they seemed to have their home during the day, when Sam
-and Ulna led the way into the broad plateau of the upper world.
-
-The mass of rocks in which they sought shelter was close to the head of
-the rift.
-
-The increasing darkness favored their reaching these rocks without being
-seen by any one not near by.
-
-This was an admirable hiding place, and in the event of trouble it had
-every advantage for observation and defense.
-
-In the midst of these rocks they ate their supper, and Sam detailed the
-guards for the night.
-
-His greatest fear was that the dog might reveal, by growling, their
-hiding place to any who might come near. To guard against this as much
-as possible, he fastened a rope muzzle about the dog's head and told Ike
-to watch him.
-
-Some three hours of darkness had passed when Ike called out:
-
-"See har, Mistah Sam, this yar dog scents somethin' an' I can't hold him
-to save my life."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.--FROM SAFETY INTO DANGER.
-
-
-It did not need the low growling of the dog to convince our young
-friends that they were in the midst of danger.
-
-Along the trail leading up from the ravine, they could hear low,
-gutteral voices, and they did not need to be told that the Apaches, whom
-they had seen as the sun was setting, had come to the spring, for the
-fall of moccasined feet could be heard dying out in that direction.
-
-"The Apaches!" whispered Sam, as he grasped Ulna's arm with one hand,
-and clutched his rifle more tightly with the other.
-
-"Yes," was the reply.
-
-"Do you think they will discover us?"
-
-"They cannot help doing so."
-
-"What will be their next move after finding we are near by?"
-
-"They will trail us down."
-
-"To these rocks?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And then?"
-
-"And then if they find me they will see that the rising sun looks on one
-less Ute in the world," was Ulna's reply, given with his habitual
-calmness.
-
-"But we will fight," said Sam, stoutly. "And if it comes to dying, we
-will die together, and the enemy will make nothing by it."
-
-"Ha! dey's startin' a fiah down dar by the spring," said Ike, who had
-been peering through the darkness in the direction the Apaches had
-taken.
-
-This was true. A column of luminous smoke, followed by a fountain of
-sparks and flame, shot into the calm night air near the spring.
-
-The Indians were using the fuel Ike and Wah Shin had gathered, and by
-the light of the dancing flames their slender, half-naked figures could
-be seen.
-
-Sam counted thirteen warriors. All appeared to be well armed with
-rifles, and the red paint on their faces told that they were out on no
-mission of peace.
-
-"I will go out and try to learn their purpose," said Ulna, as he slung
-his rifle on his back, and tightened his belt.
-
-"But they may catch you," said Sam.
-
-"I will see that they don't."
-
-"Can you understand them if you hear them speak?"
-
-"Yes, as well as if they were Utes. It is better that I should go, and
-if I find that it will be wiser not to return, remember I shall either
-escape to Hurley's Gulch, or stay so close that I can be of service if
-needed. But, if it can be avoided, do not bring on a fight with these
-people."
-
-Sam was about to protest against Ulna's course, but before he could
-utter a word the young Ute had sprung lightly over the rocks, and was
-making his way to the spring.
-
-For the first time since leaving Gold Cave Camp Sam Willett felt
-thoroughly alarmed.
-
-He had fearlessly faced the storm and stood undaunted in the presence of
-Nature in her most awful aspects, without losing heart for a moment, but
-the presence of these savages--ignorant and bloodthirsty--made him
-tremble for the safety of his dear father, to whose rescue he was
-straining every nerve to come.
-
-Ulna's daring and seemingly reckless conduct filled Sam with alarm, for
-apart from his great regard for that youth, he knew that he could not
-offer a strong resistance to the Apaches with only the inexpert Ike and
-Wah Shin to depend on.
-
-"I wouldn't ha' did wat Ulna's done," said Ike, in a frightened whisper.
-"No, not for fifty hundred thousand million dollars in goold an' solit
-dimeints."
-
-"No catchee dis chile do so much like foolee," said Wah Shin, with a
-shudder at the thought.
-
-"Hist! Keep still and stop the dog's growling," said Sam sternly, as
-from his perch, higher up, he tried to make out what the Indians were
-doing down by the fire, and if possible to discover Ulna.
-
-Meantime Ulna, moving as silently as the shadows that came and went
-about the fire near the spring, made his way toward the enemy.
-
-He walked so erect and quickly that it would seem as if it were his
-purpose to go directly to the fire, but he took care to keep a rock
-between him and the enemy.
-
-When within fifty yards of the spring he dropped on his hands and knees,
-and without stopping, crept quickly forward.
-
-When he got so close to the fire that he could distinctly hear what the
-Apaches were talking about, he came to a stop, and lying close to the
-ground, he bent eagerly forward to listen.
-
-The leader of this band was a man named Blanco, which is the Spanish
-word for white, though in this case it seemed to be misapplied.
-
-Blanco's repulsive appearance was increased by the fact that he had only
-one eye--like Badger.
-
-The chief and his companions had already discovered that the spring had
-been recently visited, and they very naturally inferred from the tracks
-of shoes that they had been made by white men.
-
-Nor did the impress of the moccasins escape their keen eyes.
-
-"One Ute, three white men," were the first words Ulna heard when he got
-within hearing distance of the Apaches.
-
-"Where did they come from?" asked a brave, who by the aid of a torch had
-been examining the tracks lower down the ravine.
-
-"It looks as if they came by way of the Great Caon," said one.
-
-"Ugh!" grunted Blanco, "I don't believe that."
-
-"But the trail leads that way," persisted the man who held the torch.
-
-"I don't care if it led into the sky."
-
-"If it did, Blanco, you could not see it, and though our medicine-men
-say that people in the times far past came from the sky, I never heard
-of their bringing dogs with them," said the man with the torch.
-
-"Dogs!" exclaimed the band in chorus.
-
-"No; one dog."
-
-"Where is it?" asked the chief.
-
-"Here is the track," and the man held the torch down and showed the
-impress of Maj's feet on the ground.
-
-"No, that's a wolf," said the chief.
-
-"The foot of the mountain wolf is not so large," said the keen observer,
-"nor has it long hairs on its toes as has the creature that made this
-track."
-
-Like all leaders, the chief did not like to be so openly contradicted by
-one under him, and he was again about to protest that he was right, and
-it was a wolf that had been at the spring, when, as if to set all doubts
-at rest, the fierce barking of a dog could be heard at the top of the
-hill and not more than two hundred yards away.
-
-Maj, in some way, had slipped his muzzle and escaped Ike's hold and was
-now making himself heard outside the rocks, among which Sam and his
-friends were hiding.
-
-The instant the Indians heard the sound they seized their arms and
-sprang away from the light of the fire.
-
-As luck, rather than design, had it, they ran in the direction where
-Ulna was hiding, and before he could think of rising to his feet they
-were about him.
-
-The brave fellow stuck close to the ground, and he might have escaped
-had not one of the Apaches stumbled and fell on top of him.
-
-The savage gave a yell of fear, but at the same instant he seized Ulna
-and held him fast.
-
-"What is wrong there?" demanded the chief, as he hurried in the
-direction from which the cry came.
-
-"A Ute! a Ute!" was the response of the man whom Ulna was making a
-desperate effort to cast off.
-
-In an instant every brave had fallen on Ulna, and, almost as quickly, he
-was bound hand and foot, but he uttered neither cry nor groan to show
-the pain nor to tell of his mental anguish.
-
-"Who are you?" asked Blanco, bending over him.
-
-"I am a Ute," was the reply.
-
-"Have you a name?"
-
-"I have."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Ulna."
-
-"What! the nephew of the hated Uray?"
-
-"The nephew of the great chief, Uray."
-
-"You come alone?"
-
-"No, with friends."
-
-"Utes?"
-
-"No, miners from Gold Cave Camp."
-
-"How came you here?"
-
-"Through the caon."
-
-"And you want me to believe that?"
-
-"I ask you to believe nothing; I tell the truth," said Ulna proudly and
-half-defiantly.
-
-"Who ever went through the Great Caon and lived?" said the Apache in a
-calmer tone.
-
-"We have," said Ulna.
-
-"How many of you?"
-
-"Four and a dog."
-
-"And where are the others?"
-
-"They are where they can defy a foe or welcome a friend," said Ulna with
-undaunted spirit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.--THE TRIAL ENDS.
-
-
-Mr. Willett, like every American of intelligence, not only knew a great
-deal about the laws of the country of which he was proud of being a
-citizen, but he also knew as well as most lawyers the methods by which
-trials were conducted in the regularly organized courts of justice.
-
-In addition to this he saw that the men who had gathered to try him and
-Hank Tims, though anxious to follow the forms as they understood them,
-were very ignorant, and like all their class, had a profound respect for
-those who knew more, or seemed to know more, than themselves.
-
-The jury was composed of twelve rough, sturdy men, who looked as if they
-fully realized their duty.
-
-Even the judge sat more erect and tried to look dignified at the risk of
-being ridiculous.
-
-"Now we're all ready to begin, and I want order in the court. The gents
-as has thar hats on will take 'em off and hold 'em in thar hands," said
-the judge, again rapping with the heavy glass on the little pine table
-by his side.
-
-The "gents" promptly took off their hats, and this was followed by the
-scraping of boots and a chorus of little coughs that told how nervous
-all were.
-
-"Now," continued the judge when order was restored, "we'll have the
-witnesses in and go on with the trial."
-
-"Before you call any witnesses," said Mr. Willett, "I want you or
-whoever is conducting this case to state the charge against me and my
-friend Hank Tims."
-
-"We can't have everything har like if it was a reg'lar out-and-out
-court," said the judge angrily, and again picking up the tumbler as if
-he were going to hurl it at some one. "And as for the charges, I thought
-every one in and about Hurley's Gulch knowed that you two is charged
-with robbin' and murderin' poor Tom Edwards. Thar, I hope that statement
-of the case will suit the most partic'lar."
-
-"I and my companion, being the most interested," said Mr. Willett, with
-wonderful calmness, "should be the most particular; but if that is the
-best statement of the case that can be made, I am willing that you shall
-go ahead, asking only that I be permitted to cross-question any and all
-witnesses that may be called."
-
-"This court ain't got any objections as it knows on to yer axin'
-questions, pervidin' you stick right down to the point," growled the
-judge.
-
-Nodding to show that he was satisfied with this, Mr. Willett said, "I am
-ready," and the young man acting as clerk called out:
-
-"Badger!"
-
-Badger moved nearer to the judge and began to twirl his hat in his big,
-rough hands in a way that showed he was anything but calm.
-
-"Now, Badger," said Judge Jacks, "tell this yar court and this yar jury
-all you know 'bout the case."
-
-Badger looked into his hat as if he saw something there that might
-refresh his memory, and then, after coughing and casting his malignant
-eye up at the ceiling, he began:
-
-"Wa'al, this is 'bout all I knows 'bout this case. You see, me and Tom
-Edwards had been ole pards, and so I knowed him as well as any man this
-side the Rockies. He wasn't a bad kind of a feller to them as knowed how
-to take him, and though he didn't have much book larnin'----"
-
-Here Mr. Willett interrupted Badger to say:
-
-"This evidence, your honor, is not to the point. We are not here to
-discuss the character of the dead man, but to find out if we can who
-murdered him."
-
-"Reckon yer right," said the judge, and then he told Badger he must
-"stick to bottom facts."
-
-Thus admonished Badger resumed:
-
-"Me and Mr. Shirley got to Hurley's Gulch the night before Tom was did
-for so cruel bad, and we found he was on a spree, and complainin' to
-every one that Mr. Willett he was a-tryin' to euchre him out of fifteen
-hundred dollars, as he'd 'greed to pay for the claim over at Gold Cave
-Camp. Wa'al, the next mornin' 'bout an hour or so afore day me and Mr.
-Shirley was sleepin' together when we heard two pistol shots and a man
-a-hollerin' "murder." We hurried out and found poor Tom all shot to
-pieces. We carried him into this yar hotel, and with his dyin' last
-breath he told us that it was Mr. Willett and Hank Tims as did for him.
-Thar, that's all I knows 'bout the case."
-
-My young readers will notice that there was no oath administered to
-Badger, nor would such a sacred proceeding have affected in any way the
-nature of his evidence.
-
-"Now you've heard Badger's evidence," said the judge, with an angry
-glance at Mr. Willett and Hank. "Have you any questions to ax him?"
-
-"I have a few," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Well, rattle 'em off quick."
-
-"Badger," began Mr. Willett, "what is your business?"
-
-"I'm a miner," was the answer.
-
-"Where do you mine?"
-
-"I ain't at work--jist now."
-
-"How long have you been at Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"Off and on, 'bout a month."
-
-"You came here broke?"
-
-"Yes. I wasn't flush, I'll allow."
-
-"But you are flush now?"
-
-"Wa'al, I've got a few dollars."
-
-"Where did you get your money?"
-
-"That's my business," said Badger, angrily.
-
-"Yes," said the judge, "no gent ain't bound to tell no one how he came
-by his money--unless some one else goes to work and claims it as his'n."
-
-"My object is to show that Badger received his money from Frank
-Shirley," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"And what if he did?" asked the judge.
-
-"There is this about it, that if Badger is in Frank Shirley's employ,
-then he is working to get me and my son out of the way, for if my son
-dies before he's twenty-one years of age, then Shirley falls heir to a
-large fortune."
-
-"We ain't a-tryin' Frank Shirley. So I ain't agoin' to let you ax any
-sich questions," said the judge, rapping vigorously on the table.
-
-Still calm, if not confident, Mr. Willett asked:
-
-"Badger, were not you and Frank Shirley dressed when you say you heard
-those shots?"
-
-"Wa'al, yes, except our boots," replied Badger.
-
-"And you were awake?"
-
-"No; but I can't say I was sleepin' heavy."
-
-"_Badger, did not you kill Tom Edwards?_"
-
-This question came with the suddenness of an explosion, and it so
-staggered Badger that it was fully a minute before he could stammer out:
-
-"No. Who said I did?"
-
-"I say it! You committed the murder at Shirley's bidding, so as to get
-me out of the way, and you prompted the murdered man whom you shot down
-in the darkness to say I did it," said Mr. Willett with a forceful
-manner that startled all.
-
-During the confusion that followed this bold but perfectly just
-accusation, Badger left the witness-stand and mixed in with the
-astonished crowd.
-
-Frank Shirley was next called, but as his evidence was much the same as
-that given by Badger, it is unnecessary to record it.
-
-On his cross-examination, he claimed to have no ill-feeling against Mr.
-Willett or his son; and he had the boldness to claim that he did not
-want young Sam's fortune, as he was rich in his own right.
-
-Two other witnesses were called to prove the dying words of Tom Edwards,
-and on these and the fact that Mr. Willett had no evidence to prove that
-he had paid for the claim at Gold Cave Camp, the whole case hung.
-
-Mr. Willett testified in his own behalf.
-
-He told such a clear, straightforward story that, for the time being,
-even his enemies were impressed with its truth.
-
-In a tremulous voice he spoke about his beloved son, whom he feared to
-be dead, and he said, in conclusion:
-
-"Had it not been for the cruel flood that snatched from me my boy, the
-only tie that holds me to earth, he would have been here with the paper
-bearing Tom Edwards' signature, and then you would have seen that I
-could have no reason for desiring the death of this man, whose
-drunkenness made him his own worst enemy."
-
-After this Hank Tims told all he knew, corroborating Mr. Willett, and
-boldly asserting that he was present when Mr. Willett paid the money to
-Tom Edwards.
-
-Collins and Si Brill testified that they had known Hank "off and on" for
-many years, and that no man, up to this time had ever dared to say a
-word against his truthfulness or honesty.
-
-"Wa'al," said the judge, when the evidence was all in, "I give it as my
-opinion, that them two men, Willett and Tims, kilt Tom Edwards. I don't
-believe thar stories for a minute. Men that commit crime will lie to
-hide it every time, and don't you gentlemen of the jury go for to make
-any mistake about it.
-
-"Thar, that's all I've got to say. Now let the jury take thar time and
-fetch in a verdict that'll suit all hands. I ain't got anythin' more to
-say. The evidence is all in, and so, till the time comes to say the
-prizners is guilty or innocent the trial is jest 'bout over."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.--THE APACHES HAVE THEIR WAY.
-
-
-If an earthquake had shaken the rocks about his ears, Sam could not have
-been more shocked and startled than he was at the barking of the dog.
-
-As for Ike, he was rendered speechless, for Maj had darted away without
-any apparent effort to hold him back.
-
-"Ah, golly!" gasped Wah Shin, "de fat am allee gone in de file!"
-
-Although Maj had done all the damage possible, for Sam could see by the
-movements of the Indians that they had heard the barking, yet he did not
-provoke his young master to anger.
-
-Sam sprang down, caught the dog by the collar and pulled him back to
-their hiding place.
-
-"I--I wish we'd a left dat ar dorg back home!" cried Ike. "He ain't did
-no good eber sence we started, but to eat up de grub; an' now he goes
-an' makes a fuss, jest whin we most wanted foh him to keep his tongue to
-hisself."
-
-"See that he does not get out again," said Sam. "After all the dog only
-led the Indians to a discovery which they must have made sooner or
-later. Ah, I wish Ulna had not gone out. He knows the habits of these
-people and he would know what to do."
-
-"De man as knows what to do ondah dese yer sarcumstances," groaned Ike,
-"is a heap sight smarter'n me."
-
-"Plenty men know heap mo' den you," said Wah Shin, who was evidently in
-a bad humor. "You don' know 'nuff gettee in out lain."
-
-"Hist! Keep still," said Sam, who had again clambered to his perch on
-the rock that commanded a view of the fire. "I can see men coming this
-way."
-
-"Oh, laws a massy!" cried Ike, and with one hand he held the dog, while
-with the other he pressed his lips, "to keep from hollerin' right out,"
-as he afterward expressed it.
-
-Sam was not mistaken as to the movements of the Apaches. A number of
-them, led by their chief, had left Ulna in charge of the others and
-advanced boldly to the head of the ravine.
-
-As a proof that they had no fear of the party they were in search of,
-one of the braves carried a torch, which he brandished above his head
-till he seemed to walk amid a fountain of sparks.
-
-Taking a position where he could see without being seen, Sam, with an
-anxiously beating heart, watched the oncoming braves.
-
-They approached to within about fifty yards of the rocks in which the
-little band had sought refuge, and came to a sudden halt.
-
-Sam was wondering what would happen next, when, to his great surprise,
-the chief called out:
-
-"Hello, white mans! Hello!"
-
-The Indian spoke broken English in a way that no combination of letters
-could give a correct idea of, so for our own convenience, as well as for
-the reader's clearer understanding, we shall report what he said in the
-ordinary way, though Indians never use the elegant language some writers
-put into their mouths.
-
-"What do you want?" was Sam's response to the Indian's outcry.
-
-"Who you are?" asked the Indian.
-
-"My name is Sam Willett."
-
-"Where you come from?"
-
-"From the caon."
-
-"Oh, no; that's a Ute lie."
-
-"I did not ask you to believe me, nor do I care to talk to you. Go off
-about your business, if you have any," said Sam, his confidence
-increasing every moment that he spoke.
-
-"You got dog?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Big dog?"
-
-"A very big dog."
-
-"Him bite?"
-
-"Yes, if you come nearer."
-
-"That dog fat?"
-
-At this question the Indians laughed and jumped about, as if they
-thought their chief had uttered a very fine joke, for to the Apache a
-fat dog is the daintiest dish in all the world.
-
-Sam treated the inquiry about Maj's condition with haughty silence,
-while all the time the animal under consideration was growling and
-straining to break away from Ike, as if eager to exhibit his condition
-and his teeth.
-
-"You all white men?" was Blanco's next question.
-
-"No--not all," shouted Sam.
-
-"Who you three be?"
-
-"I shan't tell you."
-
-"Why you no tell?"
-
-"Because it is none of your business."
-
-"Dat am de gospil truff," said Ike, "an' if he don't light out purty
-soon dar'll be a loose dog a-howlin' 'round, for I can't hold onter Maj
-much longer."
-
-"My name Blanco. Me big Apache chief."
-
-"Well, what do you want?" asked Sam.
-
-"Me very good man."
-
-"I am glad to hear it."
-
-"Me and all my men, good friends to whites."
-
-"And I am a good friend to the Indians; if you let me alone, I shall let
-you alone. Good-night," said Sam, hoping that the Indian might prove
-sensitive and take this as a hint to leave, but he had entirely mistaken
-his man.
-
-"When sun come up then where you go?" asked the chief, with the same
-inquisitive manner.
-
-At this juncture it struck Sam that he might be able not only to make
-these people his friends, but to utilize them in getting to his father,
-so he said in a kindlier tone than he had yet used:
-
-"We are going to Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"You live there?"
-
-"I want to get there. Do you know the _shortest_ road?"
-
-This was asked as if Sam might be well acquainted with the longest road
-himself.
-
-"Oh, yes," said the chief.
-
-"If you guide me--by the shortest way--to Hurley's Gulch to-morrow
-morning, I will give you money, rifles, pistols, knives, blankets, and
-lots of other good things," said Sam with lavish generosity.
-
-"You got money, rifles, knives, blankets, all good things with you here,
-eh?" asked the chief.
-
-"We have all the arms we need for our own defense, and we know how to
-use them. But you guide me to Hurley's Gulch, and I will keep my word,"
-said Sam, with more confidence than he felt.
-
-Instead of replying at once to this generous proposition, the chief
-spoke with his followers for some minutes in low, guttural tones.
-
-Sam could hear the murmur of their voices, and he rightly guessed that
-they were discussing whether to accept his offer in good faith, or to
-kill and rob himself and his companions.
-
-"We see you, sun up; you no leave," called out the chief at length.
-
-"You must make up your mind to-night, for I am going to leave early in
-the morning," said Sam.
-
-"Oh, all right. I on hand," was the chief's reply.
-
-Again they consulted together, and Sam could see that four men remained
-behind to watch, while the others, with the chief, went down to the
-fire.
-
-All this time Sam was in great trouble about Ulna, for he did not even
-suspect that he was a prisoner in the hands of his cruel tribal foes.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin were in great tribulation about themselves, for they
-had no faith in the Indians; indeed, they firmly believed that the
-Apaches would scalp them all on the morrow.
-
-Ike gave expression to his feelings in the remark:
-
-"When we was down in that yar canyon den I felt ez if I'd rudder be in
-any odder place in dis worl', or de nex'; but now I'd a heap sight
-sooner be down dar dan up yar."
-
-Though tired and sleepy, Sam could not think of closing his eyes that
-night, for he feared to trust Ike or Wah Shin on guard, and he half
-expected an attack from the Apaches before morning.
-
-He knew that any attempt at escape would be detected, and might hasten
-the struggle he was so anxious to avoid.
-
-More than once he wished himself back in the caon, but the thought that
-he was nearer to his father, and the hope that after all the Indians
-might not be so bad as he feared, gave him courage to face the future.
-
-He knew that resistance against such a force, and with his own limited
-supply of food and water, would be downright folly. So when the chief
-appeared before the rocks, just as the sun was rising, he went out to
-meet him, and shook hands with him.
-
-"Me come down to water, eat something," said the chief, in what seemed a
-hospitable spirit.
-
-[Illustration: _Sam went out to meet the chief and shook hands with
-him._]
-
-Sam, Ike, and Wah Shin took up their bundles and with the dog, went back
-to the spring.
-
-Here to their amazement and horror they found Ulna lying near the fire
-with his hands and feet bound.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.--A BOLD MOVE.
-
-
-We have already seen that Sam was cool and brave, and such characters
-but rarely act from impulse. Yet there are times when impulse is more
-effective than all the calm reasoning in the world, and this was one of
-them.
-
-On the way to the spring with Blanco, Sam felt very nervous. He did not
-have much faith in the chief's profession of friendship for the whites,
-and from what he remembered of Hank Tims' stories about the Apaches, he
-believed them to be a very treacherous and bloodthirsty people.
-
-But the sight of Ulna, prostrate and bound, scattered all Sam's fears
-and indecision to the winds.
-
-"This is my friend!" he shouted as he sprung to Ulna's side and drew his
-own hunting-knife.
-
-"Hold! He is a Ute and my foe!" roared the chief.
-
-But neither his words nor his movements could stay Sam Willett, who was
-now blind to everything but the condition of his brave friend.
-
-Two rapid flashes of the knife, and the cords that bound Ulna's hands
-and feet were severed.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin trembled at the audacity of their young leader.
-
-Even Blanco and his braves were speechless and helpless for the moment,
-and looked from one to the other, as if wondering what this
-extraordinary young white man would do next.
-
-They had not long to wonder, for Ulna, in the very second that he was
-freed, sprang to his feet, leaped at the nearest Indian, who chanced to
-hold the repeating-rifle that had been taken from himself the night
-before, and tearing it from his grasp, he bounded up the ravine before a
-hand could be raised to stay him.
-
-"Shoot! shoot!" cried the chief when he could regain his breath.
-
-"Don't fire!" shouted Sam as, with his own gun raised, he sprang
-directly in front of the Apaches.
-
-They did not fire, perhaps because it would have been useless, for
-before they had fully realized the order of the chief and why it was
-called out, the fleet-footed Ulna had vanished up the rift.
-
-Blanco shouted for the braves to pursue, and on the instant four of the
-youngest and most active leaped forward, like blood-hounds freed from
-the leash.
-
-With yells that frightened the dog and made him crouch behind Ike, the
-Apaches started up the ravine.
-
-Sam was about to follow them, but the chief caught him by the shoulder
-and said sternly:
-
-"You do heap harm. Stay!"
-
-Meanwhile, Ulna had gained the upland, with his face turned toward the
-sun, now flashing over the crests of the Sierra Madre Mountains.
-
-The cruel cords had cut into his wrists and ankles, and the strained
-position in which he had been held so many hours had stiffened his
-limbs; but, absorbed in the battle for his own life, he forgot or did
-not feel his pain.
-
-On gaining the upland, he halted for an instant to pull his cap lower
-and to tighten his belt; then, as he heard the blood-curdling yells
-behind him, he started off again, running this time straight for the
-mountains to the east.
-
-He looked back for an instant, to see the four Apaches rising into view
-from the rift.
-
-He had about two hundred yards the lead, and he very wisely made up his
-mind not to increase it.
-
-As a tribe, the Utes have ever prided themselves on the speed and
-endurance of their runners.
-
-They begin to practice as children, and they are taught to stop at no
-obstacle and not to vary their speed, whether facing or descending a
-hill.
-
-They keep the lips firmly closed, breathing altogether through the
-nostrils, and the arms, or at least the elbows, are kept firmly pressed
-to the sides, the hands being advanced at right angles to the body and
-the fingers shut, like a boxer's fist.
-
-An observer, seeing Ulna's light, springy bound and the absence of all
-effort, would have been charmed with the grace of the youth's movements,
-but would have felt that he was not getting over the ground very fast,
-while his pursuers appeared to be flying; and they were certainly
-straining every nerve.
-
-But Ulna's feet were on his native heath, and he knew that his safety
-depended on reserving his strength, rather than exhausting himself by a
-mighty effort at the start.
-
-The four runners behind him discharged their rifles, but the bullets
-whistled harmlessly by his ears.
-
-They yelled, and he heard them with a feeling of delight, for he well
-knew that men cannot run fast and yell very loud at the same time.
-
-Still the Apaches seemed to gain on him, till his lead was reduced to
-not more than fifty yards, and he could hear their loud explosive
-breathings behind him.
-
-Gradually three of the young braves began to lessen their speed and drop
-to the rear, while one appeared to gain at every bound on the fugitive.
-
-After running for more than hour, Ulna threw a quick glance over his
-shoulder and took in this state of affairs.
-
-His heart bounded with delight at the prospect, but he neither increased
-nor lessened his speed. His movements seemed to be as even and tireless
-as the flight of the mountain eagles circling above his head.
-
-Another half hour and he looked back again. Only one man was in sight,
-and he was not more than a hundred feet away.
-
-Quick as a flash Ulna came to a halt, wheeled and fired. The Apache
-threw up his arms and fell senseless at the feet of the young Ute.
-
-Here Ulna's training in the missionary school at Taos came into play.
-
-His natural impulse would have led him to make sure work, and tear the
-black scalp from the head of his foe, but his heart was touched with
-pity rather than hate, and now that his pursuer was harmless he might
-help him, if he was not fatally wounded.
-
-He examined the Apache's wound, and found that the bullet had struck his
-head without breaking his skull.
-
-"He will come to himself after a while," said Ulna, as he drew his foe
-to the shadow of a rock and placed his back against it.
-
-But while prompted to this act of humanity, Ulna did not permit his
-heart to interfere with his head. According to all the rules of
-civilized warfare, the arms of an enemy belong to his conqueror, so he
-took the Apache's pistol and ammunition-belt, which also contained his
-long, keen scalping-knife.
-
-These he fastened on his own person, and had scarcely finished when the
-wounded brave opened his eyes and looked about him in a dazed way. As
-soon as he saw Ulna he closed his eyes again and began to chant in a low
-solemn voice the death-song of his tribe.
-
-He was in the power of his foe, and as he could not give mercy himself,
-for he did not know of such a thing, he expected that the Ute would put
-him to death, and his song told that he was ready to meet it without
-fear.
-
-"Listen to me," said Ulna, laying his hand on the Apache's shoulder and
-speaking in a firm but kindly tone. "I am a Ute, but the whites have
-taught me to hate no man because of his tribe. Your life is your own;
-take it and make your way back to your friends who have lagged in the
-race, and tell them that the nephew of Uray does not hate nor kill the
-helpless."
-
-"But I am an Apache. I have forfeited my life. I would take yours if I
-could. Why stay your hand? This is not the warfare that our fathers
-practised," said the astonished Apache.
-
-"No, nor shall I ever practice such a warfare. Yet for the life I spare
-I would ask a favor."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Return to Blanco and tell him that the people now in his hands mean no
-harm. Tell him that if he guides them to Hurley's Gulch he will be well
-paid. Tell him that if he harms them, the whites will make war, nor stay
-their hands while there is an Apache left in the Mogollon Mountains."
-
-With the last word Ulna waved his hand to the brave and sped away again
-to the eastward with the same tireless spring.
-
-Ulna was miles away when the three Apaches, who had started out with the
-wounded man, made their appearance.
-
-"Where is the Ute?" they asked.
-
-"Gone," was the reply.
-
-"And your arms?"
-
-"They are gone, too."
-
-"Who took them?"
-
-"The Ute."
-
-"Why then did he not take your life and your scalp?" they asked in great
-surprise.
-
-"He stunned me with a shot which I was not expecting; but he stunned me
-more when he refused the death I was expecting," said the brave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.--THE VERDICT AND SENTENCE.
-
-
-In order that the jury might think over and discuss the evidence against
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims it was decided to leave them in full
-possession of the tent in which the trial was held.
-
-"When you've got yer minds made up," said the man who had been acting as
-judge, "let me know, and I'll come in and pass sentence."
-
-This fellow had started out to convict the accused men, and, as we have
-seen, he let slip no chance to impress his prejudices on the jury.
-
-Collins and Si Brill with two others, who had been the original guards,
-took charge of the prisoners while the jury were making up their minds,
-though Badger insisted that he should have the prisoners in his keeping.
-
-"If I ain't to have 'em," he protested, "whar was the good of 'lectin'
-me sheriff?"
-
-"Not a bit of good," sneered Collins, "and if you'd had any spunk you
-wouldn't have took the place. Now, take my advice and git."
-
-Badger did "git," that is, he sought out Frank Shirley, whom he found in
-the bar-room surrounded by a great crowd of men, who were drinking at
-his expense and discussing the verdict at the same time.
-
-It seemed to be the opinion of nearly all present that the jury would
-soon bring in a verdict of "Guilty of the crime charged."
-
-"If they don't do that," said the landlord, "then I'll tell you what I'm
-in for."
-
-"What's that?" asked Badger.
-
-"I'm in for hangin' every man on the jury, and the prizners with 'em,
-before the sun sets."
-
-A cheer showed the favor with which this proposition was received.
-
-When Shirley could get away from the crowd, he and Badger went down by
-the creek where they could talk without being overheard.
-
-"Well, Badger, what do you think?" asked Shirley.
-
-"'Bout the verdict?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"No one can't think but one way after the evidence. Why, nothin' could
-be stronger."
-
-"That's so; but do you think any one suspects?" asked Shirley,
-nervously.
-
-"Suspects what?"
-
-"That we put up the whole job."
-
-"Not a soul," said Badger.
-
-"I wish I could think that."
-
-"But you can think it."
-
-"You forget what Mr. Willett asked you when he was cross-examining."
-
-"What was that?"
-
-"His question was, '_Badger, did not you kill Tom Edwards?_'"
-
-As Frank Shirley repeated these words he looked into Badger's face and
-saw the color flying and the thick lips trembling.
-
-"Why do you speak in that kind of a way to me?" stammered Badger. "Ain't
-I stuck by you and did what I said? And so far as the killin' of Tom
-Edwards is consarned, didn't you help plan the job, and didn't you stand
-by while I carried it out?"
-
-"That is all true, Badger; but I am not going back on you----"
-
-"Then why do you speak that way?"
-
-"Because I want you to understand that Willett suspects the whole truth.
-Indeed, he stated the case from beginning to end as if he knew all about
-it."
-
-"Wa'al, if he does, I didn't tell him."
-
-"Of course not, Badger; but you must see that those who think Willett
-and Hank Tims innocent will at once say, 'Some one killed Tom Edwards,
-and we should find the guilty parties.'"
-
-"And that's the thought that skeers you?"
-
-"I must confess, Badger, it makes me feel very uneasy," said Shirley.
-
-"I thought you had more nerve."
-
-"I am not lacking in that, but caution is better than nerve; and I've
-been thinking that the sooner we can get out of this place the better."
-
-"I'll allow yer right thar, Mr. Shirley; but if we was to get away in a
-hurry, them that suspects us would foller up and hunt us down like wild
-beasts. Why, Collins, he's jest a spilin' to have a fuss with us, and
-I'm bound that he shan't, for he's powerful ugly with a six-shooter."
-
-"Still, I want to get away. There is no doubt in my mind as to the fate
-of young Sam."
-
-"Thar shouldn't be, for thar ain't no more doubt about him and all the
-rest of his gang bein' drownded than thar is that that jury over thar
-will bring in a verdict of guilty," and Badger jerked his head in the
-direction of the canvas hotel.
-
-"And they will hang the prisoners?"
-
-"You can bet they will, and in short order, too."
-
-"To-day?"
-
-"Yes, to-day."
-
-"Then my mission will be accomplished, and it would be folly to stay an
-hour in this savage hole if I can get out of it and go to wealth and
-friends."
-
-"And I'll stick by you, no fear of that, leastwise till I get my share
-of the swag, and then I think I'll marry and try to lead a more
-decentish life than I have been doin'----"
-
-Badger was stopped in his statement of good resolutions by a loud cheer
-coming from the hotel.
-
-"Halloo! what's that?" asked Shirley.
-
-"It must be the vardict; let us go and see," replied Badger, and he at
-once started off in the direction of the noise, followed by his nervous
-employer.
-
-Badger was right in his guess.
-
-The jury had sent out word that they had agreed on a verdict.
-
-The preceding excitement was great, but it was calmness itself compared
-with that that stirred the miners when it became known that the jury
-were ready to report.
-
-From the bar and the tents and huts round about men poured into the
-place of trial.
-
-Badger had to run to get up in time, for he did not see how business
-could go on without the presence of the sheriff.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims sat in the place they had occupied during the
-trial.
-
-The judge, flushed with liquor, took his place and rapped and shouted
-for order.
-
-The twelve jurymen and the prisoners were the only calm persons present,
-and even their faces showed that they fully appreciated the situation.
-
-When the judge, after breaking the heavy glass and splintering the
-little pine table by his side had succeeded in getting the mob down, he
-turned to the jury and said:
-
-"Gents, have you got a verdict?"
-
-"Yes," coughed the one acting as foreman.
-
-"All unanimous?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'al, let's have it," said the judge.
-
-The silence became profound on the instant.
-
-Men with watches could hear them ticking, and men with hearts became
-painfully aware of the fact.
-
-Though a big, strong fellow, the foreman was trembling when he rose to
-his feet, and he tried to cough behind his hand several times before he
-could get control of his voice. At length he managed to say:
-
-"We find that the two prizners is----"
-
-Here he stopped and coughed again, and he undoubtedly would have sat
-down without finishing the sentence had not the judge shouted:
-
-"Wa'al, the prizners is what?"
-
-"_Guilty!_" came the reply.
-
-On hearing this Badger tried to lead a cheer with the help of the judge,
-but as the farce was not yet over, some one cursed him and told him to
-"shut up."
-
-"I don't well see how you could fotch in any other vardict," began the
-judge. "Fact is, you couldn't have did it and continued to live among
-the people at Hurley's Gulch that's in for law and order and fair play;
-so I say you've all done yer duty nobly like good feller citizens."
-
-This opinion met with some applause; then the judge turned to Mr.
-Willett and Hank, and in a voice intended to be very solemn, as it
-certainly was very hoarse, he called out:
-
-"Presners at the bar stand up!"
-
-The two men rose, and Mr. Willett cast a quick glance over the crowd in
-the hope of seeing the friendly faces of Collins and his partner, Si
-Brill, but they were not in sight.
-
-"Have either of you men anythin' to say why I shouldn't now pass
-sentence of death on you?"
-
-"Only this," said Mr. Willett: "that you will pass sentence of death on
-innocent men."
-
-"It is the sentence of this court that the committee and the sheriff of
-this yar court take you two prizners out of this place at once and hang
-you both till you are dead, dead, dead!" said the judge, with a fierce
-emphasis on the last word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.--SURPRISE FOR HURLEY'S GULCH.
-
-
-On hearing the cruel sentence, something like a gasp of pain came from
-many of the men who most firmly believed in the guilt of the prisoners.
-
-No man can ever become so degraded and hardened as not to be moved by
-the approaching death of even a perfect stranger.
-
-Badger alone was delighted at having something to do with the trial, for
-it was the sheriff's duty to attend to the execution.
-
-With the death of these two men, the work which he had pledged Shirley
-to do would be completed.
-
-More than this, with the death of these two men he felt that all danger
-to himself would vanish and all suspicion be allayed.
-
-"It's mighty hard lines, Mr. Willett," said Hank Tims as he shook his
-fellow-prisoner's hand, "but one has to die sooner or later, and it
-should comfort you and me at this time to know that we can leave this
-world and stand in the presence of the Great Master and Chief of all,
-feelin' that we ain't never done anythin' that should bring a blush of
-shame to our cheeks nor a pang of regret to the friends as is left
-behind."
-
-"True, Hank, true," said Mr. Willett as he stroked his brow. "Since I
-have come to feel that my boy is dead, life has lost all its charms for
-me and death its terrors. What is there to live for since he is gone?
-Nothing!" and with a sigh of resignation Mr. Willett let his hands fall
-heavily by his side.
-
-Badger, judging by his conduct on this occasion, must have had no little
-experience in lynching affairs. He appeared before the prisoners with
-ropes, and as resistance would have been useless, Mr. Willett and Hank
-permitted the heartless wretch to tie their hands tightly behind their
-backs.
-
-This over, he went to the members of the vigilance committee, who were
-engaged in earnest conversation outside the tent.
-
-Having told them what he had done, Badger asked for instructions.
-
-"We're in a kind of a fix about this onpleasant business," said one.
-
-"Wot's the trouble?" asked Badger.
-
-"Thar ain't no trees big enough for the purpose within twenty miles of
-this," said the man.
-
-"Then why can't they be blindfolded and shot?" asked Badger.
-
-"'Coz the judge said to hang 'em."
-
-"Wa'al, I don't think thar'll be any trouble in gettin' him to change
-his mind," said Badger. "You see he must 'commydate the sentence to the
-place."
-
-The vigilance committee meant to do right, and they were determined to
-erect a scaffold on the cliff above the creek, and carry out the
-sentence as it had been ordered.
-
-By the time these preparations were completed the sun was well down the
-west.
-
-Another hour and darkness would fall upon the world and on the lives of
-the condemned men.
-
-With more thoughtfulness than might have been expected from men of their
-character, the crowd withdrew from the place in which the trial had been
-held, leaving Mr. Willett and Hank alone.
-
-It is not for us to attempt to describe the secret thoughts and feelings
-of the condemned men.
-
-They spoke but little.
-
-Once Hank looked about him and said:
-
-"I wonder what's become of Collins and Si Brill, they were kind to us,
-and I'd like to shake hands with them and thank them before the ind
-comes."
-
-"They must know how we feel toward them, Hank, and as to their absence,
-it is my belief that they have gone away to avoid witnessing the
-death--the murder of two innocent men that they are powerless to
-prevent," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Yes, that must be it. Wa'al, I never saw a lynchin' nor took part in
-one, but I must confess I'd die a sight easier if I only knowed that
-them two critters, Badger and Shirley, was sure to meet up with the ind
-they deserve."
-
-"You may be sure, Hank, that justice will overtake them in the end.
-Standing as you are, on the edge of the grave, would you exchange places
-with either of these men?"
-
-"No, not if they was to throw in all the gold in the world to boot,"
-said Hank earnestly.
-
-"Then you see there is something which a good man dreads more than
-death, Hank."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Willett, it's a black character and a black heart."
-
-Hank had just uttered this when the flap of the tent was pushed aside
-and Badger entered, followed by a number of the committee.
-
-"Wa'al, gents," said Badger, "we're all ready."
-
-"And so are we," said Mr. Willett, as he and Hank rose to their feet and
-stood side by side.
-
-"This ain't pleasant work," said one of the committee with a face and
-manner that told he was heartily ashamed of his part in the business,
-"but it's got to be did."
-
-Neither Mr. Willett nor Hank made any reply.
-
-Badger and the members of the committee were all armed to the teeth, and
-forming about the prisoners, they marched them down to a platform that
-projected over the cliff and from the further end of which two ropes
-hung down.
-
-About this platform every man living in and about Hurley's Gulch,
-excepting Si Brill and Collins, had gathered, even Frank Shirley, weak
-and wicked, could not resist the temptation to see his cruel work
-completed.
-
-The ropes were made ready and the condemned men were told they could
-pray for five minutes.
-
-Instead of kneeling down both turned their faces to the setting sun, and
-in all that crowd no one was calmer than they.
-
-Suddenly the painful stillness was broken by a cry that came from the
-westward and the crowd, as one man turned in that direction.
-
-There, like a silhouette against the red face of the setting sun, they
-saw a lithe figure, in the picturesque garb of a Ute Indian bounding
-toward them.
-
-"It is Ulna!" some one shouted, "Ulna coming from the direction of the
-great caon!"
-
-"Hold! hold! hold! for your lives!"
-
-This was shouted by a dozen stalwart horsemen, Collins and Si Brill in
-the lead, who came galloping to the place of execution from the east.
-
-As these men flung themselves from their saddles, Ulna, with compressed
-lips and flashing eyes bounded through the crowd.
-
-At a glance he took in the situation, and then in a voice that rang
-clear and high as a bugle blast along the cliffs he called out:
-
-"Sam Willett lives and he has the paper!"
-
-"And these men shall not die, if me and my friends can help it, and
-we're inclined to think we can!" thundered Collins, as he drew Mr.
-Willett and Hank back from the platform and severed the cords that bound
-their arms.
-
-"And my boy still lives?" cried Mr. Willett, as he reached out his hands
-to Ulna.
-
-"Yes, he lives; I left him this morning, and----"
-
-Mr. Willett heard no more.
-
-The resolute heart that could face death without a tremor, was all
-overcome by this joyous revelation, and he fell fainting to the ground.
-
-"That's a Ute lie!" hissed Badger, to whose side Frank Shirley had come,
-pale and trembling.
-
-While Hank and Si Brill were restoring Mr. Willett to consciousness,
-Collins called out:
-
-"We'll see if it's a lie. Come, Ulna, my boy, tell us all about it, and
-if any man tries to stop you I'll give him a chance to bite the end off
-my revolver."
-
-The coming of the young Ute, being unexpected, caused more of a
-sensation than the execution of the prisoners would have done.
-
-The mob with bated breath gathered about Ulna, and though he was wearied
-with his run of fifty miles over a rough, trackless country, he told the
-main points of his thrilling story in a way that convinced everyone of
-the truth of his report.
-
-For men to go down to death is an old story, but when those mourned for
-as dead appear in the flesh, even those not superstitious are inclined
-to wonder and to feel that a miracle has been performed.
-
-"Do you believe that young Indian's story?" asked Shirley after he had
-led Badger away from the crowd.
-
-"I am afraid it's true," said Badger.
-
-"Then we're beaten!" groaned Shirley.
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"What can be done, Badger?"
-
-"If young Sam is alive he will try to reach here."
-
-"Yes; there can be no doubt of that."
-
-"Then he should be met on the way."
-
-"By whom?"
-
-"By us."
-
-"If so, we should start at once."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Shirley, there is not a minute to spare. Let us get our horses
-and start as soon as it's dark," said Badger, with unusual
-determination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.--HOW IT FARED WITH SAM AND HIS FRIENDS.
-
-
-When darkness came, the night of Ulna's arrival at Hurley's Gulch, it
-found the camp excited about the existence of Tom Edwards'
-receipt--which it was claimed young Sam had--and, as a consequence the
-miners were divided as to the guilt or innocence of Mr. Willett and Hank
-Tims.
-
-Three-fifths of the men believed that the prisoners were fairly tried,
-justly condemned and that they should have been hanged.
-
-Indeed, these fellows felt that Collins, Si Brill and the men they had
-brought with them to prevent the execution were no better than a pack of
-outlaws.
-
-All the men at Hurley's Gulch carried pistols, as a matter of course,
-but now they armed themselves with rifles, for the purpose of destroying
-Collins and his friends, if they did not at once surrender the
-prisoners.
-
-From comparative peace the camp was plunged into a state of war, with
-rival factions ready to slay each other, in order that they might take
-or save the lives of Mr. Willett and Hank Tims.
-
-Leaving Hurley's Gulch to its enraged rival factions, let us turn to the
-west and see how it fared with Sam Willett and his friends.
-
-In the wild excitement of battle, soldiers, who hitherto may have
-secretly doubted their own courage, have been known to perform deeds of
-the most heroic valor, of which they retained not the slightest memory
-when the conflict was over.
-
-This was Sam's case.
-
-His manner of freeing Ulna was bold to the verge of madness; but the
-instant he saw the young Ute vanishing at the head of the rift, he
-forgot all about the manner by which his release had been effected.
-
-The anger of the chief, Blanco, was so great when he saw what Sam had
-done that he would have slain that daring youth without doubt had he not
-feared that in so doing he might lose his own life.
-
-"What you do them for?" roared the chief, as he pointed after the
-fugitive.
-
-"He was my friend," was all Sam could say, for by this time he had only
-the haziest conception of what he had actually done.
-
-"He was the foe of my tribe."
-
-"You did not know him."
-
-"You do me bad," said the enraged chief. "You take Ute's place. My
-people no stand what you do. I like be your friend. You friend of Ute's.
-No my friend."
-
-The chief snapped the fingers of both hands and turned to talk with his
-remaining braves.
-
-"Mistah Sam! Mistah Sam!" whispered Ike.
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"W'at you tink now?"
-
-"About what?"
-
-"'Bout de sitooation?"
-
-"I don't know," said Sam gloomily.
-
-"Tink we's in a bad box?"
-
-"If we are we must bear it."
-
-"Jest so; but somehow I'd like a change to good luck, jest to see how it
-feels like. 'Peers to me ez if we was nebber to hab no good times no
-more," and Ike rolled his eyes and sighed at a great rate.
-
-"W'at say me cookee blekfas'?" said Wah Shin, in whom the desire to be
-at work was stronger than his fear of the savages.
-
-"I don't think they'll let you cook," said Sam.
-
-"Den me tly. Dey say 'no,' den me stopee. Let 'em hab way."
-
-Wah Shin opened the bundle, took out the few remaining rabbits, and
-going over to the fire, he deliberately raked the coals and began to
-warm the decidedly simple breakfast.
-
-The Apaches offered no objections to the actions of the Chinaman, though
-they watched him with the eager curiosity of children at a circus.
-
-The Apaches make a bread from the pounded roots of the maguey or
-mountain aloe, of which they always carry a supply when on their war
-forays or hunting expeditions.
-
-This bread is sweet and nutritious, and that it will keep for a long
-time in its original state is shown by the fact that the recorder of
-these stirring incidents has still in his possession some of this bread,
-which he obtained in the mountains of Arizona fifteen years ago.
-
-The odor of the rabbits on the coals reached the nostrils of the chief,
-and it must have soothed his anger somewhat, for he spoke to his
-companions in the Apache tongue, and they at once pulled a lot of this
-bread from their buckskin haversacks--it resembled plugs of very black
-tobacco and tasted better than it looked--and they gave Sam, Ike and Wah
-Shin each a piece.
-
-"This is all the food we have left," said Sam, addressing the chief and
-pointing to the rabbits, "but we shall be glad to share with you, and if
-you guide us to Hurley's Gulch I will pledge my word that you shall have
-all I promised you before."
-
-The chief replied to this with a grunt that showed he was still far from
-feeling good-natured, still he proved that he was not only very hungry,
-but also very selfish, by devouring one of the four rabbits without
-asking any outside assistance.
-
-Ike witnessed this performance in open-eyed wonder, and he could not
-resist whispering to Sam:
-
-"I've seed a good many hogs in my time, but that ar Injun as went an'
-eat a hull rabbit all by hissel', is jest 'bout de biggest one I ebber
-sot my two eyes on. Dar, he ain't lef' noffin' but de bones."
-
-"When you no have more meat," said the chief, coming over and standing
-before Sam, while he cast a covetous look at Maj, "then I tell you what
-you do."
-
-"What?" asked Sam.
-
-"Don't you like the dog?"
-
-"Oh, yes," said Sam, thinking that the Indian who could like dumb
-creatures must have a kindly heart. "I am very fond of the dog."
-
-"Then why you no eat him?" asked Blanco.
-
-As Sam had never looked at Maj as something that might be eaten instead
-of being fed, he was not a little puzzled what to reply, still he
-managed to say, with an attempt at smiling:
-
-"That isn't the way I like the dog."
-
-"No," said Ike in a low voice, "we likes dog wid de ha'r on an' de bark
-in him."
-
-All unmindful of this discussion Maj went on eating the bones that had
-been thrown to him and looking as if he had room for a great many more
-than were in sight.
-
-After this very informal meal was over the chief gave an order to his
-own people and then told Sam that he and his friends must follow him.
-
-"Where to?" asked Sam.
-
-"We see, me don't know," was the surly reply.
-
-As there was no food left, Sam rolled up the blankets and throwing these
-and the saddle-bags containing the gold dust and the precious paper over
-his shoulder, started up the ravine.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin followed, the former clinging to his old shot-gun as if
-his life depended on it.
-
-Eight lithe Indians, none of them burdened with clothes or the world's
-goods, brought up the rear.
-
-On reaching the uplands the chief came to a halt, the others doing the
-same, and shading his eyes from the sun, he looked long and eagerly to
-the eastward.
-
-With a thrill of joy Sam saw that neither Ulna nor his pursuers were in
-sight, and well knowing the young Ute's powers as a runner, he had now
-no fears of his being overtaken.
-
-As if he understood what was passing in the white youth's mind, the
-chief said:
-
-"You know Ulna long time?"
-
-"Only a few months."
-
-"You like him heap?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"You make him free?"
-
-"I am glad I did," said Sam, boldly.
-
-"Then you take his place like same as he was here," said Blanco, with an
-angry glint in his eyes.
-
-"I do not understand."
-
-"If Ulna stay we kill him."
-
-"Yes," said Sam, feeling a cold chill and wondering what was coming
-next.
-
-"But Ulna get away."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You help him."
-
-"I did."
-
-"Then you take Ulna's place. You all same like Ulna to us. We take you
-to Apaches, way off," and the chief waved his hands to the south where
-the purple peaks of the San Francisco range could be seen rising into
-the bluest of blue skies.
-
-"Would you kill a man because he loved his friend?" asked Sam with a
-calmness of manner that did not at all indicate his feelings.
-
-"When man's friend my foe--yes."
-
-"But Ulna would not do that."
-
-"You think so."
-
-"I am sure he would not."
-
-"Ha! you don't know Ute."
-
-"I know Ulna," persisted Sam.
-
-"Ulna he like take my scalp."
-
-"I am sure he would not hurt you unless it was to save his own life. The
-whites have taught him better."
-
-"The whites!" repeated the chief, with a grunt of contempt. "Oh, yes,
-the whites, heap fine the whites. They take all Apaches' land, kill his
-wife, kill him when he don't like it. Apache don't go to white man's
-land; why, then, he comes here we no send for him?"
-
-Sam saw that this was a mixed question to which the answer could not be
-truthfully given unless it agreed with the Indian's notion of right,
-still he said evasively:
-
-"All men do wrong at times, but all men should try to do right."
-
-"What is right? what is wrong? White man think one thing, Apache think
-another thing; no one know. Sit down on stone; I wait till braves come
-back with Ulna's scalp, then all leave."
-
-Without waiting for any comment, Blanco again snapped the fingers of
-both hands above his head, and turned away to show he did not care to
-discuss the subject further.
-
-This conversation took place near the point of rocks in which Sam and
-his friends had spent the previous night.
-
-On some of the outlying stones Ike and Wah Shin were seated, eagerly
-watching the chief, while their faces showed that they were taking
-anything but a hopeful view of the situation.
-
-"Mistah Sam, w'at you t'ink 'bout dis time?" asked Ike as he placed a
-blanket for his young master to sit on.
-
-"I hardly know what to think, Ike," was the reply.
-
-"Don't you t'ink we made a mistake?"
-
-"In what way, Ike?"
-
-"By comin' up out ob dat canyon."
-
-"Would you want to stay there forever?"
-
-"Wa'al, not adzackly; but if I had any choosin 'bout it I'd a heap sight
-rudder be dar dan heah. I neber did hab no use for a Injun nohow. Jest
-only tink, dey's been a-watchin' an' a-watchin' Maj, an' a-lickin' ob
-dar lips as if dey was feelin' how he tasted. But if dey gits away wid
-dat dog den dey'll hab to steal him whin dis yar chile's asleep," said
-Ike, and he reached out and pulled the dog nearer to him by means of a
-rope he had fastened about his neck.
-
-"Dogee, he no so belly bad fol to make eat. Way off Chinaland fat dogee
-allee same's nice lilly tulkey. Big man he like him muchee heap."
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike, with ludicrous contempt, "I tanks de Great Mastah I
-ain't a Injun or a Chinee. Dar's only two decent kind ob people; one's
-black, like me, de odder's w'ite like Mistah Sam. But," he added, with a
-sigh, "I don't go foh to blame no one jest kase dey's so unfortnit as
-not to be ob de right culah."
-
-Sam could not keep his mind on the very funny discussion which followed
-between Ike and Wah Shin, as to the merits of their respective races. He
-was thinking of his beloved father, and wondering if he still lived and
-was waiting for the paper that was to prove his innocence, by showing to
-the world that he could have had no possible motive for desiring the
-death of Tom Edwards.
-
-One, two, three hours passed and the fierce sun poured down a blistering
-heat on the bare rocks, till the hot air rose in shivering, shimmering
-waves, that distorted every object seen at any distance, and threw into
-the most fantastic shapes the hills that studded the wide plateau.
-
-Every few minutes Sam looked to the east, expecting the return of the
-braves who had gone in pursuit of Ulna, but it was not till the sun had
-been past the zenith more than an hour, that his keen gaze detected four
-figures--the mirage gave them the appearance of giant
-spectres--approaching at a deliberate pace.
-
-Blanco made the discovery about the same time, and at once sent a
-messenger to hurry up the pursuers. He did not need to be told that his
-braves had not been successful in their mission, for had they been
-returning with a scalp they would not have been so deliberate in their
-movements.
-
-When the braves were within a few hundred yards, Blanco ran out to meet
-them, and seeing that one of them was wounded he said:
-
-"Did the Ute win?"
-
-"He did," replied the wounded man. "An antelope could not have kept up
-with him had he put forth all his speed."
-
-"Yet, you came close enough to him to catch his bullet," said the
-puzzled chief.
-
-"Yes, and close enough to lose my scalp, if Ulna had cared to take it,"
-said the brave, with a candor but rarely manifested by a savage.
-
-In answer to the chief's desire to learn how this unusual event came
-about, the brave told frankly and truthfully the whole story, even to
-the conversation he had with Ulna before he left.
-
-This story evidently had a powerful effect on Blanco, for he stroked his
-forehead for some minutes, and then said:
-
-"The Utes are changing; the Apaches must change too. I will not harm the
-young white man who told me the truth."
-
-Turning, the chief strode quickly to the place where Sam was sitting and
-eagerly watching, and then extending his hand, he said with some feeling
-in his voice:
-
-"You no tell lie. Ulna is good. Ulna escape. I am glad in my heart, for
-he no take life one of my braves when he can."
-
-Sam could hardly credit his ears, but there was no mistaking the
-expression on the swarthy face, despite its half-covering of war paint,
-so he shook the chief's hand and said with a great sense of relief:
-
-"I told you the truth about Ulna, I tell you the truth about myself. Now
-guide me to Hurley's Gulch and I will pay you all I promised."
-
-For reasons which he did not state, the chief said he could not go to
-Hurley's Gulch, but he was willing to guide Sam part of the way there,
-and to take all the rifles and other weapons they had with them as part
-payment, the other things promised to be sent out to a certain point two
-days after the party reached the Gulch.
-
-These were certainly anything but generous terms, but as Sam was in no
-humor to press a close bargain, he agreed to them at once.
-
-There was not much preparation to be made. All the canteens were filled
-with water, and about the middle of the afternoon they began the march
-for Hurley's Gulch, which the chief said could be reached the next
-afternoon, though he would leave them in the morning.
-
-With a lighter heart than he had carried for many a day, Sam, with Ike,
-Wah Shin, and the dog following him in the order named, started off by
-the side of the chief.
-
-They moved so fast that by dark, when they went into camp in the bottom
-of a gulch where there was water, they had traveled at least twenty
-miles.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.--IN GREATER PERIL STILL.
-
-
-With the first glimmer of day the following morning all were awake, and
-a very light breakfast was made of the root bread, which the chief
-distributed with great fairness as far as it went.
-
-As Sam had agreed, he turned over to the chief the rifles, pistols,
-knives and blankets belonging to his party, keeping back only the
-canteens, which had been filled with water, and the saddle-bags.
-
-"I should like to borrow my own rifle from you," said Sam, after he had
-made the transfer, "for it is not safe to travel through this land
-without a weapon to defend one's self from foe or wild beasts. I shall
-return it when I send you the other things."
-
-"I let you have dis gun," said the chief, pointing to the old rusty
-shot-gun that had been the special object of Ike's care and the delight
-of his heart for so long.
-
-"Take her, Mistah Sam, take her," urged Ike. "Dar ain't anodder gun like
-her--no, not in all dis yar land."
-
-This was certainly the truth, yet "she" was rather an unreliable weapon
-to depend on in a trying emergency.
-
-"That is a shot-gun, no good to you or to me. Let me have my own rifle
-with some ammunition, and I pledge my life to send it back and six more
-equally good with it."
-
-"I tell you what I do," said the chief, after some deliberation and a
-good deal of whispering with his own people.
-
-"What?"
-
-"You got dog?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, you give me dog, I give you rifle."
-
-Sam had always been attached to Maj, and the adventures they had shared
-together made him even dearer, so that to lose him would be like parting
-with a friend; still, he knew that a sacrifice might have to be made.
-
-"What do you want with the dog?" he asked.
-
-"Eat him," grunted the chief.
-
-"I will give you the dog if you pledge me your word that you will not
-kill him for three days," said Sam, stooping and patting Maj on the
-head, while the faithful creature, in its turn, licked his hand.
-
-"But we no find game then we get hungry," said the chief.
-
-"You can find game. Agree to this, for the dog is my friend," said Sam
-with much feeling.
-
-"An' my frien', too," added Ike.
-
-"All right; I no kill for three days," said the chief.
-
-With this understanding Sam received his rifle and the belt containing
-his ammunition, and one of the Apaches fastened a cord about the dog's
-neck and dragged the reluctant creature to his own side.
-
-The chief pointed to a distant elevation--it looked to be only a few
-miles away, though it was actually thirty or more--and said:
-
-"That mountain back Hurley's Gulch. Go there. Keep north side. You find
-'em before dark. I come here three days. You bring all things, rifles,
-pistols, knives, and--and one more thing."
-
-"What is that?" asked Sam.
-
-"Heap tobacco, much lot whisky."
-
-"I will keep my promise," said Sam, who could not but feel that the
-Indian was decidedly "on the make."
-
-With this understanding Sam and his friends parted from the Apaches, and
-with their eager eyes fixed on the mountain that marked the site of
-Hurley's Gulch they hurried on.
-
-The thought that he should meet his father that night gave strength and
-elasticity to Sam's limbs and filled his heart with a hope that was
-thrilling in its ecstacy.
-
-He felt that their troubles were near an end, and that before the sun
-went down his father's innocence would be established, and the little
-band of Gold Cave Campers would be happily together once more.
-
-He walked with such a long, quick stride that Ike and Wah Shin could
-only keep up with him by breaking into a dog-trot, that made them puff
-with the exertion.
-
-"See h'ar, Mistah Sam!" called out Ike, after they had been traveling
-for two hours and the heat waves began to distort the landscape again.
-"Does yeh expeck a feller foh to run like a race-horse, w'en he ain't
-got nothin' in his inside but a bit ob dem dar roots? Foh de Lor', if
-you keeps up dis yar like all day, you'll fine yerself alone, foh dis
-chile's so holler he's nigh done gin out," and Sam came to a halt and
-wiped his perspiring face with his ragged coat-sleeve.
-
-"Me hungly allee same like Ike, but me no say any-tlings," said Wah Shin
-as he stood panting like a hunted hare.
-
-"I know, boys, that I've been hurrying more than I should in justice to
-you, but the thought that every step is taking me nearer to my father
-makes me forget how weary you must be," said Sam, his own brown face
-showing how the terrible pace told on him.
-
-"Mistah Sam, dar's a sight more reason w'y you should be tireder an'
-hungrier dan we," said Ike, the better part of his nature asserting
-itself, as it always did in an emergency. "But we'll git dar long afore
-dark widout so much hurryin', an' yer fadder'll be a heap sight more
-pleased if we all shows up fresh an' smilin', eben if we is so holler."
-
-Sam slackened his pace, but he was making fully four miles an hour when
-under way again.
-
-The water in their canteens became very warm in the blistering heat of
-that dry atmosphere, but they had to drink, and as a consequence their
-supply was exhausted by the middle of the afternoon.
-
-They had no food with them, and all were very hungry, but the prospect
-ahead made them forget their sufferings; for soldiers do not feel the
-pain of wounds received in the excitement of battle.
-
-Sam reasoned that two hours more would see them at Hurley's Gulch, and
-had so told his companions, when Ike called out:
-
-"Hello! Wat on earf is dem?"
-
-Sam turned in the direction pointed out by Ike, and to his amazement he
-saw the forms of four gigantic horsemen; but, instead of their riding
-along the solid earth, they appeared to be moving far up in the sky.
-
-All were familiar enough with the phenomena of this land to know that
-the riders were on the ground and that the spectral figures,
-representing them in the heavens had their origin in the mirage which is
-so frequent and delusive in this land.
-
-"Ulna has reached Hurley's Gulch, and those must be men who have come to
-search for us," said Sam after he had surveyed the figures for some
-seconds.
-
-About the same time the horsemen must have discovered Sam and his
-friends, for the giant figures could be seen pointing and waving their
-arms, while the monstrous horses plunged across the sky with mighty
-bounds.
-
-Again Sam hurried on till he came to a towering rock that commanded from
-its summit a view of the country round about.
-
-Up this he clambered, Ike and Wah Shin following him with great
-activity.
-
-On the summit of the rock there were a series of excavations, some of
-which were partly filled with water left there by the late storm.
-
-This water was comparatively cool, and after drinking till satisfied,
-Sam looked in the direction from which he expected the riders.
-
-To his surprise, they were only a few hundred yards away, and it did not
-need a second glance to convince him that one of these riders was Frank
-Shirley, and another was the man with one eye who had accompanied him on
-that day, that seemed so far away, to Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"Surely," he reasoned, "these would not be the men my father would send
-out from Hurley's Gulch to find me."
-
-Instinctively he felt that the presence of these men meant him no good,
-and he made up his mind not to place himself in their power till assured
-that they were friendly.
-
-The two horsemen with Frank Shirley and Badger were the landlord of the
-hotel at Hurley's, and a wretched creature of the same stripe who had
-been a partner and friend of Tom Edwards.
-
-"Halloo! Halloo, Sam Willett! We've come out to find you!" called out
-Shirley when he came within hearing distance.
-
-"Who sent you?" was Sam's salutation.
-
-"Your father."
-
-"How did he know I was here?"
-
-"Ulna told him."
-
-"Then why didn't he or Hank Tims come?"
-
-"There are good reasons why they could not get off, so we have come in
-their stead. Get down from the rocks; we've been searching for you since
-before daylight," said Shirley, as he and Badger dismounted from their
-horses not a hundred feet away.
-
-Slipping into one of the excavations so that he could see what was going
-on below without exposing himself, Sam called down:
-
-"Frank Shirley, my father never sent you to find me."
-
-"What! do you think Mr. Shirley's a-lyin'?" shouted Badger, at the same
-time unstringing his rifle and assuming a position as if about to fire.
-
-"Yes, I do," said Sam boldly.
-
-Badger would have fired, though Sam was out of sight had not Shirley
-laid his hand on his arm and said pleadingly:
-
-"Don't do that, Badger; you'll spill all the fat in the fire. That young
-fellow has a rifle, and he knows how to use it."
-
-Sam heard all this distinctly and he called out:
-
-"Yes, and I will use it if you fellows don't get back and mount your
-horses while I count ten. One, two, three, four----"
-
-Neither Shirley nor Badger waited to hear more, for as "one" was called
-out they saw the muzzle of a rifle pointing down at them from the top of
-the rock.
-
-With the alacrity of acrobats the two men scrambled into their saddles,
-and as they did so the word "Two!" rang out.
-
-"There, you see, we want to humor you, and if we were not friends we
-shouldn't do that," said Frank Shirley, trembling in voice and frame
-from his recent effort.
-
-Sam's reply showed that he had no faith in this.
-
-"My rifle is good for a half-mile. If you are within reach in ten
-minutes I'll begin to fire."
-
-"See h'ar, young feller," called out Badger, "do you know what I think
-of you?"
-
-"No, and I don't care."
-
-"I think you're a devil."
-
-"All right. Start, for the ten minutes have begun."
-
-The four men did start. It would have been nothing less than suicide,
-the landlord said, to remain there and be shot at, "more particlar whin
-there was no show to shoot back."
-
-Sullenly the men rode off, and when they had gone out of rifle-reach
-they came to a halt, and after much swearing all round, Shirley asked:
-
-"Well, gentlemen, what's to be done next?"
-
-"Nothing, till dark," said Badger.
-
-"And what then?"
-
-"Then we ken get at 'em."
-
-"But how?"
-
-"While two of us shoot at the front of the rock to attract 'em, two
-others can climb up behind and finish the job for good," said Badger.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.--IN A TRAP.
-
-
-From his lookout Sam kept a constant watch on the four horsemen, and he
-made up his mind from their movements that they were not going back
-without letting him hear from them again.
-
-"W'at you tink now, 'bout dis time?" asked Ike, who, with Wah Shin, had
-crept up from one of the excavations to Sam's side.
-
-"I think, Ike, that those men are not our friends," said Sam, pointing
-to the distant group.
-
-"Dat's jest how I feel. De worl' wouldn't be no wuss off if de earf was
-to open up an' swaller all dem men an' den come shut agin, like a
-rat-trap, Mistah Sam! Do you know what I tinks?"
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"W'en we wuz down in dem canyons, wif de watah all round us an' dem dar
-big rocks shootin' away up till dey 'peahed to go right frue de sky, den
-we tinked we wuz in a pooty bad fix, didn't we?"
-
-"So we did, Ike."
-
-"An' den again, w'en we fell in wif dem savage Injuns an' it appeahed as
-ef dey was bound to hab our skelps, den we tinked as how we wuz in a
-heap sight wuss fix'n eber?"
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"An' we kinder wished we wuz back in de canyons?"
-
-"That is true."
-
-"Wa'al, does yeh know w'at I tinks now?"
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"Dat a mean w'ite man is a heap sight meaner dan a mean Injun----"
-
-"My opinion exactly."
-
-"An' dat if I had my choice to be in de comp'ny ob dem four men off dar,
-or away back wif dem bar-legged 'Paches, as is so powahful fond ob dorg,
-w'y, I'd go wif de 'Patches ebery time, an' feel might tankful foh de
-hobertunity."
-
-"I agree with you, Ike."
-
-"But w'at's to be did?"
-
-"We must wait."
-
-"An' starve?"
-
-"We can't get anything to eat here, Ike."
-
-"If we could get suffin' to eat de place'd be a sight pleasanter. I
-nebber could feel brave w'en I was feelin' holler at de same time," and
-Ike tightened his belt, and rapped himself on the outside to show he was
-very much in the condition of a drum.
-
-"Bime by, light way soon we hab night, sun go down, see," said Wah Shin,
-pointing to the west where a crimson flush marked the spot where the sun
-had set.
-
-With great anxiety Sam saw the shadows settling over the landscape.
-
-He was now convinced that these men came to do him a harm, and he
-resolved not to let them come near him while he had a shot left in his
-rifle, or he was able to pull a trigger.
-
-He felt this delay more keenly than he had all the obstacles that beset
-his course since he left Gold Cave Camp to reach his father.
-
-By a perilous and round about way he had come, and when within a few
-miles of the objective point for which he had struggled so bravely, he
-found himself stopped by men, who, according to all the laws of
-humanity, should have been his protectors and friends.
-
-It was much like a brave swimmer's sinking within touch of shore, or a
-starving man's hand falling helpless by his side when just within reach
-of food.
-
-But Sam Willett had the courage and the devotion that obstacles could
-not weaken nor sufferings ever change.
-
-With every trial he grew stronger, more determined to reach the father,
-who was nearly always in his thoughts, and never for an instant absent
-from his heart.
-
-To add to the trials of the situation night was coming, and under its
-cover Sam was now convinced that these men would try to make their way
-to the top of the rock on which he and his faithful companions had found
-a refuge.
-
-"I've heerd tell o' war," groaned Ike, "an' I've seed men as fit an'
-fout, but thar wasn't none of 'em as eber got cornered as we is now. If
-I wasn't so awful holler I'd kneel down and pray, for if de good Lor'
-wants to help us He'll neber hab a bettah chance."
-
-"Don't lose heart, Ike. Help will come in good time," said Sam, with a
-cheeriness of manner that did not at all indicate his actual feelings.
-
-"I no cannee see how help him can gettee to us, but I no cale. Only can
-die one time," said Wah Shin, with the stolidity of bearing and that
-indifference to death which so often distinguishes the Mongolian.
-
-"These men," said Sam, pointing in the direction of the enemy, "knew we
-were out here before they left Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"It do seem bery much dat way," said Ike, with a sad shake of the head.
-Then he added: "But I don't see how dey could hab knowed."
-
-"Can't you think of one way, Ike?"
-
-"No, Mistah Sam; foh de life ob me I can't."
-
-"Have you forgotten Ulna?"
-
-"Ulna!" exclaimed Ike.
-
-"Yes; there is no doubt in my mind as to his safety. He has reached
-Hurley's Gulch, and those men, my father's enemies, have come out, on
-the strength of Ulna's information, to stop us."
-
-"But why don't some ob our friends show up? Dat's w'at gits me," said
-Ike, and he rubbed his head vigorously with both hands, as if he might
-in this way excite his brain into better action.
-
-The question asked by Ike had presented itself to Sam before, but as he
-could not answer it he did not let it annoy him. Speculation and action
-do not work in harmony.
-
-While it was yet sufficiently light, Sam Willett, like a careful soldier
-examining the field on which a life and death struggle is about to take
-place, looked over the rock on which they had found refuge and saw its
-weak points as well as its advantages.
-
-He walked boldly about within sight of the enemy, and the wonder is that
-they did not risk a shot at him. They certainly would have done so had
-they not agreed to try the effect of strategy before attempting force.
-
-It did not take Sam long to discover that the summit of the rock was
-accessible on one side only, and so he very wisely reasoned that that
-was the only side to be defended in the event of a night attack.
-
-He reasoned further that a rock so conspicuous in the landscape and
-known to have water on its top must be well known to every one
-acquainted with that land. Indeed, there was evidence all about him that
-the place had been frequently visited and used as a camping-ground by
-Indians and miners, and the chances were that Frank Shirley's companions
-knew the way to the top.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin were without arms, but it did not take Sam long to
-discover how their strength and courage could be utilized in defending
-the position.
-
-Scattered over the crest of the rock there were a great many irregular
-pieces of yellow sandstone, weighing from a few ounces to fifty pounds,
-or more, and, properly handled these stones would make very effective
-ammunition.
-
-People whose hands and brains are occupied do not feel trouble like
-those who have nothing to do but to think over their woes.
-
-The instant Sam stated his purpose to Ike and Wah Shin, their faces
-brightened and they went to work with a spirit and energy that made them
-forget, for the time, that they were very hungry.
-
-They piled the stones four feet high across the narrow turn, up which
-their assailants must come, and in addition they placed a great heap
-within reach to be used as ammunition.
-
-By the time these preparations were made, it was quite dark, but the
-snorting and tramping of uneasy horses and the hoarse voices of men in
-the distance, told Sam that the enemy were still close by.
-
-"Mistah Sam," whispered Ike, unable longer to stand the strain in
-silence.
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"How does yeh feel 'bout dis time?"
-
-"All right--considering."
-
-"Not so hungry as yeh was, eh?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Dat's same's me. My heart's beatin' so dat I don't feel so holler----"
-
-"You heap skee-at," grunted Wah Shin.
-
-"Yes, an' I ain't 'shamed to say I is; but if it comes to chuckin' down
-rocks, you'll see I ken work harder'n you, Wah Shin," said Ike, with
-spirit.
-
-"Mebbe yes. Mebbe no. Me chuckee rocks w'en Meest Sam he say, 'You go
-in, Wah.' Me no blag."
-
-"Hist!" interrupted Sam. "Keep silence. They are coming nearer."
-
-On the instant Ike and Wah Shin became as silent as the grave, and
-hugged closer to the surface of the rock, but they could hear their own
-hearts beating like war-drums, and they would not have been at all
-surprised if told that the men down below could hear them, too.
-
-It was a trying moment, but Sam was equal to the occasion. His ready
-rifle was protruding through an opening in the wall that commanded the
-approach. Ike stood at his right hand and Wah Shin on his left, each
-ready to hurl down the stones on their assailants, when their young
-commander gave the word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.--A BRIEF TRUCE AND WHAT FOLLOWED IT.
-
-
-After a painful wait, Sam heard voices under the rock, and he braced
-himself for the expected assault.
-
-The men were evidently consulting, and one was in favor of attacking at
-once, while the others advised "strategy;" this was the one word that
-came distinctly to Sam's ears.
-
-At length, Shirley, who was in favor of strategy, stepped back from
-under the rock and called up:
-
-"Hello! hello! up there!"
-
-"Hello, down there!" was Sam's response.
-
-"Is that you, Sam Willett?"
-
-"It is."
-
-"I want to talk with you."
-
-"Talk away, I am listening."
-
-"Do you know me?"
-
-"No, I don't, and what's more I don't want to," said Sam, with a ring of
-firmness in his voice that surprised and angered his questioner.
-
-"I am your friend, your cousin," said Shirley.
-
-"You are Frank Shirley?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Late of Detroit?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, that's me."
-
-"Well, Frank Shirley, late of Detroit, you may be my cousin, but you are
-not my friend."
-
-"But why shouldn't I be?"
-
-"Because you are not a gentleman."
-
-"That young feller up there," said Badger, with an oath, "ought to be
-tarred and feathered and then set on fire and shot at. And if I ever get
-my hands on him, I'll----"
-
-"Don't," interrupted the landlord, "you'll kick all the fat into the
-fire. Let Mr. Shirley talk to the boy; he'll get in fine work, if you
-only keep your mouth shut."
-
-Badger gave vent to his feelings by a series of savage growls, and
-Shirley, after much coughing to ease his nervousness, proceeded to carry
-out his strategy.
-
-"See here, Sam Willett!"
-
-"Go on, I hear," was the response.
-
-"I don't mean you any harm."
-
-"And you sha'n't do me any, if I can help it," said Sam.
-
-"If you look away off to the east, you can see lights."
-
-"I know that."
-
-"Do you know where those lights are?"
-
-"I think I do."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"At Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"Your father is there----"
-
-"I am glad to hear it."
-
-"And he is very sick."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Because I saw him in a bad fix to-day."
-
-"See here, Shirley, tell me at once what you want," said Sam, in his
-spirited way.
-
-"I want to take you to your father; he's been heart-broken, thinking you
-were dead; so come down, and I pledge you my honor as a gentleman that I
-will take you to Hurley's Gulch," said Shirley, in accents intended to
-be reassuring and soothing.
-
-"Your honor as a gentleman?" repeated Sam with a ring of sarcasm.
-
-"Yes, that's what I said."
-
-"And we'll let you three young fellers ride our horses," added the
-landlord.
-
-"And you will also pledge your honor, as a gentleman, to do that?" said
-Sam.
-
-"Oh, I'll swear to it," said the landlord.
-
-"Thanks, but the security being false and worthless, I must decline your
-offer," said Sam, surprised at his own coolness and his ready command of
-language.
-
-"Then you won't come down?" from Shirley.
-
-"Thanks, not to-night."
-
-"Sam Willett!"
-
-"Yes; Frank Shirley!"
-
-"Are you crazy?"
-
-"No, I'm mad; and you'll find I'm dangerous if you bother me further,"
-said Sam stoutly.
-
-"See har, young feller," shouted Badger. "If you don't want us to save
-you, do you know what we'll do next?"
-
-"I don't."
-
-"Why, we'll get mad, too----"
-
-"I don't care."
-
-"And," continued Badger, his voice choking with anger, "we'll go up thar
-and fotch you down; and if so be you git hurt, it'll be yer own fault."
-
-"Hurt?" from Sam.
-
-"Yes, and hurted purty bad, too."
-
-"What's your name?"
-
-"My name's Badger. I'm a terror, I am. I was nussed on blizzards, and
-rocked by tornadoes. I live on rattlesnakes and horned toads, and when
-I'm riled its wuss nor a earthquake. Now you are gettin' my dander riz,
-so come down, for if I have to climb up after you, you'll git hurt."
-
-Badger certainly thought that this fierce speech would have a most
-depressing effect upon the youth in command of the rock, great therefore
-was his anger and disappointment when he received this reply.
-
-"Before I am hurt some one else will be in the same fix, for I and my
-companions propose to defend ourselves."
-
-"But why defend yourselves," said Shirley, "when we mean you nothing but
-good."
-
-"I do not care to give my reasons; but I'll tell you what I've been
-thinking ever since I started to reach Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"That you and the one-eyed ruffian who travels with you are the cause of
-all my father's troubles----"
-
-"That's a lie!" roared Badger.
-
-Sam continued as if he had not heard the interruption.
-
-"And I believe it was you two who killed that wretch, Tom Edwards, in
-order to get us into a scrape--yes, to get us out of the way. Now get
-back, or come on, just as you please."
-
-Sam said this in a way that convinced the man below that his resolution
-could not be shaken, and that any attempt to oust him from his
-stronghold by force would be met with resistance to the death.
-
-"That young devil up thar's a chip of the old block," hissed Badger.
-"Why, cuss him, he talks jist like his father. Do you know what my
-opinion of them two is, Mr. Shirley?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"That they're the hardest, toughest cases I've met up with in my
-five-and-forty years of mixin' among all classes. Sich people hadn't
-ought to be let live among decent folks."
-
-"I've seed boys in my time, hundreds and thousands of 'em," said the
-disgusted landlord, "but that young feller up on top of that rock, for
-downright gall and bitterness, and bull-headedness, lays over anything I
-ever saw, heard or red of."
-
-"It is evident to me that Sam Willett will fight; now what are we to
-do?" asked Shirley in despair, for all prospect of succeeding by
-"strategy" was gone.
-
-"We must carry out my plan," said Badger.
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"We've got to go back to first principles, jist as I supposed we would
-when you got talkin' 'bout mildness and strategy----"
-
-"Explain yourself, Badger."
-
-"You and me must face the music, Mr. Shirley."
-
-"Face the music?" stammered Shirley.
-
-"Yes, thar's nothin' else to be did."
-
-"Explain yourself, Badger."
-
-"You and me must creep up the rock on the other side, while Jake and Ned
-stand off to the east and keep up a fire on the top, so as to distract
-attention from the p'int we're after. Do you see?"
-
-Shirley said he saw very clearly; but from his manner it was very
-evident he did not look with approval on this plan of assault.
-
-Physically and morally Frank Shirley was a coward, and though he tried
-to hide this fact from others, he could not hide it from himself.
-
-But even cowards will fight desperately for their lives, and all
-Shirley's future, if not his very existence, depended on the success of
-this monstrous undertaking.
-
-If he failed, then he was an impoverished outcast with the stain of
-murder on his soul, though all the chances were that if Sam Willett was
-permitted to reach Hurley's Gulch, the vigilantes would arrest himself
-and Badger for the death of Tom Edwards.
-
-Quickly he looked over the situation, and his cowardly heart took on a
-show of courage; it was the courage of desperation, as he realized how
-much depended on his conduct this night.
-
-"I can't say that I'm much of a fighter, having had no experience that
-way," said Shirley with a tremor in his voice. "But, Badger, if you lead
-the way, I'll follow to the end. We must finish this job to-night."
-
-"If we don't it'll finish us," said Badger grimly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.--A NIGHT BATTLE.
-
-
-Sam was astonished when he heard the rifles banging away on the east
-side of the rock.
-
-He had been looking for a direct attack and so could not understand this
-move.
-
-"What can they mean; they are certainly bad, but they are not such
-downright fools as to think they can do us any harm from that quarter,"
-said Sam, thinking aloud rather than asking for the opinion of his
-companions.
-
-"Mistah Sam."
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"I ken hear de bullets a whistlin' ober head, an' it do 'peah ez ef dey
-was comin' lower down."
-
-"W'at mattle if dey no comee low nuff down to hult? Let 'em singee,
-lat's alle lite," grunted Wah Shin, as he crouched closer to the rock,
-and hugged to his breast a big stone, which he intended to use to the
-best advantage when the proper time came.
-
-Sam Willett was by instinct a soldier.
-
-This useless attack had a purpose in it, and he was not long in reaching
-a right conclusion.
-
-To encourage Ike and Wah Shin, he gave them the benefit of his
-reasoning.
-
-"That firing, off there, is all a dodge," he said.
-
-"Tink dey're shootin' foh fun, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"No, Ike, they are in dead earnest, but their object is to take our
-attention away from the point of danger."
-
-"De odder side."
-
-"Yes; the attack will be made along the trail leading from the ground to
-the top of the rock, and we must be prepared for it," said Sam.
-
-Nothing could be gained by heeding the riflemen.
-
-All his sight and strength must now be used to watch and guard the only
-ascent by which their position could be reached without the highest
-scaling ladders, and of such mechanical appliances there was no danger.
-
-Sam placed Ike and Wah Shin in position again, and whispered to them not
-to hurl a stone till he gave the word.
-
-This done he brought his rifle to a half cock, and making sure that his
-cartridges were within reach, he knelt down with the muzzle of his gun
-covering the trail.
-
-The dry, still air carried every sound.
-
-Though Badger and Shirley moved with the stealth of Indians, yet their
-labored breathing, and, now and then, the fall of their feet came to
-Sam's ears.
-
-He was sure he could hear two men whispering under the rocks. He took a
-firmer hold of his rifle and tried to look through the intense darkness
-that covered the route by which the attack must be made.
-
-The strain of that long wait was more trying to strength and courage
-than would have been a prompt attack.
-
-Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed, and still the riflemen to the east
-kept up their desultory, but harmless firing.
-
-The darkness that added to the difficulties of the defense, was not a
-great advantage to the attacking party.
-
-Badger was in the advance, groping with his hands for the trail, and not
-daring to strike a light, for fear of making it the target for Sam.
-
-"Keep close behind," whispered Badger to Shirley, who, as they crept on,
-showed a decided disposition to lag to the rear.
-
-"Have you found the trail, Badger?"
-
-"I think so."
-
-"Is it steep?"
-
-"Hist, man, don't talk, but foller close up. Here's the place where we
-begin to climb. Mind, it's no fool of a job to get to the top at the
-best of times," said Badger, as he began the ascent on hands and knees.
-
-Shirley, trembling in every limb, came close after, his fears somewhat
-allayed by the comforting thought that Badger's huge form would shield
-him from any bullets that might be fired down.
-
-Sam was on the alert. The sounds about the place died out, and the
-stillness added to the painful intensity of the situation.
-
-Unable longer to control his feelings, Ike bent down and whispered:
-
-"Say, Mistah Sam."
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"Dis yar's gittin' ticklish."
-
-"Yes; be still."
-
-Unmindful of this injunction, Ike continued:
-
-"Somet'ing got to be did mighty soon, or dis chile can't stan' de
-strain."
-
-"Wait."
-
-"But it's time to heab de rocks."
-
-"Not till I give the word."
-
-"But as I'm a sinner I can heah 'em!"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Right close by----"
-
-Ike's sentence, was cut short by the flash and crack of a pistol fired
-by a man not twenty feet away.
-
-With a "spat" the bullet splintered against the rocks a few feet above
-Sam's head.
-
-The time for immediate action had come.
-
-"Now, boys!" shouted Sam, in ringing tones.
-
-By the flash of his own rifle he saw the forms of two men on the trail
-outside the wall he had thrown up.
-
-With the strength of desperation, Ike and Wah Shin rose to their feet
-and began hurling stones into the path, while Sam fired as rapidly as he
-could throw shells into the breech of his rifle.
-
-In less time than it takes to record the act, the defenders knew that
-the assault had been a failure.
-
-Oaths, groans and the crashing of bodies, two score feet below, told
-that Badger and Shirley did not retreat of their own volition, but in
-accordance with the one law which they could not violate, viz.:
-gravitation.
-
-Cries for help went up from the base of the rock, and the two men who
-had been indulging in harmless rifle practice hastened to the relief of
-their less fortunate companions.
-
-"Hello, boys, any one hurt?" asked one.
-
-"Hurt!" groaned Badger. "They've done for me."
-
-"Oh, I guess not. Let us get a light and see how things is," said the
-landlord.
-
-"Don't make a light," protested Shirley.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because they'll fire at it."
-
-"No, but go up and clean them fellows out. I could die happy if I knowed
-you'd cleaned 'em out," gasped Badger.
-
-"Wa'al," said the landlord, "you can't expect me to go up there and try
-to do anything after the fist you two have made of it. I don't mind
-anything in reason, but that's axin' a leetle too much."
-
-"Something must be done, and at once," said Frank Shirley.
-
-"What do you want done?" asked the landlord, already heartily sick of
-the undertaking.
-
-"I am hurt as well as Badger."
-
-"Sorry for that."
-
-"And you two must help us on our horses and get us away from here."
-
-"Of course we'll stick by you," said the landlord. "But atween you and
-me and the rock, Mr. Shirley, I kinder think, perhaps, it mout be
-better, if so be you steered cl'ar of Hurley's Gulch for awhile----"
-
-The man stopped suddenly, his attention being attracted by the barking
-of a dog in the distance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.--TO THE RESCUE.
-
-
-Badger and Shirley were carried from under the rock, but when it came to
-lifting them on the horses it was found that they were too much injured
-to ride.
-
-"Thar ain't no use in my tryin' it," groaned Badger. "I can't sit in the
-saddle."
-
-"Then what's to be did?" asked the landlord.
-
-"Hide me away, and when daylight comes send some of the boys after me
-with a stretcher."
-
-"That'd never do," protested the landlord.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Coz, if you was to git back to the Gulch at this time all the chances
-is they'd make you stretch hemp. Fact is, ole feller, you and Shirley
-here has played your last keerds, and I'm downright sorry to say the
-game has gone agin you in a most surprisin' bad way."
-
-"Don't leave me!" whined Shirley. "Take care of me and I'll pay you your
-own price."
-
-"Oh, that's all right," said the landlord, who, with his companion, had
-placed the two men side by side on their saddle blankets and left with
-them two canteens. "But the barkin' of that dog comes nearer and nearer,
-and I don't like it. Keep a stiff upper lip and I'll send out and see
-how you are after sun-up."
-
-With this promise the landlord and his companion, with an eye single to
-their own safety, mounted their horses and rode away.
-
-The barking of the dog, coming from the west, was also heard by Sam and
-his friends.
-
-"I tink dlat no dogee. Dlat a wolf," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Wolf!" repeated Ike with fine scorn. "That's no wolf. Heah him! Jist
-lissen, Mistah Sam! Ain't dat music, an' can't yeh make it out?"
-
-"I hear it, Ike," said Sam, "and the animal is evidently running fast
-and coming this way."
-
-"It's Maj! It's deah ole Maj!" shouted Ike, and in his excitement he
-dashed against the wall, and with a roar like Niagara the rocks went
-thundering down the trail.
-
-Sam heard the two horsemen galloping away, but as he could not tell
-whether they were retreating or going after reinforcements he determined
-not to abate his vigilance so long as there was a sign of danger.
-
-Again he heard something clambering up the rocks, and he was on the
-point of firing, when a short, joyous bark rang out, and the next
-instant Maj was in their midst.
-
-The faithful creature was nearly exhausted by his long run, for he had
-escaped from the Apaches, but he had strength enough left to show his
-joy at the meeting.
-
-He leaped at Sam, and after licking his face and hands he turned and,
-with commendable impartiality, bestowed the same attention on the
-others.
-
-Ike actually cried for joy, and he made an effort to take the dog in his
-arms, but when the first greetings were over Maj, half dead with hunger
-and thirst, discovered that there was water near by, and without any
-thought of the propriety of his conduct he plunged in and lapped till
-his parched skin was full.
-
-"Oh, if Ulna was only heah now," cried Ike, "we'd be all togedder agin
-an' as happy as a--as a darkey in ripe watah millyon time!"
-
-Sam was confident that Ulna had reached Hurley's Gulch, and this thought
-gave him so much comfort that he did not wonder why his friend had not
-come to his relief, for he well knew that the Indian youth would do
-everything that lay in his power, and he was right in this surmise.
-
-The coming of Ulna had not only saved the lives of two men, but it had
-also caused a revolution in the minds of a majority of the people living
-at Hurley's Gulch.
-
-To be sure, there were some who did not believe the Indian youth, and
-who were satisfied in their own minds that Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-should be hanged, and that they would be, sooner or later; but these
-fellows found themselves in the minority and only whispered their
-belief.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were still under guard, for the promised proof
-of their innocence was not at hand; but Si Brill and Collins, now the
-most prominent men in the camp, felt that the end they hoped for was
-very near.
-
-Ulna, after being refreshed with food, kept his eyes open, and he was
-the first to discover that Badger, Shirley and the others had left
-Hurley's Gulch.
-
-He at once sought out Collins and said to him:
-
-"I saw the four men ride away."
-
-"But men are ridin' away and a-ridin' in all the time," said Collins,
-who not being at all suspicious saw no harm in the act.
-
-"True, Collins; but I am sure these men mean harm to Sam Willett."
-
-"Nonsense."
-
-"It is the truth."
-
-"But you left Sam in the hands of them onary 'Paches, didn't you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then how can Badger get at him?"
-
-"The Apaches say they are not at war with the whites----"
-
-"I don't take no stock in them or their sayin's," said Collins.
-
-"But they are at peace, else they would have killed Sam at once. As it
-is they will either rob him and turn him loose, or else hold him for a
-reward."
-
-"Well?" said Collins reflectively.
-
-"And if Badger and his gang meet the Apaches and pay the reward, then
-they will have Sam Willett in their power----"
-
-"Hold!" cried Collins. "I see it all! Once in their power they will kill
-the boy and get the receipt Tom Edwards gave when he was paid for the
-mine. Then the dogs can come back here and defy us. We must move to the
-rescue, Ulna! We must move at once!"
-
-Accompanied by Ulna, Collins went to Si Brill and others of his friends,
-and after warning them to say nothing to Mr. Willett, he told them of
-his fears for Sam and urged the necessity of getting out a rescuing
-party at once, which he was ready to lead "if no one else didn't offer."
-
-At this time there were not many horses in camp, and unfortunately
-nearly all were owned by the men who had been so bitter against Mr.
-Willett.
-
-It was after midnight when Collins succeeded in getting three horses and
-a mule; they belonged to Mr. Willett and this limited the rescuing party
-to four, one of whom was Ulna, who went along as a guide, though all
-knew he could be depended on if there were serious work on hand.
-
-About two hours before day they came face to face with the landlord and
-his companion.
-
-"Where have you fellers been?" demanded Tom Collins.
-
-"I don't know that it's any of your business," was the landlord's reply,
-"but I don't mind sayin' that we went out to see if thar was any Injuns
-in sight. For one, I didn't take any stock in that young Ute's story."
-
-"Wa'al," said Collins, "there's plenty of better men than you--and I'm
-one of 'em, that do believe the Ute. Now what have you done with Badger
-and Shirley?"
-
-"They left us 'bout dark; if you want them you must hunt 'em for
-yourself. I ain't no one's dog," growled the landlord.
-
-"The man that had you for his dog might count on bein' bit, but I reckon
-we ken find out all we want without yer help. Go back to the Gulch and
-pack yer traps, for it's my 'pinion it'll be very hot there in a day or
-two for dogs of your breed," said Collins as he shook his bridle and
-rode on.
-
-Meantime Sam, ignorant of the doings of friends and foe, kept watch on
-the summit of the rock.
-
-He was completely "played out," and it was only by a strong effort of
-will and a constant change of position that he kept from sinking down
-and going to sleep like his companions.
-
-As soon as the gray dawn began to make distant objects visible Sam awoke
-Ike and Wah Shin.
-
-Sleep had only brought a temporary cessation from the pangs of hunger,
-but the brave fellows made no complaint.
-
-Ike, always on the lookout, was the first to discover horsemen in the
-distance, coming from the direction of Hurley's Gulch.
-
-"It 'peahs to me powahful like's ef Ulna is one ob dem yar men," said
-Ike.
-
-He was not mistaken.
-
-On came the riders at a gallop.
-
-In the advance rode Ulna.
-
-As soon as they caught sight of Sam they waved their hats and sent up a
-thrilling cheer.
-
-[Illustration: _Sam and Ike discover the horsemen coming to their
-rescue._]
-
-Even the horses caught the spirit of their riders, and plunged into a
-faster gallop, till they came to a halt under the towering rock which
-Sam had defended so gallantly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.--SAM'S DEVOTION IS REWARDED.
-
-
-"Hello!" shouted Collins, as he and his companions dismounted and looked
-up at the three famished people on the rock. "How did you three gents
-and the dog git up thar?"
-
-It was evident from this question that Collins was not acquainted with
-the rock.
-
-"On the other side," said Sam.
-
-"All right; we'll find the way and come up."
-
-"Better save the trouble," said Sam. "We'll come down, and glad we are
-of the chance."
-
-"Glad!" cried Ike; "dat word don't nigh begin foh to 'spress dis yar
-chile's feelin's. I'ze full, chuck full ob downright bliss, I is. Come
-along, Maj and Wah, foh it does seem powahful like's ef de trouble had
-jest 'bout come to an ind."
-
-Down over the ruin of the wall they clambered, and at the foot stood
-Ulna--the faithful.
-
-The Indian may be a stoic under suffering, but there are no people in
-the world so ready to give expression to joy, nor so demonstrative where
-the better impulses of the heart are called out.
-
-"Sam! Sam! My friend, thank God you are safe!" cried Ulna, and his eyes
-looked larger and blacker for their tears as he caught his friend to his
-breast and kissed him first on one cheek and then on the other.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin shook hands with every one again and again, and then
-they jointly performed a joy-dance, in which the dog joined, to the
-music of his own glad barking.
-
-"Looks like's ef you'd been corralled up thar," said Collins, looking up
-at the defense and down at the red stains on the stones at the bottom.
-
-"We have that," replied Sam, and then briefly and with characteristic
-modesty, he told of the fight of the night before.
-
-"And the paper," said Collins; "the receipt Tom Edwards said he didn't
-give yer father?"
-
-"I've got it here," said Sam, pointing to the saddle-bags slung over his
-shoulder.
-
-"Wa'al, I felt most sure it'd turn up. But what became of Badger and
-Shirley?"
-
-"I think they were hurt, but I hope not badly," said Sam.
-
-"Some one's hurt, and purty bad, too," said one of Collins' men.
-
-"How do you know that, Jack?"
-
-"Jest look over thar, Collins," said the man, pointing to a wall some
-distance off, at the side of which two men appeared to be sleeping.
-
-On the instant all went over, and they discovered Shirley and Badger.
-
-The former was dead, but an examination showed that he had received no
-wound that would account for his demise.
-
-"No, boys," groaned Badger, "he wasn't hurt much at all, but I was the
-feller that suffered."
-
-"Then how did Shirley come to die?" asked Collins.
-
-"Die! Coz, he was a coward."
-
-"What do you mean, Badger?"
-
-"He said the game was up, so he took poison to finish hisself."
-
-"Poison!" exclaimed all.
-
-"Yes, poison. He wanted me to take some, too, but I'd rather hang. Look
-round and you'll find the thing that held it."
-
-The searchers did not have far to look, for clasped in the dead man's
-right hand they found a small vial with a death's head and cross-bones
-on the label, which contained the legend, in red letters, "Sulph.
-Morphia."
-
-"Badger."
-
-"Yes, Collins."
-
-"What brought you fellows out here?"
-
-"Can't you guess?"
-
-"I can, but I'd rather you'd tell me."
-
-"And you won't think no harder of me for it."
-
-"Badger," replied Collins, "I can't think of anything you could
-do--unless you chanced to be decent--that would make me think any
-different of you than I do now."
-
-"Wa'al, I reckon I ain't got long to live, so I'll tell the downright
-truth for once----"
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Shirley, Jake and another feller came out with me to do for young
-Willett, but we didn't connect. Thar, that's all I'll say at present,"
-and Badger closed his eyes and looked to be as dead as the man lying by
-his side.
-
-"Men that starts out to make the life-path hard for other folks," said
-Collins, with much feeling in his voice, "generally fetches up with a
-short turn themselves, and falls into the pit dug for others. Now, boys,
-what's best to be did next?"
-
-"Thar's nothin' to be did," said the man who had spoken before, "but to
-sarch the body and then bury it. This is as good a place as back at the
-Gulch. When we've did that we'll tote Badger 'long with us and let him
-tell his story."
-
-As this advice seemed good, it was acted on at once.
-
-After taking from the pockets such valuables and papers as might cast
-light on his own life, or be sent to his friends, the men scraped out a
-grave with their knives, and in it they laid the body of the man who had
-ruined himself in trying "to make the life-path hard for other folks."
-
-When preparations were being made for the return to Hurley's Gulch,
-Badger--who evidently thought he was to be left there--lost all the
-coarse spirit that once characterized him, and he whined:
-
-"Oh, don't leave me out here to the wolves, boys. Take me to the Gulch
-with you and I'll confess all."
-
-"We'll tote you back, never fear," said Collins. "We ain't the kind of
-men that like to see sufferin', even if it's deserved."
-
-The horses of Shirley and Badger were found near by. One of these was
-given to Sam, who said he would carry Wah Shin behind him if some one
-else would carry Ike.
-
-Ulna, who rode a mule and was the lightest one of the party, gladly
-consented to ride double with Ike. This being arranged, the next
-question was the conveyance of the wounded Badger.
-
-He was given stimulants from his own canteen, and then lifted into his
-own saddle. With a strong man on either side to keep him from falling,
-the party started back to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Within two hours they were at their destination, but long before they
-reached there they were seen and recognized by those who had been kindly
-disposed to Mr. Willett, and an extemporized committee came out to meet
-them.
-
-"The paper! The paper! Have you got Tom Edwards' receipt?" was the
-salutation that greeted Sam, as dozens of sturdy men gathered round and
-shook his hand.
-
-He had prepared for this by taking the water-stained paper from the
-saddle-bags, to which he had clung through all his privations.
-
-"Here it is!" cried Sam, holding the receipt aloft. "Here it is, and I
-will intrust it to Mr. Collins while I go to my father."
-
-A rousing cheer went up from the men, and that cheer was heard in the
-dugout by Mr. Willett and Hank Tims, and reading its meaning aright,
-they raised their tearful eyes and thanked God.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.--THE LAST, BUT NOT THE LEAST IMPORTANT.
-
-
-Si Brill heard the shouting, and leaving his friends--the prisoners--to
-care for themselves he fairly flew out of the ravine.
-
-He saw his "pard" holding the paper aloft and he understood all. The
-glow of a well-earned victory came to his bronzed face, and he sent up a
-cheer that started all the echoes in the gulch into life.
-
-"All is lovely, Si!" shouted Collins. "We got the receipt, and the boy's
-safe. Don't wait a second but take him to his father at once. His heart
-is jist a hungerin' to hold young Sam next to it."
-
-"You're right every time, old pard!" shouted Si Brill.
-
-Sam ran to him and he was on the point of asking where his father was,
-when Si caught him in his arms and gave him such a hug as would have
-crushed one of weaker frame.
-
-He would have carried Sam in triumph on his broad shoulders, had that
-young gentleman consented. As it was he took his hand, and raising his
-hat in the other, he ran down the gulch, cheering all the while as if
-the sound were essential to his progress.
-
-Mr. Willett stood in the door of the dugout. He saw Si accompanied by a
-tall, slender youth. No need to tell him who it was.
-
-With the cry, "My boy! Oh, thank Heaven for my boy," Mr. Willett ran out
-and father and son were clasped in each other's arms, and their kisses
-and their tears mingled.
-
-"See h'ar, Mr. Willett," called out Hank Tims, who had followed up his
-friend, "when you've got through a huggin' young Sam, jist turn him over
-to me and let me have a chance to express my sentiments on this
-occasion."
-
-At sound of the dear old hunter's voice, Sam turned to him with extended
-hands and cried out:
-
-"Hank, old friend, I've been through the great caon."
-
-"Well!" laughed Hank, as he shook Sam's hands, and patted his back by
-turns, "you look as if you'd been dragged through a narrer knot hole,
-but yer eyes are as bright as ever and you'll soon git flesh on yer
-bones, but through the Gerrait Caon! oh, come, Sam, don't try to fool
-me so soon after we've been parted for so long----"
-
-"But didn't Ulna tell you?"
-
-"So he did, Sam, but I thought mebbe his mind was affected. But never
-mind, we'll have lots of time to talk over our adventures when we git
-back to Gold Cave Camp. Well, well, I never did think, leastwise not
-lately, that I'd ever live to see so happy a day as this," and Hank
-turned his attention to Ike and Wah Shin, who had come upon the scene,
-nor was the dog forgotten in the warm welcome given to all.
-
-"I tell you, Mistah Willett," said Ike, as he held his old employer's
-hand, "I'ze got enough to talk about till the day I die, even if I was
-to live for a thousand years."
-
-"Which I hope you may, Ike. But what is that noise up the hill?" asked
-Mr. Willett, his attention attracted by the prolonged cheering in that
-direction.
-
-They had not long to wonder, for soon Collins came dashing down the
-hill, his eyes glowing and a flush of triumph on his manly face.
-
-"What's up, pard?" asked Si Brill.
-
-"They've got at the truth!" shouted Collins.
-
-"What truth?"
-
-"The truth about the murder."
-
-"Then you showed them the receipt?" said Mr. Willett, again taking Sam's
-hand.
-
-"Yes; I did all that, and even then some of 'em wanted to doubt; but
-something has happened to settle 'em."
-
-"What's that?" asked Hank.
-
-"The landlord has lit out----"
-
-"Oh!"
-
-"But that's not all," continued Collins. "Badger is dead----"
-
-"Dead!" echoed all.
-
-"Yes, dead; but just before he pegged out he confessed that it was him
-killed Tom Edwards----"
-
-"I was right in my belief," said Mr. Willett solemnly.
-
-"Yes," continued Collins, "and now every man in the camp, even those
-that was the bitterest, are jest achin' to see you, and to congratulate
-you, and to ax yer parding; so let's go up. Thar's no danger to you nor
-your's in Hurley's Gulch now," and there was a ring of pride in the
-brave fellow's voice.
-
-The Gold Cave campers, happier than we can describe over their reunion,
-followed Collins from the dugout to the canvas settlement on the bluff.
-
-As soon as the assembled miners caught sight of them they sent up such a
-glad shout as was never heard before nor since on the banks of that
-particular gulch.
-
-At heart the great mass of men are right, and they mean to do right.
-Among these miners there seemed to be a general disposition to make
-amends as speedily as possible for their past errors.
-
-Not satisfied with cheering and shouting their congratulations, they
-rushed in by twos and fours, and beginning with Mr. Willett, they lifted
-all the Gold Cave campers--not neglecting Ike and Wah Shin--to their
-shoulders, and then marched in triumphal procession to the scene of the
-trial at the hotel.
-
-The flight of the proprietor did not seem to make any difference, for
-there was plenty of food and cooks to prepare the banquet.
-
-Ike went at once to the place where Wah Shin was helping to get dinner.
-
-"I'll kind o' fill up a little, Wah," said Ike, as he laid siege to a
-big loaf of bread and a correspondingly large piece of cold meat, "for
-it'll take me jist 'bout a year's steady feedin' to catch up. You can
-bet that I'll never be sorry again that I didn't eat moah w'en I had a
-good chance."
-
-Maj seemed to be of the same opinion, for he did not leave Ike's side
-for hours, and when he was next seen in public, he was truly aldermanic
-in his girth and evidently on good terms with himself and the world.
-
-After a hearty dinner, which no one enjoyed more than Sam, speeches in
-praise of "the young caoneers" as they were called, were made, and
-resolutions expressing unbounded confidence in Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-were passed.
-
-And so ended the happiest day Hurley's Gulch had ever seen, or ever saw
-again.
-
-The next day our friends returned to Gold Cave Camp, but before starting
-off, Mr. Willett purchased the articles Sam had promised to send to the
-Indians, and Si Brill and Collins pledged themselves to deliver them.
-
-Here our story ends, yet it may not be amiss to add a few words
-explanatory of the future of the characters in whom we have been so much
-interested.
-
-Mr. Willett made a good deal of money out of the Gold Cave Camp
-property, but the danger from floods led him after a time to sell it at
-a sacrifice.
-
-Years have passed since these adventures came to a close. To-day
-"Willett & Son" are among the richest and most honored miners and
-bankers in the Far West.
-
-Their porter in the bank is our old friend, Ike; indeed so great is his
-interest in the establishment and so highly does he think of his
-position that he is very positive it could not go on for a day without
-him.
-
-He always speaks of the firm as "we."
-
-"We's doin' fine," is a frequent expression of his, though nothing
-delights him so much as to tell of his adventures in the Great Caon. He
-sneers at all other human exploits as things of no account compared with
-the events in which he played so prominent a part.
-
-Mr. Willett's cook is the faithful Wah Shin. "Wah really runs the
-house," Sam says, but he always adds, "and it could not be run better.
-Wah is a standing proof that the Mongolian has a bright mind and a
-generous heart--that is if you get one of the right kind and treat him
-right."
-
-Strange though it may seem, Ulna, as Mr. Willett's protege, came east
-and studied medicine, and his skill and judgment are making him famous
-in the West. We need not add that there is one house in Denver where
-"Doctor Ulna" is always a welcome and an honored guest.
-
-"Collins, Brill & Tims" is the firm name of one of the most prosperous
-"concerns" in Colorado.
-
-It is not necessary for us to speak separately of the members in order
-to have them recognized, though it may not be amiss to say that they are
-all married men, and are among the largest depositors in the bank of
-Willett & Son.
-
-They make the banker's house their home when in Denver, and although
-Hurley's Gulch has been long since abandoned, and the wolf unfrightened
-howls over its site, they love to talk over the stirring days when a
-son's devotion proved itself more powerful than Lynch law and vigilance
-committees.
-
-
-
-
-LOST.
-
-
-In the summer of 1864 Paul Seeton went to spend his holidays with his
-cousin, Frank More.
-
-Frank lived in the northern part of Maine, on the outskirts of a vast
-forest. Paul was a Boston boy, who had scarcely ever been out of the
-city in his life.
-
-It was in Aroostook county, a place famous for growing the biggest
-timber in the northern states, a place known to lumbermen and loved by
-them; with few inhabitants except those who are engaged in the timber
-trade; with no villages and no roads.
-
-One day Frank proposed a fishing excursion. Their destination was about
-fifteen miles away, on a chain of lakes that extended far into the
-forest.
-
-They set out at break of day, rode on horseback over a rough road for
-about two hours, and at length reached the shore of a lake.
-
-Here they hired a boat from a man who lived in a log house, and
-embarking, sailed for five or six miles to a place where the lake
-narrowed. Here taking down their sail they rowed for some distance
-through a channel so narrow that the branches of the lofty pines on
-either side almost met. It took a good hour to pass through this, when
-suddenly they emerged from it and found themselves on a second lake,
-three or four times as large as the first.
-
-Up went the sail again, and away they went over the second lake for
-about ten miles. All around grew the primeval forest, dense, dark and
-luxuriant. But Frank had been here before, and the scene was quite
-familiar.
-
-The boat went swiftly onward, and at last approached the farthest
-extremity of the lake. Here a small peninsula jutted forth from the
-forest into the lake, which was cleared and under cultivation. Upon it
-arose a log hut, from the rude chimney of which smoke was curling
-upward.
-
-It belonged to a man named Spence, who cultivated the ground in summer
-and in winter went lumbering in the woods. He lived there all alone, and
-apart from his solitude was very comfortable.
-
-The boat grounded on the beach in front of Spence's hut, and the boys
-went up to the house. They found Spence himself at home, cooking his
-dinner.
-
-The boys did not stay long. After asking a few questions as to the best
-fishing holes, they took to the boat again, and following Spence's
-directions, rowed toward a small creek which penetrated among the hills,
-and passing up this, at length came to a small basin enclosed by high
-wooded shores. Here they began to fish.
-
-Although they waited patiently, they found, to their great
-disappointment, that the fish would not come. At length Paul felt a
-bite; he pulled up his line in a fever of agitation, and with a glow of
-triumph jerked into the boat a tiny fish about four inches long. But
-Paul's triumph was not at all shared by Frank.
-
-"Pooh!" said he, "it's only a miserable perch."
-
-"A perch?" said Paul. "Isn't it a good fish?"
-
-"Good? Why, these lakes are crammed with them. It's trout we want, not
-these." And as Frank said this he jerked his own line with some
-complacency. Soon something bit his bait. He jerked it out and found, to
-his disgust, another perch.
-
-At length Frank said that he was going up the woods a little distance,
-to a lake which was about a mile off, connected with this by a brook. He
-could follow the windings of the brook and easily get there.
-
-Paul, however, thought he would stay where he was, for the woods looked
-very rough, and he enjoyed being in a boat, even if he didn't catch
-anything.
-
-So Frank started off, promising to be back within an hour.
-
-Paul continued his fishing. He moved the boat to the opposite shore. No
-bites came--that is, none came to the bait, but he soon became aware of
-other bites, which he did not expect. These were produced by swarms of
-mosquitoes, which gathered so thickly that at last Paul had to pull in
-his line and give himself to self-defense. He shifted the position of
-the boat a dozen times, but his persecutors followed him. At last he
-could stand it no longer, and concluded to go after Frank.
-
-Nearly an hour had passed, and it was about time for Frank to return. It
-was Paul's intention to stroll along the brook, and he would be certain
-either to meet Frank in his return, or else he would find him at the
-lake to which he had gone.
-
-It was very swampy, and Paul sank in up to his knees for some distance,
-but at length reached rising ground. The brook was only a small one, and
-was bordered by such dense underbrush that Paul found it impossible to
-follow it. In fact, a much better path appeared.
-
-This was a rough track, overgrown with moss and ferns, which was used by
-the lumbermen in winter. It went up from the lake apparently in the same
-direction as the brook.
-
-So he walked along this path, forcing his way through alder bushes and
-tangled ferns, until at last he came to a stop in front of a wide and
-impassable marsh.
-
-The lumber path in winter ran across this, but now it could not be
-traversed. So Paul tried to go around it. But after completing about
-half the circuit, he reached a swampy place which he could not cross.
-
-He now retraced his steps, and at length decided to return to the boat
-and wait there.
-
-The lumber path could not be very easily found, but at last he turned
-into a place which looked very much like it, and walked on for some
-distance. But the way was rough. At length the path ceased altogether.
-He found himself in the wild wood.
-
-He saw now that he had missed the path, but thought that the best plan
-would be to keep straight on, and get back to the lake. So he kept on.
-It was very hard work. The ground was covered with moss, in some places
-it was spongy, in others it was overgrown with ferns, while every now
-and then he would have to climb over the trunk of some fallen tree.
-
-In this way he struggled onward for a long time, and wondered why he
-could not see any signs of the lake. At last he began to grow
-discouraged. The full conviction forced itself upon him that he had lost
-his way. He had been wandering; how long a time and how far he did not
-know.
-
-There were no signs whatever of the lake. What to do he could not tell.
-He stood still, and looked around. Dense forest trees arose on every
-side, shutting out the view, and enclosing him with their gloomy shades.
-
-Then he called as loud as he could. There was no answer. He called again
-and again, and waited for a long time after each cry to hear whether
-there was any response. But none came.
-
-What to do now was the question. He was not a coward, but any one might
-well have been alarmed, lost in those vast, trackless forests. Paul was
-alarmed, of course; but he was a spirited boy, and was not inclined to
-sit down and give up. After a few minutes he wisely decided that it was
-necessary to have some plan, and choose some definite direction in which
-to go.
-
-So he concluded that the safest way for him would be to retrace his
-steps as carefully as possible.
-
-Back he went, and managed to recover his track, but lost sight of it
-again, and found himself once more completely at a loss.
-
-Turning on his own track in this way had only severed him utterly from
-the last faint hold which he had on the possible direction of the lake.
-
-Once more he stood and considered, and finally after making up his mind
-as to the probable position of the lake, he started again with the
-determination to keep on in as straight a line as possible in that one
-direction.
-
-His course was rough and toilsome in the extreme. Swamps, bogs, thick
-ferns, dense underbrush, tangled alders, fallen forest trees, huge
-rocks, all came by turns before his path, and all had by turns to be
-passed through or surmounted. Paul's city life had not fitted him for a
-task like this; but despair gave him strength.
-
-Hours passed. Every hour brought fresh difficulties. His strength and
-resolution gradually gave way. No signs of escape had shown themselves.
-No sounds had come to his ears which promised help. He felt himself
-alone; alone to struggle with his dismal fate.
-
-At last he reached rising ground. Here the woods were clear. The trees
-stood far apart, and the walking was easy. Utterly worn out, he toiled
-on and at length reached the crest of the hill.
-
-Scarcely had he done so than an exclamation burst from him. Immediately
-below lay a broad sheet of water. He hurried down to the margin, and
-looked anxiously around in all directions.
-
-There was nothing, however, but a sheet of water surrounded by woods.
-Whether this was the lake which he had left, or some other one, he could
-not tell. At any rate he was too fatigued to make any further exertion,
-so he flung himself upon the ground to rest.
-
-Gradually sleep overtook him, and his slumber was so sound that he
-actually did not awake till the following day. On rousing himself he
-heard the birds singing, and felt the fresh, cool air of the morning.
-
-He was very hungry, but felt rested and refreshed, and went at once to
-examine his position.
-
-From the place where he stood he could see the end of the lake to the
-right, but on the left the view was impeded by a promontory.
-
-His first effort now was to go to the promontory and examine the other
-end. The distance was not great, and he soon reached the place.
-
-He looked eagerly down the lake, when, to his unutterable delight, he
-saw at the lower end the lone cottage to which the boat had carried him
-the day before.
-
-All was now plain. He had wandered back to the lake blindly, and by such
-an extraordinary circuit that he had come to the shore about five miles
-away from the cottage.
-
-He now set forth to work his way back to the cottage. He followed the
-windings of the shores, keeping the water always in sight. The distance
-was only five or six miles, but so circuitous was the shore, so full of
-indentations, and so rough was the way, that it was nearly evening when
-he reached the cottage.
-
-No one was there when he arrived, but he waited, and at dusk a boat came
-over the water with Spence and Frank. For a day and a half they had been
-scouring the woods for him, and Frank, in his despair, did not know what
-to do. Paul was received as one who had risen from the dead.
-
-
-
-
-FATE OF AN ENTRAPPED BEAR.
-
-
-Wild beasts, in their wanderings through the forests, often meet and
-fight in the most savage manner. Here is a story told the writer, last
-summer, by an old gentleman in Somerest county, Maine:
-
-"One of the toughest fights I ever saw," said he, "came off over behind
-that mountain yonder. It was years ago. Perhaps I saw with a boy's eyes
-at that time; I was but fourteen years old, then. But you shall have the
-story:
-
-"There wa'n't a railroad in the state, in those days. Whenever any of
-the farmers wanted to go down to Farmington, or Norridgewock, or to
-Portland, they had to go with their teams; and when making a trip to the
-latter place were often gone a week or ten days.
-
-"Quite late in the fall my father and Mr. Wilber, our nearest neighbor,
-had gone to Portland in company. Always during their absence we boys
-used the time in fishing, gunning, and other sports such as boys delight
-in. They had been gone two days, when early the third morning after
-their departure Jed Wilber came running to our house, all excitement.
-
-"'The bears have been killing our sheep!' he exclaimed. 'They came into
-the little pasture last night, killed the old four-year-old, and a lamb,
-dragged them out into the bushes, and there we found their pelts taken
-off and rolled up, as nice as a butcher could do it.'
-
-"'Oh, you ought to have shut them up, Jed,' said grandmother.
-
-"'I know it,' said Jed. 'Father told us to, every night. But we were
-playing last night, and forgot it.'
-
-"'The bear'll be back, to-night,' said I.
-
-"'Of course he will,' said Jed, 'and that's what I am over here for--I
-want to get your bear-trap. I know just how to set it,' he went on,
-seeing grandmother hesitate. 'I saw 'em set it last winter a dozen
-times.'
-
-"'Well, you can have the trap,' said grandmother. 'But mind it don't
-spring, and catch your hands or feet.'
-
-"Jed and I brought the trap from the woodhouse chamber. It was
-tremendously heavy--weighing sixty or seventy pounds. But between us we
-carried it up to the Wilbers', and with Sol's help (Sol was Jed's next
-younger brother) we took it to the pasture. Then, by using a crowbar we
-managed, after a deal of prying and holding, to press down the stiff
-springs, and so set it. This done, we chained it to a four-foot log of
-green spruce, and left it near the spot where the bear had killed the
-sheep. For a bait, we laid partially under it a sheep's head, from a
-sheep that had lately been slaughtered by Mr. Wilber.
-
-"Perhaps some of the boys may wonder why the lads did not chain the trap
-to a stump, or a standing tree. Hunters never chain a bear-trap fast to
-the spot where they set it. They clog it, that is, fasten a heavy stick
-or log to it, for the bear to drag. If caught and held fast, at first, a
-large bear would demolish any trap. But if allowed to run with it, the
-clog will at length weary him so that he may be easily overtaken and
-shot.
-
-"Early the next morning," continued the old man, "I ran over to
-Wilber's, and we hurried to the pasture. The sheep's head was gone, but
-the bear, if indeed it was one, had kept his legs out of the trap. We
-rebaited it with mutton shanks, and the next morning Jed came to the
-house before I was dressed.
-
-"'The trap's gone!' he shouted. 'Get your gun. We must follow him!'
-
-"Hastily swallowing some breakfast, I loaded the gun with slugs, and
-with Jed and Sol rushed to the pasture. Sure enough the trap was gone,
-clog and all. The place where it had been placed bore marks of a
-struggle; the turf was gouged up, and in several spots there were
-blood-drops on the grass, and on the dry leaves. It was in October, the
-last of the month. The brakes in the woods were dead, but still
-standing. These had been pressed to the ground, and made a broad trail.
-
-"By noon we gained the crest of a high ridge, or mountain, five or six
-miles to the westward. The farther side fell off abruptly to the bank of
-a small river. This side, too, was covered with thick hemlock and
-spruce. We hesitated about going further. It would be nearly night by
-the time we got back, if we started for home now. But we wanted to save
-the trap. If we went back, not only should we lose the bear, but the
-trap besides, and Jed, whose carelessness had cost the loss of two
-sheep, was especially anxious to get the bear.
-
-"Sol had brought a lunch. We divided it between us, and again taking up
-our guns, followed the trail down into the dark growth, toward the
-river. An hour took us to the stream. But here, instead of coming upon
-the bear, as we had expected, we found that he had turned up the bank to
-the north. We kept on, however. There was a sort of fascination in the
-chase, even though every mile was taking us further into the wilderness.
-
-"The late October afternoon was waning. Already the shadow of a large
-mountain to the westward was falling over the forest, in the valley
-where we were. The valley narrowed to a rocky ravine as we went on, and
-the mountain, with its dark spruces, seemed to tower threateningly over
-us.
-
-"'It's no use, Jed,' said I; 'we ought to go home. I know you want----'
-
-"'Hark!' exclaimed Sol.
-
-"A sharp yelp, as if from a hurt dog, rang out. It seemed to come to us
-from only a short distance. Almost instantly it was followed by a long
-yell, and a chorus of howls. Snap ran, crouching, between our legs.
-
-"'Wolves!' cried Jed.
-
-"We stood listening, breathlessly. In a moment the yell burst out again,
-followed by yelps, snarls, and the sounds of a general fight.
-
-"'I'll bet they're afoul of the bear,' whispered Jed.
-
-"The uproar continued.
-
-"'If they are, they won't mind us,' continued Jed. 'Let's creep up, and
-see.'
-
-"Cocking our guns, we moved cautiously forward. The yells grew louder,
-and we heard growls. At length, turning a little bend of the ravine, we
-peered round a great boulder and saw a sight I shall never forget. With
-his back against a rock sat the bear--a tremendous fellow he
-looked--with the trap on his paw, while about him leaped, and surged,
-and snapped, fifteen or twenty gray wolves, their white teeth grinning,
-and their eyes flashing green fire. The bear was fighting for life
-against the whole of them.
-
-"The wolves had struck upon his trail, and the smell of the blood that
-came from the leg crushed in the trap had made them furious. He fought
-hard, swinging the trap clog, as he struck with his forelegs to beat
-them off.
-
-"Occasionally, as the ravenous creatures leaped at his throat, he would
-catch one with his uninjured paw and give him a hug that drew out a
-smothered yelp. Sometimes five or six of the wolves would jump at the
-bear at the same time, and for a moment we would lose sight of him, but
-he brushed them away, and rose again. The growls, yells and snapping
-jaws were savage beyond description. It grew dusk as we watched the
-fight.
-
-"'What can we do?' said Sol.
-
-"'It would be useless for us to interfere,' said I; 'they're bound to
-have him.'
-
-"'Let's fire among them, though,' said Jed; 'I haven't brought a loaded
-gun up here for nothing. All together now.'
-
-"All three of us fired together at the growling, struggling pack.
-
-"A moment's silence followed the reports, then a long howl. We shrank
-back around the boulder, out of sight. Then a sudden panic seized us,
-and we ran down the ravine, and did not stop till we were a mile below.
-A faint howl came echoing through the somber forest.
-
-"'They are not chasing us,' said Jed; 'guess we riddled some of 'em!'
-
-"Night fell as we climbed the steep ridge. We had a dark time going home
-through the woods. Fortunately, Sol had a match in his pocket, and
-coming to an old white birch stub, we tore off several rolls of the
-dried bark. By fastening these to the end of a stick and lighting them,
-we were able to pick our way through the woods. It was a hazy night. The
-moon showed dimly. The glimpses we now and then got of it enabled us to
-keep a straight course. It was after eight o'clock when we reached home,
-and worried enough the folks had been about us.
-
-"The next forenoon we started for the ravine again. We were curious to
-know how the fight terminated; besides, it was best to get the trap, if
-possible, to avert the storm that would burst on Jed's head when his
-father came home. Taking a shorter cut through the woods, we reached the
-place where we had seen the wolves, about eleven o'clock.
-
-"No sound was heard save the rippling of the stream among the rocks. We
-stole cautiously to the boulder, where we had stood the night before,
-and looked from behind it. Nothing was in sight.
-
-"'Gone,' said Jed. 'Let's go up, and see where they had their fight.'
-
-"A sly little mink darted away, and into the stream as we approached.
-Beyond was a ghastly sight! There lay the skull and bones of the bear,
-gnawed clean, and showing yellow-white; and there lay the trap, still
-gripping with its iron jaws the bone of one paw.
-
-"All the brakes were smashed down, and the bushes and the rock were
-besmeared with blood and hair. About the trap, within a radius of a few
-rods, lay the bones and skulls of two of the wolves, eaten by their
-comrades. Perhaps the bear had killed them, or perchance our shots had
-caused their death. It looked as if other wolves had come to the feast.
-
-"'Come, come!' muttered Jed. 'Let's be off before they come back.'
-
-"We took the trap to the stream to cleanse it, and then placing it on
-two poles we started for home. And a _tug_ it gave us, too!"
-
-
-
-
-A FIGHT IN THE WOODS.
-
-
-Some years ago, while in the northern part of Maine, I spent the month
-of September and a portion of October at a "hay-farm" on the borders of
-Chamberlain Lake--Lake Apmoogenegamook, the Indians used to call it. The
-whole region was almost an unbroken wilderness. Game was plenty, and by
-way of recreation from my duties as an assistant engineer I had set up a
-"line of traps" for mink and sable--"saple," as old trappers say--along
-a small but very rapid, noisy stream called Bear Brook, which comes down
-into the lake through a gorge between two high spruce-clad mountains.
-
-Huge boulders had rolled down the sides, and lay piled along the bed of
-the gorge. The brook, which was the outlet of a small pond, pent up
-among the ridges above, foamed and roared and gurgled down among rocks
-shaded by thick, black spruces, which leaned out from the sides of the
-ravine.
-
-It was a wild place. I had stumbled upon it, one afternoon, while
-hunting a caribou (a kind of deer) some weeks before, and knew it must
-be good trapping ground; for the rocks and clear, black pools, in short
-the whole place had that peculiar, fishy smell which bespoke an
-abundance of trout; and where trout abound there are sure to be mink.
-
-My traps were of that sort which hunters call "figure four" traps, made
-of stakes and poles, with a figure-four spring. Perhaps some of our boy
-readers may have caught squirrels in that way. For bait I used trout
-from the brook. I carried my hook and line with me, and after setting a
-trap, threw in my hook and pulled out trout enough to bait it. My line
-extended about a mile up the gorge, and comprised some twenty-five or
-thirty traps.
-
-After setting them, I shot a number of red squirrels for a "drag," and
-thus connected the traps together. Perhaps I should explain that a
-_drag_ is a bundle of squirrels or partridges newly killed and from
-which the blood is dripping, which are dragged along by a withe from
-trap to trap to make a trail and scent, so that the mink and sable will
-follow it.
-
-It is customary to visit mink traps once in two or three days. But as I
-had plenty of time just then, I went to mine every forenoon.
-
-During the first week after setting them I had excellent luck. I caught
-eleven mink and three sable--about fifty dollars' worth, as I reckoned
-it. My hopes of making a small fortune in the fur business were very
-sanguine, until one morning I found every trap torn up! The poles and
-stakes were scattered over the ground, spindles were broken to pieces,
-and at one or two places where there had been a mink in the trap, the
-head and bits of fur were lying about as if it had been devoured.
-
-At first I thought that perhaps some fellow who had intended to trap
-there had done the mischief to drive me away (a very common trick among
-rival trappers); but when I saw that the minks had been torn to pieces,
-I knew the destruction was the work of some animal--a fisher, most
-likely, or as some call it, a "black-cat."
-
-I had never yet seen one of these creatures, but had often heard hunters
-and trappers tell what pests they were, following them on their rounds,
-robbing and tearing up their traps almost as rapidly as they could set
-them. Indeed, I had read in Baird's--I believe it was Baird's--Works on
-Natural History, that the fisher-cat, or _mustela canadensis_, is a very
-fierce carnivorous animal of the weasel family, a most determined
-fighter and more than a match for a common hound.
-
-Well, I had nothing to do but to set the traps again, a task which I did
-in the course of the day, really hoping that the beast had merely paid
-the place a transient visit, and gone on upon his wanderings.
-
-But the next morning showed my hopes were vain, for he had "gone
-through" my _line_ again, and every trap was upset. It really seemed as
-if the "varmint" had taken a malicious delight in tearing them to
-pieces.
-
-At one of the traps a fine sable had been caught, and as if for very
-mischief the marauder had torn the beautiful skin, which was worth ten
-or a dozen dollars, to shreds.
-
-Surely, if there is a business in the world that demands patience and
-perseverance, it is trapping. At least it took about all I could summon
-to go resignedly to work, make new spindles, catch fresh bait, and set
-the traps again, especially with the prospect of having the same task to
-perform the next morning.
-
-I went at it, however, and by eleven o'clock had them all reset save
-one, the upper one, where the sable had been caught, when, on
-approaching it through the thick spruces, I saw a large raccoon gnawing
-the sable's head. Seeing me at the same instant, he caught up the head,
-and before I could unsling my gun scuttled away out of sight.
-
-Was it possible that a 'coon had been doing all this mischief? I knew
-them to be adepts at a variety of woods tricks, but had never heard of
-their robbing traps before. Here was one caught gnawing a sable's head
-in the vicinity of the broken traps. Circumstantial evidence, as they
-say in court, was strong against him.
-
-I determined to watch--that trap, at least.
-
-Going over to our camp on the lake, I took a hasty lunch, and putting a
-fresh charge into my gun went back to the ravine. A few rods from the
-place where I had surprised the 'coon there was a thick clump of low
-spruces. Here I hid myself and began my watch.
-
-The afternoon dragged away. Crows and hawks cawed and screamed;
-kingfishers and squirrels chickered and chirred, but no animal came near
-the traps. The sun was setting behind the high, black mountain, twilight
-began to dim the narrow valley.
-
-Thinking I had had my labor for my pains, I was about crawling out of my
-hiding-place, when a twig snapped in the direction of the traps, and
-turning quickly I saw the 'coon coming up the bank of the brook, the
-same one, I was sure, that I had seen before, because of its unusual
-size.
-
-With a glance around, to see that there was no danger near, he ambled
-along to the spot where the sable's head had been, and began sniffing at
-the shreds and bits of fur which lay about. Wishing to see if he would
-touch the trap, I did not stir, but watched his movements.
-
-After picking up the bits of skin, he walked round the trap several
-times, with his queer, quizzical face askew, examining it. Then
-happening to scent one of the sable's legs which lay at a little
-distance, he ran to it and began to eat it. I could hear his sharp teeth
-upon the bones. Suddenly he stopped, listened, then growled. Very much
-to my surprise, there was an answering growl. Then another and another
-response. In a moment more, from behind a great rock in the bank, there
-stole out a large, black animal, an object of the 'coon's utter
-abhorrence, evidently.
-
-Fresh growls greeted the appearance of the intruder, who came stealthily
-forward. He was a wicked looking fellow, and had evidently hostile
-intentions.
-
-The 'coon rose to his feet, lifting his back like a bear or a cat, and
-growling all the while. The newcomer crouched almost to the earth, but
-continued to steal up to the 'coon until within a yard or two.
-
-There they stood facing each other, getting more angry every moment; and
-evidently intended to have a big "set to." I had no wish to interfere,
-and was contented to remain a spectator. The two thieves might settle
-their quarrels between themselves. I wasn't at all certain to which of
-them I stood indebted for my extra labor, and concluded to keep my
-charge of shot for whichever of them survived the fray.
-
-The growls rose to shrieks; the fisher, for such I judged it to be,
-wriggling his black tail, and the 'coon getting his back still higher.
-Then came a sudden grab, quick as a flash, and a prodigious scuffle.
-Over and over they rolled, grappling and tearing; now the gray tail
-would whisk up in sight, then the black one. The fur flew, and that
-strong, disagreeable odor, sometimes noticed when a cat spits, was
-wafted out to my hiding-place.
-
-It was hard to tell which was the best fighter. Gray fur and black fur
-seemed to be getting torn out in about equal snatches. Suddenly the
-'coon got away from his antagonist, and running to the foot of a great
-spruce tree standing near, went like a dart up the trunk to the lower
-limbs. There he faced about.
-
-The fisher followed to the tree and looked up. He saw his late foe,
-growled, and then began to climb after him. He was not so good a climber
-as the 'coon, but scratched his way up with true weasel determination.
-The moment he came within reach the raccoon jumped at him, regardless of
-the height from the ground, and fastened upon his back. The shock caused
-the fisher to lose his hold, and down both animals dropped with
-tremendous force, sufficient to knock the breath out of them, I thought.
-But they clung to each other, and dug and bit with the fury of maniacs.
-'Coons are noted fighters; and as for the fishers, they never give up
-while the breath of life is in them.
-
-Presently the 'coon broke away again, and once more ran to the tree,
-this time going up its trunk, out of sight, among the branches at the
-very top. It looked as if he was getting about all the fight he cared to
-have.
-
-Not so with the big weasel. He instantly followed his antagonist,
-clumsily but surely clawing his way up the trunk. It took him some time
-to reach the top, but he got there at last. Another grapple ensued among
-the very topmost boughs, and they both came tumbling to the ground,
-catching at the limbs as they fell; but grappling afresh they rolled
-down the steep bank to the edge of the water.
-
-Meanwhile it had grown so dark that I could but just see their writhing
-forms. The growling, grappling sound continued, however, and I could
-hear them splash in the water. Then there came a lull. One or the other
-had "given in," I felt sure. Which was the victor?
-
-Cocking my gun, I crept to the bank. As nearly as I could make out the
-situation, the fisher was holding the 'coon by the throat.
-
-I took a step forward. A twig snapped under my foot. Instantly a pair of
-fiery eyes glared up at me in the gloom; and with a harsh snarl the
-fisher raised himself. But the 'coon didn't stir; he was dead.
-
-It seemed almost too bad to shoot the victor of so desperate a fight;
-but thinking of my traps I hardened my heart and fired. The fisher
-reared up, fell over, then recovering its legs, leaped at me with all
-the ferocity of its bloodthirsty race. But the heavy buckshot had surely
-done its work, and with another attempt to spring at me the animal fell
-back dead.
-
-I had no more trouble with my traps.
-
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
- *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CAON ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37466 ***</div>
<div class="document" id="lost-in-the-canon">
<h1 class="document-title level-1 pfirst title">LOST IN THE CAÑON.</h1>
-
-<!-- -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- -->
-<div class="container language-en pgheader" xml:lang="en" id="pg-header">
-<p class="noindent pfirst">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 <a class="reference internal pginternal" href="#project-gutenberg-license">Project Gutenberg License</a>
-included with this eBook or online at
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-<div class="vspace" style="height: 1em">
-</div>
-<div class="container" id="pg-machine-header">
-<p class="noindent pfirst">Title: Lost in the Cañon</p>
-<p class="noindent pnext">Author: Alfred R. Calhoun</p>
-<p class="noindent pnext">Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37466]</p>
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<h3 class="level-3 pfirst section-title title">THE END.</h3>
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 37466 ***</div>
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@@ -1,10928 +0,0 @@
-.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*-
-
-.. meta::
- :PG.Id: 37466
- :PG.Title: Lost in the Cañon
- :PG.Released: 2011-09-17
- :PG.Rights: Public Domain
- :PG.Producer: Roger Frank
- :PG.Producer: Mary Meehan
- :PG.Producer: the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
- :PG.Credits:
- :DC.Creator: Alfred R. Calhoun
- :MARCREL.ill:
- :DC.Title: Lost in the Cañon
- :DC.Language: en
- :DC.Created: 1888
-
-.. role:: small-caps
- :class: small-caps
-
-
-==================
-LOST IN THE CAÑON.
-==================
-
-.. _pg-header:
-
-.. container:: pgheader language-en
-
- .. style:: paragraph
- :class: noindent
-
- 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
- http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-
-
- |
-
- .. _pg-machine-header:
-
- .. container::
-
- Title: Lost in the Cañon
-
- Author: Alfred R. Calhoun
-
- Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37466]
-
- Language: English
-
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
- |
-
- .. _pg-start-line:
-
- \*\*\* START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CAÑON \*\*\*
-
- |
- |
- |
- |
-
- .. _pg-produced-by:
-
- .. container::
-
- Produced by Roger Frank, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
-
- |
-
-
-
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
- | THE STORY OF
- | Sam Willett's Adventures on the Great
- | Colorado of the West.
-
-.. class:: center large
-
- | :small-caps:`By` ALFRED R. CALHOUN,
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
- | *Author of*
- | "Cochise," "Excelsior," "The Californians," etc., etc.
-
- | ILLUSTRATED.
-
-.. image:: images/tpemb.jpg
- :align: center
-
-
-.. class:: center medium
-
- | NEW YORK:
- | A. L. BURT, PUBLISHER.
- |
- | :small-caps:`Copyright 1888, by A. L. Burt.`
-
-----
-
-
-.. figure:: images/illus1.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping rocks.
-
- Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping rocks.
-
-----
-
-.. contents:: CONTENTS
- :depth: 1
- :backlinks: entry
-
-----
-
-
-
-.. class:: center x-large
-
-LOST IN THE CAÑON.
-
-----
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.—A REMARKABLE CAMP.
-=============================
-
-
-The scene of this narrative is laid in Southwestern
-Colorado, and the date is so recent that boys
-living out there at that time are only just beginning to
-think themselves young men—and it is really astonishing
-how soon boys leap into vigorous manhood in that
-wild, free land.
-
-"We's 'bleeged to hab 'im, for dah ain't de least scrap
-ob meat in de camp!"
-
-This stirring information was shouted by a stout negro
-boy of fifteen or sixteen years of age, who, with a long,
-rusty, single-barrel shot-gun in his arms, stood at the
-base of a towering mass of bare rocks, and looked eagerly
-up at two other youths creeping along the giddy
-heights, and evidently in eager search of something that
-had escaped them, but which they were determined to
-overtake.
-
-The lithe form, long black hair, and copper-colored
-skin of one of the young hunters bespoke him an Indian
-of the purest type. He wore a close-fitting buckskin
-dress, and slung at his back was a short repeating
-rifle.
-
-The other youth up the rocks, though bronzed on the
-hands and face to a color as dark as the young Ute's,
-had the blue eyes and curly yellow hair that told of a
-pure white ancestry. His name was Samuel Willett,
-and though not much more than sixteen years of age,
-his taller form and more athletic build made him look
-several years the senior of his red and black companions.
-
-Sam Willett was armed and dressed like a hunter,
-and his well-worn equipments told that he was not out
-masquerading in the costume of a theatrical Nimrod.
-
-The Indian youth, Ulna, and Sam Willett had chased
-a Rocky Mountain or bighorn sheep into the mass of
-towering rocks which they were now searching; and that
-they were not hunting for mere sport was proven by Ike,
-the black boy's repeated cry:
-
-"We's 'bleeged to hab 'im, foh dar ain't de least scrap
-ob meat in de camp!"
-
-"I want to get the meat as much as you do, Ike, so
-have patience!" Sam shouted down, without stopping in
-his pursuit an instant.
-
-The two daring hunters disappeared, and Ike, whose
-desire for meat was greater than his love for the chase,
-began circling about the confused pile of rocks so as to
-keep his companions in sight.
-
-The bighorn "sheep" is in reality not a sheep at all,
-but a variety of powerful mountain antelope, whose
-strength, speed and daring among the rocks and cañons
-are not the least wonderful things about the wonderful
-land in which he makes his exclusive home.
-
-Even old Western hunters believe that these animals
-can leap from immense heights and land on their horns
-without harm, but this is an error.
-
-While Ike was gazing with eager eyes and open mouth
-at the towering, volcanic cliffs, the bighorn came to
-view on a rock five hundred feet overhead.
-
-The hunters were close behind, and the creature's only
-means of escape was to leap across a chasm fully thirty
-feet wide to another rock of a little lower elevation.
-
-"Shoot! shoot!" yelled the excited Ike, as the bighorn
-gathered himself up and eyed the terrific gorge that beset
-his course.
-
-As if stung to desperation by the shout the creature
-leaped forward with a force that must have
-cleared the gulf, and an accuracy that would have insured
-a landing on the other side, but just as it sprang
-into mid-air two shots rang out within a small fraction
-of a second of each other, and the bighorn came crashing
-down and fell dead at the black boy's feet.
-
-In his wild excitement Ike discharged the rusty single-barrel
-shot-gun, which he had been hugging in his arms
-as if it were a baby. All the power of the old-fashioned
-weapon must have been in the report and recoil, for the
-former sounded like the explosion of a howitzer, and the
-latter was so terrific as to send the holder sprawling
-across the carcass of the bighorn.
-
-Sam Willett saw all this as he hurried down the rocks,
-otherwise he might have thought when he had reached
-the bottom that the animal had fallen on his companion
-and faithful servant and killed him.
-
-"Hello, Ike, old fellow, what's up?" asked Sam, as he
-helped the owner of the shot-gun to his feet.
-
-"Is I all alive, foh shuah, Mistah Sam?" demanded
-Ike, as he stared wildly about him.
-
-"Of course you are, and here is the meat you have
-been so eager for," said Sam.
-
-"Wa'll, Mistah Sam, it's dat ar gun," said Ike, gazing
-sadly at the old weapon which he still held in his arms.
-"I ain't used her bad; ain't fired her off for more'n six
-months afore we kem out har from Michigan—dat's five
-months ago—an' now only to tink she's done gone back
-on me in dat are way."
-
-The Indian youth, Ulna, had come down by this time,
-and when he took in the situation his fine, almost effeminate
-face was wreathed in smiles, that displayed a
-beautiful set of white teeth.
-
-In a low, musical voice and without any accent, he
-said in excellent English:
-
-"The sun is setting and we must hurry if we would
-reach the camp before dark."
-
-"An' more partikler ez we've got to tote dis ar venizon
-home," said Ike, now wide awake to the necessities
-of the situation.
-
-Each of the youths had a hunting knife in his belt,
-and they soon proved that these weapons were not carried
-for ornament.
-
-With a rapidity and skill that would have won the admiration
-of an eastern butcher, they skinned and cleaned
-the animal, severed the mammoth head and then divided
-the meat into three parcels.
-
-Each had to shoulder about fifty pounds, but being
-sturdy, healthy young fellows they did not seem to mind
-their burdens, as they started off with long, vigorous
-strides toward the west.
-
-The sun in all his course does not look down on a
-wilder, grander or more desolate land than that which
-met the gaze of the young hunters, no matter to which
-side they turned.
-
-Verdureless mountains of fantastic shapes rose into
-the cloudless sky on every hand.
-
-Here and there in the crevices of the black volcanic
-rocks, over which they hurried, a stunted sagebush or a
-dwarf cactus suggested the awful barrenness of the place
-rather than told of vegetation.
-
-They were in the land of cañons and drought, on the
-summit of the Great American Plateau where rain but
-seldom falls, where the streams flow through frightful
-gorges, and where men and animals have often perished
-from thirst within sight of waters which they could not
-reach.
-
-Bleak and sublime as the land was, is, and ever must
-be, yet the belief—a well founded belief by the way—that
-its gloomy ravines contained gold, led hundreds of
-hardy miners and adventurers to look upon it as that
-El Dorado for which the early Spanish explorers in these
-wilds had sought in vain.
-
-As the leader of the little party, Sam Willett, strode
-ahead, the deepening shadows of the mountains impelled
-him each instant to a quicker pace.
-
-There was no apparent trail, yet Sam never hesitated
-in his course, but kept on as unerringly as a bird of passage,
-till he came to a great black rift that seemed to suddenly
-open at his feet.
-
-Away down in the shadowy depths he could see a
-white band that told of moving water.
-
-A glow, the source of which could not be seen, indicated
-a fire down near the base of the cliff, and the
-barking of a dog—the sound appeared to come from the
-depths of a cave—suggested a human habitation.
-
-On reaching the crest of the chasm Sam Willett did
-not hesitate, but at once plunged down to what, to a
-stranger, would appear certain death.
-
-Along the cañon wall there was a steep but well constructed
-trail that afforded secure footing to a traveler
-who was not troubled with giddiness.
-
-Without once stopping, Sam and his companions made
-their way to the bottom of the rift and forded the roaring
-torrent that thundered over its uneven bed.
-
-On the cañon wall, opposite to that by which they
-had descended, they saw about a hundred feet above the
-stream, what seemed like a number of illuminated pigeon
-holes. This was their home, the place to which had
-been given the not inappropriate name of "Gold Cave
-Camp."
-
-With barks of delight, a big dog met them near the
-water and joyously escorted them up the other side to an
-irregular plateau, about a hundred feet in diameter, that
-shot out like the once famous Table Rock at Niagara.
-
-This plateau was in front of the cave, in which the
-miners had made their home.
-
-The background of light revealed the forms of three
-men. The dress and long cue of one bespoke him a
-Chinaman, the second was dressed like a hunter, and the
-third, a tall, powerful figure, had only his heavy beard and
-striking stature to distinguish him.
-
-"Is that you, Sam?" called out the tall man, as the
-foremost of the party reached the plateau.
-
-"Yes, father," was the reply, "and we have brought
-back some meat."
-
-"Wa'll!" exclaimed the second man, "I didn't think
-thar was a pound of live meat left within twenty mile of
-yar."
-
-"Hoolay! Bully! Now me gettee suppel!" cried
-the excited Chinaman, who was known by the fitting
-name of Wah Shin.
-
-Preceded by Maj, the dog, Sam and his fellow hunters
-entered the remarkable cave—of which we shall speak
-hereafter—and laid the meat on the floor.
-
-"I began to grow uneasy about you, my boy," said
-Mr. Willett, as he fondly kissed his son, "meat is very
-desirable, but I would rather suffer for it than be worried
-at your absence."
-
-Sam explained about the delay in the hunt, and then
-went to a spring that rose from the floor of the cave
-close to the fire, and here he set the example of drinking
-and washing himself.
-
-Meanwhile Wah Shin began to demonstrate his position
-in that strangely mixed company. In nearly no
-time he had steaks broiling on the coals, the savory odor
-of which made Hank Tims, the old guide, take long inhalations
-with great enjoyment.
-
-Apart from meat there was an abundance of other
-food in this strange camp, so that in a very short time
-Wah Shin, with Ike's aid, had a most excellent supper
-spread on a table consisting of two roughly-hewn cedar
-slabs, supported at either end by a square stationary
-stone, that had been placed there by the original but
-unknown cave dwellers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.—LOOKING BACKWARD AND FORWARD.
-=========================================
-
-
-It is not a little remarkable that the six dwellers in
-Gold Cave Camp should represent four of the five
-types into which scientists divide the human race, but
-this though curious in itself, is not nearly so much so as
-their being residents of this sparsely settled wilderness,
-and living, as it were, in caves in the depths of the
-earth.
-
-Mr. Willett had been a merchant in Detroit, Michigan,
-where his only child, Sam, was born.
-
-He had been very happy in his married life and very
-prosperous in his business; but, alas, for the stability of
-human affairs, his wife died. Following this awful calamity
-came a series of reverses in business which no
-human foresight could prevent. His property was swept
-away, and in his fortieth year he found himself a poor
-man, with a son to educate and care for and all life's
-battle to fight over again.
-
-Mr. Willett had been educated as a mining engineer,
-and though he had never followed his profession he, very
-naturally, looked to it as a means of support when all
-his other resources were gone.
-
-In the days of his great distress and perplexity he read
-of sudden fortunes being made in the newly-discovered
-gold fields of the San Juan country in Southwestern
-Colorado, and thither he determined to go.
-
-Although still in the prime of life, Mr. Willett concentrated
-all the love of his brave heart on his son and
-resolved to devote his time and thought to his care and
-education.
-
-Sam's maternal grandfather, Mr. Shirley, was a very
-rich, but a very morose and eccentric old man, who
-chose never to become reconciled to his daughter's marriage
-to Mr. Willett. But when Sam's mother died, the
-old gentleman offered to adopt his grandson and make
-him his sole heir, if the father would consent to renounce
-all claims to him.
-
-In his son's interest Mr. Willett might have considered
-this proposal favorably had not Sam himself
-upset the scheme by saying stoutly:
-
-"Father, do not ask me to leave you, for I feel it
-would be sending me to death. If you go to the West,
-I shall go with you. There are only two of us left, why
-should we be parted?"
-
-Mr. Willett replied to this query by kissing his son,
-and so it was settled that they should go to the West together.
-
-Ike was an orphan lad who, in some inexplicable way,
-had drifted up to Michigan from Kentucky. Mr. Willett
-found and cared for the boy, and he repaid this
-generosity by a fidelity and devotion worthy of all praise.
-
-Mr. Willett could see no use for Ike in the West, but
-when the time for departure came, the black boy appeared
-at the depot with an old hunting bag, containing
-all his clothing, slung at his back, and a remarkable-looking
-shot-gun folded in his arms.
-
-"Dar's no use a talkin' to me, boss," he said to Mr.
-Willett, when that gentleman expressed his surprise at
-the boy's appearance. "Ize bound to go 'long wid
-Mistah Sam. Oh, don't yeh feel skeat 'bout de cash foh
-de passage. Ize got ebery cent I ever earned stored
-away har; its more'n fifty dollar, an' I'll foot de bills till
-de las' red cent's gone."
-
-In proof of this bold statement, Ike drew from the
-depths of his trousers' pockets a bag containing several
-pounds weight of bronze, nickel and silver coins.
-
-Ike found an eloquent advocate in Sam; and so it
-came about that at the very last moment Mr. Willett
-decided to take the colored boy with him, though he
-could not be made to avail himself of the generous fellow's
-hoardings.
-
-The three went to Denver, thence over the Rocky
-range to St. Luis Park, and over the Sierra Madre
-mountains to the San Juan country.
-
-They had procured horses to ride on, and two pack
-mules to carry their supplies and mining tools.
-
-While at Port Garland in the St. Luis Park, they met
-with Hank Tims and the Ute boy, Ulna, who was a
-nephew of the great chief Uray, whom the writer of
-this narrative knew very well and greatly admired.
-
-Hank Tims and Ulna were themselves thinking about
-going into the San Juan country, and, as they were
-well acquainted with that region and appeared to take to
-Mr. Willett's party at once, they were readily induced to
-join his expedition.
-
-It would be out of place in this brief but essential review
-to recount all the adventures that beset our friends
-till they reached the scene of their proposed labors.
-
-After much wandering, they found Gold Cave Camp,
-but it was in the possession of a wild, dissolute fellow
-named Tom Edwards.
-
-As Edwards was working his claim all alone and was
-eager to leave it, Mr. Willett bought him out at his
-own price, and at once made preparations to pan for
-such gold as might be found in the bed of the cañon.
-
-A few days after the commencement of operations,
-Wah Shin appeared in the camp.
-
-He looked as if he had been blown in from the bleak
-hills, but he managed to explain in his broken English
-that he had lost himself coming up from Santa Fe, and
-that he was a first-class cook.
-
-He asked for "a job," but even before Mr. Willett
-had made up his mind to hire him, he set to work to
-give an exhibition of his skill; and the result was so
-entirely satisfactory that he was retained on his own
-terms.
-
-But it is much easier to explain the presence of these
-people than it is to account for the strange home in
-which they lived.
-
-Learned men claim that long before the coming of
-the white men to this continent, long, indeed, before
-the coming of the Indians, that there was a strange race
-of people in that Western land, whom, for the want of
-a better name, they call "The Cave Dwellers."
-
-But no matter how formed, or by whom they were first
-inhabited, these caves—they are quite common in that
-land—made ready and comfortable homes for the mining
-adventurers.
-
-Those occupied by Mr. Willett and his associates, consisted
-of a series of eight apartments, all opening on the
-plateau and all connected by passage ways that must
-have been the work of human hands.
-
-The apartments were circular in shape, and the largest,
-which was used as a kitchen and general store room,
-was about twenty feet in diameter and ten feet in
-height.
-
-As before stated there was an ample spring of delicious
-cool water in this apartment, and the original hewers of
-the caves, no doubt, selected the place on this account.
-
-After a hearty supper, Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-lit their pipes and sat before the fire, for though the
-days are warm in this land the nights are unusually
-cool.
-
-Drift wood, picked up from the crevices of the rocks
-in which it had been lodged by floods caused by the
-melting of snow in the mountains, constituted the fuel
-of the camp, and the great pile near the fire showed
-that it was to be had in abundance.
-
-All had been working hard that day, so after a
-desultory talk about the great success that was meeting
-their search for gold, they lay down on their blanket
-cots in the other apartments and went to sleep—that is,
-all but Sam and his father.
-
-Mr. Willett and his son slept together in the nearest
-room, but though they lay down side by side they did
-not go to sleep at once.
-
-"Sam," said Mr. Willett in a troubled voice, "since
-you left this morning that fellow, Tom Edwards, has
-been here again."
-
-"What did he want?" asked Sam.
-
-"He appeared to be drunk, and he threatened to kill
-me if I did not give him more money."
-
-"But you have paid him the price agreed on?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then I should not heed him."
-
-"Still, I am afraid he will cause me trouble, so, to-morrow,
-I will ride over to Hurley's Gulch and consult
-a lawyer, and as that is our nearest market and post-office,
-I will take Hank and Ulna along with two pack
-mules so as to carry back supplies."
-
-"That is forty miles away, so that you will be gone
-several days. But if you must go, father, I will do the
-best I can while you are absent," said Sam, laying his
-hand soothingly on his father's broad breast.
-
-"I know you will, my boy, but there is another matter
-I wished to speak with you about."
-
-"What is that, father?"
-
-"Why, this Tom Edwards brought me a letter from
-your grandfather's lawyer in Michigan. It tells me that
-the old man is dead, and that in his will he leaves all
-his property to you, but you are not to have a cent of it
-till you are twenty-one years of age——"
-
-"Four years and a half, dear father!" cried the excited
-Sam.
-
-"But," continued Mr. Willett, "the will further
-says that if you should die in the meantime that the
-property is to go to your grandfather's nephew, Frank
-Shirley."
-
-"A bad, disreputable man to whom neither you nor
-mother would speak," said Sam.
-
-"He is all that, I fear, and it troubles me to learn
-from Edwards that Frank Shirley has recently come
-into this land," said Mr. Willett.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.—SAM'S TRIALS BEGIN.
-================================
-
-
-While daylight was flooding the upper world
-next morning, and the shadows were lifting
-from the gloomy depths of the cañon, the modern cave
-dwellers ate their breakfast.
-
-About three hundred yards above the caves the cañon
-widened out into a valley some three hundred yards in
-diameter. The bottom of this valley was covered with
-rich grass, and in it was a grove of cotton-wood trees
-whose bright verdure gave the place the appearance of a
-rich emerald gem in a mighty setting of granite.
-
-In this valley the horses and pack mules were kept,
-and, as they had but little to do, they might be said to
-"live in clover."
-
-While it was still dusky in these depths, though the
-glimpses of far-off ruddy mountain peaks told that the
-sun was rising in the upper world, Sam and Ike, who
-were hardly ever apart, went up to the valley and soon
-returned with three horses and two mules, the latter
-were to carry back the necessary supplies from Hurley's
-Gulch.
-
-It had been Mr. Willett's custom to make this trip
-once a month, so that his going now was not an unusual
-event, yet his face showed that he was much
-dejected, as if he had a premonition of the awful calamity
-that was so soon to come upon himself and his beloved
-boy.
-
-His last words, as he kissed Sam, were:
-
-"If anything should happen to detain me longer than
-four days, I will send a letter back by Ulna."
-
-"But we'll be back on time," joined in Hank Tims,
-"for I don't like crowds, an', then, we've struck pay
-dirt rich up at the head of the valley, an' I'm just a
-spilein' to see how it'll pan out to the ind."
-
-Good-bys were said, and Sam, Ike and Wah Shin stood
-on the plateau before the cave and waved their hats,
-till the three men had led the animals up the giddy trail
-and disappeared beyond the towering summit of the
-cliff.
-
-Under the teaching of his father and Hank Tims,
-Sam had become a skillful gold miner, that is, so far as
-panning out the gravel and collecting the gold were concerned.
-
-The fact that he was the prospective heir to a large
-fortune did not unfit him for work this morning. With
-Ike he went up to the sluices immediately after his
-father left, and until the sun was in mid-heaven they
-worked, shoveling gravel into the cradle and rocking it
-under the water, and only stopping to pick out the nuggets
-and yellow dust and scales that rewarded their
-effort every hour.
-
-By means of an old-fashioned horn, Wah Shin summoned
-them to dinner. Of the fresh meat he had
-made pies that would have tempted an invalid's
-appetite. And, as the boys ate, sitting before the entrance
-to the cave, the Chinaman's face fairly glowed with delight
-at the evidence of his excellent cooking.
-
-"Ven'zon pie belly good," chuckled Wah Shin, as he
-produced a second when the first had vanished. "But
-man eatee too muchee, den get mebbe sick."
-
-"Dat ar edvice is 'tended foh Mistah Sam," laughed
-Ike, as he helped himself again. "But vanzon pie an'
-'possums are two tings I ain't nebber got my fill ob up to
-dis time."
-
-Sam heard but did not heed the talk of his companions,
-for his attention was at the moment attracted
-to two strange men who were slowly making their way
-down the trail on the opposite side of the cañon
-wall.
-
-As there was danger from prowling bands of Indians
-who had left the reservation, and also from white outlaws
-who frequently robbed weak mining camps, every
-one at Gold Cave Camp strapped on a belt, with a knife
-and pistols in it, as regularly as he pulled on his boots.
-
-Starting to his feet and followed by Ike, Sam went
-down to the stream, getting there just as the two men
-reached the bottom.
-
-One of the strangers was a tall, dark-bearded man,
-with one eye, and the other was a short, yellow-skinned
-man with a mean expression of face, whom Sam recognized
-as his cousin, Frank Shirley.
-
-Sam had never spoken to this man, so he did not
-greet him like an acquaintance now.
-
-Both men were well armed, as is the fashion of the
-country, and when they came within hailing distance,
-Frank Shirley called out:
-
-"Hello, young man, is this Mr. Willett's camp?"
-
-"It is, sir," was Sam's reply, as he came to a halt.
-
-"Is Mr. Willett home?"
-
-"He is not."
-
-"Where is he?"
-
-"He has gone to Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"When did he leave?"
-
-"This morning."
-
-"Ah, I'm sorry I missed him. When do you expect
-him back?"
-
-"In a few days. Won't you come over and have
-some dinner?" asked Sam, waving his hand in the direction
-of the plateau, on which Wah Shin was visible.
-
-"Thank you; no. We are going on to Hurley's
-Gulch, and are in a great hurry," said Frank Shirley,
-turning and whispering to his companion, who nodded
-vigorously in response.
-
-"Who shall I say called?" asked Sam, as the two men
-turned to ascend the trail.
-
-"Friends," was the laconical reply.
-
-"If dem's frien's," said Ike, when the men had gone
-out of hearing, "den Ize de biggest kind ob a foe."
-
-The conversation of the two men when they reached
-the top of the cliff proved the black boy's surmise to be
-correct.
-
-They had left their horses hitched to a rock, and as
-they prepared to mount, Frank Shirley said to his companion:
-
-"That's the boy, Badger."
-
-"The boy ez stan's atween you an' fortune?" said
-Badger.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'll, ain't you hired me to help you clear the
-way?"
-
-"I have, Badger."
-
-"Good; then let us git rid of the father first, an'
-then all the rest'll be ez smooth ez ile."
-
-"You will stick to your contract?"
-
-"I'd be a fool if I didn't. You pay expenses an'
-give me ten thousand dollars to get 'em out of the way.
-Isn't that it?"
-
-"That's it, Badger," said Frank Shirley, as he
-mounted and rode along beside his companion.
-
-"That ar boy down thar," said Badger, waving his
-hand back at the cañon, "ain't no slouch. He'll fight,
-he will; an' the best way with sich is to give 'em no
-chance."
-
-"No chance," echoed Frank Shirley, "that's it
-exactly. And now that we have them parted our opportunity
-has come."
-
-"Just ez if 'twas made to order," said Badger.
-
-After the men had gone, Sam and Ike went to work
-again, but the former had lost the cheerfulness that distinguished
-him in the morning.
-
-He could not get those two men out of his mind, not
-that he feared their return—indeed, he could not account
-to himself for the strange feeling of dread that
-possessed him for the next three days.
-
-While working, on the afternoon of the fourth day
-since his father's departure, he noticed that the sky had
-become overcast and that the water in the bed of the
-stream was rapidly rising.
-
-He and Ike quit work earlier than usual, and they
-had great difficulty in making their way to the caves
-through the swollen torrent.
-
-They had hardly reached cover when a terrific storm
-came up and the cañon became as dark as night, while
-the roar of the waters and the crashing of the thunder
-were ceaseless and appalling.
-
-It was about nine o'clock at night, and the three occupants
-of the cave were sitting with awed faces before the
-fire, when, to their inexpressible surprise, Ulna, the
-young Ute, stood dripping before them.
-
-"How did you reach here?" asked Sam, springing to
-his feet and grasping Ulna's hand.
-
-"I rode till I killed my horse, then I ran for hours.
-The flood was up, and it is rising, but I managed to
-swim across——"
-
-"But my father!" interrupted Sam, pleadingly laying
-his arm on the young Indian's shoulders.
-
-"He and Hank Tims are prisoners at Hurley's Gulch,"
-said Ulna.
-
-"Prisoners."
-
-"Yes, and in the hands of the lynchers who charge
-them with the murder of Tom Edwards. Here is a letter
-from your father that will explain all," said Ulna, pulling
-a damp paper from his pocket and adding, "your testimony
-is wanted at once to clear the accused; but no
-man can cross the cañon for a week, and then it will be
-too late!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.—A PERILOUS SITUATION.
-=================================
-
-
-Sam Willett had courage and fortitude in no
-common degree, but the words of Ulna, who stood
-dripping and panting before him, froze him with a
-speechless terror.
-
-He took the wet paper from the Indian boy's hand,
-but for some seconds he had neither the courage nor the
-strength to open it.
-
-The howling of the wind down the gorge and the
-hoarse roaring of the maddened waters heightened the
-terror of the situation.
-
-Wah Shin, though not well versed in English, fully
-understood the import of Ulna's message, but realizing
-his own inability to do or to suggest anything, he stood
-with his lips drawn and his little oblique eyes half
-closed.
-
-Ike was the only one of the party who did not appear
-to have lost the power of speech. Taking the letter
-from Sam's hand, he said:
-
-"Dat ar paper's powahful damp, an' I reckon, Mistah
-Sam, yeh kin read it bettah if so be I dries it so's it
-won't fall to pieces."
-
-Ike opened the paper and while he held it before the
-fire, Ulna briefly explained the situation.
-
-He said that Mr. Willett, Hank Tims and himself
-reached Hurley's Gulch without any mishap.
-
-They found the rude mining camp in a great state of
-commotion owing to a robbery and murder that had
-recently been committed.
-
-The more law-abiding, or rather the more industrious,
-for there was no organized law in the place, had formed
-a vigilance committee to hang the next murderer or robber,
-under the wild sanction of "lynch law."
-
-"Just as soon as we reached Hurley's Gulch," continued
-Ulna, "we met Tom Edwards, and he was very
-drunk and very abusive. He shouted to every one
-he met that Mr. Willett had robbed him, and took Gold
-Cave Camp from him without paying a cent, though he
-had promised fifteen hundred dollars."
-
-"Why, the man lies infamously!" interrupted Sam.
-"I was a witness to Edwards' receipt for the money in
-full, and I have it here among father's papers."
-
-"And that receipt is what your father must have at
-once in order to clear him of the charge of robbery and
-murder," said Ulna.
-
-"Murder!" repeated Sam.
-
-"Yes. Last night Tom Edwards was found dying
-with a pistol bullet in his breast, and with his last
-breath he swore to the men who found him that your
-father and Hank Tims shot him to get rid of paying the
-money they owed him. The vigilantes at once arrested
-Mr. Willett and Tom, and they swear they will hang
-them if they do not prove that Tom Edwards was paid.
-I saw the money paid myself, but they refuse to take the
-word of an Indian," said Ulna, with a flash of indignation
-in his splendid black eyes; then continuing, "but
-they agreed to let me come here for the paper."
-
-"Heah!" cried Ike, springing from beside the fire,
-"de lettah's dry enough to read. Let's know w'at
-Mistah Willett he has to say foh hisself."
-
-Sam took the paper, and kneeling down to get the
-benefit of the light, he read aloud as follows:
-
- ":small-caps:`My Dear Son`:—I do not want you to be at all
- alarmed at my detention. Ulna will explain why neither
- Tom nor I can return till you have brought us the receipt
- which Tom Edwards signed when I paid him the
- money in full for his claim at Gold Cave Camp.
-
- "This receipt you will find among the papers in my
- saddle-bags. Bring it to me with all speed and leave
- Ulna back in charge of the camp; it does not matter if
- the mining ceases till we return.
-
- "I regret to have to tell you that Tom Edwards is
- dead. He was drunk when he received the shot that
- killed him, and he accused Hank and me of the crime.
- If the people here knew us well they would not believe
- this charge for one instant, but they do not, and so we
- must wait till we can show the vigilance committee who
- hold us prisoners, that we could have no motive for,
- even if we were inclined to do this awful deed.
-
- "I saw Frank Shirley here yesterday afternoon in
- company with a well-known desperado who goes by the
- name of 'One-Eyed Badger.' I cannot but think that
- these two men are at the bottom of this new trouble,
- but what their reasons can be I cannot even guess; certain
- it is that I have never done them or any one else a
- wrong knowingly.
-
- "Do not lose heart, for I have no fear as to the result:
- only come as soon as you can to your loving father,
-
-.. class:: right
-
- ":small-caps:`Samuel Willett.`"
-
-Sam read this over rapidly, then he read it a second
-time with more deliberation.
-
-"De boss am in a bad fix," groaned Ike, "an' I jest
-wish I could take his place."
-
-"I shall go to my father at once," said Sam, stoutly.
-
-He went to the saddle-bags, got the necessary papers—the
-receipt and deed—and placed them securely in the
-inner breast pocket of his buckskin tunic.
-
-"You no gettee on holse an' lide such night as deez
-coz it was so muchee stolmy?" said Wah Shin when
-he saw Sam getting out his saddle, bridle and rifle.
-
-"I must get to Hurley's Gulch before another day,"
-was the resolute reply, "if I have to go there on my
-hands and knees."
-
-"But you cannot go to-night," protested Ulna.
-"Come and see the danger."
-
-He took Sam by the arm and led him out to the
-plateau before the entrance to the cave.
-
-It has been said that it but seldom rains in this land,
-but when it does the watery torrents come down with a
-continued fury, of which the dwellers in more favored
-climes can have only the faintest conception.
-
-The bare rocks refuse to absorb the rain as it falls,
-and so the ever-accumulating waters sweep into the
-cañons and fill the narrow beds between the precipitous
-banks with wild torrents, that must be once seen before
-an adequate idea can be formed of the tremendous and
-seemingly irresistible power of water in action.
-
-The four occupants of the caves, all fine types of four
-human races, went out to the plateau.
-
-The light, streaming through the cave opening, cut
-across the inky blackness of the cañon like a solid yellow
-shaft, that made the surrounding darkness more impenetrable.
-
-Laden with sheets rather than drops of rain, the wind
-swept down the ravine with a force that threatened to
-tear the observers from the rocks and hurl them into
-the seething torrent.
-
-"Before this time," said Ulna, speaking with the
-calmness that distinguished all he said, "the valley is
-flooded and the horses up there are drowned."
-
-Sam shuddered but made no reply.
-
-He went back to the cave, secured a lighted brand,
-and, returning to the edge of the plateau, he dropped it
-over.
-
-It went hissing down. If the current were as low
-as the day before it should have fallen sheer down
-for a hundred feet, but before going half that distance,
-it lit up an expanse of water white with foam, and was
-extinguished.
-
-The result of this experiment brought Sam's heart to
-his mouth, and he could not have uttered a word if the
-life of the father he so well loved depended on it.
-
-"If she keeps on a-climbin' up dat way," groaned
-Ike, "de watah'll be nigh into de cave by mawnin'."
-
-Sam now recalled that he had found drift-wood lodged
-in the crevices of the rocks, even higher than the entrances
-to the cave, and from this he inferred that at
-the highest water no one could stay in the cave and live.
-
-Maj, the fine setter dog, had been moaning beside the
-fire all the evening, but now he came out and crouched
-at his young master's feet, as if his instinct told him of
-the danger and that he wanted protection.
-
-Fearing that the poor horses were gone, and well
-knowing that it would be madness to attempt to cross
-the cañon that night, Sam turned sadly to his companions
-and said:
-
-"We can do nothing till daylight comes. Let us get
-in out of the storm."
-
-They returned to the cave and silently sat down on
-the stones that had been placed for seats near the fire.
-
-It was a most trying situation.
-
-Even if Mr. Willett and Hank Tims had been safely
-there in the cave, the ever-increasing storm and the possibility,
-or rather the certainty of its danger if it continued
-would have been sufficient to drive sleep from the
-eyes of all.
-
-But Sam Willett, brave, unselfish youth that he was,
-gave no thought to the peril of his own surroundings.
-
-With his chin resting between his up-turned palms, he
-looked steadily at the dying fire without seeing it.
-
-His heart and his thoughts were ever with his sorely-tried
-father at Hurley's Gulch, and he groaned as he
-read in the beating of the storm the edict that might
-bar his going to the rescue.
-
-But though unmindful of himself, it was not in Sam's
-nature to neglect the comfort of others.
-
-"Lie down, all of you," he said to his companions,
-"and I will stand guard till daylight comes."
-
-After a weak protest, Wah Shin, Ulna and Ike
-brought in their blankets and lay down before the fire.
-
-Ike pretended that he did not want to sleep, but, after
-an attempt at desultory talk, his eyes closed and he soon
-became oblivious to his surroundings.
-
-Maj continued to be restless and frightened. Now
-and then, as if to judge for himself how the storm was
-getting on, he would go to the cave opening, and, after
-whining in a pained way for some seconds, he would
-come back and crouch down near the fire with his nose
-resting on his young master's knees.
-
-To sorrow-stricken Sam Willett that night seemed like
-an eternity of darkness.
-
-He was beginning to feel that the storm had destroyed
-the sun, when the grey light of another day began to
-creep slowly into the cave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.—AT HURLEY'S GULCH.
-=============================
-
-
-Hurley's Gulch, though subsequently called
-"Hurley City," has no right on the map if it
-ever had a place there, for, like many other more ambitious
-and important cities, it has ceased to be the
-abode of man and returned to its original state of barrenness
-and desolation.
-
-It was at this time a mining camp that had sprung up
-in a night, as it were, when a man named Hurley—after
-whom the place was named—had discovered gold in a
-little creek near the spot that so suddenly became the
-site of busy mining life.
-
-Though less than six months old and destined not to
-survive a second birthday, Hurley's Gulch had nearly a
-thousand inhabitants, with stores, saloons, assay offices,
-hotels and all the business establishments that characterize
-such places.
-
-There were a few women in the camp and a sprinkling
-of Indians, Negroes and Mexicans, but the great mass
-of the inhabitants were miners, rough in appearance and
-even rougher in speech.
-
-A more picturesque and novel settlement than Hurley's
-Gulch it would be impossible to find outside the
-peculiar mining camps of the West.
-
-Two little streaks of grass could be found growing beside
-the creek on the bluff above which the camp had
-been established; but beyond this there was hardly a
-sign of vegetation in sight.
-
-All about the place, far as the eye could reach, was a
-tempest-tossed expanse of dry, glistening rocks.
-
-As there was neither timber for building nor material
-for bricks, the dwellings, stores, saloons, hotels and
-offices were necessarily of canvas.
-
-The tents were pitched here and there irregularly,
-and as all of them had seen hard service in other mining
-camps and "cities," their general appearance was
-patched and dilapidated in the extreme.
-
-The great majority of the men at Hurley's Gulch were
-industrious miners; but as vultures hover over the track
-of an army in the field and wolves follow up a buffalo
-herd to prey upon the weakest, so crowds of well-dressed
-gamblers and red-faced whisky sellers swarm in prosperous
-mining camps to plunder and demoralize.
-
-Hurley's Gulch had more than its share of these
-wicked fellows, and as there was not the shadow of law
-there to defend the weak, every man went armed as a
-matter of course.
-
-Until law officers can be elected or appointed and
-courts of justice established in such camps, it is the
-custom of the more industrious and peaceable to form
-what they call "vigilance committees" for their own
-protection.
-
-It need not be said that, no matter how well-meaning
-the purpose, many men, themselves criminals, get on
-such committees, and that great wrong is often done to
-the innocent by these rude efforts to do justice.
-
-Mr. Willett's was a case in point.
-
-A few days before he had come over this last time to
-Hurley's Gulch, a hard-working miner had been killed
-and robbed of the gold-dust which he had patiently
-panned out from the bed of the stream.
-
-This crime made the miners angry, and they held an
-indignation meeting after the poor man's funeral, and
-organized a committee to ferret out and punish the
-criminals.
-
-As there was no jail in which to detain those guilty
-of lighter offences, there was only one penalty in the
-code of the vigilantes, and that was *death*!
-
-Tom Edwards had not been a favorite with the better
-class of men at Hurley's Gulch.
-
-In his opinion money was made for the sole purpose
-of gambling away and getting drunk on.
-
-It was generally believed that he had been paid for his
-claim at Gold Cave Camp by Mr. Willett, so that many
-who heard him declare to the contrary and say that he
-had sold on credit, placed no faith in his word.
-
-But when Tom Edwards was found dying the night
-before Mr. Willett was to have left the Gulch, his past
-falsehoods were forgotten in view of the nearness of his
-end and the calmest were inclined to believe him.
-
-It was well known that hot words had passed that
-very day between Mr. Willett and Tom Edwards, and
-this afforded to many a reason for the act.
-
-It was pitchy dark when the wretched man was shot,
-and he was very drunk at the time, so that when his
-wound restored him, for a short time, to his senses,
-there can be no doubt but he was honest in the belief
-that "two men," Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were the
-guilty parties.
-
-The accused men were at once arrested by the vigilance
-committee and placed under guard in a tent.
-
-Both protested their innocence, as well they might,
-and Mr. Willett asked to be permitted to send to his
-camp for papers that would prove to all that he had paid
-Tom Edwards in full the price at which he valued his
-claim.
-
-A few men were inclined to believe Mr. Willett, but
-to set all doubts at rest, it was decided that further
-action should be postponed in the case till the receipt of
-the money and the deed of sale had been procured.
-
-The next morning Ulna was dispatched on this mission,
-and we have seen the fidelity with which he performed
-the duty and the unexpected obstacles that prevented
-the return of the accused man's son with the
-papers.
-
-There were two men at Hurley's Gulch at this time
-who, if they had chosen, could have set at rest all doubts
-as to the mystery surrounding Tom Edwards' death and
-handed over the guilty parties to the vigilantes; but as
-this act would have resulted in their own swift destruction,
-they kept their awful secret to themselves.
-
-These men were Frank Shirley and the outlaw Badger.
-
-Frank Shirley believed, and with reason, that if Sam
-Willett was out of the way, the last bar between him
-and a great fortune would be down.
-
-He was a dissolute, thriftless fellow, every faculty of
-whose low mind seemed to have been concentrated into
-the one mean gift of cunning.
-
-On the way from Gold Cave Camp to Hurley's Gulch,
-Frank Shirley and the man whom he had hired to help
-him in his wicked purpose, discussed the situation from
-every point of view.
-
-The first thing they decided on was that Mr. Willett
-and his son must be prevented from ever meeting again,
-but they did not agree so readily as to how this was to
-be done.
-
-More bluff, and possibly more brutal than his employer,
-Badger urged that he be allowed to waylay Mr.
-Willett and kill him on his return.
-
-But Frank Shirley opposed this, saying, for he was a
-coward at heart, as all such men are:
-
-"Willett will have with him the Indian boy and the
-old hunter, Hank Tims; they are all well-armed, and
-they would be stronger than us. No, Badger, we must
-hit upon some plan that has less risk in it."
-
-"Wa'al," responded Badger, "hit upon the plan
-yersel', an' if I don't carry it out without flinchin', I'll
-give you leave to shoot me down like a dog."
-
-When these men reached Hurley's Gulch they found
-Edwards "drunk as usual," and loudly declaring
-wherever he went that Mr. Willett was trying to rob him
-out of fifteen hundred dollars.
-
-Here was the very chance for which Frank Shirley
-had been looking.
-
-If he could have Edwards put out of the way, in such
-a manner as to fasten the crime on Mr. Willett, a hundred
-stronger and braver men would be ready to accomplish
-his purpose with their own hands.
-
-He told Badger of his scheme, and that creature,
-without a moment's thought of the awful crime he was
-about to commit, pledged himself to carry it out when
-the other gave the word.
-
-To add to the evidence against Mr. Willett, as that
-gentleman was arrested, Frank Shirley appeared to be
-very much cast down.
-
-With tears in his eyes, he explained to the many who
-were only too eager to listen, that Mr. Willett had married
-his, Shirley's, cousin, that he had borne a bad
-character in Detroit, and that he had recently fled from
-that city to escape the consequences of his many crimes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.—WHY THE PAPERS WERE NOT BROUGHT.
-============================================
-
-
-Before awaking his companions, all of whom
-seemed to be sleeping heavily, Sam went out to see
-if the flood in the cañon had risen.
-
-He ventured but a few yards beyond the entrance to
-the cave, for the sight that met his eyes appalled him.
-
-The rain was still pouring down in torrents, and the
-flood had risen till it was nearly on a level with the
-plateau.
-
-"Three feet more and it will be into the cave," he
-said, speaking aloud.
-
-"Watel littee mole high up no cannee stay, mus' allee
-die if no can swimmee," said a voice behind Sam.
-
-There was no need to ask whose it was.
-
-Wah Shin, with thoughts of breakfast in his mind,
-had got up, but first he decided to satisfy himself of the
-condition of affairs outside.
-
-"Yes, Wah Shin," said Sam, without turning his
-head, "even as I look at the flood it appears to be
-rising."
-
-"If it come mole up, wat we allee do?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"No cannee stop dis place?"
-
-"I fear not."
-
-"Way we go den, no can tink."
-
-"Nor can I think either, Wah."
-
-"If no can lib, den no coz wy die hungly," said Wah
-Shin, and with this belief strong in his mind, he re-entered
-the cave and set about getting breakfast with
-his usual indifference to the state of the weather.
-
-At any other time the sight of the flood and the danger
-of its coming higher would have alarmed Sam greatly,
-but though he could not ignore the danger that threatened
-him now, his own situation was lost sight of as he
-thought of his father's position.
-
-He was still standing looking at the rushing flood, as
-if fascinated by its power and volume, when Ike and
-Ulna came out and joined him.
-
-"Foh massy's sake!" exclaimed Ike, when he caught
-sight of the water. "Ain't she jest a bilein' up."
-
-"Do you think the water will rise higher?" asked Sam
-as he turned to Ulna, and tried to find some comfort in
-his calm, impassive face.
-
-Before replying Ulna looked up at the sky for some
-seconds, then said:
-
-"The storm is not half over."
-
-"And while it lasts the water will go on rising?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, that is what we must expect."
-
-"Then it will flood the cave?"
-
-"It will surely do that."
-
-"And drive us out?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, if we don't want to drown there."
-
-"Then we must try to leave?"
-
-"Yes, we must try to leave," echoed Ulna.
-
-"But how can we get away?"
-
-"Ah," said Ulna, with something like a sigh, "I
-cannot now think of how that's to be done."
-
-"If so be we was all birds, we could fly," said Ike,
-very solemnly, "it'd come in mighty handy-like jest
-'bout dis time."
-
-Sam now realized that he must think and act for his
-companions as well as for himself.
-
-His was a brave, sturdy, self-reliant nature, that
-grows stronger and stronger in the face of increasing
-trials and responsibilities.
-
-"Let us go in out of the rain and think," he said,
-while he turned and nervously stroked his forehead.
-
-When they went back to the cave they found that
-Wah Shin had a good breakfast ready, and was still busy
-cooking more food.
-
-When asked by Sam why he was doing this, he said,
-as if it were a matter of course.
-
-"Bime by, watel him come in, puttee out file; file
-him go out, no can cookee; no got tings cookee, no can
-eat; no eatee den allee mus' die."
-
-"Well, Wah Shin," said Sam with a grim smile, "if
-there is any hope in cooking, keep at it while the food
-lasts."
-
-Despite their troubles and the dangers that cut them
-off from the world and threatened their lives, all, Maj
-included, complimented Wah Shin's efforts in their behalf
-by partaking of a hearty breakfast.
-
-During the meal Sam was unusually silent; it was evident
-he was thinking very hard, and the others did not
-attempt to disturb his deliberations till he had risen from
-his seat, then Ulna asked:
-
-"Have you thought out a way to get across the cañon,
-Sam?"
-
-"I have thought out a way of trying it," he answered.
-
-"How?"
-
-"On a raft."
-
-"But we have no raft."
-
-"Then we must make one."
-
-"Where is the timber?"
-
-"There is some here in the form of slabs and firewood,
-and there is plenty whirling down with the flood.
-You can handle a lariat, Ulna?"
-
-"I think I can," was the response.
-
-"Then get a rope, we have a lot here in the cave;
-make a noose and secure all the long pieces of timber
-you can. The water is nearly up to the plateau, and
-Ike will help you pull them out."
-
-"An' watee can me do?" asked Wah Shin.
-
-"Keep right on cooking, for if we cannot cross the
-flood on the raft, we'll be swept into the great cañon of
-the Colorado, and there we shall need all the food we
-can take along."
-
-The others set to work with a will, but even Ulna,
-who was born out in that land, only faintly comprehended
-the import of what Sam said about the great
-cañon.
-
-Indeed, Sam himself had only a vague notion of what
-was meant by the now famous geographical name.
-
-He knew the history and geography of his own
-country very well, as every well-trained youth should, and
-he was, therefore, aware that the great Colorado of the
-West was formed by the junction of two important
-rivers, the Green and the Grand; he was further aware
-that the water roaring outside entered the latter river
-about twenty-five miles below the camp.
-
-Had these been ordinary rivers there would be good
-reason to dread venturing out on their currents at flood
-time, even in a good boat; but the Green and the Grand
-for many score miles above their junction flowed through
-immense rocky defiles or cañons, and they united in one
-mighty cañon, through which flowed for fully four hundred
-miles the waters of the Colorado on their way to
-the Gulf of California.
-
-Sam had talked a great deal about this wonderful
-chasm with Hank Tims, and that most reliable authority
-had assured him that only two parties had ever attempted
-to go through the great cañon and returned to
-tell of their perilous adventures and hair-breadth escapes.
-
-Hank claimed to have stood on a cliff that rose
-straight up from the edge of the Colorado at one point,
-and looked down a sheer perpendicular depth of over
-seven thousand feet, the very thought of which is enough
-to make an ordinary head giddy.
-
-But Sam helped to make a craft that would enable
-them to cross the two hundred feet that separated them
-from the opposite bank, and this accomplished in safety,
-they could make their way on foot to Hurley's Gulch,
-where he knew his father was eagerly awaiting his coming.
-
-He secured all the gold dust about his own person,
-and then made up bundles of blankets, provisions and
-ammunition that might be of use if they did not succeed
-in making a crossing.
-
-This done, he went out and found that Ike and Ulna
-had succeeded in staying and landing a great deal of
-drift-wood, just the thing for a raft, and a number of
-stout poles that might be used in guiding it.
-
-By this time the flood had risen still higher and
-higher, and was now ankle deep on the plateau outside
-the cave opening, and there was not a moment to lose.
-
-With an energy that was all his own, and a skill that
-surprised himself, Sam set about building the raft.
-
-By means of ropes, the longer timbers were securely
-lashed side by side, and over these, like a deck, the
-lighter slabs taken from the cave were nailed.
-
-When this clumsy and insecure structure was completed,
-Sam saw that the food, blankets, arms and
-ammunition were tied so that they could not be swept
-off by the wash of the waters.
-
-It comforted him somewhat to know that all his companions
-could swim, though the stoutest swimmer could
-not last long in the mad torrent sweeping past.
-
-Sam assigned each one a position, and gave him strict
-instructions as to what he must do under certain circumstances;
-and Maj seemingly well aware of what was up,
-crouched down in the center of the raft.
-
-"Now," said Sam, as he stood up, pole in hand, at one
-end of the raft, "we must wait for the current to float
-us off, and trust in God."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.—THE WONDERFUL VOYAGE BEGINS.
-=========================================
-
-
-Under and around the raft the waters
-surged and poured, as if they were testing the
-strength of the frail structure before lifting it up and
-hurling it away to destruction.
-
-With his feet well apart to balance himself, and the
-long pole ready in his strong hands, Sam stood pale but
-resolute.
-
-They had only a few minutes to wait.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin sent up a cry of horror as, with
-the roar of an angry monster, the current swept the raft
-into the stream.
-
-With the grim stoicism of his race, Ulna looked about
-him without seeming to be at all disturbed by the awful
-situation.
-
-Sam's object was to get across to the other side of the
-cañon and effect a landing with his party, for he never
-for an instant lost sight of the fact that his father's
-freedom if not his life depended on his reaching Hurley's
-Gulch at once with the papers in the Edwards case.
-
-But alas for all the schemes planned by love and executed
-by courage! What was man's strength and daring
-to the weight of the piled-up, flying waters?
-
-The instant the raft swung away from the plateau Sam
-saw that his pole was of no use, for the river bottom was
-fully one hundred feet below the surface.
-
-He tried to use the pole as a paddle, but his efforts
-had no effect on the course of the raft.
-
-It was hurled like a plaything by some mighty, unseen
-power, into the center of the flood; then, with the speed
-of a racer urged on by whip and spur, the frail ark
-went flying down the cañon.
-
-For the life of him Sam could not utter a word. His
-face was blanched, but it was not with fear, though
-death seemed now inevitable.
-
-"What will become of poor father!" This is what
-poor Sam would have cried out if he could have given
-expression to the one thought that filled his brain and
-the one feeling that stirred his heart.
-
-But neither Ike nor Wah Shin attempted to restrain
-their cries, though their voices were nearly drowned out
-by the never-ceasing roar of the torrent.
-
-Wah Shin was terror-stricken, and in his fright he
-forgot his little store of defective English and shouted
-for help in his native tongue.
-
-The effect on Ike was to change the color of his face
-to a dark grey, and to make the whites of his eyes very
-conspicuous. He was devoutly on his knees, though he
-clung to the logs with both hands, and prayed with an
-earnestness that there was no mistaking.
-
-In much less time than it takes to describe the feelings
-of the passengers they were whirled out of sight of the
-caves and were rushing down between the towering
-cañon walls with a velocity that was truly appalling.
-
-It was Sam's belief, as well as the belief of the others,
-after they saw that crossing was impossible, that they
-would be crushed by the great jagged rocks that beset
-their course, but they soon discovered that they were in
-the middle of the current, and that they were passing
-in safety the obstructions that threatened ruin every instant.
-
-The bravest men tremble on the eve of their first battle,
-and their hearts sink when they hear the first rattle
-of the skirmishers' rifles. But as the time passes without
-their being shot down, they become indifferent to the
-dangers that at first alarmed and unnerved them, and
-fight with the coolness and confidence of veterans.
-
-A sailor will laugh at a storm that is full of terrors to
-the landsman, for it is certain that familiarity with
-danger does breed contempt.
-
-After the raft had dashed on for an hour or more, our
-friends began to feel confident and to look at the situation
-without fear in their eyes.
-
-Ike was the first to speak; perhaps because Wah Shin
-had not yet regained his knowledge of English. After
-winking very fast for fully a half minute, he said:
-
-"It don't seem like's if we was goin' to sink—at least
-not yet a bit."
-
-He had to shout this out to make himself heard, and
-Sam, in response, had to speak in the same tones.
-
-"If we can find a place where we can make a landing,
-I don't care how soon she sinks after that."
-
-"Dar don't appeah to be much show foh a land in
-dese ar parts," said Ike, as he looked up at the walls
-that not only formed the sides of the cañon, but which
-seemed to block their advance, for the course of the
-river was tortuous in the extreme, so much so, indeed,
-that they could but rarely see more than a few hundred
-yards in advance.
-
-At length, and after they must have floated more than
-twenty miles, the cañon of Gold Cave Creek entered the
-much greater and more sublime cañon of Grand River.
-
-Here the bed of the river was so much wider, that
-though there was more water in it, it flowed with a current
-that was calmness itself when compared with the
-fierce mountain torrent that had recently made the raft
-its plaything.
-
-With a great sigh of relief, Wah Shin now proceeded
-to show that his knowledge of English had come back to
-him.
-
-"Dees place no so belly bad likee dat place we way
-back alle come flom."
-
-"This is Grand River," said Ulna, speaking for the
-first time, and seemingly as calm as if he were in a place
-of safety, as he added: "And further down all the
-cañons of the Green and Grand rivers unite to form the
-mighty Colorado."
-
-"I hope we may be able to land before we reach
-there," said Sam Willett, who had now discovered that
-by means of the pole he could steer the raft in the
-calmer water.
-
-Even the dog regained confidence. Maj had been
-crouching down on the blankets, and wincing and
-trembling with fear, but he sat up when the smoother
-current was reached, and licked his lips and moved his
-tail in a way that left no doubt as to his approval of the
-changed condition of affairs.
-
-But though the current of Grand River was slow as
-compared with that of Gold Cave Creek, it would be a
-mistake to imagine that it was at all stagnant.
-
-The beds of all its tributaries were swollen at this
-time, so that the waters of Grand River were thirty feet
-above the average level and moving with a speed of four
-or five miles an hour.
-
-Although continually watching for some place in
-which he could make a landing, it was not till near sunset
-that Sam found such a spot as he wanted.
-
-The river soon widened out into a bowl-shaped valley,
-on the margin of which there were benches of dry
-ground, covered with stunted little cedars that gave a
-grave-yard appearance to the place.
-
-By means of their poles Sam and Ulna succeeded in
-forcing the raft to the shore, where it was securely fastened,
-and Wah Shin and Ike sent up prayers of thanks,
-each after his fashion.
-
-This arrangement had been made none too soon, for
-they had not finished removing the cargo from the raft
-when the black shadows of night seemed to rise up from
-the water, for the glow on the top of the cañon walls
-showed that it was still comparatively light in the upper
-world.
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike when the last of the cargo was
-safely stored under the cedars, "w'at am de nex' t'ing on
-de programmy?"
-
-"De nex' t'ing," replied Wah Shin as he began getting
-out his pots, pans and supplies, "is dat we makee
-file, den we has to gettee hot someting mebbe fol to
-eat."
-
-This admirable suggestion met with general approval.
-
-That there had been higher floods than this the drift-wood
-lodged in the crevices of the neighboring rocks
-abundantly attested.
-
-As it had not only stopped raining by this time, but
-the clouds had exhausted themselves and vanished from
-the strip of sky visible above their heads, they had no
-difficulty in starting a fire.
-
-In the ruddy glow the yellow current, roaring and
-sweeping near by, took on the hue of blood, but our
-friends were too hungry, weary and anxious to be impressed
-by this.
-
-Wah Shin had plenty of food cooked, but he very
-wisely thought that it would be more palatable if
-warmed over and a cup of good coffee added to the
-meal.
-
-Despite the dangers that surrounded them and the
-woful anxiety about his father, that was never absent
-from Sam Willett's heart, he could not help being impressed
-by the wild weirdness of the situation.
-
-He kept his feelings bravely to himself and expressed
-pleasure at the appetites shown by his friends, while
-trying to comfort them with a half-felt hope that they
-might be able to escape from the cañon on the morrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.—MR. WILLETT AND HANK TIMS.
-========================================
-
-
-Mr. Willett and his friend and fellow prisoner,
-Hank Tims, were kept securely guarded in a tent
-situated in about the center of the straggling habitations
-that went to make up the camp at Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Hank, who knew the country and the climate better
-than any white man in it, was well aware, from the continuence
-and violence of the storm, that it was spread
-over a wide area, and that the heavy rainfall and the
-consequent melting of snow on the crests of the higher
-mountains would flood all the streams flowing into the
-great Colorado.
-
-He did not wish voluntarily to confess his fears to
-Mr. Willett, and yet he felt that it was only right that
-that gentleman should know what effect the storm might
-have on their own lives.
-
-"Do you know what I have been thinking ever since
-night came and the rain has been dashing on the canvas
-over our heads, as if determined to get in?" said Mr.
-Willett, along toward morning, on the day following the
-departure of Ulna for Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"Mebbe ye've been thinkin' that this is a powerful
-stormy night," answered Hank, at a venture.
-
-"Yes, and that the storm will be apt to flood the
-cañon where the boys are."
-
-"Wa'al," drawled Hank, as if weighing his words,
-"this yar rain'll be mighty apt to raise the creeks in the
-bottoms of the cañons."
-
-"What if Ulna should not be able to get across?"
-
-"He'll get across, no fear of that," said Hank. "But
-thar's another important pint in the case."
-
-"What is that, Hank?"
-
-"It's can Ulna git back an' fetch yer son with him."
-
-"And what do you think about that, Hank?"
-
-"I don't know what to think."
-
-"But, surely, you have some idea."
-
-"Oh, yes," said Hank, his hand to his ear to measure
-the sound of the pouring rain, and his gray eyes intently
-fixed on the ceiling, as if he were trying to find
-out when the flood would break through and drench
-them.
-
-"Well," said Mr. Willett, nervously, "what's your
-opinion?"
-
-"I don't really think that Ulna, or Sam, ken git
-back to Hurley's for days. Cos why, they can't cross
-the flood to the trail, an' no man could, onless he
-chanced to be rigged with wings, like a bird, an' up to
-this time I ain't run acrost a human mortal fixed in that
-way, though I'll allow that sich an addition would be
-powerful convenient at times."
-
-"But if my son can't come here, what then?"
-
-"You mean, how will it fare with us?"
-
-"Yes, Hank, that is what I mean."
-
-"Wa'al, it'll depend on many pints."
-
-"Give me some of them."
-
-"If the men in these diggins keep sober, we ken
-hope for fair treatment, but if they don't it'll go hard
-on us. But all that depends on the storm," said Hank,
-with great deliberation.
-
-"On the storm?" repeated Mr. Willett.
-
-"Yes; that's what I said. Of course, you understand
-that if the rain keeps on an' raises the creek har at
-Hurley's, then the miners won't be able to work for
-days an' days?"
-
-"I understand that, Hank."
-
-"Wa'al, if they don't work, an' have somethink
-to okerpy their minds, do you know what they will do?"
-
-"I haven't the slightest idea," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Why, they'll crowd into the saloons an' git drunk.
-When even a well-meanin' man is drunk he's a beast,
-but when these rough fellows drink that devil's broth,
-whisky, why it makes 'em reg'lar out and out fiends."
-
-"I understand you," said Mr. Willett sadly.
-
-The two men relapsed into silence and again lay down
-on the blankets that had been given them by the vigilance
-committee.
-
-Hank Tims was right in his surmise.
-
-Morning brought no cessation to the storm, and as a
-consequence the miners could not work, for Hurley's
-Gulch was transformed from a little stream into a raging
-torrent.
-
-As has been before stated, a majority of these miners
-were industrious, honest men; and their vigilance
-committee, though apt to do wrong in its efforts to be just,
-had a repressing effect on the lawless element.
-
-These men were honest in the belief that Mr. Willett
-and his companion were responsible for the death of
-Tom Edwards, and it must be confessed that all the
-circumstances—circumstances that were strengthened by
-the dying man's statements, pointed that way.
-
-The "Grand Union Hotel," the most important establishment
-at Hurley's Gulch, was composed of three
-tents, and old dilapidated tents at that.
-
-The front tent was occupied by a bar, the center tent
-as a kitchen and dining room, and the rear canvas
-afforded space for the guests to spread their own
-blankets and sleep as best they might.
-
-Frank Shirley and Badger had their headquarters at
-the Grand Union. Here, the following day, the miners
-gathered to discuss the effect the storm might have on
-the return of the messenger with the paper that was to
-show that Mr. Willett had paid Edwards in full for his
-claim at Gold Cave Camp.
-
-A few men believed Mr. Willett's story, but yet, in
-deference to the wishes of the majority they were willing
-to have a trial, but not till a sufficient time had passed
-for the floods to subside so that the messenger might
-have a chance to return.
-
-Frank Shirley saw the drift of affairs, and, without
-seeming to do so, he made up his mind to direct it.
-
-He was well supplied with money, and feeling that
-he had a large fortune to fall back on, if he managed
-his game properly, he decided to give every man, for
-nothing, all the whisky he could drink, and then when
-he had the camp crazed with liquor to turn them at
-once against Mr. Willett.
-
-In carrying out this monstrous scheme, Frank Shirley
-was ably seconded by Badger.
-
-The storm continued throughout the day, but the
-sound of its fury was gradually deadened by the uproar
-of the drunken men in and about the Grand Union
-Hotel.
-
-From being a well-meaning crowd of miners, they
-gradually became a mob of fierce and profane drunken
-men, with no more moral conception of their conduct
-than the inmates of a mad-house.
-
-By the time night came again, they had forgotten
-their promise to give the accused men a hearing, and
-were resolved to slay them at once.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.—A FRUITLESS EFFORT.
-===============================
-
-
-The blankets and bundles carried on the raft
-were pretty well soaked by the rain and the whirling
-waters of the cañon, but as soon as supper was over
-Sam gave orders to have the things spread out and dried
-before the fire.
-
-In this work all took an eager part, and as they had
-been able to collect plenty of fuel, they were enabled to
-build such a fire as had never chased the night shadows
-from that part of Grand River Cañon before.
-
-When the blankets were dried they were spread over
-heaps of cedar boughs and made beds that would have
-tempted a dyspeptic to sleep.
-
-But, though very weary, our friends did not lie down
-at once, but sat before the fire speculating and wondering
-if they would be able to climb out of the cañon on
-the morrow and make their way to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Although there was no danger in this place from wild
-beasts or savage foes, Sam Willett began to-night a system
-of guard duty which he kept up during all the
-nights of his perilous journey.
-
-His great fear now was that the flood might rise and
-carry off the raft or drown out their camping-place, as
-it was evident it had done on many former occasions.
-
-That they might not be taken by surprise, he divided
-the night into four watches, to begin at nine o'clock
-and to continue till five, when it would be broad daylight.
-
-Each one was to stand guard two hours at a time and
-to wake the next one when his watch had expired. The
-order was to be changed every night so that no one
-would have to be on duty at the same time two nights
-in succession.
-
-This arrangement met with the approval of all, and
-Sam took the first turn on guard.
-
-The others lay down with the promptness of soldiers
-when the word of command was given, and they were
-soon sleeping soundly.
-
-Sam had an excellent watch, the gift of his dead
-mother and valued accordingly, and this enabled them
-to measure the time with military exactness.
-
-The flood rose about a foot during the night, but beyond
-this, nothing of a startling nature occurred.
-
-They breakfasted the following morning before it was
-quite light, and when the glow of the rising sun could
-be seen on the crest of the peaks that towered for many
-hundreds of feet above the bed of the stream, Sam and
-Ulna started off to see if they could find a way to the
-upper world, leaving Ike and Wah Shin in charge of the
-camp.
-
-These two worthies were the best of friends, and
-when together they talked in a way that would have
-been very amusing to any one who could have overheard
-it.
-
-"Dis am a mighty queah place," said Ike, glancing
-about him after Sam and Ulna had got out of hearing.
-
-"A belly funny hole, way, way down flom wo'ld,"
-said Wah Shin as he imitated Ike's movements.
-
-"Wah Shin."
-
-"Go on chin, me heal you," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Do you t'ink God made all de world?"
-
-"Oh, me t'ink so," said Wah Shin carelessly.
-
-"An' eberyting He made 's got some use?"
-
-"Oh, yes, allee tings got some use—mebbe."
-
-"An' He made dese canyons?"
-
-"Don't know 'bout dem," said Wah Shin dubiously.
-
-"Wa'al, if God didn't make de canyons, who did?"
-asked Ike, with a manner that indicated his appreciation
-of the great weight of the question.
-
-To confess ignorance of a subject is a manly habit
-which very few are addicted to. Wah Shin at once
-proved that he did not consider himself an authority on
-all matters, for he said, promptly and frankly:
-
-"Me don't know."
-
-"Dey aint got no use, ez I ken see," continued Ike,
-"an' it's my farm belief dat dat oder pusson ez goes
-roun' like a roarin' lion dug out dese yer canawls an' den
-found ez he had no watah to fill 'em up wid."
-
-"Mebbe so—me don't know."
-
-"Now, if dey was filled wid fire," said Ike, with the
-same wise manner, "I'd call it a fust-rate job—ob de
-kind."
-
-"Ha, ha!" roared Wah Shin, as if he caught the
-sharpest point of an excellent joke. "'Spose alle file,
-den wat we do, eh?"
-
-"We wouldn't be har," said Ike.
-
-"But no cannee help oursels."
-
-"Reckon yer right. Ez atween de two, I goes in foh
-watah ebery day in de week an' twice on Sundays. But
-if I'd had de buildin' ob dese yer canyons I wouldn't hab
-wasted sich a mighty sight ob stone in puttin' in de
-banks. But den eberyting in dis yer world ain't jest as
-we'd like to have it, so it's better to take tings as dey
-come; what do you say, Wah Shin?"
-
-"We gottee take it as it come—no can help oulsels,"
-said Wah Shin grimly.
-
-This phase of the situation was so self-evident that
-even Ike could not think of objecting to it, so he began
-to whistle a hymn tune and to pack up the food and
-blankets so that they might be all ready to start when
-Sam and Ulna returned with the information that they
-had discovered a way out of the cañon.
-
-But this hope, after having been strongly cherished
-for three hours, was doomed to disappointment.
-
-Shortly before noon the two explorers returned, and
-though Sam's face told of his failure, Ike could not help
-asking:
-
-"Wa'al, Mistah Sam, wat luck?"
-
-"Poor luck, Ike," was the sad reply.
-
-"Couldn't find de way out, eh?"
-
-"There is no way to find. Every wall we came to is
-as high and steep as those about the camp," said Sam,
-with a sigh and an upward glance at the perpendicular
-cliffs that appeared to be bending over them, as if the
-touch of a child's hand might tumble them into the
-chasm.
-
-"Undah sich sarcumstances ez dem," said Ike, very
-solemnly, "wat do yeh tinks best to be done?"
-
-"We must leave here at once."
-
-"But how's it to be did, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"We must leave as we came."
-
-"On de raft?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'al, dat's a heap sight moah comfotable way dan
-if we had to swim foh it," said Ike, with a sudden display
-of cheerfulness.
-
-Sam now began to realize that their stock of provisions
-was small, that there was no way of replenishing
-them in the cañon, and that their stay in these depths
-was very indefinite, if, indeed, the chances were not all
-against their ever being able to get out.
-
-He saw that it would be a mistaken kindness if he let
-the others or himself eat all that they desired, and great
-as his affection was for Maj, the dog, he regretted that
-the animal was along, for it made another and a very
-large mouth to feed.
-
-With force and frankness he laid the case before his
-companions, and without a sign of dissent, they agreed
-to have the food so divided as to make it last for ten
-days, before which time the least hopeful was certain
-they would again be in the upper world.
-
-A dinner of limited rations was at once eaten, and
-though it was ample, every one of them thought that
-he could easily eat as much more and not feel that he
-was playing the glutton.
-
-Again the cargo was placed securely on the raft, and
-Maj walked demurely on board and lay down on top of
-the blankets.
-
-After strengthening the raft by the addition of some
-pieces of light, dry cedar, it was freed from its moorings
-and pushed into the current.
-
-The four passengers occupied the same relative positions
-as on the previous day, Sam standing in the stern
-and skilfully steering the float from the many angry-looking
-rocks that jutted into the swift current.
-
-As the light began to fade, Sam gazed eagerly in
-front and on either side in the hope of being able to find
-some expansion or ledge on which they could land for
-the night. But an impenetrable darkness settled over
-them, and they were still afloat in the cañon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.—A NIGHT OF AWFUL GLOOM.
-==================================
-
-
-Words can convey to the reader an idea of only
-those things with which he is familiar, or of
-which he can form a picture through his imagination,
-and even when the latter is vivid it must draw largely
-for its creation on things with which it is somewhat
-acquainted.
-
-No pen or tongue could properly describe the situation
-and the feelings of the four human beings who through
-the long black hours of that night whirled and drifted
-down through the black depths of the cañon.
-
-As it was useless to stand up and attempt to steer, for
-he could not see his hand held close before his face, Sam
-Willett crouched down on the raft, and clung with
-nervous hands to its trembling timbers.
-
-Now and then they seemed to be floating through
-quiet waters, but just when hope came to cheer them
-with the belief that they had passed through the most
-dangerous part of the current, the raft would be hurled
-down long lines of rapids, or caught by some projecting
-rock it would be sent spinning around with a velocity
-that made the occupants sick with the whirling motion
-and the fear that the end had come. Such a situation
-would have tested the strength of the most experienced
-nerves, even if the midday sun was shining into the
-chasm, but the darkness added to its terrors and filled
-the bravest with alarm.
-
-On and on, and on. It seemed to Sam that they were
-sinking into the bowels of the earth, or flying away
-through the realms of night and the abode of impenetrable
-darkness.
-
-Now and then he would look up at the few stars visible
-in the strip of sky far overhead, to assure himself
-that he was yet in the world of life and light.
-
-They were floating down a quiet stretch of water when
-Ike called out in a tremulous voice.
-
-"Say, Mistah Sam, ken yeh heah me?"
-
-"Yes, Ike, I can hear," was the reply.
-
-"How does yeh feel, 'bout dis time?"
-
-"I feel hopeful, Ike."
-
-"Why does yeh feel dat way?"
-
-"It is my disposition," said Sam, for want of a better
-answer.
-
-"Got any ideah wot's de time?"
-
-"I have not, Ike."
-
-"How long does yeh tink it is since *de sun went down
-foh de last time*?"
-
-"About eight hours," said Sam, though, judging by
-his own feelings, it seemed like so many days.
-
-"Eight houahs!" exclaimed Ike. "Oh, Mistah
-Sam, yeh's away clar off de track."
-
-"How long do you think it is since the sun went
-down?" asked Sam, for the sound of their voices seemed
-to lighten the gloom.
-
-"Jest 'bout fifteen yeahs an' six months ago," said
-Ike, with the greatest solemnity, adding quickly, "an'
-I don't tink de sun'll eber rise agin. It's done gone gin
-out. My, if we could see our faces 'bout dis yer time,
-do yeh know wot we'd find?"
-
-"What, Ike?"
-
-"Dat we've all growed up in de darkness, and dat we'z
-ole men."
-
-"Me not feel like ole man," said Wah Shin.
-
-"What do you feel like?" asked Sam, glad to hear
-them all speaking again.
-
-"Me feel belly hungly," was the reply.
-
-"Patience, patience," cried out Ulna, from the forward
-part of the raft, "God's sun is rising now."
-
-"Where!" was the exclamation of all.
-
-"In the east," said the young Ute.
-
-Not one of them could tell in what direction the east
-was, but all turned their heads.
-
-Suddenly Ike called out:
-
-"Oh, I see a light in de sky!"
-
-At the same instant all saw it, high up and directly in
-front.
-
-The light looked like the glow of a wonderful fire
-opal, set in the inky blackness of the sky.
-
-Brighter and brighter it grew each moment, till the
-reflected light penetrated the profound depths of the
-cañon.
-
-It was the rising sun saluting the highest snow peaks
-of the mountains, a section of which was visible in
-front.
-
-With the joy of the blind when the blessing of sight
-is restored, our friends watched the increasing light
-coming down from the sky.
-
-Gradually the towering walls of the cañon became
-more distinct, till at length their far-off summits could
-be seen, with here and there a cedar clinging for dear
-life to the giddy ledges.
-
-"If dis yar day is gwyne to be ez long ez de last
-night," said Ike, when he felt that the coming of the
-sun was not a false alarm, "why, I reckon we'll all be
-ole men afore it gits dark agin."
-
-Even the dog gained courage by the coming of the
-day, and sitting up he began to bark in a way that
-proved his interest in the world was returning.
-
-There was no means of telling how far they had been
-borne by the current during the long hours of that
-awful night, but as soon as it was light again Sam took
-the pole and resumed his position as helmsman.
-
-As they were swept on he looked to the right and left
-in the hope of finding a place where they might make a
-landing.
-
-They were wet, hungry and weary, but the coming
-sun revived their drooping spirits.
-
-It was not till near noon that the precipitous walls
-expanded into an area a quarter of a mile in diameter,
-that looked, in its flooded state, like a subterranean lake.
-
-Here the current was much slower, and with Ulna's
-help, Sam succeeded in gliding the raft to a ledge of
-sloping rocks, where it was made fast, and again the
-passengers carried the cargo on shore.
-
-The sun shone on their landing place, which, being
-on the south bank of the river, Sam decided to explore
-thoroughly in the hope of finding a way out of the
-cañon, for he did not lose sight for a minute of his
-father's trying situation.
-
-This expansion of the cañon walls was much greater
-than the one from which they had come the day before,
-and there were so many recesses and irregularities that
-getting out appeared to be an easy matter indeed.
-
-They spread their wet blankets and clothing on the
-rocks, and they found enough drift-wood to make a fire,
-but all were so hungry that they did not wait for the
-fire before eating.
-
-Wah Shin had some cooked food ready, and, although
-it had not been improved by its long soaking, hunger
-made it very palatable.
-
-After the fire was started, Wah Shin and Ike, thoroughly
-exhausted, and it may be more weary in feeling
-because unburdened with the responsibility of the situation,
-lay down on the sun-heated rocks and were soon
-asleep.
-
-"You must be tired also, Ulna. Lie down and I will
-look around and see if I can find a way out of this,"
-said Sam, laying his hand on the handsome young
-Indian's shoulder.
-
-"I will not say that I could not lie down and go to
-sleep at once," replied Ulna, "but if you are going to
-search I shall go with you. I know how you feel about
-your father, and that thought is always in my heart; so
-if you stay awake to work, I must do the same."
-
-.. figure:: images/illus1.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping rocks.
-
- Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping rocks.
-
-The two youths shook hands, and after seeing that
-their rifles were in order and loaded they slung them
-over their shoulders and started off.
-
-They clambered over huge masses of white sandstone
-rock that had fallen in from the sides of the cañon, like
-the ruin of a giant's stronghold, and at every step they
-could see by the drift-wood that the present flood had
-been preceded by others much higher.
-
-Compared with the great pillars of stone scattered
-about them each was impressed with the idea that his
-companion must have shrunk, he looked in contrast with
-his surroundings so much smaller than usual.
-
-After much searching and climbing they came to a
-great rift in the cañon wall that led up to the blue sky,
-and seemed to promise an outlet from these awful depths.
-
-At the discovery Sam could not restrain a cry of joy,
-and even Ulna's usually impassive face was illuminated
-with the light of hope.
-
-"I can see nothing to stop us!" said Sam, as with the
-activity of a mountain lion he sprang up the defile.
-
-But it was three thousand feet to the top of the rift,
-and from their position they could not see all the
-obstacles that lay in their way.
-
-But like the poet's Alpine climber, the motto was
-Excelsior!—higher up—and with stout hearts they faced
-the unknown path that promised access to the upper
-world and then to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-They clambered up and on, the way becoming narrower
-and steeper at each step, while here and there
-their course was made difficult by huge bowlders that
-had fallen in from above.
-
-After fully three hours hard work, and just when it
-seemed that a little more exertion would take them to
-the summit, the cleft came to an end in a precipice
-fully a hundred feet in height, though from the bottom
-it looked only like a step that a child might overcome.
-
-Sam was so cast down by his discovery that he leaned
-against the side of the cliff and pressing his hands to his
-eyes, he groaned:
-
-"Oh, my poor father, what will become of him!
-What will he think of my absence?"
-
-"He will know that if you could you would come to
-him; and those who keep him and Hank Tims prisoners
-need not to be told about the flood. They will give us
-time to get back, I am sure they will give us time," said
-Ulna, and he took Sam's hand and pressed it affectionately.
-
-They had made a bold attempt and failed, and now
-there was nothing left but to make their way back to the
-place where they had left the raft tied, and Ike and Wah
-Shin were sleeping on the rocks.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.—A TRYING SITUATION.
-===============================
-
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were guarded by
-a number of the vigilantes, and with these men,
-who appeared to be rough but honest fellows, they talked
-about their trying situation.
-
-It will be remembered that Frank Shirley and Badger
-spent money freely during that first rainy day in order
-to get the miners drunk, believing that while they were
-in that state they could be led to destroy the prisoners
-without even the appearance of a trial.
-
-In addition to making two-thirds of the men drunk,
-Shirley poisoned their minds by telling them what a very
-bad man Mr. Willett had been in Detroit, and he intimated,
-in a way more powerful than a direct accusation,
-that he had poisoned his wife.
-
-The result of all this was that by the evening of that
-rainy day a great mob, inflamed with liquor and driven
-into fury by lies, was shouting for the lives of Mr. Willett
-and his companion.
-
-The guards not having been subjected to the influence
-of the bars were calm and determined to do what they
-believed to be their duty.
-
-Soon after dark one of the guards, a tall, rugged man
-named Collins came into the tent, and, turning up the
-lamp that hung from the pole in the center, he said:
-
-"I'm afraid, gents, we are goin' to have trouble."
-
-"Trouble!" repeated Mr. Willett, as he rose from the
-blanket on which he had been lying. "I don't see how
-our trouble can be increased."
-
-"I'll tell you how," said Collins, evidently very much
-excited. "You know those of us here at Hurley's Gulch
-that are in for doin' about what's right, want to give you
-gents a fair show."
-
-"That is what I want to believe," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Well, I'm very much afeerd that things has took a
-change for the worst."
-
-Collins hesitated, and Mr. Willett said:
-
-"For the worse! What do you mean?"
-
-"I mean that this man Frank Shirley, who says he's
-yer dead wife's cousin, has made most of the men crazy
-drunk, for as it's been stormin' and as the krik is up the
-boys couldn't work to-day. Then Shirley's give out that
-he knowed you in Detroit, and that you was a very bad
-man back there."
-
-"If you men knew this Shirley as well as I do," said
-Mr. Willett, his brown cheeks flushing with indignation,
-"you would not believe him under oath. But what has
-this to do with my case? Have they not agreed to wait
-till my son comes here with the papers to prove I paid
-Edwards in full for his claim at Gold Cave Gulch?"
-
-"Yes, they agreed to that when they was sober."
-
-"But, surely, Mr. Collins, they do not think differently
-now," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"I'm afeerd they do. Hark! don't you hear 'em
-a-hollerin' and yellin' and shootin' off their pistols?"
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims must have heard the
-noise even had their hearing been less acute, for every
-minute it came nearer and nearer.
-
-"When men get drunk," said Hank, "they become
-brutes. But you are here to guard us, an' you are sober
-an' have yer judgment an' senses about you. Now, Mr.
-Collins, do you know what I'd advise?"
-
-"What?" asked Collins, who seemed at a loss what
-to do under the trying circumstances.
-
-"Either protect us till we've had a trial, or else give
-us back our rifles and pistols and let us protect ourselves.
-What do you say?"
-
-"I want to stand by you," said Collins, "but before
-I can 'gree to anything I must see my friends."
-
-He hurried out, and, blending with the yelling of the
-intoxicated mob, the prisoners could hear the low tones
-of men in earnest conversation just outside the tent.
-
-"What do you think of the situation, Hank?" asked
-Mr. Willett, when they were again alone.
-
-"I think it is mighty bad," was the reply.
-
-"But you surely do not think those men will shoot us
-down in cold blood?"
-
-"They've done such things before. If they was only
-sober they'd do near right as they know how, but they
-ain't. Just hear how they yell! Talk about Injuns an'
-savages, a drunken white man is meaner and more bloodthirsty
-than all of 'em put together. Ah! It'd be a
-heap sight better world if thar was never a drop of
-whisky in it," and Hank sighed and shook his head.
-
-He had but just ceased speaking when the flap of the
-tent was again raised and Collins re-entered. This time
-he brought the rifles and pistols that had been taken
-from the prisoners.
-
-"Here!" he said, "we've agreed not to let you be kilt
-without a show. But we may git you to a place where
-you'll be safe till the mob has a chance to cool down.
-Quick! put on these things and foller me."
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank fastened on their belts, and
-when they had done so, Collins put out the lamp and led
-the way out of the tent.
-
-It was very dark outside and the rain had been followed
-by a fierce gale.
-
-"Hang on to my arms, so's we won't git parted,"
-said Collins as he stepped between the two men whom
-he was gallantly determined to save from the fury of the
-mob.
-
-They hurried on through the darkness, the yelling of
-the crowd gradually dying out behind them.
-
-It seemed to Mr. Willett that they had walked several
-miles, and he was wondering how their guide could be
-certain of his way in the inky darkness, for from the
-time of starting he never hesitated for a moment, when
-Collins came to a halt and said:
-
-"This is the place. Now foller behind me and be
-very keerful, for the path is steep and slippery, and if
-you should chance to lose your footin' you'd shoot into
-the creek whar the water's forty foot deep 'bout this
-time."
-
-Bracing themselves they followed Collins down a steep
-bank till they came to the very edge of the seething torrent,
-then up along the uneven shore they went for
-about a hundred yards and turned sharply to the right.
-
-At length they found themselves standing before a
-rock and wondering what would happen next.
-
-They were not long in doubt, for Collins lit a dark-lantern
-and its glance of golden light revealed an opening
-in the rock very much like the entrance to the old
-abode at Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"This is whar me and Si Brill, my pardner, hold
-out," said Collins as he led the way into the cave.
-
-The place was somewhat contracted, but it had two
-beds, a fire-place and cooking appliances, so that space
-was not a matter of any importance.
-
-"I must thank you, my friend," said Mr. Willett
-with a great sense of relief, "and I hope to be able to
-prove to you before long that your kindness and courage
-have been exercised for innocent men."
-
-"Yes," added Hank, "and for two men that would
-rather do a right, even if it put them out of the way,
-than to think a wrong that paid big."
-
-"I'll stand by you," said Collins, "and you must
-stand by me, for if it was knowed I fotched you har,
-them fellers would make short work of me and Si Brill.
-Si's back at the tent and I must go and hunt him up.
-But what I was a goin' to say is, don't try to light out.
-Stay har till we can have a fair trial. You'll find lots
-of grub in this corral, and I don't want you to be hungry.
-When your son comes over from Gold Cave Camp,
-Mr. Willett, I'll fotch him to you at once. And now,
-good-night, for I won't be back again before sun-up."
-
-"We certainly appreciate your kindness, Mr. Collins,"
-said Mr. Willett as he took the sturdy miner's
-hand, "and I can assure you that Hank and I will remain
-here till you say we are free to leave."
-
-"And if we get well out of this scrape an' you should
-chance to be in the same fix," said Hank, "you ken bet
-your last cent we'll stand by you as one good man should
-stand by another."
-
-Putting out his lamp and warning them not to venture
-outside the cave till they saw him again, Collins
-scrambled out and made his way back to the tent in
-which the prisoners had been confined.
-
-He found that the canvas had been torn down and
-slashed to pieces with knives in the hands of the furious
-mob.
-
-The shouting and the occasional pistol shots told that
-the mob had gone back to the saloon, and while Collins
-was wondering whether he should go there or not, he
-was joined by his partner, Si Brill.
-
-"What's up now, Si?" asked Collins.
-
-"I'm afeerd we're in for it," was the reply.
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"The mob believes we run the prizners off——"
-
-"They do, eh?"
-
-"Yes, and they swear if they ain't brought back by
-daylight, you and me will have to fight for it."
-
-"Well," said Collins slowly, "they ken have a fight."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.—THE VOYAGE IS RESUMED.
-===================================
-
-
-When Sam Willett and Ulna returned to the
-camp they found Ike, Wah Shin and the dog
-lying on the rocks near the dying fire.
-
-Although they had been sleeping for nearly five
-hours, it was with difficulty that Ike could be aroused,
-and when he did sit up and rub his eyes, he declared
-with laughable solemnity that he had only been asleep a
-few minutes.
-
-"If you look at the sun I think you will see you are
-mistaken," said Sam, pointing to the west.
-
-"Dat sun," said Ike, with the fine contempt of one
-who had lost all faith in the luminary that rules the day;
-"I don't got no use foh it. 'Tain't like the sun we
-uster know way back at Detroit. Wy, sometimes he
-gets up and hurries across the sky like a race-horse, an'
-sometimes he don't get up foh weeks an' weeks. He's
-foolin' us, dat's all I got to say." And Ike rose and
-yawned till he showed every tooth in his capacious
-mouth.
-
-"I gottee heap muchee sleep, me no sleep mole foh
-twenty-one day," said Wah Shin, who seemed determined
-not to agree with Ike in this matter.
-
-"If ebber I should get out of this yar scrape, an' I
-should hab lots of money an' plenty ob time," said Ike
-with comical earnestness, "I'll go off to some place
-whar it ain't dark most all de time, an' I'll sleep in de
-sun foh weeks an' weeks an' weeks at a stretch, an'
-don't you forgit it."
-
-As it was now about three o'clock in the afternoon
-Sam, after consulting with Ulna, and recalling their experience
-of the night before, decided not to launch their
-raft till the following morning.
-
-Wishing more than ever that he was a bird, Ike went
-off with Wah Shin to gather fuel, and Sam and Ulna,
-both much exhausted, lay down to get a little much
-needed sleep.
-
-When they closed their eyes the western sun was
-flooding the cañon with a river of golden glory, when
-they woke up "night had let her sable curtain down and
-pinned it with a star."
-
-A great fire was blazing near by, and Ike and Wah
-Shin were preparing supper, while Maj sat licking his
-chops and eagerly watching the operations.
-
-Sam had already divided the provisions, so that with
-care, "an' not eatin' nigh's much as they felt like," to
-use Ike's words, they could manage to live without much
-suffering for another week.
-
-After supper Ike startled the company by saying:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam, I'ze got an offer to make."
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-Before proceeding Ike turned and pointed to the parcels
-containing their little stock of food.
-
-"Ain't I de owner ob one-quarter ob dat grub?"
-
-"You shall have your share, Ike; but why do you
-ask?" said Sam, who half guessed what was coming.
-
-"I've eat my share for to-night."
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"An' I still feel as holler as a drum," and Ike rolled
-his eyes and tightened his belt.
-
-"You have had as much as the rest," said Sam.
-
-"Oh, I ain't a complainin'; no one won't say, Mistah
-Sam, dat you don't tote fair, but heah's de pint I
-wants to git at——"
-
-"Go on, Ike."
-
-"You let me have all my share now."
-
-"What would you do with it?"
-
-"Do wif it!" echoed Ike. "Wy, I'd sit right down
-an' gib it all a inside passage. I'd a heap sight rudder
-hab one good, squar meal dan a hundred scrimpsy ones.
-Dar ain't no pleasure in stoppin' jest when yeh wants to
-keep right on eatin'."
-
-"Nevertheless we must all do it, Ike. We are not
-eating for pleasure, but to keep alive till we get out of
-this place."
-
-"Wa'al, if we ebber does git out, an' I can sit down
-before grub an' eat all I wants, dat grub will suffer—if I
-has any strent left," and Ike sat down and watched
-Maj with a hungry look that boded no good to that
-faithful creature.
-
-Sam had often been surprised at Ulna's gentle manners
-and the excellent English he spoke; he seemed so
-little like the wild Indians he had read about that he
-was anxious to know something of his life, but from
-feelings of delicacy he had never asked him about his
-past up to this time. By way of passing the time before
-setting the guard, he asked Ulna where he had
-learned English so well.
-
-"In the Mission School at Taos," said Ulna. "My
-father, who was a brother of our chief, Uray, was killed
-in the Sierra Madre Mountains, by the Hill, or Arizona,
-Apaches, when I was a little child."
-
-"And your mother?" suggested Sam.
-
-"She could read and write, and she could speak
-Spanish and English as well as the language of her own
-people; all this she had learned in the school at Taos,
-to which place the good missionaries took her when she
-was a child; that was long before the white man crowded
-into this land."
-
-"Is your mother living?"
-
-"Yes, and my sister; she is a year older than I, and
-she is very good. Two years ago my mother, who still
-lived at Taos, married a white man—a Mexican. I did
-not like him and I ran away and joined the tribe. But
-I did not like the ways of our people, though I felt that
-their free life on the hills and along the great rivers
-was the only one to live. Yes, I have much of the
-white man's knowledge, and I am glad of it. Still, my
-heart has ever hungered for the free life of the Ute.
-No matter what befalls me, I do not complain; the Great
-Spirit rules and directs all," and as Ulna ceased speaking,
-he uncovered his head and raised his handsome, expressive
-face to the stars.
-
-"I thank you for telling me this," said Sam, taking
-the young Indian's hand and pressing it warmly, while
-he added: "It does not make me love you any the less
-or more, Ulna, but somehow I think that the more good
-people know of each other the warmer friends they become."
-
-"Dem's my sentiments," said Ike, who looked as if
-he had been sleeping, though he must have been wide
-awake. "Foh instants, when I didn't know Mistah
-Sam, I didn't like him at all; but now dat I does know
-him better'n any one in de world, w'y as a consekence I
-likes him a heap sight more'n I does any one in de world."
-
-Sam had been inclined to feel angry with Ike when he
-spoke in the way he did about dividing the food, but
-this little expression of genuine sentiment on the black
-boy's part quite touched his heart, and he showed his
-feeling by saying:
-
-"Ah, Ike, you may have a hungry stomach, but it
-cannot be truthfully said that you haven't got a kindly
-heart."
-
-"Bimeby, mebbe, I tell you sometings all 'bout me,
-Wah Shin," said the Chinaman, who felt that he must
-add something to the expressions of good-fellowship.
-
-After a little further talk, in which they discussed the
-situation and vainly tried to guess where they were,
-Sam gave the order in which the guards should be called
-and handed his watch to Ike, whose turn came first, and
-lay down on the blankets, which were quite dry and
-comfortable by this time.
-
-To prove that Ike was not in the least selfish, though
-his display of healthy-boy appetite might lead us to a
-different belief, it is but just to him to say that when
-his two hours guard were up, he did not call Sam, whose
-turn it was next, and who appeared to be sleeping very
-soundly, but he stood the whole four hours on watch
-and then awoke Wah Shin, and, after whispering to him
-what he had done added:
-
-"Mistah Sam's got the keer of all on his shoulders,
-an' he needs all de sleep he kin git. W'y, I ken sleep
-any time; he can't, so I sez, let's let him sleep his fill
-w'ile he's at it."
-
-They were up again before daylight, and the allowance
-of food for breakfast made ready, a portion being
-set apart for Maj, for though the dog was not at all a
-useful member of the little band, indeed, his consumption
-of rations for one made him undesirable, yet Sam
-could not find it in his heart to put the faithful creature
-out of the way.
-
-There was no need to discuss the course they should
-next take; there was only one avenue that held out the
-promise of escape, and that was the swift stream rushing
-by their resting place to an unknown landing.
-
-By this time all hands had become quite expert in
-loading and unloading the raft, so that it did not take
-them long to get under way this morning, each one in
-his accustomed place and Maj crouching down on the
-blankets in the center.
-
-The rope was untied, and, with the pole in his hand,
-Sam stood up behind, and again they were sweeping
-down on the red waters of this wonderful river.
-
-As they drifted between the precipitous banks that
-seemed to grow higher and higher with the passing of
-each bend, Sam recalled all he had ever heard or read
-about the mighty Colorado of the West and its wonderful
-cañon. He remembered that it was four hundred
-miles of continuous cañon wall from the point where the
-Green and Grand Rivers united to the Mormon settlement
-at Virgin River, where the cañon walls give place
-to a wide valley.
-
-He shuddered but kept his thoughts to himself, for he
-wisely reasoned that no good could result from frightening
-his companions by a true picture of the dangers that
-lay before them.
-
-For himself he believed that there must be some opening
-by which they could leave the cañon before traversing
-its length, and this hope was not darkened with the
-thought that such an avenue of escape, if used, might
-not better their condition.
-
-They drifted on till the middle of the afternoon, passing
-many side cañons which it was impossible to enter,
-when they suddenly found their raft swept by a whirling
-current, that boiled about them like the waves of a
-storm-tossed sea.
-
-They looked up, to find that the towering gray walls
-had broken into mighty pillars that rose for thousands
-of feet into the sky.
-
-It was the junction of the Green and Grand Rivers,
-and the piled up, roaring and irresistible flood was
-caused by the coming together of the two currents.
-
-The scene that presented itself at this point was indescribably
-sublime, and even the dangers of the situation
-were forgotten for the moment in the awful grandeur of
-their surroundings.
-
-Although Sam still stood bravely up, his pole was useless
-to control the movements of the raft, which was
-borne with the speed of a swallow's flight into the whirlpool,
-about which the waters circled and danced, as if
-celebrating their meeting in these wild depths.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.—WHIRLED AWAY.
-===========================
-
-
-As the raft was being swept into the whirlpool,
-Ike and Wah Shin sent up a shriek of alarm that
-rose high above the roar of the waters, and Maj crouched
-down lower on the blankets and moaned piteously.
-
-Ulna sat in his accustomed place. He did not make
-a movement, nor did the expression of his face change
-as they were being whirled to what seemed certain death.
-
-As nothing could be done to avert the impending
-catastrophe, Sam uttered a prayer, drew in his pole to
-save himself from being swept off and then sat as calmly
-and stoically down as if he were a young brave.
-
-There was a central vortex about which the waters
-swept with the speed of a mill-stream, and for this
-point—as if forced on by an irresistible power, the raft
-plunged.
-
-It seemed like going down a hill on a sled. Once
-fairly under way there was nothing to stop it.
-
-With one quick glance from the center of the whirlpool
-to the pillars piercing the sky, Sam closed his eyes
-expecting the next instant would be the last.
-
-But instead of rushing down to death, he was called
-back to an interest in his surroundings by feeling a peculiarly
-soothing, swinging sensation in the raft.
-
-He opened his eyes and looked about him, and to his
-unutterable surprise they were being swept about the
-mighty whirlpool, like a ball at the end of a string in a
-strong man's hand.
-
-Nearer and nearer to the center, until it seemed that
-the fraction of a second must bring the fatal plunge, and
-then the raft would be suddenly flung to the outer edge
-of the whirlpool again.
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, as he looked about him and
-winked very fast, "dis am curus."
-
-"Too muchee, swing, swing!" cried Wah Shin, as the
-raft hung again on the edge of the vortex, only to be
-hurled a second time to the outer edge.
-
-This swinging was at first a decidedly pleasant sensation,
-but soon it made the passengers on the raft giddy
-and then quite sick.
-
-It was only by keeping their eyes shut that they could
-command their senses.
-
-A half an hour of this whirling to the center and being
-thrown back to the edge continued, though it
-seemed much longer to the tortured occupants of the
-raft, and Sam spoke his thoughts rather than addressed
-any of his companions when he said:
-
-"Will this go on forever?"
-
-"It do look to me powahful-like's if we was a-gwine
-to sikle round dis yar place foheber an' eber, amen,"
-said Ike.
-
-Sam looked up again at the sky, and the crimson
-hue of the clouds told him that the sun would soon sink
-in the upper world and that darkness would soon come
-to add to their trials.
-
-He felt that whether the raft was swallowed up or
-continued to swing in that giddy dance till morning
-would make but little difference to himself or his companions,
-for in either case death would come before
-morning.
-
-His brave heart grew heavy, as if the darkness of descending
-night were falling on it.
-
-He thought of his dead mother, thought of the imprisoned
-father, whom he had set out so heroically to
-save, and the death that threatened was only awful to
-him because he was to see his father nevermore.
-
-While these thoughts were running through his mind
-he felt a different movement in the raft. This was followed
-by a cheer from Ike and Wah Shin and the loud
-barking of the dog.
-
-Sam looked quickly up.
-
-Joy! joy! In some inexplicable way the raft had been
-hurled so far beyond the circle of the whirlpool's power
-as to be caught by the current and carried into the
-Colorado, which here begins its journey under that
-name, for the Gulf of California.
-
-Even Ulna was roused from his usual stoicism by the
-change. Pointing to the right, where in the twilight a
-low peninsula could be seen jutting into the river, he
-called to Sam:
-
-"Let us steer for that point. I think we can make a
-landing there."
-
-"All right," replied Sam with his habitual cheerfulness.
-
-Ulna now took up his own pole, and after much
-effort they succeeded in getting the raft to the low
-point, and here, without difficulty, they made a landing.
-
-As there was neither tree nor rock to tie to they
-pulled the raft high up on the strip of beach, and then
-looked around, but without success, for the means to
-make a fire.
-
-It was too dark to see ten feet away, so they sat on the
-rocks after making the discovery that what they supposed
-to be a peninsula was really an island.
-
-But they made another discovery at the same time
-that was destined to affect their progress very seriously,
-and that was that one-half the provisions had in some
-way been pushed or slipped from the raft; but they were
-lost, and hunger, or rather, starvation was only a few
-days off.
-
-They ate a little of their remaining provisions and
-then spread the blankets on the low, damp ground.
-
-Sam Willett had a military idea of the value of discipline.
-Having begun with having guards at night, he
-determined to keep it up till the end.
-
-The wisdom of this precaution was shown before another
-sun came to banish the shadows.
-
-About an hour before daylight Ulna, who was then
-watching, discovered that the flood was rising around
-them, and hastily awoke his companions.
-
-They sprang up to find the water roaring about them,
-and Sam, holding the raft to keep it from floating off,
-ordered the others to bundle up the blankets and get all
-the things on board.
-
-As soon as this was done they pushed the raft into
-deeper water, got on board and were at once swept away
-by the current.
-
-Such trials would have crushed the spirits of any but
-the bravest, and with a less resolute leader than Sam,
-despair would have made the others indifferent to their
-surroundings.
-
-While it was yet as dark as midnight in the cañon,
-they could look up and see pink streaks in the far-off
-sky that told them the light of another day was again
-flushing the upper world.
-
-But the sun only looked into this gloomy abyss for
-one short hour in the twenty-four, and then left it to
-the gathering shadows and impenetrable night.
-
-It was ten o'clock by Sam's watch when they found
-a ledge of rocks on which they could make a landing.
-
-This haven was discovered none too soon, for the
-severe straining the raft had had in the whirlpool had
-loosened the cords that held the logs and they threatened
-to come apart and let all into the water.
-
-The remaining food was very much soaked, but their
-appetites were keen enough to eat the whole of it just as
-it was.
-
-Two more days would see all of their provisions gone,
-and, realizing this fact, Sam proposed dividing what was
-left so as to last over three days, but against this arrangement
-Ike and Wall Shin entered a protest.
-
-"Now, Mistah Sam," said Ike, "I ain't got nigh so
-much sinse as you has, but it'd been a heap sight bettah
-if you jest took my edvice."
-
-"Your advice about what, Ike?" asked Sam.
-
-"'Bout dat grub."
-
-"What about it?"
-
-"I proposed, night afore last, we should all go in and
-eat all we could—now, didn't I?"
-
-"I believe, Ike, you did say something like that."
-
-"An' you said 'no;' so w'at's the consekence?"
-
-"The consequence is, Ike, that you obeyed me then,
-and I expect you to obey me still," said Sam firmly.
-
-"Yes; an' I'll keep on obeyin' you till I die, but har's
-de pint," and Ike spread out his hand and looked at the
-palm as if he were reading. "If we'd hab eat a lot more
-ob dat grub, den dar wouldn't have been so much lost.
-Wouldn't it be a heap sight better if we had dat stuff
-inside ob us dan at de bottom ob dat ar whirlpole?"
-
-"We did everything for the best, Ike, and therefore
-we should not blame ourselves," said Sam.
-
-"I no tinkee dat glub's in watel," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Whar is it, den?" asked Ike.
-
-"I tink Maj he lookee muchee fat. Him no so
-hungly like befole; mebbe him eatee glub."
-
-The object of this awful accusation sat near by eyeing
-the little stock of provisions as if he could dispose of
-the lot without feeling any great discomfort.
-
-"No," said Ulna, who usually listened to these conversations
-without taking part in them; "the dog did
-not eat that food."
-
-"W'y you tinkee no?" asked Wah Shin.
-
-"Because the bag in which the food was placed is
-gone, and the dog could not have eaten that."
-
-"Me no so shule bout lat," said Wah Shin. "W'en
-dog him heap hungly him eat bag too."
-
-Clearly Ike and Wah Shin had formed a conspiracy
-against the dog, and this only confirmed Sam in his
-attachment to the poor brute, though more than once he
-wished that he was in some other place.
-
-Sam and Ulna at once set about repairing the raft,
-and while they were engaged in this work Ike showed
-that he had unbounded faith in his young master's
-knowledge by asking these questions:
-
-"Mistah Sam, w'at you tink bout dis time?"
-
-"Nothing, Ike," was the reply.
-
-"Know 'bout whar we is?"
-
-"I do not."
-
-"Know whar we'z goin'?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Nor whin we'll git dar?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Eber heah ob sich a fix?"
-
-"Never."
-
-"If we gits out ob dis yeh won't neber want to try
-anudder sich scrape, I reckon?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Ye've had enough?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"So has I, but dar's no use a gibbin' up so, Mistah
-Brown!" and then with a sudden change of manner that
-startled all hands, the dog included, Ike sang out in a
-rich tenor voice.
-
- | "Oh fust was made de sun,
- | An' den was made de sky,
- | An' den dey made de earf
- | An' hung it up to dry,
- | An' den de made de star, outer yalla gals' eyes
- | Foh to gib a little light
- | W'en de sun don't rise."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.—ORDER AND DISORDER.
-================================
-
-
-The storm died out over Hurley's Gulch, and
-except for the high current in the creek there was
-nothing to indicate that the land had been recently
-deluged.
-
-The bluest of cloudless skies bent over the landscape;
-the verdureless rocks glistened in the light of the sun,
-as if they had recently been subjected to a furnace heat
-instead of being drenched by a flood.
-
-The lines of the Sierra Madre Mountains, to the east,
-were so clear and sharply defined that they seemed to be
-but a short walk away instead of being seventy miles.
-
-Only the ragged tents and dilapidated cabins showed
-the effects of the storm; perhaps we should include the
-crowd of red-eyed miners, who, with the evidences of
-unbridled dissipation on their faces, crowded about the
-principal saloon.
-
-Frank Shirley and Badger were disappointed in the
-work they had planned for the night before.
-
-They had spent much money and time in working the
-mob up to a pitch of unreasoning and brutal frenzy, and
-yet nothing had been done.
-
-"'Tain't the boys' fault," said Badger, as on the
-following morning he and Frank Shirley walked along
-the banks of the creek.
-
-"Whose fault is it, then?" asked Shirley, sulkily.
-
-"Why, it's the fault of them other two fellers—Collins
-and Brill—that was sot to guard the prizners; they
-ain't no good; they've gone clar back on us," said
-Badger, with an angry light in his single eye.
-
-"Well, I left the management to you, and I don't
-understand why you failed," said Shirley, who evidently
-felt that the man he had employed to do his vile work
-was not keeping his part of the contract.
-
-"If a man don't win first time is he agoin' to give
-up and never try again?" and Badger answered his own
-question by adding: "Not if he's got the right kind of
-stuff in him."
-
-"But what are we to do next? You see, I must have
-this man out of the way. If he lives then I have no
-show to get the fortune."
-
-"I thought it all depended on the boy's livin'."
-
-"So it does, but you know our plan."
-
-"I do that, and I'm goin' to stick to it. Don't lose
-patience; this yar world wasn't made in a day. Time is
-allers well-spent on a big job."
-
-By this time they had come in their walk to the tent
-in which the prisoners were confined the night before.
-
-The tent, as has been said, lay torn on the ground,
-but the knives of the mob and not the storm had made
-the rents.
-
-Collins and Brill, both seemingly very angry, were
-talking to a lot of the miners when Badger pushed
-through the crowd and said:
-
-"You two is purty guards."
-
-"We didn't ask your opinion," said Brill, hotly.
-
-"Still I feel like givin' it. Whar's the prizners?"
-
-"They are safe," said Collins.
-
-"Safe whar?"
-
-"In my charge."
-
-"But whar have you hid 'em?"
-
-"Where a lot of drunken ruffians can do them no
-harm till they have had a fair trial," said Brill.
-
-"Drunken ruffians!" retorted Badger, with a cool
-effrontery that won the admiration of his employer, "we
-ain't murderers at any rate. And if we did want to do
-for them two, that you've hid away in yer dugout, as I
-believe, it was to prevent others from doin' like 'em.
-When you are a savin' of them, you'd orter think of
-poor Tom Edwards, as is dead and buried."
-
-"I started out to see that them two men had a fair
-trial," said Collins, stoutly, "and I'm goin' to do it.
-We've sent other messengers for that boy with the paper,
-and if he don't show up with it, why then, I'll be in for
-trial. But let me warn you fellers that there's men in
-this camp that means to see fair play, and if you don't
-like our way of doin' business, Badger, just step to one
-side and say so to me, and I'll give you all the chance
-you want to larn who's best man."
-
-As Collins spoke he laid his hand on the stock of his
-pistol and there was a set to his firm lips and a light in
-his keen gray eyes that there was no mistaking.
-
-Like all of his class, Badger was at heart a very great
-coward, and he proved it now.
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed, in a voice that trembled perceptibly,
-"I don't want to quar'l with you. I'm in for
-doin' what's right. But I tell you this, Collins, and
-you mark my words, that boy of Willett's ain't agoin'
-to show up in this camp with no paper."
-
-"We'll see about that," said Collins.
-
-"I'm willin' to bet on it," said Badger.
-
-"Have you got money to bet?"
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"Then my advise to you, Badger, is to start off and
-pay your debts instead of gambling with other people's
-money," and with this caustic shot, Collins turned on
-his heel and walked away with his partner, Brill.
-
-They had gone about fifty yards when Badger shouted
-after them:
-
-"See har, Collins!"
-
-"What is it?" asked Collins looking over his
-shoulder.
-
-"How long are we to wait for the trial?"
-
-"I told you till Mr. Willett's son comes."
-
-"A day?"
-
-"On account of the floods it may take three days."
-
-"Say three days then."
-
-"Wa'al, if it will make you fellers easier, I'll say
-three days!"
-
-"And then the trial?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Boy or no boy?"
-
-"Boy or no boy," replied Collins.
-
-"And if they're found guilty?"
-
-"Then me an' Brill will be in for punishin them as
-much as any man in your gang. Meantime it might be
-better if you fellers shut down on drinkin'."
-
-With this very sensible opinion Collins and Brill, each
-active and tall and with a rifle at his back, started off in
-the direction of their dugout.
-
-They told Mr. Willett and Hank Tims what had happened,
-and Brill added:
-
-"You're purty safe for three days, Mr. Willett, yet if
-I was you I don't think I'd leave this place or run the
-risk of meeting any of the gang drunk."
-
-These miners, like all brave fellows, were gentle and
-generous to the two men whom they took pains to treat
-as guests, so that they might forget that they were
-prisoners.
-
-The day following the events just narrated the man
-who had been sent by the vigilantes to Gold Cave Camp
-to hurry up Sam Willett with the all-important paper,
-came back on a weary horse, bringing with him a very
-startling report.
-
-The instant he dismounted before the canvas hotel he
-was greeted from all sides by queries like these:
-
-"Got back, Ned?"
-
-"Wot's the news?"
-
-"Whar's the boy?"
-
-"Wouldn't he come?"
-
-"You found thar wasn't any paper to fetch?"
-
-When the messenger had recovered his breath and the
-silence abated, he replied to all these questions in one
-sentence:
-
-"Thar wasn't no one at the caves!"
-
-"No one!" shouted a number.
-
-"Not a livin' soul."
-
-"Whar had they gone?" asked Badger.
-
-"The flood must have drowned 'em all out," said the
-messenger.
-
-"Did it rise as high as the caves?" asked one.
-
-"Yes; clear up to the top."
-
-"But they mout have got off afore the flood riz?" said
-Badger.
-
-"Wa'al," was the reply, "if they did git off, they
-must have gone inter hidin', for I sarched and sarched,
-and didn't see hair nor hide, nor sign nor trace of 'em."
-
-This news startled every one, but it brought intense
-pleasure to two.
-
-As soon as Frank Shirley and Badger could go off
-without attracting attention, they withdrew from the
-crowd, and the former asked:
-
-"What do you think of the news, Badger?"
-
-"Couldn't be better," said Badger.
-
-"Think the boy's drowned?"
-
-"He must be."
-
-"But might he not have escaped?"
-
-"How?"
-
-"In a boat or on a raft."
-
-"Wa'al," laughed Badger, "they didn't have no
-boat, and if they tried a raft, why that'd be the same as
-committin' suicide."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I mean that I've knowed of men as got into the
-great cañon of the Colorado, but no one knows of any
-that came out on a raft. The boy's dead as a door nail
-by this time, and you're a rich man," said Badger,
-reaching out his hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.—THE PROVISIONS ALL GONE.
-====================================
-
-
-When the raft was repaired, the blankets, arms,
-and little stock of food were put on board and
-securely fastened, each one took his accustomed place,
-with Maj in the middle, and the voyage was resumed.
-
-How far they had come, Sam had no means of telling,
-he only knew to his sorrow that he was being borne further
-and further away from his father.
-
-Without this awful anxiety on his mind, the situation
-would have been sufficient to shake the nerves and courage
-of a strong man.
-
-The brave youth felt that he was not only battling in
-these depths for his own life, but for the lives of those
-whom fate had thrown with him on this most thrilling
-voyage.
-
-He fully realized the situation, and the fortitude with
-which he faced it redounds the more to his credit.
-
-They were on a shaky raft at the bottom of the
-mightiest gorge in all the world.
-
-Even if they could reach the top, they would find
-themselves in the midst of an arid, trackless desert, cut
-up by other cañons, across which naught but the mountain
-eagle could pass in safety.
-
-The hunger, ever gnawing at his vitals, kept before
-him the fact that their provisions were nearly out.
-
-If by dying, Sam could save his beloved father and
-return to safety his companions in these trials, he would
-not have hesitated about facing death; but as it was, he
-determined to do his full duty while his strength lasted,
-though no eye but God's appreciated the effort he was
-putting forth.
-
-The cañon through which they were now passing, had
-the highest walls they had yet seen. For more than a
-mile their glistening gray sides shot up to the thin belt
-of dark blue sky, their summits crowned with pinnacles
-that in comparison would dwarf the highest and
-noblest structure ever built by human hands.
-
-As if resting after their mad dance in the whirlpool,
-the waters flowed calmly and silently down, yet with a
-speed that told Sam they were moving at the rate of
-about four miles an hour.
-
-The most wonderful thing about these depths was the
-dim twilight, and long before the sun went down in the
-upper world, the stars were visible from the bottom of
-the cañon.
-
-As night approached the passengers scanned the
-shores eagerly, and looked ahead to every bend in the
-tortuous river, hoping they might be able to find a strip
-of shore or a ledge of rocks on which to make a landing,
-but in vain.
-
-"It don't look's if dar was any more shoah," said
-Ike, in a loud, frightened tone, that echoed from rock to
-rock for nearly a minute after he had spoken.
-
-"Not within sight," said Sam, with affected cheerfulness.
-
-"Den wat's we to do?"
-
-"We must keep on."
-
-"On de raft?"
-
-"The only chance is between that and the water."
-
-"Dat's so," said Ike, solemnly.
-
-"Too muchee watel, too lillee glub; no likee dis fix
-belly muchee," said Wah Shin.
-
-"You must try and rest as best you can," said Sam.
-"Ulna and I will take turns in steering the raft."
-
-"All night, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"Yes, Ike, all night."
-
-"Den you done lost faith in dis chile?"
-
-"I have not. Why do you ask?"
-
-"Coz, Mistah Sam, I ain't agoin' to sleep while you
-weah yorself out. I may be purty mean, but I ain't
-nigh so mean as dat. I ken steer in de dark as well as
-de next man, an' I'm agoin' fer to try, if so be you don't
-objeck."
-
-"Me, too; allee same like Ike. Me no steels so well
-likee me cookee, but I tly, too," said Wah Shin.
-
-"I am glad to see, boys," said Sam, feeling stronger
-for the spirit shown by his two most dependent companions,
-"that you are willing to do your part. If we
-come out all right, as I believe we shall, it will be because
-we never felt like giving up."
-
-"Dem's my sentiments," said Ike, heartily.
-
-"Me say allee same likee dat," joined in Wah Shin,
-who showed that he was coming out strong as their trials
-increased.
-
-Ulna spoke not a word, but in the dim and fading
-light his dark face glowed with a pride and pleasure
-more eloquent in its expression than words.
-
-To show that he appreciated their efforts, and with
-the belief that it would be better for all, if each was
-made to feel that he had an important share of the responsibility
-on his shoulders, Sam decided that they
-should take turns in steering during the night, in the
-same order that they would if on guard.
-
-These arrangements were hardly completed when the
-impenetrable darkness, to which no mortal with eyes
-could ever grow accustomed, came down on the cañon.
-
-Sam had matches in a water-proof case, and with the
-help of these and his watch they were enabled to mark
-the hours during that long, dreary night.
-
-During the watches of heavy, painful darkness, the
-raft swept swiftly and silently on, meeting with no mishap
-but giving to its occupants the impression that
-they were falling down, down through the depths of a
-rayless and fathomless space.
-
-When it became light enough to see the next morning,
-Sam noticed that all his companions looked older, and
-he reasoned that this was due to hunger, mental anxiety
-and want of sleep.
-
-Even in the days of plenty, Ike was always ready to
-eat, and, as we have seen, the desire for more food was
-ever on his mind, from the hour when Sam thought it
-prudent to limit the rations.
-
-From the moment it was light enough to see he kept
-his eyes fastened on the little bag containing their
-remaining stock of provisions. It was evident, from the
-expression of his mouth, that he was trying to restrain
-his feelings, but unable to resist, he at length exclaimed:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam!"
-
-"What is it, Ike?" asked Sam, who already guessed
-what was coming.
-
-"How does yeh feel 'bout dis time?"
-
-"Pretty well, Ike; how are you?"
-
-"I'ze mighty holler!" groaned Ike, and he pressed his
-hand over his belt and bent himself forward in a most
-comical way.
-
-"Hungry, Ike?"
-
-"Hungry!" repeated Ike, "dat ar' word don't nigh
-begin foh to 'spress jest how I feel."
-
-"Cheer up, Ike; we'll find a landing-place presently,
-and then we'll have something hot."
-
-"W'en a feller's as holler an' hungry as I am, he ain't
-so mighty partickler whedder do grub's hot or cole. De
-question wif him is, is dar enough to fill up all de
-emptiness."
-
-"Very true, Ike——"
-
-Sam's sentence was cut short by an exclamation from
-Ulna, who had risen to his feet and was pointing to a
-line of shore on the left, where grew a cluster of stunted
-bushes.
-
-They succeeded in getting the raft to this point and
-made a landing without any difficulty.
-
-Here they found a great quantity of drift-wood, and
-Wah Shin and Ike started a fire while Sam and Ulna,
-with an eye to the future, selected some stout pieces of
-timber with which to strengthen their raft.
-
-"Don't you t'ink," asked Ike as he pointed to their
-little stock of food, "dat dar ain't no use in makin' two
-bites ob a cherry?"
-
-"Why do you ask that, Ike?"
-
-"Coz, dar ain't more'n nuff grub dar foh one right-down,
-honest, squar meal, an' if us was to eat it, we'd
-all feel a heap sight bettah."
-
-"But the future, Ike?"
-
-"Wa'al, sah, I ain't hungry in de futah; Ize hungry
-right jest now at dis bressed minute."
-
-"Me feel allee same like dat," said Wah Shin.
-
-As this was exactly how Sam and the uncomplaining
-Ulna felt, the former gave orders to warm up all the
-food and divide it into five shares, one of which was to
-be for Maj.
-
-They had a good supply of coffee left and a few
-pounds of bread with a like quantity of meat.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe that feast. Only
-those who have long endured the pangs of hunger can
-appreciate it.
-
-Each one rose from the banquet much relieved and
-refreshed, and in their enjoyment of the present they
-quite lost sight of the fact that their last particle of food
-was gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.—DANGER AHEAD.
-==========================
-
-
-After their last hearty meal, which finished up the
-provisions, Sam Willett and his friends felt better,
-stronger and warmer than they had since the beginning
-of this wonderful voyage.
-
-It is one of the blessings and charms of youth that
-while it enjoys the present and anticipates the happiness
-of the future, it steadily ignores all thoughts of coming
-afflictions.
-
-Ike was boisterous in his hilarity; he danced about the
-fire, as if "the squar meal" had had an intoxicating
-effect on him; and, at length, unable to restrain himself,
-he burst into the following snatch from an old
-plantation song:
-
- | "Oh! don't you know Miss Dinah Crane,
- | She's 'gwine to be married;
- | Glad am I, an' dat's a fac,
- | For berry long she's tarried.
- |
- | "So fotch along de wine an' de hoe cake too,
- | De gumbo an' de cream,
- | An' don't fergit de weddin' cake
- | On wich we darkies dream!
- |
- | "For we will larf an' sing all day,
- | Hooraw, hooraw, hooraw!
- | An' on de banjo sweetly play
- | With a zip, yaw, yaw—yaw, yaw!"
-
-Even Ulna smiled at this performance, and Maj
-chased his tail and barked till the cañon walls rang with
-the echoes.
-
-The strip of shore, on which they were encamped,
-extended from their landing place for some distance
-down the river, so before launching the raft again, Sam
-thought it would be well for Ulna and himself to make
-an examination as far as they could do so on foot.
-
-Taking their rifles, which were loaded with metallic
-cartridges that the water could not injure, they started
-off, first telling Ike and Wah Shin to take advantage of
-their absence to get some sleep.
-
-They walked and clambered along the shore for about
-half a mile, when there came to their ears a hoarse,
-deep, monotonous roar.
-
-"What is that?" asked Sam, coming to a sudden halt
-and laying his hand on Ulna's arm.
-
-"I don't know," was the quiet reply.
-
-"From what direction does the sound come?"
-
-"From down the river."
-
-"It must be the water?"
-
-"There is nothing else to make a noise down here."
-
-"I once heard the roar of the great fall at Niagara,
-and that brings it to my mind. Let us move on," said
-Sam.
-
-Again they resumed their journey.
-
-At times they were forced to creep along the edge,
-knee deep in water, but they did not mind this.
-
-After going about three hundred yards further down,
-they came to an irregular rock, up whose sides they
-climbed in the hope of getting a better view of the river
-below.
-
-They were not disappointed in their purpose, but the
-prospect that met their gaze was well calculated to dismay
-the stoutest heart.
-
-Their vision was limited by a bend in the river a quarter
-of a mile below, but between this and the rock on
-which they stood, the water was white with foam as it
-roared and tumbled over a series of rapids, in the midst
-of which black rocks appeared like the heads of monstrous
-creatures.
-
-This sight was so appalling that neither Sam nor
-Ulna could utter a word for some seconds, but stood
-looking from the maddened waters into each other's
-frightened face.
-
-Sam was the first to speak:
-
-"Oh, Ulna, that is awful!"
-
-"Bad," was the laconic reply.
-
-"What are we to do?"
-
-"I cannot tell."
-
-"We can't go back the way we came?"
-
-"No," said Ulna, and he emphasized this opinion by
-a vigorous shake of the head.
-
-"We can't get out by climbing up the walls?"
-
-"I wish we could," said Ulna.
-
-"Then," continued Sam, "there are only two courses
-open to us."
-
-"Only two."
-
-"One is to try and go down the rapids on the raft."
-
-"And the other," added Ulna, "is to remain where
-the raft now is and starve to death."
-
-"And have you a choice, Ulna."
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"If I am to die, I want to die resisting."
-
-"Then you are for trying the rapids?"
-
-"I am; but I shall do as you say."
-
-"I say 'go on.'"
-
-Sam reached out and took Ulna's hand, and so they
-stood for some minutes looking at the frightful rapids
-which they had decided to face.
-
-It was now about noon, there was fully five hours of
-daylight left, and they decided to avail themselves of it
-to test the rapids.
-
-Sam reasoned that the thing had to be done, and the
-sooner the experiment was made the better, and in
-addition to this he knew that there was no more food
-left, and that from this time on himself and his companions
-would grow weaker and weaker for the effort.
-
-They turned to walk back, Sam clambering along the
-giddy ledge of the rock which rose straight up from the
-water. He was a few yards in advance of Ulna, for
-whose immediate safety he had no fear, when he was
-brought to a sudden stand, and his heart stopped beating,
-and the cold sweat came out on his forehead at
-hearing a short, quick cry of alarm behind him.
-
-The cry was followed by a splash, and turning, Sam
-saw that Ulna had fallen from the rock into the fierce
-current that roared and foamed above its base.
-
-Sam threw aside his rifle and sprang back to the rescue
-of the young Indian, but before he had gone ten
-feet Ulna was fifty yards away, bravely battling with the
-maddened waters, above whose roar came the words:
-
-"God bless you! Farewell!"
-
-Sam stood petrified with horror.
-
-To plunge into the water and attempt to help Ulna in
-that way would be madness.
-
-Even as Sam watched he could see the brave face becoming
-more and more indistinct as it rose and fell on
-the surges, and then with a wave of the arm vanished
-out of sight behind the distant bend of the river.
-
-Overcome with his emotions, Sam sat down on the
-rock, and pressing his hand to his eyes, he cried as if
-his heart was breaking.
-
-It was not for himself he grieved, nor would it be
-just to say that these tears were an evidence of weakness
-in the character of our brave young friend.
-
-He loved the handsome Indian youth, as he might
-have loved a brother; but this awful loss came with the
-memory of his other trials, so that his emotion was a
-proof of his loyal heart and gentle nature.
-
-The man or boy who is incapable of tears, it is safe to
-say, is also incapable of a noble feeling.
-
-Believing that Ulna had gone down the mad river to
-his death, Sam, as he sat there, recalled that he owed a
-duty to the living.
-
-Slinging his rifle on his back again, he retraced his
-steps to camp.
-
-He found Ike, Wah Shin and the dog, all sleeping by
-the fire as peacefully as if they were on downy beds in
-the midst of civilization.
-
-Maj leaped up barking with joy and began to fawn on
-his young master.
-
-This awoke Ike and Wah Shin, the former of whom
-declared as usual that he had only just closed his eyes,
-"an' hadn't been asleep at all."
-
-"We must make ready to start at once," said Sam.
-"Get the things on board and tie them securely."
-
-"All right, sah," said Ike, and he went to work with
-the energy of one who had dined abundantly and slept
-well.
-
-"Ulna, whele him go?" asked Wah Shin, stopping in
-the midst of loading the raft and looking about.
-
-"He has gone down the river," said Sam, and his sad
-face told the Mongolian that something serious had happened.
-
-"Him no gone gettee dlownded," gasped Wah Shin,
-and his eyes grew more oblique with alarm.
-
-"Drownded!" cried Ike. "Why, Ulna kin swim
-like a whole flock of ducks in a mill pond."
-
-"The river is very rough ahead," said Sam, "and
-after Ulna fell into the rapids he could not get back."
-
-"An' whar did he go to?" asked Ike.
-
-"Down the river."
-
-"To de bottom?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, "if de ribber's as rough as
-dat, den we'd bettah stay whar we is."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.—MR. WILLETT LEARNS THE NEWS.
-==========================================
-
-
-Collins, and his partner, Brill, were at heart as
-tender as they were brave.
-
-They reasoned that Mr. Willett should know the news
-the messenger brought back from Gold Cave Camp, yet
-neither felt like conveying it to the unhappy man.
-
-"Somebody's got to tell him," said Brill, to his partner,
-"and as you've got the best gift of gab, Collins, I
-reckon you're the feller to do it."
-
-"If it comes down whar I've got to speak my mind
-and tell a sneakin' feller jest what I think of him," replied
-Collins, "I ain't slow, and I find I'm flush of
-words 'bout that time, but tellin' a man his son's dead,
-and that that 'ar paper he sent for to save his own life,
-ain't agoin to be perduced, why, that's an entirely different
-matter, and I'd a sight rather contract out the
-job to some chap as don't mind sich things."
-
-"See har, pard, I've got an idear."
-
-"Let's have it," said Collins, much relieved.
-
-"I think we'd better do this kinder by slow degrees
-like. What do you say?"
-
-"Why, I say, Brill, ole feller, I don't catch on to the
-drift of your ore bed," said Collins.
-
-"I mean through Hank Tims."
-
-"What about him?"
-
-"We must get him to one side, kinder."
-
-"And what then?"
-
-"Why then we must up and tell him the hull story."
-
-"I see yer pint, Brill."
-
-"And then," continued Brill, "he can give it to Mr.
-Willett, and that'll kinder let us out of the scrape."
-
-In token of his approval of this very excellent plan,
-Collins shook hands with his partner, and then Hank
-Tims was called outside of the dugout.
-
-The partners were still in doubt as to which of them
-should tell the story, and noticing that they stood looking
-at each other Hank asked:
-
-"Is there any fresh trouble up, pards?"
-
-"Wa'al, yes, kinder," said Collins, taking upon himself
-the painful duties of spokesman.
-
-"Let's have it," said Hank, stoutly. "Neither me
-nor Mr. Willett is skeered to hear the worst."
-
-"Jest so," said Collins, "and so we thought we'd
-better give you the news and let you break it to him."
-
-"What news?" asked Hank.
-
-"Why the news that's come from Gold Cave Camp."
-
-"Wa'al, let's have it."
-
-"You know, Hank, we sent a messenger to Gold Cave
-Camp when we found the storm was onto us, and Mr.
-Willett's son hadn't showed up with that paper."
-
-"Yes, I heard of that, Collins."
-
-"Wa'al, the man's back——"
-
-"And the boy—Sam Willett?" cried Hank.
-
-"Couldn't be found," stammered Collins.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He wasn't thar."
-
-"No," added Brill, "he wasn't no whar in sight."
-
-"And the other folks, the black boy, the Chinee and
-the young Ute, Ulna, what came here with me an Mr.
-Willett and went back again when we was took prizners?"
-
-"No one knows; they wasn't in sight."
-
-"Drownded out!" gasped Hank.
-
-"No, the folks think they tried to git away by swimmin'
-or making a raft," said Collins.
-
-"They might as well try to fly. Ah, this is bad news;
-mighty bad news. I'd rather die mysel', and I know
-Mr. Willett would rather die a thousand times over than
-to lose that boy. Did you ever see young Sam Willett,
-gents?"
-
-The partners shook their heads and said they never
-had seen young Sam Willett.
-
-"Wa'al," continued Hank, with a sob in his voice,
-"he wasn't what you and me mout think a full-growed
-man, but never a braver nor a handsomer lad ever
-crossed them Sierras off thar to the east. He was a
-gentleman, young Sam was, from the ground up; he
-couldn't think anything mean, much less do it. Ah,
-why should men like you, and me, and others be left
-and him be took? I don't see how I can bring mysel' to
-tell his father, for he was all Mr. Willett had left, and
-he won't keer any more for life when he hears this."
-
-"It's mighty tough on the old man," coughed Brill,
-"not to mention his other troubles; but as he's got to
-know it sooner or later, my pard and me thought you'd
-better tell him."
-
-"Wa'al, if I must I 'spose I must; but I tell you
-what, boys, I'd jest as soon you'd order me out to be
-shot. In fact I'd a heap sight rather be shot, if I was
-only sure that my dyin' would bring back young Sam
-Willett to life."
-
-Brushing his sleeve across his eyes, Hank turned
-away to hide his feelings, and the partners went silently
-back to the cluster of tents and buildings that was
-known as "the camp."
-
-We have already seen something of the love that existed
-between Mr. Willett and his son.
-
-Apart from the affection natural to their relationship,
-these two were still more strongly attached to each other
-by the fact that they were alone in the world and the exclusive
-object of each other's most profound affections.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe the manner in which
-Hank Tims communicated the news to the already
-much afflicted father, but it should be said that he
-acquitted himself with a tenderness hardly to be expected
-from one of his rough exterior and rude life.
-
-There are blows so crushing to the human heart that
-they fall without being followed by a sign of pain or a
-cry of agony.
-
-The sting of a bee will call out a shout from the
-strongest man, but the bullet that taps the fountain of
-life is received with ashy but silent lips.
-
-All the color left Mr. Willett's face, and he fell back
-on the blankets on which he had been sitting.
-
-He looked as if he were dying, and Hank, to redress
-the effects of the blow he had been forced to deal, sprang
-forward, and putting his arms about Mr. Willett's
-shoulder, he said, though he had not the slightest faith
-in his own words:
-
-"Thar ain't no doubt in my mind but the boys made
-a raft. Sam was sharp, and thar was lots of timber to
-do it."
-
-"But that would only be going to death," said Mr.
-Willett faintly and slowly.
-
-"Oh, not by a long odds. Thar's lots and lots of
-places lower down whar they might get out easy. Now,
-let's jest have patience; thar ain't nothin' like a good
-stock of patience. Why, it wouldn't s'prise me not a
-bit if I was to see Sam and the hull caboodle of 'em walk
-into the door of this dugout this blessed minute," and
-Hank fixed his eyes steadily on the opening, as if he
-were quite prepared for this phenomenon.
-
-Leaving Hank Tims to fan the faint ray of hope he
-had kindled in the afflicted father's heart, let us give a
-few minutes to reporting the conduct of the two men
-who were the authors of all this trouble.
-
-There were some very bad men at Hurley's Gulch, as
-there are bad men in any gathering the world over, but
-in justice it should be said that a majority aimed to do
-as near right as they knew how.
-
-Men's ideas of right and wrong vary with their training
-and their natural abilities to weigh evidence and
-comprehend truth. But even those men who are rude
-in their bearing, or even vicious in their lives, have their
-hearts touched by a death that brings great sorrow to
-some fond, loving heart.
-
-So when the people at Hurley's Gulch began to think
-over Mr. Willett's loss, they forgot for the time the grave
-offence with which he was charged, and expressed themselves
-as very sorry for the death of his boy.
-
-This change of feeling did not escape the ever wide-awake
-observation of Frank Shirley.
-
-He was a pretty good judge of human nature, and so
-he thought it wiser not to say anything at this time.
-Indeed, he played his part so well that he expressed to
-the crowd, whom he kept attached to him by frequent
-treating, that he was very sorry for young Sam Willett's
-loss.
-
-"He was a cousin of mine," sighed Shirley, "and not
-a bit like his father."
-
-How could the people know that the death of Sam
-Willett was the one object that brought Shirley to this
-land, and how could they know that the life of the noble
-youth was the one thing that stood between this fellow
-and a large fortune.
-
-"I tell you, Mr. Shirley," said Badger to his employer
-the day after the reception of the news from Gold
-Cave Camp, "you're a keen one. Oh, you ken play it
-fine—finer'n any one I ever seed."
-
-"Do you think so, Badger?" said Shirley, flattered by
-this compliment to his talent for crime.
-
-"Yes, I do. In a day or two the boys'll forgit all
-about the death of young Willett. Then you ken swing
-in on the murder of Tom Edwards again, and make
-them do jest as you please."
-
-"Well, I'll try," replied the jubilant Shirley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.—IN THE RAPIDS.
-=============================
-
-
-The bravest soldier, no matter how cool his
-bearing, feels a sense of awe and dread when the
-rattle of rifles along the skirmish line tells him that the
-murderous battle has begun.
-
-If there be men who never felt fear under such nerve-trying
-circumstances, then they certainly deserve no
-credit, for true courage consists in the determination to
-face a danger while fully comprehending its awful
-possibilities.
-
-Sam Willett wisely decided not to picture to Ike and
-Wah Shin the dangers that lay before them; but while
-doing this he did not attempt to hide from himself the
-fact that within a few hours himself and his faithful
-companions might be the dead playthings of the wild
-waters.
-
-As calmly and sternly as the cavalry leader wheels his
-battalions into line in front of the murderous artillery
-which he intends to charge, Sam Willett made his preparations
-for the passage of the rapids.
-
-He strengthened the raft and fastened to it their arms
-and blankets, and then to prevent their being washed
-off, or lost if they fell overboard, he insisted that each
-should tie a rope about his waist, the other end being
-fastened to the logs.
-
-It was not until the last precautions against the danger
-that lay ahead were proposed that Ike began to feel
-greatly alarmed.
-
-"Golly, Mistah Sam," he said, with trembling lips,
-"hitchin ob oursels to dese yar logs wif ropes looks to me
-kinder skittish."
-
-"I hope they may not be needed," said Sam, as he
-made ready to push the raft off.
-
-"You seed dem currents down de ribber?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"Pooty ugly, ain't dey?"
-
-"We must pass them."
-
-"'Twas dem as drownded Ulna?"
-
-"He fell from a rock into the river."
-
-"Den if he couldn't swim back, dem currents must
-be mighty bad."
-
-"No can stay hele; no can backee go; den wat we do;
-allee same we mustee glong down ribbel," said Wah Shin,
-who seemed to have no trouble in taking in the situation.
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike, desperately, "I reckon de job's
-got to be did. I don't want to be drowned way down
-har, when no one won't neber heah ob me agin, an'
-moah 'ticklah, Mistah Sam, I doesn't want you to die,
-but if dat be de good Lor's will, den I says amen, an'
-goes ahead."
-
-Sam at first thought that he would tie Maj to the raft,
-but as the animal had not the reason to avail himself of
-this advantage, he decided to let him take his chances
-if he should be washed off.
-
-"Now, I am about to push off," said Sam, standing
-at the stern with the pole in his hand, "and if we get
-into danger I want you both to keep cool and do as I
-say. Don't yell out, or try to hang on to each other, if
-the raft should go to pieces."
-
-Ike and Wah Shin promised to do as they were told,
-and then with a mental prayer to Heaven to guide and
-protect him, Sam set one end of the pole against the
-bank and pushed the raft into the current.
-
-"Dis don't seem so powahful bad," said Ike, as he
-looked ahead and saw a smooth expanse extending for
-nearly a half mile in front.
-
-"Not so bad, Ike," said Sam, his eyes fixed on the
-bend, beyond which he knew the dreaded rapids rolled.
-
-As they drifted on he could not help recalling the
-mighty falls of Niagara which he had visited with his
-father a few years before.
-
-He remembered that a few miles above the falls the
-majestic river flowed on grandly and swiftly, without a
-ripple to break its glassy surface, or a murmur to suggest
-the frightful plunge it was soon to take. Then
-came the roaring rapids and the thundering fall.
-
-What if these rapids ended in the same way?
-
-This thought had just flashed through his mind, when
-the raft shot past the rock from which Ulna had fallen,
-and the next instant it swung round the bend, and the
-thunder of the waters was heard and the seething white
-waves came to view.
-
-Every stick of timber in the raft groaned, as if it were
-a sentient being, trembling at its coming destruction.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin fell flat on the logs and clung to
-them with all their might, not daring to look at the
-prospect ahead.
-
-Even Sam dropped on his knees and gazed steadily in
-front, while the dog crept towards him, and, with a
-plaintive whine, thrust his nose into his master's breast.
-
-Sam soon discovered that it would not only be useless,
-but absolutely dangerous to attempt to steer the raft, so
-he hauled in the pole and with his hands clung to the
-logs on either side.
-
-The speed at which they went down soon became so
-frightfully great that the objects along the shore could
-not be distinguished, but became streaked and confused
-to their sight.
-
-Now and again the raft would strike against one of
-the black rocks, that rose like a monster out of the
-water, and then it would spin and whirl down the torrent
-as if determined to throw off its occupants.
-
-Bend after bend was passed, and Sam began to think
-that the rapids extended indefinitely, when to his horror
-the raft struck against another rock, and with such force
-that the ropes, fastening one end, snapped and broke
-like a silken thread in the hands of a giant.
-
-At the same instant the logs parted and spread out
-like a fan, throwing all the occupants into the water.
-
-Now the wisdom of Sam's precaution in tying themselves
-to the raft became evident.
-
-Had it not been for this they would have been swept
-apart and drowned at once, but as it was the ropes not
-only kept them together, but enabled them to haul
-themselves back to the logs and cling to them for support.
-
-The dog was, of course, thrown out with the others,
-and was at once swept beyond reach, though for some
-minutes Sam could see the brave creature facing the current
-and making a desperate effort to swim back.
-
-Sam was just beginning to feel that the raft must soon
-go to pieces, when they were suddenly swept around a
-bend and into a calm expanse of water, though a few
-hundred yards further on he saw the line of white foam
-that indicated other rapids ahead.
-
-Calling to his companions to assist him, and putting
-forth a superhuman effort himself, Sam succeeded in
-getting the raft out of the current and into a little cove
-where there was shallow water and a ledge of smooth,
-shelving rocks that made a good landing place.
-
-They straightened out the logs, made them fast again,
-and then they took off the arms and frayed blankets
-that had not been swept from the raft by the rocks and
-rapids.
-
-This done the three clambered up to a dry place,
-though they were so wet that it would not have made
-any difference if they stood in the water.
-
-Thinking that Ulna might have made a landing at
-some point along the shore of this calm expanse, Sam
-looked up and down both banks, but excepting Ike,
-Wah Shin and himself there was not a living creature
-in sight, even the dog had been unable to resist the
-force of the current.
-
-"Dis am a mighty bad fix, sure enuff," were Ike's
-first words as he surveyed his dripping form and then
-began slowly to take in the situation.
-
-"It might be worse," was Sam's comment, though if
-he had been called on to explain how it well could be
-worse, he would have been at a loss to tell.
-
-"Watel we do nex," asked Wah Shin, and he half-raised
-his hands and let them fall again to indicate his
-utter helplessness.
-
-Sam could not reply. He would have felt a great
-sense of relief if either of the others had made a reasonable
-suggestion.
-
-It was growing dark, and he knew that it would be
-madness to attempt the river again till the light of another
-full day lay before them.
-
-In answer to Wah Shin's question, Ike said:
-
-"I'll tell yeh w'at I'd like to do, Wah."
-
-"I can tellee mesel lat too," said Wah Shin.
-
-"In de fust place I'd like some nice dry clothes."
-
-"I too," said Wah.
-
-"Den I wouldn't mind bein' in a nice house."
-
-"Ugh," and Wah shrugged himself as if he thought
-that a very lovely idea.
-
-"Den," continued Ike, as he smacked his lips, "I'd
-like to be a settin' down to a table in dat house."
-
-"Ha!" cried Wah.
-
-"An'—an' I'd like to hab dat table filled way up wid
-good tings, an' me a settin' dar free to pile in all I
-wanted——"
-
-"Dat am belly nice," said Wah.
-
-"Den arter I'd eat, an' eat an' eat, till I couldn't
-more'n stan', I'd have some one pick me up and tote
-me off to de wahmest, softest bed——"
-
-At this point Sam interrupted by saying:
-
-"We must all take off our clothes and wring them
-out, for I am not going to try it again till morning."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.—AFLOAT AGAIN.
-==========================
-
-
-Work is the one certain remedy for a troubled
-mind. Sam felt that if he didn't do something
-he should go distracted, and judging by his own feelings
-he reasoned that it would be better for Ike and Wah
-Shin if their hands and brains were employed.
-
-He made them wring out their own clothes and
-the blankets, and spread them on the rocks to dry; and
-then all three set to work to repair the damage to the
-raft.
-
-They found that the ropes that held the logs together
-had been cut and frayed by the keen edges of the
-rocks, with which they were brought into contact.
-
-They took the whole raft to pieces; first having tied
-the rope till it was as strong, though shorter, than it
-was before, and then they refastened the whole structure,
-making it as secure as possible with the material
-at hand.
-
-They had but just completed their work, and made
-the raft fast by anchoring it to a stone, when it suddenly
-grew so dark that they could hardly see each
-other.
-
-They next put on their clothes, which were far from
-being dry, and their discomfort was increased by a keen,
-cold wind, that came driving down the cañon.
-
-"Wat's to be did de nex'?" asked Ike, his teeth chattering
-and his voice tremulous with the cold.
-
-"We must move about till our clothes get dry. It
-will never do to have rheumatism added to our other
-troubles," said Sam.
-
-"Wa'al, I dunno dat we'd be much de wuss off, if we
-had rheumatiz, an' measles, an' toothaches, an' dem
-tings. Fac' is, Mistah Sam, we couldn't well be in a
-badder fix, no matter wat happened to us."
-
-"Oh, yes," drawled Wah Shin, "'spose we hab no
-clothes, no laftee, no gun, no can gettee way, den wat?"
-
-"Keep moving, boys, till you get warm," called out
-Sam, and he set the example by walking about on the
-flat top of the rock, taking care that neither himself nor
-companions went too close to the perilous edge.
-
-The exertion and the heat of their bodies warmed
-them up and dried their clothes, but by this time it was
-near midnight.
-
-There was no danger of being disturbed by savage foe
-or wild beast, still Sam thought it better to keep up the
-system of guards he had first established.
-
-He was so weary that he could have dropped on the
-hard, cold rock on which he stood, and been asleep at
-once, but that fine sense of duty that distinguished all
-his acts, led him to forget or put aside his own wants
-for the safety and comfort of others.
-
-But though Ike loved to eat and sleep as well as any
-youth, black or white, that ever lived, there was a
-"streek" of thoughtfulness and unselfishness in his
-character that asserted itself now and then.
-
-When the order of the watch was arranged, Ike laid
-his hand on his young master's shoulder and said:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam, does yeh tink I'm blind?"
-
-"Certainly not, Ike. Why should you ask such a
-question as that?" asked Sam, in great surprise.
-
-"Coz, Ize got de reasons."
-
-"Well, what are they?"
-
-"Don't yeh tink I'ze been a watchin' ob yeh?"
-
-"What of it, Ike?"
-
-"Dar's dis ob it. I'ze seed yeh a workin' an' a workin',
-an' not gettin' no rest nur sleep, but jest a layin'
-yersel' out foh to keer for us no-account folks, and make
-us comf'able. Now, I know I'm mean 'bout habin' my
-share ob grub an' sleepin', an' dem tings, but I ain't so
-mean's not to see an' tink."
-
-"You are a good fellow, Ike, but I really can't see
-what you are driving at," said Sam.
-
-"I'm dribein' at dis, dat you'z got to rest de fust one.
-Har, de blankets ain't so awful wet, an' if you ain't
-wahm enough, yeh can hab my coat. So do lie down
-an' take a sleep, dat'll make yeh brain more clarer foh
-to tink to-morrow."
-
-When one is inclined to a thing, it does not require
-much urging.
-
-Sam yielded to Ike's entreaties, which were supported
-by Wah Shin, in the strongest English he could command.
-
-They made him as comfortable as possible under the
-circumstances, and, after promising to wake him when
-his turn came, they crept off some distance, and sitting
-down side by side they talked in whispers like a pair of
-conspirators.
-
-"Wah Shin?"
-
-"Glang, Ike, me gottee no deaf," said Wah.
-
-"You're a good feller."
-
-"Me tinkee so, too," said the modest Mongolian.
-
-"You like Mistah Sam?"
-
-"Oh, yes; likee him gleat heap."
-
-"I thought so."
-
-"Him belly fine youngee man."
-
-"Now, Wah, you an' me's had a heap sight more
-sleep dan Mistah Sam since we started out on dis yar
-scrimmidge, ain't we?"
-
-"Oh, yes, heap molee."
-
-"So," continued Ike with the confidential whisper of
-one about to communicate a great secret, "I wants you
-an' me to play a trick on him."
-
-"Playee tlick!" repeated Wah, puzzled as to the
-meaning.
-
-"Yes; yeh see he's sleepin' now like a angel."
-
-"Dunno; me nebel see angel. W'at him?"
-
-Without attempting to enlighten Wah as to the nature
-of angels, of which it must be confessed he had only a
-vague conception himself, Ike said.
-
-"We must let him sleep right straight 'long till de
-mornin'; den w'en he gits up an' rubs his eyes an' sees
-it's daylight, he'll be dat s'prised ho won't know w'at to
-say. Won't dat be a trick?"
-
-"Him belly nice tlick," chuckled Wah. "Heap
-muchee fun. Let 'im sleep; you, me watchee till sun
-him come top-side galore. Ike, you gottee heap big
-head," and Wah patted the black boy's head in a way
-that showed affection and approval.
-
-A generous master makes faithful servants. We do
-not know whether this is an adage or not, but it sounds
-as if it ought to be.
-
-So weary was poor Sam that Ike and Wah Shin might
-have slept through the night without his knowing it,
-but it did not require his watchful presence to make
-them dutiful.
-
-They divided the night into two reliefs, each taking a
-half and doing his duty with the fine sense of pleasure
-that came from the knowledge that they were cheating
-Sam into a long and much needed rest.
-
-Sam certainly was much surprised when he got up in
-the morning and saw the flush of day in the strip of sky
-far overhead and the light coming into the depths of the
-cañon.
-
-He was certainly much refreshed by his rest, and
-when he saw Ike smiling near by, he at once guessed
-what had been done.
-
-"Why didn't you wake me up?" he asked.
-
-Ike laughed and at once told him of "the trick" he
-and Wah Shin had played.
-
-Sam was much touched by this evidence of thoughtfulness
-and devotion, and he fastened it in his memory,
-that it might be easily recalled if the chance ever came
-to show his appreciation in another form than words.
-
-This was the first morning that they were wholly
-without food since starting on their journey.
-
-All were decidedly hungry, but not a word was said
-about eating. Even Ike, always ready to show he had
-an appetite, felt that it would be somewhat personal
-to talk about "grub," but at heart he blamed himself
-for having eat so much the day before. It would
-have been the part of wisdom, he thought, to have
-put a little away for this morning.
-
-"Wa'al, Mistah Sam, wat's to be did nex'?" asked
-Ike, as he looked down at the white line that marked
-the beginning of another series of unknown rapids
-about three hundred yards away.
-
-"We must try it again, Ike," said Sam, bravely.
-
-"Down de ribber?"
-
-"Do you think we could go up?"
-
-"Wa'al, not berry well, an' if we could dis chile
-wouldn't be in foh tryin' it again."
-
-"Then we must go down."
-
-"No cannee help oulsel's, if so we go flom dis," said
-Wah Shin, with all the wisdom of Confucius.
-
-Once more the few remaining things were placed as
-securely as was possible on the raft.
-
-Again, and without the wondering of the day before,
-Ike and Wah Shin imitated Sam by tying themselves to
-the raft.
-
-With much of that feeling of desperation that stirs an
-officer who leads his men in a hopeless assault against a
-powerful enemy, Sam pushed the raft into the stream.
-
-The current near the shore was slow, but as they got
-out further it became more rapid, until at length they
-shot down with the speed of a race-horse for the white
-line of foam that flashed between the grim walls like
-the teeth of some fierce monster set in lips of stone.
-
-"Cling tight to the raft, boys!" cried Sam, as the
-logs began to groan and tremble. "Cling fast and keep
-cool! We are going through all right!"
-
-The brave fellow did not have much faith in his own
-words, but they had an inspiriting effect on the others.
-
-Into the warring rapids shot the raft, and in an instant
-all were drenched in the spray that dashed around them.
-
-Sam could not see ten feet ahead.
-
-His mind, like the waters and the raft, was in a wild
-whirl; yet, with the grip of a drowning man, he clung
-to the logs and tried to shout words of cheer to the
-others.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.—THE TRIAL BEGINS.
-=============================
-
-
-At the instigation of Collins and his partner, Si
-Brill, a number of men started off from Hurley's
-Gulch to see if they could find Sam Willett and his companions,
-or learn anything of their fate.
-
-Neither the searchers nor those who sent them had
-any great faith in their mission, but the very fact that
-they tried shows that they were moved by a feeling of
-commendable humanity.
-
-Three days passed and the men came back saying they
-could not find Sam Willett, nor the others, and giving
-it as their opinion, that they had all been drowned.
-
-In the meantime Frank Shirley, who had much of
-that cunning and ingenuity for which men of his character
-are so often noted, sought to create the impression
-that Sam was alive, but that he had run away, in order
-not to be forced to appear against his father.
-
-The night the searchers came back there was a great
-crowd in the bar of the principal saloon, and as Shirley
-was treating, as usual, he was the center of attraction
-and virtually the chairman of the gathering.
-
-A few of the men had just expressed sorrow for Sam's
-death, when Shirley said:
-
-"I'd be sorrier than any one if I knew the young
-fellow was dead, but I'm happy to say I don't believe he
-is."
-
-"Of course, you've got reasons for your belief," said
-one.
-
-"Yes; I always have good reasons for everything I
-do and say," said Shirley, feeling the authority his free
-use of money had given him.
-
-"Mebbe you'd tell us why you think so," said the
-man.
-
-"I'll explain by asking you some questions," said
-Shirley, licking his lips, as he always did while speaking.
-
-"Fire ahead," said the man.
-
-"You remember that Indian boy—what's his name?"
-
-"Ulna," suggested the man.
-
-"Yes, Ulna. Well, the day of the arrest of these
-two men, Willett and Tims, for the cruel murder of
-poor Tom Edwards, this Indian boy was sent to Gold
-Cave Camp to bring back the son of one of the prisoners
-and a certain paper. Isn't that so?" and Shirley
-looked around for the approval of the assembly.
-
-"Yes, that's so!" shouted a number.
-
-"Now," continued Frank Shirley, with the deliberation
-of a man who had carefully weighed what he was
-about to say, "I ask you gentlemen if this Ulna returned
-to Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"No!" exclaimed half the men in the place.
-
-"Of course he didn't. Now, what should we, as
-sensible men, infer from this fact?"
-
-Again Shirley looked about the room, and as no one
-attempted to say what should be inferred from the fact
-as stated, he proceeded to enlighten them.
-
-"As Ulna did not come back and cannot be found, it
-is safe to infer that he succeeded in delivering his message
-to Mr. Willett's son."
-
-"Yes," said the man who had drawn Shirley out, "I
-must say it looks very much that way."
-
-"Very well; Mr. Willett's son, who is a wonderfully
-brave, bright young fellow, got that message, and from
-this fact I make another inference."
-
-Shirley licked his lips and remained silent so long that
-it was becoming painful, and Badger voiced the feeling
-of the crowd by calling out:
-
-"Go ahead and give us yer p'ints!"
-
-"If Ulna could get to Gold Cave Camp in the night
-with that message, don't you think that young Sam Willett
-could get away?"
-
-Nearly every one said this looked reasonable.
-
-"Now, my belief," Shirley went on, "is that he and
-all hands did get away. The searchers, who have just
-come from the camp, say the place was cleaned out,
-rifles and all that being gone, which wouldn't be the
-case if the folks were drowned."
-
-"But," said the man who had started this discussion,
-"if the young feller got away, why didn't he come right
-straight to Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"Ah, that's the vital question," said Shirley, with a
-more vigorous lick at his lips. "Now, you'd like to
-know why I think he didn't come here?"
-
-"I certainly should," said the man.
-
-"It was because he had no paper to bring. Oh, he's
-a bright fellow; he's a second cousin of mine, and I can
-put myself in his place and just see how he reasoned
-about this matter."
-
-"Don't wait, but go right in and tell us all about it,"
-said the impatient Badger, whose admiration for his
-employer was rising every moment.
-
-"Why, he reasoned that if he came here without Tom
-Edwards' receipt—which he knew had no existence—that
-the gentlemen of the vigilance committee would
-make short work of his father——"
-
-"And he was as right as right can be in that guess,"
-interrupted Badger.
-
-"But," continued Shirley, "being a keen young
-fellow, he made up his mind that nothing would
-be done to his father if he stayed away. He believed
-the vigilantes would wait for several days, as they've
-already done, and that by the end of that time their
-anger would go down; they would look more lightly on
-the murder of poor Tom Edwards—and that would be
-the last of it. But talking is mighty dry work; step
-up to the bar, boys, and have a drink with me."
-
-Like other invitations of the same kind, from the
-same source, this one was promptly accepted, the effect
-being to convince nearly every man that there was no
-getting away from Frank Shirley's reasoning.
-
-Before the meeting broke up that night, which it did
-not do till a late hour, it was firmly decided that the
-trial of Mr. Willett and Hank Tims should take place
-the next day, which being Sunday would enable every
-one at Hurley's Gulch to be present.
-
-In addition to its effect on the unfortunate men, the
-foregoing conversation serves admirably to show how a
-cunning and malicious man can pervert facts to suit
-himself, and while making them seem most like truth
-to the reason, have them exactly opposite to it in fact.
-
-Unobserved by the crowd in the bar, Collins had
-overheard this conversation, and the conclusion to which
-a majority of the vigilantes had come.
-
-Being simple-hearted, Collins was imposed on for the
-time being by Shirley's argument, and while he was listening
-to it he really believed that it might be true; but
-as he slowly returned to the dugout, his good sense asserted
-itself and he saw the utter falsity of the fellow's
-reasoning.
-
-Knowing how deeply troubled Mr. Willett was by the
-uncertain fate of his beloved son, Collins said nothing
-to him about the decision of the vigilantes till the following
-morning.
-
-After breakfast Collins repeated the talk at the saloon
-the night before, and added:
-
-"I hope the feller's right 'bout the boy's safety."
-
-"Ah, I wish he were," sighed Mr. Willett. "But if
-my dear boy were living, and he could get to me, sleep
-would not touch his eyes till he was again at my side."
-
-"Thar's one thing in partiklar I'd like to git out of
-this scrape for," said Hank, and on being asked by Brill
-what that thing was, he continued:
-
-"I'd like to lick that lyin' slanderin' cowardly Shirley.
-Only to think of a critter like him accusin' young Sam
-Willett of doin' a low, mean trick. Ah, he's a dirty
-dog, if one ever came west of the Sierra Madres."
-
-Up to this time Mr. Willett had not explained to Collins
-and Si Brill, Shirley's reasons for desiring to see his
-son dead and himself out of the way. He did so
-now.
-
-"Wa'al!" exclaimed Brill, "that thar explanation
-shows the culled pusson in the wood-pile, as clar as daylight.
-Ah, I only wish Bob Sturgis—he was a lawyer—didn't
-leave camp when he did; but I'll see that you
-have a show to defend yourself, if we've got to fight for
-it?"
-
-While the sturdy miner was speaking, two rough looking
-men—they were the worst element in the vigilance
-committee—appeared in the doorway and one of them
-called out:
-
-"We've come from the kimitty, and we'er agoin' to
-fotch up the prizners; so trot 'em out."
-
-"We'll trot 'em out," replied Collins, as he took
-down his rifle from a peg, "and we'll trot along with
-'em, for neither Si Brill nor me has give up our office as
-guards yet, an' what's more, we ain't agoin' to do it till
-this case is ended, one way or the other."
-
-"We ain't got no objection," growled one of the men,
-"only don't keep us waitin' har all day."
-
-"If yer in a great hurry," retorted Brill, as he also
-reached for his rifle, "go back as you come, for we've
-got charge of the prizners, and you can't take 'em from
-us without a fight."
-
-The two men stepped back to consult, and Collins
-whispered, as he handed Mr. Willett and Hank two revolvers
-each:
-
-"Hide those about your clothes, you may find them
-handy before we get through with this scrape."
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims quickly secreted the revolvers
-in their inside breast pockets and then followed
-the guards out of the dugout.
-
-They clambered up the bank, ignoring the two men
-who constituted the "kimitty" and went on to the
-hotel, the dining-room of which—it was also the
-kitchen—was set apart by the proprietor for the trial.
-
-The place was already crowded to suffocation, and a
-curious feature of the gathering was the fact that the
-burly, bearded man, who was to act as judge, and every
-other man in the room, was armed to the teeth and
-looked as if eager for a fight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.—A BREAK IN THE CLOUDS.
-===================================
-
-
-The second series of rapids, though much more
-dreaded by Sam than the first, proved to be
-neither very long, nor, by comparison, very dangerous.
-
-Within ten minutes from the time of entering them
-they were passed in safety, and the raft was floating
-down the broadest, smoothest current they had experienced
-since starting on their perilous journey.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin cautiously released their hold on
-the logs and looked about them.
-
-Sam again stood up with the steering pole in his
-hands.
-
-Straight as an arrow, and for fully three miles, the
-river could be seen flowing down between its towering
-banks.
-
-This sight brought to Sam a sense of great relief, and
-its effect on Ike was decidedly exhilarating.
-
-Standing up in the front of the raft he waved his
-arms like a windmill and shouted out:
-
-"Bress de Lor! we'z safe! we'z safe!"
-
-Escape from the awful dangers they had just come
-through so miraculously made Ike forget, for the moment,
-his hunger and the fact that there could be
-no safety to people floating on a shaky raft, down a river
-whose course seemed through the very heart of sterile,
-towering mountains.
-
-Ah, well, this only goes to show that, no matter how
-desperate the situation we always have something to be
-thankful for; and that no matter how bad things are, so
-long as life, health and hope remain, they might be
-worse.
-
-Another thing very unusual in this experience was the
-fact that the cañon walls, instead of rising straight up
-from the water, stood back, leaving on either side a
-strip on which, amid great masses of detached sandstone
-there grew a number of stunted mezquite and cedar
-trees.
-
-They were all as wet as they well could be, but they
-had grown so accustomed to this that Sam made up his
-mind not to go ashore to dry their clothes, but to keep
-right on, when a shout from Ike caused him to change
-his purpose.
-
-"I see a wolf or a deer; way dar to de right!" and
-Ike pointed down to where the bushes hid the rocks.
-
-"Lat no deel," said Wah Shin, as he bent forward
-and shaded his eyes.
-
-"Mebbe yeh ken tell us wat it is," said Ike, with a
-touch of sarcasm, for having discovered the animal he
-felt that he had a right to say what it was.
-
-"Lat's yalla doggee," said Wah Shin.
-
-And Wah Shin was right, for at that instant the
-animal sprang into view and began a vigorous barking,
-and a frisking back and forth.
-
-"It's Maj! It's Maj!" cried Ike.
-
-Maj it certainly was, and the joy of the faithful creature
-at seeing his friends was touching.
-
-Sam at once guided the raft to the shore, but while
-it was yet many yards away, the dog swam out, was
-pulled on board and at once jumped on Sam, who if he
-had not been wet before certainly would have been now.
-
-"Dat ar dog looks to me ez if he had been habin' a
-big feed some place," said Ike, when they got on shore,
-and he could examine Maj's rounded form, which his
-dripping coat made more conspicuous.
-
-"Mebbe him full of watel," suggested Wah Shin.
-
-"No," said Ike, as he pressed the dog's sides, "it's
-grub; good solid grub." Then, addressing Maj, he said,
-in tones intended to be very seductive: "See har, ole
-feller, don't go foh to tell me dat yer hungry, like we is.
-You'se been eatin' meat, don't say 'no' foh I won't stan'
-it; but, like a good dorg, show me de place whar yeh
-found it, an' if ebber I gits out ob dis yeh fix, I'll buy
-yeh a brass collar, wif yeh name on de outside in great
-big letters."
-
-As if he understood this and was anxious to earn the
-reward so generously offered him, Maj started off with a
-short, sharp bark, but before he had gone very far he
-turned and came slowly back again, as if he had changed
-his mind.
-
-Meanwhile, Wah Shin got together a pile of dry wood,
-and, as the matches in Sam's water-proof case escaped
-the water, they soon had a roaring fire, before which
-their cargo and their clothes—the latter well tattered—were
-placed to dry.
-
-At first Sam, who was now very hungry, was inclined
-to think that it was a whim of Ike's that led him to see
-anything suggestive of food in the dog's appearance, but
-when he came to look carefully at the animal and study
-his contented manner, he was satisfied that he had found
-something to eat since being washed from the raft.
-
-With nearly all his clothes drying before the fire, Sam,
-followed by Ike, started off to examine the shore further
-down.
-
-He had not gone far when he noticed great clefts in
-the walls of the cañon, as if the mighty mass had been
-cracked by some tremendous power.
-
-These fissures ran up and back for thousands of feet,
-but the largest one visible was not of sufficient width to
-admit of their getting up in that way, neither were these
-openings on the side of the cañon which they must ascend
-in order to reach Hurley's Gulch.
-
-An examination of the point where one of the fissures
-came down to the shore convinced Sam that some creatures
-had used this passage-way recently as an avenue
-for ascending to the upper world, or coming down to
-this profound and silent valley.
-
-He had just communicated this opinion to Ike, and
-was about to turn away when his attention was attracted
-to the dog, now standing with his right paw raised, his
-tail extended and his whole form as rigid as if it had
-been cut in marble.
-
-"See!" shouted Ike, "Maj is on de p'int! Whar,
-whar's de game?"
-
-The words had scarcely passed his lips when there
-was a squeak and a rushing noise, and a score, or more,
-long-eared rabbits dashed by within twenty feet of the
-party.
-
-"Hooraw! Rabbits! rabbits!" cried Ike. "Let us
-git our guns! Rabbits makes bully grub!"
-
-Sam had not his gun with him, but he at once started
-back to the fire and examined his rifle, which had come
-through without being damaged.
-
-The water had not affected the metallic cartridges, of
-which he had a good supply left. Filling his belt with
-these he started off, Ike keeping by his side with his remarkable
-old shot-gun on his shoulder, though its utter
-uselessness had been emphasized by its recent heavy
-rusting.
-
-Ike was useful, however, in holding back the dog,
-who had evidently been feeding on rabbit since his landing
-at this place.
-
-Sam was an excellent rifleman, having had much
-practice, and being possessed of nerves as true and
-steady as steel, without which the weapon can never be
-mastered.
-
-He crept ahead, and about three hundred yards below
-the camp he came within sight of a little cove, or
-pocket, in the cañon wall that seemed literally to swarm
-with long-eared rabbits.
-
-He fired with judgment, and kept firing while the
-creatures remained in sight and he was sure of his
-shots.
-
-The result was that within five minutes he had killed
-thirteen rabbits.
-
-Everyone that was struck was taken, and to the true
-hunter, who never inflicts an unnecessary wound on the
-animals he hunts, this is always a great satisfaction.
-
-Ike was disappointed that he had not been permitted
-to try "her," as he called his old shot-gun, on the game;
-but, as he picked up the goodly load of rabbits and carried
-it back to camp, it would be difficult to imagine a
-more delighted fellow.
-
-It is said that "it never rains but it pours," and this
-seemed to be the case with the sudden turn in the tide
-of good luck that had set in toward our unfortunate
-friends.
-
-When they got back to camp, they found that Wah
-Shin had been testing the fish lines and flies, which they
-had scarcely thought of up to this time, and with such
-unexpectedly good luck that he had landed two fine
-trout and was in the act of pulling in the third when
-Ike came to sight laden down with game.
-
-The least ray of light is cheering to those who have
-been long in darkness; and the briefest cessation from
-pain is like Heaven to those groaning in agony! so the
-prospect of food—a prospect made all the more delightful
-by the gnawing hunger each felt so keenly—made
-them forget for the time all the trials they had passed
-and the uncertain future that lay before them.
-
-Even the fire blazed up cheerily as if in sympathy
-with their feelings, and Maj lay down like a faithful
-scout, who has guided the famished into a land—of
-rabbits.
-
-In almost as short a time as it takes to tell it, the
-rabbits and the fish were cooking.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe that feast, for there
-are some things impossible to even our expressive English
-tongue.
-
-Suffice it to say, each ate all he could, with a result
-that "made away" with one half the supply on hand.
-
-They had just finished their most enjoyable meal,
-when Wah Shin, who chanced to be looking toward the
-river, uttered a cry of alarm.
-
-The others quickly turned in that direction, and, to
-their amazement, they saw the spectral figure of a dark
-man rising from the water.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.—"JOY! JOY! IT IS ULNA AGAIN!"
-===========================================
-
-
-Unlike Ike and Wah Shin, Sam Willett was not
-the least superstitious, yet, as he saw the spectral
-figure rising from the shore he could not imagine it a
-human being.
-
-"Did you think me dead?" asked the dripping figure.
-
-By this time Sam had leaped to his feet and advanced
-toward their extraordinary visitor.
-
-He was not long in doubt.
-
-There was no mistaking the lithe figure and the now
-pinched but still expressive face.
-
-"Joy! joy! It is Ulna again!" cried Sam, and with a
-bound he was on the shore and the young Ute was in his
-arms.
-
-As soon as Ike and Wah Shin were convinced that
-this was Ulna in the flesh and not his ghost, they ran
-down and performed such a war dance about him, as
-they held his hands, as he never witnessed around the
-camp fires of his own tribe.
-
-When Ike could give expression to his delight, he
-pulled Ulna in the direction of the fire, calling out the
-while:
-
-"Tum along; tum along! you looks if yeh hadn't
-had nawthin' to eat foh years. We kin fix yeh. We
-kin stuff yeh with rabbits till yeh can't stan'; an' w'en
-dem's gone we knows de place whar we kin go an' git
-lots moah."
-
-Ulna certainly did look famished, but true to himself,
-neither by word nor sign did he give expression to the
-sufferings he had passed through nor the agony of
-hunger he was now enduring.
-
-The half of a cooked rabbit was left from the recent
-banquet, and Ulna had this placed in his hand and
-made to sit on a stone before the fire.
-
-"Eat 'em allee up; me gettee nodle one, no time,"
-said Wah Shin, who was never so happy as when he was
-cooking.
-
-"Yes," urged Ike, "wade right in. Dar ain't no
-stint dis time. We've found de head-quahtahs ob all de
-rabbits, an' we ain't a gwine foh to be hungry no moah."
-
-After all these expressions of hospitality and good
-will, Sam had a chance to say, as he took a seat beside
-Ulna.
-
-"I thought I had seen you for the last time, but
-thank God you and all of us are saved to meet again."
-
-"When I called 'farewell' to you," said Ulna, "I
-felt the end had come, but like the people of my
-tribe I did not give up——"
-
-"Nevah give up de ship," interjected Ike.
-
-"I made up my mind to resist the flood till my
-strength was gone," continued Ulna.
-
-"One ain't got much strent, onless he's got plenty to
-eat an' lots ob time to sleep," said Ike, who, though
-much interested in Ulna, felt that he must give expression
-to his own feelings or choke.
-
-The young Indian explained that he was so weighted
-down by his rifle and cartridges that, after the first
-rapids had been passed, he had only strength left to
-keep afloat without being able to make the shore.
-
-"When I was swept into the second rapids," he said,
-"all hope vanished. I must have been rendered unconscious
-by some blow, but be that as it may, I have
-no memory of reaching the bank. When I came to last
-night I was half lying in the water. I drew myself out
-and walked about, trying to find something to eat. I
-could not sleep for thinking of you, for I did not see, after
-what I had suffered, how you were to get through the
-rapids on the raft."
-
-"I cannot describe to you how my heart beat with joy
-a few hours ago, when I saw the raft shooting out of the
-foam with all its passengers except the dog on board. I
-saw you making for the shore, and I shouted to attract
-your attention to the opposite side."
-
-"If we'd a heerd yeh, yeh wouldn't ha' had to hollered
-twice," said Ike.
-
-"I did not feel very strong till I saw you, and then,
-as there was nothing else left me, I made up my mind
-to try swimming across."
-
-"An' you made it; you made it like a—like a mice,
-an' yeh fotched yeh rifle widge yeh," said Ike, in tones
-of great approval.
-
-"Ike he heap talkee," said Wah Shin, as he sat another
-half of a broiled rabbit before Ulna. "Me cookee light
-slate along."
-
-"And now," said Ulna, who had the rare faculty of
-eating while he spoke, "tell me how you made out after
-we parted in that strange way."
-
-Sam narrated the adventures, already recorded, and
-after some discussion, to Ike's great delight, it was decided
-to remain here for at least another day, and to lay
-in a supply of rabbits before they faced the unknown
-and dreaded cañon again.
-
-After Ulna had appeased his hunger, Sam made him
-lie down before the fire and take a sleep, while he and
-Ike went off on another hunting expedition.
-
-They brought home several loads of rabbits during
-the day, and Wah Shin, who believed the game would
-keep better if it were cooked, busied himself broiling
-rabbits till the last one was in an edible condition.
-
-Toward evening Ulna got up from the blanket, in
-which he had been wrapped, and when he put on his
-clothes he looked like an entirely different being from
-the spectre that appeared at the river side some hours
-before.
-
-Now that the immediate danger from hunger was
-over, Sam would have been comparatively happy had it
-not been for thoughts of his father.
-
-It is well that it is not given to us to lift the veil of
-the future, or to tell what is happening beyond the
-range of our own vision. Yet, it must be confessed,
-that it would have eased the minds of the loving father
-and the devoted son, if each could have known of the
-situation of the other at this time.
-
-It was not in Ike's nature to feel trouble for any
-length of time. He had all the light-heartedness of his
-race, and an enviable capacity for enjoying the present.
-
-He played with the dog; he laughed and sang, till at
-length, overcome with the excess of enjoyment—and it
-may be the great quantities of broiled rabbit he had
-eaten, he threw himself on the ground before the fire
-and was asleep in no time.
-
-Again Sam detailed the guards, taking the first
-watch himself, and when another morning dawned
-they found themselves more rested and refreshed than
-they had been at any time since leaving Gold Cave
-Camp.
-
-The night before Ulna busied himself cutting the
-jack-rabbits' skins into strips, which he knotted and
-twisted into ropes, and these ropes were found of the
-greatest use in binding the pieces of the raft together
-before they resumed their journey down the long, dark,
-watery arcade.
-
-They were afloat again soon after daylight, and the
-thought that they were safe and sound and all together
-again brought unspeakable joy to every heart—and we
-might include Maj in the list, for from his seat in the
-middle of the raft he eyed his friends with an expression
-of great comfort and satisfaction.
-
-Long before the sun rose high enough to look into the
-cañon they had drifted many miles away from their
-camp of the morning.
-
-The current, which Sam estimated at about three
-miles an hour, was unbroken; flowing on in silent majesty,
-between the cold, gray cliffs that rose at points for
-more than a mile sheer up, till their eyes grew giddy in
-measuring their elevation.
-
-Here and there, to the right and left, they passed side
-cañons, black and forbidding, like cells set in the walls
-of a mighty prison.
-
-In the afternoon these side cañons became more
-frequent, and as they approached one Sam saw that a
-stream of clear water was pouring out from between its
-walls.
-
-As this opening was on the east, or left bank, and in
-the direction of Hurley's Gulch, he determined to try
-and get the raft into it, and see if they could find an
-avenue to the upper world through its bed.
-
-He told Ulna of his purpose, and in an instant the
-young Ute had a pole in his hand.
-
-They could touch bottom at this point and as the current
-from the side cañon was not very strong, they succeeded
-in getting the raft in.
-
-The bed of the stream was so narrow in places that
-Ike on one side and Wah Shin on the other were enabled
-to help along by pulling at the rocks.
-
-It was growing dark again, and Sam, elated at their
-success so far, began to fear that they might not be able
-to reach a place where they could make fast for the
-night, when all at once the cañon walls, as if they had
-been touched by the wand of a magician, expanded into
-a beautiful bowl-shaped valley.
-
-This valley, in the dim light, looked to be fully a quarter
-of a mile in diameter, and to the great surprise of
-all it had grassy banks; and as their feet touched the
-sward the delicious odor of wild thyme and Indian
-pinks filled the air.
-
-They found enough dry wood to make a fire to warm
-up their meat.
-
-"It looks to me," said Sam, as he sat quietly before
-the fire, for some time after supper, "as if the worst is
-over, and that we can get to Hurley's Gulch without
-much trouble from here."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.—THE TRIAL IN PROGRESS.
-=====================================
-
-
-It cannot be denied that these rude forms of justice,
-known as "Judge Lynch's Courts," have done
-some good in disorganized conditions of society, by deterring,
-if not in punishing, crime. Indeed, in many
-cases vigilance committees have been of the greatest service,
-even in places where the law is supposed to be in
-force. At one time these committees saved the city of
-San Francisco from the control of murderers and gamblers.
-
-But on the whole they do more harm than good, for,
-as in the present instance at Hurley's Gulch, bad men
-join them for self-protection or to carry out their own
-selfish ends.
-
-The only men who can properly administer justice are
-those accustomed to weighing evidence, and, no matter
-how well meaning, rough miners are apt to be influenced
-by their feelings rather than their reason.
-
-It would not have taken a stranger long to see that a
-majority of the men gathered in that canvas-covered
-apartment, in the hotel at Hurley's Gulch, were prejudiced
-against the prisoners.
-
-To Mr. Willett, who was familiar with the dignified
-forms of courts of justice in the East, the proceedings
-looked like a burlesque on law, for an attempt was made
-to do things after the manner of long established
-methods.
-
-Before the prisoners were brought in, it was decided
-by the committee having the matter in charge, that a
-man named Jacks, an ignorant, red-faced fellow, who
-had occupied a similar position on a former occasion,
-should act as judge.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were given camp-chairs
-directly in front of "the judge," who was making a
-desperate effort to maintain the dignified bearing supposed
-to be essential to the office.
-
-The judge rapped with the bottom of a heavy tumbler—the
-contents of which he had just drank—on a
-little pine table by his side and called out:
-
-"The next thing in order, gents, is to 'lect a sheriff
-and a clerk, for I propose that everything in this court
-shall be square and reg'lar; and, if the prizners has any
-objections to the officers they must say so now, or forever
-after hold their peace."
-
-When the judge had ceased speaking, a man with
-a bullet-head, a red shirt and no neck to speak of—he
-was the proprietor of this remarkable hotel—pushed
-himself through the crowd and called out:
-
-"I nominate Badger for sheriff of this here court."
-
-Without waiting for this motion to be seconded, the
-judge yelled out:
-
-"All in favor of Badger for sheriff say 'aye,' all opposed
-say 'aye,' too."
-
-As this arrangement left no chance for those who
-might be opposed to Badger to say "no," he was declared
-to be unanimously elected.
-
-"Next thing in order is to 'lect a clerk," said the
-judge.
-
-The man who had nominated Badger now yelled out:
-
-"I name Frank Shirley for clerk!"
-
-The judge, without waiting for the forms in such
-cases, would have declared Shirley elected had not Mr.
-Willett leaped to his feet and shouted:
-
-"I protest."
-
-"One of the prizners protests," said the judge, and
-he picked up the tumbler with an angry gesture, as if
-about to hurl it at Mr. Willett's head.
-
-Frank Shirley evidently expected to act as clerk of the
-court without any opposition, for as soon as his name
-was called he pushed himself to the front.
-
-"What objection have you got to Mr. Shirley, I'd
-like to know?" said the judge, his face growing redder
-with anger.
-
-"I have many objections," said Mr. Willett, not at
-all intimidated by the frowns of Shirley's friends.
-
-"Can't the man write?" asked the judge.
-
-"I suppose he can," replied Mr. Willett.
-
-"Wa'al, if he can write what more do you want in a
-clerk?" said the judge.
-
-"Many things."
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"He should be free from prejudices."
-
-"And so he is."
-
-"And so he is not," said Mr. Willett, calmly but
-firmly. "He is my bitter enemy. He has been setting
-the good men of this place against me by his slanders
-and unblushing falsehoods. If you want this trial to be
-fair you must not begin by making officers of men who
-may find it to their interest to convict me."
-
-"I mean to do what's fair," Shirley managed to say.
-"And I am not seeking this place. If you elect me I
-will serve, and do my whole duty like a man, forgetting
-the past bad character of this unfortunate man, Willett,
-who married my cousin and sent the poor woman to the
-grave by his cruelties."
-
-This speech had a powerful effect on the mob, for the
-men began to stamp, and some of them yelled:
-
-"Don't pay no heed to the prizner, but go right
-straight on with the trial!"
-
-"Yes, we'll go on with the trial," said the judge,
-rapping for order, as if determined to have it or break
-the table.
-
-Still cool and undaunted, Mr. Willett stood up till the
-storm had somewhat abated.
-
-"If," he said, "I am to have no voice in my own defence,
-then this trial is a farce and the sooner it ends in
-the murder of two innocent men the better. If the
-judge did not mean that I could object to the officers
-you were about to elect, why did he say so? I am simply
-availing myself of the privilege you grant me, and I can
-give you still stronger reasons for my opposition to this
-Frank Shirley, whom I here denounce, as a man without
-manly courage or honest principle, and wholly unworthy
-of belief. He is the one man in this territory who will
-reap wealth from the death of myself and my son; are
-you willing to let such a man take part in a trial that
-may seal my doom in his interest?"
-
-The judge was about to make an angry comment on
-this, but he was prevented by Collins, who pushed his
-way through the crowd, and said with a flash of the eyes
-that boded no good to those who opposed him:
-
-"Thar ain't no man in Hurley's Gulch, or out of it
-either that'll stand before my face, or the face of my
-pard, Si Brill, and say that either of us don't always tell
-the right up and down truth. If thar is sich a man
-har, I'd like him to trot himself out so that I ken git a
-good square look at him for 'bout three seconds and a
-half."
-
-As Collins said this, he quickly threw his strong right
-hand back on the stock of one of his revolvers and took
-a calm survey of the sea of astonished faces.
-
-If there was any man present who had doubts as to
-the honesty and veracity of Mr. Collins and his partner,
-he thought it the part of prudence to keep them to himself,
-for the present at least.
-
-"Now," continued Collins, after a half minute of
-painful silence, "I happen to know, and so does my
-pard, Si Brill, that that sneak, Shirley, who has been
-tryin' to make friends with the honest men and the
-mean ones too, in this camp, by keepin' of 'em howlin'
-drunk, will fall into a big estate over thar in Michigan,
-if Mr. Willett's son should chance to peg out afore he
-gits to be old enough to vote in politics. So, for one, I
-ain't a goin' to stand by and let that cur have anythin' to
-do with the case. And more than that, you fellers
-ought to feel ashamed, clar down to your boots, at
-'lectin' for sheriff of this court a man who's known in
-every minin' camp this side of the Sierras as a drunkard,
-a bummer—yes, and a murderer! that's Badger, and I
-make the charge right here to his face. If he don't
-deny it, mebbe some of his new found friends, Jacks, the
-judge of the court for instance, might like to take it up.
-If so, I'm just about as ready to back my words now as
-at any other time."
-
-Again Collins drew himself up and looked about him,
-with his right hand gripping the stock of his six-shooter.
-
-"See har, Collins," said the judge, speaking in tones
-intended to be very soothing, "we're not here to fight,
-but to do our duty as good men——"
-
-"But is it doin' yer duty to tell the prizners they kin
-object, and then, when one of 'em does so, to try and
-choke him off, so's to put in an enemy and a sneak as
-the clerk of this court?"
-
-"Wa'll, Collins, thar's other folks that ken write in
-this camp," said the judge. "So I'll withdraw Mr.
-Shirley, and let another be named."
-
-Much crest-fallen at this decision of the judge, and
-the very uncomplimentary opinion of himself which he
-had been forced to listen to, Frank Shirley shrunk back
-into the crowd from which he had lately emerged with
-so much confidence.
-
-Even Badger, usually so ready to assert himself, remained
-dumb in the presence of this strong, brave man.
-
-A young miner, bearing the appropriate name of
-Clark, was selected as clerk of the court, and then the
-judge said it was in order to swear in a jury.
-
-"'Cordin' to law," he added, "the prizners has a
-right to ax the jury questions, and to object to 'em if
-they doesn't pan out all right. But I hope we'll git
-along faster'n we've been doin' else this yar trial will last
-from July to eternity."
-
-As Mr. Willett did not know any of the men who
-were called to act as jurors, he judged their fitness for
-the position by their appearance, and so he offered objections
-to only two, and they were drunk.
-
-It was already noon when the judge declared that all
-the preliminaries were over, and that he was now prepared
-to go on with the trial in earnest, "and have
-justice did to the livin' and the dead."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.—OUT OF THE DEPTHS.
-================================
-
-
-The delight of Sam Willett and his friends at
-being out of the great cañon compensated them in
-part for the severe trials through which they had
-recently passed, and with the disappearance of the
-stupendous walls of the Colorado they believed all their
-troubles would vanish.
-
-Daylight convinced them that they had encamped for
-the night in a spot that seemed like an Eden when compared
-with their recent resting-places, though back from
-the charming little valley the rocks rose straight up to
-a height nearly as great as those of the main river.
-
-Hungry people care more for the quantity than the
-variety of their food, and so the boys made a hearty
-breakfast of the goodly supply of broiled rabbits, and
-then started to find a way out of the valley.
-
-Sam and Ulna soon discovered that though they could
-not take the raft much further up the side cañon, that
-they could march along its bed at the bottom of which
-flowed a little stream of clear, cool water.
-
-They came back to camp, made up their arms,
-blankets and remaining supplies into four bundles, and
-Sam announced that they would follow up the stream on
-foot, for its direction was directly toward Hurley's
-Gulch.
-
-With wise precaution Sam made fast the raft, for
-though such an event was to be dreaded, he wanted to
-have it within reach if they were again forced to go back
-to the cañon in which they had suffered so much.
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, as they took up their line of
-march along the stream, "dis seems like ole times."
-
-"How so?" asked Sam, who was always pleased to see
-the colored boy in a good humor.
-
-"W'y, we're totin' oursels instead of habin' de raft
-tote us. I 'clar to goodness, I nebber wants to see a raft
-agin the longest day I lib. Ize done wif rafts foreber
-and eber, amen."
-
-"Duno," said Wah Shin, who seemed always very
-solemn, "dat laft sabe us, me no go backe on laft. No
-laft, den we allee dead."
-
-Maj barked approval of this and began to leap on
-every one in turn to show his delight at the new method
-of travel.
-
-They found no serious obstacles in the cañon, though
-the sharp grade rose in a way that indicated they were
-rising rapidly to the table lands above.
-
-Late in the afternoon they came to a spring near the
-head of the ravine along which they had been marching
-all day, and, as it was well known to all that water and
-fuel were scarce in the uplands, it was decided to stay
-here for the night.
-
-While Ike and Wah Shin gathered dry cactus and
-weeds to make a fire, Ulna shouted to them not to make
-a light till he came back; then motioning to Sam to
-follow him he led the way up a steep ascent, the summit
-of which promised a view of the surrounding country.
-
-After a half hour's clambering they reached the top,
-and after the cramped range of vision that recently
-hemmed them in, the sight that now gladdened their
-eyes was thrilling and inspiring beyond expression.
-
-A table land, nearly devoid of vegetation, broken here
-and there by chasms, or stately pillars of sand rock came
-to view under a blaze of golden sun-light that poured
-down from a cloudless sky with a splendor nearly blinding
-in its brilliancy.
-
-Away to the east the wall of the Sierra Madre mountains
-rose up like an amethystine rampart, the snow peaks
-glowing in the light of the declining sun like mighty
-masses of fire opal.
-
-After inhaling a long breath, the better to give expression
-to his surprise and delight, Sam exclaimed in
-the poetical language of Mrs. Hemans:
-
-"For the strength of the hills we bless Thee, my
-God, our father's God!"
-
-Ulna's fine face, though usually calm and impassive,
-now showed much feeling, but that this was not due to
-the glorious scenery about them was soon evident.
-
-"Sam," he said, "I didn't care to speak to you before
-Ike and Wah Shin, for I did not want to excite them,
-but I saw something down there at the spring that
-troubles me very much."
-
-"What was that?" asked Sam.
-
-"A track."
-
-"What kind of a track?"
-
-"An Indian's."
-
-"But this is the hunting ground of your people, the
-Utes, why should we fear?"
-
-"There would be no war if the different tribes of men
-were content to stay in their own hunting grounds, but
-that track was made by an Apache," said Ulna, with
-more than usual seriousness.
-
-"How do you know it was made by an Apache?"
-
-"By the impression of the sole of the moccasin. The
-Mezcarillas have the sole in two pieces, sewed together
-down the middle; the Utes have their's in one."
-
-"But the Apaches have recently made a treaty of
-peace with the whites; why should we fear them?" said
-Sam.
-
-"The Apaches will break the treaty, or will defy it,
-if they can do so with safety. But they have never
-made a treaty with the Utes. For generations they have
-been at war with my people, and if they knew I was
-here they would be after my scalp with the hunger of
-wolves."
-
-"They could not take yours unless they took mine,"
-said Sam, reaching out his hand to prove his sincerity.
-
-"I am certain of that, Sam; but I do not want to add
-to your dangers and troubles, if I cannot lessen them."
-
-"Of course not, Ulna, but I do not understand
-you."
-
-"It may be that the Apaches, and I am not sure they
-are about, will let you and the others go on without
-harm, while if they discover me they will be sure to
-make an attack on all of us," said Ulna, speaking very
-slowly, but with a strong, steady voice.
-
-"Well, we can't help that. If they attack us we
-shall be able to show that we have rifles and know how
-to handle them," said Sam, bravely.
-
-"This is what I have been thinking," continued
-Ulna. "I can make my way alone from here faster
-than the four of us can, and I can elude the Apaches as
-the hawk eludes the wild-cat. If I can reach Hurley's
-Gulch I can start men out to your relief; if I fail you
-will be none the worse off."
-
-"This is too serious a matter to decide at once," said
-Sam. "Even to save the lives of the others, I would
-not increase your danger——"
-
-"But what if the danger of all is increased by my
-staying here?"
-
-"Then I should say go, but let us go down to the
-spring and think it all over. I am sure we can tell Ike
-and Wah Shin about this; they are both plucky and
-faithful."
-
-"As you say," was Ulna's reply, and he cast a quick
-glance about the horizon before descending from the
-rock on which they had been standing.
-
-"What do you see?" asked Sam, looking eagerly in
-the direction of Ulna's fixed eyes.
-
-"Apaches!" was the whispered reply.
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Off to the south."
-
-Looking in the direction pointed out by Ulna, Sam
-saw, low down on the edge of the horizon, a number of
-pigmy figures that but for their movements might have
-passed for bunches of cactus.
-
-"Are they coming this way?" asked Sam, unconsciously
-tightening his grip on his rifle, while his heart
-beat faster.
-
-"I cannot tell that, but if they should come they
-must not find us here."
-
-Ulna sprang down the rocks, followed by Sam, and
-they found Ike and Wah Shin about to start a fire.
-
-"You must make no fire to-night," said Sam.
-
-"What foh?" asked Ike, who had a strong prejudice
-in favor of hot food.
-
-"Because we are afraid there are Indians near by."
-
-"Injuns!" exclaimed Ike, and he pressed his hands to
-the top of his head, as if to keep down his rising scalp.
-
-"Yes; we must fill our canteens with water and move
-from here at once."
-
-"But whar to, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"To the shelter of some rocks not far from the head
-of this ravine. Let the fire go, Wah Shin, we can get
-along without it to-night."
-
-"Me no likee bad Injun; me no kalee fo' fi'," said
-Wah Shin, as he kicked over the pile of fuel, and hurriedly
-began to fill the four canteens.
-
-The sun had set and the chilling shadows were creeping
-up from the cañons, in which they seemed to have
-their home during the day, when Sam and Ulna led the
-way into the broad plateau of the upper world.
-
-The mass of rocks in which they sought shelter was
-close to the head of the rift.
-
-The increasing darkness favored their reaching these
-rocks without being seen by any one not near by.
-
-This was an admirable hiding place, and in the event
-of trouble it had every advantage for observation and
-defense.
-
-In the midst of these rocks they ate their supper, and
-Sam detailed the guards for the night.
-
-His greatest fear was that the dog might reveal, by
-growling, their hiding place to any who might come
-near. To guard against this as much as possible, he
-fastened a rope muzzle about the dog's head and told Ike
-to watch him.
-
-Some three hours of darkness had passed when Ike
-called out:
-
-"See har, Mistah Sam, this yar dog scents somethin'
-an' I can't hold him to save my life."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.—FROM SAFETY INTO DANGER.
-=====================================
-
-
-It did not need the low growling of the dog to convince
-our young friends that they were in the midst
-of danger.
-
-Along the trail leading up from the ravine, they
-could hear low, gutteral voices, and they did not need
-to be told that the Apaches, whom they had seen as the
-sun was setting, had come to the spring, for the fall of
-moccasined feet could be heard dying out in that direction.
-
-"The Apaches!" whispered Sam, as he grasped
-Ulna's arm with one hand, and clutched his rifle more
-tightly with the other.
-
-"Yes," was the reply.
-
-"Do you think they will discover us?"
-
-"They cannot help doing so."
-
-"What will be their next move after finding we are
-near by?"
-
-"They will trail us down."
-
-"To these rocks?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And then?"
-
-"And then if they find me they will see that the
-rising sun looks on one less Ute in the world," was
-Ulna's reply, given with his habitual calmness.
-
-"But we will fight," said Sam, stoutly. "And if it
-comes to dying, we will die together, and the enemy will
-make nothing by it."
-
-"Ha! dey's startin' a fiah down dar by the spring,"
-said Ike, who had been peering through the darkness in
-the direction the Apaches had taken.
-
-This was true. A column of luminous smoke, followed
-by a fountain of sparks and flame, shot into the
-calm night air near the spring.
-
-The Indians were using the fuel Ike and Wah Shin
-had gathered, and by the light of the dancing flames
-their slender, half-naked figures could be seen.
-
-Sam counted thirteen warriors. All appeared to be
-well armed with rifles, and the red paint on their faces
-told that they were out on no mission of peace.
-
-"I will go out and try to learn their purpose," said
-Ulna, as he slung his rifle on his back, and tightened
-his belt.
-
-"But they may catch you," said Sam.
-
-"I will see that they don't."
-
-"Can you understand them if you hear them speak?"
-
-"Yes, as well as if they were Utes. It is better that
-I should go, and if I find that it will be wiser not to return,
-remember I shall either escape to Hurley's Gulch,
-or stay so close that I can be of service if needed. But,
-if it can be avoided, do not bring on a fight with these
-people."
-
-Sam was about to protest against Ulna's course, but
-before he could utter a word the young Ute had sprung
-lightly over the rocks, and was making his way to the
-spring.
-
-For the first time since leaving Gold Cave Camp Sam
-Willett felt thoroughly alarmed.
-
-He had fearlessly faced the storm and stood undaunted
-in the presence of Nature in her most awful
-aspects, without losing heart for a moment, but the
-presence of these savages—ignorant and bloodthirsty—made
-him tremble for the safety of his dear father, to
-whose rescue he was straining every nerve to come.
-
-Ulna's daring and seemingly reckless conduct filled
-Sam with alarm, for apart from his great regard for that
-youth, he knew that he could not offer a strong resistance
-to the Apaches with only the inexpert Ike and Wah
-Shin to depend on.
-
-"I wouldn't ha' did wat Ulna's done," said Ike, in a
-frightened whisper. "No, not for fifty hundred thousand
-million dollars in goold an' solit dimeints."
-
-"No catchee dis chile do so much like foolee," said
-Wah Shin, with a shudder at the thought.
-
-"Hist! Keep still and stop the dog's growling," said
-Sam sternly, as from his perch, higher up, he tried to
-make out what the Indians were doing down by the fire,
-and if possible to discover Ulna.
-
-Meantime Ulna, moving as silently as the shadows
-that came and went about the fire near the spring, made
-his way toward the enemy.
-
-He walked so erect and quickly that it would seem as
-if it were his purpose to go directly to the fire, but he
-took care to keep a rock between him and the enemy.
-
-When within fifty yards of the spring he dropped on
-his hands and knees, and without stopping, crept
-quickly forward.
-
-When he got so close to the fire that he could distinctly
-hear what the Apaches were talking about, he
-came to a stop, and lying close to the ground, he bent
-eagerly forward to listen.
-
-The leader of this band was a man named Blanco,
-which is the Spanish word for white, though in this case
-it seemed to be misapplied.
-
-Blanco's repulsive appearance was increased by the
-fact that he had only one eye—like Badger.
-
-The chief and his companions had already discovered
-that the spring had been recently visited, and they very
-naturally inferred from the tracks of shoes that they had
-been made by white men.
-
-Nor did the impress of the moccasins escape their
-keen eyes.
-
-"One Ute, three white men," were the first words
-Ulna heard when he got within hearing distance of the
-Apaches.
-
-"Where did they come from?" asked a brave, who by
-the aid of a torch had been examining the tracks lower
-down the ravine.
-
-"It looks as if they came by way of the Great Cañon,"
-said one.
-
-"Ugh!" grunted Blanco, "I don't believe that."
-
-"But the trail leads that way," persisted the man
-who held the torch.
-
-"I don't care if it led into the sky."
-
-"If it did, Blanco, you could not see it, and though
-our medicine-men say that people in the times far past
-came from the sky, I never heard of their bringing dogs
-with them," said the man with the torch.
-
-"Dogs!" exclaimed the band in chorus.
-
-"No; one dog."
-
-"Where is it?" asked the chief.
-
-"Here is the track," and the man held the torch
-down and showed the impress of Maj's feet on the
-ground.
-
-"No, that's a wolf," said the chief.
-
-"The foot of the mountain wolf is not so large," said
-the keen observer, "nor has it long hairs on its toes as
-has the creature that made this track."
-
-Like all leaders, the chief did not like to be so openly
-contradicted by one under him, and he was again about
-to protest that he was right, and it was a wolf that had
-been at the spring, when, as if to set all doubts at rest,
-the fierce barking of a dog could be heard at the top of
-the hill and not more than two hundred yards away.
-
-Maj, in some way, had slipped his muzzle and escaped
-Ike's hold and was now making himself heard outside
-the rocks, among which Sam and his friends were hiding.
-
-The instant the Indians heard the sound they seized
-their arms and sprang away from the light of the fire.
-
-As luck, rather than design, had it, they ran in the
-direction where Ulna was hiding, and before he could
-think of rising to his feet they were about him.
-
-The brave fellow stuck close to the ground, and he
-might have escaped had not one of the Apaches stumbled
-and fell on top of him.
-
-The savage gave a yell of fear, but at the same instant
-he seized Ulna and held him fast.
-
-"What is wrong there?" demanded the chief, as he
-hurried in the direction from which the cry came.
-
-"A Ute! a Ute!" was the response of the man whom
-Ulna was making a desperate effort to cast off.
-
-In an instant every brave had fallen on Ulna, and,
-almost as quickly, he was bound hand and foot, but he
-uttered neither cry nor groan to show the pain nor to
-tell of his mental anguish.
-
-"Who are you?" asked Blanco, bending over him.
-
-"I am a Ute," was the reply.
-
-"Have you a name?"
-
-"I have."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Ulna."
-
-"What! the nephew of the hated Uray?"
-
-"The nephew of the great chief, Uray."
-
-"You come alone?"
-
-"No, with friends."
-
-"Utes?"
-
-"No, miners from Gold Cave Camp."
-
-"How came you here?"
-
-"Through the cañon."
-
-"And you want me to believe that?"
-
-"I ask you to believe nothing; I tell the truth," said
-Ulna proudly and half-defiantly.
-
-"Who ever went through the Great Cañon and
-lived?" said the Apache in a calmer tone.
-
-"We have," said Ulna.
-
-"How many of you?"
-
-"Four and a dog."
-
-"And where are the others?"
-
-"They are where they can defy a foe or welcome a
-friend," said Ulna with undaunted spirit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.—THE TRIAL ENDS.
-=============================
-
-
-Mr. Willett, like every American of intelligence,
-not only knew a great deal about the laws
-of the country of which he was proud of being a citizen,
-but he also knew as well as most lawyers the methods by
-which trials were conducted in the regularly organized
-courts of justice.
-
-In addition to this he saw that the men who had
-gathered to try him and Hank Tims, though anxious to
-follow the forms as they understood them, were very
-ignorant, and like all their class, had a profound respect
-for those who knew more, or seemed to know more, than
-themselves.
-
-The jury was composed of twelve rough, sturdy men,
-who looked as if they fully realized their duty.
-
-Even the judge sat more erect and tried to look dignified
-at the risk of being ridiculous.
-
-"Now we're all ready to begin, and I want order in
-the court. The gents as has thar hats on will take 'em
-off and hold 'em in thar hands," said the judge, again
-rapping with the heavy glass on the little pine table by
-his side.
-
-The "gents" promptly took off their hats, and this
-was followed by the scraping of boots and a chorus of
-little coughs that told how nervous all were.
-
-"Now," continued the judge when order was restored,
-"we'll have the witnesses in and go on with the trial."
-
-"Before you call any witnesses," said Mr. Willett, "I
-want you or whoever is conducting this case to state the
-charge against me and my friend Hank Tims."
-
-"We can't have everything har like if it was a reg'lar
-out-and-out court," said the judge angrily, and again
-picking up the tumbler as if he were going to hurl it at
-some one. "And as for the charges, I thought every
-one in and about Hurley's Gulch knowed that you two is
-charged with robbin' and murderin' poor Tom Edwards.
-Thar, I hope that statement of the case will suit the most
-partic'lar."
-
-"I and my companion, being the most interested,"
-said Mr. Willett, with wonderful calmness, "should be
-the most particular; but if that is the best statement of
-the case that can be made, I am willing that you shall go
-ahead, asking only that I be permitted to cross-question
-any and all witnesses that may be called."
-
-"This court ain't got any objections as it knows on to
-yer axin' questions, pervidin' you stick right down to the
-point," growled the judge.
-
-Nodding to show that he was satisfied with this, Mr.
-Willett said, "I am ready," and the young man acting
-as clerk called out:
-
-"Badger!"
-
-Badger moved nearer to the judge and began to twirl
-his hat in his big, rough hands in a way that showed he
-was anything but calm.
-
-"Now, Badger," said Judge Jacks, "tell this yar
-court and this yar jury all you know 'bout the case."
-
-Badger looked into his hat as if he saw something there
-that might refresh his memory, and then, after coughing
-and casting his malignant eye up at the ceiling, he
-began:
-
-"Wa'al, this is 'bout all I knows 'bout this case. You
-see, me and Tom Edwards had been ole pards, and so I
-knowed him as well as any man this side the Rockies.
-He wasn't a bad kind of a feller to them as knowed how
-to take him, and though he didn't have much book
-larnin'——"
-
-Here Mr. Willett interrupted Badger to say:
-
-"This evidence, your honor, is not to the point. We
-are not here to discuss the character of the dead man, but
-to find out if we can who murdered him."
-
-"Reckon yer right," said the judge, and then he told
-Badger he must "stick to bottom facts."
-
-Thus admonished Badger resumed:
-
-"Me and Mr. Shirley got to Hurley's Gulch the night
-before Tom was did for so cruel bad, and we found he
-was on a spree, and complainin' to every one that Mr.
-Willett he was a-tryin' to euchre him out of fifteen hundred
-dollars, as he'd 'greed to pay for the claim over at
-Gold Cave Camp. Wa'al, the next mornin' 'bout an hour
-or so afore day me and Mr. Shirley was sleepin' together
-when we heard two pistol shots and a man a-hollerin'
-"murder." We hurried out and found poor Tom all shot
-to pieces. We carried him into this yar hotel, and with
-his dyin' last breath he told us that it was Mr. Willett
-and Hank Tims as did for him. Thar, that's all I knows
-'bout the case."
-
-My young readers will notice that there was no oath
-administered to Badger, nor would such a sacred proceeding
-have affected in any way the nature of his
-evidence.
-
-"Now you've heard Badger's evidence," said the
-judge, with an angry glance at Mr. Willett and Hank.
-"Have you any questions to ax him?"
-
-"I have a few," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Well, rattle 'em off quick."
-
-"Badger," began Mr. Willett, "what is your business?"
-
-"I'm a miner," was the answer.
-
-"Where do you mine?"
-
-"I ain't at work—jist now."
-
-"How long have you been at Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"Off and on, 'bout a month."
-
-"You came here broke?"
-
-"Yes. I wasn't flush, I'll allow."
-
-"But you are flush now?"
-
-"Wa'al, I've got a few dollars."
-
-"Where did you get your money?"
-
-"That's my business," said Badger, angrily.
-
-"Yes," said the judge, "no gent ain't bound to tell
-no one how he came by his money—unless some one else
-goes to work and claims it as his'n."
-
-"My object is to show that Badger received his
-money from Frank Shirley," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"And what if he did?" asked the judge.
-
-"There is this about it, that if Badger is in Frank
-Shirley's employ, then he is working to get me and my
-son out of the way, for if my son dies before he's twenty-one
-years of age, then Shirley falls heir to a large fortune."
-
-"We ain't a-tryin' Frank Shirley. So I ain't agoin'
-to let you ax any sich questions," said the judge, rapping
-vigorously on the table.
-
-Still calm, if not confident, Mr. Willett asked:
-
-"Badger, were not you and Frank Shirley dressed
-when you say you heard those shots?"
-
-"Wa'al, yes, except our boots," replied Badger.
-
-"And you were awake?"
-
-"No; but I can't say I was sleepin' heavy."
-
-"*Badger, did not you kill Tom Edwards?*"
-
-This question came with the suddenness of an explosion,
-and it so staggered Badger that it was fully a
-minute before he could stammer out:
-
-"No. Who said I did?"
-
-"I say it! You committed the murder at Shirley's
-bidding, so as to get me out of the way, and you
-prompted the murdered man whom you shot down in
-the darkness to say I did it," said Mr. Willett with a
-forceful manner that startled all.
-
-During the confusion that followed this bold but perfectly
-just accusation, Badger left the witness-stand and
-mixed in with the astonished crowd.
-
-Frank Shirley was next called, but as his evidence
-was much the same as that given by Badger, it is unnecessary
-to record it.
-
-On his cross-examination, he claimed to have no ill-feeling
-against Mr. Willett or his son; and he had the
-boldness to claim that he did not want young Sam's
-fortune, as he was rich in his own right.
-
-Two other witnesses were called to prove the dying
-words of Tom Edwards, and on these and the fact that
-Mr. Willett had no evidence to prove that he had paid
-for the claim at Gold Cave Camp, the whole case hung.
-
-Mr. Willett testified in his own behalf.
-
-He told such a clear, straightforward story that, for
-the time being, even his enemies were impressed with
-its truth.
-
-In a tremulous voice he spoke about his beloved son,
-whom he feared to be dead, and he said, in conclusion:
-
-"Had it not been for the cruel flood that snatched
-from me my boy, the only tie that holds me to earth, he
-would have been here with the paper bearing Tom
-Edwards' signature, and then you would have seen that
-I could have no reason for desiring the death of this
-man, whose drunkenness made him his own worst enemy."
-
-After this Hank Tims told all he knew, corroborating
-Mr. Willett, and boldly asserting that he was present
-when Mr. Willett paid the money to Tom Edwards.
-
-Collins and Si Brill testified that they had known
-Hank "off and on" for many years, and that no man,
-up to this time had ever dared to say a word against his
-truthfulness or honesty.
-
-"Wa'al," said the judge, when the evidence was all
-in, "I give it as my opinion, that them two men, Willett
-and Tims, kilt Tom Edwards. I don't believe thar
-stories for a minute. Men that commit crime will lie to
-hide it every time, and don't you gentlemen of the jury
-go for to make any mistake about it.
-
-"Thar, that's all I've got to say. Now let the jury
-take thar time and fetch in a verdict that'll suit all
-hands. I ain't got anythin' more to say. The evidence
-is all in, and so, till the time comes to say the prizners
-is guilty or innocent the trial is jest 'bout over."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.—THE APACHES HAVE THEIR WAY.
-==========================================
-
-
-If an earthquake had shaken the rocks about his
-ears, Sam could not have been more shocked and
-startled than he was at the barking of the dog.
-
-As for Ike, he was rendered speechless, for Maj had
-darted away without any apparent effort to hold him
-back.
-
-"Ah, golly!" gasped Wah Shin, "de fat am allee
-gone in de file!"
-
-Although Maj had done all the damage possible, for
-Sam could see by the movements of the Indians that
-they had heard the barking, yet he did not provoke his
-young master to anger.
-
-Sam sprang down, caught the dog by the collar and
-pulled him back to their hiding place.
-
-"I—I wish we'd a left dat ar dorg back home!" cried
-Ike. "He ain't did no good eber sence we started, but
-to eat up de grub; an' now he goes an' makes a fuss,
-jest whin we most wanted foh him to keep his tongue to
-hisself."
-
-"See that he does not get out again," said Sam.
-"After all the dog only led the Indians to a discovery
-which they must have made sooner or later. Ah, I
-wish Ulna had not gone out. He knows the habits of
-these people and he would know what to do."
-
-"De man as knows what to do ondah dese yer sarcumstances,"
-groaned Ike, "is a heap sight smarter'n
-me."
-
-"Plenty men know heap mo' den you," said Wah
-Shin, who was evidently in a bad humor. "You don'
-know 'nuff gettee in out lain."
-
-"Hist! Keep still," said Sam, who had again clambered
-to his perch on the rock that commanded a view
-of the fire. "I can see men coming this way."
-
-"Oh, laws a massy!" cried Ike, and with one hand he
-held the dog, while with the other he pressed his lips,
-"to keep from hollerin' right out," as he afterward expressed
-it.
-
-Sam was not mistaken as to the movements of the
-Apaches. A number of them, led by their chief, had
-left Ulna in charge of the others and advanced boldly
-to the head of the ravine.
-
-As a proof that they had no fear of the party they
-were in search of, one of the braves carried a torch,
-which he brandished above his head till he seemed to
-walk amid a fountain of sparks.
-
-Taking a position where he could see without being
-seen, Sam, with an anxiously beating heart, watched the
-oncoming braves.
-
-They approached to within about fifty yards of the
-rocks in which the little band had sought refuge, and
-came to a sudden halt.
-
-Sam was wondering what would happen next, when,
-to his great surprise, the chief called out:
-
-"Hello, white mans! Hello!"
-
-The Indian spoke broken English in a way that no
-combination of letters could give a correct idea of, so
-for our own convenience, as well as for the reader's
-clearer understanding, we shall report what he said in
-the ordinary way, though Indians never use the elegant
-language some writers put into their mouths.
-
-"What do you want?" was Sam's response to the Indian's
-outcry.
-
-"Who you are?" asked the Indian.
-
-"My name is Sam Willett."
-
-"Where you come from?"
-
-"From the cañon."
-
-"Oh, no; that's a Ute lie."
-
-"I did not ask you to believe me, nor do I care to
-talk to you. Go off about your business, if you have
-any," said Sam, his confidence increasing every moment
-that he spoke.
-
-"You got dog?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Big dog?"
-
-"A very big dog."
-
-"Him bite?"
-
-"Yes, if you come nearer."
-
-"That dog fat?"
-
-At this question the Indians laughed and jumped
-about, as if they thought their chief had uttered a very
-fine joke, for to the Apache a fat dog is the daintiest
-dish in all the world.
-
-Sam treated the inquiry about Maj's condition with
-haughty silence, while all the time the animal under
-consideration was growling and straining to break away
-from Ike, as if eager to exhibit his condition and his
-teeth.
-
-"You all white men?" was Blanco's next question.
-
-"No—not all," shouted Sam.
-
-"Who you three be?"
-
-"I shan't tell you."
-
-"Why you no tell?"
-
-"Because it is none of your business."
-
-"Dat am de gospil truff," said Ike, "an' if he don't
-light out purty soon dar'll be a loose dog a-howlin'
-'round, for I can't hold onter Maj much longer."
-
-"My name Blanco. Me big Apache chief."
-
-"Well, what do you want?" asked Sam.
-
-"Me very good man."
-
-"I am glad to hear it."
-
-"Me and all my men, good friends to whites."
-
-"And I am a good friend to the Indians; if you let
-me alone, I shall let you alone. Good-night," said Sam,
-hoping that the Indian might prove sensitive and take
-this as a hint to leave, but he had entirely mistaken his
-man.
-
-"When sun come up then where you go?" asked the
-chief, with the same inquisitive manner.
-
-At this juncture it struck Sam that he might be able
-not only to make these people his friends, but to utilize
-them in getting to his father, so he said in a kindlier
-tone than he had yet used:
-
-"We are going to Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"You live there?"
-
-"I want to get there. Do you know the *shortest*
-road?"
-
-This was asked as if Sam might be well acquainted
-with the longest road himself.
-
-"Oh, yes," said the chief.
-
-"If you guide me—by the shortest way—to Hurley's
-Gulch to-morrow morning, I will give you money, rifles,
-pistols, knives, blankets, and lots of other good things,"
-said Sam with lavish generosity.
-
-"You got money, rifles, knives, blankets, all good
-things with you here, eh?" asked the chief.
-
-"We have all the arms we need for our own defense,
-and we know how to use them. But you guide me to
-Hurley's Gulch, and I will keep my word," said Sam,
-with more confidence than he felt.
-
-Instead of replying at once to this generous proposition,
-the chief spoke with his followers for some minutes
-in low, guttural tones.
-
-Sam could hear the murmur of their voices, and he
-rightly guessed that they were discussing whether to
-accept his offer in good faith, or to kill and rob himself
-and his companions.
-
-"We see you, sun up; you no leave," called out the
-chief at length.
-
-"You must make up your mind to-night, for I am
-going to leave early in the morning," said Sam.
-
-"Oh, all right. I on hand," was the chief's reply.
-
-Again they consulted together, and Sam could see that
-four men remained behind to watch, while the others,
-with the chief, went down to the fire.
-
-All this time Sam was in great trouble about Ulna, for
-he did not even suspect that he was a prisoner in the
-hands of his cruel tribal foes.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin were in great tribulation about
-themselves, for they had no faith in the Indians; indeed,
-they firmly believed that the Apaches would scalp them
-all on the morrow.
-
-Ike gave expression to his feelings in the remark:
-
-"When we was down in that yar canyon den I felt ez
-if I'd rudder be in any odder place in dis worl', or de
-nex'; but now I'd a heap sight sooner be down dar dan
-up yar."
-
-Though tired and sleepy, Sam could not think of closing
-his eyes that night, for he feared to trust Ike or Wah
-Shin on guard, and he half expected an attack from the
-Apaches before morning.
-
-He knew that any attempt at escape would be detected,
-and might hasten the struggle he was so anxious to
-avoid.
-
-More than once he wished himself back in the cañon,
-but the thought that he was nearer to his father, and the
-hope that after all the Indians might not be so bad as he
-feared, gave him courage to face the future.
-
-He knew that resistance against such a force, and
-with his own limited supply of food and water, would be
-downright folly. So when the chief appeared before the
-rocks, just as the sun was rising, he went out to meet
-him, and shook hands with him.
-
-"Me come down to water, eat something," said the
-chief, in what seemed a hospitable spirit.
-
-.. figure:: images/illus2.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Sam went out to meet the chief and shook hands with him.
-
- Sam went out to meet the chief and shook hands with him.
-
-Sam, Ike, and Wah Shin took up their bundles and
-with the dog, went back to the spring.
-
-Here to their amazement and horror they found Ulna
-lying near the fire with his hands and feet bound.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.—A BOLD MOVE.
-============================
-
-
-We have already seen that Sam was cool and
-brave, and such characters but rarely act from
-impulse. Yet there are times when impulse is more
-effective than all the calm reasoning in the world, and
-this was one of them.
-
-On the way to the spring with Blanco, Sam felt very
-nervous. He did not have much faith in the chief's
-profession of friendship for the whites, and from what
-he remembered of Hank Tims' stories about the
-Apaches, he believed them to be a very treacherous and
-bloodthirsty people.
-
-But the sight of Ulna, prostrate and bound, scattered
-all Sam's fears and indecision to the winds.
-
-"This is my friend!" he shouted as he sprung to
-Ulna's side and drew his own hunting-knife.
-
-"Hold! He is a Ute and my foe!" roared the
-chief.
-
-But neither his words nor his movements could stay
-Sam Willett, who was now blind to everything but the
-condition of his brave friend.
-
-Two rapid flashes of the knife, and the cords that
-bound Ulna's hands and feet were severed.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin trembled at the audacity of their
-young leader.
-
-Even Blanco and his braves were speechless and helpless
-for the moment, and looked from one to the other,
-as if wondering what this extraordinary young white
-man would do next.
-
-They had not long to wonder, for Ulna, in the very
-second that he was freed, sprang to his feet, leaped at
-the nearest Indian, who chanced to hold the repeating-rifle
-that had been taken from himself the night before,
-and tearing it from his grasp, he bounded up the ravine
-before a hand could be raised to stay him.
-
-"Shoot! shoot!" cried the chief when he could regain
-his breath.
-
-"Don't fire!" shouted Sam as, with his own gun
-raised, he sprang directly in front of the Apaches.
-
-They did not fire, perhaps because it would have been
-useless, for before they had fully realized the order of
-the chief and why it was called out, the fleet-footed
-Ulna had vanished up the rift.
-
-Blanco shouted for the braves to pursue, and on the
-instant four of the youngest and most active leaped forward,
-like blood-hounds freed from the leash.
-
-With yells that frightened the dog and made him
-crouch behind Ike, the Apaches started up the ravine.
-
-Sam was about to follow them, but the chief caught
-him by the shoulder and said sternly:
-
-"You do heap harm. Stay!"
-
-Meanwhile, Ulna had gained the upland, with his face
-turned toward the sun, now flashing over the crests of
-the Sierra Madre Mountains.
-
-The cruel cords had cut into his wrists and ankles,
-and the strained position in which he had been held so
-many hours had stiffened his limbs; but, absorbed in
-the battle for his own life, he forgot or did not feel his
-pain.
-
-On gaining the upland, he halted for an instant to
-pull his cap lower and to tighten his belt; then, as he
-heard the blood-curdling yells behind him, he started off
-again, running this time straight for the mountains to
-the east.
-
-He looked back for an instant, to see the four Apaches
-rising into view from the rift.
-
-He had about two hundred yards the lead, and he very
-wisely made up his mind not to increase it.
-
-As a tribe, the Utes have ever prided themselves on
-the speed and endurance of their runners.
-
-They begin to practice as children, and they are taught
-to stop at no obstacle and not to vary their speed, whether
-facing or descending a hill.
-
-They keep the lips firmly closed, breathing altogether
-through the nostrils, and the arms, or at least the elbows,
-are kept firmly pressed to the sides, the hands being advanced
-at right angles to the body and the fingers shut,
-like a boxer's fist.
-
-An observer, seeing Ulna's light, springy bound and
-the absence of all effort, would have been charmed with
-the grace of the youth's movements, but would have felt
-that he was not getting over the ground very fast, while
-his pursuers appeared to be flying; and they were certainly
-straining every nerve.
-
-But Ulna's feet were on his native heath, and he knew
-that his safety depended on reserving his strength,
-rather than exhausting himself by a mighty effort at the
-start.
-
-The four runners behind him discharged their rifles,
-but the bullets whistled harmlessly by his ears.
-
-They yelled, and he heard them with a feeling of delight,
-for he well knew that men cannot run fast and
-yell very loud at the same time.
-
-Still the Apaches seemed to gain on him, till his lead
-was reduced to not more than fifty yards, and he could
-hear their loud explosive breathings behind him.
-
-Gradually three of the young braves began to lessen
-their speed and drop to the rear, while one appeared to
-gain at every bound on the fugitive.
-
-After running for more than hour, Ulna threw a
-quick glance over his shoulder and took in this state of
-affairs.
-
-His heart bounded with delight at the prospect, but he
-neither increased nor lessened his speed. His movements
-seemed to be as even and tireless as the flight of
-the mountain eagles circling above his head.
-
-Another half hour and he looked back again. Only
-one man was in sight, and he was not more than a hundred
-feet away.
-
-Quick as a flash Ulna came to a halt, wheeled and
-fired. The Apache threw up his arms and fell senseless
-at the feet of the young Ute.
-
-Here Ulna's training in the missionary school at
-Taos came into play.
-
-His natural impulse would have led him to make sure
-work, and tear the black scalp from the head of his foe,
-but his heart was touched with pity rather than hate,
-and now that his pursuer was harmless he might help
-him, if he was not fatally wounded.
-
-He examined the Apache's wound, and found that the
-bullet had struck his head without breaking his
-skull.
-
-"He will come to himself after a while," said Ulna,
-as he drew his foe to the shadow of a rock and placed his
-back against it.
-
-But while prompted to this act of humanity, Ulna did
-not permit his heart to interfere with his head. According
-to all the rules of civilized warfare, the arms of an
-enemy belong to his conqueror, so he took the Apache's
-pistol and ammunition-belt, which also contained his
-long, keen scalping-knife.
-
-These he fastened on his own person, and had scarcely
-finished when the wounded brave opened his eyes and
-looked about him in a dazed way. As soon as he saw
-Ulna he closed his eyes again and began to chant in a
-low solemn voice the death-song of his tribe.
-
-He was in the power of his foe, and as he could not
-give mercy himself, for he did not know of such a thing,
-he expected that the Ute would put him to death, and
-his song told that he was ready to meet it without
-fear.
-
-"Listen to me," said Ulna, laying his hand on the
-Apache's shoulder and speaking in a firm but kindly
-tone. "I am a Ute, but the whites have taught me to
-hate no man because of his tribe. Your life is your
-own; take it and make your way back to your friends
-who have lagged in the race, and tell them that the
-nephew of Uray does not hate nor kill the helpless."
-
-"But I am an Apache. I have forfeited my life. I
-would take yours if I could. Why stay your hand?
-This is not the warfare that our fathers practised," said
-the astonished Apache.
-
-"No, nor shall I ever practice such a warfare. Yet
-for the life I spare I would ask a favor."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Return to Blanco and tell him that the people now
-in his hands mean no harm. Tell him that if he guides
-them to Hurley's Gulch he will be well paid. Tell
-him that if he harms them, the whites will make war,
-nor stay their hands while there is an Apache left in the
-Mogollon Mountains."
-
-With the last word Ulna waved his hand to the brave
-and sped away again to the eastward with the same tireless spring.
-
-Ulna was miles away when the three Apaches, who
-had started out with the wounded man, made their
-appearance.
-
-"Where is the Ute?" they asked.
-
-"Gone," was the reply.
-
-"And your arms?"
-
-"They are gone, too."
-
-"Who took them?"
-
-"The Ute."
-
-"Why then did he not take your life and your scalp?"
-they asked in great surprise.
-
-"He stunned me with a shot which I was not expecting;
-but he stunned me more when he refused the death
-I was expecting," said the brave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.—THE VERDICT AND SENTENCE.
-=======================================
-
-
-In order that the jury might think over and discuss
-the evidence against Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-it was decided to leave them in full possession of the
-tent in which the trial was held.
-
-"When you've got yer minds made up," said the man
-who had been acting as judge, "let me know, and I'll
-come in and pass sentence."
-
-This fellow had started out to convict the accused
-men, and, as we have seen, he let slip no chance to
-impress his prejudices on the jury.
-
-Collins and Si Brill with two others, who had been
-the original guards, took charge of the prisoners while
-the jury were making up their minds, though Badger
-insisted that he should have the prisoners in his
-keeping.
-
-"If I ain't to have 'em," he protested, "whar was
-the good of 'lectin' me sheriff?"
-
-"Not a bit of good," sneered Collins, "and if you'd
-had any spunk you wouldn't have took the place. Now,
-take my advice and git."
-
-Badger did "git," that is, he sought out Frank Shirley,
-whom he found in the bar-room surrounded by a great
-crowd of men, who were drinking at his expense and
-discussing the verdict at the same time.
-
-It seemed to be the opinion of nearly all present that
-the jury would soon bring in a verdict of "Guilty of the
-crime charged."
-
-"If they don't do that," said the landlord, "then
-I'll tell you what I'm in for."
-
-"What's that?" asked Badger.
-
-"I'm in for hangin' every man on the jury, and the
-prizners with 'em, before the sun sets."
-
-A cheer showed the favor with which this proposition
-was received.
-
-When Shirley could get away from the crowd, he and
-Badger went down by the creek where they could talk
-without being overheard.
-
-"Well, Badger, what do you think?" asked Shirley.
-
-"'Bout the verdict?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"No one can't think but one way after the evidence.
-Why, nothin' could be stronger."
-
-"That's so; but do you think any one suspects?"
-asked Shirley, nervously.
-
-"Suspects what?"
-
-"That we put up the whole job."
-
-"Not a soul," said Badger.
-
-"I wish I could think that."
-
-"But you can think it."
-
-"You forget what Mr. Willett asked you when he was
-cross-examining."
-
-"What was that?"
-
-"His question was, '*Badger, did not you kill Tom
-Edwards?*'"
-
-As Frank Shirley repeated these words he looked into
-Badger's face and saw the color flying and the thick lips
-trembling.
-
-"Why do you speak in that kind of a way to me?"
-stammered Badger. "Ain't I stuck by you and did
-what I said? And so far as the killin' of Tom Edwards
-is consarned, didn't you help plan the job, and didn't
-you stand by while I carried it out?"
-
-"That is all true, Badger; but I am not going back
-on you——"
-
-"Then why do you speak that way?"
-
-"Because I want you to understand that Willett suspects
-the whole truth. Indeed, he stated the case from
-beginning to end as if he knew all about it."
-
-"Wa'al, if he does, I didn't tell him."
-
-"Of course not, Badger; but you must see that those
-who think Willett and Hank Tims innocent will at once
-say, 'Some one killed Tom Edwards, and we should find
-the guilty parties.'"
-
-"And that's the thought that skeers you?"
-
-"I must confess, Badger, it makes me feel very uneasy,"
-said Shirley.
-
-"I thought you had more nerve."
-
-"I am not lacking in that, but caution is better than
-nerve; and I've been thinking that the sooner we can
-get out of this place the better."
-
-"I'll allow yer right thar, Mr. Shirley; but if we was
-to get away in a hurry, them that suspects us would foller
-up and hunt us down like wild beasts. Why, Collins,
-he's jest a spilin' to have a fuss with us, and I'm bound
-that he shan't, for he's powerful ugly with a six-shooter."
-
-"Still, I want to get away. There is no doubt in my
-mind as to the fate of young Sam."
-
-"Thar shouldn't be, for thar ain't no more doubt
-about him and all the rest of his gang bein' drownded
-than thar is that that jury over thar will bring in a
-verdict of guilty," and Badger jerked his head in the
-direction of the canvas hotel.
-
-"And they will hang the prisoners?"
-
-"You can bet they will, and in short order, too."
-
-"To-day?"
-
-"Yes, to-day."
-
-"Then my mission will be accomplished, and it would
-be folly to stay an hour in this savage hole if I can get
-out of it and go to wealth and friends."
-
-"And I'll stick by you, no fear of that, leastwise till
-I get my share of the swag, and then I think I'll marry
-and try to lead a more decentish life than I have been
-doin'——"
-
-Badger was stopped in his statement of good resolutions
-by a loud cheer coming from the hotel.
-
-"Halloo! what's that?" asked Shirley.
-
-"It must be the vardict; let us go and see," replied
-Badger, and he at once started off in the direction of the
-noise, followed by his nervous employer.
-
-Badger was right in his guess.
-
-The jury had sent out word that they had agreed on a
-verdict.
-
-The preceding excitement was great, but it was calmness
-itself compared with that that stirred the miners
-when it became known that the jury were ready to
-report.
-
-From the bar and the tents and huts round about men
-poured into the place of trial.
-
-Badger had to run to get up in time, for he did not see
-how business could go on without the presence of the
-sheriff.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims sat in the place they had
-occupied during the trial.
-
-The judge, flushed with liquor, took his place and
-rapped and shouted for order.
-
-The twelve jurymen and the prisoners were the only
-calm persons present, and even their faces showed that
-they fully appreciated the situation.
-
-When the judge, after breaking the heavy glass and
-splintering the little pine table by his side had succeeded
-in getting the mob down, he turned to the jury and
-said:
-
-"Gents, have you got a verdict?"
-
-"Yes," coughed the one acting as foreman.
-
-"All unanimous?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'al, let's have it," said the judge.
-
-The silence became profound on the instant.
-
-Men with watches could hear them ticking, and men
-with hearts became painfully aware of the fact.
-
-Though a big, strong fellow, the foreman was trembling
-when he rose to his feet, and he tried to cough
-behind his hand several times before he could get control
-of his voice. At length he managed to say:
-
-"We find that the two prizners is——"
-
-Here he stopped and coughed again, and he undoubtedly
-would have sat down without finishing the
-sentence had not the judge shouted:
-
-"Wa'al, the prizners is what?"
-
-":small-caps:`Guilty!`" came the reply.
-
-On hearing this Badger tried to lead a cheer with the
-help of the judge, but as the farce was not yet over, some
-one cursed him and told him to "shut up."
-
-"I don't well see how you could fotch in any other
-vardict," began the judge. "Fact is, you couldn't have
-did it and continued to live among the people at Hurley's
-Gulch that's in for law and order and fair play; so I say
-you've all done yer duty nobly like good feller citizens."
-
-This opinion met with some applause; then the judge
-turned to Mr. Willett and Hank, and in a voice intended
-to be very solemn, as it certainly was very hoarse, he
-called out:
-
-"Presners at the bar stand up!"
-
-The two men rose, and Mr. Willett cast a quick glance
-over the crowd in the hope of seeing the friendly faces of
-Collins and his partner, Si Brill, but they were not in
-sight.
-
-"Have either of you men anythin' to say why I
-shouldn't now pass sentence of death on you?"
-
-"Only this," said Mr. Willett: "that you will pass
-sentence of death on innocent men."
-
-"It is the sentence of this court that the committee and
-the sheriff of this yar court take you two prizners out of
-this place at once and hang you both till you are dead,
-dead, dead!" said the judge, with a fierce emphasis on the
-last word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.—SURPRISE FOR HURLEY'S GULCH.
-=========================================
-
-
-On hearing the cruel sentence, something like
-a gasp of pain came from many of the men who
-most firmly believed in the guilt of the prisoners.
-
-No man can ever become so degraded and hardened
-as not to be moved by the approaching death of even a
-perfect stranger.
-
-Badger alone was delighted at having something to do
-with the trial, for it was the sheriff's duty to attend to
-the execution.
-
-With the death of these two men, the work which he
-had pledged Shirley to do would be completed.
-
-More than this, with the death of these two men he
-felt that all danger to himself would vanish and all suspicion
-be allayed.
-
-"It's mighty hard lines, Mr. Willett," said Hank
-Tims as he shook his fellow-prisoner's hand, "but one
-has to die sooner or later, and it should comfort you and
-me at this time to know that we can leave this world
-and stand in the presence of the Great Master and Chief
-of all, feelin' that we ain't never done anythin' that
-should bring a blush of shame to our cheeks nor a pang
-of regret to the friends as is left behind."
-
-"True, Hank, true," said Mr. Willett as he stroked
-his brow. "Since I have come to feel that my boy is
-dead, life has lost all its charms for me and death its
-terrors. What is there to live for since he is gone?
-Nothing!" and with a sigh of resignation Mr. Willett
-let his hands fall heavily by his side.
-
-Badger, judging by his conduct on this occasion, must
-have had no little experience in lynching affairs. He
-appeared before the prisoners with ropes, and as resistance
-would have been useless, Mr. Willett and Hank
-permitted the heartless wretch to tie their hands tightly
-behind their backs.
-
-This over, he went to the members of the vigilance
-committee, who were engaged in earnest conversation
-outside the tent.
-
-Having told them what he had done, Badger asked
-for instructions.
-
-"We're in a kind of a fix about this onpleasant business,"
-said one.
-
-"Wot's the trouble?" asked Badger.
-
-"Thar ain't no trees big enough for the purpose
-within twenty miles of this," said the man.
-
-"Then why can't they be blindfolded and shot?"
-asked Badger.
-
-"'Coz the judge said to hang 'em."
-
-"Wa'al, I don't think thar'll be any trouble in gettin'
-him to change his mind," said Badger. "You see he
-must 'commydate the sentence to the place."
-
-The vigilance committee meant to do right, and they
-were determined to erect a scaffold on the cliff above
-the creek, and carry out the sentence as it had been
-ordered.
-
-By the time these preparations were completed the
-sun was well down the west.
-
-Another hour and darkness would fall upon the world
-and on the lives of the condemned men.
-
-With more thoughtfulness than might have been expected
-from men of their character, the crowd withdrew
-from the place in which the trial had been held, leaving
-Mr. Willett and Hank alone.
-
-It is not for us to attempt to describe the secret
-thoughts and feelings of the condemned men.
-
-They spoke but little.
-
-Once Hank looked about him and said:
-
-"I wonder what's become of Collins and Si Brill, they
-were kind to us, and I'd like to shake hands with them
-and thank them before the ind comes."
-
-"They must know how we feel toward them, Hank,
-and as to their absence, it is my belief that they have
-gone away to avoid witnessing the death—the murder of
-two innocent men that they are powerless to prevent,"
-said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Yes, that must be it. Wa'al, I never saw a
-lynchin' nor took part in one, but I must confess I'd die
-a sight easier if I only knowed that them two critters,
-Badger and Shirley, was sure to meet up with the ind
-they deserve."
-
-"You may be sure, Hank, that justice will overtake
-them in the end. Standing as you are, on the edge of
-the grave, would you exchange places with either of
-these men?"
-
-"No, not if they was to throw in all the gold in the
-world to boot," said Hank earnestly.
-
-"Then you see there is something which a good man
-dreads more than death, Hank."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Willett, it's a black character and a black
-heart."
-
-Hank had just uttered this when the flap of the tent
-was pushed aside and Badger entered, followed by a
-number of the committee.
-
-"Wa'al, gents," said Badger, "we're all ready."
-
-"And so are we," said Mr. Willett, as he and Hank
-rose to their feet and stood side by side.
-
-"This ain't pleasant work," said one of the committee
-with a face and manner that told he was heartily ashamed
-of his part in the business, "but it's got to be did."
-
-Neither Mr. Willett nor Hank made any reply.
-
-Badger and the members of the committee were all
-armed to the teeth, and forming about the prisoners,
-they marched them down to a platform that projected
-over the cliff and from the further end of which two
-ropes hung down.
-
-About this platform every man living in and about
-Hurley's Gulch, excepting Si Brill and Collins, had
-gathered, even Frank Shirley, weak and wicked, could
-not resist the temptation to see his cruel work
-completed.
-
-The ropes were made ready and the condemned men
-were told they could pray for five minutes.
-
-Instead of kneeling down both turned their faces to
-the setting sun, and in all that crowd no one was calmer
-than they.
-
-Suddenly the painful stillness was broken by a cry
-that came from the westward and the crowd, as one man
-turned in that direction.
-
-There, like a silhouette against the red face of the
-setting sun, they saw a lithe figure, in the picturesque
-garb of a Ute Indian bounding toward them.
-
-"It is Ulna!" some one shouted, "Ulna coming from
-the direction of the great cañon!"
-
-"Hold! hold! hold! for your lives!"
-
-This was shouted by a dozen stalwart horsemen, Collins
-and Si Brill in the lead, who came galloping to the
-place of execution from the east.
-
-As these men flung themselves from their saddles,
-Ulna, with compressed lips and flashing eyes bounded
-through the crowd.
-
-At a glance he took in the situation, and then in a
-voice that rang clear and high as a bugle blast along the
-cliffs he called out:
-
-"Sam Willett lives and he has the paper!"
-
-"And these men shall not die, if me and my friends
-can help it, and we're inclined to think we can!" thundered
-Collins, as he drew Mr. Willett and Hank back
-from the platform and severed the cords that bound
-their arms.
-
-"And my boy still lives?" cried Mr. Willett, as he
-reached out his hands to Ulna.
-
-"Yes, he lives; I left him this morning, and——"
-
-Mr. Willett heard no more.
-
-The resolute heart that could face death without a
-tremor, was all overcome by this joyous revelation, and
-he fell fainting to the ground.
-
-"That's a Ute lie!" hissed Badger, to whose side
-Frank Shirley had come, pale and trembling.
-
-While Hank and Si Brill were restoring Mr. Willett
-to consciousness, Collins called out:
-
-"We'll see if it's a lie. Come, Ulna, my boy, tell us
-all about it, and if any man tries to stop you I'll give
-him a chance to bite the end off my revolver."
-
-The coming of the young Ute, being unexpected,
-caused more of a sensation than the execution of the
-prisoners would have done.
-
-The mob with bated breath gathered about Ulna, and
-though he was wearied with his run of fifty miles over a
-rough, trackless country, he told the main points of his
-thrilling story in a way that convinced everyone of the
-truth of his report.
-
-For men to go down to death is an old story, but when
-those mourned for as dead appear in the flesh, even those
-not superstitious are inclined to wonder and to feel that
-a miracle has been performed.
-
-"Do you believe that young Indian's story?" asked
-Shirley after he had led Badger away from the crowd.
-
-"I am afraid it's true," said Badger.
-
-"Then we're beaten!" groaned Shirley.
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"What can be done, Badger?"
-
-"If young Sam is alive he will try to reach here."
-
-"Yes; there can be no doubt of that."
-
-"Then he should be met on the way."
-
-"By whom?"
-
-"By us."
-
-"If so, we should start at once."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Shirley, there is not a minute to spare.
-Let us get our horses and start as soon as it's dark," said
-Badger, with unusual determination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.—HOW IT FARED WITH SAM AND HIS FRIENDS.
-====================================================
-
-
-When darkness came, the night of Ulna's arrival
-at Hurley's Gulch, it found the camp excited
-about the existence of Tom Edwards' receipt—which it
-was claimed young Sam had—and, as a consequence the
-miners were divided as to the guilt or innocence of Mr.
-Willett and Hank Tims.
-
-Three-fifths of the men believed that the prisoners
-were fairly tried, justly condemned and that they should
-have been hanged.
-
-Indeed, these fellows felt that Collins, Si Brill and
-the men they had brought with them to prevent the execution
-were no better than a pack of outlaws.
-
-All the men at Hurley's Gulch carried pistols, as a
-matter of course, but now they armed themselves with
-rifles, for the purpose of destroying Collins and his
-friends, if they did not at once surrender the prisoners.
-
-From comparative peace the camp was plunged into a
-state of war, with rival factions ready to slay each other,
-in order that they might take or save the lives of Mr.
-Willett and Hank Tims.
-
-Leaving Hurley's Gulch to its enraged rival factions,
-let us turn to the west and see how it fared with Sam
-Willett and his friends.
-
-In the wild excitement of battle, soldiers, who
-hitherto may have secretly doubted their own courage,
-have been known to perform deeds of the most heroic
-valor, of which they retained not the slightest memory
-when the conflict was over.
-
-This was Sam's case.
-
-His manner of freeing Ulna was bold to the verge of
-madness; but the instant he saw the young Ute vanishing
-at the head of the rift, he forgot all about the manner
-by which his release had been effected.
-
-The anger of the chief, Blanco, was so great when he
-saw what Sam had done that he would have slain that
-daring youth without doubt had he not feared that in so
-doing he might lose his own life.
-
-"What you do them for?" roared the chief, as he
-pointed after the fugitive.
-
-"He was my friend," was all Sam could say, for by
-this time he had only the haziest conception of what he
-had actually done.
-
-"He was the foe of my tribe."
-
-"You did not know him."
-
-"You do me bad," said the enraged chief. "You
-take Ute's place. My people no stand what you do. I
-like be your friend. You friend of Ute's. No my
-friend."
-
-The chief snapped the fingers of both hands and
-turned to talk with his remaining braves.
-
-"Mistah Sam! Mistah Sam!" whispered Ike.
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"W'at you tink now?"
-
-"About what?"
-
-"'Bout de sitooation?"
-
-"I don't know," said Sam gloomily.
-
-"Tink we's in a bad box?"
-
-"If we are we must bear it."
-
-"Jest so; but somehow I'd like a change to good
-luck, jest to see how it feels like. 'Peers to me ez if we
-was nebber to hab no good times no more," and Ike
-rolled his eyes and sighed at a great rate.
-
-"W'at say me cookee blekfas'?" said Wah Shin, in
-whom the desire to be at work was stronger than his fear
-of the savages.
-
-"I don't think they'll let you cook," said Sam.
-
-"Den me tly. Dey say 'no,' den me stopee. Let 'em
-hab way."
-
-Wah Shin opened the bundle, took out the few remaining
-rabbits, and going over to the fire, he deliberately
-raked the coals and began to warm the decidedly
-simple breakfast.
-
-The Apaches offered no objections to the actions of
-the Chinaman, though they watched him with the eager
-curiosity of children at a circus.
-
-The Apaches make a bread from the pounded roots of
-the maguey or mountain aloe, of which they always carry
-a supply when on their war forays or hunting expeditions.
-
-This bread is sweet and nutritious, and that it will
-keep for a long time in its original state is shown by the
-fact that the recorder of these stirring incidents has still
-in his possession some of this bread, which he obtained
-in the mountains of Arizona fifteen years ago.
-
-The odor of the rabbits on the coals reached the nostrils
-of the chief, and it must have soothed his anger
-somewhat, for he spoke to his companions in the Apache
-tongue, and they at once pulled a lot of this bread from
-their buckskin haversacks—it resembled plugs of very
-black tobacco and tasted better than it looked—and they
-gave Sam, Ike and Wah Shin each a piece.
-
-"This is all the food we have left," said Sam, addressing
-the chief and pointing to the rabbits, "but we
-shall be glad to share with you, and if you guide us to
-Hurley's Gulch I will pledge my word that you shall have
-all I promised you before."
-
-The chief replied to this with a grunt that showed he
-was still far from feeling good-natured, still he proved
-that he was not only very hungry, but also very selfish,
-by devouring one of the four rabbits without asking any
-outside assistance.
-
-Ike witnessed this performance in open-eyed wonder,
-and he could not resist whispering to Sam:
-
-"I've seed a good many hogs in my time, but that ar
-Injun as went an' eat a hull rabbit all by hissel', is jest
-'bout de biggest one I ebber sot my two eyes on. Dar,
-he ain't lef' noffin' but de bones."
-
-"When you no have more meat," said the chief, coming
-over and standing before Sam, while he cast a
-covetous look at Maj, "then I tell you what you
-do."
-
-"What?" asked Sam.
-
-"Don't you like the dog?"
-
-"Oh, yes," said Sam, thinking that the Indian who
-could like dumb creatures must have a kindly heart.
-"I am very fond of the dog."
-
-"Then why you no eat him?" asked Blanco.
-
-As Sam had never looked at Maj as something that
-might be eaten instead of being fed, he was not a little
-puzzled what to reply, still he managed to say, with an
-attempt at smiling:
-
-"That isn't the way I like the dog."
-
-"No," said Ike in a low voice, "we likes dog wid de
-ha'r on an' de bark in him."
-
-All unmindful of this discussion Maj went on eating
-the bones that had been thrown to him and looking as if
-he had room for a great many more than were in sight.
-
-After this very informal meal was over the chief gave
-an order to his own people and then told Sam that he
-and his friends must follow him.
-
-"Where to?" asked Sam.
-
-"We see, me don't know," was the surly reply.
-
-As there was no food left, Sam rolled up the blankets
-and throwing these and the saddle-bags containing the
-gold dust and the precious paper over his shoulder,
-started up the ravine.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin followed, the former clinging to
-his old shot-gun as if his life depended on it.
-
-Eight lithe Indians, none of them burdened with
-clothes or the world's goods, brought up the rear.
-
-On reaching the uplands the chief came to a halt, the
-others doing the same, and shading his eyes from the
-sun, he looked long and eagerly to the eastward.
-
-With a thrill of joy Sam saw that neither Ulna nor
-his pursuers were in sight, and well knowing the young
-Ute's powers as a runner, he had now no fears of his being
-overtaken.
-
-As if he understood what was passing in the white
-youth's mind, the chief said:
-
-"You know Ulna long time?"
-
-"Only a few months."
-
-"You like him heap?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"You make him free?"
-
-"I am glad I did," said Sam, boldly.
-
-"Then you take his place like same as he was here,"
-said Blanco, with an angry glint in his eyes.
-
-"I do not understand."
-
-"If Ulna stay we kill him."
-
-"Yes," said Sam, feeling a cold chill and wondering
-what was coming next.
-
-"But Ulna get away."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You help him."
-
-"I did."
-
-"Then you take Ulna's place. You all same like
-Ulna to us. We take you to Apaches, way off," and the
-chief waved his hands to the south where the purple
-peaks of the San Francisco range could be seen rising
-into the bluest of blue skies.
-
-"Would you kill a man because he loved his friend?"
-asked Sam with a calmness of manner that did not at
-all indicate his feelings.
-
-"When man's friend my foe—yes."
-
-"But Ulna would not do that."
-
-"You think so."
-
-"I am sure he would not."
-
-"Ha! you don't know Ute."
-
-"I know Ulna," persisted Sam.
-
-"Ulna he like take my scalp."
-
-"I am sure he would not hurt you unless it was to
-save his own life. The whites have taught him better."
-
-"The whites!" repeated the chief, with a grunt of
-contempt. "Oh, yes, the whites, heap fine the whites.
-They take all Apaches' land, kill his wife, kill him when
-he don't like it. Apache don't go to white man's land;
-why, then, he comes here we no send for him?"
-
-Sam saw that this was a mixed question to which the
-answer could not be truthfully given unless it agreed
-with the Indian's notion of right, still he said evasively:
-
-"All men do wrong at times, but all men should try
-to do right."
-
-"What is right? what is wrong? White man think
-one thing, Apache think another thing; no one know.
-Sit down on stone; I wait till braves come back with
-Ulna's scalp, then all leave."
-
-Without waiting for any comment, Blanco again
-snapped the fingers of both hands above his head, and
-turned away to show he did not care to discuss the subject
-further.
-
-This conversation took place near the point of rocks
-in which Sam and his friends had spent the previous
-night.
-
-On some of the outlying stones Ike and Wah Shin were
-seated, eagerly watching the chief, while their faces
-showed that they were taking anything but a hopeful
-view of the situation.
-
-"Mistah Sam, w'at you t'ink 'bout dis time?" asked
-Ike as he placed a blanket for his young master to sit on.
-
-"I hardly know what to think, Ike," was the reply.
-
-"Don't you t'ink we made a mistake?"
-
-"In what way, Ike?"
-
-"By comin' up out ob dat canyon."
-
-"Would you want to stay there forever?"
-
-"Wa'al, not adzackly; but if I had any choosin 'bout
-it I'd a heap sight rudder be dar dan heah. I neber did
-hab no use for a Injun nohow. Jest only tink, dey's
-been a-watchin' an' a-watchin' Maj, an' a-lickin' ob dar
-lips as if dey was feelin' how he tasted. But if dey gits
-away wid dat dog den dey'll hab to steal him whin dis
-yar chile's asleep," said Ike, and he reached out and
-pulled the dog nearer to him by means of a rope he had
-fastened about his neck.
-
-"Dogee, he no so belly bad fol to make eat. Way off
-Chinaland fat dogee allee same's nice lilly tulkey. Big
-man he like him muchee heap."
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike, with ludicrous contempt, "I
-tanks de Great Mastah I ain't a Injun or a Chinee.
-Dar's only two decent kind ob people; one's black, like
-me, de odder's w'ite like Mistah Sam. But," he added,
-with a sigh, "I don't go foh to blame no one jest kase
-dey's so unfortnit as not to be ob de right culah."
-
-Sam could not keep his mind on the very funny discussion
-which followed between Ike and Wah Shin, as
-to the merits of their respective races. He was thinking
-of his beloved father, and wondering if he still lived
-and was waiting for the paper that was to prove his innocence,
-by showing to the world that he could have had
-no possible motive for desiring the death of Tom Edwards.
-
-One, two, three hours passed and the fierce sun
-poured down a blistering heat on the bare rocks, till the
-hot air rose in shivering, shimmering waves, that distorted
-every object seen at any distance, and threw into
-the most fantastic shapes the hills that studded the wide
-plateau.
-
-Every few minutes Sam looked to the east, expecting
-the return of the braves who had gone in pursuit of
-Ulna, but it was not till the sun had been past the zenith
-more than an hour, that his keen gaze detected four figures—the
-mirage gave them the appearance of giant
-spectres—approaching at a deliberate pace.
-
-Blanco made the discovery about the same time, and
-at once sent a messenger to hurry up the pursuers. He
-did not need to be told that his braves had not been successful
-in their mission, for had they been returning
-with a scalp they would not have been so deliberate in
-their movements.
-
-When the braves were within a few hundred yards,
-Blanco ran out to meet them, and seeing that one of
-them was wounded he said:
-
-"Did the Ute win?"
-
-"He did," replied the wounded man. "An antelope
-could not have kept up with him had he put forth all
-his speed."
-
-"Yet, you came close enough to him to catch his bullet,"
-said the puzzled chief.
-
-"Yes, and close enough to lose my scalp, if Ulna had
-cared to take it," said the brave, with a candor but
-rarely manifested by a savage.
-
-In answer to the chief's desire to learn how this unusual
-event came about, the brave told frankly and truthfully
-the whole story, even to the conversation he had
-with Ulna before he left.
-
-This story evidently had a powerful effect on Blanco,
-for he stroked his forehead for some minutes, and then
-said:
-
-"The Utes are changing; the Apaches must change
-too. I will not harm the young white man who told me
-the truth."
-
-Turning, the chief strode quickly to the place where
-Sam was sitting and eagerly watching, and then extending
-his hand, he said with some feeling in his voice:
-
-"You no tell lie. Ulna is good. Ulna escape. I
-am glad in my heart, for he no take life one of my
-braves when he can."
-
-Sam could hardly credit his ears, but there was no
-mistaking the expression on the swarthy face, despite its
-half-covering of war paint, so he shook the chief's hand
-and said with a great sense of relief:
-
-"I told you the truth about Ulna, I tell you the truth
-about myself. Now guide me to Hurley's Gulch and I
-will pay you all I promised."
-
-For reasons which he did not state, the chief said he
-could not go to Hurley's Gulch, but he was willing to
-guide Sam part of the way there, and to take all the
-rifles and other weapons they had with them as part payment,
-the other things promised to be sent out to a
-certain point two days after the party reached the Gulch.
-
-These were certainly anything but generous terms,
-but as Sam was in no humor to press a close bargain, he
-agreed to them at once.
-
-There was not much preparation to be made. All the
-canteens were filled with water, and about the middle of
-the afternoon they began the march for Hurley's Gulch,
-which the chief said could be reached the next afternoon,
-though he would leave them in the morning.
-
-With a lighter heart than he had carried for many a
-day, Sam, with Ike, Wah Shin, and the dog following
-him in the order named, started off by the side of the
-chief.
-
-They moved so fast that by dark, when they went
-into camp in the bottom of a gulch where there was
-water, they had traveled at least twenty miles.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.—IN GREATER PERIL STILL.
-======================================
-
-
-With the first glimmer of day the following morning
-all were awake, and a very light breakfast
-was made of the root bread, which the chief distributed
-with great fairness as far as it went.
-
-As Sam had agreed, he turned over to the chief the
-rifles, pistols, knives and blankets belonging to his party,
-keeping back only the canteens, which had been filled
-with water, and the saddle-bags.
-
-"I should like to borrow my own rifle from you," said
-Sam, after he had made the transfer, "for it is not safe
-to travel through this land without a weapon to defend
-one's self from foe or wild beasts. I shall return it when
-I send you the other things."
-
-"I let you have dis gun," said the chief, pointing to
-the old rusty shot-gun that had been the special object
-of Ike's care and the delight of his heart for so long.
-
-"Take her, Mistah Sam, take her," urged Ike. "Dar
-ain't anodder gun like her—no, not in all dis yar land."
-
-This was certainly the truth, yet "she" was rather
-an unreliable weapon to depend on in a trying emergency.
-
-"That is a shot-gun, no good to you or to me. Let
-me have my own rifle with some ammunition, and I
-pledge my life to send it back and six more equally good
-with it."
-
-"I tell you what I do," said the chief, after some
-deliberation and a good deal of whispering with his own
-people.
-
-"What?"
-
-"You got dog?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, you give me dog, I give you rifle."
-
-Sam had always been attached to Maj, and the adventures
-they had shared together made him even dearer,
-so that to lose him would be like parting with a friend;
-still, he knew that a sacrifice might have to be made.
-
-"What do you want with the dog?" he asked.
-
-"Eat him," grunted the chief.
-
-"I will give you the dog if you pledge me your word
-that you will not kill him for three days," said Sam,
-stooping and patting Maj on the head, while the faithful
-creature, in its turn, licked his hand.
-
-"But we no find game then we get hungry," said the
-chief.
-
-"You can find game. Agree to this, for the dog is
-my friend," said Sam with much feeling.
-
-"An' my frien', too," added Ike.
-
-"All right; I no kill for three days," said the chief.
-
-With this understanding Sam received his rifle and
-the belt containing his ammunition, and one of the
-Apaches fastened a cord about the dog's neck and
-dragged the reluctant creature to his own side.
-
-The chief pointed to a distant elevation—it looked to
-be only a few miles away, though it was actually thirty
-or more—and said:
-
-"That mountain back Hurley's Gulch. Go there.
-Keep north side. You find 'em before dark. I come
-here three days. You bring all things, rifles, pistols,
-knives, and—and one more thing."
-
-"What is that?" asked Sam.
-
-"Heap tobacco, much lot whisky."
-
-"I will keep my promise," said Sam, who could not
-but feel that the Indian was decidedly "on the make."
-
-With this understanding Sam and his friends parted
-from the Apaches, and with their eager eyes fixed on the
-mountain that marked the site of Hurley's Gulch they
-hurried on.
-
-The thought that he should meet his father that night
-gave strength and elasticity to Sam's limbs and filled his
-heart with a hope that was thrilling in its ecstacy.
-
-He felt that their troubles were near an end, and that
-before the sun went down his father's innocence would
-be established, and the little band of Gold Cave Campers
-would be happily together once more.
-
-He walked with such a long, quick stride that Ike and
-Wah Shin could only keep up with him by breaking into
-a dog-trot, that made them puff with the exertion.
-
-"See h'ar, Mistah Sam!" called out Ike, after they
-had been traveling for two hours and the heat waves began
-to distort the landscape again. "Does yeh expeck a
-feller foh to run like a race-horse, w'en he ain't got
-nothin' in his inside but a bit ob dem dar roots? Foh de
-Lor', if you keeps up dis yar like all day, you'll fine
-yerself alone, foh dis chile's so holler he's nigh done gin
-out," and Sam came to a halt and wiped his perspiring
-face with his ragged coat-sleeve.
-
-"Me hungly allee same like Ike, but me no say any-tlings,"
-said Wah Shin as he stood panting like a
-hunted hare.
-
-"I know, boys, that I've been hurrying more than I
-should in justice to you, but the thought that every step
-is taking me nearer to my father makes me forget how
-weary you must be," said Sam, his own brown face
-showing how the terrible pace told on him.
-
-"Mistah Sam, dar's a sight more reason w'y you
-should be tireder an' hungrier dan we," said Ike, the
-better part of his nature asserting itself, as it always did
-in an emergency. "But we'll git dar long afore dark
-widout so much hurryin', an' yer fadder'll be a heap
-sight more pleased if we all shows up fresh an' smilin',
-eben if we is so holler."
-
-Sam slackened his pace, but he was making fully four
-miles an hour when under way again.
-
-The water in their canteens became very warm in the
-blistering heat of that dry atmosphere, but they had to
-drink, and as a consequence their supply was exhausted
-by the middle of the afternoon.
-
-They had no food with them, and all were very hungry,
-but the prospect ahead made them forget their sufferings;
-for soldiers do not feel the pain of wounds received
-in the excitement of battle.
-
-Sam reasoned that two hours more would see them at
-Hurley's Gulch, and had so told his companions, when
-Ike called out:
-
-"Hello! Wat on earf is dem?"
-
-Sam turned in the direction pointed out by Ike, and
-to his amazement he saw the forms of four gigantic horsemen;
-but, instead of their riding along the solid earth,
-they appeared to be moving far up in the sky.
-
-All were familiar enough with the phenomena of this
-land to know that the riders were on the ground and
-that the spectral figures, representing them in the heavens
-had their origin in the mirage which is so frequent
-and delusive in this land.
-
-"Ulna has reached Hurley's Gulch, and those must
-be men who have come to search for us," said Sam after
-he had surveyed the figures for some seconds.
-
-About the same time the horsemen must have discovered
-Sam and his friends, for the giant figures could
-be seen pointing and waving their arms, while the monstrous
-horses plunged across the sky with mighty bounds.
-
-Again Sam hurried on till he came to a towering rock
-that commanded from its summit a view of the country
-round about.
-
-Up this he clambered, Ike and Wah Shin following
-him with great activity.
-
-On the summit of the rock there were a series of excavations,
-some of which were partly filled with water
-left there by the late storm.
-
-This water was comparatively cool, and after drinking
-till satisfied, Sam looked in the direction from which he
-expected the riders.
-
-To his surprise, they were only a few hundred yards
-away, and it did not need a second glance to convince
-him that one of these riders was Frank Shirley, and another
-was the man with one eye who had accompanied
-him on that day, that seemed so far away, to Gold Cave
-Camp.
-
-"Surely," he reasoned, "these would not be the men
-my father would send out from Hurley's Gulch to find
-me."
-
-Instinctively he felt that the presence of these men
-meant him no good, and he made up his mind not to
-place himself in their power till assured that they were
-friendly.
-
-The two horsemen with Frank Shirley and Badger
-were the landlord of the hotel at Hurley's, and a
-wretched creature of the same stripe who had been a
-partner and friend of Tom Edwards.
-
-"Halloo! Halloo, Sam Willett! We've come out to
-find you!" called out Shirley when he came within
-hearing distance.
-
-"Who sent you?" was Sam's salutation.
-
-"Your father."
-
-"How did he know I was here?"
-
-"Ulna told him."
-
-"Then why didn't he or Hank Tims come?"
-
-"There are good reasons why they could not get off,
-so we have come in their stead. Get down from the
-rocks; we've been searching for you since before daylight,"
-said Shirley, as he and Badger dismounted from
-their horses not a hundred feet away.
-
-Slipping into one of the excavations so that he could
-see what was going on below without exposing himself,
-Sam called down:
-
-"Frank Shirley, my father never sent you to find
-me."
-
-"What! do you think Mr. Shirley's a-lyin'?" shouted
-Badger, at the same time unstringing his rifle and assuming
-a position as if about to fire.
-
-"Yes, I do," said Sam boldly.
-
-Badger would have fired, though Sam was out of sight
-had not Shirley laid his hand on his arm and said pleadingly:
-
-"Don't do that, Badger; you'll spill all the fat in the
-fire. That young fellow has a rifle, and he knows how
-to use it."
-
-Sam heard all this distinctly and he called out:
-
-"Yes, and I will use it if you fellows don't get back
-and mount your horses while I count ten. One, two,
-three, four——"
-
-Neither Shirley nor Badger waited to hear more, for
-as "one" was called out they saw the muzzle of a rifle
-pointing down at them from the top of the rock.
-
-With the alacrity of acrobats the two men scrambled
-into their saddles, and as they did so the word "Two!"
-rang out.
-
-"There, you see, we want to humor you, and if we
-were not friends we shouldn't do that," said Frank
-Shirley, trembling in voice and frame from his recent
-effort.
-
-Sam's reply showed that he had no faith in this.
-
-"My rifle is good for a half-mile. If you are within
-reach in ten minutes I'll begin to fire."
-
-"See h'ar, young feller," called out Badger, "do you
-know what I think of you?"
-
-"No, and I don't care."
-
-"I think you're a devil."
-
-"All right. Start, for the ten minutes have begun."
-
-The four men did start. It would have been nothing
-less than suicide, the landlord said, to remain there and
-be shot at, "more particlar whin there was no show to
-shoot back."
-
-Sullenly the men rode off, and when they had gone
-out of rifle-reach they came to a halt, and after much
-swearing all round, Shirley asked:
-
-"Well, gentlemen, what's to be done next?"
-
-"Nothing, till dark," said Badger.
-
-"And what then?"
-
-"Then we ken get at 'em."
-
-"But how?"
-
-"While two of us shoot at the front of the rock to
-attract 'em, two others can climb up behind and finish
-the job for good," said Badger.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.—IN A TRAP.
-==========================
-
-
-From his lookout Sam kept a constant watch on the
-four horsemen, and he made up his mind from
-their movements that they were not going back without
-letting him hear from them again.
-
-"W'at you tink now, 'bout dis time?" asked Ike, who,
-with Wah Shin, had crept up from one of the excavations
-to Sam's side.
-
-"I think, Ike, that those men are not our friends,"
-said Sam, pointing to the distant group.
-
-"Dat's jest how I feel. De worl' wouldn't be no wuss
-off if de earf was to open up an' swaller all dem men an'
-den come shut agin, like a rat-trap, Mistah Sam! Do
-you know what I tinks?"
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"W'en we wuz down in dem canyons, wif de watah
-all round us an' dem dar big rocks shootin' away up till
-dey 'peahed to go right frue de sky, den we tinked we
-wuz in a pooty bad fix, didn't we?"
-
-"So we did, Ike."
-
-"An' den again, w'en we fell in wif dem savage Injuns
-an' it appeahed as ef dey was bound to hab our skelps,
-den we tinked as how we wuz in a heap sight wuss fix'n
-eber?"
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"An' we kinder wished we wuz back in de canyons?"
-
-"That is true."
-
-"Wa'al, does yeh know w'at I tinks now?"
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"Dat a mean w'ite man is a heap sight meaner dan a
-mean Injun——"
-
-"My opinion exactly."
-
-"An' dat if I had my choice to be in de comp'ny ob
-dem four men off dar, or away back wif dem bar-legged
-'Paches, as is so powahful fond ob dorg, w'y, I'd go wif
-de 'Patches ebery time, an' feel might tankful foh de
-hobertunity."
-
-"I agree with you, Ike."
-
-"But w'at's to be did?"
-
-"We must wait."
-
-"An' starve?"
-
-"We can't get anything to eat here, Ike."
-
-"If we could get suffin' to eat de place'd be a sight
-pleasanter. I nebber could feel brave w'en I was feelin'
-holler at de same time," and Ike tightened his belt,
-and rapped himself on the outside to show he was very
-much in the condition of a drum.
-
-"Bime by, light way soon we hab night, sun go
-down, see," said Wah Shin, pointing to the west where
-a crimson flush marked the spot where the sun had set.
-
-With great anxiety Sam saw the shadows settling over
-the landscape.
-
-He was now convinced that these men came to do him
-a harm, and he resolved not to let them come near him
-while he had a shot left in his rifle, or he was able to
-pull a trigger.
-
-He felt this delay more keenly than he had all the
-obstacles that beset his course since he left Gold Cave
-Camp to reach his father.
-
-By a perilous and round about way he had come, and
-when within a few miles of the objective point for which
-he had struggled so bravely, he found himself stopped by
-men, who, according to all the laws of humanity, should
-have been his protectors and friends.
-
-It was much like a brave swimmer's sinking within
-touch of shore, or a starving man's hand falling helpless
-by his side when just within reach of food.
-
-But Sam Willett had the courage and the devotion
-that obstacles could not weaken nor sufferings ever
-change.
-
-With every trial he grew stronger, more determined to
-reach the father, who was nearly always in his thoughts,
-and never for an instant absent from his heart.
-
-To add to the trials of the situation night was coming,
-and under its cover Sam was now convinced that these
-men would try to make their way to the top of the rock
-on which he and his faithful companions had found a
-refuge.
-
-"I've heerd tell o' war," groaned Ike, "an' I've seed
-men as fit an' fout, but thar wasn't none of 'em as eber
-got cornered as we is now. If I wasn't so awful holler
-I'd kneel down and pray, for if de good Lor' wants to
-help us He'll neber hab a bettah chance."
-
-"Don't lose heart, Ike. Help will come in good
-time," said Sam, with a cheeriness of manner that did
-not at all indicate his actual feelings.
-
-"I no cannee see how help him can gettee to us, but I
-no cale. Only can die one time," said Wah Shin, with
-the stolidity of bearing and that indifference to death
-which so often distinguishes the Mongolian.
-
-"These men," said Sam, pointing in the direction of
-the enemy, "knew we were out here before they left
-Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"It do seem bery much dat way," said Ike, with a sad
-shake of the head. Then he added: "But I don't see
-how dey could hab knowed."
-
-"Can't you think of one way, Ike?"
-
-"No, Mistah Sam; foh de life ob me I can't."
-
-"Have you forgotten Ulna?"
-
-"Ulna!" exclaimed Ike.
-
-"Yes; there is no doubt in my mind as to his safety.
-He has reached Hurley's Gulch, and those men, my
-father's enemies, have come out, on the strength of
-Ulna's information, to stop us."
-
-"But why don't some ob our friends show up? Dat's
-w'at gits me," said Ike, and he rubbed his head vigorously
-with both hands, as if he might in this way excite
-his brain into better action.
-
-The question asked by Ike had presented itself to Sam
-before, but as he could not answer it he did not let it
-annoy him. Speculation and action do not work in
-harmony.
-
-While it was yet sufficiently light, Sam Willett, like a
-careful soldier examining the field on which a life and
-death struggle is about to take place, looked over the
-rock on which they had found refuge and saw its weak
-points as well as its advantages.
-
-He walked boldly about within sight of the enemy,
-and the wonder is that they did not risk a shot at him.
-They certainly would have done so had they not agreed
-to try the effect of strategy before attempting force.
-
-It did not take Sam long to discover that the summit
-of the rock was accessible on one side only, and so he
-very wisely reasoned that that was the only side to be defended
-in the event of a night attack.
-
-He reasoned further that a rock so conspicuous in the
-landscape and known to have water on its top must be
-well known to every one acquainted with that land. Indeed,
-there was evidence all about him that the place
-had been frequently visited and used as a camping-ground
-by Indians and miners, and the chances were
-that Frank Shirley's companions knew the way to the
-top.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin were without arms, but it did not
-take Sam long to discover how their strength and courage
-could be utilized in defending the position.
-
-Scattered over the crest of the rock there were a great
-many irregular pieces of yellow sandstone, weighing
-from a few ounces to fifty pounds, or more, and, properly
-handled these stones would make very effective ammunition.
-
-People whose hands and brains are occupied do not
-feel trouble like those who have nothing to do but to
-think over their woes.
-
-The instant Sam stated his purpose to Ike and Wah
-Shin, their faces brightened and they went to work with
-a spirit and energy that made them forget, for the time,
-that they were very hungry.
-
-They piled the stones four feet high across the narrow
-turn, up which their assailants must come, and in addition
-they placed a great heap within reach to be used as
-ammunition.
-
-By the time these preparations were made, it was
-quite dark, but the snorting and tramping of uneasy
-horses and the hoarse voices of men in the distance, told
-Sam that the enemy were still close by.
-
-"Mistah Sam," whispered Ike, unable longer to stand
-the strain in silence.
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"How does yeh feel 'bout dis time?"
-
-"All right—considering."
-
-"Not so hungry as yeh was, eh?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Dat's same's me. My heart's beatin' so dat I don't
-feel so holler——"
-
-"You heap skee-at," grunted Wah Shin.
-
-"Yes, an' I ain't 'shamed to say I is; but if it comes
-to chuckin' down rocks, you'll see I ken work harder'n
-you, Wah Shin," said Ike, with spirit.
-
-"Mebbe yes. Mebbe no. Me chuckee rocks w'en
-Meest Sam he say, 'You go in, Wah.' Me no blag."
-
-"Hist!" interrupted Sam. "Keep silence. They
-are coming nearer."
-
-On the instant Ike and Wah Shin became as silent as
-the grave, and hugged closer to the surface of the rock,
-but they could hear their own hearts beating like war-drums,
-and they would not have been at all surprised if
-told that the men down below could hear them, too.
-
-It was a trying moment, but Sam was equal to the occasion.
-His ready rifle was protruding through an opening
-in the wall that commanded the approach. Ike
-stood at his right hand and Wah Shin on his left, each
-ready to hurl down the stones on their assailants, when
-their young commander gave the word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.—A BRIEF TRUCE AND WHAT FOLLOWED IT.
-==================================================
-
-
-After a painful wait, Sam heard voices under the
-rock, and he braced himself for the expected
-assault.
-
-The men were evidently consulting, and one was in
-favor of attacking at once, while the others advised
-"strategy;" this was the one word that came distinctly
-to Sam's ears.
-
-At length, Shirley, who was in favor of strategy,
-stepped back from under the rock and called up:
-
-"Hello! hello! up there!"
-
-"Hello, down there!" was Sam's response.
-
-"Is that you, Sam Willett?"
-
-"It is."
-
-"I want to talk with you."
-
-"Talk away, I am listening."
-
-"Do you know me?"
-
-"No, I don't, and what's more I don't want to," said
-Sam, with a ring of firmness in his voice that surprised
-and angered his questioner.
-
-"I am your friend, your cousin," said Shirley.
-
-"You are Frank Shirley?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Late of Detroit?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, that's me."
-
-"Well, Frank Shirley, late of Detroit, you may be
-my cousin, but you are not my friend."
-
-"But why shouldn't I be?"
-
-"Because you are not a gentleman."
-
-"That young feller up there," said Badger, with an
-oath, "ought to be tarred and feathered and then set
-on fire and shot at. And if I ever get my hands on him,
-I'll——"
-
-"Don't," interrupted the landlord, "you'll kick all
-the fat into the fire. Let Mr. Shirley talk to the boy;
-he'll get in fine work, if you only keep your mouth shut."
-
-Badger gave vent to his feelings by a series of savage
-growls, and Shirley, after much coughing to ease his
-nervousness, proceeded to carry out his strategy.
-
-"See here, Sam Willett!"
-
-"Go on, I hear," was the response.
-
-"I don't mean you any harm."
-
-"And you sha'n't do me any, if I can help it," said
-Sam.
-
-"If you look away off to the east, you can see lights."
-
-"I know that."
-
-"Do you know where those lights are?"
-
-"I think I do."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"At Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"Your father is there——"
-
-"I am glad to hear it."
-
-"And he is very sick."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Because I saw him in a bad fix to-day."
-
-"See here, Shirley, tell me at once what you want,"
-said Sam, in his spirited way.
-
-"I want to take you to your father; he's been heart-broken,
-thinking you were dead; so come down, and I
-pledge you my honor as a gentleman that I will take you
-to Hurley's Gulch," said Shirley, in accents intended to
-be reassuring and soothing.
-
-"Your honor as a gentleman?" repeated Sam with a
-ring of sarcasm.
-
-"Yes, that's what I said."
-
-"And we'll let you three young fellers ride our
-horses," added the landlord.
-
-"And you will also pledge your honor, as a gentleman,
-to do that?" said Sam.
-
-"Oh, I'll swear to it," said the landlord.
-
-"Thanks, but the security being false and worthless,
-I must decline your offer," said Sam, surprised at his
-own coolness and his ready command of language.
-
-"Then you won't come down?" from Shirley.
-
-"Thanks, not to-night."
-
-"Sam Willett!"
-
-"Yes; Frank Shirley!"
-
-"Are you crazy?"
-
-"No, I'm mad; and you'll find I'm dangerous if you
-bother me further," said Sam stoutly.
-
-"See har, young feller," shouted Badger. "If you
-don't want us to save you, do you know what we'll do
-next?"
-
-"I don't."
-
-"Why, we'll get mad, too——"
-
-"I don't care."
-
-"And," continued Badger, his voice choking with
-anger, "we'll go up thar and fotch you down; and if so
-be you git hurt, it'll be yer own fault."
-
-"Hurt?" from Sam.
-
-"Yes, and hurted purty bad, too."
-
-"What's your name?"
-
-"My name's Badger. I'm a terror, I am. I was
-nussed on blizzards, and rocked by tornadoes. I live on
-rattlesnakes and horned toads, and when I'm riled its
-wuss nor a earthquake. Now you are gettin' my dander
-riz, so come down, for if I have to climb up after you,
-you'll git hurt."
-
-Badger certainly thought that this fierce speech would
-have a most depressing effect upon the youth in command
-of the rock, great therefore was his anger and disappointment
-when he received this reply.
-
-"Before I am hurt some one else will be in the same
-fix, for I and my companions propose to defend ourselves."
-
-"But why defend yourselves," said Shirley, "when
-we mean you nothing but good."
-
-"I do not care to give my reasons; but I'll tell you
-what I've been thinking ever since I started to reach
-Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"That you and the one-eyed ruffian who travels with
-you are the cause of all my father's troubles——"
-
-"That's a lie!" roared Badger.
-
-Sam continued as if he had not heard the interruption.
-
-"And I believe it was you two who killed that wretch,
-Tom Edwards, in order to get us into a scrape—yes, to
-get us out of the way. Now get back, or come on,
-just as you please."
-
-Sam said this in a way that convinced the man below
-that his resolution could not be shaken, and that any
-attempt to oust him from his stronghold by force would
-be met with resistance to the death.
-
-"That young devil up thar's a chip of the old block,"
-hissed Badger. "Why, cuss him, he talks jist like his
-father. Do you know what my opinion of them two is,
-Mr. Shirley?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"That they're the hardest, toughest cases I've met
-up with in my five-and-forty years of mixin' among all
-classes. Sich people hadn't ought to be let live among
-decent folks."
-
-"I've seed boys in my time, hundreds and thousands
-of 'em," said the disgusted landlord, "but that young
-feller up on top of that rock, for downright gall and bitterness,
-and bull-headedness, lays over anything I ever
-saw, heard or red of."
-
-"It is evident to me that Sam Willett will fight; now
-what are we to do?" asked Shirley in despair, for all
-prospect of succeeding by "strategy" was gone.
-
-"We must carry out my plan," said Badger.
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"We've got to go back to first principles, jist as I
-supposed we would when you got talkin' 'bout mildness and
-strategy——"
-
-"Explain yourself, Badger."
-
-"You and me must face the music, Mr. Shirley."
-
-"Face the music?" stammered Shirley.
-
-"Yes, thar's nothin' else to be did."
-
-"Explain yourself, Badger."
-
-"You and me must creep up the rock on the other
-side, while Jake and Ned stand off to the east and keep
-up a fire on the top, so as to distract attention from the
-p'int we're after. Do you see?"
-
-Shirley said he saw very clearly; but from his manner
-it was very evident he did not look with approval on this
-plan of assault.
-
-Physically and morally Frank Shirley was a coward,
-and though he tried to hide this fact from others, he
-could not hide it from himself.
-
-But even cowards will fight desperately for their lives,
-and all Shirley's future, if not his very existence, depended
-on the success of this monstrous undertaking.
-
-If he failed, then he was an impoverished outcast with
-the stain of murder on his soul, though all the chances
-were that if Sam Willett was permitted to reach Hurley's
-Gulch, the vigilantes would arrest himself and
-Badger for the death of Tom Edwards.
-
-Quickly he looked over the situation, and his cowardly
-heart took on a show of courage; it was the courage of
-desperation, as he realized how much depended on his
-conduct this night.
-
-"I can't say that I'm much of a fighter, having had
-no experience that way," said Shirley with a tremor in
-his voice. "But, Badger, if you lead the way, I'll follow
-to the end. We must finish this job to-night."
-
-"If we don't it'll finish us," said Badger grimly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.—A NIGHT BATTLE.
-=============================
-
-
-Sam was astonished when he heard the rifles banging
-away on the east side of the rock.
-
-He had been looking for a direct attack and so could
-not understand this move.
-
-"What can they mean; they are certainly bad, but
-they are not such downright fools as to think they can
-do us any harm from that quarter," said Sam, thinking
-aloud rather than asking for the opinion of his companions.
-
-"Mistah Sam."
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"I ken hear de bullets a whistlin' ober head, an' it do
-'peah ez ef dey was comin' lower down."
-
-"W'at mattle if dey no comee low nuff down to
-hult? Let 'em singee, lat's alle lite," grunted Wah
-Shin, as he crouched closer to the rock, and hugged to
-his breast a big stone, which he intended to use to the
-best advantage when the proper time came.
-
-Sam Willett was by instinct a soldier.
-
-This useless attack had a purpose in it, and he was not
-long in reaching a right conclusion.
-
-To encourage Ike and Wah Shin, he gave them the
-benefit of his reasoning.
-
-"That firing, off there, is all a dodge," he said.
-
-"Tink dey're shootin' foh fun, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"No, Ike, they are in dead earnest, but their object
-is to take our attention away from the point of danger."
-
-"De odder side."
-
-"Yes; the attack will be made along the trail leading
-from the ground to the top of the rock, and we must
-be prepared for it," said Sam.
-
-Nothing could be gained by heeding the riflemen.
-
-All his sight and strength must now be used to watch
-and guard the only ascent by which their position could
-be reached without the highest scaling ladders, and of
-such mechanical appliances there was no danger.
-
-Sam placed Ike and Wah Shin in position again, and
-whispered to them not to hurl a stone till he gave the
-word.
-
-This done he brought his rifle to a half cock, and
-making sure that his cartridges were within reach, he
-knelt down with the muzzle of his gun covering the
-trail.
-
-The dry, still air carried every sound.
-
-Though Badger and Shirley moved with the stealth of
-Indians, yet their labored breathing, and, now and then,
-the fall of their feet came to Sam's ears.
-
-He was sure he could hear two men whispering under
-the rocks. He took a firmer hold of his rifle and tried
-to look through the intense darkness that covered the
-route by which the attack must be made.
-
-The strain of that long wait was more trying to
-strength and courage than would have been a prompt
-attack.
-
-Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed, and still the riflemen
-to the east kept up their desultory, but harmless
-firing.
-
-The darkness that added to the difficulties of the defense,
-was not a great advantage to the attacking party.
-
-Badger was in the advance, groping with his hands
-for the trail, and not daring to strike a light, for fear of
-making it the target for Sam.
-
-"Keep close behind," whispered Badger to Shirley,
-who, as they crept on, showed a decided disposition to
-lag to the rear.
-
-"Have you found the trail, Badger?"
-
-"I think so."
-
-"Is it steep?"
-
-"Hist, man, don't talk, but foller close up. Here's
-the place where we begin to climb. Mind, it's no fool of
-a job to get to the top at the best of times," said Badger,
-as he began the ascent on hands and knees.
-
-Shirley, trembling in every limb, came close after, his
-fears somewhat allayed by the comforting thought that
-Badger's huge form would shield him from any bullets
-that might be fired down.
-
-Sam was on the alert. The sounds about the place
-died out, and the stillness added to the painful intensity
-of the situation.
-
-Unable longer to control his feelings, Ike bent down
-and whispered:
-
-"Say, Mistah Sam."
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"Dis yar's gittin' ticklish."
-
-"Yes; be still."
-
-Unmindful of this injunction, Ike continued:
-
-"Somet'ing got to be did mighty soon, or dis chile
-can't stan' de strain."
-
-"Wait."
-
-"But it's time to heab de rocks."
-
-"Not till I give the word."
-
-"But as I'm a sinner I can heah 'em!"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Right close by——"
-
-Ike's sentence, was cut short by the flash and crack of
-a pistol fired by a man not twenty feet away.
-
-With a "spat" the bullet splintered against the rocks
-a few feet above Sam's head.
-
-The time for immediate action had come.
-
-"Now, boys!" shouted Sam, in ringing tones.
-
-By the flash of his own rifle he saw the forms of two
-men on the trail outside the wall he had thrown
-up.
-
-With the strength of desperation, Ike and Wah Shin
-rose to their feet and began hurling stones into the
-path, while Sam fired as rapidly as he could throw shells
-into the breech of his rifle.
-
-In less time than it takes to record the act, the defenders
-knew that the assault had been a failure.
-
-Oaths, groans and the crashing of bodies, two score
-feet below, told that Badger and Shirley did not retreat
-of their own volition, but in accordance with the one
-law which they could not violate, viz.: gravitation.
-
-Cries for help went up from the base of the rock, and
-the two men who had been indulging in harmless rifle
-practice hastened to the relief of their less fortunate
-companions.
-
-"Hello, boys, any one hurt?" asked one.
-
-"Hurt!" groaned Badger. "They've done for me."
-
-"Oh, I guess not. Let us get a light and see how
-things is," said the landlord.
-
-"Don't make a light," protested Shirley.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because they'll fire at it."
-
-"No, but go up and clean them fellows out. I could
-die happy if I knowed you'd cleaned 'em out," gasped
-Badger.
-
-"Wa'al," said the landlord, "you can't expect me to
-go up there and try to do anything after the fist you
-two have made of it. I don't mind anything in reason,
-but that's axin' a leetle too much."
-
-"Something must be done, and at once," said Frank
-Shirley.
-
-"What do you want done?" asked the landlord, already
-heartily sick of the undertaking.
-
-"I am hurt as well as Badger."
-
-"Sorry for that."
-
-"And you two must help us on our horses and get us
-away from here."
-
-"Of course we'll stick by you," said the landlord.
-"But atween you and me and the rock, Mr. Shirley, I
-kinder think, perhaps, it mout be better, if so be you
-steered cl'ar of Hurley's Gulch for awhile——"
-
-The man stopped suddenly, his attention being attracted
-by the barking of a dog in the distance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.—TO THE RESCUE.
-=============================
-
-
-Badger and Shirley were carried from under the
-rock, but when it came to lifting them on the
-horses it was found that they were too much injured to
-ride.
-
-"Thar ain't no use in my tryin' it," groaned Badger.
-"I can't sit in the saddle."
-
-"Then what's to be did?" asked the landlord.
-
-"Hide me away, and when daylight comes send some
-of the boys after me with a stretcher."
-
-"That'd never do," protested the landlord.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Coz, if you was to git back to the Gulch at this time
-all the chances is they'd make you stretch hemp. Fact
-is, ole feller, you and Shirley here has played your last
-keerds, and I'm downright sorry to say the game has
-gone agin you in a most surprisin' bad way."
-
-"Don't leave me!" whined Shirley. "Take care of
-me and I'll pay you your own price."
-
-"Oh, that's all right," said the landlord, who, with
-his companion, had placed the two men side by side on
-their saddle blankets and left with them two canteens.
-"But the barkin' of that dog comes nearer and nearer,
-and I don't like it. Keep a stiff upper lip and I'll send
-out and see how you are after sun-up."
-
-With this promise the landlord and his companion,
-with an eye single to their own safety, mounted their
-horses and rode away.
-
-The barking of the dog, coming from the west, was
-also heard by Sam and his friends.
-
-"I tink dlat no dogee. Dlat a wolf," said Wah
-Shin.
-
-"Wolf!" repeated Ike with fine scorn. "That's no
-wolf. Heah him! Jist lissen, Mistah Sam! Ain't dat
-music, an' can't yeh make it out?"
-
-"I hear it, Ike," said Sam, "and the animal is evidently
-running fast and coming this way."
-
-"It's Maj! It's deah ole Maj!" shouted Ike, and in
-his excitement he dashed against the wall, and with a
-roar like Niagara the rocks went thundering down the
-trail.
-
-Sam heard the two horsemen galloping away, but as
-he could not tell whether they were retreating or going
-after reinforcements he determined not to abate his vigilance
-so long as there was a sign of danger.
-
-Again he heard something clambering up the rocks,
-and he was on the point of firing, when a short, joyous
-bark rang out, and the next instant Maj was in their
-midst.
-
-The faithful creature was nearly exhausted by his long
-run, for he had escaped from the Apaches, but he had
-strength enough left to show his joy at the meeting.
-
-He leaped at Sam, and after licking his face and hands
-he turned and, with commendable impartiality, bestowed
-the same attention on the others.
-
-Ike actually cried for joy, and he made an effort to
-take the dog in his arms, but when the first greetings
-were over Maj, half dead with hunger and thirst, discovered
-that there was water near by, and without any
-thought of the propriety of his conduct he plunged in
-and lapped till his parched skin was full.
-
-"Oh, if Ulna was only heah now," cried Ike, "we'd
-be all togedder agin an' as happy as a—as a darkey in
-ripe watah millyon time!"
-
-Sam was confident that Ulna had reached Hurley's
-Gulch, and this thought gave him so much comfort that
-he did not wonder why his friend had not come to his
-relief, for he well knew that the Indian youth would do
-everything that lay in his power, and he was right in
-this surmise.
-
-The coming of Ulna had not only saved the lives of
-two men, but it had also caused a revolution in the
-minds of a majority of the people living at Hurley's
-Gulch.
-
-To be sure, there were some who did not believe the
-Indian youth, and who were satisfied in their own minds
-that Mr. Willett and Hank Tims should be hanged, and
-that they would be, sooner or later; but these fellows
-found themselves in the minority and only whispered
-their belief.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were still under guard,
-for the promised proof of their innocence was not at
-hand; but Si Brill and Collins, now the most prominent
-men in the camp, felt that the end they hoped for was
-very near.
-
-Ulna, after being refreshed with food, kept his eyes
-open, and he was the first to discover that Badger, Shirley
-and the others had left Hurley's Gulch.
-
-He at once sought out Collins and said to him:
-
-"I saw the four men ride away."
-
-"But men are ridin' away and a-ridin' in all the
-time," said Collins, who not being at all suspicious saw
-no harm in the act.
-
-"True, Collins; but I am sure these men mean harm
-to Sam Willett."
-
-"Nonsense."
-
-"It is the truth."
-
-"But you left Sam in the hands of them onary
-'Paches, didn't you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then how can Badger get at him?"
-
-"The Apaches say they are not at war with the
-whites——"
-
-"I don't take no stock in them or their sayin's," said
-Collins.
-
-"But they are at peace, else they would have killed
-Sam at once. As it is they will either rob him and turn
-him loose, or else hold him for a reward."
-
-"Well?" said Collins reflectively.
-
-"And if Badger and his gang meet the Apaches and
-pay the reward, then they will have Sam Willett in their
-power——"
-
-"Hold!" cried Collins. "I see it all! Once in their
-power they will kill the boy and get the receipt Tom
-Edwards gave when he was paid for the mine. Then the
-dogs can come back here and defy us. We must move
-to the rescue, Ulna! We must move at once!"
-
-Accompanied by Ulna, Collins went to Si Brill and
-others of his friends, and after warning them to say
-nothing to Mr. Willett, he told them of his fears for
-Sam and urged the necessity of getting out a rescuing
-party at once, which he was ready to lead "if no one else
-didn't offer."
-
-At this time there were not many horses in camp, and
-unfortunately nearly all were owned by the men who
-had been so bitter against Mr. Willett.
-
-It was after midnight when Collins succeeded in getting
-three horses and a mule; they belonged to Mr.
-Willett and this limited the rescuing party to four, one
-of whom was Ulna, who went along as a guide, though
-all knew he could be depended on if there were serious
-work on hand.
-
-About two hours before day they came face to face
-with the landlord and his companion.
-
-"Where have you fellers been?" demanded Tom Collins.
-
-"I don't know that it's any of your business," was the
-landlord's reply, "but I don't mind sayin' that we went
-out to see if thar was any Injuns in sight. For one, I
-didn't take any stock in that young Ute's story."
-
-"Wa'al," said Collins, "there's plenty of better men
-than you—and I'm one of 'em, that do believe the Ute.
-Now what have you done with Badger and Shirley?"
-
-"They left us 'bout dark; if you want them you must
-hunt 'em for yourself. I ain't no one's dog," growled
-the landlord.
-
-"The man that had you for his dog might count on
-bein' bit, but I reckon we ken find out all we want without
-yer help. Go back to the Gulch and pack yer traps,
-for it's my 'pinion it'll be very hot there in a day or two
-for dogs of your breed," said Collins as he shook his
-bridle and rode on.
-
-Meantime Sam, ignorant of the doings of friends and
-foe, kept watch on the summit of the rock.
-
-He was completely "played out," and it was only by
-a strong effort of will and a constant change of position
-that he kept from sinking down and going to sleep like
-his companions.
-
-As soon as the gray dawn began to make distant objects
-visible Sam awoke Ike and Wah Shin.
-
-Sleep had only brought a temporary cessation from the
-pangs of hunger, but the brave fellows made no complaint.
-
-Ike, always on the lookout, was the first to discover
-horsemen in the distance, coming from the direction of
-Hurley's Gulch.
-
-"It 'peahs to me powahful like's ef Ulna is one ob
-dem yar men," said Ike.
-
-He was not mistaken.
-
-On came the riders at a gallop.
-
-In the advance rode Ulna.
-
-As soon as they caught sight of Sam they waved their
-hats and sent up a thrilling cheer.
-
-.. figure:: images/illus3.jpg
- :align: center
- :alt: Sam and Ike discover the horsemen coming to their rescue.
-
- Sam and Ike discover the horsemen coming to their rescue.
-
-Even the horses caught the spirit of their riders, and
-plunged into a faster gallop, till they came to a halt
-under the towering rock which Sam had defended so
-gallantly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.—SAM'S DEVOTION IS REWARDED.
-==========================================
-
-
-"Hello!" shouted Collins, as he and his companions
-dismounted and looked up at the three
-famished people on the rock. "How did you three
-gents and the dog git up thar?"
-
-It was evident from this question that Collins was not
-acquainted with the rock.
-
-"On the other side," said Sam.
-
-"All right; we'll find the way and come up."
-
-"Better save the trouble," said Sam. "We'll come
-down, and glad we are of the chance."
-
-"Glad!" cried Ike; "dat word don't nigh begin foh
-to 'spress dis yar chile's feelin's. I'ze full, chuck full
-ob downright bliss, I is. Come along, Maj and Wah,
-foh it does seem powahful like's ef de trouble had jest
-'bout come to an ind."
-
-Down over the ruin of the wall they clambered, and
-at the foot stood Ulna—the faithful.
-
-The Indian may be a stoic under suffering, but there
-are no people in the world so ready to give expression to
-joy, nor so demonstrative where the better impulses of
-the heart are called out.
-
-"Sam! Sam! My friend, thank God you are safe!"
-cried Ulna, and his eyes looked larger and blacker for
-their tears as he caught his friend to his breast and
-kissed him first on one cheek and then on the
-other.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin shook hands with every one again
-and again, and then they jointly performed a joy-dance,
-in which the dog joined, to the music of his own glad
-barking.
-
-"Looks like's ef you'd been corralled up thar," said
-Collins, looking up at the defense and down at the red
-stains on the stones at the bottom.
-
-"We have that," replied Sam, and then briefly and
-with characteristic modesty, he told of the fight of the
-night before.
-
-"And the paper," said Collins; "the receipt Tom
-Edwards said he didn't give yer father?"
-
-"I've got it here," said Sam, pointing to the saddle-bags
-slung over his shoulder.
-
-"Wa'al, I felt most sure it'd turn up. But what became
-of Badger and Shirley?"
-
-"I think they were hurt, but I hope not badly," said
-Sam.
-
-"Some one's hurt, and purty bad, too," said one of
-Collins' men.
-
-"How do you know that, Jack?"
-
-"Jest look over thar, Collins," said the man, pointing
-to a wall some distance off, at the side of which two
-men appeared to be sleeping.
-
-On the instant all went over, and they discovered
-Shirley and Badger.
-
-The former was dead, but an examination showed that
-he had received no wound that would account for his
-demise.
-
-"No, boys," groaned Badger, "he wasn't hurt much
-at all, but I was the feller that suffered."
-
-"Then how did Shirley come to die?" asked Collins.
-
-"Die! Coz, he was a coward."
-
-"What do you mean, Badger?"
-
-"He said the game was up, so he took poison to finish
-hisself."
-
-"Poison!" exclaimed all.
-
-"Yes, poison. He wanted me to take some, too, but
-I'd rather hang. Look round and you'll find the thing
-that held it."
-
-The searchers did not have far to look, for clasped in
-the dead man's right hand they found a small vial with
-a death's head and cross-bones on the label, which contained
-the legend, in red letters, "Sulph. Morphia."
-
-"Badger."
-
-"Yes, Collins."
-
-"What brought you fellows out here?"
-
-"Can't you guess?"
-
-"I can, but I'd rather you'd tell me."
-
-"And you won't think no harder of me for it."
-
-"Badger," replied Collins, "I can't think of anything
-you could do—unless you chanced to be decent—that
-would make me think any different of you than I do
-now."
-
-"Wa'al, I reckon I ain't got long to live, so I'll tell
-the downright truth for once——"
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Shirley, Jake and another feller came out with me
-to do for young Willett, but we didn't connect. Thar,
-that's all I'll say at present," and Badger closed his
-eyes and looked to be as dead as the man lying by his
-side.
-
-"Men that starts out to make the life-path hard for
-other folks," said Collins, with much feeling in his
-voice, "generally fetches up with a short turn themselves,
-and falls into the pit dug for others. Now, boys,
-what's best to be did next?"
-
-"Thar's nothin' to be did," said the man who had
-spoken before, "but to sarch the body and then bury it.
-This is as good a place as back at the Gulch. When
-we've did that we'll tote Badger 'long with us and let
-him tell his story."
-
-As this advice seemed good, it was acted on at
-once.
-
-After taking from the pockets such valuables and
-papers as might cast light on his own life, or be sent to
-his friends, the men scraped out a grave with their
-knives, and in it they laid the body of the man who had
-ruined himself in trying "to make the life-path hard
-for other folks."
-
-When preparations were being made for the return to
-Hurley's Gulch, Badger—who evidently thought he was
-to be left there—lost all the coarse spirit that once
-characterized him, and he whined:
-
-"Oh, don't leave me out here to the wolves, boys.
-Take me to the Gulch with you and I'll confess
-all."
-
-"We'll tote you back, never fear," said Collins. "We
-ain't the kind of men that like to see sufferin', even if
-it's deserved."
-
-The horses of Shirley and Badger were found near by.
-One of these was given to Sam, who said he would carry
-Wah Shin behind him if some one else would carry
-Ike.
-
-Ulna, who rode a mule and was the lightest one of
-the party, gladly consented to ride double with Ike.
-This being arranged, the next question was the conveyance
-of the wounded Badger.
-
-He was given stimulants from his own canteen, and
-then lifted into his own saddle. With a strong man on
-either side to keep him from falling, the party started
-back to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Within two hours they were at their destination, but
-long before they reached there they were seen and recognized
-by those who had been kindly disposed to Mr.
-Willett, and an extemporized committee came out to
-meet them.
-
-"The paper! The paper! Have you got Tom Edwards'
-receipt?" was the salutation that greeted Sam, as
-dozens of sturdy men gathered round and shook his
-hand.
-
-He had prepared for this by taking the water-stained
-paper from the saddle-bags, to which he had clung
-through all his privations.
-
-"Here it is!" cried Sam, holding the receipt aloft.
-"Here it is, and I will intrust it to Mr. Collins while I
-go to my father."
-
-A rousing cheer went up from the men, and that cheer
-was heard in the dugout by Mr. Willett and Hank
-Tims, and reading its meaning aright, they raised their
-tearful eyes and thanked God.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.—THE LAST, BUT NOT THE LEAST IMPORTANT.
-=======================================================
-
-
-Si Brill heard the shouting, and leaving his
-friends—the prisoners—to care for themselves he
-fairly flew out of the ravine.
-
-He saw his "pard" holding the paper aloft and he
-understood all. The glow of a well-earned victory came
-to his bronzed face, and he sent up a cheer that started
-all the echoes in the gulch into life.
-
-"All is lovely, Si!" shouted Collins. "We got the receipt,
-and the boy's safe. Don't wait a second but take
-him to his father at once. His heart is jist a hungerin'
-to hold young Sam next to it."
-
-"You're right every time, old pard!" shouted Si Brill.
-
-Sam ran to him and he was on the point of asking
-where his father was, when Si caught him in his arms
-and gave him such a hug as would have crushed one of
-weaker frame.
-
-He would have carried Sam in triumph on his broad
-shoulders, had that young gentleman consented. As it
-was he took his hand, and raising his hat in the other,
-he ran down the gulch, cheering all the while as if the
-sound were essential to his progress.
-
-Mr. Willett stood in the door of the dugout. He saw
-Si accompanied by a tall, slender youth. No need to
-tell him who it was.
-
-With the cry, "My boy! Oh, thank Heaven for my
-boy," Mr. Willett ran out and father and son were
-clasped in each other's arms, and their kisses and their
-tears mingled.
-
-"See h'ar, Mr. Willett," called out Hank Tims, who
-had followed up his friend, "when you've got through
-a huggin' young Sam, jist turn him over to me and let
-me have a chance to express my sentiments on this
-occasion."
-
-At sound of the dear old hunter's voice, Sam turned
-to him with extended hands and cried out:
-
-"Hank, old friend, I've been through the great
-cañon."
-
-"Well!" laughed Hank, as he shook Sam's hands,
-and patted his back by turns, "you look as if you'd been
-dragged through a narrer knot hole, but yer eyes are as
-bright as ever and you'll soon git flesh on yer bones, but
-through the Gerrait Cañon! oh, come, Sam, don't try to
-fool me so soon after we've been parted for so long——"
-
-"But didn't Ulna tell you?"
-
-"So he did, Sam, but I thought mebbe his mind was
-affected. But never mind, we'll have lots of time to
-talk over our adventures when we git back to Gold Cave
-Camp. Well, well, I never did think, leastwise not
-lately, that I'd ever live to see so happy a day as this,"
-and Hank turned his attention to Ike and Wah Shin,
-who had come upon the scene, nor was the dog forgotten
-in the warm welcome given to all.
-
-"I tell you, Mistah Willett," said Ike, as he held his
-old employer's hand, "I'ze got enough to talk about till
-the day I die, even if I was to live for a thousand
-years."
-
-"Which I hope you may, Ike. But what is that
-noise up the hill?" asked Mr. Willett, his attention attracted
-by the prolonged cheering in that direction.
-
-They had not long to wonder, for soon Collins came
-dashing down the hill, his eyes glowing and a flush of
-triumph on his manly face.
-
-"What's up, pard?" asked Si Brill.
-
-"They've got at the truth!" shouted Collins.
-
-"What truth?"
-
-"The truth about the murder."
-
-"Then you showed them the receipt?" said Mr. Willett,
-again taking Sam's hand.
-
-"Yes; I did all that, and even then some of 'em
-wanted to doubt; but something has happened to settle
-'em."
-
-"What's that?" asked Hank.
-
-"The landlord has lit out——"
-
-"Oh!"
-
-"But that's not all," continued Collins. "Badger is
-dead——"
-
-"Dead!" echoed all.
-
-"Yes, dead; but just before he pegged out he confessed
-that it was him killed Tom Edwards——"
-
-"I was right in my belief," said Mr. Willett solemnly.
-
-"Yes," continued Collins, "and now every man in
-the camp, even those that was the bitterest, are jest
-achin' to see you, and to congratulate you, and to ax yer
-parding; so let's go up. Thar's no danger to you nor
-your's in Hurley's Gulch now," and there was a ring of
-pride in the brave fellow's voice.
-
-The Gold Cave campers, happier than we can describe
-over their reunion, followed Collins from the dugout to
-the canvas settlement on the bluff.
-
-As soon as the assembled miners caught sight of them
-they sent up such a glad shout as was never heard before
-nor since on the banks of that particular
-gulch.
-
-At heart the great mass of men are right, and they
-mean to do right. Among these miners there seemed
-to be a general disposition to make amends as speedily
-as possible for their past errors.
-
-Not satisfied with cheering and shouting their congratulations,
-they rushed in by twos and fours, and beginning
-with Mr. Willett, they lifted all the Gold Cave
-campers—not neglecting Ike and Wah Shin—to their
-shoulders, and then marched in triumphal procession to
-the scene of the trial at the hotel.
-
-The flight of the proprietor did not seem to make any
-difference, for there was plenty of food and cooks to
-prepare the banquet.
-
-Ike went at once to the place where Wah Shin was
-helping to get dinner.
-
-"I'll kind o' fill up a little, Wah," said Ike, as he laid
-siege to a big loaf of bread and a correspondingly large
-piece of cold meat, "for it'll take me jist 'bout a year's
-steady feedin' to catch up. You can bet that I'll never
-be sorry again that I didn't eat moah w'en I had a good
-chance."
-
-Maj seemed to be of the same opinion, for he did not
-leave Ike's side for hours, and when he was next seen in
-public, he was truly aldermanic in his girth and evidently
-on good terms with himself and the world.
-
-After a hearty dinner, which no one enjoyed more than
-Sam, speeches in praise of "the young cañoneers" as
-they were called, were made, and resolutions expressing
-unbounded confidence in Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-were passed.
-
-And so ended the happiest day Hurley's Gulch had
-ever seen, or ever saw again.
-
-The next day our friends returned to Gold Cave
-Camp, but before starting off, Mr. Willett purchased the
-articles Sam had promised to send to the Indians, and
-Si Brill and Collins pledged themselves to deliver
-them.
-
-Here our story ends, yet it may not be amiss to add a
-few words explanatory of the future of the characters in
-whom we have been so much interested.
-
-Mr. Willett made a good deal of money out of the
-Gold Cave Camp property, but the danger from floods
-led him after a time to sell it at a sacrifice.
-
-Years have passed since these adventures came to a
-close. To-day "Willett & Son" are among the richest
-and most honored miners and bankers in the Far
-West.
-
-Their porter in the bank is our old friend, Ike; indeed
-so great is his interest in the establishment and so highly
-does he think of his position that he is very positive it
-could not go on for a day without him.
-
-He always speaks of the firm as "we."
-
-"We's doin' fine," is a frequent expression of his,
-though nothing delights him so much as to tell of his
-adventures in the Great Cañon. He sneers at all other
-human exploits as things of no account compared with
-the events in which he played so prominent a part.
-
-Mr. Willett's cook is the faithful Wah Shin. "Wah
-really runs the house," Sam says, but he always adds,
-"and it could not be run better. Wah is a standing
-proof that the Mongolian has a bright mind and a generous
-heart—that is if you get one of the right kind and
-treat him right."
-
-Strange though it may seem, Ulna, as Mr. Willett's
-protege, came east and studied medicine, and his skill and
-judgment are making him famous in the West. We
-need not add that there is one house in Denver where
-"Doctor Ulna" is always a welcome and an honored
-guest.
-
-"Collins, Brill & Tims" is the firm name of one of
-the most prosperous "concerns" in Colorado.
-
-It is not necessary for us to speak separately of the
-members in order to have them recognized, though it
-may not be amiss to say that they are all married men,
-and are among the largest depositors in the bank of
-Willett & Son.
-
-They make the banker's house their home when in
-Denver, and although Hurley's Gulch has been long since
-abandoned, and the wolf unfrightened howls over its
-site, they love to talk over the stirring days when a son's
-devotion proved itself more powerful than Lynch law
-and vigilance committees.
-
-
-
-
-LOST.
-=====
-
-
-In the summer of 1864 Paul Seeton went to spend
-his holidays with his cousin, Frank More.
-
-Frank lived in the northern part of Maine, on the
-outskirts of a vast forest. Paul was a Boston boy, who
-had scarcely ever been out of the city in his life.
-
-It was in Aroostook county, a place famous for growing
-the biggest timber in the northern states, a place
-known to lumbermen and loved by them; with few
-inhabitants except those who are engaged in the timber
-trade; with no villages and no roads.
-
-One day Frank proposed a fishing excursion. Their
-destination was about fifteen miles away, on a chain of
-lakes that extended far into the forest.
-
-They set out at break of day, rode on horseback over
-a rough road for about two hours, and at length reached
-the shore of a lake.
-
-Here they hired a boat from a man who lived in a log
-house, and embarking, sailed for five or six miles to a
-place where the lake narrowed. Here taking down
-their sail they rowed for some distance through a
-channel so narrow that the branches of the lofty pines
-on either side almost met. It took a good hour to pass
-through this, when suddenly they emerged from it and
-found themselves on a second lake, three or four times
-as large as the first.
-
-Up went the sail again, and away they went over the
-second lake for about ten miles. All around grew the
-primeval forest, dense, dark and luxuriant. But Frank
-had been here before, and the scene was quite familiar.
-
-The boat went swiftly onward, and at last approached
-the farthest extremity of the lake. Here a small peninsula
-jutted forth from the forest into the lake, which
-was cleared and under cultivation. Upon it arose a log
-hut, from the rude chimney of which smoke was curling
-upward.
-
-It belonged to a man named Spence, who cultivated
-the ground in summer and in winter went lumbering
-in the woods. He lived there all alone, and apart from
-his solitude was very comfortable.
-
-The boat grounded on the beach in front of Spence's
-hut, and the boys went up to the house. They found
-Spence himself at home, cooking his dinner.
-
-The boys did not stay long. After asking a few
-questions as to the best fishing holes, they took to the
-boat again, and following Spence's directions, rowed
-toward a small creek which penetrated among the hills,
-and passing up this, at length came to a small basin
-enclosed by high wooded shores. Here they began to
-fish.
-
-Although they waited patiently, they found, to their
-great disappointment, that the fish would not come.
-At length Paul felt a bite; he pulled up his line in a
-fever of agitation, and with a glow of triumph jerked
-into the boat a tiny fish about four inches long. But
-Paul's triumph was not at all shared by Frank.
-
-"Pooh!" said he, "it's only a miserable perch."
-
-"A perch?" said Paul. "Isn't it a good fish?"
-
-"Good? Why, these lakes are crammed with them.
-It's trout we want, not these." And as Frank said
-this he jerked his own line with some complacency.
-Soon something bit his bait. He jerked it out and
-found, to his disgust, another perch.
-
-At length Frank said that he was going up the woods
-a little distance, to a lake which was about a mile off,
-connected with this by a brook. He could follow the
-windings of the brook and easily get there.
-
-Paul, however, thought he would stay where he was,
-for the woods looked very rough, and he enjoyed being
-in a boat, even if he didn't catch anything.
-
-So Frank started off, promising to be back within an
-hour.
-
-Paul continued his fishing. He moved the boat to
-the opposite shore. No bites came—that is, none came
-to the bait, but he soon became aware of other bites,
-which he did not expect. These were produced by
-swarms of mosquitoes, which gathered so thickly that
-at last Paul had to pull in his line and give himself to
-self-defense. He shifted the position of the boat a
-dozen times, but his persecutors followed him. At last
-he could stand it no longer, and concluded to go after
-Frank.
-
-Nearly an hour had passed, and it was about time for
-Frank to return. It was Paul's intention to stroll along
-the brook, and he would be certain either to meet Frank
-in his return, or else he would find him at the lake to
-which he had gone.
-
-It was very swampy, and Paul sank in up to his knees
-for some distance, but at length reached rising ground.
-The brook was only a small one, and was bordered by
-such dense underbrush that Paul found it impossible to
-follow it. In fact, a much better path appeared.
-
-This was a rough track, overgrown with moss and
-ferns, which was used by the lumbermen in winter. It
-went up from the lake apparently in the same direction
-as the brook.
-
-So he walked along this path, forcing his way through
-alder bushes and tangled ferns, until at last he came to
-a stop in front of a wide and impassable marsh.
-
-The lumber path in winter ran across this, but now
-it could not be traversed. So Paul tried to go around
-it. But after completing about half the circuit,
-he reached a swampy place which he could not
-cross.
-
-He now retraced his steps, and at length decided to
-return to the boat and wait there.
-
-The lumber path could not be very easily found, but
-at last he turned into a place which looked very much
-like it, and walked on for some distance. But the way
-was rough. At length the path ceased altogether. He
-found himself in the wild wood.
-
-He saw now that he had missed the path, but thought
-that the best plan would be to keep straight on, and get
-back to the lake. So he kept on. It was very hard
-work. The ground was covered with moss, in some
-places it was spongy, in others it was overgrown with
-ferns, while every now and then he would have to climb
-over the trunk of some fallen tree.
-
-In this way he struggled onward for a long time, and
-wondered why he could not see any signs of the lake.
-At last he began to grow discouraged. The full conviction
-forced itself upon him that he had lost his way.
-He had been wandering; how long a time and how far he
-did not know.
-
-There were no signs whatever of the lake. What to
-do he could not tell. He stood still, and looked around.
-Dense forest trees arose on every side, shutting out the
-view, and enclosing him with their gloomy shades.
-
-Then he called as loud as he could. There was no
-answer. He called again and again, and waited for a
-long time after each cry to hear whether there was any
-response. But none came.
-
-What to do now was the question. He was not a
-coward, but any one might well have been alarmed, lost
-in those vast, trackless forests. Paul was alarmed, of
-course; but he was a spirited boy, and was not inclined
-to sit down and give up. After a few minutes he wisely
-decided that it was necessary to have some plan, and
-choose some definite direction in which to go.
-
-So he concluded that the safest way for him would be
-to retrace his steps as carefully as possible.
-
-Back he went, and managed to recover his track, but
-lost sight of it again, and found himself once more completely
-at a loss.
-
-Turning on his own track in this way had only severed
-him utterly from the last faint hold which he had on
-the possible direction of the lake.
-
-Once more he stood and considered, and finally after
-making up his mind as to the probable position of the
-lake, he started again with the determination to keep on
-in as straight a line as possible in that one direction.
-
-His course was rough and toilsome in the extreme.
-Swamps, bogs, thick ferns, dense underbrush, tangled
-alders, fallen forest trees, huge rocks, all came by turns
-before his path, and all had by turns to be passed
-through or surmounted. Paul's city life had not fitted
-him for a task like this; but despair gave him strength.
-
-Hours passed. Every hour brought fresh difficulties.
-His strength and resolution gradually gave way. No
-signs of escape had shown themselves. No sounds had
-come to his ears which promised help. He felt himself
-alone; alone to struggle with his dismal fate.
-
-At last he reached rising ground. Here the woods
-were clear. The trees stood far apart, and the walking
-was easy. Utterly worn out, he toiled on and at
-length reached the crest of the hill.
-
-Scarcely had he done so than an exclamation burst
-from him. Immediately below lay a broad sheet of
-water. He hurried down to the margin, and looked
-anxiously around in all directions.
-
-There was nothing, however, but a sheet of water
-surrounded by woods. Whether this was the lake which
-he had left, or some other one, he could not tell. At
-any rate he was too fatigued to make any further exertion,
-so he flung himself upon the ground to rest.
-
-Gradually sleep overtook him, and his slumber was so
-sound that he actually did not awake till the following
-day. On rousing himself he heard the birds singing,
-and felt the fresh, cool air of the morning.
-
-He was very hungry, but felt rested and refreshed,
-and went at once to examine his position.
-
-From the place where he stood he could see the end
-of the lake to the right, but on the left the view was
-impeded by a promontory.
-
-His first effort now was to go to the promontory and
-examine the other end. The distance was not great,
-and he soon reached the place.
-
-He looked eagerly down the lake, when, to his unutterable
-delight, he saw at the lower end the lone cottage
-to which the boat had carried him the day before.
-
-All was now plain. He had wandered back to the
-lake blindly, and by such an extraordinary circuit that
-he had come to the shore about five miles away from the
-cottage.
-
-He now set forth to work his way back to the cottage.
-He followed the windings of the shores, keeping the
-water always in sight. The distance was only five or
-six miles, but so circuitous was the shore, so full of
-indentations, and so rough was the way, that it was
-nearly evening when he reached the cottage.
-
-No one was there when he arrived, but he waited,
-and at dusk a boat came over the water with Spence
-and Frank. For a day and a half they had been scouring
-the woods for him, and Frank, in his despair, did
-not know what to do. Paul was received as one who
-had risen from the dead.
-
-
-
-
-FATE OF AN ENTRAPPED BEAR.
-==========================
-
-
-Wild beasts, in their wanderings through the
-forests, often meet and fight in the most savage
-manner. Here is a story told the writer, last summer,
-by an old gentleman in Somerest county, Maine:
-
-"One of the toughest fights I ever saw," said he,
-"came off over behind that mountain yonder. It was
-years ago. Perhaps I saw with a boy's eyes at that
-time; I was but fourteen years old, then. But you
-shall have the story:
-
-"There wa'n't a railroad in the state, in those days.
-Whenever any of the farmers wanted to go down to
-Farmington, or Norridgewock, or to Portland, they had
-to go with their teams; and when making a trip to the
-latter place were often gone a week or ten days.
-
-"Quite late in the fall my father and Mr. Wilber,
-our nearest neighbor, had gone to Portland in company.
-Always during their absence we boys used the time in
-fishing, gunning, and other sports such as boys delight
-in. They had been gone two days, when early the third
-morning after their departure Jed Wilber came running
-to our house, all excitement.
-
-"'The bears have been killing our sheep!' he
-exclaimed. 'They came into the little pasture last
-night, killed the old four-year-old, and a lamb, dragged
-them out into the bushes, and there we found their pelts
-taken off and rolled up, as nice as a butcher could
-do it.'
-
-"'Oh, you ought to have shut them up, Jed,' said
-grandmother.
-
-"'I know it,' said Jed. 'Father told us to, every
-night. But we were playing last night, and forgot it.'
-
-"'The bear'll be back, to-night,' said I.
-
-"'Of course he will,' said Jed, 'and that's what I am
-over here for—I want to get your bear-trap. I know
-just how to set it,' he went on, seeing grandmother
-hesitate. 'I saw 'em set it last winter a dozen times.'
-
-"'Well, you can have the trap,' said grandmother.
-'But mind it don't spring, and catch your hands or feet.'
-
-"Jed and I brought the trap from the woodhouse
-chamber. It was tremendously heavy—weighing sixty
-or seventy pounds. But between us we carried it up
-to the Wilbers', and with Sol's help (Sol was Jed's next
-younger brother) we took it to the pasture. Then, by
-using a crowbar we managed, after a deal of prying and
-holding, to press down the stiff springs, and so set it.
-This done, we chained it to a four-foot log of green
-spruce, and left it near the spot where the bear had
-killed the sheep. For a bait, we laid partially under it
-a sheep's head, from a sheep that had lately been
-slaughtered by Mr. Wilber.
-
-"Perhaps some of the boys may wonder why the lads
-did not chain the trap to a stump, or a standing tree.
-Hunters never chain a bear-trap fast to the spot where
-they set it. They clog it, that is, fasten a heavy stick or
-log to it, for the bear to drag. If caught and held fast, at
-first, a large bear would demolish any trap. But if
-allowed to run with it, the clog will at length weary
-him so that he may be easily overtaken and shot.
-
-"Early the next morning," continued the old man,
-"I ran over to Wilber's, and we hurried to the pasture.
-The sheep's head was gone, but the bear, if indeed it
-was one, had kept his legs out of the trap. We rebaited
-it with mutton shanks, and the next morning Jed came
-to the house before I was dressed.
-
-"'The trap's gone!' he shouted. 'Get your gun.
-We must follow him!'
-
-"Hastily swallowing some breakfast, I loaded the
-gun with slugs, and with Jed and Sol rushed to the
-pasture. Sure enough the trap was gone, clog and all.
-The place where it had been placed bore marks of a
-struggle; the turf was gouged up, and in several spots
-there were blood-drops on the grass, and on the dry
-leaves. It was in October, the last of the month. The
-brakes in the woods were dead, but still standing.
-These had been pressed to the ground, and made a
-broad trail.
-
-"By noon we gained the crest of a high ridge, or
-mountain, five or six miles to the westward. The
-farther side fell off abruptly to the bank of a small
-river. This side, too, was covered with thick hemlock
-and spruce. We hesitated about going further. It
-would be nearly night by the time we got back, if we
-started for home now. But we wanted to save the trap.
-If we went back, not only should we lose the bear, but
-the trap besides, and Jed, whose carelessness had cost
-the loss of two sheep, was especially anxious to get the
-bear.
-
-"Sol had brought a lunch. We divided it between
-us, and again taking up our guns, followed the trail
-down into the dark growth, toward the river. An hour
-took us to the stream. But here, instead of coming
-upon the bear, as we had expected, we found that he
-had turned up the bank to the north. We kept on,
-however. There was a sort of fascination in the chase,
-even though every mile was taking us further into the
-wilderness.
-
-"The late October afternoon was waning. Already
-the shadow of a large mountain to the westward was
-falling over the forest, in the valley where we were.
-The valley narrowed to a rocky ravine as we went on,
-and the mountain, with its dark spruces, seemed to
-tower threateningly over us.
-
-"'It's no use, Jed,' said I; 'we ought to go home. I
-know you want——'
-
-"'Hark!' exclaimed Sol.
-
-"A sharp yelp, as if from a hurt dog, rang out. It
-seemed to come to us from only a short distance.
-Almost instantly it was followed by a long yell, and a
-chorus of howls. Snap ran, crouching, between our
-legs.
-
-"'Wolves!' cried Jed.
-
-"We stood listening, breathlessly. In a moment the
-yell burst out again, followed by yelps, snarls, and the
-sounds of a general fight.
-
-"'I'll bet they're afoul of the bear,' whispered Jed.
-
-"The uproar continued.
-
-"'If they are, they won't mind us,' continued Jed.
-'Let's creep up, and see.'
-
-"Cocking our guns, we moved cautiously forward.
-The yells grew louder, and we heard growls. At length,
-turning a little bend of the ravine, we peered round a
-great boulder and saw a sight I shall never forget.
-With his back against a rock sat the bear—a tremendous
-fellow he looked—with the trap on his paw, while
-about him leaped, and surged, and snapped, fifteen or
-twenty gray wolves, their white teeth grinning, and
-their eyes flashing green fire. The bear was fighting
-for life against the whole of them.
-
-"The wolves had struck upon his trail, and the smell
-of the blood that came from the leg crushed in the
-trap had made them furious. He fought hard, swinging
-the trap clog, as he struck with his forelegs to beat
-them off.
-
-"Occasionally, as the ravenous creatures leaped at his
-throat, he would catch one with his uninjured paw and
-give him a hug that drew out a smothered yelp. Sometimes
-five or six of the wolves would jump at the bear
-at the same time, and for a moment we would lose sight
-of him, but he brushed them away, and rose again.
-The growls, yells and snapping jaws were savage
-beyond description. It grew dusk as we watched the
-fight.
-
-"'What can we do?' said Sol.
-
-"'It would be useless for us to interfere,' said I;
-'they're bound to have him.'
-
-"'Let's fire among them, though,' said Jed; 'I
-haven't brought a loaded gun up here for nothing. All
-together now.'
-
-"All three of us fired together at the growling, struggling
-pack.
-
-"A moment's silence followed the reports, then a
-long howl. We shrank back around the boulder, out
-of sight. Then a sudden panic seized us, and we ran
-down the ravine, and did not stop till we were a mile
-below. A faint howl came echoing through the somber
-forest.
-
-"'They are not chasing us,' said Jed; 'guess we riddled
-some of 'em!'
-
-"Night fell as we climbed the steep ridge. We had
-a dark time going home through the woods. Fortunately,
-Sol had a match in his pocket, and coming to
-an old white birch stub, we tore off several rolls of the
-dried bark. By fastening these to the end of a stick
-and lighting them, we were able to pick our way through
-the woods. It was a hazy night. The moon showed
-dimly. The glimpses we now and then got of it enabled
-us to keep a straight course. It was after eight o'clock
-when we reached home, and worried enough the folks
-had been about us.
-
-"The next forenoon we started for the ravine again.
-We were curious to know how the fight terminated;
-besides, it was best to get the trap, if possible, to avert
-the storm that would burst on Jed's head when his
-father came home. Taking a shorter cut through the
-woods, we reached the place where we had seen the
-wolves, about eleven o'clock.
-
-"No sound was heard save the rippling of the stream
-among the rocks. We stole cautiously to the boulder,
-where we had stood the night before, and looked from
-behind it. Nothing was in sight.
-
-"'Gone,' said Jed. 'Let's go up, and see where they
-had their fight.'
-
-"A sly little mink darted away, and into the stream
-as we approached. Beyond was a ghastly sight! There
-lay the skull and bones of the bear, gnawed clean, and
-showing yellow-white; and there lay the trap, still gripping
-with its iron jaws the bone of one paw.
-
-"All the brakes were smashed down, and the bushes
-and the rock were besmeared with blood and hair.
-About the trap, within a radius of a few rods, lay the
-bones and skulls of two of the wolves, eaten by their
-comrades. Perhaps the bear had killed them, or perchance
-our shots had caused their death. It looked as
-if other wolves had come to the feast.
-
-"'Come, come!' muttered Jed. 'Let's be off before
-they come back.'
-
-"We took the trap to the stream to cleanse it, and
-then placing it on two poles we started for home. And
-a *tug* it gave us, too!"
-
-
-
-
-A FIGHT IN THE WOODS.
-=====================
-
-
-Some years ago, while in the northern part of Maine,
-I spent the month of September and a portion of
-October at a "hay-farm" on the borders of Chamberlain
-Lake—Lake Apmoogenegamook, the Indians used to
-call it. The whole region was almost an unbroken
-wilderness. Game was plenty, and by way of recreation
-from my duties as an assistant engineer I had set up a "line
-of traps" for mink and sable—"saple," as old trappers
-say—along a small but very rapid, noisy stream called
-Bear Brook, which comes down into the lake through
-a gorge between two high spruce-clad mountains.
-
-Huge boulders had rolled down the sides, and lay
-piled along the bed of the gorge. The brook, which
-was the outlet of a small pond, pent up among the ridges
-above, foamed and roared and gurgled down among
-rocks shaded by thick, black spruces, which leaned out
-from the sides of the ravine.
-
-It was a wild place. I had stumbled upon it, one
-afternoon, while hunting a caribou (a kind of deer)
-some weeks before, and knew it must be good trapping
-ground; for the rocks and clear, black pools, in short
-the whole place had that peculiar, fishy smell which
-bespoke an abundance of trout; and where trout abound
-there are sure to be mink.
-
-My traps were of that sort which hunters call "figure
-four" traps, made of stakes and poles, with a figure-four
-spring. Perhaps some of our boy readers may
-have caught squirrels in that way. For bait I used
-trout from the brook. I carried my hook and line with
-me, and after setting a trap, threw in my hook and
-pulled out trout enough to bait it. My line extended
-about a mile up the gorge, and comprised some twenty-five
-or thirty traps.
-
-After setting them, I shot a number of red squirrels
-for a "drag," and thus connected the traps together.
-Perhaps I should explain that a *drag* is a bundle of
-squirrels or partridges newly killed and from which the
-blood is dripping, which are dragged along by a withe
-from trap to trap to make a trail and scent, so that the
-mink and sable will follow it.
-
-It is customary to visit mink traps once in two or
-three days. But as I had plenty of time just then, I
-went to mine every forenoon.
-
-During the first week after setting them I had excellent
-luck. I caught eleven mink and three sable—about
-fifty dollars' worth, as I reckoned it. My hopes
-of making a small fortune in the fur business were very
-sanguine, until one morning I found every trap torn
-up! The poles and stakes were scattered over the
-ground, spindles were broken to pieces, and at one or
-two places where there had been a mink in the trap,
-the head and bits of fur were lying about as if it had
-been devoured.
-
-At first I thought that perhaps some fellow who had
-intended to trap there had done the mischief to drive
-me away (a very common trick among rival trappers);
-but when I saw that the minks had been torn to pieces,
-I knew the destruction was the work of some animal—a
-fisher, most likely, or as some call it, a "black-cat."
-
-I had never yet seen one of these creatures, but had
-often heard hunters and trappers tell what pests they
-were, following them on their rounds, robbing and tearing
-up their traps almost as rapidly as they could set
-them. Indeed, I had read in Baird's—I believe it was
-Baird's—Works on Natural History, that the fisher-cat,
-or *mustela canadensis*, is a very fierce carnivorous
-animal of the weasel family, a most determined fighter
-and more than a match for a common hound.
-
-Well, I had nothing to do but to set the traps again,
-a task which I did in the course of the day, really hoping
-that the beast had merely paid the place a transient
-visit, and gone on upon his wanderings.
-
-But the next morning showed my hopes were vain,
-for he had "gone through" my *line* again, and every
-trap was upset. It really seemed as if the "varmint"
-had taken a malicious delight in tearing them to pieces.
-
-At one of the traps a fine sable had been caught, and
-as if for very mischief the marauder had torn the
-beautiful skin, which was worth ten or a dozen dollars,
-to shreds.
-
-Surely, if there is a business in the world that
-demands patience and perseverance, it is trapping. At
-least it took about all I could summon to go resignedly
-to work, make new spindles, catch fresh bait, and set
-the traps again, especially with the prospect of having
-the same task to perform the next morning.
-
-I went at it, however, and by eleven o'clock had them
-all reset save one, the upper one, where the sable had
-been caught, when, on approaching it through the thick
-spruces, I saw a large raccoon gnawing the sable's head.
-Seeing me at the same instant, he caught up the head,
-and before I could unsling my gun scuttled away out
-of sight.
-
-Was it possible that a 'coon had been doing all this
-mischief? I knew them to be adepts at a variety of
-woods tricks, but had never heard of their robbing traps
-before. Here was one caught gnawing a sable's head in
-the vicinity of the broken traps. Circumstantial evidence,
-as they say in court, was strong against him.
-
-I determined to watch—that trap, at least.
-
-Going over to our camp on the lake, I took a hasty
-lunch, and putting a fresh charge into my gun went
-back to the ravine. A few rods from the place where
-I had surprised the 'coon there was a thick clump of
-low spruces. Here I hid myself and began my watch.
-
-The afternoon dragged away. Crows and hawks
-cawed and screamed; kingfishers and squirrels chickered
-and chirred, but no animal came near the traps. The
-sun was setting behind the high, black mountain,
-twilight began to dim the narrow valley.
-
-Thinking I had had my labor for my pains, I was
-about crawling out of my hiding-place, when a twig
-snapped in the direction of the traps, and turning
-quickly I saw the 'coon coming up the bank of the
-brook, the same one, I was sure, that I had seen before,
-because of its unusual size.
-
-With a glance around, to see that there was no danger
-near, he ambled along to the spot where the sable's
-head had been, and began sniffing at the shreds and bits
-of fur which lay about. Wishing to see if he would
-touch the trap, I did not stir, but watched his movements.
-
-After picking up the bits of skin, he walked round
-the trap several times, with his queer, quizzical face
-askew, examining it. Then happening to scent one of
-the sable's legs which lay at a little distance, he ran to
-it and began to eat it. I could hear his sharp teeth
-upon the bones. Suddenly he stopped, listened, then
-growled. Very much to my surprise, there was an
-answering growl. Then another and another response.
-In a moment more, from behind a great rock in the
-bank, there stole out a large, black animal, an object of
-the 'coon's utter abhorrence, evidently.
-
-Fresh growls greeted the appearance of the intruder,
-who came stealthily forward. He was a wicked looking
-fellow, and had evidently hostile intentions.
-
-The 'coon rose to his feet, lifting his back like a bear
-or a cat, and growling all the while. The newcomer
-crouched almost to the earth, but continued to steal up
-to the 'coon until within a yard or two.
-
-There they stood facing each other, getting more
-angry every moment; and evidently intended to have a
-big "set to." I had no wish to interfere, and was contented
-to remain a spectator. The two thieves might
-settle their quarrels between themselves. I wasn't at
-all certain to which of them I stood indebted for my
-extra labor, and concluded to keep my charge of shot
-for whichever of them survived the fray.
-
-The growls rose to shrieks; the fisher, for such I
-judged it to be, wriggling his black tail, and the 'coon
-getting his back still higher. Then came a sudden
-grab, quick as a flash, and a prodigious scuffle. Over
-and over they rolled, grappling and tearing; now the
-gray tail would whisk up in sight, then the black one.
-The fur flew, and that strong, disagreeable odor, sometimes
-noticed when a cat spits, was wafted out to my
-hiding-place.
-
-It was hard to tell which was the best fighter. Gray
-fur and black fur seemed to be getting torn out in
-about equal snatches. Suddenly the 'coon got away
-from his antagonist, and running to the foot of a great
-spruce tree standing near, went like a dart up the trunk
-to the lower limbs. There he faced about.
-
-The fisher followed to the tree and looked up. He
-saw his late foe, growled, and then began to climb after
-him. He was not so good a climber as the 'coon, but
-scratched his way up with true weasel determination.
-The moment he came within reach the raccoon jumped
-at him, regardless of the height from the ground, and
-fastened upon his back. The shock caused the fisher
-to lose his hold, and down both animals dropped with
-tremendous force, sufficient to knock the breath out of
-them, I thought. But they clung to each other, and
-dug and bit with the fury of maniacs. 'Coons are
-noted fighters; and as for the fishers, they never give
-up while the breath of life is in them.
-
-Presently the 'coon broke away again, and once more
-ran to the tree, this time going up its trunk, out of
-sight, among the branches at the very top. It looked
-as if he was getting about all the fight he cared to have.
-
-Not so with the big weasel. He instantly followed
-his antagonist, clumsily but surely clawing his way up
-the trunk. It took him some time to reach the top,
-but he got there at last. Another grapple ensued among
-the very topmost boughs, and they both came tumbling
-to the ground, catching at the limbs as they fell; but
-grappling afresh they rolled down the steep bank to
-the edge of the water.
-
-Meanwhile it had grown so dark that I could but just
-see their writhing forms. The growling, grappling
-sound continued, however, and I could hear them
-splash in the water. Then there came a lull. One or
-the other had "given in," I felt sure. Which was the
-victor?
-
-Cocking my gun, I crept to the bank. As nearly as
-I could make out the situation, the fisher was holding
-the 'coon by the throat.
-
-I took a step forward. A twig snapped under my
-foot. Instantly a pair of fiery eyes glared up at me in
-the gloom; and with a harsh snarl the fisher raised himself.
-But the 'coon didn't stir; he was dead.
-
-It seemed almost too bad to shoot the victor of so
-desperate a fight; but thinking of my traps I hardened
-my heart and fired. The fisher reared up, fell over,
-then recovering its legs, leaped at me with all the ferocity
-of its bloodthirsty race. But the heavy buckshot
-had surely done its work, and with another attempt to
-spring at me the animal fell back dead.
-
-I had no more trouble with my traps.
-
-.. class:: center
-
-THE END.
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@@ -1,9424 +0,0 @@
- LOST IN THE CANYON.
-
-
-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 http://www.gutenberg.org/license.
-
-Title: Lost in the Canyon
-
-Author: Alfred R. Calhoun
-
-Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37466]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: US-ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CANYON ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank, Mary Meehan, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
-
- THE STORY OF
- Sam Willett's Adventures on the Great
- Colorado of the West.
-
- _By_ ALFRED R. CALHOUN,
-
- _Author of_
- "Cochise," "Excelsior," "The Californians," etc., etc.
-
- ILLUSTRATED.
-
- NEW YORK:
- A. L. BURT, PUBLISHER.
-
- _Copyright 1888, by A. L. Burt._
-
- ----
-
-[Illustration: _Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping
-rocks._]
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I.--A REMARKABLE CAMP.
- CHAPTER II.--LOOKING BACKWARD AND FORWARD.
- CHAPTER III.--SAM'S TRIALS BEGIN.
- CHAPTER IV.--A PERILOUS SITUATION.
- CHAPTER V.--AT HURLEY'S GULCH.
- CHAPTER VI.--WHY THE PAPERS WERE NOT BROUGHT.
- CHAPTER VII.--THE WONDERFUL VOYAGE BEGINS.
- CHAPTER VIII.--MR. WILLETT AND HANK TIMS.
- CHAPTER IX.--A FRUITLESS EFFORT.
- CHAPTER X.--A NIGHT OF AWFUL GLOOM.
- CHAPTER XI.--A TRYING SITUATION.
- CHAPTER XII.--THE VOYAGE IS RESUMED.
- CHAPTER XIII.--WHIRLED AWAY.
- CHAPTER XIV.--ORDER AND DISORDER.
- CHAPTER XV.--THE PROVISIONS ALL GONE.
- CHAPTER XVI.--DANGER AHEAD.
- CHAPTER XVII.--MR. WILLETT LEARNS THE NEWS.
- CHAPTER XVIII.--IN THE RAPIDS.
- CHAPTER XIX.--AFLOAT AGAIN.
- CHAPTER XX.--THE TRIAL BEGINS.
- CHAPTER XXI.--A BREAK IN THE CLOUDS.
- CHAPTER XXII.--"JOY! JOY! IT IS ULNA AGAIN!"
- CHAPTER XXIII.--THE TRIAL IN PROGRESS.
- CHAPTER XXIV.--OUT OF THE DEPTHS.
- CHAPTER XXV.--FROM SAFETY INTO DANGER.
- CHAPTER XXVI.--THE TRIAL ENDS.
- CHAPTER XXVII.--THE APACHES HAVE THEIR WAY.
- CHAPTER XXVIII.--A BOLD MOVE.
- CHAPTER XXIX.--THE VERDICT AND SENTENCE.
- CHAPTER XXX.--SURPRISE FOR HURLEY'S GULCH.
- CHAPTER XXXI.--HOW IT FARED WITH SAM AND HIS FRIENDS.
- CHAPTER XXXII.--IN GREATER PERIL STILL.
- CHAPTER XXXIII.--IN A TRAP.
- CHAPTER XXXIV.--A BRIEF TRUCE AND WHAT FOLLOWED IT.
- CHAPTER XXXV.--A NIGHT BATTLE.
- CHAPTER XXXVI.--TO THE RESCUE.
- CHAPTER XXVII.--SAM'S DEVOTION IS REWARDED.
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.--THE LAST, BUT NOT THE LEAST IMPORTANT.
- LOST.
- FATE OF AN ENTRAPPED BEAR.
- A FIGHT IN THE WOODS.
-
- ----
-
- LOST IN THE CANYON.
-
- ----
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.--A REMARKABLE CAMP.
-
-
-The scene of this narrative is laid in Southwestern Colorado, and the
-date is so recent that boys living out there at that time are only just
-beginning to think themselves young men--and it is really astonishing
-how soon boys leap into vigorous manhood in that wild, free land.
-
-"We's 'bleeged to hab 'im, for dah ain't de least scrap ob meat in de
-camp!"
-
-This stirring information was shouted by a stout negro boy of fifteen or
-sixteen years of age, who, with a long, rusty, single-barrel shot-gun in
-his arms, stood at the base of a towering mass of bare rocks, and looked
-eagerly up at two other youths creeping along the giddy heights, and
-evidently in eager search of something that had escaped them, but which
-they were determined to overtake.
-
-The lithe form, long black hair, and copper-colored skin of one of the
-young hunters bespoke him an Indian of the purest type. He wore a
-close-fitting buckskin dress, and slung at his back was a short
-repeating rifle.
-
-The other youth up the rocks, though bronzed on the hands and face to a
-color as dark as the young Ute's, had the blue eyes and curly yellow
-hair that told of a pure white ancestry. His name was Samuel Willett,
-and though not much more than sixteen years of age, his taller form and
-more athletic build made him look several years the senior of his red
-and black companions.
-
-Sam Willett was armed and dressed like a hunter, and his well-worn
-equipments told that he was not out masquerading in the costume of a
-theatrical Nimrod.
-
-The Indian youth, Ulna, and Sam Willett had chased a Rocky Mountain or
-bighorn sheep into the mass of towering rocks which they were now
-searching; and that they were not hunting for mere sport was proven by
-Ike, the black boy's repeated cry:
-
-"We's 'bleeged to hab 'im, foh dar ain't de least scrap ob meat in de
-camp!"
-
-"I want to get the meat as much as you do, Ike, so have patience!" Sam
-shouted down, without stopping in his pursuit an instant.
-
-The two daring hunters disappeared, and Ike, whose desire for meat was
-greater than his love for the chase, began circling about the confused
-pile of rocks so as to keep his companions in sight.
-
-The bighorn "sheep" is in reality not a sheep at all, but a variety of
-powerful mountain antelope, whose strength, speed and daring among the
-rocks and canyons are not the least wonderful things about the wonderful
-land in which he makes his exclusive home.
-
-Even old Western hunters believe that these animals can leap from
-immense heights and land on their horns without harm, but this is an
-error.
-
-While Ike was gazing with eager eyes and open mouth at the towering,
-volcanic cliffs, the bighorn came to view on a rock five hundred feet
-overhead.
-
-The hunters were close behind, and the creature's only means of escape
-was to leap across a chasm fully thirty feet wide to another rock of a
-little lower elevation.
-
-"Shoot! shoot!" yelled the excited Ike, as the bighorn gathered himself
-up and eyed the terrific gorge that beset his course.
-
-As if stung to desperation by the shout the creature leaped forward with
-a force that must have cleared the gulf, and an accuracy that would have
-insured a landing on the other side, but just as it sprang into mid-air
-two shots rang out within a small fraction of a second of each other,
-and the bighorn came crashing down and fell dead at the black boy's
-feet.
-
-In his wild excitement Ike discharged the rusty single-barrel shot-gun,
-which he had been hugging in his arms as if it were a baby. All the
-power of the old-fashioned weapon must have been in the report and
-recoil, for the former sounded like the explosion of a howitzer, and the
-latter was so terrific as to send the holder sprawling across the
-carcass of the bighorn.
-
-Sam Willett saw all this as he hurried down the rocks, otherwise he
-might have thought when he had reached the bottom that the animal had
-fallen on his companion and faithful servant and killed him.
-
-"Hello, Ike, old fellow, what's up?" asked Sam, as he helped the owner
-of the shot-gun to his feet.
-
-"Is I all alive, foh shuah, Mistah Sam?" demanded Ike, as he stared
-wildly about him.
-
-"Of course you are, and here is the meat you have been so eager for,"
-said Sam.
-
-"Wa'll, Mistah Sam, it's dat ar gun," said Ike, gazing sadly at the old
-weapon which he still held in his arms. "I ain't used her bad; ain't
-fired her off for more'n six months afore we kem out har from
-Michigan--dat's five months ago--an' now only to tink she's done gone
-back on me in dat are way."
-
-The Indian youth, Ulna, had come down by this time, and when he took in
-the situation his fine, almost effeminate face was wreathed in smiles,
-that displayed a beautiful set of white teeth.
-
-In a low, musical voice and without any accent, he said in excellent
-English:
-
-"The sun is setting and we must hurry if we would reach the camp before
-dark."
-
-"An' more partikler ez we've got to tote dis ar venizon home," said Ike,
-now wide awake to the necessities of the situation.
-
-Each of the youths had a hunting knife in his belt, and they soon proved
-that these weapons were not carried for ornament.
-
-With a rapidity and skill that would have won the admiration of an
-eastern butcher, they skinned and cleaned the animal, severed the
-mammoth head and then divided the meat into three parcels.
-
-Each had to shoulder about fifty pounds, but being sturdy, healthy young
-fellows they did not seem to mind their burdens, as they started off
-with long, vigorous strides toward the west.
-
-The sun in all his course does not look down on a wilder, grander or
-more desolate land than that which met the gaze of the young hunters, no
-matter to which side they turned.
-
-Verdureless mountains of fantastic shapes rose into the cloudless sky on
-every hand.
-
-Here and there in the crevices of the black volcanic rocks, over which
-they hurried, a stunted sagebush or a dwarf cactus suggested the awful
-barrenness of the place rather than told of vegetation.
-
-They were in the land of canyons and drought, on the summit of the Great
-American Plateau where rain but seldom falls, where the streams flow
-through frightful gorges, and where men and animals have often perished
-from thirst within sight of waters which they could not reach.
-
-Bleak and sublime as the land was, is, and ever must be, yet the
-belief--a well founded belief by the way--that its gloomy ravines
-contained gold, led hundreds of hardy miners and adventurers to look
-upon it as that El Dorado for which the early Spanish explorers in these
-wilds had sought in vain.
-
-As the leader of the little party, Sam Willett, strode ahead, the
-deepening shadows of the mountains impelled him each instant to a
-quicker pace.
-
-There was no apparent trail, yet Sam never hesitated in his course, but
-kept on as unerringly as a bird of passage, till he came to a great
-black rift that seemed to suddenly open at his feet.
-
-Away down in the shadowy depths he could see a white band that told of
-moving water.
-
-A glow, the source of which could not be seen, indicated a fire down
-near the base of the cliff, and the barking of a dog--the sound appeared
-to come from the depths of a cave--suggested a human habitation.
-
-On reaching the crest of the chasm Sam Willett did not hesitate, but at
-once plunged down to what, to a stranger, would appear certain death.
-
-Along the canyon wall there was a steep but well constructed trail that
-afforded secure footing to a traveler who was not troubled with
-giddiness.
-
-Without once stopping, Sam and his companions made their way to the
-bottom of the rift and forded the roaring torrent that thundered over
-its uneven bed.
-
-On the canyon wall, opposite to that by which they had descended, they
-saw about a hundred feet above the stream, what seemed like a number of
-illuminated pigeon holes. This was their home, the place to which had
-been given the not inappropriate name of "Gold Cave Camp."
-
-With barks of delight, a big dog met them near the water and joyously
-escorted them up the other side to an irregular plateau, about a hundred
-feet in diameter, that shot out like the once famous Table Rock at
-Niagara.
-
-This plateau was in front of the cave, in which the miners had made
-their home.
-
-The background of light revealed the forms of three men. The dress and
-long cue of one bespoke him a Chinaman, the second was dressed like a
-hunter, and the third, a tall, powerful figure, had only his heavy beard
-and striking stature to distinguish him.
-
-"Is that you, Sam?" called out the tall man, as the foremost of the
-party reached the plateau.
-
-"Yes, father," was the reply, "and we have brought back some meat."
-
-"Wa'll!" exclaimed the second man, "I didn't think thar was a pound of
-live meat left within twenty mile of yar."
-
-"Hoolay! Bully! Now me gettee suppel!" cried the excited Chinaman, who
-was known by the fitting name of Wah Shin.
-
-Preceded by Maj, the dog, Sam and his fellow hunters entered the
-remarkable cave--of which we shall speak hereafter--and laid the meat on
-the floor.
-
-"I began to grow uneasy about you, my boy," said Mr. Willett, as he
-fondly kissed his son, "meat is very desirable, but I would rather
-suffer for it than be worried at your absence."
-
-Sam explained about the delay in the hunt, and then went to a spring
-that rose from the floor of the cave close to the fire, and here he set
-the example of drinking and washing himself.
-
-Meanwhile Wah Shin began to demonstrate his position in that strangely
-mixed company. In nearly no time he had steaks broiling on the coals,
-the savory odor of which made Hank Tims, the old guide, take long
-inhalations with great enjoyment.
-
-Apart from meat there was an abundance of other food in this strange
-camp, so that in a very short time Wah Shin, with Ike's aid, had a most
-excellent supper spread on a table consisting of two roughly-hewn cedar
-slabs, supported at either end by a square stationary stone, that had
-been placed there by the original but unknown cave dwellers.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.--LOOKING BACKWARD AND FORWARD.
-
-
-It is not a little remarkable that the six dwellers in Gold Cave Camp
-should represent four of the five types into which scientists divide the
-human race, but this though curious in itself, is not nearly so much so
-as their being residents of this sparsely settled wilderness, and
-living, as it were, in caves in the depths of the earth.
-
-Mr. Willett had been a merchant in Detroit, Michigan, where his only
-child, Sam, was born.
-
-He had been very happy in his married life and very prosperous in his
-business; but, alas, for the stability of human affairs, his wife died.
-Following this awful calamity came a series of reverses in business
-which no human foresight could prevent. His property was swept away, and
-in his fortieth year he found himself a poor man, with a son to educate
-and care for and all life's battle to fight over again.
-
-Mr. Willett had been educated as a mining engineer, and though he had
-never followed his profession he, very naturally, looked to it as a
-means of support when all his other resources were gone.
-
-In the days of his great distress and perplexity he read of sudden
-fortunes being made in the newly-discovered gold fields of the San Juan
-country in Southwestern Colorado, and thither he determined to go.
-
-Although still in the prime of life, Mr. Willett concentrated all the
-love of his brave heart on his son and resolved to devote his time and
-thought to his care and education.
-
-Sam's maternal grandfather, Mr. Shirley, was a very rich, but a very
-morose and eccentric old man, who chose never to become reconciled to
-his daughter's marriage to Mr. Willett. But when Sam's mother died, the
-old gentleman offered to adopt his grandson and make him his sole heir,
-if the father would consent to renounce all claims to him.
-
-In his son's interest Mr. Willett might have considered this proposal
-favorably had not Sam himself upset the scheme by saying stoutly:
-
-"Father, do not ask me to leave you, for I feel it would be sending me
-to death. If you go to the West, I shall go with you. There are only two
-of us left, why should we be parted?"
-
-Mr. Willett replied to this query by kissing his son, and so it was
-settled that they should go to the West together.
-
-Ike was an orphan lad who, in some inexplicable way, had drifted up to
-Michigan from Kentucky. Mr. Willett found and cared for the boy, and he
-repaid this generosity by a fidelity and devotion worthy of all praise.
-
-Mr. Willett could see no use for Ike in the West, but when the time for
-departure came, the black boy appeared at the depot with an old hunting
-bag, containing all his clothing, slung at his back, and a
-remarkable-looking shot-gun folded in his arms.
-
-"Dar's no use a talkin' to me, boss," he said to Mr. Willett, when that
-gentleman expressed his surprise at the boy's appearance. "Ize bound to
-go 'long wid Mistah Sam. Oh, don't yeh feel skeat 'bout de cash foh de
-passage. Ize got ebery cent I ever earned stored away har; its more'n
-fifty dollar, an' I'll foot de bills till de las' red cent's gone."
-
-In proof of this bold statement, Ike drew from the depths of his
-trousers' pockets a bag containing several pounds weight of bronze,
-nickel and silver coins.
-
-Ike found an eloquent advocate in Sam; and so it came about that at the
-very last moment Mr. Willett decided to take the colored boy with him,
-though he could not be made to avail himself of the generous fellow's
-hoardings.
-
-The three went to Denver, thence over the Rocky range to St. Luis Park,
-and over the Sierra Madre mountains to the San Juan country.
-
-They had procured horses to ride on, and two pack mules to carry their
-supplies and mining tools.
-
-While at Port Garland in the St. Luis Park, they met with Hank Tims and
-the Ute boy, Ulna, who was a nephew of the great chief Uray, whom the
-writer of this narrative knew very well and greatly admired.
-
-Hank Tims and Ulna were themselves thinking about going into the San
-Juan country, and, as they were well acquainted with that region and
-appeared to take to Mr. Willett's party at once, they were readily
-induced to join his expedition.
-
-It would be out of place in this brief but essential review to recount
-all the adventures that beset our friends till they reached the scene of
-their proposed labors.
-
-After much wandering, they found Gold Cave Camp, but it was in the
-possession of a wild, dissolute fellow named Tom Edwards.
-
-As Edwards was working his claim all alone and was eager to leave it,
-Mr. Willett bought him out at his own price, and at once made
-preparations to pan for such gold as might be found in the bed of the
-canyon.
-
-A few days after the commencement of operations, Wah Shin appeared in
-the camp.
-
-He looked as if he had been blown in from the bleak hills, but he
-managed to explain in his broken English that he had lost himself coming
-up from Santa Fe, and that he was a first-class cook.
-
-He asked for "a job," but even before Mr. Willett had made up his mind
-to hire him, he set to work to give an exhibition of his skill; and the
-result was so entirely satisfactory that he was retained on his own
-terms.
-
-But it is much easier to explain the presence of these people than it is
-to account for the strange home in which they lived.
-
-Learned men claim that long before the coming of the white men to this
-continent, long, indeed, before the coming of the Indians, that there
-was a strange race of people in that Western land, whom, for the want of
-a better name, they call "The Cave Dwellers."
-
-But no matter how formed, or by whom they were first inhabited, these
-caves--they are quite common in that land--made ready and comfortable
-homes for the mining adventurers.
-
-Those occupied by Mr. Willett and his associates, consisted of a series
-of eight apartments, all opening on the plateau and all connected by
-passage ways that must have been the work of human hands.
-
-The apartments were circular in shape, and the largest, which was used
-as a kitchen and general store room, was about twenty feet in diameter
-and ten feet in height.
-
-As before stated there was an ample spring of delicious cool water in
-this apartment, and the original hewers of the caves, no doubt, selected
-the place on this account.
-
-After a hearty supper, Mr. Willett and Hank Tims lit their pipes and sat
-before the fire, for though the days are warm in this land the nights
-are unusually cool.
-
-Drift wood, picked up from the crevices of the rocks in which it had
-been lodged by floods caused by the melting of snow in the mountains,
-constituted the fuel of the camp, and the great pile near the fire
-showed that it was to be had in abundance.
-
-All had been working hard that day, so after a desultory talk about the
-great success that was meeting their search for gold, they lay down on
-their blanket cots in the other apartments and went to sleep--that is,
-all but Sam and his father.
-
-Mr. Willett and his son slept together in the nearest room, but though
-they lay down side by side they did not go to sleep at once.
-
-"Sam," said Mr. Willett in a troubled voice, "since you left this
-morning that fellow, Tom Edwards, has been here again."
-
-"What did he want?" asked Sam.
-
-"He appeared to be drunk, and he threatened to kill me if I did not give
-him more money."
-
-"But you have paid him the price agreed on?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then I should not heed him."
-
-"Still, I am afraid he will cause me trouble, so, to-morrow, I will ride
-over to Hurley's Gulch and consult a lawyer, and as that is our nearest
-market and post-office, I will take Hank and Ulna along with two pack
-mules so as to carry back supplies."
-
-"That is forty miles away, so that you will be gone several days. But if
-you must go, father, I will do the best I can while you are absent,"
-said Sam, laying his hand soothingly on his father's broad breast.
-
-"I know you will, my boy, but there is another matter I wished to speak
-with you about."
-
-"What is that, father?"
-
-"Why, this Tom Edwards brought me a letter from your grandfather's
-lawyer in Michigan. It tells me that the old man is dead, and that in
-his will he leaves all his property to you, but you are not to have a
-cent of it till you are twenty-one years of age----"
-
-"Four years and a half, dear father!" cried the excited Sam.
-
-"But," continued Mr. Willett, "the will further says that if you should
-die in the meantime that the property is to go to your grandfather's
-nephew, Frank Shirley."
-
-"A bad, disreputable man to whom neither you nor mother would speak,"
-said Sam.
-
-"He is all that, I fear, and it troubles me to learn from Edwards that
-Frank Shirley has recently come into this land," said Mr. Willett.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.--SAM'S TRIALS BEGIN.
-
-
-While daylight was flooding the upper world next morning, and the
-shadows were lifting from the gloomy depths of the canyon, the modern
-cave dwellers ate their breakfast.
-
-About three hundred yards above the caves the canyon widened out into a
-valley some three hundred yards in diameter. The bottom of this valley
-was covered with rich grass, and in it was a grove of cotton-wood trees
-whose bright verdure gave the place the appearance of a rich emerald gem
-in a mighty setting of granite.
-
-In this valley the horses and pack mules were kept, and, as they had but
-little to do, they might be said to "live in clover."
-
-While it was still dusky in these depths, though the glimpses of far-off
-ruddy mountain peaks told that the sun was rising in the upper world,
-Sam and Ike, who were hardly ever apart, went up to the valley and soon
-returned with three horses and two mules, the latter were to carry back
-the necessary supplies from Hurley's Gulch.
-
-It had been Mr. Willett's custom to make this trip once a month, so that
-his going now was not an unusual event, yet his face showed that he was
-much dejected, as if he had a premonition of the awful calamity that was
-so soon to come upon himself and his beloved boy.
-
-His last words, as he kissed Sam, were:
-
-"If anything should happen to detain me longer than four days, I will
-send a letter back by Ulna."
-
-"But we'll be back on time," joined in Hank Tims, "for I don't like
-crowds, an', then, we've struck pay dirt rich up at the head of the
-valley, an' I'm just a spilein' to see how it'll pan out to the ind."
-
-Good-bys were said, and Sam, Ike and Wah Shin stood on the plateau
-before the cave and waved their hats, till the three men had led the
-animals up the giddy trail and disappeared beyond the towering summit of
-the cliff.
-
-Under the teaching of his father and Hank Tims, Sam had become a
-skillful gold miner, that is, so far as panning out the gravel and
-collecting the gold were concerned.
-
-The fact that he was the prospective heir to a large fortune did not
-unfit him for work this morning. With Ike he went up to the sluices
-immediately after his father left, and until the sun was in mid-heaven
-they worked, shoveling gravel into the cradle and rocking it under the
-water, and only stopping to pick out the nuggets and yellow dust and
-scales that rewarded their effort every hour.
-
-By means of an old-fashioned horn, Wah Shin summoned them to dinner. Of
-the fresh meat he had made pies that would have tempted an invalid's
-appetite. And, as the boys ate, sitting before the entrance to the cave,
-the Chinaman's face fairly glowed with delight at the evidence of his
-excellent cooking.
-
-"Ven'zon pie belly good," chuckled Wah Shin, as he produced a second
-when the first had vanished. "But man eatee too muchee, den get mebbe
-sick."
-
-"Dat ar edvice is 'tended foh Mistah Sam," laughed Ike, as he helped
-himself again. "But vanzon pie an' 'possums are two tings I ain't nebber
-got my fill ob up to dis time."
-
-Sam heard but did not heed the talk of his companions, for his attention
-was at the moment attracted to two strange men who were slowly making
-their way down the trail on the opposite side of the canyon wall.
-
-As there was danger from prowling bands of Indians who had left the
-reservation, and also from white outlaws who frequently robbed weak
-mining camps, every one at Gold Cave Camp strapped on a belt, with a
-knife and pistols in it, as regularly as he pulled on his boots.
-
-Starting to his feet and followed by Ike, Sam went down to the stream,
-getting there just as the two men reached the bottom.
-
-One of the strangers was a tall, dark-bearded man, with one eye, and the
-other was a short, yellow-skinned man with a mean expression of face,
-whom Sam recognized as his cousin, Frank Shirley.
-
-Sam had never spoken to this man, so he did not greet him like an
-acquaintance now.
-
-Both men were well armed, as is the fashion of the country, and when
-they came within hailing distance, Frank Shirley called out:
-
-"Hello, young man, is this Mr. Willett's camp?"
-
-"It is, sir," was Sam's reply, as he came to a halt.
-
-"Is Mr. Willett home?"
-
-"He is not."
-
-"Where is he?"
-
-"He has gone to Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"When did he leave?"
-
-"This morning."
-
-"Ah, I'm sorry I missed him. When do you expect him back?"
-
-"In a few days. Won't you come over and have some dinner?" asked Sam,
-waving his hand in the direction of the plateau, on which Wah Shin was
-visible.
-
-"Thank you; no. We are going on to Hurley's Gulch, and are in a great
-hurry," said Frank Shirley, turning and whispering to his companion, who
-nodded vigorously in response.
-
-"Who shall I say called?" asked Sam, as the two men turned to ascend the
-trail.
-
-"Friends," was the laconical reply.
-
-"If dem's frien's," said Ike, when the men had gone out of hearing, "den
-Ize de biggest kind ob a foe."
-
-The conversation of the two men when they reached the top of the cliff
-proved the black boy's surmise to be correct.
-
-They had left their horses hitched to a rock, and as they prepared to
-mount, Frank Shirley said to his companion:
-
-"That's the boy, Badger."
-
-"The boy ez stan's atween you an' fortune?" said Badger.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'll, ain't you hired me to help you clear the way?"
-
-"I have, Badger."
-
-"Good; then let us git rid of the father first, an' then all the rest'll
-be ez smooth ez ile."
-
-"You will stick to your contract?"
-
-"I'd be a fool if I didn't. You pay expenses an' give me ten thousand
-dollars to get 'em out of the way. Isn't that it?"
-
-"That's it, Badger," said Frank Shirley, as he mounted and rode along
-beside his companion.
-
-"That ar boy down thar," said Badger, waving his hand back at the canyon,
-"ain't no slouch. He'll fight, he will; an' the best way with sich is to
-give 'em no chance."
-
-"No chance," echoed Frank Shirley, "that's it exactly. And now that we
-have them parted our opportunity has come."
-
-"Just ez if 'twas made to order," said Badger.
-
-After the men had gone, Sam and Ike went to work again, but the former
-had lost the cheerfulness that distinguished him in the morning.
-
-He could not get those two men out of his mind, not that he feared their
-return--indeed, he could not account to himself for the strange feeling
-of dread that possessed him for the next three days.
-
-While working, on the afternoon of the fourth day since his father's
-departure, he noticed that the sky had become overcast and that the
-water in the bed of the stream was rapidly rising.
-
-He and Ike quit work earlier than usual, and they had great difficulty
-in making their way to the caves through the swollen torrent.
-
-They had hardly reached cover when a terrific storm came up and the
-canyon became as dark as night, while the roar of the waters and the
-crashing of the thunder were ceaseless and appalling.
-
-It was about nine o'clock at night, and the three occupants of the cave
-were sitting with awed faces before the fire, when, to their
-inexpressible surprise, Ulna, the young Ute, stood dripping before them.
-
-"How did you reach here?" asked Sam, springing to his feet and grasping
-Ulna's hand.
-
-"I rode till I killed my horse, then I ran for hours. The flood was up,
-and it is rising, but I managed to swim across----"
-
-"But my father!" interrupted Sam, pleadingly laying his arm on the young
-Indian's shoulders.
-
-"He and Hank Tims are prisoners at Hurley's Gulch," said Ulna.
-
-"Prisoners."
-
-"Yes, and in the hands of the lynchers who charge them with the murder
-of Tom Edwards. Here is a letter from your father that will explain
-all," said Ulna, pulling a damp paper from his pocket and adding, "your
-testimony is wanted at once to clear the accused; but no man can cross
-the canyon for a week, and then it will be too late!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.--A PERILOUS SITUATION.
-
-
-Sam Willett had courage and fortitude in no common degree, but the words
-of Ulna, who stood dripping and panting before him, froze him with a
-speechless terror.
-
-He took the wet paper from the Indian boy's hand, but for some seconds
-he had neither the courage nor the strength to open it.
-
-The howling of the wind down the gorge and the hoarse roaring of the
-maddened waters heightened the terror of the situation.
-
-Wah Shin, though not well versed in English, fully understood the import
-of Ulna's message, but realizing his own inability to do or to suggest
-anything, he stood with his lips drawn and his little oblique eyes half
-closed.
-
-Ike was the only one of the party who did not appear to have lost the
-power of speech. Taking the letter from Sam's hand, he said:
-
-"Dat ar paper's powahful damp, an' I reckon, Mistah Sam, yeh kin read it
-bettah if so be I dries it so's it won't fall to pieces."
-
-Ike opened the paper and while he held it before the fire, Ulna briefly
-explained the situation.
-
-He said that Mr. Willett, Hank Tims and himself reached Hurley's Gulch
-without any mishap.
-
-They found the rude mining camp in a great state of commotion owing to a
-robbery and murder that had recently been committed.
-
-The more law-abiding, or rather the more industrious, for there was no
-organized law in the place, had formed a vigilance committee to hang the
-next murderer or robber, under the wild sanction of "lynch law."
-
-"Just as soon as we reached Hurley's Gulch," continued Ulna, "we met Tom
-Edwards, and he was very drunk and very abusive. He shouted to every one
-he met that Mr. Willett had robbed him, and took Gold Cave Camp from him
-without paying a cent, though he had promised fifteen hundred dollars."
-
-"Why, the man lies infamously!" interrupted Sam. "I was a witness to
-Edwards' receipt for the money in full, and I have it here among
-father's papers."
-
-"And that receipt is what your father must have at once in order to
-clear him of the charge of robbery and murder," said Ulna.
-
-"Murder!" repeated Sam.
-
-"Yes. Last night Tom Edwards was found dying with a pistol bullet in his
-breast, and with his last breath he swore to the men who found him that
-your father and Hank Tims shot him to get rid of paying the money they
-owed him. The vigilantes at once arrested Mr. Willett and Tom, and they
-swear they will hang them if they do not prove that Tom Edwards was
-paid. I saw the money paid myself, but they refuse to take the word of
-an Indian," said Ulna, with a flash of indignation in his splendid black
-eyes; then continuing, "but they agreed to let me come here for the
-paper."
-
-"Heah!" cried Ike, springing from beside the fire, "de lettah's dry
-enough to read. Let's know w'at Mistah Willett he has to say foh
-hisself."
-
-Sam took the paper, and kneeling down to get the benefit of the light,
-he read aloud as follows:
-
- "_My Dear Son_:--I do not want you to be at all alarmed at my
- detention. Ulna will explain why neither Tom nor I can return
- till you have brought us the receipt which Tom Edwards signed
- when I paid him the money in full for his claim at Gold Cave
- Camp.
-
- "This receipt you will find among the papers in my saddle-bags.
- Bring it to me with all speed and leave Ulna back in charge of
- the camp; it does not matter if the mining ceases till we
- return.
-
- "I regret to have to tell you that Tom Edwards is dead. He was
- drunk when he received the shot that killed him, and he accused
- Hank and me of the crime. If the people here knew us well they
- would not believe this charge for one instant, but they do not,
- and so we must wait till we can show the vigilance committee who
- hold us prisoners, that we could have no motive for, even if we
- were inclined to do this awful deed.
-
- "I saw Frank Shirley here yesterday afternoon in company with a
- well-known desperado who goes by the name of 'One-Eyed Badger.'
- I cannot but think that these two men are at the bottom of this
- new trouble, but what their reasons can be I cannot even guess;
- certain it is that I have never done them or any one else a
- wrong knowingly.
-
- "Do not lose heart, for I have no fear as to the result: only
- come as soon as you can to your loving father,
-
- "_Samuel Willett._"
-
-Sam read this over rapidly, then he read it a second time with more
-deliberation.
-
-"De boss am in a bad fix," groaned Ike, "an' I jest wish I could take
-his place."
-
-"I shall go to my father at once," said Sam, stoutly.
-
-He went to the saddle-bags, got the necessary papers--the receipt and
-deed--and placed them securely in the inner breast pocket of his
-buckskin tunic.
-
-"You no gettee on holse an' lide such night as deez coz it was so muchee
-stolmy?" said Wah Shin when he saw Sam getting out his saddle, bridle
-and rifle.
-
-"I must get to Hurley's Gulch before another day," was the resolute
-reply, "if I have to go there on my hands and knees."
-
-"But you cannot go to-night," protested Ulna. "Come and see the danger."
-
-He took Sam by the arm and led him out to the plateau before the
-entrance to the cave.
-
-It has been said that it but seldom rains in this land, but when it does
-the watery torrents come down with a continued fury, of which the
-dwellers in more favored climes can have only the faintest conception.
-
-The bare rocks refuse to absorb the rain as it falls, and so the
-ever-accumulating waters sweep into the canyons and fill the narrow beds
-between the precipitous banks with wild torrents, that must be once seen
-before an adequate idea can be formed of the tremendous and seemingly
-irresistible power of water in action.
-
-The four occupants of the caves, all fine types of four human races,
-went out to the plateau.
-
-The light, streaming through the cave opening, cut across the inky
-blackness of the canyon like a solid yellow shaft, that made the
-surrounding darkness more impenetrable.
-
-Laden with sheets rather than drops of rain, the wind swept down the
-ravine with a force that threatened to tear the observers from the rocks
-and hurl them into the seething torrent.
-
-"Before this time," said Ulna, speaking with the calmness that
-distinguished all he said, "the valley is flooded and the horses up
-there are drowned."
-
-Sam shuddered but made no reply.
-
-He went back to the cave, secured a lighted brand, and, returning to the
-edge of the plateau, he dropped it over.
-
-It went hissing down. If the current were as low as the day before it
-should have fallen sheer down for a hundred feet, but before going half
-that distance, it lit up an expanse of water white with foam, and was
-extinguished.
-
-The result of this experiment brought Sam's heart to his mouth, and he
-could not have uttered a word if the life of the father he so well loved
-depended on it.
-
-"If she keeps on a-climbin' up dat way," groaned Ike, "de watah'll be
-nigh into de cave by mawnin'."
-
-Sam now recalled that he had found drift-wood lodged in the crevices of
-the rocks, even higher than the entrances to the cave, and from this he
-inferred that at the highest water no one could stay in the cave and
-live.
-
-Maj, the fine setter dog, had been moaning beside the fire all the
-evening, but now he came out and crouched at his young master's feet, as
-if his instinct told him of the danger and that he wanted protection.
-
-Fearing that the poor horses were gone, and well knowing that it would
-be madness to attempt to cross the canyon that night, Sam turned sadly to
-his companions and said:
-
-"We can do nothing till daylight comes. Let us get in out of the storm."
-
-They returned to the cave and silently sat down on the stones that had
-been placed for seats near the fire.
-
-It was a most trying situation.
-
-Even if Mr. Willett and Hank Tims had been safely there in the cave, the
-ever-increasing storm and the possibility, or rather the certainty of
-its danger if it continued would have been sufficient to drive sleep
-from the eyes of all.
-
-But Sam Willett, brave, unselfish youth that he was, gave no thought to
-the peril of his own surroundings.
-
-With his chin resting between his up-turned palms, he looked steadily at
-the dying fire without seeing it.
-
-His heart and his thoughts were ever with his sorely-tried father at
-Hurley's Gulch, and he groaned as he read in the beating of the storm
-the edict that might bar his going to the rescue.
-
-But though unmindful of himself, it was not in Sam's nature to neglect
-the comfort of others.
-
-"Lie down, all of you," he said to his companions, "and I will stand
-guard till daylight comes."
-
-After a weak protest, Wah Shin, Ulna and Ike brought in their blankets
-and lay down before the fire.
-
-Ike pretended that he did not want to sleep, but, after an attempt at
-desultory talk, his eyes closed and he soon became oblivious to his
-surroundings.
-
-Maj continued to be restless and frightened. Now and then, as if to
-judge for himself how the storm was getting on, he would go to the cave
-opening, and, after whining in a pained way for some seconds, he would
-come back and crouch down near the fire with his nose resting on his
-young master's knees.
-
-To sorrow-stricken Sam Willett that night seemed like an eternity of
-darkness.
-
-He was beginning to feel that the storm had destroyed the sun, when the
-grey light of another day began to creep slowly into the cave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.--AT HURLEY'S GULCH.
-
-
-Hurley's Gulch, though subsequently called "Hurley City," has no right
-on the map if it ever had a place there, for, like many other more
-ambitious and important cities, it has ceased to be the abode of man and
-returned to its original state of barrenness and desolation.
-
-It was at this time a mining camp that had sprung up in a night, as it
-were, when a man named Hurley--after whom the place was named--had
-discovered gold in a little creek near the spot that so suddenly became
-the site of busy mining life.
-
-Though less than six months old and destined not to survive a second
-birthday, Hurley's Gulch had nearly a thousand inhabitants, with stores,
-saloons, assay offices, hotels and all the business establishments that
-characterize such places.
-
-There were a few women in the camp and a sprinkling of Indians, Negroes
-and Mexicans, but the great mass of the inhabitants were miners, rough
-in appearance and even rougher in speech.
-
-A more picturesque and novel settlement than Hurley's Gulch it would be
-impossible to find outside the peculiar mining camps of the West.
-
-Two little streaks of grass could be found growing beside the creek on
-the bluff above which the camp had been established; but beyond this
-there was hardly a sign of vegetation in sight.
-
-All about the place, far as the eye could reach, was a tempest-tossed
-expanse of dry, glistening rocks.
-
-As there was neither timber for building nor material for bricks, the
-dwellings, stores, saloons, hotels and offices were necessarily of
-canvas.
-
-The tents were pitched here and there irregularly, and as all of them
-had seen hard service in other mining camps and "cities," their general
-appearance was patched and dilapidated in the extreme.
-
-The great majority of the men at Hurley's Gulch were industrious miners;
-but as vultures hover over the track of an army in the field and wolves
-follow up a buffalo herd to prey upon the weakest, so crowds of
-well-dressed gamblers and red-faced whisky sellers swarm in prosperous
-mining camps to plunder and demoralize.
-
-Hurley's Gulch had more than its share of these wicked fellows, and as
-there was not the shadow of law there to defend the weak, every man went
-armed as a matter of course.
-
-Until law officers can be elected or appointed and courts of justice
-established in such camps, it is the custom of the more industrious and
-peaceable to form what they call "vigilance committees" for their own
-protection.
-
-It need not be said that, no matter how well-meaning the purpose, many
-men, themselves criminals, get on such committees, and that great wrong
-is often done to the innocent by these rude efforts to do justice.
-
-Mr. Willett's was a case in point.
-
-A few days before he had come over this last time to Hurley's Gulch, a
-hard-working miner had been killed and robbed of the gold-dust which he
-had patiently panned out from the bed of the stream.
-
-This crime made the miners angry, and they held an indignation meeting
-after the poor man's funeral, and organized a committee to ferret out
-and punish the criminals.
-
-As there was no jail in which to detain those guilty of lighter
-offences, there was only one penalty in the code of the vigilantes, and
-that was _death_!
-
-Tom Edwards had not been a favorite with the better class of men at
-Hurley's Gulch.
-
-In his opinion money was made for the sole purpose of gambling away and
-getting drunk on.
-
-It was generally believed that he had been paid for his claim at Gold
-Cave Camp by Mr. Willett, so that many who heard him declare to the
-contrary and say that he had sold on credit, placed no faith in his
-word.
-
-But when Tom Edwards was found dying the night before Mr. Willett was to
-have left the Gulch, his past falsehoods were forgotten in view of the
-nearness of his end and the calmest were inclined to believe him.
-
-It was well known that hot words had passed that very day between Mr.
-Willett and Tom Edwards, and this afforded to many a reason for the act.
-
-It was pitchy dark when the wretched man was shot, and he was very drunk
-at the time, so that when his wound restored him, for a short time, to
-his senses, there can be no doubt but he was honest in the belief that
-"two men," Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were the guilty parties.
-
-The accused men were at once arrested by the vigilance committee and
-placed under guard in a tent.
-
-Both protested their innocence, as well they might, and Mr. Willett
-asked to be permitted to send to his camp for papers that would prove to
-all that he had paid Tom Edwards in full the price at which he valued
-his claim.
-
-A few men were inclined to believe Mr. Willett, but to set all doubts at
-rest, it was decided that further action should be postponed in the case
-till the receipt of the money and the deed of sale had been procured.
-
-The next morning Ulna was dispatched on this mission, and we have seen
-the fidelity with which he performed the duty and the unexpected
-obstacles that prevented the return of the accused man's son with the
-papers.
-
-There were two men at Hurley's Gulch at this time who, if they had
-chosen, could have set at rest all doubts as to the mystery surrounding
-Tom Edwards' death and handed over the guilty parties to the vigilantes;
-but as this act would have resulted in their own swift destruction, they
-kept their awful secret to themselves.
-
-These men were Frank Shirley and the outlaw Badger.
-
-Frank Shirley believed, and with reason, that if Sam Willett was out of
-the way, the last bar between him and a great fortune would be down.
-
-He was a dissolute, thriftless fellow, every faculty of whose low mind
-seemed to have been concentrated into the one mean gift of cunning.
-
-On the way from Gold Cave Camp to Hurley's Gulch, Frank Shirley and the
-man whom he had hired to help him in his wicked purpose, discussed the
-situation from every point of view.
-
-The first thing they decided on was that Mr. Willett and his son must be
-prevented from ever meeting again, but they did not agree so readily as
-to how this was to be done.
-
-More bluff, and possibly more brutal than his employer, Badger urged
-that he be allowed to waylay Mr. Willett and kill him on his return.
-
-But Frank Shirley opposed this, saying, for he was a coward at heart, as
-all such men are:
-
-"Willett will have with him the Indian boy and the old hunter, Hank
-Tims; they are all well-armed, and they would be stronger than us. No,
-Badger, we must hit upon some plan that has less risk in it."
-
-"Wa'al," responded Badger, "hit upon the plan yersel', an' if I don't
-carry it out without flinchin', I'll give you leave to shoot me down
-like a dog."
-
-When these men reached Hurley's Gulch they found Edwards "drunk as
-usual," and loudly declaring wherever he went that Mr. Willett was
-trying to rob him out of fifteen hundred dollars.
-
-Here was the very chance for which Frank Shirley had been looking.
-
-If he could have Edwards put out of the way, in such a manner as to
-fasten the crime on Mr. Willett, a hundred stronger and braver men would
-be ready to accomplish his purpose with their own hands.
-
-He told Badger of his scheme, and that creature, without a moment's
-thought of the awful crime he was about to commit, pledged himself to
-carry it out when the other gave the word.
-
-To add to the evidence against Mr. Willett, as that gentleman was
-arrested, Frank Shirley appeared to be very much cast down.
-
-With tears in his eyes, he explained to the many who were only too eager
-to listen, that Mr. Willett had married his, Shirley's, cousin, that he
-had borne a bad character in Detroit, and that he had recently fled from
-that city to escape the consequences of his many crimes.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.--WHY THE PAPERS WERE NOT BROUGHT.
-
-
-Before awaking his companions, all of whom seemed to be sleeping
-heavily, Sam went out to see if the flood in the canyon had risen.
-
-He ventured but a few yards beyond the entrance to the cave, for the
-sight that met his eyes appalled him.
-
-The rain was still pouring down in torrents, and the flood had risen
-till it was nearly on a level with the plateau.
-
-"Three feet more and it will be into the cave," he said, speaking aloud.
-
-"Watel littee mole high up no cannee stay, mus' allee die if no can
-swimmee," said a voice behind Sam.
-
-There was no need to ask whose it was.
-
-Wah Shin, with thoughts of breakfast in his mind, had got up, but first
-he decided to satisfy himself of the condition of affairs outside.
-
-"Yes, Wah Shin," said Sam, without turning his head, "even as I look at
-the flood it appears to be rising."
-
-"If it come mole up, wat we allee do?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"No cannee stop dis place?"
-
-"I fear not."
-
-"Way we go den, no can tink."
-
-"Nor can I think either, Wah."
-
-"If no can lib, den no coz wy die hungly," said Wah Shin, and with this
-belief strong in his mind, he re-entered the cave and set about getting
-breakfast with his usual indifference to the state of the weather.
-
-At any other time the sight of the flood and the danger of its coming
-higher would have alarmed Sam greatly, but though he could not ignore
-the danger that threatened him now, his own situation was lost sight of
-as he thought of his father's position.
-
-He was still standing looking at the rushing flood, as if fascinated by
-its power and volume, when Ike and Ulna came out and joined him.
-
-"Foh massy's sake!" exclaimed Ike, when he caught sight of the water.
-"Ain't she jest a bilein' up."
-
-"Do you think the water will rise higher?" asked Sam as he turned to
-Ulna, and tried to find some comfort in his calm, impassive face.
-
-Before replying Ulna looked up at the sky for some seconds, then said:
-
-"The storm is not half over."
-
-"And while it lasts the water will go on rising?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, that is what we must expect."
-
-"Then it will flood the cave?"
-
-"It will surely do that."
-
-"And drive us out?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, if we don't want to drown there."
-
-"Then we must try to leave?"
-
-"Yes, we must try to leave," echoed Ulna.
-
-"But how can we get away?"
-
-"Ah," said Ulna, with something like a sigh, "I cannot now think of how
-that's to be done."
-
-"If so be we was all birds, we could fly," said Ike, very solemnly,
-"it'd come in mighty handy-like jest 'bout dis time."
-
-Sam now realized that he must think and act for his companions as well
-as for himself.
-
-His was a brave, sturdy, self-reliant nature, that grows stronger and
-stronger in the face of increasing trials and responsibilities.
-
-"Let us go in out of the rain and think," he said, while he turned and
-nervously stroked his forehead.
-
-When they went back to the cave they found that Wah Shin had a good
-breakfast ready, and was still busy cooking more food.
-
-When asked by Sam why he was doing this, he said, as if it were a matter
-of course.
-
-"Bime by, watel him come in, puttee out file; file him go out, no can
-cookee; no got tings cookee, no can eat; no eatee den allee mus' die."
-
-"Well, Wah Shin," said Sam with a grim smile, "if there is any hope in
-cooking, keep at it while the food lasts."
-
-Despite their troubles and the dangers that cut them off from the world
-and threatened their lives, all, Maj included, complimented Wah Shin's
-efforts in their behalf by partaking of a hearty breakfast.
-
-During the meal Sam was unusually silent; it was evident he was thinking
-very hard, and the others did not attempt to disturb his deliberations
-till he had risen from his seat, then Ulna asked:
-
-"Have you thought out a way to get across the canyon, Sam?"
-
-"I have thought out a way of trying it," he answered.
-
-"How?"
-
-"On a raft."
-
-"But we have no raft."
-
-"Then we must make one."
-
-"Where is the timber?"
-
-"There is some here in the form of slabs and firewood, and there is
-plenty whirling down with the flood. You can handle a lariat, Ulna?"
-
-"I think I can," was the response.
-
-"Then get a rope, we have a lot here in the cave; make a noose and
-secure all the long pieces of timber you can. The water is nearly up to
-the plateau, and Ike will help you pull them out."
-
-"An' watee can me do?" asked Wah Shin.
-
-"Keep right on cooking, for if we cannot cross the flood on the raft,
-we'll be swept into the great canyon of the Colorado, and there we shall
-need all the food we can take along."
-
-The others set to work with a will, but even Ulna, who was born out in
-that land, only faintly comprehended the import of what Sam said about
-the great canyon.
-
-Indeed, Sam himself had only a vague notion of what was meant by the now
-famous geographical name.
-
-He knew the history and geography of his own country very well, as every
-well-trained youth should, and he was, therefore, aware that the great
-Colorado of the West was formed by the junction of two important rivers,
-the Green and the Grand; he was further aware that the water roaring
-outside entered the latter river about twenty-five miles below the camp.
-
-Had these been ordinary rivers there would be good reason to dread
-venturing out on their currents at flood time, even in a good boat; but
-the Green and the Grand for many score miles above their junction flowed
-through immense rocky defiles or canyons, and they united in one mighty
-canyon, through which flowed for fully four hundred miles the waters of
-the Colorado on their way to the Gulf of California.
-
-Sam had talked a great deal about this wonderful chasm with Hank Tims,
-and that most reliable authority had assured him that only two parties
-had ever attempted to go through the great canyon and returned to tell of
-their perilous adventures and hair-breadth escapes.
-
-Hank claimed to have stood on a cliff that rose straight up from the
-edge of the Colorado at one point, and looked down a sheer perpendicular
-depth of over seven thousand feet, the very thought of which is enough
-to make an ordinary head giddy.
-
-But Sam helped to make a craft that would enable them to cross the two
-hundred feet that separated them from the opposite bank, and this
-accomplished in safety, they could make their way on foot to Hurley's
-Gulch, where he knew his father was eagerly awaiting his coming.
-
-He secured all the gold dust about his own person, and then made up
-bundles of blankets, provisions and ammunition that might be of use if
-they did not succeed in making a crossing.
-
-This done, he went out and found that Ike and Ulna had succeeded in
-staying and landing a great deal of drift-wood, just the thing for a
-raft, and a number of stout poles that might be used in guiding it.
-
-By this time the flood had risen still higher and higher, and was now
-ankle deep on the plateau outside the cave opening, and there was not a
-moment to lose.
-
-With an energy that was all his own, and a skill that surprised himself,
-Sam set about building the raft.
-
-By means of ropes, the longer timbers were securely lashed side by side,
-and over these, like a deck, the lighter slabs taken from the cave were
-nailed.
-
-When this clumsy and insecure structure was completed, Sam saw that the
-food, blankets, arms and ammunition were tied so that they could not be
-swept off by the wash of the waters.
-
-It comforted him somewhat to know that all his companions could swim,
-though the stoutest swimmer could not last long in the mad torrent
-sweeping past.
-
-Sam assigned each one a position, and gave him strict instructions as to
-what he must do under certain circumstances; and Maj seemingly well
-aware of what was up, crouched down in the center of the raft.
-
-"Now," said Sam, as he stood up, pole in hand, at one end of the raft,
-"we must wait for the current to float us off, and trust in God."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.--THE WONDERFUL VOYAGE BEGINS.
-
-
-Under and around the raft the waters surged and poured, as if they were
-testing the strength of the frail structure before lifting it up and
-hurling it away to destruction.
-
-With his feet well apart to balance himself, and the long pole ready in
-his strong hands, Sam stood pale but resolute.
-
-They had only a few minutes to wait.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin sent up a cry of horror as, with the roar of an angry
-monster, the current swept the raft into the stream.
-
-With the grim stoicism of his race, Ulna looked about him without
-seeming to be at all disturbed by the awful situation.
-
-Sam's object was to get across to the other side of the canyon and effect
-a landing with his party, for he never for an instant lost sight of the
-fact that his father's freedom if not his life depended on his reaching
-Hurley's Gulch at once with the papers in the Edwards case.
-
-But alas for all the schemes planned by love and executed by courage!
-What was man's strength and daring to the weight of the piled-up, flying
-waters?
-
-The instant the raft swung away from the plateau Sam saw that his pole
-was of no use, for the river bottom was fully one hundred feet below the
-surface.
-
-He tried to use the pole as a paddle, but his efforts had no effect on
-the course of the raft.
-
-It was hurled like a plaything by some mighty, unseen power, into the
-center of the flood; then, with the speed of a racer urged on by whip
-and spur, the frail ark went flying down the canyon.
-
-For the life of him Sam could not utter a word. His face was blanched,
-but it was not with fear, though death seemed now inevitable.
-
-"What will become of poor father!" This is what poor Sam would have
-cried out if he could have given expression to the one thought that
-filled his brain and the one feeling that stirred his heart.
-
-But neither Ike nor Wah Shin attempted to restrain their cries, though
-their voices were nearly drowned out by the never-ceasing roar of the
-torrent.
-
-Wah Shin was terror-stricken, and in his fright he forgot his little
-store of defective English and shouted for help in his native tongue.
-
-The effect on Ike was to change the color of his face to a dark grey,
-and to make the whites of his eyes very conspicuous. He was devoutly on
-his knees, though he clung to the logs with both hands, and prayed with
-an earnestness that there was no mistaking.
-
-In much less time than it takes to describe the feelings of the
-passengers they were whirled out of sight of the caves and were rushing
-down between the towering canyon walls with a velocity that was truly
-appalling.
-
-It was Sam's belief, as well as the belief of the others, after they saw
-that crossing was impossible, that they would be crushed by the great
-jagged rocks that beset their course, but they soon discovered that they
-were in the middle of the current, and that they were passing in safety
-the obstructions that threatened ruin every instant.
-
-The bravest men tremble on the eve of their first battle, and their
-hearts sink when they hear the first rattle of the skirmishers' rifles.
-But as the time passes without their being shot down, they become
-indifferent to the dangers that at first alarmed and unnerved them, and
-fight with the coolness and confidence of veterans.
-
-A sailor will laugh at a storm that is full of terrors to the landsman,
-for it is certain that familiarity with danger does breed contempt.
-
-After the raft had dashed on for an hour or more, our friends began to
-feel confident and to look at the situation without fear in their eyes.
-
-Ike was the first to speak; perhaps because Wah Shin had not yet
-regained his knowledge of English. After winking very fast for fully a
-half minute, he said:
-
-"It don't seem like's if we was goin' to sink--at least not yet a bit."
-
-He had to shout this out to make himself heard, and Sam, in response,
-had to speak in the same tones.
-
-"If we can find a place where we can make a landing, I don't care how
-soon she sinks after that."
-
-"Dar don't appeah to be much show foh a land in dese ar parts," said
-Ike, as he looked up at the walls that not only formed the sides of the
-canyon, but which seemed to block their advance, for the course of the
-river was tortuous in the extreme, so much so, indeed, that they could
-but rarely see more than a few hundred yards in advance.
-
-At length, and after they must have floated more than twenty miles, the
-canyon of Gold Cave Creek entered the much greater and more sublime canyon
-of Grand River.
-
-Here the bed of the river was so much wider, that though there was more
-water in it, it flowed with a current that was calmness itself when
-compared with the fierce mountain torrent that had recently made the
-raft its plaything.
-
-With a great sigh of relief, Wah Shin now proceeded to show that his
-knowledge of English had come back to him.
-
-"Dees place no so belly bad likee dat place we way back alle come flom."
-
-"This is Grand River," said Ulna, speaking for the first time, and
-seemingly as calm as if he were in a place of safety, as he added: "And
-further down all the canyons of the Green and Grand rivers unite to form
-the mighty Colorado."
-
-"I hope we may be able to land before we reach there," said Sam Willett,
-who had now discovered that by means of the pole he could steer the raft
-in the calmer water.
-
-Even the dog regained confidence. Maj had been crouching down on the
-blankets, and wincing and trembling with fear, but he sat up when the
-smoother current was reached, and licked his lips and moved his tail in
-a way that left no doubt as to his approval of the changed condition of
-affairs.
-
-But though the current of Grand River was slow as compared with that of
-Gold Cave Creek, it would be a mistake to imagine that it was at all
-stagnant.
-
-The beds of all its tributaries were swollen at this time, so that the
-waters of Grand River were thirty feet above the average level and
-moving with a speed of four or five miles an hour.
-
-Although continually watching for some place in which he could make a
-landing, it was not till near sunset that Sam found such a spot as he
-wanted.
-
-The river soon widened out into a bowl-shaped valley, on the margin of
-which there were benches of dry ground, covered with stunted little
-cedars that gave a grave-yard appearance to the place.
-
-By means of their poles Sam and Ulna succeeded in forcing the raft to
-the shore, where it was securely fastened, and Wah Shin and Ike sent up
-prayers of thanks, each after his fashion.
-
-This arrangement had been made none too soon, for they had not finished
-removing the cargo from the raft when the black shadows of night seemed
-to rise up from the water, for the glow on the top of the canyon walls
-showed that it was still comparatively light in the upper world.
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike when the last of the cargo was safely stored under the
-cedars, "w'at am de nex' t'ing on de programmy?"
-
-"De nex' t'ing," replied Wah Shin as he began getting out his pots, pans
-and supplies, "is dat we makee file, den we has to gettee hot someting
-mebbe fol to eat."
-
-This admirable suggestion met with general approval.
-
-That there had been higher floods than this the drift-wood lodged in the
-crevices of the neighboring rocks abundantly attested.
-
-As it had not only stopped raining by this time, but the clouds had
-exhausted themselves and vanished from the strip of sky visible above
-their heads, they had no difficulty in starting a fire.
-
-In the ruddy glow the yellow current, roaring and sweeping near by, took
-on the hue of blood, but our friends were too hungry, weary and anxious
-to be impressed by this.
-
-Wah Shin had plenty of food cooked, but he very wisely thought that it
-would be more palatable if warmed over and a cup of good coffee added to
-the meal.
-
-Despite the dangers that surrounded them and the woful anxiety about his
-father, that was never absent from Sam Willett's heart, he could not
-help being impressed by the wild weirdness of the situation.
-
-He kept his feelings bravely to himself and expressed pleasure at the
-appetites shown by his friends, while trying to comfort them with a
-half-felt hope that they might be able to escape from the canyon on the
-morrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.--MR. WILLETT AND HANK TIMS.
-
-
-Mr. Willett and his friend and fellow prisoner, Hank Tims, were kept
-securely guarded in a tent situated in about the center of the
-straggling habitations that went to make up the camp at Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Hank, who knew the country and the climate better than any white man in
-it, was well aware, from the continuence and violence of the storm, that
-it was spread over a wide area, and that the heavy rainfall and the
-consequent melting of snow on the crests of the higher mountains would
-flood all the streams flowing into the great Colorado.
-
-He did not wish voluntarily to confess his fears to Mr. Willett, and yet
-he felt that it was only right that that gentleman should know what
-effect the storm might have on their own lives.
-
-"Do you know what I have been thinking ever since night came and the
-rain has been dashing on the canvas over our heads, as if determined to
-get in?" said Mr. Willett, along toward morning, on the day following
-the departure of Ulna for Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"Mebbe ye've been thinkin' that this is a powerful stormy night,"
-answered Hank, at a venture.
-
-"Yes, and that the storm will be apt to flood the canyon where the boys
-are."
-
-"Wa'al," drawled Hank, as if weighing his words, "this yar rain'll be
-mighty apt to raise the creeks in the bottoms of the canyons."
-
-"What if Ulna should not be able to get across?"
-
-"He'll get across, no fear of that," said Hank. "But thar's another
-important pint in the case."
-
-"What is that, Hank?"
-
-"It's can Ulna git back an' fetch yer son with him."
-
-"And what do you think about that, Hank?"
-
-"I don't know what to think."
-
-"But, surely, you have some idea."
-
-"Oh, yes," said Hank, his hand to his ear to measure the sound of the
-pouring rain, and his gray eyes intently fixed on the ceiling, as if he
-were trying to find out when the flood would break through and drench
-them.
-
-"Well," said Mr. Willett, nervously, "what's your opinion?"
-
-"I don't really think that Ulna, or Sam, ken git back to Hurley's for
-days. Cos why, they can't cross the flood to the trail, an' no man
-could, onless he chanced to be rigged with wings, like a bird, an' up to
-this time I ain't run acrost a human mortal fixed in that way, though
-I'll allow that sich an addition would be powerful convenient at times."
-
-"But if my son can't come here, what then?"
-
-"You mean, how will it fare with us?"
-
-"Yes, Hank, that is what I mean."
-
-"Wa'al, it'll depend on many pints."
-
-"Give me some of them."
-
-"If the men in these diggins keep sober, we ken hope for fair treatment,
-but if they don't it'll go hard on us. But all that depends on the
-storm," said Hank, with great deliberation.
-
-"On the storm?" repeated Mr. Willett.
-
-"Yes; that's what I said. Of course, you understand that if the rain
-keeps on an' raises the creek har at Hurley's, then the miners won't be
-able to work for days an' days?"
-
-"I understand that, Hank."
-
-"Wa'al, if they don't work, an' have somethink to okerpy their minds, do
-you know what they will do?"
-
-"I haven't the slightest idea," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Why, they'll crowd into the saloons an' git drunk. When even a
-well-meanin' man is drunk he's a beast, but when these rough fellows
-drink that devil's broth, whisky, why it makes 'em reg'lar out and out
-fiends."
-
-"I understand you," said Mr. Willett sadly.
-
-The two men relapsed into silence and again lay down on the blankets
-that had been given them by the vigilance committee.
-
-Hank Tims was right in his surmise.
-
-Morning brought no cessation to the storm, and as a consequence the
-miners could not work, for Hurley's Gulch was transformed from a little
-stream into a raging torrent.
-
-As has been before stated, a majority of these miners were industrious,
-honest men; and their vigilance committee, though apt to do wrong in its
-efforts to be just, had a repressing effect on the lawless element.
-
-These men were honest in the belief that Mr. Willett and his companion
-were responsible for the death of Tom Edwards, and it must be confessed
-that all the circumstances--circumstances that were strengthened by the
-dying man's statements, pointed that way.
-
-The "Grand Union Hotel," the most important establishment at Hurley's
-Gulch, was composed of three tents, and old dilapidated tents at that.
-
-The front tent was occupied by a bar, the center tent as a kitchen and
-dining room, and the rear canvas afforded space for the guests to spread
-their own blankets and sleep as best they might.
-
-Frank Shirley and Badger had their headquarters at the Grand Union.
-Here, the following day, the miners gathered to discuss the effect the
-storm might have on the return of the messenger with the paper that was
-to show that Mr. Willett had paid Edwards in full for his claim at Gold
-Cave Camp.
-
-A few men believed Mr. Willett's story, but yet, in deference to the
-wishes of the majority they were willing to have a trial, but not till a
-sufficient time had passed for the floods to subside so that the
-messenger might have a chance to return.
-
-Frank Shirley saw the drift of affairs, and, without seeming to do so,
-he made up his mind to direct it.
-
-He was well supplied with money, and feeling that he had a large fortune
-to fall back on, if he managed his game properly, he decided to give
-every man, for nothing, all the whisky he could drink, and then when he
-had the camp crazed with liquor to turn them at once against Mr.
-Willett.
-
-In carrying out this monstrous scheme, Frank Shirley was ably seconded
-by Badger.
-
-The storm continued throughout the day, but the sound of its fury was
-gradually deadened by the uproar of the drunken men in and about the
-Grand Union Hotel.
-
-From being a well-meaning crowd of miners, they gradually became a mob
-of fierce and profane drunken men, with no more moral conception of
-their conduct than the inmates of a mad-house.
-
-By the time night came again, they had forgotten their promise to give
-the accused men a hearing, and were resolved to slay them at once.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.--A FRUITLESS EFFORT.
-
-
-The blankets and bundles carried on the raft were pretty well soaked by
-the rain and the whirling waters of the canyon, but as soon as supper was
-over Sam gave orders to have the things spread out and dried before the
-fire.
-
-In this work all took an eager part, and as they had been able to
-collect plenty of fuel, they were enabled to build such a fire as had
-never chased the night shadows from that part of Grand River Canyon
-before.
-
-When the blankets were dried they were spread over heaps of cedar boughs
-and made beds that would have tempted a dyspeptic to sleep.
-
-But, though very weary, our friends did not lie down at once, but sat
-before the fire speculating and wondering if they would be able to climb
-out of the canyon on the morrow and make their way to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Although there was no danger in this place from wild beasts or savage
-foes, Sam Willett began to-night a system of guard duty which he kept up
-during all the nights of his perilous journey.
-
-His great fear now was that the flood might rise and carry off the raft
-or drown out their camping-place, as it was evident it had done on many
-former occasions.
-
-That they might not be taken by surprise, he divided the night into four
-watches, to begin at nine o'clock and to continue till five, when it
-would be broad daylight.
-
-Each one was to stand guard two hours at a time and to wake the next one
-when his watch had expired. The order was to be changed every night so
-that no one would have to be on duty at the same time two nights in
-succession.
-
-This arrangement met with the approval of all, and Sam took the first
-turn on guard.
-
-The others lay down with the promptness of soldiers when the word of
-command was given, and they were soon sleeping soundly.
-
-Sam had an excellent watch, the gift of his dead mother and valued
-accordingly, and this enabled them to measure the time with military
-exactness.
-
-The flood rose about a foot during the night, but beyond this, nothing
-of a startling nature occurred.
-
-They breakfasted the following morning before it was quite light, and
-when the glow of the rising sun could be seen on the crest of the peaks
-that towered for many hundreds of feet above the bed of the stream, Sam
-and Ulna started off to see if they could find a way to the upper world,
-leaving Ike and Wah Shin in charge of the camp.
-
-These two worthies were the best of friends, and when together they
-talked in a way that would have been very amusing to any one who could
-have overheard it.
-
-"Dis am a mighty queah place," said Ike, glancing about him after Sam
-and Ulna had got out of hearing.
-
-"A belly funny hole, way, way down flom wo'ld," said Wah Shin as he
-imitated Ike's movements.
-
-"Wah Shin."
-
-"Go on chin, me heal you," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Do you t'ink God made all de world?"
-
-"Oh, me t'ink so," said Wah Shin carelessly.
-
-"An' eberyting He made 's got some use?"
-
-"Oh, yes, allee tings got some use--mebbe."
-
-"An' He made dese canyons?"
-
-"Don't know 'bout dem," said Wah Shin dubiously.
-
-"Wa'al, if God didn't make de canyons, who did?" asked Ike, with a
-manner that indicated his appreciation of the great weight of the
-question.
-
-To confess ignorance of a subject is a manly habit which very few are
-addicted to. Wah Shin at once proved that he did not consider himself an
-authority on all matters, for he said, promptly and frankly:
-
-"Me don't know."
-
-"Dey aint got no use, ez I ken see," continued Ike, "an' it's my farm
-belief dat dat oder pusson ez goes roun' like a roarin' lion dug out
-dese yer canawls an' den found ez he had no watah to fill 'em up wid."
-
-"Mebbe so--me don't know."
-
-"Now, if dey was filled wid fire," said Ike, with the same wise manner,
-"I'd call it a fust-rate job--ob de kind."
-
-"Ha, ha!" roared Wah Shin, as if he caught the sharpest point of an
-excellent joke. "'Spose alle file, den wat we do, eh?"
-
-"We wouldn't be har," said Ike.
-
-"But no cannee help oursels."
-
-"Reckon yer right. Ez atween de two, I goes in foh watah ebery day in de
-week an' twice on Sundays. But if I'd had de buildin' ob dese yer
-canyons I wouldn't hab wasted sich a mighty sight ob stone in puttin' in
-de banks. But den eberyting in dis yer world ain't jest as we'd like to
-have it, so it's better to take tings as dey come; what do you say, Wah
-Shin?"
-
-"We gottee take it as it come--no can help oulsels," said Wah Shin
-grimly.
-
-This phase of the situation was so self-evident that even Ike could not
-think of objecting to it, so he began to whistle a hymn tune and to pack
-up the food and blankets so that they might be all ready to start when
-Sam and Ulna returned with the information that they had discovered a
-way out of the canyon.
-
-But this hope, after having been strongly cherished for three hours, was
-doomed to disappointment.
-
-Shortly before noon the two explorers returned, and though Sam's face
-told of his failure, Ike could not help asking:
-
-"Wa'al, Mistah Sam, wat luck?"
-
-"Poor luck, Ike," was the sad reply.
-
-"Couldn't find de way out, eh?"
-
-"There is no way to find. Every wall we came to is as high and steep as
-those about the camp," said Sam, with a sigh and an upward glance at the
-perpendicular cliffs that appeared to be bending over them, as if the
-touch of a child's hand might tumble them into the chasm.
-
-"Undah sich sarcumstances ez dem," said Ike, very solemnly, "wat do yeh
-tinks best to be done?"
-
-"We must leave here at once."
-
-"But how's it to be did, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"We must leave as we came."
-
-"On de raft?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'al, dat's a heap sight moah comfotable way dan if we had to swim foh
-it," said Ike, with a sudden display of cheerfulness.
-
-Sam now began to realize that their stock of provisions was small, that
-there was no way of replenishing them in the canyon, and that their stay
-in these depths was very indefinite, if, indeed, the chances were not
-all against their ever being able to get out.
-
-He saw that it would be a mistaken kindness if he let the others or
-himself eat all that they desired, and great as his affection was for
-Maj, the dog, he regretted that the animal was along, for it made
-another and a very large mouth to feed.
-
-With force and frankness he laid the case before his companions, and
-without a sign of dissent, they agreed to have the food so divided as to
-make it last for ten days, before which time the least hopeful was
-certain they would again be in the upper world.
-
-A dinner of limited rations was at once eaten, and though it was ample,
-every one of them thought that he could easily eat as much more and not
-feel that he was playing the glutton.
-
-Again the cargo was placed securely on the raft, and Maj walked demurely
-on board and lay down on top of the blankets.
-
-After strengthening the raft by the addition of some pieces of light,
-dry cedar, it was freed from its moorings and pushed into the current.
-
-The four passengers occupied the same relative positions as on the
-previous day, Sam standing in the stern and skilfully steering the float
-from the many angry-looking rocks that jutted into the swift current.
-
-As the light began to fade, Sam gazed eagerly in front and on either
-side in the hope of being able to find some expansion or ledge on which
-they could land for the night. But an impenetrable darkness settled over
-them, and they were still afloat in the canyon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.--A NIGHT OF AWFUL GLOOM.
-
-
-Words can convey to the reader an idea of only those things with which
-he is familiar, or of which he can form a picture through his
-imagination, and even when the latter is vivid it must draw largely for
-its creation on things with which it is somewhat acquainted.
-
-No pen or tongue could properly describe the situation and the feelings
-of the four human beings who through the long black hours of that night
-whirled and drifted down through the black depths of the canyon.
-
-As it was useless to stand up and attempt to steer, for he could not see
-his hand held close before his face, Sam Willett crouched down on the
-raft, and clung with nervous hands to its trembling timbers.
-
-Now and then they seemed to be floating through quiet waters, but just
-when hope came to cheer them with the belief that they had passed
-through the most dangerous part of the current, the raft would be hurled
-down long lines of rapids, or caught by some projecting rock it would be
-sent spinning around with a velocity that made the occupants sick with
-the whirling motion and the fear that the end had come. Such a situation
-would have tested the strength of the most experienced nerves, even if
-the midday sun was shining into the chasm, but the darkness added to its
-terrors and filled the bravest with alarm.
-
-On and on, and on. It seemed to Sam that they were sinking into the
-bowels of the earth, or flying away through the realms of night and the
-abode of impenetrable darkness.
-
-Now and then he would look up at the few stars visible in the strip of
-sky far overhead, to assure himself that he was yet in the world of life
-and light.
-
-They were floating down a quiet stretch of water when Ike called out in
-a tremulous voice.
-
-"Say, Mistah Sam, ken yeh heah me?"
-
-"Yes, Ike, I can hear," was the reply.
-
-"How does yeh feel, 'bout dis time?"
-
-"I feel hopeful, Ike."
-
-"Why does yeh feel dat way?"
-
-"It is my disposition," said Sam, for want of a better answer.
-
-"Got any ideah wot's de time?"
-
-"I have not, Ike."
-
-"How long does yeh tink it is since _de sun went down foh de last
-time_?"
-
-"About eight hours," said Sam, though, judging by his own feelings, it
-seemed like so many days.
-
-"Eight houahs!" exclaimed Ike. "Oh, Mistah Sam, yeh's away clar off de
-track."
-
-"How long do you think it is since the sun went down?" asked Sam, for
-the sound of their voices seemed to lighten the gloom.
-
-"Jest 'bout fifteen yeahs an' six months ago," said Ike, with the
-greatest solemnity, adding quickly, "an' I don't tink de sun'll eber
-rise agin. It's done gone gin out. My, if we could see our faces 'bout
-dis yer time, do yeh know wot we'd find?"
-
-"What, Ike?"
-
-"Dat we've all growed up in de darkness, and dat we'z ole men."
-
-"Me not feel like ole man," said Wah Shin.
-
-"What do you feel like?" asked Sam, glad to hear them all speaking
-again.
-
-"Me feel belly hungly," was the reply.
-
-"Patience, patience," cried out Ulna, from the forward part of the raft,
-"God's sun is rising now."
-
-"Where!" was the exclamation of all.
-
-"In the east," said the young Ute.
-
-Not one of them could tell in what direction the east was, but all
-turned their heads.
-
-Suddenly Ike called out:
-
-"Oh, I see a light in de sky!"
-
-At the same instant all saw it, high up and directly in front.
-
-The light looked like the glow of a wonderful fire opal, set in the inky
-blackness of the sky.
-
-Brighter and brighter it grew each moment, till the reflected light
-penetrated the profound depths of the canyon.
-
-It was the rising sun saluting the highest snow peaks of the mountains,
-a section of which was visible in front.
-
-With the joy of the blind when the blessing of sight is restored, our
-friends watched the increasing light coming down from the sky.
-
-Gradually the towering walls of the canyon became more distinct, till at
-length their far-off summits could be seen, with here and there a cedar
-clinging for dear life to the giddy ledges.
-
-"If dis yar day is gwyne to be ez long ez de last night," said Ike, when
-he felt that the coming of the sun was not a false alarm, "why, I reckon
-we'll all be ole men afore it gits dark agin."
-
-Even the dog gained courage by the coming of the day, and sitting up he
-began to bark in a way that proved his interest in the world was
-returning.
-
-There was no means of telling how far they had been borne by the current
-during the long hours of that awful night, but as soon as it was light
-again Sam took the pole and resumed his position as helmsman.
-
-As they were swept on he looked to the right and left in the hope of
-finding a place where they might make a landing.
-
-They were wet, hungry and weary, but the coming sun revived their
-drooping spirits.
-
-It was not till near noon that the precipitous walls expanded into an
-area a quarter of a mile in diameter, that looked, in its flooded state,
-like a subterranean lake.
-
-Here the current was much slower, and with Ulna's help, Sam succeeded in
-gliding the raft to a ledge of sloping rocks, where it was made fast,
-and again the passengers carried the cargo on shore.
-
-The sun shone on their landing place, which, being on the south bank of
-the river, Sam decided to explore thoroughly in the hope of finding a
-way out of the canyon, for he did not lose sight for a minute of his
-father's trying situation.
-
-This expansion of the canyon walls was much greater than the one from
-which they had come the day before, and there were so many recesses and
-irregularities that getting out appeared to be an easy matter indeed.
-
-They spread their wet blankets and clothing on the rocks, and they found
-enough drift-wood to make a fire, but all were so hungry that they did
-not wait for the fire before eating.
-
-Wah Shin had some cooked food ready, and, although it had not been
-improved by its long soaking, hunger made it very palatable.
-
-After the fire was started, Wah Shin and Ike, thoroughly exhausted, and
-it may be more weary in feeling because unburdened with the
-responsibility of the situation, lay down on the sun-heated rocks and
-were soon asleep.
-
-"You must be tired also, Ulna. Lie down and I will look around and see
-if I can find a way out of this," said Sam, laying his hand on the
-handsome young Indian's shoulder.
-
-"I will not say that I could not lie down and go to sleep at once,"
-replied Ulna, "but if you are going to search I shall go with you. I
-know how you feel about your father, and that thought is always in my
-heart; so if you stay awake to work, I must do the same."
-
-[Illustration: _Sam succeeded in guiding the raft to a ledge of sloping
-rocks._]
-
-The two youths shook hands, and after seeing that their rifles were in
-order and loaded they slung them over their shoulders and started off.
-
-They clambered over huge masses of white sandstone rock that had fallen
-in from the sides of the canyon, like the ruin of a giant's stronghold,
-and at every step they could see by the drift-wood that the present
-flood had been preceded by others much higher.
-
-Compared with the great pillars of stone scattered about them each was
-impressed with the idea that his companion must have shrunk, he looked
-in contrast with his surroundings so much smaller than usual.
-
-After much searching and climbing they came to a great rift in the canyon
-wall that led up to the blue sky, and seemed to promise an outlet from
-these awful depths.
-
-At the discovery Sam could not restrain a cry of joy, and even Ulna's
-usually impassive face was illuminated with the light of hope.
-
-"I can see nothing to stop us!" said Sam, as with the activity of a
-mountain lion he sprang up the defile.
-
-But it was three thousand feet to the top of the rift, and from their
-position they could not see all the obstacles that lay in their way.
-
-But like the poet's Alpine climber, the motto was Excelsior!--higher
-up--and with stout hearts they faced the unknown path that promised
-access to the upper world and then to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-They clambered up and on, the way becoming narrower and steeper at each
-step, while here and there their course was made difficult by huge
-bowlders that had fallen in from above.
-
-After fully three hours hard work, and just when it seemed that a little
-more exertion would take them to the summit, the cleft came to an end in
-a precipice fully a hundred feet in height, though from the bottom it
-looked only like a step that a child might overcome.
-
-Sam was so cast down by his discovery that he leaned against the side of
-the cliff and pressing his hands to his eyes, he groaned:
-
-"Oh, my poor father, what will become of him! What will he think of my
-absence?"
-
-"He will know that if you could you would come to him; and those who
-keep him and Hank Tims prisoners need not to be told about the flood.
-They will give us time to get back, I am sure they will give us time,"
-said Ulna, and he took Sam's hand and pressed it affectionately.
-
-They had made a bold attempt and failed, and now there was nothing left
-but to make their way back to the place where they had left the raft
-tied, and Ike and Wah Shin were sleeping on the rocks.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.--A TRYING SITUATION.
-
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were guarded by a number of the vigilantes,
-and with these men, who appeared to be rough but honest fellows, they
-talked about their trying situation.
-
-It will be remembered that Frank Shirley and Badger spent money freely
-during that first rainy day in order to get the miners drunk, believing
-that while they were in that state they could be led to destroy the
-prisoners without even the appearance of a trial.
-
-In addition to making two-thirds of the men drunk, Shirley poisoned
-their minds by telling them what a very bad man Mr. Willett had been in
-Detroit, and he intimated, in a way more powerful than a direct
-accusation, that he had poisoned his wife.
-
-The result of all this was that by the evening of that rainy day a great
-mob, inflamed with liquor and driven into fury by lies, was shouting for
-the lives of Mr. Willett and his companion.
-
-The guards not having been subjected to the influence of the bars were
-calm and determined to do what they believed to be their duty.
-
-Soon after dark one of the guards, a tall, rugged man named Collins came
-into the tent, and, turning up the lamp that hung from the pole in the
-center, he said:
-
-"I'm afraid, gents, we are goin' to have trouble."
-
-"Trouble!" repeated Mr. Willett, as he rose from the blanket on which he
-had been lying. "I don't see how our trouble can be increased."
-
-"I'll tell you how," said Collins, evidently very much excited. "You
-know those of us here at Hurley's Gulch that are in for doin' about
-what's right, want to give you gents a fair show."
-
-"That is what I want to believe," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Well, I'm very much afeerd that things has took a change for the
-worst."
-
-Collins hesitated, and Mr. Willett said:
-
-"For the worse! What do you mean?"
-
-"I mean that this man Frank Shirley, who says he's yer dead wife's
-cousin, has made most of the men crazy drunk, for as it's been stormin'
-and as the krik is up the boys couldn't work to-day. Then Shirley's give
-out that he knowed you in Detroit, and that you was a very bad man back
-there."
-
-"If you men knew this Shirley as well as I do," said Mr. Willett, his
-brown cheeks flushing with indignation, "you would not believe him under
-oath. But what has this to do with my case? Have they not agreed to wait
-till my son comes here with the papers to prove I paid Edwards in full
-for his claim at Gold Cave Gulch?"
-
-"Yes, they agreed to that when they was sober."
-
-"But, surely, Mr. Collins, they do not think differently now," said Mr.
-Willett.
-
-"I'm afeerd they do. Hark! don't you hear 'em a-hollerin' and yellin'
-and shootin' off their pistols?"
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims must have heard the noise even had their
-hearing been less acute, for every minute it came nearer and nearer.
-
-"When men get drunk," said Hank, "they become brutes. But you are here
-to guard us, an' you are sober an' have yer judgment an' senses about
-you. Now, Mr. Collins, do you know what I'd advise?"
-
-"What?" asked Collins, who seemed at a loss what to do under the trying
-circumstances.
-
-"Either protect us till we've had a trial, or else give us back our
-rifles and pistols and let us protect ourselves. What do you say?"
-
-"I want to stand by you," said Collins, "but before I can 'gree to
-anything I must see my friends."
-
-He hurried out, and, blending with the yelling of the intoxicated mob,
-the prisoners could hear the low tones of men in earnest conversation
-just outside the tent.
-
-"What do you think of the situation, Hank?" asked Mr. Willett, when they
-were again alone.
-
-"I think it is mighty bad," was the reply.
-
-"But you surely do not think those men will shoot us down in cold
-blood?"
-
-"They've done such things before. If they was only sober they'd do near
-right as they know how, but they ain't. Just hear how they yell! Talk
-about Injuns an' savages, a drunken white man is meaner and more
-bloodthirsty than all of 'em put together. Ah! It'd be a heap sight
-better world if thar was never a drop of whisky in it," and Hank sighed
-and shook his head.
-
-He had but just ceased speaking when the flap of the tent was again
-raised and Collins re-entered. This time he brought the rifles and
-pistols that had been taken from the prisoners.
-
-"Here!" he said, "we've agreed not to let you be kilt without a show.
-But we may git you to a place where you'll be safe till the mob has a
-chance to cool down. Quick! put on these things and foller me."
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank fastened on their belts, and when they had done so,
-Collins put out the lamp and led the way out of the tent.
-
-It was very dark outside and the rain had been followed by a fierce
-gale.
-
-"Hang on to my arms, so's we won't git parted," said Collins as he
-stepped between the two men whom he was gallantly determined to save
-from the fury of the mob.
-
-They hurried on through the darkness, the yelling of the crowd gradually
-dying out behind them.
-
-It seemed to Mr. Willett that they had walked several miles, and he was
-wondering how their guide could be certain of his way in the inky
-darkness, for from the time of starting he never hesitated for a moment,
-when Collins came to a halt and said:
-
-"This is the place. Now foller behind me and be very keerful, for the
-path is steep and slippery, and if you should chance to lose your
-footin' you'd shoot into the creek whar the water's forty foot deep
-'bout this time."
-
-Bracing themselves they followed Collins down a steep bank till they
-came to the very edge of the seething torrent, then up along the uneven
-shore they went for about a hundred yards and turned sharply to the
-right.
-
-At length they found themselves standing before a rock and wondering
-what would happen next.
-
-They were not long in doubt, for Collins lit a dark-lantern and its
-glance of golden light revealed an opening in the rock very much like
-the entrance to the old abode at Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"This is whar me and Si Brill, my pardner, hold out," said Collins as he
-led the way into the cave.
-
-The place was somewhat contracted, but it had two beds, a fire-place and
-cooking appliances, so that space was not a matter of any importance.
-
-"I must thank you, my friend," said Mr. Willett with a great sense of
-relief, "and I hope to be able to prove to you before long that your
-kindness and courage have been exercised for innocent men."
-
-"Yes," added Hank, "and for two men that would rather do a right, even
-if it put them out of the way, than to think a wrong that paid big."
-
-"I'll stand by you," said Collins, "and you must stand by me, for if it
-was knowed I fotched you har, them fellers would make short work of me
-and Si Brill. Si's back at the tent and I must go and hunt him up. But
-what I was a goin' to say is, don't try to light out. Stay har till we
-can have a fair trial. You'll find lots of grub in this corral, and I
-don't want you to be hungry. When your son comes over from Gold Cave
-Camp, Mr. Willett, I'll fotch him to you at once. And now, good-night,
-for I won't be back again before sun-up."
-
-"We certainly appreciate your kindness, Mr. Collins," said Mr. Willett
-as he took the sturdy miner's hand, "and I can assure you that Hank and
-I will remain here till you say we are free to leave."
-
-"And if we get well out of this scrape an' you should chance to be in
-the same fix," said Hank, "you ken bet your last cent we'll stand by you
-as one good man should stand by another."
-
-Putting out his lamp and warning them not to venture outside the cave
-till they saw him again, Collins scrambled out and made his way back to
-the tent in which the prisoners had been confined.
-
-He found that the canvas had been torn down and slashed to pieces with
-knives in the hands of the furious mob.
-
-The shouting and the occasional pistol shots told that the mob had gone
-back to the saloon, and while Collins was wondering whether he should go
-there or not, he was joined by his partner, Si Brill.
-
-"What's up now, Si?" asked Collins.
-
-"I'm afeerd we're in for it," was the reply.
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"The mob believes we run the prizners off----"
-
-"They do, eh?"
-
-"Yes, and they swear if they ain't brought back by daylight, you and me
-will have to fight for it."
-
-"Well," said Collins slowly, "they ken have a fight."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.--THE VOYAGE IS RESUMED.
-
-
-When Sam Willett and Ulna returned to the camp they found Ike, Wah Shin
-and the dog lying on the rocks near the dying fire.
-
-Although they had been sleeping for nearly five hours, it was with
-difficulty that Ike could be aroused, and when he did sit up and rub his
-eyes, he declared with laughable solemnity that he had only been asleep
-a few minutes.
-
-"If you look at the sun I think you will see you are mistaken," said
-Sam, pointing to the west.
-
-"Dat sun," said Ike, with the fine contempt of one who had lost all
-faith in the luminary that rules the day; "I don't got no use foh it.
-'Tain't like the sun we uster know way back at Detroit. Wy, sometimes he
-gets up and hurries across the sky like a race-horse, an' sometimes he
-don't get up foh weeks an' weeks. He's foolin' us, dat's all I got to
-say." And Ike rose and yawned till he showed every tooth in his
-capacious mouth.
-
-"I gottee heap muchee sleep, me no sleep mole foh twenty-one day," said
-Wah Shin, who seemed determined not to agree with Ike in this matter.
-
-"If ebber I should get out of this yar scrape, an' I should hab lots of
-money an' plenty ob time," said Ike with comical earnestness, "I'll go
-off to some place whar it ain't dark most all de time, an' I'll sleep in
-de sun foh weeks an' weeks an' weeks at a stretch, an' don't you forgit
-it."
-
-As it was now about three o'clock in the afternoon Sam, after consulting
-with Ulna, and recalling their experience of the night before, decided
-not to launch their raft till the following morning.
-
-Wishing more than ever that he was a bird, Ike went off with Wah Shin to
-gather fuel, and Sam and Ulna, both much exhausted, lay down to get a
-little much needed sleep.
-
-When they closed their eyes the western sun was flooding the canyon with
-a river of golden glory, when they woke up "night had let her sable
-curtain down and pinned it with a star."
-
-A great fire was blazing near by, and Ike and Wah Shin were preparing
-supper, while Maj sat licking his chops and eagerly watching the
-operations.
-
-Sam had already divided the provisions, so that with care, "an' not
-eatin' nigh's much as they felt like," to use Ike's words, they could
-manage to live without much suffering for another week.
-
-After supper Ike startled the company by saying:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam, I'ze got an offer to make."
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-Before proceeding Ike turned and pointed to the parcels containing their
-little stock of food.
-
-"Ain't I de owner ob one-quarter ob dat grub?"
-
-"You shall have your share, Ike; but why do you ask?" said Sam, who half
-guessed what was coming.
-
-"I've eat my share for to-night."
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"An' I still feel as holler as a drum," and Ike rolled his eyes and
-tightened his belt.
-
-"You have had as much as the rest," said Sam.
-
-"Oh, I ain't a complainin'; no one won't say, Mistah Sam, dat you don't
-tote fair, but heah's de pint I wants to git at----"
-
-"Go on, Ike."
-
-"You let me have all my share now."
-
-"What would you do with it?"
-
-"Do wif it!" echoed Ike. "Wy, I'd sit right down an' gib it all a inside
-passage. I'd a heap sight rudder hab one good, squar meal dan a hundred
-scrimpsy ones. Dar ain't no pleasure in stoppin' jest when yeh wants to
-keep right on eatin'."
-
-"Nevertheless we must all do it, Ike. We are not eating for pleasure,
-but to keep alive till we get out of this place."
-
-"Wa'al, if we ebber does git out, an' I can sit down before grub an' eat
-all I wants, dat grub will suffer--if I has any strent left," and Ike
-sat down and watched Maj with a hungry look that boded no good to that
-faithful creature.
-
-Sam had often been surprised at Ulna's gentle manners and the excellent
-English he spoke; he seemed so little like the wild Indians he had read
-about that he was anxious to know something of his life, but from
-feelings of delicacy he had never asked him about his past up to this
-time. By way of passing the time before setting the guard, he asked Ulna
-where he had learned English so well.
-
-"In the Mission School at Taos," said Ulna. "My father, who was a
-brother of our chief, Uray, was killed in the Sierra Madre Mountains, by
-the Hill, or Arizona, Apaches, when I was a little child."
-
-"And your mother?" suggested Sam.
-
-"She could read and write, and she could speak Spanish and English as
-well as the language of her own people; all this she had learned in the
-school at Taos, to which place the good missionaries took her when she
-was a child; that was long before the white man crowded into this land."
-
-"Is your mother living?"
-
-"Yes, and my sister; she is a year older than I, and she is very good.
-Two years ago my mother, who still lived at Taos, married a white man--a
-Mexican. I did not like him and I ran away and joined the tribe. But I
-did not like the ways of our people, though I felt that their free life
-on the hills and along the great rivers was the only one to live. Yes, I
-have much of the white man's knowledge, and I am glad of it. Still, my
-heart has ever hungered for the free life of the Ute. No matter what
-befalls me, I do not complain; the Great Spirit rules and directs all,"
-and as Ulna ceased speaking, he uncovered his head and raised his
-handsome, expressive face to the stars.
-
-"I thank you for telling me this," said Sam, taking the young Indian's
-hand and pressing it warmly, while he added: "It does not make me love
-you any the less or more, Ulna, but somehow I think that the more good
-people know of each other the warmer friends they become."
-
-"Dem's my sentiments," said Ike, who looked as if he had been sleeping,
-though he must have been wide awake. "Foh instants, when I didn't know
-Mistah Sam, I didn't like him at all; but now dat I does know him
-better'n any one in de world, w'y as a consekence I likes him a heap
-sight more'n I does any one in de world."
-
-Sam had been inclined to feel angry with Ike when he spoke in the way he
-did about dividing the food, but this little expression of genuine
-sentiment on the black boy's part quite touched his heart, and he showed
-his feeling by saying:
-
-"Ah, Ike, you may have a hungry stomach, but it cannot be truthfully
-said that you haven't got a kindly heart."
-
-"Bimeby, mebbe, I tell you sometings all 'bout me, Wah Shin," said the
-Chinaman, who felt that he must add something to the expressions of
-good-fellowship.
-
-After a little further talk, in which they discussed the situation and
-vainly tried to guess where they were, Sam gave the order in which the
-guards should be called and handed his watch to Ike, whose turn came
-first, and lay down on the blankets, which were quite dry and
-comfortable by this time.
-
-To prove that Ike was not in the least selfish, though his display of
-healthy-boy appetite might lead us to a different belief, it is but just
-to him to say that when his two hours guard were up, he did not call
-Sam, whose turn it was next, and who appeared to be sleeping very
-soundly, but he stood the whole four hours on watch and then awoke Wah
-Shin, and, after whispering to him what he had done added:
-
-"Mistah Sam's got the keer of all on his shoulders, an' he needs all de
-sleep he kin git. W'y, I ken sleep any time; he can't, so I sez, let's
-let him sleep his fill w'ile he's at it."
-
-They were up again before daylight, and the allowance of food for
-breakfast made ready, a portion being set apart for Maj, for though the
-dog was not at all a useful member of the little band, indeed, his
-consumption of rations for one made him undesirable, yet Sam could not
-find it in his heart to put the faithful creature out of the way.
-
-There was no need to discuss the course they should next take; there was
-only one avenue that held out the promise of escape, and that was the
-swift stream rushing by their resting place to an unknown landing.
-
-By this time all hands had become quite expert in loading and unloading
-the raft, so that it did not take them long to get under way this
-morning, each one in his accustomed place and Maj crouching down on the
-blankets in the center.
-
-The rope was untied, and, with the pole in his hand, Sam stood up
-behind, and again they were sweeping down on the red waters of this
-wonderful river.
-
-As they drifted between the precipitous banks that seemed to grow higher
-and higher with the passing of each bend, Sam recalled all he had ever
-heard or read about the mighty Colorado of the West and its wonderful
-canyon. He remembered that it was four hundred miles of continuous canyon
-wall from the point where the Green and Grand Rivers united to the
-Mormon settlement at Virgin River, where the canyon walls give place to a
-wide valley.
-
-He shuddered but kept his thoughts to himself, for he wisely reasoned
-that no good could result from frightening his companions by a true
-picture of the dangers that lay before them.
-
-For himself he believed that there must be some opening by which they
-could leave the canyon before traversing its length, and this hope was
-not darkened with the thought that such an avenue of escape, if used,
-might not better their condition.
-
-They drifted on till the middle of the afternoon, passing many side
-canyons which it was impossible to enter, when they suddenly found their
-raft swept by a whirling current, that boiled about them like the waves
-of a storm-tossed sea.
-
-They looked up, to find that the towering gray walls had broken into
-mighty pillars that rose for thousands of feet into the sky.
-
-It was the junction of the Green and Grand Rivers, and the piled up,
-roaring and irresistible flood was caused by the coming together of the
-two currents.
-
-The scene that presented itself at this point was indescribably sublime,
-and even the dangers of the situation were forgotten for the moment in
-the awful grandeur of their surroundings.
-
-Although Sam still stood bravely up, his pole was useless to control the
-movements of the raft, which was borne with the speed of a swallow's
-flight into the whirlpool, about which the waters circled and danced, as
-if celebrating their meeting in these wild depths.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.--WHIRLED AWAY.
-
-
-As the raft was being swept into the whirlpool, Ike and Wah Shin sent up
-a shriek of alarm that rose high above the roar of the waters, and Maj
-crouched down lower on the blankets and moaned piteously.
-
-Ulna sat in his accustomed place. He did not make a movement, nor did
-the expression of his face change as they were being whirled to what
-seemed certain death.
-
-As nothing could be done to avert the impending catastrophe, Sam uttered
-a prayer, drew in his pole to save himself from being swept off and then
-sat as calmly and stoically down as if he were a young brave.
-
-There was a central vortex about which the waters swept with the speed
-of a mill-stream, and for this point--as if forced on by an irresistible
-power, the raft plunged.
-
-It seemed like going down a hill on a sled. Once fairly under way there
-was nothing to stop it.
-
-With one quick glance from the center of the whirlpool to the pillars
-piercing the sky, Sam closed his eyes expecting the next instant would
-be the last.
-
-But instead of rushing down to death, he was called back to an interest
-in his surroundings by feeling a peculiarly soothing, swinging sensation
-in the raft.
-
-He opened his eyes and looked about him, and to his unutterable surprise
-they were being swept about the mighty whirlpool, like a ball at the end
-of a string in a strong man's hand.
-
-Nearer and nearer to the center, until it seemed that the fraction of a
-second must bring the fatal plunge, and then the raft would be suddenly
-flung to the outer edge of the whirlpool again.
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, as he looked about him and winked very fast,
-"dis am curus."
-
-"Too muchee, swing, swing!" cried Wah Shin, as the raft hung again on
-the edge of the vortex, only to be hurled a second time to the outer
-edge.
-
-This swinging was at first a decidedly pleasant sensation, but soon it
-made the passengers on the raft giddy and then quite sick.
-
-It was only by keeping their eyes shut that they could command their
-senses.
-
-A half an hour of this whirling to the center and being thrown back to
-the edge continued, though it seemed much longer to the tortured
-occupants of the raft, and Sam spoke his thoughts rather than addressed
-any of his companions when he said:
-
-"Will this go on forever?"
-
-"It do look to me powahful-like's if we was a-gwine to sikle round dis
-yar place foheber an' eber, amen," said Ike.
-
-Sam looked up again at the sky, and the crimson hue of the clouds told
-him that the sun would soon sink in the upper world and that darkness
-would soon come to add to their trials.
-
-He felt that whether the raft was swallowed up or continued to swing in
-that giddy dance till morning would make but little difference to
-himself or his companions, for in either case death would come before
-morning.
-
-His brave heart grew heavy, as if the darkness of descending night were
-falling on it.
-
-He thought of his dead mother, thought of the imprisoned father, whom he
-had set out so heroically to save, and the death that threatened was
-only awful to him because he was to see his father nevermore.
-
-While these thoughts were running through his mind he felt a different
-movement in the raft. This was followed by a cheer from Ike and Wah Shin
-and the loud barking of the dog.
-
-Sam looked quickly up.
-
-Joy! joy! In some inexplicable way the raft had been hurled so far
-beyond the circle of the whirlpool's power as to be caught by the
-current and carried into the Colorado, which here begins its journey
-under that name, for the Gulf of California.
-
-Even Ulna was roused from his usual stoicism by the change. Pointing to
-the right, where in the twilight a low peninsula could be seen jutting
-into the river, he called to Sam:
-
-"Let us steer for that point. I think we can make a landing there."
-
-"All right," replied Sam with his habitual cheerfulness.
-
-Ulna now took up his own pole, and after much effort they succeeded in
-getting the raft to the low point, and here, without difficulty, they
-made a landing.
-
-As there was neither tree nor rock to tie to they pulled the raft high
-up on the strip of beach, and then looked around, but without success,
-for the means to make a fire.
-
-It was too dark to see ten feet away, so they sat on the rocks after
-making the discovery that what they supposed to be a peninsula was
-really an island.
-
-But they made another discovery at the same time that was destined to
-affect their progress very seriously, and that was that one-half the
-provisions had in some way been pushed or slipped from the raft; but
-they were lost, and hunger, or rather, starvation was only a few days
-off.
-
-They ate a little of their remaining provisions and then spread the
-blankets on the low, damp ground.
-
-Sam Willett had a military idea of the value of discipline. Having begun
-with having guards at night, he determined to keep it up till the end.
-
-The wisdom of this precaution was shown before another sun came to
-banish the shadows.
-
-About an hour before daylight Ulna, who was then watching, discovered
-that the flood was rising around them, and hastily awoke his companions.
-
-They sprang up to find the water roaring about them, and Sam, holding
-the raft to keep it from floating off, ordered the others to bundle up
-the blankets and get all the things on board.
-
-As soon as this was done they pushed the raft into deeper water, got on
-board and were at once swept away by the current.
-
-Such trials would have crushed the spirits of any but the bravest, and
-with a less resolute leader than Sam, despair would have made the others
-indifferent to their surroundings.
-
-While it was yet as dark as midnight in the canyon, they could look up
-and see pink streaks in the far-off sky that told them the light of
-another day was again flushing the upper world.
-
-But the sun only looked into this gloomy abyss for one short hour in the
-twenty-four, and then left it to the gathering shadows and impenetrable
-night.
-
-It was ten o'clock by Sam's watch when they found a ledge of rocks on
-which they could make a landing.
-
-This haven was discovered none too soon, for the severe straining the
-raft had had in the whirlpool had loosened the cords that held the logs
-and they threatened to come apart and let all into the water.
-
-The remaining food was very much soaked, but their appetites were keen
-enough to eat the whole of it just as it was.
-
-Two more days would see all of their provisions gone, and, realizing
-this fact, Sam proposed dividing what was left so as to last over three
-days, but against this arrangement Ike and Wall Shin entered a protest.
-
-"Now, Mistah Sam," said Ike, "I ain't got nigh so much sinse as you has,
-but it'd been a heap sight bettah if you jest took my edvice."
-
-"Your advice about what, Ike?" asked Sam.
-
-"'Bout dat grub."
-
-"What about it?"
-
-"I proposed, night afore last, we should all go in and eat all we
-could--now, didn't I?"
-
-"I believe, Ike, you did say something like that."
-
-"An' you said 'no;' so w'at's the consekence?"
-
-"The consequence is, Ike, that you obeyed me then, and I expect you to
-obey me still," said Sam firmly.
-
-"Yes; an' I'll keep on obeyin' you till I die, but har's de pint," and
-Ike spread out his hand and looked at the palm as if he were reading.
-"If we'd hab eat a lot more ob dat grub, den dar wouldn't have been so
-much lost. Wouldn't it be a heap sight better if we had dat stuff inside
-ob us dan at de bottom ob dat ar whirlpole?"
-
-"We did everything for the best, Ike, and therefore we should not blame
-ourselves," said Sam.
-
-"I no tinkee dat glub's in watel," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Whar is it, den?" asked Ike.
-
-"I tink Maj he lookee muchee fat. Him no so hungly like befole; mebbe
-him eatee glub."
-
-The object of this awful accusation sat near by eyeing the little stock
-of provisions as if he could dispose of the lot without feeling any
-great discomfort.
-
-"No," said Ulna, who usually listened to these conversations without
-taking part in them; "the dog did not eat that food."
-
-"W'y you tinkee no?" asked Wah Shin.
-
-"Because the bag in which the food was placed is gone, and the dog could
-not have eaten that."
-
-"Me no so shule bout lat," said Wah Shin. "W'en dog him heap hungly him
-eat bag too."
-
-Clearly Ike and Wah Shin had formed a conspiracy against the dog, and
-this only confirmed Sam in his attachment to the poor brute, though more
-than once he wished that he was in some other place.
-
-Sam and Ulna at once set about repairing the raft, and while they were
-engaged in this work Ike showed that he had unbounded faith in his young
-master's knowledge by asking these questions:
-
-"Mistah Sam, w'at you tink bout dis time?"
-
-"Nothing, Ike," was the reply.
-
-"Know 'bout whar we is?"
-
-"I do not."
-
-"Know whar we'z goin'?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Nor whin we'll git dar?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Eber heah ob sich a fix?"
-
-"Never."
-
-"If we gits out ob dis yeh won't neber want to try anudder sich scrape,
-I reckon?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Ye've had enough?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"So has I, but dar's no use a gibbin' up so, Mistah Brown!" and then
-with a sudden change of manner that startled all hands, the dog
-included, Ike sang out in a rich tenor voice.
-
- "Oh fust was made de sun,
- An' den was made de sky,
- An' den dey made de earf
- An' hung it up to dry,
- An' den de made de star, outer yalla gals' eyes
- Foh to gib a little light
- W'en de sun don't rise."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.--ORDER AND DISORDER.
-
-
-The storm died out over Hurley's Gulch, and except for the high current
-in the creek there was nothing to indicate that the land had been
-recently deluged.
-
-The bluest of cloudless skies bent over the landscape; the verdureless
-rocks glistened in the light of the sun, as if they had recently been
-subjected to a furnace heat instead of being drenched by a flood.
-
-The lines of the Sierra Madre Mountains, to the east, were so clear and
-sharply defined that they seemed to be but a short walk away instead of
-being seventy miles.
-
-Only the ragged tents and dilapidated cabins showed the effects of the
-storm; perhaps we should include the crowd of red-eyed miners, who, with
-the evidences of unbridled dissipation on their faces, crowded about the
-principal saloon.
-
-Frank Shirley and Badger were disappointed in the work they had planned
-for the night before.
-
-They had spent much money and time in working the mob up to a pitch of
-unreasoning and brutal frenzy, and yet nothing had been done.
-
-"'Tain't the boys' fault," said Badger, as on the following morning he
-and Frank Shirley walked along the banks of the creek.
-
-"Whose fault is it, then?" asked Shirley, sulkily.
-
-"Why, it's the fault of them other two fellers--Collins and Brill--that
-was sot to guard the prizners; they ain't no good; they've gone clar
-back on us," said Badger, with an angry light in his single eye.
-
-"Well, I left the management to you, and I don't understand why you
-failed," said Shirley, who evidently felt that the man he had employed
-to do his vile work was not keeping his part of the contract.
-
-"If a man don't win first time is he agoin' to give up and never try
-again?" and Badger answered his own question by adding: "Not if he's got
-the right kind of stuff in him."
-
-"But what are we to do next? You see, I must have this man out of the
-way. If he lives then I have no show to get the fortune."
-
-"I thought it all depended on the boy's livin'."
-
-"So it does, but you know our plan."
-
-"I do that, and I'm goin' to stick to it. Don't lose patience; this yar
-world wasn't made in a day. Time is allers well-spent on a big job."
-
-By this time they had come in their walk to the tent in which the
-prisoners were confined the night before.
-
-The tent, as has been said, lay torn on the ground, but the knives of
-the mob and not the storm had made the rents.
-
-Collins and Brill, both seemingly very angry, were talking to a lot of
-the miners when Badger pushed through the crowd and said:
-
-"You two is purty guards."
-
-"We didn't ask your opinion," said Brill, hotly.
-
-"Still I feel like givin' it. Whar's the prizners?"
-
-"They are safe," said Collins.
-
-"Safe whar?"
-
-"In my charge."
-
-"But whar have you hid 'em?"
-
-"Where a lot of drunken ruffians can do them no harm till they have had
-a fair trial," said Brill.
-
-"Drunken ruffians!" retorted Badger, with a cool effrontery that won the
-admiration of his employer, "we ain't murderers at any rate. And if we
-did want to do for them two, that you've hid away in yer dugout, as I
-believe, it was to prevent others from doin' like 'em. When you are a
-savin' of them, you'd orter think of poor Tom Edwards, as is dead and
-buried."
-
-"I started out to see that them two men had a fair trial," said Collins,
-stoutly, "and I'm goin' to do it. We've sent other messengers for that
-boy with the paper, and if he don't show up with it, why then, I'll be
-in for trial. But let me warn you fellers that there's men in this camp
-that means to see fair play, and if you don't like our way of doin'
-business, Badger, just step to one side and say so to me, and I'll give
-you all the chance you want to larn who's best man."
-
-As Collins spoke he laid his hand on the stock of his pistol and there
-was a set to his firm lips and a light in his keen gray eyes that there
-was no mistaking.
-
-Like all of his class, Badger was at heart a very great coward, and he
-proved it now.
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed, in a voice that trembled perceptibly, "I don't want
-to quar'l with you. I'm in for doin' what's right. But I tell you this,
-Collins, and you mark my words, that boy of Willett's ain't agoin' to
-show up in this camp with no paper."
-
-"We'll see about that," said Collins.
-
-"I'm willin' to bet on it," said Badger.
-
-"Have you got money to bet?"
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"Then my advise to you, Badger, is to start off and pay your debts
-instead of gambling with other people's money," and with this caustic
-shot, Collins turned on his heel and walked away with his partner,
-Brill.
-
-They had gone about fifty yards when Badger shouted after them:
-
-"See har, Collins!"
-
-"What is it?" asked Collins looking over his shoulder.
-
-"How long are we to wait for the trial?"
-
-"I told you till Mr. Willett's son comes."
-
-"A day?"
-
-"On account of the floods it may take three days."
-
-"Say three days then."
-
-"Wa'al, if it will make you fellers easier, I'll say three days!"
-
-"And then the trial?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Boy or no boy?"
-
-"Boy or no boy," replied Collins.
-
-"And if they're found guilty?"
-
-"Then me an' Brill will be in for punishin them as much as any man in
-your gang. Meantime it might be better if you fellers shut down on
-drinkin'."
-
-With this very sensible opinion Collins and Brill, each active and tall
-and with a rifle at his back, started off in the direction of their
-dugout.
-
-They told Mr. Willett and Hank Tims what had happened, and Brill added:
-
-"You're purty safe for three days, Mr. Willett, yet if I was you I don't
-think I'd leave this place or run the risk of meeting any of the gang
-drunk."
-
-These miners, like all brave fellows, were gentle and generous to the
-two men whom they took pains to treat as guests, so that they might
-forget that they were prisoners.
-
-The day following the events just narrated the man who had been sent by
-the vigilantes to Gold Cave Camp to hurry up Sam Willett with the
-all-important paper, came back on a weary horse, bringing with him a
-very startling report.
-
-The instant he dismounted before the canvas hotel he was greeted from
-all sides by queries like these:
-
-"Got back, Ned?"
-
-"Wot's the news?"
-
-"Whar's the boy?"
-
-"Wouldn't he come?"
-
-"You found thar wasn't any paper to fetch?"
-
-When the messenger had recovered his breath and the silence abated, he
-replied to all these questions in one sentence:
-
-"Thar wasn't no one at the caves!"
-
-"No one!" shouted a number.
-
-"Not a livin' soul."
-
-"Whar had they gone?" asked Badger.
-
-"The flood must have drowned 'em all out," said the messenger.
-
-"Did it rise as high as the caves?" asked one.
-
-"Yes; clear up to the top."
-
-"But they mout have got off afore the flood riz?" said Badger.
-
-"Wa'al," was the reply, "if they did git off, they must have gone inter
-hidin', for I sarched and sarched, and didn't see hair nor hide, nor
-sign nor trace of 'em."
-
-This news startled every one, but it brought intense pleasure to two.
-
-As soon as Frank Shirley and Badger could go off without attracting
-attention, they withdrew from the crowd, and the former asked:
-
-"What do you think of the news, Badger?"
-
-"Couldn't be better," said Badger.
-
-"Think the boy's drowned?"
-
-"He must be."
-
-"But might he not have escaped?"
-
-"How?"
-
-"In a boat or on a raft."
-
-"Wa'al," laughed Badger, "they didn't have no boat, and if they tried a
-raft, why that'd be the same as committin' suicide."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"I mean that I've knowed of men as got into the great canyon of the
-Colorado, but no one knows of any that came out on a raft. The boy's
-dead as a door nail by this time, and you're a rich man," said Badger,
-reaching out his hand.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.--THE PROVISIONS ALL GONE.
-
-
-When the raft was repaired, the blankets, arms, and little stock of food
-were put on board and securely fastened, each one took his accustomed
-place, with Maj in the middle, and the voyage was resumed.
-
-How far they had come, Sam had no means of telling, he only knew to his
-sorrow that he was being borne further and further away from his father.
-
-Without this awful anxiety on his mind, the situation would have been
-sufficient to shake the nerves and courage of a strong man.
-
-The brave youth felt that he was not only battling in these depths for
-his own life, but for the lives of those whom fate had thrown with him
-on this most thrilling voyage.
-
-He fully realized the situation, and the fortitude with which he faced
-it redounds the more to his credit.
-
-They were on a shaky raft at the bottom of the mightiest gorge in all
-the world.
-
-Even if they could reach the top, they would find themselves in the
-midst of an arid, trackless desert, cut up by other canyons, across which
-naught but the mountain eagle could pass in safety.
-
-The hunger, ever gnawing at his vitals, kept before him the fact that
-their provisions were nearly out.
-
-If by dying, Sam could save his beloved father and return to safety his
-companions in these trials, he would not have hesitated about facing
-death; but as it was, he determined to do his full duty while his
-strength lasted, though no eye but God's appreciated the effort he was
-putting forth.
-
-The canyon through which they were now passing, had the highest walls
-they had yet seen. For more than a mile their glistening gray sides shot
-up to the thin belt of dark blue sky, their summits crowned with
-pinnacles that in comparison would dwarf the highest and noblest
-structure ever built by human hands.
-
-As if resting after their mad dance in the whirlpool, the waters flowed
-calmly and silently down, yet with a speed that told Sam they were
-moving at the rate of about four miles an hour.
-
-The most wonderful thing about these depths was the dim twilight, and
-long before the sun went down in the upper world, the stars were visible
-from the bottom of the canyon.
-
-As night approached the passengers scanned the shores eagerly, and
-looked ahead to every bend in the tortuous river, hoping they might be
-able to find a strip of shore or a ledge of rocks on which to make a
-landing, but in vain.
-
-"It don't look's if dar was any more shoah," said Ike, in a loud,
-frightened tone, that echoed from rock to rock for nearly a minute after
-he had spoken.
-
-"Not within sight," said Sam, with affected cheerfulness.
-
-"Den wat's we to do?"
-
-"We must keep on."
-
-"On de raft?"
-
-"The only chance is between that and the water."
-
-"Dat's so," said Ike, solemnly.
-
-"Too muchee watel, too lillee glub; no likee dis fix belly muchee," said
-Wah Shin.
-
-"You must try and rest as best you can," said Sam. "Ulna and I will take
-turns in steering the raft."
-
-"All night, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"Yes, Ike, all night."
-
-"Den you done lost faith in dis chile?"
-
-"I have not. Why do you ask?"
-
-"Coz, Mistah Sam, I ain't agoin' to sleep while you weah yorself out. I
-may be purty mean, but I ain't nigh so mean as dat. I ken steer in de
-dark as well as de next man, an' I'm agoin' fer to try, if so be you
-don't objeck."
-
-"Me, too; allee same like Ike. Me no steels so well likee me cookee, but
-I tly, too," said Wah Shin.
-
-"I am glad to see, boys," said Sam, feeling stronger for the spirit
-shown by his two most dependent companions, "that you are willing to do
-your part. If we come out all right, as I believe we shall, it will be
-because we never felt like giving up."
-
-"Dem's my sentiments," said Ike, heartily.
-
-"Me say allee same likee dat," joined in Wah Shin, who showed that he
-was coming out strong as their trials increased.
-
-Ulna spoke not a word, but in the dim and fading light his dark face
-glowed with a pride and pleasure more eloquent in its expression than
-words.
-
-To show that he appreciated their efforts, and with the belief that it
-would be better for all, if each was made to feel that he had an
-important share of the responsibility on his shoulders, Sam decided that
-they should take turns in steering during the night, in the same order
-that they would if on guard.
-
-These arrangements were hardly completed when the impenetrable darkness,
-to which no mortal with eyes could ever grow accustomed, came down on
-the canyon.
-
-Sam had matches in a water-proof case, and with the help of these and
-his watch they were enabled to mark the hours during that long, dreary
-night.
-
-During the watches of heavy, painful darkness, the raft swept swiftly
-and silently on, meeting with no mishap but giving to its occupants the
-impression that they were falling down, down through the depths of a
-rayless and fathomless space.
-
-When it became light enough to see the next morning, Sam noticed that
-all his companions looked older, and he reasoned that this was due to
-hunger, mental anxiety and want of sleep.
-
-Even in the days of plenty, Ike was always ready to eat, and, as we have
-seen, the desire for more food was ever on his mind, from the hour when
-Sam thought it prudent to limit the rations.
-
-From the moment it was light enough to see he kept his eyes fastened on
-the little bag containing their remaining stock of provisions. It was
-evident, from the expression of his mouth, that he was trying to
-restrain his feelings, but unable to resist, he at length exclaimed:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam!"
-
-"What is it, Ike?" asked Sam, who already guessed what was coming.
-
-"How does yeh feel 'bout dis time?"
-
-"Pretty well, Ike; how are you?"
-
-"I'ze mighty holler!" groaned Ike, and he pressed his hand over his belt
-and bent himself forward in a most comical way.
-
-"Hungry, Ike?"
-
-"Hungry!" repeated Ike, "dat ar' word don't nigh begin foh to 'spress
-jest how I feel."
-
-"Cheer up, Ike; we'll find a landing-place presently, and then we'll
-have something hot."
-
-"W'en a feller's as holler an' hungry as I am, he ain't so mighty
-partickler whedder do grub's hot or cole. De question wif him is, is dar
-enough to fill up all de emptiness."
-
-"Very true, Ike----"
-
-Sam's sentence was cut short by an exclamation from Ulna, who had risen
-to his feet and was pointing to a line of shore on the left, where grew
-a cluster of stunted bushes.
-
-They succeeded in getting the raft to this point and made a landing
-without any difficulty.
-
-Here they found a great quantity of drift-wood, and Wah Shin and Ike
-started a fire while Sam and Ulna, with an eye to the future, selected
-some stout pieces of timber with which to strengthen their raft.
-
-"Don't you t'ink," asked Ike as he pointed to their little stock of
-food, "dat dar ain't no use in makin' two bites ob a cherry?"
-
-"Why do you ask that, Ike?"
-
-"Coz, dar ain't more'n nuff grub dar foh one right-down, honest, squar
-meal, an' if us was to eat it, we'd all feel a heap sight bettah."
-
-"But the future, Ike?"
-
-"Wa'al, sah, I ain't hungry in de futah; Ize hungry right jest now at
-dis bressed minute."
-
-"Me feel allee same like dat," said Wah Shin.
-
-As this was exactly how Sam and the uncomplaining Ulna felt, the former
-gave orders to warm up all the food and divide it into five shares, one
-of which was to be for Maj.
-
-They had a good supply of coffee left and a few pounds of bread with a
-like quantity of meat.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe that feast. Only those who have long
-endured the pangs of hunger can appreciate it.
-
-Each one rose from the banquet much relieved and refreshed, and in their
-enjoyment of the present they quite lost sight of the fact that their
-last particle of food was gone.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.--DANGER AHEAD.
-
-
-After their last hearty meal, which finished up the provisions, Sam
-Willett and his friends felt better, stronger and warmer than they had
-since the beginning of this wonderful voyage.
-
-It is one of the blessings and charms of youth that while it enjoys the
-present and anticipates the happiness of the future, it steadily ignores
-all thoughts of coming afflictions.
-
-Ike was boisterous in his hilarity; he danced about the fire, as if "the
-squar meal" had had an intoxicating effect on him; and, at length,
-unable to restrain himself, he burst into the following snatch from an
-old plantation song:
-
- "Oh! don't you know Miss Dinah Crane,
- She's 'gwine to be married;
- Glad am I, an' dat's a fac,
- For berry long she's tarried.
-
- "So fotch along de wine an' de hoe cake too,
- De gumbo an' de cream,
- An' don't fergit de weddin' cake
- On wich we darkies dream!
-
- "For we will larf an' sing all day,
- Hooraw, hooraw, hooraw!
- An' on de banjo sweetly play
- With a zip, yaw, yaw--yaw, yaw!"
-
-Even Ulna smiled at this performance, and Maj chased his tail and barked
-till the canyon walls rang with the echoes.
-
-The strip of shore, on which they were encamped, extended from their
-landing place for some distance down the river, so before launching the
-raft again, Sam thought it would be well for Ulna and himself to make an
-examination as far as they could do so on foot.
-
-Taking their rifles, which were loaded with metallic cartridges that the
-water could not injure, they started off, first telling Ike and Wah Shin
-to take advantage of their absence to get some sleep.
-
-They walked and clambered along the shore for about half a mile, when
-there came to their ears a hoarse, deep, monotonous roar.
-
-"What is that?" asked Sam, coming to a sudden halt and laying his hand
-on Ulna's arm.
-
-"I don't know," was the quiet reply.
-
-"From what direction does the sound come?"
-
-"From down the river."
-
-"It must be the water?"
-
-"There is nothing else to make a noise down here."
-
-"I once heard the roar of the great fall at Niagara, and that brings it
-to my mind. Let us move on," said Sam.
-
-Again they resumed their journey.
-
-At times they were forced to creep along the edge, knee deep in water,
-but they did not mind this.
-
-After going about three hundred yards further down, they came to an
-irregular rock, up whose sides they climbed in the hope of getting a
-better view of the river below.
-
-They were not disappointed in their purpose, but the prospect that met
-their gaze was well calculated to dismay the stoutest heart.
-
-Their vision was limited by a bend in the river a quarter of a mile
-below, but between this and the rock on which they stood, the water was
-white with foam as it roared and tumbled over a series of rapids, in the
-midst of which black rocks appeared like the heads of monstrous
-creatures.
-
-This sight was so appalling that neither Sam nor Ulna could utter a word
-for some seconds, but stood looking from the maddened waters into each
-other's frightened face.
-
-Sam was the first to speak:
-
-"Oh, Ulna, that is awful!"
-
-"Bad," was the laconic reply.
-
-"What are we to do?"
-
-"I cannot tell."
-
-"We can't go back the way we came?"
-
-"No," said Ulna, and he emphasized this opinion by a vigorous shake of
-the head.
-
-"We can't get out by climbing up the walls?"
-
-"I wish we could," said Ulna.
-
-"Then," continued Sam, "there are only two courses open to us."
-
-"Only two."
-
-"One is to try and go down the rapids on the raft."
-
-"And the other," added Ulna, "is to remain where the raft now is and
-starve to death."
-
-"And have you a choice, Ulna."
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"If I am to die, I want to die resisting."
-
-"Then you are for trying the rapids?"
-
-"I am; but I shall do as you say."
-
-"I say 'go on.'"
-
-Sam reached out and took Ulna's hand, and so they stood for some minutes
-looking at the frightful rapids which they had decided to face.
-
-It was now about noon, there was fully five hours of daylight left, and
-they decided to avail themselves of it to test the rapids.
-
-Sam reasoned that the thing had to be done, and the sooner the
-experiment was made the better, and in addition to this he knew that
-there was no more food left, and that from this time on himself and his
-companions would grow weaker and weaker for the effort.
-
-They turned to walk back, Sam clambering along the giddy ledge of the
-rock which rose straight up from the water. He was a few yards in
-advance of Ulna, for whose immediate safety he had no fear, when he was
-brought to a sudden stand, and his heart stopped beating, and the cold
-sweat came out on his forehead at hearing a short, quick cry of alarm
-behind him.
-
-The cry was followed by a splash, and turning, Sam saw that Ulna had
-fallen from the rock into the fierce current that roared and foamed
-above its base.
-
-Sam threw aside his rifle and sprang back to the rescue of the young
-Indian, but before he had gone ten feet Ulna was fifty yards away,
-bravely battling with the maddened waters, above whose roar came the
-words:
-
-"God bless you! Farewell!"
-
-Sam stood petrified with horror.
-
-To plunge into the water and attempt to help Ulna in that way would be
-madness.
-
-Even as Sam watched he could see the brave face becoming more and more
-indistinct as it rose and fell on the surges, and then with a wave of
-the arm vanished out of sight behind the distant bend of the river.
-
-Overcome with his emotions, Sam sat down on the rock, and pressing his
-hand to his eyes, he cried as if his heart was breaking.
-
-It was not for himself he grieved, nor would it be just to say that
-these tears were an evidence of weakness in the character of our brave
-young friend.
-
-He loved the handsome Indian youth, as he might have loved a brother;
-but this awful loss came with the memory of his other trials, so that
-his emotion was a proof of his loyal heart and gentle nature.
-
-The man or boy who is incapable of tears, it is safe to say, is also
-incapable of a noble feeling.
-
-Believing that Ulna had gone down the mad river to his death, Sam, as he
-sat there, recalled that he owed a duty to the living.
-
-Slinging his rifle on his back again, he retraced his steps to camp.
-
-He found Ike, Wah Shin and the dog, all sleeping by the fire as
-peacefully as if they were on downy beds in the midst of civilization.
-
-Maj leaped up barking with joy and began to fawn on his young master.
-
-This awoke Ike and Wah Shin, the former of whom declared as usual that
-he had only just closed his eyes, "an' hadn't been asleep at all."
-
-"We must make ready to start at once," said Sam. "Get the things on
-board and tie them securely."
-
-"All right, sah," said Ike, and he went to work with the energy of one
-who had dined abundantly and slept well.
-
-"Ulna, whele him go?" asked Wah Shin, stopping in the midst of loading
-the raft and looking about.
-
-"He has gone down the river," said Sam, and his sad face told the
-Mongolian that something serious had happened.
-
-"Him no gone gettee dlownded," gasped Wah Shin, and his eyes grew more
-oblique with alarm.
-
-"Drownded!" cried Ike. "Why, Ulna kin swim like a whole flock of ducks
-in a mill pond."
-
-"The river is very rough ahead," said Sam, "and after Ulna fell into the
-rapids he could not get back."
-
-"An' whar did he go to?" asked Ike.
-
-"Down the river."
-
-"To de bottom?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, "if de ribber's as rough as dat, den we'd bettah
-stay whar we is."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.--MR. WILLETT LEARNS THE NEWS.
-
-
-Collins, and his partner, Brill, were at heart as tender as they were
-brave.
-
-They reasoned that Mr. Willett should know the news the messenger
-brought back from Gold Cave Camp, yet neither felt like conveying it to
-the unhappy man.
-
-"Somebody's got to tell him," said Brill, to his partner, "and as you've
-got the best gift of gab, Collins, I reckon you're the feller to do it."
-
-"If it comes down whar I've got to speak my mind and tell a sneakin'
-feller jest what I think of him," replied Collins, "I ain't slow, and I
-find I'm flush of words 'bout that time, but tellin' a man his son's
-dead, and that that 'ar paper he sent for to save his own life, ain't
-agoin to be perduced, why, that's an entirely different matter, and I'd
-a sight rather contract out the job to some chap as don't mind sich
-things."
-
-"See har, pard, I've got an idear."
-
-"Let's have it," said Collins, much relieved.
-
-"I think we'd better do this kinder by slow degrees like. What do you
-say?"
-
-"Why, I say, Brill, ole feller, I don't catch on to the drift of your
-ore bed," said Collins.
-
-"I mean through Hank Tims."
-
-"What about him?"
-
-"We must get him to one side, kinder."
-
-"And what then?"
-
-"Why then we must up and tell him the hull story."
-
-"I see yer pint, Brill."
-
-"And then," continued Brill, "he can give it to Mr. Willett, and that'll
-kinder let us out of the scrape."
-
-In token of his approval of this very excellent plan, Collins shook
-hands with his partner, and then Hank Tims was called outside of the
-dugout.
-
-The partners were still in doubt as to which of them should tell the
-story, and noticing that they stood looking at each other Hank asked:
-
-"Is there any fresh trouble up, pards?"
-
-"Wa'al, yes, kinder," said Collins, taking upon himself the painful
-duties of spokesman.
-
-"Let's have it," said Hank, stoutly. "Neither me nor Mr. Willett is
-skeered to hear the worst."
-
-"Jest so," said Collins, "and so we thought we'd better give you the
-news and let you break it to him."
-
-"What news?" asked Hank.
-
-"Why the news that's come from Gold Cave Camp."
-
-"Wa'al, let's have it."
-
-"You know, Hank, we sent a messenger to Gold Cave Camp when we found the
-storm was onto us, and Mr. Willett's son hadn't showed up with that
-paper."
-
-"Yes, I heard of that, Collins."
-
-"Wa'al, the man's back----"
-
-"And the boy--Sam Willett?" cried Hank.
-
-"Couldn't be found," stammered Collins.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"He wasn't thar."
-
-"No," added Brill, "he wasn't no whar in sight."
-
-"And the other folks, the black boy, the Chinee and the young Ute, Ulna,
-what came here with me an Mr. Willett and went back again when we was
-took prizners?"
-
-"No one knows; they wasn't in sight."
-
-"Drownded out!" gasped Hank.
-
-"No, the folks think they tried to git away by swimmin' or making a
-raft," said Collins.
-
-"They might as well try to fly. Ah, this is bad news; mighty bad news.
-I'd rather die mysel', and I know Mr. Willett would rather die a
-thousand times over than to lose that boy. Did you ever see young Sam
-Willett, gents?"
-
-The partners shook their heads and said they never had seen young Sam
-Willett.
-
-"Wa'al," continued Hank, with a sob in his voice, "he wasn't what you
-and me mout think a full-growed man, but never a braver nor a handsomer
-lad ever crossed them Sierras off thar to the east. He was a gentleman,
-young Sam was, from the ground up; he couldn't think anything mean, much
-less do it. Ah, why should men like you, and me, and others be left and
-him be took? I don't see how I can bring mysel' to tell his father, for
-he was all Mr. Willett had left, and he won't keer any more for life
-when he hears this."
-
-"It's mighty tough on the old man," coughed Brill, "not to mention his
-other troubles; but as he's got to know it sooner or later, my pard and
-me thought you'd better tell him."
-
-"Wa'al, if I must I 'spose I must; but I tell you what, boys, I'd jest
-as soon you'd order me out to be shot. In fact I'd a heap sight rather
-be shot, if I was only sure that my dyin' would bring back young Sam
-Willett to life."
-
-Brushing his sleeve across his eyes, Hank turned away to hide his
-feelings, and the partners went silently back to the cluster of tents
-and buildings that was known as "the camp."
-
-We have already seen something of the love that existed between Mr.
-Willett and his son.
-
-Apart from the affection natural to their relationship, these two were
-still more strongly attached to each other by the fact that they were
-alone in the world and the exclusive object of each other's most
-profound affections.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe the manner in which Hank Tims
-communicated the news to the already much afflicted father, but it
-should be said that he acquitted himself with a tenderness hardly to be
-expected from one of his rough exterior and rude life.
-
-There are blows so crushing to the human heart that they fall without
-being followed by a sign of pain or a cry of agony.
-
-The sting of a bee will call out a shout from the strongest man, but the
-bullet that taps the fountain of life is received with ashy but silent
-lips.
-
-All the color left Mr. Willett's face, and he fell back on the blankets
-on which he had been sitting.
-
-He looked as if he were dying, and Hank, to redress the effects of the
-blow he had been forced to deal, sprang forward, and putting his arms
-about Mr. Willett's shoulder, he said, though he had not the slightest
-faith in his own words:
-
-"Thar ain't no doubt in my mind but the boys made a raft. Sam was sharp,
-and thar was lots of timber to do it."
-
-"But that would only be going to death," said Mr. Willett faintly and
-slowly.
-
-"Oh, not by a long odds. Thar's lots and lots of places lower down whar
-they might get out easy. Now, let's jest have patience; thar ain't
-nothin' like a good stock of patience. Why, it wouldn't s'prise me not a
-bit if I was to see Sam and the hull caboodle of 'em walk into the door
-of this dugout this blessed minute," and Hank fixed his eyes steadily on
-the opening, as if he were quite prepared for this phenomenon.
-
-Leaving Hank Tims to fan the faint ray of hope he had kindled in the
-afflicted father's heart, let us give a few minutes to reporting the
-conduct of the two men who were the authors of all this trouble.
-
-There were some very bad men at Hurley's Gulch, as there are bad men in
-any gathering the world over, but in justice it should be said that a
-majority aimed to do as near right as they knew how.
-
-Men's ideas of right and wrong vary with their training and their
-natural abilities to weigh evidence and comprehend truth. But even those
-men who are rude in their bearing, or even vicious in their lives, have
-their hearts touched by a death that brings great sorrow to some fond,
-loving heart.
-
-So when the people at Hurley's Gulch began to think over Mr. Willett's
-loss, they forgot for the time the grave offence with which he was
-charged, and expressed themselves as very sorry for the death of his
-boy.
-
-This change of feeling did not escape the ever wide-awake observation of
-Frank Shirley.
-
-He was a pretty good judge of human nature, and so he thought it wiser
-not to say anything at this time. Indeed, he played his part so well
-that he expressed to the crowd, whom he kept attached to him by frequent
-treating, that he was very sorry for young Sam Willett's loss.
-
-"He was a cousin of mine," sighed Shirley, "and not a bit like his
-father."
-
-How could the people know that the death of Sam Willett was the one
-object that brought Shirley to this land, and how could they know that
-the life of the noble youth was the one thing that stood between this
-fellow and a large fortune.
-
-"I tell you, Mr. Shirley," said Badger to his employer the day after the
-reception of the news from Gold Cave Camp, "you're a keen one. Oh, you
-ken play it fine--finer'n any one I ever seed."
-
-"Do you think so, Badger?" said Shirley, flattered by this compliment to
-his talent for crime.
-
-"Yes, I do. In a day or two the boys'll forgit all about the death of
-young Willett. Then you ken swing in on the murder of Tom Edwards again,
-and make them do jest as you please."
-
-"Well, I'll try," replied the jubilant Shirley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.--IN THE RAPIDS.
-
-
-The bravest soldier, no matter how cool his bearing, feels a sense of
-awe and dread when the rattle of rifles along the skirmish line tells
-him that the murderous battle has begun.
-
-If there be men who never felt fear under such nerve-trying
-circumstances, then they certainly deserve no credit, for true courage
-consists in the determination to face a danger while fully comprehending
-its awful possibilities.
-
-Sam Willett wisely decided not to picture to Ike and Wah Shin the
-dangers that lay before them; but while doing this he did not attempt to
-hide from himself the fact that within a few hours himself and his
-faithful companions might be the dead playthings of the wild waters.
-
-As calmly and sternly as the cavalry leader wheels his battalions into
-line in front of the murderous artillery which he intends to charge, Sam
-Willett made his preparations for the passage of the rapids.
-
-He strengthened the raft and fastened to it their arms and blankets, and
-then to prevent their being washed off, or lost if they fell overboard,
-he insisted that each should tie a rope about his waist, the other end
-being fastened to the logs.
-
-It was not until the last precautions against the danger that lay ahead
-were proposed that Ike began to feel greatly alarmed.
-
-"Golly, Mistah Sam," he said, with trembling lips, "hitchin ob oursels
-to dese yar logs wif ropes looks to me kinder skittish."
-
-"I hope they may not be needed," said Sam, as he made ready to push the
-raft off.
-
-"You seed dem currents down de ribber?"
-
-"I did."
-
-"Pooty ugly, ain't dey?"
-
-"We must pass them."
-
-"'Twas dem as drownded Ulna?"
-
-"He fell from a rock into the river."
-
-"Den if he couldn't swim back, dem currents must be mighty bad."
-
-"No can stay hele; no can backee go; den wat we do; allee same we mustee
-glong down ribbel," said Wah Shin, who seemed to have no trouble in
-taking in the situation.
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike, desperately, "I reckon de job's got to be did. I
-don't want to be drowned way down har, when no one won't neber heah ob
-me agin, an' moah 'ticklah, Mistah Sam, I doesn't want you to die, but
-if dat be de good Lor's will, den I says amen, an' goes ahead."
-
-Sam at first thought that he would tie Maj to the raft, but as the
-animal had not the reason to avail himself of this advantage, he decided
-to let him take his chances if he should be washed off.
-
-"Now, I am about to push off," said Sam, standing at the stern with the
-pole in his hand, "and if we get into danger I want you both to keep
-cool and do as I say. Don't yell out, or try to hang on to each other,
-if the raft should go to pieces."
-
-Ike and Wah Shin promised to do as they were told, and then with a
-mental prayer to Heaven to guide and protect him, Sam set one end of the
-pole against the bank and pushed the raft into the current.
-
-"Dis don't seem so powahful bad," said Ike, as he looked ahead and saw a
-smooth expanse extending for nearly a half mile in front.
-
-"Not so bad, Ike," said Sam, his eyes fixed on the bend, beyond which he
-knew the dreaded rapids rolled.
-
-As they drifted on he could not help recalling the mighty falls of
-Niagara which he had visited with his father a few years before.
-
-He remembered that a few miles above the falls the majestic river flowed
-on grandly and swiftly, without a ripple to break its glassy surface, or
-a murmur to suggest the frightful plunge it was soon to take. Then came
-the roaring rapids and the thundering fall.
-
-What if these rapids ended in the same way?
-
-This thought had just flashed through his mind, when the raft shot past
-the rock from which Ulna had fallen, and the next instant it swung round
-the bend, and the thunder of the waters was heard and the seething white
-waves came to view.
-
-Every stick of timber in the raft groaned, as if it were a sentient
-being, trembling at its coming destruction.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin fell flat on the logs and clung to them with all their
-might, not daring to look at the prospect ahead.
-
-Even Sam dropped on his knees and gazed steadily in front, while the dog
-crept towards him, and, with a plaintive whine, thrust his nose into his
-master's breast.
-
-Sam soon discovered that it would not only be useless, but absolutely
-dangerous to attempt to steer the raft, so he hauled in the pole and
-with his hands clung to the logs on either side.
-
-The speed at which they went down soon became so frightfully great that
-the objects along the shore could not be distinguished, but became
-streaked and confused to their sight.
-
-Now and again the raft would strike against one of the black rocks, that
-rose like a monster out of the water, and then it would spin and whirl
-down the torrent as if determined to throw off its occupants.
-
-Bend after bend was passed, and Sam began to think that the rapids
-extended indefinitely, when to his horror the raft struck against
-another rock, and with such force that the ropes, fastening one end,
-snapped and broke like a silken thread in the hands of a giant.
-
-At the same instant the logs parted and spread out like a fan, throwing
-all the occupants into the water.
-
-Now the wisdom of Sam's precaution in tying themselves to the raft
-became evident.
-
-Had it not been for this they would have been swept apart and drowned at
-once, but as it was the ropes not only kept them together, but enabled
-them to haul themselves back to the logs and cling to them for support.
-
-The dog was, of course, thrown out with the others, and was at once
-swept beyond reach, though for some minutes Sam could see the brave
-creature facing the current and making a desperate effort to swim back.
-
-Sam was just beginning to feel that the raft must soon go to pieces,
-when they were suddenly swept around a bend and into a calm expanse of
-water, though a few hundred yards further on he saw the line of white
-foam that indicated other rapids ahead.
-
-Calling to his companions to assist him, and putting forth a superhuman
-effort himself, Sam succeeded in getting the raft out of the current and
-into a little cove where there was shallow water and a ledge of smooth,
-shelving rocks that made a good landing place.
-
-They straightened out the logs, made them fast again, and then they took
-off the arms and frayed blankets that had not been swept from the raft
-by the rocks and rapids.
-
-This done the three clambered up to a dry place, though they were so wet
-that it would not have made any difference if they stood in the water.
-
-Thinking that Ulna might have made a landing at some point along the
-shore of this calm expanse, Sam looked up and down both banks, but
-excepting Ike, Wah Shin and himself there was not a living creature in
-sight, even the dog had been unable to resist the force of the current.
-
-"Dis am a mighty bad fix, sure enuff," were Ike's first words as he
-surveyed his dripping form and then began slowly to take in the
-situation.
-
-"It might be worse," was Sam's comment, though if he had been called on
-to explain how it well could be worse, he would have been at a loss to
-tell.
-
-"Watel we do nex," asked Wah Shin, and he half-raised his hands and let
-them fall again to indicate his utter helplessness.
-
-Sam could not reply. He would have felt a great sense of relief if
-either of the others had made a reasonable suggestion.
-
-It was growing dark, and he knew that it would be madness to attempt the
-river again till the light of another full day lay before them.
-
-In answer to Wah Shin's question, Ike said:
-
-"I'll tell yeh w'at I'd like to do, Wah."
-
-"I can tellee mesel lat too," said Wah Shin.
-
-"In de fust place I'd like some nice dry clothes."
-
-"I too," said Wah.
-
-"Den I wouldn't mind bein' in a nice house."
-
-"Ugh," and Wah shrugged himself as if he thought that a very lovely
-idea.
-
-"Den," continued Ike, as he smacked his lips, "I'd like to be a settin'
-down to a table in dat house."
-
-"Ha!" cried Wah.
-
-"An'--an' I'd like to hab dat table filled way up wid good tings, an' me
-a settin' dar free to pile in all I wanted----"
-
-"Dat am belly nice," said Wah.
-
-"Den arter I'd eat, an' eat an' eat, till I couldn't more'n stan', I'd
-have some one pick me up and tote me off to de wahmest, softest bed----"
-
-At this point Sam interrupted by saying:
-
-"We must all take off our clothes and wring them out, for I am not going
-to try it again till morning."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.--AFLOAT AGAIN.
-
-
-Work is the one certain remedy for a troubled mind. Sam felt that if he
-didn't do something he should go distracted, and judging by his own
-feelings he reasoned that it would be better for Ike and Wah Shin if
-their hands and brains were employed.
-
-He made them wring out their own clothes and the blankets, and spread
-them on the rocks to dry; and then all three set to work to repair the
-damage to the raft.
-
-They found that the ropes that held the logs together had been cut and
-frayed by the keen edges of the rocks, with which they were brought into
-contact.
-
-They took the whole raft to pieces; first having tied the rope till it
-was as strong, though shorter, than it was before, and then they
-refastened the whole structure, making it as secure as possible with the
-material at hand.
-
-They had but just completed their work, and made the raft fast by
-anchoring it to a stone, when it suddenly grew so dark that they could
-hardly see each other.
-
-They next put on their clothes, which were far from being dry, and their
-discomfort was increased by a keen, cold wind, that came driving down
-the canyon.
-
-"Wat's to be did de nex'?" asked Ike, his teeth chattering and his voice
-tremulous with the cold.
-
-"We must move about till our clothes get dry. It will never do to have
-rheumatism added to our other troubles," said Sam.
-
-"Wa'al, I dunno dat we'd be much de wuss off, if we had rheumatiz, an'
-measles, an' toothaches, an' dem tings. Fac' is, Mistah Sam, we couldn't
-well be in a badder fix, no matter wat happened to us."
-
-"Oh, yes," drawled Wah Shin, "'spose we hab no clothes, no laftee, no
-gun, no can gettee way, den wat?"
-
-"Keep moving, boys, till you get warm," called out Sam, and he set the
-example by walking about on the flat top of the rock, taking care that
-neither himself nor companions went too close to the perilous edge.
-
-The exertion and the heat of their bodies warmed them up and dried their
-clothes, but by this time it was near midnight.
-
-There was no danger of being disturbed by savage foe or wild beast,
-still Sam thought it better to keep up the system of guards he had first
-established.
-
-He was so weary that he could have dropped on the hard, cold rock on
-which he stood, and been asleep at once, but that fine sense of duty
-that distinguished all his acts, led him to forget or put aside his own
-wants for the safety and comfort of others.
-
-But though Ike loved to eat and sleep as well as any youth, black or
-white, that ever lived, there was a "streek" of thoughtfulness and
-unselfishness in his character that asserted itself now and then.
-
-When the order of the watch was arranged, Ike laid his hand on his young
-master's shoulder and said:
-
-"See heah, Mistah Sam, does yeh tink I'm blind?"
-
-"Certainly not, Ike. Why should you ask such a question as that?" asked
-Sam, in great surprise.
-
-"Coz, Ize got de reasons."
-
-"Well, what are they?"
-
-"Don't yeh tink I'ze been a watchin' ob yeh?"
-
-"What of it, Ike?"
-
-"Dar's dis ob it. I'ze seed yeh a workin' an' a workin', an' not gettin'
-no rest nur sleep, but jest a layin' yersel' out foh to keer for us
-no-account folks, and make us comf'able. Now, I know I'm mean 'bout
-habin' my share ob grub an' sleepin', an' dem tings, but I ain't so
-mean's not to see an' tink."
-
-"You are a good fellow, Ike, but I really can't see what you are driving
-at," said Sam.
-
-"I'm dribein' at dis, dat you'z got to rest de fust one. Har, de
-blankets ain't so awful wet, an' if you ain't wahm enough, yeh can hab
-my coat. So do lie down an' take a sleep, dat'll make yeh brain more
-clarer foh to tink to-morrow."
-
-When one is inclined to a thing, it does not require much urging.
-
-Sam yielded to Ike's entreaties, which were supported by Wah Shin, in
-the strongest English he could command.
-
-They made him as comfortable as possible under the circumstances, and,
-after promising to wake him when his turn came, they crept off some
-distance, and sitting down side by side they talked in whispers like a
-pair of conspirators.
-
-"Wah Shin?"
-
-"Glang, Ike, me gottee no deaf," said Wah.
-
-"You're a good feller."
-
-"Me tinkee so, too," said the modest Mongolian.
-
-"You like Mistah Sam?"
-
-"Oh, yes; likee him gleat heap."
-
-"I thought so."
-
-"Him belly fine youngee man."
-
-"Now, Wah, you an' me's had a heap sight more sleep dan Mistah Sam since
-we started out on dis yar scrimmidge, ain't we?"
-
-"Oh, yes, heap molee."
-
-"So," continued Ike with the confidential whisper of one about to
-communicate a great secret, "I wants you an' me to play a trick on him."
-
-"Playee tlick!" repeated Wah, puzzled as to the meaning.
-
-"Yes; yeh see he's sleepin' now like a angel."
-
-"Dunno; me nebel see angel. W'at him?"
-
-Without attempting to enlighten Wah as to the nature of angels, of which
-it must be confessed he had only a vague conception himself, Ike said.
-
-"We must let him sleep right straight 'long till de mornin'; den w'en he
-gits up an' rubs his eyes an' sees it's daylight, he'll be dat s'prised
-ho won't know w'at to say. Won't dat be a trick?"
-
-"Him belly nice tlick," chuckled Wah. "Heap muchee fun. Let 'im sleep;
-you, me watchee till sun him come top-side galore. Ike, you gottee heap
-big head," and Wah patted the black boy's head in a way that showed
-affection and approval.
-
-A generous master makes faithful servants. We do not know whether this
-is an adage or not, but it sounds as if it ought to be.
-
-So weary was poor Sam that Ike and Wah Shin might have slept through the
-night without his knowing it, but it did not require his watchful
-presence to make them dutiful.
-
-They divided the night into two reliefs, each taking a half and doing
-his duty with the fine sense of pleasure that came from the knowledge
-that they were cheating Sam into a long and much needed rest.
-
-Sam certainly was much surprised when he got up in the morning and saw
-the flush of day in the strip of sky far overhead and the light coming
-into the depths of the canyon.
-
-He was certainly much refreshed by his rest, and when he saw Ike smiling
-near by, he at once guessed what had been done.
-
-"Why didn't you wake me up?" he asked.
-
-Ike laughed and at once told him of "the trick" he and Wah Shin had
-played.
-
-Sam was much touched by this evidence of thoughtfulness and devotion,
-and he fastened it in his memory, that it might be easily recalled if
-the chance ever came to show his appreciation in another form than
-words.
-
-This was the first morning that they were wholly without food since
-starting on their journey.
-
-All were decidedly hungry, but not a word was said about eating. Even
-Ike, always ready to show he had an appetite, felt that it would be
-somewhat personal to talk about "grub," but at heart he blamed himself
-for having eat so much the day before. It would have been the part of
-wisdom, he thought, to have put a little away for this morning.
-
-"Wa'al, Mistah Sam, wat's to be did nex'?" asked Ike, as he looked down
-at the white line that marked the beginning of another series of unknown
-rapids about three hundred yards away.
-
-"We must try it again, Ike," said Sam, bravely.
-
-"Down de ribber?"
-
-"Do you think we could go up?"
-
-"Wa'al, not berry well, an' if we could dis chile wouldn't be in foh
-tryin' it again."
-
-"Then we must go down."
-
-"No cannee help oulsel's, if so we go flom dis," said Wah Shin, with all
-the wisdom of Confucius.
-
-Once more the few remaining things were placed as securely as was
-possible on the raft.
-
-Again, and without the wondering of the day before, Ike and Wah Shin
-imitated Sam by tying themselves to the raft.
-
-With much of that feeling of desperation that stirs an officer who leads
-his men in a hopeless assault against a powerful enemy, Sam pushed the
-raft into the stream.
-
-The current near the shore was slow, but as they got out further it
-became more rapid, until at length they shot down with the speed of a
-race-horse for the white line of foam that flashed between the grim
-walls like the teeth of some fierce monster set in lips of stone.
-
-"Cling tight to the raft, boys!" cried Sam, as the logs began to groan
-and tremble. "Cling fast and keep cool! We are going through all right!"
-
-The brave fellow did not have much faith in his own words, but they had
-an inspiriting effect on the others.
-
-Into the warring rapids shot the raft, and in an instant all were
-drenched in the spray that dashed around them.
-
-Sam could not see ten feet ahead.
-
-His mind, like the waters and the raft, was in a wild whirl; yet, with
-the grip of a drowning man, he clung to the logs and tried to shout
-words of cheer to the others.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.--THE TRIAL BEGINS.
-
-
-At the instigation of Collins and his partner, Si Brill, a number of men
-started off from Hurley's Gulch to see if they could find Sam Willett
-and his companions, or learn anything of their fate.
-
-Neither the searchers nor those who sent them had any great faith in
-their mission, but the very fact that they tried shows that they were
-moved by a feeling of commendable humanity.
-
-Three days passed and the men came back saying they could not find Sam
-Willett, nor the others, and giving it as their opinion, that they had
-all been drowned.
-
-In the meantime Frank Shirley, who had much of that cunning and
-ingenuity for which men of his character are so often noted, sought to
-create the impression that Sam was alive, but that he had run away, in
-order not to be forced to appear against his father.
-
-The night the searchers came back there was a great crowd in the bar of
-the principal saloon, and as Shirley was treating, as usual, he was the
-center of attraction and virtually the chairman of the gathering.
-
-A few of the men had just expressed sorrow for Sam's death, when Shirley
-said:
-
-"I'd be sorrier than any one if I knew the young fellow was dead, but
-I'm happy to say I don't believe he is."
-
-"Of course, you've got reasons for your belief," said one.
-
-"Yes; I always have good reasons for everything I do and say," said
-Shirley, feeling the authority his free use of money had given him.
-
-"Mebbe you'd tell us why you think so," said the man.
-
-"I'll explain by asking you some questions," said Shirley, licking his
-lips, as he always did while speaking.
-
-"Fire ahead," said the man.
-
-"You remember that Indian boy--what's his name?"
-
-"Ulna," suggested the man.
-
-"Yes, Ulna. Well, the day of the arrest of these two men, Willett and
-Tims, for the cruel murder of poor Tom Edwards, this Indian boy was sent
-to Gold Cave Camp to bring back the son of one of the prisoners and a
-certain paper. Isn't that so?" and Shirley looked around for the
-approval of the assembly.
-
-"Yes, that's so!" shouted a number.
-
-"Now," continued Frank Shirley, with the deliberation of a man who had
-carefully weighed what he was about to say, "I ask you gentlemen if this
-Ulna returned to Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"No!" exclaimed half the men in the place.
-
-"Of course he didn't. Now, what should we, as sensible men, infer from
-this fact?"
-
-Again Shirley looked about the room, and as no one attempted to say what
-should be inferred from the fact as stated, he proceeded to enlighten
-them.
-
-"As Ulna did not come back and cannot be found, it is safe to infer that
-he succeeded in delivering his message to Mr. Willett's son."
-
-"Yes," said the man who had drawn Shirley out, "I must say it looks very
-much that way."
-
-"Very well; Mr. Willett's son, who is a wonderfully brave, bright young
-fellow, got that message, and from this fact I make another inference."
-
-Shirley licked his lips and remained silent so long that it was becoming
-painful, and Badger voiced the feeling of the crowd by calling out:
-
-"Go ahead and give us yer p'ints!"
-
-"If Ulna could get to Gold Cave Camp in the night with that message,
-don't you think that young Sam Willett could get away?"
-
-Nearly every one said this looked reasonable.
-
-"Now, my belief," Shirley went on, "is that he and all hands did get
-away. The searchers, who have just come from the camp, say the place was
-cleaned out, rifles and all that being gone, which wouldn't be the case
-if the folks were drowned."
-
-"But," said the man who had started this discussion, "if the young
-feller got away, why didn't he come right straight to Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"Ah, that's the vital question," said Shirley, with a more vigorous lick
-at his lips. "Now, you'd like to know why I think he didn't come here?"
-
-"I certainly should," said the man.
-
-"It was because he had no paper to bring. Oh, he's a bright fellow; he's
-a second cousin of mine, and I can put myself in his place and just see
-how he reasoned about this matter."
-
-"Don't wait, but go right in and tell us all about it," said the
-impatient Badger, whose admiration for his employer was rising every
-moment.
-
-"Why, he reasoned that if he came here without Tom Edwards'
-receipt--which he knew had no existence--that the gentlemen of the
-vigilance committee would make short work of his father----"
-
-"And he was as right as right can be in that guess," interrupted Badger.
-
-"But," continued Shirley, "being a keen young fellow, he made up his
-mind that nothing would be done to his father if he stayed away. He
-believed the vigilantes would wait for several days, as they've already
-done, and that by the end of that time their anger would go down; they
-would look more lightly on the murder of poor Tom Edwards--and that
-would be the last of it. But talking is mighty dry work; step up to the
-bar, boys, and have a drink with me."
-
-Like other invitations of the same kind, from the same source, this one
-was promptly accepted, the effect being to convince nearly every man
-that there was no getting away from Frank Shirley's reasoning.
-
-Before the meeting broke up that night, which it did not do till a late
-hour, it was firmly decided that the trial of Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-should take place the next day, which being Sunday would enable every
-one at Hurley's Gulch to be present.
-
-In addition to its effect on the unfortunate men, the foregoing
-conversation serves admirably to show how a cunning and malicious man
-can pervert facts to suit himself, and while making them seem most like
-truth to the reason, have them exactly opposite to it in fact.
-
-Unobserved by the crowd in the bar, Collins had overheard this
-conversation, and the conclusion to which a majority of the vigilantes
-had come.
-
-Being simple-hearted, Collins was imposed on for the time being by
-Shirley's argument, and while he was listening to it he really believed
-that it might be true; but as he slowly returned to the dugout, his good
-sense asserted itself and he saw the utter falsity of the fellow's
-reasoning.
-
-Knowing how deeply troubled Mr. Willett was by the uncertain fate of his
-beloved son, Collins said nothing to him about the decision of the
-vigilantes till the following morning.
-
-After breakfast Collins repeated the talk at the saloon the night
-before, and added:
-
-"I hope the feller's right 'bout the boy's safety."
-
-"Ah, I wish he were," sighed Mr. Willett. "But if my dear boy were
-living, and he could get to me, sleep would not touch his eyes till he
-was again at my side."
-
-"Thar's one thing in partiklar I'd like to git out of this scrape for,"
-said Hank, and on being asked by Brill what that thing was, he
-continued:
-
-"I'd like to lick that lyin' slanderin' cowardly Shirley. Only to think
-of a critter like him accusin' young Sam Willett of doin' a low, mean
-trick. Ah, he's a dirty dog, if one ever came west of the Sierra
-Madres."
-
-Up to this time Mr. Willett had not explained to Collins and Si Brill,
-Shirley's reasons for desiring to see his son dead and himself out of
-the way. He did so now.
-
-"Wa'al!" exclaimed Brill, "that thar explanation shows the culled pusson
-in the wood-pile, as clar as daylight. Ah, I only wish Bob Sturgis--he
-was a lawyer--didn't leave camp when he did; but I'll see that you have
-a show to defend yourself, if we've got to fight for it?"
-
-While the sturdy miner was speaking, two rough looking men--they were
-the worst element in the vigilance committee--appeared in the doorway
-and one of them called out:
-
-"We've come from the kimitty, and we'er agoin' to fotch up the prizners;
-so trot 'em out."
-
-"We'll trot 'em out," replied Collins, as he took down his rifle from a
-peg, "and we'll trot along with 'em, for neither Si Brill nor me has
-give up our office as guards yet, an' what's more, we ain't agoin' to do
-it till this case is ended, one way or the other."
-
-"We ain't got no objection," growled one of the men, "only don't keep us
-waitin' har all day."
-
-"If yer in a great hurry," retorted Brill, as he also reached for his
-rifle, "go back as you come, for we've got charge of the prizners, and
-you can't take 'em from us without a fight."
-
-The two men stepped back to consult, and Collins whispered, as he handed
-Mr. Willett and Hank two revolvers each:
-
-"Hide those about your clothes, you may find them handy before we get
-through with this scrape."
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims quickly secreted the revolvers in their inside
-breast pockets and then followed the guards out of the dugout.
-
-They clambered up the bank, ignoring the two men who constituted the
-"kimitty" and went on to the hotel, the dining-room of which--it was
-also the kitchen--was set apart by the proprietor for the trial.
-
-The place was already crowded to suffocation, and a curious feature of
-the gathering was the fact that the burly, bearded man, who was to act
-as judge, and every other man in the room, was armed to the teeth and
-looked as if eager for a fight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.--A BREAK IN THE CLOUDS.
-
-
-The second series of rapids, though much more dreaded by Sam than the
-first, proved to be neither very long, nor, by comparison, very
-dangerous.
-
-Within ten minutes from the time of entering them they were passed in
-safety, and the raft was floating down the broadest, smoothest current
-they had experienced since starting on their perilous journey.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin cautiously released their hold on the logs and looked
-about them.
-
-Sam again stood up with the steering pole in his hands.
-
-Straight as an arrow, and for fully three miles, the river could be seen
-flowing down between its towering banks.
-
-This sight brought to Sam a sense of great relief, and its effect on Ike
-was decidedly exhilarating.
-
-Standing up in the front of the raft he waved his arms like a windmill
-and shouted out:
-
-"Bress de Lor! we'z safe! we'z safe!"
-
-Escape from the awful dangers they had just come through so miraculously
-made Ike forget, for the moment, his hunger and the fact that there
-could be no safety to people floating on a shaky raft, down a river
-whose course seemed through the very heart of sterile, towering
-mountains.
-
-Ah, well, this only goes to show that, no matter how desperate the
-situation we always have something to be thankful for; and that no
-matter how bad things are, so long as life, health and hope remain, they
-might be worse.
-
-Another thing very unusual in this experience was the fact that the
-canyon walls, instead of rising straight up from the water, stood back,
-leaving on either side a strip on which, amid great masses of detached
-sandstone there grew a number of stunted mezquite and cedar trees.
-
-They were all as wet as they well could be, but they had grown so
-accustomed to this that Sam made up his mind not to go ashore to dry
-their clothes, but to keep right on, when a shout from Ike caused him to
-change his purpose.
-
-"I see a wolf or a deer; way dar to de right!" and Ike pointed down to
-where the bushes hid the rocks.
-
-"Lat no deel," said Wah Shin, as he bent forward and shaded his eyes.
-
-"Mebbe yeh ken tell us wat it is," said Ike, with a touch of sarcasm,
-for having discovered the animal he felt that he had a right to say what
-it was.
-
-"Lat's yalla doggee," said Wah Shin.
-
-And Wah Shin was right, for at that instant the animal sprang into view
-and began a vigorous barking, and a frisking back and forth.
-
-"It's Maj! It's Maj!" cried Ike.
-
-Maj it certainly was, and the joy of the faithful creature at seeing his
-friends was touching.
-
-Sam at once guided the raft to the shore, but while it was yet many
-yards away, the dog swam out, was pulled on board and at once jumped on
-Sam, who if he had not been wet before certainly would have been now.
-
-"Dat ar dog looks to me ez if he had been habin' a big feed some place,"
-said Ike, when they got on shore, and he could examine Maj's rounded
-form, which his dripping coat made more conspicuous.
-
-"Mebbe him full of watel," suggested Wah Shin.
-
-"No," said Ike, as he pressed the dog's sides, "it's grub; good solid
-grub." Then, addressing Maj, he said, in tones intended to be very
-seductive: "See har, ole feller, don't go foh to tell me dat yer hungry,
-like we is. You'se been eatin' meat, don't say 'no' foh I won't stan'
-it; but, like a good dorg, show me de place whar yeh found it, an' if
-ebber I gits out ob dis yeh fix, I'll buy yeh a brass collar, wif yeh
-name on de outside in great big letters."
-
-As if he understood this and was anxious to earn the reward so
-generously offered him, Maj started off with a short, sharp bark, but
-before he had gone very far he turned and came slowly back again, as if
-he had changed his mind.
-
-Meanwhile, Wah Shin got together a pile of dry wood, and, as the matches
-in Sam's water-proof case escaped the water, they soon had a roaring
-fire, before which their cargo and their clothes--the latter well
-tattered--were placed to dry.
-
-At first Sam, who was now very hungry, was inclined to think that it was
-a whim of Ike's that led him to see anything suggestive of food in the
-dog's appearance, but when he came to look carefully at the animal and
-study his contented manner, he was satisfied that he had found something
-to eat since being washed from the raft.
-
-With nearly all his clothes drying before the fire, Sam, followed by
-Ike, started off to examine the shore further down.
-
-He had not gone far when he noticed great clefts in the walls of the
-canyon, as if the mighty mass had been cracked by some tremendous power.
-
-These fissures ran up and back for thousands of feet, but the largest
-one visible was not of sufficient width to admit of their getting up in
-that way, neither were these openings on the side of the canyon which
-they must ascend in order to reach Hurley's Gulch.
-
-An examination of the point where one of the fissures came down to the
-shore convinced Sam that some creatures had used this passage-way
-recently as an avenue for ascending to the upper world, or coming down
-to this profound and silent valley.
-
-He had just communicated this opinion to Ike, and was about to turn away
-when his attention was attracted to the dog, now standing with his right
-paw raised, his tail extended and his whole form as rigid as if it had
-been cut in marble.
-
-"See!" shouted Ike, "Maj is on de p'int! Whar, whar's de game?"
-
-The words had scarcely passed his lips when there was a squeak and a
-rushing noise, and a score, or more, long-eared rabbits dashed by within
-twenty feet of the party.
-
-"Hooraw! Rabbits! rabbits!" cried Ike. "Let us git our guns! Rabbits
-makes bully grub!"
-
-Sam had not his gun with him, but he at once started back to the fire
-and examined his rifle, which had come through without being damaged.
-
-The water had not affected the metallic cartridges, of which he had a
-good supply left. Filling his belt with these he started off, Ike
-keeping by his side with his remarkable old shot-gun on his shoulder,
-though its utter uselessness had been emphasized by its recent heavy
-rusting.
-
-Ike was useful, however, in holding back the dog, who had evidently been
-feeding on rabbit since his landing at this place.
-
-Sam was an excellent rifleman, having had much practice, and being
-possessed of nerves as true and steady as steel, without which the
-weapon can never be mastered.
-
-He crept ahead, and about three hundred yards below the camp he came
-within sight of a little cove, or pocket, in the canyon wall that seemed
-literally to swarm with long-eared rabbits.
-
-He fired with judgment, and kept firing while the creatures remained in
-sight and he was sure of his shots.
-
-The result was that within five minutes he had killed thirteen rabbits.
-
-Everyone that was struck was taken, and to the true hunter, who never
-inflicts an unnecessary wound on the animals he hunts, this is always a
-great satisfaction.
-
-Ike was disappointed that he had not been permitted to try "her," as he
-called his old shot-gun, on the game; but, as he picked up the goodly
-load of rabbits and carried it back to camp, it would be difficult to
-imagine a more delighted fellow.
-
-It is said that "it never rains but it pours," and this seemed to be the
-case with the sudden turn in the tide of good luck that had set in
-toward our unfortunate friends.
-
-When they got back to camp, they found that Wah Shin had been testing
-the fish lines and flies, which they had scarcely thought of up to this
-time, and with such unexpectedly good luck that he had landed two fine
-trout and was in the act of pulling in the third when Ike came to sight
-laden down with game.
-
-The least ray of light is cheering to those who have been long in
-darkness; and the briefest cessation from pain is like Heaven to those
-groaning in agony! so the prospect of food--a prospect made all the more
-delightful by the gnawing hunger each felt so keenly--made them forget
-for the time all the trials they had passed and the uncertain future
-that lay before them.
-
-Even the fire blazed up cheerily as if in sympathy with their feelings,
-and Maj lay down like a faithful scout, who has guided the famished into
-a land--of rabbits.
-
-In almost as short a time as it takes to tell it, the rabbits and the
-fish were cooking.
-
-We shall not attempt to describe that feast, for there are some things
-impossible to even our expressive English tongue.
-
-Suffice it to say, each ate all he could, with a result that "made away"
-with one half the supply on hand.
-
-They had just finished their most enjoyable meal, when Wah Shin, who
-chanced to be looking toward the river, uttered a cry of alarm.
-
-The others quickly turned in that direction, and, to their amazement,
-they saw the spectral figure of a dark man rising from the water.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.--"JOY! JOY! IT IS ULNA AGAIN!"
-
-
-Unlike Ike and Wah Shin, Sam Willett was not the least superstitious,
-yet, as he saw the spectral figure rising from the shore he could not
-imagine it a human being.
-
-"Did you think me dead?" asked the dripping figure.
-
-By this time Sam had leaped to his feet and advanced toward their
-extraordinary visitor.
-
-He was not long in doubt.
-
-There was no mistaking the lithe figure and the now pinched but still
-expressive face.
-
-"Joy! joy! It is Ulna again!" cried Sam, and with a bound he was on the
-shore and the young Ute was in his arms.
-
-As soon as Ike and Wah Shin were convinced that this was Ulna in the
-flesh and not his ghost, they ran down and performed such a war dance
-about him, as they held his hands, as he never witnessed around the camp
-fires of his own tribe.
-
-When Ike could give expression to his delight, he pulled Ulna in the
-direction of the fire, calling out the while:
-
-"Tum along; tum along! you looks if yeh hadn't had nawthin' to eat foh
-years. We kin fix yeh. We kin stuff yeh with rabbits till yeh can't
-stan'; an' w'en dem's gone we knows de place whar we kin go an' git lots
-moah."
-
-Ulna certainly did look famished, but true to himself, neither by word
-nor sign did he give expression to the sufferings he had passed through
-nor the agony of hunger he was now enduring.
-
-The half of a cooked rabbit was left from the recent banquet, and Ulna
-had this placed in his hand and made to sit on a stone before the fire.
-
-"Eat 'em allee up; me gettee nodle one, no time," said Wah Shin, who was
-never so happy as when he was cooking.
-
-"Yes," urged Ike, "wade right in. Dar ain't no stint dis time. We've
-found de head-quahtahs ob all de rabbits, an' we ain't a gwine foh to be
-hungry no moah."
-
-After all these expressions of hospitality and good will, Sam had a
-chance to say, as he took a seat beside Ulna.
-
-"I thought I had seen you for the last time, but thank God you and all
-of us are saved to meet again."
-
-"When I called 'farewell' to you," said Ulna, "I felt the end had come,
-but like the people of my tribe I did not give up----"
-
-"Nevah give up de ship," interjected Ike.
-
-"I made up my mind to resist the flood till my strength was gone,"
-continued Ulna.
-
-"One ain't got much strent, onless he's got plenty to eat an' lots ob
-time to sleep," said Ike, who, though much interested in Ulna, felt that
-he must give expression to his own feelings or choke.
-
-The young Indian explained that he was so weighted down by his rifle and
-cartridges that, after the first rapids had been passed, he had only
-strength left to keep afloat without being able to make the shore.
-
-"When I was swept into the second rapids," he said, "all hope vanished.
-I must have been rendered unconscious by some blow, but be that as it
-may, I have no memory of reaching the bank. When I came to last night I
-was half lying in the water. I drew myself out and walked about, trying
-to find something to eat. I could not sleep for thinking of you, for I
-did not see, after what I had suffered, how you were to get through the
-rapids on the raft."
-
-"I cannot describe to you how my heart beat with joy a few hours ago,
-when I saw the raft shooting out of the foam with all its passengers
-except the dog on board. I saw you making for the shore, and I shouted
-to attract your attention to the opposite side."
-
-"If we'd a heerd yeh, yeh wouldn't ha' had to hollered twice," said Ike.
-
-"I did not feel very strong till I saw you, and then, as there was
-nothing else left me, I made up my mind to try swimming across."
-
-"An' you made it; you made it like a--like a mice, an' yeh fotched yeh
-rifle widge yeh," said Ike, in tones of great approval.
-
-"Ike he heap talkee," said Wah Shin, as he sat another half of a broiled
-rabbit before Ulna. "Me cookee light slate along."
-
-"And now," said Ulna, who had the rare faculty of eating while he spoke,
-"tell me how you made out after we parted in that strange way."
-
-Sam narrated the adventures, already recorded, and after some
-discussion, to Ike's great delight, it was decided to remain here for at
-least another day, and to lay in a supply of rabbits before they faced
-the unknown and dreaded canyon again.
-
-After Ulna had appeased his hunger, Sam made him lie down before the
-fire and take a sleep, while he and Ike went off on another hunting
-expedition.
-
-They brought home several loads of rabbits during the day, and Wah Shin,
-who believed the game would keep better if it were cooked, busied
-himself broiling rabbits till the last one was in an edible condition.
-
-Toward evening Ulna got up from the blanket, in which he had been
-wrapped, and when he put on his clothes he looked like an entirely
-different being from the spectre that appeared at the river side some
-hours before.
-
-Now that the immediate danger from hunger was over, Sam would have been
-comparatively happy had it not been for thoughts of his father.
-
-It is well that it is not given to us to lift the veil of the future, or
-to tell what is happening beyond the range of our own vision. Yet, it
-must be confessed, that it would have eased the minds of the loving
-father and the devoted son, if each could have known of the situation of
-the other at this time.
-
-It was not in Ike's nature to feel trouble for any length of time. He
-had all the light-heartedness of his race, and an enviable capacity for
-enjoying the present.
-
-He played with the dog; he laughed and sang, till at length, overcome
-with the excess of enjoyment--and it may be the great quantities of
-broiled rabbit he had eaten, he threw himself on the ground before the
-fire and was asleep in no time.
-
-Again Sam detailed the guards, taking the first watch himself, and when
-another morning dawned they found themselves more rested and refreshed
-than they had been at any time since leaving Gold Cave Camp.
-
-The night before Ulna busied himself cutting the jack-rabbits' skins
-into strips, which he knotted and twisted into ropes, and these ropes
-were found of the greatest use in binding the pieces of the raft
-together before they resumed their journey down the long, dark, watery
-arcade.
-
-They were afloat again soon after daylight, and the thought that they
-were safe and sound and all together again brought unspeakable joy to
-every heart--and we might include Maj in the list, for from his seat in
-the middle of the raft he eyed his friends with an expression of great
-comfort and satisfaction.
-
-Long before the sun rose high enough to look into the canyon they had
-drifted many miles away from their camp of the morning.
-
-The current, which Sam estimated at about three miles an hour, was
-unbroken; flowing on in silent majesty, between the cold, gray cliffs
-that rose at points for more than a mile sheer up, till their eyes grew
-giddy in measuring their elevation.
-
-Here and there, to the right and left, they passed side canyons, black
-and forbidding, like cells set in the walls of a mighty prison.
-
-In the afternoon these side canyons became more frequent, and as they
-approached one Sam saw that a stream of clear water was pouring out from
-between its walls.
-
-As this opening was on the east, or left bank, and in the direction of
-Hurley's Gulch, he determined to try and get the raft into it, and see
-if they could find an avenue to the upper world through its bed.
-
-He told Ulna of his purpose, and in an instant the young Ute had a pole
-in his hand.
-
-They could touch bottom at this point and as the current from the side
-canyon was not very strong, they succeeded in getting the raft in.
-
-The bed of the stream was so narrow in places that Ike on one side and
-Wah Shin on the other were enabled to help along by pulling at the
-rocks.
-
-It was growing dark again, and Sam, elated at their success so far,
-began to fear that they might not be able to reach a place where they
-could make fast for the night, when all at once the canyon walls, as if
-they had been touched by the wand of a magician, expanded into a
-beautiful bowl-shaped valley.
-
-This valley, in the dim light, looked to be fully a quarter of a mile in
-diameter, and to the great surprise of all it had grassy banks; and as
-their feet touched the sward the delicious odor of wild thyme and Indian
-pinks filled the air.
-
-They found enough dry wood to make a fire to warm up their meat.
-
-"It looks to me," said Sam, as he sat quietly before the fire, for some
-time after supper, "as if the worst is over, and that we can get to
-Hurley's Gulch without much trouble from here."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.--THE TRIAL IN PROGRESS.
-
-
-It cannot be denied that these rude forms of justice, known as "Judge
-Lynch's Courts," have done some good in disorganized conditions of
-society, by deterring, if not in punishing, crime. Indeed, in many cases
-vigilance committees have been of the greatest service, even in places
-where the law is supposed to be in force. At one time these committees
-saved the city of San Francisco from the control of murderers and
-gamblers.
-
-But on the whole they do more harm than good, for, as in the present
-instance at Hurley's Gulch, bad men join them for self-protection or to
-carry out their own selfish ends.
-
-The only men who can properly administer justice are those accustomed to
-weighing evidence, and, no matter how well meaning, rough miners are apt
-to be influenced by their feelings rather than their reason.
-
-It would not have taken a stranger long to see that a majority of the
-men gathered in that canvas-covered apartment, in the hotel at Hurley's
-Gulch, were prejudiced against the prisoners.
-
-To Mr. Willett, who was familiar with the dignified forms of courts of
-justice in the East, the proceedings looked like a burlesque on law, for
-an attempt was made to do things after the manner of long established
-methods.
-
-Before the prisoners were brought in, it was decided by the committee
-having the matter in charge, that a man named Jacks, an ignorant,
-red-faced fellow, who had occupied a similar position on a former
-occasion, should act as judge.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were given camp-chairs directly in front of
-"the judge," who was making a desperate effort to maintain the dignified
-bearing supposed to be essential to the office.
-
-The judge rapped with the bottom of a heavy tumbler--the contents of
-which he had just drank--on a little pine table by his side and called
-out:
-
-"The next thing in order, gents, is to 'lect a sheriff and a clerk, for
-I propose that everything in this court shall be square and reg'lar;
-and, if the prizners has any objections to the officers they must say so
-now, or forever after hold their peace."
-
-When the judge had ceased speaking, a man with a bullet-head, a red
-shirt and no neck to speak of--he was the proprietor of this remarkable
-hotel--pushed himself through the crowd and called out:
-
-"I nominate Badger for sheriff of this here court."
-
-Without waiting for this motion to be seconded, the judge yelled out:
-
-"All in favor of Badger for sheriff say 'aye,' all opposed say 'aye,'
-too."
-
-As this arrangement left no chance for those who might be opposed to
-Badger to say "no," he was declared to be unanimously elected.
-
-"Next thing in order is to 'lect a clerk," said the judge.
-
-The man who had nominated Badger now yelled out:
-
-"I name Frank Shirley for clerk!"
-
-The judge, without waiting for the forms in such cases, would have
-declared Shirley elected had not Mr. Willett leaped to his feet and
-shouted:
-
-"I protest."
-
-"One of the prizners protests," said the judge, and he picked up the
-tumbler with an angry gesture, as if about to hurl it at Mr. Willett's
-head.
-
-Frank Shirley evidently expected to act as clerk of the court without
-any opposition, for as soon as his name was called he pushed himself to
-the front.
-
-"What objection have you got to Mr. Shirley, I'd like to know?" said the
-judge, his face growing redder with anger.
-
-"I have many objections," said Mr. Willett, not at all intimidated by
-the frowns of Shirley's friends.
-
-"Can't the man write?" asked the judge.
-
-"I suppose he can," replied Mr. Willett.
-
-"Wa'al, if he can write what more do you want in a clerk?" said the
-judge.
-
-"Many things."
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"He should be free from prejudices."
-
-"And so he is."
-
-"And so he is not," said Mr. Willett, calmly but firmly. "He is my
-bitter enemy. He has been setting the good men of this place against me
-by his slanders and unblushing falsehoods. If you want this trial to be
-fair you must not begin by making officers of men who may find it to
-their interest to convict me."
-
-"I mean to do what's fair," Shirley managed to say. "And I am not
-seeking this place. If you elect me I will serve, and do my whole duty
-like a man, forgetting the past bad character of this unfortunate man,
-Willett, who married my cousin and sent the poor woman to the grave by
-his cruelties."
-
-This speech had a powerful effect on the mob, for the men began to
-stamp, and some of them yelled:
-
-"Don't pay no heed to the prizner, but go right straight on with the
-trial!"
-
-"Yes, we'll go on with the trial," said the judge, rapping for order, as
-if determined to have it or break the table.
-
-Still cool and undaunted, Mr. Willett stood up till the storm had
-somewhat abated.
-
-"If," he said, "I am to have no voice in my own defence, then this trial
-is a farce and the sooner it ends in the murder of two innocent men the
-better. If the judge did not mean that I could object to the officers
-you were about to elect, why did he say so? I am simply availing myself
-of the privilege you grant me, and I can give you still stronger reasons
-for my opposition to this Frank Shirley, whom I here denounce, as a man
-without manly courage or honest principle, and wholly unworthy of
-belief. He is the one man in this territory who will reap wealth from
-the death of myself and my son; are you willing to let such a man take
-part in a trial that may seal my doom in his interest?"
-
-The judge was about to make an angry comment on this, but he was
-prevented by Collins, who pushed his way through the crowd, and said
-with a flash of the eyes that boded no good to those who opposed him:
-
-"Thar ain't no man in Hurley's Gulch, or out of it either that'll stand
-before my face, or the face of my pard, Si Brill, and say that either of
-us don't always tell the right up and down truth. If thar is sich a man
-har, I'd like him to trot himself out so that I ken git a good square
-look at him for 'bout three seconds and a half."
-
-As Collins said this, he quickly threw his strong right hand back on the
-stock of one of his revolvers and took a calm survey of the sea of
-astonished faces.
-
-If there was any man present who had doubts as to the honesty and
-veracity of Mr. Collins and his partner, he thought it the part of
-prudence to keep them to himself, for the present at least.
-
-"Now," continued Collins, after a half minute of painful silence, "I
-happen to know, and so does my pard, Si Brill, that that sneak, Shirley,
-who has been tryin' to make friends with the honest men and the mean
-ones too, in this camp, by keepin' of 'em howlin' drunk, will fall into
-a big estate over thar in Michigan, if Mr. Willett's son should chance
-to peg out afore he gits to be old enough to vote in politics. So, for
-one, I ain't a goin' to stand by and let that cur have anythin' to do
-with the case. And more than that, you fellers ought to feel ashamed,
-clar down to your boots, at 'lectin' for sheriff of this court a man
-who's known in every minin' camp this side of the Sierras as a drunkard,
-a bummer--yes, and a murderer! that's Badger, and I make the charge
-right here to his face. If he don't deny it, mebbe some of his new found
-friends, Jacks, the judge of the court for instance, might like to take
-it up. If so, I'm just about as ready to back my words now as at any
-other time."
-
-Again Collins drew himself up and looked about him, with his right hand
-gripping the stock of his six-shooter.
-
-"See har, Collins," said the judge, speaking in tones intended to be
-very soothing, "we're not here to fight, but to do our duty as good
-men----"
-
-"But is it doin' yer duty to tell the prizners they kin object, and
-then, when one of 'em does so, to try and choke him off, so's to put in
-an enemy and a sneak as the clerk of this court?"
-
-"Wa'll, Collins, thar's other folks that ken write in this camp," said
-the judge. "So I'll withdraw Mr. Shirley, and let another be named."
-
-Much crest-fallen at this decision of the judge, and the very
-uncomplimentary opinion of himself which he had been forced to listen
-to, Frank Shirley shrunk back into the crowd from which he had lately
-emerged with so much confidence.
-
-Even Badger, usually so ready to assert himself, remained dumb in the
-presence of this strong, brave man.
-
-A young miner, bearing the appropriate name of Clark, was selected as
-clerk of the court, and then the judge said it was in order to swear in
-a jury.
-
-"'Cordin' to law," he added, "the prizners has a right to ax the jury
-questions, and to object to 'em if they doesn't pan out all right. But I
-hope we'll git along faster'n we've been doin' else this yar trial will
-last from July to eternity."
-
-As Mr. Willett did not know any of the men who were called to act as
-jurors, he judged their fitness for the position by their appearance,
-and so he offered objections to only two, and they were drunk.
-
-It was already noon when the judge declared that all the preliminaries
-were over, and that he was now prepared to go on with the trial in
-earnest, "and have justice did to the livin' and the dead."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.--OUT OF THE DEPTHS.
-
-
-The delight of Sam Willett and his friends at being out of the great
-canyon compensated them in part for the severe trials through which they
-had recently passed, and with the disappearance of the stupendous walls
-of the Colorado they believed all their troubles would vanish.
-
-Daylight convinced them that they had encamped for the night in a spot
-that seemed like an Eden when compared with their recent resting-places,
-though back from the charming little valley the rocks rose straight up
-to a height nearly as great as those of the main river.
-
-Hungry people care more for the quantity than the variety of their food,
-and so the boys made a hearty breakfast of the goodly supply of broiled
-rabbits, and then started to find a way out of the valley.
-
-Sam and Ulna soon discovered that though they could not take the raft
-much further up the side canyon, that they could march along its bed at
-the bottom of which flowed a little stream of clear, cool water.
-
-They came back to camp, made up their arms, blankets and remaining
-supplies into four bundles, and Sam announced that they would follow up
-the stream on foot, for its direction was directly toward Hurley's
-Gulch.
-
-With wise precaution Sam made fast the raft, for though such an event
-was to be dreaded, he wanted to have it within reach if they were again
-forced to go back to the canyon in which they had suffered so much.
-
-"Golly!" exclaimed Ike, as they took up their line of march along the
-stream, "dis seems like ole times."
-
-"How so?" asked Sam, who was always pleased to see the colored boy in a
-good humor.
-
-"W'y, we're totin' oursels instead of habin' de raft tote us. I 'clar to
-goodness, I nebber wants to see a raft agin the longest day I lib. Ize
-done wif rafts foreber and eber, amen."
-
-"Duno," said Wah Shin, who seemed always very solemn, "dat laft sabe us,
-me no go backe on laft. No laft, den we allee dead."
-
-Maj barked approval of this and began to leap on every one in turn to
-show his delight at the new method of travel.
-
-They found no serious obstacles in the canyon, though the sharp grade
-rose in a way that indicated they were rising rapidly to the table lands
-above.
-
-Late in the afternoon they came to a spring near the head of the ravine
-along which they had been marching all day, and, as it was well known to
-all that water and fuel were scarce in the uplands, it was decided to
-stay here for the night.
-
-While Ike and Wah Shin gathered dry cactus and weeds to make a fire,
-Ulna shouted to them not to make a light till he came back; then
-motioning to Sam to follow him he led the way up a steep ascent, the
-summit of which promised a view of the surrounding country.
-
-After a half hour's clambering they reached the top, and after the
-cramped range of vision that recently hemmed them in, the sight that now
-gladdened their eyes was thrilling and inspiring beyond expression.
-
-A table land, nearly devoid of vegetation, broken here and there by
-chasms, or stately pillars of sand rock came to view under a blaze of
-golden sun-light that poured down from a cloudless sky with a splendor
-nearly blinding in its brilliancy.
-
-Away to the east the wall of the Sierra Madre mountains rose up like an
-amethystine rampart, the snow peaks glowing in the light of the
-declining sun like mighty masses of fire opal.
-
-After inhaling a long breath, the better to give expression to his
-surprise and delight, Sam exclaimed in the poetical language of Mrs.
-Hemans:
-
-"For the strength of the hills we bless Thee, my God, our father's God!"
-
-Ulna's fine face, though usually calm and impassive, now showed much
-feeling, but that this was not due to the glorious scenery about them
-was soon evident.
-
-"Sam," he said, "I didn't care to speak to you before Ike and Wah Shin,
-for I did not want to excite them, but I saw something down there at the
-spring that troubles me very much."
-
-"What was that?" asked Sam.
-
-"A track."
-
-"What kind of a track?"
-
-"An Indian's."
-
-"But this is the hunting ground of your people, the Utes, why should we
-fear?"
-
-"There would be no war if the different tribes of men were content to
-stay in their own hunting grounds, but that track was made by an
-Apache," said Ulna, with more than usual seriousness.
-
-"How do you know it was made by an Apache?"
-
-"By the impression of the sole of the moccasin. The Mezcarillas have the
-sole in two pieces, sewed together down the middle; the Utes have
-their's in one."
-
-"But the Apaches have recently made a treaty of peace with the whites;
-why should we fear them?" said Sam.
-
-"The Apaches will break the treaty, or will defy it, if they can do so
-with safety. But they have never made a treaty with the Utes. For
-generations they have been at war with my people, and if they knew I was
-here they would be after my scalp with the hunger of wolves."
-
-"They could not take yours unless they took mine," said Sam, reaching
-out his hand to prove his sincerity.
-
-"I am certain of that, Sam; but I do not want to add to your dangers and
-troubles, if I cannot lessen them."
-
-"Of course not, Ulna, but I do not understand you."
-
-"It may be that the Apaches, and I am not sure they are about, will let
-you and the others go on without harm, while if they discover me they
-will be sure to make an attack on all of us," said Ulna, speaking very
-slowly, but with a strong, steady voice.
-
-"Well, we can't help that. If they attack us we shall be able to show
-that we have rifles and know how to handle them," said Sam, bravely.
-
-"This is what I have been thinking," continued Ulna. "I can make my way
-alone from here faster than the four of us can, and I can elude the
-Apaches as the hawk eludes the wild-cat. If I can reach Hurley's Gulch I
-can start men out to your relief; if I fail you will be none the worse
-off."
-
-"This is too serious a matter to decide at once," said Sam. "Even to
-save the lives of the others, I would not increase your danger----"
-
-"But what if the danger of all is increased by my staying here?"
-
-"Then I should say go, but let us go down to the spring and think it all
-over. I am sure we can tell Ike and Wah Shin about this; they are both
-plucky and faithful."
-
-"As you say," was Ulna's reply, and he cast a quick glance about the
-horizon before descending from the rock on which they had been standing.
-
-"What do you see?" asked Sam, looking eagerly in the direction of Ulna's
-fixed eyes.
-
-"Apaches!" was the whispered reply.
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Off to the south."
-
-Looking in the direction pointed out by Ulna, Sam saw, low down on the
-edge of the horizon, a number of pigmy figures that but for their
-movements might have passed for bunches of cactus.
-
-"Are they coming this way?" asked Sam, unconsciously tightening his grip
-on his rifle, while his heart beat faster.
-
-"I cannot tell that, but if they should come they must not find us
-here."
-
-Ulna sprang down the rocks, followed by Sam, and they found Ike and Wah
-Shin about to start a fire.
-
-"You must make no fire to-night," said Sam.
-
-"What foh?" asked Ike, who had a strong prejudice in favor of hot food.
-
-"Because we are afraid there are Indians near by."
-
-"Injuns!" exclaimed Ike, and he pressed his hands to the top of his
-head, as if to keep down his rising scalp.
-
-"Yes; we must fill our canteens with water and move from here at once."
-
-"But whar to, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"To the shelter of some rocks not far from the head of this ravine. Let
-the fire go, Wah Shin, we can get along without it to-night."
-
-"Me no likee bad Injun; me no kalee fo' fi'," said Wah Shin, as he
-kicked over the pile of fuel, and hurriedly began to fill the four
-canteens.
-
-The sun had set and the chilling shadows were creeping up from the
-canyons, in which they seemed to have their home during the day, when Sam
-and Ulna led the way into the broad plateau of the upper world.
-
-The mass of rocks in which they sought shelter was close to the head of
-the rift.
-
-The increasing darkness favored their reaching these rocks without being
-seen by any one not near by.
-
-This was an admirable hiding place, and in the event of trouble it had
-every advantage for observation and defense.
-
-In the midst of these rocks they ate their supper, and Sam detailed the
-guards for the night.
-
-His greatest fear was that the dog might reveal, by growling, their
-hiding place to any who might come near. To guard against this as much
-as possible, he fastened a rope muzzle about the dog's head and told Ike
-to watch him.
-
-Some three hours of darkness had passed when Ike called out:
-
-"See har, Mistah Sam, this yar dog scents somethin' an' I can't hold him
-to save my life."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.--FROM SAFETY INTO DANGER.
-
-
-It did not need the low growling of the dog to convince our young
-friends that they were in the midst of danger.
-
-Along the trail leading up from the ravine, they could hear low,
-gutteral voices, and they did not need to be told that the Apaches, whom
-they had seen as the sun was setting, had come to the spring, for the
-fall of moccasined feet could be heard dying out in that direction.
-
-"The Apaches!" whispered Sam, as he grasped Ulna's arm with one hand,
-and clutched his rifle more tightly with the other.
-
-"Yes," was the reply.
-
-"Do you think they will discover us?"
-
-"They cannot help doing so."
-
-"What will be their next move after finding we are near by?"
-
-"They will trail us down."
-
-"To these rocks?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"And then?"
-
-"And then if they find me they will see that the rising sun looks on one
-less Ute in the world," was Ulna's reply, given with his habitual
-calmness.
-
-"But we will fight," said Sam, stoutly. "And if it comes to dying, we
-will die together, and the enemy will make nothing by it."
-
-"Ha! dey's startin' a fiah down dar by the spring," said Ike, who had
-been peering through the darkness in the direction the Apaches had
-taken.
-
-This was true. A column of luminous smoke, followed by a fountain of
-sparks and flame, shot into the calm night air near the spring.
-
-The Indians were using the fuel Ike and Wah Shin had gathered, and by
-the light of the dancing flames their slender, half-naked figures could
-be seen.
-
-Sam counted thirteen warriors. All appeared to be well armed with
-rifles, and the red paint on their faces told that they were out on no
-mission of peace.
-
-"I will go out and try to learn their purpose," said Ulna, as he slung
-his rifle on his back, and tightened his belt.
-
-"But they may catch you," said Sam.
-
-"I will see that they don't."
-
-"Can you understand them if you hear them speak?"
-
-"Yes, as well as if they were Utes. It is better that I should go, and
-if I find that it will be wiser not to return, remember I shall either
-escape to Hurley's Gulch, or stay so close that I can be of service if
-needed. But, if it can be avoided, do not bring on a fight with these
-people."
-
-Sam was about to protest against Ulna's course, but before he could
-utter a word the young Ute had sprung lightly over the rocks, and was
-making his way to the spring.
-
-For the first time since leaving Gold Cave Camp Sam Willett felt
-thoroughly alarmed.
-
-He had fearlessly faced the storm and stood undaunted in the presence of
-Nature in her most awful aspects, without losing heart for a moment, but
-the presence of these savages--ignorant and bloodthirsty--made him
-tremble for the safety of his dear father, to whose rescue he was
-straining every nerve to come.
-
-Ulna's daring and seemingly reckless conduct filled Sam with alarm, for
-apart from his great regard for that youth, he knew that he could not
-offer a strong resistance to the Apaches with only the inexpert Ike and
-Wah Shin to depend on.
-
-"I wouldn't ha' did wat Ulna's done," said Ike, in a frightened whisper.
-"No, not for fifty hundred thousand million dollars in goold an' solit
-dimeints."
-
-"No catchee dis chile do so much like foolee," said Wah Shin, with a
-shudder at the thought.
-
-"Hist! Keep still and stop the dog's growling," said Sam sternly, as
-from his perch, higher up, he tried to make out what the Indians were
-doing down by the fire, and if possible to discover Ulna.
-
-Meantime Ulna, moving as silently as the shadows that came and went
-about the fire near the spring, made his way toward the enemy.
-
-He walked so erect and quickly that it would seem as if it were his
-purpose to go directly to the fire, but he took care to keep a rock
-between him and the enemy.
-
-When within fifty yards of the spring he dropped on his hands and knees,
-and without stopping, crept quickly forward.
-
-When he got so close to the fire that he could distinctly hear what the
-Apaches were talking about, he came to a stop, and lying close to the
-ground, he bent eagerly forward to listen.
-
-The leader of this band was a man named Blanco, which is the Spanish
-word for white, though in this case it seemed to be misapplied.
-
-Blanco's repulsive appearance was increased by the fact that he had only
-one eye--like Badger.
-
-The chief and his companions had already discovered that the spring had
-been recently visited, and they very naturally inferred from the tracks
-of shoes that they had been made by white men.
-
-Nor did the impress of the moccasins escape their keen eyes.
-
-"One Ute, three white men," were the first words Ulna heard when he got
-within hearing distance of the Apaches.
-
-"Where did they come from?" asked a brave, who by the aid of a torch had
-been examining the tracks lower down the ravine.
-
-"It looks as if they came by way of the Great Canyon," said one.
-
-"Ugh!" grunted Blanco, "I don't believe that."
-
-"But the trail leads that way," persisted the man who held the torch.
-
-"I don't care if it led into the sky."
-
-"If it did, Blanco, you could not see it, and though our medicine-men
-say that people in the times far past came from the sky, I never heard
-of their bringing dogs with them," said the man with the torch.
-
-"Dogs!" exclaimed the band in chorus.
-
-"No; one dog."
-
-"Where is it?" asked the chief.
-
-"Here is the track," and the man held the torch down and showed the
-impress of Maj's feet on the ground.
-
-"No, that's a wolf," said the chief.
-
-"The foot of the mountain wolf is not so large," said the keen observer,
-"nor has it long hairs on its toes as has the creature that made this
-track."
-
-Like all leaders, the chief did not like to be so openly contradicted by
-one under him, and he was again about to protest that he was right, and
-it was a wolf that had been at the spring, when, as if to set all doubts
-at rest, the fierce barking of a dog could be heard at the top of the
-hill and not more than two hundred yards away.
-
-Maj, in some way, had slipped his muzzle and escaped Ike's hold and was
-now making himself heard outside the rocks, among which Sam and his
-friends were hiding.
-
-The instant the Indians heard the sound they seized their arms and
-sprang away from the light of the fire.
-
-As luck, rather than design, had it, they ran in the direction where
-Ulna was hiding, and before he could think of rising to his feet they
-were about him.
-
-The brave fellow stuck close to the ground, and he might have escaped
-had not one of the Apaches stumbled and fell on top of him.
-
-The savage gave a yell of fear, but at the same instant he seized Ulna
-and held him fast.
-
-"What is wrong there?" demanded the chief, as he hurried in the
-direction from which the cry came.
-
-"A Ute! a Ute!" was the response of the man whom Ulna was making a
-desperate effort to cast off.
-
-In an instant every brave had fallen on Ulna, and, almost as quickly, he
-was bound hand and foot, but he uttered neither cry nor groan to show
-the pain nor to tell of his mental anguish.
-
-"Who are you?" asked Blanco, bending over him.
-
-"I am a Ute," was the reply.
-
-"Have you a name?"
-
-"I have."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Ulna."
-
-"What! the nephew of the hated Uray?"
-
-"The nephew of the great chief, Uray."
-
-"You come alone?"
-
-"No, with friends."
-
-"Utes?"
-
-"No, miners from Gold Cave Camp."
-
-"How came you here?"
-
-"Through the canyon."
-
-"And you want me to believe that?"
-
-"I ask you to believe nothing; I tell the truth," said Ulna proudly and
-half-defiantly.
-
-"Who ever went through the Great Canyon and lived?" said the Apache in a
-calmer tone.
-
-"We have," said Ulna.
-
-"How many of you?"
-
-"Four and a dog."
-
-"And where are the others?"
-
-"They are where they can defy a foe or welcome a friend," said Ulna with
-undaunted spirit.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.--THE TRIAL ENDS.
-
-
-Mr. Willett, like every American of intelligence, not only knew a great
-deal about the laws of the country of which he was proud of being a
-citizen, but he also knew as well as most lawyers the methods by which
-trials were conducted in the regularly organized courts of justice.
-
-In addition to this he saw that the men who had gathered to try him and
-Hank Tims, though anxious to follow the forms as they understood them,
-were very ignorant, and like all their class, had a profound respect for
-those who knew more, or seemed to know more, than themselves.
-
-The jury was composed of twelve rough, sturdy men, who looked as if they
-fully realized their duty.
-
-Even the judge sat more erect and tried to look dignified at the risk of
-being ridiculous.
-
-"Now we're all ready to begin, and I want order in the court. The gents
-as has thar hats on will take 'em off and hold 'em in thar hands," said
-the judge, again rapping with the heavy glass on the little pine table
-by his side.
-
-The "gents" promptly took off their hats, and this was followed by the
-scraping of boots and a chorus of little coughs that told how nervous
-all were.
-
-"Now," continued the judge when order was restored, "we'll have the
-witnesses in and go on with the trial."
-
-"Before you call any witnesses," said Mr. Willett, "I want you or
-whoever is conducting this case to state the charge against me and my
-friend Hank Tims."
-
-"We can't have everything har like if it was a reg'lar out-and-out
-court," said the judge angrily, and again picking up the tumbler as if
-he were going to hurl it at some one. "And as for the charges, I thought
-every one in and about Hurley's Gulch knowed that you two is charged
-with robbin' and murderin' poor Tom Edwards. Thar, I hope that statement
-of the case will suit the most partic'lar."
-
-"I and my companion, being the most interested," said Mr. Willett, with
-wonderful calmness, "should be the most particular; but if that is the
-best statement of the case that can be made, I am willing that you shall
-go ahead, asking only that I be permitted to cross-question any and all
-witnesses that may be called."
-
-"This court ain't got any objections as it knows on to yer axin'
-questions, pervidin' you stick right down to the point," growled the
-judge.
-
-Nodding to show that he was satisfied with this, Mr. Willett said, "I am
-ready," and the young man acting as clerk called out:
-
-"Badger!"
-
-Badger moved nearer to the judge and began to twirl his hat in his big,
-rough hands in a way that showed he was anything but calm.
-
-"Now, Badger," said Judge Jacks, "tell this yar court and this yar jury
-all you know 'bout the case."
-
-Badger looked into his hat as if he saw something there that might
-refresh his memory, and then, after coughing and casting his malignant
-eye up at the ceiling, he began:
-
-"Wa'al, this is 'bout all I knows 'bout this case. You see, me and Tom
-Edwards had been ole pards, and so I knowed him as well as any man this
-side the Rockies. He wasn't a bad kind of a feller to them as knowed how
-to take him, and though he didn't have much book larnin'----"
-
-Here Mr. Willett interrupted Badger to say:
-
-"This evidence, your honor, is not to the point. We are not here to
-discuss the character of the dead man, but to find out if we can who
-murdered him."
-
-"Reckon yer right," said the judge, and then he told Badger he must
-"stick to bottom facts."
-
-Thus admonished Badger resumed:
-
-"Me and Mr. Shirley got to Hurley's Gulch the night before Tom was did
-for so cruel bad, and we found he was on a spree, and complainin' to
-every one that Mr. Willett he was a-tryin' to euchre him out of fifteen
-hundred dollars, as he'd 'greed to pay for the claim over at Gold Cave
-Camp. Wa'al, the next mornin' 'bout an hour or so afore day me and Mr.
-Shirley was sleepin' together when we heard two pistol shots and a man
-a-hollerin' "murder." We hurried out and found poor Tom all shot to
-pieces. We carried him into this yar hotel, and with his dyin' last
-breath he told us that it was Mr. Willett and Hank Tims as did for him.
-Thar, that's all I knows 'bout the case."
-
-My young readers will notice that there was no oath administered to
-Badger, nor would such a sacred proceeding have affected in any way the
-nature of his evidence.
-
-"Now you've heard Badger's evidence," said the judge, with an angry
-glance at Mr. Willett and Hank. "Have you any questions to ax him?"
-
-"I have a few," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Well, rattle 'em off quick."
-
-"Badger," began Mr. Willett, "what is your business?"
-
-"I'm a miner," was the answer.
-
-"Where do you mine?"
-
-"I ain't at work--jist now."
-
-"How long have you been at Hurley's Gulch?"
-
-"Off and on, 'bout a month."
-
-"You came here broke?"
-
-"Yes. I wasn't flush, I'll allow."
-
-"But you are flush now?"
-
-"Wa'al, I've got a few dollars."
-
-"Where did you get your money?"
-
-"That's my business," said Badger, angrily.
-
-"Yes," said the judge, "no gent ain't bound to tell no one how he came
-by his money--unless some one else goes to work and claims it as his'n."
-
-"My object is to show that Badger received his money from Frank
-Shirley," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"And what if he did?" asked the judge.
-
-"There is this about it, that if Badger is in Frank Shirley's employ,
-then he is working to get me and my son out of the way, for if my son
-dies before he's twenty-one years of age, then Shirley falls heir to a
-large fortune."
-
-"We ain't a-tryin' Frank Shirley. So I ain't agoin' to let you ax any
-sich questions," said the judge, rapping vigorously on the table.
-
-Still calm, if not confident, Mr. Willett asked:
-
-"Badger, were not you and Frank Shirley dressed when you say you heard
-those shots?"
-
-"Wa'al, yes, except our boots," replied Badger.
-
-"And you were awake?"
-
-"No; but I can't say I was sleepin' heavy."
-
-"_Badger, did not you kill Tom Edwards?_"
-
-This question came with the suddenness of an explosion, and it so
-staggered Badger that it was fully a minute before he could stammer out:
-
-"No. Who said I did?"
-
-"I say it! You committed the murder at Shirley's bidding, so as to get
-me out of the way, and you prompted the murdered man whom you shot down
-in the darkness to say I did it," said Mr. Willett with a forceful
-manner that startled all.
-
-During the confusion that followed this bold but perfectly just
-accusation, Badger left the witness-stand and mixed in with the
-astonished crowd.
-
-Frank Shirley was next called, but as his evidence was much the same as
-that given by Badger, it is unnecessary to record it.
-
-On his cross-examination, he claimed to have no ill-feeling against Mr.
-Willett or his son; and he had the boldness to claim that he did not
-want young Sam's fortune, as he was rich in his own right.
-
-Two other witnesses were called to prove the dying words of Tom Edwards,
-and on these and the fact that Mr. Willett had no evidence to prove that
-he had paid for the claim at Gold Cave Camp, the whole case hung.
-
-Mr. Willett testified in his own behalf.
-
-He told such a clear, straightforward story that, for the time being,
-even his enemies were impressed with its truth.
-
-In a tremulous voice he spoke about his beloved son, whom he feared to
-be dead, and he said, in conclusion:
-
-"Had it not been for the cruel flood that snatched from me my boy, the
-only tie that holds me to earth, he would have been here with the paper
-bearing Tom Edwards' signature, and then you would have seen that I
-could have no reason for desiring the death of this man, whose
-drunkenness made him his own worst enemy."
-
-After this Hank Tims told all he knew, corroborating Mr. Willett, and
-boldly asserting that he was present when Mr. Willett paid the money to
-Tom Edwards.
-
-Collins and Si Brill testified that they had known Hank "off and on" for
-many years, and that no man, up to this time had ever dared to say a
-word against his truthfulness or honesty.
-
-"Wa'al," said the judge, when the evidence was all in, "I give it as my
-opinion, that them two men, Willett and Tims, kilt Tom Edwards. I don't
-believe thar stories for a minute. Men that commit crime will lie to
-hide it every time, and don't you gentlemen of the jury go for to make
-any mistake about it.
-
-"Thar, that's all I've got to say. Now let the jury take thar time and
-fetch in a verdict that'll suit all hands. I ain't got anythin' more to
-say. The evidence is all in, and so, till the time comes to say the
-prizners is guilty or innocent the trial is jest 'bout over."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.--THE APACHES HAVE THEIR WAY.
-
-
-If an earthquake had shaken the rocks about his ears, Sam could not have
-been more shocked and startled than he was at the barking of the dog.
-
-As for Ike, he was rendered speechless, for Maj had darted away without
-any apparent effort to hold him back.
-
-"Ah, golly!" gasped Wah Shin, "de fat am allee gone in de file!"
-
-Although Maj had done all the damage possible, for Sam could see by the
-movements of the Indians that they had heard the barking, yet he did not
-provoke his young master to anger.
-
-Sam sprang down, caught the dog by the collar and pulled him back to
-their hiding place.
-
-"I--I wish we'd a left dat ar dorg back home!" cried Ike. "He ain't did
-no good eber sence we started, but to eat up de grub; an' now he goes
-an' makes a fuss, jest whin we most wanted foh him to keep his tongue to
-hisself."
-
-"See that he does not get out again," said Sam. "After all the dog only
-led the Indians to a discovery which they must have made sooner or
-later. Ah, I wish Ulna had not gone out. He knows the habits of these
-people and he would know what to do."
-
-"De man as knows what to do ondah dese yer sarcumstances," groaned Ike,
-"is a heap sight smarter'n me."
-
-"Plenty men know heap mo' den you," said Wah Shin, who was evidently in
-a bad humor. "You don' know 'nuff gettee in out lain."
-
-"Hist! Keep still," said Sam, who had again clambered to his perch on
-the rock that commanded a view of the fire. "I can see men coming this
-way."
-
-"Oh, laws a massy!" cried Ike, and with one hand he held the dog, while
-with the other he pressed his lips, "to keep from hollerin' right out,"
-as he afterward expressed it.
-
-Sam was not mistaken as to the movements of the Apaches. A number of
-them, led by their chief, had left Ulna in charge of the others and
-advanced boldly to the head of the ravine.
-
-As a proof that they had no fear of the party they were in search of,
-one of the braves carried a torch, which he brandished above his head
-till he seemed to walk amid a fountain of sparks.
-
-Taking a position where he could see without being seen, Sam, with an
-anxiously beating heart, watched the oncoming braves.
-
-They approached to within about fifty yards of the rocks in which the
-little band had sought refuge, and came to a sudden halt.
-
-Sam was wondering what would happen next, when, to his great surprise,
-the chief called out:
-
-"Hello, white mans! Hello!"
-
-The Indian spoke broken English in a way that no combination of letters
-could give a correct idea of, so for our own convenience, as well as for
-the reader's clearer understanding, we shall report what he said in the
-ordinary way, though Indians never use the elegant language some writers
-put into their mouths.
-
-"What do you want?" was Sam's response to the Indian's outcry.
-
-"Who you are?" asked the Indian.
-
-"My name is Sam Willett."
-
-"Where you come from?"
-
-"From the canyon."
-
-"Oh, no; that's a Ute lie."
-
-"I did not ask you to believe me, nor do I care to talk to you. Go off
-about your business, if you have any," said Sam, his confidence
-increasing every moment that he spoke.
-
-"You got dog?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Big dog?"
-
-"A very big dog."
-
-"Him bite?"
-
-"Yes, if you come nearer."
-
-"That dog fat?"
-
-At this question the Indians laughed and jumped about, as if they
-thought their chief had uttered a very fine joke, for to the Apache a
-fat dog is the daintiest dish in all the world.
-
-Sam treated the inquiry about Maj's condition with haughty silence,
-while all the time the animal under consideration was growling and
-straining to break away from Ike, as if eager to exhibit his condition
-and his teeth.
-
-"You all white men?" was Blanco's next question.
-
-"No--not all," shouted Sam.
-
-"Who you three be?"
-
-"I shan't tell you."
-
-"Why you no tell?"
-
-"Because it is none of your business."
-
-"Dat am de gospil truff," said Ike, "an' if he don't light out purty
-soon dar'll be a loose dog a-howlin' 'round, for I can't hold onter Maj
-much longer."
-
-"My name Blanco. Me big Apache chief."
-
-"Well, what do you want?" asked Sam.
-
-"Me very good man."
-
-"I am glad to hear it."
-
-"Me and all my men, good friends to whites."
-
-"And I am a good friend to the Indians; if you let me alone, I shall let
-you alone. Good-night," said Sam, hoping that the Indian might prove
-sensitive and take this as a hint to leave, but he had entirely mistaken
-his man.
-
-"When sun come up then where you go?" asked the chief, with the same
-inquisitive manner.
-
-At this juncture it struck Sam that he might be able not only to make
-these people his friends, but to utilize them in getting to his father,
-so he said in a kindlier tone than he had yet used:
-
-"We are going to Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"You live there?"
-
-"I want to get there. Do you know the _shortest_ road?"
-
-This was asked as if Sam might be well acquainted with the longest road
-himself.
-
-"Oh, yes," said the chief.
-
-"If you guide me--by the shortest way--to Hurley's Gulch to-morrow
-morning, I will give you money, rifles, pistols, knives, blankets, and
-lots of other good things," said Sam with lavish generosity.
-
-"You got money, rifles, knives, blankets, all good things with you here,
-eh?" asked the chief.
-
-"We have all the arms we need for our own defense, and we know how to
-use them. But you guide me to Hurley's Gulch, and I will keep my word,"
-said Sam, with more confidence than he felt.
-
-Instead of replying at once to this generous proposition, the chief
-spoke with his followers for some minutes in low, guttural tones.
-
-Sam could hear the murmur of their voices, and he rightly guessed that
-they were discussing whether to accept his offer in good faith, or to
-kill and rob himself and his companions.
-
-"We see you, sun up; you no leave," called out the chief at length.
-
-"You must make up your mind to-night, for I am going to leave early in
-the morning," said Sam.
-
-"Oh, all right. I on hand," was the chief's reply.
-
-Again they consulted together, and Sam could see that four men remained
-behind to watch, while the others, with the chief, went down to the
-fire.
-
-All this time Sam was in great trouble about Ulna, for he did not even
-suspect that he was a prisoner in the hands of his cruel tribal foes.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin were in great tribulation about themselves, for they
-had no faith in the Indians; indeed, they firmly believed that the
-Apaches would scalp them all on the morrow.
-
-Ike gave expression to his feelings in the remark:
-
-"When we was down in that yar canyon den I felt ez if I'd rudder be in
-any odder place in dis worl', or de nex'; but now I'd a heap sight
-sooner be down dar dan up yar."
-
-Though tired and sleepy, Sam could not think of closing his eyes that
-night, for he feared to trust Ike or Wah Shin on guard, and he half
-expected an attack from the Apaches before morning.
-
-He knew that any attempt at escape would be detected, and might hasten
-the struggle he was so anxious to avoid.
-
-More than once he wished himself back in the canyon, but the thought that
-he was nearer to his father, and the hope that after all the Indians
-might not be so bad as he feared, gave him courage to face the future.
-
-He knew that resistance against such a force, and with his own limited
-supply of food and water, would be downright folly. So when the chief
-appeared before the rocks, just as the sun was rising, he went out to
-meet him, and shook hands with him.
-
-"Me come down to water, eat something," said the chief, in what seemed a
-hospitable spirit.
-
-[Illustration: _Sam went out to meet the chief and shook hands with
-him._]
-
-Sam, Ike, and Wah Shin took up their bundles and with the dog, went back
-to the spring.
-
-Here to their amazement and horror they found Ulna lying near the fire
-with his hands and feet bound.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.--A BOLD MOVE.
-
-
-We have already seen that Sam was cool and brave, and such characters
-but rarely act from impulse. Yet there are times when impulse is more
-effective than all the calm reasoning in the world, and this was one of
-them.
-
-On the way to the spring with Blanco, Sam felt very nervous. He did not
-have much faith in the chief's profession of friendship for the whites,
-and from what he remembered of Hank Tims' stories about the Apaches, he
-believed them to be a very treacherous and bloodthirsty people.
-
-But the sight of Ulna, prostrate and bound, scattered all Sam's fears
-and indecision to the winds.
-
-"This is my friend!" he shouted as he sprung to Ulna's side and drew his
-own hunting-knife.
-
-"Hold! He is a Ute and my foe!" roared the chief.
-
-But neither his words nor his movements could stay Sam Willett, who was
-now blind to everything but the condition of his brave friend.
-
-Two rapid flashes of the knife, and the cords that bound Ulna's hands
-and feet were severed.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin trembled at the audacity of their young leader.
-
-Even Blanco and his braves were speechless and helpless for the moment,
-and looked from one to the other, as if wondering what this
-extraordinary young white man would do next.
-
-They had not long to wonder, for Ulna, in the very second that he was
-freed, sprang to his feet, leaped at the nearest Indian, who chanced to
-hold the repeating-rifle that had been taken from himself the night
-before, and tearing it from his grasp, he bounded up the ravine before a
-hand could be raised to stay him.
-
-"Shoot! shoot!" cried the chief when he could regain his breath.
-
-"Don't fire!" shouted Sam as, with his own gun raised, he sprang
-directly in front of the Apaches.
-
-They did not fire, perhaps because it would have been useless, for
-before they had fully realized the order of the chief and why it was
-called out, the fleet-footed Ulna had vanished up the rift.
-
-Blanco shouted for the braves to pursue, and on the instant four of the
-youngest and most active leaped forward, like blood-hounds freed from
-the leash.
-
-With yells that frightened the dog and made him crouch behind Ike, the
-Apaches started up the ravine.
-
-Sam was about to follow them, but the chief caught him by the shoulder
-and said sternly:
-
-"You do heap harm. Stay!"
-
-Meanwhile, Ulna had gained the upland, with his face turned toward the
-sun, now flashing over the crests of the Sierra Madre Mountains.
-
-The cruel cords had cut into his wrists and ankles, and the strained
-position in which he had been held so many hours had stiffened his
-limbs; but, absorbed in the battle for his own life, he forgot or did
-not feel his pain.
-
-On gaining the upland, he halted for an instant to pull his cap lower
-and to tighten his belt; then, as he heard the blood-curdling yells
-behind him, he started off again, running this time straight for the
-mountains to the east.
-
-He looked back for an instant, to see the four Apaches rising into view
-from the rift.
-
-He had about two hundred yards the lead, and he very wisely made up his
-mind not to increase it.
-
-As a tribe, the Utes have ever prided themselves on the speed and
-endurance of their runners.
-
-They begin to practice as children, and they are taught to stop at no
-obstacle and not to vary their speed, whether facing or descending a
-hill.
-
-They keep the lips firmly closed, breathing altogether through the
-nostrils, and the arms, or at least the elbows, are kept firmly pressed
-to the sides, the hands being advanced at right angles to the body and
-the fingers shut, like a boxer's fist.
-
-An observer, seeing Ulna's light, springy bound and the absence of all
-effort, would have been charmed with the grace of the youth's movements,
-but would have felt that he was not getting over the ground very fast,
-while his pursuers appeared to be flying; and they were certainly
-straining every nerve.
-
-But Ulna's feet were on his native heath, and he knew that his safety
-depended on reserving his strength, rather than exhausting himself by a
-mighty effort at the start.
-
-The four runners behind him discharged their rifles, but the bullets
-whistled harmlessly by his ears.
-
-They yelled, and he heard them with a feeling of delight, for he well
-knew that men cannot run fast and yell very loud at the same time.
-
-Still the Apaches seemed to gain on him, till his lead was reduced to
-not more than fifty yards, and he could hear their loud explosive
-breathings behind him.
-
-Gradually three of the young braves began to lessen their speed and drop
-to the rear, while one appeared to gain at every bound on the fugitive.
-
-After running for more than hour, Ulna threw a quick glance over his
-shoulder and took in this state of affairs.
-
-His heart bounded with delight at the prospect, but he neither increased
-nor lessened his speed. His movements seemed to be as even and tireless
-as the flight of the mountain eagles circling above his head.
-
-Another half hour and he looked back again. Only one man was in sight,
-and he was not more than a hundred feet away.
-
-Quick as a flash Ulna came to a halt, wheeled and fired. The Apache
-threw up his arms and fell senseless at the feet of the young Ute.
-
-Here Ulna's training in the missionary school at Taos came into play.
-
-His natural impulse would have led him to make sure work, and tear the
-black scalp from the head of his foe, but his heart was touched with
-pity rather than hate, and now that his pursuer was harmless he might
-help him, if he was not fatally wounded.
-
-He examined the Apache's wound, and found that the bullet had struck his
-head without breaking his skull.
-
-"He will come to himself after a while," said Ulna, as he drew his foe
-to the shadow of a rock and placed his back against it.
-
-But while prompted to this act of humanity, Ulna did not permit his
-heart to interfere with his head. According to all the rules of
-civilized warfare, the arms of an enemy belong to his conqueror, so he
-took the Apache's pistol and ammunition-belt, which also contained his
-long, keen scalping-knife.
-
-These he fastened on his own person, and had scarcely finished when the
-wounded brave opened his eyes and looked about him in a dazed way. As
-soon as he saw Ulna he closed his eyes again and began to chant in a low
-solemn voice the death-song of his tribe.
-
-He was in the power of his foe, and as he could not give mercy himself,
-for he did not know of such a thing, he expected that the Ute would put
-him to death, and his song told that he was ready to meet it without
-fear.
-
-"Listen to me," said Ulna, laying his hand on the Apache's shoulder and
-speaking in a firm but kindly tone. "I am a Ute, but the whites have
-taught me to hate no man because of his tribe. Your life is your own;
-take it and make your way back to your friends who have lagged in the
-race, and tell them that the nephew of Uray does not hate nor kill the
-helpless."
-
-"But I am an Apache. I have forfeited my life. I would take yours if I
-could. Why stay your hand? This is not the warfare that our fathers
-practised," said the astonished Apache.
-
-"No, nor shall I ever practice such a warfare. Yet for the life I spare
-I would ask a favor."
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Return to Blanco and tell him that the people now in his hands mean no
-harm. Tell him that if he guides them to Hurley's Gulch he will be well
-paid. Tell him that if he harms them, the whites will make war, nor stay
-their hands while there is an Apache left in the Mogollon Mountains."
-
-With the last word Ulna waved his hand to the brave and sped away again
-to the eastward with the same tireless spring.
-
-Ulna was miles away when the three Apaches, who had started out with the
-wounded man, made their appearance.
-
-"Where is the Ute?" they asked.
-
-"Gone," was the reply.
-
-"And your arms?"
-
-"They are gone, too."
-
-"Who took them?"
-
-"The Ute."
-
-"Why then did he not take your life and your scalp?" they asked in great
-surprise.
-
-"He stunned me with a shot which I was not expecting; but he stunned me
-more when he refused the death I was expecting," said the brave.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.--THE VERDICT AND SENTENCE.
-
-
-In order that the jury might think over and discuss the evidence against
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims it was decided to leave them in full
-possession of the tent in which the trial was held.
-
-"When you've got yer minds made up," said the man who had been acting as
-judge, "let me know, and I'll come in and pass sentence."
-
-This fellow had started out to convict the accused men, and, as we have
-seen, he let slip no chance to impress his prejudices on the jury.
-
-Collins and Si Brill with two others, who had been the original guards,
-took charge of the prisoners while the jury were making up their minds,
-though Badger insisted that he should have the prisoners in his keeping.
-
-"If I ain't to have 'em," he protested, "whar was the good of 'lectin'
-me sheriff?"
-
-"Not a bit of good," sneered Collins, "and if you'd had any spunk you
-wouldn't have took the place. Now, take my advice and git."
-
-Badger did "git," that is, he sought out Frank Shirley, whom he found in
-the bar-room surrounded by a great crowd of men, who were drinking at
-his expense and discussing the verdict at the same time.
-
-It seemed to be the opinion of nearly all present that the jury would
-soon bring in a verdict of "Guilty of the crime charged."
-
-"If they don't do that," said the landlord, "then I'll tell you what I'm
-in for."
-
-"What's that?" asked Badger.
-
-"I'm in for hangin' every man on the jury, and the prizners with 'em,
-before the sun sets."
-
-A cheer showed the favor with which this proposition was received.
-
-When Shirley could get away from the crowd, he and Badger went down by
-the creek where they could talk without being overheard.
-
-"Well, Badger, what do you think?" asked Shirley.
-
-"'Bout the verdict?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"No one can't think but one way after the evidence. Why, nothin' could
-be stronger."
-
-"That's so; but do you think any one suspects?" asked Shirley,
-nervously.
-
-"Suspects what?"
-
-"That we put up the whole job."
-
-"Not a soul," said Badger.
-
-"I wish I could think that."
-
-"But you can think it."
-
-"You forget what Mr. Willett asked you when he was cross-examining."
-
-"What was that?"
-
-"His question was, '_Badger, did not you kill Tom Edwards?_'"
-
-As Frank Shirley repeated these words he looked into Badger's face and
-saw the color flying and the thick lips trembling.
-
-"Why do you speak in that kind of a way to me?" stammered Badger. "Ain't
-I stuck by you and did what I said? And so far as the killin' of Tom
-Edwards is consarned, didn't you help plan the job, and didn't you stand
-by while I carried it out?"
-
-"That is all true, Badger; but I am not going back on you----"
-
-"Then why do you speak that way?"
-
-"Because I want you to understand that Willett suspects the whole truth.
-Indeed, he stated the case from beginning to end as if he knew all about
-it."
-
-"Wa'al, if he does, I didn't tell him."
-
-"Of course not, Badger; but you must see that those who think Willett
-and Hank Tims innocent will at once say, 'Some one killed Tom Edwards,
-and we should find the guilty parties.'"
-
-"And that's the thought that skeers you?"
-
-"I must confess, Badger, it makes me feel very uneasy," said Shirley.
-
-"I thought you had more nerve."
-
-"I am not lacking in that, but caution is better than nerve; and I've
-been thinking that the sooner we can get out of this place the better."
-
-"I'll allow yer right thar, Mr. Shirley; but if we was to get away in a
-hurry, them that suspects us would foller up and hunt us down like wild
-beasts. Why, Collins, he's jest a spilin' to have a fuss with us, and
-I'm bound that he shan't, for he's powerful ugly with a six-shooter."
-
-"Still, I want to get away. There is no doubt in my mind as to the fate
-of young Sam."
-
-"Thar shouldn't be, for thar ain't no more doubt about him and all the
-rest of his gang bein' drownded than thar is that that jury over thar
-will bring in a verdict of guilty," and Badger jerked his head in the
-direction of the canvas hotel.
-
-"And they will hang the prisoners?"
-
-"You can bet they will, and in short order, too."
-
-"To-day?"
-
-"Yes, to-day."
-
-"Then my mission will be accomplished, and it would be folly to stay an
-hour in this savage hole if I can get out of it and go to wealth and
-friends."
-
-"And I'll stick by you, no fear of that, leastwise till I get my share
-of the swag, and then I think I'll marry and try to lead a more
-decentish life than I have been doin'----"
-
-Badger was stopped in his statement of good resolutions by a loud cheer
-coming from the hotel.
-
-"Halloo! what's that?" asked Shirley.
-
-"It must be the vardict; let us go and see," replied Badger, and he at
-once started off in the direction of the noise, followed by his nervous
-employer.
-
-Badger was right in his guess.
-
-The jury had sent out word that they had agreed on a verdict.
-
-The preceding excitement was great, but it was calmness itself compared
-with that that stirred the miners when it became known that the jury
-were ready to report.
-
-From the bar and the tents and huts round about men poured into the
-place of trial.
-
-Badger had to run to get up in time, for he did not see how business
-could go on without the presence of the sheriff.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims sat in the place they had occupied during the
-trial.
-
-The judge, flushed with liquor, took his place and rapped and shouted
-for order.
-
-The twelve jurymen and the prisoners were the only calm persons present,
-and even their faces showed that they fully appreciated the situation.
-
-When the judge, after breaking the heavy glass and splintering the
-little pine table by his side had succeeded in getting the mob down, he
-turned to the jury and said:
-
-"Gents, have you got a verdict?"
-
-"Yes," coughed the one acting as foreman.
-
-"All unanimous?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Wa'al, let's have it," said the judge.
-
-The silence became profound on the instant.
-
-Men with watches could hear them ticking, and men with hearts became
-painfully aware of the fact.
-
-Though a big, strong fellow, the foreman was trembling when he rose to
-his feet, and he tried to cough behind his hand several times before he
-could get control of his voice. At length he managed to say:
-
-"We find that the two prizners is----"
-
-Here he stopped and coughed again, and he undoubtedly would have sat
-down without finishing the sentence had not the judge shouted:
-
-"Wa'al, the prizners is what?"
-
-"_Guilty!_" came the reply.
-
-On hearing this Badger tried to lead a cheer with the help of the judge,
-but as the farce was not yet over, some one cursed him and told him to
-"shut up."
-
-"I don't well see how you could fotch in any other vardict," began the
-judge. "Fact is, you couldn't have did it and continued to live among
-the people at Hurley's Gulch that's in for law and order and fair play;
-so I say you've all done yer duty nobly like good feller citizens."
-
-This opinion met with some applause; then the judge turned to Mr.
-Willett and Hank, and in a voice intended to be very solemn, as it
-certainly was very hoarse, he called out:
-
-"Presners at the bar stand up!"
-
-The two men rose, and Mr. Willett cast a quick glance over the crowd in
-the hope of seeing the friendly faces of Collins and his partner, Si
-Brill, but they were not in sight.
-
-"Have either of you men anythin' to say why I shouldn't now pass
-sentence of death on you?"
-
-"Only this," said Mr. Willett: "that you will pass sentence of death on
-innocent men."
-
-"It is the sentence of this court that the committee and the sheriff of
-this yar court take you two prizners out of this place at once and hang
-you both till you are dead, dead, dead!" said the judge, with a fierce
-emphasis on the last word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.--SURPRISE FOR HURLEY'S GULCH.
-
-
-On hearing the cruel sentence, something like a gasp of pain came from
-many of the men who most firmly believed in the guilt of the prisoners.
-
-No man can ever become so degraded and hardened as not to be moved by
-the approaching death of even a perfect stranger.
-
-Badger alone was delighted at having something to do with the trial, for
-it was the sheriff's duty to attend to the execution.
-
-With the death of these two men, the work which he had pledged Shirley
-to do would be completed.
-
-More than this, with the death of these two men he felt that all danger
-to himself would vanish and all suspicion be allayed.
-
-"It's mighty hard lines, Mr. Willett," said Hank Tims as he shook his
-fellow-prisoner's hand, "but one has to die sooner or later, and it
-should comfort you and me at this time to know that we can leave this
-world and stand in the presence of the Great Master and Chief of all,
-feelin' that we ain't never done anythin' that should bring a blush of
-shame to our cheeks nor a pang of regret to the friends as is left
-behind."
-
-"True, Hank, true," said Mr. Willett as he stroked his brow. "Since I
-have come to feel that my boy is dead, life has lost all its charms for
-me and death its terrors. What is there to live for since he is gone?
-Nothing!" and with a sigh of resignation Mr. Willett let his hands fall
-heavily by his side.
-
-Badger, judging by his conduct on this occasion, must have had no little
-experience in lynching affairs. He appeared before the prisoners with
-ropes, and as resistance would have been useless, Mr. Willett and Hank
-permitted the heartless wretch to tie their hands tightly behind their
-backs.
-
-This over, he went to the members of the vigilance committee, who were
-engaged in earnest conversation outside the tent.
-
-Having told them what he had done, Badger asked for instructions.
-
-"We're in a kind of a fix about this onpleasant business," said one.
-
-"Wot's the trouble?" asked Badger.
-
-"Thar ain't no trees big enough for the purpose within twenty miles of
-this," said the man.
-
-"Then why can't they be blindfolded and shot?" asked Badger.
-
-"'Coz the judge said to hang 'em."
-
-"Wa'al, I don't think thar'll be any trouble in gettin' him to change
-his mind," said Badger. "You see he must 'commydate the sentence to the
-place."
-
-The vigilance committee meant to do right, and they were determined to
-erect a scaffold on the cliff above the creek, and carry out the
-sentence as it had been ordered.
-
-By the time these preparations were completed the sun was well down the
-west.
-
-Another hour and darkness would fall upon the world and on the lives of
-the condemned men.
-
-With more thoughtfulness than might have been expected from men of their
-character, the crowd withdrew from the place in which the trial had been
-held, leaving Mr. Willett and Hank alone.
-
-It is not for us to attempt to describe the secret thoughts and feelings
-of the condemned men.
-
-They spoke but little.
-
-Once Hank looked about him and said:
-
-"I wonder what's become of Collins and Si Brill, they were kind to us,
-and I'd like to shake hands with them and thank them before the ind
-comes."
-
-"They must know how we feel toward them, Hank, and as to their absence,
-it is my belief that they have gone away to avoid witnessing the
-death--the murder of two innocent men that they are powerless to
-prevent," said Mr. Willett.
-
-"Yes, that must be it. Wa'al, I never saw a lynchin' nor took part in
-one, but I must confess I'd die a sight easier if I only knowed that
-them two critters, Badger and Shirley, was sure to meet up with the ind
-they deserve."
-
-"You may be sure, Hank, that justice will overtake them in the end.
-Standing as you are, on the edge of the grave, would you exchange places
-with either of these men?"
-
-"No, not if they was to throw in all the gold in the world to boot,"
-said Hank earnestly.
-
-"Then you see there is something which a good man dreads more than
-death, Hank."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Willett, it's a black character and a black heart."
-
-Hank had just uttered this when the flap of the tent was pushed aside
-and Badger entered, followed by a number of the committee.
-
-"Wa'al, gents," said Badger, "we're all ready."
-
-"And so are we," said Mr. Willett, as he and Hank rose to their feet and
-stood side by side.
-
-"This ain't pleasant work," said one of the committee with a face and
-manner that told he was heartily ashamed of his part in the business,
-"but it's got to be did."
-
-Neither Mr. Willett nor Hank made any reply.
-
-Badger and the members of the committee were all armed to the teeth, and
-forming about the prisoners, they marched them down to a platform that
-projected over the cliff and from the further end of which two ropes
-hung down.
-
-About this platform every man living in and about Hurley's Gulch,
-excepting Si Brill and Collins, had gathered, even Frank Shirley, weak
-and wicked, could not resist the temptation to see his cruel work
-completed.
-
-The ropes were made ready and the condemned men were told they could
-pray for five minutes.
-
-Instead of kneeling down both turned their faces to the setting sun, and
-in all that crowd no one was calmer than they.
-
-Suddenly the painful stillness was broken by a cry that came from the
-westward and the crowd, as one man turned in that direction.
-
-There, like a silhouette against the red face of the setting sun, they
-saw a lithe figure, in the picturesque garb of a Ute Indian bounding
-toward them.
-
-"It is Ulna!" some one shouted, "Ulna coming from the direction of the
-great canyon!"
-
-"Hold! hold! hold! for your lives!"
-
-This was shouted by a dozen stalwart horsemen, Collins and Si Brill in
-the lead, who came galloping to the place of execution from the east.
-
-As these men flung themselves from their saddles, Ulna, with compressed
-lips and flashing eyes bounded through the crowd.
-
-At a glance he took in the situation, and then in a voice that rang
-clear and high as a bugle blast along the cliffs he called out:
-
-"Sam Willett lives and he has the paper!"
-
-"And these men shall not die, if me and my friends can help it, and
-we're inclined to think we can!" thundered Collins, as he drew Mr.
-Willett and Hank back from the platform and severed the cords that bound
-their arms.
-
-"And my boy still lives?" cried Mr. Willett, as he reached out his hands
-to Ulna.
-
-"Yes, he lives; I left him this morning, and----"
-
-Mr. Willett heard no more.
-
-The resolute heart that could face death without a tremor, was all
-overcome by this joyous revelation, and he fell fainting to the ground.
-
-"That's a Ute lie!" hissed Badger, to whose side Frank Shirley had come,
-pale and trembling.
-
-While Hank and Si Brill were restoring Mr. Willett to consciousness,
-Collins called out:
-
-"We'll see if it's a lie. Come, Ulna, my boy, tell us all about it, and
-if any man tries to stop you I'll give him a chance to bite the end off
-my revolver."
-
-The coming of the young Ute, being unexpected, caused more of a
-sensation than the execution of the prisoners would have done.
-
-The mob with bated breath gathered about Ulna, and though he was wearied
-with his run of fifty miles over a rough, trackless country, he told the
-main points of his thrilling story in a way that convinced everyone of
-the truth of his report.
-
-For men to go down to death is an old story, but when those mourned for
-as dead appear in the flesh, even those not superstitious are inclined
-to wonder and to feel that a miracle has been performed.
-
-"Do you believe that young Indian's story?" asked Shirley after he had
-led Badger away from the crowd.
-
-"I am afraid it's true," said Badger.
-
-"Then we're beaten!" groaned Shirley.
-
-"Not yet."
-
-"What can be done, Badger?"
-
-"If young Sam is alive he will try to reach here."
-
-"Yes; there can be no doubt of that."
-
-"Then he should be met on the way."
-
-"By whom?"
-
-"By us."
-
-"If so, we should start at once."
-
-"Yes, Mr. Shirley, there is not a minute to spare. Let us get our horses
-and start as soon as it's dark," said Badger, with unusual
-determination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.--HOW IT FARED WITH SAM AND HIS FRIENDS.
-
-
-When darkness came, the night of Ulna's arrival at Hurley's Gulch, it
-found the camp excited about the existence of Tom Edwards'
-receipt--which it was claimed young Sam had--and, as a consequence the
-miners were divided as to the guilt or innocence of Mr. Willett and Hank
-Tims.
-
-Three-fifths of the men believed that the prisoners were fairly tried,
-justly condemned and that they should have been hanged.
-
-Indeed, these fellows felt that Collins, Si Brill and the men they had
-brought with them to prevent the execution were no better than a pack of
-outlaws.
-
-All the men at Hurley's Gulch carried pistols, as a matter of course,
-but now they armed themselves with rifles, for the purpose of destroying
-Collins and his friends, if they did not at once surrender the
-prisoners.
-
-From comparative peace the camp was plunged into a state of war, with
-rival factions ready to slay each other, in order that they might take
-or save the lives of Mr. Willett and Hank Tims.
-
-Leaving Hurley's Gulch to its enraged rival factions, let us turn to the
-west and see how it fared with Sam Willett and his friends.
-
-In the wild excitement of battle, soldiers, who hitherto may have
-secretly doubted their own courage, have been known to perform deeds of
-the most heroic valor, of which they retained not the slightest memory
-when the conflict was over.
-
-This was Sam's case.
-
-His manner of freeing Ulna was bold to the verge of madness; but the
-instant he saw the young Ute vanishing at the head of the rift, he
-forgot all about the manner by which his release had been effected.
-
-The anger of the chief, Blanco, was so great when he saw what Sam had
-done that he would have slain that daring youth without doubt had he not
-feared that in so doing he might lose his own life.
-
-"What you do them for?" roared the chief, as he pointed after the
-fugitive.
-
-"He was my friend," was all Sam could say, for by this time he had only
-the haziest conception of what he had actually done.
-
-"He was the foe of my tribe."
-
-"You did not know him."
-
-"You do me bad," said the enraged chief. "You take Ute's place. My
-people no stand what you do. I like be your friend. You friend of Ute's.
-No my friend."
-
-The chief snapped the fingers of both hands and turned to talk with his
-remaining braves.
-
-"Mistah Sam! Mistah Sam!" whispered Ike.
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"W'at you tink now?"
-
-"About what?"
-
-"'Bout de sitooation?"
-
-"I don't know," said Sam gloomily.
-
-"Tink we's in a bad box?"
-
-"If we are we must bear it."
-
-"Jest so; but somehow I'd like a change to good luck, jest to see how it
-feels like. 'Peers to me ez if we was nebber to hab no good times no
-more," and Ike rolled his eyes and sighed at a great rate.
-
-"W'at say me cookee blekfas'?" said Wah Shin, in whom the desire to be
-at work was stronger than his fear of the savages.
-
-"I don't think they'll let you cook," said Sam.
-
-"Den me tly. Dey say 'no,' den me stopee. Let 'em hab way."
-
-Wah Shin opened the bundle, took out the few remaining rabbits, and
-going over to the fire, he deliberately raked the coals and began to
-warm the decidedly simple breakfast.
-
-The Apaches offered no objections to the actions of the Chinaman, though
-they watched him with the eager curiosity of children at a circus.
-
-The Apaches make a bread from the pounded roots of the maguey or
-mountain aloe, of which they always carry a supply when on their war
-forays or hunting expeditions.
-
-This bread is sweet and nutritious, and that it will keep for a long
-time in its original state is shown by the fact that the recorder of
-these stirring incidents has still in his possession some of this bread,
-which he obtained in the mountains of Arizona fifteen years ago.
-
-The odor of the rabbits on the coals reached the nostrils of the chief,
-and it must have soothed his anger somewhat, for he spoke to his
-companions in the Apache tongue, and they at once pulled a lot of this
-bread from their buckskin haversacks--it resembled plugs of very black
-tobacco and tasted better than it looked--and they gave Sam, Ike and Wah
-Shin each a piece.
-
-"This is all the food we have left," said Sam, addressing the chief and
-pointing to the rabbits, "but we shall be glad to share with you, and if
-you guide us to Hurley's Gulch I will pledge my word that you shall have
-all I promised you before."
-
-The chief replied to this with a grunt that showed he was still far from
-feeling good-natured, still he proved that he was not only very hungry,
-but also very selfish, by devouring one of the four rabbits without
-asking any outside assistance.
-
-Ike witnessed this performance in open-eyed wonder, and he could not
-resist whispering to Sam:
-
-"I've seed a good many hogs in my time, but that ar Injun as went an'
-eat a hull rabbit all by hissel', is jest 'bout de biggest one I ebber
-sot my two eyes on. Dar, he ain't lef' noffin' but de bones."
-
-"When you no have more meat," said the chief, coming over and standing
-before Sam, while he cast a covetous look at Maj, "then I tell you what
-you do."
-
-"What?" asked Sam.
-
-"Don't you like the dog?"
-
-"Oh, yes," said Sam, thinking that the Indian who could like dumb
-creatures must have a kindly heart. "I am very fond of the dog."
-
-"Then why you no eat him?" asked Blanco.
-
-As Sam had never looked at Maj as something that might be eaten instead
-of being fed, he was not a little puzzled what to reply, still he
-managed to say, with an attempt at smiling:
-
-"That isn't the way I like the dog."
-
-"No," said Ike in a low voice, "we likes dog wid de ha'r on an' de bark
-in him."
-
-All unmindful of this discussion Maj went on eating the bones that had
-been thrown to him and looking as if he had room for a great many more
-than were in sight.
-
-After this very informal meal was over the chief gave an order to his
-own people and then told Sam that he and his friends must follow him.
-
-"Where to?" asked Sam.
-
-"We see, me don't know," was the surly reply.
-
-As there was no food left, Sam rolled up the blankets and throwing these
-and the saddle-bags containing the gold dust and the precious paper over
-his shoulder, started up the ravine.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin followed, the former clinging to his old shot-gun as if
-his life depended on it.
-
-Eight lithe Indians, none of them burdened with clothes or the world's
-goods, brought up the rear.
-
-On reaching the uplands the chief came to a halt, the others doing the
-same, and shading his eyes from the sun, he looked long and eagerly to
-the eastward.
-
-With a thrill of joy Sam saw that neither Ulna nor his pursuers were in
-sight, and well knowing the young Ute's powers as a runner, he had now
-no fears of his being overtaken.
-
-As if he understood what was passing in the white youth's mind, the
-chief said:
-
-"You know Ulna long time?"
-
-"Only a few months."
-
-"You like him heap?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"You make him free?"
-
-"I am glad I did," said Sam, boldly.
-
-"Then you take his place like same as he was here," said Blanco, with an
-angry glint in his eyes.
-
-"I do not understand."
-
-"If Ulna stay we kill him."
-
-"Yes," said Sam, feeling a cold chill and wondering what was coming
-next.
-
-"But Ulna get away."
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You help him."
-
-"I did."
-
-"Then you take Ulna's place. You all same like Ulna to us. We take you
-to Apaches, way off," and the chief waved his hands to the south where
-the purple peaks of the San Francisco range could be seen rising into
-the bluest of blue skies.
-
-"Would you kill a man because he loved his friend?" asked Sam with a
-calmness of manner that did not at all indicate his feelings.
-
-"When man's friend my foe--yes."
-
-"But Ulna would not do that."
-
-"You think so."
-
-"I am sure he would not."
-
-"Ha! you don't know Ute."
-
-"I know Ulna," persisted Sam.
-
-"Ulna he like take my scalp."
-
-"I am sure he would not hurt you unless it was to save his own life. The
-whites have taught him better."
-
-"The whites!" repeated the chief, with a grunt of contempt. "Oh, yes,
-the whites, heap fine the whites. They take all Apaches' land, kill his
-wife, kill him when he don't like it. Apache don't go to white man's
-land; why, then, he comes here we no send for him?"
-
-Sam saw that this was a mixed question to which the answer could not be
-truthfully given unless it agreed with the Indian's notion of right,
-still he said evasively:
-
-"All men do wrong at times, but all men should try to do right."
-
-"What is right? what is wrong? White man think one thing, Apache think
-another thing; no one know. Sit down on stone; I wait till braves come
-back with Ulna's scalp, then all leave."
-
-Without waiting for any comment, Blanco again snapped the fingers of
-both hands above his head, and turned away to show he did not care to
-discuss the subject further.
-
-This conversation took place near the point of rocks in which Sam and
-his friends had spent the previous night.
-
-On some of the outlying stones Ike and Wah Shin were seated, eagerly
-watching the chief, while their faces showed that they were taking
-anything but a hopeful view of the situation.
-
-"Mistah Sam, w'at you t'ink 'bout dis time?" asked Ike as he placed a
-blanket for his young master to sit on.
-
-"I hardly know what to think, Ike," was the reply.
-
-"Don't you t'ink we made a mistake?"
-
-"In what way, Ike?"
-
-"By comin' up out ob dat canyon."
-
-"Would you want to stay there forever?"
-
-"Wa'al, not adzackly; but if I had any choosin 'bout it I'd a heap sight
-rudder be dar dan heah. I neber did hab no use for a Injun nohow. Jest
-only tink, dey's been a-watchin' an' a-watchin' Maj, an' a-lickin' ob
-dar lips as if dey was feelin' how he tasted. But if dey gits away wid
-dat dog den dey'll hab to steal him whin dis yar chile's asleep," said
-Ike, and he reached out and pulled the dog nearer to him by means of a
-rope he had fastened about his neck.
-
-"Dogee, he no so belly bad fol to make eat. Way off Chinaland fat dogee
-allee same's nice lilly tulkey. Big man he like him muchee heap."
-
-"Wa'al," said Ike, with ludicrous contempt, "I tanks de Great Mastah I
-ain't a Injun or a Chinee. Dar's only two decent kind ob people; one's
-black, like me, de odder's w'ite like Mistah Sam. But," he added, with a
-sigh, "I don't go foh to blame no one jest kase dey's so unfortnit as
-not to be ob de right culah."
-
-Sam could not keep his mind on the very funny discussion which followed
-between Ike and Wah Shin, as to the merits of their respective races. He
-was thinking of his beloved father, and wondering if he still lived and
-was waiting for the paper that was to prove his innocence, by showing to
-the world that he could have had no possible motive for desiring the
-death of Tom Edwards.
-
-One, two, three hours passed and the fierce sun poured down a blistering
-heat on the bare rocks, till the hot air rose in shivering, shimmering
-waves, that distorted every object seen at any distance, and threw into
-the most fantastic shapes the hills that studded the wide plateau.
-
-Every few minutes Sam looked to the east, expecting the return of the
-braves who had gone in pursuit of Ulna, but it was not till the sun had
-been past the zenith more than an hour, that his keen gaze detected four
-figures--the mirage gave them the appearance of giant
-spectres--approaching at a deliberate pace.
-
-Blanco made the discovery about the same time, and at once sent a
-messenger to hurry up the pursuers. He did not need to be told that his
-braves had not been successful in their mission, for had they been
-returning with a scalp they would not have been so deliberate in their
-movements.
-
-When the braves were within a few hundred yards, Blanco ran out to meet
-them, and seeing that one of them was wounded he said:
-
-"Did the Ute win?"
-
-"He did," replied the wounded man. "An antelope could not have kept up
-with him had he put forth all his speed."
-
-"Yet, you came close enough to him to catch his bullet," said the
-puzzled chief.
-
-"Yes, and close enough to lose my scalp, if Ulna had cared to take it,"
-said the brave, with a candor but rarely manifested by a savage.
-
-In answer to the chief's desire to learn how this unusual event came
-about, the brave told frankly and truthfully the whole story, even to
-the conversation he had with Ulna before he left.
-
-This story evidently had a powerful effect on Blanco, for he stroked his
-forehead for some minutes, and then said:
-
-"The Utes are changing; the Apaches must change too. I will not harm the
-young white man who told me the truth."
-
-Turning, the chief strode quickly to the place where Sam was sitting and
-eagerly watching, and then extending his hand, he said with some feeling
-in his voice:
-
-"You no tell lie. Ulna is good. Ulna escape. I am glad in my heart, for
-he no take life one of my braves when he can."
-
-Sam could hardly credit his ears, but there was no mistaking the
-expression on the swarthy face, despite its half-covering of war paint,
-so he shook the chief's hand and said with a great sense of relief:
-
-"I told you the truth about Ulna, I tell you the truth about myself. Now
-guide me to Hurley's Gulch and I will pay you all I promised."
-
-For reasons which he did not state, the chief said he could not go to
-Hurley's Gulch, but he was willing to guide Sam part of the way there,
-and to take all the rifles and other weapons they had with them as part
-payment, the other things promised to be sent out to a certain point two
-days after the party reached the Gulch.
-
-These were certainly anything but generous terms, but as Sam was in no
-humor to press a close bargain, he agreed to them at once.
-
-There was not much preparation to be made. All the canteens were filled
-with water, and about the middle of the afternoon they began the march
-for Hurley's Gulch, which the chief said could be reached the next
-afternoon, though he would leave them in the morning.
-
-With a lighter heart than he had carried for many a day, Sam, with Ike,
-Wah Shin, and the dog following him in the order named, started off by
-the side of the chief.
-
-They moved so fast that by dark, when they went into camp in the bottom
-of a gulch where there was water, they had traveled at least twenty
-miles.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.--IN GREATER PERIL STILL.
-
-
-With the first glimmer of day the following morning all were awake, and
-a very light breakfast was made of the root bread, which the chief
-distributed with great fairness as far as it went.
-
-As Sam had agreed, he turned over to the chief the rifles, pistols,
-knives and blankets belonging to his party, keeping back only the
-canteens, which had been filled with water, and the saddle-bags.
-
-"I should like to borrow my own rifle from you," said Sam, after he had
-made the transfer, "for it is not safe to travel through this land
-without a weapon to defend one's self from foe or wild beasts. I shall
-return it when I send you the other things."
-
-"I let you have dis gun," said the chief, pointing to the old rusty
-shot-gun that had been the special object of Ike's care and the delight
-of his heart for so long.
-
-"Take her, Mistah Sam, take her," urged Ike. "Dar ain't anodder gun like
-her--no, not in all dis yar land."
-
-This was certainly the truth, yet "she" was rather an unreliable weapon
-to depend on in a trying emergency.
-
-"That is a shot-gun, no good to you or to me. Let me have my own rifle
-with some ammunition, and I pledge my life to send it back and six more
-equally good with it."
-
-"I tell you what I do," said the chief, after some deliberation and a
-good deal of whispering with his own people.
-
-"What?"
-
-"You got dog?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, you give me dog, I give you rifle."
-
-Sam had always been attached to Maj, and the adventures they had shared
-together made him even dearer, so that to lose him would be like parting
-with a friend; still, he knew that a sacrifice might have to be made.
-
-"What do you want with the dog?" he asked.
-
-"Eat him," grunted the chief.
-
-"I will give you the dog if you pledge me your word that you will not
-kill him for three days," said Sam, stooping and patting Maj on the
-head, while the faithful creature, in its turn, licked his hand.
-
-"But we no find game then we get hungry," said the chief.
-
-"You can find game. Agree to this, for the dog is my friend," said Sam
-with much feeling.
-
-"An' my frien', too," added Ike.
-
-"All right; I no kill for three days," said the chief.
-
-With this understanding Sam received his rifle and the belt containing
-his ammunition, and one of the Apaches fastened a cord about the dog's
-neck and dragged the reluctant creature to his own side.
-
-The chief pointed to a distant elevation--it looked to be only a few
-miles away, though it was actually thirty or more--and said:
-
-"That mountain back Hurley's Gulch. Go there. Keep north side. You find
-'em before dark. I come here three days. You bring all things, rifles,
-pistols, knives, and--and one more thing."
-
-"What is that?" asked Sam.
-
-"Heap tobacco, much lot whisky."
-
-"I will keep my promise," said Sam, who could not but feel that the
-Indian was decidedly "on the make."
-
-With this understanding Sam and his friends parted from the Apaches, and
-with their eager eyes fixed on the mountain that marked the site of
-Hurley's Gulch they hurried on.
-
-The thought that he should meet his father that night gave strength and
-elasticity to Sam's limbs and filled his heart with a hope that was
-thrilling in its ecstacy.
-
-He felt that their troubles were near an end, and that before the sun
-went down his father's innocence would be established, and the little
-band of Gold Cave Campers would be happily together once more.
-
-He walked with such a long, quick stride that Ike and Wah Shin could
-only keep up with him by breaking into a dog-trot, that made them puff
-with the exertion.
-
-"See h'ar, Mistah Sam!" called out Ike, after they had been traveling
-for two hours and the heat waves began to distort the landscape again.
-"Does yeh expeck a feller foh to run like a race-horse, w'en he ain't
-got nothin' in his inside but a bit ob dem dar roots? Foh de Lor', if
-you keeps up dis yar like all day, you'll fine yerself alone, foh dis
-chile's so holler he's nigh done gin out," and Sam came to a halt and
-wiped his perspiring face with his ragged coat-sleeve.
-
-"Me hungly allee same like Ike, but me no say any-tlings," said Wah Shin
-as he stood panting like a hunted hare.
-
-"I know, boys, that I've been hurrying more than I should in justice to
-you, but the thought that every step is taking me nearer to my father
-makes me forget how weary you must be," said Sam, his own brown face
-showing how the terrible pace told on him.
-
-"Mistah Sam, dar's a sight more reason w'y you should be tireder an'
-hungrier dan we," said Ike, the better part of his nature asserting
-itself, as it always did in an emergency. "But we'll git dar long afore
-dark widout so much hurryin', an' yer fadder'll be a heap sight more
-pleased if we all shows up fresh an' smilin', eben if we is so holler."
-
-Sam slackened his pace, but he was making fully four miles an hour when
-under way again.
-
-The water in their canteens became very warm in the blistering heat of
-that dry atmosphere, but they had to drink, and as a consequence their
-supply was exhausted by the middle of the afternoon.
-
-They had no food with them, and all were very hungry, but the prospect
-ahead made them forget their sufferings; for soldiers do not feel the
-pain of wounds received in the excitement of battle.
-
-Sam reasoned that two hours more would see them at Hurley's Gulch, and
-had so told his companions, when Ike called out:
-
-"Hello! Wat on earf is dem?"
-
-Sam turned in the direction pointed out by Ike, and to his amazement he
-saw the forms of four gigantic horsemen; but, instead of their riding
-along the solid earth, they appeared to be moving far up in the sky.
-
-All were familiar enough with the phenomena of this land to know that
-the riders were on the ground and that the spectral figures,
-representing them in the heavens had their origin in the mirage which is
-so frequent and delusive in this land.
-
-"Ulna has reached Hurley's Gulch, and those must be men who have come to
-search for us," said Sam after he had surveyed the figures for some
-seconds.
-
-About the same time the horsemen must have discovered Sam and his
-friends, for the giant figures could be seen pointing and waving their
-arms, while the monstrous horses plunged across the sky with mighty
-bounds.
-
-Again Sam hurried on till he came to a towering rock that commanded from
-its summit a view of the country round about.
-
-Up this he clambered, Ike and Wah Shin following him with great
-activity.
-
-On the summit of the rock there were a series of excavations, some of
-which were partly filled with water left there by the late storm.
-
-This water was comparatively cool, and after drinking till satisfied,
-Sam looked in the direction from which he expected the riders.
-
-To his surprise, they were only a few hundred yards away, and it did not
-need a second glance to convince him that one of these riders was Frank
-Shirley, and another was the man with one eye who had accompanied him on
-that day, that seemed so far away, to Gold Cave Camp.
-
-"Surely," he reasoned, "these would not be the men my father would send
-out from Hurley's Gulch to find me."
-
-Instinctively he felt that the presence of these men meant him no good,
-and he made up his mind not to place himself in their power till assured
-that they were friendly.
-
-The two horsemen with Frank Shirley and Badger were the landlord of the
-hotel at Hurley's, and a wretched creature of the same stripe who had
-been a partner and friend of Tom Edwards.
-
-"Halloo! Halloo, Sam Willett! We've come out to find you!" called out
-Shirley when he came within hearing distance.
-
-"Who sent you?" was Sam's salutation.
-
-"Your father."
-
-"How did he know I was here?"
-
-"Ulna told him."
-
-"Then why didn't he or Hank Tims come?"
-
-"There are good reasons why they could not get off, so we have come in
-their stead. Get down from the rocks; we've been searching for you since
-before daylight," said Shirley, as he and Badger dismounted from their
-horses not a hundred feet away.
-
-Slipping into one of the excavations so that he could see what was going
-on below without exposing himself, Sam called down:
-
-"Frank Shirley, my father never sent you to find me."
-
-"What! do you think Mr. Shirley's a-lyin'?" shouted Badger, at the same
-time unstringing his rifle and assuming a position as if about to fire.
-
-"Yes, I do," said Sam boldly.
-
-Badger would have fired, though Sam was out of sight had not Shirley
-laid his hand on his arm and said pleadingly:
-
-"Don't do that, Badger; you'll spill all the fat in the fire. That young
-fellow has a rifle, and he knows how to use it."
-
-Sam heard all this distinctly and he called out:
-
-"Yes, and I will use it if you fellows don't get back and mount your
-horses while I count ten. One, two, three, four----"
-
-Neither Shirley nor Badger waited to hear more, for as "one" was called
-out they saw the muzzle of a rifle pointing down at them from the top of
-the rock.
-
-With the alacrity of acrobats the two men scrambled into their saddles,
-and as they did so the word "Two!" rang out.
-
-"There, you see, we want to humor you, and if we were not friends we
-shouldn't do that," said Frank Shirley, trembling in voice and frame
-from his recent effort.
-
-Sam's reply showed that he had no faith in this.
-
-"My rifle is good for a half-mile. If you are within reach in ten
-minutes I'll begin to fire."
-
-"See h'ar, young feller," called out Badger, "do you know what I think
-of you?"
-
-"No, and I don't care."
-
-"I think you're a devil."
-
-"All right. Start, for the ten minutes have begun."
-
-The four men did start. It would have been nothing less than suicide,
-the landlord said, to remain there and be shot at, "more particlar whin
-there was no show to shoot back."
-
-Sullenly the men rode off, and when they had gone out of rifle-reach
-they came to a halt, and after much swearing all round, Shirley asked:
-
-"Well, gentlemen, what's to be done next?"
-
-"Nothing, till dark," said Badger.
-
-"And what then?"
-
-"Then we ken get at 'em."
-
-"But how?"
-
-"While two of us shoot at the front of the rock to attract 'em, two
-others can climb up behind and finish the job for good," said Badger.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.--IN A TRAP.
-
-
-From his lookout Sam kept a constant watch on the four horsemen, and he
-made up his mind from their movements that they were not going back
-without letting him hear from them again.
-
-"W'at you tink now, 'bout dis time?" asked Ike, who, with Wah Shin, had
-crept up from one of the excavations to Sam's side.
-
-"I think, Ike, that those men are not our friends," said Sam, pointing
-to the distant group.
-
-"Dat's jest how I feel. De worl' wouldn't be no wuss off if de earf was
-to open up an' swaller all dem men an' den come shut agin, like a
-rat-trap, Mistah Sam! Do you know what I tinks?"
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"W'en we wuz down in dem canyons, wif de watah all round us an' dem dar
-big rocks shootin' away up till dey 'peahed to go right frue de sky, den
-we tinked we wuz in a pooty bad fix, didn't we?"
-
-"So we did, Ike."
-
-"An' den again, w'en we fell in wif dem savage Injuns an' it appeahed as
-ef dey was bound to hab our skelps, den we tinked as how we wuz in a
-heap sight wuss fix'n eber?"
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"An' we kinder wished we wuz back in de canyons?"
-
-"That is true."
-
-"Wa'al, does yeh know w'at I tinks now?"
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"Dat a mean w'ite man is a heap sight meaner dan a mean Injun----"
-
-"My opinion exactly."
-
-"An' dat if I had my choice to be in de comp'ny ob dem four men off dar,
-or away back wif dem bar-legged 'Paches, as is so powahful fond ob dorg,
-w'y, I'd go wif de 'Patches ebery time, an' feel might tankful foh de
-hobertunity."
-
-"I agree with you, Ike."
-
-"But w'at's to be did?"
-
-"We must wait."
-
-"An' starve?"
-
-"We can't get anything to eat here, Ike."
-
-"If we could get suffin' to eat de place'd be a sight pleasanter. I
-nebber could feel brave w'en I was feelin' holler at de same time," and
-Ike tightened his belt, and rapped himself on the outside to show he was
-very much in the condition of a drum.
-
-"Bime by, light way soon we hab night, sun go down, see," said Wah Shin,
-pointing to the west where a crimson flush marked the spot where the sun
-had set.
-
-With great anxiety Sam saw the shadows settling over the landscape.
-
-He was now convinced that these men came to do him a harm, and he
-resolved not to let them come near him while he had a shot left in his
-rifle, or he was able to pull a trigger.
-
-He felt this delay more keenly than he had all the obstacles that beset
-his course since he left Gold Cave Camp to reach his father.
-
-By a perilous and round about way he had come, and when within a few
-miles of the objective point for which he had struggled so bravely, he
-found himself stopped by men, who, according to all the laws of
-humanity, should have been his protectors and friends.
-
-It was much like a brave swimmer's sinking within touch of shore, or a
-starving man's hand falling helpless by his side when just within reach
-of food.
-
-But Sam Willett had the courage and the devotion that obstacles could
-not weaken nor sufferings ever change.
-
-With every trial he grew stronger, more determined to reach the father,
-who was nearly always in his thoughts, and never for an instant absent
-from his heart.
-
-To add to the trials of the situation night was coming, and under its
-cover Sam was now convinced that these men would try to make their way
-to the top of the rock on which he and his faithful companions had found
-a refuge.
-
-"I've heerd tell o' war," groaned Ike, "an' I've seed men as fit an'
-fout, but thar wasn't none of 'em as eber got cornered as we is now. If
-I wasn't so awful holler I'd kneel down and pray, for if de good Lor'
-wants to help us He'll neber hab a bettah chance."
-
-"Don't lose heart, Ike. Help will come in good time," said Sam, with a
-cheeriness of manner that did not at all indicate his actual feelings.
-
-"I no cannee see how help him can gettee to us, but I no cale. Only can
-die one time," said Wah Shin, with the stolidity of bearing and that
-indifference to death which so often distinguishes the Mongolian.
-
-"These men," said Sam, pointing in the direction of the enemy, "knew we
-were out here before they left Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"It do seem bery much dat way," said Ike, with a sad shake of the head.
-Then he added: "But I don't see how dey could hab knowed."
-
-"Can't you think of one way, Ike?"
-
-"No, Mistah Sam; foh de life ob me I can't."
-
-"Have you forgotten Ulna?"
-
-"Ulna!" exclaimed Ike.
-
-"Yes; there is no doubt in my mind as to his safety. He has reached
-Hurley's Gulch, and those men, my father's enemies, have come out, on
-the strength of Ulna's information, to stop us."
-
-"But why don't some ob our friends show up? Dat's w'at gits me," said
-Ike, and he rubbed his head vigorously with both hands, as if he might
-in this way excite his brain into better action.
-
-The question asked by Ike had presented itself to Sam before, but as he
-could not answer it he did not let it annoy him. Speculation and action
-do not work in harmony.
-
-While it was yet sufficiently light, Sam Willett, like a careful soldier
-examining the field on which a life and death struggle is about to take
-place, looked over the rock on which they had found refuge and saw its
-weak points as well as its advantages.
-
-He walked boldly about within sight of the enemy, and the wonder is that
-they did not risk a shot at him. They certainly would have done so had
-they not agreed to try the effect of strategy before attempting force.
-
-It did not take Sam long to discover that the summit of the rock was
-accessible on one side only, and so he very wisely reasoned that that
-was the only side to be defended in the event of a night attack.
-
-He reasoned further that a rock so conspicuous in the landscape and
-known to have water on its top must be well known to every one
-acquainted with that land. Indeed, there was evidence all about him that
-the place had been frequently visited and used as a camping-ground by
-Indians and miners, and the chances were that Frank Shirley's companions
-knew the way to the top.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin were without arms, but it did not take Sam long to
-discover how their strength and courage could be utilized in defending
-the position.
-
-Scattered over the crest of the rock there were a great many irregular
-pieces of yellow sandstone, weighing from a few ounces to fifty pounds,
-or more, and, properly handled these stones would make very effective
-ammunition.
-
-People whose hands and brains are occupied do not feel trouble like
-those who have nothing to do but to think over their woes.
-
-The instant Sam stated his purpose to Ike and Wah Shin, their faces
-brightened and they went to work with a spirit and energy that made them
-forget, for the time, that they were very hungry.
-
-They piled the stones four feet high across the narrow turn, up which
-their assailants must come, and in addition they placed a great heap
-within reach to be used as ammunition.
-
-By the time these preparations were made, it was quite dark, but the
-snorting and tramping of uneasy horses and the hoarse voices of men in
-the distance, told Sam that the enemy were still close by.
-
-"Mistah Sam," whispered Ike, unable longer to stand the strain in
-silence.
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"How does yeh feel 'bout dis time?"
-
-"All right--considering."
-
-"Not so hungry as yeh was, eh?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Dat's same's me. My heart's beatin' so dat I don't feel so holler----"
-
-"You heap skee-at," grunted Wah Shin.
-
-"Yes, an' I ain't 'shamed to say I is; but if it comes to chuckin' down
-rocks, you'll see I ken work harder'n you, Wah Shin," said Ike, with
-spirit.
-
-"Mebbe yes. Mebbe no. Me chuckee rocks w'en Meest Sam he say, 'You go
-in, Wah.' Me no blag."
-
-"Hist!" interrupted Sam. "Keep silence. They are coming nearer."
-
-On the instant Ike and Wah Shin became as silent as the grave, and
-hugged closer to the surface of the rock, but they could hear their own
-hearts beating like war-drums, and they would not have been at all
-surprised if told that the men down below could hear them, too.
-
-It was a trying moment, but Sam was equal to the occasion. His ready
-rifle was protruding through an opening in the wall that commanded the
-approach. Ike stood at his right hand and Wah Shin on his left, each
-ready to hurl down the stones on their assailants, when their young
-commander gave the word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.--A BRIEF TRUCE AND WHAT FOLLOWED IT.
-
-
-After a painful wait, Sam heard voices under the rock, and he braced
-himself for the expected assault.
-
-The men were evidently consulting, and one was in favor of attacking at
-once, while the others advised "strategy;" this was the one word that
-came distinctly to Sam's ears.
-
-At length, Shirley, who was in favor of strategy, stepped back from
-under the rock and called up:
-
-"Hello! hello! up there!"
-
-"Hello, down there!" was Sam's response.
-
-"Is that you, Sam Willett?"
-
-"It is."
-
-"I want to talk with you."
-
-"Talk away, I am listening."
-
-"Do you know me?"
-
-"No, I don't, and what's more I don't want to," said Sam, with a ring of
-firmness in his voice that surprised and angered his questioner.
-
-"I am your friend, your cousin," said Shirley.
-
-"You are Frank Shirley?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Late of Detroit?"
-
-"Yes, Sam, that's me."
-
-"Well, Frank Shirley, late of Detroit, you may be my cousin, but you are
-not my friend."
-
-"But why shouldn't I be?"
-
-"Because you are not a gentleman."
-
-"That young feller up there," said Badger, with an oath, "ought to be
-tarred and feathered and then set on fire and shot at. And if I ever get
-my hands on him, I'll----"
-
-"Don't," interrupted the landlord, "you'll kick all the fat into the
-fire. Let Mr. Shirley talk to the boy; he'll get in fine work, if you
-only keep your mouth shut."
-
-Badger gave vent to his feelings by a series of savage growls, and
-Shirley, after much coughing to ease his nervousness, proceeded to carry
-out his strategy.
-
-"See here, Sam Willett!"
-
-"Go on, I hear," was the response.
-
-"I don't mean you any harm."
-
-"And you sha'n't do me any, if I can help it," said Sam.
-
-"If you look away off to the east, you can see lights."
-
-"I know that."
-
-"Do you know where those lights are?"
-
-"I think I do."
-
-"Where?"
-
-"At Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"Your father is there----"
-
-"I am glad to hear it."
-
-"And he is very sick."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Because I saw him in a bad fix to-day."
-
-"See here, Shirley, tell me at once what you want," said Sam, in his
-spirited way.
-
-"I want to take you to your father; he's been heart-broken, thinking you
-were dead; so come down, and I pledge you my honor as a gentleman that I
-will take you to Hurley's Gulch," said Shirley, in accents intended to
-be reassuring and soothing.
-
-"Your honor as a gentleman?" repeated Sam with a ring of sarcasm.
-
-"Yes, that's what I said."
-
-"And we'll let you three young fellers ride our horses," added the
-landlord.
-
-"And you will also pledge your honor, as a gentleman, to do that?" said
-Sam.
-
-"Oh, I'll swear to it," said the landlord.
-
-"Thanks, but the security being false and worthless, I must decline your
-offer," said Sam, surprised at his own coolness and his ready command of
-language.
-
-"Then you won't come down?" from Shirley.
-
-"Thanks, not to-night."
-
-"Sam Willett!"
-
-"Yes; Frank Shirley!"
-
-"Are you crazy?"
-
-"No, I'm mad; and you'll find I'm dangerous if you bother me further,"
-said Sam stoutly.
-
-"See har, young feller," shouted Badger. "If you don't want us to save
-you, do you know what we'll do next?"
-
-"I don't."
-
-"Why, we'll get mad, too----"
-
-"I don't care."
-
-"And," continued Badger, his voice choking with anger, "we'll go up thar
-and fotch you down; and if so be you git hurt, it'll be yer own fault."
-
-"Hurt?" from Sam.
-
-"Yes, and hurted purty bad, too."
-
-"What's your name?"
-
-"My name's Badger. I'm a terror, I am. I was nussed on blizzards, and
-rocked by tornadoes. I live on rattlesnakes and horned toads, and when
-I'm riled its wuss nor a earthquake. Now you are gettin' my dander riz,
-so come down, for if I have to climb up after you, you'll git hurt."
-
-Badger certainly thought that this fierce speech would have a most
-depressing effect upon the youth in command of the rock, great therefore
-was his anger and disappointment when he received this reply.
-
-"Before I am hurt some one else will be in the same fix, for I and my
-companions propose to defend ourselves."
-
-"But why defend yourselves," said Shirley, "when we mean you nothing but
-good."
-
-"I do not care to give my reasons; but I'll tell you what I've been
-thinking ever since I started to reach Hurley's Gulch."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"That you and the one-eyed ruffian who travels with you are the cause of
-all my father's troubles----"
-
-"That's a lie!" roared Badger.
-
-Sam continued as if he had not heard the interruption.
-
-"And I believe it was you two who killed that wretch, Tom Edwards, in
-order to get us into a scrape--yes, to get us out of the way. Now get
-back, or come on, just as you please."
-
-Sam said this in a way that convinced the man below that his resolution
-could not be shaken, and that any attempt to oust him from his
-stronghold by force would be met with resistance to the death.
-
-"That young devil up thar's a chip of the old block," hissed Badger.
-"Why, cuss him, he talks jist like his father. Do you know what my
-opinion of them two is, Mr. Shirley?"
-
-"What?"
-
-"That they're the hardest, toughest cases I've met up with in my
-five-and-forty years of mixin' among all classes. Sich people hadn't
-ought to be let live among decent folks."
-
-"I've seed boys in my time, hundreds and thousands of 'em," said the
-disgusted landlord, "but that young feller up on top of that rock, for
-downright gall and bitterness, and bull-headedness, lays over anything I
-ever saw, heard or red of."
-
-"It is evident to me that Sam Willett will fight; now what are we to
-do?" asked Shirley in despair, for all prospect of succeeding by
-"strategy" was gone.
-
-"We must carry out my plan," said Badger.
-
-"What's that?"
-
-"We've got to go back to first principles, jist as I supposed we would
-when you got talkin' 'bout mildness and strategy----"
-
-"Explain yourself, Badger."
-
-"You and me must face the music, Mr. Shirley."
-
-"Face the music?" stammered Shirley.
-
-"Yes, thar's nothin' else to be did."
-
-"Explain yourself, Badger."
-
-"You and me must creep up the rock on the other side, while Jake and Ned
-stand off to the east and keep up a fire on the top, so as to distract
-attention from the p'int we're after. Do you see?"
-
-Shirley said he saw very clearly; but from his manner it was very
-evident he did not look with approval on this plan of assault.
-
-Physically and morally Frank Shirley was a coward, and though he tried
-to hide this fact from others, he could not hide it from himself.
-
-But even cowards will fight desperately for their lives, and all
-Shirley's future, if not his very existence, depended on the success of
-this monstrous undertaking.
-
-If he failed, then he was an impoverished outcast with the stain of
-murder on his soul, though all the chances were that if Sam Willett was
-permitted to reach Hurley's Gulch, the vigilantes would arrest himself
-and Badger for the death of Tom Edwards.
-
-Quickly he looked over the situation, and his cowardly heart took on a
-show of courage; it was the courage of desperation, as he realized how
-much depended on his conduct this night.
-
-"I can't say that I'm much of a fighter, having had no experience that
-way," said Shirley with a tremor in his voice. "But, Badger, if you lead
-the way, I'll follow to the end. We must finish this job to-night."
-
-"If we don't it'll finish us," said Badger grimly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.--A NIGHT BATTLE.
-
-
-Sam was astonished when he heard the rifles banging away on the east
-side of the rock.
-
-He had been looking for a direct attack and so could not understand this
-move.
-
-"What can they mean; they are certainly bad, but they are not such
-downright fools as to think they can do us any harm from that quarter,"
-said Sam, thinking aloud rather than asking for the opinion of his
-companions.
-
-"Mistah Sam."
-
-"Yes, Ike."
-
-"I ken hear de bullets a whistlin' ober head, an' it do 'peah ez ef dey
-was comin' lower down."
-
-"W'at mattle if dey no comee low nuff down to hult? Let 'em singee,
-lat's alle lite," grunted Wah Shin, as he crouched closer to the rock,
-and hugged to his breast a big stone, which he intended to use to the
-best advantage when the proper time came.
-
-Sam Willett was by instinct a soldier.
-
-This useless attack had a purpose in it, and he was not long in reaching
-a right conclusion.
-
-To encourage Ike and Wah Shin, he gave them the benefit of his
-reasoning.
-
-"That firing, off there, is all a dodge," he said.
-
-"Tink dey're shootin' foh fun, Mistah Sam?"
-
-"No, Ike, they are in dead earnest, but their object is to take our
-attention away from the point of danger."
-
-"De odder side."
-
-"Yes; the attack will be made along the trail leading from the ground to
-the top of the rock, and we must be prepared for it," said Sam.
-
-Nothing could be gained by heeding the riflemen.
-
-All his sight and strength must now be used to watch and guard the only
-ascent by which their position could be reached without the highest
-scaling ladders, and of such mechanical appliances there was no danger.
-
-Sam placed Ike and Wah Shin in position again, and whispered to them not
-to hurl a stone till he gave the word.
-
-This done he brought his rifle to a half cock, and making sure that his
-cartridges were within reach, he knelt down with the muzzle of his gun
-covering the trail.
-
-The dry, still air carried every sound.
-
-Though Badger and Shirley moved with the stealth of Indians, yet their
-labored breathing, and, now and then, the fall of their feet came to
-Sam's ears.
-
-He was sure he could hear two men whispering under the rocks. He took a
-firmer hold of his rifle and tried to look through the intense darkness
-that covered the route by which the attack must be made.
-
-The strain of that long wait was more trying to strength and courage
-than would have been a prompt attack.
-
-Five, ten, fifteen minutes passed, and still the riflemen to the east
-kept up their desultory, but harmless firing.
-
-The darkness that added to the difficulties of the defense, was not a
-great advantage to the attacking party.
-
-Badger was in the advance, groping with his hands for the trail, and not
-daring to strike a light, for fear of making it the target for Sam.
-
-"Keep close behind," whispered Badger to Shirley, who, as they crept on,
-showed a decided disposition to lag to the rear.
-
-"Have you found the trail, Badger?"
-
-"I think so."
-
-"Is it steep?"
-
-"Hist, man, don't talk, but foller close up. Here's the place where we
-begin to climb. Mind, it's no fool of a job to get to the top at the
-best of times," said Badger, as he began the ascent on hands and knees.
-
-Shirley, trembling in every limb, came close after, his fears somewhat
-allayed by the comforting thought that Badger's huge form would shield
-him from any bullets that might be fired down.
-
-Sam was on the alert. The sounds about the place died out, and the
-stillness added to the painful intensity of the situation.
-
-Unable longer to control his feelings, Ike bent down and whispered:
-
-"Say, Mistah Sam."
-
-"What is it, Ike?"
-
-"Dis yar's gittin' ticklish."
-
-"Yes; be still."
-
-Unmindful of this injunction, Ike continued:
-
-"Somet'ing got to be did mighty soon, or dis chile can't stan' de
-strain."
-
-"Wait."
-
-"But it's time to heab de rocks."
-
-"Not till I give the word."
-
-"But as I'm a sinner I can heah 'em!"
-
-"Where?"
-
-"Right close by----"
-
-Ike's sentence, was cut short by the flash and crack of a pistol fired
-by a man not twenty feet away.
-
-With a "spat" the bullet splintered against the rocks a few feet above
-Sam's head.
-
-The time for immediate action had come.
-
-"Now, boys!" shouted Sam, in ringing tones.
-
-By the flash of his own rifle he saw the forms of two men on the trail
-outside the wall he had thrown up.
-
-With the strength of desperation, Ike and Wah Shin rose to their feet
-and began hurling stones into the path, while Sam fired as rapidly as he
-could throw shells into the breech of his rifle.
-
-In less time than it takes to record the act, the defenders knew that
-the assault had been a failure.
-
-Oaths, groans and the crashing of bodies, two score feet below, told
-that Badger and Shirley did not retreat of their own volition, but in
-accordance with the one law which they could not violate, viz.:
-gravitation.
-
-Cries for help went up from the base of the rock, and the two men who
-had been indulging in harmless rifle practice hastened to the relief of
-their less fortunate companions.
-
-"Hello, boys, any one hurt?" asked one.
-
-"Hurt!" groaned Badger. "They've done for me."
-
-"Oh, I guess not. Let us get a light and see how things is," said the
-landlord.
-
-"Don't make a light," protested Shirley.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because they'll fire at it."
-
-"No, but go up and clean them fellows out. I could die happy if I knowed
-you'd cleaned 'em out," gasped Badger.
-
-"Wa'al," said the landlord, "you can't expect me to go up there and try
-to do anything after the fist you two have made of it. I don't mind
-anything in reason, but that's axin' a leetle too much."
-
-"Something must be done, and at once," said Frank Shirley.
-
-"What do you want done?" asked the landlord, already heartily sick of
-the undertaking.
-
-"I am hurt as well as Badger."
-
-"Sorry for that."
-
-"And you two must help us on our horses and get us away from here."
-
-"Of course we'll stick by you," said the landlord. "But atween you and
-me and the rock, Mr. Shirley, I kinder think, perhaps, it mout be
-better, if so be you steered cl'ar of Hurley's Gulch for awhile----"
-
-The man stopped suddenly, his attention being attracted by the barking
-of a dog in the distance.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.--TO THE RESCUE.
-
-
-Badger and Shirley were carried from under the rock, but when it came to
-lifting them on the horses it was found that they were too much injured
-to ride.
-
-"Thar ain't no use in my tryin' it," groaned Badger. "I can't sit in the
-saddle."
-
-"Then what's to be did?" asked the landlord.
-
-"Hide me away, and when daylight comes send some of the boys after me
-with a stretcher."
-
-"That'd never do," protested the landlord.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Coz, if you was to git back to the Gulch at this time all the chances
-is they'd make you stretch hemp. Fact is, ole feller, you and Shirley
-here has played your last keerds, and I'm downright sorry to say the
-game has gone agin you in a most surprisin' bad way."
-
-"Don't leave me!" whined Shirley. "Take care of me and I'll pay you your
-own price."
-
-"Oh, that's all right," said the landlord, who, with his companion, had
-placed the two men side by side on their saddle blankets and left with
-them two canteens. "But the barkin' of that dog comes nearer and nearer,
-and I don't like it. Keep a stiff upper lip and I'll send out and see
-how you are after sun-up."
-
-With this promise the landlord and his companion, with an eye single to
-their own safety, mounted their horses and rode away.
-
-The barking of the dog, coming from the west, was also heard by Sam and
-his friends.
-
-"I tink dlat no dogee. Dlat a wolf," said Wah Shin.
-
-"Wolf!" repeated Ike with fine scorn. "That's no wolf. Heah him! Jist
-lissen, Mistah Sam! Ain't dat music, an' can't yeh make it out?"
-
-"I hear it, Ike," said Sam, "and the animal is evidently running fast
-and coming this way."
-
-"It's Maj! It's deah ole Maj!" shouted Ike, and in his excitement he
-dashed against the wall, and with a roar like Niagara the rocks went
-thundering down the trail.
-
-Sam heard the two horsemen galloping away, but as he could not tell
-whether they were retreating or going after reinforcements he determined
-not to abate his vigilance so long as there was a sign of danger.
-
-Again he heard something clambering up the rocks, and he was on the
-point of firing, when a short, joyous bark rang out, and the next
-instant Maj was in their midst.
-
-The faithful creature was nearly exhausted by his long run, for he had
-escaped from the Apaches, but he had strength enough left to show his
-joy at the meeting.
-
-He leaped at Sam, and after licking his face and hands he turned and,
-with commendable impartiality, bestowed the same attention on the
-others.
-
-Ike actually cried for joy, and he made an effort to take the dog in his
-arms, but when the first greetings were over Maj, half dead with hunger
-and thirst, discovered that there was water near by, and without any
-thought of the propriety of his conduct he plunged in and lapped till
-his parched skin was full.
-
-"Oh, if Ulna was only heah now," cried Ike, "we'd be all togedder agin
-an' as happy as a--as a darkey in ripe watah millyon time!"
-
-Sam was confident that Ulna had reached Hurley's Gulch, and this thought
-gave him so much comfort that he did not wonder why his friend had not
-come to his relief, for he well knew that the Indian youth would do
-everything that lay in his power, and he was right in this surmise.
-
-The coming of Ulna had not only saved the lives of two men, but it had
-also caused a revolution in the minds of a majority of the people living
-at Hurley's Gulch.
-
-To be sure, there were some who did not believe the Indian youth, and
-who were satisfied in their own minds that Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-should be hanged, and that they would be, sooner or later; but these
-fellows found themselves in the minority and only whispered their
-belief.
-
-Mr. Willett and Hank Tims were still under guard, for the promised proof
-of their innocence was not at hand; but Si Brill and Collins, now the
-most prominent men in the camp, felt that the end they hoped for was
-very near.
-
-Ulna, after being refreshed with food, kept his eyes open, and he was
-the first to discover that Badger, Shirley and the others had left
-Hurley's Gulch.
-
-He at once sought out Collins and said to him:
-
-"I saw the four men ride away."
-
-"But men are ridin' away and a-ridin' in all the time," said Collins,
-who not being at all suspicious saw no harm in the act.
-
-"True, Collins; but I am sure these men mean harm to Sam Willett."
-
-"Nonsense."
-
-"It is the truth."
-
-"But you left Sam in the hands of them onary 'Paches, didn't you?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Then how can Badger get at him?"
-
-"The Apaches say they are not at war with the whites----"
-
-"I don't take no stock in them or their sayin's," said Collins.
-
-"But they are at peace, else they would have killed Sam at once. As it
-is they will either rob him and turn him loose, or else hold him for a
-reward."
-
-"Well?" said Collins reflectively.
-
-"And if Badger and his gang meet the Apaches and pay the reward, then
-they will have Sam Willett in their power----"
-
-"Hold!" cried Collins. "I see it all! Once in their power they will kill
-the boy and get the receipt Tom Edwards gave when he was paid for the
-mine. Then the dogs can come back here and defy us. We must move to the
-rescue, Ulna! We must move at once!"
-
-Accompanied by Ulna, Collins went to Si Brill and others of his friends,
-and after warning them to say nothing to Mr. Willett, he told them of
-his fears for Sam and urged the necessity of getting out a rescuing
-party at once, which he was ready to lead "if no one else didn't offer."
-
-At this time there were not many horses in camp, and unfortunately
-nearly all were owned by the men who had been so bitter against Mr.
-Willett.
-
-It was after midnight when Collins succeeded in getting three horses and
-a mule; they belonged to Mr. Willett and this limited the rescuing party
-to four, one of whom was Ulna, who went along as a guide, though all
-knew he could be depended on if there were serious work on hand.
-
-About two hours before day they came face to face with the landlord and
-his companion.
-
-"Where have you fellers been?" demanded Tom Collins.
-
-"I don't know that it's any of your business," was the landlord's reply,
-"but I don't mind sayin' that we went out to see if thar was any Injuns
-in sight. For one, I didn't take any stock in that young Ute's story."
-
-"Wa'al," said Collins, "there's plenty of better men than you--and I'm
-one of 'em, that do believe the Ute. Now what have you done with Badger
-and Shirley?"
-
-"They left us 'bout dark; if you want them you must hunt 'em for
-yourself. I ain't no one's dog," growled the landlord.
-
-"The man that had you for his dog might count on bein' bit, but I reckon
-we ken find out all we want without yer help. Go back to the Gulch and
-pack yer traps, for it's my 'pinion it'll be very hot there in a day or
-two for dogs of your breed," said Collins as he shook his bridle and
-rode on.
-
-Meantime Sam, ignorant of the doings of friends and foe, kept watch on
-the summit of the rock.
-
-He was completely "played out," and it was only by a strong effort of
-will and a constant change of position that he kept from sinking down
-and going to sleep like his companions.
-
-As soon as the gray dawn began to make distant objects visible Sam awoke
-Ike and Wah Shin.
-
-Sleep had only brought a temporary cessation from the pangs of hunger,
-but the brave fellows made no complaint.
-
-Ike, always on the lookout, was the first to discover horsemen in the
-distance, coming from the direction of Hurley's Gulch.
-
-"It 'peahs to me powahful like's ef Ulna is one ob dem yar men," said
-Ike.
-
-He was not mistaken.
-
-On came the riders at a gallop.
-
-In the advance rode Ulna.
-
-As soon as they caught sight of Sam they waved their hats and sent up a
-thrilling cheer.
-
-[Illustration: _Sam and Ike discover the horsemen coming to their
-rescue._]
-
-Even the horses caught the spirit of their riders, and plunged into a
-faster gallop, till they came to a halt under the towering rock which
-Sam had defended so gallantly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.--SAM'S DEVOTION IS REWARDED.
-
-
-"Hello!" shouted Collins, as he and his companions dismounted and looked
-up at the three famished people on the rock. "How did you three gents
-and the dog git up thar?"
-
-It was evident from this question that Collins was not acquainted with
-the rock.
-
-"On the other side," said Sam.
-
-"All right; we'll find the way and come up."
-
-"Better save the trouble," said Sam. "We'll come down, and glad we are
-of the chance."
-
-"Glad!" cried Ike; "dat word don't nigh begin foh to 'spress dis yar
-chile's feelin's. I'ze full, chuck full ob downright bliss, I is. Come
-along, Maj and Wah, foh it does seem powahful like's ef de trouble had
-jest 'bout come to an ind."
-
-Down over the ruin of the wall they clambered, and at the foot stood
-Ulna--the faithful.
-
-The Indian may be a stoic under suffering, but there are no people in
-the world so ready to give expression to joy, nor so demonstrative where
-the better impulses of the heart are called out.
-
-"Sam! Sam! My friend, thank God you are safe!" cried Ulna, and his eyes
-looked larger and blacker for their tears as he caught his friend to his
-breast and kissed him first on one cheek and then on the other.
-
-Ike and Wah Shin shook hands with every one again and again, and then
-they jointly performed a joy-dance, in which the dog joined, to the
-music of his own glad barking.
-
-"Looks like's ef you'd been corralled up thar," said Collins, looking up
-at the defense and down at the red stains on the stones at the bottom.
-
-"We have that," replied Sam, and then briefly and with characteristic
-modesty, he told of the fight of the night before.
-
-"And the paper," said Collins; "the receipt Tom Edwards said he didn't
-give yer father?"
-
-"I've got it here," said Sam, pointing to the saddle-bags slung over his
-shoulder.
-
-"Wa'al, I felt most sure it'd turn up. But what became of Badger and
-Shirley?"
-
-"I think they were hurt, but I hope not badly," said Sam.
-
-"Some one's hurt, and purty bad, too," said one of Collins' men.
-
-"How do you know that, Jack?"
-
-"Jest look over thar, Collins," said the man, pointing to a wall some
-distance off, at the side of which two men appeared to be sleeping.
-
-On the instant all went over, and they discovered Shirley and Badger.
-
-The former was dead, but an examination showed that he had received no
-wound that would account for his demise.
-
-"No, boys," groaned Badger, "he wasn't hurt much at all, but I was the
-feller that suffered."
-
-"Then how did Shirley come to die?" asked Collins.
-
-"Die! Coz, he was a coward."
-
-"What do you mean, Badger?"
-
-"He said the game was up, so he took poison to finish hisself."
-
-"Poison!" exclaimed all.
-
-"Yes, poison. He wanted me to take some, too, but I'd rather hang. Look
-round and you'll find the thing that held it."
-
-The searchers did not have far to look, for clasped in the dead man's
-right hand they found a small vial with a death's head and cross-bones
-on the label, which contained the legend, in red letters, "Sulph.
-Morphia."
-
-"Badger."
-
-"Yes, Collins."
-
-"What brought you fellows out here?"
-
-"Can't you guess?"
-
-"I can, but I'd rather you'd tell me."
-
-"And you won't think no harder of me for it."
-
-"Badger," replied Collins, "I can't think of anything you could
-do--unless you chanced to be decent--that would make me think any
-different of you than I do now."
-
-"Wa'al, I reckon I ain't got long to live, so I'll tell the downright
-truth for once----"
-
-"What is it?"
-
-"Shirley, Jake and another feller came out with me to do for young
-Willett, but we didn't connect. Thar, that's all I'll say at present,"
-and Badger closed his eyes and looked to be as dead as the man lying by
-his side.
-
-"Men that starts out to make the life-path hard for other folks," said
-Collins, with much feeling in his voice, "generally fetches up with a
-short turn themselves, and falls into the pit dug for others. Now, boys,
-what's best to be did next?"
-
-"Thar's nothin' to be did," said the man who had spoken before, "but to
-sarch the body and then bury it. This is as good a place as back at the
-Gulch. When we've did that we'll tote Badger 'long with us and let him
-tell his story."
-
-As this advice seemed good, it was acted on at once.
-
-After taking from the pockets such valuables and papers as might cast
-light on his own life, or be sent to his friends, the men scraped out a
-grave with their knives, and in it they laid the body of the man who had
-ruined himself in trying "to make the life-path hard for other folks."
-
-When preparations were being made for the return to Hurley's Gulch,
-Badger--who evidently thought he was to be left there--lost all the
-coarse spirit that once characterized him, and he whined:
-
-"Oh, don't leave me out here to the wolves, boys. Take me to the Gulch
-with you and I'll confess all."
-
-"We'll tote you back, never fear," said Collins. "We ain't the kind of
-men that like to see sufferin', even if it's deserved."
-
-The horses of Shirley and Badger were found near by. One of these was
-given to Sam, who said he would carry Wah Shin behind him if some one
-else would carry Ike.
-
-Ulna, who rode a mule and was the lightest one of the party, gladly
-consented to ride double with Ike. This being arranged, the next
-question was the conveyance of the wounded Badger.
-
-He was given stimulants from his own canteen, and then lifted into his
-own saddle. With a strong man on either side to keep him from falling,
-the party started back to Hurley's Gulch.
-
-Within two hours they were at their destination, but long before they
-reached there they were seen and recognized by those who had been kindly
-disposed to Mr. Willett, and an extemporized committee came out to meet
-them.
-
-"The paper! The paper! Have you got Tom Edwards' receipt?" was the
-salutation that greeted Sam, as dozens of sturdy men gathered round and
-shook his hand.
-
-He had prepared for this by taking the water-stained paper from the
-saddle-bags, to which he had clung through all his privations.
-
-"Here it is!" cried Sam, holding the receipt aloft. "Here it is, and I
-will intrust it to Mr. Collins while I go to my father."
-
-A rousing cheer went up from the men, and that cheer was heard in the
-dugout by Mr. Willett and Hank Tims, and reading its meaning aright,
-they raised their tearful eyes and thanked God.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.--THE LAST, BUT NOT THE LEAST IMPORTANT.
-
-
-Si Brill heard the shouting, and leaving his friends--the prisoners--to
-care for themselves he fairly flew out of the ravine.
-
-He saw his "pard" holding the paper aloft and he understood all. The
-glow of a well-earned victory came to his bronzed face, and he sent up a
-cheer that started all the echoes in the gulch into life.
-
-"All is lovely, Si!" shouted Collins. "We got the receipt, and the boy's
-safe. Don't wait a second but take him to his father at once. His heart
-is jist a hungerin' to hold young Sam next to it."
-
-"You're right every time, old pard!" shouted Si Brill.
-
-Sam ran to him and he was on the point of asking where his father was,
-when Si caught him in his arms and gave him such a hug as would have
-crushed one of weaker frame.
-
-He would have carried Sam in triumph on his broad shoulders, had that
-young gentleman consented. As it was he took his hand, and raising his
-hat in the other, he ran down the gulch, cheering all the while as if
-the sound were essential to his progress.
-
-Mr. Willett stood in the door of the dugout. He saw Si accompanied by a
-tall, slender youth. No need to tell him who it was.
-
-With the cry, "My boy! Oh, thank Heaven for my boy," Mr. Willett ran out
-and father and son were clasped in each other's arms, and their kisses
-and their tears mingled.
-
-"See h'ar, Mr. Willett," called out Hank Tims, who had followed up his
-friend, "when you've got through a huggin' young Sam, jist turn him over
-to me and let me have a chance to express my sentiments on this
-occasion."
-
-At sound of the dear old hunter's voice, Sam turned to him with extended
-hands and cried out:
-
-"Hank, old friend, I've been through the great canyon."
-
-"Well!" laughed Hank, as he shook Sam's hands, and patted his back by
-turns, "you look as if you'd been dragged through a narrer knot hole,
-but yer eyes are as bright as ever and you'll soon git flesh on yer
-bones, but through the Gerrait Canyon! oh, come, Sam, don't try to fool
-me so soon after we've been parted for so long----"
-
-"But didn't Ulna tell you?"
-
-"So he did, Sam, but I thought mebbe his mind was affected. But never
-mind, we'll have lots of time to talk over our adventures when we git
-back to Gold Cave Camp. Well, well, I never did think, leastwise not
-lately, that I'd ever live to see so happy a day as this," and Hank
-turned his attention to Ike and Wah Shin, who had come upon the scene,
-nor was the dog forgotten in the warm welcome given to all.
-
-"I tell you, Mistah Willett," said Ike, as he held his old employer's
-hand, "I'ze got enough to talk about till the day I die, even if I was
-to live for a thousand years."
-
-"Which I hope you may, Ike. But what is that noise up the hill?" asked
-Mr. Willett, his attention attracted by the prolonged cheering in that
-direction.
-
-They had not long to wonder, for soon Collins came dashing down the
-hill, his eyes glowing and a flush of triumph on his manly face.
-
-"What's up, pard?" asked Si Brill.
-
-"They've got at the truth!" shouted Collins.
-
-"What truth?"
-
-"The truth about the murder."
-
-"Then you showed them the receipt?" said Mr. Willett, again taking Sam's
-hand.
-
-"Yes; I did all that, and even then some of 'em wanted to doubt; but
-something has happened to settle 'em."
-
-"What's that?" asked Hank.
-
-"The landlord has lit out----"
-
-"Oh!"
-
-"But that's not all," continued Collins. "Badger is dead----"
-
-"Dead!" echoed all.
-
-"Yes, dead; but just before he pegged out he confessed that it was him
-killed Tom Edwards----"
-
-"I was right in my belief," said Mr. Willett solemnly.
-
-"Yes," continued Collins, "and now every man in the camp, even those
-that was the bitterest, are jest achin' to see you, and to congratulate
-you, and to ax yer parding; so let's go up. Thar's no danger to you nor
-your's in Hurley's Gulch now," and there was a ring of pride in the
-brave fellow's voice.
-
-The Gold Cave campers, happier than we can describe over their reunion,
-followed Collins from the dugout to the canvas settlement on the bluff.
-
-As soon as the assembled miners caught sight of them they sent up such a
-glad shout as was never heard before nor since on the banks of that
-particular gulch.
-
-At heart the great mass of men are right, and they mean to do right.
-Among these miners there seemed to be a general disposition to make
-amends as speedily as possible for their past errors.
-
-Not satisfied with cheering and shouting their congratulations, they
-rushed in by twos and fours, and beginning with Mr. Willett, they lifted
-all the Gold Cave campers--not neglecting Ike and Wah Shin--to their
-shoulders, and then marched in triumphal procession to the scene of the
-trial at the hotel.
-
-The flight of the proprietor did not seem to make any difference, for
-there was plenty of food and cooks to prepare the banquet.
-
-Ike went at once to the place where Wah Shin was helping to get dinner.
-
-"I'll kind o' fill up a little, Wah," said Ike, as he laid siege to a
-big loaf of bread and a correspondingly large piece of cold meat, "for
-it'll take me jist 'bout a year's steady feedin' to catch up. You can
-bet that I'll never be sorry again that I didn't eat moah w'en I had a
-good chance."
-
-Maj seemed to be of the same opinion, for he did not leave Ike's side
-for hours, and when he was next seen in public, he was truly aldermanic
-in his girth and evidently on good terms with himself and the world.
-
-After a hearty dinner, which no one enjoyed more than Sam, speeches in
-praise of "the young canyoneers" as they were called, were made, and
-resolutions expressing unbounded confidence in Mr. Willett and Hank Tims
-were passed.
-
-And so ended the happiest day Hurley's Gulch had ever seen, or ever saw
-again.
-
-The next day our friends returned to Gold Cave Camp, but before starting
-off, Mr. Willett purchased the articles Sam had promised to send to the
-Indians, and Si Brill and Collins pledged themselves to deliver them.
-
-Here our story ends, yet it may not be amiss to add a few words
-explanatory of the future of the characters in whom we have been so much
-interested.
-
-Mr. Willett made a good deal of money out of the Gold Cave Camp
-property, but the danger from floods led him after a time to sell it at
-a sacrifice.
-
-Years have passed since these adventures came to a close. To-day
-"Willett & Son" are among the richest and most honored miners and
-bankers in the Far West.
-
-Their porter in the bank is our old friend, Ike; indeed so great is his
-interest in the establishment and so highly does he think of his
-position that he is very positive it could not go on for a day without
-him.
-
-He always speaks of the firm as "we."
-
-"We's doin' fine," is a frequent expression of his, though nothing
-delights him so much as to tell of his adventures in the Great Canyon. He
-sneers at all other human exploits as things of no account compared with
-the events in which he played so prominent a part.
-
-Mr. Willett's cook is the faithful Wah Shin. "Wah really runs the
-house," Sam says, but he always adds, "and it could not be run better.
-Wah is a standing proof that the Mongolian has a bright mind and a
-generous heart--that is if you get one of the right kind and treat him
-right."
-
-Strange though it may seem, Ulna, as Mr. Willett's protege, came east
-and studied medicine, and his skill and judgment are making him famous
-in the West. We need not add that there is one house in Denver where
-"Doctor Ulna" is always a welcome and an honored guest.
-
-"Collins, Brill & Tims" is the firm name of one of the most prosperous
-"concerns" in Colorado.
-
-It is not necessary for us to speak separately of the members in order
-to have them recognized, though it may not be amiss to say that they are
-all married men, and are among the largest depositors in the bank of
-Willett & Son.
-
-They make the banker's house their home when in Denver, and although
-Hurley's Gulch has been long since abandoned, and the wolf unfrightened
-howls over its site, they love to talk over the stirring days when a
-son's devotion proved itself more powerful than Lynch law and vigilance
-committees.
-
-
-
-
-LOST.
-
-
-In the summer of 1864 Paul Seeton went to spend his holidays with his
-cousin, Frank More.
-
-Frank lived in the northern part of Maine, on the outskirts of a vast
-forest. Paul was a Boston boy, who had scarcely ever been out of the
-city in his life.
-
-It was in Aroostook county, a place famous for growing the biggest
-timber in the northern states, a place known to lumbermen and loved by
-them; with few inhabitants except those who are engaged in the timber
-trade; with no villages and no roads.
-
-One day Frank proposed a fishing excursion. Their destination was about
-fifteen miles away, on a chain of lakes that extended far into the
-forest.
-
-They set out at break of day, rode on horseback over a rough road for
-about two hours, and at length reached the shore of a lake.
-
-Here they hired a boat from a man who lived in a log house, and
-embarking, sailed for five or six miles to a place where the lake
-narrowed. Here taking down their sail they rowed for some distance
-through a channel so narrow that the branches of the lofty pines on
-either side almost met. It took a good hour to pass through this, when
-suddenly they emerged from it and found themselves on a second lake,
-three or four times as large as the first.
-
-Up went the sail again, and away they went over the second lake for
-about ten miles. All around grew the primeval forest, dense, dark and
-luxuriant. But Frank had been here before, and the scene was quite
-familiar.
-
-The boat went swiftly onward, and at last approached the farthest
-extremity of the lake. Here a small peninsula jutted forth from the
-forest into the lake, which was cleared and under cultivation. Upon it
-arose a log hut, from the rude chimney of which smoke was curling
-upward.
-
-It belonged to a man named Spence, who cultivated the ground in summer
-and in winter went lumbering in the woods. He lived there all alone, and
-apart from his solitude was very comfortable.
-
-The boat grounded on the beach in front of Spence's hut, and the boys
-went up to the house. They found Spence himself at home, cooking his
-dinner.
-
-The boys did not stay long. After asking a few questions as to the best
-fishing holes, they took to the boat again, and following Spence's
-directions, rowed toward a small creek which penetrated among the hills,
-and passing up this, at length came to a small basin enclosed by high
-wooded shores. Here they began to fish.
-
-Although they waited patiently, they found, to their great
-disappointment, that the fish would not come. At length Paul felt a
-bite; he pulled up his line in a fever of agitation, and with a glow of
-triumph jerked into the boat a tiny fish about four inches long. But
-Paul's triumph was not at all shared by Frank.
-
-"Pooh!" said he, "it's only a miserable perch."
-
-"A perch?" said Paul. "Isn't it a good fish?"
-
-"Good? Why, these lakes are crammed with them. It's trout we want, not
-these." And as Frank said this he jerked his own line with some
-complacency. Soon something bit his bait. He jerked it out and found, to
-his disgust, another perch.
-
-At length Frank said that he was going up the woods a little distance,
-to a lake which was about a mile off, connected with this by a brook. He
-could follow the windings of the brook and easily get there.
-
-Paul, however, thought he would stay where he was, for the woods looked
-very rough, and he enjoyed being in a boat, even if he didn't catch
-anything.
-
-So Frank started off, promising to be back within an hour.
-
-Paul continued his fishing. He moved the boat to the opposite shore. No
-bites came--that is, none came to the bait, but he soon became aware of
-other bites, which he did not expect. These were produced by swarms of
-mosquitoes, which gathered so thickly that at last Paul had to pull in
-his line and give himself to self-defense. He shifted the position of
-the boat a dozen times, but his persecutors followed him. At last he
-could stand it no longer, and concluded to go after Frank.
-
-Nearly an hour had passed, and it was about time for Frank to return. It
-was Paul's intention to stroll along the brook, and he would be certain
-either to meet Frank in his return, or else he would find him at the
-lake to which he had gone.
-
-It was very swampy, and Paul sank in up to his knees for some distance,
-but at length reached rising ground. The brook was only a small one, and
-was bordered by such dense underbrush that Paul found it impossible to
-follow it. In fact, a much better path appeared.
-
-This was a rough track, overgrown with moss and ferns, which was used by
-the lumbermen in winter. It went up from the lake apparently in the same
-direction as the brook.
-
-So he walked along this path, forcing his way through alder bushes and
-tangled ferns, until at last he came to a stop in front of a wide and
-impassable marsh.
-
-The lumber path in winter ran across this, but now it could not be
-traversed. So Paul tried to go around it. But after completing about
-half the circuit, he reached a swampy place which he could not cross.
-
-He now retraced his steps, and at length decided to return to the boat
-and wait there.
-
-The lumber path could not be very easily found, but at last he turned
-into a place which looked very much like it, and walked on for some
-distance. But the way was rough. At length the path ceased altogether.
-He found himself in the wild wood.
-
-He saw now that he had missed the path, but thought that the best plan
-would be to keep straight on, and get back to the lake. So he kept on.
-It was very hard work. The ground was covered with moss, in some places
-it was spongy, in others it was overgrown with ferns, while every now
-and then he would have to climb over the trunk of some fallen tree.
-
-In this way he struggled onward for a long time, and wondered why he
-could not see any signs of the lake. At last he began to grow
-discouraged. The full conviction forced itself upon him that he had lost
-his way. He had been wandering; how long a time and how far he did not
-know.
-
-There were no signs whatever of the lake. What to do he could not tell.
-He stood still, and looked around. Dense forest trees arose on every
-side, shutting out the view, and enclosing him with their gloomy shades.
-
-Then he called as loud as he could. There was no answer. He called again
-and again, and waited for a long time after each cry to hear whether
-there was any response. But none came.
-
-What to do now was the question. He was not a coward, but any one might
-well have been alarmed, lost in those vast, trackless forests. Paul was
-alarmed, of course; but he was a spirited boy, and was not inclined to
-sit down and give up. After a few minutes he wisely decided that it was
-necessary to have some plan, and choose some definite direction in which
-to go.
-
-So he concluded that the safest way for him would be to retrace his
-steps as carefully as possible.
-
-Back he went, and managed to recover his track, but lost sight of it
-again, and found himself once more completely at a loss.
-
-Turning on his own track in this way had only severed him utterly from
-the last faint hold which he had on the possible direction of the lake.
-
-Once more he stood and considered, and finally after making up his mind
-as to the probable position of the lake, he started again with the
-determination to keep on in as straight a line as possible in that one
-direction.
-
-His course was rough and toilsome in the extreme. Swamps, bogs, thick
-ferns, dense underbrush, tangled alders, fallen forest trees, huge
-rocks, all came by turns before his path, and all had by turns to be
-passed through or surmounted. Paul's city life had not fitted him for a
-task like this; but despair gave him strength.
-
-Hours passed. Every hour brought fresh difficulties. His strength and
-resolution gradually gave way. No signs of escape had shown themselves.
-No sounds had come to his ears which promised help. He felt himself
-alone; alone to struggle with his dismal fate.
-
-At last he reached rising ground. Here the woods were clear. The trees
-stood far apart, and the walking was easy. Utterly worn out, he toiled
-on and at length reached the crest of the hill.
-
-Scarcely had he done so than an exclamation burst from him. Immediately
-below lay a broad sheet of water. He hurried down to the margin, and
-looked anxiously around in all directions.
-
-There was nothing, however, but a sheet of water surrounded by woods.
-Whether this was the lake which he had left, or some other one, he could
-not tell. At any rate he was too fatigued to make any further exertion,
-so he flung himself upon the ground to rest.
-
-Gradually sleep overtook him, and his slumber was so sound that he
-actually did not awake till the following day. On rousing himself he
-heard the birds singing, and felt the fresh, cool air of the morning.
-
-He was very hungry, but felt rested and refreshed, and went at once to
-examine his position.
-
-From the place where he stood he could see the end of the lake to the
-right, but on the left the view was impeded by a promontory.
-
-His first effort now was to go to the promontory and examine the other
-end. The distance was not great, and he soon reached the place.
-
-He looked eagerly down the lake, when, to his unutterable delight, he
-saw at the lower end the lone cottage to which the boat had carried him
-the day before.
-
-All was now plain. He had wandered back to the lake blindly, and by such
-an extraordinary circuit that he had come to the shore about five miles
-away from the cottage.
-
-He now set forth to work his way back to the cottage. He followed the
-windings of the shores, keeping the water always in sight. The distance
-was only five or six miles, but so circuitous was the shore, so full of
-indentations, and so rough was the way, that it was nearly evening when
-he reached the cottage.
-
-No one was there when he arrived, but he waited, and at dusk a boat came
-over the water with Spence and Frank. For a day and a half they had been
-scouring the woods for him, and Frank, in his despair, did not know what
-to do. Paul was received as one who had risen from the dead.
-
-
-
-
-FATE OF AN ENTRAPPED BEAR.
-
-
-Wild beasts, in their wanderings through the forests, often meet and
-fight in the most savage manner. Here is a story told the writer, last
-summer, by an old gentleman in Somerest county, Maine:
-
-"One of the toughest fights I ever saw," said he, "came off over behind
-that mountain yonder. It was years ago. Perhaps I saw with a boy's eyes
-at that time; I was but fourteen years old, then. But you shall have the
-story:
-
-"There wa'n't a railroad in the state, in those days. Whenever any of
-the farmers wanted to go down to Farmington, or Norridgewock, or to
-Portland, they had to go with their teams; and when making a trip to the
-latter place were often gone a week or ten days.
-
-"Quite late in the fall my father and Mr. Wilber, our nearest neighbor,
-had gone to Portland in company. Always during their absence we boys
-used the time in fishing, gunning, and other sports such as boys delight
-in. They had been gone two days, when early the third morning after
-their departure Jed Wilber came running to our house, all excitement.
-
-"'The bears have been killing our sheep!' he exclaimed. 'They came into
-the little pasture last night, killed the old four-year-old, and a lamb,
-dragged them out into the bushes, and there we found their pelts taken
-off and rolled up, as nice as a butcher could do it.'
-
-"'Oh, you ought to have shut them up, Jed,' said grandmother.
-
-"'I know it,' said Jed. 'Father told us to, every night. But we were
-playing last night, and forgot it.'
-
-"'The bear'll be back, to-night,' said I.
-
-"'Of course he will,' said Jed, 'and that's what I am over here for--I
-want to get your bear-trap. I know just how to set it,' he went on,
-seeing grandmother hesitate. 'I saw 'em set it last winter a dozen
-times.'
-
-"'Well, you can have the trap,' said grandmother. 'But mind it don't
-spring, and catch your hands or feet.'
-
-"Jed and I brought the trap from the woodhouse chamber. It was
-tremendously heavy--weighing sixty or seventy pounds. But between us we
-carried it up to the Wilbers', and with Sol's help (Sol was Jed's next
-younger brother) we took it to the pasture. Then, by using a crowbar we
-managed, after a deal of prying and holding, to press down the stiff
-springs, and so set it. This done, we chained it to a four-foot log of
-green spruce, and left it near the spot where the bear had killed the
-sheep. For a bait, we laid partially under it a sheep's head, from a
-sheep that had lately been slaughtered by Mr. Wilber.
-
-"Perhaps some of the boys may wonder why the lads did not chain the trap
-to a stump, or a standing tree. Hunters never chain a bear-trap fast to
-the spot where they set it. They clog it, that is, fasten a heavy stick
-or log to it, for the bear to drag. If caught and held fast, at first, a
-large bear would demolish any trap. But if allowed to run with it, the
-clog will at length weary him so that he may be easily overtaken and
-shot.
-
-"Early the next morning," continued the old man, "I ran over to
-Wilber's, and we hurried to the pasture. The sheep's head was gone, but
-the bear, if indeed it was one, had kept his legs out of the trap. We
-rebaited it with mutton shanks, and the next morning Jed came to the
-house before I was dressed.
-
-"'The trap's gone!' he shouted. 'Get your gun. We must follow him!'
-
-"Hastily swallowing some breakfast, I loaded the gun with slugs, and
-with Jed and Sol rushed to the pasture. Sure enough the trap was gone,
-clog and all. The place where it had been placed bore marks of a
-struggle; the turf was gouged up, and in several spots there were
-blood-drops on the grass, and on the dry leaves. It was in October, the
-last of the month. The brakes in the woods were dead, but still
-standing. These had been pressed to the ground, and made a broad trail.
-
-"By noon we gained the crest of a high ridge, or mountain, five or six
-miles to the westward. The farther side fell off abruptly to the bank of
-a small river. This side, too, was covered with thick hemlock and
-spruce. We hesitated about going further. It would be nearly night by
-the time we got back, if we started for home now. But we wanted to save
-the trap. If we went back, not only should we lose the bear, but the
-trap besides, and Jed, whose carelessness had cost the loss of two
-sheep, was especially anxious to get the bear.
-
-"Sol had brought a lunch. We divided it between us, and again taking up
-our guns, followed the trail down into the dark growth, toward the
-river. An hour took us to the stream. But here, instead of coming upon
-the bear, as we had expected, we found that he had turned up the bank to
-the north. We kept on, however. There was a sort of fascination in the
-chase, even though every mile was taking us further into the wilderness.
-
-"The late October afternoon was waning. Already the shadow of a large
-mountain to the westward was falling over the forest, in the valley
-where we were. The valley narrowed to a rocky ravine as we went on, and
-the mountain, with its dark spruces, seemed to tower threateningly over
-us.
-
-"'It's no use, Jed,' said I; 'we ought to go home. I know you want----'
-
-"'Hark!' exclaimed Sol.
-
-"A sharp yelp, as if from a hurt dog, rang out. It seemed to come to us
-from only a short distance. Almost instantly it was followed by a long
-yell, and a chorus of howls. Snap ran, crouching, between our legs.
-
-"'Wolves!' cried Jed.
-
-"We stood listening, breathlessly. In a moment the yell burst out again,
-followed by yelps, snarls, and the sounds of a general fight.
-
-"'I'll bet they're afoul of the bear,' whispered Jed.
-
-"The uproar continued.
-
-"'If they are, they won't mind us,' continued Jed. 'Let's creep up, and
-see.'
-
-"Cocking our guns, we moved cautiously forward. The yells grew louder,
-and we heard growls. At length, turning a little bend of the ravine, we
-peered round a great boulder and saw a sight I shall never forget. With
-his back against a rock sat the bear--a tremendous fellow he
-looked--with the trap on his paw, while about him leaped, and surged,
-and snapped, fifteen or twenty gray wolves, their white teeth grinning,
-and their eyes flashing green fire. The bear was fighting for life
-against the whole of them.
-
-"The wolves had struck upon his trail, and the smell of the blood that
-came from the leg crushed in the trap had made them furious. He fought
-hard, swinging the trap clog, as he struck with his forelegs to beat
-them off.
-
-"Occasionally, as the ravenous creatures leaped at his throat, he would
-catch one with his uninjured paw and give him a hug that drew out a
-smothered yelp. Sometimes five or six of the wolves would jump at the
-bear at the same time, and for a moment we would lose sight of him, but
-he brushed them away, and rose again. The growls, yells and snapping
-jaws were savage beyond description. It grew dusk as we watched the
-fight.
-
-"'What can we do?' said Sol.
-
-"'It would be useless for us to interfere,' said I; 'they're bound to
-have him.'
-
-"'Let's fire among them, though,' said Jed; 'I haven't brought a loaded
-gun up here for nothing. All together now.'
-
-"All three of us fired together at the growling, struggling pack.
-
-"A moment's silence followed the reports, then a long howl. We shrank
-back around the boulder, out of sight. Then a sudden panic seized us,
-and we ran down the ravine, and did not stop till we were a mile below.
-A faint howl came echoing through the somber forest.
-
-"'They are not chasing us,' said Jed; 'guess we riddled some of 'em!'
-
-"Night fell as we climbed the steep ridge. We had a dark time going home
-through the woods. Fortunately, Sol had a match in his pocket, and
-coming to an old white birch stub, we tore off several rolls of the
-dried bark. By fastening these to the end of a stick and lighting them,
-we were able to pick our way through the woods. It was a hazy night. The
-moon showed dimly. The glimpses we now and then got of it enabled us to
-keep a straight course. It was after eight o'clock when we reached home,
-and worried enough the folks had been about us.
-
-"The next forenoon we started for the ravine again. We were curious to
-know how the fight terminated; besides, it was best to get the trap, if
-possible, to avert the storm that would burst on Jed's head when his
-father came home. Taking a shorter cut through the woods, we reached the
-place where we had seen the wolves, about eleven o'clock.
-
-"No sound was heard save the rippling of the stream among the rocks. We
-stole cautiously to the boulder, where we had stood the night before,
-and looked from behind it. Nothing was in sight.
-
-"'Gone,' said Jed. 'Let's go up, and see where they had their fight.'
-
-"A sly little mink darted away, and into the stream as we approached.
-Beyond was a ghastly sight! There lay the skull and bones of the bear,
-gnawed clean, and showing yellow-white; and there lay the trap, still
-gripping with its iron jaws the bone of one paw.
-
-"All the brakes were smashed down, and the bushes and the rock were
-besmeared with blood and hair. About the trap, within a radius of a few
-rods, lay the bones and skulls of two of the wolves, eaten by their
-comrades. Perhaps the bear had killed them, or perchance our shots had
-caused their death. It looked as if other wolves had come to the feast.
-
-"'Come, come!' muttered Jed. 'Let's be off before they come back.'
-
-"We took the trap to the stream to cleanse it, and then placing it on
-two poles we started for home. And a _tug_ it gave us, too!"
-
-
-
-
-A FIGHT IN THE WOODS.
-
-
-Some years ago, while in the northern part of Maine, I spent the month
-of September and a portion of October at a "hay-farm" on the borders of
-Chamberlain Lake--Lake Apmoogenegamook, the Indians used to call it. The
-whole region was almost an unbroken wilderness. Game was plenty, and by
-way of recreation from my duties as an assistant engineer I had set up a
-"line of traps" for mink and sable--"saple," as old trappers say--along
-a small but very rapid, noisy stream called Bear Brook, which comes down
-into the lake through a gorge between two high spruce-clad mountains.
-
-Huge boulders had rolled down the sides, and lay piled along the bed of
-the gorge. The brook, which was the outlet of a small pond, pent up
-among the ridges above, foamed and roared and gurgled down among rocks
-shaded by thick, black spruces, which leaned out from the sides of the
-ravine.
-
-It was a wild place. I had stumbled upon it, one afternoon, while
-hunting a caribou (a kind of deer) some weeks before, and knew it must
-be good trapping ground; for the rocks and clear, black pools, in short
-the whole place had that peculiar, fishy smell which bespoke an
-abundance of trout; and where trout abound there are sure to be mink.
-
-My traps were of that sort which hunters call "figure four" traps, made
-of stakes and poles, with a figure-four spring. Perhaps some of our boy
-readers may have caught squirrels in that way. For bait I used trout
-from the brook. I carried my hook and line with me, and after setting a
-trap, threw in my hook and pulled out trout enough to bait it. My line
-extended about a mile up the gorge, and comprised some twenty-five or
-thirty traps.
-
-After setting them, I shot a number of red squirrels for a "drag," and
-thus connected the traps together. Perhaps I should explain that a
-_drag_ is a bundle of squirrels or partridges newly killed and from
-which the blood is dripping, which are dragged along by a withe from
-trap to trap to make a trail and scent, so that the mink and sable will
-follow it.
-
-It is customary to visit mink traps once in two or three days. But as I
-had plenty of time just then, I went to mine every forenoon.
-
-During the first week after setting them I had excellent luck. I caught
-eleven mink and three sable--about fifty dollars' worth, as I reckoned
-it. My hopes of making a small fortune in the fur business were very
-sanguine, until one morning I found every trap torn up! The poles and
-stakes were scattered over the ground, spindles were broken to pieces,
-and at one or two places where there had been a mink in the trap, the
-head and bits of fur were lying about as if it had been devoured.
-
-At first I thought that perhaps some fellow who had intended to trap
-there had done the mischief to drive me away (a very common trick among
-rival trappers); but when I saw that the minks had been torn to pieces,
-I knew the destruction was the work of some animal--a fisher, most
-likely, or as some call it, a "black-cat."
-
-I had never yet seen one of these creatures, but had often heard hunters
-and trappers tell what pests they were, following them on their rounds,
-robbing and tearing up their traps almost as rapidly as they could set
-them. Indeed, I had read in Baird's--I believe it was Baird's--Works on
-Natural History, that the fisher-cat, or _mustela canadensis_, is a very
-fierce carnivorous animal of the weasel family, a most determined
-fighter and more than a match for a common hound.
-
-Well, I had nothing to do but to set the traps again, a task which I did
-in the course of the day, really hoping that the beast had merely paid
-the place a transient visit, and gone on upon his wanderings.
-
-But the next morning showed my hopes were vain, for he had "gone
-through" my _line_ again, and every trap was upset. It really seemed as
-if the "varmint" had taken a malicious delight in tearing them to
-pieces.
-
-At one of the traps a fine sable had been caught, and as if for very
-mischief the marauder had torn the beautiful skin, which was worth ten
-or a dozen dollars, to shreds.
-
-Surely, if there is a business in the world that demands patience and
-perseverance, it is trapping. At least it took about all I could summon
-to go resignedly to work, make new spindles, catch fresh bait, and set
-the traps again, especially with the prospect of having the same task to
-perform the next morning.
-
-I went at it, however, and by eleven o'clock had them all reset save
-one, the upper one, where the sable had been caught, when, on
-approaching it through the thick spruces, I saw a large raccoon gnawing
-the sable's head. Seeing me at the same instant, he caught up the head,
-and before I could unsling my gun scuttled away out of sight.
-
-Was it possible that a 'coon had been doing all this mischief? I knew
-them to be adepts at a variety of woods tricks, but had never heard of
-their robbing traps before. Here was one caught gnawing a sable's head
-in the vicinity of the broken traps. Circumstantial evidence, as they
-say in court, was strong against him.
-
-I determined to watch--that trap, at least.
-
-Going over to our camp on the lake, I took a hasty lunch, and putting a
-fresh charge into my gun went back to the ravine. A few rods from the
-place where I had surprised the 'coon there was a thick clump of low
-spruces. Here I hid myself and began my watch.
-
-The afternoon dragged away. Crows and hawks cawed and screamed;
-kingfishers and squirrels chickered and chirred, but no animal came near
-the traps. The sun was setting behind the high, black mountain, twilight
-began to dim the narrow valley.
-
-Thinking I had had my labor for my pains, I was about crawling out of my
-hiding-place, when a twig snapped in the direction of the traps, and
-turning quickly I saw the 'coon coming up the bank of the brook, the
-same one, I was sure, that I had seen before, because of its unusual
-size.
-
-With a glance around, to see that there was no danger near, he ambled
-along to the spot where the sable's head had been, and began sniffing at
-the shreds and bits of fur which lay about. Wishing to see if he would
-touch the trap, I did not stir, but watched his movements.
-
-After picking up the bits of skin, he walked round the trap several
-times, with his queer, quizzical face askew, examining it. Then
-happening to scent one of the sable's legs which lay at a little
-distance, he ran to it and began to eat it. I could hear his sharp teeth
-upon the bones. Suddenly he stopped, listened, then growled. Very much
-to my surprise, there was an answering growl. Then another and another
-response. In a moment more, from behind a great rock in the bank, there
-stole out a large, black animal, an object of the 'coon's utter
-abhorrence, evidently.
-
-Fresh growls greeted the appearance of the intruder, who came stealthily
-forward. He was a wicked looking fellow, and had evidently hostile
-intentions.
-
-The 'coon rose to his feet, lifting his back like a bear or a cat, and
-growling all the while. The newcomer crouched almost to the earth, but
-continued to steal up to the 'coon until within a yard or two.
-
-There they stood facing each other, getting more angry every moment; and
-evidently intended to have a big "set to." I had no wish to interfere,
-and was contented to remain a spectator. The two thieves might settle
-their quarrels between themselves. I wasn't at all certain to which of
-them I stood indebted for my extra labor, and concluded to keep my
-charge of shot for whichever of them survived the fray.
-
-The growls rose to shrieks; the fisher, for such I judged it to be,
-wriggling his black tail, and the 'coon getting his back still higher.
-Then came a sudden grab, quick as a flash, and a prodigious scuffle.
-Over and over they rolled, grappling and tearing; now the gray tail
-would whisk up in sight, then the black one. The fur flew, and that
-strong, disagreeable odor, sometimes noticed when a cat spits, was
-wafted out to my hiding-place.
-
-It was hard to tell which was the best fighter. Gray fur and black fur
-seemed to be getting torn out in about equal snatches. Suddenly the
-'coon got away from his antagonist, and running to the foot of a great
-spruce tree standing near, went like a dart up the trunk to the lower
-limbs. There he faced about.
-
-The fisher followed to the tree and looked up. He saw his late foe,
-growled, and then began to climb after him. He was not so good a climber
-as the 'coon, but scratched his way up with true weasel determination.
-The moment he came within reach the raccoon jumped at him, regardless of
-the height from the ground, and fastened upon his back. The shock caused
-the fisher to lose his hold, and down both animals dropped with
-tremendous force, sufficient to knock the breath out of them, I thought.
-But they clung to each other, and dug and bit with the fury of maniacs.
-'Coons are noted fighters; and as for the fishers, they never give up
-while the breath of life is in them.
-
-Presently the 'coon broke away again, and once more ran to the tree,
-this time going up its trunk, out of sight, among the branches at the
-very top. It looked as if he was getting about all the fight he cared to
-have.
-
-Not so with the big weasel. He instantly followed his antagonist,
-clumsily but surely clawing his way up the trunk. It took him some time
-to reach the top, but he got there at last. Another grapple ensued among
-the very topmost boughs, and they both came tumbling to the ground,
-catching at the limbs as they fell; but grappling afresh they rolled
-down the steep bank to the edge of the water.
-
-Meanwhile it had grown so dark that I could but just see their writhing
-forms. The growling, grappling sound continued, however, and I could
-hear them splash in the water. Then there came a lull. One or the other
-had "given in," I felt sure. Which was the victor?
-
-Cocking my gun, I crept to the bank. As nearly as I could make out the
-situation, the fisher was holding the 'coon by the throat.
-
-I took a step forward. A twig snapped under my foot. Instantly a pair of
-fiery eyes glared up at me in the gloom; and with a harsh snarl the
-fisher raised himself. But the 'coon didn't stir; he was dead.
-
-It seemed almost too bad to shoot the victor of so desperate a fight;
-but thinking of my traps I hardened my heart and fired. The fisher
-reared up, fell over, then recovering its legs, leaped at me with all
-the ferocity of its bloodthirsty race. But the heavy buckshot had surely
-done its work, and with another attempt to spring at me the animal fell
-back dead.
-
-I had no more trouble with my traps.
-
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
- *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CANYON ***
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@@ -1,119 +0,0 @@
-
-
-I tly, too," said Wah Shin.
- Line 3137 column 2 - Query word tly - not reporting duplicates
-
-the caon.
- Line 3161 column 7 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-till the caon walls rang with the echoes.
- Line 3285 column 12 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-the caon.
- Line 3935 column 7 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-"Playee tlick!" repeated Wah, puzzled as to the meaning.
- Line 4034 column 8 - Query word tlick - not reporting duplicates
-
-into the depths of the caon.
- Line 4065 column 26 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-caon walls, instead of rising straight up from the water, stood back,
- Line 4395 column 3 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-caon, as if the mighty mass had been cracked by some tremendous power.
- Line 4461 column 3 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-that way, neither were these openings on the side of the caon which
- Line 4465 column 60 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-within sight of a little cove, or pocket, in the caon wall that seemed
- Line 4504 column 52 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-the unknown and dreaded caon again.
- Line 4659 column 27 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-Long before the sun rose high enough to look into the caon they had
- Line 4708 column 57 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-Here and there, to the right and left, they passed side caons, black
- Line 4716 column 59 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-In the afternoon these side caons became more frequent, and as they
- Line 4719 column 31 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-caon was not very strong, they succeeded in getting the raft in.
- Line 4731 column 3 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-could make fast for the night, when all at once the caon walls, as if
- Line 4739 column 55 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-caon compensated them in part for the severe trials through which they
- Line 4973 column 3 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-much further up the side caon, that they could march along its bed at
- Line 4987 column 28 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-forced to go back to the caon in which they had suffered so much.
- Line 4997 column 28 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-They found no serious obstacles in the caon, though the sharp grade
- Line 5015 column 42 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-caons, in which they seemed to have their home during the day, when Sam
- Line 5162 column 3 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-"It looks as if they came by way of the Great Caon," said one.
- Line 5318 column 49 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-"Through the caon."
- Line 5404 column 16 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-"Who ever went through the Great Caon and lived?" said the Apache in a
- Line 5411 column 36 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-a-hollerin' "murder." We hurried out and found poor Tom all shot to
- Line 5517 column 13 - Wrongspaced quotes?
-
-a-hollerin' "murder." We hurried out and found poor Tom all shot to
- Line 5517 column 21 - Wrongspaced quotes?
-
-"From the caon."
- Line 5722 column 13 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-More than once he wished himself back in the caon, but the thought that
- Line 5851 column 48 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-great caon!"
- Line 6450 column 9 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-figures--the mirage gave them the appearance of giant
- Line 6839 column 53 - Short line 53?
-
-"Me hungly allee same like Ike, but me no say any-tlings," said Wah Shin
- Line 7015 column 50 - Query word tlings - not reporting duplicates
-
-accordance with the one law which they could not violate, viz.:
- Line 7794 column 62 - Double punctuation?
-
-"Hank, old friend, I've been through the great caon."
- Line 8267 column 50 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-bones, but through the Gerrait Caon! oh, come, Sam, don't try to fool
- Line 8272 column 34 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-praise of "the young caoneers" as they were called, were made, and
- Line 8363 column 24 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
-delights him so much as to tell of his adventures in the Great Caon. He
- Line 8394 column 66 - Non-ASCII character 241
-
- *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CAON ***
- Line 9051 column 6 - Asterisk?
-
- *** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST IN THE CAON ***
- Line 9051 column 60 - Non-ASCII character 209
-
-Note: Queried word tly was duplicated 1 times
-
-Note: Queried word tlick was duplicated 1 times
diff --git a/gc.bat b/gc.bat
deleted file mode 100644
index 265ff2a..0000000
--- a/gc.bat
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,7 +0,0 @@
-d:
-cd d:\pgms\gutcheck\
-del e:\Data\Books-WW\Work\canon\37466\errors.txt
-gutcheck.exe e:\Data\Books-WW\Work\canon\37466\37466-8.txt >e:\Data\Books-WW\Work\canon\37466\errors.txt
-e:
-cd e:\Data\Books-WW\Work\canon\37466
-notepad errors.txt