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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51738 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51738)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Julian Mortimer, by Harry Castlemon
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Julian Mortimer
- A Brave Boy's Struggle for Home and Fortune
-
-
-Author: Harry Castlemon
-
-
-
-Release Date: April 12, 2016 [eBook #51738]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JULIAN MORTIMER***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Giovanni Fini, Melissa McDaniel, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images
-generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 51738-h.htm or 51738-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51738/51738-h/51738-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/51738/51738-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/julianmortimerbr00cast
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-
-[Illustration: “Julian!” exclaimed the man, in a low but excited tone
-of voice. “I am here!” replied the prisoner, so overjoyed that he could
-scarcely speak.—Page 118.
- _Julian Mortimer._]
-
-
-JULIAN MORTIMER;
-
-A Brave Boy’s Struggle for Home and Fortune
-
-by
-
-HARRY CASTLEMON,
-
-Author of
-The “Gunboat Series,” “The Boy Trapper,” “Sportsman’s Club Series,”
-etc., etc.
-
-Illustrated.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A. L. Burt Company, Publishers
-New York
-
-Copyright, 1873, by Street & Smith.
-Copyright, 1887, by A. L. Burt.
-Copyright, 1901, by Charles S. Fosdick.
-
-JULIAN MORTIMER.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- JULIAN MORTIMER
-
- I. THE WAGON TRAIN 5
- II. JULIAN HEARS SOMETHING 11
- III. A RIDE IN THE DARK 18
- IV. JULIAN FINDS A RELATIVE 30
- V. JULIAN’S HOME 38
- VI. JULIAN MEETS A STRANGER 46
- VII. THE FLIGHT 55
- VIII. CHASED BY A BLOOD-HOUND 63
- IX. GOOD FOR EVIL 71
- X. JULIAN HAS A VISITOR 80
- XI. JACK’S PLANS 89
- XII. ON BOARD THE FLATBOAT 97
- XIII. IN THE SMOKE-HOUSE 108
- XIV. SANDERS TELLS HIS STORY 118
- XV. THE JOURNEY COMMENCED 126
- XVI. SILAS ROPER, THE GUIDE 131
- XVII. ACROSS THE PLAINS 139
- XVIII. THE EMIGRANT AGAIN 147
- XIX. UNCLE REGINALD EXPLAINS 158
- XX. JULIAN GETS INTO BUSINESS 168
- XXI. WHITE-HORSE FRED 177
- XXII. THE SPECTERS OF THE CAVE 186
- XXIII. JULIAN MAKES A DISCOVERY 196
- XXIV. PEDRO MAKES ANOTHER 205
- XXV. HOW IT RESULTED 211
- XXVI. FRED’S STORY 221
- XXVII. FRED’S STORY, CONCLUDED 232
- XXVIII. THE ATTACK ON THE RANCHO 241
-
- AN IDEA AND A FORTUNE BY OWEN HACKET. 249
-
- THE GRANTHAM DIAMONDS BY RUSSELL STOCKTON. 265
-
-
-
-
- JULIAN MORTIMER;
-
- OR,
-
- A Brave Boy’s Struggle for Home and Fortune.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE WAGON TRAIN.
-
-
-THE SUN was just sinking out of sight behind the western mountains, and
-the shadows of twilight were beginning to creep through the valley,
-when two horsemen, who had been picking their way along the rocky and
-almost impassible road that ran through Bridger’s Pass, drew rein on
-the summit of an elevation and looked about them.
-
-One of them was a trapper—he never would have been taken for anything
-else—a man about forty years of age, and a giant in strength and
-stature. The very small portion of his face that could be seen over
-his thick, bushy whiskers was as brown as an Indian’s; and from under
-the tattered fur cap that was slouched over his forehead, peeped forth
-a pair of eyes as sharp as those of an eagle. He was dressed in a
-complete suit of buckskin, rode a large cream-colored mustang, and
-carried a heavy rifle across the horn of his saddle. Around his waist
-he wore a leather belt, supporting a knife and tomahawk, and under his
-left arm, suspended by thongs of buckskin, which crossed his breast,
-hung a bullet-pouch and powder-horn. This man was Silas Roper—one of
-the best guides that ever led a wagon train across the prairie.
-
-His companion was a youth about sixteen years of age, Julian Mortimer
-by name, and the hero of our story. He presented a great contrast to
-the burly trapper. He was slender and graceful, with a fair, almost
-girlish face, and a mild blue eye, which gazed in wonder at the wild
-scene spread out before it. It was plain that he had not been long on
-the prairie, and a stranger would have declared that he was out of his
-element; but those who were best acquainted with him would have told
-a different story. He took to the mountains and woods as naturally as
-though he had been born there, and Silas Roper predicted that he would
-make his mark as a frontiersman before many years more had passed over
-his head. There was plenty of strength in his slight figure, and one
-might have looked the world over without finding a more determined and
-courageous spirit. He was an excellent shot with the rifle, and managed
-the fiery little charger on which he was mounted with an ease and grace
-that showed him to be an accomplished horseman.
-
-The boy’s dress was an odd mixture of the simple style of the prairies
-and the newest and most elaborate fashions of the Mexicans. He wore a
-sombrero, a jacket of dark-blue cloth, profusely ornamented with gold
-lace, buckskin trowsers, brown cloth leggings with green fringe, and
-light shoes, the heels of which were armed with huge Mexican spurs. His
-weapons consisted of a rifle, slung over his shoulder by a broad strap,
-a hunting knife and a brace of revolvers, which he carried in his belt,
-and a lasso, which was coiled upon the horn of his saddle. From his
-left shoulder hung a small deerskin haversack, to which was attached
-an ornamented powder-horn. The haversack contained bullets for his
-rifle, cartridges for his revolvers, and flint, steel and tinder for
-lighting a fire. Behind his saddle, neatly rolled up and held in its
-place by two straps, was a poncho which did duty both as overcoat and
-bed. He was mounted on a coal-black horse, which was very fleet, and so
-ill-tempered that no one besides his master cared to approach him.
-
-The trapper and his young companion belonged to an emigrant train
-which, a few weeks previous to the beginning of our story, had left St.
-Joseph for Sacramento, and they had ridden in advance of the wagons
-to select a camping ground for the night. This was a matter of no
-ordinary importance at that particular time, for during the last two
-days a band of Indians had been hovering upon the flanks of the train,
-and the guide knew that they were awaiting a favorable opportunity to
-swoop down upon it. Hitherto Silas had had an eye only to the comfort
-of the emigrants, and in picking out his camping grounds had selected
-places that were convenient to wood and water, and which afforded ample
-pasturage for the stock belonging to the train; but now he was called
-upon to provide for the safety of the people under his charge.
-
-The road, at the point where the horsemen had halted, wound around the
-base of a rocky cliff, which arose for a hundred feet without a single
-break or crevice, and was barely wide enough to admit the passage of a
-single wagon. On the side opposite the cliff was a deep gorge, which
-seemed to extend down into the very bowels of the earth. It was here
-that the guide had decided to camp for the night. He carefully examined
-the ground, and a smile of satisfaction lighted up his face.
-
-“This is the place we’ve been looking fur,” said he, dismounting from
-his horse and tying the animal to a neighboring tree. “Now I will go
-out an’ look around a little bit, an’ you can stay here till the wagons
-come up. You won’t be afeared if I leave you alone, will you?”
-
-“Afraid?” repeated Julian. “Of course not. There’s nothing to be afraid
-of.”
-
-“You may think differently afore you see the sun rise again,” replied
-the guide. “Now, when the train comes up tell the fellers to take half
-the wagons an’ block up the road, here at the end of the cliff, an’ to
-put the others at the lower end. Then we’ll be protected on all sides.
-The Injuns can’t come down the cliff to get at us, ’cause it’s too
-steep; an’ they can’t cross the gully nuther. They’ll have to come
-along the road; an’ when they try that we’ll get behind the wagons an’
-fight ’em the best we know how. It’s risky business, too,” added Silas,
-pulling off his cap and digging his fingers into his head, “‘cause if
-they are too many fur us we won’t have no chance on airth to run. We’ll
-have to stay right here an’ die, the hul kit an’ bilin’ of us.”
-
-Julian, who had never seen an Indian in war-paint or heard the
-whistle of a hostile bullet, was amazed at the trapper’s coolness
-and indifference. The bare thought of a fight with the savages was
-enough to cause him the most intense alarm, and yet here was Silas,
-who had more than once been a prisoner in the hands of the Indians,
-and who knew much better than Julian could imagine it, what the fate
-of the emigrants would be if their enemies proved too strong for them,
-apparently as much at his ease as though there had not been a hostile
-warrior within a thousand miles. The boy wondered at his courage and
-wished his friend could impart some of it to him, little dreaming how
-soon he would have need of it.
-
-“Do you really think there is danger of an attack?” asked Julian, as
-soon as he could speak.
-
-The trapper, who was in the act of untying a haunch of venison that
-was fastened behind his saddle, turned and looked curiously at his
-companion.
-
-“Youngster,” said he, “if you should diskiver a cloud as black as
-midnight comin’ up over these mountains, an’ should see the lightnin’ a
-playin’ around the edges, an’ hear the thunder a grumblin’, what would
-you say?”
-
-“That we were going to have a storm,” replied Julian.
-
-“In course you would. An’ when I know that thar are Injins all around
-us, an’ that they are takin’ mighty good care to keep themselves out of
-sight, I tell myself that they’ll bar watchin’. When I see their trail,
-an’ find out that thar are nigh onto three hundred braves in the party,
-an’ that they haint got no women or plunder with ’em, I know that they
-are on the war-path. An’ when they foller us fur two hul days, an’
-their spies watch us every night while we are makin’ our camp—like
-that varlet over thar is watchin’ us now—I know that they are arter us
-an’ nobody else. The signs are jest as plain to me as the signs of a
-thunder storm are to you.”
-
-“Is there some one watching us now?” asked Julian, in great excitement.
-
-“Sartin thar is. I’ve seed that copper-colored face of his’n peepin’
-over that rock ever since we’ve been here. If he was within good
-pluggin’ distance all the news he would carry back to his friends
-wouldn’t do ’em much good, I reckon.”
-
-As the trapper spoke he pointed toward the opposite side of the gorge.
-Julian looked in the direction indicated, closely scrutinizing every
-rock and tree within the range of his vision, but nothing in the shape
-of an Indian’s head could he see. His eyes were not as sharp as those
-of the guide.
-
-“Never mind,” said Silas, “you’ll see plenty of ’em afore mornin’, an’
-they’ll be closer to you than you’ll care to have ’em. But you needn’t
-be any ways oneasy. _They_ won’t hurt you. It’s white men that you’ve
-got to look out fur.”
-
-“White men?” echoed Julian.
-
-“Sartin. Thar’s two persons in the world—an’ I can lay my hand on one
-of ’em in less’n five minutes—who would be willin’ to give something
-nice if they could get hold of you. I know a heap more about you than
-you think I do.”
-
-“You have hinted something like this before, Silas, and I don’t know
-what you mean. I wish you would explain yourself.”
-
-“I hain’t got no time now,” replied the guide, shouldering his rifle
-and walking briskly up the road. “Keep your eyes open, an’ don’t go out
-of the camp till I get back. Don’t forget what I told you about them
-wagons nuther.”
-
-The trapper quickly disappeared around a bend in the road, and
-Julian once more directed his gaze across the gully and tried in vain
-to discover the hiding-place of the spy. He began to feel timid now
-that he was alone. The thought that there were hostile Indians all
-around him, and that one of their number was concealed almost within
-rifle-shot of him, watching every move he made, was by no means an
-agreeable one. His first impulse was to put spurs to his horse and make
-the best of his way back to the train; and he probably would have done
-so had he not at that moment become aware that the train was coming to
-him. He heard the rumbling of the wheels and the voices of teamsters
-below him, and the familiar sounds brought his courage back to him
-again. He remained at his post until the foremost wagons came in sight,
-and then proceeded to carry out the instructions Silas had given him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-JULIAN HEARS SOMETHING.
-
-
-IN HALF an hour the preparations for the night were all completed,
-and Julian surveyed the camp with a smile of satisfaction. There were
-twenty wagons in the train, and of these two barricades had been made,
-one at the upper and the other at the lower end of the cliffs, as the
-guide had directed. The vehicles had been drawn close together, and
-were fastened to one another by chains so that they could not be easily
-moved from their places. The space between the wheels was blocked up
-with plows, harrows, stoves, bedsteads and chairs, thus rendering it a
-matter of some difficulty for any one to effect an entrance into the
-camp.
-
-While this work was being performed the shadows of twilight had
-deepened into the gloom of night, and now all objects outside the
-circle of light made by the camp-fires were concealed by Egyptian
-darkness. Inside the barricades a scene was presented that was a
-cheering one to men wearied with their day’s journey. A dozen fires
-blazed along the base of the cliff, and beside them stalwart pioneers
-reposed on their blankets, smoking their pipes and watching with
-hungry eyes the preparations for supper that were going on around
-them. Venison steaks were broiling on the coals, potatoes roasting in
-the ashes, and coffee-pots simmered and sputtered, filling the camp
-with the odor of their aromatic contents. Cattle and horses cropped
-the herbage that grew along the edge of the gully, and noisy children,
-all unconscious of the danger that threatened them, rolled about on
-the grass, or relieved their cramped limbs by running races along the
-road. But, although the camp wore an air of domesticity and security,
-preparations for battle were everywhere visible. The saddles and
-bridles had not been removed from the horses as usual, the emigrants
-wore their revolvers about their waists, and kept their rifles within
-easy reach. There were pale faces in that camp, and men who had all
-their lives been familiar with danger started and trembled at the
-rustle of every leaf.
-
-Julian Mortimer, from a neighboring wagon, on which he had perched
-himself to await the return of the guide, watched the scene presented
-to his gaze, as he had done every night since leaving St. Joseph, and
-bemoaned his hard lot in life.
-
-“Among all these people,” he soliloquized, “there are none that I can
-call relatives and friends, and not one even to speak a kind word to
-me. How I envy those fellows,” he added, glancing at a couple of boys
-about his own age who were seated at the nearest camp-fire conversing
-with their parents. “They have a father to watch over them, a mother to
-care for them, and brothers and sisters to love, but they do not seem
-to appreciate their blessings, for they are continually quarreling with
-one another, and no longer ago than this morning one of those boys flew
-into a terrible rage because his mother asked him to chop some wood
-to cook breakfast with. If he could be alone in the world for a few
-days, as I have been almost ever since I can remember, he would know
-how to value that mother when he got back to her. If the Indians attack
-us to-night some of the emigrants will certainly be killed, and the
-friends they have left behind them in the States will mourn over their
-fate; but if I fall, there will be no one to drop a tear for me or say
-he is sorry I am gone. There is nothing on earth that cares whether I
-live or die, unless it is my horse. If the Indians kill me perhaps he
-will miss me.”
-
-Julian’s soliloquy was suddenly interrupted by a light footstep behind
-the wagon in which he was sitting. He turned quickly and discovered a
-man stealing along the barricade and examining it closely, as if he
-were looking for a place to get through it. Julian’s first thought
-was to accost him, but there was something so stealthy in the man’s
-actions that his curiosity was aroused, and checking the words that
-arose on his lips he remained quiet in his concealment, and waited to
-see what was going to happen. He had often seen the man during the
-journey across the plains, and knew that he was one of the emigrants,
-but why he should seek to leave the camp at that time and in so unusual
-a manner, was something the boy could not understand.
-
-The man walked the whole length of the barricade, turning to look
-at the emigrants now and then to make sure that none of them were
-observing his movements, and finally disappeared under one of the
-wagons. Julian heard him working his way through the obstructions that
-had been placed between the wheels, and presently saw him appear again
-on the outside of the barricade.
-
-Almost at the same instant the boy discovered another figure moving
-rapidly but noiselessly down the road toward the camp. At first he
-thought it was the guide, but when the man came within the circle of
-light thrown out by the camp-fires he saw that he was a stranger.
-He was evidently a mountain man, for he was dressed in buckskin and
-carried a long rifle in the hollow of his arm, and the never-failing
-knife and tomahawk in his belt; but he was the worst specimen of this
-class of men that Julian had ever seen. His clothing was soiled and
-ragged, his hair, which had evidently never been acquainted with a
-comb, fell down upon his shoulders, and his face looked as though it
-had received the very roughest usage, for it was terribly battered and
-scarred. One glance at him was enough to frighten Julian, who, knowing
-instinctively that the man was there for no good purpose, drew further
-back into the shadow of the wagon-cover.
-
-The emigrant who had left the camp in so suspicious a manner,
-discovered the stranger the moment he reached the outside of the
-barricade, but he did not appear to be surprised to see him. On the
-contrary, he acted as if he had been expecting him, for he placed one
-foot on the nearest wagon-tongue, rested his elbow on his knee, and
-when the trapper had approached within speaking distance, said in a
-suppressed whisper:
-
-“How are you, Sanders?”
-
-The latter paid no more attention to the greeting than if he had not
-been addressed at all. He advanced close to the wagon in which Julian
-was concealed—so close that his brawny shoulders were almost within
-reach of the boy’s hand—and peered through the barricade, taking in
-at one swift glance all that was going on inside the camp. He next
-looked up and down the road, fixing his eyes suspiciously on every tree
-and rock near him that was large enough to conceal a foe, and having
-satisfied himself that there was no one near him, he dropped the butt
-of his rifle to the ground, and growled out:
-
-“Wal!”
-
-“Well,” replied the emigrant, “I have been to Missouri, and I have
-returned, as you see.”
-
-“I reckon you’re satisfied now, hain’t you?” he asked.
-
-“I am. I am satisfied of four things: That the boy is alive and hearty;
-that he remembers more of his early history than we thought he would;
-that he has come out here to make trouble for us; and that he is at
-this very moment with this wagon train.”
-
-As the emigrant said this he folded his arms and looked at his
-companion to observe the effect these words would have upon him. He, no
-doubt, expected that the trapper would be surprised, and the latter’s
-actions indicated that he certainly was. He stepped back as suddenly
-as if a blow had been aimed at him, and after regarding the emigrant
-sharply for a moment, struck the butt of his rifle with his clenched
-hand, and ejaculated:
-
-“Sho!”
-
-“It’s a fact,” replied his companion.
-
-“Wal, now, I wouldn’t be afeared to bet my ears agin a chaw of tobacker
-that you’re fooled the worst kind,” said the trapper, who was very
-much excited over what he had heard, and seemed quite unable to bring
-himself to believe it. “The boy was young when he was tuk away from
-here—not more’n eight years old—an’ do you ’spose he could remember
-anything that happened or find his way across these yere prairies to
-his hum agin? Don’t look reason’ble.”
-
-“It’s the truth, whether it looks reasonable or not. I have seen Julian
-Mortimer, and talked with him, and consequently may be supposed to know
-more about him and his plans than you who have not seen him for years.
-What was that?”
-
-Julian, astonished to hear his own name pronounced by one whom he
-believed to be a stranger to him, uttered an ejaculation under his
-breath, and forgetting in his excitement how close the men were to him,
-bent forward and began to listen more intently.
-
-The very slight rustling he occasioned among the folds of the canvas
-cover of the wagon was sufficient to attract the attention of the
-emigrant and his companion, who brought their conversation to a sudden
-close, and looking about them suspiciously, waited for a repetition of
-the sound.
-
-But Julian, frightened at what he had done, and trembling in every limb
-when he saw the trapper turn his head and gaze earnestly toward the
-wagon in which he was concealed, remained perfectly motionless and held
-his breath in suspense.
-
-The men listened a moment, but hearing nothing to alarm them, Sanders
-folded his arms over the muzzle of his rifle, intimating by a gesture
-that he was ready to hear what else the emigrant had to say, and the
-latter once more placed his foot on the wagon-tongue, and continued:
-
-“It is time we had an understanding on one point, Sanders. Are you
-working for my cousin, Reginald, or for me?”
-
-“I’m workin’ fur you, in course,” replied the trapper. “I’ve done my
-level best fur you. I had my way with one of the brats, an’ put him
-whar he’ll never trouble nobody.”
-
-“Has he never troubled any one since that night? Has he never troubled
-_you_?” asked the emigrant, in a significant tone. “Could you be hired
-to spend an hour in Reginald’s rancho after dark?”
-
-“No, I couldn’t,” replied the trapper, in a subdued voice, glancing
-nervously around, and drawing a little closer to his companion. “But
-that thar boy is at the bottom of the lake, an’ I’d swar to it,
-’cause I put him thar myself. What it is that walks about that rancho
-every night, an’ makes such noises, an’ cuts up so, I don’t know.
-You had oughter let me done as I pleased with the other; but you got
-chicken-hearted all of a sudden, an’ didn’t want him rubbed out, an’
-so I stole him away from his hum for you, an’ you toted him off to the
-States. If he comes back here an’ makes outlaws of you an’ your cousin,
-it’s no business of mine. But I am on your side, an’ you know it.”
-
-“I don’t know anything of the kind. It is true that you did all this
-for me, and that I paid you well for it; but I know that you have since
-promised Reginald that you would find the boy and bring him back here.
-Will you attack this train to-night?”
-
-“Sartin. That’s what we’ve been a follerin’ it fur. If you want to save
-your bacon, you’d best be gettin’ out.”
-
-“I intend to do so; but I don’t want the boy to get out; do you
-understand? You know where to find me in the morning, and if you will
-bring me his jacket and leggins to prove that he is out of the way,
-I will give you a thousand dollars. There are a good many boys with
-the train, but you will have no trouble in picking out Julian, if
-you remember how he looked eight years ago. You will know him by his
-handsome face and straight, slender figure.”
-
-“I’ll find him,” said the trapper; “it’s a bargain, an’ thar’s my hand
-onto it. Now I’ll jest walk around an’ take a squint at things, an’ you
-had best pack up what plunder you want to save an’ cl’ar out; ’cause in
-less’n an hour me an’ the Injuns will be down on this yere wagon train
-like a turkey on a tater-bug.”
-
-The emigrant evidently thought it best to act on this suggestion,
-for without wasting any time or words in leave-taking he made his way
-carefully through the barricade into the camp.
-
-The trapper watched him until he disappeared from view, and then said,
-as if talking to himself, but in a tone of voice loud enough for Julian
-to hear:
-
-“A thousand dollars fur doin’ a job that you are afeared to do
-yourself! I don’t mind shootin’ the boy, but I’d be the biggest kind of
-a dunce to do it fur that money when another man offers me $5,000 for
-him alive an’ well. If that youngster, Julian, is in this camp, I’ll
-win that five thousand to-night, or my name ain’t Ned Sanders.”
-
-The trapper shouldered his rifle, and with a step that would not have
-awakened a cricket, stole along the barricade, carefully examining
-it at every point, and mentally calculating the chances for making
-a successful attack upon it. When he had passed out of sight in the
-darkness, Julian drew a long breath, and settled back in his place of
-concealment to think over what he had heard.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-A RIDE IN THE DARK.
-
-
-TO DESCRIBE the feelings with which Julian Mortimer listened to the
-conversation we have just recorded were impossible. He knew now that he
-had been greatly mistaken in some opinions he had hitherto entertained.
-He had told himself but a few minutes before that there was no one on
-earth who cared whether he lived or died; but scarcely had the thought
-passed through his mind before he became aware that there were at
-least two persons in the world who were deeply interested in that very
-matter—so much so that one was willing to pay a ruffian a thousand
-dollars to kill him, while the other had offered five times that amount
-to have him delivered into his hands alive and well. It was no wonder
-that the boy was overwhelmed with fear and bewilderment.
-
-“Whew!” he panted, pulling off his sombrero and wiping the big drops
-of perspiration from his forehead, “this goes ahead of any thing I
-ever heard of. I wonder if Silas had any reference to this when he
-said that there were two men in the world who would be willing to give
-something nice to get hold of me! I’m done for. If I am not killed by
-the Indians, that villain, Sanders, will make a prisoner of me and
-take me off to Reginald. Who is Reginald, and what have I done that he
-should be so anxious to see me? I never knew before that I was worth
-$5,000 to anybody. Who is that emigrant, and how does it come that I am
-in his way? He says that he has talked with me and knows all about my
-plans, but I am positive that I never spoke to him in my life. I never
-saw him until I found him with this wagon train at St. Joseph. I have
-had some thrilling adventures during the past few weeks, and I can see
-very plainly that they are not yet ended.”
-
-Julian, trembling with anxiety and alarm, clambered out of the wagon,
-and leaning on the muzzle of his rifle, looked down into the gorge,
-thought over his situation, and tried to determine upon some plan of
-action. His first impulse was to acquaint the emigrants with the fact
-that one of their number had been holding converse with an enemy, and
-have the traitor secured at once. His next was to provide for his own
-safety by collecting the few articles of value he possessed and making
-his way back to the prairie; but he was deterred from attempting to
-carry out this plan by the fear that while he was fleeing from one
-danger he might run into another. The savages had probably surrounded
-the camp by this time, and he could not hope to pass through their
-lines without being discovered. The best course he could pursue was to
-wait until the guide returned. He would know just what ought to be done.
-
-Julian was so completely absorbed in his reverie that he forgot to keep
-an eye on what was going on around him, and consequently he did not see
-the two dark figures which came stealing along the road as noiselessly
-as spirits. But the figures were there, and when they discovered Julian
-they drew back into the bushes that lined the base of the cliff, and
-held a whispered consultation. Presently one of them stepped out into
-the road again and ran toward the camp. He did not attempt to escape
-observation, but hurried along as though he had a perfect right to be
-there. He seemed to be ignorant of the boy’s presence until he heard
-his voice and saw the muzzle of his rifle looking straight into his
-face.
-
-“Halt!” cried Julian, standing with his finger on the trigger, ready to
-enforce his command if it were not instantly obeyed. “Who are you?”
-
-“A friend,” replied the man. “Don’t shoot!”
-
-“Come up here, friend, and let us have a look at you.”
-
-As the stranger approached Julian saw that he appeared to be very much
-excited about something, and that he breathed heavily as if he had been
-running long and rapidly.
-
-“If you are a friend what are you doing on the outside of the camp?”
-asked the boy.
-
-“Why, we’ve been trappin’ here in the mountains, me an’ my pardner
-have, an’ to-day the Injuns driv us out,” replied the stranger. “We
-jest had to git up an’ dig out to save our har, an’ left all our
-plunder in the hands of the redskins—spelter, hosses, traps, an’ every
-thing except our rifles. While we were a makin’ tracks fur the prairie
-we come plump agin somebody; an’ who do you ’spose it was? It was Silas
-Roper. We used to be chums, me an’ him did, an’ have hunted and trapped
-together many a day up in the Blackfoot country. We found him watchin’
-the camp of Ned Sanders an’ his band of rascals, an’ Silas said that if
-he had just one more man he could kill or captur’ the last one of ’em.
-He told me whar his wagon train was, an’ axed me would I come down an’
-get one of the fellers to lend a hand. He said that Julian Mortimer was
-plucky an’ a good shot, an’ he’d like to have him. Mebbe you know him
-an’ can tell me whar’ to find him.”
-
-“I can. I am Julian Mortimer,” replied the boy, proudly.
-
-“You!” The trapper seemed to be first surprised, and then disappointed.
-He surveyed Julian from head to foot, and then continued: “Sho! I
-expected to see a _man_. What could a little cub like you do with
-Sanders and his gang?”
-
-“I am man enough to put a ball into one of them if I get a fair
-chance,” replied Julian. “I know something about Sanders, and have
-reasons for wishing him put where he will never see me again.”
-
-“Wall, you’re spunky if you are little, an’ spunk is the thing that
-counts arter all. Mebbe you’ll do as well as any body. Will you go?”
-
-“Of course I will, if Silas sent for me.”
-
-“‘Nough said. Go easy now, an’ do jest as you see me do.”
-
-The trapper shouldered his rifle and started down the road at a rapid
-run, with Julian close at his heels.
-
-When they passed the first bend in the road a man came out of the
-bushes, where he had been concealed, and followed after them with
-noiseless footsteps. Julian did not see him, and neither did he see the
-dark forms that were hidden behind the trees and rocks on each side
-of the path; he saw no one except his guide until he came suddenly
-around the base of a cliff and found himself in front of a camp-fire,
-beside which lay half-a-dozen rough-looking men stretched out on their
-blankets.
-
-Julian stopped when this unexpected sight greeted his eyes, but his
-guide kept on, and seating himself on the ground before the fire,
-jerked his thumb over his shoulder toward the boy, and coolly announced:
-
-“Here he is, fellers. Leastwise, he says that’s his name.”
-
-Julian stood like one petrified. He looked at his guide, at the
-trappers that were lying around, and then his gaze wandered toward an
-object which he had not before noticed. It was Silas Roper, who stood
-on the opposite side of the fire, with his back to a tree, to which he
-was securely bound.
-
-One glance at him was enough for Julian, who now saw that he had been
-duped. He understood the trick that had been played upon him as well
-as though it had been explained in words, and wondered at his own
-stupidity. If it had been true, as the strange trapper had told him,
-that Silas was keeping guard over the camp of the outlaws, and needed
-just one more man to enable him to effect their capture, would he have
-sent for an inexperienced person like himself when there were at least
-a score of old Indian-fighters among the emigrants? Julian told himself
-that he ought to have known better.
-
-These thoughts passed through his mind in an instant of time, and in
-his excitement and alarm, forgetting everything except that he was in
-the presence of enemies, he faced about and took to his heels; but he
-had not made many steps when the man who had followed him from the
-camp, and who was none other than Sanders himself, suddenly appeared in
-his path.
-
-“Not quite so fast!” said he, in savage tones. “You’re wuth a heap to
-us, if you only knowed it, an’ we couldn’t think of partin’ with you so
-soon.”
-
-As the trapper spoke, he twisted the boy’s rifle out of his grasp,
-tore the belt which contained his revolvers and hunting-knife from his
-waist, and then seized him by the collar and dragged him toward the
-fire—Julian, who knew that it would be the height of folly to irritate
-the ruffian, offering no resistance.
-
-“I call this a good night’s work,” continued Sanders, who seemed to be
-highly elated. “We’ve been waitin’ fur both them fellers fur more’n
-a year, an’ we’ve got ’em at last. This is Julian. I knowed him the
-minute I sot my eyes onto him, and could have picked him out among a
-million. He hain’t changed a bit in his face, but he’s grown a heap
-taller an’ stouter, an’ p’raps is a leetle livelier on his legs than
-he was when me an’ him run that foot-race eight year ago. Remember
-that—don’t you, youngster?”
-
-“No, I don’t,” replied Julian. “I never ran a race with you in my life.
-I never saw you until to-night.”
-
-“Didn’t! Wol, I’ve seed you a good many times durin’ the last two
-months, an’ have talked with you, too; but I was dressed up like a
-gentleman then, an’ mebbe that’s the reason you don’t recognize me now.
-Dick thinks he knows more about you than anybody else, but I reckon he
-don’t.”
-
-“Who is Dick?” asked the boy.
-
-“He’s the feller who was talkin’ to me to-night while you were settin’
-in that wagon listenin’ to us. I didn’t know you were about thar until
-Dick had gone back into the camp, an’ then I seed you come down from
-the wagon. I wanted to get you away from thar, ’cause I was afeared
-that if you were in the camp durin’ the fight some of the Injuns might
-send a ball or arrer into you, an’ that would have been bad fur me an’
-my mates, ’cause it would have tuk jest $5,000 out of our pockets. I
-didn’t see no chance to slip up an’ make a pris’ner of you without
-alarmin’ the emigrants, so I come back here an’ got one of my men, an’
-me an’ him made up that story we told you. It worked first-rate, didn’t
-it.”
-
-[Illustration: JULIAN SUDDENLY FOUND HIMSELF A PRISONER IN THE
-TRAPPERS’ CAMP.—See page 21.]
-
-“But you have not yet told me who Dick is,” said Julian, without
-answering the outlaw’s question. “How did he become acquainted with me;
-and what reason has he for wishing me put out of his way? I heard him
-say that he would give you a thousand dollars if you would kill me.”
-
-“Them’s his very words. But you needn’t be no ways skeary, ’cause I
-wouldn’t hurt a hair of your head—not while I can make more money
-by takin’ good care of you. As fur the reasons Dick’s got fur havin’
-somethin’ agin you, that’s his business an’ not mine. Mebbe you’ll know
-all about it one of these days. But I reckon we might as well be movin’
-now. What have you done with the critters, Tom?”
-
-The man who had guided Julian to the camp of the outlaws arose from
-his seat, disappeared in the bushes, and presently returned leading
-three horses. At a sign from his captors Julian mounted one of the
-animals, Sanders sprang upon the back of another, and seizing Julian’s
-horse by the bridle rode off into the darkness, followed by Tom, who
-brought up the rear. The boy wondered what the outlaws were going to
-do with him, and hoped that Sanders, who had shown himself to be quite
-communicative, might see fit to enlighten him; but the trapper seemed
-to have relapsed into a meditative mood, for he rode along with his
-eyes fastened on the horn of his saddle, and for half an hour never
-opened his lips except to swear at Julian’s horse, which showed a
-disposition to lag behind, and to answer a challenge from the foremost
-of a long line of Indians who passed them on the road.
-
-When Julian saw these warriors he thought of the emigrants, and knew
-that the fight the guide had predicted was not far distant. It was
-begun that very hour, and the signal for the attack was a single,
-long-drawn war-whoop, which echoed and re-echoed among the cliffs until
-it seemed to Julian as if the mountains were literally filled with
-yelling savages. No sooner had it died away than a chorus of frightful
-whoops arose from the direction of the camp, accompanied by the rapid
-discharge of fire-arms and the defiant shouts of the emigrants, which
-came to Julian’s ears with terrible distinctness. Although he knew
-that he was at a safe distance from the scene of the conflict, and in
-the power of men who would protect him from the savages, he could not
-have been more terrified if he had been standing side by side with the
-pioneers battling for his life.
-
-“What do you think of it, anyhow?” asked Sanders, noticing the boy’s
-agitation. “Never heered sounds like them afore, I reckon.”
-
-“No,” replied Julian, in a trembling voice, “and I never want to hear
-them again. It is some of your work. Silas says the Indians would not
-be half as bad as they are, if it were not for white renegades like you
-and your friends, who are continually spreading dissatisfaction among
-them, and urging them on to the war-path.”
-
-“Wouldn’t!” exclaims Sanders. “I don’t reckon we’re any wuss than other
-folks I’ve heern tell on. Thar are men in the world—an’ some of ’em
-don’t live so very far from here, nuther—who walk with their noses in
-the air, an’ think themselves better’n everybody else, an’ yet they are
-bad enough to offer men like me an’ my mates money to put some of their
-own kin out of the way. We’re jest about as good as the rest if we are
-outlaws.”
-
-For the next two miles the route pursued by the trappers and their
-prisoner lay through a deep ravine, where the darkness was so intense
-that Julian could scarcely see his hand before him, and at every step
-of the way the reports of fire-arms and the whoops and yells of the
-combatants rang in his ears. There was a fierce battle going on at the
-camp, and the boy wondered who would gain the victory.
-
-The question was answered in a few minutes, for when the three horsemen
-emerged from the valley, and reached the summit of a high hill, over
-which the road ran, Julian looked back and saw a bright flame, which
-increased in volume every moment, shining over the tops of the trees.
-Then he knew that the emigrants had failed in their attempts to beat
-off their assailants. The savages had succeeded in setting fire to the
-wagons which formed the barricade, and when that protection was swept
-away, the battle would be changed to a massacre. The Indians would pour
-into the camp in overwhelming numbers, and surrounded as the emigrants
-were on every side, not one of them could hope to escape.
-
-“Thar’s another wagon train gone up,” said Sanders, with savage
-exultation. “It’s a pity that every one of them can’t be sarved the
-same way. Why don’t folks stay in the States whar they belong, instead
-of coming out here whar they know they ain’t wanted? How would you like
-to be in that camp, youngster?”
-
-“I don’t know that I should be in a much worse situation than I am
-now,” replied Julian. “If I were with the emigrants I should probably
-be killed, and I am not sure that I shall fare any better at the hands
-of the man into whose power you intend to deliver me.”
-
-“That’s a fact,” said Sanders, reflectively. “If I was in your place,
-an’ was tuk pris’ner, I believe I’d as soon be among the Injuns as in
-the hands of Reginald Mortimer.”
-
-“Reginald Mortimer!” repeated Julian, in great amazement.
-
-“He’s the very feller whose name I spoke,” replied Sanders, turning
-around in his saddle and facing his prisoner.
-
-Julian looked earnestly at the trapper for a few seconds and drew a
-long breath of relief.
-
-“I begin to understand the matter,” said he. “I knew you were mistaken
-as to my identity.”
-
-“Which?” exclaimed Sanders.
-
-“I mean that you have got hold of the wrong boy. Because my name
-happens to be Mortimer, you think I am the one this man Reginald wants;
-but when he sees me and knows my history, he will release me.”
-
-When Sanders heard this he threw back his head and burst into a loud
-laugh, in which he was joined by Tom. Julian could not see that he had
-said anything calculated to excite their mirth, but the outlaws could,
-and they were highly amused—so much so that it was fully five minutes
-before they recovered themselves sufficiently to speak.
-
-“Wal, you are a green one,” said Sanders, at length. “The minute
-Reginald puts his eyes on you he will say that you are the very chap
-he’s been a-lookin’ fur so long, an’ instead of releasin’ you he’ll
-lock you up whar you’ll never see daylight again. Maybe he’ll do
-something wuss—I don’t know.”
-
-“I wouldn’t put myself in your place and run the risk,” chimed in Tom.
-“But I’d a heap sooner be rubbed out to onct than be shut up in that
-rancho of his’n. Sich queer doin’s as they do have thar! The ole man
-can’t keep a thing in his house.”
-
-“What is the reason?” asked Julian.
-
-“‘Cause it’s stole from him, that’s the reason—money, we’pons,
-clothes, grub—everything. He can’t keep nothing.”
-
-“Why doesn’t he lock his doors?”
-
-“Haint every door in the rancho got mor’n a dozen bolts an’ chains onto
-it, an’ don’t he keep three or four big dogs on the outside of the
-house, an’ as many more inside? An’ haint he sot up night after night
-with his pistols in his hands watchin’ fur the thieves? It don’t do no
-’arthly good whatsomever. Things is missin’ all the while, an’ nobody
-don’t know whar they go to. You see,” added Tom, sinking his voice
-almost to a whisper, “thar’s some folks besides the ole man livin’ in
-that ar rancho, an’ they don’t need doors an’ winders. They can go
-through a keyhole, or a crack an inch wide, and even a solid stone wall
-can’t stop ’em. I slept thar one night, an’ if I didn’t see——”
-
-“Hold your grip, Tom,” interrupted Sanders, hastily. “Somehow I don’t
-like to hear that thing spoke of. That rancho is a bad place to stop
-at, that’s a fact; an’ I’d as soon fight a fair stand-up battle with
-the biggest grizzly in the mountains as to spend an hour thar arter
-sundown. I wouldn’t be half so bad skeered.”
-
-After saying this Sanders relapsed into silence again, and so did Tom;
-and Julian, who had heard just enough to excite his curiosity, tried in
-vain to induce them to continue the conversation. He wanted to learn
-something about Reginald Mortimer, and know what the trappers had seen
-in his house that frightened them so badly; but they paid no heed to
-his questions, and Julian was finally obliged to give it up in despair.
-
-How far he traveled that night he did not know. He was so nearly
-overcome with fear and anxiety, and so completely absorbed in his
-speculations concerning the future, that at times he was utterly
-unconscious of what was going on around him. All he remembered was that
-for five long hours Sanders kept his horse at a full gallop, leading
-the way at reckless speed along yawning chasms and under beetling
-cliffs which hung threateningly over the road, that he became so weary
-that he reeled about in his saddle, and that finally, when it seemed to
-him that he could no longer shake off the stupor that was pressing upon
-him, Sanders suddenly drew rein and announced that they were at their
-journey’s end.
-
-Julian looked up and found himself in an extensive valley, which
-stretched away to the right and left as far as his eyes could reach. In
-front of him was a high stone wall, over the top of which he could see
-the roof of what appeared to be a commodious and comfortable house. The
-building was evidently intended to serve as a fortification as well as
-a dwelling, for the walls were thick and provided with loop-holes, and
-the windows were protected by heavy iron-bound shutters.
-
-All was dark and silent within the rancho; but when Sanders pounded
-upon the gate with the butt of his revolver, a chorus of hoarse growls
-arose on the other side of the wall, and a pack of dogs greeted them
-with furious and long-continued barking. Presently Julian heard a door
-open and close in the rancho, and saw the light of a lantern shining
-above the wall. Then came the rattling of chains and the grating
-of heavy bolts, and a small wicket in the gate swung open and was
-immediately filled by the bull’s-eye of a powerful dark lantern. The
-person who handled the lantern, whoever he was, could obtain a good
-view of the horsemen, but they could not see him, for he remained in
-the shade. He consumed a good deal of time in making his observations,
-and Sanders began to grow impatient.
-
-“Wal, Pedro,” he growled, “when you get through lookin’ at us you’ll
-let us in, won’t you? We’ve got business with the ole man, an’ we’re
-in a hurry. I don’t want to stay about this place no longer than I can
-help,” he added, in an undertone.
-
-The sound of the outlaw’s voice must have satisfied the man as to the
-identity of his visitors, for he closed the wicket, and after a short
-delay opened the gate, and Sanders led the way into the rancho.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-JULIAN FINDS A RELATIVE.
-
-
-HAD JULIAN been entering a prison, knowing that he was destined to
-remain there for the term of his natural life, he could not have been
-more terrified than he was when he found himself surrounded by the
-gloomy walls of the rancho, and heard the ponderous gate clang behind
-him. He was playing an involuntary part in a strange and mysterious
-drama, and the uncertainty of what might be the next scene in which he
-would be forced to assist, kept him in a terrible state of suspense.
-But he was blessed with more than an ordinary share of courage, and
-when the first momentary thrill of terror had passed away, he called
-it all to his aid, and prepared to meet whatever was in store for
-him with an undaunted front. He appeared to be much more at his ease
-than the two trappers, for they had suddenly lost their swaggering,
-confident air, and were gazing about them uneasily as though they were
-apprehensive of discovering something they did not care to see.
-
-“He’s all grit, haint he?” whispered Sanders, who, as well as his
-companion, seemed surprised at the captive’s coolness and indifference.
-“He’s a genuine Mortimer.”
-
-“Mebbe he’ll look different afore he has been many hours inside these
-yere walls,” replied Tom, in the same cautious whisper. “Wait till he
-gets into the house an’ sees _him_, as I saw him one night.”
-
-“Well, if you’re going in you had better dismount, hadn’t you? Or do
-you intend to ride your horses in? Who’s this you have here?”
-
-It was Pedro who spoke. He had lingered to fasten the gate, and now
-came up and elevated his lantern to take a survey of the trappers and
-their prisoner. When the rays from the bull’s-eye fell upon Julian’s
-features he staggered back as if he had been shot, his face grew deadly
-pale, and his whole frame trembled violently.
-
-“It isn’t—it isn’t——”
-
-Pedro tried to pronounce some name, but it seemed to stick in his
-throat.
-
-“No, it isn’t _him_,” replied Sanders; “it’s the other.”
-
-“Not Julian?” exclaimed the Mexican, plainly much relieved.
-
-“Yes, Julian, an’ nobody else.”
-
-“Why, how came he here? Where did you find him?”
-
-“Now, Pedro, you haven’t offered us $5,000 to bring him to you safe an’
-sound, have you? Them’s questions we don’t answer for nobody except the
-ole man. We want to see him, an’ purty quick, too.”
-
-Sanders dismounted from his horse, and at a sign from him Tom and
-Julian did the same. Pedro led the way toward the door of the rancho,
-shaking his head and ejaculating in both Spanish and English, and
-turning around now and then to look sharply at Julian as if he had not
-yet been able to make up his mind whether he was a solid flesh and
-blood boy or only a spirit. He conducted the trappers and their captive
-into the house, and after pausing to fasten the door, led them through
-a long, wide hall, the walls of which were hung with old-fashioned
-pictures and implements of the chase, and ushered them into an
-elegantly furnished room; and after taking one more good look at
-Julian, waved his hand toward a couple of chairs and asked the trappers
-to be seated.
-
-“I will go and tell the governor who you are, and whom you have brought
-with you,” said he.
-
-“Hold your horses!” exclaimed Sanders, suddenly, and in great
-excitement. “You haint a-goin’ to take that light with you an’ leave us
-here in the dark? I wouldn’t stay here fur all the money the ole man’s
-got stowed away in that cave of his’n, if it’s $50,000.”
-
-“Fifty thousand!” sneered Pedro. “You have queer ideas of wealth.
-Better say fifty million; and he don’t know where it is any more than
-you do. He’ll find out now, however,” added the Mexican, with a hasty
-glance at Julian.
-
-“Wal, put that lantern on the table if you’re goin’ out,” repeated
-Sanders.
-
-Pedro muttered something about having any thing but an exalted opinion
-of a man, who, after braving innumerable dangers, was afraid to remain
-in a dark room for a moment or two, but he complied with the request.
-He placed the lantern on the table and went out, leaving the trappers
-and Julian to themselves. The latter sunk helplessly into the nearest
-chair, while Sanders and his companion, after looking all about the
-room to make sure that there was no fourth person present, moved up
-closer together and stood regarding one another with an expression of
-great amazement on their faces.
-
-“Fifty million!” whispered Sanders, who was the first to speak. “Do you
-believe it?”
-
-“That’s a monstrous heap of money,” replied Tom—“more’n the hul State
-of Californy is worth. But I’ve allers heern tell that old Reginald had
-more yaller boys stowed away in this rancho than a wagon train could
-haul away. If it’s a fact, we’ve made a mistake by——”
-
-He finished the sentence by jerking his thumb over his shoulder toward
-Julian.
-
-“Sartin, we have,” replied Sanders. “We hadn’t oughter give him up for
-no $5,000. Pedro told us that the ole man don’t know whar the money is
-any more’n we do, but that he would find out all about it now; and when
-he said that he looked at Julian. Did you notice?”
-
-Tom replied in the affirmative.
-
-“That means that the money is hid somewhars; but it can’t be that the
-boy knows whar it is, ’cause he was so young when he was took away from
-here. Thar’s a heap o’ things about this house an’ family that I would
-like to have made clear to me. But I know one thing, an’ that is, we
-can make up on the other feller what we lose on Julian; an’ besides, we
-can watch our chance an’ steal the boy out agin when—what’s that? Did
-you hear anything, youngster?”
-
-Sanders’ voice trembled as he asked this question, and facing suddenly
-about he gazed first toward the farther end of the room, and then
-toward Julian, who had started to his feet, and stood looking the very
-picture of bewilderment.
-
-“I did,” replied the boy, in a scarcely audible whisper; “and I saw
-something moving those curtains, too.”
-
-The walls of the room into which Julian and his captors had been
-conducted, instead of being plastered or papered, were concealed by
-crimson hangings which extended from the ceiling to the floor. These
-were the curtains of which he had spoken.
-
-As he sat listening in a dreamy sort of way to the whispered
-conversation of the trappers, he heard a grating noise on the other
-side of the hangings resembling that which would be occasioned by a key
-turning in a rusty lock.
-
-A bright, dazzling light blazed up for an instant and was extinguished,
-and then the hangings were pushed aside and a pair of eyes appeared at
-the opening and looked into the room.
-
-Julian saw a portion of the face to which they belonged and sprang
-to his feet in great astonishment, for he thought he recognized the
-features of the emigrant whose conversation with Sanders he had
-overheard. But the face was withdrawn almost as soon as it appeared,
-and Julian was not allowed a second look.
-
-“What did you see?” cried Sanders, his face ghastly pale, and the hand
-which rested on the lock of his rifle trembling visibly.
-
-“I saw some one looking in here,” replied Julian, “and it was the same
-man who offered you a thousand dollars to put me out of the way.”
-
-“Dick Mortimer!” Sanders almost shrieked.
-
-The expression of terror on his face gave way instantly to a look of
-profound astonishment. He dropped the butt of his rifle heavily to the
-floor, and Tom uttered a long-drawn whistle.
-
-The two men stared vacantly at one another for a moment, and then with
-a common impulse sprang across the room and tore aside the hangings.
-
-There was no one there. Nothing was revealed except the solid stone
-wall which formed that side of the room. Where could the emigrant have
-gone? He certainly had not come into the room, and neither could he
-have retreated through the wall. Julian stood transfixed.
-
-“I know I saw him there,” said he, as soon as he could speak. “It beats
-me where he could have gone so suddenly.”
-
-“That’s nothing,” replied Sanders. “You’ll be beat wuss than this if
-you stay in this rancho all night, I can tell you that.”
-
-But the trapper’s actions indicated that it was something, after
-all, for as soon as he had satisfied himself that the emigrant had
-disappeared, he dropped the hangings as if they had been coals of fire,
-and snatching the lantern from the table retreated toward the door with
-all possible haste, with Tom close at his heels. Nor was Julian far
-behind the trappers when they reached the hall.
-
-He did not wonder now that they were impatient to transact their
-business and leave the house. He would have been glad to leave it
-himself. His captors had told him that there were some “queer doings”
-in that rancho. Did they refer to scenes like this? Were people who,
-like this emigrant, had no business there, in the habit of walking
-about the house every night, and of vanishing after such a bewildering
-fashion when discovered; and was he to be compelled to remain there a
-witness to such proceedings.
-
-The boy trembled at the thought. He was not superstitious. He knew that
-he had seen the face of a man peeping out from behind the hangings, and
-he believed, too, that his sudden and mysterious disappearance could
-be explained, and that there was nothing supernatural about it; but
-nevertheless he resolved that as long as he was allowed the free use
-of his feet he would not remain in a dark room in that house without
-company.
-
-When the trappers retreated into the hall he went with them, and like
-them, kept his back turned toward the room, and impatiently awaited
-Pedro’s return. Nor was he obliged to wait long.
-
-In a few seconds he heard a door open and close, a light flashed into
-the hall, and two men came hurrying toward him. One of them was Pedro,
-and the other was a tall, foreign-looking gentleman, in dressing-gown
-and slippers, who came along with a smile on his face, and his hand
-outstretched, as if about to greet some friend from whom he had long
-been separated.
-
-Upon reaching Julian’s side he threw his arms around him and clasped
-him in a most affectionate embrace—to which the boy submitted without
-uttering a word. He had not expected such a reception as this; and, if
-one might judge by the expression on the faces of the trappers, they
-had not expected it either. Their underjaws dropped down, they stared
-at one another for a moment, and then Tom gave utterance to another
-long-drawn whistle, and Sanders pounded the floor with the butt of his
-rifle.
-
-“Julian! Julian! is it possible that you have returned at last?” cried
-the gentleman, holding the boy off at arm’s length for a moment, and
-then straining him to his breast once more. “Don’t you know your Uncle
-Reginald?”
-
-“It’s him sure enough, ain’t it?” asked Sanders.
-
-“Of course it is he,” replied the owner of the rancho, still clinging
-to Julian as if he never meant to let him go again. “I should have
-recognized him if I had met him in Asia. No one but a Mortimer could
-ever boast of such a face as that. Where did you find him? Julian, why
-don’t you tell me that you are glad to see me?”
-
-“I say, guv’nor,” interrupted Sanders, “couldn’t he talk to you jest as
-well arter we are gone? Me an’ my pardner are in a monstrous hurry. How
-about them $5,000?”
-
-“I will place it in your hands this moment. Come with me.”
-
-Seizing Julian by the hand, Reginald Mortimer—for that was the
-gentleman’s name—led the way along the hall, and into a room which the
-prisoner saw was used as a sleeping apartment, for there was the bed
-from which this man, who claimed to be his uncle, had just arisen.
-
-Conducting the boy to a seat on the sofa, and leaving the trappers to
-stand or sit as suited their fancy, the gentleman produced a bunch of
-keys from his desk and unlocked a strong box which was standing at the
-head of his bed.
-
-When the lid was thrown back Julian opened his eyes and leaned forward
-to obtain a nearer view of the contents of the box.
-
-Such a sight he had never seen before. The box was literally filled
-with gold coin—some of it packed away in little drawers, and the rest
-tied up in canvas bags. Two of these bags the owner lifted out of the
-box and handed to the trappers, saying:
-
-“There is the money I promised to give you if you succeeded in
-restoring Julian to me safe and sound. I give you my hearty thanks
-beside, for you have rendered me a most important service. Pedro, show
-Sanders and his friend to the best room in the house.”
-
-“Nary time, if _you_ please!” exclaimed the trapper, with a frightened
-look. “We’ll feel a heap better, an’ sleep a sight easier, if we camp
-in the mountains.”
-
-“But I want to talk to you about Julian. Where did you find him?”
-
-“We’ll tell you all about that when we bring the other feller to you.”
-
-“The other fellow?”
-
-“Yes; that is, if we can come to tarms.”
-
-“Whom do you mean?”
-
-“Silas Roper. Say another five thousand fur him, an’ we’ll have him
-here to-morrow bright an’ arly.”
-
-“Silas Roper!” exclaimed the gentleman, gleefully. “Am I not in luck?
-Certainly, I say it; bring him immediately.”
-
-“It’s a bargain. Come on, Tom.”
-
-“Well, go, if you must, and remember that although I am under
-obligations to you now, I shall be vastly more your debtor when you
-give that man into my hands. My plans are working splendidly.”
-
-When the door had closed behind the trappers Reginald Mortimer locked
-his strong box and once more turned toward Julian. The latter, who
-since his arrival at the rancho had moved like one in a dream, aroused
-himself by a strong effort and looked squarely into the man’s face. He
-gazed at him a moment, and then sprung to his feet with a cry of alarm
-and ran toward the door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-JULIAN’S HOME.
-
-
-WE HAVE said that Julian Mortimer was the hero of our story, and in
-order that you may understand what brought him to the mountains, and
-how it came that several persons whom he believed he had never seen
-before should take so deep an interest in him, we must go back and
-relate some events that transpired previous to the beginning of our
-story.
-
-On the banks of the Missouri River, about fifty miles below St. Joseph,
-was a small clearing, in which stood a dilapidated cabin inhabited by
-the family of John Bowles. It was a gloomy-looking place, and that was
-not to be wondered at, for Jack, as he was familiarly called, was not
-the man to waste any of his time or money in beautifying his home.
-Both were much too precious for that. His time was spent in hunting
-and trapping, and his money—what little he earned—was devoted to the
-purchase of bad whisky, of which he was exceedingly fond. He was a
-tall, heavy, broad-shouldered man, and looked the very impersonation of
-laziness. His two boys, Jake and Tom, were chips of the old block, and
-his wife was a sharp-featured, ill-tempered woman of wonderful strength
-and daring, and it was said that in a fair rough-and-tumble fight—for
-things came to that sometimes in the cabin of Mr. Bowles—she was more
-than a match for her redoubtable husband.
-
-The neighboring settlers had but little to do with Jack. They remarked
-that his family went clothed in rags from one year’s end to another;
-that they were sometimes destitute of even the common necessities of
-life; and that Jack hunted early and late and spent every cent he
-made at the grocery at “The Corners.” But one stormy night a stranger
-was seen to ride rapidly away from the cabin, and from that hour
-things seemed to take a turn for the better with Jack Bowles. He and
-his family appeared in brand new suits of clothing; the boys sported
-silver-mounted rifles in place of the rusty single-barreled shot-guns
-in which they had before taken so much delight; a neighbor, who knew
-something of the use of carpenters’ tools, was employed to patch up
-the cabin, and Jack gave up hunting and spent his days and nights in
-lounging about the grocery, drinking whisky and showing large rolls of
-bills and handfuls of gold and silver. The settlers noticed, too, that
-the cabin had an inmate whom they had never seen before—a slender,
-fair-haired boy about eight years of age, who seemed to be altogether
-out of his element there. And they told one another also that Jack and
-his wife had reasons for wishing to keep him out of sight as much as
-possible, for whenever any one passed the clearing the boy would be
-summoned into the house by the shrill voice of Mrs. Bowles, and the
-door closed upon him.
-
-From this they naturally concluded that the boy and the money Jack
-spent so freely were in some way connected; and, when hard pressed,
-Jack acknowledged that such was the fact. He said that the boy’s
-name was Julian Mortimer; that he had been brought to the cabin by a
-stranger who wished to leave him there for a month or two while he went
-on a business tour to New Orleans; and that he had paid a few weeks’
-board for him in advance. There was one thing, however, that Jack did
-not see fit to disclose, and that was that the stranger had cautioned
-him to keep strict watch over the boy, and under no circumstances
-to allow him far out of his sight. For awhile the settlers wondered
-greatly at this story; but it soon ceased to be the topic of
-conversation, and finally even the circumstance of the stranger’s visit
-was forgotten.
-
-Weeks grew into months, and months into years, and Julian Mortimer was
-still an inmate of Jack Bowles’ cabin, which he had learned to call
-home. The money that had been paid for his board had long ago been
-squandered at The Corners, and Jack had been obliged to overhaul his
-long-neglected implements of the chase, and resume his old occupation
-of hunting and trapping.
-
-The cabin was in a worse condition now than it was before it was
-repaired. It was built of rough, unhewn logs, and contained but one
-room. It had no floor—the ground, which had been trampled upon until
-it was as hard as a rock, answering that purpose. The only furniture
-it could boast of were two miserable beds, and a three-legged pine
-table that had been pushed against the wall to enable it to retain its
-upright position. As for chairs, there were none; the places of these
-useful articles being supplied with boxes and empty nail-kegs. There
-were no windows in the cabin, all the light and air being admitted
-through the door, which was allowed to stand open during the coldest
-days in winter.
-
-A ladder on one side of the room led to the loft where Julian slept. It
-was the most uncomfortable part of the house, for some of the boards
-at the gable-end had fallen off, the shingles on the roof were loose,
-and during a storm the rain and sleet rattled down on his hard pillow.
-There was nothing inviting about Julian’s bed, for it was simply a pile
-of husks, with a large gunny sack, a tattered blanket, and one or two
-ragged coats spread over it. But he always went to that bed aching in
-every muscle after his hard day’s work, and slept as soundly there, in
-spite of the cold wind and rattling shingles, as if it had been a couch
-of down.
-
-One end of the cabin was occupied by an immense fire-place, with
-a stick chimney, which leaned away from the building as if about
-to topple over. A fire was burning brightly on the hearth one cold
-afternoon in March, and before it stood Mrs. Bowles, watching some
-venison steaks that were broiling on the coals, and smoking a short
-cob pipe, which was held firmly between her teeth. She was angry—that
-was plain enough to be seen—and, indeed, it would have been difficult
-to find her in any other mood. She thought she had good reasons for
-showing her temper occasionally, for “that Julian,” as she called
-the household drudge, was the plague of her life. More than half an
-hour ago she had sent him out after firewood, and although she had
-called him three times, and promised to dust his jacket for him the
-moment he came within reach of her arm—a threat that never failed to
-quicken the pace of her sons—he had not yet returned. She watched the
-broiling steaks for a few minutes, listening the while for the sound of
-footsteps, and then went to the door, removed the pipe from her mouth,
-threw back her head and shrieked:
-
-“You, Julian! Have you gone clear to St. Joe arter that firewood?”
-
-This time her shrill tones reached the ears of a young fellow about
-sixteen years of age, who was at work in the edge of the woods at a
-short distance from the house. We ought rather to say that he _had_
-been at work, and was resting from his labor, leaning on his ax and
-gazing thoughtfully at the ground when the woman’s sharp voice broke in
-upon his reverie.
-
-“There it is again,” said he, with a long-drawn sigh, lifting his ax
-and resuming his work. “It’s Julian! Julian! from morning until night.
-Julian has to do everything that is done on the farm. I shouldn’t mind
-the work so much if they would only give me some warm clothes and say
-a kind word to me now and then; but they won’t do it. Look at that,”
-he added, pausing, with his ax suspended in the air, and gazing down
-at his boots, which were so sadly out of repair that they afforded his
-feet but very little protection from the mud, and none whatever from
-the sharp, biting air. “This coat is so thin that the wind blows right
-through it; and as for this hat—well, perhaps it is better than none
-at all, but not much. These are the only clothes I have in the world,
-and they are the best I have owned since I came to this place eight
-years ago. I have money enough to buy others, but I dare not do it, for
-fear that they will be taken away from me and given to that lazy Jake
-or Tom. And as for the treatment I receive—why, there isn’t a dog on
-the place so badly abused. I suppose I shall get another beating now
-for keeping Mrs. Bowles waiting for this firewood.”
-
-When Julian had finished his soliloquy and his chopping, he threw down
-his ax, and shouldering one of the heavy back-logs he had cut, made his
-way slowly toward the house. Mrs. Bowles was too busily engaged with
-her preparations for supper to think of the rawhide which she had taken
-from its accustomed nail behind the door and laid upon the table close
-at her side, and Julian succeeded in transferring his pile of wood from
-the edge of the clearing to the cabin without attracting her attention.
-This done, his work for the night was over, and he was at liberty to
-attend to a little business of his own.
-
-Drawing on a pair of tattered gloves he left the house, and walking
-briskly past the corn-cribs, struck into the path that led through the
-woods to The Corners, turning his head now and then to make sure that
-there was no one observing his movements. Had he taken pains to look
-closely at one of the corn-cribs as he went past it, he would have
-discovered two pairs of eyes peering through an opening over the door;
-and had he glanced behind him when he reached the cover of the woods,
-he would have seen the door fly open and two figures spring out and run
-swiftly along the path in pursuit of him.
-
-Julian had set out to visit his traps. Minks, foxes and raccoons were
-abundant in the woods about the clearing, and he was very expert in
-taking them. During the last two winters he had earned a sum of money
-that was quite a respectable fortune in his eyes; and more than that,
-he had purchased an excellent rifle, a supply of ammunition and a fine
-young horse, which he intended should some day carry him miles and
-miles out of the reach of Mrs. Bowles’ rawhide.
-
-The rifle, together with his money and stock of furs, was concealed
-where no one would ever think of looking for it; but the horse was
-claimed by Tom Bowles, Jack’s younger son, who took possession of the
-animal as soon as Julian brought him home. But that was a matter that
-did not trouble our hero. Of course he was denied the pleasure of
-riding the horse—for Jake and Tom followed the example set them by
-their parents, and tyrannized over Julian in every possible way—but
-he knew where to find him when he wanted him; and when he was ready
-to undertake the journey he had been planning and thinking about, he
-intended to take possession of him without consulting Tom Bowles or any
-one else.
-
-On the day that Julian first brought the horse home he created quite a
-commotion in the Bowles family. When he told Jack, in the presence of
-his wife and sons, that the animal was his own private property, and
-that he had paid $75 in cash for him, the inquiry very naturally arose,
-where did the money come from? That was a matter that Julian did not
-care to talk about. If he replied that he had received it for the furs
-he had trapped, he knew that Jack and his boys would hunt the woods
-over until they found his dead-falls, and then rob and destroy them.
-
-He declined to enlighten them on this point, and that created on uproar
-at once. Jack swore lustily; Mrs. Bowles flourished her rawhide; Tom
-took charge of the horse and led him off to the stable; and Jake
-threatened to black his eye for him. But Julian, who was not one of the
-sort who are easily frightened, remained firm, and Jack and his boys
-were compelled to change their tactics and resort to strategy.
-
-They told one another that they would keep a sharp eye on all Julian’s
-movements, and follow him wherever he went; and if they did not find
-out what he did in the woods while he was there, and what it was that
-took him away from home so regularly every night and morning, they
-would know the reason why.
-
-But even this plan failed, for Julian was always on the alert and could
-not be caught napping. His ears, as sharp as an Indian’s, always told
-him when he was followed. On such occasions he would stroll carelessly
-about through the woods, as if he had no particular object in view,
-and finally make his way home again and go to work. Then Tom and Jake
-would be angrier than ever, and Julian was certain to suffer for his
-watchfulness.
-
-On this particular evening, however, Julian was not as careful as
-usual. The plans he had been so long maturing were almost ready to
-carry into execution, and he was so completely wrapped up in his
-glorious anticipations concerning the future that he did not hear the
-light footsteps of Jake and Tom as they dodged through the bushes
-behind him.
-
-He walked straight to the creek, and from the force of long habit,
-paused on the bank to look about him. Having satisfied himself that
-there was no one in sight, he sprung into the bed of the stream, and
-looking under the overhanging roots of a beech where he had set one of
-his traps, discovered a large mink caught by one of his hind feet.
-
-A blow on the head with a stick stilled the animal, and after resetting
-and baiting the trap, Julian picked up his prize, and rejoicing in the
-thought that the skin of the mink would bring $2 more to be added to
-his little fortune, hurried on up the creek.
-
-For an hour Julian continued his walk, stopping now and then to bait
-and set a trap that had been sprung by some animal too cunning to be
-caught, or to take a fox, mink or raccoon out of another, and finally
-he stopped at the foot of a precipitous cliff with $13 worth of furs
-thrown over his shoulder—not a bad afternoon’s work for a trapper of
-his years.
-
-He now became more cautious than ever in his movements. His first care
-was to convince himself that there was no one following him; and in
-order to set his fears on this score at rest, he dropped his game and
-ran back along the bank of the creek, peering through the trees in
-every direction, and passing so close to Tom and Jake, who had thrown
-themselves behind a log to escape discovery, that he could have touched
-them. But he saw no one, and believing himself to be alone in the
-woods, he once more shouldered his game and made his way up the cliff
-until he reached a thicket of bushes that grew near the summit.
-
-Here he paused, and began pulling away the leaves with his hands,
-presently disclosing to view a small door which had been set into the
-face of the cliff. The opening of the door revealed what appeared to be
-the mouth of a cave, extending down into the ground. Julian threw in
-his foxes and minks one after the other, and then crawled in himself
-and closed the door after him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-JULIAN MEETS A STRANGER.
-
-
-JULIAN’S first move, after he had shut the door, was to strike a match,
-and his second to light a candle which he took from a shelf close at
-hand. As the light blazed up, he held it above his head and took a
-survey of the cave, or, as he called it, his “store-house.” It was a
-very small one—not more than six feet square—but it was large enough
-to contain all Julian’s earthly possessions. All that could be seen
-was a quantity of furs, some already cured and neatly baled up, and
-others hanging against the walls stretched upon boards and frames to
-dry; but there were other valuable articles stowed away there, and as
-soon as Julian had glanced about the room to see that nothing had been
-disturbed during his absence, he placed his candle on the floor and
-proceeded to bring them to light.
-
-The walls, floor and ceiling of the room were composed of small
-saplings, and two of these saplings concealed treasures that were of
-more value to Julian than all his furs. One of them was in the floor,
-and when it had been lifted out of its place by the edge of a hatchet,
-some of the young trapper’s wealth, which would have made Jake and Tom
-open their eyes in amazement could they have seen it, was disclosed to
-view.
-
-It consisted of a silver-mounted rifle, inclosed in a strong canvas bag
-to protect it from the damp and dirt, a hunting-knife, an ornamented
-powder-horn and a fawn-skin bullet-pouch, both the latter filled with
-ammunition.
-
-Julian looked at these articles long and lovingly. He had come by them
-honestly—they were the first valuables he had ever owned, and he had
-worked so hard for them! He took the rifle from its case, drew it up to
-his shoulder and glanced along the clean brown barrel, as if drawing
-a bead on an imaginary deer’s head, held it in a dozen different
-positions to allow the light to shine on the silver mountings, and
-finally returned it, with all the accouterments, to its hiding-place,
-and went to look after his other treasures. He removed one of the
-saplings that formed the ceiling, thrust his arm into the opening
-and drew out a small tin box, which contained money to the amount of
-$80—the proceeds of two winters’ work at trapping. Julian ran hastily
-over the bills to make sure that they were all there, then put back
-the box, returned the sapling to its place, and drawing his knife from
-his pocket sat down to remove the skins from the animals he had just
-captured.
-
-“I’m rich!” he exclaimed, looking about him with a smile of
-satisfaction. “Counting in my money and what my horse, hunting rig
-and hunting furs are worth, I have at least $250. I have purchased
-everything I need, and some fine, frosty morning, when Mrs. Bowles
-calls for ‘you, Julian,’ to get up and build the fire, he won’t
-answer. He’ll be miles away, and be making quick tracks for the Rocky
-Mountains. I only wish I was there now. There’s where I came from
-when I was brought to Jack Bowles’ house. I just know it was, because
-I can remember of hearing people talk of going over the mountains
-to California, and I know, too, that there were gold diggings on my
-father’s farm, or rancho, I believe he called it. I’m going to try to
-find my father when I get there, and if I ever see him I shall know
-him.”
-
-Julian’s thoughts ran on in this channel while he was busy with his
-knife, and in half an hour the skins had all been stretched, and the
-young trapper was ready to return to the miserable hovel he called
-home. He extinguished his candle, crawled out of the cave, and after
-concealing the door by piling leaves against it, hurried down the bluff
-and into the woods, happy in the belief that no one was the wiser
-for what he had done; but no sooner had he disappeared than Jake and
-Tom Bowles came out of the bushes in which they had been hidden, and
-clambered up the cliff toward Julian’s store-house.
-
-It was rapidly growing dark, and Julian, anxious to reach the cabin
-before his absence was discovered, broke into a rapid run, which he
-never slackened until he reached the road leading from The Corners to
-the clearing. There he encountered a stranger, who, as he came out of
-the bushes, accosted him with:
-
-“Hold on a minute, my lad. I believe I am a little out of my reckoning,
-and perhaps you can set me right.”
-
-Julian stopped and looked at the man. He could not get so much as even
-a glimpse of his face, for the broad felt hat he wore was pulled down
-over his forehead, and his heavy muffler was drawn up so high that
-nothing but his eyes could be seen; but the boy at once put him down
-as a gentleman, for he was dressed in broadcloth, and wore fine boots
-and fur gloves. Julian looked at his neat dress, and then at his own
-tattered garments, and drew his coat about him and folded his arms over
-it to hide it from the stranger’s gaze.
-
-“Is there a hotel about here?” continued the gentleman, approaching the
-place where Julian was standing.
-
-“No, sir,” was the reply; “none nearer than The Corners, and that’s ten
-miles away.”
-
-“Is there no dwelling-house near?”
-
-“There is a shanty about a mile distant belonging to Jack Bowles, but I
-wouldn’t advise you to go there.”
-
-“Then I am on the right road after all,” said the stranger, with a
-sigh of relief. “Jack Bowles! He’s just the man I want to see. I have
-some important business with him. He can accommodate me with a bed and
-supper, can he not?”
-
-“He can give you some corn bread and venison, but as for a _bed_,
-that’s a thing he doesn’t keep in his house. If you happen to have half
-a dollar in your pocket, however, he will stow you away somewhere. Jack
-will do almost anything for half a dollar. Why, what’s the matter,
-sir?”
-
-It was no wonder that Julian asked this question, for the gentleman,
-who had now advanced quite near to him, took just one glance at his
-face, and started back as if he had seen some frightful apparition. He
-pushed his hat back from his forehead, pulled his muffler down from
-his face, and stared at Julian as if he meant to look him through. The
-boy was astonished at his behavior, and he would have been still more
-astonished if he had been able to look far enough into the future to
-see all that was to grow out of this meeting.
-
-“Boy!” exclaimed the gentleman, in a voice which his agitation rendered
-almost indistinct, “who are you? What’s your name?”
-
-“Julian Mortimer,” replied our hero.
-
-“Julian! Julian Mortimer!” repeated the man, as if he could scarcely
-believe his ears. “It cannot be possible. Why, boy, you’re just—ahem!
-I mean—what a striking resemblance.”
-
-The stranger spoke these last words hurriedly, and then, as if
-recollecting himself, hastily pulled his hat down over his forehead
-again, and once more concealed his face with his muffler—all except
-his eyes, which he kept fastened upon Julian.
-
-“No doubt you think I act very strangely,” he continued, after a
-moment’s pause, “and perhaps I do, but the truth of the matter is, you
-look so much like a young friend of mine—a relative, in fact—that for
-a moment I was almost sure you were he. But, of course, you can’t be,
-for he is dead—been dead eight years. If you are ready we will go on.”
-
-Julian was forced to be contented with this explanation, but he was not
-quite satisfied with it. It was made in a bungling, hesitating manner,
-as if the man were thinking about one thing and talking about another.
-More than that, the excitement he had exhibited on the first meeting
-with Julian seemed to increase the longer he looked at him; and now and
-then he rubbed his gloved hands together as if he were meditating upon
-something that afforded him infinite pleasure. He continued to watch
-the boy out of the corner of his eye, and finally inquired:
-
-“Is this man Bowles, of whom you spoke, your father?”
-
-“No, sir,” replied Joe, emphatically. “I live with him, but he is no
-relative of mine. My father, as I remember him, was a different sort of
-man altogether.”
-
-“Eh!” ejaculated the stranger, with a start. “As you remember him? Ah!
-he is dead, then?”
-
-“Not that I know of, sir. He was alive and well the last time I saw
-him. I’ll see him again in a few weeks.”
-
-“Where is he?”
-
-“Out West. He owns a rancho near the mountains with a gold mine on it.”
-
-“Then why are you here?”
-
-“Because I can’t help myself. I didn’t come here of my own free will,
-but was brought by one who will have good cause to remember me if I
-meet him again when I become a man.”
-
-“Do you think you would know him if you should see him again?” asked
-the stranger, looking sharply at Julian, and putting his hat lower over
-his eyes.
-
-“I am quite sure I should. He stole me away from my home and brought
-me here; but why he did it I can’t tell. I don’t intend to stay any
-longer, if it would do him any good to know it. I’ve got a good horse
-and rifle, and plenty of money, and I am going to leave here in a few
-days and go back to the mountains where I belong, and I shall not ask
-Jack Bowles’ consent, either.”
-
-“Do you think he would oppose it?”
-
-“I know he would. He would beat me half to death, or his wife would,
-and lock me up in the smoke-house till I promised never to think of
-such a thing again. I’m going to run away, and by the time he misses me
-I shall be a long distance out of his reach.”
-
-The man listened attentively to all Julian had to say, and when the
-latter ceased speaking he placed his hands behind his back, fastened
-his eyes on the ground, and walked along as if he were in a brown
-study. He did not look up until they reached the door of the cabin
-where Jack Bowles, who had just finished his supper, stood smoking his
-cob pipe.
-
-“Wal, who have ye got thar?” was his surly greeting.
-
-“A gentleman who wishes to find a place to stay all night,” replied
-Julian.
-
-“Why don’t he toddle on and find it, then?” growled Jack. “I ain’t a
-hinderin’ him, be I? He can’t stop here. I don’t keep a hotel to take
-in every Tom, Dick and Harry that comes along. Wal, I be dog-gone!”
-
-Jack suddenly took his pipe from his mouth, and stepping hastily up to
-the stranger, bent forward and peered into his face. Then something
-that was intended for a smile of recognition overspread his own
-countenance, and extending his hand with as cordial an air as he could
-assume, he continued:
-
-“I allowed I had seed ye somewhar afore, Mr.—eh?”
-
-Jack paused before the name he had been about to pronounce escaped his
-lips, interrupted by a hasty gesture from the stranger, who glanced
-toward Julian and raised his hand warningly.
-
-“You are mistaken, my friend,” said he, blandly. “You have never seen
-me before, but I hope the fact that I am a stranger to you will not
-prevent you from extending your hospitality to me for the night.”
-
-Jack stared, took a few long, deliberate pulls at his pipe, looked
-first at the eaves of the cabin, then down at the ground, and finally
-turned to Julian for an explanation.
-
-“What’s he tryin’ to get through hisself?” he asked.
-
-“He wants something to eat and a bed to sleep in,” replied the boy.
-
-“Oh! Why didn’t he say so, then? Wal, stranger, I reckon we can hang
-ye up somewhar,” added Jack, who had seen and comprehended the warning
-gesture; “although, as I told ye afore, we don’t make a business of
-takin’ in every tramp that comes along. Ye see, in a new country
-like this it ain’t safe. Ole woman, make up another batch of them
-corn-dodgers an’ fry a slice or two of that bar’s meat. Julian, what be
-ye a standin’ thar gapin’ at? Cl’ar yerself. Come in, stranger—come
-in an’ set down.”
-
-Julian moved around the corner of the cabin and remained out of sight
-until he heard Mrs. Bowles laying the table for the guest, and then he
-also entered.
-
-It was not a very sociable party he found in the house. Mrs. Bowles was
-moving about preparing the corn-dodgers and bear meat; the visitor,
-who had removed his overcoat and muffler, was comfortably seated on a
-nail-keg in a dark corner of the room, and Jack Bowles sat in front
-of the fire, his elbows resting on his knees and his hat pulled down
-over his eyes, which were slowly moving over the stranger’s person and
-scrutinizing his dress and ornaments.
-
-Julian noticed that his gaze rested long on the watch chain that hung
-across the stranger’s vest, and on the diamond ring that glittered on
-his finger, and the expression he saw on Jack’s face alarmed him and
-made him wish most sincerely that he had never conducted the gentleman
-to the cabin.
-
-No one spoke until supper was ready, and then the guest was invited
-to “draw up and pitch in.” Julian tried to obtain a glimpse of his
-features as he came out of his dark corner, but the man, as if guessing
-his intention, kept his head turned away from him and took his seat at
-the table with his back to the fire, so that his face still remained in
-the shadow.
-
-While he was busy with his corn-dodgers and bear meat, Jake and Tom
-came in. They glanced curiously at the guest, and Tom seated himself
-beside the fire opposite Julian, whom he regarded with a triumphant
-smile, while Jake went to one of the beds that stood in the room and
-carefully hid something under the pillows. Julian afterward recalled
-the movements of these two worthies, and wondered why his suspicions
-had not been aroused.
-
-When the stranger had satisfied his appetite, the three boys, at a sign
-from Mrs. Bowles, sat down and made a very light meal of that which was
-left, and no sooner had they arisen from the table than they received
-a second signal from Mr. Bowles, who pointed with his thumb over his
-shoulder toward that part of the room in which the beds were situated.
-
-The boys all obeyed the order, but one of them, at least, had no
-intention of going to sleep. It was Julian, who, as he slowly mounted
-the ladder that led to the loft, told himself that he was in some way
-connected with the stranger’s visit to the cabin, and that he would
-learn something about the matter before morning, if there was any
-way for him to accomplish his object. He stretched himself upon his
-hard bed, and drawing one of the coats over his shoulders, waited
-impatiently to see what was going to happen.
-
-For half an hour all was still; then some one began to move softly
-about the cabin, a step was heard on the ladder, and a light flashed
-upon the rafters over Julian’s head.
-
-Presently a hand grasping a tallow dip appeared above the edge of the
-loft, closely followed by the grizzly head and broad shoulders of Jack
-Bowles, who stopped when he reached the top of the ladder and gazed at
-our hero long and earnestly.
-
-Julian was wide awake, and through his half-closed eyelids could see
-every move Jack made, but the latter, believing him to be fast asleep,
-descended the ladder and joined his guest.
-
-“My suspicions are confirmed,” soliloquized Julian. “They intend to
-talk upon some subject that they don’t want me to know anything about.
-I am going to learn something now. Perhaps I shall find out who I am
-and where my father is, and why I was brought here. What if this man
-should prove to be my father, who, for reasons of his own, does not
-wish to reveal himself to me?”
-
-Julian, highly excited over this thought, rolled noiselessly off the
-bed upon the floor, crept to the edge of the loft, and looked over into
-the room below. Jack had just placed his candle on the table, and was
-approaching his guest with outstretched hand.
-
-“Now, then, Mr. Mortimer,” said he, “the boy is out of the way fur the
-night, an’ thar’s no use in settin’ back thar away from the fire. Draw
-up an’ give us a shake.”
-
-“_Mr. Mortimer!_” was Julian’s mental ejaculation.
-
-His heart seemed to stop beating. He opened his eyes to their widest
-extent and kept them fastened upon the stranger, who pulled his
-nail-keg in front of the fire and seated himself upon it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE FLIGHT.
-
-
-WHEN THE gentleman came out of his dark corner, and the light of the
-candle fell upon his features, Julian took a good look at him, and an
-expression of great disappointment settled on his face.
-
-“Whoever he is, he is not my father,” said he, to himself, “for my
-father had gray hair. This man is a stranger, and as it would be a mean
-piece of business in me to stay here and listen to his conversation I
-will crawl back to my pile of husks and go to sleep.”
-
-Acting upon this resolution Julian began a slow and cautious retreat;
-but he had not gone far when a thought struck him, and he crept back to
-the edge of the loft and looked over into the room again.
-
-“Jack called him _Mr. Mortimer_,” soliloquized the boy, “and I should
-like to know who and what he is. The manner in which he acted when I
-met him in the woods makes me believe that he has seen me before, and
-that he knows something about me that he wishes to keep hidden from me.
-I have a good deal at stake and it will do no harm to listen a while
-anyhow.”
-
-It was a very handsome face that Julian’s eyes rested upon, and one
-that he did not think he should ever forget. Although the man’s
-language indicated that he was an American, his features had a decided
-Spanish cast. His face was dark and wore a haughty expression, his hair
-was long and waving, and like his mustache and goatee, was as black as
-midnight. Julian looked at him attentively, and was surprised to see
-that he shook hands with Mr. Bowles and his wife, as if they were old
-acquaintances whom he was glad to meet once more.
-
-“It’s a long time since I’ve seed ye, Mr. Mortimer, but I allowed I
-knowed ye as soon as I clapped my eyes onto ye,” said Jack, drawing his
-nail-keg a little closer to the side of his guest.
-
-“And you came very near making a mess of it, too,” replied the latter,
-with some impatience in his tones. “I believe that boy suspects me—he
-looked at me as if he did—and I would not have him know who I am for
-the world. You’re sure he is asleep?”
-
-“Sartin, ’cause I went up to look. We’ve kept him safe an’ sound fur
-ye, ’cordin’ to orders, hain’t we?”
-
-“An’ now you have come to take him away from us—I jest know ye have,”
-exclaimed Mrs. Bowles, raising the corner of her tattered apron to her
-left eye. “I don’t know how I can let him go, ’cause my heart’s awfully
-sot onto that poor, motherless boy.”
-
-“We’ve done our level best by him,” chimed in Jack. “Ye told us when ye
-brought him here that he was a gentleman, an’ a gentleman’s son, an’
-we’ve treated him like one.”
-
-“When _he_ brought me here,” repeated Julian, to himself; and it was
-only by a great exercise of will that he refrained from speaking the
-words aloud.
-
-He became highly excited at once. Mr. Mortimer was the one who had
-stolen him away from his home and delivered him up to the tender
-mercies of Jack Bowles and his wife—the very man of all others he most
-wished to see. He had been a long time coming, almost eight years, and
-now that he had arrived, Julian found that he was destined to become
-better acquainted with him than he cared to be. He watched the guest
-more closely than ever, carefully scrutinizing his features in order to
-fix them in his memory. He hoped to meet him some day under different
-circumstances.
-
-“He haint never had no work to do, an’ we never struck him a lick in
-our lives,” continued Jack. “We’ve treated him better’n our own boys.
-He’s got a good hoss of his own, an’ I’ve been a feedin’ it outen my
-corn ever since he owned it, an’ never axed him even to bring in an
-armful of wood to pay for it. An’ my boys do say that he’s got a heap
-of money laid up somewhars. If ye have come to take him away I reckon
-ye’ll do the handsome thing by us.”
-
-“My friends,” interrupted the guest, as soon as he saw a chance to
-speak, “I know all about Julian, for I have talked with him. I know
-what he has got and what he intends to do. Have you ever told him
-anything about his parentage?”
-
-“Nary word,” replied Jack.
-
-“Then I wonder how it is that he knows so much about it. He knows that
-his home is near the mountains; that he was stolen away from it, and
-that he has a father there. More than that he intends to go back there
-very soon, and is laying his plans to run away from you.”
-
-“Wal, I never heered the beat in all my born days!” exclaimed Mrs.
-Bowles, involuntarily extending her hand toward the rawhide which hung
-on the nail behind the door. “I’ll give him the best kind of a whoppin’
-in the mornin’. I’ll beat him half to—— What should the poor, dear
-boy want to run away from his best friends fur?”
-
-“The leetle brat—the ongrateful rascal!” said Mr. Bowles. “That’s
-why he’s bought that ar hoss; an’ that’s why he’s been a huntin’ an’
-trappin’ so steady—to earn money to run away from us, is it? I’ll larn
-him.”
-
-And Jack turned around on his nail-keg and looked so savagely toward
-the loft, where Julian was supposed to be slumbering, that the
-eavesdropper was greatly alarmed, and crouched closer to the floor and
-trembled in every limb, as if he already felt the stinging blows of the
-rawhide.
-
-“It seems that my visit was most opportune,” continued the stranger.
-“If I had arrived a day or two later I might not have found Julian
-here. He would probably have been on his way to the mountains; and
-if he had by any accident succeeded in finding his old home, all my
-plans, which I have spent long years in maturing, would have been
-ruined. I came here to remove him from your care. It appears that
-certain persons, who are very much interested in him, and who have
-been searching for him high and low ever since I brought him here, have
-by some means discovered his hiding-place, and it is necessary that I
-should remove him farther out of their reach. I shall take him to South
-America.”
-
-“What’s that? Is it fur from here?” asked Jack.
-
-“It is a long distance. I came down the river from St. Joseph in a
-flatboat,” added the visitor. “I found that the captain is a man who
-will do anything for money, and I have arranged with him to carry us to
-New Orleans. It will take us a long time to accomplish the journey, but
-we cannot be as easily followed as we could if we went by steamer. If
-you will accompany me I will pay you well for your services. I can say
-that the boy is a lunatic and that you are his keeper.”
-
-“‘Nough said!” exclaimed Jack. “I’m jest the man to watch him.”
-
-“But you must not watch him too closely,” said Mr. Mortimer earnestly.
-“If he should accidentally fall overboard during the journey it would
-not make any difference in your pay.”
-
-“In course not,” replied Jack, with a meaning glitter in his eye. “If
-he gets one of them ar’ crazy spells onto him some dark night an’ jumps
-into the river, why—then——”
-
-“Why then you ought to be handsomely rewarded for your faithful
-services while in my employ, and discharged.”
-
-“Perzactly. Whar is this yere flatboat now?”
-
-“I left her about twenty miles up the river. I told the captain to
-lay up for a few hours until I could have time to come down here and
-transact my business with you. She will be along about noon to-morrow.
-Have everything ready so that we can hail her, and step on board
-without an instant’s delay.”
-
-“I don’t fur the life o’ me see how I can let him go—my heart is so
-sot onto him,” sighed Mrs. Bowles, once more raising her apron to her
-eyes. “He do save me a heap o’ steps, an’ he’s a monstrous good hand to
-cut wood an’ build fires o’ frosty mornin’s.”
-
-“But he hain’t never had it to do,” interrupted Jack, who, for reasons
-of his own, thought it best to impress upon the mind of his guest that
-Julian’s life under his roof had been one continual round of ease and
-enjoyment. “We allers makes our own boys roll out o’ mornin’s and cut
-wood, an’ Julian can lay in his comfortable bed, as snug as a bug in a
-rug, an’ snooze as long as he pleases. The reason we’ve tuk sich good
-care of him is, ’cause we thought ye sot store by him. Ye’re some kin
-to him, I reckon. Ye’re names is alike.”
-
-“That is a matter that does not interest you,” answered the guest
-sharply. “I pay you to work for me, and not to ask questions.”
-
-“I didn’t mean no offense. But when I see a man like yerself totin’ a
-boy about the country, an’ leavin’ him hid in a place like this fur
-eight year, an’ then huntin’ him up agin, an runnin’ him off to some
-other place, an’ hear ye say that if he falls into the river an’ gets
-drownded ye won’t be no ways sorry fur it, I think there’s something
-up, don’t I? Ye don’t do that fur nothing; an’ since the boy ain’t ole
-enough to be a standin’ atween ye an’ a woman, I naterally conclude
-that he stands atween ye an’ money. Howsomever, it hain’t no consarn of
-mine. I know which side of my corn-dodger’s got the lasses onto it.”
-
-“Pap! I say pap!” suddenly cried a voice from one of the beds. “Ye
-think yer sharp, ye an that feller do, but ye ain’t so sharp as ye
-might be.”
-
-“Hush yer noise, boy, an’ speak when ye’re spoken to,” exclaimed Jack
-angrily. “Ye needn’t be no ways oneasy, Mr. Mortimer,” he added, seeing
-that his guest arose hastily to his feet and appeared to be greatly
-excited to know that their conversation had been overheard. “We’re all
-true blue here, an’ my boys has too much good sense to blab what they
-hears—leastwise while they are paid to keep their mouths shet. Ye,
-Jake, roll over an’ go to sleep.”
-
-“All right, pap,” said Jake, obeying the first part of the order. “If
-ye wake up in the mornin’ an’ find that yer bird has flew ye needn’t
-blame me, ’cause I told ye.”
-
-“Eh?” roared Jack, jumping up in great amazement.
-
-“O, he won’t be here, an’ ye can bet yer bottom dollar on it. He’s
-heered every blessed word ye said.”
-
-“Who? Julian?” gasped the visitor.
-
-“Sartin. I seed his head a stickin’ over the hull time ye was a
-talkin’.”
-
-Had a bomb-shell burst in the room the two men could not have been
-more astonished. They stood motionless for a moment, and then, with a
-muttered imprecation, Jack bounded across the floor and went swiftly up
-the ladder that led to the loft, closely followed by his guest, whose
-face was as pale as death, while Mrs. Bowles snatched the rawhide from
-its nail, and rolling up her sleeves took her stand in front of the
-fire-place, prepared for any emergency.
-
-Jack sprung into the loft when he reached the top of the ladder and ran
-straight to the bed, expecting to lay his hands upon the eavesdropper;
-but he was not there. With eager haste he threw aside the tattered
-coats and blankets, and even kicked the corn-husks about, but no Julian
-was hidden among them. Nor was he anywhere in the loft; for there was
-no furniture there, and consequently no place of concealment large
-enough to shelter a squirrel.
-
-“Dog-gone!” roared Jack, stamping about so furiously that the boards
-which formed the floor of the loft creaked and bent, and seemed on the
-point of breaking beneath his weight and letting him through into the
-room below.
-
-“He’s gone, as sure as ye’re a foot high.”
-
-“He probably escaped through this hole,” said Mr. Mortimer, running to
-the gable-end of the cabin where the boards had fallen off. “It isn’t
-more than ten feet to the ground, and he could easily drop down without
-injuring himself. He must be brought back at any cost.”
-
-“In course he must, an’ I know how to do it. I’ve got a hound that’ll
-trail him. Ole woman, stick yer head outer that door an’ holler for
-Nero.”
-
-While Mrs. Bowles was shouting out the hound’s name, awaking the echoes
-far and near with her shrill voice, Jake and Tom were pulling on their
-clothes with all possible haste.
-
-“Here’s a fine chance for a spec,” said the former, slyly pulling a
-small tin box from under his pillow and putting it carefully into his
-pocket. “Mebbe that feller in the store clothes will give something
-to have Julian brought back. The ole man’ll never ketch him ’cause he
-can’t run fast enough; an’ Julian’s too sharp to give a hound a chance
-to foller him. We know jest the place he’ll make tracks fur, an’ if we
-go thar we can gobble him.”
-
-“Ye Jake!” cried Mr. Bowles, hurrying down the ladder, “when I get
-time, I’m a goin’ to give ye the best wallopin’ ye ever heern tell on.”
-
-“Ye needn’t mind,” replied Jake, in great alarm.
-
-“But I _will_ mind, I tell ye; an’ I hain’t a-goin’ to forget it,
-nuther.”
-
-“I hain’t been a doin’ of nothing, pap.”
-
-“That’s jest what’s the matter. I’m goin’ to lick ye fur not doin’
-something—fur not tellin’ me that ye seed Julian a listenin’. Here he
-comes! Here’s the feller that’ll bring the runaway back to us in less’n
-five minutes.”
-
-At this moment the door was dashed violently open and in bounded Nero,
-who seemed to know that there was work for him to do, and was impatient
-to begin it. He was a magnificent brute—so large that when he sprang
-up and placed his paws upon his master’s shoulders his head was on a
-level with Jack’s. He showed a frightful array of teeth and growled
-threateningly at the visitor, who constantly shifted his position in
-order to keep Jack’s burly form between himself and the savage beast.
-
-“Thar’s the dog fur ye, Mr. Mortimer,” said Bowles, looking proudly at
-his favorite. “He’ll ketch any thing ye tell him to, from a bar down
-to a chicken. Hand me that rope, ole woman. I’ll have to hold him in
-the leash, or he won’t leave enough of Julian to make it wuth while to
-take that trip down the river. Now, then, hunt ’em up, ye rascal!”
-
-Having made one end of the rope fast to the hound’s collar, Mr. Bowles
-wrapped the other about his hand and arm, snatched a blazing fire-brand
-from the hearth, and hurried out of the door and around the house, to
-examine the ground there, and ascertain if Julian had really escaped
-from the opening in the gable-end. The hound struck the scent at once,
-and uttering a loud bay dashed off into the darkness, dragging the
-clumsy Jack after him.
-
-“Now’s your time,” whispered Tom, when the yelping of the dog and the
-encouraging yells of his master began to grow fainter in the distance;
-“speak to him.”
-
-“I say!” exclaimed Jake, addressing himself to Mr. Mortimer, who was
-pacing nervously up and down the floor; “pap’ll never ketch him, but we
-can, ’cause we know whar to look fur him.”
-
-“Then why don’t you do it?” demanded the guest, angrily. “I will give
-you $10 apiece if you will bring him back to me.”
-
-“Wal, that’s business. We were jest waitin’ to hear ye say something of
-that kind. Come on, Tom.”
-
-The two boys rushed out of the house, and running swiftly along the
-path that led by the corn-cribs, were soon out of sight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-CHASED BY A BLOOD-HOUND.
-
-
-JULIAN did not remain long enough in his concealment to overhear all
-the conversation we have recorded, for an action he witnessed on the
-part of Jake Bowles, shortly after that worthy got into bed, turned
-his thoughts from the stranger, and his plans into another channel. He
-saw Jake thrust his arm under his pillow and draw out a small tin box,
-which he opened, and after looking over his shoulder to make sure that
-his father and mother were too much engaged with their visitor to pay
-any attention to himself, he drew out of it a roll of bills. He ran his
-fingers over them caressingly, held them above his head to allow the
-firelight to shine upon them, and exhibited in various other ways the
-delight he experienced in having them in his possession; after which he
-returned them to the box, replaced it under his pillow, and settling
-himself comfortably between the blankets, threw his arm over his head,
-and as Julian thought, prepared to go to sleep. But Jake did not intend
-to do anything of the kind, for he saw the top of the eavesdropper’s
-head over the edge of the loft.
-
-“That’s my box,” thought our hero, his cheek growing suddenly pale, and
-his heart beating against his ribs with a noise that frightened him.
-“I’ve been robbed.”
-
-The knowledge of this disagreeable fact came upon him with a force so
-stunning and bewildering, that for a few seconds he lay as motionless
-upon the floor of the loft as if he had been stricken down by some
-powerful hand. His secret was discovered after all his pains, and
-by the very ones from whose knowledge he had wished most to keep it
-hidden.
-
-“My horse went first,” thought Julian, striving hard to choke back the
-tears that arose to his eyes, “and now everything else is gone; for, of
-course, if they found the box they must have found my furs and my rifle
-also. And I was always so careful never to go near my store-house until
-I had satisfied myself that there was no one in sight. I shan’t give up
-those things, and that’s all about it. Because I have never resisted
-their tyranny, Jack and his boys think I am a coward, but now I will
-show them what I am made of.”
-
-Very slowly and cautiously Julian drew back from the edge of the loft,
-and retreated toward the opening in the gable-end of the cabin. So
-stealthy was he in his movements that even the wakeful Jake did not
-hear him as he crept across the floor, swung himself down from the
-gable-end and dropped to the ground.
-
-The instant he landed on his feet he darted off at the top of his
-speed, directing his steps toward the corn-cribs.
-
-“That much is done,” panted Julian, “but the work is yet to come. It
-will be no trouble to saddle my horse and secure my rifle and furs,
-but how am I to obtain possession of that money? It is mine, and I am
-determined to have it. Here, Billy! Here, Billy!”
-
-Julian’s horse, which was standing under a dilapidated shed, raised
-his head on hearing his name pronounced, and seeing his master open
-one of the cribs, came up, expecting the ear of corn which the boy
-never failed to have ready for him whenever he passed through the
-stable-yard. Julian knew where Tom kept his saddle and bridle, and it
-was but the work of a few seconds to place them on the horse. When this
-had been done he climbed over the corn to the farther end of the crib,
-and began tossing aside the ears, muttering as he did so:
-
-“This place is a regular repository for stolen goods. I have found more
-than one article belonging to me stowed away here, and unless I am
-very much mistaken—ah! I thought so. Here are my furs—all baled up
-and ready for transportation, thanks to Tom and Jake—my rifle and my
-hunting-knife. Now, if they had only left my money here I would be on
-my way to St. Joseph in less than five minutes. I must have it if it
-takes me a week to get it.”
-
-Julian hastily pulled the canvas cover off his rifle, and slung the
-weapon over his shoulder by a broad strap that was attached to it,
-buckled his hunting-knife about his waist, placed his furs, which Tom
-and Jake had tied up in one bundle, close at hand, and once more began
-throwing the corn aside, searching everywhere for his powder-horn and
-bullet-pouch. While thus engaged his attention was attracted by a great
-uproar which suddenly arose in the house. He listened, and could hear
-the tramping of heavy feet and the sound of angry, excited voices,
-with which were presently mingled the shrill tones of Mrs. Bowles, who
-thrust her head out of the door and shouted for Nero.
-
-“The blood-hound!” gasped Julian. “I didn’t think Jack Bowles was as
-bad as that. Oh! for just one load for my rifle! But why should Nero
-harm me? He has known me as long as he has known any of the family. I
-have often shared my meals with him, and perhaps if he overtakes me he
-will recognize me.”
-
-Julian knew too much, however, of the nature of the fierce brute to
-indulge long in this hope.
-
-Nero was the terror of the neighborhood, and when aroused he had been
-known to defy Jack Bowles himself. Our hero was perfectly well aware
-that the hound would trail him as he would a deer, and that if by any
-chance he succeeded in overtaking him, he would pull him down and
-throttle him without the least mercy. His heart beat a trifle faster
-than usual when he thought of the probable results of a fight with the
-terrible animal, and his hands trembled as he caught up his bundle of
-furs and clambered over the corn toward the door.
-
-He had left Billy with his head in the crib, feasting on the corn
-within his reach, and he believed that he would remain there until he
-was ready to mount him; but when he came out of the door he saw him at
-the farther end of the yard, prancing and playing about in high glee.
-
-The boy ran toward him, pronouncing his name in a low voice, but Billy,
-instead of obeying the call, kicked up his heels and galloped away to
-the other side of the yard. Just then Julian heard the door of the
-cabin thrown open, and looking back saw the hound spring into the room
-and fawn upon his master.
-
-“I’m caught,” thought our hero, in intense alarm. “I dare not wait to
-secure my horse, and on foot I can never hope to escape from that dog.
-I might as well give up now as any time.”
-
-The boy’s actions, however, did not indicate that he had the least idea
-of surrendering himself without a struggle for his freedom.
-
-After one more unsuccessful attempt to capture his unruly steed,
-he threw his pack of furs over his shoulder, leaped the fence that
-inclosed the stable-yard, and striking the path that led to the woods,
-ran for his life. He did not waste time in looking back, and there was
-no need of it, for his ears kept him posted in all that was going on.
-He knew when Jack and his dog came out of the cabin, and the cold sweat
-started out from every pore in his body when Nero’s deep-toned bay, and
-his master’s exultant yells, rang out on the still air, telling him
-that the trail had been found and the pursuit commenced.
-
-Calling to his aid all the power he had thus far held in reserve,
-Julian flew along the path with the speed of a frightened deer, and
-with a few bounds reached the cover of the woods.
-
-Without in the least slackening his pace, he threw his bundle of furs
-into the bushes on one side of the path, and pitched his rifle as far
-as he could in the opposite direction. His second move was to pull off
-his coat and wrap it around his left arm, and his third to draw his
-hunting-knife from its sheath, and tie the thong of buckskin which was
-attached to the handle around his wrist. His face all this while wore
-an expression that would have astonished Jack Bowles could he have seen
-it.
-
-Being now relieved of every encumbrance, Julian flew along with
-redoubled speed, through darkness so intense that he could scarcely
-see his hand before his face, leaping logs and ditches, and struggling
-through thickets of briers and cane that at almost any other time would
-have effectually checked his progress, all the while listening to
-the baying of the hound, and wondering why the animal was so long in
-overtaking him.
-
-When he had accomplished nearly half a mile, and the sounds of the
-chase began to grow fainter, showing that his pursuers were losing
-ground, he uttered an exclamation of delight, and slackened his pace.
-
-“I thought Nero’s music did not ring out as loud and clear as usual,”
-said he to himself; “and now I know the reason. Jack is holding fast to
-him, and the dog is choking himself to death trying to get away. Mr.
-Bowles never saw the day that he could catch me in a fair race. I may
-as well go slower and save my breath.”
-
-But, even as these thoughts were passing through Julian’s mind, he
-heard a sound behind him that brought from him a cry of alarm, and
-caused him to spring forward again with all the power he could command.
-It was a yell of rage from Jack, accompanied by a loud, ringing bay,
-such as Nero usually uttered when following a trail. The eager hound
-had escaped from his master’s control.
-
-The fugitive shuddered at the thought, and would not permit himself to
-believe it; but in a few seconds the fact became too apparent. Nero’s
-bays sounded nearer and nearer, and presently Julian heard him crashing
-through the bushes behind him.
-
-His lightness of foot could not save him now. The fight he so much
-dreaded could not be avoided, and the sooner he was prepared for it the
-better.
-
-To think, with Julian, was to act. He at once decided that the little
-open glade he was then traversing should be the battle-ground. It was
-almost entirely free from undergrowth, and moreover, the branches of
-the trees overhead were not so thick as to entirely shut out the light
-of the moon, which, just then, as if in sympathy with the fugitive,
-made a feeble effort to shine through the clouds that obscured it.
-
-A few rapid steps brought him to the opposite side of the glade, and
-to the foot of a huge poplar. Here he faced about, and taking his
-stand with his back against the tree, so that the shock of the first
-collision might not knock him off his feet, he wrapped his coat closer
-about his arm, and fastened it there by tying the sleeves in a knot
-with his teeth, grasped his hunting-knife with a firmer hold, and
-calmly awaited the appearance of the blood-hound. Nor was the contest
-long delayed.
-
-Stimulated by the freshness of the trail, Nero came on with long and
-rapid bounds, and at last broke from a thicket on the opposite side of
-the glade, and with a bay which rang in Julian’s ears like the knell of
-death, moved swiftly toward his victim.
-
-The fugitive had barely time to settle his hat more firmly on his head
-and brace himself for the shock, when the fierce animal arose in the
-air and launched himself at his throat. The arm with the coat wrapped
-around it was quickly interposed, and Nero’s ponderous jaws closed upon
-it with a power that, for an instant, rendered Julian incapable of
-action. He was borne back against the tree by the weight of the brute,
-but rallied in a moment, and then began the most desperate struggle of
-his life.
-
-The hound was as quick as a cat in his movements, and seemed endowed
-with as many lives; for, although the boy’s long, keen blade found
-lodgment in his body more than once, it appeared to make no impression
-upon him. He clung to Julian’s arm with the tenacity of a bull-dog,
-never once loosening or shifting his hold; and now and then, throwing
-all his strength into the effort, he gave his antagonist a shake that
-brought him to his knees.
-
-To make matters worse, Jack Bowles was not far behind. He was soon
-near enough to shout directions to his hound. He heard the sounds of
-the struggle, and believing that his favorite was gaining the mastery,
-ordered him to let go his hold.
-
-[Illustration: “THEN BEGAN THE MOST DESPERATE STRUGGLE IN JULIAN’S
-LIFE.”]
-
-“He is past minding, Jack,” shouted Julian, whose courage and
-determination had never once flagged during all the doubtful contest;
-“and when I am done with him he will be past hearing you.”
-
-Jack heard every word, and comprehended the situation as well as if
-there had been light enough for him to see everything that was going
-on. It was wonderful how quickly his tone changed.
-
-“Hi! hi!” he yelled, forcing his burly form through the bushes with all
-the speed of which he was capable, “pull him down, Nero! Shake him to
-death, ye rascal! Drop that ar we’pon, Julian, or I’ll larrup ye within
-an inch of yer life. I wouldn’t have that dog hurt for $100.”
-
-“You ought to have thought of that before you put him on my trail,”
-replied Julian. “There! Thank goodness that ends it.”
-
-The hound ceased the battle as suddenly as he begun it. He became limp
-and lifeless all at once, and sank to the ground in a heap, dragging
-Julian with him. But even in death his jaws would not relax their hold.
-His long teeth had caught in the coat, and Julian could not release his
-arm.
-
-Just then, Jack Bowles burst from the bushes, and came lumbering
-across the glade. He saw Julian kneeling beside the hound and knew
-instinctively what had happened. His astonishment and rage knew no
-bounds.
-
-“Dog-gone!” he roared; “ye’ve done it now, boy. I wouldn’t be in yer
-cowhide shoes fur no money. Hold on, thar! Come back here, or——”
-
-The oaths and threats with which Jack awoke the echoes of the forest
-made Julian’s blood run cold, but they did not check his flight.
-
-Finding himself unable to obtain possession of his coat, he slipped his
-arm out of it and fled, leaving the garment in the hound’s mouth.
-
-He was out of sight in a moment.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-GOOD FOR EVIL.
-
-
-JULIAN, almost exhausted by his violent exertions, was in no condition
-to continue his fight. He simply ran to the opposite side of the
-poplar, in front of which the fight had taken place, and threw himself
-flat between the roots, where he lay trembling with fear, and hardly
-daring to breathe lest Jack should discover him. But that worthy was
-too angry to see anything except his prostrate hound. He bent over the
-animal for a moment, and then rushed frantically off in the direction
-he supposed Julian had gone, stamping through the bushes like a mad man
-and stopping now and then to listen for the sound of the fugitive’s
-footsteps. He made a wide circuit through the woods, searching
-everywhere for the object of his vengeance, and finally came back to
-his favorite again.
-
-He seemed to be unable to bring himself to believe that he had seen
-Nero alive for the last time. He placed him upon his feet, called him
-by name, and even shook him to make him show some signs of life; and
-when at last he had satisfied himself that the dog was really dead, he
-jumped up and spurned him with his heavy boot.
-
-“Only think!” he exclaimed aloud; “a hound that could pull down a
-four-pronged buck as easy as he could a chicken, that could stretch
-a two-year-ole bar while ye was a thinkin’ about it, an’ chaw up a
-full-grown wildcat every mornin’ afore breakfast, has met his match at
-last in that leetle pale-face Julian, who doesn’t look as if he had
-pluck enough to face a mouse. Nero, I am teetotally ashamed of ye.
-Whar is that Julian? If I don’t ketch him I shall lose the money I was
-goin’ to make by that trip to Orleans. But I’ll make more outen Mr.
-Mortimer. I’ll have that watch an’ that ring, an’ everything he’s got
-in his pockets afore daylight. I hain’t a goin’ to be swindled on all
-sides, I bet ye.”
-
-When Jack had finished his soliloquy—every word of which Julian had
-overheard—he once more began his search for the fugitive. The boy
-remained quiet in his concealment until the sound of his footsteps
-had died away, and then with a long breath of relief arose to his
-feet and went to recover his coat. He found it where Jack had thrown
-it after freeing it from the teeth of the hound. It had never been a
-very valuable piece of property since it came into his possession, and
-now it was in a worse condition than ever; but Julian, knowing that
-he was destined for months to come to live entirely in the open air,
-could not think of leaving it behind. He threw the garment over his
-shoulder, and taking a last look at the hound, and shuddering as he
-recalled the incidents of the fight, bent his steps through the woods
-toward his store-house. He wanted to see what Tom and Jake had done to
-it. Perhaps they had left something there worth saving. He was very
-cautious in his movements, stealing along with a step that would not
-have awakened a cricket and pausing every few feet to listen. But he
-heard no suspicious sounds, and when he reached the cliff in which his
-store-house was located he was satisfied that he had seen the last of
-his enemies for that night at least.
-
-He found the ruins of his store-house lying all along the side of the
-bluff, for the young robbers, not content with taking possession of
-Julian’s valuables, had pulled out the saplings of which the house was
-built and scattered them far and wide. As Julian stood looking at the
-ruins of the cabin, thinking how hard he had worked to build it, and
-wondering how Jake and Tom had ever discovered it, he heard a slight
-rustling in the bushes by his side, and before he could turn to see
-what occasioned it, he found himself lying flat on his back with a
-heavy weight on his breast holding him down. At the same instant he
-felt a strap passed around his wrist.
-
-Had his assailant conducted his operations in silence, Julian, who
-believed that he had fallen into the clutches of Jack Bowles, and that
-it would be folly to resist, would have suffered himself to be bound
-without even a word of remonstrance, but his antagonist, having a
-confederate close by, and believing that he was likely to have more on
-his hands than he could well attend to, shouted lustily for help.
-
-“Here he is, Jake,” he yelled. “Hurry up. I’ll hold him an’ ye can tie
-him. The $20 are our’n.”
-
-“Tom Bowles!” cried Julian.
-
-“Sartin; an’ ye’ll find it out as soon as we get ye fast. Don’t go to
-bein’ sassy now, ’cause we won’t b’ar it. Tie that ar strap around his
-arms, Jake.”
-
-“Perhaps Jake isn’t man enough to do it,” replied our hero; and the
-sequel proved that he was not.
-
-Julian arose to his feet as easily and quickly as though there had been
-no one there to prevent him, and seizing Tom by the collar, gave him a
-trip and a push that sent him heels over head down the cliff.
-
-Without waiting to see what had become of him, Julian turned upon Jake,
-and then began another fight, which, although by no means of so serious
-a character as the one Julian had had a few minutes before, was quite
-as furious and determined. Jake was older and larger and stronger than
-Julian, but by no means as active. He was fighting for the $10 his
-father’s guest had promised him if our hero was brought back to the
-cabin a prisoner, and to retain possession of the $80 he carried in his
-pocket.
-
-He knew that Julian was aware that he had the money about his person,
-for the very first clutch he made was for Jake’s pocket, in which he
-felt the box. His fingers closed upon it at once with a tenacity fully
-equal to that with which our hero had clung to his arm.
-
-“Leave go, consarn ye,” yelled Jake, “or I’ll punch ye!”
-
-“Let go yourself,” replied Julian. “I earned it honestly—it is mine,
-and I am going to have it if I have to fight you here till daylight.”
-
-“Help! Tom, help!” shouted Jake, doubling himself up and twisting about
-in all sorts of shapes to break Julian’s hold. “Be ye a coward that ye
-stand down there gapin’ that way?”
-
-Tom did not reply, and neither did he show any inclination to respond
-to his brother’s appeals for assistance. He stood at the foot of the
-bluff, holding his hands to his side, which had been pretty severely
-bruised by his fall, and listening to the footsteps and ejaculations of
-some one who was approaching through the bushes at a rapid run.
-
-“Ye know that I’ve got a’most a hundred dollars of his’n in my pocket!”
-yelled Jake, indignant at the conduct of his brother. “Be ye goin’ to
-stand thar an’ let him take it away from me?”
-
-“A’most a hundred dollars!” cried a familiar voice in tones of great
-amazement. “Hang on to him, Jake, an’ I’ll say no more about the
-whoppin’ I promised ye.”
-
-“O, won’t ye ketch it now, Julian!” shouted Tom, almost beside himself
-with delight. “Pap’s a comin’!”
-
-Both the combatants heard the words, and the fight became desperate
-indeed. Julian strove with greater determination than ever to force the
-coveted box from Jake’s pocket, and the latter, encouraged by the hope
-of speedy and powerful assistance, confidently continued the struggle
-which he had more than once been on the point of abandoning. But
-fortune favored the rightful owner of the money. An unlucky step on the
-part of his antagonist precipitated them both into the excavation in
-which the store-house had stood, and that ended the contest.
-
-A severe bump took all the courage out of Jake, who, setting up a howl
-of pain, raised both hands to his head, while Julian, with a shout of
-triumph, secured the box and sprung out of the cave. A burly form met
-him on the brink, and strong fingers closed on his coat collar.
-
-“I’ve got ye at last!” exclaimed Jack Bowles, so overjoyed that he
-could scarcely speak. “Give up them hundred dollars to onct, or I’ll
-wallop ye till——”
-
-Julian did not hear what else Jack had to say, for he was not there.
-Mr. Bowles stood holding at arm’s length a tattered coat, to the collar
-of which he was clinging with all his strength; but the boy who had
-been in the garment when he took hold of it was bounding swiftly down
-the bluff.
-
-When Julian recovered his coat after his fight with the hound, he had
-thrown it over his shoulders and secured it by a single button at the
-throat. The button had given away under Jack’s hold, leaving the boy
-at liberty to take himself off, which he did with a promptness and
-celerity that struck Bowles and his sons motionless with astonishment.
-By the time they had recovered themselves sufficiently to think of
-pursuit Julian was out of hearing.
-
-“Hurrah for me!” soliloquized the fugitive, hugging his beloved box
-close to his breast and stealing along through the woods as noiselessly
-as a spirit. “I’ve got everything except my horse. As soon as Jack and
-his boys have gone to bed I’ll catch him and bid good-by to Missouri. I
-am all right now.”
-
-At no time during the next half-hour was Julian out of sight of the
-ruins of his store-house, or out of hearing of the voices of Jack
-Bowles and his boys. He sat on a log so near them that had it been
-daylight he would certainly have been discovered, watching their
-movements and listening attentively to every word they said. He heard
-Jake relate the history of the box containing the $80, and learned for
-the first time that he and his brother had followed him when he went
-out to examine his traps, and thus discovered his secret.
-
-As Jack and his boys believed that Julian would make the best of his
-way up the river now that he had recovered his money, they did not
-attempt any vigorous pursuit. They ran a short distance through the
-woods in the direction in which the fugitive had disappeared, and then
-Jack, utterly discouraged and almost boiling over with fury, ordered
-his sons to follow him toward home.
-
-“A’most a hundred dollars!” he repeated for the twentieth time. “Don’t
-it beat all the world how that boy could make more money than the hul
-of us put together? An’ ye say that he’s got a bundle of mink skins as
-big as ye can shoulder that he stole outen the crib whar ye had hid
-’em? They’ll bring him forty or fifty dollars more, consarn it all.
-Why didn’t ye tell me about the money an’ the furs the fust thing when
-ye brought ’em home, like ye had oughter done? I’m goin’ to foller him
-to-morrow on hossback. If I don’t ketch him I shall owe ye two lickins,
-an’ if they ain’t sich as ye’ll remember the longest day ye live, I’m a
-Dutchman.”
-
-Jack and his boys walked slowly along the path that led from the
-store-house to the clearing, and as soon as they were out of sight
-in the darkness, Julian arose from his log and followed after them.
-He kept within hearing of their voices all the while, and when
-they reached the clearing he stood at the fence which inclosed the
-stable-yard, and saw them enter the house.
-
-As soon as they had disappeared, he ran back to the place where he had
-left his rifle and furs, which, as he had taken particular pains to
-mark the locality, he was not long in finding. The rifle he slung over
-his shoulder, and the furs, together with the box containing his money,
-he concealed in a hollow log.
-
-This being done, he once more bent his steps toward the clearing,
-resolved to make another attempt to secure his horse. The animal, which
-was still running restlessly about the yard with the saddle and bridle
-on, positively refused to permit himself to be captured, and Julian
-finally went toward one of the cribs, intending to try the persuasive
-effects of an ear of corn. As he drew near the door he stopped, almost
-certain that he saw the figure of a man standing in the shadow of the
-crib. A moment later he knew that his eyes had not deceived him, for
-the man, finding himself discovered, came out in plain sight and walked
-rapidly toward him. It was Mr. Mortimer.
-
-“I knew you would never go away and leave your horse,” said he, in a
-tone of triumph. “I have been watching for you for the last half-hour.
-I have a legal right to control your actions, my boy, and you will
-save yourself some trouble by—Julian, stop! What do you mean?”
-
-The stranger lost his commanding, threatening air in an instant, and
-coming to a sudden halt, raised both his hands before his face, and
-turned away his head as if he had seen something frightful. The change
-was brought about by an action on the part of Julian who, believing
-that the man was near enough to him to prevent any attempt at escape,
-cocked his rifle and leveled it full at Mr. Mortimer’s breast. He acted
-on his first impulse. Had he taken a second thought he would probably
-have made no move of this kind, for he knew that the weapon was empty.
-But Mr. Mortimer did not, and he stopped and backed away from the boy
-with much greater haste than he had used in approaching him.
-
-“What do you mean, you young outlaw?” repeated the man, his voice
-trembling in spite of all his efforts to control it.
-
-“I mean that I am not going to allow myself to be taken on board a
-flatboat and pushed overboard,” replied Julian, calmly; and seeing that
-the empty rifle proved so valuable an assistant, he resolutely kept it
-pointed toward the stranger’s breast.
-
-“Turn that weapon away!” cried Mr. Mortimer, after shifting his
-position a dozen times to get out of range of the deadly muzzle. “I
-will have you arrested the first thing in the morning.”
-
-“Very good,” answered Julian. “Then perhaps you will be called upon to
-show by what authority you took me away from my home and brought me
-here, and why you want me drowned in the river.”
-
-“I am your guardian, I tell you.”
-
-“I suppose I am at liberty to do as I please about believing that, am
-I not? But admitting that you are, it does not give you the right to
-abuse me, does it? Who made you my guardian?”
-
-Before Mr. Mortimer could answer this question the door of the cabin
-opened, and Jack Bowles appeared on the threshold, and stood looking
-out into the darkness. Julian’s guardian, if such he was, was about to
-call out to him, but checked the words that arose to his lips when he
-saw the muzzle of the rifle looking straight into his face.
-
-“Don’t speak above your breath,” said the boy, in low, earnest tones.
-“I have just one more word to say to you, and then I am off. I suppose
-you think I am the only one about here who has enemies, do you not?
-Well, you are mistaken. Your life is in danger, if you only knew it.”
-
-“My life!” repeated Mr. Mortimer, as soon as he could speak. “From
-whom?”
-
-“Jack Bowles. He is bound to have money, and he don’t care how he gets
-it. As he and his boys have failed in their attempts to rob me, and
-since he is likely to lose what you offered to pay him if he would
-accompany you to New Orleans, he has determined to rob you to-night. I
-heard him say so. If you go to sleep you will never see the sun rise
-again. This is one act of kindness I have been able to do you in return
-for the evil you have done me. Good night.”
-
-“Mr. Mortimer, be that you a standin’ out thar by the corn-crib?”
-shouted Jack Bowles.
-
-The gentleman heard the question, but he was thinking too busily about
-something else to reply. He stood motionless, watching Julian as he
-sped swiftly through the stable-yard, and when he leaped the fence and
-ran along the path that led toward the woods, Mr. Mortimer slowly and
-reluctantly returned to the cabin.
-
-“Wasn’t thar nobody out thar with ye?” demanded Jack.
-
-“Yes,” was the scarcely audible reply; “Julian was there, but I could
-not detain him, for he had a loaded rifle in his hands.”
-
-“Why didn’t ye holler?” asked Jack fiercely. “I’ve got a rifle, I
-reckon.”
-
-“Would you call for help if you saw a weapon pointed straight at your
-breast?”
-
-Jack made no answer. He stepped aside to allow his guest to pass, and
-Mr. Mortimer entered and took his seat on one of the nail-kegs. He
-glanced at his host, and saw that there was something about his person
-that he had not before noticed. It was a broad leather belt, from which
-protruded the buck-horn handle of a bowie-knife. Mr. Mortimer shuddered
-as he looked at it, and wished himself away in the woods with Julian.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-JULIAN HAS A VISITOR.
-
-
-IF WE were interested in the fortunes of Mr. Mortimer, we might put
-in an interesting chapter here by relating the various incidents that
-transpired in the cabin during the night; but as we have nothing to
-do with his personal adventures only in so far as they are connected
-with Julian’s, it will be enough to say that it was a night of terror
-for him, and one that he never forgot; that, declining the pressing
-invitation his host extended to him to occupy the bed which Mrs. Bowles
-had arranged for his especial benefit, the guest took his seat in the
-corner in which the billets of wood for the fire-place were piled, and
-folding his arms and leaning his head against the wall, watched Jack
-as closely as ever a cat watched a mouse; that Jack, seeing that the
-gentleman’s suspicions had been aroused in some mysterious manner,
-fumed inwardly, but believing that time and patience would accomplish
-wonders, settled back on his nail-keg to wait until his guest, overcome
-by weariness and want of sleep, should be compelled to seek repose;
-that, as the night wore on, and Mr. Mortimer never once changed his
-position or showed the least sign of drowsiness, Jack began to grow
-uneasy, and sat fingering the handle of his knife, and occasionally
-running his eyes over the gentleman’s person from head to foot, as if
-mentally calculating the chances of a successful encounter with him;
-that finally, resolved on trying strategy, Jack threw himself upon
-the bed, and after snoring lustily for half an hour, suddenly opened
-his eyes, which had never once been closed in sleep, only to find Mr.
-Mortimer as watchful and seated as near the billets of wood as ever;
-that then Jack’s patience was all exhausted, and he snored in earnest,
-but the visitor never moved until daylight began to stream in through
-the half-open door.
-
-No one, to have heard the hearty good-morning Jack wished his guest as
-soon as he opened his eyes, would have believed that he had ever had
-designs upon his life. Neither of them alluded to the matter in any
-way, but Bowles noticed that his guest was always on the alert.
-
-About 10 o’clock in the forenoon a flatboat might have been seen moored
-in front of the cabin. On the shore stood a party of three men, one of
-whom was Jack Bowles, another Mr. Mortimer, and the third the captain
-of the boat—a gentleman who looked enough like Jack to be his brother.
-After saying this it is scarcely necessary to add that he carried the
-face of a villain.
-
-A fourth man was pacing the bank a short distance from the party
-mentioned, watching all their movements, listening eagerly to the few
-words of their conversation that now and then caught his ear, and
-noticing with some nervousness, which showed itself in the frequent
-changing of his hands from the arm-holes of his vest to the pockets of
-his coat, that they were looking at him rather suspiciously.
-
-This gentleman, whoever he was, had evidently bestowed considerable
-pains upon his toilet; and the dignified manner in which he bore
-himself, as well as the satisfied and admiring glances which he
-occasionally cast down at his dress, indicated that he had a high
-opinion of himself and his personal appearance.
-
-His garments were all of the finest broadcloth; but as some of them had
-been made for larger, and others for smaller men than himself, they
-fitted him oddly enough. His trowsers being too long, were rolled up
-around the tops of a pair of heavy cowhide boots; and his coat-sleeves
-being too short, revealed arms that were as brown and muscular as those
-of a blacksmith. A heavy watch-chain hung across his vest, and the
-fingers of both his hands were ornamented with enormous seal rings.
-But little could be seen of his face, for it was almost entirely
-concealed by thick, bushy whiskers, and by a large red handkerchief,
-which was passed under his chin and tied over his head.
-
-“Who is he?” asked Mr. Mortimer, who became unaccountably nervous and
-excited the instant his eyes rested on the stranger.
-
-“He gave no name,” replied the captain of the flatboat. “He came aboard
-of us shortly after you left yesterday, and engaged passage for New
-Orleans. He is going to the West Indies for his health.”
-
-“For his health!” echoed Mr. Mortimer.
-
-He turned and looked at the stranger again, taking in at a glance his
-powerful shoulders, which, like those of Tom Hood’s coachman, were much
-“too broad to be conceived by any narrow mind,” his quick, elastic
-step, ruddy face, and brawny hands and arms, and asked himself if a
-finer specimen of robust health could be found anywhere.
-
-“I know that man in spite of his disguise,” said he, at length, “and
-I know what brought him here. He must not be allowed to accompany us,
-captain. I will give you double his fare if you will order him to stay
-ashore.”
-
-“It is too late,” replied the skipper. “He has paid his passage, and I
-charged him a good round sum too.”
-
-“Well, return it to him, and tell him that as your cabin is to be
-occupied by a dangerous lunatic and his keepers you cannot accommodate
-him.”
-
-“I will talk to him, but I don’t know how much good it will do. He is
-very impatient to start down the river, and, what appears strange to
-me, he is anxious to go in my boat.”
-
-“It isn’t at all strange to me. His name is Sanders, and he was sent
-out here to watch me, and by my cousin.”
-
-Mr. Mortimer, who in his excitement had spoken a little too hastily,
-suddenly checked himself and looked savagely at the man whom he had
-called Sanders. The latter, observing his close scrutiny, pulled his
-handkerchief closer about his face and shifted his hands from his
-pockets to the arm-holes of his vest.
-
-“Speaking of this crazy boy,” said the captain, “reminds me that you
-have not yet told me when you will be ready to start with him. I have
-engaged to deliver my cargo of hoop-poles by a certain time, and I can
-wait for you but a few hours longer. You say that the boy has taken it
-into his head that he is rich, that he has friends living out West, and
-that he has escaped and concealed himself in the woods?”
-
-“Yes,” replied Jack. “He got away from us last night. Me an’ Mr.
-Mortimer were jest goin’ to start after him on hossback when yer boat
-come in sight. We’ll have him here afore sundown if thar’s men enough
-in the county to hold him. Mebbe this feller has heerd of him. I’ll ask
-him.”
-
-The person referred to was a settler, who was just returning from The
-Corners, and who at that moment galloped up on his horse. He stopped
-when he saw Jack preparing to speak to him, and in reply to his
-question if he had seen or heard of Julian, said:
-
-“Yes; I saw him at The Corners not more than two hours ago. He traded
-off $45 worth of mink skins and bought some powder and lead. He said
-that he had made a camp on the bluffs over on Beaver Creek, and that he
-was going to stay there a day or two. Anything the matter with him?”
-
-“He’s gone clean outen his head, that’s all,” replied Jack.
-
-“Crazy?” cried the settler.
-
-“Sartin. He stole a’most a hundred dollars of me last night an’ run
-away. He wouldn’t a done that if he’d been in his right mind, would he?”
-
-Jack, having gained all the information he desired, gave Mr. Mortimer
-a significant look, and the two walked rapidly toward the cabin, at
-the door of which their horses were standing, saddled and bridled, and
-springing upon their backs rode off across the clearing.
-
-“Did I do right in sayin’ what I did about Julian?” asked Jack, as soon
-as he and his companion were out of hearing of the men on the bank.
-
-“Perfectly. I want everybody who is likely to meet him to know that
-he is not in his right mind. You see, when we take him on board the
-flatboat he may tell the captain or the crew that we are his enemies,
-and that he knows we intend to do him some injury; but as we have
-already told them that he is crazy they will pay no attention to what
-he says. Don’t you understand?”
-
-“In course. But ye hain’t changed yer plans, have ye? Ye hain’t a-goin’
-to put him in a ’sylum, be ye?”
-
-“I never had any such intention. If he falls overboard you shall have
-$200; but, of course, that is a matter that we keep to ourselves.”
-
-“I know jest what ye mean. Folks will think that we take Julian on
-board the flatboat to carry him to Orleans; but we don’t. We take him
-thar so as to drop him into the river, an’ get him outen yer way. Make
-yer mind easy. Them two hundred is mine.”
-
-The settler, who was very much astonished at what Jack had told him,
-and had half a mind to join in the pursuit, watched him and his
-companion until they were out of sight, and then continued his ride;
-but he had not gone far when when he was stopped by the odd-looking man
-in broadcloth.
-
-“Stranger,” said the latter, in regular backwoods vernacular, “whar is
-this yere Beaver Creek you was a speakin’ of?”
-
-“I don’t know that I could direct you so that you could find it,” was
-the reply.
-
-“Who said I wanted to find it?” inquired the man. “I only axes you
-which way it is from here, an’ how fur?”
-
-“Well,” returned the settler, facing about in his saddle, shutting one
-eye and gazing at the woods through the half-closed lids of the other;
-“it’s four miles right north of here if you go through the timber, and
-eight miles if you go by the road.”
-
-The man in broadcloth walked off at once, and without stopping to thank
-the settler for his information. As long as he remained within sight of
-the cabin and flatboat he was very deliberate in his movements; but
-the instant the woods concealed him from view, he broke into a rapid
-run, threading his way through the thick bushes with a celerity that
-was surprising. Up hill and down he went, never once slackening his
-pace or deviating from the course the settler had given him, until at
-last he saw a thin cloud of smoke arising through the trees in front
-of him, and after climbing a precipitous cliff, found himself standing
-face to face with Julian Mortimer.
-
-The boy, who being busy with his preparations for dinner, had not heard
-the sound of his footsteps until he reached the top of the bluff,
-jumped up with his gun in his hand, ready to fight or run, as occasion
-might require. His first thought was that his enemies had tracked him
-to his hiding-place; but finding that his visitor was a stranger, and
-that he appeared to have no hostile intentions, he leaned on the muzzle
-of his rifle and waited for him to make known his business.
-
-The man, whose breath was not even quickened by his long and rapid
-run, gazed about him with an air of interest. He looked at the brush
-shanty which Julian had erected to protect him from the weather, at the
-comfortable bed of blankets and leaves which was arranged under the
-sheltering roof, at the squirrels broiling before the fire, and then
-his eyes wandered to our hero, at whom he gazed long and earnestly. The
-boy did not look much now as he did when he escaped from Jack Bowles’
-cabin, for he was dressed in a suit of new and comfortable clothes, and
-sported a wide-brimmed hat and a pair of high-top boots.
-
-“Julian,” exclaimed the stranger, at length. “It’s you sure enough,
-hain’t it? I hain’t seed you fur more’n eight year, but I would know
-you any whar.”
-
-“Would you?” asked Julian, throwing his rifle into the hollow of his
-arm and resting his thumb on the hammer; “then have the goodness to
-leave here at once. I am suspicious of every stranger who calls me by
-name.”
-
-“An’ well you may be,” replied the man, earnestly, “‘cause most of ’em
-are enemies to you. But I hain’t. I’m a friend, an’ I can prove it.
-Do you know that Dick Mortimer an’ Jack Bowles are huntin’ the country
-over to find you?”
-
-“Yes; but I wasn’t aware Mr. Mortimer’s name is Dick.”
-
-“Wal, it is. The flatboat’s come, an’ when they ketch you they’re goin’
-to take you to Orleans an’ lock you up fur a crazy boy.”
-
-“Why, they said last night that they were going to push me overboard
-and drown me,” said Julian, as soon as he could speak.
-
-“Mebbe they be. I don’t know what they are goin’ to do—I’m only
-tellin’ you what I heerd ’em say.”
-
-“Who are you, any how; and how does it come that you know my name?”
-
-“Why, boy, I’ve knowed you ever since you was knee high to a duck, an’
-your father afore you.”
-
-“You have?” cried Julian, greatly amazed.
-
-“In course. An’ your mother an’ your brother, too. They live out in the
-mountains, an’ I come to take you to ’em. They’ll be monstrous glad to
-see you, an’ they’re waitin’ fur you.”
-
-“Are they all alive?”
-
-“The last blessed one of ’em.”
-
-“I remember my father,” said Julian, gazing thoughtfully at the ground,
-“and it seems to me that I have some recollection of my brother; but I
-never knew anything about my mother. What brought you here?”
-
-“I come to your camp to tell you that Bowles and Mortimer are comin’
-arter you on hossback, an’ that if you want to save yourself you had
-better dig out. An’ I come to Missouri ’cause your friends sent me here
-arter you. I know the hul lot of ’em, I tell you, an’ if you will trust
-yourself to me I will take you to ’em safe an’ sound.”
-
-Julian, astounded and bewildered by this proposition, dropped the butt
-of his rifle to the ground, and looked sharply at the man, as if he
-meant to read his very thoughts. Was he really the friend he professed
-to be? Of one thing the boy was certain—and that was that he was not
-an ally of Mr. Mortimer. If he had been he would not have warned him
-that another attempt was about to be made to capture him.
-
-How gladly would he have given himself up to the man’s guidance if he
-had only been sure that he was trustworthy! He would have followed him
-all over the world, and braved all imaginable dangers, if he knew that
-by so doing he would be restored to his home once more. _Home!_ How the
-word thrilled him!
-
-“Who in the world am I?” Julian asked himself in great perplexity;
-“and how does it happen that the moment I am ready to carry my plans
-into execution, men whom I never remember to have seen before should
-suddenly appear and exhibit so deep an interest in me? If I have such
-good friends, who are so very anxious to see me, why did they leave me
-here for eight long years to be beaten, and starved, and treated worse
-than a dog? I can’t understand it at all.”
-
-“What do you say?” asked the stranger; “will you go? You had better be
-in a hurry about making up your mind to something, ’cause I can hear
-the trampin’ of hosses.”
-
-“Yes,” replied Julian, “I shall go; but I shall go alone.”
-
-“Wal, then,” continued the man, who was plainly very much disappointed
-by this decision, “let me give you a word of advice: If you won’t trust
-me, don’t trust nobody—do you hear? You’ll meet plenty of folks who
-know you, an’ who will have something to say to you; but don’t listen
-to ’em. Jine a wagon train at St. Joe, an’ when you reach Fort Kearney,
-stop thar. You will then be within forty miles of your hum. You’d best
-be gettin’ away from here, ’cause them fellers is comin’—I can hear
-’em.”
-
-“How did they find out where I am?” asked Julian.
-
-“Why, some chap saw you tradin’ off your furs this mornin’ an’ buying’
-powder an’ lead, an’ he told ’em. Why don’t you run? Don’t you hear ’em
-comin’?”
-
-Julian listened, and could at last distinguish the rapid strokes of
-horses’ hoofs on the hard road. He knelt down behind a log that lay on
-the edge of the bluff, and looking over the top of it, waited for the
-horsemen to come in sight.
-
-The sound of the hoofs grew louder and louder, and in a few minutes Mr.
-Mortimer came into view, and drawing rein at the foot of the bluff,
-sprung out of his saddle. Jack Bowles was not with him; he was alone.
-
-“I am not afraid of him,” thought Julian. “I kept him at bay last
-night with an empty rifle, and now I have a loaded one. He shall never
-capture me.”
-
-Julian arose to his feet, and turned to look at the stranger. He was
-not in sight. The boy had not heard even the rustle of a leaf to tell
-him that he was in motion, and yet he had disappeared. He wished now
-that he had paid more attention to the man’s warning; but his mind was
-so fully occupied, and he was so deeply interested in what he had had
-to say about the home and friends that were waiting for him away off in
-the mountains, that he had hardly given a thought to the danger which
-threatened him. He began to think of it now, however, for he heard Mr.
-Mortimer ascending the bluff.
-
-“Hold on, down there!” cried Julian. “I am watching you.”
-
-“Ah! you are there, are you?” replied Mr. Mortimer. “I will soon be
-there, too. If I had known that your rifle was empty, I should have
-secured you last night.”
-
-“Who told you it was empty?”
-
-“We found your powder-horn and bullet-pouch in the corn-crib this
-morning. Don’t attempt any resistance now. You are surrounded, and
-cannot escape.”
-
-“Surrounded!” echoed Julian.
-
-He turned quickly, and sure enough there was an enemy in his rear,
-who had mounted the bluff on the opposite side, and approached so
-cautiously that the boy had not heard him. It was Jack Bowles.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-JACK’S PLANS.
-
-
-THE EXPRESSION Julian saw on the face of his old enemy alarmed him
-greatly. His countenance was distorted with fury, and the boy saw
-enough in it to satisfy him that Jack intended to take ample revenge on
-him for what he had done. With a cry of terror he turned and took to
-his heels; but Bowles was already within reach of him, and before our
-hero had made many steps, he fastened upon his collar with one hand,
-and with the other twisted his rifle out of his grasp.
-
-“Let’s see ye slip outen yer coat an’ get away from me this time,” said
-Jack, with savage exultation. “I’ve got a long account to settle with
-ye, my lad. I’ll larn ye to go about the country stealin’ money an’
-killin’ honest folks’ huntin’ dogs. We’d best tie him, hadn’t we, Mr.
-Mortimer, fur fear that he gets one of them ar crazy spells onto him?”
-
-“Certainly,” said that gentleman, who, having by this time reached the
-top of the bluff, stepped forward to assist in securing the prisoner.
-
-“An’ sarch him, too,” added Jack. “He may have some dangerous we’pons
-about him. Don’t go to makin’ a fuss now.”
-
-“I have no such intention,” replied Julian, who, knowing that he
-was powerless, submitted to his captors, who bound his arms firmly
-behind his back. “But I can tell you one thing, Jack—you and Richard
-Mortimer. You are not going to take me down the river and put me into
-an asylum.”
-
-Mr. Mortimer was profoundly astonished at these words. He looked
-sharply at the prisoner for a moment and exclaimed: “Has Sanders been
-here?”
-
-“Sanders?” repeated Julian.
-
-“Yes; a short, thick-set man, dressed in black, and wearing an
-abundance of jewelry.”
-
-“I have no acquaintance with any such person.”
-
-“But you do not say that you have not seen him. You have talked with
-him—I am certain of it—or you would not know that my name is Richard.
-Sanders knows why I am here, and I know why he is here and who sent
-him. We are both playing the same game, and we shall see who will win.
-He shall never take passage on that flatboat.”
-
-As soon as Julian had been securely bound, Jack set himself to work to
-overhaul his pockets, searching—not for concealed weapons, but for the
-money belonging to the prisoner. A very short investigation, however,
-served to satisfy him that the coveted treasure was not hidden about
-Julian’s person, and with an expression of almost ungovernable fury on
-his face he left him and began to search the camp. He picked up the
-prisoner’s blankets, shook them thoroughly, threw aside the leaves
-which the boy had scraped together to serve as a mattress, and looked
-into every hollow stump and under every log on the bluff; but nothing
-in the shape of a box or pocket-book could he find.
-
-“Whar is it?” he roared, unable to contain himself longer.
-
-“Where’s what?” asked Julian.
-
-“The money, ye rascal—the $145.”
-
-“I haven’t got as much as that.”
-
-“Wal, you’ve got _some_. Whar is it, I axes ye?”
-
-“It is concealed where you will never think of looking for it, and
-there it shall stay.”
-
-“I’ll bet a hoss that it don’t stay thar,” shouted Jack, stamping the
-ground and shaking his fists in his rage. “Mark my words. Afore I’m
-done with ye, ye’ll come to this bluff an’ give me that money with yer
-own hands.”
-
-“And mark _my_ words,” replied Julian calmly. “I shall do nothing of
-the kind. I’ll die first. It is mine—you’ve no right to it, and you
-shan’t have it.”
-
-“Never mind the money now, Bowles,” exclaimed Mr. Mortimer, who was
-becoming impatient at the delay. “You will have plenty of time to hunt
-for it after your return from New Orleans. We must begin our journey at
-once.”
-
-Jack, reluctant to abandon the search, took another turn about the
-camp, and after venting some of his spite by pulling down Julian’s
-brush cabin and kicking over the squirrels that were broiling before
-the fire, picked up the blankets and the rifle, and seizing the boy
-roughly by the arm hurried him down the bluff. After placing him behind
-Mr. Mortimer on his horse he disappeared in the woods and presently
-returned, mounted on his own nag, and led the way toward the clearing.
-He did not follow the road, as Julian hoped he would, but to avoid
-meeting any of the settlers, held straight through the woods. He was
-moody and sullen during the whole of the ride, and the deep scowl on
-his forehead showed that he was thinking intently.
-
-“The minute Julian drops overboard from the flatboat, that minute I
-shall have $200 put into my hands,” soliloquized Mr. Bowles. “That’s a
-monstrous heap of money fur a poor man like me, but I’d like to have
-them $145, too. Now how am I goin’ to get it? That’s what I’d like to
-know. I’ll never find it unless Julian tells me whar it is, an’ if he’s
-at the bottom of the river he _can’t_ tell me. Hain’t thar no way fur
-me to push him overboard without drownin’ him?”
-
-Upon this question Jack pondered long and deeply, and by the time he
-and his companions reached the clearing he must have found an answer to
-it, and a satifactory one, too, for he brightened up and became lively
-and talkative.
-
-The first person Julian saw when he reached the clearing was the
-stranger in broadcloth, who was pacing up and down the bank. He did
-not look up when the boy and his captors rode past him, but pulled the
-handkerchief a little closer about his face, and sinking his chin lower
-into the collar of his coat, kept his eyes fastened upon the ground.
-
-“If you are all ready to start, Jack,” said Mr. Mortimer, as they drew
-rein in front of the door of the cabin, where Mrs. Bowles and her sons
-were waiting to receive them, “we will go on board the flatboat at
-once.”
-
-“Wal, I hain’t quite ready,” returned Jack. “I shall be away from home
-a long time if we go to New Orleans, an’ Jake and Tom’ll have to look
-out fur things while I am gone. I want to tell ’em what to do.”
-
-“Your wife can do that as well as you can,” replied Mr. Mortimer
-impatiently.
-
-“An’ more’n that,” continued Jack, holding open his coat to let his
-guest see that it was in a very dilapidated condition, “I’ve got to
-have some clothes, if I’m goin’ to a country whar white folks live. I
-don’t want to make ye ashamed of me.”
-
-“You have nothing to fear on that score. Your clothes will do well
-enough.”
-
-“But I say they won’t. I was born and raised a gentleman, _I_ was, and
-I guess I know what sort of riggin’ a gentleman had oughter wear when
-he goes a visitin’.”
-
-“I don’t want to wait another minute. Don’t you know that we are in
-danger as long as we remain here? Suppose some of the settlers should
-find out what is going on?”
-
-“Oh, now, how be they goin’ to find it out? We hain’t a goin’ to tell
-on ourselves, be we?”
-
-“But the captain wants to start immediately,” persisted Mr. Mortimer.
-
-“I can’t help that. I shan’t be ready for an hour or two—p’raps more;
-’cause I’ve got to go to The Corners arter some good clothes.”
-
-“Then you may stay there, if you choose. I can get along without your
-assistance.”
-
-“No ye can’t, an’ ye shan’t, nuther,” retorted Jack.
-
-“I shall go without you,” continued Mr. Mortimer, decidedly. “Then what
-will become of the $200 I promised you?”
-
-Jack approached his guest and placed his lips close to his ear.
-
-“If ye go without me I’ll have the officers of the law on yer track in
-less’n an hour,” said he, fiercely. “Then what will become of _ye_? I
-can say, ye know, that ye offered me money to shove the boy overboard,
-an’ p’raps ye’ll have to tell some things ye’d rather the world
-wouldn’t know. Ye’ve got money, an’ ye can keep the boat here as long
-as ye please.” Then aloud he added: “Ye an’ Julian can step into the
-house, an’ sit down an’ talk to the ole woman, an’ me an’ the boys will
-go to the stable an’ feed the hosses. I’ll be back as soon as I get my
-business done.”
-
-Mr. Mortimer, finding that he was at the mercy of his confederate,
-was obliged to await his pleasure. He conducted his prisoner into the
-cabin, while Jack led the horses toward the stable, followed by Jake
-and Tom.
-
-The boys assisted their father in removing the saddles and feeding the
-animals, and when this had been done, Jack conducted them into one of
-the cribs, and after closing and fastening the door, seated himself
-upon the corn and proceeded to make his sons acquainted with certain
-plans he had determined upon.
-
-He did not know that some one besides Jake and Tom was listening to
-every word he said, but such was the fact. It was Sanders, who having
-overheard enough of Jack’s conversation with Mr. Mortimer to excite
-his curiosity, and seeing Bowles and his sons enter the crib and shut
-themselves in, made a circuit through the woods, and came up within
-hearing of their voices in time to learn as much of their scheme as he
-cared to know.
-
-“I reckon Mr. Mortimer will get tired of waitin’ fur me,” said Jack,
-“‘cause he hain’t no ways likely to see me agin afore dark. I’ve got
-work fur ye to do, youngsters, an’ if ye do it as I tell ye to, there’s
-money to be made by it. Listen, now, with all the ears you’ve got.
-In the fust place, in order that ye may understand the hul matter, I
-must tell ye that this Mr. Mortimer is the same feller who brought
-Julian here years ago. He’s some kin to him—his pap, mebbe, fur all
-I know—but he don’t want to own him, ’cause the boy somehow stands
-atween him an’ a fortin’. He wants to put him whar he’ll never see
-him agin, an’ so me an’ him have give out that he is crazy, an’ that
-we’re goin’ to take him to Orleans an’ put him in a ’sylum. In course,
-he hain’t no more outen his head than I be, but that’s no business of
-mine. Mr. Mortimer’s goin’ to start down the river with him to-night,
-an’ I’m goin’ along to take care of him.”
-
-Jack did not see fit to tell his boys that Mr. Mortimer had offered
-him money to push Julian overboard, and that he had promised to do it.
-That was a dangerous secret, and one that he did not care to trust to
-anybody’s keeping.
-
-“I shall get $200 fur makin’ the trip,” continued Jack. “Now, I want
-to earn them thar two hundred, but I don’t want Julian to be tuk to
-New Orleans an’ shut up thar, ’cause if he is, we’ll lose jest $145 by
-it—the hundred he stole from ye last night, Jake, an’ the forty-five
-he made this mornin’ outen his mink skins. He’s hid the money, an’ I
-want to get a chance to make him tell whar it is; an’ this is the way
-I’m goin’ to work it. As soon as it comes dark, ye, Jake an’ Tom, must
-get into the dug-out an’ drop down the river in it, as easy as ye can,
-tie it to the starn of the flatboat, an’ then lay down on the bottom
-an’ keep still thar. Be sure an’ make it fast with a short rope, so as
-to keep outen the way of the sweeps. When ye’ve done that I will go
-up to the house, an’ me an’ Mr. Mortimer an’ Julian will go on board
-the flatboat, an’ she’ll put out into the river, draggin’ the dug-out
-arter her. When Mr. Mortimer an’ most of the crew have gone to bed,
-I’ll untie Julian an’ take him up fur a turn about the deck. I’ll give
-him all the chance he wants to get away, an’ he will be sartin to use
-it. He said that we shouldn’t never take him down the river; an’ bein’
-perfectly at home in the water, he won’t mind jumpin’ overboard and
-swimmin’ ashore. As soon as I see him in the water I’ll whistle, an’
-ye must cut loose from the flatboat an’ pick him up. Be as easy as ye
-can about it, an’ when ye onct get hold of him hang on, no matter
-what happens; tie him hard an’ fast, an’ bring him hum an’ put him in
-the smoke-house till I come. I’ll be along some time to-morrer, ’cause
-when Mr. Mortimer finds out that Julian is overboard he’ll think he’s
-drownded, an’ he’ll pay me off an’ discharge me. Arter I get hold of
-Julian, it won’t take me long to make him tell whar he’s hid them
-hundred an’ forty-five dollars. When I get that an’ the two hundred
-I’ll be rich.”
-
-“But, pap, how much be me an’ Tom goin’ to git fur doin’ the job?”
-asked Jake.
-
-“Ye’ll git enough to satisfy ye,” was the reply. “Jake shall have
-Julian’s rifle fur his share. It’s a good one, an’ didn’t cost a cent
-less’n $25. Tom shall have his blankets, which he can sell at The
-Corners if he don’t want to keep ’em, an’ the clothes Julian’s got on.
-Tom thinks a heap of good clothes, an’ that shows that he’s goin’ to be
-a gentleman when he’s growed up. An’ more’n that, if I find Julian here
-when I come hum, I’ll give each of ye $10; but if he _hain’t_ here,
-ye shan’t have nothin’ but the dog-gondest wallopin’ ye ever heern
-tell on, an’ ye’ll get that as sartin as ye’re a foot high. It’ll be
-wusser’n all the rest I ever give ye biled down into one. Now, be ye
-sure that ye know jest what ye’ve got to do?”
-
-Jake and Tom were not quite certain that they did, and so their father
-repeated his instructions, and kept on repeating them until the boys
-thoroughly understood them.
-
-Every part of the work they were expected to perform, as well as the
-treatment Julian was to receive prior to Jack’s return, was discussed,
-and the latter being satisfied at last that there was no danger of
-failure, announced that it was his intention to pass the rest of the
-afternoon in sleep. He instructed Jake to return to the house and
-announce that his father had just set out for The Corners on horseback,
-and then concealed himself among the corn at the farther end of the
-crib, while his boys, after making sure that there was no one in sight,
-opened the door and went out. No sooner had they entered the cabin
-than Sanders left his position behind the crib, made another circuit
-through the woods back to the bank of the river, and once more began
-walking up and down, now and then shaking his head and chuckling to
-himself as if he were thinking about something that afforded him great
-satisfaction.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-ON BOARD THE FLATBOAT.
-
-
-“PAP! I say, pap! be ye goin’ to sleep here till creation comes? It’s
-pitch dark, an’ me an’ Tom have got the dug-out tied fast to the
-flatboat, like ye told us, an’ the cap’n’s jest been in the house a
-tellin’ of Mr. Mortimer that he ain’t a-goin’ to wait no longer. Get
-up, consarn it all.”
-
-It was Jake Bowles who spoke, and while he was thus addressing his
-slumbering parent he was shaking him most vigorously. Jack opened his
-eyes at last, and after yawning and stretching his arms, and listening
-to what his hopeful son had to say about the dug-out and the captain’s
-impatience, he began to understand the matter.
-
-“All right,” he replied, drowsily. “Now, Jake, I want to be sartin’
-that ye know what ye’ve got to do. Let me hear ye go over what I said
-to ye this mornin’.”
-
-Jake began and rehearsed his instructions, and went through with
-them to his father’s entire satisfaction. When he had concluded Jack
-inquired:
-
-“What did I say I’d give ye if ye brought Julian back here a prisoner?”
-
-“Oh, I hain’t forgot that, I bet ye,” replied Jake, quickly. “Ye said
-ye’d give me his rifle an’ $10. Don’t _ye_ forget it, pap, when ye
-comes back.”
-
-“I won’t. I’m a man what allers sticks to his word. Now let me see if
-ye remember something else. What did I say I’d give ye an’ Tom if ye
-let him get away from ye?”
-
-“A larrupin’.”
-
-“A little one or a big one?”
-
-“A big one—wusser than all the rest.”
-
-“I’m powerful glad to see that ye hain’t forgot it. I’ll allers keep my
-promises, I told ye. Mind what ye are about, now.”
-
-Having thus cautioned his young ally, Jack staggered to his feet and
-walked slowly toward the house, where he found Mr. Mortimer pacing the
-floor in great excitement. The captain of the flatboat had just left
-him, with the information that if Jack did not return in half an hour
-he would be obliged to start without him, for he could wait no longer.
-
-“You have come at last, have you?” was Mr. Mortimer’s greeting.
-
-“Hain’t you got a pair of good eyes? In course, I have.”
-
-“I should say it was a high time. And you haven’t got your clothes,
-either.”
-
-“Wal, that ain’t no fault of mine, is it? I forgot to ax ye fur some
-money to git ’em with, an’ the storekeeper wouldn’t trust me. I’m all
-ready now, if you are.”
-
-“Then take charge of Julian and bring him on board the boat at once.
-Remember that I want him kept out of my sight as much as possible.”
-
-“I give ye the word of a gentleman that he shan’t never trouble ye no
-more,” replied Jack significantly.
-
-Mr. Mortimer hurried out of the cabin, slamming the door after him. As
-he sprung upon the deck of the flatboat he was met by the captain, who
-was impatiently awaiting his appearance.
-
-“We are ready at last,” said the passenger, “and the sooner you get
-under way the better it will suit me.”
-
-“Stand by the lines,” shouted the captain.
-
-“Where’s that man?” continued Mr. Mortimer.
-
-His companion pointed toward the bow of the boat. Mr. Mortimer looked
-and saw Sanders pacing back and forth as wide awake as ever.
-
-“He must be made of iron,” said the skipper, “for he has kept up that
-walk ever since we landed here this morning, and shows no sign of
-giving out.”
-
-“There is nothing strange in that. He is working for money, and wants
-to be where he can see everything that is going on. Have you told him
-that he can not go down the river with us?”
-
-“Not yet.”
-
-“Then do it at once. Use every argument you can think of to induce him
-to go ashore, and if you can not make him listen to reason call your
-crew and put him off.”
-
-Mr. Mortimer descended the stairs leading into a little dismal
-apartment in the stern of the boat that was dignified by the name of
-“the cabin,” and the captain approached his passenger, and extending a
-roll of bills, said:
-
-“I’m sorry to be obliged to say that I can’t take you to Orleans.”
-
-“Sho!” exclaimed Sanders.
-
-“It’s a fact. My cabin has been given up to a crazy boy and his
-keepers, and I can’t accommodate you. Here’s the passage money you paid
-me.”
-
-“I don’t want it. A bargain’s a bargain.”
-
-“I tell you that I can’t take you.”
-
-“O, I hain’t no ways particl’ar as to commodation. I can hang up
-anywhar.”
-
-“But I don’t want you on board my boat, and you shan’t stay either.
-Here’s your money. Take it and go ashore.”
-
-“Now jest listen to me a minute, cap’n, and I’ll tell you something,”
-replied Sanders, approaching the skipper and speaking in a low,
-confidential tone. The latter, believing that his passenger was about
-to communicate some secret to him, leaned forward and caught the words:
-“I shan’t stir a peg.”
-
-“Then I shall use force,” cried the captain in a rage. “I shall put you
-off.”
-
-At the mention of the word “force” all the combativeness in the
-stranger’s composition arose and showed itself. His eyes flashed
-angrily, and doubling up one huge fist he brought it down into the palm
-of his hand with a report like that of a pistol.
-
-“Look a here, cap’n,” said he, with a great deal of emphasis, “my name
-is—Jones.”
-
-He had been on the point of pronouncing his own name—one that had more
-than once struck terror to a braver heart than the captain of the
-flatboat possessed—but recollected himself in time, and gave the first
-one that came to his mind.
-
-“Yes, that’s my name,” he exclaimed, after a moment’s
-pause—“Jones—_Tom_ Jones. I’m the peaceablest feller you ever seed
-when I ain’t crossed, but when I _am_ I’m a leetle wusser than a hul
-passel of wild-cats. I can see through a grindstun as fur as the next
-man. I know why you don’t want me here, but I’m a-goin’ to stay, I can
-tell you, an’ if you want to see bullets fly faster than you ever seed
-’em fly afore, jest tell your crew to put me off.”
-
-As Sanders said this he placed his hands in the pockets of his coat,
-and when he brought them into view again, he held in each one a navy
-revolver. After flourishing them before the eyes of the captain he put
-them away again, and locking his thumbs in the arm-holes of his vest,
-resumed his walk up and down the deck. While this conversation was
-going on the crew had been busy casting off the lines with which the
-flatboat was made fast to the bank, and now one of them sung out: “All
-gone, sir.”
-
-The captain turned, and seeing that Mr. Bowles and Julian had just
-come on board, and knowing that it would be useless to make any more
-attempts to rid himself of his objectionable passenger, gave orders to
-get under way.
-
-“Haul in that gang-plank,” said he. “Get out the setting-poles and
-shove off for’ard. Man the larboard sweeps, and pull her bow out.”
-
-While the crew were busy working the boat out into the river, Mr.
-Bowles took occasion to stroll aft and look over into the water. It was
-very dark, but still there was light enough for him to distinguish the
-outlines of the dug-out dragging at the stern of the flatboat. So far
-his plans were working smoothly. His only fear was that the canoe might
-be discovered by the pilot; but, after all, there was little danger of
-it, for that officer, beside being obliged to give his whole attention
-to directing the course of the boat, occupied a position so far from
-the stern that he could not look over into the water, even if he had
-been disposed to do so. Jack took off his hat and flourished it about
-his head, and instantly another hat was thrust over the side of the
-dug-out, and being moved to and fro was pulled back out of sight. Jake
-and Tom were on the alert, and Mr. Bowles, being satisfied of the fact,
-returned to his prisoner and conducted him into the cabin.
-
-Julian took the seat pointed out to him, and looked around with
-curiosity. The cabin was a very dingy apartment, and was dimly lighted
-by a smoky lantern, which hung suspended from a beam overhead. It
-contained a rusty cooking stove, a rough table, around which were
-arranged four long benches to serve in lieu of chairs, and two sides
-were occupied by bunks in which the crew slept.
-
-One of them, a little apart from the others, was provided with
-curtains, which, being looped back, revealed a very comfortable-looking
-bed, that was doubtless intended for Mr. Mortimer. The latter gentleman
-had nothing to say to Mr. Bowles when he came in, but continued his
-walk in silence.
-
-Jack took a turn about the cabin, and then seating himself in a chair
-near his prisoner, folded his arms, rested his chin on his breast, and
-closed his eyes as if preparing to go to sleep.
-
-Being heavily loaded and short-handed besides, considerable time was
-consumed in working the flatboat out into the river; but at the end of
-half an hour a gentle, gliding motion, accompanied by the “lapping”
-sound of the waves against her sides, told Julian that she was fairly
-under way.
-
-Presently the captain came below, followed by some of his crew. The men
-looked curiously at the passengers, especially at Julian, who sat in
-his chair with his hands tied behind his back, and without any ceremony
-divested themselves of some of their outer clothing and tumbled into
-bed.
-
-The captain, after pointing out to his passengers the beds he had
-arranged for them, followed their example, and presently Mr. Mortimer
-also sought his couch.
-
-Julian, almost worn down by fatigue and excitement, waited impatiently
-for Jack to give the signal for retiring, but the latter had no
-intention of doing anything of the kind. He waited until the sounds
-which issued from the bunks told him that their occupants were all
-asleep, and then he beckoned Julian to follow him to the deck. A
-terrible fear seized upon the boy as he arose to obey. Was Jack about
-to throw him overboard?
-
-He tottered up the stairs, and when he reached the deck, was astonished
-beyond measure and immensely relieved by an unexpected proceeding on
-the part of his keeper, who, instead of conducting him to the side and
-pitching him into the water, began untying his hands.
-
-“What in the world does he mean, I wonder?” thought Julian. “Does he
-expect me to remain on board this boat if he gives me the least chance
-to leave it? If he takes his eyes off me for one instant I’ll astonish
-him.”
-
-“What are you untying that crazy fellow for?” exclaimed the pilot, who
-stood with his hand resting on one of the sweeps which served as the
-rudders of the flatboat. “The cap’n says he’s dangerous.”
-
-“An’ so he is,” replied Jack—“in the day-time; but at night he’s as
-gentle as a kitten. I’m goin’ to let him take a leetle exercise afore
-he goes to bed. He’ll sleep the better fur it. Ye needn’t be afeared,
-’cause I can manage him. Mind what ye’re about now,” he added in a low
-tone, addressing himself to Julian. “I’ve got my eyes onto ye.”
-
-Jack walked aft to talk to the pilot, and Julian, delighted to find
-himself once more at liberty, strolled leisurely about the boat.
-
-The crew on watch were huddled together in the waist, and at a little
-distance from them, Sanders lay stretched out on the deck, apparently
-fast asleep. Julian walked past the prostrate forms, and taking his
-stand on the bow, gazed toward the shore. Half the width of the
-Missouri River lay between him and his freedom.
-
-“I can easily do it,” said he to himself, “and I am going to try it.
-Good-by, Jack. When I set my feet on solid ground once more I will put
-a safe distance between you and me before I stop.”
-
-Julian seated himself on the side of the boat and looked down into the
-dark, muddy water, now and then turning his eyes toward Jack and the
-pilot. The former kept his back toward him and his gaze turned up the
-river, as if he saw something there that interested him, and finally
-the pilot, in response to some inquiry from Jack, faced about and
-looked in the same direction. This was Julian’s opportunity, and he was
-prompt to seize upon it. Placing his hands upon the side of the boat he
-swung himself off and dropped into the river.
-
-His sudden immersion in the cold water almost took his breath away, and
-for a moment he felt as if every drop of blood in his body had been
-turned into ice; but quickly recovering himself he struck out lustily
-for the shore.
-
-There were two persons on board who had witnessed the whole proceeding.
-One was Sanders, who was wide awake, in spite of the terrific snores he
-uttered, and the other was Jack Bowles.
-
-So delighted was Jack at the success that had thus far attended his
-plans that he could scarcely refrain from shouting.
-
-Fearing that the pilot, if he had not also witnessed Julian’s act,
-might soon notice his absence, he looked about for something to occupy
-his attention, and found it.
-
-“I see a snag,” said he suddenly. “Look out, or ye’ll be afoul of it in
-a minute.”
-
-“I see it, too,” replied the pilot. “I was so busy talking to you that
-I forgot to attend to my business. Snag on the starboard bow!” he
-shouted. “Man the sweeps, all hands!”
-
-The crew jumped at the word, and Jack sprung down from the pilot’s
-bench and walked aft whistling. Jake and Tom, who were curled up
-in the bottom of the dug-out, heard and obeyed the signal. They
-straightened up at once, and while one seized a paddle the other cut
-the painter with which the canoe was made fast to the flatboat, and in
-a moment more they were out of sight. Jack stood on the stern of the
-boat listening intently for fully five minutes, and then he was almost
-certain that he heard a splashing in the water and a smothered cry for
-help.
-
-“They’ve got him!” said he gleefully. “I was afeared they might miss
-him in the dark. If they had, wouldn’t I have dusted their jackets fur
-them, though? But they’re good boys, Jake an’ Tom are. The two hundred
-dollars are mine, an’ the hundred an’ forty-five besides.”
-
-By this time the snag had been passed in safety, and the watch once
-more huddled together in the waist to sleep until their services were
-again required. Jack took his stand beside the pilot, and waited
-for him to say something about Julian’s disappearance; but as he
-did not refer to the matter, Mr. Bowles went below and tumbled into
-bed, satisfied that no one beside himself was the wiser for what had
-happened.
-
-Jack awoke long before daylight, but remained quiet in his bunk,
-awaiting a favorable opportunity to carry out the rest of his plans. At
-last the cook entered the cabin and began preparations for breakfast.
-Shortly afterward some of the crew crawled out of their bunks, and
-the captain also arose. When Jack saw him he began to bestir himself.
-He got out upon the floor, and after dressing himself with great
-deliberation, went to the bunk which had been set apart for Julian’s
-use. The bed certainly looked as if it had been occupied, but there
-was no one in it now. Jack started back with well-assumed surprise,
-uttering an exclamation that attracted the attention of every one in
-the cabin, and then rushing forward picked up something and examined it
-attentively. It was the rope with which Julian had been bound.
-
-“Wal, if this yere don’t beat all natur’,” cried Jack.
-
-“Is he loose?” asked the captain in alarm.
-
-“That’s jest what’s the matter. He’s slipped his hands outen this rope
-and hid hisself somewhars. Help me find him, fellers,” added Jack, in
-great excitement, leading the way toward the deck; “but look out fur
-yerselves, ’cause if any of ye had any we’pons he’s found ’em, an’
-he’ll use ’em, too.”
-
-A slight rustling among the bed-clothes behind the curtain which
-concealed the bunk in which Mr. Mortimer lay, proved that that
-gentleman was awake and listening to all that was going on. Jack heard
-the noise and noticed the movements of the occupant of the bunk, but
-the captain and his men did not. They were too busy with thoughts of
-the dangerous lunatic, whom they must assist in securing, to hear or
-see anything. They followed Jack to the deck, and during the next
-quarter of an hour the greatest confusion prevailed on board the
-flatboat.
-
-Mr. Bowles that morning earned the reputation of being a very
-courageous man; for while he continually cautioned the crew to beware
-of the fire-arms of which he was sure his escaped prisoner had obtained
-possession, he exposed himself most recklessly, being everywhere
-foremost in the search, and advancing boldly into the darkest corners
-of the hold, where no one else dared to venture. Every part of the boat
-was thoroughly searched, but no Julian was found; and Jack and the
-captain, after talking the matter over, were obliged to come to the
-conclusion that he had put an end to his life by jumping overboard.
-
-The next thing was to inform Mr. Mortimer—who Jack said was some
-distant relative of the unfortunate youth—of the melancholy fact; but
-that gentleman had already learned the particulars from one of the
-crew, and had also made a most disagreeable discovery. Jack found him
-on deck, and when his eyes rested on him he stopped and gazed at him in
-surprise.
-
-Mr. Mortimer’s serious air might have been put on for the occasion,
-Bowles told himself, but he never could have assumed that pale face.
-Something was the matter with him. He listened in silence while Jack
-and the captain told him of Julian’s mysterious disappearance, and when
-they ceased speaking he walked off to an unoccupied part of the deck.
-
-The captain presently went down into his cabin and Jack joined Mr.
-Mortimer.
-
-“Where is he?” asked the latter in a low whisper.
-
-“At the bottom of the river,” replied Jack in the same cautious tone.
-“He was standin’ right there, jest this way,” he added, stepping close
-to the side of the boat, “with his hands tied behind him, an’ I come up
-an’ give him a leetle nudge with my shoulder an’ over he went. Nobody
-didn’t see me do it, either.”
-
-“I don’t care to know how it was done,” interrupted Mr. Mortimer
-hastily. “I only want to be sure that it _was_ done, and effectually.”
-
-“It sartinly was. He couldn’t swim fur with his hands tied, could he?”
-
-“No; but he might have been picked up. Have you seen Sanders this
-morning?”
-
-“I hain’t,” replied Jack, looking about the deck, while an expression
-of anxiety settled on his face. “He wouldn’t save him, would he?”
-
-“Of course he would, if he got the opportunity. If he could take that
-boy to a certain man whose name I could mention he would make more
-money by it than he ever saw. He is working against me.”
-
-“Wal, he didn’t pick him up. I was on deck fur ten minutes arter
-Julian went overboard, an’ I didn’t see him at all. Mebbe he’s about
-somewhars.”
-
-“No, he isn’t. He’s gone; and so is the yawl belonging to the flatboat.”
-
-Jack started, and folding his arms gazed thoughtfully over the side
-into the water. Although he had not noticed the circumstance at the
-time, he now remembered that on the preceding day Sanders had kept as
-close as possible to him and Mr. Mortimer, and that he had more than
-once paused in his walk as if he were listening to their conversation.
-
-Might he not by some means have become acquainted with his plans,
-and set himself to work to defeat them? And if Julian was so valuable
-to him, might he not have followed Jake and Tom in the yawl with the
-intention of securing their prisoner? The thought was enough to put
-Jack on nettles.
-
-“Whar’s them two hundred?” he asked, suddenly.
-
-Mr. Mortimer, putting his hand into his pocket, produced a roll of
-bills, which he slyly handed to his confederate, and Jack continued:
-
-“I can’t be of no more use here, an’ you might as well tell the cap’n
-to set me ashore.”
-
-“I will. I want to go myself. I am uneasy about that man Sanders. Here
-comes the captain now.”
-
-“I shall have to land to do it,” said the skipper, after listening to
-the request of his passenger, “for I have no boat to send you off in.
-That strange-looking man in black has deserted us and stolen it. It was
-worth $60, too.”
-
-“Say no more about that,” returned Mr. Mortimer. “Put us on dry land
-and I will compensate you for the loss of your boat.”
-
-The captain gave the necessary orders to the pilot, called up his crew
-to man the sweeps, and in a few seconds the bow of the flatboat was
-turned toward the shore.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-IN THE SMOKE-HOUSE.
-
-
-“IF ANY one on board that flatboat is crazy it is Jack Bowles. He might
-have known that I wouldn’t stay there long after my hands were untied.
-Didn’t I tell him that I would never go back to that camp and give him
-my money with my own hands? I am free now, and if he ever captures me
-again I shall deserve to be obliged to remain under his roof for the
-rest of my days. The cabin can’t be more than ten miles away. I can
-easily walk there in three hours, and it will be no trouble for me to
-slip into the house and obtain possession of my rifle and blankets
-without awakening Jake and Tom. Then I’ll catch my horse, go back to my
-camp on the bluffs after my money, and by daylight I’ll be twenty miles
-away.”
-
-While these thoughts were passing through Julian’s mind he was striking
-out lustily for the shore. The flatboat was still in plain view, for
-the current carried both her and him down the river at an almost equal
-rate of speed. Julian kept close watch of her, expecting every moment
-to hear an uproar on her deck, telling him that his absence had been
-discovered. He little dreamed that his escape, which he had so easily
-accomplished, had been brought about by the assistance of his dreaded
-enemy, who was at that very moment creating a diversion in his favor;
-and he little thought, too, that the pursuers he feared were not coming
-from the flatboat, but from another quarter altogether. Had he looked
-up the river occasionally, instead of keeping his gaze so steadily
-directed across the stream, he would have discovered something.
-
-A dug-out was coming swiftly down the river, its prow being pointed
-directly toward Julian. In the stern sat Tom Bowles vigorously plying
-a paddle, which he used with so much skill that it made not the
-slightest sound as it rose and fell in the water. Stretched out flat in
-the bow was Jake Bowles, who kept his eyes fastened on Julian’s head,
-now and then signaling to his brother with his hands, and showing him
-what course to steer. Julian discovered his enemies before he had swam
-a third of the distance to the shore, but then it was too late to make
-even an attempt to avoid them. He heard a hissing sound, made by the
-sharp bow of the dug-out as it cleft the water, and turned quickly,
-only to find himself in the grasp of Jake Bowles, who seized his collar
-with both hands and held fast to it.
-
-“I reckon ye thought ye was gone, didn’t ye?” he cried, in a triumphant
-tone; “but ye hain’t, be ye? Yer ketched agin, an’ this time ye’ll stay
-ketched, I bet ye. Balance the boat, Tom, an’ I’ll haul him in.”
-
-“I thought I left you at home, Jake Bowles!” exclaimed Julian. “How
-came you here?”
-
-“I guess we’ve got as much right on this yere river as anybody, hain’t
-we? We come arter ye, that’s how we come here, an’ we’ve got ye, too.”
-
-For a moment Julian was too astonished to move. The approach of his
-enemies had been so noiseless, and their appearance was so sudden and
-unexpected, that he was utterly bewildered. Not until Jack had dragged
-him half-way into the dug-out did he begin to comprehend the situation.
-
-“Let go!” he exclaimed, “or I’ll capsize the boat.”
-
-“Nary let go,” replied Jake. “I owe you a good poundin’ fur stealin’
-them $100 from me, an’ fur knockin’ me into that hole last night, an’
-I’m goin’ to give it to ye afore I let ye go. Come in here.”
-
-“No, you come out here,” said Julian. “I’ll duck you sure if you don’t
-let go my collar.”
-
-This was the second time the two boys had measured strength, and
-although our hero was fighting at great disadvantage, he tested the
-endurance and muscle of his antagonist most severely. He strove to the
-utmost to drag Jake into the water; but the latter had wrapped his
-legs around one of the thwarts and thrown his left arm over another,
-and Julian could not break his hold. Nor could he overturn the boat,
-for Tom watched the contest closely, and frustrated all Julian’s
-attempts by throwing the weight of his body on the opposite side of the
-dug-out.
-
-Jake, in the meantime exerted himself to drag his prisoner out of
-the water; but finding that it was a task beyond his strength, he
-held firmly to Julian’s collar, determined to wait until the latter,
-exhausted by his furious struggles, should be obliged to surrender
-himself. But Julian’s endurance seemed to have no limit. He resolutely
-continued the contest, and all this while the canoe was floating down
-the river side by side with the flatboat, which was scarcely more than
-a hundred yards distant.
-
-“We’re fightin’ fur money now, _we_ are,” said Jake—“for the $145.
-It’s no use fur ye to kick about so, ’cause we’ve got ye, an’ we’re
-goin’ to hold fast to ye.”
-
-“You’ll not get the money, even if you succeed in making a prisoner of
-me,” replied Julian, with as much spirit as ever.
-
-“We’ll see about that when we’ve got ye hum. I guess if ye go a few
-days without eatin’ or sleepin’, an’ have the rawhide laid over yer
-shoulders ten or twenty times every hour, ye’ll be glad to tell us all
-we want to know. Come here, Tom, an’ hit him a clip with yer paddle. I
-guess that’ll fetch him to his senses.”
-
-“Souse him under,” replied Tom; “that’s the way to make him give in.”
-
-Jake was prompt to act upon the suggestion.
-
-Julian resisted him desperately, but one or two severe blows on the
-fingers with the edge of Tom’s paddle broke his hold on the side of the
-canoe, and his head was forced under the water. Jake held him there a
-few seconds, and then pulled him to the surface, and after giving him
-time to draw a breath or two, and clear his eyes of the water, asked
-him if he would abandon the struggle and allow himself to be drawn into
-the boat.
-
-[Illustration: “JAKE BOWLES SEIZED JULIAN BY THE COLLAR AND HELD
-FAST.”—[Page 109].]
-
-“No,” replied Julian, not in the least daunted; “I’ll never give up
-while I have any strength left.”
-
-“Stick him under agin,” said Tom, and down went Julian’s head for the
-second time.
-
-Jake held him under longer than before—as long as he dared, in
-fact—and when he pulled him up again, Julian was incapable of any
-serious resistance. He gasped for breath, and tried to lay hold of the
-side of the canoe.
-
-Jake, quick to improve the opportunity thus presented, exerted all
-his strength, while Tom kept the boat trimmed in order to prevent a
-capsize, and finally succeeded in dragging his prisoner out of the
-water. In less time than it takes to tell it he was secured beyond all
-hope of escape, and the canoe was shooting swiftly up the river.
-
-It was fully half an hour before Julian moved or spoke. He lay so
-quietly on the bottom of the dug-out that Jake and Tom began to be
-alarmed, fearing that in their eagerness to take all the fight out of
-their captive, they had gone too far, and taken the breath out of him.
-
-But Julian was fast recovering from the effects of his ducking, and
-as soon as he was himself again the brothers speedily became aware of
-the fact, for he began to try the strength of the ropes with which he
-was confined. He thrashed about at an alarming rate, rocking the canoe
-from side to side, until at last the water began to pour in over the
-gunwales, and Jake and Tom were obliged to cease paddling and trim
-their craft in order to keep it right side up.
-
-But they had done their work thoroughly, and Julian, finding his
-efforts useless, ceased his struggles, and listened to the threats of
-his captors, who tried by every means in their power to compel him to
-tell where he had hidden his money.
-
-During the progress of the conversation he heard some things he did
-not know before, and one was that his escape from the flatboat and his
-recapture by Jake and Tom were a part of the scheme Mr. Bowles had set
-on foot for the finding of the concealed treasure. He was astonished to
-know that while he imagined he was working for his own interests he was
-playing into the hands of his enemy, and told himself that Jack still
-had the most difficult part of the undertaking before him.
-
-The prisoner suffered intensely during the journey up the river. The
-night was cold, the wind keen and piercing, and seemed to cut through
-his wet clothing like a knife. When at last the canoe reached the
-landing he was so benumbed that he could scarcely speak.
-
-Having made the dug-out fast to a tree on the bank, Jake and Tom pulled
-their captive ashore, and finding him unable to stand alone, took hold
-of his arms and led him toward the house.
-
-Scarcely were they out of sight when a heavy yawl, rowed by a single
-man, shot up to the landing and stopped alongside the canoe. The
-occupant sprung out, and without waiting to secure his boat, crept
-cautiously up the bank, and followed after Jake and Tom.
-
-When the brothers reached the cabin they pushed open the door and
-entered, dragging their captive after them. Mrs. Bowles, who sat
-nodding on one of the nail-kegs, started up as they came in, and Julian
-knew from the first words she uttered that she was expecting them.
-
-“So ye’ve got him, have ye?” she exclaimed, gleefully. “This night’s
-work will make rich folks outen us. An’ ye was goin’ to run away from
-us, was ye—from me an’ Jack, who have allers treated ye like a son
-ever since ye’ve been with us? An’ ye’ve got $145 hid away from us,
-have ye? What business have ye got with so much money? Take him out
-to the smoke-house an’ lock him up thar. I’m too sleepy to wollop him
-to-night, but I’ll tend to him the fust thing in the mornin’.”
-
-Julian had expected a terrible beating as soon as he was brought into
-the presence of Mrs. Bowles, and was much relieved to know that his
-punishment was to be postponed for a few hours. It was the first time
-he had ever known Jack’s wife to be too sleepy to use the rawhide.
-
-“An he ain’t got no business with them new suit of clothes, nuther,”
-said Tom, who, while his brother was searching for a candle and the key
-to the smoke-house, was taking some of his own ragged wearing apparel
-down from the nails in one corner of the cabin. “He’s got to take ’em
-off an’ give ’em to me. Pap said so.”
-
-“Ye shall have ’em, Tommy,” said his mother. “Ye’ve been a good boy an’
-ye desarve ’em.”
-
-“An’ I’m to have his rifle an’ $10 besides,” chimed in Jake, angling
-for a word of commendation.
-
-“So ye are. Allers be good an’ ye’ll be sartin to prosper.”
-
-When Jake had found the candle and key, and Tom had selected the
-garments he intended to give to Julian in exchange for his own, the two
-boys led their captive out of the cabin to the smoke-house.
-
-The first business in order, after they had conducted Julian into his
-prison, was to rob him of his clothes. Jake untied his hands and stood
-close by his side, in order to seize him if he made any attempt to
-escape, while Tom picked up a heavy club and stationed himself in front
-of the door, ready to knock the prisoner down if he eluded his brother.
-But Julian, shivering violently with the cold and utterly incapable
-of any exertion, thought only of dry clothes and comfort and not of
-escape. He felt much more at his ease after he had relieved himself
-of his wet garments and put on those Tom had provided for him, and
-told himself that if his captors would bring him the blankets Jack had
-stolen from his camp on the bluff, he could obtain a night’s refreshing
-sleep in spite of the cold and his bonds. But he soon found that they
-did not intend to permit him to go to sleep at all; and during the next
-few minutes he gained some idea of what was in store for him.
-
-As soon as the exchange had been made, and Julian had again been
-bound, Tom dropped his club, and catching up a long rope which he had
-brought with him from the house, mounted upon a box and made one end of
-it fast to a beam overhead. At the same time Jake pushed his prisoner
-under the beam, and seizing the other end of the rope tied it to his
-hands. Julian was now confined so that he could neither sit, lie nor
-walk about. He must remain upon his feet and stand in one place during
-the rest of the night.
-
-“I don’t see any use in this,” said he, dismayed at the gloomy prospect
-before him. “I can’t escape from this house as long as my hands are
-tied.”
-
-“Wal, we can see use in it, if ye can’t,” replied Tom. “We’re doin’
-jest what pap told us to do.”
-
-“An’ we don’t do it ’cause we’re afeared of yer gettin’ away, nuther,”
-said Jake. “Ye’ve got to stand right here without a wink of sleep or a
-bite to eat till ye tell us whar that money is hid. Mebbe ye’ll tell us
-now.”
-
-“No, I’ll not,” replied Julian promptly and decidedly.
-
-“All right. Ye’ll think different in the mornin’, I tell ye. The ole
-woman will be here bright an’ arly, an’ if ye ain’t ready to open yer
-mouth, she’ll give ye a dozen or two as hard as ever she can lay ’em
-on. When pap comes home to-morrer he’ll take the job outen her hands.
-Ye’ve got into a hard row of stumps, feller.”
-
-After carefully examining their captive’s bonds, and looking carefully
-about the smoke-house to make sure that there was no opening in it from
-which he could escape, even if he succeeded in freeing his hands, Jake
-and Tom went out, locking the door after them.
-
-When the sound of their footsteps had died away, and Julian began to
-ponder upon what they had said to him, and to realize how powerless he
-was in the hands of his enemies, his courage for the first time gave
-away utterly. He took a step forward and threw his weight upon the
-rope, but it was firmly tied to the beam above and too strong to be
-broken, and the movement only pulled his hands between his shoulders,
-thus “tricing him up” most effectually. He had never dreamed that his
-enemies would endeavor to torture his secret out of him in this way.
-He had expected to be beaten, and he believed that he could endure
-that; but was his fortitude proof against such a test as this? In
-order to save himself suffering would it not be policy to give Jack
-the information he demanded, and when his liberty was restored to him,
-resume his old occupation of trapping until he could earn enough to
-purchase an outfit for his proposed journey? He had worked hard for two
-winters to accumulate the little property he now possessed, and should
-he surrender it at the command of one who had not the smallest shadow
-of a right to it? Julian passed an hour debating such points as these,
-and at the end of that time his decision was made.
-
-“I’ll never do it,” said he to himself. “It belongs to me alone. Nobody
-else has a claim upon it. The woods are as free to Jack Bowles as they
-once were to me—much more so, in fact, for there is no one to dog
-his steps, destroy his traps and steal his earnings—and if he wants
-money let him work for it. That’s the way I got mine. He will find
-that I am not to be starved or beaten into telling him where that box
-is concealed. Jake and Tom are coming back again. I hope they have not
-brought the rawhide with them.”
-
-The footsteps which had attracted Julian’s attention drew nearer and
-nearer, and presently a cautious hand laid hold of the padlock with
-which the door was secured. Julian listened to hear the bolt turned,
-but soon found out that his visitor, whoever he was, did not intend to
-effect an entrance with the assistance of a key; for after shaking the
-lock to assure himself that it was fast in the staple, he placed his
-shoulders against the door and tried to burst it open. The prisoner
-heard him panting and puffing as he applied his strength to the stout
-planks. He heard, too, the angry words he muttered when he found that
-his efforts were useless, and caught the sound of his footsteps as he
-moved around the smoke-house.
-
-Julian wondered greatly. Who was he? Was he some friend who, knowing
-that he was confined there, had come with the hope of rescuing
-him? There was scarcely a man in the settlement who would not have
-hurried to his relief had it been known that he was in trouble, but
-unfortunately no one was aware of his situation. Of course, then, the
-visitor could not be a friend. Most likely he was some hungry prowler,
-whose only object was to filch a ham or a side of bacon from the
-smoke-house.
-
-In spite of the unpleasantness of his situation, Julian became
-interested in the man’s movements. He walked around the building and
-finally came back and tried the door again, but with no better success
-than before. Then there was silence for a few minutes, during which the
-man was, no doubt, thinking what was best to be done, and at length a
-noise at one corner of the house told the prisoner that he had decided
-upon a plan of operations. He was using the projecting ends of the logs
-as a ladder, and mounting to the top of the building. His success was
-certain now. The roof was covered with narrow oak boards, laid on like
-shingles, and held in place by small nails; and it would be a matter of
-no difficulty for him to pull a few of them off and drop down on the
-inside of the smoke-house. That such was the visitor’s intention soon
-became evident. He attacked the shingles at once, using extreme caution
-in removing them from their fastenings, and in a few seconds an opening
-had been made in the roof, that was immediately filled by the head
-and shoulders of the man, who lighted a match and held it up to take
-a survey of things below him. Julian had a good view of him. Could he
-believe his eyes? He stared hard at his visitor, and uttered a cry of
-delight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-SANDERS TELLS HIS STORY.
-
-
-JULIAN’S visitor was the man Sanders. He recognized him by the
-handkerchief that was tied over his head. If he had come there to
-release him would it not be sufficient proof that he was really the
-friend he professed to be?
-
-“Julian!” exclaimed the man, in a low but excited tone of voice.
-
-“I am here!” replied the prisoner, so overjoyed that he could scarcely
-speak plainly.
-
-“Wal, come out o’ that. You needn’t stay thar no longer.”
-
-“I can’t go up there—I am tied.”
-
-“Are you? Then I’ll soon be down to turn you loose.”
-
-After burning another match to make sure the way was clear below him,
-Sanders crawled through the opening in the roof, and hanging by his
-hands, dropped to the ground. A knife which he drew from his pocket
-made quick work with the prisoner’s bonds, and in a few seconds he was
-free.
-
-“How came you here?” Julian asked of his deliverer, after he had taken
-a few turns around the smoke-house to relieve his cramped limbs. “I
-left you ten miles down the river fast asleep on board the flatboat.”
-
-“Not much I wasn’t asleep,” replied Sanders, with a laugh. “I seed
-every thing that happened. But we hain’t got no time to talk. Be thar
-any men in the house?”
-
-“No. Jake and Tom are alone with their mother.”
-
-“Them boys? If I had known that, you wouldn’t have been brought in
-here. Climb up on my shoulders now, and crawl out.”
-
-Not having entirely recovered from the effects of his long ride in
-his wet clothes, Julian was not very strong or active, but after some
-difficulty he succeeded in mounting upon Sanders’ broad shoulders,
-and drawing himself up to the opening in the roof, he crawled through
-and dropped to the ground. The man climbed up the logs and followed
-him, and when he once more stood by Julian’s side he gave utterance,
-with the first words he spoke, to the very thoughts that were passing
-through the boy’s mind.
-
-“I reckon that if I do a few more things of this kind you will be
-willin’ to b’lieve that I am any thing but an enemy to you, won’t you?”
-he asked.
-
-“You have rendered me a most important service,” answered the boy,
-guardedly, “and I am very grateful to you for it. I only wish I was as
-well satisfied of your friendship, and the truth of some things you
-told me this morning, as I am of the interest you somehow take in me. I
-can not understand why you, who are an utter stranger to me, should put
-yourself to so much trouble to assist me.”
-
-“I hain’t no stranger to you,” replied Sanders earnestly. “I tell you
-I knowed you and your brother afore either of you could walk. You were
-stole away from your home by Dick Mortimer. Your friends have just
-found out whar you are, an’ sent me arter you. You’re goin’ to start
-for the plains now, hain’t you?”
-
-“I am, and in less than five minutes.”
-
-“Wal, I’m goin’ the same way. You needn’t travel in my company unless
-you’re a mind to, but I’d be powerful glad to have you. I can show you
-the way to St. Joe anyhow, an’ as we go along I will tell you about the
-folks you hain’t seed fur so many years.”
-
-Julian leaned against the smoke-house and thought over this
-proposition. It was a very fair one, and he could not see that he would
-place himself in any danger by accepting it. He was _almost_ ready to
-put entire faith in his new acquaintance, and to believe everything
-he had told him. He wanted to believe it, and if Sanders had made
-his appearance a few hours before—prior to his meeting with Mr.
-Mortimer—Julian would have placed unlimited confidence in him. But his
-experience with Jack Bowles’ guest had made him timid and suspicious.
-
-Sanders did not ask him to give himself up to his guidance and control,
-but seemed satisfied to wait until he was willing to do so of his free
-will; and Julian told himself that that was a good sign.
-
-He at last decided that he would accept the offer of the man’s guidance
-as far as St. Joseph, and that when he reached that point he would
-decide upon his future movements. In the meantime he would watch his
-companion closely, and leave him at the very first sign of treachery.
-This determination he communicated to Sanders, who seemed to be
-immensely delighted by it.
-
-“I am monstrous glad to hear you say it,” said he. “And I’ll tell you
-what’s a fact: If you go with me as fur as St. Joe, you will go all the
-rest of the way with me.”
-
-Julian did not quite like the tone in which these words were spoken,
-for it made him feel that there was more in them than he could
-understand; and had there been light enough for him to see the
-expression the man’s face wore at that moment the opinion would have
-been confirmed.
-
-“Whar you goin’ now?” asked Sanders, as Julian moved toward the cabin.
-
-“Jake and Tom have some of my property in their possession,” was the
-reply; “a suit of clothes, a rifle and a pair of blankets. I must have
-them before I start.”
-
-“‘Taint wuth while,” said Sanders. “You’ve got money; buy more.”
-
-“I may need the little I have for other purposes when I get out on the
-plains.”
-
-“Sho! You’ll find more out thar than you ever dreamed of. You can walk
-up a ravine a little way from your father’s rancho an’ pick up nuggets
-of gold as big as you can tote.”
-
-“But I don’t know how long it will be, or what I shall be obliged to
-pass through, before I get there,” replied Julian. “Another thing,
-Jack Bowles and his boys shall not have the satisfaction of using
-anything that belongs to me.”
-
-“Wal, go ahead, then, if you’re so sot onto it, an’ I’ll be close by to
-lend a hand if you get into trouble.”
-
-While this conversation was being carried on Julian and his companion
-were walking toward the cabin, and now they were close beside it. The
-boy at once pushed open the door and entered, while Sanders took his
-stand upon the steps where he could see all that went on.
-
-There was a roaring fire on the hearth, and by the aid of the light it
-threw out Julian could distinguish every object in the cabin.
-
-Almost the first things his eyes rested upon were the clothes of which
-he had been robbed, spread out on a couple of nail-kegs to dry. His
-rifle stood beside the bed in which Jake and Tom lay fast asleep, and
-his powder-horn and bullet-pouch hung from a nail over their heads.
-Walking across the floor with his ordinary step, and without taking the
-least pains to avoid arousing the occupants of the cabin, Julian took
-the horn and pouch down from the nail, and while slinging them over his
-shoulder discovered the other articles of which he was in search—his
-blankets, which were snugly tucked around the shoulders of the sleeping
-brothers.
-
-“You are very good to yourselves, are you not?” said Julian aloud. “You
-leave me to freeze in the smoke-house, and make use of my property to
-keep yourselves warm. You’ll sleep colder for the rest of the night.”
-
-As he said this he jerked the blankets off the bed. The movement awoke
-Tom Bowles who started up in alarm, and was greatly amazed to see his
-prisoner standing unbound beside his bed.
-
-“Ye Julian!” he exclaimed, as soon as he found his tongue.
-
-“That’s just what’s the matter!” replied our hero.
-
-“How come ye outen that ar smoke-house?”
-
-“I crawled out.”
-
-“Ye’ll crawl back agin mighty sudden, I tell ye,” replied Tom, seizing
-his brother by the shoulder. “Wake up here, Jake.”
-
-“Hold on!” said Julian, lifting his recovered rifle over Tom’s head.
-“No noise, now.”
-
-If Tom was alarmed by this movement on the part of Julian, he was still
-more terrified when he saw a head and a pair of broad shoulders thrust
-in at the door, and a clenched hand, which looked as though it might
-have knocked down an ox, shaken threateningly at him. He understood the
-gesture and took his hand off his brother’s shoulder.
-
-“Good-by, Tom,” said Julian, shouldering his rifle and gathering his
-clothes and blankets under his arm. “I am sorry that I am in so great
-a hurry, for I have several little accounts against you and Jake that
-I should like to settle up before I go. Give my very kindest regards
-to your father when he returns, and be sure and follow the excellent
-advice your mother gave you a while ago in my hearing.”
-
-So saying Julian left the cabin, and Sanders slammed the door after
-him. Followed by his ally, the boy walked toward the corn-cribs, and
-while he was pulling off Tom’s tattered garments and putting on his
-own, which were now dry and comfortable, he saw the door of the cabin
-opened and the heads of Mrs. Bowles and her two sons thrust cautiously
-out. But they did not speak to him or venture beyond the threshold.
-They peered into the darkness a moment and then closed and fastened the
-door; and that was the last Julian ever saw of them.
-
-Billy, proving more tractable than on a former occasion, was captured
-and saddled without difficulty. In two hours more Julian’s camp on the
-bluff was again occupied. The brush shanty which Jack Bowles had pulled
-down had been restored to an upright position; a fire was burning
-brightly before it; Billy was standing hitched to a tree close by; and
-Julian, with his saddle under his head for a pillow, and the tin box
-containing his money safely stowed away in his pocket, lay stretched
-out on one of the blankets, while Sanders reclined upon the other
-smoking his pipe. The man had been relating how he had hidden behind
-the corn-crib and overheard Jack Bowles’ plans concerning Julian, and
-thus been able to take measures to defeat them. He had been a witness
-to everything that happened on board the flatboat. He had seen Julian
-go overboard, and knowing that Jake and Tom were close by waiting to
-pick him up, he had clambered down into the yawl, as soon as he saw an
-opportunity to do so without attracting the attention of any one of the
-flatboat’s crew, and pushed off to Julian’s assistance. His story was
-followed by a long pause, which was broken by our hero, who said:
-
-“I am ready to hear what you have to tell me about my parents. You say
-they are both alive?”
-
-“Both of ’em,” replied Sanders.
-
-“How does my father look?”
-
-“Jest as nateral as life—enough like you to be your brother, if it
-wasn’t for his gray har an’ mustache. He’s a tall, broad-shouldered
-man, has an eye like an eagle’s, an’ is the best hossman an’ rifle-shot
-in the West. He’s awful rich, too; I don’t b’lieve he knows how much
-he’s wuth. You see, your mother—an’ she’s a lady, you bet—is a
-Spanish woman. Her father, long years ago,” Sanders went on hurriedly,
-as if he did not intend to allow his listener any time to ask
-questions, “took it into his ole head that he wanted to be away from
-everybody, an’ so he located out thar in the mountains. He allers was
-rich, but when he got out thar he found himself richer’n ever. Thar was
-gold all around him. He couldn’t walk without steppin’ onto it, an’ he
-picked it up by cart-loads. Your father, who was out thar sojerin’,
-resigned his commission in the army an’ married his darter; an’ in
-course when the ole man died he came into possession of all his gold
-dust. But thar were some people about who didn’t want him to keep it.
-The only kin folks your mother had after her father died were a brother
-an’ cousin, an’ you see if everybody else had been out of the way, all
-the money would have fell to her brother. They ain’t the honestest
-fellers in the world, her kin folks ain’t, I must say. They’re the wust
-sort of gamblers, bein’ monstrous fond of three-card monte, an’ they
-are even suspicioned of doin’ things a heap sight wuss than that; an’
-since your father an’ his family wouldn’t die an’ leave them to take
-charge of the money, they laid a plan to hurry up matters an’ divide
-the plunder between them. But all the harm they done was to steal you
-away from home, an’ that didn’t do ’em no good ’cause I’ve found you
-agin.”
-
-“You say that Dick Mortimer is the man who kidnapped me?” asked Julian,
-when Sanders paused.
-
-“Sartin, I do.”
-
-“And that he is a relative of my mother’s?”
-
-“Them’s my very words.”
-
-“Well, now, is he her brother or her cousin?”
-
-“He’s her brother.”
-
-“Her _own_ brother?”
-
-“In course.”
-
-“How can that be? My mother’s name wasn’t Mortimer before she was
-married, was it?”
-
-“Eh?” exclaimed Sanders, somewhat disconcerted by this question. “Oh,
-no; in course not. Her name was Cordova, an’ Dick’s her cousin.”
-
-“Then how does it come that his name is Mortimer?”
-
-“Eh? I’m blessed if I know. I guess it jest happened so. An’ your
-brother’s alive an’ all right, too. Now he’s a _boy_, he is. You’re
-mighty right. His name’s Fred. Won’t he make things lively for you
-though when you get out thar? You hain’t goin’ to sleep, be you?”
-
-“Yes, I am,” replied Julian, rearranging his blanket and resting his
-head on his hard pillow, “I have scarcely closed my eyes during the
-past forty-eight hours, and I begin to feel the need of rest. We have a
-long journey to make to-morrow, you know. Goodnight.”
-
-Sanders looked sharply at the boy, and settled back on his blanket,
-muttering as he did so:
-
-“Did I tell him anything out of the way, I wonder? I am afraid I got
-that brother an’ cousin business mixed up a trifle too much. I said
-jest what Reginald told me to say as nigh as I could. If I can only
-manage to keep him with me till we reach St. Joe, I am all right. It
-will make a rich man of me.”
-
-“It is no use to waste time in listening to this fellow and building
-hopes on what he says,” thought Julian, throwing his arm over his head,
-and watching his companion through his half-closed eyes. “He repeated
-his story as if he had learned it by heart, and some portions of it
-didn’t hold together. I wish he would take off that handkerchief and
-give me a fair view of his face. Who is he, and why did he come here?
-My father never sent him, for, if he is alive and well, and knows where
-I am, he would have come himself if he wanted to have me near him. He
-is no friend of Dick Mortimer, for he is working against him. Is he up
-to some trick of his own, or is he employed by somebody? I’ll not go
-to sleep, for I am afraid of him. I can’t well avoid traveling in his
-company as far as St. Joseph, but when I get there I will have no more
-to do with him.”
-
-For a short while Julian was wakeful enough. His recent excitement and
-adventures, and his speculations concerning the future, kept his brain
-busy and banished sleep. But at last his thoughts became confused, his
-eyelids grew heavy, and in a few minutes more he was in the land of
-dreams.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE JOURNEY COMMENCED.
-
-
-WHEN Julian opened his eyes again the sun was rising. He started up
-with an exclamation which was repeated as soon as he was fairly awake.
-His first thought was of his companion. He was gone. A glance about the
-camp showed him that something else was also missing—his rifle, which
-he had placed under the eaves of the cabin close at hand and ready
-for use in case of emergency. A strange feeling came over Julian, and
-it was some minutes before he could muster up courage enough to place
-his hand upon the breast of his jacket in which he carried his box of
-money. But he did it at last, and was immensely relieved to find that
-his box was safe. He removed the lid, and saw that its contents had not
-been disturbed.
-
-While he was trying to find some explanation for his companion’s
-absence, and wondering why, if he had deserted him and stolen his
-gun, he had not taken the money also, Sanders appeared in sight over
-the brow of the bluff with Julian’s rifle on his shoulder and several
-squirrels in his hand, which he had shot for their breakfast. The boy
-said nothing about the fright his absence had occasioned him, but
-assisted him in cooking and eating the squirrels, telling himself the
-while that whatever else Sanders might be he was not a thief. It was
-plain now that if he had any designs upon Julian, the time to carry
-them into execution had not yet arrived.
-
-When the two had satisfied their appetites Billy was saddled, the fire
-extinguished, and the journey toward St. Joseph commenced. Julian
-rode the horse and Sanders walked by his side, striding along at an
-astonishing rate and keeping Billy in a trot all the way. He proved
-to be a very entertaining companion, and told stories of adventure in
-the mountains and on the plains till Julian became interested in spite
-of himself. Sanders, quick to notice the fact, again spoke of the home
-among the gold mines to which he was ready to conduct Julian if the
-latter would only trust to his guidance; but seeing very plainly that
-the boy did not believe a word he said, he dropped the subject and did
-not refer to it again.
-
-At noon they stopped at a farm-house, where both travelers and horse
-were regaled with an excellent dinner, and about 10 o’clock that night
-found themselves in a hotel in St. Joseph. Julian asked to be shown at
-once to his room, and after he had locked himself in and barricaded the
-door with the washstand and chairs, he drew a long breath of relief,
-and for the first time since meeting Richard Mortimer believed himself
-free from danger. The feeling of comfort and security he experienced
-was certainly refreshing, but it would have been short-lived had he
-known what his companion in the adjoining room was thinking about.
-
-That worthy was up and doing at a very early hour, and his first move,
-after he had come out of his room and looked up and down the hall to
-make sure that there was no one in sight, was to place his ear and
-then his eye to the keyhole of Julian’s door. He heard and saw enough
-to satisfy him that the boy had not yet arisen, and this point being
-settled he went down stairs and out of the house. He hurried along the
-streets, and after turning numerous corners found himself in front of
-a small and very dingy public house, which, as the sign before the
-door indicated, was called the “Hunter’s Home.” It was patronized
-exclusively by frontiersmen, and some of the guests were already astir
-and lounging about the doors. Sanders glanced at the groups as he
-walked by them, and turning the nearest corner passed on out of sight.
-No sooner had he disappeared than two men arose from the bench on which
-they had been sitting, and strolling down the street and turning the
-same corner, presently came up with Sanders, who was perched upon a
-dry-goods box in front of a store.
-
-“I allowed it was you, Ned, but I didn’t know,” said one of them,
-advancing and extending his hand, which Sanders shook cordially.
-“You’re dressed up like a gentleman. What luck?”
-
-“I’ve got him.”
-
-“You have?” cried both the men in concert.
-
-“It’s a fact. He’s in a hotel not more’n a half a mile from
-here—Julian Mortimer himself, an’ nobody else. I’ve had the wust kind
-of a time a gettin’ him. Dick Mortimer was thar ahead of me.”
-
-“Sho!”
-
-“Yes. An’ we’re goin to have a wusser time, I am afraid, gettin’ him
-out of the town to the prairy. He’s sharper’n two steel traps, that boy
-is, an’ somehow he don’t like the looks of me. He knows a heap about
-himself, an’ is too smart to swallow a single one of the lies I told
-him. He’s goin’ to cut loose from me, I can see it in his eye; an’
-whatever we do must be done to once. He wants to jine a wagon train, if
-he can find one.”
-
-“Wal, he can,” replied one of the men, “‘cause thar’s one goin’ out
-to-day. Silas Roper’s goin’ along.”
-
-“Silas Roper!” replied Sanders savagely. “He’s allers in the way. He
-musn’t see the boy, ’cause if he does our goose is cooked—done brown.
-Come with me to the hotel, an’ as we go along I will think up some way
-to manage this business.”
-
-Sanders jumped off the dry-goods box and walked rapidly away, closely
-followed by his two companions. When they arrived within sight of the
-hotel he stopped, for they saw Julian standing on the steps. Sanders’
-friends recognized him at once, and declared that they would have known
-him if they had met him on the other side of the world. They held a
-short, whispered conversation, after which the two men retreated into a
-doorway out of sight, and Sanders kept on and accosted Julian.
-
-“You’re an ’arly bird, hain’t you?” said he, with an awkward attempt
-to appear cordial and friendly. “So am I. I have been findin’ out
-somethin’ about the wagon trains, an’ I am told that one went out
-yesterday bound for the very place you want to go. It will pass within
-a hundred yards of the door of your father’s rancho. I am goin’ to
-start after it directly. Thar won’t be another goin’ out under a month,
-an’ I can’t wait so long; fur I’ve no money to waste in payin’ board
-bills.”
-
-“Neither have I,” said Julian.
-
-“Then you’d best go with me, hadn’t you? We can easy ketch the train by
-day after to-morrow——”
-
-Sanders paused suddenly, finishing the sentence with something that
-sounded very much like an oath. He gazed earnestly down the street
-for a moment, and then turned and walked rapidly away, drawing his
-handkerchief close about his face as he went. He did not slacken his
-pace until he had left the hotel out of sight, and was joined by his
-two companions, who had made an equally hasty retreat. The expression
-on their faces indicated that they were terribly enraged about
-something.
-
-“If they wasn’t worth so much money to us I would make way with both
-of them in less time than it takes to say so!” exclaimed Sanders, in a
-very savage tone of voice. “Did you ever hear tell of such luck? I’ve
-done all that can be done at this end of the route, but I hain’t beat
-yet. We’ll go to the mountains now, an’ have every thing fixed agin’
-the wagon train gets thar.”
-
-For some reason Sanders and his friends now seemed anxious to leave
-the town with as little delay as possible. They made the best of their
-way to the Hunter’s Home, which they entered hurriedly, and when they
-again made their appearance on the street they were all on horseback
-and carried rifles on their shoulders and revolvers and bowie-knives in
-their belts.
-
-No one not well acquainted with him would have recognized Sanders as
-the same man who had gone into the hotel but a few minutes before. His
-broadcloth and jewelry had disappeared, also the handkerchief which
-he had worn about his face, and he was dressed in a suit of buckskin,
-which had evidently seen the hardest kind of service. If Julian could
-have taken one glance at him now, he would not have felt the least
-inclination to renew his short acquaintance with him, nor would he
-have wondered that the man had been so careful to keep his features
-concealed from view. Perhaps he would have asked himself why he did not
-continually wear the handkerchief.
-
-His was the worst looking face that had ever been seen in the streets
-of St. Joseph—one that any man except its owner would have been
-ashamed of; and even _he_ had thought best to hide it for a while lest
-it should bear testimony against him and defeat his plans. But as he
-was now about to leave the country of civilized men and go among those
-of his own kind, concealment was no longer necessary. He appeared in
-his true character, that of villain and desperado.
-
-When Sanders and his companions were fairly out of the stable-yard,
-they put spurs to their horses, and rode swiftly away. They stopped
-that night long enough to ascertain that Julian was with the emigrants,
-and to make a demonstration, the result of which shall be related
-presently, and then resumed their rapid gallop, which they did not
-slacken in one day, nor two; and even at the end of a week, mounted on
-fresh horses, which they had stolen or obtained in exchange for their
-own jaded animals, they were still riding toward the mountains as if
-for dear life. In this way they gained considerably on the wagon train,
-and by the time it appeared in sight of Bridger’s Pass, Sanders had
-mustered assistance, and was ready to accomplish by force of arms what
-he had failed to gain by strategy.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-SILAS ROPER, THE GUIDE.
-
-
-SURPRISED at the abruptness with which Sanders had deserted him, and
-at the unmistakable signs of rage and alarm he exhibited, Julian stood
-looking after his retreating form until it disappeared from view, and
-then directed his gaze down the street.
-
-He could see nothing there calculated to frighten Sanders or any body
-else. There were but few men in sight, and these appeared to have no
-hostile intentions toward any one, for they were going quietly about
-their business, and did not seem to be aware that there were such
-persons as Julian and his late companion in existence.
-
-Among them was a man who attracted the boy’s attention at once; and
-he also seemed to be an object of interest to all in his immediate
-vicinity, for every one who passed him turned to look back at him. He
-was the nearest approach to a giant that Julian had ever seen. Sanders,
-large and powerful as he was, would have looked like a boy beside him.
-He was as straight as an arrow, and moved along as if he were set on
-springs. He was dressed in a complete suit of buckskin, even to his
-moccasins, and carried the never-failing knife and revolver about his
-waist. But little could be seen of his face, for it was covered with
-immense whiskers, which reached almost to his belt. He walked with his
-hands in the pockets of his hunting-shirt, looking carelessly about
-him, as if he had determined upon nothing in particular.
-
-Arriving at the steps where Julian stood, he seated himself upon them,
-and drawing a pipe from a little pouch which hung at his belt, prepared
-to fill up for a smoke.
-
-Julian watched all his movements with interest, and felt a strange kind
-of awe in the man’s presence. He was certainly a trapper, and he must
-be a daring one, too, unless his looks belied him, for he would have
-been picked out among a thousand as a man who was not to be daunted by
-any physical dangers. He must know all about life on the frontier, of
-course, and perhaps he could give some information concerning the wagon
-train of which Sanders had spoken.
-
-“Sir!” said Julian, as soon as this thought passed through his mind.
-
-“Wal!” returned the trapper, raising a pair of honest-looking brown
-eyes, which seemed to invite the boy’s confidence.
-
-“Can you tell me whether or not a wagon train left this place yesterday
-for the mountains?” asked Julian.
-
-“I can.”
-
-“I understood there was,” continued Julian, after waiting for the man
-to say something else.
-
-“Then you understood what wasn’t so.”
-
-“Was there none left?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“What object could Sanders have had in view in telling me that
-falsehood?” thought the boy. “When does the next one start?”
-
-“To-day.”
-
-“How soon?”
-
-“To onct.”
-
-“Where from?”
-
-“From a place ’bout a mile from here, right up this street.”
-
-“Could I go with it?”
-
-“I reckon. Want to go to Californy?”
-
-“No, sir; I am bound for the mountains.”
-
-“For the Peak?”
-
-“No, sir; for the _mountains_.”
-
-“Wal, wharabouts in the mountains?”
-
-“Whereabouts?” replied Julian.
-
-He gazed at the trapper a moment, and seating himself on the opposite
-end of the steps, looked down at the ground in a brown study. The
-question propounded to him excited a serious train of reflections in
-his mind. He had always spoken and thought of “the mountains” without
-having any very definite idea concerning them. He had imagined that
-when he was once safe across the plains his troubles would all be over,
-and that it would be a matter of no difficulty to find the home and
-friends of which he was in search if they were still in existence; but
-the trapper’s last words had opened his eyes and showed him the real
-magnitude of his undertaking. “Whereabouts in the mountains?”
-
-This was a question that Julian could not answer. He remembered now to
-have read somewhere that the Rocky Mountains covered an area of 980,000
-square miles. How could he hope to find his father in such a wilderness
-as that? He might be in Mexico, or he might be in Oregon—Julian didn’t
-know. After all he had endured and accomplished, the obstacles that lay
-in his path were but just beginning to make themselves manifest. This
-reflection for the moment utterly unnerved him, and tears began to fall
-from his eyes. The trapper removed his pipe from his mouth long enough
-to say:
-
-“Cryin’?”
-
-“I know it is unmanly,” replied Julian, “but I can’t help it. I have
-been through some difficulties lately, but I can see that there are
-worse ones before me. But I’ll never give up—never!”
-
-“Stick to that allers,” said the trapper, now beginning to show some
-interest in what the boy had to say. “Never-give-up has carried many a
-feller through the wust kind of scrapes. Got any friends out West?”
-
-“Yes, sir—or, rather, I had a few years ago; but I don’t know where to
-find them. Did you ever hear of Major Mortimer?”
-
-“I b’lieve I’ve heerd his name spoke.”
-
-“Do you know where he lives?”
-
-“I can’t jest say I do exactly. Thar’s only two or three men who can
-tell whar he is now, but I know whar he used to live.”
-
-“He is my father.”
-
-“_I know it._”
-
-“You do?” cried Julian. He looked at the man in utter bewilderment, and
-arose hastily to his feet. “Good-day, sir,” said he. “I am obliged to
-you for the information you gave me about that wagon train.”
-
-The trapper made no reply. He took his pipe out of his mouth and looked
-after the boy as he jumped off the steps and hurried down the street,
-and when he disappeared he arose, thrust his hands in his pockets and
-sauntered after him. What would Julian have thought if he had known
-that he was running away from the only friend he had east of the
-mountains?
-
-“I will have nothing to do with any one who has ever seen or heard
-of me,” soliloquized the boy, as he hurried along, looking into the
-different stores he passed. “How does it come, I wonder, that so many
-men whom I never saw before know me? I am going to depend upon myself
-until I am satisfied that I am out of danger. If Sanders makes his
-appearance again I will send him about his business. I will go out with
-that wagon train, and perhaps before I reach the mountains I shall find
-some man who doesn’t know me, and who can give me the information I
-want. This is the place I am looking for.”
-
-He stopped in front of a store, where a boy about his own age was at
-work taking down the shutters. It appeared to be a sort of variety
-store, for clothing and furnishing goods were displayed in one of the
-windows, and weapons and saddlery in the other.
-
-Julian entered, and when he came out again, a quarter of an hour
-afterward, he had made as great a change in his appearance as Sanders
-did during the short time he remained in the Hunter’s Home. He was
-dressed in a full Mexican suit, which the polite and attentive clerk
-had made him believe was just the thing to wear during a journey across
-the plains, and in the saddle-bags, which he carried over his shoulder,
-was another and a finer suit of the same description, as well as a
-small supply of powder and lead, a brace of revolvers, and several
-other articles of which he thought he might stand in need. On his arm
-he carried a poncho—a rubber blanket with a hole in the center—which
-was to be used in lieu of an umbrella in rainy weather.
-
-When he came out and bent his steps toward the hotel, a tall fellow in
-buckskin, who was leaning against an awning on the opposite side of the
-street, straightened up and followed after him. When he sat down to his
-breakfast the same man walked through the hall, and looked in at the
-dining-room; and when, after paying his bill at the hotel, he came out
-with all his weapons and luggage, and sprung upon his horse, the man in
-buckskin disappeared down a neighboring street, and presently came back
-again, mounted on a large cream-colored mustang, and rode in pursuit of
-Julian.
-
-Our hero found that the information the strange trapper had given him
-concerning the wagon train was correct. The emigrants had been encamped
-on a common a short distance from the hotel, and when Julian came up
-with them they were all on the move. The road in advance of him was
-dotted with white wagon-covers as far as his eyes could reach. It was a
-novel and interesting sight to him, and he soon forgot his troubles in
-watching what was going on around him. The day that he had thought of
-and lived for so long had arrived at last, and he was fairly on his way
-to the mountains. The road the emigrants intended to follow might not
-lead him to his home, but what of that? It was enough for him to know
-that it crossed the mountains somewhere.
-
-Billy, being in high mettle, insisted on going ahead, and his rider
-allowing him a free rein, was carried at a swinging gallop along the
-entire length of the train until he arrived at the foremost wagons.
-The emigrants all seemed to be in excellent spirits, and Julian heard
-them laughing and talking with one another as he dashed by. On the way
-he passed several boys, who were racing their horses along the road,
-now and then stopping to call back to their parents and friends in
-the wagons. Their merriment had an effect upon Julian. It made him
-contrast their situation with his own. In all that wagon train there
-was no one to greet him, no one who knew how he longed for a word of
-sympathy and encouragement from somebody, and no one who cared for him
-or his affairs.
-
-“But I am free!” said the boy, who was not long in finding some crumbs
-of comfort with which to solace himself. “I can go where I please,
-and there is no Jack Bowles to dog my footsteps and beat me with his
-rawhide. I can eat, sleep and walk about in perfect security, knowing
-that there is no one to molest me. I am leaving behind me Richard
-Mortimer, Sanders and all the rest of my secret enemies, and the
-dangers and difficulties I have yet to encounter will be such as I know
-how to meet. If I do not find my home and friends before my money is
-gone, I have a good horse and rifle, and I know how to shoot and trap.
-I shall be able to take care of myself.”
-
-There were several men riding in company in advance of the train, and
-not wishing to intrude upon them, Julian fell in behind, and during
-the whole of that forenoon never spoke a word to any one. When noon
-came the wagons began to draw off into the woods one by one, and
-in a quarter of an hour the entire train had come to a halt, and
-preparations for dinner were actively going on. Julian, hungry and
-lonely, would have been glad of an invitation to join one of the happy
-parties that were scattered about among the trees, but no one noticed
-him. He dismounted a little apart from the rest of the emigrants, and
-after tying his horse to a tree, spread his poncho upon the ground,
-and was about to begin an attack upon the small supply of crackers and
-cheese stowed away in his saddle-bags, when some one spoke to him.
-
-“Wal, my lad, its grub time,” said a familiar voice.
-
-Julian looked up, and there, leaning upon a rifle that an ordinary man
-could scarcely have raised to his shoulder, stood the tall trapper whom
-he had met in the streets of St. Joseph. At the sight of him his old
-fears were revived with redoubled force.
-
-“Here’s one enemy I haven’t left behind me,” thought Julian. “I must
-still be on the lookout for treachery. I know it is dinner-time,” he
-added, aloud; “and I am just about to take advantage of it.”
-
-“In what way? I don’t see that you have got anything to eat.”
-
-“I have, nevertheless,” replied the boy, laying his hand on his
-saddle-bags.
-
-“Do you keep it in thar?” asked the trapper, with a laugh. “How long do
-you think it’ll last you?”
-
-“A day or two; and when it is gone my rifle must supply my larder.
-There must be an abundance of game on the plains.”
-
-“Humph! That shows how much you know ’bout prairie life. Sometimes
-thar’s game an’ sometimes thar hain’t. An’ sometimes when we know
-thar’s plenty of buffaler an’ antelope only a little ways off, we can’t
-go out to shoot ’em fur fear of the Injuns. What’ll you do under them
-sarcumstances?”
-
-Julian didn’t know. He would be obliged to go to bed hungry, he
-supposed.
-
-“Yes, an’ you’ll go to bed hungry many a night afore you see the
-mountains, if this is the way you’re goin’ to do business,” continued
-the trapper. “We can do better’n this fur you. Come into our mess; we’d
-be glad to have you.”
-
-Julian thanked the man for his kind offer, but took time to consider
-before replying. The interest his new acquaintance seemed to take in
-his welfare made him suspicious, and he wanted to keep as far away
-from him as possible. But, after all, if the trapper had any designs
-upon him, what difference would it make whether Julian remained at one
-end of the wagon train or the other? It would certainly be better to
-make sure of plenty to eat during the journey than to depend upon his
-rifle; and, if he saw anything in the trapper’s actions to confirm his
-suspicions, he could easily avoid being left alone with him.
-
-He arose and picked up his saddle-bags, and the trapper, who had waited
-patiently for an answer to his invitation, shouldered his rifle and
-led the way through the woods, presently stopping at one of the wagons,
-beside which a party of three men were seated on the ground eating
-their dinner.
-
-These looked curiously at Julian as he came up, and seemed to be
-waiting for the trapper to tell why he had brought him there; but as he
-did not appear to think that any explanation was necessary, they made
-way for the boy, and waving their hands toward the plates containing
-the corn-bread and bacon, went on with their conversation.
-
-The trapper soon satisfied his appetite, and mounting his horse, which
-was grazing close by, rode off, leaving Julian alone with the three
-men. He listened to their conversation, and soon learned that they were
-from an Eastern State, that they had never been West before, and that
-their destination was the gold mines of California.
-
-This silenced some of Julian’s fears, and finally, venturing to inquire
-who the trapper was, he was told that his name was Silas Roper, and
-that he was the chief man of the wagon train—the guide. The men were
-enthusiastic in their praises of him, and if they told the truth, as
-Julian hoped they did, Silas was one in whom he could well afford to
-confide.
-
-Our hero then explained how he came to be brought into the mess,
-following up the story with as much of his history as he was willing
-the men should know, and their hearty words of sympathy and welcome
-placed him at his ease at once, and almost made him believe that at
-last he had found real friends.
-
-While the dinner was in progress a horseman came leisurely down the
-road, gazing earnestly at every group of emigrants he passed, as if he
-were searching for some one. When he reached the place where Julian and
-the three men were seated, he drew rein with an exclamation of surprise
-and satisfaction, and sat motionless in his saddle, staring at them
-as if debating some point in his mind. Having at last decided upon
-something he rode up to the party and accosted them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-ACROSS THE PLAINS.
-
-
-THE MOMENT Julian’s eyes rested upon the strange horseman he asked
-himself where he had seen him before. There was something about him
-that looked familiar. He was dressed in rough clothing, like the rest
-of the emigrants, wore high-top boots and a broad felt hat. His hair
-was cut close to his head, and his face, which was dark and haughty,
-was clean shaven; although the blue shade about his chin and upper
-lip showed that goatee and mustache had recently been growing there.
-His voice sounded strangely familiar, too, although Julian could not
-recollect where he had heard it before.
-
-The man announced that he was bound for San Francisco, and that having
-been obliged to make his preparations for the journey in great haste,
-in order to join that wagon train, he had had no opportunity to lay in
-a supply of provisions. As their mess appeared to be small he would
-be glad to join it, if the men had no objections, and was willing to
-pay liberally for the privilege. Julian’s new friends had no objection
-whatever. They liked good company, and if the stranger would agree to
-pay his share of the provisions he might come in and welcome. And so
-the matter was settled, and the new-comer became a member of Julian’s
-mess.
-
-Our hero had never carried a lighter heart than he did during that
-afternoon’s ride. He no longer felt that he was utterly forsaken in the
-world. He had some one to talk to now—men who had never seen or heard
-of him before, who did not even know his name, but who nevertheless
-sympathized with him and took an interest in his affairs. And it was
-because these new-found friends were strangers to him that Julian
-felt safe in their company. He was still suspicious of the guide,
-notwithstanding the high terms of praise in which he had been spoken of
-by the members of his mess, and he disliked the appearance of the new
-emigrant also.
-
-The latter seemed desirous of cultivating the boy’s acquaintance. He
-addressed a good many of his remarks to him, and whenever he said
-anything that he thought to be particularly interesting or witty,
-he would look at Julian and wink. This was quite enough to excite
-the boy’s suspicions; but he comforted himself with the thought that
-neither the guide nor the emigrant would dare molest him in the
-presence of the whole wagon train, and that he would take care never to
-be left alone with them.
-
-The afternoon passed quickly away, and it was sunset almost before
-Julian knew it. His day in the saddle had severely tested his
-endurance, and he was glad indeed when the train came to a halt. Being
-desirous of showing his new friends that he appreciated their kindness
-to him, he assisted them in making the camp, unharnessing the mules,
-providing the wood for fire, and bringing the water with which to fill
-the camp-kettle. The guide, whom he had not seen during the whole of
-the afternoon, made his appearance when supper was ready, and so did
-the emigrant; but the latter did not approach the fire. He stopped at a
-respectful distance, looked hard at Silas, whose back was turned toward
-him, and then walked quickly out of sight. Julian, astonished at his
-singular behavior, looked around at the other members of the mess to
-see if any beside himself had observed it; but the men were too busy
-with their corn-bread and bacon to pay any attention to what was going
-on outside their own camp.
-
-Supper over, Silas and his companions stretched themselves on their
-blankets to enjoy their pipes, while Julian busied himself in gathering
-up the dishes and packing the remains of the supper away in the wagon.
-This done, he went out for a stroll down the road; he wanted to see how
-the camp looked by moonlight.
-
-The day’s journey, although it had been a hard and fatiguing one,
-seemed to have had no effect upon the spirits of the emigrants, who
-were as merry and laughed and sang as loudly as when they left St.
-Joseph. They seemed to be supremely happy and contented, and Julian did
-not wonder at it. They had everything their hearts could desire to make
-them happy, and he had everything to make him miserable. If he had had
-parents and brothers and sisters there he would have laughed too, and
-felt as light of heart as the best of them. But there was not a soul
-with whom he could claim relationship in less than a thousand miles,
-and perhaps not in the world. Julian was falling into his melancholy
-mood again, and he wanted to be alone; the sounds of merriment grated
-harshly on his ears. He left the camp and hurried down the road. On he
-went, regardless of the flight of time, through the woods in which the
-wagons had halted, to the prairie that lay beyond, brooding over the
-past and speculating on the future.
-
-How long his fit of abstraction continued he could not have told;
-but when he came to himself the camp-fires were out of sight, and he
-was standing on an extensive plain which stretched away before him
-as far as his eyes could reach, without even a tree or bush to break
-the monotony. He was alone; there was not a living thing within the
-range of his vision. This was Julian’s first glimpse of the prairie,
-and it was not without its effect upon him. He gazed in wonder. What
-an immense region it was that lay between him and his home—all India
-could be put into it twice, he had read somewhere—and until that
-moment what a ridiculously faint conception he had had of it! What
-would he not have given to have been able to tell what lay beyond it?
-He listened but not a sound came to his ears. An unearthly silence
-brooded over the vast expanse—a silence so deep that he could hear the
-beating of his own heart. Julian was awed, almost frightened by it; and
-turning quickly about he started for the camp at the top of his speed.
-
-Perhaps Julian would have been really frightened if he had known that
-he was not so utterly alone as he imagined himself to be. There were
-no less than four persons in sight of him all the while, and part of
-the time, five. Three of them were Sanders and the men who had left St.
-Joseph in his company. Having watched the train from a safe distance
-all that day, they entered the camp as soon as it grew dark to satisfy
-themselves that the boy of whom they were in search was among the
-emigrants. They saw him as he strolled through the woods and followed,
-hoping to find an opportunity to make a prisoner of him. The fourth
-man, who watched every move Julian made during the time he remained
-within sight of him, and who carried in his hand a revolver cocked
-and ready for use, was the emigrant; and the fifth was Silas Roper.
-The latter, unlike the others, who made use of every tuft of grass to
-cover their bodies, walked erect down the road, keeping always within
-rifle-range of Julian, whose form, being clad in dark garments, was
-thrown out in bold relief against the gray background of the prairie.
-The emigrant saw him, if Julian did not, and for some reasons of his
-own thought it best to abandon his pursuit of the boy. He concealed
-himself in the grass until the trapper had passed on, and then
-scrambled to his feet and slunk away in the direction of the camp.
-
-Julian had not retraced his steps very far before he began to wish most
-heartily that he had turned back long ago. There was some one following
-him—following, too, for the purpose and with the determination of
-overtaking him. His ears told him that such was the fact, and there
-was no need that he should look back to make sure of it—he dared not
-do it. He heard the sound of the pursuit very plainly—the stealthy,
-cautious patter of moccasined feet on the hard road, which grew louder
-and more distinct every instant. Who was his pursuer? The guide, beyond
-a doubt, for he was the only man in the train who wore moccasins. Fear
-lent Julian wings, and he made headway astonishingly; but there was
-some one beside the clumsy Jack Bowles in pursuit of him now, and the
-lightness of foot that had brought him off with flying colors in his
-race with that worthy could not avail him.
-
-“It’s no use, Julian,” said a gruff voice behind him. “I’m a comin’,
-an’ if I don’t overhaul you thar ain’t no snakes. You’re ketched, an’
-you might as well stop an’ give in.”
-
-But our hero was not one of the kind who give in. He strained every
-nerve to escape, but his pursuer gained rapidly. He was close behind
-him now—Julian could hear his heavy breathing; but just as he was
-expecting to feel his strong grasp on his collar, a blinding sheet of
-flame shot out of the gloom directly in advance of him, and something
-whistled through the air close to his ear. In another minute Julian had
-run squarely into the arms of Silas Roper, and his pursuer had faced
-about and was making his way through the tall grass as if a legion of
-wolves were close at his heels.
-
-“I reckon I throwed away that chunk of lead, didn’t I?” said Silas.
-“You needn’t be skeered now. I know you ain’t hurt, ’cause I’ve had my
-eyes on you all the while.”
-
-Julian, weak with terror and utterly bewildered to find the guide in
-front, when he had all the while supposed him to be behind and in
-pursuit of him, could not reply. But if he was surprised at this, he
-was still more amazed at the manner in which Silas received him. He
-did not show the least desire to do him an injury, but on the contrary
-extended his arm around him protectingly, and supported him until he
-had somewhat recovered himself.
-
-“You’re lively on your legs fur a little one,” continued the trapper,
-“but you’re well nigh give out, ain’t you? If thar had been just a
-trifle more light Sanders would have been past harmin’ you now.”
-
-“Who?” gasped Julian.
-
-“Sanders. You didn’t think to hear of him again so soon, did you?”
-
-“I never expected to hear from him again.”
-
-“Sho! Wal, you’ll hear and see more of him durin’ the next few weeks
-than you’ll like, _I_ tell you. That was him a chasin’ you, ’cause I’ve
-seed him often enough to know him,” added the trapper, leading the way
-toward the camp, loading his rifle as he went.
-
-“You said you were watching me,” said Julian. “Why did you do it?”
-
-“‘Cause I’m a friend to you.”
-
-“I begin to believe you are,” replied the boy, casting all his
-suspicions to the winds. “If I had been sure of it to-day when I first
-saw you, I shouldn’t have run away from you; but I have seen so much
-treachery lately that I distrust everybody.”
-
-“I can easy b’lieve that. I know purty near what Dick an’ Ned have been
-up to.”
-
-“You told me this morning that you know who I am. Of course, then, you
-know my father.”
-
-“Sartin I do.”
-
-“Is he alive?”
-
-“He is.”
-
-“And my mother?”
-
-“No, she’s dead—died when you was a little feller.”
-
-“And my brother?”
-
-“He’s all right.”
-
-“Can you take me to my father?”
-
-“I reckon not.”
-
-“What’s the reason?”
-
-“‘Cause I don’t know whar he is—that’s the reason. I’ll allers be a
-friend to you, howsomever.”
-
-During the walk to the camp Julian asked innumerable questions about
-his home and friends, but the information that we have just recorded
-was all he could extort from the trapper. He taxed his ingenuity to
-the utmost, and propounded his inquiries in a dozen different ways,
-but Silas could neither be surprised or coaxed into revealing more
-than he had already told. Nor did Julian ever hear anything more from
-him, although he saw very plainly that the trapper knew all about
-him, and could easily gratify his curiosity if he felt so inclined.
-Day after day he renewed his endeavors to worm out some small item of
-information, but all he could ascertain positively was that his father
-and brother were alive and well, and with that he was obliged to be
-content. Of another thing he was also pretty certain, and that was,
-that he should not find his home—if he found it at all—the pleasant
-and inviting place that Sanders had represented it to be. But in this
-respect he was not much disappointed, for he had built no hopes upon
-anything his false friend had told him.
-
-During the journey across the plains nothing worthy of record occurred
-to vary the monotony of Julian’s life. He met with no more adventures,
-for Sanders had disappeared, and although the boy was certain that
-Silas could tell what had become of him, all his questioning failed to
-elicit the desired information. The emigrant kept himself as much as
-possible out of sight. The members of the mess expressed some surprise
-at his abrupt desertion of them, and asked one another what could have
-been the occasion of it; but no one knew, and in a day or two the
-matter was forgotten.
-
-As the days progressed Julian’s friendship for and confidence in
-his silent friend steadily increased. Silas on his part cherished
-an unbounded affection for his young companion, and manifested it
-by a thousand little acts of kindness. He beguiled many a weary
-mile of their journey with stories of what he had seen and done,
-and descriptions of life in the Far West, but said not a word about
-Julian’s affairs unless he was asked.
-
-At last the Rocky Mountains began to loom up before them, and on the
-same day Silas, who as usual was riding in advance of the train with
-Julian, pointed out a hostile Indian on the summit of a distant swell.
-
-“How do you know he is hostile?” asked Julian. “Can you see the paint
-on his face at this distance?”
-
-“No, but I know who’s been a smokin’ an a talkin’ with his tribe around
-the council fires,” replied the trapper. “You think you’ve been through
-a heap since you fust seed Dick Mortimer, and p’raps you have; but
-you’ll go through a heap more if you live a week longer. You needn’t
-be afeared of the Injuns, howsomever,” added Silas, seeing that the
-boy’s cheek blanched, and that he cast anxious glances toward the
-distant warrior. “They won’t harm you. If every man, woman and child
-in the train is massacred, you’ll be kept safe, unless you are hurt by
-accident.”
-
-“What makes you think so?”
-
-“I don’t think so, I know it; but I hain’t got time to talk about it
-now, ’cause I must ride back an’ keep the wagons closer together.”
-
-This was always the way with the trapper after he had said something
-that Julian was particularly anxious to have explained—he had no time
-to say more on the subject just then, but must see to something that
-demanded his immediate attention.
-
-Julian was greatly perplexed by what he had just heard. It sounded very
-unreasonable, but he did not doubt the truth of it, for he had learned
-to put implicit faith in the trapper’s word.
-
-In two days more Bridger’s Pass was reached, and the emigrants made
-their camp for the last time.
-
-We have already related how Julian was enticed away from the wagon
-train by the outlaws, who carried him on horseback to Reginald
-Mortimer’s rancho, and that during the ride he heard the sounds of a
-fierce battle going on between the Indians and the emigrants, and saw
-the train consumed by fire.
-
-We have also told of his introduction to the man who called himself
-his uncle, and described the reception that gentleman extended to him.
-He was conducted into Mr. Mortimer’s sleeping-apartment, and saw the
-outlaws receive a heavy reward for delivering him into the hands of the
-owner of the rancho, after which Sanders and his companion took their
-departure, and Julian was left alone with his new relative.
-
-Then for the first time he raised his eyes and took a fair look at the
-man. Surely he had seen that face and figure somewhere. They were those
-of Richard Mortimer. He had left him on board a flatboat more than a
-thousand miles away, and here he was in the mountains where he least
-expected to see him, ready now and able to carry out his plans against
-Julian’s life.
-
-One glance at him was enough for our hero, who, with a cry of terror,
-turned and ran toward the door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE EMIGRANT AGAIN.
-
-
-“STOP!” cried Reginald Mortimer, in great astonishment. “Come back
-here!”
-
-Julian heard the command, but he did not heed it. He strove with
-nervous haste to open the door, but the knob refused to turn for him.
-He dashed himself against it with frantic violence; but the stout oak
-planks had been intended to resist a stronger force than he could bring
-to bear upon them, and they did not even tremble beneath his weight.
-
-Reginald Mortimer appeared to be utterly confounded by the boy’s
-behavior. He watched his movements for a few seconds, and said:
-
-“Julian, you could not leave the rancho if you were to effect an
-entrance into the hall. Shall I call Pedro, and tell him to let you
-out?”
-
-It was now Julian’s turn to be astonished. He had expected violence,
-but was not prepared for the accents of kindness. He looked timidly at
-the man, and took his hand off the door-knob.
-
-“Come here and tell me all about it,” continued Reginald Mortimer in a
-mild tone. “Why should a glance at me alarm you? Is there anything so
-very frightful about me?”
-
-“No, sir; but you are the man who stole me away from my home and took
-me to live with Jack Bowles.”
-
-The owner of the rancho opened his eyes, but said nothing.
-
-“And you came to his house not long ago and offered him money to drown
-me in the Missouri River,” added Julian.
-
-Reginald Mortimer was profoundly astonished. After hesitating a moment,
-as if undecided how to act, he extended his hand to Julian, and
-leading him to a seat on the sofa, placed himself beside him.
-
-“My dear boy,” said he, kindly, “what delusion is this you are laboring
-under? You have made a great mistake. That this house is your own, and
-that you will some day have a better right here than I or any body
-else, I admit. And that you were stolen away long years ago by some bad
-man is equally true; but I knew nothing of it until after it was done,
-and neither did I know where you were, for all my efforts to find you
-were unavailing. I never heard of Jack Bowles before. I have not the
-least idea where he lives, and neither do I know who the man was who
-wanted to drown you in the river. It certainly was not I.”
-
-“Then it was some one who looks exactly like you,” said Julian.
-
-“There is but one person in the world who resembles me, that I am aware
-of, and that is my cousin—your Uncle Richard. It could not have been
-he, for he has tried as hard to find you, and is as much interested in
-your welfare as I am. Besides, he went to Fort Stoughton two months ago
-to shoot buffaloes, and has not yet returned. It could not have been
-Sanders either, for he does not look at all like me. More than that, he
-is a firm friend of our family, and has worked hard to find you—not
-with any intention of doing you an injury, but in order to restore you
-to your home and friends once more. You must be dreaming.”
-
-While Reginald Mortimer was speaking Julian was looking him sharply in
-the face and thinking busily. He was not deceived by the man’s apparent
-sincerity. Although greatly mystified he knew that he was not dreaming.
-His thoughts wandered back to that memorable night on which he had
-first seen Richard Mortimer at Jack Bowles’ cabin. He remembered how
-closely he had scrutinized his features in order to impress them upon
-his memory, and when he compared them with the features of the man who
-was now seated at his side he told himself that any one not intimately
-acquainted with the two gentlemen would have declared them to be one
-and the same person. But something that just then occurred to him
-satisfied him that they could not be. He thought he must be growing
-very dull, or else he would have known long ago that the emigrant who
-had joined the wagon train at St. Joseph, and watched all his movements
-so closely during the journey across the plains, could be none other
-than Richard Mortimer. He wondered that he had not thought of it
-before, and especially that he had not recognized him when Sanders
-pronounced his name in the reception-room.
-
-Another thing that suddenly became clear to him was that the trapper,
-Sanders, was the same man who had rescued him from the smoke-house.
-
-Julian saw the reason for his pretended friendship now, and knew why it
-was that the man had been so anxious to accompany him to the mountains.
-He wanted to make $5,000 by delivering him into the hands of Reginald
-Mortimer. But there were still a good many things that he could _not_
-understand, and he wondered if they would ever be made plain to him.
-
-“You are greatly in need of rest,” said Mr. Mortimer, laying his hand
-gently on the boy’s shoulder. “You are completely exhausted. Go to bed
-now, and I will talk these affairs over with you in the morning. I will
-then explain everything. If you feel timid in this gloomy old house I
-will tell Pedro to make you a bed here on the sofa.”
-
-“I would rather be alone, if you please,” replied Julian. “I have been
-through a good deal to-night, and I want time to think it over. My mind
-is greatly confused.”
-
-Reginald Mortimer lighted a candle, and after unfastening the ponderous
-spring-lock which held the door and prevented Julian’s escape from the
-room, he conducted him along the main hall for a short distance, and
-turned into another that ran at right angles with it, finally ushering
-him into his sleeping apartment.
-
-“This is your room,” said he. “You are master here, and if you will
-take the trouble to look about you, you will find that I have neglected
-nothing that I thought would add to your comfort. Now, if you will
-dismiss your fears, if you have any, as I hope you will, for they are
-certainly groundless—you can enjoy a refreshing sleep. You need not
-hurry yourself in the morning, for I will wait breakfast for you.
-Goodnight, and pleasant dreams.”
-
-Reginald Mortimer placed the candle upon the center-table and went out,
-closing the door after him. Julian stood listening to the sound of his
-retreating footsteps, and when it had died away, and he heard a door
-open and close in some distant part of the house, he stepped carefully
-across the floor and tried the lock. It was not fastened.
-
-“This looks as though there might be some truth in that man’s story,”
-said he to himself. “The doors in this rancho—if that is what the
-house is called—seem to have a way of locking themselves, and I fully
-expected to find myself a prisoner. I’ll see that no one enters here
-to-night. If Dick Mortimer is still prowling around he shall never
-see the inside of this room. And Reginald doesn’t know that Dick is
-about here at all. He thinks he is off on a shooting excursion at Fort
-Stoughton, wherever that is. Dick evidently keeps his movements hidden
-from his cousin, and that proves that he is up to something he doesn’t
-want him to know.”
-
-Julian turned the key in the lock as he said this, put down the catch,
-and seeing two strong bolts on the door, one above and the other below
-the lock, he pushed them into their sockets. Not satisfied with this
-he tilted one of the chairs against the door, and placing the back
-under the lock, and bracing the hind legs firmly against the floor,
-thus formed a barricade that could not have been easily forced from the
-outside, even if the lock and bolts had been undone.
-
-This much being accomplished, Julian took his stand in the middle of
-the floor and looked about him. His quarters were large and airy, and
-contained a greater variety of elegant furniture than he had ever seen
-before. The floor was covered with a soft carpet that gave out no
-sound as he stepped across it. The walls were concealed by blue and
-gold hangings, and in one corner stood a comfortable bed, which, with
-its clean white spread and pillow-cases, presented a great contrast
-to the miserable couch to which Julian had been accustomed for the
-last eight years. Opposite the bed was a huge fire-place, and over
-it was a mantel-piece of black walnut, on which stood an ornamental
-clock. In the corner beside the fire-place was a small book-case,
-containing a collection of works that would have delighted any boy
-who was as fond of excitement and adventure as Julian. In spite of
-the limited advantages he had enjoyed in his old home he had learned
-to read and write, and having an all-devouring passion for books, he
-had perused every thing that came in his way. On the opposite side of
-the fire-place stood a finely carved wardrobe, and the first things
-Julian’s eyes rested upon when he opened the doors was a double-barrel
-shot-gun, a rifle, and a belt containing a revolver.
-
-“This is just what I’ve been looking for,” said he joyfully, as he drew
-the elegant six-shooter from its holster. “If I am master of this room,
-as that man says I am, I have a right to do as I choose. I choose to
-say that I want to be alone here to-night. Dick Mortimer had better
-keep his distance, and so had those strange people Sanders spoke of,
-who can go through key-holes, and cracks an inch wide, and even solid
-stone walls. If they trouble me I will see if a bullet can go through
-_them_. Now, where is the ammunition?”
-
-That was a question easier asked than answered. The accouterments
-belonging to the weapons were all in the wardrobe—the powder-horn and
-bullet-pouch depending from the muzzle of the rifle, and the shot-bag
-and flask hanging from the ramrod of the double-barrel; but they were
-empty. Nor was there any ammunition in the room. Julian overhauled the
-drawers in the lower part of the book-case, but they contained nothing
-but writing and drawing materials. Then he searched all the drawers in
-the bureau; but although they were filled to overflowing with all sorts
-of trinkets and valuables dear to the heart of youth—nothing in the
-shape of powder and lead could be found.
-
-With a sigh of regret Julian returned the useless revolver to its
-holster, and throwing himself into a large easy-chair, which extended
-its arms invitingly, stretched his feet out before him, thrust his
-hands into his pockets and went off into a reverie.
-
-“What a change a few short weeks have made in my circumstances,”
-thought he. “It seems only yesterday that I was living in a den that a
-respectable dog would turn up his nose at, going about clothed in rags,
-starving both summer and winter, and beaten and sworn at by every one
-of the family. Now I find myself under the roof of a man who speaks
-almost the first kind words to me that I ever remember of hearing, who
-embraces me and tells me that he is my uncle, and leading me to a room
-fitted up like a palace informs me that I am sole master of it. And I
-need not get up in the morning at the first peep of day to cut firewood
-and help Mrs. Bowles lay the table and cook corn-dodgers, but may
-sleep as long as I please, and my breakfast will be kept waiting for
-me. This man tells me, too, that I shall some day have a better right
-here than he, who now claims to be the owner of the rancho. Isn’t it
-enough to turn any one’s head? I will go to sleep now, and perhaps in
-the morning some of these things, which now seem to be involved in such
-impenetrable mystery, will be clearer to me.”
-
-Julian arose to his feet, and having turned down the quilts began to
-divest himself of his jacket. Suddenly he paused and stood holding the
-garment in his hand, and looking first at the candle on the table and
-then at the hangings which concealed the walls.
-
-“I’ve heard and witnessed enough to-night to make a coward of almost
-anybody except Silas Roper,” thought he, “but I believe I’ve got the
-nerve to do it. I am going to see what is on the other side of those
-curtains. If there is any way for that emigrant, or for those people
-that Sanders spoke of to get in here, I want to know it. I shouldn’t
-like to wake up in the night and find them prowling about my room.
-Gracious!”
-
-Julian felt the cold chills creeping over him, and glanced quickly
-about the apartment, half-expecting to see some frightful object
-advancing upon him from some dark corner.
-
-At first he was half-inclined to pass the night in the easy-chair, and
-never go to sleep at all; but dismissing the thought almost as soon as
-it entered his mind, he snatched the candle from the table and hurrying
-across the room raised the hangings.
-
-Nothing was to be seen but the huge blocks of stone which formed
-the walls. On one side of the room there was no opening except the
-fire-place, opposite to which was the door. The other two sides, as
-Julian discovered when he raised the hangings, were provided with
-windows.
-
-He placed his face close to the panes, but not even the twinkle of
-a star could be seen through the gloom. Somewhat surprised thereat,
-Julian deposited his candle on the floor, looped back the curtains and
-carefully raised the window. It opened into what appeared to be a deep
-recess in the wall. At the opposite side was a heavy iron-bound door,
-just the size of the window, which swung inward as Julian drew the
-bolt, and then he saw the stars shining down upon him, and the full
-moon rising above the mountain tops.
-
-“This house was certainly intended for a fort,” thought the boy, gazing
-in surprise at the massive walls around him, which seemed strong enough
-to resist the heaviest artillery. “There isn’t a wooden partition in it
-as far as I’ve seen. They are all of stone, and must be six or seven
-feet thick. I can’t see the use of it.”
-
-This was a point upon which Julian was enlightened before he was many
-hours older. He learned that the walls were not as solid as they
-appeared; that there were long corridors and winding passage-ways
-running through them, communicating with every room in the house, and
-all leading to a gloomy cavern in the hill behind the building, with
-which he was destined soon to become well acquainted.
-
-Julian held the shutters open and took a survey of the scene before
-him. He saw the high stone wall which surrounded the house on all
-sides, the ponderous gate which had opened a short time before to admit
-him and the trappers, the well-beaten bridle-path leading across the
-valley toward the mountains, and noted even the smallest object within
-the range of his vision, but nothing looked familiar.
-
-The home of his boyhood was not so gloomy and desolate a place as this
-in which he now found himself. There was no high wall to shut out all
-view of the outer world, but there were flowers blooming before the
-door, a pleasant grove close by, and people constantly coming and
-going. And there was a jolly old gentleman, from whose side he was
-scarcely ever separated, who used to take him on his knee and talk to
-him for hours; and now and then a laughing, blue-eyed boy would make
-his appearance after a long absence, spend a few days in romping with
-him and then go off again. Where was that father and brother now? If
-they were alive and well, as Silas had so often assured him, why were
-they not living there in the rancho, if that was their home? Why should
-they remain away and allow a stranger to take the management of their
-affairs?
-
-“If I have a home and friends I must look further to find them, that
-is plain enough to be seen,” soliloquized Julian, closing the shutter
-and creeping back into the room. “But before I go I should like to know
-what object this man has in view in bringing me here and claiming me
-for his nephew. When I meet him in the morning I will call him Uncle
-Reginald, and act as though I believed—— What are you doing here?”
-
-When Julian stepped down from the window-seat into the room he had just
-left, he found that it had an occupant who had no business there. It
-was not a spirit, either, for spirits do not need lanterns to guide
-their footsteps, and revolvers to defend themselves, and this intruder
-had both. One was held in his left hand by his side, and with the
-muzzle of the other he was covering Julian’s head. It was the emigrant,
-clean shaven and close cropped, as he was when the boy first saw him
-with the wagon train.
-
-“What do you want here, Dick Mortimer?” cried Julian, recoiling before
-the muzzle of the revolver. “Clear out!”
-
-“So you know me, do you?” inquired the man, with some surprise. “That
-villain, Sanders, has been posting you. He has deserted me and gone
-over to my cousin; but, fortunately, I shall have no further occasion
-for his services. Put on your jacket and come with me; and mind you, no
-noise!”
-
-“By what authority do you order me out of my own house?” demanded
-Julian, scarcely knowing what he said. “I am master here, if you
-please.”
-
-“Ah! Reginald has been posting you, too, has he?” exclaimed the
-emigrant angrily. “You have learned more than I ever intended you
-should know; but it can’t be helped now. This is my authority,” he
-added, raising his revolver to a level with the boy’s head and placing
-his finger on the trigger; “and you will do well to respect it. What
-else did Reginald say to you? Did he tell you who you are, or give you
-any information concerning your father?”
-
-“No; but I know that he is alive and well.”
-
-“Then Silas has been posting you. Do you know where he is?”
-
-“That’s my business. Have you a man with you waiting to earn that
-$1,000, or do you intend to do the work yourself?”
-
-“You know that too, do you? No; you need stand in no fear of bodily
-harm as long as you obey my commands. I have come to the conclusion
-that I can use you to as good purpose as Reginald can. No more words
-now. Put on that coat and come with me.”
-
-Julian mechanically obeyed. His bodily powers were so nearly exhausted,
-and he was thrown into such a state of bewilderment and alarm by his
-new adventure, that he suddenly seemed to become insensible to every
-emotion. He could walk and talk, but he received no more impression
-from the objects around him than if he had been in a dream. He no
-longer shrunk away from the revolver which was kept pointed straight
-at his head, nor was he surprised when the emigrant raised the
-hangings at the foot of the bed and disclosed to view an opening in
-the wall—that solid stone wall which Julian had so carefully examined
-but a few minutes before. He clambered through without waiting for the
-order, and followed his captor along a narrow passage-way and down a
-flight of steps into a commodious underground apartment, which, judging
-by its general appearance, was used as a cellar and store-house. Here
-the emigrant spoke again, and the sound of his voice aroused Julian to
-a sense of his situation.
-
-“Yes, yes,” said he, “I have changed my plans concerning you. Silas
-Roper is the man I want now, and in order to get hold of him I must
-hold fast to you. I have a comfortable little shooting-box up in the
-mountains, and there you can stay and enjoy—— Great heavens!”
-
-The emigrant ceased speaking and started back as if he had been shot.
-Julian looked up into his face and saw that it was white with terror,
-and noticed, too, that he was trembling violently in every limb. His
-eyes were staring fixedly toward the farther end of the cellar, and
-following the direction of his gaze Julian discovered something that
-made his heart beat a little faster than usual.
-
-It was not a frightful object his gaze rested upon—nothing but the
-figure of a feeble and decrepit old man, who was walking across
-the opposite end of the cellar. He moved along with tottering step
-and form half-bent, his thin silvery hair streaming down over his
-shoulders, and one withered hand grasping a staff upon which he leaned
-heavily. He seemed ignorant of the presence of the emigrant and his
-prisoner, and walked on without looking either to the right or left.
-Suddenly, however, he turned and approached the foot of the stairs.
-Julian could not see his eyes, which were fastened upon the ground,
-but he obtained a fair view of his face. He could discover nothing
-in it calculated to frighten any one, for its expression was mild
-and benevolent, but the emigrant seemed unable to endure the sight
-of it. He retreated as the old man advanced, growing more and more
-terrified every moment, and finally with a shriek of dismay dashed the
-lantern upon the floor, extinguishing the light and leaving the cellar
-shrouded in darkness. Julian turned and made a feeble attempt to ascend
-the stairs, but exhausted nature gave away at last. He felt himself
-falling—falling—and then all was blank to him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-UNCLE REGINALD EXPLAINS.
-
-
-WHEN Julian’s consciousness returned it was broad daylight. The instant
-his eyes were open the thrilling events of the night came back to
-him, and he started up in alarm, expecting to find himself still in
-the power of the dreaded emigrant. But, although he saw enough to
-astonish him beyond measure, there was nothing to terrify him. His
-persevering and relentless enemy was nowhere to be seen. He was snugly
-tucked up in bed in the same room to which he had been conducted by
-Reginald Mortimer, his clothes were lying in order on a chair close
-at hand, the curtains were thrown back, the windows and shutters all
-open, and heaven’s bright sunlight was streaming in. And what was very
-surprising, there was the door locked and bolted and secured by the
-chair, just as he had left it.
-
-“Can it be possible that those things never happened, and that Dick
-Mortimer, with his lantern and revolver, the long, dark passage-way,
-and the feeble old man who frightened him so terribly, were objects
-that I saw only in my dreams?” exclaimed Julian.
-
-As this thought passed through his mind he sprung from the couch,
-and running to the opposite side of the room pulled up the hangings,
-fully expecting to find there the opening through which his captor
-had conducted him into the passage-way. But the wall was as solid as
-ever—not one of the huge blocks of stone was out of place.
-
-“If I dreamed _that_ I did not dream that I left these curtains all
-down and the windows closed, did I?” Julian asked himself in deep
-perplexity. “Somebody has certainly been in here while I was asleep,
-and he didn’t come in through the door either. I’ve spent my last
-night in this house. I didn’t hear any of those frightful sounds
-Sanders heard the night he slept here, but I’ve seen enough. If I ever
-get outside these walls I’ll not come back. What’s this?”
-
-After hastily throwing on his clothes Julian stepped to the table to
-help himself to a glass of water from the pitcher that some thoughtful
-hand had placed there, when his eyes fell upon a paper, folded in the
-form of a letter, and addressed to himself. With eager haste he opened
-it, and after some trouble, for the spelling was defective and the
-writing almost illegible, he deciphered the following:
-
-“Have no fear. Watchful friends are near you, and no harm shall come to
-you. Reginald Mortimer is your uncle. Treat him as such.”
-
-Julian read these mysterious words over and over again, and finally
-carried the paper to the window and examined it on all sides, in
-the hope of finding something more—something to tell him who these
-watchful friends were, and where the missive came from. Being
-disappointed in these hopes he put the letter carefully away in his
-pocket and resumed his toilet. He was a long time about it, for he
-frequently stopped and stood at the window gazing out at the mountains
-on the other side of the valley, or walked up and down the room with
-his eyes fastened on the carpet. His mind was busy all the while, and
-by the time he was ready to leave the room he had thought over his
-situation and determined upon a plan of action. Just then the little
-clock on the mantel struck the hour of 10.
-
-“I am getting fashionable,” said Julian, who, remembering how carefully
-Richard Mortimer was always dressed, and believing that Uncle Reginald,
-as he had determined to call him, might be equally particular, stopped
-to take another look at himself in the mirror before quitting the room.
-
-It was a very handsome face and figure that the polished surface of
-the glass reflected. A finely embroidered shirt with wide collar and
-neck-tie, a closely fitting jacket of dark-blue cloth, black velvet
-trousers, brown cloth leggings with green fringe, light shoes, and a
-long crimson sash worn about the waist, completed an attire that set
-off his slender, well-knit frame to the very best advantage. One could
-scarcely recognize in him the half-starved ragamuffin whose daily duty
-it had been to keep Mrs. Bowles supplied with back-logs and fore-sticks.
-
-Having satisfied himself that he was presentable, Julian undid the
-numerous fastenings of the door, smiling the while to think how
-inefficient they had proved to keep out the intruders of whom he stood
-so much in fear, and was about to pass out into the hall when the sound
-of voices reached his ears. He paused and listened, his attention being
-attracted by the mention of the name of one in whom he was now more
-than ever interested.
-
-“Wal, I don’t reckon we could help it, could we?” growled a voice which
-the boy knew belonged to the trapper Sanders. “Me an’ my pardner ain’t
-the men to let $5,000 slip through our fingers without doin’ our level
-best to hang onto it, be sure?”
-
-“A couple of blockheads, I say!” replied the voice of Reginald
-Mortimer, in angry, excited tones. “Two desperadoes like you and Tom to
-allow a single man like Silas Roper to get the better of you. Go and
-hide yourself. How did it happen?”
-
-“Why we was a bringin’ him down here this mornin’ on hossback, me and
-Tom was,” replied Sanders, “an’ the first thing we knowed he slipped
-his hands out o’ his bonds, which we thought we had made hard an’ fast,
-an’ afore we could say ‘Gen’ral Jackson’ with our mouths open, he
-jerked Tom’s gun out o’ his hands, knocked him from his saddle as clean
-as a whistle, an’ sent the ball into me.”
-
-“Hurrah for Silas?” thought Julian, gleefully. “He has escaped. Now, if
-there is any way in which he can assist me he will not fail to do it.”
-
-“He was out o’ sight an’ hearin’ afore we could raise a finger to stop
-him,” continued Sanders. “I guess my broken arm an’ Tom’s bloody head
-is proof enough of what I say, hain’t it? We couldn’t help it.”
-
-“Perhaps you did the best you could,” replied Reginald Mortimer in
-a milder tone. “That Silas Roper is a match for any two men in the
-mountains. Come into this room and let Pedro dress your wounds.”
-
-“Nary time,” said Sanders emphatically. “I’ve had jest the wust luck
-in the world ever since I had anything to do with you an’ your house,
-an’ now I’m goin’ to cut you. I came here to tell you that, an’ I ain’t
-never comin’ nigh you again. Let us out o’ here.”
-
-“You will come whenever I choose to send for you,” said Mr. Mortimer
-fiercely.
-
-“Oh, if it comes to _that_ cap’n, in course we will,” replied Sanders,
-dropping his angry, confident tone very suddenly. “We’re bound to obey
-orders, but don’t ask nary one of us to come here agin. We’d a heap
-sooner you’d send us out to steal hosses and rob miners.”
-
-“Silence!” said Mr. Mortimer in a hoarse whisper. “Do you not know that
-the very walls in this house have ears? You _must_ capture Silas Roper;
-and I will give you the money I promised you whenever you deliver him
-into my hands. He is about here, and he will remain in the vicinity as
-long as I hold fast to this stool-pigeon.”
-
-Uncle Reginald and the trappers passed through the door into the yard,
-and Julian strolled along the hall, and not knowing where else to go,
-entered the reception-room. While he was walking about with his hands
-in his pocket, he was thinking over some portions of the conversation
-to which he had just listened.
-
-“Captain?” he repeated. “What is Uncle Reginald captain of? Steal
-horses and rob miners! Silas told me that the mountains were full of
-men engaged in that kind of business, and I wonder if this new relative
-of mine is in any way connected with them! He must be; and he must
-be their leader, too, for Sanders acknowledged that he was bound to
-obey his orders. Good gracious! What sort of a place have I got into,
-anyhow?”
-
-While Julian, appalled by this new discovery he had made, was pacing
-restlessly up and down the floor, Uncle Reginald hurried in. The scowl
-on his forehead indicated that he was in a bad humor about something,
-but it cleared away instantly when he discovered Julian, and advancing
-with outstretched hand he greeted him in the most cordial manner.
-
-“I hope you rested well after the fatigues and excitements of
-yesterday,” said he with a friendly smile. “You look as if you had.
-Breakfast is waiting, and while we are discussing it we will have a
-social chat.”
-
-The boy, making some satisfactory reply, returned his uncle’s smile
-and the hearty pressure of his hand, and accompanied him toward the
-breakfast-room, which was located at the farther end of the hall. He
-glanced over the well-filled table as he took the chair pointed out
-to him, and told himself that if this breakfast was a fair sample of
-Uncle Reginald’s style of living he would never go hungry while he
-remained under his roof. Corn bread, salt meat and buttermilk did not
-constitute the substantial part of the repast as they invariably did in
-the cabin of Jack Bowles. There were juicy venison steaks, hot muffins,
-wheat bread, eggs, boiled and fried, toast and potatoes in abundance,
-and also coffee and chocolate, which Pedro, who waited upon the table,
-drew from a silver urn which stood on the sideboard. More than that,
-the cloth was spotless, the dishes clean and white and the table was
-altogether so nicely arranged, and looked so inviting, that Julian grew
-hungry the moment his eyes rested upon it.
-
-When Pedro had supplied the wants of his master and his guests, he
-retired, and the two were left alone.
-
-“Well, Julian,” said Uncle Reginald in a cheery voice, “do you feel
-inclined for a gallop on a swift horse this morning? I have some
-business that will occupy my attention until dinner, and if you in the
-meantime wish to amuse yourself in that way, there is a very fine filly
-in the stable which I purchased expressly for you, and which I hope
-will supply the place of the horse you lost last night.”
-
-“You must have been expecting me,” said the boy.
-
-“Certainly. I have been looking for you every day for the last two
-months; and as this introduces the subject which I know you are
-impatient to talk about, I will now make the explanation I promised
-you. In the first place, do you know that last night you slept in your
-old home for the first time in eight years? You were born in this
-house, and every thing in and about it—money, horses, cattle and gold
-diggings—will come into your undisputed possession the moment you are
-twenty-one years old. It is a fact. You are by no means the pauper you
-have always supposed yourself to be.”
-
-Julian dropped his knife and fork, and settling back in his chair
-looked the astonishment he could not express in words. He gazed
-earnestly at his uncle, and then ran his eyes around the room as if he
-were trying to make an estimate of the value of his possessions from
-the few articles he saw about him.
-
-“It is the truth, every word of it,” repeated Reginald Mortimer. “It
-is all yours, and it is a property worth having, I assure you. Your
-father, who was my brother, is dead, and so is your brother Frederick.
-I am your guardian, and stand ready to surrender your patrimony to you
-whenever you are competent to take charge of it. I assumed control of
-your father’s affairs immediately after his death. At that time you
-were eight years old and your brother nine. Fred died, and shortly
-afterward you were stolen away by some one, who, as I this morning
-learned from Sanders, who told me all about it, took you off to
-Missouri and left you there with one Jack Bowles. For eight years I
-made every effort to find you, and I have at last succeeded. I do not
-intend that you shall be separated from me any more.”
-
-“Well,” said Julian, when his uncle paused.
-
-“Well, that’s all.”
-
-“_All!_” echoed the boy. “Am I to learn no more of my history than this
-brief outline? Do you not know who it was who stole me away?”
-
-“I haven’t the slightest idea.”
-
-“Or what he stole me away for?”
-
-“Why, of course your property had something to do with it, but just
-what I can’t tell.”
-
-Julian, who had settled into an easy position in his arm-chair
-with the expectation of hearing something exciting about himself,
-straightened up, and with an expression of great disappointment on his
-face, resumed his toast and coffee. He wanted to hear more, and he was
-satisfied from his uncle’s manner that he could tell him more if he
-felt so inclined; but it was plain that he did not, for his next words
-related to another subject.
-
-“I hope you are now convinced that the fears to which you last night
-gave way were entirely groundless,” said Mr. Mortimer. “I shall
-endeavor by every means in my power to make your life here a pleasant
-one. I have been very lonely and I want you to cheer me. I want you
-to feel that you are one of the family, that you have a right to be
-here, and that you are at liberty to go and come whenever it suits your
-fancy. You shall have the best horse in the stable, a pack of hounds,
-a servant to wait on you, and live like a gentleman. There is a fort
-about two miles distant. Some of the officers have their families with
-them, and among them are several boys about your own age. Whenever you
-want company, bring them up here. They will find enough to interest
-them.”
-
-“Perhaps they would also find some things they would not care to see,”
-said Julian, thinking of his recent adventure with the emigrant.
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“Why, some of those strange people who go about of nights making such
-unearthly noises.”
-
-“That sounds just like Sanders,” exclaimed Uncle Reginald impatiently.
-“Julian, I hope you are a boy of too much good sense to pay the least
-attention to any thing that low, ignorant fellow may say to you. There
-isn’t a word of truth in it.”
-
-“Nor about the secret passage-ways that run all through the house?”
-
-“Not a particle. It is all moonshine.”
-
-“Or about the old man who lives in the cellar?”
-
-“All the veriest nonsense in the world.”
-
-“Or about your missing things?”
-
-“Why, as to that, I have missed some things, that’s a fact, but I know
-where they went. Pedro took them. He is a great rascal.”
-
-“Why do you not discharge him if he is a thief?”
-
-“Because servants are not so easily procured in this wilderness. More
-than that, he is a valuable fellow in spite of his faults—understands
-all my ways, and knows just how I want every thing done. You will stay
-with me?”
-
-“Certainly, sir. I have not seen so much of the comforts of a home that
-I can afford to throw them away as soon as they are offered to me.
-Beside, I want to see the bottom of this mystery.”
-
-“What mystery? Well, perhaps it does seem a little strange that I, a
-man whom you never remember to have seen before, should claim you as a
-nephew, and tell you that I hold in my hands a valuable property which
-is all your own, but it is nevertheless true.”
-
-“And there are other things that seem strange to me,” continued Julian.
-“One of them is that you can live here unmolested, as you evidently do,
-while peaceable emigrants are butchered at your very doors.”
-
-“That is also easily explained. In the first place, that wagon train
-was quite a lengthy step from my door when it was attacked—about forty
-miles. In the next, there is a fort and a regiment of soldiers almost
-within call of me. I have twenty-five herdsmen in the valley, and at
-the very first sign of a war-party they would come flocking into the
-house, which could withstand the assault of all the Indians on the
-plains. Now, if you have finished your breakfast, and are ready for
-your ride, I will show you your horse.”
-
-If Julian had given utterance to the thoughts that were passing
-through his mind, he would have told his uncle that he was not quite
-ready for his ride. There were other questions that he would like to
-have had answered. He wanted to know what sort of an organisation it
-was of which his uncle was captain; why he was so much interested in
-Silas Roper that he was willing to give $5,000 for his apprehension;
-if he knew that his cousin, Richard Mortimer, instead of being at
-Fort Stoughton hunting buffaloes, was prowling about somewhere in the
-immediate neighborhood, and that he had twice visited the rancho the
-night before. He wanted to know which of the two men who claimed to
-be his guardian was so in reality; how Uncle Reginald had found out
-that he was hidden in the wilds of Missouri; why, since he was so very
-anxious to find him, he had sent the trapper after him instead of going
-himself; and why Sanders had deserted him so suddenly when Silas Roper
-made his appearance in the streets of St. Joseph. He wanted to know who
-Silas Roper was; how he had learned so much about himself; and what
-Uncle Reginald meant when he said that the guide would not leave the
-vicinity of the rancho as long as the “stool-pigeon” was there. These
-and other questions had Julian intended to propound to his uncle; but
-the abruptness with which all the topics upon which he most wished to
-converse were dismissed, satisfied him that it would be a useless waste
-of time, and that his relative did not intend to enlighten him any
-further than he saw fit. Julian would have been glad of an opportunity
-to talk to one of those “watchful friends” spoken of in the note. He
-had a great deal to say to him.
-
-“Romez, bring out Snowdrop.”
-
-It was his uncle who spoke, and the sound of his voice aroused Julian
-from his reverie. They had now reached the stables—which were built
-under the same roof with the house and surrounded by the same wall—and
-were standing in front of the door.
-
-The Mexican hostler to whom the order was addressed disappeared in
-the stable, and in a few minutes came out again, leading a beautiful
-snow-white mare, saddled and bridled.
-
-Julian looked at her with delight, and declared that he had never seen
-a finer animal. She was very showy, and pranced about as if impatient
-to exhibit her mettle.
-
-“I did not care to ride at first, but I do now,” said Julian. “I will
-be ready as soon as I get my rifle and revolver. But I must have some
-ammunition.”
-
-“Pedro will supply you,” replied Uncle Reginald. “Go to him for
-everything you want.”
-
-It was but the work of a few minutes to run to his room, throw his
-rifle and accouterments over his shoulder, buckle his revolver about
-his waist and return to Pedro for the powder and lead. He was out again
-almost as soon as he went in, and vaulting into the saddle he bade his
-uncle good-by and rode at a full gallop out of the gate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-JULIAN GETS INTO BUSINESS.
-
-
-IF THERE is anything better calculated than another to put one at
-peace with himself and all the world, it is a brisk gallop on a good
-horse of a fine summer’s morning. It is a specific for melancholy.
-When Julian was safe outside the gloomy walls of the rancho, and felt
-himself being borne through the air with the speed of a bird on the
-wing, his spirits rose wonderfully, and in the exuberance of his glee
-he swung his sombrero about his head, and gave utterance to a yell
-almost as loud and unearthly as any he had heard uttered by the savages
-the night before. The spirited mare responded to the yell with a fresh
-burst of speed, and her rider, giving her a free rein, was carried at a
-rapid rate through the valley in which his uncle’s rancho was located,
-through the willows that skirted the base of the mountain, and finally
-found himself in a rocky defile which wound about among the cliffs.
-Here the mare voluntarily slackened her pace to a walk, and Julian
-wiped his flushed face with his handkerchief and looked about him.
-He could see nothing but rocks. They hemmed him in on all sides, and
-towered above his head until their tops seemed to pierce the clouds.
-
-“I don’t know why I ever allowed myself to be brought in here,” thought
-the boy, “or why the horse should leave a level path to follow so
-miserable a road as this. Perhaps Uncle Reginald purchased her of some
-miner or settler up here in the mountains, and she thinks she is on
-her way home. At any rate she seems to know where she is going, and so
-long as she doesn’t lose me I don’t care where she carries me. I hope I
-shall find some one to talk to. Since uncle will not tell me anything
-about myself, I must learn what I want to know from other sources.
-Halloo!”
-
-This exclamation was called forth by an unexpected sight that greeted
-his eyes. As he came suddenly around an abrupt bend in the path, he
-found before him a long, low, narrow cabin, built snugly under a
-beetling cliff which hung threateningly over the gorge. Two well-beaten
-paths appeared at this point; one leading to the doors of the building,
-and the other running on down the gorge. The mare, which seemed
-perfectly familiar with the locality, quickened her pace at once, and
-before Julian could gather up the reins to check her, she had turned
-into the first mentioned path, and galloping up to one of the doors
-stopped as if waiting for her rider to dismount. After looking all
-about him, without discovering any one, Julian began to take a survey
-of the premises.
-
-There were two doors in the house, both opening out on the path. A
-short examination of the ground in front of the one at which his horse
-had stopped, showed him that it led into a stable; while the other, no
-doubt, opened into the living-room, for there was a rough bench beside
-it for the accommodation of loungers. While Julian was wondering by
-whom and for what purpose the house had been erected in that remote and
-lonely spot, his attention was attracted by the movements of his horse,
-which, after pricking up her ears and looking intently at the door in
-front of her, as if expecting the arrival of some one, began pawing the
-ground impatiently.
-
-“She thinks there ought to be somebody here,” thought Julian. “And
-there certainly is something in the stable,” he added, after listening
-a moment, “for I can hear the stamping of horses. Halloo! the house!”
-
-Julian waited for a reply, and listened for some movement in the
-cabin which would tell him that his call had been heard; but the only
-response he received was the echo of his own voice thrown back from the
-cliffs. This satisfied him that the owner of the premises was absent;
-and picking up his reins, he was on the point of turning back toward
-the valley, when, by the merest accident, he discovered something that
-he might have seen before if he had made good use of his eyes. It was
-a small window close under the eaves of the house, which was filled by
-the muzzle of a revolver and a pair of gleaming eyes looking straight
-at him.
-
-Too astonished to speak, the boy sat in his saddle wondering what was
-going to happen now, and presently saw the six-shooter disappear and
-the eyes approach closer to the opening. A moment afterward a shaggy
-head, crowned by a broad-brimmed hat, was thrust slowly out, and a
-masculine face, that was by no means handsome or prepossessing, was
-exposed to his view.
-
-“It’s you after all, hain’t it?” growled a deep voice, in no very
-amiable tones.
-
-“Yes,” replied Julian, “it is I. But I heartily wish it was somebody
-else,” he added, mentally.
-
-“Why in tarnation didn’t you whistle? I didn’t know you in them new
-clothes, and I might have put a ball into you just as easy as not. I’ll
-be out in a jiffy.”
-
-As the man said this he drew in his head and closed the window. Julian
-was glad indeed when his villainous face disappeared, and trembled when
-he reflected that perhaps that revolver had been leveled at his head,
-and those evil eyes fastened upon him ever since he arrived within
-sight of the cabin, and he had never suspected it. He saw at once that
-he had placed himself in a dangerous position. One of two things was
-certain. The owner of the rancho was either hiding from pursuit, or
-else he was engaged in some unlawful business. If he were an honest man
-he would not act so strangely.
-
-“But how does it happen that he recognizes me?” Julian asked himself.
-“Does he know who I am, or does he take me for somebody else? If he
-knows that I am Julian Mortimer, he may be a man of the Sanders stamp
-who has been hired to put me out of Dick’s way. If he thinks that I am
-an acquaintance of his, or an accomplice, he will certainly discover
-his mistake as soon as he has a fair view of my face, and then what
-will he do to me? I think I had better not wait for him.”
-
-As quick as thought Julian wheeled his mare and touched her with his
-spurs; but the animal, knowing probably that good care and plenty of
-corn awaited her entry into the stable which she regarded as her home,
-responded very reluctantly. Before she had made many bounds the door
-of the stable was jerked open, and a voice called out in surprised and
-indignant tones:
-
-“Halt! halt! I say, on the instant, or you’re a dead man!”
-
-Julian knew that the speaker was in earnest, for his command was
-followed by the click of the lock of his revolver; but he would have
-kept on in spite of his fear of the bullets had not his horse, which
-doubtless recognized the voice, came to a sudden stand-still. Julian
-looked back and saw that the man’s pistol was pointed straight at his
-breast.
-
-“If you ain’t a _little_ ahead of all the fools I ever saw in all my
-born days my name ain’t Bob Smirker, and never was,” exclaimed the
-owner of the rancho fiercely. “That’s the second time I have come
-within an inch of shooting you. Come back here now, and let’s have no
-more fooling.”
-
-Julian, not daring to attempt to continue his retreat on his unwilling
-steed, was compelled to obey. Calling all his courage to his aid, he
-turned about and rode back to the cabin. Smirker looked sharply at him
-as he came up, but Julian met his gaze without flinching, and even
-succeeded in calling a smile to his face. Believing that he had nothing
-to gain by deception, he began to explain who he was and how he came to
-be there; but the man interrupted him, and Julian was afterward glad
-that he had done so.
-
-“I hope I am not intruding, sir,” he began. “I was out for a breath of
-fresh air——”
-
-“Oh, hush your nonsense!” cried the owner of the rancho angrily.
-“You’re always ’out for a breath of fresh air’ when you are doing
-something you’ve no business to do. That was what you said to me on
-the day you found my secret passage-way which leads down from the top
-of the cliff. I didn’t want anybody but myself to know about that
-passage-way, and when I found that you had discovered it I was mad
-enough to shoot you. You’re eternally up to some foolishness, and it’s
-the greatest wonder in the world you haven’t been killed a thousand
-times. Everybody says so. Now, Fred, if you should come here every hour
-in the day for the next ten years, don’t ever ride up without giving
-the signal, and don’t try to run away when I open the door. This ain’t
-boy’s play we’re at, as you would soon find out if them soldiers or
-some of the settlers should get hold of you. You hadn’t ought to done
-it, ’cause I didn’t know you in that Mexican rig. Come in. I’ve got
-something for you.”
-
-While the man was speaking he was looking squarely into Julian’s
-face, and the latter was waiting in an agony of suspense to see what
-he would do when he discovered that he had mistaken the identity of
-his visitor. But Smirker did not seem to think he had made a mistake.
-Having delivered his lecture and thus worked off a little of his
-indignation, he returned his revolver to his belt and led the way into
-the stable, closely followed by Julian’s horse, which moved after him
-without waiting for the word from her rider. Julian drew a long breath
-of relief, and told himself that the danger for the present was past.
-The difficulty now was to personate the boy whom Smirker believed him
-to be.
-
-While his companion lingered to fasten the door, Julian dismounted and
-ran his eye about the stable, which was lighted by a lantern suspended
-from one of the beams. It was much larger than it appeared on the
-outside, showing that it extended under the cliff. It was provided with
-stalls for a dozen horses, three of which had occupants. The mare being
-left to herself, walked into one of the stalls and immediately began
-munching some corn which had doubtless been placed there for her.
-
-“Now, then,” said Smirker, when he had fastened the door, “where is it?
-Hand it out here.”
-
-“Where is what?” asked the boy.
-
-“Why, you know. Didn’t you bring it?”
-
-“No,” replied Julian, who of course had not the slightest idea what the
-man meant.
-
-“Didn’t they say anything about it?” asked Smirker, who appeared to be
-very much disappointed as well as angry.
-
-“Not a word.”
-
-“Well, now, this way of doing business don’t suit me, and you may tell
-’em that I said so. I run just as much risk here as them that steals
-the swag—every bit; ’cause how do I know but them soldiers will be
-down on me when I ain’t looking for them? Looks like they wanted to
-swindle me out of my share. But, after all, they ain’t ahead of me
-much, ’cause I—you won’t blow on me, Fred?”
-
-“Of course not,” replied Julian.
-
-“I’ve got a little plunder here that I’m going to keep till they come
-down with the yellow boys they owe me.”
-
-“What sort of plunder?”
-
-“Why, nuggets and gold-dust—twenty-five hundred dollars’ worth. You
-see, I was down in the mines the other day, and heard of a man who had
-struck a lead and was going home that very day. But he didn’t go.”
-
-“Why not?” asked the boy, when Smirker paused.
-
-“‘Cause I knocked him on the head—that’s why. I’ve got the gold hid
-away safe. Do you want to go back now, or will you stay awhile? I am
-lonesome here all by myself.”
-
-“I had better go now,” replied Julian, who was eager to escape from the
-man’s presence at the earliest possible moment. “I am in something of a
-hurry.”
-
-Smirker struck up a lively whistle, and taking a bridle down from a pin
-beside the door, went into one of the stalls and brought out a horse
-which looked enough like Snowdrop to have been her brother. He was the
-same color, the same size, and just as stylish and spirited. Julian
-knew that he was expected to ride this horse away and leave his own
-steed in the care of the man; and, although he did not quite like the
-arrangement, he consoled himself with the thought that if he never saw
-Snowdrop again he would lose nothing by the exchange.
-
-“You ride good horses, Fred,” said Smirker, as he put Julian’s saddle
-on the horse he had just brought out, “but you had better take my
-advice and get others of a different color. White horses don’t do for
-such business as this, ’cause they show too plain of nights; and any
-one who happens to pass you on the road will remember of having seen
-you. There are plenty of better horses in the world, and the one I am
-going to send with you is one of them.”
-
-Smirker having by this time saddled and bridled the white nag, went
-into a second stall and brought out a large bay horse which he walked
-up and down the stable for Julian’s inspection. The moment the boy’s
-eyes rested on him he became reconciled to the loss of his mare, and
-even eager to part with her, if by so doing he could gain possession of
-this magnificent animal. If his speed and endurance were equal to his
-beauty, he was certainly a horse worth having.
-
-“He’s lightning on wheels,” declared Smirker, as he slipped a bridle
-over the bay’s head, “and perhaps he will give you as much as you
-want to do to lead him. He came from Fort Stoughton, and was stolen
-from the major, who had just brought him from the States. There you
-are,” he added, waving his hand toward the horses, intimating by the
-gesture that Julian was at liberty to take charge of them as soon as he
-pleased. “I wish you a pleasant journey. You have been very lucky so
-far, and I hope your good fortune will continue.”
-
-The boy was prompt to take advantage of the permission thus given him
-to leave the cabin. He quickly mounted the white horse, inquiring as he
-did so:
-
-“Any word to send to anybody?”
-
-“Yes, there is,” replied Smirker, “and I came near forgetting it. You
-can tell the fellows below that the captain’s cub has got back at last.”
-
-“What cub?”
-
-“Why, Julian; the one he’s been looking for so long. We’ll finger some
-of that money and find out where that hidden gold mine is now.”
-
-“Does this—this _cub_ know where it is?”
-
-“No, but Silas Roper does. Sanders was here this morning and told me
-the whole secret.”
-
-“The captain hasn’t got hold of Silas, has he?”
-
-“Not yet, but he will have him before long. It is a little the queerest
-thing I ever heard of, this plan of the captain’s is,” continued
-Smirker, placing one hand on the horn of Julian’s saddle, and settling
-into an easy position against the side of the horse as if he had a long
-story to tell, “and it shows what a head he’s got on his shoulders, and
-what education will do for a man. You see—but in the first place you
-know that he is no more of a Mortimer than I am?”
-
-Julian, not daring to trust himself to speak, nodded his head, pulled
-out his handkerchief ostensibly for the purpose of wiping his forehead,
-but really to conceal the sudden pallor which he knew overspread his
-face, and the man went on:
-
-“The captain’s playing a deep game, and he’s going to succeed in it,
-too. He’s making a decoy duck of Julian—using him to keep Silas Roper
-about here until he can catch him; and when he once gets hold of him
-and finds out where the money and the nuggets are, he’ll make short
-work with both of them.”
-
-What else Smirker was about to say Julian never knew, for an unexpected
-interruption occurred at that moment. A shrill whistle, sounding from
-some point close at hand, echoed through the gorge. It produced a
-strange effect upon Julian’s companion, for he turned as pale as death,
-and the hand which he placed upon the butt of his revolver trembled
-visibly. He stood motionless until the whistle was repeated, and then
-hurried across the floor and mounting a short ladder that leaned
-against the wall of the stable, opened the window before spoken of.
-
-No sooner had he looked out than he sprung to the ground again, and
-with a volley of oaths that made Julian’s blood run cold, strode up to
-him and seized him by the collar.
-
-“Look here, my cub,” he hissed, between his clenched teeth, “I
-suspected you all along. There ain’t two White-horse Freds in this
-country, and I know it. Who are you? Speak quick!”
-
-As he said this he pulled his revolver from his belt and leveled it at
-Julian’s head.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-WHITE-HORSE FRED.
-
-
-JULIAN, who had been congratulating himself upon the ease with which
-he was about to extricate himself from his perilous situation, was
-dismayed at this turn of events. He comprehended the matter perfectly.
-White-horse Fred, so called probably from the color of the animals he
-rode, was a member of a band of horse thieves and robbers, and it was
-his business to assist in moving the plunder from one point to another.
-The man Smirker belonged to the same organization, and it was his duty
-to receive and care for the booty until such time as the authorized
-agents of the band called for it. He had probably been on the lookout
-for his confederate when Julian arrived.
-
-“But why didn’t he know that I wasn’t White-horse Fred as soon as he
-looked into my face?” thought the boy, so nearly overcome with terror
-that he did not hear the words that had been addressed to him. “And how
-does it happen that I was riding Fred’s horse? How did my uncle come by
-him? I can’t understand it?”
-
-“Speak quick!” repeated Smirker, savagely, “and don’t try to draw no
-weapons. Who are you?”
-
-He pulled back the hammer of his pistol with the thumb of his right
-hand as he spoke, and shifting his left from Julian’s collar to the
-butt of the revolver which the boy was on the point of pulling from his
-belt.
-
-“Who should I be?” returned Julian boldly. “If I’ve no business here
-how came I by that horse I brought you? That’s what I’d like to know.”
-
-“And if that fellow out there ain’t White-horse Fred how did he give
-Fred’s whistle so exact, and how did he come by Fred’s clothes? That’s
-what _I’d_ like to know.”
-
-It was plain, both from Smirker’s tone and manner, that he began to
-believe that he had been a little too hasty. He let go Julian’s pistol,
-lowered the hammer of his own weapon, and stood gazing at our hero with
-an expression of great bewilderment on his face.
-
-“Wouldn’t it be a good plan to ask him?” suggested Julian.
-
-Smirker thought it would. He jerked open the door of the stable, and
-Julian, who was on the point of dashing his spurs into his horse and
-riding over the robber and making good his escape, found his way
-blocked up by a dashing young fellow, who rode gayly into the stable,
-but stopped short on discovering Julian, and checked the words of
-greeting that arose to his lips. For fully a minute no one spoke. The
-two boys sat on their horses staring at one another, and Smirker, after
-closing and locking the door, took his stand between them, looking
-first at the new-comer and then at Julian, apparently unable to come to
-any decision concerning them.
-
-The strange equestrian was a youth about Julian’s age and size, only
-a little more robust, and had the two been dressed alike it would
-have been a matter of some difficulty for any one to tell them apart.
-Julian looked as if he had just come out of a lady’s bandbox, while the
-new-comer seemed to have bestowed but little care upon his toilet that
-morning. His dress consisted of a red flannel shirt, open at the throat
-and worn without a coat, coarse trowsers, which were thrust into a pair
-of high-top boots, and a broad-brimmed hat. A belt encircled his waist,
-supporting a knife on one side and a revolver on the other. He rode a
-small Indian pony, which, judging by its appearance, had been driven
-long and rapidly.
-
-“Now, then,” said Smirker, who was the first to recover the use of his
-tongue, “one of you two fellows has got himself in the worst kind of a
-scrape—one that he will never get out of alive. Which is White-horse
-Fred?”
-
-Julian had shown a tolerably bold front as long as a hope of escape
-remained, but now that he found the door of the stable locked upon him,
-and himself completely at the mercy of the two robbers, his courage
-gave way utterly, and he could not have made an intelligent reply to
-Smirker’s question even if he had had anything to say.
-
-The new-comer was the genuine White-horse Fred—there could be no doubt
-about that, for he had given the signal when he approached the cabin,
-and more than that, Smirker had recognized him by the clothes he wore.
-
-Giving himself up for lost, Julian waited almost impatiently for the
-strange horseman to speak, believing that the opening of his lips would
-be the signal for his own death. What, then, was his amazement when he
-heard the boy exclaim:
-
-“White-horse Fred! If there is any one here that goes by that name, it
-must be you or that young gentleman over there.”
-
-“Then you ain’t him!” said Smirker, growing more and more perplexed.
-
-“No. Do I look like him!”
-
-“You sartinly do, and act like him. What were you whistling out there
-for?”
-
-“Oh, just to hear the echo.”
-
-“And what made you come in here?”
-
-“Because you opened the door.”
-
-“You talk like White-horse Fred, too. But if you hain’t him you’re
-where you’ve got no business to be, and you’ll never get away, nuther.”
-
-Smirker raised his revolver and pointed it at the boy’s breast.
-Julian, faint with terror, turned away his head and held his breath in
-suspense; but the stranger never flinched so much as a hair’s breadth.
-
-“Don’t do anything rash,” said he calmly. “I have told you who I am
-_not_, and now you had better ask me who I _am_.”
-
-“I don’t care who you are. You’re a dead man.”
-
-“And you will be another in less than an hour,” replied the boy,
-without the least sign of alarm. “My Uncle Reginald Mortimer’s servant
-is close behind me. He will know that I came in here, and if I don’t go
-out again he will also know what has become of me.”
-
-Smirker lowered his revolver, and falling back a step or two, stared
-blankly at the speaker, and then at our hero. The astonishment his face
-exhibited was fully reflected in Julian’s. The latter’s terror had all
-given way to surprise. He forgot Smirker and his revolver, the danger
-of his situation, and every thing else except the last few words the
-stranger had uttered: “My Uncle Reginald Mortimer.” Who was this fellow
-who was going about claiming Julian’s relative as his own?
-
-“You have concluded not to shoot me, haven’t you?” asked the boy, whose
-coolness and courage were wonderful to behold.
-
-“Who are you?” demanded Smirker.
-
-“My name is Julian Mortimer. I am a stranger here, having but just
-arrived from the States. I came out this morning to take a ride, and it
-seems I have got into a place where I am not wanted. I beg pardon for
-my intrusion, and will thank you to open that door and let me out.”
-
-“Julian Mortimer!” exclaimed Smirker.
-
-“_Julian Mortimer!_” echoed the owner of that name, in a scarcely
-audible voice.
-
-If our hero had been surprised before, he was doubly so now. He could
-scarcely believe that he had heard aright. If this stranger was Julian
-Mortimer, who in the world was _he_, Julian asked himself. Were there
-two boys of that name in existence, and was Uncle Reginald the guardian
-of both, and holding in his hands a valuable property to be surrendered
-to them when they reached their majority?
-
-He rubbed his eyes to make sure he was not dreaming, and looked hard at
-the stranger, who seemed not a little astonished at the sensation he
-had created.
-
-As for Smirker, he was as nearly beside himself as a sane man could
-well be; and, what was very singular, he seemed all of a sudden to have
-discovered some reason for wishing to keep as far away from Julian as
-possible, for he backed into one of the stables and stood eying him
-like a caged hyena.
-
-“Well, what of it?” said the stranger. “Perhaps you don’t believe what
-I told you. If it is necessary that I should furnish proof, I can do
-so. Open the door and let me out.”
-
-“You spoke that name just in time,” said Smirker fiercely, “for in
-a minute more you would have been done for. If you are really the
-captain’s cub, you are worth too much to us to be put out of the way
-yet awhile. But not much I won’t let you out-doors. Your story may be
-true, and it may not. I am going to keep you here till I can send to
-headquarters and find out.”
-
-“All right,” replied the boy, swinging himself from his saddle and
-gazing about the stable as if everything he saw in it was full of
-interest to him. “I am easily suited. I’d as soon stay here an hour or
-two as not. I never was in a house like this before. What makes you
-call ’em all _ranchos_?”
-
-“Look a here,” added Smirker, turning to our hero. “If this fellow is
-Julian Mortimer, who are you?”
-
-“Are you not yet satisfied that I am White-horse Fred?” asked Julian in
-reply. “Perhaps you want me to prove it.”
-
-Julian’s terror had all passed away now, and he was in his right mind
-again. There was still a chance of escape. Although he had not the
-remotest idea who the new-comer was, he had heard and seen enough
-to satisfy him that he was a stranger in that wilderness as well as
-himself, and that he was not White-horse Fred, consequently he ran no
-risk in continuing to personate the character he had been compelled to
-assume. Indeed, it was the only thing he could do. He was impatient to
-be off, too, for the real White-horse Fred might arrive at any moment,
-and then something would certainly happen.
-
-“There’s a mystery at the bottom of this, and I’ll bet a horse on it,”
-said Smirker, shaking his fists in the air, and striding up and down
-the stable. “I know you are White-horse Fred,” he added, addressing
-himself to our hero, “but—but—what’s the rest of your name? Fred
-what?”
-
-“Fred nothing. That’s all the name I’ve got. I never had any other.”
-
-“Well, you have got another, and if it is the one I think it is, I
-don’t see how in the world you come to be riding about here. You had
-ought to be at the bottom of the lake. I’ll see the fellows below this
-very night, and have a new runner put on this route, or I’ll give up
-the station. I ain’t a going to have no such fellow as you coming about
-me. You can’t get out of here any too sudden.”
-
-This speech was all Greek to Julian, except the last sentence. That he
-understood perfectly, and was quite ready to act upon the suggestion
-it contained. The moment Smirker opened the door of the stable he
-dashed the spurs into his horse, which sprung forward like an arrow
-from a bow, and tore down the path with the speed of the wind, the bay
-following. In a few seconds he was out of sight.
-
-Scarcely waiting for Julian to get fairly out of the stable, Smirker
-slammed the door and locked it, and turning fiercely upon his new
-prisoner disarmed him by jerking off the belt which contained his
-knife and revolver. Having thus put it out of the boy’s power to do
-any mischief, Smirker suddenly seemed to become unconscious of his
-presence. He had much to think about, and for the next quarter of an
-hour he gave himself up entirely to his reflections, never once casting
-a single glance toward his companion. He paced up and down the stable
-with long strides, shaking his head and muttering, and trying in vain
-to find some explanation for the strange, and to him bewildering,
-incidents that had just occurred. They were more than bewildering—they
-were absolutely terrifying, as the expression on his face and his whole
-bearing and manner abundantly proved. He walked with a very unsteady
-step, his burly frame trembled like an oak in a storm, and now and
-then he raised his hand to dash away the perspiration which stood on
-his forehead like drops of rain.
-
-The prisoner was as cool and collected as ever. Being left to himself,
-he strolled carelessly about the stable, examining every object in it,
-and occasionally directing his gaze toward the open door leading from
-the stable into the living-room of the cabin. Finally he leaned against
-one of the stalls, and when Smirker’s back was turned hastily pulled
-something from his pocket and tossed it into the manger—something that
-gave out a ringing, metallic sound as it fell. The noise, slight as it
-was, caught the man’s ear and aroused him from his reverie. He turned
-and confronted his prisoner at once.
-
-“What you doing there?” he demanded.
-
-“Nothing at all,” was the reply. “I am waiting as patiently as I
-can for you to explain why you have robbed me of my weapons, and
-are keeping me here. I assure you that my Uncle Reginald will have
-something to say to you about this before you are many hours older.”
-
-“What you doing there?” repeated Smirker fiercely; “I heard something
-chink.”
-
-“Perhaps it was my persuaders,” said the boy, lifting his boot and
-exhibiting a huge Mexican spur, ornamented with little silver bells,
-which tinkled musically as he moved his feet about.
-
-“P’raps it was, and p’raps most likely it wasn’t. Haven’t I lived long
-enough to tell the difference between the rattling of spurs and the
-jingling of money? I have, I bet you. I’ll soon find out what you’ve
-been up to.”
-
-Smirker walked into the stall in front of which the boy was standing,
-and then for the first time the prisoner began to show signs of
-anxiety. He closely watched the man’s movements, and cast frequent and
-impatient glances toward the door of the living-room, as if he were
-expecting and earnestly desiring the arrival of some one.
-
-Smirker was in the stall but a few moments, and when he came out he
-carried in his hand a small canvas bag, at the sight of which the
-prisoner turned white with terror. Taking his stand under the lantern,
-Smirker untied the string with which the bag was fastened; but no
-sooner did his eyes fall upon its contents than he dropped it as if it
-had been a coal of fire, and his face grew livid with rage and alarm.
-
-“Betrayed!” he roared, stamping his feet furiously upon the ground, and
-flourishing his fists in the air. “And, fool that I was, I might have
-known it! I suspected it from the beginning.”
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked the boy, and his voice was as firm and
-steady as ever.
-
-“What’s the matter?” shrieked Smirker, driven almost insane by his
-intense passion. “Do you stand there and ask me what’s the matter? It’s
-the last question you will ever ask me, for you are as good as a dead
-man already. Didn’t I say that there was something at the bottom of
-all this? _You_ are White-horse Fred—that bag proves it. It contains
-nuggets, and gold-dust, and money—my share of the swag which I have
-received and sent to the fellows below. I expected to get it from that
-other boy, and asked him for it; but of course he couldn’t give it to
-me, being an imposter. And I allowed him to go off scot free, and even
-told him some secrets that nobody outside the band ought to know. How
-long will it take him to ride to the fort and tell what he has seen and
-heard, and lead a squad of soldiers back here? And you helped him out
-in it—you, a sworn member of the band! Now, you shall tell me what you
-mean by acting as you have done. Speak in a hurry, or I’ll choke it out
-of you!”
-
-Smirker, howling out these words with a fierceness and energy which
-showed that he was terribly in earnest, advanced toward his prisoner
-in a low, crouching attitude, something like that a wild beast would
-assume when about to spring upon its prey.
-
-The boy’s face was very pale, but he bravely stood his ground. Knowing
-that escape was impossible, he was prepared to fight desperately for
-his life.
-
-“Will you tell me?” asked the robber, creeping forward with a slow,
-cat-like motion.
-
-“I have nothing to tell,” replied the boy, “except this: I have friends
-close at hand, and they ought to be here now.”
-
-“Then I will have this business over before they arrive.”
-
-“Come on, and I will show you what a Mortimer is made of.”
-
-Before the words of defiance had fairly left the boy’s lips, Smirker
-bounded forward, and the two closed in a death struggle.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-THE SPECTERS OF THE CAVE.
-
-
-THE FIGHT was of longer duration and was much more desperate than one
-would suppose it could have been, considering the immense advantage
-which Smirker possessed over his wiry antagonist in weight and muscle;
-but of course it could end in but one way. White-horse Fred, bruised
-and exhausted, was borne to the ground at last, with the man’s knee on
-his breast and his brawny hand at his throat.
-
-“Now let’s hear from you,” hissed Smirker. “Who was that fellow who
-came here and passed himself off for you, and why did you help him out
-in it? Speak, before I choke the life out of you.”
-
-If Fred could have obeyed his reply would have been as defiant as ever;
-but the powerful grasp on his throat rendered articulation impossible.
-
-“You won’t tell me?” demanded Smirker; “then take the reward of your
-treachery.”
-
-The robber’s hand glided around his side to his belt, and when it came
-in sight again it brought with it a gleaming bowie-knife, which was
-raised in the air above the prisoner’s breast; but just as it was on
-the point of descending it was arrested as effectually as though the
-arm which wielded it had been turned into stone.
-
-“Hold hard, thar!”
-
-The words, uttered by a strange voice and spoken in a tone of stern
-command, rang through the stable with startling distinctness. Smirker
-raised his eyes and there, standing in the door to which Fred had
-so often directed his gaze, was a gigantic figure clad in buckskin,
-holding in his hands a long, heavy rifle, the muzzle of which was
-pointed straight at the robber’s head.
-
-“Silas Roper!” gasped Fred’s antagonist.
-
-“‘Tain’t nobody else, as you’ll find out mighty sudden if you move an
-eyelid,” was the reply. “Drop that we’pon an’ get up from thar.”
-
-The command was no sooner uttered than it was obeyed by the trembling
-Smirker, who threw down his knife and slunk away like a whipped cur
-before the stalwart trapper, as he came striding into the stable, and
-retreating toward the nearest stall, held both his hands above his head
-in token of surrender.
-
-“None of that ar, now,” said Silas, as he bent over the prostrate form
-of the boy. “Keep out in plain sight whar I can have an eye on you. Are
-you bad hurt, Fred? If you are, that feller’s signed his death-warrant.”
-
-“No! no!” moaned the boy faintly. “Don’t touch him.”
-
-Smirker was amazed to hear the one who had so narrowly escaped death at
-his hands interceding for him. It relieved him of all fear of bodily
-injury, and he straightway began to recover his composure; but he drew
-a step or two nearer to Fred’s side, thinking it best to keep as far as
-possible out of the reach of the giant, whom he knew had good cause to
-be at enmity with him.
-
-“I shall be all right as soon as I have had time to recover the breath
-he choked out of me,” continued the latter. “Oh, Silas, I am so glad to
-see you! But why didn’t you come just a few minutes sooner. I have seen
-_him_. He was in this very stable.”
-
-“Him!” repeated the trapper. “Who? Not Julian?”
-
-“Yes, Julian. I didn’t think I should know him when I met him, but I
-did. I wanted to throw my arms around him and tell him that he was my
-brother, but Smirker was in the way. I am terribly disappointed in him,
-Silas. He is from the States, you know, and I expected to see a boy who
-hadn’t courage enough to face a sheep. But he’ll do.”
-
-“Why, how come he here?” asked Silas in great astonishment.
-
-“I haven’t the least idea. Make Smirker tell. He’ll do anything you ask
-him.”
-
-“How was it?” demanded the trapper, turning to the owner of the cabin.
-“Tell nothing but the truth.”
-
-Smirker was too completely cowed by the presence of the giant, with
-whose powers he had more than once been made fully acquainted, to
-fabricate a falsehood even if he had anything to gain by it. Not daring
-to disobey, or even to hesitate, he began, and in a faltering voice
-told the story of Julian’s visit to his cabin just as we have related
-it. He also described what had taken place after Fred’s arrival, but
-added that Silas must ask the boy to explain that, for it was something
-he could not comprehend.
-
-“I can soon make it plain to you,” said White-horse Fred, now taking up
-the story. “You can’t imagine how surprised I was to find Julian here,
-and if Smirker had possessed any control over himself I should not have
-known what to do. But the way he looked and acted gave me a clew, and
-I saw through the whole thing as clearly as if it had been explained
-to me in words. Uncle Reginald, you know, happened to ride by old
-Antoine’s cabin the other day while I was absent, and seeing one of my
-horses, Snowdrop, there, suddenly conceived a violent passion for her
-and took possession of her without saying so much as ‘by your leave.’
-I wondered what he intended to do with her and now I have found out.
-He gave her to my brother. Julian this morning thought he would take a
-ride and look over the country, and not knowing that the horse belonged
-to a band of robbers, gave her a loose rein and she brought him here.
-Finding that he had got himself into trouble, he acted upon some hint
-that Smirker gave him and passed himself off for me; and if _I_ had not
-arrived just as I did, he would have got away without being suspected.
-To help him out of the difficulty, I told Smirker that my name was
-Julian Mortimer, and the blockhead believed it.”
-
-“Thar ain’t nothing so very strange in that,” observed Silas. “No man
-on airth could tell you two apart if you was dressed alike.”
-
-“But we were not. Smirker has seen me in these clothes a hundred times,
-I suppose, and I should think he ought to have recognized me. Now that
-I think of it, I ran something of a risk, didn’t I? Suppose that when I
-said that my name was Julian Mortimer, my brother had lost his courage
-and revealed himself? Wouldn’t I have been in a scrape? I depended
-entirely upon his presence of mind to carry me through, and I didn’t
-lose by it. But wasn’t he astonished, though? I thought he would tumble
-out of his saddle. But he behaved pretty well, considering that he is
-from the States.”
-
-“Why didn’t you want to tell me who he was?” asked Smirker, who had
-listened attentively to the story.
-
-“I would have been smart to do that, wouldn’t I?” returned White-horse
-Fred. “Suppose I had told you, and you had succeeded in making an end
-of me before Silas came, what would you have done? You would have
-gone straight to Uncle Reginald and told him what had happened, and
-he would—Well, it’s enough for you to know that he would have made
-trouble for Julian. Silas, if you had only come a few minutes sooner he
-would have been with us now. I am uneasy about him. He will get into
-difficulty when he gets home, now you see if he doesn’t.”
-
-“I couldn’t come no sooner,” replied the trapper; “‘cause I had
-more trouble than I thought I’d have crawlin’ down that long, dark
-passage-way that leads from the top of the cliff. What’s the matter
-with you?”
-
-This question was addressed to Smirker, who suddenly began to exhibit
-a greater degree of terror than the circumstances seemed to warrant.
-The show of courage he had maintained ever since he found that Fred was
-disposed to stand between him and the vengeance of the trapper vanished
-as quickly as it had appeared; and scarcely able to retain an upright
-position, he was obliged to lean against the wall for support.
-
-“You needn’t be no ways skeery,” said Silas, who seemed to feel some
-compassion for the trembling wretch. “We’ve got plenty agin you, but if
-you behave yourself, nobody’s goin’ to hurt you. All we ask of you is
-to tell us something we want to know; an’ if you will do that, we’ll
-turn you loose, an’ you can dig out of this country as soon as you
-please.”
-
-“I’ll tell you anything,” replied Smirker quickly. “But first I’d like
-to have you tell me something. When I was going to pitch into you,” he
-added, turning to White-horse Fred, “you told me to come on, and you
-would show me what a _Mortimer_ was made of, didn’t you?”
-
-“I did,” replied the boy. “I knew, of course, that you were too much
-for me, but I wasn’t going to surrender. That’s something I don’t know
-how to do.”
-
-“And you have said two or three times that Julian is four brother,
-hain’t you?” Smirker went on.
-
-“I have, and he is.”
-
-“Then you must be the son of old Major Mortimer?”
-
-“I am proud to say that I am.”
-
-“Well, now if you _are_, what business you got walking about on top of
-the ground? That’s what I’d like to know. You had ought to be at the
-bottom of the lake that lies behind your father’s rancho. Sanders put
-you there, ’cause I seen him do it with my own eyes.”
-
-“I know he did, and my body is there yet,” replied White-horse Fred.
-
-“Eh?” exclaimed Smirker, drawing away from the boy toward the trapper.
-
-“Don’t you know that a Mortimer can’t be killed?” asked Fred, who,
-having recovered from the effects of his struggle with the robber, was
-his jolly, reckless self once more. “And have you not yet learned that
-the members of our family have the power of throwing the shield of
-their protection around their servants? It’s a fact. You remember old
-Juan, do you not? Dick Mortimer shot him twice with his own hands, and
-you knocked him on the head with the butt of your rifle; and then you
-both picked him up and threw him over a cliff, didn’t you?”
-
-“There ain’t no use in saying we didn’t,” replied Smirker. “But I was
-hired to help in that work.”
-
-“Oh, of course. Men always have some excuse for doing wrong. Well,
-that old fellow’s body may be at the bottom of that gorge now, but I
-don’t believe it is. There is something that looks wonderfully like him
-walking about above ground this very day. If you want to see it we can
-show it to you.”
-
-“You needn’t put yourselves to no trouble,” whined Smirker. “Ask me all
-the questions you want to and turn me loose.”
-
-“The old chap walks around of nights, too,” continued White-horse
-Fred, in a tone of voice that made the cold chills creep all over his
-listener, “assisting his friends in every possible way and executing
-all sorts of vengeance on his enemies. How would you feel if you should
-wake up about midnight and see him coming toward you just this way?”
-
-Fred threw himself into a crouching posture, similar to that which
-Smirker had assumed a few minutes before, drew his head down between
-his shoulders, distorted his features, opened his eyes and mouth to
-their widest extent, spread out his fingers like the claws of a wild
-beast, and crept slowly toward the robber.
-
-“Don’t!” cried Smirker.
-
-“We’re goin’ to take you right whar he was seed last,” said Silas, who
-believing that time enough had been wasted, thought it best to bring
-Fred’s pleasantries to an end; “and if you don’t tell us what we want
-to know we’ll show him to you as sure as you’re a hoss-thief. Put the
-saddles on the critters, Fred, while I tie this feller.”
-
-“I will tell you what you want to know now,” said Smirker, who
-continued to exhibit the most abject terror.
-
-“Yes; but you see we want to take you to a place whar we can keep you
-safe till we find out whether or not you tell us the truth.”
-
-As Silas spoke he detached a halter from one of the bridles hanging
-on the wall, and with it securely bound the arms of his prisoner, who
-remonstrated earnestly against the proceeding, but never once thought
-of resistance.
-
-By the time this was done Fred had saddled the two horses in the
-stable, one of which was Snowdrop, and the other an animal belonging to
-Smirker, replaced the belt containing the revolver and knife about his
-waist, and also secured possession of the bag containing the nuggets
-and gold-dust. Silas then mounted Smirker’s horse, and bending down
-from his saddle and placing his arm about his prisoner, raised him to a
-seat behind him as easily as if he had been a child.
-
-In a few minutes more the trio were riding down the gully at a brisk
-trot. Silas and his young companion held their weapons ready for
-instant use, and kept a good lookout on all sides of them. If they
-chanced to meet any of the band of which their prisoner was a member,
-they might be called upon to fight for possession of him. But they
-accomplished the descent of the gorge, crossed the valley, and entered
-the woods on the opposite side without meeting any one, and finally
-found themselves in the vicinity of the rancho. Here they became very
-cautious in their movements, White-horse Fred leading the way at a
-slow walk, and frequently stopping to look about and listen. Presently
-he dismounted in a dense thicket, and having tied his nag to one of
-the bushes, seated himself on the ground, his example being followed
-by the trapper. For fully half an hour they and their prisoner sat
-motionless in their place of concealment, and at the end of that time
-Silas Roper’s quick ear caught the sound of a stealthy footfall.
-He communicated the fact to Fred in a whisper, and the latter was
-instantly on the alert. He crept away through the bushes, and presently
-came back again.
-
-“It’s Dick,” said he, in a low tone; “and after Julian again I’ll
-warrant. Isn’t he persevering? He is coming down the hill. Do you think
-I could get ahead of him?”
-
-“I reckon you might if you’re right lively,” replied the guide. “But be
-careful of what you do. One mistake would spile everything.”
-
-The active Fred was out of sight almost before Silas had ceased
-speaking. Threading his way rapidly but noiselessly through the woods,
-he reached the bottom of a wide and deep ravine, which he crossed with
-a few swift bounds. Arriving at the base of a hill on the opposite
-side, he pushed aside a thick cluster of bushes, disclosing to view a
-dark opening, which seemed to extend far down into the regions below.
-Into this he dived like a squirrel going into his hole, and in a second
-more was out of sight.
-
-The bushes which concealed the opening had scarcely sprung back to
-their places when Richard Mortimer appeared in sight, moving down the
-ravine with slow and cautious steps, and pausing every few feet to
-look about him. When he reached the mouth of the cave he backed into
-the bushes, and concealing himself among them, stood for a long time
-listening and gazing up and down the ravine. Being satisfied at last
-that his movements were unobserved, he drew back into the opening, and
-hurried along a narrow passage-way, which led first to the store-room
-before spoken of, and thence through the hill to Reginald Mortimer’s
-rancho.
-
-“I am now going to make amends for the cowardice I exhibited last
-night,” soliloquized Richard Mortimer. “I am heartily ashamed of what
-I did, and I shall never again allow myself to be frightened from my
-purpose by so shallow an artifice. It couldn’t have been old Juan’s
-ghost I saw, for there are no such things. Neither could it have been
-the old man himself, for he was put out of the way long years ago, and
-as I was present when the deed was committed, and even assisted in it,
-I know that the work was thoroughly done. The apparition certainly
-looked exactly like him, and if it comes in my way to-night I am going
-to find out what it is. My Derringers are freshly loaded, and I will
-see what impression the bullets in them will make upon it.”
-
-The passage-way was as dark as midnight, but Richard Mortimer, being
-perfectly familiar with all its windings, walked rapidly through it,
-and turning an abrupt bend, found himself at the place where the
-passage opened into the store-room. Although he had braced his nerves,
-called all his courage to his aid, and was fully prepared to encounter
-something here, he could not repress the thrill of horror that ran
-through him, or the exclamation of astonishment that escaped his lips
-the moment he emerged from the passage-way.
-
-A pale green light, whose source was invisible, and through which
-objects could but be dimly seen as through a mist, was streaming
-through the cellar. To Richard Mortimer’s excited imagination it seemed
-to proceed from the bodies of two persons who were slowly approaching
-him from the opposite end of the apartment—one a very aged man, and
-the other a youth who looked remarkably like White-horse Fred. They
-were walking side by side, gazing into each other’s faces, and appeared
-to be conversing earnestly, for their hands were constantly employed in
-gesticulating, and their lips moved, although no sound came forth. The
-light, which gave a strange and unearthly appearance to their features,
-seemed to move as they moved; and, instead of diffusing itself about
-the room, was confined to a narrow space in the immediate vicinity of
-the figures. Richard Mortimer gazed, and as he gazed felt his courage
-oozing out at the ends of his fingers. His first impulse was to turn
-and take to his heels, but the weakness was only momentary. Recovering
-himself by a strong effort, he advanced boldly into the store-room,
-but its mysterious occupants took no notice of him. He drew one of his
-Derringers from his pocket, and leveled it at the old man’s breast.
-
-“I have just one bullet apiece for you, my friends,” said he, his voice
-trembling in spite of his efforts to control it, “and unless you stop
-that pantomime and speak to me, I will bring this farce to an end in a
-way that you probably have not expected.”
-
-He paused, but no answer was returned, nor was there the least change
-in the expression of the countenances of the two figures to show that
-his words had been heard. They continued to approach the place where he
-was standing, talking earnestly and gesticulating.
-
-They were now quite near to him—so near that Richard Mortimer
-retreated a step or two, and as he did so his finger pressed the
-trigger. There was a bright flash, a stunning report, and when the
-smoke, which for a few seconds obscured his vision, cleared away so
-that he could see the effect of his shot, he dropped his empty weapon
-and staggered back as if he were about to fall. There stood the old man
-erect and unharmed, still talking with his companion, and neither of
-them seemed to have heard the report of the pistol.
-
-To draw the other and discharge it was but the work of an instant,
-but it had no visible effect upon the objects of his vengeance, who
-continued to advance, the light keeping pace with them, and their faces
-appearing to assume a more ghostly and unearthly look the nearer they
-approached.
-
-And now Richard Mortimer discovered something that had hitherto escaped
-his notice—a tiny stream of blood which was trickling down the old
-man’s temple, and two holes in the breast of his buckskin jacket.
-White-horse Fred was as wet as if he had just come out of the lake,
-and the water dripped from his garments as he moved along. The sight
-reminded Richard Mortimer of one memorable night when scenes of horror
-and bloodshed had been enacted at the rancho, and drove away every
-particle of his courage. With a wild shriek of terror he turned and
-fled like the wind.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-JULIAN MAKES A DISCOVERY.
-
-
-OUR HERO rode away from the cabin which had been the scene of his
-recent thrilling adventure in an ecstasy of bewilderment and alarm.
-He could not find a satisfactory explanation for a single one of the
-strange incidents that had happened there—they were all shrouded in
-a mystery which he could not penetrate. Of one thing, however, he was
-certain, and that was that that gallant young fellow, whoever he was,
-who had so narrowly escaped death at Smirker’s hands, should not remain
-long a prisoner. He would have him out of that cabin if there was any
-way by which his release could be effected, and find out what he meant
-by claiming to be Julian Mortimer. Perhaps that “watchful friend,” who
-had addressed that note to him and visited his room the night before
-while he was asleep, could tell him what ought to be done under the
-circumstances, if he could only obtain an interview with him. This he
-would use his best endeavors to accomplish by returning at once to his
-uncle’s rancho, and remaining awake all night. If his mysterious friend
-should come into his room before morning he would be sure to see him.
-
-Julian’s new horse was quite as swift as Snowdrop, and showed the same
-willingness to go ahead. He flew down the rocky path at break-neck
-speed, the bay quietly following. For two hours he continued that
-mad gallop, and at the end of that time suddenly slackened his pace
-to a walk. This aroused Julian, who straightened up and looked about
-him, expecting to see his uncle’s rancho close before him; but not a
-building of any description was in sight. His horse was toiling up a
-steep mountain path, which led through a wilderness of trees and rocks
-that Julian did not remember to have seen before. He knew that he had
-not passed that way in the morning. He had been so completely absorbed
-in his reflections that he had not thought of directing his steed, but
-trusted to the animal to carry him back to his uncle’s rancho. But
-now he remembered, with a thrill of terror, that he was not riding
-Snowdrop, but a horse belonging to a robber—one, too, which was in the
-habit of making frequent and perhaps daily journeys between certain
-points. The animal seemed to know where he was going, but Julian did
-not. He had not seen the valley since he left Smirker’s cabin, and that
-proved that the horse, without attracting his attention, had turned
-into another path, and was carrying him deeper into the mountains.
-But to what place? To another robber station beyond a doubt. Julian
-shuddered at the thought.
-
-To add to his alarm, night was rapidly coming on, the sky was overcast
-with clouds of inky blackness, the lightning was playing about the
-mountain tops, and the hoarse mutterings of a storm could be heard
-in the distance. What was to be done under such circumstances? He
-could never retrace his steps and find his way back to the valley in
-the dark. He knew by the experience he had already had with Snowdrop
-that the animals White-horse Fred rode, having become accustomed to
-a particular line of duty, objected to having their usual manner of
-proceeding interrupted; and if the nag on which he was now mounted
-should show the same disinclination to turn back that Snowdrop had
-exhibited to leave Smirker’s cabin, what could he do? He would be
-obliged to depend entirely on himself, and he would become hopelessly
-bewildered before he had gone a hundred yards. To camp beside the path
-and wait for daylight would be equally hazardous, for the crash of
-fallen timbers in the distance told him that the swiftly approaching
-storm was sweeping every movable thing before it. He must go on—he had
-no alternative.
-
-“There’s some consolation in knowing that I can’t get into a much worse
-scrape than that which I have just got out of,” thought Julian. “If I
-don’t succeed in passing myself off as White-horse Fred, I will reveal
-myself and trust to luck. In that event the robbers will only make a
-prisoner of me, for I am worth too much to them to be harmed. Smirker
-said so, although I haven’t the least idea what he meant by it.”
-
-Having settled this point, Julian put spurs to his horse, which, having
-by this time gained the summit of the hill, set off at the top of his
-speed. The gloom of night settled rapidly over the mountains, growing
-more and more intense every instant, and finally even the nearest
-objects were shut out from his view, save when the occasional flashes
-of lightning burst from the thick blackness overhead. To increase his
-uneasiness, he became aware that the path over which he was being
-carried with all the speed his horse could command ran along the brink
-of a deep precipice. Trusting entirely to the white nag, and leaving
-the bay to take care of himself, Julian clung with a death-grip to the
-horn of his saddle, closing his eyes when the lightning illuminated
-the scene, that he might not see the dangers before him, and then
-when darkness once more settled over the mountains holding his breath
-in suspense, momentarily expecting to find himself whirling headlong
-to destruction. But the sure-footed animal, having carried the real
-White-horse Fred along that same chasm on many a night like this, was
-too familiar with the way to run into any dangers.
-
-Nearer and nearer came the storm, a roar like that of a thousand
-express trains filling the canyon behind him, the lightning flashing
-incessantly, the thunder booming and echoing among the cliffs like
-rapid discharges of heavy artillery, the crash of falling timber
-sounding louder and plainer every instant, and faster and faster flew
-the white horse with his terrified rider. He sped along like a bird on
-the wing, never once abating his speed even in the roughest and most
-difficult places, and finally, to Julian’s immense relief, carried him
-into a thickly wooded ravine, and after making several abrupt turns and
-plunging through a dense thicket of bushes, came to a sudden halt. On
-the instant the boy placed his hand to his mouth and gave a perfect
-imitation of White-horse Fred’s whistle.
-
-“Ay! ay!” came the response through the darkness, the voice sounding
-close at hand.
-
-“Whew!” panted Julian, drawing his handkerchief across his dripping
-forehead. “Wasn’t it lucky that I had my wits about me? I heard a
-window close, and a bolt rattle as it was pushed into its socket; and
-that proves that some one heard my approach and was on the lookout.
-If I hadn’t given the signal just as I did I might have been shot.
-Wouldn’t I give something to know what I have got to go through with
-now?”
-
-Julian could not see even the faintest outline of a house before him,
-but nevertheless there was one there. The sound of voices and the
-tramping of heavy feet on a stone floor came faintly to his ears,
-followed by the grating of bolts and locks; and presently a door swung
-open close at his side—so close that if he had thrust out his hand he
-could have touched it—a flood of light streamed out into the darkness,
-and a man with a lantern appeared on the threshold. Julian’s horse at
-once moved forward, carrying his rider into a stable similar to the one
-adjoining Smirker’s cabin, and the bay followed closely at his heels.
-Scarcely had they reached the shelter of the friendly roof when the
-storm burst forth in all its fury.
-
-Julian rolled off his horse rather than dismounted, and the hostler,
-after closing and fastening the door, held up his lantern and peered
-sharply into his face.
-
-“Why, boy!” he exclaimed in great amazement.
-
-“It is all up with me now,” thought Julian. “I am discovered at last.”
-
-“Well, sir!” continued the man, after a pause. “I have seen something
-to-night I never expected to see in my life—White-horse Fred
-frightened.”
-
-“I guess you would be frightened if you were in my place,” returned
-Julian, greatly relieved.
-
-“The soldiers haven’t been after you, have they?”
-
-The boy replied in the negative.
-
-“Oh, it’s the storm, then. It’s awful, that’s a fact. I never heard
-such thunder or such a roaring of wind. You got here just in time,
-didn’t you? Listen to that rain. The water in the gullies will be
-breast high to a horse in five minutes. Where did this fellow come
-from?” asked the hostler, leading the bay into one of the stalls.
-
-“From Fort Stoughton. He was stolen from the major.”
-
-“Is this all you’ve got? Haven’t you brought any dust or nuggets?”
-
-“No. That was all Smirker had to give me.”
-
-“The fellows up there are getting lazy. They never send anything but
-horses lately. What do you know that is interesting or exciting?”
-
-“Nothing. Smirker told me to tell you that the captain’s cub had got
-back.”
-
-“Glory!” exclaimed the man, looking over his shoulder at Julian, and
-bringing his horny palms together with a noise like the report of a
-pistol.
-
-“I don’t know what he meant by it,” added Julian, hoping that the
-man would finish the story Smirker had been relating to him when
-White-horse Fred arrived.
-
-“Of course you don’t, but I do; and it is the best piece of news I ever
-heard.”
-
-“Why is it?”
-
-“That is a secret known only to a few of us whom the captain is willing
-to trust. But, of course, as you are a faithful member of the band, you
-will one day share in the benefits of it. I’d like to tell you, but I’m
-sworn to tell nobody. Your supper is waiting.”
-
-That was something Julian was glad to hear. Uncle Reginald had kept
-him in such a state of excitement that morning that he had eaten very
-little breakfast, and he was as hungry as a wolf. Fortunately there was
-but one door leading out of the stable beside the one at which he had
-come in, and he knew which way to go to find the living room of the
-cabin.
-
-Being satisfied now that he could pass himself off anywhere for
-White-horse Fred, he boldly pushed open the door and found himself
-in the presence of two rough-looking men, who were stretched out on
-benches, with their saddles under their heads for pillows.
-
-At one end of the room was a table, made of unplaned boards, upon
-which was a goodly supply of corn-bread and bacon, a tin plate with a
-fork beside it, and a quart cup, which a villainous-looking Mexican,
-who entered from another door just as Julian came in from the stable,
-was filling with very black-looking coffee. The men on the benches
-greeted him with rude cordiality, the Mexican bowed to him, and Julian,
-assuming an air of carelessness and indifference that he was very far
-from feeling, threw his sombrero into one corner of the room and seated
-himself at the table.
-
-The nervousness and timidity he felt on first entering the room very
-soon began to wear away. The men, after making some coarse jests
-concerning his new clothes, entered into a lively conversation with
-him, and asked a multitude of questions about persons and places which
-Julian had never seen or heard of. From some remarks they let fall he
-found out why they were so inquisitive. They were obliged to remain in
-that cabin month in and month out, scarcely over stirring beyond the
-threshold; they never saw any new faces except those of the captain and
-the two agents who brought the stolen property there and took it away
-again; and they knew nothing of what was going on in the outside world
-except what their visitors told them. Julian gratified their curiosity
-by relating a very few things that had happened that day in Smirker’s
-cabin, and a good many things that had not happened. He repeated every
-word that had been told him about the “captain’s cub,” in the hope
-that the men would tell him the rest of the story, but in this he was
-disappointed. They expressed unbounded delight at the intelligence, but
-said, somewhat fiercely, that Smirker ought to have held his tongue.
-
-But little was said after this. The men having listened to all Julian
-had to tell them, rearranged their blankets and prepared to go to
-sleep; and the boy, being left to himself, gave his whole attention to
-the corn-bread and bacon. When he finished his supper and arose from
-the table, the robbers were both snoring lustily.
-
-“What’s the next thing on the programme, I wonder?” soliloquized
-Julian, who, not knowing what else to do, walked about the room looking
-at the weapons which hung upon the wall. “I am afraid to make a move
-in any direction for fear I shall act so unlike White-horse Fred that
-somebody will suspect me. I’ll stroll around a little and see what sort
-of a place I have got into.”
-
-The Mexican who had served up the supper came in at this moment to
-clear away the dishes, and when he went out again, Julian walked to the
-door through which he disappeared, and stood there looking about him,
-and wondering if it would be safe to venture beyond it. It led into a
-long, narrow hall, at the opposite end of which was a second door that
-communicated with the kitchen. This door was open, and the sounds that
-issued from the room told him that the Mexican was engaged in washing
-the supper dishes.
-
-After a moment’s pause Julian kept slowly on, intending to take a peep
-into the kitchen; but when he had gone about half-way through the hall,
-he saw another door at his left hand, which he had not before noticed.
-It was open, and led into a room which presented a great contrast to
-the one Julian had just left.
-
-[Illustration: “HE SAT BY THE TABLE, WITH HIS HEAD RESTING UPON HIS
-HAND.”]
-
-It was nicely furnished, carpeted, provided with a comfortable bed, and
-there were ornaments on the mantel over the fire-place, and pictures
-hanging upon the walls. In the middle of the floor was a table with the
-remains of a supper upon it, and beside it sat a tall, military-looking
-gentleman dressed in a faded suit of black. He sat with his head
-resting upon his hand, and his eyes fastened upon the floor; and there
-was something in his face, which was turned partly toward him, that
-attracted the boy’s attention and excited his sympathy at once. He knew
-instinctively that the man was in trouble. A second glance showed him
-that he was a prisoner—that he was in double irons.
-
-Who was he, and what had he done to incur the displeasure of the
-robbers that they should keep him so closely confined? If Julian had
-been able to answer this question, and had known the full value of the
-discovery he had just made, he would have been astonished and excited
-beyond measure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-PEDRO MAKES ANOTHER.
-
-
-THE PRISONER raised his head with a weary, languid air when Julian
-stopped before his door, but no sooner did his eyes rest full upon
-the boy than his whole appearance changed as if by magic. The look of
-utter dejection faded from his face, and was succeeded by an expression
-in which excitement and hope were strangely blended. Placing his
-finger upon his lips with a warning gesture, he arose to his feet, and
-then Julian saw that he was even more securely confined than he had
-supposed, being chained to the floor.
-
-The prisoner, who was considerably past the prime of life, was a man of
-very commanding appearance, and in his youthful days must have been a
-model of strength and agility; but now his frame was emaciated to the
-last degree, his cheeks were pale and sunken, and his eyes, which were
-fastened eagerly upon the boy, had a wild, defiant look in them.
-
-As he arose slowly and tremblingly to his feet, he beckoned to Julian
-impatiently, almost fiercely, to enter the room, at the same time
-drawing a letter from his pocket and tossing it toward him. It fell
-upon the carpet just inside the door, and Julian, filled with wonder,
-stepped forward and picked it up. An instant afterward he would have
-given everything he ever hoped to possess if he could have recalled the
-action.
-
-The rattling of dishes in the kitchen suddenly ceased, and the Mexican
-cook came into the hall, humming a tune and snapping his fingers as if
-he felt at peace with himself and all the world, and Julian knew, as
-well as if it had been told him, that he was coming into that room.
-
-The anxiety and alarm he exhibited were fully shared by the prisoner,
-whose face was the color of ashes. He could not have been more fully
-alive to the dangers of the boy’s situation if he had been in the same
-peril himself. After looking all around the room, searching for some
-avenue of escape or place of concealment, he pointed with a quick
-movement behind the door, and sinking back into his chair rested his
-head upon his hand. Julian understood the gesture and was quick to obey
-it. He dodged behind the door like a flash of light, and a moment later
-the Mexican came into the room.
-
-“Have you finished your supper?” he demanded roughly.
-
-“No,” replied the prisoner. “Come in again in a few minutes.”
-
-“Now, I want you to hurry up; do you understand that? I am not going to
-wait all night for those dishes.”
-
-The Mexican went out again and stood looking up and down the hall.
-Once he started toward the living-room, and the movement gave Julian
-new cause for alarm. What if he should go in there and discover his
-absence? What would the robbers do to him if they should find him
-concealed in the room with their prisoner? The fears these questions
-conjured up were speedily set at rest, however, for the man turned
-about and went into the kitchen again; and when the rattling of the
-dishes told Julian that he had resumed his work, he thrust the letter
-into his pocket, slipped from behind the door, and with noiseless steps
-retraced his way to the living-room. He arrived there just in time to
-escape danger from a new source, for the door of the stable opened and
-the hostler entered. He found the boy seated beside the table, with
-his arms folded and his head resting upon them. He had assumed this
-position in order to conceal his face, which he knew was as pale as
-that of the dead.
-
-“Wake up here, Fred!” cried the man, striking Julian on the shoulder
-with his open hand. “You’ve no business to go to sleep. You know it’s
-against orders for anybody except us four fellows to stay in this
-rancho all night. The storm is over, and you can start back now.”
-
-“Start back!” thought Julian, raising his head and rubbing his eyes as
-if he were very sleepy. “Must I ride along that dreadful chasm again
-to-night? Where will that horse take me? Back to Smirker’s, probably.”
-
-“You will have a pleasanter time going than you did coming,” continued
-the hostler. “The moon is shining brightly.”
-
-“Any messages?” asked Julian.
-
-“None that I think of. Be down again to-morrow?”
-
-The boy, replying in the affirmative, accompanied the hostler to the
-stable, and in a few minutes more heard the heavy door locked behind
-him, and was flying along the zigzag path that led from the rancho to
-the chasm.
-
-The ride proved to be much more to his liking than the one he had taken
-a few hours before. The moon lighted up every object within the range
-of his vision, and he had a fair view of the dangers through which he
-had passed. The horse carried him along the chasm in safety, and when
-that was passed Julian threw the reins loose on the animal’s neck and
-gave himself up to his reflections. Of course the prisoner occupied all
-his thoughts. He pulled the letter from his pocket and looked at it on
-all sides. There was something written on it—probably the address of
-the person to whom it was to be delivered; but Julian, with the aid
-of no better light than that afforded by the moon, could not make it
-out. He had two prisoners to assist now, he told himself—Smirker’s
-captive and the old gentleman who had given him the letter. The former,
-as we know, was no longer in need of help; but the other was, and
-in Julian he had a friend worth having. He had others, too, shrewd,
-active, daring men, who had labored unceasingly for years to discover
-his whereabouts and effect his release, but without the least hope of
-success. Silas Roper would have given the best years of his life to
-have known what Julian knew.
-
-It seemed to our hero that the ride would never come to an end. He made
-no attempt to guide his horse, but kept a good lookout on both sides
-in the hope of seeing some familiar landmark. He did not intend to be
-carried back to Smirker’s cabin if he could prevent it. An hour later
-he emerged from a deep ravine into a broad, level valley, and then he
-knew where he was. His horse showed a desire to carry him up a narrow
-path which led to a high hill beyond; but Julian insisted on having his
-own way, and by the help of his spurs soon induced the animal to yield
-to his guidance. The five miles that lay between him and his uncle’s
-rancho were quickly accomplished, and when Julian drew rein in front of
-the gate he felt as if a mountain had suddenly been removed from his
-shoulders.
-
-“I never expected to see this place again,” thought he, as he pounded
-upon the gate with the handle of his hunting-knife. “Uncle Reginald
-told me this morning that he wanted me to feel that I had a right to go
-and come when I pleased, and I guess he will think I haven’t been slow
-to take advantage of his permission. It must be long after midnight,
-but I can’t go to sleep, for I don’t want to miss seeing that watchful
-friend of mine, if he comes about.”
-
-The furious blows Julian showered upon the gate brought the dogs out in
-full chorus, and in a few minutes Pedro also appeared with his lantern.
-He must have known who it was demanding admittance, for he did not stop
-to look through the wicket, but opened the gate at once, and Julian
-rode in.
-
-“I am sorry to be obliged to disturb you at this hour,” said the boy,
-as he dismounted in front of the door of the rancho, “but I couldn’t
-help it.”
-
-“I was up and waiting for you,” was the reply. “Your uncle has given me
-orders to hold myself in readiness to attend to you at any hour of the
-day or night; so you see—well—I—_Carrajo_!”
-
-The Mexican, who had taken Julian’s bridle from his hand, ceased
-speaking very suddenly, raised his lantern, and after surveying the
-horse all over, opened his eyes to their widest extent, and broke
-out into a volley of Spanish oaths and ejaculations indicative of the
-greatest astonishment. He had made an alarming discovery.
-
-“Well, what is it?” asked Julian. “Do you see anything strange?”
-
-“No,” answered the man hastily. “Take this lantern to light you to your
-room, and I will put your horse in the stable.”
-
-“Is anything new going to happen, I wonder?” thought Julian, as he took
-the proffered lantern and made his way along the hall to the sleeping
-apartment. “Pedro has found something to surprise him, and I can’t
-imagine what it can be. I guess Uncle Reginald would be surprised, too,
-if he knew where I have been and what I have seen since he last saw me.”
-
-Never before had a room looked so cozy and comfortable, or a bed so
-inviting, as Julian’s did that night. He was almost exhausted by his
-long ride and the excitement through which he had passed, but he had a
-matter of importance before him, and he could not think of retiring.
-His first move was to light the candle that stood on the table and
-extinguish the lantern, and his second to draw his easy-chair beside
-the table and take the mysterious letter from his pocket. It was soiled
-and crumpled, and Julian thought it must have been written a long time,
-and that the gentleman had carried it constantly about his person,
-waiting for an opportunity to give it to some one. The words written on
-the outside were:
-
- “_To any good Christian into whose hands this letter may come._”
-
-“That means me,” thought the boy. “That poor gentleman is in great
-trouble, I know, and I am Christian enough to help him out of it if I
-can.”
-
-He opened the letter, little dreaming what a surprise was in store
-for him, and looked at the signature to see who the writer was. He
-looked, and the blood went rushing back upon his heart, leaving his
-face ghastly pale. He rubbed his eyes, held the letter closer to the
-candle, and slowly read aloud the words:
-
- “Yours, in dire distress, SAMUEL MORTIMER,
-
- “Late Major of the Army of the United States.”
-
-“It is from my father!” gasped Julian, sinking helplessly back into his
-chair.
-
-“Is it? Then give it to me,” said a stern voice close at his elbow.
-
-A hand suddenly appeared from behind his chair, and clutching the
-letter, attempted to snatch it from his grasp, but the boy’s fingers
-closed upon it with a most determined grip. Thinking of the emigrant,
-he started up with a cry of alarm to find himself confronted by Uncle
-Reginald, whose face was as black as a thunder-cloud.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-HOW IT RESULTED.
-
-
-WHEN PEDRO took charge of Julian’s horse he did not lead him directly
-to the stable, but to the back part of the house, where he left him
-until he could run into the kitchen and procure another lantern.
-When he came out again he made a thorough examination of the animal,
-and having at last satisfied himself that he made no mistake, he ran
-into the house and pounded loudly upon the door of Uncle Reginald’s
-bed-room. The summons quickly brought that gentleman to his feet,
-and when the numerous bolts and locks had been undone, Pedro pushed
-open the door and entered without ceremony. The excitement and alarm
-depicted upon his features must have been contagious, for no sooner did
-Mr. Mortimer glance at his face than his own assumed a very anxious
-look.
-
-“Did Julian ride Snowdrop away this morning, or did I dream it?” asked
-Pedro, before he was fairly inside the door.
-
-“You did not dream it,” was the reply. “He did. Why do you ask the
-question?”
-
-“Because here’s the very mischief to pay. I told you just how it would
-be if you turned that boy loose to run about the country like a wild
-colt. I shouldn’t be surprised if your little game was brought to an
-end in less than twenty-four hours.”
-
-“What do you mean?” cried Uncle Reginald in alarm. “Speak out plainly.”
-
-“I mean that if Julian rode Snowdrop away he has brought Bob
-back—that’s what I mean.”
-
-Pedro’s employer was utterly confounded by this intelligence. His
-under jaw dropped down, and he looked at his companion without saying a
-word.
-
-“It is the truth?” continued the Mexican. “Now where did he leave
-Snowdrop, and where did he get Bob? Either at Smirker’s or at the
-_other place_; and if he has been _there_, it proves something.”
-
-“It does, indeed,” cried Reginald Mortimer, turning white to the lips.
-“It proves that some of my trusted men have turned against me; for
-he could never have gained admittance to either place except through
-treachery. I must talk to him, and see if he has learned anything he
-ought not to know.”
-
-Uncle Reginald threw on his clothes with all possible haste, and
-hurried along the hall to Julian’s room. The door opened when he turned
-the knob, and entering without attracting the boy’s attention, he
-found him in the act of reading a letter. When Uncle Reginald saw the
-letter all his worst suspicions were confirmed. He knew where Julian
-had been, and he knew, too, by whom the missive had been written, and
-what it contained. Approaching the boy’s chair with a cat-like tread,
-he leaned over his shoulder and made an attempt to take the paper out
-of his hand; but Julian detected the move in time to defeat it. He
-sprung to his feet, and for a moment the two stood holding the letter
-between them, and glaring at one another like wild beasts at bay. Uncle
-Reginald was astonished at the look of defiance and determination he
-saw in the eyes that were fastened upon him. It taught him something of
-the spirit of the youth with whom he had to deal.
-
-“Julian,” said he, in a tone of voice which he intended should frighten
-the boy into obedience to his commands, “I have a good deal to say to
-you; but, in the first place, give me that letter.”
-
-“I would as readily give you my life,” was the prompt reply.
-
-“Let go, I tell you,” said Uncle Reginald, in a still sterner voice,
-making a vain effort to unclasp the sinewy fingers that were closed
-upon the letter.
-
-“Let go yourself. It is from my father. I have more right to it than
-you have, and I will not let go.
-
-“I am your guardian, Julian, and have the right to control you, as you
-will quickly learn to your cost, if you do not obey me.”
-
-“I don’t care if you are the King of the Sandwich Islands, you shan’t
-have this letter. I don’t believe you are my guardian. You have done
-nothing but tell me one falsehood after another ever since I have been
-here. You said my father was dead, and he isn’t. He is alive, and I
-have seen him—seen him, too, in prison and chained to the floor. You
-say you are my uncle, and you are not. You have no more right to the
-name you bear than your Mexican servant has—not a bit.”
-
-“Who told you all this?” asked Uncle Reginald, making a strong effort
-to keep back the tempest of passion which was almost ready to break
-forth.
-
-“Your man Smirker. I am going to have him arrested as soon as I can go
-to the fort. He killed a miner and stole his money; he told me so.”
-
-“He told you so!” repeated Reginald Mortimer.
-
-“Yes. He mistook me for a rascally accomplice of his—White-horse Fred.”
-
-“Did Smirker introduce you into Hale’s rancho—I mean the place where
-you saw this prisoner?”
-
-“No. The horse he gave me in exchange for mine introduced me there.”
-
-“Well, go on. What else do you know?”
-
-“I know you had better let go this letter instantly; for if you
-don’t——”
-
-Julian finished the sentence by placing his hand upon the butt of his
-revolver; but before he could draw it from his belt Reginald Mortimer
-released his hold upon the letter, and bounding forward, seized the boy
-by the throat, and attempted to throw him to the floor.
-
-Julian was neither surprised nor frightened. He retained his presence
-of mind. His first thought was not of defense but of the letter; and
-having secured that by thrusting it into his bosom he was ready for
-the struggle. How the contest would have ended if he had been left to
-himself it is hard to tell; but help was close at hand. The hangings
-at the foot of the bed were thrust cautiously aside, and a pair of
-eyes appeared and looked into the room. They watched the combatants a
-moment and then disappeared, and shortly afterward the hangings were
-again raised and three figures sprung from behind them. The foremost
-was Silas Roper; close at his heels followed the strange horseman whom
-Julian had met at Smirker’s cabin; and the rear was brought up by the
-feeble old man, who, by simply walking across the cellar the night
-before, had saved our hero from being carried away captive by Richard
-Mortimer.
-
-At this moment the door through which Uncle Reginald had entered was
-cautiously opened, and another head was thrust into the room. It was
-the head of Pedro, the Mexican, who, after just one glance at what was
-going on inside the apartment, drew back out of sight.
-
-“The jig is danced at last,” said he to himself, as he ran along the
-hall, “and those of us who are found in these parts in the morning will
-be called upon to settle with the fiddler. It is nothing more than I
-expected, but I know how to block this little game.”
-
-Pedro went straight to the stable, led out the horse Julian had brought
-there a short time before, and springing upon his back, rode off toward
-the mountains.
-
-Silas and his friends had come into that room on business, and their
-actions indicated that they were disposed to waste no time in carrying
-it out. The trapper walked straight up to Reginald Mortimer, and
-seizing him by the collar and tearing his hand from the boy’s throat,
-threw him at full length on the floor. Julian staggered to his feet as
-soon as he was relieved of the weight of his antagonist, to find a pair
-of strong arms clasped about his neck, and to hear himself addressed in
-terms of endearment, to which he listened like one in a dream. Then he
-felt himself forced into a chair, and knew that Silas came up and shook
-hands with him, and that he was followed by the feeble old man, who
-said something that was doubtless intended for a welcome; but Julian’s
-mind was in such a whirl of excitement that he could not understand a
-word he uttered.
-
-“What’s the matter with you, anyhow?” asked White-horse Fred, bringing
-his hand down upon Julian’s shoulder with a force that fairly made the
-boy’s teeth rattle. “Can’t you say you are glad to see me, or are you
-above owning a brother who belongs to a band of robbers?”
-
-“Let me collect my thoughts a little, and then I will talk to you,”
-replied Julian. “I can’t quite understand all this.”
-
-“And there’s another as much in the dark as you are,” said Fred,
-pointing to Reginald Mortimer. “You perhaps imagine you are dreaming,
-and I know he wishes he was, don’t you, captain? There are two of us
-here whom you never expected to see in the flesh again; are there not?
-Take your time, Julian, and think the matter over, and while you are
-about it I will look around and pack up a few articles that may be of
-use to you, for we are going to find new quarters for you now.”
-
-Julian settled back in a chair and gazed long and earnestly at all
-the persons in the room—at the old Mexican who stood at his side
-leaning upon his staff; at Silas, sitting upon the bed and smiling
-complacently at him as if he enjoyed his bewilderment; at Reginald
-Mortimer, lying bound and helpless on the floor, and who, like Julian,
-was almost overwhelmed with astonishment; and then at his brother,
-who was skipping about the room, overhauling the bureau, wardrobe and
-book-case, now and then depositing some articles which he took from
-them upon a blanket he had spread on the floor.
-
-“_My brother!_” said Julian aloud. “How strangely it sounds.”
-
-“Doesn’t it!” replied Fred, pausing in his work and looking over his
-shoulder at Julian. “But it is the truth. I don’t know what you think
-about it, but I am delighted to claim the relationship. A brother is
-something worth having out here in this wilderness, I tell you.”
-
-“What is your name?” asked Julian.
-
-“Fred—White-horse Fred, if it suits you better—sworn agent for a
-band of outlaws and rascals of which our worthy uncle here is the
-acknowledged leader. Any objections to my company?”
-
-“Then you are not dead?”
-
-“Do I look like it?”
-
-“And you are not _Julian_ Mortimer?”
-
-“By no means. How could I be when you are that lucky individual?”
-
-“Then why did you tell Smirker so?”
-
-“To help you out of a scrape,” replied Fred, picking up the bundle he
-had made and throwing it over his shoulder. “But I say, Julian,” he
-added, a shade of anxiety overspreading his merry countenance, “of
-course you are not aware of the fact, but you have jeopardized the life
-of one who is very dear to both of us by getting into this fuss with
-Uncle Reginald.”
-
-“How?” asked Julian.
-
-“Why, our father has been a prisoner in the hands of the band of
-which I am a member for eight years, and if anything happens to the
-captain—Uncle Reginald—his jailors have orders to shoot him as soon
-as word comes to their ears.”
-
-“The news is on the way to them now,” said the robber chief, with
-savage emphasis, “and he will be shot before daylight. Pedro is already
-on his road to the mountains.”
-
-“Who sent him?” demanded White-horse Fred.
-
-“I expect he sent himself,” cried Julian, starting from his chair in
-great excitement. “I saw him put his head in at the door just as you
-came in. We must be off at once.”
-
-“But where will we go, and what shall we do?” asked Fred. “We don’t
-know where father is; if we did, we should have released him before
-this time.”
-
-“Well, I know where he is, and I have seen him. More than that, I’ve
-got a letter from him.”
-
-“Hold hard thar!” exclaimed Silas, as Julian drew the letter from his
-pocket, and moved nearer the candle. “Don’t read a word of it here, for
-thar’s no knowin’ how many pairs of ears thar may be listenin’ to it.
-Come with us, an’ we will talk this matter over.”
-
-Julian had never seen three persons more excited than the trapper and
-his companions were over the announcement he had just made. It did not
-take the form of words, but showed itself in their countenances, and
-in their hurried, nervous actions. They prepared to leave the room at
-once. Silas raised the captive robber to his shoulder as if he had been
-a sack of flour, while the old Mexican skipped before him like a boy of
-sixteen, and held up the hangings which concealed the entrance to the
-secret passage-way. White-horse Fred, who had looked into the muzzle of
-Smirker’s revolver without flinching or even changing color, was pale
-enough now, and the hand with which he extended Julian’s sombrero to
-him now trembled like a leaf. They left the room without saying a word,
-and followed Silas, who led the way along the passage to the cellar,
-where they found a man with a lantern waiting for them. It was Romez,
-the hostler. He was greatly astonished to see the trapper carrying
-Reginald Mortimer on his shoulder, but without asking any questions he
-turned and mounted a ladder which rested against the wall of the cellar.
-
-While Julian was going up he had leisure to make an examination of
-the store-house. It was a natural cave in the mountain, and seemed to
-have no roof—at least there was none that could be seen. The wall
-against which the ladder was placed arose for the height of thirty
-feet, as smooth and perpendicular as if it had been fashioned by the
-hand of man, and terminated in a broad, level platform. When the
-parties stepped upon this platform they paused until Romez had drawn up
-the ladder, and then mounted to a second ledge of rock higher up the
-cavern. This ladder was also drawn up, and the journey resumed along
-a narrow, slippery path, that finally ended in a dark opening, which
-proved to be the mouth of a smaller cave.
-
-The interior of this cavern presented a scene which filled Julian
-with astonishment. Almost the first object his eyes rested upon was
-Smirker’s burly form stretched out on a little pallet in one corner.
-He was securely bound, and did not look much now like the reckless
-desperado he had appeared when Julian first met him in his cabin. But
-the presence of this man did not occasion him so much astonishment as
-the sight of the gold that was scattered about the room. He saw it
-there in all shapes—in dust, nuggets, quartz and coin. It was stowed
-away in chests, tied up in little bags, and packed upon shelves and
-piled in corners as if it had been merchandise of some description.
-Julian had never dreamed that all the gold mines of California could
-produce as much of the precious metal as he saw collected in that one
-small room. The cave was also used as a receptacle for various odds and
-ends—rifles, revolvers, muskets, hunting-knives, saddles and bridles.
-As Julian glanced about him he told himself that he knew now what had
-become of some of the articles Uncle Reginald had missed from his
-rancho.
-
-“During your travels to-day did you hear Smirker or anybody else say
-anything about some hidden treasure which he hoped to handle some day?”
-asked White-horse Fred.
-
-Julian replied that he did.
-
-“Well, here it is. This is the cause of all our trouble. If it hadn’t
-been for these yellow boys we might have been a united, happy family
-to-day.”
-
-“I don’t reckon it’ll be very long afore we’re all together agin like
-we used to be,” said Silas, as he deposited his prisoner upon the
-pallet beside the other. “If the major is where we can get at him we’ll
-have him out this very night. How did you find him, Julian?”
-
-“Smirker gave me a horse in exchange for mine that took me straight to
-his prison,” replied the boy. And then he went on to relate, in a few
-rapid words, how his curiosity had led him to walk about the rancho,
-and that while on his way to the kitchen he had found the prisoner. He
-described, too, how narrowly he had escaped discovery by the Mexican
-when he came in to remove the supper dishes, and told what had passed
-between Uncle Reginald and himself prior to the arrival of Silas and
-his friends.
-
-“You are a lucky fellow, Julian,” said White-horse Fred, when he had
-finished his story. “I have been making regular daily journeys to that
-rancho for more than a year, and never saw or heard anything to lead me
-to suspect that affairs were not all right there. I used to wonder why
-there were four men at that station and only one, or at the most two,
-at the others, and have thought it strange that they should always be
-so particular to hurry me away. No matter how bad the weather was they
-wouldn’t let me stay all night. But what is to be done, Silas? Pedro
-has gone to the mountains to warn Hale and his crowd, and if he gets
-there before we do, the discovery Julian has made will be of no value
-to us.”
-
-“‘Tain’t wuth while to do anything in a hurry,” replied the trapper.
-“Let’s hear what’s in that letter.”
-
-Julian drew the letter from his pocket, and taking his stand near the
-lantern, began reading it aloud.
-
-We do not reproduce it because its contents have no bearing upon our
-story. It was just such a letter as any one of us would have tried to
-write had we been placed in Major Mortimer’s situation. It described
-some events that happened long years before, and which we shall
-presently hear from the lips of White-horse Fred, and pleaded for
-assistance in language that would have wrung tears of pity from any but
-a savage.
-
-Julian’s cheeks were wet long before he ceased reading, and once he
-stopped and turned toward the robber chief as if he had half a mind
-to take an ample revenge on him. The old Mexican wept like a child,
-and gave vent to his indignation by pounding on the floor with his
-staff; while Silas and White-horse Fred stood, with clinched hands and
-compressed lips, gazing at Julian with eyes that would grow dim in
-spite of them.
-
-A dead silence succeeded the reading of the letter, which was finally
-broken by the trapper, who, after a short consultation with the two
-boys, determined upon a plan of action. This he explained in a few
-words, and preparations were at once made to carry it into effect.
-
-Leaving the old Mexican to watch the prisoners, the rest of the party
-descended to the cellar and thence made their way into the stables.
-Julian mounted Snowdrop and Fred went in pursuit of her mate, but he
-was gone.
-
-“Good luck attends us on all sides to-night!” said he gleefully. “Here
-were a dozen horses in the stable, and instead of taking a fresh one
-that blockhead Pedro selected an animal which has already traveled
-forty miles to-night. So much the better for us. We’ll overtake him
-before he has gone five miles.”
-
-The party mounted in haste, and galloping out of the gate directed
-their course down the valley.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-FRED’S STORY.
-
-
-WHITE-HORSE FRED and his long-lost but now recovered brother were boys
-who were not much given to sentiment; but although they did not go into
-ecstasies over one another, they were none the less delighted at their
-reunion. They kept as close together as possible, and clung to each
-other’s hands as they galloped along, as if afraid that something might
-again come between them to separate them.
-
-“Well, old fellow,” said Fred at length, “it didn’t take you long to
-raise a row after you got here, did it. Uncle Reginald little dreamed,
-when he was working so hard to find you in order to further his own
-ends, how completely you would kick over his kettle of fish in less
-than twenty-four hours after your arrival. We’ll keep those white
-horses as long as we live, won’t we? They are the best friends we’ve
-ever had.”
-
-“I believe that now,” replied Julian; “but I didn’t think so when they
-were roaming about among the mountains with me and carrying me to
-robber dens. But, Fred, you are not a horse-thief?”
-
-“I never stole a horse, or anything else, if that is what you mean; but
-I have been a member of the band for more than a year. I’ve had charge
-of a good many dollars’ worth of stolen property first and last, and if
-I had happened to fall into the hands of the settlers while I had it in
-my possession, I’d have been gone up sure.”
-
-“Why, Fred, what made you do it.”
-
-“I had an object in view—one that justified even worse things than
-that. It will not retard our speed in the least if we talk as we go
-along, so I will tell my story first—I know you are dying to hear
-it—and then I will listen to yours. Where shall I begin?”
-
-“At the beginning, of course. Tell me who I am, how I came to be an
-inmate of Jack Bowles’ cabin, and all about it. I have lived among
-mysteries for the last few weeks, and I want every one of them
-explained.”
-
-“And yet there isn’t a single mystery connected with your history, or
-mine, either,” replied White-horse Fred. “I can make everything plain
-to you in ten minutes. In the first place, that old rancho back there
-is our home. It was built by Grandfather Cordova, our mother’s father,
-who came out here in early times. When I tell you that it was intended
-as a fort as well as a dwelling, you will know how those secret
-passage-ways came to be there. Such a building was necessary in those
-days, for it was hardly safe for white men about——”
-
-“Safe!” interrupted Julian. “It isn’t safe now.”
-
-“Oh, things have changed wonderfully since that house was built, and
-even during my recollection. We call ourselves a quiet, orderly,
-well-disposed set of people; but when grandfather first came out here
-he saw some excitements, I tell you. He was a native of Mexico, and
-brought with him a small colony of his own people. The Indians were so
-troublesome that the government was obliged to keep a strong body of
-troops here, and father was one of their officers. He commanded the
-fort; and Silas, who was in more than one battle with him, says he was
-a fighter worth looking at. He had not been out here very long before
-he fell in love with and married our mother, Inez Cordova, threw up his
-commission, and went to digging gold and raising cattle. Everything
-went on smoothly until grandfather and mother died, and then the
-trouble began. In one night our family was completely broken up by a
-couple of adventurers, who ought certainly to have had some mercy on us
-if they had no affection for us, for they were our mother’s brother and
-cousin.
-
-“So far your story corresponds with the one Sanders told me,” said
-Julian.
-
-“Can’t you remember anything about those happy days?” continued
-White-horse Fred. “I can, but then I am almost two years older than
-you are. I can remember that Juan—the old fellow who came into your
-room with us to-night—and his two boys, Romez and Antoine, were great
-favorites of mine. Juan was father’s _major domo_—he had charge of
-everything in the house. Romez was the hostler, and Antoine was the
-chief herdsman. They were life-long servants of our family, and they
-and a few others have since proved themselves as true as steel. When I
-became old enough to be trusted alone with a horse, I used to ride out
-to Antoine’s hut, which was located in the lower end of the valley, and
-spend weeks at a time with him, assisting in herding the cattle and
-learning to throw the lasso. Father would occasionally ride out there
-to see that I was all right, and now and then I would come home to
-spend a day with you.”
-
-“I can remember those visits,” observed Julian.
-
-“At that time, in spite of the gloom thrown over it by the death of
-our mother, which occurred when you were about three years old, our
-house was not the desolate place it is now. The officers of the fort
-used to visit there regularly to talk over army matters with father,
-eat Juan’s excellent dinners, and enjoy the splendid shooting the
-mountains afforded. Father did considerable trading with the trappers
-and friendly Indians; the house was always full, and there was always
-something interesting going on there. Somehow the story got abroad that
-father was immensely rich. Well, he was wealthy, but he didn’t have as
-much money as most people supposed he did.”
-
-“How much was he worth, anyhow?” asked Julian.
-
-“Perhaps a couple of million, and the most of that once belonged to
-grandfather.”
-
-“Why, I heard Pedro tell Sanders that he had fifty millions stowed away
-somewhere.”
-
-“Ah, nonsense! Pedro has about as clear ideas of wealth as he has of
-the moon; and that’s something he knows nothing at all about. The story
-got wind from this simple circumstance: Father was one day walking up
-a little ravine a short distance from the house, prospecting, when he
-found a pretty good-sized nugget. The next day he picked up another,
-and a week or two afterward he found a third. He told some of the
-officers of it, and they spread it around. There were a few miners
-here then, and they at once crowded into the ravine and turned up
-every inch of it; but not another nugget was brought to light. That,
-however, did not serve to convince them that there was not a gold mine
-of wonderful richness hidden about there somewhere. They industriously
-circulated the report, and finally the story, together with the news of
-grandfather’s death and mother’s, reached the ears of a couple of men
-in San Francisco, who at once laid their plans to possess themselves
-of father’s wealth. They were Reginald and Richard Cordova, mother’s
-brother and cousin.
-
-“They were graceless scamps, those same fellows—professional gamblers,
-who had been cast off by grandfather on account of their profligate
-habits. As our parents had never mentioned their names, no one out here
-knew that there were such men in existence. They came to the mountains,
-and, as bad luck would have it, the first man whose acquaintance they
-made was Ned Sanders. They pumped him carefully, and found that he
-was just the fellow they wanted, for he knew a good deal about our
-family, and would do anything for money. They unfolded their plans to
-him, which were to murder father and his boys, and claiming to be his
-brothers, seize upon his property. Sanders entered heartily into their
-scheme, but he proposed a slight change of programme.
-
-“‘I’ve got better idees nor them,’ said he. ‘The ole major’s got a heap
-of money laid up somewhar, but it ain’t a drop in the bucket to what
-we’d finger if we could only find that hidden gold mine of his’n. We’ll
-make way with the boys, ’cause they won’t be of no use to us; but we
-won’t harm the major. In course he won’t want to tell us whar the gold
-mine is, and we can’t scare him into it, nuther, ’cause he’s one of
-them kind of fellers that don’t scare wuth a cent; but we can force it
-out o’ him in another way. We’ll make a pris’ner of him, and shut him
-up away from his horses, an’ his hounds, an’ his cattle, an’ keep him
-shut up till he is willin’ to tell us what we want to know.’
-
-“Just see the heathenish ingenuity Sanders exhibited!” exclaimed
-White-horse Fred angrily. “Knowing full well that father could not be
-frightened into revealing his secret, he resolved to torture it out
-of him; and he decided, too, upon the only method that could by any
-possibility prove successful. Being a man of active habits, it would
-be but little short of death for him to be shut out from the world and
-deprived of occupation. Liberty and something to do were as necessary
-to his existence as the food he ate.
-
-“Sanders also told the plotters that Major Mortimer and his boys were
-not the only ones with whom they would have to deal. There were some
-firm friends of the family who must be got rid of, or they would
-make trouble. First, there was Silas Roper. During a battle with the
-Indians, father had saved his life at the risk of his own, and Silas
-was so grateful for it that he gave up hunting and trapping and turned
-herdsman in order that he might always be near father. It wouldn’t be
-a safe piece of business to attempt to harm the major or any of his
-family while Silas was about. And there was old Juan and half a dozen
-others, who had been employed in the family in grandfather’s life-time.
-They could never be induced to lend their aid to so villainous a
-scheme, and they must be killed. In order to cope with so many
-men—Silas was a small army in himself—it would be necessary to have
-more help, and this Sanders agreed to furnish.
-
-“The plan was thoroughly discussed, and a time set for carrying it
-into execution. When the night arrived, Sanders appeared with three
-choice spirits, named Smirker, Hale and Lutz. They began operations by
-effecting an entrance into the rancho through the cellar. Father was
-surprised in his bed, and bound hand and foot; three of the obnoxious
-Mexicans were murdered in their sleep; but old Juan, taking the alarm,
-fled from the house. He was seen, however, pursued, and overtaken on
-the brink of a deep gully, a short distance away. He was stabbed, shot
-twice, beaten on the head with the butt of a rifle, and finally thrown
-over the cliff; but he is to-night hale and hearty, in spite of his
-wounds and his ninety-five years.
-
-“The next in order was Silas Roper. They surrounded his cabin, broke
-open the door, and there their operations in that quarter ceased. The
-trapper, who says he always keeps himself in trim for a fight, assumed
-the offensive at once, and whipped out his assailants with an ease that
-must have astonished them. Lutz, who was the first to enter the cabin,
-was shot dead in his tracks; Reginald received a blow over the head
-that laid him aside for a week or two; Sanders got another, and so did
-Smirker; and Silas escaped without a scratch.
-
-“The next thing was to go back to the house after you and me. I
-remember as well how I felt when I awoke and found the outlaws in my
-room as if the incidents I am trying to describe had happened only
-yesterday. I remember, too, of seeing you jump out of bed, and draw
-a bee-line for the door. You got out, but Sanders ran after you and
-brought you back.”
-
-“That must have been what he referred to when he told me that he and I
-once ran a foot-race,” said Julian.
-
-“I can recall the thoughts that passed through my mind when Sanders and
-Smirker, accompanied by Richard, were taking us down to the lake to
-throw us in. I remember of falling through the air and sinking in the
-water, but beyond that all is blank to me. After I was thrown in, an
-idea suddenly occurred to Richard, and he concluded to make a change
-in his programme, and save you alive for some future emergency. A time
-might arrive when an heir to the hidden gold mine—in the existence of
-which he and his cousin firmly believed—would be a convenient thing to
-have about. There were a good many ways in which he might be used. So
-Richard, after seeing his cousin disposed of in some remote place where
-he would not be likely to be discovered, and giving Sanders some very
-minute instructions, took you and started off to Missouri.
-
-“In the meantime, old Juan had recovered his consciousness. When he was
-thrown into the gorge he did not fall to the bottom, but lodged on a
-leaning tree about four feet below the brink of the cliff. When he came
-to himself he crawled down to the lake to bathe his wounds, but stopped
-just before he reached the bank, for he saw Richard and the two outlaws
-coming down with us. He saw them throw me into the water, and when they
-went away with you he jumped in and rescued me.
-
-“In the morning those of the servants who had not been molested,
-and who had slept soundly in spite of all the noise and confusion,
-awoke to find the rancho almost deserted. The owner and his family
-had disappeared, and some of their own number were lying dead in
-their beds. They went at once in search of the commanding officer of
-the fort, who came up, but could make nothing of our disappearance.
-At the end of a week or two, as nothing was seen or heard of us, he
-concluded that we also had been foully dealt with, and thought it high
-time that some one was put there to attend to things. He asked the
-servants if they knew whether or not father had any relatives near,
-and Sanders, who happened to be present, said he had heard him speak
-of two brothers, Reginald and Richard Mortimer, who were living in San
-Francisco. The officer decided to send a letter to them, and Sanders
-agreed to carry it. He made a great show of starting off, but rode only
-about five miles through the mountains to a miserable little hut where
-Reginald was waiting for him.
-
-“Two months afterward Uncle Reginald was acknowledged by the officers,
-the settlers, and the servants as the lawful master of the rancho, and
-father was languishing in the prison into which he had been thrown,
-with the assurance that he should never come out of it until he told
-where his wealth was concealed. He denied all knowledge of the gold
-mine, but said that he had some money stowed away in a safe place, and
-that he would die in confinement before he would tell where it was.”
-
-“Why didn’t Silas and Juan go to the commander of the fort and tell
-him what had happened?” asked Julian.
-
-“I was just coming to that. They met the next morning in our
-treasure-house, which you visited to-night, to talk the matter over.
-They had both seen enough to satisfy them that father had been carried
-away as a prisoner, and they had no difficulty in guessing at the
-object his captors had in view. If they told the commander of the fort
-he would send his cavalry scouting about among the mountains, and
-that would alarm the robbers, and perhaps lead them to murder father.
-The first thing to be done was to find out where he was confined,
-and it would be time enough to call in the help of the troops when
-that had been ascertained. But with all their efforts—and they did
-everything men could do—they failed to gain the slightest clew to his
-whereabouts. He had disappeared as completely as though he had never
-existed at all. They spent years in the search, but until you told them
-what you had seen to-night they knew no more about the matter than they
-did when father was first captured.
-
-“About four years ago I thought I was getting old enough and shrewd
-enough to take a part in the search myself; but Silas and Juan
-would not permit it. They said that as long as I kept out of sight
-everybody would believe me dead, but that if I showed my face I would
-be recognized at once, and Reginald would send some one after me who
-would make sure work of me. But at last I could endure the inactivity
-no longer; and once, when Silas was away in the mountains, I came out
-of the cave in which I had spent the best part of four years of my
-life, and began to look about to find something to do. Most of father’s
-servants were gone, and their places were supplied with new ones;
-but there were some of the old ones left, and among them were Romez,
-Antoine and Ithuriel. The latter had been promoted by Richard Mortimer,
-as he called himself, to the position of body-servant; Romez held his
-old position as hostler, and Antoine was still a herdsman. I lived with
-the latter for two years, assisting him in his duties, and waiting
-impatiently for something to turn up. I was careful to keep out of
-sight of Reginald and Richard, but mingled freely with the rest of the
-people about the rancho, and even with the soldiers and settlers, and
-no one knew me. I paid regular nightly visits to old Juan, who lived
-in the cave where father’s money was hidden, and once while on my way
-there something happened that suggested to me a plan of action.
-
-“There are two passage-ways that lead to the cellar—one from the house
-and the other from the outside of the hill. I always went in through
-the latter, and I went very slowly and cautiously too, for fear of
-finding some one in there whom I did not care to see. One night I did
-find some persons there—Reginald and Richard, who were examining the
-walls of the cellar by the aid of a lantern. Old Juan said they used to
-spend a good deal of time there looking for the concealed treasure.
-
-“I was so surprised to see them that I did not think of retreat, and
-after I had time to collect my thoughts I did not feel any inclination
-to turn back. Although I had often seen the men at a distance, this
-was the first time since that memorable night that I had ever been so
-near to them, and I wanted to take a good look at them. Silas and Juan
-had often told me in the most emphatic language never to attempt to
-harm one of them, even if I got the opportunity—and knowing that they
-had father’s welfare at heart, and that they were wiser than myself, I
-had promised to obey. But I could not resist the temptation to draw my
-rifle to my shoulder and cover both their heads with the sight—they
-were standing closely together and squarely in line, so that one
-bullet would have passed through them both—telling myself the while
-how easily I could shoot them, and how richly they deserved it. While
-I stood in this position Reginald turned toward me. Finding that I
-was discovered, I did not lower my rifle, but kept it at my shoulder,
-determined that if he offered to molest me I would resist him to the
-best of my ability. But I soon found that I had nothing to fear. He
-stood for a moment gazing at me with eyes that seemed almost ready to
-start from their sockets, and said in a husky voice:
-
-“Merciful heavens! Dick, look there!”
-
-Dick looked, and one look was enough. He pronounced my name with
-a shriek, and dropping his lantern, fled from the cellar, closely
-followed by his cousin. At first I was greatly astonished at their
-behavior, but after thinking the matter over, I began to understand
-it. Reginald and Richard are very ignorant men, in spite of their fine
-flow of language, and of course they are superstitious. They believe
-in signs and omens, and apparitions, and knowing that they had put me
-at the bottom of the lake, they could not comprehend how I came to be
-standing there alive and unharmed. This, as I have said, suggested to
-me a plan of action. I knew all about those secret passage-ways, and I
-made use of them to keep those two guilty men in a constant state of
-alarm. I gave up herding cattle and spent all my time loitering about
-the house, listening to the conversations between Reginald and his
-followers, and showing myself whenever I saw an opportunity to frighten
-somebody. I tied a piece of thick green cloth over the bull’s-eye of a
-dark lantern, and carrying this in my hand I used to wander about the
-passage-ways of nights, uttering the most unearthly shrieks and howls.
-I paid regular visits to Reginald’s sleeping-room and Dick’s, and took
-possession of everything I could carry away, such as money, weapons,
-clothing and furniture. Old Juan undertook to watch the cellar. He
-showed himself every time Reginald, Richard, or Pedro went in there,
-and finally frightened Richard so badly that he left the house and went
-to live in a little cabin he built in the mountains.
-
-“One night I went into a room to see what I could pick up, and whom
-should I find there but Ned Sanders and an outlaw friend of his fast
-asleep in bed. I took possession of their weapons, carried them into
-the passage-way out of their reach, and then placing my lantern in one
-corner, and taking my stand in the middle of the room where the light
-would fall squarely on my face, began to groan awfully. I was not long
-in arousing them, and when their eyes were fairly open they were not
-long in leaving the room either. I never found an opportunity to appear
-to Sanders after that, for he shunned the rancho as if it had been a
-grizzly bear’s den.”
-
-“I spent a good many months in this way, and at last finding that I
-could learn nothing about father, I went to herding cattle again. In
-the meantime Uncle Reginald and Sanders had organized a band of robbers
-and horse-thieves; and this, as I afterward learned, was the occasion
-of a fierce quarrel between the cousins, who came to blows over it.
-Richard didn’t want anything to do with such an organization, believing
-that it would endanger the success of their plans, but Reginald carried
-his point. Richard never forgave his cousin for that, and being
-determined to be revenged upon him he has been working for the last two
-years to obtain possession of all father’s money, intending as soon as
-he gets it to decamp and leave Reginald in the lurch.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-FRED’S STORY, CONCLUDED.
-
-
-“BELIEVING that some of the members of this band of robbers knew where
-father was,” continued White-horse Fred, “I watched for an opportunity
-to join it, and finally succeeded in my object. I became one of the
-runners, or couriers; that is, it was my duty to convey orders and
-the stolen property from one point to another. It was a subordinate
-position, although I ran just as much risk as Sanders, or any other
-member of the band who did the stealing, and I knew that as long as I
-held it I could not hope to learn much of the secret business of the
-organization; consequently I worked hard for promotion, and, if I am
-to believe what I have been told, I did some reckless things. At any
-rate, it wasn’t long before the name of White-horse Fred became pretty
-well known about here. I have been chased and shot at by soldiers
-and settlers more times than I can remember, and I have been in the
-fort when the officers were talking about me and laying plans for my
-capture.”
-
-“Why didn’t they recognize you?” asked Julian.
-
-“I didn’t say that _I_ was well known, did I? I said my _name_ was. The
-officers didn’t know who I was—that’s the reason they didn’t recognize
-me. There were only five men who knew me by the name I bore—Smirker,
-and the four fellows at Hale’s rancho. No one dreamed that White-horse
-Fred and the apparition who kept Uncle Reginald’s rancho in such an
-uproar were one and the same person, and I had emphatic orders from
-Silas and Juan never to reveal myself. Everybody had heard of the queer
-doings at Uncle Reginald’s, and it was whispered about among the
-robbers that Fred Mortimer and old Juan had risen from their graves to
-torment their murderers. I was in hopes that we would soon frighten
-Reginald away; but he had come there after father’s money, and he was
-determined he would not go until he got it.
-
-“All this while—my story has now covered the space of more than seven
-years—Reginald was keeping father closely confined in some hidden
-prison, hoping to break his spirit and force him to tell where his
-money was concealed. But father remained firm, and Reginald became
-tired of waiting at last, and so did Sanders. The latter finally
-thought up another plan by which to obtain possession of the treasure,
-and when he had matured it he went to Reginald to talk it over.
-
-“Old Juan, who was always on the watch, saw him go into the rancho, and
-believing that he had some private business to transact that it might
-be well for him to overhear, he went into the passage-way, opened the
-secret door that led into Reginald’s sleeping-room, and set himself to
-listen. We afterward learned that there was another listener to that
-conversation, and it was Richard. He and Reginald were now at open
-enmity. He never made his appearance at the rancho in the day-time, but
-loitered about there of nights, searching everywhere for the money,
-and taking notes of all that was going on—and I ought to say right
-here that Richard and Sanders, who had hitherto been fast friends, had
-a falling out. Richard, for some reasons of his own, did not want his
-cousin to know that you were alive. Sanders and Smirker were the only
-ones beside himself who were acquainted with the secret, and as soon as
-they found out that he wanted it kept from Reginald’s knowledge they
-demanded yellow boys as the price of their silence. Richard supplied
-their wants as long as he could, but at last his funds were exhausted
-and he could obtain no more. Sanders had been expecting this, and
-having pumped Richard’s pockets dry, he deserted him and went over to
-Reginald.
-
-“‘Capen,’ said Sanders, when he and Reginald had locked themselves in
-the bed-room in which their private interviews were always held, ‘I’m
-gettin’ monstrous tired of waitin’ fur a sight o’ them big nuggets. The
-old major’s never goin’ to give in—he’ll die fust.’
-
-“‘I am afraid so,’ replied Reginald; ‘but what can I do more than I
-have done? It is a very easy thing to deprive a man of his liberty,
-but it’s quite a different matter to make him open his mouth when he’s
-determined he won’t. If we had only been smart enough to keep the boys
-alive, we could have worked on his feelings through them. But he knows
-they are dead, and that’s what makes him so desperate.’
-
-“‘I know nary one of ’em hain’t dead,’ replied Sanders. ‘I mean, you
-see——’
-
-“‘Yes, I know what you mean. You mean that they are both dead,
-but that one of them has come back and walks around nights,’ said
-Reginald, looking all about the room as if he expected to see something
-frightful. ‘But you haven’t seen the other—Julian—have you.’
-
-“‘No; but I know he’s alive. Oh, it’s a fact,’ added Sanders, seeing
-by the expression on Reginald’s face that he was hardly prepared to
-believe this. ‘He wasn’t never hurt at all. Fred was flung into the
-lake and drownded—an’ I don’t see why in creation he don’t stay
-thar—but Julian wasn’t.’
-
-“And with this preface, Sanders went on to tell what Richard had done
-with you, and why he had saved you alive. He said that from some
-remarks Richard had accidentally let fall he had learned pretty nearly
-where you could be found, and added that for a suitable consideration
-he would produce you.
-
-“‘An’ when we get him out here, capen, we’ll have two strings to our
-bow,’ continued Sanders. ‘I don’t go in very strong fur attemptin’ to
-work on the feelin’s of the major—leastways not till we have tried
-something else—’cause he’s awfully hard-headed, an’ when he onct makes
-up his mind to a thing he’s as sot as one of the Rocky Mountains.
-Thar’s one other man in the world who knows whar the nuggets is hid,
-an’ if we can get hold of him, I b’lieve we can make _him_ open his
-mouth. It’s Silas Roper. You see, him an’ old Juan used to do purty
-much as they pleased here in the major’s time, an’ they knowed all
-about his private business matters. Juan would be the best one to work
-on, ’cause he hain’t got Silas’s grit, but he hain’t come back here in
-sich shape that we can manage him.’
-
-“‘But we don’t know where Silas is,’ said Reginald.
-
-“‘Never mind. He’s about here somewhar, an I’ll bet a hoss onto it. An’
-I’ll bet on another thing, too: As soon as Silas finds out that we’ve
-got Julian here he’ll come out of his hidin’-place, an’ we can captur’
-him. Understand my plan, don’t you?’
-
-“Reginald did understand it, and gave it his hearty approval. He spent
-an hour talking the matter over with Sanders, giving him some very
-minute instructions, so that there could be no possible chance for
-failure, and brought the interview to an end by telling him a long list
-of lies to be repeated to you, and furnishing him money to bear his
-expenses to the States.”
-
-“I have often wondered what object Sanders could have had in
-misrepresenting things as he did,” remarked Julian.
-
-“I can tell you. Reginald thought it very probable that you had been
-left in some thickly settled part of the country, and he was afraid
-that Sanders, if left to himself, might attempt to carry you away
-by force. By doing that he might have aroused the settlers and the
-officers of the law in the neighborhood, and thus defeated his plans.
-If he had once succeeded in getting you out on the prairie away from
-everybody, he would have thrown off his mask and appeared in his true
-character very quickly.
-
-“Sanders started for the States that very night, and so did Richard.
-The latter was determined that if he could not possess father’s money
-nobody should, and he hoped to reach your hiding-place in advance
-of Sanders, and dispose of you so effectually that you never could
-be found. Old Juan told Silas about it when he came in from the
-mountains, and he also started for the States, intending to wait
-for you at St. Joe, and to take charge of you if Sanders brought you
-there. He succeeded in getting hold of you at last, and brought you to
-the mountains. Richard, finding himself outwitted, joined your train
-in disguise, hoping to find an opportunity to shoot you during the
-journey, while Sanders came on ahead and raised a band of Indians to
-attack the train. He had been promised $5,000 if he would deliver you
-into Reginald’s hands, and that money he was determined to have. Our
-affairs have been pretty well mixed up for the last eight years, but
-this night will see them straightened out again.”
-
-“I certainly hope so. But, Fred, why didn’t Silas, when he found me,
-tell me that he was a friend, and that he would assist me?”
-
-“He did tell you that. If he had told you more, would you have believed
-him? Hadn’t Sanders deceived you and made you suspicious of everybody?
-When you and Silas were sitting on the steps of the hotel in St. Joe,
-and he told you that he knew who you were, didn’t you jump up and run
-away from him? The old fellow isn’t much given to talking anyhow. He
-believes in actions rather than words. You know that he was captured by
-Sanders and some of his band on the night the train was attacked, and
-that he escaped from them the next morning.”
-
-“What would Reginald have done to him if he had been brought to the
-rancho?”
-
-“He would have tried to force him to tell where father’s money was
-hidden, and if he had refused, as he certainly would have done, that
-would have been the last of Silas. Then Reginald would have used you to
-frighten father, telling him that he had you in his power, and that if
-he didn’t tell where that money was he would do something dreadful to
-you.”
-
-“What was Reginald’s object in treating me so kindly? Why didn’t he
-keep me a close prisoner?”
-
-“Why, he wanted to make Silas Roper show himself, so that he could be
-captured. That could never be done by shutting you up. The best way
-was to give you full swing, and allow you to roam about as much as
-you pleased, for then Silas would be sure to see you, and you would
-sooner or later get into the habit of meeting him regularly; and when
-that state of affairs had been brought about, it would be but little
-trouble for Sanders and some of his band to surprise and capture Silas.
-In order to make you contented and willing to stay with him, Reginald
-provided you with every comfort, and told you that story about your
-being the sole heir to the property. He thought that would serve as
-well as bolts and bars to keep you about the rancho, for no boy in full
-possession of his senses would be likely to run away while he believed
-that he had a million or two in prospect.
-
-“I was out riding my route on the night you arrived, but old Juan
-was on the watch as usual, and he knew when you were brought into
-the rancho. He frightened Richard, and made him abandon the idea of
-carrying you off to the mountains; and when you fell down in a swoon,
-he and Romez took you back to your room and put you to bed. It was
-Juan who wrote the note you received, and opened your windows the next
-morning before you awoke.”
-
-“I shall never forget how surprised I was to find that some one had
-been in there,” observed Julian.
-
-“When I visited Juan the next morning I found Silas with him. They told
-me what had happened the night before, adding that you had just gone
-out riding on Snowdrop. I was very much disappointed, for I had hoped
-to meet you as soon as you arrived. You see, to explain how you came
-by that mare, I make my home with Antoine, the herdsman. When I return
-from Hale’s I generally go there and leave my horse, and then set off
-to visit old Juan. Yesterday morning when I went home I found Snowdrop
-missing, and Antoine told me that Reginald had taken her. He gave her
-to you, and that one move on his part did us more good than eight
-years’ hard work has done.
-
-“I had an encouraging piece of news for Silas. Smirker had told me
-that he knew where father was confined, and the trapper and I, after
-talking the matter over, decided to arrest him, and force the secret
-from him. On the same day he told me this he communicated to me another
-piece of news, and that was that he had two holes to his burrow, and a
-way of escape to be made use of in case of an attack from the soldiers
-or settlers; and thinking that if we concluded to make a raid on him
-when Silas came home, it might be well enough to know where that other
-hole to his burrow was, I spent one whole day in looking for it. I
-discovered it at last, and when I came down through it and burst into
-his cabin, Smirker was so angry that he had half a mind to shoot me.”
-
-“He told me about that,” said Julian. “But did he never suspect your
-identity?”
-
-“Never until this morning; and then he did not suspect me at first,
-but you. He was one of those who threw me into the lake, and when
-he learned that I wouldn’t stay there, and that I had come back to
-Reginald’s rancho, and was cutting up dreadful shines, he became badly
-frightened. He often talked to me about it, and acknowledged that he
-was afraid that the “haunt,” as he called it, might take it into his
-head to visit his cabin. When he saw us together this morning, and
-found out that one of us was a Mortimer, he knew the other must be
-also, for he says we look exactly alike, and so does Silas. Hale and
-his crowd must also see a very strong resemblance, or else you never
-could have passed yourself off for me in that rancho, where they are
-constantly on the lookout for treachery. Smirker believed that you
-were White-horse Fred, and also that you were Fred Mortimer, and the
-discovery he thought he had made alarmed him greatly. He breathed much
-more freely after you had gone out, and so did I.
-
-“For myself I should have felt no fears, had it not been for one thing.
-I had with me a bag containing nuggets, dust and money, which I was to
-deliver to Smirker; if he searched me and found that bag in my pocket,
-he would know that I had deceived him—that I was the real White-horse
-Fred—and my life wouldn’t be worth a moment’s purchase. I tried to
-dispose of the bag, but he detected me in the act, and the result was
-just what I expected. He called me a traitor, told me that my time had
-come, and was on the very point of making his words good when Silas
-appeared. He came down the secret passage-way that leads from the top
-of the cliff, and arrived just in time.
-
-“We tied Smirker, put him on a horse, and started to carry him to our
-cave. As it was rather early—we make it a point never to go in and
-out of the cellar during the day-time—we dismounted to wait until it
-should grow dark. While we were sitting in our place of concealment,
-Richard came down the ravine, and I knew that he was about to make
-another attempt to capture you. I hurried down the mountain, reached
-the cellar before him, held a short consultation with Juan, called
-Romez out of the stable to assist us, and by the time Richard arrived
-we had a nice little surprise in store for him. I poured a bucket of
-water over my head—that was to make me look as if I had just come out
-of the lake, you know—and Juan, who had on the same clothes he wore on
-the night he was thrown over the cliff, made himself hideous by putting
-a little red paint on his forehead. Romez perched himself upon the top
-of the cellar wall with my dark-lantern in his hand, which, by the aid
-of green cloth and a wide band of birch bark around the bull’s-eye, was
-so arranged that it would reflect only a narrow streak of green light;
-and when Richard came in Juan and I were walking across the cellar with
-the light shining full in our faces. He had come prepared for just such
-an emergency as this, and drawing his Derringers from his pocket, he
-fired them both at Juan; but finding that the old fellow didn’t fall as
-he expected he would, he threw down his weapons and took to his heels.
-I’ve got them now,” added White-horse Fred, drawing the Derringers from
-his boots. “I may have a chance to try them on Joe Hale to-night, and
-if I do he’ll _drop_. There are bullets in them this time.”
-
-“Were there no bullets in them before?”
-
-“Not when they were fired at Juan. You see, Richard is too much of a
-gentleman to do anything for himself that he can make another do for
-him. He thinks Ithuriel, his servant, can be trusted to any extent,
-but, as it happens, he is one of the best friends we have, and it
-is through him that we have learned so much about Richard and his
-doings. Richard told him to load his Derringers very carefully, adding
-that he wanted them to shoot something that had appeared to him the
-night before. Ithuriel, knowing very well what that something was,
-charged the pistols heavily with powder, but put in no bullets. He
-came straight down to Juan, and told him what he had done, and so when
-Richard pointed his pistols at us, we were not afraid of them. I guess
-now I have told—— Halloo! There he is. Come on, Julian.”
-
-Fred, bringing his story to a sudden close, put spurs to his horse, and
-dashed away at the top of his speed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE ATTACK ON THE RANCHO.
-
-
-JULIAN was not long in discovering the cause of his brother’s
-excitement. It was a white horse which was moving along the mountain
-path a short distance in advance. He ran heavily as if almost ready to
-drop with fatigue, and carried on his back a man dressed in Mexican
-costume. The horse was Bob, and his rider was Pedro.
-
-A race ensued at once. Bob was as fleet as the wind, but he was wearied
-with his night’s travel, and the pursuers, mounted on their fresh
-horses and led by Silas Roper, who coiled up his lasso as he went,
-gained rapidly. The white horse disappeared in a thickly wooded ravine;
-but Silas and his party soon came up with him standing motionless in
-the path, and Pedro was seen darting into the bushes which lined the
-base of the cliff. An order to halt, followed by the whistle of a lasso
-and the ominous click of three revolver locks, brought him to the
-path again, where he stood holding his hands above his head in token
-of surrender. Silas and Romez dismounted, bound the prisoner hand and
-foot, and after concealing him behind a log that lay at the base of the
-cliff, the party resumed its journey as if nothing had happened, Fred
-leading the white horse. As this incident had been confidently looked
-for, it brought no comments from any one except White-horse Fred, who
-said, as he resumed his place by his brother’s side:
-
-“If Pedro had had half the sense I have given him credit for, he would
-have known that an iron nag couldn’t stand sixty miles in a full gallop
-over such roads as these. I hope Bob will recover a little of his wind
-before we reach Hale’s, for I want to use him then. When we caught
-sight of Pedro,” he added, “I was about to remark that I had finished
-what I had to say, and would listen to you. Now, tell me all about
-yourself. I know you have seen some exciting times.”
-
-Julian’s story was quite as interesting to Fred as the latter’s story
-had been to Julian. It took him fully half an hour to complete it,
-and by that time they were in the vicinity of Hale’s rancho. When
-they reached the chasm which had been such a terror to Julian, they
-dismounted, and after a short consultation had been held, and Fred had
-exchanged his red shirt and coarse trowsers for his brother’s natty
-Mexican suit, he placed himself at the head of the party, and conducted
-them on foot to Major Mortimer’s prison. As noiselessly as spirits they
-approached the building and drew up around the door. Not a whisper was
-uttered, for their plans had been thoroughly discussed, and each one
-knew just what he was expected to do.
-
-Having seen his companions stationed to his satisfaction, Fred crept
-back along the path again, and disappeared in the darkness. He was
-gone nearly half an hour, and then the sound of horse’s hoofs on the
-hard path told his impatient friends that he was returning. Louder
-and louder grew the clatter of the hoofs, and presently Julian knew
-that it had been heard by the robbers, for there was a movement in the
-cabin, and a small window beside the door, close under the eaves, was
-slowly and cautiously opened. In a few seconds the horse and his rider
-appeared dodging about among the thick bushes that grew on each side of
-the path, and drew up before the door. Fred’s whistle met with a prompt
-response.
-
-“Ay! ay!” exclaimed the man at the window. “What’s the matter now?
-Anything wrong?”
-
-“I should say there was,” replied Fred in a voice that trembled with
-excitement. “The soldiers have sprung a trap and caught every soul of
-us in it except the captain and me. There isn’t a gentleman of the road
-left down our way—not one.”
-
-The robber expressed his surprise at this piece of news by a volley of
-oaths and exclamations that made Julian wonder.
-
-He opened the slide of a dark lantern, and allowing its rays to shine
-out of the window upon the young horseman, said:
-
-“How can that be possible? Things were all right this morning—the
-captain said so.”
-
-“Well, if you could see him now he would tell you that things are all
-wrong,” replied Fred.
-
-“Where is he?”
-
-“He is hiding at Smirker’s. He sent me down here with a note,” replied
-White-horse Fred, showing the letter that Julian had received from his
-father. “It’s an order, and an important one, too, I guess, for he told
-me to give it into the hands of no one but Joe Hale.”
-
-“Now I’ll be blessed if there isn’t something mighty queer about all
-this,” said the robber after a little reflection. “You had better come
-in and give an account of yourself.”
-
-“I am perfectly willing to do that. Open the door, and be quick about
-it too, for I am in a hurry to get through here. I tell you I am not
-going to stay in this country after what I have seen. I am off for
-’Frisco this very night.”
-
-The robber was in no hurry to open the door. He thrust his lantern out
-of the window and took a good look at White-horse Fred and the animal
-on which he was mounted; but he could see nothing wrong about them.
-
-The horse, which was covered with foam, stood with his head down and
-his sides heaving plainly, very nearly exhausted. A single glance at
-him and at his rider’s pale face was enough to satisfy the robber that
-there was more truth in the boy’s story than he had at first believed.
-
-“I guess you _have_ seen some strange things, Fred,” said he. “You’re
-as white as a sheet.”
-
-The boy had nothing to say in reply, but told himself that any one
-would have shown some nervousness in his circumstances. His father’s
-life depended upon the movements of that man who was leaning out of the
-window talking to him. If he opened the door all might be well; but if
-he carried on all the conversation through the window, and kept the
-door closed, their expedition would end in failure, and Major Mortimer
-would be a doomed man. It was no wonder that Fred’s face was pale.
-
-The appearance of the horse and his rider went a long way toward
-allaying the robber’s suspicions; but ever on the lookout for
-treachery, he thought it best to examine the ground in front of the
-rancho before opening the door. He thrust his head and shoulders out of
-the window and held his lantern down beside the wall. There was some
-one there, but the robber was not allowed time to see who it was.
-
-Silas Roper was crouching close beside the door, directly under the
-window, and he knew by the sudden gleam of surprise and intelligence
-which shot across the man’s face that he had been discovered. Fred knew
-it too, and gave up all hope; but not so Silas. He was fully equal to
-the emergency. Crouching lower, for an instant, like a tiger gathering
-himself for a spring, he bounded into the air with the quickness of
-thought, and seizing the robber, pulled him bodily from the window to
-the ground, stifling his cry for help by a strong grasp on his throat.
-
-“Never mind us,” whispered the trapper, as his companions sprung
-forward to assist in securing the prisoner. “I’ll take care of this
-fellow, an’ do you open that door while you’ve got the chance.”
-
-Julian saw the necessity of prompt action, and so did Romez.
-White-horse Fred had told his companions that there was but one man on
-guard at a time at Hale’s rancho, and now that he had been secured, the
-next thing was to make good their entry into the building before the
-other robbers were aroused.
-
-Romez took his stand under the window, and Julian, mounting upon his
-shoulders, dropped down on the inside of the stable. The locks and
-bolts with which the door was secured were quickly but noiselessly
-undone, and Silas and his two companions rushed in and followed Julian,
-who, with his revolver in one hand and the lantern in the other, led
-the way to the living-room.
-
-Hale and his companion were found fast asleep on the benches, and were
-pounced upon and secured by Silas and Romez before they had time to
-think of their weapons, which were lying close at hand.
-
-White-horse Fred, having seized an ax as he passed through the stable,
-kept close behind his brother, who led him straight to his father’s
-prison.
-
-“This is the door!” cried Julian, scarcely able to speak, so great was
-his excitement and delight—“down with it! Come here, Mexican!” he
-added, leveling his revolver at the cook, who, having been aroused by
-the noise, at that moment came out of the kitchen; “you’re a prisoner.”
-
-If the man was too sleepy to comprehend the fact just then, he became
-fully sensible of it a few seconds later, for Silas and Romez came
-bounding through the hall and seized and tied him in the twinkling of
-an eye.
-
-Fred, meanwhile, was showering furious blows upon the door, and when
-he had loosened the hinges, Silas placed his broad back against it and
-with one push sent it flying into the middle of the room. Fred and
-Julian rushed into the apartment side by side, expecting to find their
-father waiting with open arms to receive them, but stopped suddenly and
-recoiled with horror before the sight that met their gaze.
-
-The major was sitting limp and motionless in his chair, his chin
-resting on his breast, and his hands—which had been relieved of the
-irons, probably to allow him to retire to rest—hanging by his side.
-His face was paler now than when Julian saw it a few hours before, and
-at the sight of it he cried out in dismay that they had come too late.
-
-“No, we hain’t nuther!” exclaimed Silas, raising the insensible form
-of his beloved commander tenderly in his arms. “Thar ain’t nothing the
-matter with him—all he wants is air.”
-
-Silas carried the major into the living-room and laid him upon a pile
-of blankets which Fred and Julian had spread upon the floor. There
-he left him to the care of the boys while he and Romez proceeded to
-complete the work that had been so well begun. Their first care was
-to ransack the building and satisfy themselves that no one else was
-confined there, and their second to dispose of their prisoners so that
-they could be found again when wanted. They could not take the robbers
-with them when they returned to the valley, for they had other work
-to do, and must ride rapidly. It would not be safe to leave them in
-the rancho, for they might be discovered and released by some of their
-friends. They must be gagged to insure their silence, and hidden away
-in the woods where no one would ever think of looking for them.
-
-When they returned to the living-room after performing their work, they
-found the major standing erect and holding his boys clasped in his
-arms. Rough men that they were, they were touched by the sight. They
-remained respectfully apart, watching the happy group and listening
-to their conversation, now and then glancing at one another, and
-drawing their hands hastily across their eyes; but when they went up to
-greet the major they were the every-day Silas and Romez, as calm and
-indifferent, apparently, as they had been a few moments before while
-dealing with the horse-thieves.
-
-Romez took off his sombrero, and said, “How do!” in his imperfect
-English, while Silas gave the major a military salute, and informed him
-that he was powerful glad to feel his grip once more. The emotion was
-all exhibited by the rescued man, who clung to the faithful fellows who
-had labored so long and perseveringly for his release as if he never
-wanted to let them go again.
-
-The major’s unexpected restoration to his family and to liberty had a
-wonderful effect upon him. His buoyancy of spirits, his strength and
-energy, returned at once; and during the ride homeward, he led the way
-at such a rate of speed that continued conversation was quite out
-of the question. He rode the bay horse which Julian had brought from
-Smirker’s cabin, and which the boy regarded as his own special charge.
-He knew where the animal came from, and he hoped at no distant day to
-be able to restore him to his rightful owner.
-
-After crossing the valley the party made a wide circuit through the
-mountains on the opposite side, arriving just at daylight in front of a
-small cabin. The door was forced without ceremony, and one of the two
-men who were surprised in their beds was secured before he was fairly
-awake. The new prisoner was Richard Cordova, and his companion, who
-armed himself and joined the major’s party, was Ithuriel, his servant.
-In a little less than five hours Silas and his three companions had
-ridden more than fifty miles over rough mountain roads, captured eight
-desperate fellows, and that, too, without having once been called upon
-to use any weapon more formidable than the ax, with which White-horse
-Fred had cut down the door of his father’s prison. When Julian thought
-of it, he told himself that the trapper was indeed a man of action.
-
-The major and his party rode at once to the fort, and his appearance
-there among the officers, with several of whom he had once been
-intimately acquainted, produced a great commotion. The commander
-listened in amazement to his story, and acting upon the information
-which Silas was able to give him, at once dispatched his cavalry to the
-mountains in pursuit of the robbers who were yet at large. The history
-of the wrongs of the major and his family spread like wild-fire, and
-everybody who heard it was astonished and enraged. The trappers about
-the fort, and the sutlers and miners flew to arms to assist in hunting
-down the outlaws, and during the week following Julian and his brother
-found ample opportunity to gratify their love of excitement. The
-avengers did their work quickly and well, and the summary manner in
-which the captured desperadoes were disposed of served as a warning to
-other lawless spirits in that section for all time to come.
-
-At the end of a fortnight the fighting was all over, the excitement
-had somewhat abated, the settlers and miners had resumed their various
-avocations, and the major and his boys were once more in peaceable
-possession of their home, which soon began to wear its old familiar
-look again. The high stone wall which surrounded the rancho was leveled
-to the ground, and flowers planted where it stood. The officers of the
-fort visited there regularly as of old, and the rooms which had so long
-been silent and deserted echoed to the sound of laughter and music.
-
-Everybody looked upon Fred and his brother as heroes. The almost
-inexhaustible fund of stories the former had collected during his
-connection with the robber band, as well as the adventures he met with
-while in the performance of his perilous duties, were listened to
-with interest by all the visitors at the rancho, and none were more
-delighted with them than the officers who tried so hard to capture him.
-He and his brother for a few weeks led a life of quiet ease, for the
-keen and rational enjoyment of which they had been fully prepared by
-their recent perils and excitements. The time never hung heavily on
-their hands. They had much to talk about, and when weary of fighting
-their battles over again, there were their horses, hounds, guns and
-fishing-rods always at their command. We might relate many interesting
-incidents that happened in that valley before the boys bade good-by to
-their father and their mountain home to become students in an Eastern
-academy, but “A Brave Boy’s Struggles for Home and Fortune” are ended,
-and our story must end with them.
-
-The few who had remained faithful to their employer during his exile
-were not forgotten. The major and his boys showed them every kindness
-and attention in their power, and among all those who had claims upon
-their gratitude and esteem none commanded a larger share than Silas
-Roper, the guide.
-
-
-
-
- AN IDEA AND A FORTUNE.
-
- BY OWEN HACKET.
-
-
-WITH their backs toward Placer Notch two young men of about twenty-one,
-burdened with prospectors’ kits, came silently down the trail. The
-well-worn way ran beside the murky stream that for the twenty-five
-years had run through the sluices of the Placer Notch Mining Company’s
-claim, which, singularly, included in their four acres the only paying
-claims that had ever been staked in McGowan’s Pass.
-
-As the young prospectors neared Sol Brunt’s supply depot at the foot of
-the pass, the latter broke the silence and said moodily:
-
-“I wish I had known three months ago as much as I know now.”
-
-“Three months ago, Tom, we both knew what we had to expect; that was
-all talked over.”
-
-“Well, it’s one thing to see hardship and failure at a distance, but
-it’s another thing to go through them. I didn’t know then, as I do now,
-what real hardship was. I thought I did. Handy man on a farm seemed
-about as near slavery as we could find in a free country.”
-
-“Our experience is not unusual, Tom. We may succeed yet—we may not. I
-am going to stick it out another month and so are you——”
-
-“I’m not so sure of that,” interrupted Tom.
-
-“Yes you will, if I know you, Tom, and I guess I do. You like to have
-your little growl now and then, and I’m glad you do; it makes me argue
-on the bright side, and to see the pleasant features and the hopeful
-prospects.”
-
-“It’s a pity hopes don’t sell in the market, Phil; you’d be pretty well
-off if they did.”
-
-“Come, now! none of your sarcasm, old man. I tell you we are going to
-stick this for a month yet. We have no money, it is true; but we can
-work our way, and we are free and are seeing the world. That beats
-eighteen hours a day on farm work.”
-
-The trail here ran close to the edge of the stream and about a foot
-above it. Phil Gormley the hopeful, happened to step on a loose stone;
-it gave way and down went his right leg into the water.
-
-“I like that!” he exclaimed in vexation, as he pulled his foot out
-with much difficulty. He regarded his shoe with surprise on seeing it
-covered to the top with soft mud. He sat down on a log and squeezed the
-water out of his trousers leg, gazing all the while at the muddy shoe
-in a reverie that attracted Tom Danvers’ attention.
-
-“What’s up?” he asked.
-
-“I was trying to account for such deep mud in the bed of a mountain
-stream. I am certain this mud is the year’s deposit of the dirt that
-is separated from the gold in the sluices above at Placer Notch.”
-
-“Well, what of it?”
-
-“It simply flashes across me that this silt must be very rich in the
-waste gold that is washed out with the dirt from the sluices.”
-
-“Are you thinking of staking out a mud claim?”
-
-“Not quite as bad as that. A man might scoop mud out and wash it till
-doomsday without getting enough to keep his pipe alight from year to
-year. But just fancy how many millions must have passed down this
-stream! You heard what the miner said up in the Notch—twenty per cent
-of the gold product was washed away from the sluices. If they have
-panned out fifty million dollars there, that would make ten million
-swept away into the big river below, with more constantly going the
-same way.”
-
-“That’s all very well in theory, but what does it amount to any way? We
-can’t get hold of any of these millions.”
-
-“No, of course not. But this I do believe: if any one could afford to
-turn this stream into a reservoir and wait ten years he would have
-enough gold silt to tackle in a wholesale sort of way that would pay.
-It would be only a question of devising a cheap system of washing the
-silt from the gold more thoroughly than they do at the mines. I’d take
-the contract to invent the process, too. But come! We won’t waste any
-more time over it. No one is going to wait ten years to get his good
-money back.”
-
-They took up their journey again, and had not walked five minutes when
-a turn in the trail and the stream brought them in sight of the tidy
-establishment of Sol Brunt. Sol was one of those who came into the
-hills with the rush when gold was discovered, but had seen fit to find
-his fortune in trade while others tramped the hills for paying claims.
-Those who thus went into business invariably had a sure fortune before
-them. Sol’s place had grown up from a shanty store to a tidy house
-that in time had received additions, making it a very considerable
-establishment. The trail had been much used in the past, but besides
-what he made out of the casual traffic over it, he supplied all the
-Placer Notch wants by contract, and turned a pretty penny out of it,
-too.
-
-No man had ever come into sight of Sol Brunt’s while the sun was up and
-failed to find the Star Spangled Banner flying at the staff head.
-
-Sol’s tidy wife came out to meet the boys, closely followed by the
-trader himself.
-
-Phil was spokesman.
-
-“Mr. Brunt this is my partner, Tom Danvers; my name is Phil Gormley.
-We’ve been in the hills three months and haven’t found a grain, but we
-don’t give up just yet. We have no money between us, but we have been
-hoping you could give us enough work this week to pay for board and
-lodging and some stores to give us a lift to the next range.”
-
-“Well, boys, I’m right glad to see you,” said Sol, and Mrs. Brunt
-looked at them with pitying eyes. “As to the lodging and the things,
-I’ll just take verbal acknowledgement of the debt when you leave. Young
-fellows who talk as you do usually get along and pay their debts too.
-As to the work, I want a little help on my hay this week, and I don’t
-mind reducing your little bill in that way.”
-
-“Just the thing for us,” exclaimed Tom Danvers. “You’ll find we’re
-experts in that line.”
-
-“So much the better then, my boy,” responded their genial host.
-
-The shadows were falling in the valley as the sun sank behind the
-mountain tops, and Mrs. Brunt went inside. Her reappearance was
-heralded by savory odors from the kitchen, and after a refreshing
-splash in cool water from a mountain rill the boys sat down with their
-hosts to a bountiful supper. Then chairs were brought to the doorway,
-where in the gloom they watched the rising and falling light of Sol’s
-pipe while he spun countless yarns of mining life which were, in truth,
-largely interspersed with mining death, mostly tragic in character.
-
-Before bidding the boys good night, Sol delicately offered to give them
-some advice, which the boys eagerly accepted.
-
-“I like pluck,” said Sol, “and I don’t want to discourage it; but I do
-hate to see it turned into an empty sluice. You’ve prospected all over
-the pass here and found nothing. Thousands have done the same before
-you. What is true of Placer Notch is pretty generally true of all the
-hills. In the early days the country swarmed with men, and almost every
-acre was gone over many times. What wasn’t found is not worth looking
-for. I don’t say the richest pay dirt ever discovered may not yet be
-turned up, but to waste your best years on a gamble is not the thing
-for boys with grit in them. Go into some business; it will pay you
-better if you have to start on three dollars a week; with a head and a
-backbone you may get to be of some account in a line where every minute
-sees something to be accomplished.”
-
-As the boys were preparing for bed, Tom remarked:
-
-“It looks like prospectors without a prospect.”
-
-“What Mr. Brunt said as to our chances is probably true, judging from
-our experience so far; but I wish to prove it to my own satisfaction
-before I accept it,” replied Phil. “Whatever my judgment may tell me,
-I can’t help feeling that there is rich pay earth _somewhere_ in the
-hills.”
-
-“Well, I think you’d better stop right here and tackle the mud yonder.”
-
-“Perhaps I will when the month is up,” replied Phil good-naturedly.
-“Good night!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Good morning, Mrs. Brunt! We’ve had a splendid sleep and are ready to
-pitch in with the pitchfork,” exclaimed Phil the next morning when the
-boys came downstairs bright and early.
-
-“I’m glad to hear it,” responded Mrs. Brunt heartily. “You’ve been
-sleeping on the best mattress within fifty miles, and that accounts for
-it. Perhaps you’d like to look around a little before breakfast. You’ll
-find Mr. Brunt milking the cow down by the pond. Just follow the trail
-and you’ll find him.”
-
-The boys gladly acted on the suggestion, and sauntered over a rustic
-bridge that spanned the stream. The trail led them into a thick grove
-of firs filled with the murmurs of the babbling waters, which here
-flowed over a sharp descent. A sudden turn in the path brought them to
-the edge of the grove where a splendid prospect burst upon their view.
-
-One feature of it made Phil Gormley stop and clutch Tom by the arm!
-
-The mountain pass widened suddenly at this point in the form of a
-semicircle on each side, while a quarter of a mile away the flanking
-mountains swept so close together again that there was only a very
-narrow outlet between two opposing spurs. A great basin was thus
-formed of over a quarter of a mile across—how deep, they could not
-tell, because a great sheet of still water filled the hollow. Beyond,
-from spur to spur, ran a chain of spile heads, which showed that
-man, not nature, had made this lake. Over the dam the water lazily
-trickled, forming the continuation of the stream they had followed from
-Placer Notch. It was not necessary for Tom to ask the cause of Phil’s
-agitation. Their conversation of the day before had flashed across him
-as the artificial lake burst into view. Just below them was Sol, seated
-on a rock and milking his single cow, in a strip of meadow that fringed
-the sheet of water.
-
-Phil’s face was flushed and his eyes were very bright, but he made a
-visible effort to calm himself as he approached.
-
-The boys and their host passed cordial morning greetings, and then Phil
-said carelessly:
-
-“Such a fine sheet of water is something of a surprise in such a spot.
-Did you build the dam, Mr. Brunt?”
-
-“Not I,” replied the storekeeper. “There’s a story to that. They say a
-mining inspector named John Martin, who took in Placer Notch on his
-circuit twenty-five years ago, saw this hollow when he first passed by
-and got the idea into his head that if he could trap the muddy water
-that ran off from the sluices and thus collect the tailings, in the
-course of time the mass of mud in the bottom would pan out rich from
-the gold that was constantly going to waste. He located this place in
-the land office, and had the dam built. Before he could take title
-he disappeared while on his rounds, and was never again heard of. I
-finally got the title myself, for it struck me that perhaps some day if
-the country around here grew up and there was any use for it, I could
-use the pond for water power: or I could drain it off and plant on the
-bottom, which ought to be the richest kind of soil. There’s thirty feet
-of mud on that bottom, I calculate.”
-
-“He must have had a tremendous job to build a dam that would make a
-pond over thirty feet deep,” commented Tom.
-
-“No; it wasn’t such a big job. Luck was with him and started the work.
-Just before Martin began, a landslide filled up the narrow space
-between the two mountains where they come together. You can see this
-from the other side of the dam. There wasn’t much left to be done; he
-drove some logs and did some filling in; the stream gradually filled up
-the hollow, and when the water rose as high as the dam it began to run
-off down the pass just as it used to, leaving a deposit on the bottom
-of the basin that has been rising ever since.”
-
-“But, Mr. Brunt,” asked Phil indifferently, “haven’t you ever thought
-of following up the inspector’s idea of separating the gold that is in
-the bottom?”
-
-“I can’t say I have—not seriously. There must be a great deal of the
-dust there, but the proportion is so small that I guess it wouldn’t be
-worth while to waste any money on such a scheme.”
-
-Hearing this, Tom cast a sly glance at Phil as if to say, “What did _I_
-tell you?” but he saw that Phil was driving at something and he had
-sense enough to say nothing.
-
-The milking was done, and they all went back to breakfast, where they
-were met by Mrs. Brunt, whose round face was all aglow from the labors
-of cooking. Then they went down to the strip of meadow again and made
-an onslaught on the hay-field, in which Tom, who tackled that part not
-yet mowed, cut such a swath as made old Sol stare. They finished early
-in the day, and as they turned back to the store the owner surveyed the
-stack he and Phil had built with the greatest satisfaction imaginable,
-remarking that the two had accomplished in less than a day what would
-have taken him the best part of a week.
-
-Phil had indeed worked hard during the day; he had thought hard also.
-Ideas had been chasing through his head in numbers. How rich in gold
-was the deposit? How could he test it? How could it be separated in
-bulk at a cost low enough to pay? Ah, that was the vital question of
-the whole matter! And yet if that were solved other questions would
-follow. How to promote or float the scheme? Whom to apply to? How to
-proportion the profits? Yes, Phil had been thinking very hard, indeed,
-and thinking to such purpose as to be fully prepared to talk to the
-point. The subject of the pay bottom was not referred to again during
-the day; but when they had taken their places in the doorway, as on
-the previous evening, while the merry rattle of the plates and the
-“clink” of the knives and forks and spoons betokened dish washing in
-the kitchen, Phil began to speak his little piece.
-
-“I want to talk to you seriously, Mr. Brunt, about a matter that I have
-had in mind since yesterday. As we came down from the Notch I noticed
-the muddy bed of the stream, and remarked to Tom here, that I believed
-if that sediment could be coraled there would be money in it. I found
-this morning that another great mind—and Phil laughed at his own
-conceit—had run in the same channel, and had built twenty-five years
-ago what I had proposed yesterday as a good thing.
-
-“Now, Mr. Brunt, if I can show you that your idle pond is exceedingly
-valuable in gold, I want to know if you will share equally with me any
-profits that I may show you the way to get out of it?”
-
-Sol chuckled good-naturedly, but incredulously, and said:
-
-“Aye, aye, my boy! You can have half the profits and more too.”
-
-“It is agreed seriously?” persisted Phil.
-
-“All right, my boy—only understand I put up no money.”
-
-“That leads me right to the next point. Providing, as before, I could
-prove value here, a third man or syndicate, or something meaning
-capital, would have to be brought in. Speaking in a general way, will
-you agree to give the use of this bottom and your adjoining land
-on a basis of, say, one-third of the profits to each of the three
-concerned—you, for your mine; myself, for the process I _know_ I can
-invent, and the third man for his money to float the enterprise.”
-
-Phil was conscious all the while that he was furnishing Mr. Brunt with
-more amusement than matter for earnest thought, but having obtained a
-really serious promise of the donation of land on the basis referred
-to—always providing of course, it could be proved by actual test that
-the gold could be separated at a profit—Phil took Sol inside, where
-in the lamplight he told all his ideas and schemes, his theory of the
-separating process and a score of other points, while Tom could only
-stare open mouthed and wonder where his chum had learned all this about
-stock companies and spiral wheels and hydraulics.
-
-By-and-by the dubious smile vanished from the face of Sol Brunt,
-and he not only listened seriously and admiringly to Phil, but also
-supplemented his proposals with suggestions, corrections and advice
-that his mature experience stamped as very valuable. But Sol’s part in
-the discussion was taken only on the hypothesis that the twenty per
-cent of waste gold that was doubtless in the silt could be got at, and
-it was arranged that the next day a test should begin by hand. If the
-test panned out, machinery would step in and do in one hour what manual
-labor would take days to accomplish; and, as Phil shrewdly pointed
-out, one of Sol’s own original ideas would supply by natural means one
-of the necessities for the mechanical process—power—which otherwise
-would be a huge item of running expenses.
-
-Accordingly, next morning the boys sallied out, accompanied by Sol,
-to overlook their operations. They carried with them a barrel, buckets
-to carry the silt and a scale to weigh it. They set up a barrel and
-half filled it with water, then into it they dumped several bucketfuls
-of silt. With staves they stirred the mixture so violently that each
-particle of fine silt must have been separated from the others. When
-at last they stopped they were dripping with perspiration. They gave
-the muddy water a few minutes to partly settle and allow the grains of
-gold, if any there were, to make their way to the bottom of the barrel;
-then by tipping the barrel carefully the water was drained off, leaving
-only a few inches of residue at the bottom of which was a thin layer of
-mud—and gold?—that was the question. It was not time to answer yet.
-In went half a barrelful of water and more buckets of silt. This was
-agitated as before and the water again drawn off.
-
-When this had been repeated several times it was noticed that the layer
-of mud on the bottom was a foot deep. Thereupon two washings of this
-were had in the same way without adding new silt, until the deposit at
-the bottom had been partly drained off. Then more silt was stirred in,
-and so they labored nearly all day, until Sol called time, saying there
-was no use of wearing themselves out.
-
-The next day the work was continued until afternoon when they had at
-the bottom of the barrel the residue of about two hundred and fifty
-pounds of silt; in this residue, only some six inches thick, was to
-be found nearly every grain of gold that the successive lots of silt
-had contained. It was time for the test. They broke the barrel, and
-carefully scraped and washed every grain of the muddy residue into
-the largest porcelain basin that Sol’s store contained, and in this
-more limited way made many successive washings until at last at the
-bottom of the white basin there gleamed nothing but a fine golden
-sand sparking in the sunlight. There _was_ gold in the mud, that was
-certain. How much and in what proportion was the next question? They
-thoroughly dried the golden sediment and called Sol’s fine apothecary’s
-scales into requisition. The dust weighed just five penny-weights.
-
-Phil had no sooner ascertained the weight than he began figuring
-excitedly on a scrap of paper. This is what he was figuring on: “A
-layer of mud, quarter mile square and average thickness of thirty
-feet—how many tons of silt are there?”
-
-His recollection of tables of weights and measures was perfect and he
-could therefore calculate this approximately, as can any schoolboy.
-He figured about three hundred and sixty thousand tons. Then he
-calculated: “Five penny-weights of gold to about two hundred and fifty
-pounds of silt, makes, say forty dollars per ton and——”
-
-“Mr. Brunt,” said Phil, looking up and with difficulty restraining
-his excitement, “I figure there is at this moment in that pond nearly
-FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS’ worth of dust!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Months had passed; Phil and Tom had come to Cheyenne City with a
-letter from Sol Brunt to the president of the Placer Notch Mining
-Company—Mr. Van Amrandt—introducing Phil’s scheme and authorizing
-Phil to represent him in the preliminary discussion of the whole matter.
-
-Phil had impressed Mr. Van Amrandt most favorably as a young man whose
-youthful enthusiasm was held in check by a thoughtfulness and judgment
-beyond his years. But time had passed; the president had been very busy
-with other matters, or there had always been some other reason to keep
-things at a stand-still for a long while. Finally the president went so
-far as to have the superintendent of the “P. N.” mine go down to Sol’s
-place and assay a quantity of the silt. Phil and Tom had been enabled
-to bide a winter’s delay as far as actual needs went, through the
-kindness of the president who had given them both subordinate clerical
-positions in the company’s office; there Phil was looked upon rather
-suspiciously by his fellow clerks as a sort of upstart who, by some
-hook or crook, could procure long interviews with the president and
-engineer, and come out of their respective offices looking as if he had
-been discussing questions of tremendous importance, as, in fact, he had.
-
-One afternoon in March the door of Mr. Van Amrandt’s private office
-opened and the president himself stood on the threshold with a paper in
-his hand.
-
-“I say, Gormley, come here, will you?” and he retired again to his desk.
-
-Phil rose and entered the private room.
-
-“Shut the door and sit down. I have here the report of Jasper who has
-been assaying up at Brunt’s “duck pond.” He reports forty-one dollars
-to the ton—a little better than your own estimate.”
-
-Phil’s heart beat away at a tremendous rate all this while, and when
-the result of the assay was announced it seemed to stop altogether. The
-president continued in a most matter-of-fact tone:
-
-“I have just told the engineer to go over those plans of yours which he
-has approved in a general way and, in connection with yourself, perfect
-the details of your device.”
-
-Phil seemed to hear this from a great distance, and Mr. Van Amrandt
-seemed to be far off and in a sort of mist. He could not move or speak
-or even think—he could only comprehend the joyful news.
-
-“By the time the designs are perfected I shall have procured the
-necessary appropriation from the directors for the machinery. They
-have terrible tales to tell of the weather up in the Notch it seems,
-Gormley; only last week there was a heavy fall of snow which the
-superintendent says is swelling the streams greatly as it melts. To
-return to the subject, though, I have just sent Jasper’s messenger
-back with a message to Brunt, asking him to come into town to sign a
-conveyance of his claim to the company; then we will issue the new
-stock to Brunt and yourself on the basis we spoke of last month.”
-
-By this time Phil had regained his self-possession. He rose and began:
-
-“Mr. Van Amrandt, I thank you very——” when the door opened and Sol
-Brunt appeared on the threshold. He advanced dejectedly and said:
-
-“The dam burst yesterday! Twenty streams from the sides of the hollow
-are tearing into the basin, and what silt is left by to-morrow I will
-sell you for a ten dollar note!”
-
-The clerks outside were startled by the sound of a heavy fall.
-
-Phil Gormley had given way under the blow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A fortune lost! you will say. Yes; part of the fourteen millions was
-washed away, part was covered by the debris of land slides which the
-unusual freshet of that spring caused. What remained amounted to
-nothing in comparison. That was five years ago. The Placer Notch Mining
-Company has been reorganized since—just a few weeks ago, in fact, and
-this whole matter was only brought back to my mind at this time by the
-receipt of a letter from a friend of mine, who announced that he has
-just been put in on the reorganization as secretary of the company. I
-refer, of course, to Phil Gormley. He lost his lucky fortune, but he is
-working out a better one, because it is coming slowly and with honest
-difficulty. But it was his idea of working the “duck pond” that planted
-this slow-growing tree of fortune, for it was that which took him to
-the company’s office.
-
-Out here on my quiet farm I do not hear many echoes from the busy
-outside world, but none could give me greater pleasure than does such
-news of my dear friend Phil—for I am no other than Doubting Thomas
-Danvers.
-
-
-
-
- THE GRANTHAM DIAMONDS
-
- BY RUSSELL STOCKTON.
-
-
-HOW it did snow, to be sure! The flakes, and very small ones they were,
-came down in slanting drives or bewildering spirals, to be taken up
-again from the earth in fierce gusts and whisked along in blinding
-drifts.
-
-John, the austere-looking butler, was putting the finishing touches on
-a tempting spread in the dining-room of the Grantham mansion. There was
-a salad and a dish of nuts; there was a generous plate of cake and a
-heaping pile of gorgeous red apples; but it would never do not to have
-something hot on such a cold night as this, so, alongside of a silver
-chafing dish was a fine English cheese and two eggs, which of course
-meant rarebits, and a tea urn with six dainty and varied tea cups and
-saucers, which of course meant girls.
-
-The antique hall clock blinked like an old man at the dancing flames
-in the great fire-place and slowly sounded eight o’clock. Almost at
-once there came the merry jingle of sleigh bells, then a few shrill
-shrieks, a ring, and then a fierce stamping of small feet on the
-veranda.
-
-Almost before John’s dignity could carry him to the hall door, Miss
-Maud Grantham ran swiftly down the stairs, followed, partly on the
-stairs, but mainly on the bannisters, by little Bobbie Grantham. Four
-rosy and very pretty faces came in with the snow gust at the door;
-there was much embracing and such a chattering, Maud failed to get a
-word in edgeways, and so resorted to the exorcism of holding aloft the
-yellow sheet of paper she held in her hand so that every eye could see
-it. The effect was instantaneous: a hush fell on the quartet at the
-sight of that dreadful messenger—a telegram.
-
-“Now don’t be afraid, girls! It’s nothing very terrible,” and she
-handed the sheet to Sadie Stillwell, who read aloud:
-
- “HUDSON, N. Y., Nov. 28, 1891.
-
- “To C. V. Grantham, Yonkers, N. Y.—Train stalled. Don’t expect us
- till morning.
-
- WES.”
-
-If the girls looked relieved for a moment they certainly showed regret
-the next, especially Minnie Trumbull; but she said nothing. Ella
-Bromley, on the contrary, exclaimed in great vexation:
-
-“What a shame! For two whole days I’ve been promising myself _such_ a
-time teasing that scamp Dick almost to death. I think it’s too bad.”
-
-“Never mind,” replied Sadie; “you will have four days in which to work
-out your horrible purpose. Why, is not slow torture better than killing
-him off in one night?”
-
-“Why, girls! How can you stand there joking,” spoke up Grace Waldron,
-“while those poor boys are slowly freezing to death in the middle of a
-snow bank?”
-
-“Nonsense!” replied Maud. “Where there’s a telegraph office there must
-be a station and a stove. It is too bad, indeed, that Wes and Dick must
-miss the little surprise party. But come along! I’ve done everything to
-help out for a jolly time. There’s the supper—I’ve had that all fixed,
-and I’ve told John we wouldn’t want him, so he’s gone off to bed, I
-suppose. Then mamma and papa have gone to the Bruces’ _musicale_, so
-there isn’t a soul in the house to disturb. Isn’t that just delightful?”
-
-With a deafening din of joyous exclamations they followed Maud Grantham
-into the music room, and there all the evening they played games,
-and gossiped, and danced and sang, totally unsuspicious of the grave
-proceedings that were taking place within sound of their voices.
-
-While this festive event was in progress Wesley and Richard Grantham,
-the sons of a wealthy New York banker, were really speeding on toward
-their home by the Eastern express. About four o’clock in the afternoon
-they had run into a snow drift just after drawing away from the station
-at Hudson. Things had looked for a time as if they were to be held in
-that town over night: so, when the train had backed to the station
-they had sent the telegram to their father. But when they saw a crowd
-of laborers file off with spades and shovels toward the deep drift,
-they had followed and watched the work, done in the faint light of
-many lamps; and they had of course chafed and grumbled, as well they
-might at being delayed on the eve of a school holiday and almost at
-the threshold of their luxurious home, quite oblivious of the fortunate
-outcome of the delay.
-
-The fierce winds that had swept the drift in place had helped to clear
-it away, and by six o’clock, when it had long been dark, the laborers
-had shoveled it nearly all off. The train moved out and plunged into
-the shallow layer of snow that remained, sweeping it up into the air in
-great feathery plumes, and the obstruction was vanquished.
-
-“See that group, Dick! What a picture! Did you notice the beautiful
-effect of the tiny lights on the snow and how weird those grim
-Italians——”
-
-“How about a good hot cup of coffee and the burning logs in the
-fireplace—there’s a picture for you!” scoffed young Dick, who had not
-yet cultivated that eye for the picturesque that his elder brother
-affected, and little more was said during the remainder of the ride.
-
-It was about ten o’clock when they slowed up at Yonkers. The boys
-tumbled out of the train and halted to turn up coat collars and pull
-mufflers more closely around their throats.
-
-“Not a carriage in sight? Well, I like this! It would seem as if
-everything was contriving to keep us away from home on the eve of
-Thanksgiving,” growled Dick.
-
-“We can certainly appreciate our good home all the more. Perhaps we can
-give thanks more heartily for it to-morrow.”
-
-“Oh, bother!” was Dick’s reply. He was an impatient youth, certainly.
-“Who’d expect a fellow to feel thankful when he had to climb a little
-St. Bernard in a storm like this. Here goes for footing it, if you’re
-ready!”
-
-They grasped their traps and plunged into the inky darkness, and in a
-moment were at the foot of the steep hill. The wind was cutting and the
-snow blinding. Even if they had not kept their heads well down against
-the blast they could not have seen an arm’s length before them—only a
-dimly white sheet under their feet.
-
-Dick, plunging ahead knee deep in the snow suddenly felt a terrific
-shock; for an instant he knew nothing; then he came to the realization
-that he was lying on his back in a snow bank with Wesley bending close
-over him and calling his name anxiously. He sat upright at once and
-confusedly asked:
-
-“What was that, Wes? I did not see a thing.”
-
-“It seemed to be a man running down the hill. After he collided with
-you he just brushed me. Look! there he is now!”
-
-Wes was pointing toward the station, where the train, for some reason
-delayed, was just beginning to move out. What Wes saw through the
-falling snow was the figure of a tall man dash into the circle of the
-station’s dim light and leap on the platform of the last car, just
-passing away. It all occurred in an instant and Dick looked too late to
-see the hurrying figure.
-
-“Did you recognize him, Wes?”
-
-“No, of course not. The snow blurs everything at such a distance.”
-
-“Worse luck! I wish he’d missed that train. I’d go right back and
-interview him—yes I would! I think I’m hurt, Wes; that fellow’s elbow
-or shoulder struck me over the eye.”
-
-“Just a moment and I will light one of those fusees. It is fortunate
-I bought them from that ragged Italian—nothing else would hold an
-instant in this gale.”
-
-After some fumbling in pockets with gloved hands the box of vesuvians
-was found. Wesley struck one and by its sputtering light examined as
-best he could Dick’s eye. There was only a slight abrasion, apparently,
-but as Dick complained of a smarting in the eyeball a handkerchief was
-tied over the injured orb.
-
-“Now how are we ever to find our traps? They must have gone in every
-direction. Oh, I’d just like to——” Dick shook his fist at the
-darkness in the direction of the departed train and then began to tramp
-around in the snow to find his things. First, Wesley put his foot into
-Dick’s hat which had rolled some distance off; then Dick kicked his
-bundle of canes and umbrellas and, lastly, he tumbled flat over his
-large hand satchel. He felt around it and then broke out again:
-
-“I _am_ a stupid. I never strapped this confounded bag in the car and
-the lock has slipped. The thing is perfectly empty, Wes!”
-
-“Let us see what we can do with the aid of these fusees, Dick. They are
-a good example of ‘bread upon the waters,’ aren’t they.”
-
-“Hang it! I’m thinking of bread in a better place just now. Come! give
-me some of those things, too. If we don’t get along soon I shall freeze
-stiff.”
-
-They burned one after another of the vesuvians and gathered up all
-sorts of miscellaneous things in the way of clothing and boxes and
-little packages and what not, and at last they concluded it was useless
-to look further, as every inch of ground had been gone over for quite
-some distance. The things were jammed in pell mell and the bag was
-strapped this time: then they again began the ascent, cold to their
-very bones.
-
-It was a toilsome tramp up the hill in knee-deep snow, with sometimes
-a soft drift into which the travelers would plunge and flounder around
-till they could finally extricate themselves. But at last the warm
-lights of the brilliantly illuminated mansions on the Crescent began to
-light the way and cheer them on, and, in a very few minutes the great
-Grantham house came into sight, all dark excepting the music room.
-There the windows were a blaze of light, and, when the boys reached the
-terrace, the sound of a piano almost drowned in girlish laughter, vied
-with the whistling and wheezing of the wind.
-
-“Methinks there is a ‘sound of revelry by night,’” quoted Dick. “Wonder
-what’s up.”
-
-The boys tiptoed along the veranda and peeped in on the bright scene.
-
-“Great Scott, Wes! you’re in luck; there’s Minnie Trumbull at the
-piano,” and he nudged his elder brother in a knowing way; for Minnie,
-be it known, was a rather serious girl who read deep books, painted in
-water colors and played the piano brilliantly, and it was toward her
-that Wes usually gravitated when he was at home.
-
-“I am very sorry for you, Dick, for I see Ella Bromley there, dancing
-with our sister, and I know you are in for a quarrel;” at which Dick
-looked a little conscious, for when Dick was at home he wanted nothing
-better than to quarrel with Ella, just for the pleasure of making up.
-
-At this moment a shrill shriek pierced the air. One of the girls had
-discovered two faces glaring in at the window: one had a bandaged eye
-and “Tramps!” was the idea that for an instant filled every mind. But
-the boys pressed their faces closer to the glass; there was a general
-recognition and an impetuous rush to the hall door.
-
-Handshaking, questioning, explanation, a great pulling off of coats
-helped by willing hands—such a hearty welcome home made up for all
-their trials and misfortunes on the way.
-
-“Maud, if you’ll ring for John to carry these things upstairs, Dick
-and I will go to _our_ rooms for a few minutes to get into presentable
-shape,” said Wes.
-
-“I’m sorry, boys, but you’ll have to carry the things yourself, for I
-sent all the servants off to bed hours ago.”
-
-“Well! it seems we’ve got another climb, after all, Wes,” and the boys
-disappeared above.
-
-Just as every one was sitting down to the supper table Mr. and Mrs.
-Grantham came in and another round of loving greeting ensued. When
-the parents retired upstairs the fun around the supper-table became
-furious. At its height Mr. Grantham came to the threshold of the room
-and said:
-
-“Boys, I shall have to take you away for a few minutes.”
-
-The words were said pleasantly enough, but Sadie was sensitive enough
-to notice something in her father’s tone that placed her in dread. She
-followed the boys and asked fearfully:
-
-“What is the matter, father—something, I know!”
-
-“Simply this: there has been a cunning thief in the house, and he
-seems to have taken off some of your mother’s jewels. Don’t alarm your
-friends, but let them go as soon as they wish to.”
-
-When the trio reached Mrs. Grantham’s bed-room a glance showed that
-something strange had been going on. The drawers of the bureau had
-been pulled out and rummaged; the escritoire had been treated in the
-same way. The shelves of the closets showed signs of confusion, and
-finally a cedar chest had been pried open. In this the robber had found
-Mrs. Grantham’s jewel case. Singularly enough he had left some of its
-contents behind, but he had taken the priceless necklace of large
-diamonds, the great solitaire earrings and two costly finger rings.
-
-“Dick go up to John’s room and ask him to dress and step down here,”
-directed the master.
-
-Dick departed, to return in a moment with the exciting news that John
-was not in his room and his bed was quite undisturbed. It was one of
-the butler’s nights on duty! Sadie, who arrived a few minutes later,
-having dismissed her friends, was sent to interrogate each of the
-female servants. They had seen nothing of the butler. Some of them had
-heard him go downstairs about nine o’clock, come back and go down again
-about ten: but they had thought nothing of that.
-
-“Everything points to John Simmons as the thief,” said Mr. Grantham.
-“But it is so difficult to realize a common burglar in this man, so
-dignified, so steady, so——”
-
-“Wesley Grantham! didn’t you get some idea of that brute who ran over
-me?” interrupted Dick excitedly.
-
-“No; only that he was very tall—just as John was. It is likely, I
-think, that it was he who was in such a hurry to catch the train for
-New York.”
-
-“Your eye seems to be very much inflamed, Richard,” said Mr. Grantham.
-“Go to your room and bathe it and then go right to bed. Wesley and I
-will go into the library and write out a description of this fellow
-to send to the chief of police early in the morning. Go now, my boy;
-nothing further can be done to-night.”
-
-Young Dick departed and Wesley sat down to write out a minute pen
-picture of John Simmons, butler. If their sight could have pierced
-the wall they would have seen Dick unpacking the disorderly hand
-satchel that had been burst open on the road. They would have seen him
-arranging its contents in and on his bureau. Among these things were
-several small boxes—one for his scarf pins and trinkets, another for
-his engraved cards, and so on. But one that came to his hands seemed to
-interest him particularly: the others he had indifferently put in their
-proper places—this one, about four inches long by three wide, covered
-with ivory white enameled paper, he examined thoughtfully, opened
-and——
-
-“Are you quite through with your description of the thief?” asked Dick
-at the doorway. There was a singular gleam in his eyes, and he seemed
-to labor under some suppressed excitement.
-
-“All but the eyes. We can’t seem to decide whether they were gray or
-blue.”
-
-“The person who has those jewels has dark brown eyes—almost black,”
-answered Dick.
-
-“Why, my son, what a poor memory you have! John was fair and
-florid—the English complexion, with fairly light eyes. But put it down
-gray. It really doesn’t——”
-
-“But it is not John who has those diamonds,” insisted Dick. He would
-have liked to keep his discovery back longer to puzzle his auditors,
-but he simply couldn’t. He stepped to the library table, and, taking
-a hand from behind his back, placed a white enameled jeweler’s box on
-the cloth in the fierce glare of the lamp. His father looking at him in
-surprise, said under his breath.
-
-“What can be the matter with the boy?”
-
-Wesley mechanically opened the box and both he and his father jumped to
-their feet in surprise, for the sharp gleam of many diamonds dazzled
-their eyes!
-
-Mr. Grantham reached for the little box and pulled out, first, a
-necklace of twelve large pendant diamonds; to this hung one big
-solitaire diamond earring; the other lay in the box, and with it were a
-cluster diamond ring and another of rubies, sapphires and diamonds.
-
-“I do not understand,” said Mr. Grantham uncertainly; even the man of
-affairs was dazed by the sudden and peculiar entrance of these gems,
-supposed to be in the pocket of a thief in New York City.
-
-“I guess you’re surprised. Fancy how I felt when I found them in my
-satchel.”
-
-“Your satchel? Who could have put them there!”
-
-“I myself. This is the only explanation I can think of. It must have
-been the thief—John, supposedly—who was rushing to catch the train.
-Perhaps he saw the gleam of the head-light up the road from one of the
-upper windows. He may have bundled on his wraps, thrust the box into
-his overcoat pocket or somewhere and started out to sprint for the
-train.
-
-“When he struck my manly form the shock that heeled me over must have
-knocked this box out of his pocket or wherever it was, and I gathered
-it in with the things spilled out of my bag in the snow.”
-
-“I think you have found the solution Dick. Your injured eye is not a
-_very_ large price for sixteen thousand dollars worth of gems,” was the
-comment of Wes.
-
-“Wonderful! wonderful!” exclaimed Mr. Grantham. “I must go at once and
-tell your mother. She is quite prostrated at this loss.” He started
-off, but Dick stopped him by calling:
-
-“Father! What reward did I hear you say you had offered for the finding
-of these shiners?”
-
-“Ha! ha!” laughed the banker. “I don’t think you heard me state the
-figure, Dick. But didn’t you say something about a sloop yacht the
-other day—eh?”
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-—Obvious errors were corrected.
-
-—A Table of Contents was not in the original work; one has been
- produced and added by the transcriber.
-
-
-
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-<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, Julian Mortimer, by Harry Castlemon</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Julian Mortimer</p>
-<p> A Brave Boy's Struggle for Home and Fortune</p>
-<p>Author: Harry Castlemon</p>
-<p>Release Date: April 12, 2016 [eBook #51738]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JULIAN MORTIMER***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pc">E-text prepared by Giovanni Fini, Melissa McDaniel,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/julianmortimerbr00cast">
- https://archive.org/details/julianmortimerbr00cast</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="350" height="549" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-002.jpg" width="400" height="655"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <p class="p400">“Julian!” exclaimed the man, in a low but excited tone of voice. “I am
-here!” replied the prisoner, so overjoyed that he could scarcely speak. &mdash;Page <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</p>
- <p class="pf400"><i>Julian Mortimer.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h1 class="p2"><span class="large">Julian Mortimer;</span></h1>
-
-<p class="pc4 elarge">A Brave Boy’s Struggle for Home and Fortune</p>
-<p class="pc4 mid"><span class="smcap">By HARRY CASTLEMON</span>,</p>
-<p class="pc2"><i>Author of</i></p>
-<p class="pc2 reduct">The “Gunboat Series,” “The Boy Trapper,” “Sportsman’s Club Series,” etc., etc.</p>
-<p class="pc2 mid">ILLUSTRATED.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-003.jpg" width="250" height="212"
- alt=""
- title="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="pc mid">A. L. BURT COMPANY, PUBLISHERS<br />
-NEW YORK</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="pc4">Copyright, 1873, by <span class="smcap">Street &amp; Smith</span>.<br />
-Copyright, 1887, by <span class="smcap">A. L. Burt</span>.<br />
-Copyright, 1901, by <span class="smcap">Charles S. Fosdick</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="d1" />
-
-<p class="pc">JULIAN MORTIMER.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 class="p4">CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="cont">
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr2"><span class="small">PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="3" class="tdl"><span class="mid">JULIAN MORTIMER</span></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">THE WAGON TRAIN</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JULIAN HEARS SOMETHING</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">A RIDE IN THE DARK</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_18">18</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JULIAN FINDS A RELATIVE</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JULIAN’S HOME</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_38">38</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JULIAN MEETS A STRANGER</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_46">46</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">THE FLIGHT</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">CHASED BY A BLOOD-HOUND</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">GOOD FOR EVIL</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_71">71</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JULIAN HAS A VISITOR</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_80">80</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JACK’S PLANS</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">ON BOARD THE FLATBOAT</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">IN THE SMOKE-HOUSE</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_108">108</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">SANDERS TELLS HIS STORY</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">THE JOURNEY COMMENCED</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_126">126</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">SILAS ROPER, THE GUIDE</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_131">131</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">ACROSS THE PLAINS</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_139">139</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">THE EMIGRANT AGAIN</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XIX.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">UNCLE REGINALD EXPLAINS</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XX.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JULIAN GETS INTO BUSINESS</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_168">168</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXI.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">WHITE-HORSE FRED</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_177">177</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">THE SPECTERS OF THE CAVE</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">JULIAN MAKES A DISCOVERY</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_196">196</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">PEDRO MAKES ANOTHER</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_205">205</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXV.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">HOW IT RESULTED</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_211">211</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">FRED’S STORY</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_221">221</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">FRED’S STORY, CONCLUDED</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_232">232</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr1">XXVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl1">THE ATTACK ON THE RANCHO</td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdl1">AN IDEA AND A FORTUNE <span class="smcap">By Owen Hacket.</span></td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="tdl1">THE GRANTHAM DIAMONDS <span class="smcap">By Russell Stockton.</span></td>
- <td class="tdr2"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p class="pc4 xlarge">JULIAN MORTIMER;</p>
-
-<p class="pc1">OR,</p>
-
-<p class="pc1 large font1">A Brave Boy’s Struggle for Home and Fortune.</p>
-
-<hr class="d1" />
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER I.<br />
-<span class="pch">THE WAGON TRAIN.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dt.jpg" width="80" height="81" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">THE SUN was just sinking out of sight behind
-the western mountains, and the shadows of
-twilight were beginning to creep through
-the valley, when two horsemen, who had
-been picking their way along the rocky and almost
-impassible road that ran through Bridger’s Pass, drew
-rein on the summit of an elevation and looked about
-them.</p>
-
-<p>One of them was a trapper&mdash;he never would have
-been taken for anything else&mdash;a man about forty
-years of age, and a giant in strength and stature. The
-very small portion of his face that could be seen over
-his thick, bushy whiskers was as brown as an Indian’s;
-and from under the tattered fur cap that was slouched
-over his forehead, peeped forth a pair of eyes as sharp
-as those of an eagle. He was dressed in a complete suit
-of buckskin, rode a large cream-colored mustang, and
-carried a heavy rifle across the horn of his saddle.
-Around his waist he wore a leather belt, supporting a
-knife and tomahawk, and under his left arm, suspended
-by thongs of buckskin, which crossed his breast, hung
-a bullet-pouch and powder-horn. This man was Silas
-Roper&mdash;one of the best guides that ever led a wagon
-train across the prairie.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His companion was a youth about sixteen years of
-age, Julian Mortimer by name, and the hero of our
-story. He presented a great contrast to the burly
-trapper. He was slender and graceful, with a fair,
-almost girlish face, and a mild blue eye, which gazed in
-wonder at the wild scene spread out before it. It was
-plain that he had not been long on the prairie, and a
-stranger would have declared that he was out of his element;
-but those who were best acquainted with him
-would have told a different story. He took to the
-mountains and woods as naturally as though he had
-been born there, and Silas Roper predicted that he
-would make his mark as a frontiersman before many
-years more had passed over his head. There was plenty
-of strength in his slight figure, and one might have
-looked the world over without finding a more determined
-and courageous spirit. He was an excellent shot
-with the rifle, and managed the fiery little charger on
-which he was mounted with an ease and grace that
-showed him to be an accomplished horseman.</p>
-
-<p>The boy’s dress was an odd mixture of the simple
-style of the prairies and the newest and most elaborate
-fashions of the Mexicans. He wore a sombrero, a
-jacket of dark-blue cloth, profusely ornamented with
-gold lace, buckskin trowsers, brown cloth leggings with
-green fringe, and light shoes, the heels of which were
-armed with huge Mexican spurs. His weapons consisted
-of a rifle, slung over his shoulder by a broad
-strap, a hunting knife and a brace of revolvers, which
-he carried in his belt, and a lasso, which was coiled
-upon the horn of his saddle. From his left shoulder
-hung a small deerskin haversack, to which was attached
-an ornamented powder-horn. The haversack contained
-bullets for his rifle, cartridges for his revolvers, and
-flint, steel and tinder for lighting a fire. Behind his
-saddle, neatly rolled up and held in its place by two
-straps, was a poncho which did duty both as overcoat
-and bed. He was mounted on a coal-black horse, which
-was very fleet, and so ill-tempered that no one besides
-his master cared to approach him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The trapper and his young companion belonged to an
-emigrant train which, a few weeks previous to the beginning
-of our story, had left St. Joseph for Sacramento,
-and they had ridden in advance of the wagons
-to select a camping ground for the night. This was a
-matter of no ordinary importance at that particular
-time, for during the last two days a band of Indians
-had been hovering upon the flanks of the train, and
-the guide knew that they were awaiting a favorable
-opportunity to swoop down upon it. Hitherto Silas
-had had an eye only to the comfort of the emigrants,
-and in picking out his camping grounds had selected
-places that were convenient to wood and water, and which
-afforded ample pasturage for the stock belonging to the
-train; but now he was called upon to provide for the
-safety of the people under his charge.</p>
-
-<p>The road, at the point where the horsemen had
-halted, wound around the base of a rocky cliff, which
-arose for a hundred feet without a single break or
-crevice, and was barely wide enough to admit the
-passage of a single wagon. On the side opposite the
-cliff was a deep gorge, which seemed to extend down
-into the very bowels of the earth. It was here that the
-guide had decided to camp for the night. He carefully
-examined the ground, and a smile of satisfaction lighted
-up his face.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the place we’ve been looking fur,” said he,
-dismounting from his horse and tying the animal to a
-neighboring tree. “Now I will go out an’ look around
-a little bit, an’ you can stay here till the wagons come
-up. You won’t be afeared if I leave you alone, will
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Afraid?” repeated Julian. “Of course not. There’s
-nothing to be afraid of.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may think differently afore you see the sun
-rise again,” replied the guide. “Now, when the train
-comes up tell the fellers to take half the wagons an’
-block up the road, here at the end of the cliff, an’ to
-put the others at the lower end. Then we’ll be protected
-on all sides. The Injuns can’t come down the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-cliff to get at us, ’cause it’s too steep; an’ they can’t
-cross the gully nuther. They’ll have to come along the
-road; an’ when they try that we’ll get behind the wagons
-an’ fight ’em the best we know how. It’s risky business,
-too,” added Silas, pulling off his cap and digging his
-fingers into his head, “‘cause if they are too many fur
-us we won’t have no chance on airth to run. We’ll
-have to stay right here an’ die, the hul kit an’ bilin’ of
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, who had never seen an Indian in war-paint or
-heard the whistle of a hostile bullet, was amazed at the
-trapper’s coolness and indifference. The bare thought
-of a fight with the savages was enough to cause him the
-most intense alarm, and yet here was Silas, who had
-more than once been a prisoner in the hands of the Indians,
-and who knew much better than Julian could
-imagine it, what the fate of the emigrants would be if
-their enemies proved too strong for them, apparently as
-much at his ease as though there had not been a hostile
-warrior within a thousand miles. The boy wondered at
-his courage and wished his friend could impart some of
-it to him, little dreaming how soon he would have need
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you really think there is danger of an attack?”
-asked Julian, as soon as he could speak.</p>
-
-<p>The trapper, who was in the act of untying a haunch
-of venison that was fastened behind his saddle, turned
-and looked curiously at his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Youngster,” said he, “if you should diskiver a cloud
-as black as midnight comin’ up over these mountains,
-an’ should see the lightnin’ a playin’ around the edges,
-an’ hear the thunder a grumblin’, what would you
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>“That we were going to have a storm,” replied Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“In course you would. An’ when I know that thar
-are Injins all around us, an’ that they are takin’ mighty
-good care to keep themselves out of sight, I tell myself
-that they’ll bar watchin’. When I see their trail, an’ find
-out that thar are nigh onto three hundred braves in the
-party, an’ that they haint got no women or plunder with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>
-’em, I know that they are on the war-path. An’
-when they foller us fur two hul days, an’ their spies
-watch us every night while we are makin’ our camp&mdash;like
-that varlet over thar is watchin’ us now&mdash;I know
-that they are arter us an’ nobody else. The signs are
-jest as plain to me as the signs of a thunder storm are
-to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there some one watching us now?” asked Julian,
-in great excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin thar is. I’ve seed that copper-colored face of
-his’n peepin’ over that rock ever since we’ve been here.
-If he was within good pluggin’ distance all the news he
-would carry back to his friends wouldn’t do ’em much
-good, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>As the trapper spoke he pointed toward the opposite
-side of the gorge. Julian looked in the direction indicated,
-closely scrutinizing every rock and tree within the
-range of his vision, but nothing in the shape of an Indian’s
-head could he see. His eyes were not as sharp as
-those of the guide.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said Silas, “you’ll see plenty of ’em
-afore mornin’, an’ they’ll be closer to you than you’ll
-care to have ’em. But you needn’t be any ways oneasy.
-<i>They</i> won’t hurt you. It’s white men that you’ve got to
-look out fur.”</p>
-
-<p>“White men?” echoed Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin. Thar’s two persons in the world&mdash;an’ I can
-lay my hand on one of ’em in less’n five minutes&mdash;who
-would be willin’ to give something nice if they could get
-hold of you. I know a heap more about you than you
-think I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have hinted something like this before, Silas,
-and I don’t know what you mean. I wish you would
-explain yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t got no time now,” replied the guide, shouldering
-his rifle and walking briskly up the road. “Keep
-your eyes open, an’ don’t go out of the camp till I get
-back. Don’t forget what I told you about them wagons
-nuther.”</p>
-
-<p>The trapper quickly disappeared around a bend in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-road, and Julian once more directed his gaze across the
-gully and tried in vain to discover the hiding-place of the
-spy. He began to feel timid now that he was alone.
-The thought that there were hostile Indians all around
-him, and that one of their number was concealed almost
-within rifle-shot of him, watching every move he made,
-was by no means an agreeable one. His first impulse
-was to put spurs to his horse and make the best of his
-way back to the train; and he probably would have done
-so had he not at that moment become aware that the
-train was coming to him. He heard the rumbling of
-the wheels and the voices of teamsters below him, and
-the familiar sounds brought his courage back to him
-again. He remained at his post until the foremost
-wagons came in sight, and then proceeded to carry out
-the instructions Silas had given him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER II.<br />
-<span class="pch">JULIAN HEARS SOMETHING.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/di.jpg" width="80" height="82" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">IN HALF an hour the preparations for the
-night were all completed, and Julian surveyed
-the camp with a smile of satisfaction.
-There were twenty wagons in the train, and
-of these two barricades had been made, one at the
-upper and the other at the lower end of the cliffs, as
-the guide had directed. The vehicles had been drawn
-close together, and were fastened to one another by
-chains so that they could not be easily moved from their
-places. The space between the wheels was blocked up
-with plows, harrows, stoves, bedsteads and chairs, thus
-rendering it a matter of some difficulty for any one to
-effect an entrance into the camp.</p>
-
-<p>While this work was being performed the shadows of
-twilight had deepened into the gloom of night, and now
-all objects outside the circle of light made by the camp-fires
-were concealed by Egyptian darkness. Inside the
-barricades a scene was presented that was a cheering one
-to men wearied with their day’s journey. A dozen fires
-blazed along the base of the cliff, and beside them stalwart
-pioneers reposed on their blankets, smoking their
-pipes and watching with hungry eyes the preparations
-for supper that were going on around them. Venison
-steaks were broiling on the coals, potatoes roasting in
-the ashes, and coffee-pots simmered and sputtered, filling
-the camp with the odor of their aromatic contents.
-Cattle and horses cropped the herbage that grew along
-the edge of the gully, and noisy children, all unconscious
-of the danger that threatened them, rolled about on the
-grass, or relieved their cramped limbs by running races
-along the road. But, although the camp wore an air of
-domesticity and security, preparations for battle were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-everywhere visible. The saddles and bridles had not
-been removed from the horses as usual, the emigrants
-wore their revolvers about their waists, and kept their
-rifles within easy reach. There were pale faces in that
-camp, and men who had all their lives been familiar
-with danger started and trembled at the rustle of every
-leaf.</p>
-
-<p>Julian Mortimer, from a neighboring wagon, on
-which he had perched himself to await the return of
-the guide, watched the scene presented to his gaze, as
-he had done every night since leaving St. Joseph, and
-bemoaned his hard lot in life.</p>
-
-<p>“Among all these people,” he soliloquized, “there
-are none that I can call relatives and friends, and not
-one even to speak a kind word to me. How I envy
-those fellows,” he added, glancing at a couple of boys
-about his own age who were seated at the nearest camp-fire
-conversing with their parents. “They have a
-father to watch over them, a mother to care for them,
-and brothers and sisters to love, but they do not seem
-to appreciate their blessings, for they are continually
-quarreling with one another, and no longer ago than
-this morning one of those boys flew into a terrible rage
-because his mother asked him to chop some wood to
-cook breakfast with. If he could be alone in the world
-for a few days, as I have been almost ever since I can
-remember, he would know how to value that mother
-when he got back to her. If the Indians attack us to-night
-some of the emigrants will certainly be killed, and
-the friends they have left behind them in the States
-will mourn over their fate; but if I fall, there will be no
-one to drop a tear for me or say he is sorry I am gone.
-There is nothing on earth that cares whether I live or
-die, unless it is my horse. If the Indians kill me perhaps
-he will miss me.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian’s soliloquy was suddenly interrupted by a light
-footstep behind the wagon in which he was sitting. He
-turned quickly and discovered a man stealing along the
-barricade and examining it closely, as if he were looking
-for a place to get through it. Julian’s first thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-was to accost him, but there was something so stealthy
-in the man’s actions that his curiosity was aroused, and
-checking the words that arose on his lips he remained
-quiet in his concealment, and waited to see what was
-going to happen. He had often seen the man during
-the journey across the plains, and knew that he was one
-of the emigrants, but why he should seek to leave the
-camp at that time and in so unusual a manner, was
-something the boy could not understand.</p>
-
-<p>The man walked the whole length of the barricade,
-turning to look at the emigrants now and then to make
-sure that none of them were observing his movements,
-and finally disappeared under one of the wagons. Julian
-heard him working his way through the obstructions
-that had been placed between the wheels, and
-presently saw him appear again on the outside of the
-barricade.</p>
-
-<p>Almost at the same instant the boy discovered another
-figure moving rapidly but noiselessly down the
-road toward the camp. At first he thought it was the
-guide, but when the man came within the circle of light
-thrown out by the camp-fires he saw that he was a
-stranger. He was evidently a mountain man, for he
-was dressed in buckskin and carried a long rifle in the
-hollow of his arm, and the never-failing knife and tomahawk
-in his belt; but he was the worst specimen of this
-class of men that Julian had ever seen. His clothing was
-soiled and ragged, his hair, which had evidently never
-been acquainted with a comb, fell down upon his shoulders,
-and his face looked as though it had received the
-very roughest usage, for it was terribly battered and
-scarred. One glance at him was enough to frighten
-Julian, who, knowing instinctively that the man was
-there for no good purpose, drew further back into the
-shadow of the wagon-cover.</p>
-
-<p>The emigrant who had left the camp in so suspicious
-a manner, discovered the stranger the moment he
-reached the outside of the barricade, but he did not appear
-to be surprised to see him. On the contrary, he
-acted as if he had been expecting him, for he placed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-one foot on the nearest wagon-tongue, rested his elbow
-on his knee, and when the trapper had approached
-within speaking distance, said in a suppressed whisper:</p>
-
-<p>“How are you, Sanders?”</p>
-
-<p>The latter paid no more attention to the greeting
-than if he had not been addressed at all. He advanced
-close to the wagon in which Julian was concealed&mdash;so
-close that his brawny shoulders were almost within
-reach of the boy’s hand&mdash;and peered through the barricade,
-taking in at one swift glance all that was going
-on inside the camp. He next looked up and down the
-road, fixing his eyes suspiciously on every tree and rock
-near him that was large enough to conceal a foe, and
-having satisfied himself that there was no one near him,
-he dropped the butt of his rifle to the ground, and
-growled out:</p>
-
-<p>“Wal!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” replied the emigrant, “I have been to Missouri,
-and I have returned, as you see.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you’re satisfied now, hain’t you?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I am. I am satisfied of four things: That the boy is
-alive and hearty; that he remembers more of his early
-history than we thought he would; that he has come out
-here to make trouble for us; and that he is at this very
-moment with this wagon train.”</p>
-
-<p>As the emigrant said this he folded his arms and
-looked at his companion to observe the effect these words
-would have upon him. He, no doubt, expected that the
-trapper would be surprised, and the latter’s actions indicated
-that he certainly was. He stepped back as suddenly
-as if a blow had been aimed at him, and after
-regarding the emigrant sharply for a moment, struck the
-butt of his rifle with his clenched hand, and ejaculated:</p>
-
-<p>“Sho!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a fact,” replied his companion.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, now, I wouldn’t be afeared to bet my ears agin
-a chaw of tobacker that you’re fooled the worst kind,”
-said the trapper, who was very much excited over what
-he had heard, and seemed quite unable to bring himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-to believe it. “The boy was young when he was tuk
-away from here&mdash;not more’n eight years old&mdash;an’ do you
-’spose he could remember anything that happened or
-find his way across these yere prairies to his hum agin?
-Don’t look reason’ble.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the truth, whether it looks reasonable or not. I
-have seen Julian Mortimer, and talked with him, and
-consequently may be supposed to know more about him
-and his plans than you who have not seen him for years.
-What was that?”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, astonished to hear his own name pronounced
-by one whom he believed to be a stranger to him, uttered
-an ejaculation under his breath, and forgetting in his
-excitement how close the men were to him, bent forward
-and began to listen more intently.</p>
-
-<p>The very slight rustling he occasioned among the folds
-of the canvas cover of the wagon was sufficient to attract
-the attention of the emigrant and his companion, who
-brought their conversation to a sudden close, and looking
-about them suspiciously, waited for a repetition of
-the sound.</p>
-
-<p>But Julian, frightened at what he had done, and
-trembling in every limb when he saw the trapper turn
-his head and gaze earnestly toward the wagon in which
-he was concealed, remained perfectly motionless and
-held his breath in suspense.</p>
-
-<p>The men listened a moment, but hearing nothing to
-alarm them, Sanders folded his arms over the muzzle of
-his rifle, intimating by a gesture that he was ready to
-hear what else the emigrant had to say, and the latter
-once more placed his foot on the wagon-tongue, and
-continued:</p>
-
-<p>“It is time we had an understanding on one point,
-Sanders. Are you working for my cousin, Reginald, or
-for me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m workin’ fur you, in course,” replied the trapper.
-“I’ve done my level best fur you. I had my way with
-one of the brats, an’ put him whar he’ll never trouble
-nobody.”</p>
-
-<p>“Has he never troubled any one since that night?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-Has he never troubled <i>you</i>?” asked the emigrant, in a
-significant tone. “Could you be hired to spend an
-hour in Reginald’s rancho after dark?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I couldn’t,” replied the trapper, in a subdued
-voice, glancing nervously around, and drawing a little
-closer to his companion. “But that thar boy is at the
-bottom of the lake, an’ I’d swar to it, ’cause I put him
-thar myself. What it is that walks about that rancho
-every night, an’ makes such noises, an’ cuts up so, I
-don’t know. You had oughter let me done as I pleased
-with the other; but you got chicken-hearted all of a
-sudden, an’ didn’t want him rubbed out, an’ so I stole
-him away from his hum for you, an’ you toted him off
-to the States. If he comes back here an’ makes outlaws
-of you an’ your cousin, it’s no business of mine. But
-I am on your side, an’ you know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know anything of the kind. It is true that
-you did all this for me, and that I paid you well for it;
-but I know that you have since promised Reginald that
-you would find the boy and bring him back here. Will
-you attack this train to-night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin. That’s what we’ve been a follerin’ it fur.
-If you want to save your bacon, you’d best be gettin’
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I intend to do so; but I don’t want the boy to get
-out; do you understand? You know where to find me
-in the morning, and if you will bring me his jacket and
-leggins to prove that he is out of the way, I will give
-you a thousand dollars. There are a good many boys
-with the train, but you will have no trouble in picking
-out Julian, if you remember how he looked eight years
-ago. You will know him by his handsome face and
-straight, slender figure.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll find him,” said the trapper; “it’s a bargain, an’
-thar’s my hand onto it. Now I’ll jest walk around an’
-take a squint at things, an’ you had best pack up what
-plunder you want to save an’ cl’ar out; ’cause in less’n
-an hour me an’ the Injuns will be down on this yere
-wagon train like a turkey on a tater-bug.”</p>
-
-<p>The emigrant evidently thought it best to act on this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-suggestion, for without wasting any time or words in
-leave-taking he made his way carefully through the
-barricade into the camp.</p>
-
-<p>The trapper watched him until he disappeared from
-view, and then said, as if talking to himself, but in a
-tone of voice loud enough for Julian to hear:</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand dollars fur doin’ a job that you are
-afeared to do yourself! I don’t mind shootin’ the boy,
-but I’d be the biggest kind of a dunce to do it fur that
-money when another man offers me $5,000 for him alive
-an’ well. If that youngster, Julian, is in this camp, I’ll
-win that five thousand to-night, or my name ain’t Ned
-Sanders.”</p>
-
-<p>The trapper shouldered his rifle, and with a step that
-would not have awakened a cricket, stole along the barricade,
-carefully examining it at every point, and mentally
-calculating the chances for making a successful
-attack upon it. When he had passed out of sight in
-the darkness, Julian drew a long breath, and settled
-back in his place of concealment to think over what he
-had heard.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER III.<br />
-<span class="pch">A RIDE IN THE DARK.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dt.jpg" width="80" height="81" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">TO DESCRIBE the feelings with which Julian
-Mortimer listened to the conversation we
-have just recorded were impossible. He
-knew now that he had been greatly mistaken
-in some opinions he had hitherto entertained. He had
-told himself but a few minutes before that there was
-no one on earth who cared whether he lived or died;
-but scarcely had the thought passed through his mind
-before he became aware that there were at least two
-persons in the world who were deeply interested in that
-very matter&mdash;so much so that one was willing to pay a
-ruffian a thousand dollars to kill him, while the other
-had offered five times that amount to have him delivered
-into his hands alive and well. It was no wonder that
-the boy was overwhelmed with fear and bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” he panted, pulling off his sombrero and
-wiping the big drops of perspiration from his forehead,
-“this goes ahead of any thing I ever heard of. I wonder
-if Silas had any reference to this when he said that
-there were two men in the world who would be willing
-to give something nice to get hold of me! I’m done
-for. If I am not killed by the Indians, that villain,
-Sanders, will make a prisoner of me and take me off
-to Reginald. Who is Reginald, and what have I done
-that he should be so anxious to see me? I never
-knew before that I was worth $5,000 to anybody.
-Who is that emigrant, and how does it come that I
-am in his way? He says that he has talked with
-me and knows all about my plans, but I am positive
-that I never spoke to him in my life. I never saw him
-until I found him with this wagon train at St. Joseph.
-I have had some thrilling adventures during the past<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-few weeks, and I can see very plainly that they are not
-yet ended.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, trembling with anxiety and alarm, clambered
-out of the wagon, and leaning on the muzzle of his
-rifle, looked down into the gorge, thought over his
-situation, and tried to determine upon some plan of
-action. His first impulse was to acquaint the emigrants
-with the fact that one of their number had been holding
-converse with an enemy, and have the traitor secured
-at once. His next was to provide for his own
-safety by collecting the few articles of value he possessed
-and making his way back to the prairie; but he was
-deterred from attempting to carry out this plan by the
-fear that while he was fleeing from one danger he might
-run into another. The savages had probably surrounded
-the camp by this time, and he could not hope to pass
-through their lines without being discovered. The best
-course he could pursue was to wait until the guide returned.
-He would know just what ought to be done.</p>
-
-<p>Julian was so completely absorbed in his reverie that
-he forgot to keep an eye on what was going on around
-him, and consequently he did not see the two dark
-figures which came stealing along the road as noiselessly
-as spirits. But the figures were there, and when they
-discovered Julian they drew back into the bushes that
-lined the base of the cliff, and held a whispered consultation.
-Presently one of them stepped out into the
-road again and ran toward the camp. He did not
-attempt to escape observation, but hurried along as
-though he had a perfect right to be there. He seemed
-to be ignorant of the boy’s presence until he heard his
-voice and saw the muzzle of his rifle looking straight
-into his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Halt!” cried Julian, standing with his finger on the
-trigger, ready to enforce his command if it were not
-instantly obeyed. “Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“A friend,” replied the man. “Don’t shoot!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come up here, friend, and let us have a look at
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>As the stranger approached Julian saw that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-appeared to be very much excited about something, and
-that he breathed heavily as if he had been running long
-and rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>“If you are a friend what are you doing on the outside
-of the camp?” asked the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, we’ve been trappin’ here in the mountains, me
-an’ my pardner have, an’ to-day the Injuns driv us out,”
-replied the stranger. “We jest had to git up an’ dig
-out to save our har, an’ left all our plunder in the hands
-of the redskins&mdash;spelter, hosses, traps, an’ every thing
-except our rifles. While we were a makin’ tracks fur
-the prairie we come plump agin somebody; an’ who do
-you ’spose it was? It was Silas Roper. We used to be
-chums, me an’ him did, an’ have hunted and trapped
-together many a day up in the Blackfoot country. We
-found him watchin’ the camp of Ned Sanders an’ his
-band of rascals, an’ Silas said that if he had just one
-more man he could kill or captur’ the last one of ’em.
-He told me whar his wagon train was, an’ axed me would
-I come down an’ get one of the fellers to lend a hand.
-He said that Julian Mortimer was plucky an’ a good
-shot, an’ he’d like to have him. Mebbe you know him
-an’ can tell me whar’ to find him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can. I am Julian Mortimer,” replied the boy,
-proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“You!” The trapper seemed to be first surprised,
-and then disappointed. He surveyed Julian from head
-to foot, and then continued: “Sho! I expected to see a
-<i>man</i>. What could a little cub like you do with Sanders
-and his gang?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am man enough to put a ball into one of them if I
-get a fair chance,” replied Julian. “I know something
-about Sanders, and have reasons for wishing him put
-where he will never see me again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wall, you’re spunky if you are little, an’ spunk is
-the thing that counts arter all. Mebbe you’ll do as well
-as any body. Will you go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I will, if Silas sent for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nough said. Go easy now, an’ do jest as you see
-me do.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The trapper shouldered his rifle and started down the
-road at a rapid run, with Julian close at his heels.</p>
-
-<p>When they passed the first bend in the road a man
-came out of the bushes, where he had been concealed,
-and followed after them with noiseless footsteps. Julian
-did not see him, and neither did he see the dark forms
-that were hidden behind the trees and rocks on each side
-of the path; he saw no one except his guide until he
-came suddenly around the base of a cliff and found himself
-in front of a camp-fire, beside which lay half-a-dozen
-rough-looking men stretched out on their blankets.</p>
-
-<p>Julian stopped when this unexpected sight greeted his
-eyes, but his guide kept on, and seating himself on the
-ground before the fire, jerked his thumb over his
-shoulder toward the boy, and coolly announced:</p>
-
-<p>“Here he is, fellers. Leastwise, he says that’s his
-name.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian stood like one petrified. He looked at his
-guide, at the trappers that were lying around, and then
-his gaze wandered toward an object which he had not
-before noticed. It was Silas Roper, who stood on the
-opposite side of the fire, with his back to a tree, to which
-he was securely bound.</p>
-
-<p>One glance at him was enough for Julian, who now
-saw that he had been duped. He understood the trick
-that had been played upon him as well as though it had
-been explained in words, and wondered at his own
-stupidity. If it had been true, as the strange trapper
-had told him, that Silas was keeping guard over the
-camp of the outlaws, and needed just one more man to
-enable him to effect their capture, would he have sent
-for an inexperienced person like himself when there
-were at least a score of old Indian-fighters among the
-emigrants? Julian told himself that he ought to have
-known better.</p>
-
-<p>These thoughts passed through his mind in an instant
-of time, and in his excitement and alarm, forgetting
-everything except that he was in the presence of enemies,
-he faced about and took to his heels; but he had not
-made many steps when the man who had followed him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-from the camp, and who was none other than Sanders
-himself, suddenly appeared in his path.</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite so fast!” said he, in savage tones. “You’re
-wuth a heap to us, if you only knowed it, an’ we couldn’t
-think of partin’ with you so soon.”</p>
-
-<p>As the trapper spoke, he twisted the boy’s rifle out of
-his grasp, tore the belt which contained his revolvers and
-hunting-knife from his waist, and then seized him by
-the collar and dragged him toward the fire&mdash;Julian, who
-knew that it would be the height of folly to irritate the
-ruffian, offering no resistance.</p>
-
-<p>“I call this a good night’s work,” continued Sanders,
-who seemed to be highly elated. “We’ve been waitin’
-fur both them fellers fur more’n a year, an’ we’ve got ’em
-at last. This is Julian. I knowed him the minute I
-sot my eyes onto him, and could have picked him out
-among a million. He hain’t changed a bit in his face,
-but he’s grown a heap taller an’ stouter, an’ p’raps is a
-leetle livelier on his legs than he was when me an’ him
-run that foot-race eight year ago. Remember that&mdash;don’t
-you, youngster?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t,” replied Julian. “I never ran a race
-with you in my life. I never saw you until to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t! Wol, I’ve seed you a good many times
-durin’ the last two months, an’ have talked with you,
-too; but I was dressed up like a gentleman then, an’
-mebbe that’s the reason you don’t recognize me now.
-Dick thinks he knows more about you than anybody
-else, but I reckon he don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is Dick?” asked the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s the feller who was talkin’ to me to-night while
-you were settin’ in that wagon listenin’ to us. I didn’t
-know you were about thar until Dick had gone back
-into the camp, an’ then I seed you come down from the
-wagon. I wanted to get you away from thar, ’cause I
-was afeared that if you were in the camp durin’ the fight
-some of the Injuns might send a ball or arrer into you,
-an’ that would have been bad fur me an’ my mates,
-’cause it would have tuk jest $5,000 out of our pockets.
-I didn’t see no chance to slip up an’ make a pris’ner of
-you without alarmin’ the emigrants, so I come back
-here an’ got one of my men, an’ me an’ him made up
-that story we told you. It worked first-rate, didn’t it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-023.jpg" width="400" height="224"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc400"><span class="smcap">Julian Suddenly Found Himself a Prisoner in the Trappers’ Camp.</span><span class="wn">&mdash;See page <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</span></p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But you have not yet told me who Dick is,” said
-Julian, without answering the outlaw’s question. “How
-did he become acquainted with me; and what reason has
-he for wishing me put out of his way? I heard him say
-that he would give you a thousand dollars if you would
-kill me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Them’s his very words. But you needn’t be no ways
-skeary, ’cause I wouldn’t hurt a hair of your head&mdash;not
-while I can make more money by takin’ good care of
-you. As fur the reasons Dick’s got fur havin’ somethin’
-agin you, that’s his business an’ not mine. Mebbe you’ll
-know all about it one of these days. But I reckon we
-might as well be movin’ now. What have you done
-with the critters, Tom?”</p>
-
-<p>The man who had guided Julian to the camp of the
-outlaws arose from his seat, disappeared in the bushes,
-and presently returned leading three horses. At a sign
-from his captors Julian mounted one of the animals,
-Sanders sprang upon the back of another, and seizing
-Julian’s horse by the bridle rode off into the darkness,
-followed by Tom, who brought up the rear. The boy
-wondered what the outlaws were going to do with him,
-and hoped that Sanders, who had shown himself to be
-quite communicative, might see fit to enlighten him;
-but the trapper seemed to have relapsed into a meditative
-mood, for he rode along with his eyes fastened on the
-horn of his saddle, and for half an hour never opened
-his lips except to swear at Julian’s horse, which showed
-a disposition to lag behind, and to answer a challenge
-from the foremost of a long line of Indians who passed
-them on the road.</p>
-
-<p>When Julian saw these warriors he thought of the
-emigrants, and knew that the fight the guide had predicted
-was not far distant. It was begun that very
-hour, and the signal for the attack was a single, long-drawn
-war-whoop, which echoed and re-echoed among
-the cliffs until it seemed to Julian as if the mountains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-were literally filled with yelling savages. No sooner
-had it died away than a chorus of frightful whoops
-arose from the direction of the camp, accompanied by
-the rapid discharge of fire-arms and the defiant shouts
-of the emigrants, which came to Julian’s ears with terrible
-distinctness. Although he knew that he was at a
-safe distance from the scene of the conflict, and in the
-power of men who would protect him from the savages,
-he could not have been more terrified if he had been
-standing side by side with the pioneers battling for his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think of it, anyhow?” asked Sanders,
-noticing the boy’s agitation. “Never heered sounds
-like them afore, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Julian, in a trembling voice, “and I
-never want to hear them again. It is some of your
-work. Silas says the Indians would not be half as bad
-as they are, if it were not for white renegades like you
-and your friends, who are continually spreading dissatisfaction
-among them, and urging them on to the war-path.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t!” exclaims Sanders. “I don’t reckon
-we’re any wuss than other folks I’ve heern tell on. Thar
-are men in the world&mdash;an’ some of ’em don’t live so very
-far from here, nuther&mdash;who walk with their noses in the
-air, an’ think themselves better’n everybody else, an’
-yet they are bad enough to offer men like me an’ my
-mates money to put some of their own kin out of the
-way. We’re jest about as good as the rest if we are outlaws.”</p>
-
-<p>For the next two miles the route pursued by the trappers
-and their prisoner lay through a deep ravine, where
-the darkness was so intense that Julian could scarcely
-see his hand before him, and at every step of the way
-the reports of fire-arms and the whoops and yells of the
-combatants rang in his ears. There was a fierce battle
-going on at the camp, and the boy wondered who would
-gain the victory.</p>
-
-<p>The question was answered in a few minutes, for when
-the three horsemen emerged from the valley, and reached<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-the summit of a high hill, over which the road ran,
-Julian looked back and saw a bright flame, which increased
-in volume every moment, shining over the tops
-of the trees. Then he knew that the emigrants had
-failed in their attempts to beat off their assailants. The
-savages had succeeded in setting fire to the wagons
-which formed the barricade, and when that protection
-was swept away, the battle would be changed to a massacre.
-The Indians would pour into the camp in overwhelming
-numbers, and surrounded as the emigrants
-were on every side, not one of them could hope to
-escape.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar’s another wagon train gone up,” said Sanders,
-with savage exultation. “It’s a pity that every one of
-them can’t be sarved the same way. Why don’t folks
-stay in the States whar they belong, instead of coming
-out here whar they know they ain’t wanted? How
-would you like to be in that camp, youngster?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I should be in a much worse
-situation than I am now,” replied Julian. “If I were
-with the emigrants I should probably be killed, and I
-am not sure that I shall fare any better at the hands
-of the man into whose power you intend to deliver me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a fact,” said Sanders, reflectively. “If I
-was in your place, an’ was tuk pris’ner, I believe I’d as
-soon be among the Injuns as in the hands of Reginald
-Mortimer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Reginald Mortimer!” repeated Julian, in great
-amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s the very feller whose name I spoke,” replied
-Sanders, turning around in his saddle and facing his
-prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>Julian looked earnestly at the trapper for a few
-seconds and drew a long breath of relief.</p>
-
-<p>“I begin to understand the matter,” said he. “I
-knew you were mistaken as to my identity.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?” exclaimed Sanders.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean that you have got hold of the wrong boy.
-Because my name happens to be Mortimer, you think I
-am the one this man Reginald wants; but when he sees
-me and knows my history, he will release me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When Sanders heard this he threw back his head
-and burst into a loud laugh, in which he was joined by
-Tom. Julian could not see that he had said anything
-calculated to excite their mirth, but the outlaws could,
-and they were highly amused&mdash;so much so that it was
-fully five minutes before they recovered themselves
-sufficiently to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, you are a green one,” said Sanders, at length.
-“The minute Reginald puts his eyes on you he will say
-that you are the very chap he’s been a-lookin’ fur so
-long, an’ instead of releasin’ you he’ll lock you up whar
-you’ll never see daylight again. Maybe he’ll do something
-wuss&mdash;I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t put myself in your place and run the
-risk,” chimed in Tom. “But I’d a heap sooner be
-rubbed out to onct than be shut up in that rancho of
-his’n. Sich queer doin’s as they do have thar! The ole
-man can’t keep a thing in his house.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is the reason?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Cause it’s stole from him, that’s the reason&mdash;money,
-we’pons, clothes, grub&mdash;everything. He can’t keep
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why doesn’t he lock his doors?”</p>
-
-<p>“Haint every door in the rancho got mor’n a dozen
-bolts an’ chains onto it, an’ don’t he keep three or four
-big dogs on the outside of the house, an’ as many more
-inside? An’ haint he sot up night after night with his
-pistols in his hands watchin’ fur the thieves? It don’t
-do no ’arthly good whatsomever. Things is missin’ all
-the while, an’ nobody don’t know whar they go to.
-You see,” added Tom, sinking his voice almost to a
-whisper, “thar’s some folks besides the ole man livin’
-in that ar rancho, an’ they don’t need doors an’ winders.
-They can go through a keyhole, or a crack an inch wide,
-and even a solid stone wall can’t stop ’em. I slept thar
-one night, an’ if I didn’t see&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold your grip, Tom,” interrupted Sanders,
-hastily. “Somehow I don’t like to hear that thing
-spoke of. That rancho is a bad place to stop at, that’s
-a fact; an’ I’d as soon fight a fair stand-up battle with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-the biggest grizzly in the mountains as to spend an
-hour thar arter sundown. I wouldn’t be half so bad
-skeered.”</p>
-
-<p>After saying this Sanders relapsed into silence again,
-and so did Tom; and Julian, who had heard just enough
-to excite his curiosity, tried in vain to induce them to
-continue the conversation. He wanted to learn something
-about Reginald Mortimer, and know what the
-trappers had seen in his house that frightened them so
-badly; but they paid no heed to his questions, and
-Julian was finally obliged to give it up in despair.</p>
-
-<p>How far he traveled that night he did not know. He
-was so nearly overcome with fear and anxiety, and so
-completely absorbed in his speculations concerning the
-future, that at times he was utterly unconscious of what
-was going on around him. All he remembered was
-that for five long hours Sanders kept his horse at a full
-gallop, leading the way at reckless speed along yawning
-chasms and under beetling cliffs which hung threateningly
-over the road, that he became so weary that he
-reeled about in his saddle, and that finally, when it
-seemed to him that he could no longer shake off the
-stupor that was pressing upon him, Sanders suddenly
-drew rein and announced that they were at their journey’s
-end.</p>
-
-<p>Julian looked up and found himself in an extensive
-valley, which stretched away to the right and left as far
-as his eyes could reach. In front of him was a high
-stone wall, over the top of which he could see the roof
-of what appeared to be a commodious and comfortable
-house. The building was evidently intended to serve as
-a fortification as well as a dwelling, for the walls were
-thick and provided with loop-holes, and the windows
-were protected by heavy iron-bound shutters.</p>
-
-<p>All was dark and silent within the rancho; but when
-Sanders pounded upon the gate with the butt of his
-revolver, a chorus of hoarse growls arose on the other
-side of the wall, and a pack of dogs greeted them with
-furious and long-continued barking. Presently Julian
-heard a door open and close in the rancho, and saw the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-light of a lantern shining above the wall. Then came
-the rattling of chains and the grating of heavy bolts,
-and a small wicket in the gate swung open and was
-immediately filled by the bull’s-eye of a powerful dark
-lantern. The person who handled the lantern, whoever
-he was, could obtain a good view of the horsemen, but
-they could not see him, for he remained in the shade.
-He consumed a good deal of time in making his observations,
-and Sanders began to grow impatient.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, Pedro,” he growled, “when you get through
-lookin’ at us you’ll let us in, won’t you? We’ve got
-business with the ole man, an’ we’re in a hurry. I
-don’t want to stay about this place no longer than I can
-help,” he added, in an undertone.</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the outlaw’s voice must have satisfied
-the man as to the identity of his visitors, for he closed
-the wicket, and after a short delay opened the gate,
-and Sanders led the way into the rancho.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-<span class="pch">JULIAN FINDS A RELATIVE.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dh.jpg" width="80" height="79" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">HAD JULIAN been entering a prison, knowing
-that he was destined to remain there for the
-term of his natural life, he could not have
-been more terrified than he was when he
-found himself surrounded by the gloomy walls of the
-rancho, and heard the ponderous gate clang behind him.
-He was playing an involuntary part in a strange and
-mysterious drama, and the uncertainty of what might
-be the next scene in which he would be forced to assist,
-kept him in a terrible state of suspense. But he was
-blessed with more than an ordinary share of courage,
-and when the first momentary thrill of terror had passed
-away, he called it all to his aid, and prepared to meet
-whatever was in store for him with an undaunted front.
-He appeared to be much more at his ease than the two
-trappers, for they had suddenly lost their swaggering,
-confident air, and were gazing about them uneasily as
-though they were apprehensive of discovering something
-they did not care to see.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s all grit, haint he?” whispered Sanders, who, as
-well as his companion, seemed surprised at the captive’s
-coolness and indifference. “He’s a genuine Mortimer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe he’ll look different afore he has been many
-hours inside these yere walls,” replied Tom, in the same
-cautious whisper. “Wait till he gets into the house an’
-sees <i>him</i>, as I saw him one night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you’re going in you had better dismount,
-hadn’t you? Or do you intend to ride your horses in?
-Who’s this you have here?”</p>
-
-<p>It was Pedro who spoke. He had lingered to fasten
-the gate, and now came up and elevated his lantern to
-take a survey of the trappers and their prisoner. When<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-the rays from the bull’s-eye fell upon Julian’s features
-he staggered back as if he had been shot, his face grew
-deadly pale, and his whole frame trembled violently.</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t&mdash;it isn’t&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Pedro tried to pronounce some name, but it seemed to
-stick in his throat.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it isn’t <i>him</i>,” replied Sanders; “it’s the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not Julian?” exclaimed the Mexican, plainly much
-relieved.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Julian, an’ nobody else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, how came he here? Where did you find
-him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Pedro, you haven’t offered us $5,000 to
-bring him to you safe an’ sound, have you? Them’s
-questions we don’t answer for nobody except the ole man.
-We want to see him, an’ purty quick, too.”</p>
-
-<p>Sanders dismounted from his horse, and at a sign from
-him Tom and Julian did the same. Pedro led the way
-toward the door of the rancho, shaking his head and
-ejaculating in both Spanish and English, and turning
-around now and then to look sharply at Julian as if he
-had not yet been able to make up his mind whether he
-was a solid flesh and blood boy or only a spirit. He conducted
-the trappers and their captive into the house, and
-after pausing to fasten the door, led them through a long,
-wide hall, the walls of which were hung with old-fashioned
-pictures and implements of the chase, and
-ushered them into an elegantly furnished room; and
-after taking one more good look at Julian, waved his
-hand toward a couple of chairs and asked the trappers
-to be seated.</p>
-
-<p>“I will go and tell the governor who you are, and
-whom you have brought with you,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold your horses!” exclaimed Sanders, suddenly,
-and in great excitement. “You haint a-goin’ to take
-that light with you an’ leave us here in the dark? I
-wouldn’t stay here fur all the money the ole man’s got
-stowed away in that cave of his’n, if it’s $50,000.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty thousand!” sneered Pedro. “You have queer
-ideas of wealth. Better say fifty million; and he don’t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-know where it is any more than you do. He’ll find out
-now, however,” added the Mexican, with a hasty glance
-at Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, put that lantern on the table if you’re goin’
-out,” repeated Sanders.</p>
-
-<p>Pedro muttered something about having any thing
-but an exalted opinion of a man, who, after braving innumerable
-dangers, was afraid to remain in a dark room
-for a moment or two, but he complied with the request.
-He placed the lantern on the table and went out, leaving
-the trappers and Julian to themselves. The latter sunk
-helplessly into the nearest chair, while Sanders and his
-companion, after looking all about the room to make
-sure that there was no fourth person present, moved up
-closer together and stood regarding one another with an
-expression of great amazement on their faces.</p>
-
-<p>“Fifty million!” whispered Sanders, who was the first
-to speak. “Do you believe it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a monstrous heap of money,” replied Tom&mdash;“more’n
-the hul State of Californy is worth. But I’ve
-allers heern tell that old Reginald had more yaller boys
-stowed away in this rancho than a wagon train could
-haul away. If it’s a fact, we’ve made a mistake by&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>He finished the sentence by jerking his thumb over
-his shoulder toward Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin, we have,” replied Sanders. “We hadn’t
-oughter give him up for no $5,000. Pedro told us that
-the ole man don’t know whar the money is any more’n
-we do, but that he would find out all about it now; and
-when he said that he looked at Julian. Did you notice?”</p>
-
-<p>Tom replied in the affirmative.</p>
-
-<p>“That means that the money is hid somewhars; but
-it can’t be that the boy knows whar it is, ’cause he was
-so young when he was took away from here. Thar’s a
-heap o’ things about this house an’ family that I would
-like to have made clear to me. But I know one thing,
-an’ that is, we can make up on the other feller what we
-lose on Julian; an’ besides, we can watch our chance an’
-steal the boy out agin when&mdash;what’s that? Did you hear
-anything, youngster?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Sanders’ voice trembled as he asked this question, and
-facing suddenly about he gazed first toward the farther
-end of the room, and then toward Julian, who had
-started to his feet, and stood looking the very picture
-of bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>“I did,” replied the boy, in a scarcely audible whisper;
-“and I saw something moving those curtains,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>The walls of the room into which Julian and his captors
-had been conducted, instead of being plastered or
-papered, were concealed by crimson hangings which extended
-from the ceiling to the floor. These were the
-curtains of which he had spoken.</p>
-
-<p>As he sat listening in a dreamy sort of way to the
-whispered conversation of the trappers, he heard a grating
-noise on the other side of the hangings resembling
-that which would be occasioned by a key turning in a
-rusty lock.</p>
-
-<p>A bright, dazzling light blazed up for an instant and
-was extinguished, and then the hangings were pushed
-aside and a pair of eyes appeared at the opening and
-looked into the room.</p>
-
-<p>Julian saw a portion of the face to which they belonged
-and sprang to his feet in great astonishment, for
-he thought he recognized the features of the emigrant
-whose conversation with Sanders he had overheard. But
-the face was withdrawn almost as soon as it appeared,
-and Julian was not allowed a second look.</p>
-
-<p>“What did you see?” cried Sanders, his face ghastly
-pale, and the hand which rested on the lock of his rifle
-trembling visibly.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw some one looking in here,” replied Julian,
-“and it was the same man who offered you a thousand
-dollars to put me out of the way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dick Mortimer!” Sanders almost shrieked.</p>
-
-<p>The expression of terror on his face gave way instantly
-to a look of profound astonishment. He dropped the
-butt of his rifle heavily to the floor, and Tom uttered a
-long-drawn whistle.</p>
-
-<p>The two men stared vacantly at one another for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-moment, and then with a common impulse sprang across
-the room and tore aside the hangings.</p>
-
-<p>There was no one there. Nothing was revealed except
-the solid stone wall which formed that side of the
-room. Where could the emigrant have gone? He certainly
-had not come into the room, and neither could
-he have retreated through the wall. Julian stood transfixed.</p>
-
-<p>“I know I saw him there,” said he, as soon as he
-could speak. “It beats me where he could have gone
-so suddenly.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s nothing,” replied Sanders. “You’ll be beat
-wuss than this if you stay in this rancho all night, I can
-tell you that.”</p>
-
-<p>But the trapper’s actions indicated that it was something,
-after all, for as soon as he had satisfied himself
-that the emigrant had disappeared, he dropped the hangings
-as if they had been coals of fire, and snatching the
-lantern from the table retreated toward the door with
-all possible haste, with Tom close at his heels. Nor
-was Julian far behind the trappers when they reached
-the hall.</p>
-
-<p>He did not wonder now that they were impatient to
-transact their business and leave the house. He would
-have been glad to leave it himself. His captors had
-told him that there were some “queer doings” in that
-rancho. Did they refer to scenes like this? Were people
-who, like this emigrant, had no business there, in the
-habit of walking about the house every night, and of
-vanishing after such a bewildering fashion when discovered;
-and was he to be compelled to remain there a witness
-to such proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>The boy trembled at the thought. He was not superstitious.
-He knew that he had seen the face of a man
-peeping out from behind the hangings, and he believed,
-too, that his sudden and mysterious disappearance could
-be explained, and that there was nothing supernatural
-about it; but nevertheless he resolved that as long as he
-was allowed the free use of his feet he would not remain
-in a dark room in that house without company.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the trappers retreated into the hall he went
-with them, and like them, kept his back turned toward
-the room, and impatiently awaited Pedro’s return. Nor
-was he obliged to wait long.</p>
-
-<p>In a few seconds he heard a door open and close, a
-light flashed into the hall, and two men came hurrying
-toward him. One of them was Pedro, and the other
-was a tall, foreign-looking gentleman, in dressing-gown
-and slippers, who came along with a smile on his face,
-and his hand outstretched, as if about to greet some
-friend from whom he had long been separated.</p>
-
-<p>Upon reaching Julian’s side he threw his arms around
-him and clasped him in a most affectionate embrace&mdash;to
-which the boy submitted without uttering a word. He
-had not expected such a reception as this; and, if one
-might judge by the expression on the faces of the trappers,
-they had not expected it either. Their underjaws
-dropped down, they stared at one another for a
-moment, and then Tom gave utterance to another long-drawn
-whistle, and Sanders pounded the floor with the
-butt of his rifle.</p>
-
-<p>“Julian! Julian! is it possible that you have returned
-at last?” cried the gentleman, holding the boy off at
-arm’s length for a moment, and then straining him to
-his breast once more. “Don’t you know your Uncle
-Reginald?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s him sure enough, ain’t it?” asked Sanders.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it is he,” replied the owner of the rancho,
-still clinging to Julian as if he never meant to let him
-go again. “I should have recognized him if I had met
-him in Asia. No one but a Mortimer could ever boast
-of such a face as that. Where did you find him?
-Julian, why don’t you tell me that you are glad to see
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I say, guv’nor,” interrupted Sanders, “couldn’t he
-talk to you jest as well arter we are gone? Me an’ my
-pardner are in a monstrous hurry. How about them
-$5,000?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will place it in your hands this moment. Come
-with me.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Seizing Julian by the hand, Reginald Mortimer&mdash;for
-that was the gentleman’s name&mdash;led the way along the
-hall, and into a room which the prisoner saw was used
-as a sleeping apartment, for there was the bed from
-which this man, who claimed to be his uncle, had just
-arisen.</p>
-
-<p>Conducting the boy to a seat on the sofa, and leaving
-the trappers to stand or sit as suited their fancy, the gentleman
-produced a bunch of keys from his desk and unlocked
-a strong box which was standing at the head of
-his bed.</p>
-
-<p>When the lid was thrown back Julian opened his eyes
-and leaned forward to obtain a nearer view of the contents
-of the box.</p>
-
-<p>Such a sight he had never seen before. The box was
-literally filled with gold coin&mdash;some of it packed away
-in little drawers, and the rest tied up in canvas bags.
-Two of these bags the owner lifted out of the box and
-handed to the trappers, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“There is the money I promised to give you if you
-succeeded in restoring Julian to me safe and sound. I
-give you my hearty thanks beside, for you have rendered
-me a most important service. Pedro, show Sanders and
-his friend to the best room in the house.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nary time, if <i>you</i> please!” exclaimed the trapper,
-with a frightened look. “We’ll feel a heap better, an’
-sleep a sight easier, if we camp in the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I want to talk to you about Julian. Where
-did you find him?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll tell you all about that when we bring the
-other feller to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“The other fellow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; that is, if we can come to tarms.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whom do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Silas Roper. Say another five thousand fur him,
-an’ we’ll have him here to-morrow bright an’ arly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Silas Roper!” exclaimed the gentleman, gleefully.
-“Am I not in luck? Certainly, I say it; bring him
-immediately.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a bargain. Come on, Tom.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Well, go, if you must, and remember that although
-I am under obligations to you now, I shall be vastly
-more your debtor when you give that man into my
-hands. My plans are working splendidly.”</p>
-
-<p>When the door had closed behind the trappers Reginald
-Mortimer locked his strong box and once more
-turned toward Julian. The latter, who since his arrival
-at the rancho had moved like one in a dream, aroused
-himself by a strong effort and looked squarely into the
-man’s face. He gazed at him a moment, and then
-sprung to his feet with a cry of alarm and ran toward
-the door.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER V.<br />
-<span class="pch">JULIAN’S HOME</span>.</h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dw.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">WE HAVE said that Julian Mortimer was the
-hero of our story, and in order that you may
-understand what brought him to the mountains,
-and how it came that several persons
-whom he believed he had never seen before should
-take so deep an interest in him, we must go back and
-relate some events that transpired previous to the beginning
-of our story.</p>
-
-<p>On the banks of the Missouri River, about fifty miles
-below St. Joseph, was a small clearing, in which stood
-a dilapidated cabin inhabited by the family of John
-Bowles. It was a gloomy-looking place, and that was
-not to be wondered at, for Jack, as he was familiarly
-called, was not the man to waste any of his time or
-money in beautifying his home. Both were much too
-precious for that. His time was spent in hunting and
-trapping, and his money&mdash;what little he earned&mdash;was
-devoted to the purchase of bad whisky, of which he
-was exceedingly fond. He was a tall, heavy, broad-shouldered
-man, and looked the very impersonation of
-laziness. His two boys, Jake and Tom, were chips of
-the old block, and his wife was a sharp-featured, ill-tempered
-woman of wonderful strength and daring,
-and it was said that in a fair rough-and-tumble fight&mdash;for
-things came to that sometimes in the cabin of Mr.
-Bowles&mdash;she was more than a match for her redoubtable
-husband.</p>
-
-<p>The neighboring settlers had but little to do with
-Jack. They remarked that his family went clothed in
-rags from one year’s end to another; that they were
-sometimes destitute of even the common necessities of
-life; and that Jack hunted early and late and spent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-every cent he made at the grocery at “The Corners.”
-But one stormy night a stranger was seen to ride rapidly
-away from the cabin, and from that hour things seemed
-to take a turn for the better with Jack Bowles. He
-and his family appeared in brand new suits of clothing;
-the boys sported silver-mounted rifles in place of the
-rusty single-barreled shot-guns in which they had before
-taken so much delight; a neighbor, who knew
-something of the use of carpenters’ tools, was employed
-to patch up the cabin, and Jack gave up hunting and
-spent his days and nights in lounging about the grocery,
-drinking whisky and showing large rolls of bills and
-handfuls of gold and silver. The settlers noticed, too,
-that the cabin had an inmate whom they had never
-seen before&mdash;a slender, fair-haired boy about eight years
-of age, who seemed to be altogether out of his element
-there. And they told one another also that Jack and
-his wife had reasons for wishing to keep him out of
-sight as much as possible, for whenever any one passed
-the clearing the boy would be summoned into the house
-by the shrill voice of Mrs. Bowles, and the door closed
-upon him.</p>
-
-<p>From this they naturally concluded that the boy and
-the money Jack spent so freely were in some way connected;
-and, when hard pressed, Jack acknowledged
-that such was the fact. He said that the boy’s name
-was Julian Mortimer; that he had been brought to the
-cabin by a stranger who wished to leave him there for a
-month or two while he went on a business tour to New
-Orleans; and that he had paid a few weeks’ board for
-him in advance. There was one thing, however, that
-Jack did not see fit to disclose, and that was that the
-stranger had cautioned him to keep strict watch over
-the boy, and under no circumstances to allow him far
-out of his sight. For awhile the settlers wondered
-greatly at this story; but it soon ceased to be the topic of
-conversation, and finally even the circumstance of the
-stranger’s visit was forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks grew into months, and months into years, and
-Julian Mortimer was still an inmate of Jack Bowles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>’
-cabin, which he had learned to call home. The money
-that had been paid for his board had long ago been
-squandered at The Corners, and Jack had been obliged
-to overhaul his long-neglected implements of the chase,
-and resume his old occupation of hunting and trapping.</p>
-
-<p>The cabin was in a worse condition now than it was
-before it was repaired. It was built of rough, unhewn
-logs, and contained but one room. It had no floor&mdash;the
-ground, which had been trampled upon until it was as
-hard as a rock, answering that purpose. The only
-furniture it could boast of were two miserable beds, and
-a three-legged pine table that had been pushed against
-the wall to enable it to retain its upright position. As
-for chairs, there were none; the places of these useful
-articles being supplied with boxes and empty nail-kegs.
-There were no windows in the cabin, all the light and
-air being admitted through the door, which was allowed
-to stand open during the coldest days in winter.</p>
-
-<p>A ladder on one side of the room led to the loft where
-Julian slept. It was the most uncomfortable part of the
-house, for some of the boards at the gable-end had fallen
-off, the shingles on the roof were loose, and during a
-storm the rain and sleet rattled down on his hard pillow.
-There was nothing inviting about Julian’s bed, for it
-was simply a pile of husks, with a large gunny sack, a
-tattered blanket, and one or two ragged coats spread
-over it. But he always went to that bed aching in every
-muscle after his hard day’s work, and slept as soundly
-there, in spite of the cold wind and rattling shingles, as
-if it had been a couch of down.</p>
-
-<p>One end of the cabin was occupied by an immense
-fire-place, with a stick chimney, which leaned away from
-the building as if about to topple over. A fire was
-burning brightly on the hearth one cold afternoon in
-March, and before it stood Mrs. Bowles, watching some
-venison steaks that were broiling on the coals, and
-smoking a short cob pipe, which was held firmly between
-her teeth. She was angry&mdash;that was plain enough to be
-seen&mdash;and, indeed, it would have been difficult to find
-her in any other mood. She thought she had good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-reasons for showing her temper occasionally, for “that
-Julian,” as she called the household drudge, was the
-plague of her life. More than half an hour ago she had
-sent him out after firewood, and although she had called
-him three times, and promised to dust his jacket for
-him the moment he came within reach of her arm&mdash;a
-threat that never failed to quicken the pace of her sons&mdash;he
-had not yet returned. She watched the broiling
-steaks for a few minutes, listening the while for the
-sound of footsteps, and then went to the door, removed
-the pipe from her mouth, threw back her head and
-shrieked:</p>
-
-<p>“You, Julian! Have you gone clear to St. Joe arter
-that firewood?”</p>
-
-<p>This time her shrill tones reached the ears of a young
-fellow about sixteen years of age, who was at work in
-the edge of the woods at a short distance from the house.
-We ought rather to say that he <i>had</i> been at work, and
-was resting from his labor, leaning on his ax and gazing
-thoughtfully at the ground when the woman’s sharp
-voice broke in upon his reverie.</p>
-
-<p>“There it is again,” said he, with a long-drawn sigh,
-lifting his ax and resuming his work. “It’s Julian!
-Julian! from morning until night. Julian has to do
-everything that is done on the farm. I shouldn’t mind
-the work so much if they would only give me some warm
-clothes and say a kind word to me now and then; but
-they won’t do it. Look at that,” he added, pausing,
-with his ax suspended in the air, and gazing down at his
-boots, which were so sadly out of repair that they
-afforded his feet but very little protection from the mud,
-and none whatever from the sharp, biting air. “This
-coat is so thin that the wind blows right through it; and
-as for this hat&mdash;well, perhaps it is better than none at
-all, but not much. These are the only clothes I have in
-the world, and they are the best I have owned since I
-came to this place eight years ago. I have money enough
-to buy others, but I dare not do it, for fear that they
-will be taken away from me and given to that lazy Jake
-or Tom. And as for the treatment I receive&mdash;why,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-there isn’t a dog on the place so badly abused. I
-suppose I shall get another beating now for keeping
-Mrs. Bowles waiting for this firewood.”</p>
-
-<p>When Julian had finished his soliloquy and his chopping,
-he threw down his ax, and shouldering one of the
-heavy back-logs he had cut, made his way slowly toward
-the house. Mrs. Bowles was too busily engaged with
-her preparations for supper to think of the rawhide
-which she had taken from its accustomed nail behind
-the door and laid upon the table close at her side, and
-Julian succeeded in transferring his pile of wood from
-the edge of the clearing to the cabin without attracting
-her attention. This done, his work for the night was
-over, and he was at liberty to attend to a little business
-of his own.</p>
-
-<p>Drawing on a pair of tattered gloves he left the house,
-and walking briskly past the corn-cribs, struck into the
-path that led through the woods to The Corners, turning
-his head now and then to make sure that there was
-no one observing his movements. Had he taken pains
-to look closely at one of the corn-cribs as he went past
-it, he would have discovered two pairs of eyes peering
-through an opening over the door; and had he glanced
-behind him when he reached the cover of the woods,
-he would have seen the door fly open and two figures
-spring out and run swiftly along the path in pursuit of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Julian had set out to visit his traps. Minks, foxes
-and raccoons were abundant in the woods about the
-clearing, and he was very expert in taking them. During
-the last two winters he had earned a sum of money
-that was quite a respectable fortune in his eyes; and
-more than that, he had purchased an excellent rifle, a
-supply of ammunition and a fine young horse, which he
-intended should some day carry him miles and miles out
-of the reach of Mrs. Bowles’ rawhide.</p>
-
-<p>The rifle, together with his money and stock of furs,
-was concealed where no one would ever think of looking
-for it; but the horse was claimed by Tom Bowles, Jack’s
-younger son, who took possession of the animal as soon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-as Julian brought him home. But that was a matter
-that did not trouble our hero. Of course he was denied
-the pleasure of riding the horse&mdash;for Jake and Tom followed
-the example set them by their parents, and tyrannized
-over Julian in every possible way&mdash;but he knew
-where to find him when he wanted him; and when he
-was ready to undertake the journey he had been planning
-and thinking about, he intended to take possession
-of him without consulting Tom Bowles or any one
-else.</p>
-
-<p>On the day that Julian first brought the horse home
-he created quite a commotion in the Bowles family.
-When he told Jack, in the presence of his wife and sons,
-that the animal was his own private property, and that
-he had paid $75 in cash for him, the inquiry very naturally
-arose, where did the money come from? That was
-a matter that Julian did not care to talk about. If he
-replied that he had received it for the furs he had
-trapped, he knew that Jack and his boys would hunt
-the woods over until they found his dead-falls, and then
-rob and destroy them.</p>
-
-<p>He declined to enlighten them on this point, and that
-created on uproar at once. Jack swore lustily; Mrs.
-Bowles flourished her rawhide; Tom took charge of the
-horse and led him off to the stable; and Jake threatened
-to black his eye for him. But Julian, who was not one
-of the sort who are easily frightened, remained firm, and
-Jack and his boys were compelled to change their tactics
-and resort to strategy.</p>
-
-<p>They told one another that they would keep a sharp
-eye on all Julian’s movements, and follow him wherever
-he went; and if they did not find out what he did in
-the woods while he was there, and what it was that took
-him away from home so regularly every night and morning,
-they would know the reason why.</p>
-
-<p>But even this plan failed, for Julian was always on
-the alert and could not be caught napping. His ears, as
-sharp as an Indian’s, always told him when he was followed.
-On such occasions he would stroll carelessly
-about through the woods, as if he had no particular<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-object in view, and finally make his way home again
-and go to work. Then Tom and Jake would be angrier
-than ever, and Julian was certain to suffer for his watchfulness.</p>
-
-<p>On this particular evening, however, Julian was not
-as careful as usual. The plans he had been so long maturing
-were almost ready to carry into execution, and
-he was so completely wrapped up in his glorious anticipations
-concerning the future that he did not hear the
-light footsteps of Jake and Tom as they dodged through
-the bushes behind him.</p>
-
-<p>He walked straight to the creek, and from the force
-of long habit, paused on the bank to look about him.
-Having satisfied himself that there was no one in sight,
-he sprung into the bed of the stream, and looking
-under the overhanging roots of a beech where he had
-set one of his traps, discovered a large mink caught by
-one of his hind feet.</p>
-
-<p>A blow on the head with a stick stilled the animal,
-and after resetting and baiting the trap, Julian picked
-up his prize, and rejoicing in the thought that the
-skin of the mink would bring $2 more to be added to
-his little fortune, hurried on up the creek.</p>
-
-<p>For an hour Julian continued his walk, stopping now
-and then to bait and set a trap that had been sprung by
-some animal too cunning to be caught, or to take a fox,
-mink or raccoon out of another, and finally he stopped
-at the foot of a precipitous cliff with $13 worth of furs
-thrown over his shoulder&mdash;not a bad afternoon’s work
-for a trapper of his years.</p>
-
-<p>He now became more cautious than ever in his movements.
-His first care was to convince himself that
-there was no one following him; and in order to set his
-fears on this score at rest, he dropped his game and ran
-back along the bank of the creek, peering through the
-trees in every direction, and passing so close to Tom
-and Jake, who had thrown themselves behind a log to
-escape discovery, that he could have touched them.
-But he saw no one, and believing himself to be alone in
-the woods, he once more shouldered his game and made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-his way up the cliff until he reached a thicket of bushes
-that grew near the summit.</p>
-
-<p>Here he paused, and began pulling away the leaves
-with his hands, presently disclosing to view a small
-door which had been set into the face of the cliff.
-The opening of the door revealed what appeared to be
-the mouth of a cave, extending down into the ground.
-Julian threw in his foxes and minks one after the other,
-and then crawled in himself and closed the door after
-him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<span class="pch">JULIAN MEETS A STRANGER.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dj.jpg" width="80" height="83" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">JULIAN’S first move, after he had shut
-the door, was to strike a match, and his
-second to light a candle which he took from
-a shelf close at hand. As the light blazed
-up, he held it above his head and took a survey of the
-cave, or, as he called it, his “store-house.” It was a
-very small one&mdash;not more than six feet square&mdash;but it
-was large enough to contain all Julian’s earthly possessions.
-All that could be seen was a quantity of furs,
-some already cured and neatly baled up, and others
-hanging against the walls stretched upon boards and
-frames to dry; but there were other valuable articles
-stowed away there, and as soon as Julian had glanced
-about the room to see that nothing had been disturbed
-during his absence, he placed his candle on the floor
-and proceeded to bring them to light.</p>
-
-<p>The walls, floor and ceiling of the room were composed
-of small saplings, and two of these saplings concealed
-treasures that were of more value to Julian than
-all his furs. One of them was in the floor, and when
-it had been lifted out of its place by the edge of a
-hatchet, some of the young trapper’s wealth, which
-would have made Jake and Tom open their eyes in
-amazement could they have seen it, was disclosed to
-view.</p>
-
-<p>It consisted of a silver-mounted rifle, inclosed in a
-strong canvas bag to protect it from the damp and dirt,
-a hunting-knife, an ornamented powder-horn and a
-fawn-skin bullet-pouch, both the latter filled with ammunition.</p>
-
-<p>Julian looked at these articles long and lovingly. He
-had come by them honestly&mdash;they were the first valuables<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-he had ever owned, and he had worked so hard for
-them! He took the rifle from its case, drew it up to
-his shoulder and glanced along the clean brown barrel,
-as if drawing a bead on an imaginary deer’s head, held
-it in a dozen different positions to allow the light to
-shine on the silver mountings, and finally returned it,
-with all the accouterments, to its hiding-place, and went
-to look after his other treasures. He removed one of
-the saplings that formed the ceiling, thrust his arm into
-the opening and drew out a small tin box, which
-contained money to the amount of $80&mdash;the proceeds
-of two winters’ work at trapping. Julian ran
-hastily over the bills to make sure that they were all
-there, then put back the box, returned the sapling to its
-place, and drawing his knife from his pocket sat down
-to remove the skins from the animals he had just
-captured.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m rich!” he exclaimed, looking about him with a
-smile of satisfaction. “Counting in my money and
-what my horse, hunting rig and hunting furs are worth,
-I have at least $250. I have purchased everything I
-need, and some fine, frosty morning, when Mrs. Bowles
-calls for ‘you, Julian,’ to get up and build the fire, he
-won’t answer. He’ll be miles away, and be making
-quick tracks for the Rocky Mountains. I only wish I
-was there now. There’s where I came from when I was
-brought to Jack Bowles’ house. I just know it was,
-because I can remember of hearing people talk of going
-over the mountains to California, and I know, too, that
-there were gold diggings on my father’s farm, or rancho,
-I believe he called it. I’m going to try to find my
-father when I get there, and if I ever see him I shall
-know him.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian’s thoughts ran on in this channel while he was
-busy with his knife, and in half an hour the skins had
-all been stretched, and the young trapper was ready to
-return to the miserable hovel he called home. He extinguished
-his candle, crawled out of the cave, and after
-concealing the door by piling leaves against it, hurried
-down the bluff and into the woods, happy in the belief<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-that no one was the wiser for what he had done; but no
-sooner had he disappeared than Jake and Tom Bowles
-came out of the bushes in which they had been hidden,
-and clambered up the cliff toward Julian’s store-house.</p>
-
-<p>It was rapidly growing dark, and Julian, anxious to
-reach the cabin before his absence was discovered, broke
-into a rapid run, which he never slackened until he
-reached the road leading from The Corners to the clearing.
-There he encountered a stranger, who, as he came
-out of the bushes, accosted him with:</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on a minute, my lad. I believe I am a little
-out of my reckoning, and perhaps you can set me
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian stopped and looked at the man. He could not
-get so much as even a glimpse of his face, for the broad
-felt hat he wore was pulled down over his forehead, and
-his heavy muffler was drawn up so high that nothing
-but his eyes could be seen; but the boy at once put him
-down as a gentleman, for he was dressed in broadcloth,
-and wore fine boots and fur gloves. Julian looked at
-his neat dress, and then at his own tattered garments,
-and drew his coat about him and folded his arms over it
-to hide it from the stranger’s gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there a hotel about here?” continued the gentleman,
-approaching the place where Julian was standing.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” was the reply; “none nearer than The
-Corners, and that’s ten miles away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is there no dwelling-house near?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is a shanty about a mile distant belonging to
-Jack Bowles, but I wouldn’t advise you to go there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I am on the right road after all,” said the
-stranger, with a sigh of relief. “Jack Bowles! He’s
-just the man I want to see. I have some important
-business with him. He can accommodate me with a
-bed and supper, can he not?”</p>
-
-<p>“He can give you some corn bread and venison, but
-as for a <i>bed</i>, that’s a thing he doesn’t keep in his house.
-If you happen to have half a dollar in your pocket,
-however, he will stow you away somewhere. Jack will
-do almost anything for half a dollar. Why, what’s the
-matter, sir?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was no wonder that Julian asked this question, for
-the gentleman, who had now advanced quite near to
-him, took just one glance at his face, and started back
-as if he had seen some frightful apparition. He pushed
-his hat back from his forehead, pulled his muffler down
-from his face, and stared at Julian as if he meant to
-look him through. The boy was astonished at his behavior,
-and he would have been still more astonished if
-he had been able to look far enough into the future to
-see all that was to grow out of this meeting.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy!” exclaimed the gentleman, in a voice which
-his agitation rendered almost indistinct, “who are you?
-What’s your name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Julian Mortimer,” replied our hero.</p>
-
-<p>“Julian! Julian Mortimer!” repeated the man, as if
-he could scarcely believe his ears. “It cannot be possible.
-Why, boy, you’re just&mdash;ahem! I mean&mdash;what a
-striking resemblance.”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger spoke these last words hurriedly, and
-then, as if recollecting himself, hastily pulled his hat
-down over his forehead again, and once more concealed
-his face with his muffler&mdash;all except his eyes, which he
-kept fastened upon Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“No doubt you think I act very strangely,” he continued,
-after a moment’s pause, “and perhaps I do, but
-the truth of the matter is, you look so much like a
-young friend of mine&mdash;a relative, in fact&mdash;that for a
-moment I was almost sure you were he. But, of course,
-you can’t be, for he is dead&mdash;been dead eight years. If
-you are ready we will go on.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian was forced to be contented with this explanation,
-but he was not quite satisfied with it. It was
-made in a bungling, hesitating manner, as if the man
-were thinking about one thing and talking about another.
-More than that, the excitement he had exhibited
-on the first meeting with Julian seemed to increase
-the longer he looked at him; and now and then he
-rubbed his gloved hands together as if he were meditating
-upon something that afforded him infinite pleasure.
-He continued to watch the boy out of the corner of his
-eye, and finally inquired:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Is this man Bowles, of whom you spoke, your
-father?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” replied Joe, emphatically. “I live with
-him, but he is no relative of mine. My father, as I remember
-him, was a different sort of man altogether.”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh!” ejaculated the stranger, with a start. “As
-you remember him? Ah! he is dead, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not that I know of, sir. He was alive and well
-the last time I saw him. I’ll see him again in a few
-weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Out West. He owns a rancho near the mountains
-with a gold mine on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why are you here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because I can’t help myself. I didn’t come here of
-my own free will, but was brought by one who will have
-good cause to remember me if I meet him again when
-I become a man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think you would know him if you should
-see him again?” asked the stranger, looking sharply at
-Julian, and putting his hat lower over his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“I am quite sure I should. He stole me away from
-my home and brought me here; but why he did it I
-can’t tell. I don’t intend to stay any longer, if it would
-do him any good to know it. I’ve got a good horse and
-rifle, and plenty of money, and I am going to leave here
-in a few days and go back to the mountains where
-I belong, and I shall not ask Jack Bowles’ consent,
-either.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think he would oppose it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know he would. He would beat me half to death,
-or his wife would, and lock me up in the smoke-house
-till I promised never to think of such a thing again.
-I’m going to run away, and by the time he misses me I
-shall be a long distance out of his reach.”</p>
-
-<p>The man listened attentively to all Julian had to say,
-and when the latter ceased speaking he placed his
-hands behind his back, fastened his eyes on the ground,
-and walked along as if he were in a brown study. He
-did not look up until they reached the door of the cabin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-where Jack Bowles, who had just finished his supper,
-stood smoking his cob pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, who have ye got thar?” was his surly greeting.</p>
-
-<p>“A gentleman who wishes to find a place to stay all
-night,” replied Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t he toddle on and find it, then?” growled
-Jack. “I ain’t a hinderin’ him, be I? He can’t stop
-here. I don’t keep a hotel to take in every Tom, Dick
-and Harry that comes along. Wal, I be dog-gone!”</p>
-
-<p>Jack suddenly took his pipe from his mouth, and
-stepping hastily up to the stranger, bent forward and
-peered into his face. Then something that was intended
-for a smile of recognition overspread his own
-countenance, and extending his hand with as cordial an
-air as he could assume, he continued:</p>
-
-<p>“I allowed I had seed ye somewhar afore, Mr.&mdash;eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack paused before the name he had been about to
-pronounce escaped his lips, interrupted by a hasty
-gesture from the stranger, who glanced toward Julian
-and raised his hand warningly.</p>
-
-<p>“You are mistaken, my friend,” said he, blandly.
-“You have never seen me before, but I hope the fact
-that I am a stranger to you will not prevent you from
-extending your hospitality to me for the night.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack stared, took a few long, deliberate pulls at his
-pipe, looked first at the eaves of the cabin, then down
-at the ground, and finally turned to Julian for an explanation.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he tryin’ to get through hisself?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“He wants something to eat and a bed to sleep in,”
-replied the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh! Why didn’t he say so, then? Wal, stranger,
-I reckon we can hang ye up somewhar,” added Jack,
-who had seen and comprehended the warning gesture;
-“although, as I told ye afore, we don’t make a business
-of takin’ in every tramp that comes along. Ye see, in a
-new country like this it ain’t safe. Ole woman, make
-up another batch of them corn-dodgers an’ fry a slice or
-two of that bar’s meat. Julian, what be ye a standin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>’
-thar gapin’ at? Cl’ar yerself. Come in, stranger&mdash;come
-in an’ set down.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian moved around the corner of the cabin and remained
-out of sight until he heard Mrs. Bowles laying
-the table for the guest, and then he also entered.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a very sociable party he found in the house.
-Mrs. Bowles was moving about preparing the corn-dodgers
-and bear meat; the visitor, who had removed his
-overcoat and muffler, was comfortably seated on a nail-keg
-in a dark corner of the room, and Jack Bowles sat
-in front of the fire, his elbows resting on his knees and
-his hat pulled down over his eyes, which were slowly
-moving over the stranger’s person and scrutinizing his
-dress and ornaments.</p>
-
-<p>Julian noticed that his gaze rested long on the watch
-chain that hung across the stranger’s vest, and on the
-diamond ring that glittered on his finger, and the expression
-he saw on Jack’s face alarmed him and made
-him wish most sincerely that he had never conducted
-the gentleman to the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>No one spoke until supper was ready, and then the
-guest was invited to “draw up and pitch in.” Julian
-tried to obtain a glimpse of his features as he came out
-of his dark corner, but the man, as if guessing his intention,
-kept his head turned away from him and took
-his seat at the table with his back to the fire, so that his
-face still remained in the shadow.</p>
-
-<p>While he was busy with his corn-dodgers and bear
-meat, Jake and Tom came in. They glanced curiously
-at the guest, and Tom seated himself beside the fire opposite
-Julian, whom he regarded with a triumphant
-smile, while Jake went to one of the beds that stood in
-the room and carefully hid something under the pillows.
-Julian afterward recalled the movements of these two
-worthies, and wondered why his suspicions had not been
-aroused.</p>
-
-<p>When the stranger had satisfied his appetite, the three
-boys, at a sign from Mrs. Bowles, sat down and made
-a very light meal of that which was left, and no sooner
-had they arisen from the table than they received a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-second signal from Mr. Bowles, who pointed with his
-thumb over his shoulder toward that part of the room
-in which the beds were situated.</p>
-
-<p>The boys all obeyed the order, but one of them, at
-least, had no intention of going to sleep. It was Julian,
-who, as he slowly mounted the ladder that led to the
-loft, told himself that he was in some way connected
-with the stranger’s visit to the cabin, and that he would
-learn something about the matter before morning, if
-there was any way for him to accomplish his object.
-He stretched himself upon his hard bed, and drawing
-one of the coats over his shoulders, waited impatiently
-to see what was going to happen.</p>
-
-<p>For half an hour all was still; then some one began
-to move softly about the cabin, a step was heard on the
-ladder, and a light flashed upon the rafters over Julian’s
-head.</p>
-
-<p>Presently a hand grasping a tallow dip appeared
-above the edge of the loft, closely followed by the grizzly
-head and broad shoulders of Jack Bowles, who
-stopped when he reached the top of the ladder and
-gazed at our hero long and earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>Julian was wide awake, and through his half-closed
-eyelids could see every move Jack made, but the latter,
-believing him to be fast asleep, descended the ladder
-and joined his guest.</p>
-
-<p>“My suspicions are confirmed,” soliloquized Julian.
-“They intend to talk upon some subject that they
-don’t want me to know anything about. I am going to
-learn something now. Perhaps I shall find out who I
-am and where my father is, and why I was brought
-here. What if this man should prove to be my father,
-who, for reasons of his own, does not wish to reveal
-himself to me?”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, highly excited over this thought, rolled noiselessly
-off the bed upon the floor, crept to the edge of
-the loft, and looked over into the room below. Jack
-had just placed his candle on the table, and was approaching
-his guest with outstretched hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, then, Mr. Mortimer,” said he, “the boy is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-out of the way fur the night, an’ thar’s no use in settin’
-back thar away from the fire. Draw up an’ give us a
-shake.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Mr. Mortimer!</i>” was Julian’s mental ejaculation.</p>
-
-<p>His heart seemed to stop beating. He opened his eyes
-to their widest extent and kept them fastened upon the
-stranger, who pulled his nail-keg in front of the fire
-and seated himself upon it.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VII.<br />
-<span class="pch">THE FLIGHT.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dw.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">WHEN THE gentleman came out of his dark
-corner, and the light of the candle fell upon
-his features, Julian took a good look at him,
-and an expression of great disappointment
-settled on his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever he is, he is not my father,” said he, to himself,
-“for my father had gray hair. This man is a
-stranger, and as it would be a mean piece of business in
-me to stay here and listen to his conversation I will
-crawl back to my pile of husks and go to sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>Acting upon this resolution Julian began a slow and
-cautious retreat; but he had not gone far when a thought
-struck him, and he crept back to the edge of the loft and
-looked over into the room again.</p>
-
-<p>“Jack called him <i>Mr. Mortimer</i>,” soliloquized the
-boy, “and I should like to know who and what he is.
-The manner in which he acted when I met him in the
-woods makes me believe that he has seen me before, and
-that he knows something about me that he wishes to
-keep hidden from me. I have a good deal at stake and
-it will do no harm to listen a while anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a very handsome face that Julian’s eyes rested
-upon, and one that he did not think he should ever forget.
-Although the man’s language indicated that he
-was an American, his features had a decided Spanish
-cast. His face was dark and wore a haughty expression,
-his hair was long and waving, and like his mustache and
-goatee, was as black as midnight. Julian looked at him
-attentively, and was surprised to see that he shook
-hands with Mr. Bowles and his wife, as if they were old
-acquaintances whom he was glad to meet once more.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a long time since I’ve seed ye, Mr. Mortimer,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-but I allowed I knowed ye as soon as I clapped my eyes
-onto ye,” said Jack, drawing his nail-keg a little closer
-to the side of his guest.</p>
-
-<p>“And you came very near making a mess of it, too,”
-replied the latter, with some impatience in his tones.
-“I believe that boy suspects me&mdash;he looked at me as if
-he did&mdash;and I would not have him know who I am for
-the world. You’re sure he is asleep?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin, ’cause I went up to look. We’ve kept him
-safe an’ sound fur ye, ’cordin’ to orders, hain’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ now you have come to take him away from us&mdash;I
-jest know ye have,” exclaimed Mrs. Bowles, raising
-the corner of her tattered apron to her left eye. “I
-don’t know how I can let him go, ’cause my heart’s
-awfully sot onto that poor, motherless boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve done our level best by him,” chimed in Jack.
-“Ye told us when ye brought him here that he was a
-gentleman, an’ a gentleman’s son, an’ we’ve treated him
-like one.”</p>
-
-<p>“When <i>he</i> brought me here,” repeated Julian, to himself;
-and it was only by a great exercise of will that he
-refrained from speaking the words aloud.</p>
-
-<p>He became highly excited at once. Mr. Mortimer
-was the one who had stolen him away from his home
-and delivered him up to the tender mercies of Jack
-Bowles and his wife&mdash;the very man of all others he most
-wished to see. He had been a long time coming, almost
-eight years, and now that he had arrived, Julian found
-that he was destined to become better acquainted with
-him than he cared to be. He watched the guest more
-closely than ever, carefully scrutinizing his features in
-order to fix them in his memory. He hoped to meet
-him some day under different circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>“He haint never had no work to do, an’ we never
-struck him a lick in our lives,” continued Jack. “We’ve
-treated him better’n our own boys. He’s got a good
-hoss of his own, an’ I’ve been a feedin’ it outen my corn
-ever since he owned it, an’ never axed him even to bring
-in an armful of wood to pay for it. An’ my boys do say
-that he’s got a heap of money laid up somewhars. If ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-have come to take him away I reckon ye’ll do the handsome
-thing by us.”</p>
-
-<p>“My friends,” interrupted the guest, as soon as he
-saw a chance to speak, “I know all about Julian, for I
-have talked with him. I know what he has got and
-what he intends to do. Have you ever told him anything
-about his parentage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nary word,” replied Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I wonder how it is that he knows so much
-about it. He knows that his home is near the mountains;
-that he was stolen away from it, and that he has a
-father there. More than that he intends to go back
-there very soon, and is laying his plans to run away
-from you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I never heered the beat in all my born days!”
-exclaimed Mrs. Bowles, involuntarily extending her
-hand toward the rawhide which hung on the nail behind
-the door. “I’ll give him the best kind of a whoppin’ in
-the mornin’. I’ll beat him half to&mdash;&mdash; What should
-the poor, dear boy want to run away from his best friends
-fur?”</p>
-
-<p>“The leetle brat&mdash;the ongrateful rascal!” said Mr.
-Bowles. “That’s why he’s bought that ar hoss; an’
-that’s why he’s been a huntin’ an’ trappin’ so steady&mdash;to
-earn money to run away from us, is it? I’ll larn him.”</p>
-
-<p>And Jack turned around on his nail-keg and looked
-so savagely toward the loft, where Julian was supposed
-to be slumbering, that the eavesdropper was greatly
-alarmed, and crouched closer to the floor and trembled
-in every limb, as if he already felt the stinging blows of
-the rawhide.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems that my visit was most opportune,” continued
-the stranger. “If I had arrived a day or two
-later I might not have found Julian here. He would
-probably have been on his way to the mountains; and if
-he had by any accident succeeded in finding his old
-home, all my plans, which I have spent long years in
-maturing, would have been ruined. I came here to
-remove him from your care. It appears that certain
-persons, who are very much interested in him, and who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-have been searching for him high and low ever since I
-brought him here, have by some means discovered his
-hiding-place, and it is necessary that I should remove
-him farther out of their reach. I shall take him to
-South America.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that? Is it fur from here?” asked Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a long distance. I came down the river from
-St. Joseph in a flatboat,” added the visitor. “I found
-that the captain is a man who will do anything for
-money, and I have arranged with him to carry us to
-New Orleans. It will take us a long time to accomplish
-the journey, but we cannot be as easily followed as we
-could if we went by steamer. If you will accompany
-me I will pay you well for your services. I can say that
-the boy is a lunatic and that you are his keeper.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nough said!” exclaimed Jack. “I’m jest the man
-to watch him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you must not watch him too closely,” said Mr.
-Mortimer earnestly. “If he should accidentally fall
-overboard during the journey it would not make any
-difference in your pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“In course not,” replied Jack, with a meaning glitter
-in his eye. “If he gets one of them ar’ crazy spells
-onto him some dark night an’ jumps into the river,
-why&mdash;then&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Why then you ought to be handsomely rewarded
-for your faithful services while in my employ, and discharged.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perzactly. Whar is this yere flatboat now?”</p>
-
-<p>“I left her about twenty miles up the river. I told
-the captain to lay up for a few hours until I could have
-time to come down here and transact my business with
-you. She will be along about noon to-morrow. Have
-everything ready so that we can hail her, and step on
-board without an instant’s delay.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t fur the life o’ me see how I can let him go&mdash;my
-heart is so sot onto him,” sighed Mrs. Bowles, once
-more raising her apron to her eyes. “He do save me a
-heap o’ steps, an’ he’s a monstrous good hand to cut
-wood an’ build fires o’ frosty mornin’s.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But he hain’t never had it to do,” interrupted Jack,
-who, for reasons of his own, thought it best to impress
-upon the mind of his guest that Julian’s life under his
-roof had been one continual round of ease and enjoyment.
-“We allers makes our own boys roll out o’ mornin’s
-and cut wood, an’ Julian can lay in his comfortable
-bed, as snug as a bug in a rug, an’ snooze as long as he
-pleases. The reason we’ve tuk sich good care of him is,
-’cause we thought ye sot store by him. Ye’re some kin
-to him, I reckon. Ye’re names is alike.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is a matter that does not interest you,” answered
-the guest sharply. “I pay you to work for me,
-and not to ask questions.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean no offense. But when I see a man
-like yerself totin’ a boy about the country, an’ leavin’
-him hid in a place like this fur eight year, an’ then
-huntin’ him up agin, an runnin’ him off to some other
-place, an’ hear ye say that if he falls into the river an’
-gets drownded ye won’t be no ways sorry fur it, I think
-there’s something up, don’t I? Ye don’t do that fur
-nothing; an’ since the boy ain’t ole enough to be a
-standin’ atween ye an’ a woman, I naterally conclude
-that he stands atween ye an’ money. Howsomever, it
-hain’t no consarn of mine. I know which side of my
-corn-dodger’s got the lasses onto it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pap! I say pap!” suddenly cried a voice from one of
-the beds. “Ye think yer sharp, ye an that feller do,
-but ye ain’t so sharp as ye might be.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hush yer noise, boy, an’ speak when ye’re spoken
-to,” exclaimed Jack angrily. “Ye needn’t be no ways
-oneasy, Mr. Mortimer,” he added, seeing that his guest
-arose hastily to his feet and appeared to be greatly excited
-to know that their conversation had been overheard.
-“We’re all true blue here, an’ my boys has too
-much good sense to blab what they hears&mdash;leastwise
-while they are paid to keep their mouths shet. Ye,
-Jake, roll over an’ go to sleep.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, pap,” said Jake, obeying the first part of
-the order. “If ye wake up in the mornin’ an’ find that
-yer bird has flew ye needn’t blame me, ’cause I told ye.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” roared Jack, jumping up in great amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“O, he won’t be here, an’ ye can bet yer bottom dollar
-on it. He’s heered every blessed word ye said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who? Julian?” gasped the visitor.</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin. I seed his head a stickin’ over the hull time
-ye was a talkin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Had a bomb-shell burst in the room the two men
-could not have been more astonished. They stood motionless
-for a moment, and then, with a muttered imprecation,
-Jack bounded across the floor and went
-swiftly up the ladder that led to the loft, closely followed
-by his guest, whose face was as pale as death,
-while Mrs. Bowles snatched the rawhide from its nail,
-and rolling up her sleeves took her stand in front of the
-fire-place, prepared for any emergency.</p>
-
-<p>Jack sprung into the loft when he reached the top of
-the ladder and ran straight to the bed, expecting to lay
-his hands upon the eavesdropper; but he was not there.
-With eager haste he threw aside the tattered coats and
-blankets, and even kicked the corn-husks about, but no
-Julian was hidden among them. Nor was he anywhere
-in the loft; for there was no furniture there, and consequently
-no place of concealment large enough to shelter
-a squirrel.</p>
-
-<p>“Dog-gone!” roared Jack, stamping about so furiously
-that the boards which formed the floor of the loft
-creaked and bent, and seemed on the point of breaking
-beneath his weight and letting him through into the
-room below.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone, as sure as ye’re a foot high.”</p>
-
-<p>“He probably escaped through this hole,” said Mr.
-Mortimer, running to the gable-end of the cabin where
-the boards had fallen off. “It isn’t more than ten feet
-to the ground, and he could easily drop down without
-injuring himself. He must be brought back at any
-cost.”</p>
-
-<p>“In course he must, an’ I know how to do it. I’ve
-got a hound that’ll trail him. Ole woman, stick yer
-head outer that door an’ holler for Nero.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>While Mrs. Bowles was shouting out the hound’s
-name, awaking the echoes far and near with her shrill
-voice, Jake and Tom were pulling on their clothes with
-all possible haste.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a fine chance for a spec,” said the former,
-slyly pulling a small tin box from under his pillow and
-putting it carefully into his pocket. “Mebbe that
-feller in the store clothes will give something to have
-Julian brought back. The ole man’ll never ketch him
-’cause he can’t run fast enough; an’ Julian’s too sharp
-to give a hound a chance to foller him. We know jest
-the place he’ll make tracks fur, an’ if we go thar we
-can gobble him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye Jake!” cried Mr. Bowles, hurrying down the
-ladder, “when I get time, I’m a goin’ to give ye the
-best wallopin’ ye ever heern tell on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye needn’t mind,” replied Jake, in great alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“But I <i>will</i> mind, I tell ye; an’ I hain’t a-goin’ to
-forget it, nuther.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t been a doin’ of nothing, pap.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s jest what’s the matter. I’m goin’ to lick ye
-fur not doin’ something&mdash;fur not tellin’ me that ye seed
-Julian a listenin’. Here he comes! Here’s the feller
-that’ll bring the runaway back to us in less’n five
-minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the door was dashed violently open
-and in bounded Nero, who seemed to know that there
-was work for him to do, and was impatient to
-begin it. He was a magnificent brute&mdash;so large that
-when he sprang up and placed his paws upon his
-master’s shoulders his head was on a level with Jack’s.
-He showed a frightful array of teeth and growled
-threateningly at the visitor, who constantly shifted his
-position in order to keep Jack’s burly form between
-himself and the savage beast.</p>
-
-<p>“Thar’s the dog fur ye, Mr. Mortimer,” said Bowles,
-looking proudly at his favorite. “He’ll ketch any
-thing ye tell him to, from a bar down to a chicken.
-Hand me that rope, ole woman. I’ll have to hold him
-in the leash, or he won’t leave enough of Julian to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-it wuth while to take that trip down the river. Now,
-then, hunt ’em up, ye rascal!”</p>
-
-<p>Having made one end of the rope fast to the hound’s
-collar, Mr. Bowles wrapped the other about his hand
-and arm, snatched a blazing fire-brand from the hearth,
-and hurried out of the door and around the house, to
-examine the ground there, and ascertain if Julian had
-really escaped from the opening in the gable-end. The
-hound struck the scent at once, and uttering a loud bay
-dashed off into the darkness, dragging the clumsy Jack
-after him.</p>
-
-<p>“Now’s your time,” whispered Tom, when the yelping
-of the dog and the encouraging yells of his master
-began to grow fainter in the distance; “speak to him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I say!” exclaimed Jake, addressing himself to Mr.
-Mortimer, who was pacing nervously up and down the
-floor; “pap’ll never ketch him, but we can, ’cause we
-know whar to look fur him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why don’t you do it?” demanded the guest,
-angrily. “I will give you $10 apiece if you will bring
-him back to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, that’s business. We were jest waitin’ to hear
-ye say something of that kind. Come on, Tom.”</p>
-
-<p>The two boys rushed out of the house, and running
-swiftly along the path that led by the corn-cribs, were
-soon out of sight.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-<span class="pch">CHASED BY A BLOOD-HOUND.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dj.jpg" width="80" height="83" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">JULIAN did not remain long enough in his
-concealment to overhear all the conversation
-we have recorded, for an action he witnessed
-on the part of Jake Bowles, shortly after that
-worthy got into bed, turned his thoughts from the
-stranger, and his plans into another channel. He saw
-Jake thrust his arm under his pillow and draw out a small
-tin box, which he opened, and after looking over his
-shoulder to make sure that his father and mother were
-too much engaged with their visitor to pay any attention
-to himself, he drew out of it a roll of bills. He
-ran his fingers over them caressingly, held them above
-his head to allow the firelight to shine upon them, and
-exhibited in various other ways the delight he experienced
-in having them in his possession; after which
-he returned them to the box, replaced it under his
-pillow, and settling himself comfortably between the
-blankets, threw his arm over his head, and as Julian
-thought, prepared to go to sleep. But Jake did not
-intend to do anything of the kind, for he saw the
-top of the eavesdropper’s head over the edge of the
-loft.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s my box,” thought our hero, his cheek growing
-suddenly pale, and his heart beating against his ribs
-with a noise that frightened him. “I’ve been robbed.”</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge of this disagreeable fact came upon
-him with a force so stunning and bewildering, that for
-a few seconds he lay as motionless upon the floor of the
-loft as if he had been stricken down by some powerful
-hand. His secret was discovered after all his pains,
-and by the very ones from whose knowledge he had
-wished most to keep it hidden.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“My horse went first,” thought Julian, striving hard
-to choke back the tears that arose to his eyes, “and
-now everything else is gone; for, of course, if they
-found the box they must have found my furs and my
-rifle also. And I was always so careful never to go near
-my store-house until I had satisfied myself that there
-was no one in sight. I shan’t give up those things, and
-that’s all about it. Because I have never resisted their
-tyranny, Jack and his boys think I am a coward, but
-now I will show them what I am made of.”</p>
-
-<p>Very slowly and cautiously Julian drew back from
-the edge of the loft, and retreated toward the opening
-in the gable-end of the cabin. So stealthy was he in
-his movements that even the wakeful Jake did not hear
-him as he crept across the floor, swung himself down
-from the gable-end and dropped to the ground.</p>
-
-<p>The instant he landed on his feet he darted off at
-the top of his speed, directing his steps toward the
-corn-cribs.</p>
-
-<p>“That much is done,” panted Julian, “but the work
-is yet to come. It will be no trouble to saddle my
-horse and secure my rifle and furs, but how am I to
-obtain possession of that money? It is mine, and I am
-determined to have it. Here, Billy! Here, Billy!”</p>
-
-<p>Julian’s horse, which was standing under a dilapidated
-shed, raised his head on hearing his name pronounced,
-and seeing his master open one of the cribs, came up,
-expecting the ear of corn which the boy never failed to
-have ready for him whenever he passed through the
-stable-yard. Julian knew where Tom kept his saddle
-and bridle, and it was but the work of a few seconds to
-place them on the horse. When this had been done he
-climbed over the corn to the farther end of the crib,
-and began tossing aside the ears, muttering as he did so:</p>
-
-<p>“This place is a regular repository for stolen goods.
-I have found more than one article belonging to me
-stowed away here, and unless I am very much mistaken&mdash;ah!
-I thought so. Here are my furs&mdash;all baled up
-and ready for transportation, thanks to Tom and Jake&mdash;my
-rifle and my hunting-knife. Now, if they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-only left my money here I would be on my way to St.
-Joseph in less than five minutes. I must have it if it
-takes me a week to get it.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian hastily pulled the canvas cover off his rifle,
-and slung the weapon over his shoulder by a broad strap
-that was attached to it, buckled his hunting-knife about
-his waist, placed his furs, which Tom and Jake had
-tied up in one bundle, close at hand, and once more began
-throwing the corn aside, searching everywhere for
-his powder-horn and bullet-pouch. While thus engaged
-his attention was attracted by a great uproar
-which suddenly arose in the house. He listened, and
-could hear the tramping of heavy feet and the sound of
-angry, excited voices, with which were presently mingled
-the shrill tones of Mrs. Bowles, who thrust her
-head out of the door and shouted for Nero.</p>
-
-<p>“The blood-hound!” gasped Julian. “I didn’t think
-Jack Bowles was as bad as that. Oh! for just one load
-for my rifle! But why should Nero harm me? He has
-known me as long as he has known any of the family.
-I have often shared my meals with him, and perhaps if
-he overtakes me he will recognize me.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian knew too much, however, of the nature of the
-fierce brute to indulge long in this hope.</p>
-
-<p>Nero was the terror of the neighborhood, and when
-aroused he had been known to defy Jack Bowles himself.
-Our hero was perfectly well aware that the hound
-would trail him as he would a deer, and that if by any
-chance he succeeded in overtaking him, he would pull
-him down and throttle him without the least mercy.
-His heart beat a trifle faster than usual when he
-thought of the probable results of a fight with the terrible
-animal, and his hands trembled as he caught up
-his bundle of furs and clambered over the corn toward
-the door.</p>
-
-<p>He had left Billy with his head in the crib, feasting
-on the corn within his reach, and he believed that he
-would remain there until he was ready to mount him;
-but when he came out of the door he saw him at the
-farther end of the yard, prancing and playing about in
-high glee.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The boy ran toward him, pronouncing his name in a
-low voice, but Billy, instead of obeying the call, kicked
-up his heels and galloped away to the other side of the
-yard. Just then Julian heard the door of the cabin
-thrown open, and looking back saw the hound spring
-into the room and fawn upon his master.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m caught,” thought our hero, in intense alarm.
-“I dare not wait to secure my horse, and on foot I can
-never hope to escape from that dog. I might as well
-give up now as any time.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy’s actions, however, did not indicate that he
-had the least idea of surrendering himself without a
-struggle for his freedom.</p>
-
-<p>After one more unsuccessful attempt to capture his
-unruly steed, he threw his pack of furs over his shoulder,
-leaped the fence that inclosed the stable-yard, and
-striking the path that led to the woods, ran for his life.
-He did not waste time in looking back, and there was
-no need of it, for his ears kept him posted in all that
-was going on. He knew when Jack and his dog came
-out of the cabin, and the cold sweat started out from
-every pore in his body when Nero’s deep-toned bay, and
-his master’s exultant yells, rang out on the still air, telling
-him that the trail had been found and the pursuit
-commenced.</p>
-
-<p>Calling to his aid all the power he had thus far held
-in reserve, Julian flew along the path with the speed of
-a frightened deer, and with a few bounds reached the
-cover of the woods.</p>
-
-<p>Without in the least slackening his pace, he threw his
-bundle of furs into the bushes on one side of the path,
-and pitched his rifle as far as he could in the opposite
-direction. His second move was to pull off his coat
-and wrap it around his left arm, and his third to draw
-his hunting-knife from its sheath, and tie the thong of
-buckskin which was attached to the handle around his
-wrist. His face all this while wore an expression that
-would have astonished Jack Bowles could he have seen
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Being now relieved of every encumbrance, Julian flew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-along with redoubled speed, through darkness so intense
-that he could scarcely see his hand before his face, leaping
-logs and ditches, and struggling through thickets of
-briers and cane that at almost any other time would
-have effectually checked his progress, all the while listening
-to the baying of the hound, and wondering why
-the animal was so long in overtaking him.</p>
-
-<p>When he had accomplished nearly half a mile, and the
-sounds of the chase began to grow fainter, showing that
-his pursuers were losing ground, he uttered an exclamation
-of delight, and slackened his pace.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought Nero’s music did not ring out as loud and
-clear as usual,” said he to himself; “and now I know
-the reason. Jack is holding fast to him, and the dog is
-choking himself to death trying to get away. Mr.
-Bowles never saw the day that he could catch me in a
-fair race. I may as well go slower and save my
-breath.”</p>
-
-<p>But, even as these thoughts were passing through
-Julian’s mind, he heard a sound behind him that
-brought from him a cry of alarm, and caused him to
-spring forward again with all the power he could command.
-It was a yell of rage from Jack, accompanied by
-a loud, ringing bay, such as Nero usually uttered when
-following a trail. The eager hound had escaped from
-his master’s control.</p>
-
-<p>The fugitive shuddered at the thought, and would not
-permit himself to believe it; but in a few seconds the
-fact became too apparent. Nero’s bays sounded nearer
-and nearer, and presently Julian heard him crashing
-through the bushes behind him.</p>
-
-<p>His lightness of foot could not save him now. The
-fight he so much dreaded could not be avoided, and the
-sooner he was prepared for it the better.</p>
-
-<p>To think, with Julian, was to act. He at once
-decided that the little open glade he was then traversing
-should be the battle-ground. It was almost entirely free
-from undergrowth, and moreover, the branches of the
-trees overhead were not so thick as to entirely shut out
-the light of the moon, which, just then, as if in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-sympathy with the fugitive, made a feeble effort to shine
-through the clouds that obscured it.</p>
-
-<p>A few rapid steps brought him to the opposite side of
-the glade, and to the foot of a huge poplar. Here he
-faced about, and taking his stand with his back against
-the tree, so that the shock of the first collision might
-not knock him off his feet, he wrapped his coat closer
-about his arm, and fastened it there by tying the sleeves
-in a knot with his teeth, grasped his hunting-knife with
-a firmer hold, and calmly awaited the appearance of the
-blood-hound. Nor was the contest long delayed.</p>
-
-<p>Stimulated by the freshness of the trail, Nero came
-on with long and rapid bounds, and at last broke from a
-thicket on the opposite side of the glade, and with a bay
-which rang in Julian’s ears like the knell of death,
-moved swiftly toward his victim.</p>
-
-<p>The fugitive had barely time to settle his hat more
-firmly on his head and brace himself for the shock, when
-the fierce animal arose in the air and launched himself
-at his throat. The arm with the coat wrapped around
-it was quickly interposed, and Nero’s ponderous jaws
-closed upon it with a power that, for an instant, rendered
-Julian incapable of action. He was borne back
-against the tree by the weight of the brute, but rallied
-in a moment, and then began the most desperate
-struggle of his life.</p>
-
-<p>The hound was as quick as a cat in his movements,
-and seemed endowed with as many lives; for, although
-the boy’s long, keen blade found lodgment in his body
-more than once, it appeared to make no impression upon
-him. He clung to Julian’s arm with the tenacity of a
-bull-dog, never once loosening or shifting his hold; and
-now and then, throwing all his strength into the effort,
-he gave his antagonist a shake that brought him to his
-knees.</p>
-
-<p>To make matters worse, Jack Bowles was not far behind.
-He was soon near enough to shout directions to
-his hound. He heard the sounds of the struggle, and
-believing that his favorite was gaining the mastery,
-ordered him to let go his hold.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-069.jpg" width="400" height="226"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc400">“<span class="smcap">Then began the most desperate struggle in Julian’s life.</span>”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He is past minding, Jack,” shouted Julian, whose
-courage and determination had never once flagged during
-all the doubtful contest; “and when I am done with
-him he will be past hearing you.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack heard every word, and comprehended the situation
-as well as if there had been light enough for him to
-see everything that was going on. It was wonderful how
-quickly his tone changed.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! hi!” he yelled, forcing his burly form through
-the bushes with all the speed of which he was capable,
-“pull him down, Nero! Shake him to death, ye rascal!
-Drop that ar we’pon, Julian, or I’ll larrup ye within an
-inch of yer life. I wouldn’t have that dog hurt for
-$100.”</p>
-
-<p>“You ought to have thought of that before you put
-him on my trail,” replied Julian. “There! Thank
-goodness that ends it.”</p>
-
-<p>The hound ceased the battle as suddenly as he begun
-it. He became limp and lifeless all at once, and sank
-to the ground in a heap, dragging Julian with him.
-But even in death his jaws would not relax their hold.
-His long teeth had caught in the coat, and Julian could
-not release his arm.</p>
-
-<p>Just then, Jack Bowles burst from the bushes, and
-came lumbering across the glade. He saw Julian
-kneeling beside the hound and knew instinctively what
-had happened. His astonishment and rage knew no
-bounds.</p>
-
-<p>“Dog-gone!” he roared; “ye’ve done it now, boy. I
-wouldn’t be in yer cowhide shoes fur no money. Hold
-on, thar! Come back here, or&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The oaths and threats with which Jack awoke the
-echoes of the forest made Julian’s blood run cold, but
-they did not check his flight.</p>
-
-<p>Finding himself unable to obtain possession of his
-coat, he slipped his arm out of it and fled, leaving the
-garment in the hound’s mouth.</p>
-
-<p>He was out of sight in a moment.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER IX.<br />
-<span class="pch">GOOD FOR EVIL.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dj.jpg" width="80" height="83" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">JULIAN, almost exhausted by his violent exertions,
-was in no condition to continue his
-fight. He simply ran to the opposite side
-of the poplar, in front of which the fight
-had taken place, and threw himself flat between the
-roots, where he lay trembling with fear, and hardly
-daring to breathe lest Jack should discover him. But
-that worthy was too angry to see anything except his
-prostrate hound. He bent over the animal for a moment,
-and then rushed frantically off in the direction he
-supposed Julian had gone, stamping through the bushes
-like a mad man and stopping now and then to listen for
-the sound of the fugitive’s footsteps. He made a wide
-circuit through the woods, searching everywhere for the
-object of his vengeance, and finally came back to his
-favorite again.</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to be unable to bring himself to believe
-that he had seen Nero alive for the last time. He placed
-him upon his feet, called him by name, and even shook
-him to make him show some signs of life; and when
-at last he had satisfied himself that the dog was really
-dead, he jumped up and spurned him with his heavy
-boot.</p>
-
-<p>“Only think!” he exclaimed aloud; “a hound that
-could pull down a four-pronged buck as easy as he could
-a chicken, that could stretch a two-year-ole bar while ye
-was a thinkin’ about it, an’ chaw up a full-grown wildcat
-every mornin’ afore breakfast, has met his match at
-last in that leetle pale-face Julian, who doesn’t look as
-if he had pluck enough to face a mouse. Nero, I am
-teetotally ashamed of ye. Whar is that Julian? If I
-don’t ketch him I shall lose the money I was goin’ to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-make by that trip to Orleans. But I’ll make more
-outen Mr. Mortimer. I’ll have that watch an’ that
-ring, an’ everything he’s got in his pockets afore daylight.
-I hain’t a goin’ to be swindled on all sides, I
-bet ye.”</p>
-
-<p>When Jack had finished his soliloquy&mdash;every word of
-which Julian had overheard&mdash;he once more began his
-search for the fugitive. The boy remained quiet in his
-concealment until the sound of his footsteps had died
-away, and then with a long breath of relief arose to his
-feet and went to recover his coat. He found it where
-Jack had thrown it after freeing it from the teeth of
-the hound. It had never been a very valuable piece of
-property since it came into his possession, and now it was
-in a worse condition than ever; but Julian, knowing that
-he was destined for months to come to live entirely in
-the open air, could not think of leaving it behind. He
-threw the garment over his shoulder, and taking a last
-look at the hound, and shuddering as he recalled the
-incidents of the fight, bent his steps through the woods
-toward his store-house. He wanted to see what Tom and
-Jake had done to it. Perhaps they had left something
-there worth saving. He was very cautious in his movements,
-stealing along with a step that would not have
-awakened a cricket and pausing every few feet to listen.
-But he heard no suspicious sounds, and when he reached
-the cliff in which his store-house was located he was satisfied
-that he had seen the last of his enemies for that
-night at least.</p>
-
-<p>He found the ruins of his store-house lying all along
-the side of the bluff, for the young robbers, not content
-with taking possession of Julian’s valuables, had pulled
-out the saplings of which the house was built and scattered
-them far and wide. As Julian stood looking at
-the ruins of the cabin, thinking how hard he had worked
-to build it, and wondering how Jake and Tom had ever
-discovered it, he heard a slight rustling in the bushes by
-his side, and before he could turn to see what occasioned
-it, he found himself lying flat on his back with a heavy
-weight on his breast holding him down. At the same
-instant he felt a strap passed around his wrist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Had his assailant conducted his operations in silence,
-Julian, who believed that he had fallen into the clutches
-of Jack Bowles, and that it would be folly to resist, would
-have suffered himself to be bound without even a word
-of remonstrance, but his antagonist, having a confederate
-close by, and believing that he was likely to have
-more on his hands than he could well attend to, shouted
-lustily for help.</p>
-
-<p>“Here he is, Jake,” he yelled. “Hurry up. I’ll hold
-him an’ ye can tie him. The $20 are our’n.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tom Bowles!” cried Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin; an’ ye’ll find it out as soon as we get ye fast.
-Don’t go to bein’ sassy now, ’cause we won’t b’ar it. Tie
-that ar strap around his arms, Jake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps Jake isn’t man enough to do it,” replied
-our hero; and the sequel proved that he was not.</p>
-
-<p>Julian arose to his feet as easily and quickly as though
-there had been no one there to prevent him, and seizing
-Tom by the collar, gave him a trip and a push that sent
-him heels over head down the cliff.</p>
-
-<p>Without waiting to see what had become of him, Julian
-turned upon Jake, and then began another fight,
-which, although by no means of so serious a character
-as the one Julian had had a few minutes before, was
-quite as furious and determined. Jake was older and
-larger and stronger than Julian, but by no means as active.
-He was fighting for the $10 his father’s guest had
-promised him if our hero was brought back to the cabin
-a prisoner, and to retain possession of the $80 he carried
-in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>He knew that Julian was aware that he had the money
-about his person, for the very first clutch he made was
-for Jake’s pocket, in which he felt the box. His fingers
-closed upon it at once with a tenacity fully equal to that
-with which our hero had clung to his arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave go, consarn ye,” yelled Jake, “or I’ll punch
-ye!”</p>
-
-<p>“Let go yourself,” replied Julian. “I earned it honestly&mdash;it
-is mine, and I am going to have it if I have to
-fight you here till daylight.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Help! Tom, help!” shouted Jake, doubling himself
-up and twisting about in all sorts of shapes to break Julian’s
-hold. “Be ye a coward that ye stand down there
-gapin’ that way?”</p>
-
-<p>Tom did not reply, and neither did he show any inclination
-to respond to his brother’s appeals for assistance.
-He stood at the foot of the bluff, holding his
-hands to his side, which had been pretty severely bruised
-by his fall, and listening to the footsteps and ejaculations
-of some one who was approaching through the
-bushes at a rapid run.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye know that I’ve got a’most a hundred dollars of
-his’n in my pocket!” yelled Jake, indignant at the conduct
-of his brother. “Be ye goin’ to stand thar an’ let
-him take it away from me?”</p>
-
-<p>“A’most a hundred dollars!” cried a familiar voice in
-tones of great amazement. “Hang on to him, Jake,
-an’ I’ll say no more about the whoppin’ I promised ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, won’t ye ketch it now, Julian!” shouted Tom,
-almost beside himself with delight. “Pap’s a comin’!”</p>
-
-<p>Both the combatants heard the words, and the fight
-became desperate indeed. Julian strove with greater
-determination than ever to force the coveted box from
-Jake’s pocket, and the latter, encouraged by the hope of
-speedy and powerful assistance, confidently continued
-the struggle which he had more than once been on the
-point of abandoning. But fortune favored the rightful
-owner of the money. An unlucky step on the part of
-his antagonist precipitated them both into the excavation
-in which the store-house had stood, and that ended
-the contest.</p>
-
-<p>A severe bump took all the courage out of Jake, who,
-setting up a howl of pain, raised both hands to his head,
-while Julian, with a shout of triumph, secured the box
-and sprung out of the cave. A burly form met him
-on the brink, and strong fingers closed on his coat
-collar.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got ye at last!” exclaimed Jack Bowles, so overjoyed
-that he could scarcely speak. “Give up them hundred
-dollars to onct, or I’ll wallop ye till&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Julian did not hear what else Jack had to say, for he
-was not there. Mr. Bowles stood holding at arm’s length
-a tattered coat, to the collar of which he was clinging
-with all his strength; but the boy who had been in the
-garment when he took hold of it was bounding swiftly
-down the bluff.</p>
-
-<p>When Julian recovered his coat after his fight with
-the hound, he had thrown it over his shoulders and secured
-it by a single button at the throat. The button
-had given away under Jack’s hold, leaving the boy at
-liberty to take himself off, which he did with a promptness
-and celerity that struck Bowles and his sons motionless
-with astonishment. By the time they had recovered
-themselves sufficiently to think of pursuit Julian
-was out of hearing.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah for me!” soliloquized the fugitive, hugging
-his beloved box close to his breast and stealing along
-through the woods as noiselessly as a spirit. “I’ve got
-everything except my horse. As soon as Jack and his
-boys have gone to bed I’ll catch him and bid good-by to
-Missouri. I am all right now.”</p>
-
-<p>At no time during the next half-hour was Julian out
-of sight of the ruins of his store-house, or out of hearing
-of the voices of Jack Bowles and his boys. He sat on a
-log so near them that had it been daylight he would
-certainly have been discovered, watching their movements
-and listening attentively to every word they said.
-He heard Jake relate the history of the box containing
-the $80, and learned for the first time that he and his
-brother had followed him when he went out to examine
-his traps, and thus discovered his secret.</p>
-
-<p>As Jack and his boys believed that Julian would make
-the best of his way up the river now that he had recovered
-his money, they did not attempt any vigorous pursuit.
-They ran a short distance through the woods in
-the direction in which the fugitive had disappeared, and
-then Jack, utterly discouraged and almost boiling over
-with fury, ordered his sons to follow him toward home.</p>
-
-<p>“A’most a hundred dollars!” he repeated for the
-twentieth time. “Don’t it beat all the world how that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-boy could make more money than the hul of us put together?
-An’ ye say that he’s got a bundle of mink skins
-as big as ye can shoulder that he stole outen the crib
-whar ye had hid ’em? They’ll bring him forty or fifty
-dollars more, consarn it all. Why didn’t ye tell me about
-the money an’ the furs the fust thing when ye brought
-’em home, like ye had oughter done? I’m goin’ to foller
-him to-morrow on hossback. If I don’t ketch him I
-shall owe ye two lickins, an’ if they ain’t sich as ye’ll
-remember the longest day ye live, I’m a Dutchman.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack and his boys walked slowly along the path that
-led from the store-house to the clearing, and as soon as
-they were out of sight in the darkness, Julian arose
-from his log and followed after them. He kept within
-hearing of their voices all the while, and when they
-reached the clearing he stood at the fence which inclosed
-the stable-yard, and saw them enter the house.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as they had disappeared, he ran back to the
-place where he had left his rifle and furs, which, as he
-had taken particular pains to mark the locality, he was
-not long in finding. The rifle he slung over his shoulder,
-and the furs, together with the box containing his
-money, he concealed in a hollow log.</p>
-
-<p>This being done, he once more bent his steps toward
-the clearing, resolved to make another attempt to secure
-his horse. The animal, which was still running restlessly
-about the yard with the saddle and bridle on,
-positively refused to permit himself to be captured, and
-Julian finally went toward one of the cribs, intending
-to try the persuasive effects of an ear of corn. As he
-drew near the door he stopped, almost certain that he
-saw the figure of a man standing in the shadow of the
-crib. A moment later he knew that his eyes had not
-deceived him, for the man, finding himself discovered,
-came out in plain sight and walked rapidly toward him.
-It was Mr. Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew you would never go away and leave your
-horse,” said he, in a tone of triumph. “I have been
-watching for you for the last half-hour. I have a legal
-right to control your actions, my boy, and you will save<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-yourself some trouble by&mdash;Julian, stop! What do you
-mean?”</p>
-
-<p>The stranger lost his commanding, threatening air in
-an instant, and coming to a sudden halt, raised both his
-hands before his face, and turned away his head as if he
-had seen something frightful. The change was brought
-about by an action on the part of Julian who, believing
-that the man was near enough to him to prevent any
-attempt at escape, cocked his rifle and leveled it full at
-Mr. Mortimer’s breast. He acted on his first impulse.
-Had he taken a second thought he would probably have
-made no move of this kind, for he knew that the
-weapon was empty. But Mr. Mortimer did not, and
-he stopped and backed away from the boy with much
-greater haste than he had used in approaching him.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean, you young outlaw?” repeated
-the man, his voice trembling in spite of all his efforts
-to control it.</p>
-
-<p>“I mean that I am not going to allow myself to be
-taken on board a flatboat and pushed overboard,” replied
-Julian, calmly; and seeing that the empty rifle proved
-so valuable an assistant, he resolutely kept it pointed
-toward the stranger’s breast.</p>
-
-<p>“Turn that weapon away!” cried Mr. Mortimer,
-after shifting his position a dozen times to get out of
-range of the deadly muzzle. “I will have you arrested
-the first thing in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very good,” answered Julian. “Then perhaps
-you will be called upon to show by what authority you
-took me away from my home and brought me here, and
-why you want me drowned in the river.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am your guardian, I tell you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose I am at liberty to do as I please about believing
-that, am I not? But admitting that you are, it
-does not give you the right to abuse me, does it? Who
-made you my guardian?”</p>
-
-<p>Before Mr. Mortimer could answer this question the
-door of the cabin opened, and Jack Bowles appeared
-on the threshold, and stood looking out into the darkness.
-Julian’s guardian, if such he was, was about to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-call out to him, but checked the words that arose to his
-lips when he saw the muzzle of the rifle looking straight
-into his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t speak above your breath,” said the boy, in
-low, earnest tones. “I have just one more word to say
-to you, and then I am off. I suppose you think I am
-the only one about here who has enemies, do you not?
-Well, you are mistaken. Your life is in danger, if you
-only knew it.”</p>
-
-<p>“My life!” repeated Mr. Mortimer, as soon as he
-could speak. “From whom?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jack Bowles. He is bound to have money, and he
-don’t care how he gets it. As he and his boys have
-failed in their attempts to rob me, and since he is likely
-to lose what you offered to pay him if he would accompany
-you to New Orleans, he has determined to rob you
-to-night. I heard him say so. If you go to sleep you
-will never see the sun rise again. This is one act of
-kindness I have been able to do you in return for the
-evil you have done me. Good night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Mortimer, be that you a standin’ out thar by
-the corn-crib?” shouted Jack Bowles.</p>
-
-<p>The gentleman heard the question, but he was thinking
-too busily about something else to reply. He stood
-motionless, watching Julian as he sped swiftly through
-the stable-yard, and when he leaped the fence and ran
-along the path that led toward the woods, Mr. Mortimer
-slowly and reluctantly returned to the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“Wasn’t thar nobody out thar with ye?” demanded
-Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” was the scarcely audible reply; “Julian was
-there, but I could not detain him, for he had a loaded
-rifle in his hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t ye holler?” asked Jack fiercely. “I’ve
-got a rifle, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you call for help if you saw a weapon pointed
-straight at your breast?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack made no answer. He stepped aside to allow his
-guest to pass, and Mr. Mortimer entered and took his
-seat on one of the nail-kegs. He glanced at his host,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-and saw that there was something about his person that
-he had not before noticed. It was a broad leather belt,
-from which protruded the buck-horn handle of a bowie-knife.
-Mr. Mortimer shuddered as he looked at it, and
-wished himself away in the woods with Julian.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER X.<br />
-<span class="pch">JULIAN HAS A VISITOR.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/di.jpg" width="80" height="82" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">IF WE were interested in the fortunes of Mr.
-Mortimer, we might put in an interesting
-chapter here by relating the various incidents
-that transpired in the cabin during the night;
-but as we have nothing to do with his personal adventures
-only in so far as they are connected with Julian’s,
-it will be enough to say that it was a night of
-terror for him, and one that he never forgot; that, declining
-the pressing invitation his host extended to him
-to occupy the bed which Mrs. Bowles had arranged for
-his especial benefit, the guest took his seat in the corner
-in which the billets of wood for the fire-place were piled,
-and folding his arms and leaning his head against the
-wall, watched Jack as closely as ever a cat watched a
-mouse; that Jack, seeing that the gentleman’s suspicions
-had been aroused in some mysterious manner,
-fumed inwardly, but believing that time and patience
-would accomplish wonders, settled back on his nail-keg
-to wait until his guest, overcome by weariness and want
-of sleep, should be compelled to seek repose; that, as
-the night wore on, and Mr. Mortimer never once
-changed his position or showed the least sign of drowsiness,
-Jack began to grow uneasy, and sat fingering the
-handle of his knife, and occasionally running his eyes
-over the gentleman’s person from head to foot, as
-if mentally calculating the chances of a successful
-encounter with him; that finally, resolved on trying
-strategy, Jack threw himself upon the bed, and after
-snoring lustily for half an hour, suddenly opened his
-eyes, which had never once been closed in sleep, only to
-find Mr. Mortimer as watchful and seated as near the
-billets of wood as ever; that then Jack’s patience was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-all exhausted, and he snored in earnest, but the visitor
-never moved until daylight began to stream in through
-the half-open door.</p>
-
-<p>No one, to have heard the hearty good-morning Jack
-wished his guest as soon as he opened his eyes, would
-have believed that he had ever had designs upon his
-life. Neither of them alluded to the matter in any
-way, but Bowles noticed that his guest was always on
-the alert.</p>
-
-<p>About 10 o’clock in the forenoon a flatboat might
-have been seen moored in front of the cabin. On the
-shore stood a party of three men, one of whom was
-Jack Bowles, another Mr. Mortimer, and the third the
-captain of the boat&mdash;a gentleman who looked enough
-like Jack to be his brother. After saying this it is
-scarcely necessary to add that he carried the face of a
-villain.</p>
-
-<p>A fourth man was pacing the bank a short distance
-from the party mentioned, watching all their movements,
-listening eagerly to the few words of their conversation
-that now and then caught his ear, and noticing
-with some nervousness, which showed itself in the frequent
-changing of his hands from the arm-holes of his
-vest to the pockets of his coat, that they were looking
-at him rather suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>This gentleman, whoever he was, had evidently bestowed
-considerable pains upon his toilet; and the dignified
-manner in which he bore himself, as well as the
-satisfied and admiring glances which he occasionally cast
-down at his dress, indicated that he had a high opinion
-of himself and his personal appearance.</p>
-
-<p>His garments were all of the finest broadcloth; but as
-some of them had been made for larger, and others for
-smaller men than himself, they fitted him oddly enough.
-His trowsers being too long, were rolled up around the
-tops of a pair of heavy cowhide boots; and his coat-sleeves
-being too short, revealed arms that were as brown
-and muscular as those of a blacksmith. A heavy watch-chain
-hung across his vest, and the fingers of both his
-hands were ornamented with enormous seal rings. But<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-little could be seen of his face, for it was almost entirely
-concealed by thick, bushy whiskers, and by a large
-red handkerchief, which was passed under his chin and
-tied over his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is he?” asked Mr. Mortimer, who became unaccountably
-nervous and excited the instant his eyes
-rested on the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>“He gave no name,” replied the captain of the flatboat.
-“He came aboard of us shortly after you left
-yesterday, and engaged passage for New Orleans. He is
-going to the West Indies for his health.”</p>
-
-<p>“For his health!” echoed Mr. Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>He turned and looked at the stranger again, taking in
-at a glance his powerful shoulders, which, like those of
-Tom Hood’s coachman, were much “too broad to be
-conceived by any narrow mind,” his quick, elastic step,
-ruddy face, and brawny hands and arms, and asked
-himself if a finer specimen of robust health could be
-found anywhere.</p>
-
-<p>“I know that man in spite of his disguise,” said he,
-at length, “and I know what brought him here. He
-must not be allowed to accompany us, captain. I will
-give you double his fare if you will order him to stay
-ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is too late,” replied the skipper. “He has paid
-his passage, and I charged him a good round sum too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, return it to him, and tell him that as your
-cabin is to be occupied by a dangerous lunatic and his
-keepers you cannot accommodate him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will talk to him, but I don’t know how much good
-it will do. He is very impatient to start down the river,
-and, what appears strange to me, he is anxious to go in
-my boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“It isn’t at all strange to me. His name is Sanders,
-and he was sent out here to watch me, and by my
-cousin.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mortimer, who in his excitement had spoken a
-little too hastily, suddenly checked himself and looked
-savagely at the man whom he had called Sanders. The
-latter, observing his close scrutiny, pulled his handkerchief<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-closer about his face and shifted his hands from
-his pockets to the arm-holes of his vest.</p>
-
-<p>“Speaking of this crazy boy,” said the captain, “reminds
-me that you have not yet told me when you will
-be ready to start with him. I have engaged to deliver
-my cargo of hoop-poles by a certain time, and I can wait
-for you but a few hours longer. You say that the boy
-has taken it into his head that he is rich, that he has
-friends living out West, and that he has escaped and
-concealed himself in the woods?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Jack. “He got away from us last
-night. Me an’ Mr. Mortimer were jest goin’ to start
-after him on hossback when yer boat come in sight.
-We’ll have him here afore sundown if thar’s men enough
-in the county to hold him. Mebbe this feller has heerd
-of him. I’ll ask him.”</p>
-
-<p>The person referred to was a settler, who was just returning
-from The Corners, and who at that moment galloped
-up on his horse. He stopped when he saw Jack
-preparing to speak to him, and in reply to his question
-if he had seen or heard of Julian, said:</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; I saw him at The Corners not more than two
-hours ago. He traded off $45 worth of mink skins and
-bought some powder and lead. He said that he had
-made a camp on the bluffs over on Beaver Creek, and
-that he was going to stay there a day or two. Anything
-the matter with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone clean outen his head, that’s all,” replied
-Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“Crazy?” cried the settler.</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin. He stole a’most a hundred dollars of me
-last night an’ run away. He wouldn’t a done that if
-he’d been in his right mind, would he?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack, having gained all the information he desired,
-gave Mr. Mortimer a significant look, and the two
-walked rapidly toward the cabin, at the door of which
-their horses were standing, saddled and bridled, and
-springing upon their backs rode off across the clearing.</p>
-
-<p>“Did I do right in sayin’ what I did about Julian?”
-asked Jack, as soon as he and his companion were out of
-hearing of the men on the bank.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Perfectly. I want everybody who is likely to meet
-him to know that he is not in his right mind. You see,
-when we take him on board the flatboat he may tell the
-captain or the crew that we are his enemies, and that he
-knows we intend to do him some injury; but as we have
-already told them that he is crazy they will pay no attention
-to what he says. Don’t you understand?”</p>
-
-<p>“In course. But ye hain’t changed yer plans, have
-ye? Ye hain’t a-goin’ to put him in a ’sylum, be ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never had any such intention. If he falls overboard
-you shall have $200; but, of course, that is a
-matter that we keep to ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know jest what ye mean. Folks will think that
-we take Julian on board the flatboat to carry him to
-Orleans; but we don’t. We take him thar so as to drop
-him into the river, an’ get him outen yer way. Make
-yer mind easy. Them two hundred is mine.”</p>
-
-<p>The settler, who was very much astonished at what
-Jack had told him, and had half a mind to join in the
-pursuit, watched him and his companion until they
-were out of sight, and then continued his ride; but he
-had not gone far when when he was stopped by the odd-looking
-man in broadcloth.</p>
-
-<p>“Stranger,” said the latter, in regular backwoods
-vernacular, “whar is this yere Beaver Creek you was a
-speakin’ of?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know that I could direct you so that you
-could find it,” was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Who said I wanted to find it?” inquired the man.
-“I only axes you which way it is from here, an’ how
-fur?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” returned the settler, facing about in his
-saddle, shutting one eye and gazing at the woods
-through the half-closed lids of the other; “it’s four
-miles right north of here if you go through the timber,
-and eight miles if you go by the road.”</p>
-
-<p>The man in broadcloth walked off at once, and without
-stopping to thank the settler for his information.
-As long as he remained within sight of the cabin and
-flatboat he was very deliberate in his movements; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-the instant the woods concealed him from view, he
-broke into a rapid run, threading his way through the
-thick bushes with a celerity that was surprising. Up
-hill and down he went, never once slackening his pace
-or deviating from the course the settler had given him,
-until at last he saw a thin cloud of smoke arising
-through the trees in front of him, and after climbing a
-precipitous cliff, found himself standing face to face
-with Julian Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>The boy, who being busy with his preparations for
-dinner, had not heard the sound of his footsteps until
-he reached the top of the bluff, jumped up with his gun
-in his hand, ready to fight or run, as occasion might
-require. His first thought was that his enemies had
-tracked him to his hiding-place; but finding that his
-visitor was a stranger, and that he appeared to have no
-hostile intentions, he leaned on the muzzle of his rifle
-and waited for him to make known his business.</p>
-
-<p>The man, whose breath was not even quickened by
-his long and rapid run, gazed about him with an air
-of interest. He looked at the brush shanty which Julian
-had erected to protect him from the weather, at
-the comfortable bed of blankets and leaves which was
-arranged under the sheltering roof, at the squirrels
-broiling before the fire, and then his eyes wandered to
-our hero, at whom he gazed long and earnestly. The
-boy did not look much now as he did when he escaped
-from Jack Bowles’ cabin, for he was dressed in a suit of
-new and comfortable clothes, and sported a wide-brimmed
-hat and a pair of high-top boots.</p>
-
-<p>“Julian,” exclaimed the stranger, at length. “It’s
-you sure enough, hain’t it? I hain’t seed you fur
-more’n eight year, but I would know you any whar.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you?” asked Julian, throwing his rifle into
-the hollow of his arm and resting his thumb on the
-hammer; “then have the goodness to leave here at
-once. I am suspicious of every stranger who calls me
-by name.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ well you may be,” replied the man, earnestly,
-“‘cause most of ’em are enemies to you. But I hain’t.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-I’m a friend, an’ I can prove it. Do you know that
-Dick Mortimer an’ Jack Bowles are huntin’ the country
-over to find you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; but I wasn’t aware Mr. Mortimer’s name is
-Dick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, it is. The flatboat’s come, an’ when they
-ketch you they’re goin’ to take you to Orleans an’ lock
-you up fur a crazy boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, they said last night that they were going to
-push me overboard and drown me,” said Julian, as soon
-as he could speak.</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe they be. I don’t know what they are goin’
-to do&mdash;I’m only tellin’ you what I heerd ’em say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you, any how; and how does it come that
-you know my name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, boy, I’ve knowed you ever since you was knee
-high to a duck, an’ your father afore you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have?” cried Julian, greatly amazed.</p>
-
-<p>“In course. An’ your mother an’ your brother, too.
-They live out in the mountains, an’ I come to take you
-to ’em. They’ll be monstrous glad to see you, an’
-they’re waitin’ fur you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are they all alive?”</p>
-
-<p>“The last blessed one of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“I remember my father,” said Julian, gazing thoughtfully
-at the ground, “and it seems to me that I have
-some recollection of my brother; but I never knew anything
-about my mother. What brought you here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I come to your camp to tell you that Bowles and
-Mortimer are comin’ arter you on hossback, an’ that if
-you want to save yourself you had better dig out. An’
-I come to Missouri ’cause your friends sent me here
-arter you. I know the hul lot of ’em, I tell you, an’ if
-you will trust yourself to me I will take you to ’em safe
-an’ sound.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, astounded and bewildered by this proposition,
-dropped the butt of his rifle to the ground, and looked
-sharply at the man, as if he meant to read his very
-thoughts. Was he really the friend he professed to be?
-Of one thing the boy was certain&mdash;and that was that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-was not an ally of Mr. Mortimer. If he had been he
-would not have warned him that another attempt was
-about to be made to capture him.</p>
-
-<p>How gladly would he have given himself up to the
-man’s guidance if he had only been sure that he was
-trustworthy! He would have followed him all over the
-world, and braved all imaginable dangers, if he knew
-that by so doing he would be restored to his home once
-more. <i>Home!</i> How the word thrilled him!</p>
-
-<p>“Who in the world am I?” Julian asked himself in
-great perplexity; “and how does it happen that the
-moment I am ready to carry my plans into execution,
-men whom I never remember to have seen before should
-suddenly appear and exhibit so deep an interest in me?
-If I have such good friends, who are so very anxious to
-see me, why did they leave me here for eight long years
-to be beaten, and starved, and treated worse than a dog?
-I can’t understand it at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you say?” asked the stranger; “will you
-go? You had better be in a hurry about making up
-your mind to something, ’cause I can hear the trampin’
-of hosses.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Julian, “I shall go; but I shall go
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, then,” continued the man, who was plainly
-very much disappointed by this decision, “let me give
-you a word of advice: If you won’t trust me, don’t trust
-nobody&mdash;do you hear? You’ll meet plenty of folks who
-know you, an’ who will have something to say to you;
-but don’t listen to ’em. Jine a wagon train at St. Joe,
-an’ when you reach Fort Kearney, stop thar. You will
-then be within forty miles of your hum. You’d best be
-gettin’ away from here, ’cause them fellers is comin’&mdash;I
-can hear ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did they find out where I am?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, some chap saw you tradin’ off your furs this
-mornin’ an’ buying’ powder an’ lead, an’ he told ’em.
-Why don’t you run? Don’t you hear ’em comin’?”</p>
-
-<p>Julian listened, and could at last distinguish the rapid
-strokes of horses’ hoofs on the hard road. He knelt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-down behind a log that lay on the edge of the bluff, and
-looking over the top of it, waited for the horsemen to
-come in sight.</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the hoofs grew louder and louder, and
-in a few minutes Mr. Mortimer came into view, and
-drawing rein at the foot of the bluff, sprung out of his
-saddle. Jack Bowles was not with him; he was alone.</p>
-
-<p>“I am not afraid of him,” thought Julian. “I kept
-him at bay last night with an empty rifle, and now I
-have a loaded one. He shall never capture me.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian arose to his feet, and turned to look at the
-stranger. He was not in sight. The boy had not heard
-even the rustle of a leaf to tell him that he was in
-motion, and yet he had disappeared. He wished now
-that he had paid more attention to the man’s warning;
-but his mind was so fully occupied, and he was so deeply
-interested in what he had had to say about the home and
-friends that were waiting for him away off in the mountains,
-that he had hardly given a thought to the danger
-which threatened him. He began to think of it now,
-however, for he heard Mr. Mortimer ascending the bluff.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on, down there!” cried Julian. “I am watching
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! you are there, are you?” replied Mr. Mortimer.
-“I will soon be there, too. If I had known that your
-rifle was empty, I should have secured you last night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told you it was empty?”</p>
-
-<p>“We found your powder-horn and bullet-pouch in the
-corn-crib this morning. Don’t attempt any resistance
-now. You are surrounded, and cannot escape.”</p>
-
-<p>“Surrounded!” echoed Julian.</p>
-
-<p>He turned quickly, and sure enough there was an
-enemy in his rear, who had mounted the bluff on the
-opposite side, and approached so cautiously that the boy
-had not heard him. It was Jack Bowles.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XI.<br />
-<span class="pch">JACK’S PLANS.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dt.jpg" width="80" height="81" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">THE EXPRESSION Julian saw on the face of
-his old enemy alarmed him greatly. His
-countenance was distorted with fury, and the
-boy saw enough in it to satisfy him that Jack
-intended to take ample revenge on him for what he had
-done. With a cry of terror he turned and took to his
-heels; but Bowles was already within reach of him, and
-before our hero had made many steps, he fastened upon
-his collar with one hand, and with the other twisted his
-rifle out of his grasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s see ye slip outen yer coat an’ get away from
-me this time,” said Jack, with savage exultation. “I’ve
-got a long account to settle with ye, my lad. I’ll larn
-ye to go about the country stealin’ money an’ killin’
-honest folks’ huntin’ dogs. We’d best tie him, hadn’t
-we, Mr. Mortimer, fur fear that he gets one of them ar
-crazy spells onto him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly,” said that gentleman, who, having by this
-time reached the top of the bluff, stepped forward to
-assist in securing the prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ sarch him, too,” added Jack. “He may have
-some dangerous we’pons about him. Don’t go to makin’
-a fuss now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no such intention,” replied Julian, who,
-knowing that he was powerless, submitted to his captors,
-who bound his arms firmly behind his back. “But I
-can tell you one thing, Jack&mdash;you and Richard Mortimer.
-You are not going to take me down the river and put
-me into an asylum.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mortimer was profoundly astonished at these
-words. He looked sharply at the prisoner for a moment
-and exclaimed: “Has Sanders been here?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sanders?” repeated Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; a short, thick-set man, dressed in black, and
-wearing an abundance of jewelry.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no acquaintance with any such person.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you do not say that you have not seen him.
-You have talked with him&mdash;I am certain of it&mdash;or you
-would not know that my name is Richard. Sanders
-knows why I am here, and I know why he is here and
-who sent him. We are both playing the same game,
-and we shall see who will win. He shall never take
-passage on that flatboat.”</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Julian had been securely bound, Jack set
-himself to work to overhaul his pockets, searching&mdash;not
-for concealed weapons, but for the money belonging to
-the prisoner. A very short investigation, however,
-served to satisfy him that the coveted treasure was not
-hidden about Julian’s person, and with an expression of
-almost ungovernable fury on his face he left him and
-began to search the camp. He picked up the prisoner’s
-blankets, shook them thoroughly, threw aside the leaves
-which the boy had scraped together to serve as a mattress,
-and looked into every hollow stump and under
-every log on the bluff; but nothing in the shape of a
-box or pocket-book could he find.</p>
-
-<p>“Whar is it?” he roared, unable to contain himself
-longer.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s what?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“The money, ye rascal&mdash;the $145.”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t got as much as that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, you’ve got <i>some</i>. Whar is it, I axes ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is concealed where you will never think of looking
-for it, and there it shall stay.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet a hoss that it don’t stay thar,” shouted Jack,
-stamping the ground and shaking his fists in his rage.
-“Mark my words. Afore I’m done with ye, ye’ll come
-to this bluff an’ give me that money with yer own
-hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“And mark <i>my</i> words,” replied Julian calmly. “I
-shall do nothing of the kind. I’ll die first. It is mine&mdash;you’ve
-no right to it, and you shan’t have it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Never mind the money now, Bowles,” exclaimed
-Mr. Mortimer, who was becoming impatient at the delay.
-“You will have plenty of time to hunt for it
-after your return from New Orleans. We must begin
-our journey at once.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack, reluctant to abandon the search, took another
-turn about the camp, and after venting some of his spite
-by pulling down Julian’s brush cabin and kicking
-over the squirrels that were broiling before the fire,
-picked up the blankets and the rifle, and seizing the
-boy roughly by the arm hurried him down the bluff.
-After placing him behind Mr. Mortimer on his horse he
-disappeared in the woods and presently returned,
-mounted on his own nag, and led the way toward the
-clearing. He did not follow the road, as Julian hoped
-he would, but to avoid meeting any of the settlers, held
-straight through the woods. He was moody and sullen
-during the whole of the ride, and the deep scowl on
-his forehead showed that he was thinking intently.</p>
-
-<p>“The minute Julian drops overboard from the flatboat,
-that minute I shall have $200 put into my hands,”
-soliloquized Mr. Bowles. “That’s a monstrous heap of
-money fur a poor man like me, but I’d like to have
-them $145, too. Now how am I goin’ to get it? That’s
-what I’d like to know. I’ll never find it unless Julian
-tells me whar it is, an’ if he’s at the bottom of the
-river he <i>can’t</i> tell me. Hain’t thar no way fur me to
-push him overboard without drownin’ him?”</p>
-
-<p>Upon this question Jack pondered long and deeply,
-and by the time he and his companions reached the
-clearing he must have found an answer to it, and a satifactory
-one, too, for he brightened up and became lively
-and talkative.</p>
-
-<p>The first person Julian saw when he reached the
-clearing was the stranger in broadcloth, who was pacing
-up and down the bank. He did not look up when the
-boy and his captors rode past him, but pulled the handkerchief
-a little closer about his face, and sinking his
-chin lower into the collar of his coat, kept his eyes fastened
-upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“If you are all ready to start, Jack,” said Mr. Mortimer,
-as they drew rein in front of the door of the
-cabin, where Mrs. Bowles and her sons were waiting to
-receive them, “we will go on board the flatboat at
-once.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I hain’t quite ready,” returned Jack. “I
-shall be away from home a long time if we go to New
-Orleans, an’ Jake and Tom’ll have to look out fur
-things while I am gone. I want to tell ’em what to
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your wife can do that as well as you can,” replied
-Mr. Mortimer impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ more’n that,” continued Jack, holding open his
-coat to let his guest see that it was in a very dilapidated
-condition, “I’ve got to have some clothes, if I’m goin’
-to a country whar white folks live. I don’t want to
-make ye ashamed of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have nothing to fear on that score. Your
-clothes will do well enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I say they won’t. I was born and raised a gentleman,
-<i>I</i> was, and I guess I know what sort of riggin’
-a gentleman had oughter wear when he goes a visitin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to wait another minute. Don’t you
-know that we are in danger as long as we remain here?
-Suppose some of the settlers should find out what is
-going on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, now, how be they goin’ to find it out? We
-hain’t a goin’ to tell on ourselves, be we?”</p>
-
-<p>“But the captain wants to start immediately,” persisted
-Mr. Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t help that. I shan’t be ready for an hour or
-two&mdash;p’raps more; ’cause I’ve got to go to The Corners
-arter some good clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you may stay there, if you choose. I can
-get along without your assistance.”</p>
-
-<p>“No ye can’t, an’ ye shan’t, nuther,” retorted Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall go without you,” continued Mr. Mortimer,
-decidedly. “Then what will become of the $200 I
-promised you?”</p>
-
-<p>Jack approached his guest and placed his lips close to
-his ear.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“If ye go without me I’ll have the officers of the law
-on yer track in less’n an hour,” said he, fiercely. “Then
-what will become of <i>ye</i>? I can say, ye know, that ye
-offered me money to shove the boy overboard, an’ p’raps
-ye’ll have to tell some things ye’d rather the world
-wouldn’t know. Ye’ve got money, an’ ye can keep the
-boat here as long as ye please.” Then aloud he added:
-“Ye an’ Julian can step into the house, an’ sit down an’
-talk to the ole woman, an’ me an’ the boys will go to
-the stable an’ feed the hosses. I’ll be back as soon as I
-get my business done.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mortimer, finding that he was at the mercy of
-his confederate, was obliged to await his pleasure. He
-conducted his prisoner into the cabin, while Jack led
-the horses toward the stable, followed by Jake and Tom.</p>
-
-<p>The boys assisted their father in removing the saddles
-and feeding the animals, and when this had been done,
-Jack conducted them into one of the cribs, and after
-closing and fastening the door, seated himself upon the
-corn and proceeded to make his sons acquainted with
-certain plans he had determined upon.</p>
-
-<p>He did not know that some one besides Jake and Tom
-was listening to every word he said, but such was the
-fact. It was Sanders, who having overheard enough of
-Jack’s conversation with Mr. Mortimer to excite his curiosity,
-and seeing Bowles and his sons enter the crib
-and shut themselves in, made a circuit through the
-woods, and came up within hearing of their voices
-in time to learn as much of their scheme as he cared to
-know.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon Mr. Mortimer will get tired of waitin’ fur
-me,” said Jack, “‘cause he hain’t no ways likely to see
-me agin afore dark. I’ve got work fur ye to do, youngsters,
-an’ if ye do it as I tell ye to, there’s money to be
-made by it. Listen, now, with all the ears you’ve got.
-In the fust place, in order that ye may understand the
-hul matter, I must tell ye that this Mr. Mortimer is the
-same feller who brought Julian here years ago. He’s
-some kin to him&mdash;his pap, mebbe, fur all I know&mdash;but
-he don’t want to own him, ’cause the boy somehow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-stands atween him an’ a fortin’. He wants to put him
-whar he’ll never see him agin, an’ so me an’ him have
-give out that he is crazy, an’ that we’re goin’ to take
-him to Orleans an’ put him in a ’sylum. In course, he
-hain’t no more outen his head than I be, but that’s no
-business of mine. Mr. Mortimer’s goin’ to start down
-the river with him to-night, an’ I’m goin’ along to take
-care of him.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack did not see fit to tell his boys that Mr. Mortimer
-had offered him money to push Julian overboard, and
-that he had promised to do it. That was a dangerous
-secret, and one that he did not care to trust to anybody’s
-keeping.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall get $200 fur makin’ the trip,” continued
-Jack. “Now, I want to earn them thar two hundred,
-but I don’t want Julian to be tuk to New
-Orleans an’ shut up thar, ’cause if he is, we’ll lose
-jest $145 by it&mdash;the hundred he stole from ye last
-night, Jake, an’ the forty-five he made this mornin’
-outen his mink skins. He’s hid the money, an’
-I want to get a chance to make him tell whar it is; an’
-this is the way I’m goin’ to work it. As soon as it comes
-dark, ye, Jake an’ Tom, must get into the dug-out an’
-drop down the river in it, as easy as ye can, tie it to the
-starn of the flatboat, an’ then lay down on the bottom
-an’ keep still thar. Be sure an’ make it fast with a
-short rope, so as to keep outen the way of the sweeps.
-When ye’ve done that I will go up to the house, an’ me
-an’ Mr. Mortimer an’ Julian will go on board the flatboat,
-an’ she’ll put out into the river, draggin’ the dug-out
-arter her. When Mr. Mortimer an’ most of the crew
-have gone to bed, I’ll untie Julian an’ take him up fur
-a turn about the deck. I’ll give him all the chance he
-wants to get away, an’ he will be sartin to use it. He
-said that we shouldn’t never take him down the river;
-an’ bein’ perfectly at home in the water, he won’t mind
-jumpin’ overboard and swimmin’ ashore. As soon as I
-see him in the water I’ll whistle, an’ ye must cut loose
-from the flatboat an’ pick him up. Be as easy as ye can
-about it, an’ when ye onct get hold of him hang on, no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-matter what happens; tie him hard an’ fast, an’ bring
-him hum an’ put him in the smoke-house till I come.
-I’ll be along some time to-morrer, ’cause when Mr. Mortimer
-finds out that Julian is overboard he’ll think he’s
-drownded, an’ he’ll pay me off an’ discharge me. Arter
-I get hold of Julian, it won’t take me long to make him
-tell whar he’s hid them hundred an’ forty-five dollars.
-When I get that an’ the two hundred I’ll be rich.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, pap, how much be me an’ Tom goin’ to git fur
-doin’ the job?” asked Jake.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll git enough to satisfy ye,” was the reply. “Jake
-shall have Julian’s rifle fur his share. It’s a good one,
-an’ didn’t cost a cent less’n $25. Tom shall have his
-blankets, which he can sell at The Corners if he don’t
-want to keep ’em, an’ the clothes Julian’s got on. Tom
-thinks a heap of good clothes, an’ that shows that he’s
-goin’ to be a gentleman when he’s growed up. An’
-more’n that, if I find Julian here when I come hum,
-I’ll give each of ye $10; but if he <i>hain’t</i> here, ye shan’t
-have nothin’ but the dog-gondest wallopin’ ye ever heern
-tell on, an’ ye’ll get that as sartin as ye’re a foot high.
-It’ll be wusser’n all the rest I ever give ye biled down
-into one. Now, be ye sure that ye know jest what ye’ve
-got to do?”</p>
-
-<p>Jake and Tom were not quite certain that they did,
-and so their father repeated his instructions, and kept
-on repeating them until the boys thoroughly understood
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Every part of the work they were expected to perform,
-as well as the treatment Julian was to receive prior
-to Jack’s return, was discussed, and the latter being satisfied
-at last that there was no danger of failure, announced
-that it was his intention to pass the rest of the
-afternoon in sleep. He instructed Jake to return to the
-house and announce that his father had just set out for
-The Corners on horseback, and then concealed himself
-among the corn at the farther end of the crib, while his
-boys, after making sure that there was no one in sight,
-opened the door and went out. No sooner had they entered
-the cabin than Sanders left his position behind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-the crib, made another circuit through the woods back
-to the bank of the river, and once more began walking
-up and down, now and then shaking his head and chuckling
-to himself as if he were thinking about something
-that afforded him great satisfaction.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XII.<br />
-<span class="pch">ON BOARD THE FLATBOAT.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dp.jpg" width="80" height="83" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">“PAP! I say, pap! be ye goin’ to sleep here till
-creation comes? It’s pitch dark, an’ me an’
-Tom have got the dug-out tied fast to the flatboat,
-like ye told us, an’ the cap’n’s jest been
-in the house a tellin’ of Mr. Mortimer that he ain’t
-a-goin’ to wait no longer. Get up, consarn it all.”</p>
-
-<p>It was Jake Bowles who spoke, and while he was thus
-addressing his slumbering parent he was shaking him
-most vigorously. Jack opened his eyes at last, and after
-yawning and stretching his arms, and listening to what
-his hopeful son had to say about the dug-out and the captain’s
-impatience, he began to understand the matter.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” he replied, drowsily. “Now, Jake, I
-want to be sartin’ that ye know what ye’ve got to do.
-Let me hear ye go over what I said to ye this mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Jake began and rehearsed his instructions, and went
-through with them to his father’s entire satisfaction.
-When he had concluded Jack inquired:</p>
-
-<p>“What did I say I’d give ye if ye brought Julian back
-here a prisoner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I hain’t forgot that, I bet ye,” replied Jake,
-quickly. “Ye said ye’d give me his rifle an’ $10.
-Don’t <i>ye</i> forget it, pap, when ye comes back.”</p>
-
-<p>“I won’t. I’m a man what allers sticks to his word.
-Now let me see if ye remember something else. What
-did I say I’d give ye an’ Tom if ye let him get away
-from ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“A larrupin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“A little one or a big one?”</p>
-
-<p>“A big one&mdash;wusser than all the rest.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m powerful glad to see that ye hain’t forgot it. I’ll
-allers keep my promises, I told ye. Mind what ye are
-about, now.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Having thus cautioned his young ally, Jack staggered
-to his feet and walked slowly toward the house, where
-he found Mr. Mortimer pacing the floor in great excitement.
-The captain of the flatboat had just left him,
-with the information that if Jack did not return in half
-an hour he would be obliged to start without him, for
-he could wait no longer.</p>
-
-<p>“You have come at last, have you?” was Mr. Mortimer’s
-greeting.</p>
-
-<p>“Hain’t you got a pair of good eyes? In course, I
-have.”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say it was a high time. And you haven’t
-got your clothes, either.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, that ain’t no fault of mine, is it? I forgot to
-ax ye fur some money to git ’em with, an’ the storekeeper
-wouldn’t trust me. I’m all ready now, if you
-are.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then take charge of Julian and bring him on board
-the boat at once. Remember that I want him kept out
-of my sight as much as possible.”</p>
-
-<p>“I give ye the word of a gentleman that he shan’t
-never trouble ye no more,” replied Jack significantly.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mortimer hurried out of the cabin, slamming the
-door after him. As he sprung upon the deck of the flatboat
-he was met by the captain, who was impatiently
-awaiting his appearance.</p>
-
-<p>“We are ready at last,” said the passenger, “and the
-sooner you get under way the better it will suit me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stand by the lines,” shouted the captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s that man?” continued Mr. Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>His companion pointed toward the bow of the boat.
-Mr. Mortimer looked and saw Sanders pacing back and
-forth as wide awake as ever.</p>
-
-<p>“He must be made of iron,” said the skipper, “for
-he has kept up that walk ever since we landed here this
-morning, and shows no sign of giving out.”</p>
-
-<p>“There is nothing strange in that. He is working
-for money, and wants to be where he can see everything
-that is going on. Have you told him that he can not go
-down the river with us?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Not yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then do it at once. Use every argument you can
-think of to induce him to go ashore, and if you can not
-make him listen to reason call your crew and put him
-off.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mortimer descended the stairs leading into a little
-dismal apartment in the stern of the boat that was
-dignified by the name of “the cabin,” and the captain
-approached his passenger, and extending a roll of bills,
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry to be obliged to say that I can’t take you
-to Orleans.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sho!” exclaimed Sanders.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a fact. My cabin has been given up to a crazy
-boy and his keepers, and I can’t accommodate you.
-Here’s the passage money you paid me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want it. A bargain’s a bargain.”</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you that I can’t take you.”</p>
-
-<p>“O, I hain’t no ways particl’ar as to commodation. I
-can hang up anywhar.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t want you on board my boat, and you
-shan’t stay either. Here’s your money. Take it and go
-ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now jest listen to me a minute, cap’n, and I’ll tell
-you something,” replied Sanders, approaching the
-skipper and speaking in a low, confidential tone. The
-latter, believing that his passenger was about to communicate
-some secret to him, leaned forward and caught
-the words: “I shan’t stir a peg.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I shall use force,” cried the captain in a rage.
-“I shall put you off.”</p>
-
-<p>At the mention of the word “force” all the combativeness
-in the stranger’s composition arose and showed
-itself. His eyes flashed angrily, and doubling up one
-huge fist he brought it down into the palm of his hand
-with a report like that of a pistol.</p>
-
-<p>“Look a here, cap’n,” said he, with a great deal of
-emphasis, “my name is&mdash;Jones.”</p>
-
-<p>He had been on the point of pronouncing his own name&mdash;one
-that had more than once struck terror to a braver<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-heart than the captain of the flatboat possessed&mdash;but
-recollected himself in time, and gave the first one that
-came to his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, that’s my name,” he exclaimed, after a moment’s
-pause&mdash;“Jones&mdash;<i>Tom</i> Jones. I’m the peaceablest
-feller you ever seed when I ain’t crossed, but when
-I <i>am</i> I’m a leetle wusser than a hul passel of wild-cats.
-I can see through a grindstun as fur as the next man.
-I know why you don’t want me here, but I’m a-goin’ to
-stay, I can tell you, an’ if you want to see bullets fly
-faster than you ever seed ’em fly afore, jest tell your
-crew to put me off.”</p>
-
-<p>As Sanders said this he placed his hands in the pockets
-of his coat, and when he brought them into view
-again, he held in each one a navy revolver. After
-flourishing them before the eyes of the captain he put
-them away again, and locking his thumbs in the arm-holes
-of his vest, resumed his walk up and down the
-deck. While this conversation was going on the crew
-had been busy casting off the lines with which the flatboat
-was made fast to the bank, and now one of them
-sung out: “All gone, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain turned, and seeing that Mr. Bowles and
-Julian had just come on board, and knowing that it
-would be useless to make any more attempts to rid himself
-of his objectionable passenger, gave orders to get
-under way.</p>
-
-<p>“Haul in that gang-plank,” said he. “Get out the
-setting-poles and shove off for’ard. Man the larboard
-sweeps, and pull her bow out.”</p>
-
-<p>While the crew were busy working the boat out into
-the river, Mr. Bowles took occasion to stroll aft and
-look over into the water. It was very dark, but still
-there was light enough for him to distinguish the outlines
-of the dug-out dragging at the stern of the flatboat.
-So far his plans were working smoothly. His
-only fear was that the canoe might be discovered by the
-pilot; but, after all, there was little danger of it, for
-that officer, beside being obliged to give his whole attention
-to directing the course of the boat, occupied a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-position so far from the stern that he could not look
-over into the water, even if he had been disposed to
-do so. Jack took off his hat and flourished it about his
-head, and instantly another hat was thrust over the
-side of the dug-out, and being moved to and fro was
-pulled back out of sight. Jake and Tom were on the
-alert, and Mr. Bowles, being satisfied of the fact, returned
-to his prisoner and conducted him into the
-cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Julian took the seat pointed out to him, and looked
-around with curiosity. The cabin was a very dingy
-apartment, and was dimly lighted by a smoky lantern,
-which hung suspended from a beam overhead. It contained
-a rusty cooking stove, a rough table, around
-which were arranged four long benches to serve in lieu
-of chairs, and two sides were occupied by bunks in
-which the crew slept.</p>
-
-<p>One of them, a little apart from the others, was provided
-with curtains, which, being looped back, revealed
-a very comfortable-looking bed, that was doubtless intended
-for Mr. Mortimer. The latter gentleman had
-nothing to say to Mr. Bowles when he came in, but continued
-his walk in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Jack took a turn about the cabin, and then seating
-himself in a chair near his prisoner, folded his arms,
-rested his chin on his breast, and closed his eyes as if
-preparing to go to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Being heavily loaded and short-handed besides, considerable
-time was consumed in working the flatboat
-out into the river; but at the end of half an hour a
-gentle, gliding motion, accompanied by the “lapping”
-sound of the waves against her sides, told Julian that
-she was fairly under way.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the captain came below, followed by some
-of his crew. The men looked curiously at the passengers,
-especially at Julian, who sat in his chair with his
-hands tied behind his back, and without any ceremony
-divested themselves of some of their outer clothing and
-tumbled into bed.</p>
-
-<p>The captain, after pointing out to his passengers the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-beds he had arranged for them, followed their example,
-and presently Mr. Mortimer also sought his couch.</p>
-
-<p>Julian, almost worn down by fatigue and excitement,
-waited impatiently for Jack to give the signal for retiring,
-but the latter had no intention of doing anything
-of the kind. He waited until the sounds which issued
-from the bunks told him that their occupants were all
-asleep, and then he beckoned Julian to follow him to
-the deck. A terrible fear seized upon the boy as he
-arose to obey. Was Jack about to throw him overboard?</p>
-
-<p>He tottered up the stairs, and when he reached the deck,
-was astonished beyond measure and immensely relieved
-by an unexpected proceeding on the part of his keeper,
-who, instead of conducting him to the side and pitching
-him into the water, began untying his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“What in the world does he mean, I wonder?”
-thought Julian. “Does he expect me to remain on
-board this boat if he gives me the least chance to leave
-it? If he takes his eyes off me for one instant I’ll
-astonish him.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you untying that crazy fellow for?” exclaimed
-the pilot, who stood with his hand resting on
-one of the sweeps which served as the rudders of the
-flatboat. “The cap’n says he’s dangerous.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ so he is,” replied Jack&mdash;“in the day-time; but
-at night he’s as gentle as a kitten. I’m goin’ to let him
-take a leetle exercise afore he goes to bed. He’ll sleep
-the better fur it. Ye needn’t be afeared, ’cause I can
-manage him. Mind what ye’re about now,” he added
-in a low tone, addressing himself to Julian. “I’ve got
-my eyes onto ye.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack walked aft to talk to the pilot, and Julian, delighted
-to find himself once more at liberty, strolled
-leisurely about the boat.</p>
-
-<p>The crew on watch were huddled together in the
-waist, and at a little distance from them, Sanders lay
-stretched out on the deck, apparently fast asleep.
-Julian walked past the prostrate forms, and taking his
-stand on the bow, gazed toward the shore. Half the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-width of the Missouri River lay between him and his
-freedom.</p>
-
-<p>“I can easily do it,” said he to himself, “and I am
-going to try it. Good-by, Jack. When I set my
-feet on solid ground once more I will put a safe distance
-between you and me before I stop.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian seated himself on the side of the boat and
-looked down into the dark, muddy water, now and then
-turning his eyes toward Jack and the pilot. The former
-kept his back toward him and his gaze turned up the
-river, as if he saw something there that interested him,
-and finally the pilot, in response to some inquiry from
-Jack, faced about and looked in the same direction.
-This was Julian’s opportunity, and he was prompt to
-seize upon it. Placing his hands upon the side of the
-boat he swung himself off and dropped into the river.</p>
-
-<p>His sudden immersion in the cold water almost took
-his breath away, and for a moment he felt as if every
-drop of blood in his body had been turned into ice; but
-quickly recovering himself he struck out lustily for the
-shore.</p>
-
-<p>There were two persons on board who had witnessed
-the whole proceeding. One was Sanders, who was wide
-awake, in spite of the terrific snores he uttered, and the
-other was Jack Bowles.</p>
-
-<p>So delighted was Jack at the success that had thus
-far attended his plans that he could scarcely refrain
-from shouting.</p>
-
-<p>Fearing that the pilot, if he had not also witnessed
-Julian’s act, might soon notice his absence, he looked
-about for something to occupy his attention, and
-found it.</p>
-
-<p>“I see a snag,” said he suddenly. “Look out, or ye’ll
-be afoul of it in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see it, too,” replied the pilot. “I was so busy talking
-to you that I forgot to attend to my business. Snag
-on the starboard bow!” he shouted. “Man the sweeps,
-all hands!”</p>
-
-<p>The crew jumped at the word, and Jack sprung down
-from the pilot’s bench and walked aft whistling. Jake<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-and Tom, who were curled up in the bottom of the dug-out,
-heard and obeyed the signal. They straightened
-up at once, and while one seized a paddle the other cut
-the painter with which the canoe was made fast to the
-flatboat, and in a moment more they were out of sight.
-Jack stood on the stern of the boat listening intently for
-fully five minutes, and then he was almost certain that
-he heard a splashing in the water and a smothered cry
-for help.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve got him!” said he gleefully. “I was
-afeared they might miss him in the dark. If they had,
-wouldn’t I have dusted their jackets fur them, though?
-But they’re good boys, Jake an’ Tom are. The two hundred
-dollars are mine, an’ the hundred an’ forty-five besides.”</p>
-
-<p>By this time the snag had been passed in safety, and
-the watch once more huddled together in the waist to
-sleep until their services were again required. Jack took
-his stand beside the pilot, and waited for him to say
-something about Julian’s disappearance; but as he did
-not refer to the matter, Mr. Bowles went below and
-tumbled into bed, satisfied that no one beside himself
-was the wiser for what had happened.</p>
-
-<p>Jack awoke long before daylight, but remained quiet
-in his bunk, awaiting a favorable opportunity to carry
-out the rest of his plans. At last the cook entered the
-cabin and began preparations for breakfast. Shortly
-afterward some of the crew crawled out of their bunks,
-and the captain also arose. When Jack saw him he began
-to bestir himself. He got out upon the floor, and
-after dressing himself with great deliberation, went to
-the bunk which had been set apart for Julian’s use.
-The bed certainly looked as if it had been occupied,
-but there was no one in it now. Jack started back with
-well-assumed surprise, uttering an exclamation that
-attracted the attention of every one in the cabin, and
-then rushing forward picked up something and examined
-it attentively. It was the rope with which Julian
-had been bound.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, if this yere don’t beat all natur’,” cried Jack.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Is he loose?” asked the captain in alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s jest what’s the matter. He’s slipped his
-hands outen this rope and hid hisself somewhars. Help
-me find him, fellers,” added Jack, in great excitement,
-leading the way toward the deck; “but look out fur
-yerselves, ’cause if any of ye had any we’pons he’s found
-’em, an’ he’ll use ’em, too.”</p>
-
-<p>A slight rustling among the bed-clothes behind the
-curtain which concealed the bunk in which Mr. Mortimer
-lay, proved that that gentleman was awake and listening
-to all that was going on. Jack heard the noise
-and noticed the movements of the occupant of the bunk,
-but the captain and his men did not. They were too
-busy with thoughts of the dangerous lunatic, whom
-they must assist in securing, to hear or see anything.
-They followed Jack to the deck, and during the next
-quarter of an hour the greatest confusion prevailed on
-board the flatboat.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bowles that morning earned the reputation of
-being a very courageous man; for while he continually
-cautioned the crew to beware of the fire-arms of which
-he was sure his escaped prisoner had obtained possession,
-he exposed himself most recklessly, being everywhere
-foremost in the search, and advancing boldly into the
-darkest corners of the hold, where no one else dared
-to venture. Every part of the boat was thoroughly
-searched, but no Julian was found; and Jack and the
-captain, after talking the matter over, were obliged to
-come to the conclusion that he had put an end to his
-life by jumping overboard.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing was to inform Mr. Mortimer&mdash;who
-Jack said was some distant relative of the unfortunate
-youth&mdash;of the melancholy fact; but that gentleman had
-already learned the particulars from one of the crew,
-and had also made a most disagreeable discovery. Jack
-found him on deck, and when his eyes rested on him he
-stopped and gazed at him in surprise.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mortimer’s serious air might have been put on
-for the occasion, Bowles told himself, but he never could
-have assumed that pale face. Something was the matter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-with him. He listened in silence while Jack and the
-captain told him of Julian’s mysterious disappearance,
-and when they ceased speaking he walked off to an unoccupied
-part of the deck.</p>
-
-<p>The captain presently went down into his cabin and
-Jack joined Mr. Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?” asked the latter in a low whisper.</p>
-
-<p>“At the bottom of the river,” replied Jack in the
-same cautious tone. “He was standin’ right there, jest
-this way,” he added, stepping close to the side of the
-boat, “with his hands tied behind him, an’ I come up
-an’ give him a leetle nudge with my shoulder an’ over
-he went. Nobody didn’t see me do it, either.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care to know how it was done,” interrupted
-Mr. Mortimer hastily. “I only want to be sure that it
-<i>was</i> done, and effectually.”</p>
-
-<p>“It sartinly was. He couldn’t swim fur with his
-hands tied, could he?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but he might have been picked up. Have you
-seen Sanders this morning?”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t,” replied Jack, looking about the deck,
-while an expression of anxiety settled on his face. “He
-wouldn’t save him, would he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course he would, if he got the opportunity. If
-he could take that boy to a certain man whose name I
-could mention he would make more money by it than
-he ever saw. He is working against me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, he didn’t pick him up. I was on deck fur ten
-minutes arter Julian went overboard, an’ I didn’t see
-him at all. Mebbe he’s about somewhars.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he isn’t. He’s gone; and so is the yawl belonging
-to the flatboat.”</p>
-
-<p>Jack started, and folding his arms gazed thoughtfully
-over the side into the water. Although he had not noticed
-the circumstance at the time, he now remembered
-that on the preceding day Sanders had kept as close as
-possible to him and Mr. Mortimer, and that he had
-more than once paused in his walk as if he were listening
-to their conversation.</p>
-
-<p>Might he not by some means have become acquainted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-with his plans, and set himself to work to defeat them?
-And if Julian was so valuable to him, might he not have
-followed Jake and Tom in the yawl with the intention
-of securing their prisoner? The thought was enough to
-put Jack on nettles.</p>
-
-<p>“Whar’s them two hundred?” he asked, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Mortimer, putting his hand into his pocket, produced
-a roll of bills, which he slyly handed to his confederate,
-and Jack continued:</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t be of no more use here, an’ you might as well
-tell the cap’n to set me ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will. I want to go myself. I am uneasy about
-that man Sanders. Here comes the captain now.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall have to land to do it,” said the skipper, after
-listening to the request of his passenger, “for I have no
-boat to send you off in. That strange-looking man in
-black has deserted us and stolen it. It was worth $60,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say no more about that,” returned Mr. Mortimer.
-“Put us on dry land and I will compensate you for the
-loss of your boat.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain gave the necessary orders to the pilot,
-called up his crew to man the sweeps, and in a few
-seconds the bow of the flatboat was turned toward the
-shore.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XIII.<br />
-<span class="pch">IN THE SMOKE-HOUSE.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/di.jpg" width="80" height="82" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">“IF ANY one on board that flatboat is crazy it
-is Jack Bowles. He might have known that
-I wouldn’t stay there long after my hands
-were untied. Didn’t I tell him that I would
-never go back to that camp and give him my money with
-my own hands? I am free now, and if he ever captures
-me again I shall deserve to be obliged to remain under
-his roof for the rest of my days. The cabin can’t be
-more than ten miles away. I can easily walk there in
-three hours, and it will be no trouble for me to slip into
-the house and obtain possession of my rifle and blankets
-without awakening Jake and Tom. Then I’ll catch my
-horse, go back to my camp on the bluffs after my money,
-and by daylight I’ll be twenty miles away.”</p>
-
-<p>While these thoughts were passing through Julian’s
-mind he was striking out lustily for the shore. The
-flatboat was still in plain view, for the current carried
-both her and him down the river at an almost equal rate
-of speed. Julian kept close watch of her, expecting
-every moment to hear an uproar on her deck, telling
-him that his absence had been discovered. He little
-dreamed that his escape, which he had so easily accomplished,
-had been brought about by the assistance of his
-dreaded enemy, who was at that very moment creating
-a diversion in his favor; and he little thought, too, that
-the pursuers he feared were not coming from the flatboat,
-but from another quarter altogether. Had he
-looked up the river occasionally, instead of keeping his
-gaze so steadily directed across the stream, he would
-have discovered something.</p>
-
-<p>A dug-out was coming swiftly down the river, its prow
-being pointed directly toward Julian. In the stern sat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-Tom Bowles vigorously plying a paddle, which he used
-with so much skill that it made not the slightest sound
-as it rose and fell in the water. Stretched out flat in
-the bow was Jake Bowles, who kept his eyes fastened on
-Julian’s head, now and then signaling to his brother
-with his hands, and showing him what course to steer.
-Julian discovered his enemies before he had swam a
-third of the distance to the shore, but then it was too
-late to make even an attempt to avoid them. He heard
-a hissing sound, made by the sharp bow of the dug-out
-as it cleft the water, and turned quickly, only to find
-himself in the grasp of Jake Bowles, who seized his
-collar with both hands and held fast to it.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon ye thought ye was gone, didn’t ye?” he
-cried, in a triumphant tone; “but ye hain’t, be ye?
-Yer ketched agin, an’ this time ye’ll stay ketched, I bet
-ye. Balance the boat, Tom, an’ I’ll haul him in.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I left you at home, Jake Bowles!”
-exclaimed Julian. “How came you here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess we’ve got as much right on this yere river as
-anybody, hain’t we? We come arter ye, that’s how we
-come here, an’ we’ve got ye, too.”</p>
-
-<p>For a moment Julian was too astonished to move.
-The approach of his enemies had been so noiseless, and
-their appearance was so sudden and unexpected, that he
-was utterly bewildered. Not until Jack had dragged
-him half-way into the dug-out did he begin to comprehend
-the situation.</p>
-
-<p>“Let go!” he exclaimed, “or I’ll capsize the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nary let go,” replied Jake. “I owe you a good
-poundin’ fur stealin’ them $100 from me, an’ fur knockin’
-me into that hole last night, an’ I’m goin’ to give it
-to ye afore I let ye go. Come in here.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you come out here,” said Julian. “I’ll duck
-you sure if you don’t let go my collar.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the second time the two boys had measured
-strength, and although our hero was fighting at great
-disadvantage, he tested the endurance and muscle of
-his antagonist most severely. He strove to the utmost
-to drag Jake into the water; but the latter had wrapped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-his legs around one of the thwarts and thrown his left
-arm over another, and Julian could not break his hold.
-Nor could he overturn the boat, for Tom watched the
-contest closely, and frustrated all Julian’s attempts by
-throwing the weight of his body on the opposite side of
-the dug-out.</p>
-
-<p>Jake, in the meantime exerted himself to drag his
-prisoner out of the water; but finding that it was a task
-beyond his strength, he held firmly to Julian’s collar,
-determined to wait until the latter, exhausted by his
-furious struggles, should be obliged to surrender himself.
-But Julian’s endurance seemed to have no limit.
-He resolutely continued the contest, and all this while
-the canoe was floating down the river side by side with
-the flatboat, which was scarcely more than a hundred
-yards distant.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re fightin’ fur money now, <i>we</i> are,” said Jake&mdash;“for
-the $145. It’s no use fur ye to kick about so,
-’cause we’ve got ye, an’ we’re goin’ to hold fast to ye.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll not get the money, even if you succeed in
-making a prisoner of me,” replied Julian, with as much
-spirit as ever.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll see about that when we’ve got ye hum. I
-guess if ye go a few days without eatin’ or sleepin’, an’
-have the rawhide laid over yer shoulders ten or twenty
-times every hour, ye’ll be glad to tell us all we want to
-know. Come here, Tom, an’ hit him a clip with yer
-paddle. I guess that’ll fetch him to his senses.”</p>
-
-<p>“Souse him under,” replied Tom; “that’s the way
-to make him give in.”</p>
-
-<p>Jake was prompt to act upon the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>Julian resisted him desperately, but one or two severe
-blows on the fingers with the edge of Tom’s paddle
-broke his hold on the side of the canoe, and his head
-was forced under the water. Jake held him there a
-few seconds, and then pulled him to the surface, and
-after giving him time to draw a breath or two, and
-clear his eyes of the water, asked him if he would
-abandon the struggle and allow himself to be drawn
-into the boat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-111.jpg" width="400" height="227"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc400">“<span class="smcap">Jake Bowles seized Julian by the collar and held fast.</span>”<span class="wn">&mdash;[Page <a href="#Page_109">109</a>]</span>.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Julian, not in the least daunted; “I’ll
-never give up while I have any strength left.”</p>
-
-<p>“Stick him under agin,” said Tom, and down went
-Julian’s head for the second time.</p>
-
-<p>Jake held him under longer than before&mdash;as long as
-he dared, in fact&mdash;and when he pulled him up again,
-Julian was incapable of any serious resistance. He
-gasped for breath, and tried to lay hold of the side of
-the canoe.</p>
-
-<p>Jake, quick to improve the opportunity thus presented,
-exerted all his strength, while Tom kept the
-boat trimmed in order to prevent a capsize, and finally
-succeeded in dragging his prisoner out of the water.
-In less time than it takes to tell it he was secured beyond
-all hope of escape, and the canoe was shooting
-swiftly up the river.</p>
-
-<p>It was fully half an hour before Julian moved or
-spoke. He lay so quietly on the bottom of the dug-out
-that Jake and Tom began to be alarmed, fearing that in
-their eagerness to take all the fight out of their captive,
-they had gone too far, and taken the breath out of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>But Julian was fast recovering from the effects of his
-ducking, and as soon as he was himself again the brothers
-speedily became aware of the fact, for he began to
-try the strength of the ropes with which he was confined.
-He thrashed about at an alarming rate, rocking
-the canoe from side to side, until at last the water began
-to pour in over the gunwales, and Jake and Tom
-were obliged to cease paddling and trim their craft in
-order to keep it right side up.</p>
-
-<p>But they had done their work thoroughly, and Julian,
-finding his efforts useless, ceased his struggles, and
-listened to the threats of his captors, who tried by every
-means in their power to compel him to tell where he
-had hidden his money.</p>
-
-<p>During the progress of the conversation he heard
-some things he did not know before, and one was that
-his escape from the flatboat and his recapture by Jake
-and Tom were a part of the scheme Mr. Bowles had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-set on foot for the finding of the concealed treasure.
-He was astonished to know that while he imagined he
-was working for his own interests he was playing into
-the hands of his enemy, and told himself that Jack
-still had the most difficult part of the undertaking
-before him.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner suffered intensely during the journey up
-the river. The night was cold, the wind keen and
-piercing, and seemed to cut through his wet clothing
-like a knife. When at last the canoe reached the
-landing he was so benumbed that he could scarcely
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>Having made the dug-out fast to a tree on the bank,
-Jake and Tom pulled their captive ashore, and finding
-him unable to stand alone, took hold of his arms and
-led him toward the house.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely were they out of sight when a heavy yawl,
-rowed by a single man, shot up to the landing and
-stopped alongside the canoe. The occupant sprung
-out, and without waiting to secure his boat, crept
-cautiously up the bank, and followed after Jake and
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p>When the brothers reached the cabin they pushed
-open the door and entered, dragging their captive after
-them. Mrs. Bowles, who sat nodding on one of the
-nail-kegs, started up as they came in, and Julian knew
-from the first words she uttered that she was expecting
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“So ye’ve got him, have ye?” she exclaimed, gleefully.
-“This night’s work will make rich folks outen
-us. An’ ye was goin’ to run away from us, was ye&mdash;from
-me an’ Jack, who have allers treated ye like a son
-ever since ye’ve been with us? An’ ye’ve got $145 hid
-away from us, have ye? What business have ye got
-with so much money? Take him out to the smoke-house
-an’ lock him up thar. I’m too sleepy to wollop
-him to-night, but I’ll tend to him the fust thing in the
-mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian had expected a terrible beating as soon as he
-was brought into the presence of Mrs. Bowles, and was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-much relieved to know that his punishment was to be
-postponed for a few hours. It was the first time he had
-ever known Jack’s wife to be too sleepy to use the rawhide.</p>
-
-<p>“An he ain’t got no business with them new suit of
-clothes, nuther,” said Tom, who, while his brother was
-searching for a candle and the key to the smoke-house,
-was taking some of his own ragged wearing apparel
-down from the nails in one corner of the cabin.
-“He’s got to take ’em off an’ give ’em to me. Pap
-said so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye shall have ’em, Tommy,” said his mother. “Ye’ve
-been a good boy an’ ye desarve ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ I’m to have his rifle an’ $10 besides,” chimed in
-Jake, angling for a word of commendation.</p>
-
-<p>“So ye are. Allers be good an’ ye’ll be sartin to
-prosper.”</p>
-
-<p>When Jake had found the candle and key, and Tom
-had selected the garments he intended to give to Julian
-in exchange for his own, the two boys led their captive
-out of the cabin to the smoke-house.</p>
-
-<p>The first business in order, after they had conducted
-Julian into his prison, was to rob him of his clothes.
-Jake untied his hands and stood close by his side, in
-order to seize him if he made any attempt to escape,
-while Tom picked up a heavy club and stationed himself
-in front of the door, ready to knock the prisoner
-down if he eluded his brother. But Julian, shivering
-violently with the cold and utterly incapable of any exertion,
-thought only of dry clothes and comfort and not
-of escape. He felt much more at his ease after he had
-relieved himself of his wet garments and put on those
-Tom had provided for him, and told himself that if his
-captors would bring him the blankets Jack had stolen
-from his camp on the bluff, he could obtain a night’s
-refreshing sleep in spite of the cold and his bonds. But
-he soon found that they did not intend to permit him
-to go to sleep at all; and during the next few minutes
-he gained some idea of what was in store for him.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the exchange had been made, and Julian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-had again been bound, Tom dropped his club, and
-catching up a long rope which he had brought with
-him from the house, mounted upon a box and made one
-end of it fast to a beam overhead. At the same time
-Jake pushed his prisoner under the beam, and seizing
-the other end of the rope tied it to his hands. Julian
-was now confined so that he could neither sit, lie nor
-walk about. He must remain upon his feet and stand
-in one place during the rest of the night.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see any use in this,” said he, dismayed at
-the gloomy prospect before him. “I can’t escape from
-this house as long as my hands are tied.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, we can see use in it, if ye can’t,” replied Tom.
-“We’re doin’ jest what pap told us to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ we don’t do it ’cause we’re afeared of yer gettin’
-away, nuther,” said Jake. “Ye’ve got to stand
-right here without a wink of sleep or a bite to eat till
-ye tell us whar that money is hid. Mebbe ye’ll tell us
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’ll not,” replied Julian promptly and decidedly.</p>
-
-<p>“All right. Ye’ll think different in the mornin’, I
-tell ye. The ole woman will be here bright an’ arly,
-an’ if ye ain’t ready to open yer mouth, she’ll give ye a
-dozen or two as hard as ever she can lay ’em on. When
-pap comes home to-morrer he’ll take the job outen her
-hands. Ye’ve got into a hard row of stumps, feller.”</p>
-
-<p>After carefully examining their captive’s bonds, and
-looking carefully about the smoke-house to make sure
-that there was no opening in it from which he could
-escape, even if he succeeded in freeing his hands, Jake
-and Tom went out, locking the door after them.</p>
-
-<p>When the sound of their footsteps had died away, and
-Julian began to ponder upon what they had said to him,
-and to realize how powerless he was in the hands of his
-enemies, his courage for the first time gave away utterly.
-He took a step forward and threw his weight upon the
-rope, but it was firmly tied to the beam above and too
-strong to be broken, and the movement only pulled his
-hands between his shoulders, thus “tricing him up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>”
-most effectually. He had never dreamed that his enemies
-would endeavor to torture his secret out of him in
-this way. He had expected to be beaten, and he believed
-that he could endure that; but was his fortitude
-proof against such a test as this? In order to save himself
-suffering would it not be policy to give Jack the
-information he demanded, and when his liberty was
-restored to him, resume his old occupation of trapping
-until he could earn enough to purchase an outfit for his
-proposed journey? He had worked hard for two winters
-to accumulate the little property he now possessed, and
-should he surrender it at the command of one who had
-not the smallest shadow of a right to it? Julian passed
-an hour debating such points as these, and at the end of
-that time his decision was made.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll never do it,” said he to himself. “It belongs to
-me alone. Nobody else has a claim upon it. The
-woods are as free to Jack Bowles as they once were to
-me&mdash;much more so, in fact, for there is no one to dog
-his steps, destroy his traps and steal his earnings&mdash;and
-if he wants money let him work for it. That’s the way
-I got mine. He will find that I am not to be starved
-or beaten into telling him where that box is concealed.
-Jake and Tom are coming back again. I hope they
-have not brought the rawhide with them.”</p>
-
-<p>The footsteps which had attracted Julian’s attention
-drew nearer and nearer, and presently a cautious hand
-laid hold of the padlock with which the door was secured.
-Julian listened to hear the bolt turned, but soon
-found out that his visitor, whoever he was, did not intend
-to effect an entrance with the assistance of a key; for
-after shaking the lock to assure himself that it was fast
-in the staple, he placed his shoulders against the door
-and tried to burst it open. The prisoner heard him
-panting and puffing as he applied his strength to the
-stout planks. He heard, too, the angry words he muttered
-when he found that his efforts were useless, and
-caught the sound of his footsteps as he moved around
-the smoke-house.</p>
-
-<p>Julian wondered greatly. Who was he? Was he some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-friend who, knowing that he was confined there, had
-come with the hope of rescuing him? There was scarcely
-a man in the settlement who would not have hurried to
-his relief had it been known that he was in trouble, but
-unfortunately no one was aware of his situation. Of
-course, then, the visitor could not be a friend. Most
-likely he was some hungry prowler, whose only object
-was to filch a ham or a side of bacon from the smoke-house.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the unpleasantness of his situation, Julian
-became interested in the man’s movements. He walked
-around the building and finally came back and tried the
-door again, but with no better success than before.
-Then there was silence for a few minutes, during which
-the man was, no doubt, thinking what was best to be
-done, and at length a noise at one corner of the house
-told the prisoner that he had decided upon a plan of
-operations. He was using the projecting ends of the
-logs as a ladder, and mounting to the top of the building.
-His success was certain now. The roof was covered
-with narrow oak boards, laid on like shingles, and
-held in place by small nails; and it would be a matter of
-no difficulty for him to pull a few of them off and drop
-down on the inside of the smoke-house. That such
-was the visitor’s intention soon became evident. He
-attacked the shingles at once, using extreme caution in
-removing them from their fastenings, and in a few
-seconds an opening had been made in the roof, that was
-immediately filled by the head and shoulders of the
-man, who lighted a match and held it up to take a survey
-of things below him. Julian had a good view of
-him. Could he believe his eyes? He stared hard at
-his visitor, and uttered a cry of delight.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XIV.<br />
-<span class="pch">SANDERS TELLS HIS STORY.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dj.jpg" width="80" height="83" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">JULIAN’S visitor was the man Sanders. He
-recognized him by the handkerchief that was
-tied over his head. If he had come there to
-release him would it not be sufficient proof
-that he was really the friend he professed to be?</p>
-
-<p>“Julian!” exclaimed the man, in a low but excited
-tone of voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I am here!” replied the prisoner, so overjoyed that
-he could scarcely speak plainly.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, come out o’ that. You needn’t stay thar no
-longer.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t go up there&mdash;I am tied.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you? Then I’ll soon be down to turn you
-loose.”</p>
-
-<p>After burning another match to make sure the way
-was clear below him, Sanders crawled through the opening
-in the roof, and hanging by his hands, dropped to
-the ground. A knife which he drew from his pocket
-made quick work with the prisoner’s bonds, and in a
-few seconds he was free.</p>
-
-<p>“How came you here?” Julian asked of his deliverer,
-after he had taken a few turns around the smoke-house
-to relieve his cramped limbs. “I left you ten miles
-down the river fast asleep on board the flatboat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much I wasn’t asleep,” replied Sanders, with a
-laugh. “I seed every thing that happened. But we
-hain’t got no time to talk. Be thar any men in the
-house?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Jake and Tom are alone with their mother.”</p>
-
-<p>“Them boys? If I had known that, you wouldn’t
-have been brought in here. Climb up on my shoulders
-now, and crawl out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Not having entirely recovered from the effects of his
-long ride in his wet clothes, Julian was not very strong
-or active, but after some difficulty he succeeded in
-mounting upon Sanders’ broad shoulders, and drawing
-himself up to the opening in the roof, he crawled
-through and dropped to the ground. The man climbed
-up the logs and followed him, and when he once more
-stood by Julian’s side he gave utterance, with the first
-words he spoke, to the very thoughts that were passing
-through the boy’s mind.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon that if I do a few more things of this
-kind you will be willin’ to b’lieve that I am any thing
-but an enemy to you, won’t you?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You have rendered me a most important service,”
-answered the boy, guardedly, “and I am very grateful
-to you for it. I only wish I was as well satisfied of your
-friendship, and the truth of some things you told me
-this morning, as I am of the interest you somehow take
-in me. I can not understand why you, who are an utter
-stranger to me, should put yourself to so much trouble
-to assist me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I hain’t no stranger to you,” replied Sanders earnestly.
-“I tell you I knowed you and your brother afore
-either of you could walk. You were stole away from
-your home by Dick Mortimer. Your friends have just
-found out whar you are, an’ sent me arter you. You’re
-goin’ to start for the plains now, hain’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am, and in less than five minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I’m goin’ the same way. You needn’t travel
-in my company unless you’re a mind to, but I’d be
-powerful glad to have you. I can show you the way to
-St. Joe anyhow, an’ as we go along I will tell you about
-the folks you hain’t seed fur so many years.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian leaned against the smoke-house and thought
-over this proposition. It was a very fair one, and he
-could not see that he would place himself in any danger
-by accepting it. He was <i>almost</i> ready to put entire
-faith in his new acquaintance, and to believe everything
-he had told him. He wanted to believe it, and if
-Sanders had made his appearance a few hours before&mdash;prior<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-to his meeting with Mr. Mortimer&mdash;Julian would
-have placed unlimited confidence in him. But his experience
-with Jack Bowles’ guest had made him timid
-and suspicious.</p>
-
-<p>Sanders did not ask him to give himself up to his
-guidance and control, but seemed satisfied to wait until
-he was willing to do so of his free will; and Julian told
-himself that that was a good sign.</p>
-
-<p>He at last decided that he would accept the offer of
-the man’s guidance as far as St. Joseph, and that when
-he reached that point he would decide upon his future
-movements. In the meantime he would watch his companion
-closely, and leave him at the very first sign of
-treachery. This determination he communicated to
-Sanders, who seemed to be immensely delighted by it.</p>
-
-<p>“I am monstrous glad to hear you say it,” said he.
-“And I’ll tell you what’s a fact: If you go with me as
-fur as St. Joe, you will go all the rest of the way with
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian did not quite like the tone in which these words
-were spoken, for it made him feel that there was more in
-them than he could understand; and had there been
-light enough for him to see the expression the man’s
-face wore at that moment the opinion would have been
-confirmed.</p>
-
-<p>“Whar you goin’ now?” asked Sanders, as Julian
-moved toward the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“Jake and Tom have some of my property in their
-possession,” was the reply; “a suit of clothes, a rifle and
-a pair of blankets. I must have them before I start.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Taint wuth while,” said Sanders. “You’ve got
-money; buy more.”</p>
-
-<p>“I may need the little I have for other purposes when
-I get out on the plains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sho! You’ll find more out thar than you ever
-dreamed of. You can walk up a ravine a little way from
-your father’s rancho an’ pick up nuggets of gold as big
-as you can tote.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I don’t know how long it will be, or what I
-shall be obliged to pass through, before I get there,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>”
-replied Julian. “Another thing, Jack Bowles and his
-boys shall not have the satisfaction of using anything
-that belongs to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, go ahead, then, if you’re so sot onto it, an’ I’ll
-be close by to lend a hand if you get into trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>While this conversation was being carried on Julian
-and his companion were walking toward the cabin, and
-now they were close beside it. The boy at once pushed
-open the door and entered, while Sanders took his stand
-upon the steps where he could see all that went on.</p>
-
-<p>There was a roaring fire on the hearth, and by the aid
-of the light it threw out Julian could distinguish every
-object in the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Almost the first things his eyes rested upon were the
-clothes of which he had been robbed, spread out on a
-couple of nail-kegs to dry. His rifle stood beside the bed
-in which Jake and Tom lay fast asleep, and his powder-horn
-and bullet-pouch hung from a nail over their heads.
-Walking across the floor with his ordinary step, and
-without taking the least pains to avoid arousing the
-occupants of the cabin, Julian took the horn and pouch
-down from the nail, and while slinging them over his
-shoulder discovered the other articles of which he was in
-search&mdash;his blankets, which were snugly tucked around
-the shoulders of the sleeping brothers.</p>
-
-<p>“You are very good to yourselves, are you not?” said
-Julian aloud. “You leave me to freeze in the smoke-house,
-and make use of my property to keep yourselves
-warm. You’ll sleep colder for the rest of the night.”</p>
-
-<p>As he said this he jerked the blankets off the bed.
-The movement awoke Tom Bowles who started up in
-alarm, and was greatly amazed to see his prisoner standing
-unbound beside his bed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye Julian!” he exclaimed, as soon as he found his
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s just what’s the matter!” replied our hero.</p>
-
-<p>“How come ye outen that ar smoke-house?”</p>
-
-<p>“I crawled out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll crawl back agin mighty sudden, I tell ye,”
-replied Tom, seizing his brother by the shoulder.
-“Wake up here, Jake.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Hold on!” said Julian, lifting his recovered rifle
-over Tom’s head. “No noise, now.”</p>
-
-<p>If Tom was alarmed by this movement on the part of
-Julian, he was still more terrified when he saw a head
-and a pair of broad shoulders thrust in at the door, and
-a clenched hand, which looked as though it might have
-knocked down an ox, shaken threateningly at him. He
-understood the gesture and took his hand off his brother’s
-shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by, Tom,” said Julian, shouldering his rifle
-and gathering his clothes and blankets under his arm.
-“I am sorry that I am in so great a hurry, for I have
-several little accounts against you and Jake that I should
-like to settle up before I go. Give my very kindest
-regards to your father when he returns, and be sure and
-follow the excellent advice your mother gave you a while
-ago in my hearing.”</p>
-
-<p>So saying Julian left the cabin, and Sanders slammed
-the door after him. Followed by his ally, the boy walked
-toward the corn-cribs, and while he was pulling off Tom’s
-tattered garments and putting on his own, which were
-now dry and comfortable, he saw the door of the cabin
-opened and the heads of Mrs. Bowles and her two sons
-thrust cautiously out. But they did not speak to him
-or venture beyond the threshold. They peered into the
-darkness a moment and then closed and fastened the
-door; and that was the last Julian ever saw of them.</p>
-
-<p>Billy, proving more tractable than on a former occasion,
-was captured and saddled without difficulty. In two
-hours more Julian’s camp on the bluff was again occupied.
-The brush shanty which Jack Bowles had pulled
-down had been restored to an upright position; a fire
-was burning brightly before it; Billy was standing
-hitched to a tree close by; and Julian, with his saddle
-under his head for a pillow, and the tin box containing
-his money safely stowed away in his pocket, lay stretched
-out on one of the blankets, while Sanders reclined upon
-the other smoking his pipe. The man had been relating
-how he had hidden behind the corn-crib and overheard
-Jack Bowles’ plans concerning Julian, and thus<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-been able to take measures to defeat them. He had
-been a witness to everything that happened on board
-the flatboat. He had seen Julian go overboard, and
-knowing that Jake and Tom were close by waiting to
-pick him up, he had clambered down into the yawl, as
-soon as he saw an opportunity to do so without attracting
-the attention of any one of the flatboat’s crew, and
-pushed off to Julian’s assistance. His story was followed
-by a long pause, which was broken by our hero,
-who said:</p>
-
-<p>“I am ready to hear what you have to tell me about
-my parents. You say they are both alive?”</p>
-
-<p>“Both of ’em,” replied Sanders.</p>
-
-<p>“How does my father look?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jest as nateral as life&mdash;enough like you to be your
-brother, if it wasn’t for his gray har an’ mustache. He’s
-a tall, broad-shouldered man, has an eye like an eagle’s,
-an’ is the best hossman an’ rifle-shot in the West. He’s
-awful rich, too; I don’t b’lieve he knows how much he’s
-wuth. You see, your mother&mdash;an’ she’s a lady, you bet&mdash;is
-a Spanish woman. Her father, long years ago,”
-Sanders went on hurriedly, as if he did not intend to
-allow his listener any time to ask questions, “took it
-into his ole head that he wanted to be away from everybody,
-an’ so he located out thar in the mountains. He
-allers was rich, but when he got out thar he found himself
-richer’n ever. Thar was gold all around him. He
-couldn’t walk without steppin’ onto it, an’ he picked it
-up by cart-loads. Your father, who was out thar sojerin’,
-resigned his commission in the army an’ married his darter;
-an’ in course when the ole man died he came into possession
-of all his gold dust. But thar were some people
-about who didn’t want him to keep it. The only kin
-folks your mother had after her father died were a
-brother an’ cousin, an’ you see if everybody else had
-been out of the way, all the money would have fell to
-her brother. They ain’t the honestest fellers in the
-world, her kin folks ain’t, I must say. They’re the
-wust sort of gamblers, bein’ monstrous fond of three-card
-monte, an’ they are even suspicioned of doin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>’
-things a heap sight wuss than that; an’ since your
-father an’ his family wouldn’t die an’ leave them to take
-charge of the money, they laid a plan to hurry up matters
-an’ divide the plunder between them. But all the
-harm they done was to steal you away from home, an’
-that didn’t do ’em no good ’cause I’ve found you agin.”</p>
-
-<p>“You say that Dick Mortimer is the man who kidnapped
-me?” asked Julian, when Sanders paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin, I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“And that he is a relative of my mother’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“Them’s my very words.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now, is he her brother or her cousin?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s her brother.”</p>
-
-<p>“Her <i>own</i> brother?”</p>
-
-<p>“In course.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can that be? My mother’s name wasn’t Mortimer
-before she was married, was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” exclaimed Sanders, somewhat disconcerted by
-this question. “Oh, no; in course not. Her name
-was Cordova, an’ Dick’s her cousin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then how does it come that his name is Mortimer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eh? I’m blessed if I know. I guess it jest happened
-so. An’ your brother’s alive an’ all right, too.
-Now he’s a <i>boy</i>, he is. You’re mighty right. His
-name’s Fred. Won’t he make things lively for you
-though when you get out thar? You hain’t goin’ to
-sleep, be you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I am,” replied Julian, rearranging his blanket
-and resting his head on his hard pillow, “I have
-scarcely closed my eyes during the past forty-eight
-hours, and I begin to feel the need of rest. We have a
-long journey to make to-morrow, you know. Goodnight.”</p>
-
-<p>Sanders looked sharply at the boy, and settled back
-on his blanket, muttering as he did so:</p>
-
-<p>“Did I tell him anything out of the way, I wonder?
-I am afraid I got that brother an’ cousin business
-mixed up a trifle too much. I said jest what Reginald
-told me to say as nigh as I could. If I can only manage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-to keep him with me till we reach St. Joe, I am all
-right. It will make a rich man of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is no use to waste time in listening to this fellow
-and building hopes on what he says,” thought Julian,
-throwing his arm over his head, and watching his companion
-through his half-closed eyes. “He repeated his
-story as if he had learned it by heart, and some portions
-of it didn’t hold together. I wish he would take off
-that handkerchief and give me a fair view of his face.
-Who is he, and why did he come here? My father
-never sent him, for, if he is alive and well, and knows
-where I am, he would have come himself if he wanted
-to have me near him. He is no friend of Dick Mortimer,
-for he is working against him. Is he up to some
-trick of his own, or is he employed by somebody? I’ll
-not go to sleep, for I am afraid of him. I can’t well
-avoid traveling in his company as far as St. Joseph,
-but when I get there I will have no more to do with
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>For a short while Julian was wakeful enough. His
-recent excitement and adventures, and his speculations
-concerning the future, kept his brain busy and banished
-sleep. But at last his thoughts became confused, his
-eyelids grew heavy, and in a few minutes more he was
-in the land of dreams.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XV.<br />
-<span class="pch">THE JOURNEY COMMENCED.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dw.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">WHEN Julian opened his eyes again the sun
-was rising. He started up with an exclamation
-which was repeated as soon as he was
-fairly awake. His first thought was of his
-companion. He was gone. A glance about the camp
-showed him that something else was also missing&mdash;his
-rifle, which he had placed under the eaves of the cabin
-close at hand and ready for use in case of emergency. A
-strange feeling came over Julian, and it was some minutes
-before he could muster up courage enough to place
-his hand upon the breast of his jacket in which he carried
-his box of money. But he did it at last, and was
-immensely relieved to find that his box was safe. He
-removed the lid, and saw that its contents had not been
-disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>While he was trying to find some explanation for his
-companion’s absence, and wondering why, if he had deserted
-him and stolen his gun, he had not taken the
-money also, Sanders appeared in sight over the brow of
-the bluff with Julian’s rifle on his shoulder and several
-squirrels in his hand, which he had shot for their breakfast.
-The boy said nothing about the fright his absence
-had occasioned him, but assisted him in cooking and
-eating the squirrels, telling himself the while that whatever
-else Sanders might be he was not a thief. It was
-plain now that if he had any designs upon Julian, the
-time to carry them into execution had not yet arrived.</p>
-
-<p>When the two had satisfied their appetites Billy was
-saddled, the fire extinguished, and the journey toward
-St. Joseph commenced. Julian rode the horse and Sanders
-walked by his side, striding along at an astonishing
-rate and keeping Billy in a trot all the way. He proved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-to be a very entertaining companion, and told stories of
-adventure in the mountains and on the plains till Julian
-became interested in spite of himself. Sanders, quick
-to notice the fact, again spoke of the home among the
-gold mines to which he was ready to conduct Julian if
-the latter would only trust to his guidance; but seeing
-very plainly that the boy did not believe a word he said,
-he dropped the subject and did not refer to it again.</p>
-
-<p>At noon they stopped at a farm-house, where both
-travelers and horse were regaled with an excellent dinner,
-and about 10 o’clock that night found themselves
-in a hotel in St. Joseph. Julian asked to be shown at
-once to his room, and after he had locked himself in
-and barricaded the door with the washstand and chairs,
-he drew a long breath of relief, and for the first time
-since meeting Richard Mortimer believed himself free
-from danger. The feeling of comfort and security he
-experienced was certainly refreshing, but it would have
-been short-lived had he known what his companion in
-the adjoining room was thinking about.</p>
-
-<p>That worthy was up and doing at a very early hour,
-and his first move, after he had come out of his room
-and looked up and down the hall to make sure that there
-was no one in sight, was to place his ear and then his
-eye to the keyhole of Julian’s door. He heard and saw
-enough to satisfy him that the boy had not yet arisen,
-and this point being settled he went down stairs and out
-of the house. He hurried along the streets, and after
-turning numerous corners found himself in front of a
-small and very dingy public house, which, as the sign
-before the door indicated, was called the “Hunter’s
-Home.” It was patronized exclusively by frontiersmen,
-and some of the guests were already astir and lounging
-about the doors. Sanders glanced at the groups as he
-walked by them, and turning the nearest corner passed
-on out of sight. No sooner had he disappeared than two
-men arose from the bench on which they had been sitting,
-and strolling down the street and turning the same
-corner, presently came up with Sanders, who was perched
-upon a dry-goods box in front of a store.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I allowed it was you, Ned, but I didn’t know,” said
-one of them, advancing and extending his hand, which
-Sanders shook cordially. “You’re dressed up like a
-gentleman. What luck?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got him.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have?” cried both the men in concert.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a fact. He’s in a hotel not more’n a half a mile
-from here&mdash;Julian Mortimer himself, an’ nobody else.
-I’ve had the wust kind of a time a gettin’ him. Dick
-Mortimer was thar ahead of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sho!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. An’ we’re goin to have a wusser time, I am
-afraid, gettin’ him out of the town to the prairy. He’s
-sharper’n two steel traps, that boy is, an’ somehow he
-don’t like the looks of me. He knows a heap about
-himself, an’ is too smart to swallow a single one of the
-lies I told him. He’s goin’ to cut loose from me, I can
-see it in his eye; an’ whatever we do must be done to
-once. He wants to jine a wagon train, if he can find
-one.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, he can,” replied one of the men, “‘cause
-thar’s one goin’ out to-day. Silas Roper’s goin’ along.”</p>
-
-<p>“Silas Roper!” replied Sanders savagely. “He’s
-allers in the way. He musn’t see the boy, ’cause if
-he does our goose is cooked&mdash;done brown. Come with
-me to the hotel, an’ as we go along I will think up some
-way to manage this business.”</p>
-
-<p>Sanders jumped off the dry-goods box and walked
-rapidly away, closely followed by his two companions.
-When they arrived within sight of the hotel he stopped,
-for they saw Julian standing on the steps. Sanders’
-friends recognized him at once, and declared that they
-would have known him if they had met him on the
-other side of the world. They held a short, whispered
-conversation, after which the two men retreated into a
-doorway out of sight, and Sanders kept on and accosted
-Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re an ’arly bird, hain’t you?” said he, with an
-awkward attempt to appear cordial and friendly. “So
-am I. I have been findin’ out somethin’ about the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-wagon trains, an’ I am told that one went out yesterday
-bound for the very place you want to go. It will pass
-within a hundred yards of the door of your father’s
-rancho. I am goin’ to start after it directly. Thar
-won’t be another goin’ out under a month, an’ I can’t
-wait so long; fur I’ve no money to waste in payin’ board
-bills.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither have I,” said Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you’d best go with me, hadn’t you? We can
-easy ketch the train by day after to-morrow&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Sanders paused suddenly, finishing the sentence with
-something that sounded very much like an oath. He
-gazed earnestly down the street for a moment, and then
-turned and walked rapidly away, drawing his handkerchief
-close about his face as he went. He did not slacken
-his pace until he had left the hotel out of sight, and was
-joined by his two companions, who had made an equally
-hasty retreat. The expression on their faces indicated
-that they were terribly enraged about something.</p>
-
-<p>“If they wasn’t worth so much money to us I would
-make way with both of them in less time than it takes to
-say so!” exclaimed Sanders, in a very savage tone of
-voice. “Did you ever hear tell of such luck? I’ve done
-all that can be done at this end of the route, but I hain’t
-beat yet. We’ll go to the mountains now, an’ have every
-thing fixed agin’ the wagon train gets thar.”</p>
-
-<p>For some reason Sanders and his friends now seemed
-anxious to leave the town with as little delay as possible.
-They made the best of their way to the Hunter’s Home,
-which they entered hurriedly, and when they again made
-their appearance on the street they were all on horseback
-and carried rifles on their shoulders and revolvers
-and bowie-knives in their belts.</p>
-
-<p>No one not well acquainted with him would have
-recognized Sanders as the same man who had gone into
-the hotel but a few minutes before. His broadcloth and
-jewelry had disappeared, also the handkerchief which he
-had worn about his face, and he was dressed in a suit of
-buckskin, which had evidently seen the hardest kind of
-service. If Julian could have taken one glance at him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-now, he would not have felt the least inclination to
-renew his short acquaintance with him, nor would he
-have wondered that the man had been so careful to keep
-his features concealed from view. Perhaps he would
-have asked himself why he did not continually wear the
-handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>His was the worst looking face that had ever been
-seen in the streets of St. Joseph&mdash;one that any man
-except its owner would have been ashamed of; and even
-<i>he</i> had thought best to hide it for a while lest it should
-bear testimony against him and defeat his plans. But
-as he was now about to leave the country of civilized
-men and go among those of his own kind, concealment
-was no longer necessary. He appeared in his true character,
-that of villain and desperado.</p>
-
-<p>When Sanders and his companions were fairly out of
-the stable-yard, they put spurs to their horses, and rode
-swiftly away. They stopped that night long enough to
-ascertain that Julian was with the emigrants, and to
-make a demonstration, the result of which shall be
-related presently, and then resumed their rapid gallop,
-which they did not slacken in one day, nor two; and
-even at the end of a week, mounted on fresh horses,
-which they had stolen or obtained in exchange for their
-own jaded animals, they were still riding toward the
-mountains as if for dear life. In this way they gained
-considerably on the wagon train, and by the time it appeared
-in sight of Bridger’s Pass, Sanders had mustered
-assistance, and was ready to accomplish by force of arms
-what he had failed to gain by strategy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2>CHAPTER XVI.<br />
-<span class="pch">SILAS ROPER, THE GUIDE.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/ds.jpg" width="80" height="79" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">SURPRISED at the abruptness with which
-Sanders had deserted him, and at the unmistakable
-signs of rage and alarm he exhibited,
-Julian stood looking after his retreating form
-until it disappeared from view, and then directed his
-gaze down the street.</p>
-
-<p>He could see nothing there calculated to frighten
-Sanders or any body else. There were but few men in
-sight, and these appeared to have no hostile intentions
-toward any one, for they were going quietly about their
-business, and did not seem to be aware that there were
-such persons as Julian and his late companion in
-existence.</p>
-
-<p>Among them was a man who attracted the boy’s attention
-at once; and he also seemed to be an object of
-interest to all in his immediate vicinity, for every one
-who passed him turned to look back at him. He was
-the nearest approach to a giant that Julian had ever
-seen. Sanders, large and powerful as he was, would
-have looked like a boy beside him. He was as straight
-as an arrow, and moved along as if he were set on
-springs. He was dressed in a complete suit of buckskin,
-even to his moccasins, and carried the never-failing
-knife and revolver about his waist. But little could be
-seen of his face, for it was covered with immense
-whiskers, which reached almost to his belt. He walked
-with his hands in the pockets of his hunting-shirt, looking
-carelessly about him, as if he had determined upon
-nothing in particular.</p>
-
-<p>Arriving at the steps where Julian stood, he seated
-himself upon them, and drawing a pipe from a little
-pouch which hung at his belt, prepared to fill up for a
-smoke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Julian watched all his movements with interest, and
-felt a strange kind of awe in the man’s presence. He
-was certainly a trapper, and he must be a daring one,
-too, unless his looks belied him, for he would have been
-picked out among a thousand as a man who was not to
-be daunted by any physical dangers. He must know all
-about life on the frontier, of course, and perhaps he
-could give some information concerning the wagon train
-of which Sanders had spoken.</p>
-
-<p>“Sir!” said Julian, as soon as this thought passed
-through his mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal!” returned the trapper, raising a pair of honest-looking
-brown eyes, which seemed to invite the boy’s
-confidence.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you tell me whether or not a wagon train left
-this place yesterday for the mountains?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“I can.”</p>
-
-<p>“I understood there was,” continued Julian, after
-waiting for the man to say something else.</p>
-
-<p>“Then you understood what wasn’t so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was there none left?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“What object could Sanders have had in view in telling
-me that falsehood?” thought the boy. “When does
-the next one start?”</p>
-
-<p>“To-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“How soon?”</p>
-
-<p>“To onct.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where from?”</p>
-
-<p>“From a place ’bout a mile from here, right up this
-street.”</p>
-
-<p>“Could I go with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon. Want to go to Californy?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; I am bound for the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“For the Peak?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; for the <i>mountains</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, wharabouts in the mountains?”</p>
-
-<p>“Whereabouts?” replied Julian.</p>
-
-<p>He gazed at the trapper a moment, and seating himself
-on the opposite end of the steps, looked down at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-the ground in a brown study. The question propounded
-to him excited a serious train of reflections in his mind.
-He had always spoken and thought of “the mountains”
-without having any very definite idea concerning them.
-He had imagined that when he was once safe across the
-plains his troubles would all be over, and that it would
-be a matter of no difficulty to find the home and friends
-of which he was in search if they were still in existence;
-but the trapper’s last words had opened his eyes and
-showed him the real magnitude of his undertaking.
-“Whereabouts in the mountains?”</p>
-
-<p>This was a question that Julian could not answer.
-He remembered now to have read somewhere that the
-Rocky Mountains covered an area of 980,000 square
-miles. How could he hope to find his father in such a
-wilderness as that? He might be in Mexico, or he
-might be in Oregon&mdash;Julian didn’t know. After all he
-had endured and accomplished, the obstacles that lay in
-his path were but just beginning to make themselves
-manifest. This reflection for the moment utterly unnerved
-him, and tears began to fall from his eyes. The
-trapper removed his pipe from his mouth long enough
-to say:</p>
-
-<p>“Cryin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know it is unmanly,” replied Julian, “but I can’t
-help it. I have been through some difficulties lately,
-but I can see that there are worse ones before me. But
-I’ll never give up&mdash;never!”</p>
-
-<p>“Stick to that allers,” said the trapper, now beginning
-to show some interest in what the boy had to say.
-“Never-give-up has carried many a feller through the
-wust kind of scrapes. Got any friends out West?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir&mdash;or, rather, I had a few years ago; but I
-don’t know where to find them. Did you ever hear of
-Major Mortimer?”</p>
-
-<p>“I b’lieve I’ve heerd his name spoke.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know where he lives?”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t jest say I do exactly. Thar’s only two or
-three men who can tell whar he is now, but I know
-whar he used to live.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He is my father.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>I know it.</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“You do?” cried Julian. He looked at the man in
-utter bewilderment, and arose hastily to his feet.
-“Good-day, sir,” said he. “I am obliged to you for
-the information you gave me about that wagon train.”</p>
-
-<p>The trapper made no reply. He took his pipe out of
-his mouth and looked after the boy as he jumped off
-the steps and hurried down the street, and when he disappeared
-he arose, thrust his hands in his pockets and
-sauntered after him. What would Julian have thought
-if he had known that he was running away from the
-only friend he had east of the mountains?</p>
-
-<p>“I will have nothing to do with any one who has ever
-seen or heard of me,” soliloquized the boy, as he hurried
-along, looking into the different stores he passed.
-“How does it come, I wonder, that so many men whom
-I never saw before know me? I am going to depend
-upon myself until I am satisfied that I am out of danger.
-If Sanders makes his appearance again I will send him
-about his business. I will go out with that wagon train,
-and perhaps before I reach the mountains I shall find
-some man who doesn’t know me, and who can give me
-the information I want. This is the place I am looking
-for.”</p>
-
-<p>He stopped in front of a store, where a boy about his
-own age was at work taking down the shutters. It appeared
-to be a sort of variety store, for clothing and
-furnishing goods were displayed in one of the windows,
-and weapons and saddlery in the other.</p>
-
-<p>Julian entered, and when he came out again, a quarter
-of an hour afterward, he had made as great a change in
-his appearance as Sanders did during the short time he
-remained in the Hunter’s Home. He was dressed in a
-full Mexican suit, which the polite and attentive clerk
-had made him believe was just the thing to wear during
-a journey across the plains, and in the saddle-bags,
-which he carried over his shoulder, was another and a
-finer suit of the same description, as well as a small
-supply of powder and lead, a brace of revolvers, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-several other articles of which he thought he might
-stand in need. On his arm he carried a poncho&mdash;a
-rubber blanket with a hole in the center&mdash;which was to
-be used in lieu of an umbrella in rainy weather.</p>
-
-<p>When he came out and bent his steps toward the
-hotel, a tall fellow in buckskin, who was leaning against
-an awning on the opposite side of the street, straightened
-up and followed after him. When he sat down to
-his breakfast the same man walked through the hall,
-and looked in at the dining-room; and when, after paying
-his bill at the hotel, he came out with all his
-weapons and luggage, and sprung upon his horse, the
-man in buckskin disappeared down a neighboring street,
-and presently came back again, mounted on a large
-cream-colored mustang, and rode in pursuit of Julian.</p>
-
-<p>Our hero found that the information the strange
-trapper had given him concerning the wagon train was
-correct. The emigrants had been encamped on a common
-a short distance from the hotel, and when Julian
-came up with them they were all on the move. The
-road in advance of him was dotted with white wagon-covers
-as far as his eyes could reach. It was a novel
-and interesting sight to him, and he soon forgot his
-troubles in watching what was going on around him.
-The day that he had thought of and lived for so long
-had arrived at last, and he was fairly on his way to the
-mountains. The road the emigrants intended to follow
-might not lead him to his home, but what of that? It
-was enough for him to know that it crossed the mountains
-somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Billy, being in high mettle, insisted on going ahead,
-and his rider allowing him a free rein, was carried at a
-swinging gallop along the entire length of the train
-until he arrived at the foremost wagons. The emigrants
-all seemed to be in excellent spirits, and Julian heard
-them laughing and talking with one another as he
-dashed by. On the way he passed several boys, who
-were racing their horses along the road, now and then
-stopping to call back to their parents and friends in the
-wagons. Their merriment had an effect upon Julian.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-It made him contrast their situation with his own. In
-all that wagon train there was no one to greet him, no
-one who knew how he longed for a word of sympathy
-and encouragement from somebody, and no one who
-cared for him or his affairs.</p>
-
-<p>“But I am free!” said the boy, who was not long in
-finding some crumbs of comfort with which to solace
-himself. “I can go where I please, and there is no
-Jack Bowles to dog my footsteps and beat me with his
-rawhide. I can eat, sleep and walk about in perfect
-security, knowing that there is no one to molest me. I
-am leaving behind me Richard Mortimer, Sanders and
-all the rest of my secret enemies, and the dangers and
-difficulties I have yet to encounter will be such as I
-know how to meet. If I do not find my home and
-friends before my money is gone, I have a good horse
-and rifle, and I know how to shoot and trap. I shall
-be able to take care of myself.”</p>
-
-<p>There were several men riding in company in advance
-of the train, and not wishing to intrude upon them, Julian
-fell in behind, and during the whole of that forenoon
-never spoke a word to any one. When noon came
-the wagons began to draw off into the woods one by
-one, and in a quarter of an hour the entire train had
-come to a halt, and preparations for dinner were actively
-going on. Julian, hungry and lonely, would have been
-glad of an invitation to join one of the happy parties
-that were scattered about among the trees, but no one
-noticed him. He dismounted a little apart from the
-rest of the emigrants, and after tying his horse to a
-tree, spread his poncho upon the ground, and was
-about to begin an attack upon the small supply of
-crackers and cheese stowed away in his saddle-bags,
-when some one spoke to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, my lad, its grub time,” said a familiar voice.</p>
-
-<p>Julian looked up, and there, leaning upon a rifle that
-an ordinary man could scarcely have raised to his shoulder,
-stood the tall trapper whom he had met in the
-streets of St. Joseph. At the sight of him his old
-fears were revived with redoubled force.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Here’s one enemy I haven’t left behind me,” thought
-Julian. “I must still be on the lookout for treachery.
-I know it is dinner-time,” he added, aloud; “and I am
-just about to take advantage of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“In what way? I don’t see that you have got anything
-to eat.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have, nevertheless,” replied the boy, laying his
-hand on his saddle-bags.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you keep it in thar?” asked the trapper, with a
-laugh. “How long do you think it’ll last you?”</p>
-
-<p>“A day or two; and when it is gone my rifle must
-supply my larder. There must be an abundance of
-game on the plains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Humph! That shows how much you know ’bout
-prairie life. Sometimes thar’s game an’ sometimes thar
-hain’t. An’ sometimes when we know thar’s plenty of
-buffaler an’ antelope only a little ways off, we can’t go
-out to shoot ’em fur fear of the Injuns. What’ll you
-do under them sarcumstances?”</p>
-
-<p>Julian didn’t know. He would be obliged to go to
-bed hungry, he supposed.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, an’ you’ll go to bed hungry many a night afore
-you see the mountains, if this is the way you’re goin’ to
-do business,” continued the trapper. “We can do better’n
-this fur you. Come into our mess; we’d be glad
-to have you.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian thanked the man for his kind offer, but took
-time to consider before replying. The interest his new
-acquaintance seemed to take in his welfare made him
-suspicious, and he wanted to keep as far away from him
-as possible. But, after all, if the trapper had any designs
-upon him, what difference would it make whether
-Julian remained at one end of the wagon train or the
-other? It would certainly be better to make sure of
-plenty to eat during the journey than to depend upon
-his rifle; and, if he saw anything in the trapper’s actions
-to confirm his suspicions, he could easily avoid being
-left alone with him.</p>
-
-<p>He arose and picked up his saddle-bags, and the trapper,
-who had waited patiently for an answer to his invitation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-shouldered his rifle and led the way through the
-woods, presently stopping at one of the wagons, beside
-which a party of three men were seated on the ground
-eating their dinner.</p>
-
-<p>These looked curiously at Julian as he came up, and
-seemed to be waiting for the trapper to tell why he had
-brought him there; but as he did not appear to think
-that any explanation was necessary, they made way for
-the boy, and waving their hands toward the plates containing
-the corn-bread and bacon, went on with their
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>The trapper soon satisfied his appetite, and mounting
-his horse, which was grazing close by, rode off, leaving
-Julian alone with the three men. He listened to
-their conversation, and soon learned that they were
-from an Eastern State, that they had never been West
-before, and that their destination was the gold mines of
-California.</p>
-
-<p>This silenced some of Julian’s fears, and finally, venturing
-to inquire who the trapper was, he was told that
-his name was Silas Roper, and that he was the chief
-man of the wagon train&mdash;the guide. The men were
-enthusiastic in their praises of him, and if they told
-the truth, as Julian hoped they did, Silas was one in
-whom he could well afford to confide.</p>
-
-<p>Our hero then explained how he came to be brought
-into the mess, following up the story with as much of
-his history as he was willing the men should know, and
-their hearty words of sympathy and welcome placed him
-at his ease at once, and almost made him believe that at
-last he had found real friends.</p>
-
-<p>While the dinner was in progress a horseman came
-leisurely down the road, gazing earnestly at every group
-of emigrants he passed, as if he were searching for some
-one. When he reached the place where Julian and the
-three men were seated, he drew rein with an exclamation
-of surprise and satisfaction, and sat motionless in
-his saddle, staring at them as if debating some point in
-his mind. Having at last decided upon something he
-rode up to the party and accosted them.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XVII.<br />
-<span class="pch">ACROSS THE PLAINS.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dt.jpg" width="80" height="81" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">THE MOMENT Julian’s eyes rested upon the
-strange horseman he asked himself where he
-had seen him before. There was something
-about him that looked familiar. He was
-dressed in rough clothing, like the rest of the emigrants,
-wore high-top boots and a broad felt hat. His hair was
-cut close to his head, and his face, which was dark and
-haughty, was clean shaven; although the blue shade
-about his chin and upper lip showed that goatee and
-mustache had recently been growing there. His voice
-sounded strangely familiar, too, although Julian could
-not recollect where he had heard it before.</p>
-
-<p>The man announced that he was bound for San Francisco,
-and that having been obliged to make his preparations
-for the journey in great haste, in order to join that
-wagon train, he had had no opportunity to lay in a
-supply of provisions. As their mess appeared to be
-small he would be glad to join it, if the men had no
-objections, and was willing to pay liberally for the privilege.
-Julian’s new friends had no objection whatever.
-They liked good company, and if the stranger would
-agree to pay his share of the provisions he might come
-in and welcome. And so the matter was settled, and
-the new-comer became a member of Julian’s mess.</p>
-
-<p>Our hero had never carried a lighter heart than he
-did during that afternoon’s ride. He no longer felt that
-he was utterly forsaken in the world. He had some one
-to talk to now&mdash;men who had never seen or heard of
-him before, who did not even know his name, but who
-nevertheless sympathized with him and took an interest
-in his affairs. And it was because these new-found
-friends were strangers to him that Julian felt safe in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-their company. He was still suspicious of the guide,
-notwithstanding the high terms of praise in which he
-had been spoken of by the members of his mess, and he
-disliked the appearance of the new emigrant also.</p>
-
-<p>The latter seemed desirous of cultivating the boy’s
-acquaintance. He addressed a good many of his remarks
-to him, and whenever he said anything that he
-thought to be particularly interesting or witty, he would
-look at Julian and wink. This was quite enough to excite
-the boy’s suspicions; but he comforted himself with
-the thought that neither the guide nor the emigrant
-would dare molest him in the presence of the whole
-wagon train, and that he would take care never to be
-left alone with them.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon passed quickly away, and it was sunset
-almost before Julian knew it. His day in the saddle had
-severely tested his endurance, and he was glad indeed
-when the train came to a halt. Being desirous of showing
-his new friends that he appreciated their kindness
-to him, he assisted them in making the camp, unharnessing
-the mules, providing the wood for fire, and
-bringing the water with which to fill the camp-kettle.
-The guide, whom he had not seen during the whole of
-the afternoon, made his appearance when supper was
-ready, and so did the emigrant; but the latter did not
-approach the fire. He stopped at a respectful distance,
-looked hard at Silas, whose back was turned toward
-him, and then walked quickly out of sight. Julian,
-astonished at his singular behavior, looked around at
-the other members of the mess to see if any beside himself
-had observed it; but the men were too busy with
-their corn-bread and bacon to pay any attention to what
-was going on outside their own camp.</p>
-
-<p>Supper over, Silas and his companions stretched themselves
-on their blankets to enjoy their pipes, while Julian
-busied himself in gathering up the dishes and packing
-the remains of the supper away in the wagon. This
-done, he went out for a stroll down the road; he wanted
-to see how the camp looked by moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>The day’s journey, although it had been a hard and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-fatiguing one, seemed to have had no effect upon the
-spirits of the emigrants, who were as merry and laughed
-and sang as loudly as when they left St. Joseph. They
-seemed to be supremely happy and contented, and
-Julian did not wonder at it. They had everything
-their hearts could desire to make them happy, and he
-had everything to make him miserable. If he had had
-parents and brothers and sisters there he would have
-laughed too, and felt as light of heart as the best of
-them. But there was not a soul with whom he could
-claim relationship in less than a thousand miles, and
-perhaps not in the world. Julian was falling into his
-melancholy mood again, and he wanted to be alone; the
-sounds of merriment grated harshly on his ears. He
-left the camp and hurried down the road. On he went,
-regardless of the flight of time, through the woods in
-which the wagons had halted, to the prairie that lay
-beyond, brooding over the past and speculating on the
-future.</p>
-
-<p>How long his fit of abstraction continued he could not
-have told; but when he came to himself the camp-fires
-were out of sight, and he was standing on an extensive
-plain which stretched away before him as far as his eyes
-could reach, without even a tree or bush to break the
-monotony. He was alone; there was not a living thing
-within the range of his vision. This was Julian’s first
-glimpse of the prairie, and it was not without its effect
-upon him. He gazed in wonder. What an immense
-region it was that lay between him and his home&mdash;all
-India could be put into it twice, he had read somewhere&mdash;and
-until that moment what a ridiculously faint conception
-he had had of it! What would he not have given
-to have been able to tell what lay beyond it? He
-listened but not a sound came to his ears. An unearthly
-silence brooded over the vast expanse&mdash;a silence so deep
-that he could hear the beating of his own heart. Julian
-was awed, almost frightened by it; and turning quickly
-about he started for the camp at the top of his speed.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Julian would have been really frightened if
-he had known that he was not so utterly alone as he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-imagined himself to be. There were no less than four
-persons in sight of him all the while, and part of the
-time, five. Three of them were Sanders and the men
-who had left St. Joseph in his company. Having
-watched the train from a safe distance all that day, they
-entered the camp as soon as it grew dark to satisfy
-themselves that the boy of whom they were in search
-was among the emigrants. They saw him as he strolled
-through the woods and followed, hoping to find an
-opportunity to make a prisoner of him. The fourth
-man, who watched every move Julian made during the
-time he remained within sight of him, and who carried
-in his hand a revolver cocked and ready for use, was the
-emigrant; and the fifth was Silas Roper. The latter,
-unlike the others, who made use of every tuft of grass to
-cover their bodies, walked erect down the road, keeping
-always within rifle-range of Julian, whose form, being
-clad in dark garments, was thrown out in bold relief
-against the gray background of the prairie. The
-emigrant saw him, if Julian did not, and for some
-reasons of his own thought it best to abandon his pursuit
-of the boy. He concealed himself in the grass until the
-trapper had passed on, and then scrambled to his feet
-and slunk away in the direction of the camp.</p>
-
-<p>Julian had not retraced his steps very far before he
-began to wish most heartily that he had turned back long
-ago. There was some one following him&mdash;following,
-too, for the purpose and with the determination of overtaking
-him. His ears told him that such was the fact,
-and there was no need that he should look back to make
-sure of it&mdash;he dared not do it. He heard the sound of
-the pursuit very plainly&mdash;the stealthy, cautious patter
-of moccasined feet on the hard road, which grew louder
-and more distinct every instant. Who was his pursuer?
-The guide, beyond a doubt, for he was the only man in
-the train who wore moccasins. Fear lent Julian wings,
-and he made headway astonishingly; but there was some
-one beside the clumsy Jack Bowles in pursuit of him
-now, and the lightness of foot that had brought him off
-with flying colors in his race with that worthy could not
-avail him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s no use, Julian,” said a gruff voice behind him.
-“I’m a comin’, an’ if I don’t overhaul you thar ain’t
-no snakes. You’re ketched, an’ you might as well stop
-an’ give in.”</p>
-
-<p>But our hero was not one of the kind who give in.
-He strained every nerve to escape, but his pursuer
-gained rapidly. He was close behind him now&mdash;Julian
-could hear his heavy breathing; but just as he was expecting
-to feel his strong grasp on his collar, a blinding
-sheet of flame shot out of the gloom directly in advance
-of him, and something whistled through the air close
-to his ear. In another minute Julian had run squarely
-into the arms of Silas Roper, and his pursuer had faced
-about and was making his way through the tall grass as
-if a legion of wolves were close at his heels.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I throwed away that chunk of lead, didn’t
-I?” said Silas. “You needn’t be skeered now. I
-know you ain’t hurt, ’cause I’ve had my eyes on you all
-the while.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, weak with terror and utterly bewildered to
-find the guide in front, when he had all the while supposed
-him to be behind and in pursuit of him, could
-not reply. But if he was surprised at this, he was still
-more amazed at the manner in which Silas received him.
-He did not show the least desire to do him an injury,
-but on the contrary extended his arm around him protectingly,
-and supported him until he had somewhat
-recovered himself.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re lively on your legs fur a little one,” continued
-the trapper, “but you’re well nigh give out,
-ain’t you? If thar had been just a trifle more light
-Sanders would have been past harmin’ you now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” gasped Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Sanders. You didn’t think to hear of him again
-so soon, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never expected to hear from him again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sho! Wal, you’ll hear and see more of him durin’
-the next few weeks than you’ll like, <i>I</i> tell you. That
-was him a chasin’ you, ’cause I’ve seed him often enough
-to know him,” added the trapper, leading the way toward
-the camp, loading his rifle as he went.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You said you were watching me,” said Julian.
-“Why did you do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Cause I’m a friend to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I begin to believe you are,” replied the boy, casting
-all his suspicions to the winds. “If I had been sure of
-it to-day when I first saw you, I shouldn’t have run
-away from you; but I have seen so much treachery
-lately that I distrust everybody.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can easy b’lieve that. I know purty near what
-Dick an’ Ned have been up to.”</p>
-
-<p>“You told me this morning that you know who I
-am. Of course, then, you know my father.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sartin I do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he alive?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is.”</p>
-
-<p>“And my mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, she’s dead&mdash;died when you was a little feller.”</p>
-
-<p>“And my brother?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can you take me to my father?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon not.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the reason?”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Cause I don’t know whar he is&mdash;that’s the reason.
-I’ll allers be a friend to you, howsomever.”</p>
-
-<p>During the walk to the camp Julian asked innumerable
-questions about his home and friends, but the information
-that we have just recorded was all he could
-extort from the trapper. He taxed his ingenuity to the
-utmost, and propounded his inquiries in a dozen different
-ways, but Silas could neither be surprised or coaxed into
-revealing more than he had already told. Nor did Julian
-ever hear anything more from him, although he
-saw very plainly that the trapper knew all about him,
-and could easily gratify his curiosity if he felt so inclined.
-Day after day he renewed his endeavors to
-worm out some small item of information, but all
-he could ascertain positively was that his father and
-brother were alive and well, and with that he was
-obliged to be content. Of another thing he was also
-pretty certain, and that was, that he should not find his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-home&mdash;if he found it at all&mdash;the pleasant and inviting
-place that Sanders had represented it to be. But in
-this respect he was not much disappointed, for he had
-built no hopes upon anything his false friend had told
-him.</p>
-
-<p>During the journey across the plains nothing worthy
-of record occurred to vary the monotony of Julian’s
-life. He met with no more adventures, for Sanders
-had disappeared, and although the boy was certain that
-Silas could tell what had become of him, all his questioning
-failed to elicit the desired information. The
-emigrant kept himself as much as possible out of sight.
-The members of the mess expressed some surprise at
-his abrupt desertion of them, and asked one another
-what could have been the occasion of it; but no one
-knew, and in a day or two the matter was forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>As the days progressed Julian’s friendship for and confidence
-in his silent friend steadily increased. Silas on
-his part cherished an unbounded affection for his young
-companion, and manifested it by a thousand little acts
-of kindness. He beguiled many a weary mile of their
-journey with stories of what he had seen and done, and
-descriptions of life in the Far West, but said not a word
-about Julian’s affairs unless he was asked.</p>
-
-<p>At last the Rocky Mountains began to loom up before
-them, and on the same day Silas, who as usual was riding
-in advance of the train with Julian, pointed out a
-hostile Indian on the summit of a distant swell.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know he is hostile?” asked Julian.
-“Can you see the paint on his face at this distance?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I know who’s been a smokin’ an a talkin’
-with his tribe around the council fires,” replied the
-trapper. “You think you’ve been through a heap
-since you fust seed Dick Mortimer, and p’raps you
-have; but you’ll go through a heap more if you live a
-week longer. You needn’t be afeared of the Injuns,
-howsomever,” added Silas, seeing that the boy’s cheek
-blanched, and that he cast anxious glances toward the
-distant warrior. “They won’t harm you. If every
-man, woman and child in the train is massacred, you’ll
-be kept safe, unless you are hurt by accident.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“What makes you think so?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think so, I know it; but I hain’t got time to
-talk about it now, ’cause I must ride back an’ keep the
-wagons closer together.”</p>
-
-<p>This was always the way with the trapper after he
-had said something that Julian was particularly anxious
-to have explained&mdash;he had no time to say more on the
-subject just then, but must see to something that
-demanded his immediate attention.</p>
-
-<p>Julian was greatly perplexed by what he had just
-heard. It sounded very unreasonable, but he did not
-doubt the truth of it, for he had learned to put implicit
-faith in the trapper’s word.</p>
-
-<p>In two days more Bridger’s Pass was reached, and the
-emigrants made their camp for the last time.</p>
-
-<p>We have already related how Julian was enticed away
-from the wagon train by the outlaws, who carried him
-on horseback to Reginald Mortimer’s rancho, and that
-during the ride he heard the sounds of a fierce battle
-going on between the Indians and the emigrants, and
-saw the train consumed by fire.</p>
-
-<p>We have also told of his introduction to the man who
-called himself his uncle, and described the reception
-that gentleman extended to him. He was conducted
-into Mr. Mortimer’s sleeping-apartment, and saw the
-outlaws receive a heavy reward for delivering him into
-the hands of the owner of the rancho, after which
-Sanders and his companion took their departure, and
-Julian was left alone with his new relative.</p>
-
-<p>Then for the first time he raised his eyes and took a
-fair look at the man. Surely he had seen that face and
-figure somewhere. They were those of Richard Mortimer.
-He had left him on board a flatboat more than a
-thousand miles away, and here he was in the mountains
-where he least expected to see him, ready now and able
-to carry out his plans against Julian’s life.</p>
-
-<p>One glance at him was enough for our hero, who,
-with a cry of terror, turned and ran toward the door.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XVIII.<br />
-<span class="pch">THE EMIGRANT AGAIN.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/ds.jpg" width="80" height="79" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">“STOP!” cried Reginald Mortimer, in great astonishment.
-“Come back here!”</p>
-
-<p>Julian heard the command, but he did not
-heed it. He strove with nervous haste to
-open the door, but the knob refused to turn for him.
-He dashed himself against it with frantic violence; but
-the stout oak planks had been intended to resist a
-stronger force than he could bring to bear upon them,
-and they did not even tremble beneath his weight.</p>
-
-<p>Reginald Mortimer appeared to be utterly confounded
-by the boy’s behavior. He watched his movements for
-a few seconds, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Julian, you could not leave the rancho if you were
-to effect an entrance into the hall. Shall I call Pedro,
-and tell him to let you out?”</p>
-
-<p>It was now Julian’s turn to be astonished. He had
-expected violence, but was not prepared for the accents
-of kindness. He looked timidly at the man, and took
-his hand off the door-knob.</p>
-
-<p>“Come here and tell me all about it,” continued Reginald
-Mortimer in a mild tone. “Why should a glance
-at me alarm you? Is there anything so very frightful
-about me?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; but you are the man who stole me away
-from my home and took me to live with Jack Bowles.”</p>
-
-<p>The owner of the rancho opened his eyes, but said
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“And you came to his house not long ago and offered
-him money to drown me in the Missouri River,” added
-Julian.</p>
-
-<p>Reginald Mortimer was profoundly astonished. After
-hesitating a moment, as if undecided how to act, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-extended his hand to Julian, and leading him to a seat
-on the sofa, placed himself beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear boy,” said he, kindly, “what delusion is
-this you are laboring under? You have made a great
-mistake. That this house is your own, and that you
-will some day have a better right here than I or any
-body else, I admit. And that you were stolen away
-long years ago by some bad man is equally true; but I
-knew nothing of it until after it was done, and neither
-did I know where you were, for all my efforts to find
-you were unavailing. I never heard of Jack Bowles
-before. I have not the least idea where he lives, and
-neither do I know who the man was who wanted to
-drown you in the river. It certainly was not I.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then it was some one who looks exactly like you,”
-said Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“There is but one person in the world who resembles
-me, that I am aware of, and that is my cousin&mdash;your
-Uncle Richard. It could not have been he, for he has
-tried as hard to find you, and is as much interested in
-your welfare as I am. Besides, he went to Fort Stoughton
-two months ago to shoot buffaloes, and has not yet
-returned. It could not have been Sanders either, for
-he does not look at all like me. More than that, he
-is a firm friend of our family, and has worked hard to
-find you&mdash;not with any intention of doing you an injury,
-but in order to restore you to your home and
-friends once more. You must be dreaming.”</p>
-
-<p>While Reginald Mortimer was speaking Julian was
-looking him sharply in the face and thinking busily. He
-was not deceived by the man’s apparent sincerity.
-Although greatly mystified he knew that he was not
-dreaming. His thoughts wandered back to that memorable
-night on which he had first seen Richard Mortimer
-at Jack Bowles’ cabin. He remembered how closely he
-had scrutinized his features in order to impress them
-upon his memory, and when he compared them with the
-features of the man who was now seated at his side he
-told himself that any one not intimately acquainted with
-the two gentlemen would have declared them to be one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-and the same person. But something that just then
-occurred to him satisfied him that they could not be.
-He thought he must be growing very dull, or else he
-would have known long ago that the emigrant who had
-joined the wagon train at St. Joseph, and watched all
-his movements so closely during the journey across the
-plains, could be none other than Richard Mortimer. He
-wondered that he had not thought of it before, and
-especially that he had not recognized him when Sanders
-pronounced his name in the reception-room.</p>
-
-<p>Another thing that suddenly became clear to him was
-that the trapper, Sanders, was the same man who had
-rescued him from the smoke-house.</p>
-
-<p>Julian saw the reason for his pretended friendship
-now, and knew why it was that the man had been so
-anxious to accompany him to the mountains. He wanted
-to make $5,000 by delivering him into the hands of
-Reginald Mortimer. But there were still a good many
-things that he could <i>not</i> understand, and he wondered if
-they would ever be made plain to him.</p>
-
-<p>“You are greatly in need of rest,” said Mr. Mortimer,
-laying his hand gently on the boy’s shoulder. “You
-are completely exhausted. Go to bed now, and I will
-talk these affairs over with you in the morning. I will
-then explain everything. If you feel timid in this
-gloomy old house I will tell Pedro to make you a bed
-here on the sofa.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would rather be alone, if you please,” replied
-Julian. “I have been through a good deal to-night,
-and I want time to think it over. My mind is greatly
-confused.”</p>
-
-<p>Reginald Mortimer lighted a candle, and after unfastening
-the ponderous spring-lock which held the door
-and prevented Julian’s escape from the room, he conducted
-him along the main hall for a short distance, and
-turned into another that ran at right angles with it,
-finally ushering him into his sleeping apartment.</p>
-
-<p>“This is your room,” said he. “You are master
-here, and if you will take the trouble to look about you,
-you will find that I have neglected nothing that I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-thought would add to your comfort. Now, if you will
-dismiss your fears, if you have any, as I hope you will,
-for they are certainly groundless&mdash;you can enjoy a
-refreshing sleep. You need not hurry yourself in the
-morning, for I will wait breakfast for you. Goodnight,
-and pleasant dreams.”</p>
-
-<p>Reginald Mortimer placed the candle upon the center-table
-and went out, closing the door after him. Julian
-stood listening to the sound of his retreating footsteps,
-and when it had died away, and he heard a door open
-and close in some distant part of the house, he stepped
-carefully across the floor and tried the lock. It was not
-fastened.</p>
-
-<p>“This looks as though there might be some truth in
-that man’s story,” said he to himself. “The doors in
-this rancho&mdash;if that is what the house is called&mdash;seem to
-have a way of locking themselves, and I fully expected
-to find myself a prisoner. I’ll see that no one enters
-here to-night. If Dick Mortimer is still prowling around
-he shall never see the inside of this room. And Reginald
-doesn’t know that Dick is about here at all. He thinks
-he is off on a shooting excursion at Fort Stoughton,
-wherever that is. Dick evidently keeps his movements
-hidden from his cousin, and that proves that he is up to
-something he doesn’t want him to know.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian turned the key in the lock as he said this, put
-down the catch, and seeing two strong bolts on the door,
-one above and the other below the lock, he pushed them
-into their sockets. Not satisfied with this he tilted one
-of the chairs against the door, and placing the back
-under the lock, and bracing the hind legs firmly against
-the floor, thus formed a barricade that could not have
-been easily forced from the outside, even if the lock and
-bolts had been undone.</p>
-
-<p>This much being accomplished, Julian took his stand
-in the middle of the floor and looked about him. His
-quarters were large and airy, and contained a greater
-variety of elegant furniture than he had ever seen before.
-The floor was covered with a soft carpet that gave out
-no sound as he stepped across it. The walls were concealed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-by blue and gold hangings, and in one corner
-stood a comfortable bed, which, with its clean white
-spread and pillow-cases, presented a great contrast to
-the miserable couch to which Julian had been accustomed
-for the last eight years. Opposite the bed was a
-huge fire-place, and over it was a mantel-piece of black
-walnut, on which stood an ornamental clock. In the
-corner beside the fire-place was a small book-case, containing
-a collection of works that would have delighted
-any boy who was as fond of excitement and adventure
-as Julian. In spite of the limited advantages he had
-enjoyed in his old home he had learned to read and write,
-and having an all-devouring passion for books, he had
-perused every thing that came in his way. On the
-opposite side of the fire-place stood a finely carved wardrobe,
-and the first things Julian’s eyes rested upon when
-he opened the doors was a double-barrel shot-gun, a
-rifle, and a belt containing a revolver.</p>
-
-<p>“This is just what I’ve been looking for,” said he
-joyfully, as he drew the elegant six-shooter from its
-holster. “If I am master of this room, as that man
-says I am, I have a right to do as I choose. I choose to
-say that I want to be alone here to-night. Dick Mortimer
-had better keep his distance, and so had those
-strange people Sanders spoke of, who can go through
-key-holes, and cracks an inch wide, and even solid stone
-walls. If they trouble me I will see if a bullet can go
-through <i>them</i>. Now, where is the ammunition?”</p>
-
-<p>That was a question easier asked than answered. The
-accouterments belonging to the weapons were all in the
-wardrobe&mdash;the powder-horn and bullet-pouch depending
-from the muzzle of the rifle, and the shot-bag and
-flask hanging from the ramrod of the double-barrel; but
-they were empty. Nor was there any ammunition in
-the room. Julian overhauled the drawers in the lower
-part of the book-case, but they contained nothing but
-writing and drawing materials. Then he searched all
-the drawers in the bureau; but although they were filled
-to overflowing with all sorts of trinkets and valuables
-dear to the heart of youth&mdash;nothing in the shape of
-powder and lead could be found.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>With a sigh of regret Julian returned the useless revolver
-to its holster, and throwing himself into a large
-easy-chair, which extended its arms invitingly, stretched
-his feet out before him, thrust his hands into his pockets
-and went off into a reverie.</p>
-
-<p>“What a change a few short weeks have made in my
-circumstances,” thought he. “It seems only yesterday
-that I was living in a den that a respectable dog would
-turn up his nose at, going about clothed in rags, starving
-both summer and winter, and beaten and sworn at
-by every one of the family. Now I find myself under
-the roof of a man who speaks almost the first kind words
-to me that I ever remember of hearing, who embraces
-me and tells me that he is my uncle, and leading me to
-a room fitted up like a palace informs me that I am sole
-master of it. And I need not get up in the morning at
-the first peep of day to cut firewood and help Mrs.
-Bowles lay the table and cook corn-dodgers, but may
-sleep as long as I please, and my breakfast will be kept
-waiting for me. This man tells me, too, that I shall
-some day have a better right here than he, who now
-claims to be the owner of the rancho. Isn’t it enough
-to turn any one’s head? I will go to sleep now, and
-perhaps in the morning some of these things, which now
-seem to be involved in such impenetrable mystery, will
-be clearer to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian arose to his feet, and having turned down the
-quilts began to divest himself of his jacket. Suddenly
-he paused and stood holding the garment in his hand,
-and looking first at the candle on the table and then at
-the hangings which concealed the walls.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve heard and witnessed enough to-night to make a
-coward of almost anybody except Silas Roper,” thought
-he, “but I believe I’ve got the nerve to do it. I am
-going to see what is on the other side of those curtains.
-If there is any way for that emigrant, or for those people
-that Sanders spoke of to get in here, I want to know it.
-I shouldn’t like to wake up in the night and find them
-prowling about my room. Gracious!”</p>
-
-<p>Julian felt the cold chills creeping over him, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-glanced quickly about the apartment, half-expecting to
-see some frightful object advancing upon him from some
-dark corner.</p>
-
-<p>At first he was half-inclined to pass the night in the
-easy-chair, and never go to sleep at all; but dismissing
-the thought almost as soon as it entered his mind, he
-snatched the candle from the table and hurrying across
-the room raised the hangings.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing was to be seen but the huge blocks of stone
-which formed the walls. On one side of the room there
-was no opening except the fire-place, opposite to which
-was the door. The other two sides, as Julian discovered
-when he raised the hangings, were provided with
-windows.</p>
-
-<p>He placed his face close to the panes, but not even
-the twinkle of a star could be seen through the gloom.
-Somewhat surprised thereat, Julian deposited his candle
-on the floor, looped back the curtains and carefully
-raised the window. It opened into what appeared to be
-a deep recess in the wall. At the opposite side was a
-heavy iron-bound door, just the size of the window,
-which swung inward as Julian drew the bolt, and then
-he saw the stars shining down upon him, and the full
-moon rising above the mountain tops.</p>
-
-<p>“This house was certainly intended for a fort,”
-thought the boy, gazing in surprise at the massive
-walls around him, which seemed strong enough to resist
-the heaviest artillery. “There isn’t a wooden partition
-in it as far as I’ve seen. They are all of stone, and
-must be six or seven feet thick. I can’t see the use
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a point upon which Julian was enlightened
-before he was many hours older. He learned that the
-walls were not as solid as they appeared; that there
-were long corridors and winding passage-ways running
-through them, communicating with every room in the
-house, and all leading to a gloomy cavern in the hill behind
-the building, with which he was destined soon to
-become well acquainted.</p>
-
-<p>Julian held the shutters open and took a survey of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-the scene before him. He saw the high stone wall
-which surrounded the house on all sides, the ponderous
-gate which had opened a short time before to admit him
-and the trappers, the well-beaten bridle-path leading
-across the valley toward the mountains, and noted even
-the smallest object within the range of his vision, but
-nothing looked familiar.</p>
-
-<p>The home of his boyhood was not so gloomy and desolate
-a place as this in which he now found himself.
-There was no high wall to shut out all view of the outer
-world, but there were flowers blooming before the door,
-a pleasant grove close by, and people constantly coming
-and going. And there was a jolly old gentleman, from
-whose side he was scarcely ever separated, who used to
-take him on his knee and talk to him for hours; and
-now and then a laughing, blue-eyed boy would make his
-appearance after a long absence, spend a few days in
-romping with him and then go off again. Where was
-that father and brother now? If they were alive and
-well, as Silas had so often assured him, why were they
-not living there in the rancho, if that was their home?
-Why should they remain away and allow a stranger to
-take the management of their affairs?</p>
-
-<p>“If I have a home and friends I must look further
-to find them, that is plain enough to be seen,” soliloquized
-Julian, closing the shutter and creeping back
-into the room. “But before I go I should like to know
-what object this man has in view in bringing me here
-and claiming me for his nephew. When I meet him in
-the morning I will call him Uncle Reginald, and act as
-though I believed&mdash;&mdash; What are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>When Julian stepped down from the window-seat into
-the room he had just left, he found that it had an occupant
-who had no business there. It was not a spirit,
-either, for spirits do not need lanterns to guide their
-footsteps, and revolvers to defend themselves, and this
-intruder had both. One was held in his left hand by
-his side, and with the muzzle of the other he was covering
-Julian’s head. It was the emigrant, clean shaven
-and close cropped, as he was when the boy first saw him
-with the wagon train.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“What do you want here, Dick Mortimer?” cried
-Julian, recoiling before the muzzle of the revolver.
-“Clear out!”</p>
-
-<p>“So you know me, do you?” inquired the man, with
-some surprise. “That villain, Sanders, has been posting
-you. He has deserted me and gone over to my
-cousin; but, fortunately, I shall have no further occasion
-for his services. Put on your jacket and come with
-me; and mind you, no noise!”</p>
-
-<p>“By what authority do you order me out of my own
-house?” demanded Julian, scarcely knowing what he
-said. “I am master here, if you please.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah! Reginald has been posting you, too, has he?”
-exclaimed the emigrant angrily. “You have learned
-more than I ever intended you should know; but it
-can’t be helped now. This is my authority,” he added,
-raising his revolver to a level with the boy’s head and
-placing his finger on the trigger; “and you will do well
-to respect it. What else did Reginald say to you? Did
-he tell you who you are, or give you any information
-concerning your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but I know that he is alive and well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then Silas has been posting you. Do you know
-where he is?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s my business. Have you a man with you
-waiting to earn that $1,000, or do you intend to do the
-work yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know that too, do you? No; you need stand
-in no fear of bodily harm as long as you obey my commands.
-I have come to the conclusion that I can use
-you to as good purpose as Reginald can. No more
-words now. Put on that coat and come with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian mechanically obeyed. His bodily powers were
-so nearly exhausted, and he was thrown into such a
-state of bewilderment and alarm by his new adventure,
-that he suddenly seemed to become insensible to every
-emotion. He could walk and talk, but he received no
-more impression from the objects around him than if he
-had been in a dream. He no longer shrunk away from
-the revolver which was kept pointed straight at his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-head, nor was he surprised when the emigrant raised the
-hangings at the foot of the bed and disclosed to view an
-opening in the wall&mdash;that solid stone wall which Julian
-had so carefully examined but a few minutes before.
-He clambered through without waiting for the order,
-and followed his captor along a narrow passage-way and
-down a flight of steps into a commodious underground
-apartment, which, judging by its general appearance,
-was used as a cellar and store-house. Here the emigrant
-spoke again, and the sound of his voice aroused
-Julian to a sense of his situation.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” said he, “I have changed my plans
-concerning you. Silas Roper is the man I want now,
-and in order to get hold of him I must hold fast to you.
-I have a comfortable little shooting-box up in the mountains,
-and there you can stay and enjoy&mdash;&mdash; Great
-heavens!”</p>
-
-<p>The emigrant ceased speaking and started back as if
-he had been shot. Julian looked up into his face and
-saw that it was white with terror, and noticed, too, that
-he was trembling violently in every limb. His eyes
-were staring fixedly toward the farther end of the cellar,
-and following the direction of his gaze Julian discovered
-something that made his heart beat a little faster than
-usual.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a frightful object his gaze rested upon&mdash;nothing
-but the figure of a feeble and decrepit old man,
-who was walking across the opposite end of the cellar.
-He moved along with tottering step and form half-bent,
-his thin silvery hair streaming down over his
-shoulders, and one withered hand grasping a staff upon
-which he leaned heavily. He seemed ignorant of the
-presence of the emigrant and his prisoner, and walked
-on without looking either to the right or left. Suddenly,
-however, he turned and approached the foot of
-the stairs. Julian could not see his eyes, which were
-fastened upon the ground, but he obtained a fair view
-of his face. He could discover nothing in it calculated
-to frighten any one, for its expression was mild and
-benevolent, but the emigrant seemed unable to endure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-the sight of it. He retreated as the old man advanced,
-growing more and more terrified every moment, and
-finally with a shriek of dismay dashed the lantern upon
-the floor, extinguishing the light and leaving the cellar
-shrouded in darkness. Julian turned and made a feeble
-attempt to ascend the stairs, but exhausted nature gave
-away at last. He felt himself falling&mdash;falling&mdash;and then
-all was blank to him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XIX.<br />
-<span class="pch">UNCLE REGINALD EXPLAINS.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dw.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">WHEN Julian’s consciousness returned it was
-broad daylight. The instant his eyes were
-open the thrilling events of the night came
-back to him, and he started up in alarm, expecting
-to find himself still in the power of the dreaded
-emigrant. But, although he saw enough to astonish
-him beyond measure, there was nothing to terrify him.
-His persevering and relentless enemy was nowhere to be
-seen. He was snugly tucked up in bed in the same
-room to which he had been conducted by Reginald
-Mortimer, his clothes were lying in order on a chair
-close at hand, the curtains were thrown back, the
-windows and shutters all open, and heaven’s bright sunlight
-was streaming in. And what was very surprising,
-there was the door locked and bolted and secured by the
-chair, just as he had left it.</p>
-
-<p>“Can it be possible that those things never happened,
-and that Dick Mortimer, with his lantern and revolver,
-the long, dark passage-way, and the feeble old man who
-frightened him so terribly, were objects that I saw only
-in my dreams?” exclaimed Julian.</p>
-
-<p>As this thought passed through his mind he sprung
-from the couch, and running to the opposite side of the
-room pulled up the hangings, fully expecting to find
-there the opening through which his captor had conducted
-him into the passage-way. But the wall was as
-solid as ever&mdash;not one of the huge blocks of stone was
-out of place.</p>
-
-<p>“If I dreamed <i>that</i> I did not dream that I left these
-curtains all down and the windows closed, did I?” Julian
-asked himself in deep perplexity. “Somebody has certainly
-been in here while I was asleep, and he didn’t come<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-in through the door either. I’ve spent my last night in
-this house. I didn’t hear any of those frightful sounds
-Sanders heard the night he slept here, but I’ve seen
-enough. If I ever get outside these walls I’ll not come
-back. What’s this?”</p>
-
-<p>After hastily throwing on his clothes Julian stepped
-to the table to help himself to a glass of water from the
-pitcher that some thoughtful hand had placed there,
-when his eyes fell upon a paper, folded in the form of a
-letter, and addressed to himself. With eager haste he
-opened it, and after some trouble, for the spelling was
-defective and the writing almost illegible, he deciphered
-the following:</p>
-
-<p>“Have no fear. Watchful friends are near you, and
-no harm shall come to you. Reginald Mortimer is your
-uncle. Treat him as such.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian read these mysterious words over and over again,
-and finally carried the paper to the window and examined
-it on all sides, in the hope of finding something
-more&mdash;something to tell him who these watchful friends
-were, and where the missive came from. Being disappointed
-in these hopes he put the letter carefully away
-in his pocket and resumed his toilet. He was a long
-time about it, for he frequently stopped and stood at the
-window gazing out at the mountains on the other side of
-the valley, or walked up and down the room with his
-eyes fastened on the carpet. His mind was busy all the
-while, and by the time he was ready to leave the room
-he had thought over his situation and determined upon
-a plan of action. Just then the little clock on the
-mantel struck the hour of 10.</p>
-
-<p>“I am getting fashionable,” said Julian, who, remembering
-how carefully Richard Mortimer was always
-dressed, and believing that Uncle Reginald, as he had
-determined to call him, might be equally particular,
-stopped to take another look at himself in the mirror
-before quitting the room.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very handsome face and figure that the polished
-surface of the glass reflected. A finely embroidered shirt
-with wide collar and neck-tie, a closely fitting jacket of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-dark-blue cloth, black velvet trousers, brown cloth leggings
-with green fringe, light shoes, and a long crimson
-sash worn about the waist, completed an attire that set
-off his slender, well-knit frame to the very best advantage.
-One could scarcely recognize in him the half-starved
-ragamuffin whose daily duty it had been to keep
-Mrs. Bowles supplied with back-logs and fore-sticks.</p>
-
-<p>Having satisfied himself that he was presentable,
-Julian undid the numerous fastenings of the door,
-smiling the while to think how inefficient they had
-proved to keep out the intruders of whom he stood so
-much in fear, and was about to pass out into the hall
-when the sound of voices reached his ears. He paused
-and listened, his attention being attracted by the mention
-of the name of one in whom he was now more than ever
-interested.</p>
-
-<p>“Wal, I don’t reckon we could help it, could we?”
-growled a voice which the boy knew belonged to the
-trapper Sanders. “Me an’ my pardner ain’t the men to
-let $5,000 slip through our fingers without doin’ our
-level best to hang onto it, be sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“A couple of blockheads, I say!” replied the voice of
-Reginald Mortimer, in angry, excited tones. “Two
-desperadoes like you and Tom to allow a single man like
-Silas Roper to get the better of you. Go and hide yourself.
-How did it happen?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why we was a bringin’ him down here this mornin’
-on hossback, me and Tom was,” replied Sanders, “an’
-the first thing we knowed he slipped his hands out o’ his
-bonds, which we thought we had made hard an’ fast, an’
-afore we could say ‘Gen’ral Jackson’ with our mouths
-open, he jerked Tom’s gun out o’ his hands, knocked
-him from his saddle as clean as a whistle, an’ sent the
-ball into me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah for Silas?” thought Julian, gleefully. “He
-has escaped. Now, if there is any way in which he can
-assist me he will not fail to do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“He was out o’ sight an’ hearin’ afore we could raise
-a finger to stop him,” continued Sanders. “I guess my
-broken arm an’ Tom’s bloody head is proof enough of
-what I say, hain’t it? We couldn’t help it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps you did the best you could,” replied Reginald
-Mortimer in a milder tone. “That Silas Roper is a
-match for any two men in the mountains. Come into
-this room and let Pedro dress your wounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nary time,” said Sanders emphatically. “I’ve had
-jest the wust luck in the world ever since I had anything
-to do with you an’ your house, an’ now I’m goin’
-to cut you. I came here to tell you that, an’ I ain’t
-never comin’ nigh you again. Let us out o’ here.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will come whenever I choose to send for you,”
-said Mr. Mortimer fiercely.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, if it comes to <i>that</i> cap’n, in course we will,” replied
-Sanders, dropping his angry, confident tone very
-suddenly. “We’re bound to obey orders, but don’t ask
-nary one of us to come here agin. We’d a heap sooner
-you’d send us out to steal hosses and rob miners.”</p>
-
-<p>“Silence!” said Mr. Mortimer in a hoarse whisper.
-“Do you not know that the very walls in this house have
-ears? You <i>must</i> capture Silas Roper; and I will give
-you the money I promised you whenever you deliver him
-into my hands. He is about here, and he will remain in
-the vicinity as long as I hold fast to this stool-pigeon.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Reginald and the trappers passed through the
-door into the yard, and Julian strolled along the hall,
-and not knowing where else to go, entered the reception-room.
-While he was walking about with his hands in
-his pocket, he was thinking over some portions of the
-conversation to which he had just listened.</p>
-
-<p>“Captain?” he repeated. “What is Uncle Reginald
-captain of? Steal horses and rob miners! Silas told
-me that the mountains were full of men engaged in
-that kind of business, and I wonder if this new relative
-of mine is in any way connected with them! He must
-be; and he must be their leader, too, for Sanders
-acknowledged that he was bound to obey his orders.
-Good gracious! What sort of a place have I got into,
-anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>While Julian, appalled by this new discovery he had
-made, was pacing restlessly up and down the floor, Uncle
-Reginald hurried in. The scowl on his forehead<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-indicated that he was in a bad humor about something,
-but it cleared away instantly when he discovered Julian,
-and advancing with outstretched hand he greeted him
-in the most cordial manner.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you rested well after the fatigues and excitements
-of yesterday,” said he with a friendly smile.
-“You look as if you had. Breakfast is waiting, and
-while we are discussing it we will have a social chat.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy, making some satisfactory reply, returned
-his uncle’s smile and the hearty pressure of his hand,
-and accompanied him toward the breakfast-room, which
-was located at the farther end of the hall. He glanced
-over the well-filled table as he took the chair pointed
-out to him, and told himself that if this breakfast was
-a fair sample of Uncle Reginald’s style of living he
-would never go hungry while he remained under his
-roof. Corn bread, salt meat and buttermilk did not
-constitute the substantial part of the repast as they invariably
-did in the cabin of Jack Bowles. There were
-juicy venison steaks, hot muffins, wheat bread, eggs,
-boiled and fried, toast and potatoes in abundance, and
-also coffee and chocolate, which Pedro, who waited
-upon the table, drew from a silver urn which stood on
-the sideboard. More than that, the cloth was spotless,
-the dishes clean and white and the table was altogether
-so nicely arranged, and looked so inviting, that Julian
-grew hungry the moment his eyes rested upon it.</p>
-
-<p>When Pedro had supplied the wants of his master
-and his guests, he retired, and the two were left alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Julian,” said Uncle Reginald in a cheery
-voice, “do you feel inclined for a gallop on a swift
-horse this morning? I have some business that will
-occupy my attention until dinner, and if you in the
-meantime wish to amuse yourself in that way, there is a
-very fine filly in the stable which I purchased expressly
-for you, and which I hope will supply the place of the
-horse you lost last night.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must have been expecting me,” said the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly. I have been looking for you every day
-for the last two months; and as this introduces the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-subject which I know you are impatient to talk about, I
-will now make the explanation I promised you. In the
-first place, do you know that last night you slept in your
-old home for the first time in eight years? You were
-born in this house, and every thing in and about it&mdash;money,
-horses, cattle and gold diggings&mdash;will come into
-your undisputed possession the moment you are twenty-one
-years old. It is a fact. You are by no means the
-pauper you have always supposed yourself to be.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian dropped his knife and fork, and settling back
-in his chair looked the astonishment he could not express
-in words. He gazed earnestly at his uncle, and
-then ran his eyes around the room as if he were trying
-to make an estimate of the value of his possessions from
-the few articles he saw about him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the truth, every word of it,” repeated Reginald
-Mortimer. “It is all yours, and it is a property worth
-having, I assure you. Your father, who was my brother,
-is dead, and so is your brother Frederick. I am your
-guardian, and stand ready to surrender your patrimony
-to you whenever you are competent to take charge of it.
-I assumed control of your father’s affairs immediately
-after his death. At that time you were eight years old
-and your brother nine. Fred died, and shortly afterward
-you were stolen away by some one, who, as I this
-morning learned from Sanders, who told me all about
-it, took you off to Missouri and left you there with one
-Jack Bowles. For eight years I made every effort to
-find you, and I have at last succeeded. I do not intend
-that you shall be separated from me any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Julian, when his uncle paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i>All!</i>” echoed the boy. “Am I to learn no more of
-my history than this brief outline? Do you not know
-who it was who stole me away?”</p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t the slightest idea.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or what he stole me away for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course your property had something to do
-with it, but just what I can’t tell.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, who had settled into an easy position in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-arm-chair with the expectation of hearing something
-exciting about himself, straightened up, and with an
-expression of great disappointment on his face, resumed
-his toast and coffee. He wanted to hear more, and he
-was satisfied from his uncle’s manner that he could tell
-him more if he felt so inclined; but it was plain that he
-did not, for his next words related to another subject.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope you are now convinced that the fears to
-which you last night gave way were entirely groundless,”
-said Mr. Mortimer. “I shall endeavor by every means
-in my power to make your life here a pleasant one. I
-have been very lonely and I want you to cheer me. I
-want you to feel that you are one of the family, that
-you have a right to be here, and that you are at liberty
-to go and come whenever it suits your fancy. You
-shall have the best horse in the stable, a pack of hounds,
-a servant to wait on you, and live like a gentleman.
-There is a fort about two miles distant. Some of the
-officers have their families with them, and among them
-are several boys about your own age. Whenever you
-want company, bring them up here. They will find
-enough to interest them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps they would also find some things they
-would not care to see,” said Julian, thinking of his
-recent adventure with the emigrant.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, some of those strange people who go about of
-nights making such unearthly noises.”</p>
-
-<p>“That sounds just like Sanders,” exclaimed Uncle
-Reginald impatiently. “Julian, I hope you are a boy
-of too much good sense to pay the least attention to any
-thing that low, ignorant fellow may say to you. There
-isn’t a word of truth in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor about the secret passage-ways that run all
-through the house?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a particle. It is all moonshine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or about the old man who lives in the cellar?”</p>
-
-<p>“All the veriest nonsense in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or about your missing things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, as to that, I have missed some things, that’s a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-fact, but I know where they went. Pedro took them.
-He is a great rascal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why do you not discharge him if he is a thief?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because servants are not so easily procured in this
-wilderness. More than that, he is a valuable fellow in
-spite of his faults&mdash;understands all my ways, and knows
-just how I want every thing done. You will stay with
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, sir. I have not seen so much of the comforts
-of a home that I can afford to throw them away as
-soon as they are offered to me. Beside, I want to see
-the bottom of this mystery.”</p>
-
-<p>“What mystery? Well, perhaps it does seem a little
-strange that I, a man whom you never remember to
-have seen before, should claim you as a nephew, and
-tell you that I hold in my hands a valuable property
-which is all your own, but it is nevertheless true.”</p>
-
-<p>“And there are other things that seem strange to
-me,” continued Julian. “One of them is that you can
-live here unmolested, as you evidently do, while peaceable
-emigrants are butchered at your very doors.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is also easily explained. In the first place,
-that wagon train was quite a lengthy step from my door
-when it was attacked&mdash;about forty miles. In the next,
-there is a fort and a regiment of soldiers almost within
-call of me. I have twenty-five herdsmen in the valley,
-and at the very first sign of a war-party they would come
-flocking into the house, which could withstand the assault
-of all the Indians on the plains. Now, if you have
-finished your breakfast, and are ready for your ride, I
-will show you your horse.”</p>
-
-<p>If Julian had given utterance to the thoughts that
-were passing through his mind, he would have told his
-uncle that he was not quite ready for his ride. There
-were other questions that he would like to have had answered.
-He wanted to know what sort of an organisation
-it was of which his uncle was captain; why he was
-so much interested in Silas Roper that he was willing to
-give $5,000 for his apprehension; if he knew that his
-cousin, Richard Mortimer, instead of being at Fort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-Stoughton hunting buffaloes, was prowling about somewhere
-in the immediate neighborhood, and that he had
-twice visited the rancho the night before. He wanted
-to know which of the two men who claimed to be his
-guardian was so in reality; how Uncle Reginald had
-found out that he was hidden in the wilds of Missouri;
-why, since he was so very anxious to find him, he had
-sent the trapper after him instead of going himself; and
-why Sanders had deserted him so suddenly when Silas
-Roper made his appearance in the streets of St. Joseph.
-He wanted to know who Silas Roper was; how he had
-learned so much about himself; and what Uncle Reginald
-meant when he said that the guide would not leave
-the vicinity of the rancho as long as the “stool-pigeon”
-was there. These and other questions had Julian intended
-to propound to his uncle; but the abruptness
-with which all the topics upon which he most wished to
-converse were dismissed, satisfied him that it would be
-a useless waste of time, and that his relative did not
-intend to enlighten him any further than he saw fit.
-Julian would have been glad of an opportunity to talk
-to one of those “watchful friends” spoken of in the
-note. He had a great deal to say to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Romez, bring out Snowdrop.”</p>
-
-<p>It was his uncle who spoke, and the sound of his
-voice aroused Julian from his reverie. They had now
-reached the stables&mdash;which were built under the same
-roof with the house and surrounded by the same wall&mdash;and
-were standing in front of the door.</p>
-
-<p>The Mexican hostler to whom the order was addressed
-disappeared in the stable, and in a few minutes came
-out again, leading a beautiful snow-white mare, saddled
-and bridled.</p>
-
-<p>Julian looked at her with delight, and declared that
-he had never seen a finer animal. She was very showy,
-and pranced about as if impatient to exhibit her mettle.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not care to ride at first, but I do now,” said
-Julian. “I will be ready as soon as I get my rifle and
-revolver. But I must have some ammunition.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pedro will supply you,” replied Uncle Reginald.
-“Go to him for everything you want.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was but the work of a few minutes to run to his
-room, throw his rifle and accouterments over his shoulder,
-buckle his revolver about his waist and return to
-Pedro for the powder and lead. He was out again
-almost as soon as he went in, and vaulting into the saddle
-he bade his uncle good-by and rode at a full gallop
-out of the gate.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XX.<br />
-<span class="pch">JULIAN GETS INTO BUSINESS.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/di.jpg" width="80" height="82" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">IF THERE is anything better calculated than
-another to put one at peace with himself and
-all the world, it is a brisk gallop on a good
-horse of a fine summer’s morning. It is a
-specific for melancholy. When Julian was safe outside
-the gloomy walls of the rancho, and felt himself being
-borne through the air with the speed of a bird on the
-wing, his spirits rose wonderfully, and in the exuberance
-of his glee he swung his sombrero about his head, and
-gave utterance to a yell almost as loud and unearthly as
-any he had heard uttered by the savages the night
-before. The spirited mare responded to the yell with a
-fresh burst of speed, and her rider, giving her a free
-rein, was carried at a rapid rate through the valley in
-which his uncle’s rancho was located, through the willows
-that skirted the base of the mountain, and finally
-found himself in a rocky defile which wound about
-among the cliffs. Here the mare voluntarily slackened
-her pace to a walk, and Julian wiped his flushed face
-with his handkerchief and looked about him. He could
-see nothing but rocks. They hemmed him in on all
-sides, and towered above his head until their tops
-seemed to pierce the clouds.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know why I ever allowed myself to be brought
-in here,” thought the boy, “or why the horse should
-leave a level path to follow so miserable a road as this.
-Perhaps Uncle Reginald purchased her of some miner or
-settler up here in the mountains, and she thinks she is
-on her way home. At any rate she seems to know
-where she is going, and so long as she doesn’t lose me I
-don’t care where she carries me. I hope I shall find
-some one to talk to. Since uncle will not tell me anything<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-about myself, I must learn what I want to know
-from other sources. Halloo!”</p>
-
-<p>This exclamation was called forth by an unexpected
-sight that greeted his eyes. As he came suddenly around
-an abrupt bend in the path, he found before him a long,
-low, narrow cabin, built snugly under a beetling cliff
-which hung threateningly over the gorge. Two well-beaten
-paths appeared at this point; one leading to the
-doors of the building, and the other running on down
-the gorge. The mare, which seemed perfectly familiar
-with the locality, quickened her pace at once, and before
-Julian could gather up the reins to check her, she had
-turned into the first mentioned path, and galloping up
-to one of the doors stopped as if waiting for her rider to
-dismount. After looking all about him, without discovering
-any one, Julian began to take a survey of the
-premises.</p>
-
-<p>There were two doors in the house, both opening out
-on the path. A short examination of the ground in
-front of the one at which his horse had stopped, showed
-him that it led into a stable; while the other, no doubt,
-opened into the living-room, for there was a rough
-bench beside it for the accommodation of loungers.
-While Julian was wondering by whom and for what
-purpose the house had been erected in that remote and
-lonely spot, his attention was attracted by the movements
-of his horse, which, after pricking up her ears and
-looking intently at the door in front of her, as if expecting
-the arrival of some one, began pawing the ground
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>“She thinks there ought to be somebody here,”
-thought Julian. “And there certainly is something in
-the stable,” he added, after listening a moment, “for I
-can hear the stamping of horses. Halloo! the house!”</p>
-
-<p>Julian waited for a reply, and listened for some movement
-in the cabin which would tell him that his call had
-been heard; but the only response he received was the
-echo of his own voice thrown back from the cliffs. This
-satisfied him that the owner of the premises was absent;
-and picking up his reins, he was on the point of turning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-back toward the valley, when, by the merest accident,
-he discovered something that he might have seen before
-if he had made good use of his eyes. It was a small
-window close under the eaves of the house, which was
-filled by the muzzle of a revolver and a pair of gleaming
-eyes looking straight at him.</p>
-
-<p>Too astonished to speak, the boy sat in his saddle wondering
-what was going to happen now, and presently
-saw the six-shooter disappear and the eyes approach
-closer to the opening. A moment afterward a shaggy
-head, crowned by a broad-brimmed hat, was thrust
-slowly out, and a masculine face, that was by no means
-handsome or prepossessing, was exposed to his view.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s you after all, hain’t it?” growled a deep voice,
-in no very amiable tones.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Julian, “it is I. But I heartily wish
-it was somebody else,” he added, mentally.</p>
-
-<p>“Why in tarnation didn’t you whistle? I didn’t know
-you in them new clothes, and I might have put a ball
-into you just as easy as not. I’ll be out in a jiffy.”</p>
-
-<p>As the man said this he drew in his head and closed
-the window. Julian was glad indeed when his villainous
-face disappeared, and trembled when he reflected that
-perhaps that revolver had been leveled at his head, and
-those evil eyes fastened upon him ever since he arrived
-within sight of the cabin, and he had never suspected it.
-He saw at once that he had placed himself in a dangerous
-position. One of two things was certain. The
-owner of the rancho was either hiding from pursuit, or
-else he was engaged in some unlawful business. If he
-were an honest man he would not act so strangely.</p>
-
-<p>“But how does it happen that he recognizes me?”
-Julian asked himself. “Does he know who I am, or
-does he take me for somebody else? If he knows that I
-am Julian Mortimer, he may be a man of the Sanders
-stamp who has been hired to put me out of Dick’s way.
-If he thinks that I am an acquaintance of his, or an
-accomplice, he will certainly discover his mistake as
-soon as he has a fair view of my face, and then what
-will he do to me? I think I had better not wait for him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>As quick as thought Julian wheeled his mare and
-touched her with his spurs; but the animal, knowing
-probably that good care and plenty of corn awaited her
-entry into the stable which she regarded as her home,
-responded very reluctantly. Before she had made many
-bounds the door of the stable was jerked open, and a
-voice called out in surprised and indignant tones:</p>
-
-<p>“Halt! halt! I say, on the instant, or you’re a dead
-man!”</p>
-
-<p>Julian knew that the speaker was in earnest, for his
-command was followed by the click of the lock of his
-revolver; but he would have kept on in spite of his fear
-of the bullets had not his horse, which doubtless recognized
-the voice, came to a sudden stand-still. Julian
-looked back and saw that the man’s pistol was pointed
-straight at his breast.</p>
-
-<p>“If you ain’t a <i>little</i> ahead of all the fools I ever saw
-in all my born days my name ain’t Bob Smirker, and
-never was,” exclaimed the owner of the rancho fiercely.
-“That’s the second time I have come within an inch of
-shooting you. Come back here now, and let’s have no
-more fooling.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, not daring to attempt to continue his retreat
-on his unwilling steed, was compelled to obey. Calling
-all his courage to his aid, he turned about and rode back
-to the cabin. Smirker looked sharply at him as he
-came up, but Julian met his gaze without flinching, and
-even succeeded in calling a smile to his face. Believing
-that he had nothing to gain by deception, he began to
-explain who he was and how he came to be there; but
-the man interrupted him, and Julian was afterward glad
-that he had done so.</p>
-
-<p>“I hope I am not intruding, sir,” he began. “I was
-out for a breath of fresh air&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hush your nonsense!” cried the owner of the
-rancho angrily. “You’re always ’out for a breath of
-fresh air’ when you are doing something you’ve no business
-to do. That was what you said to me on the day
-you found my secret passage-way which leads down from
-the top of the cliff. I didn’t want anybody but myself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-to know about that passage-way, and when I found
-that you had discovered it I was mad enough to shoot
-you. You’re eternally up to some foolishness, and it’s
-the greatest wonder in the world you haven’t been killed
-a thousand times. Everybody says so. Now, Fred, if
-you should come here every hour in the day for the next
-ten years, don’t ever ride up without giving the signal,
-and don’t try to run away when I open the door. This
-ain’t boy’s play we’re at, as you would soon find out if
-them soldiers or some of the settlers should get hold of
-you. You hadn’t ought to done it, ’cause I didn’t know
-you in that Mexican rig. Come in. I’ve got something
-for you.”</p>
-
-<p>While the man was speaking he was looking squarely
-into Julian’s face, and the latter was waiting in an agony
-of suspense to see what he would do when he discovered
-that he had mistaken the identity of his visitor. But
-Smirker did not seem to think he had made a mistake.
-Having delivered his lecture and thus worked off a little
-of his indignation, he returned his revolver to his belt
-and led the way into the stable, closely followed by Julian’s
-horse, which moved after him without waiting for
-the word from her rider. Julian drew a long breath of
-relief, and told himself that the danger for the present
-was past. The difficulty now was to personate the boy
-whom Smirker believed him to be.</p>
-
-<p>While his companion lingered to fasten the door, Julian
-dismounted and ran his eye about the stable, which
-was lighted by a lantern suspended from one of the
-beams. It was much larger than it appeared on the outside,
-showing that it extended under the cliff. It was
-provided with stalls for a dozen horses, three of which
-had occupants. The mare being left to herself, walked
-into one of the stalls and immediately began munching
-some corn which had doubtless been placed there for
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, then,” said Smirker, when he had fastened
-the door, “where is it? Hand it out here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where is what?” asked the boy.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you know. Didn’t you bring it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied Julian, who of course had not the
-slightest idea what the man meant.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t they say anything about it?” asked Smirker,
-who appeared to be very much disappointed as well as
-angry.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a word.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now, this way of doing business don’t suit me,
-and you may tell ’em that I said so. I run just as much
-risk here as them that steals the swag&mdash;every bit; ’cause
-how do I know but them soldiers will be down on me
-when I ain’t looking for them? Looks like they wanted
-to swindle me out of my share. But, after all, they
-ain’t ahead of me much, ’cause I&mdash;you won’t blow on
-me, Fred?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” replied Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got a little plunder here that I’m going to
-keep till they come down with the yellow boys they owe
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of plunder?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, nuggets and gold-dust&mdash;twenty-five hundred
-dollars’ worth. You see, I was down in the mines the
-other day, and heard of a man who had struck a lead
-and was going home that very day. But he didn’t go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked the boy, when Smirker paused.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Cause I knocked him on the head&mdash;that’s why. I’ve
-got the gold hid away safe. Do you want to go back
-now, or will you stay awhile? I am lonesome here all
-by myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had better go now,” replied Julian, who was eager
-to escape from the man’s presence at the earliest possible
-moment. “I am in something of a hurry.”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker struck up a lively whistle, and taking a
-bridle down from a pin beside the door, went into one
-of the stalls and brought out a horse which looked
-enough like Snowdrop to have been her brother. He
-was the same color, the same size, and just as stylish
-and spirited. Julian knew that he was expected to ride
-this horse away and leave his own steed in the care of
-the man; and, although he did not quite like the arrangement,
-he consoled himself with the thought that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-if he never saw Snowdrop again he would lose nothing
-by the exchange.</p>
-
-<p>“You ride good horses, Fred,” said Smirker, as he
-put Julian’s saddle on the horse he had just brought
-out, “but you had better take my advice and get others
-of a different color. White horses don’t do for such
-business as this, ’cause they show too plain of nights;
-and any one who happens to pass you on the road will
-remember of having seen you. There are plenty of
-better horses in the world, and the one I am going to
-send with you is one of them.”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker having by this time saddled and bridled the
-white nag, went into a second stall and brought out a
-large bay horse which he walked up and down the stable
-for Julian’s inspection. The moment the boy’s eyes
-rested on him he became reconciled to the loss of his
-mare, and even eager to part with her, if by so doing
-he could gain possession of this magnificent animal.
-If his speed and endurance were equal to his beauty, he
-was certainly a horse worth having.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s lightning on wheels,” declared Smirker, as he
-slipped a bridle over the bay’s head, “and perhaps he
-will give you as much as you want to do to lead him.
-He came from Fort Stoughton, and was stolen from the
-major, who had just brought him from the States.
-There you are,” he added, waving his hand toward the
-horses, intimating by the gesture that Julian was at
-liberty to take charge of them as soon as he pleased.
-“I wish you a pleasant journey. You have been very
-lucky so far, and I hope your good fortune will continue.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy was prompt to take advantage of the permission
-thus given him to leave the cabin. He quickly
-mounted the white horse, inquiring as he did so:</p>
-
-<p>“Any word to send to anybody?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, there is,” replied Smirker, “and I came near
-forgetting it. You can tell the fellows below that the
-captain’s cub has got back at last.”</p>
-
-<p>“What cub?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Julian; the one he’s been looking for so long.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-We’ll finger some of that money and find out where
-that hidden gold mine is now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Does this&mdash;this <i>cub</i> know where it is?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but Silas Roper does. Sanders was here this
-morning and told me the whole secret.”</p>
-
-<p>“The captain hasn’t got hold of Silas, has he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not yet, but he will have him before long. It is a
-little the queerest thing I ever heard of, this plan of the
-captain’s is,” continued Smirker, placing one hand on
-the horn of Julian’s saddle, and settling into an easy
-position against the side of the horse as if he had a long
-story to tell, “and it shows what a head he’s got on his
-shoulders, and what education will do for a man. You
-see&mdash;but in the first place you know that he is no more
-of a Mortimer than I am?”</p>
-
-<p>Julian, not daring to trust himself to speak, nodded
-his head, pulled out his handkerchief ostensibly for the
-purpose of wiping his forehead, but really to conceal
-the sudden pallor which he knew overspread his face, and
-the man went on:</p>
-
-<p>“The captain’s playing a deep game, and he’s going to
-succeed in it, too. He’s making a decoy duck of Julian&mdash;using
-him to keep Silas Roper about here until he
-can catch him; and when he once gets hold of him and
-finds out where the money and the nuggets are, he’ll
-make short work with both of them.”</p>
-
-<p>What else Smirker was about to say Julian never
-knew, for an unexpected interruption occurred at that
-moment. A shrill whistle, sounding from some point
-close at hand, echoed through the gorge. It produced
-a strange effect upon Julian’s companion, for he turned
-as pale as death, and the hand which he placed upon
-the butt of his revolver trembled visibly. He stood
-motionless until the whistle was repeated, and then hurried
-across the floor and mounting a short ladder that
-leaned against the wall of the stable, opened the window
-before spoken of.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had he looked out than he sprung to the
-ground again, and with a volley of oaths that made
-Julian’s blood run cold, strode up to him and seized him
-by the collar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Look here, my cub,” he hissed, between his clenched
-teeth, “I suspected you all along. There ain’t two
-White-horse Freds in this country, and I know it. Who
-are you? Speak quick!”</p>
-
-<p>As he said this he pulled his revolver from his belt
-and leveled it at Julian’s head.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXI.<br />
-<span class="pch">WHITE-HORSE FRED.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dj.jpg" width="80" height="83" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">JULIAN, who had been congratulating himself
-upon the ease with which he was about
-to extricate himself from his perilous situation,
-was dismayed at this turn of events.
-He comprehended the matter perfectly. White-horse
-Fred, so called probably from the color of the animals
-he rode, was a member of a band of horse thieves and
-robbers, and it was his business to assist in moving the
-plunder from one point to another. The man Smirker
-belonged to the same organization, and it was his duty
-to receive and care for the booty until such time as the
-authorized agents of the band called for it. He had
-probably been on the lookout for his confederate when
-Julian arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“But why didn’t he know that I wasn’t White-horse
-Fred as soon as he looked into my face?” thought the
-boy, so nearly overcome with terror that he did not
-hear the words that had been addressed to him. “And
-how does it happen that I was riding Fred’s horse?
-How did my uncle come by him? I can’t understand
-it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Speak quick!” repeated Smirker, savagely, “and
-don’t try to draw no weapons. Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>He pulled back the hammer of his pistol with the
-thumb of his right hand as he spoke, and shifting his
-left from Julian’s collar to the butt of the revolver
-which the boy was on the point of pulling from his
-belt.</p>
-
-<p>“Who should I be?” returned Julian boldly. “If
-I’ve no business here how came I by that horse I brought
-you? That’s what I’d like to know.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if that fellow out there ain’t White-horse Fred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-how did he give Fred’s whistle so exact, and how did
-he come by Fred’s clothes? That’s what <i>I’d</i> like to
-know.”</p>
-
-<p>It was plain, both from Smirker’s tone and manner,
-that he began to believe that he had been a little too
-hasty. He let go Julian’s pistol, lowered the hammer
-of his own weapon, and stood gazing at our hero with
-an expression of great bewilderment on his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t it be a good plan to ask him?” suggested
-Julian.</p>
-
-<p>Smirker thought it would. He jerked open the door
-of the stable, and Julian, who was on the point of dashing
-his spurs into his horse and riding over the robber
-and making good his escape, found his way blocked up
-by a dashing young fellow, who rode gayly into the
-stable, but stopped short on discovering Julian, and
-checked the words of greeting that arose to his lips.
-For fully a minute no one spoke. The two boys sat on
-their horses staring at one another, and Smirker, after
-closing and locking the door, took his stand between
-them, looking first at the new-comer and then at Julian,
-apparently unable to come to any decision concerning
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The strange equestrian was a youth about Julian’s age
-and size, only a little more robust, and had the two been
-dressed alike it would have been a matter of some difficulty
-for any one to tell them apart. Julian looked as
-if he had just come out of a lady’s bandbox, while the
-new-comer seemed to have bestowed but little care upon
-his toilet that morning. His dress consisted of a red
-flannel shirt, open at the throat and worn without a coat,
-coarse trowsers, which were thrust into a pair of high-top
-boots, and a broad-brimmed hat. A belt encircled
-his waist, supporting a knife on one side and a revolver
-on the other. He rode a small Indian pony, which,
-judging by its appearance, had been driven long and
-rapidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, then,” said Smirker, who was the first to recover
-the use of his tongue, “one of you two fellows
-has got himself in the worst kind of a scrape&mdash;one that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-he will never get out of alive. Which is White-horse
-Fred?”</p>
-
-<p>Julian had shown a tolerably bold front as long as a
-hope of escape remained, but now that he found the
-door of the stable locked upon him, and himself completely
-at the mercy of the two robbers, his courage
-gave way utterly, and he could not have made an intelligent
-reply to Smirker’s question even if he had had
-anything to say.</p>
-
-<p>The new-comer was the genuine White-horse Fred&mdash;there
-could be no doubt about that, for he had given
-the signal when he approached the cabin, and more than
-that, Smirker had recognized him by the clothes he
-wore.</p>
-
-<p>Giving himself up for lost, Julian waited almost impatiently
-for the strange horseman to speak, believing
-that the opening of his lips would be the signal for his
-own death. What, then, was his amazement when he
-heard the boy exclaim:</p>
-
-<p>“White-horse Fred! If there is any one here that
-goes by that name, it must be you or that young gentleman
-over there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you ain’t him!” said Smirker, growing more
-and more perplexed.</p>
-
-<p>“No. Do I look like him!”</p>
-
-<p>“You sartinly do, and act like him. What were you
-whistling out there for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just to hear the echo.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what made you come in here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because you opened the door.”</p>
-
-<p>“You talk like White-horse Fred, too. But if you
-hain’t him you’re where you’ve got no business to be,
-and you’ll never get away, nuther.”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker raised his revolver and pointed it at the boy’s
-breast. Julian, faint with terror, turned away his head
-and held his breath in suspense; but the stranger never
-flinched so much as a hair’s breadth.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t do anything rash,” said he calmly. “I have
-told you who I am <i>not</i>, and now you had better ask me
-who I <i>am</i>.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care who you are. You’re a dead man.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you will be another in less than an hour,” replied
-the boy, without the least sign of alarm. “My
-Uncle Reginald Mortimer’s servant is close behind me.
-He will know that I came in here, and if I don’t go out
-again he will also know what has become of me.”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker lowered his revolver, and falling back a step
-or two, stared blankly at the speaker, and then at our
-hero. The astonishment his face exhibited was fully
-reflected in Julian’s. The latter’s terror had all given
-way to surprise. He forgot Smirker and his revolver,
-the danger of his situation, and every thing else except
-the last few words the stranger had uttered: “My Uncle
-Reginald Mortimer.” Who was this fellow who was
-going about claiming Julian’s relative as his own?</p>
-
-<p>“You have concluded not to shoot me, haven’t you?”
-asked the boy, whose coolness and courage were wonderful
-to behold.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you?” demanded Smirker.</p>
-
-<p>“My name is Julian Mortimer. I am a stranger
-here, having but just arrived from the States. I came
-out this morning to take a ride, and it seems I have got
-into a place where I am not wanted. I beg pardon for
-my intrusion, and will thank you to open that door and
-let me out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Julian Mortimer!” exclaimed Smirker.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Julian Mortimer!</i>” echoed the owner of that name,
-in a scarcely audible voice.</p>
-
-<p>If our hero had been surprised before, he was doubly
-so now. He could scarcely believe that he had heard
-aright. If this stranger was Julian Mortimer, who in
-the world was <i>he</i>, Julian asked himself. Were there
-two boys of that name in existence, and was Uncle
-Reginald the guardian of both, and holding in his
-hands a valuable property to be surrendered to them
-when they reached their majority?</p>
-
-<p>He rubbed his eyes to make sure he was not dreaming,
-and looked hard at the stranger, who seemed not a little
-astonished at the sensation he had created.</p>
-
-<p>As for Smirker, he was as nearly beside himself as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-sane man could well be; and, what was very singular,
-he seemed all of a sudden to have discovered some
-reason for wishing to keep as far away from Julian as
-possible, for he backed into one of the stables and stood
-eying him like a caged hyena.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it?” said the stranger. “Perhaps
-you don’t believe what I told you. If it is necessary
-that I should furnish proof, I can do so. Open the
-door and let me out.”</p>
-
-<p>“You spoke that name just in time,” said Smirker
-fiercely, “for in a minute more you would have been
-done for. If you are really the captain’s cub, you are
-worth too much to us to be put out of the way yet
-awhile. But not much I won’t let you out-doors.
-Your story may be true, and it may not. I am going
-to keep you here till I can send to headquarters and find
-out.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” replied the boy, swinging himself from
-his saddle and gazing about the stable as if everything
-he saw in it was full of interest to him. “I am easily
-suited. I’d as soon stay here an hour or two as not. I
-never was in a house like this before. What makes you
-call ’em all <i>ranchos</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Look a here,” added Smirker, turning to our hero.
-“If this fellow is Julian Mortimer, who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you not yet satisfied that I am White-horse
-Fred?” asked Julian in reply. “Perhaps you want me
-to prove it.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian’s terror had all passed away now, and he was in
-his right mind again. There was still a chance of escape.
-Although he had not the remotest idea who the new-comer
-was, he had heard and seen enough to satisfy him
-that he was a stranger in that wilderness as well as himself,
-and that he was not White-horse Fred, consequently
-he ran no risk in continuing to personate the character
-he had been compelled to assume. Indeed, it was the
-only thing he could do. He was impatient to be off,
-too, for the real White-horse Fred might arrive at any
-moment, and then something would certainly happen.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a mystery at the bottom of this, and I’ll bet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-a horse on it,” said Smirker, shaking his fists in the air,
-and striding up and down the stable. “I know you are
-White-horse Fred,” he added, addressing himself to our
-hero, “but&mdash;but&mdash;what’s the rest of your name? Fred
-what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fred nothing. That’s all the name I’ve got. I
-never had any other.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you have got another, and if it is the one I
-think it is, I don’t see how in the world you come to be
-riding about here. You had ought to be at the bottom
-of the lake. I’ll see the fellows below this very night,
-and have a new runner put on this route, or I’ll give up
-the station. I ain’t a going to have no such fellow as
-you coming about me. You can’t get out of here any
-too sudden.”</p>
-
-<p>This speech was all Greek to Julian, except the last
-sentence. That he understood perfectly, and was quite
-ready to act upon the suggestion it contained. The
-moment Smirker opened the door of the stable he dashed
-the spurs into his horse, which sprung forward like an
-arrow from a bow, and tore down the path with the
-speed of the wind, the bay following. In a few seconds
-he was out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely waiting for Julian to get fairly out of the
-stable, Smirker slammed the door and locked it, and
-turning fiercely upon his new prisoner disarmed him by
-jerking off the belt which contained his knife and
-revolver. Having thus put it out of the boy’s power to
-do any mischief, Smirker suddenly seemed to become
-unconscious of his presence. He had much to think
-about, and for the next quarter of an hour he gave himself
-up entirely to his reflections, never once casting a
-single glance toward his companion. He paced up and
-down the stable with long strides, shaking his head and
-muttering, and trying in vain to find some explanation
-for the strange, and to him bewildering, incidents that
-had just occurred. They were more than bewildering&mdash;they
-were absolutely terrifying, as the expression on his
-face and his whole bearing and manner abundantly
-proved. He walked with a very unsteady step, his burly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-frame trembled like an oak in a storm, and now and
-then he raised his hand to dash away the perspiration
-which stood on his forehead like drops of rain.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner was as cool and collected as ever. Being
-left to himself, he strolled carelessly about the stable,
-examining every object in it, and occasionally directing
-his gaze toward the open door leading from the stable
-into the living-room of the cabin. Finally he leaned
-against one of the stalls, and when Smirker’s back was
-turned hastily pulled something from his pocket and
-tossed it into the manger&mdash;something that gave out a
-ringing, metallic sound as it fell. The noise, slight as
-it was, caught the man’s ear and aroused him from his
-reverie. He turned and confronted his prisoner at
-once.</p>
-
-<p>“What you doing there?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing at all,” was the reply. “I am waiting as
-patiently as I can for you to explain why you have robbed
-me of my weapons, and are keeping me here. I assure
-you that my Uncle Reginald will have something to say
-to you about this before you are many hours older.”</p>
-
-<p>“What you doing there?” repeated Smirker fiercely;
-“I heard something chink.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps it was my persuaders,” said the boy, lifting
-his boot and exhibiting a huge Mexican spur, ornamented
-with little silver bells, which tinkled musically
-as he moved his feet about.</p>
-
-<p>“P’raps it was, and p’raps most likely it wasn’t.
-Haven’t I lived long enough to tell the difference between
-the rattling of spurs and the jingling of money? I have,
-I bet you. I’ll soon find out what you’ve been up to.”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker walked into the stall in front of which the
-boy was standing, and then for the first time the prisoner
-began to show signs of anxiety. He closely watched the
-man’s movements, and cast frequent and impatient
-glances toward the door of the living-room, as if he were
-expecting and earnestly desiring the arrival of some one.</p>
-
-<p>Smirker was in the stall but a few moments, and when
-he came out he carried in his hand a small canvas bag,
-at the sight of which the prisoner turned white with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-terror. Taking his stand under the lantern, Smirker
-untied the string with which the bag was fastened; but
-no sooner did his eyes fall upon its contents than he
-dropped it as if it had been a coal of fire, and his face
-grew livid with rage and alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Betrayed!” he roared, stamping his feet furiously
-upon the ground, and flourishing his fists in the air.
-“And, fool that I was, I might have known it! I suspected
-it from the beginning.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” asked the boy, and his voice
-was as firm and steady as ever.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” shrieked Smirker, driven
-almost insane by his intense passion. “Do you stand
-there and ask me what’s the matter? It’s the last
-question you will ever ask me, for you are as good as a
-dead man already. Didn’t I say that there was something
-at the bottom of all this? <i>You</i> are White-horse
-Fred&mdash;that bag proves it. It contains nuggets, and
-gold-dust, and money&mdash;my share of the swag which I
-have received and sent to the fellows below. I expected
-to get it from that other boy, and asked him for it; but
-of course he couldn’t give it to me, being an imposter.
-And I allowed him to go off scot free, and even told him
-some secrets that nobody outside the band ought to
-know. How long will it take him to ride to the fort
-and tell what he has seen and heard, and lead a squad
-of soldiers back here? And you helped him out in it&mdash;you,
-a sworn member of the band! Now, you shall tell
-me what you mean by acting as you have done. Speak
-in a hurry, or I’ll choke it out of you!”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker, howling out these words with a fierceness
-and energy which showed that he was terribly in earnest,
-advanced toward his prisoner in a low, crouching attitude,
-something like that a wild beast would assume
-when about to spring upon its prey.</p>
-
-<p>The boy’s face was very pale, but he bravely stood his
-ground. Knowing that escape was impossible, he was
-prepared to fight desperately for his life.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you tell me?” asked the robber, creeping forward
-with a slow, cat-like motion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I have nothing to tell,” replied the boy, “except
-this: I have friends close at hand, and they ought to be
-here now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I will have this business over before they
-arrive.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, and I will show you what a Mortimer is
-made of.”</p>
-
-<p>Before the words of defiance had fairly left the boy’s
-lips, Smirker bounded forward, and the two closed in a
-death struggle.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXII.<br />
-<span class="pch">THE SPECTERS OF THE CAVE.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dt.jpg" width="80" height="81" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">THE FIGHT was of longer duration and was
-much more desperate than one would suppose
-it could have been, considering the immense
-advantage which Smirker possessed
-over his wiry antagonist in weight and muscle; but of
-course it could end in but one way. White-horse Fred,
-bruised and exhausted, was borne to the ground at last,
-with the man’s knee on his breast and his brawny hand
-at his throat.</p>
-
-<p>“Now let’s hear from you,” hissed Smirker. “Who
-was that fellow who came here and passed himself off
-for you, and why did you help him out in it? Speak,
-before I choke the life out of you.”</p>
-
-<p>If Fred could have obeyed his reply would have been
-as defiant as ever; but the powerful grasp on his throat
-rendered articulation impossible.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t tell me?” demanded Smirker; “then take
-the reward of your treachery.”</p>
-
-<p>The robber’s hand glided around his side to his belt,
-and when it came in sight again it brought with it a
-gleaming bowie-knife, which was raised in the air above
-the prisoner’s breast; but just as it was on the point of
-descending it was arrested as effectually as though the
-arm which wielded it had been turned into stone.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold hard, thar!”</p>
-
-<p>The words, uttered by a strange voice and spoken in
-a tone of stern command, rang through the stable with
-startling distinctness. Smirker raised his eyes and there,
-standing in the door to which Fred had so often directed
-his gaze, was a gigantic figure clad in buckskin, holding
-in his hands a long, heavy rifle, the muzzle of which was
-pointed straight at the robber’s head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Silas Roper!” gasped Fred’s antagonist.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tain’t nobody else, as you’ll find out mighty sudden
-if you move an eyelid,” was the reply. “Drop that
-we’pon an’ get up from thar.”</p>
-
-<p>The command was no sooner uttered than it was
-obeyed by the trembling Smirker, who threw down his
-knife and slunk away like a whipped cur before the stalwart
-trapper, as he came striding into the stable, and
-retreating toward the nearest stall, held both his hands
-above his head in token of surrender.</p>
-
-<p>“None of that ar, now,” said Silas, as he bent over
-the prostrate form of the boy. “Keep out in plain
-sight whar I can have an eye on you. Are you bad hurt,
-Fred? If you are, that feller’s signed his death-warrant.”</p>
-
-<p>“No! no!” moaned the boy faintly. “Don’t touch
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker was amazed to hear the one who had so narrowly
-escaped death at his hands interceding for him.
-It relieved him of all fear of bodily injury, and he
-straightway began to recover his composure; but he
-drew a step or two nearer to Fred’s side, thinking it
-best to keep as far as possible out of the reach of the
-giant, whom he knew had good cause to be at enmity
-with him.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall be all right as soon as I have had time to recover
-the breath he choked out of me,” continued the
-latter. “Oh, Silas, I am so glad to see you! But
-why didn’t you come just a few minutes sooner. I have
-seen <i>him</i>. He was in this very stable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Him!” repeated the trapper. “Who? Not Julian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Julian. I didn’t think I should know him
-when I met him, but I did. I wanted to throw my
-arms around him and tell him that he was my brother,
-but Smirker was in the way. I am terribly disappointed
-in him, Silas. He is from the States, you know, and I
-expected to see a boy who hadn’t courage enough to face
-a sheep. But he’ll do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, how come he here?” asked Silas in great astonishment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I haven’t the least idea. Make Smirker tell. He’ll
-do anything you ask him.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was it?” demanded the trapper, turning to the
-owner of the cabin. “Tell nothing but the truth.”</p>
-
-<p>Smirker was too completely cowed by the presence of
-the giant, with whose powers he had more than once
-been made fully acquainted, to fabricate a falsehood
-even if he had anything to gain by it. Not daring to
-disobey, or even to hesitate, he began, and in a faltering
-voice told the story of Julian’s visit to his cabin just as
-we have related it. He also described what had taken
-place after Fred’s arrival, but added that Silas must ask
-the boy to explain that, for it was something he could
-not comprehend.</p>
-
-<p>“I can soon make it plain to you,” said White-horse
-Fred, now taking up the story. “You can’t imagine
-how surprised I was to find Julian here, and if Smirker
-had possessed any control over himself I should not
-have known what to do. But the way he looked and
-acted gave me a clew, and I saw through the whole
-thing as clearly as if it had been explained to me in
-words. Uncle Reginald, you know, happened to ride by
-old Antoine’s cabin the other day while I was absent, and
-seeing one of my horses, Snowdrop, there, suddenly conceived
-a violent passion for her and took possession of
-her without saying so much as ‘by your leave.’ I wondered
-what he intended to do with her and now I have
-found out. He gave her to my brother. Julian this
-morning thought he would take a ride and look over
-the country, and not knowing that the horse belonged
-to a band of robbers, gave her a loose rein and she
-brought him here. Finding that he had got himself
-into trouble, he acted upon some hint that Smirker
-gave him and passed himself off for me; and if <i>I</i> had
-not arrived just as I did, he would have got away without
-being suspected. To help him out of the difficulty,
-I told Smirker that my name was Julian Mortimer, and
-the blockhead believed it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thar ain’t nothing so very strange in that,” observed
-Silas. “No man on airth could tell you two apart if
-you was dressed alike.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But we were not. Smirker has seen me in these
-clothes a hundred times, I suppose, and I should think
-he ought to have recognized me. Now that I think of
-it, I ran something of a risk, didn’t I? Suppose that
-when I said that my name was Julian Mortimer, my
-brother had lost his courage and revealed himself?
-Wouldn’t I have been in a scrape? I depended entirely
-upon his presence of mind to carry me through, and I
-didn’t lose by it. But wasn’t he astonished, though? I
-thought he would tumble out of his saddle. But he
-behaved pretty well, considering that he is from the
-States.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you want to tell me who he was?” asked
-Smirker, who had listened attentively to the story.</p>
-
-<p>“I would have been smart to do that, wouldn’t I?”
-returned White-horse Fred. “Suppose I had told you,
-and you had succeeded in making an end of me before
-Silas came, what would you have done? You would
-have gone straight to Uncle Reginald and told him what
-had happened, and he would&mdash;Well, it’s enough for
-you to know that he would have made trouble for Julian.
-Silas, if you had only come a few minutes sooner
-he would have been with us now. I am uneasy about
-him. He will get into difficulty when he gets home,
-now you see if he doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t come no sooner,” replied the trapper;
-“‘cause I had more trouble than I thought I’d have
-crawlin’ down that long, dark passage-way that leads
-from the top of the cliff. What’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>This question was addressed to Smirker, who suddenly
-began to exhibit a greater degree of terror than the circumstances
-seemed to warrant. The show of courage
-he had maintained ever since he found that Fred was
-disposed to stand between him and the vengeance of the
-trapper vanished as quickly as it had appeared; and
-scarcely able to retain an upright position, he was
-obliged to lean against the wall for support.</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t be no ways skeery,” said Silas, who
-seemed to feel some compassion for the trembling
-wretch. “We’ve got plenty agin you, but if you behave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-yourself, nobody’s goin’ to hurt you. All we ask of you
-is to tell us something we want to know; an’ if you will
-do that, we’ll turn you loose, an’ you can dig out of this
-country as soon as you please.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you anything,” replied Smirker quickly.
-“But first I’d like to have you tell me something.
-When I was going to pitch into you,” he added, turning
-to White-horse Fred, “you told me to come on, and
-you would show me what a <i>Mortimer</i> was made of,
-didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did,” replied the boy. “I knew, of course, that
-you were too much for me, but I wasn’t going to surrender.
-That’s something I don’t know how to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you have said two or three times that Julian is
-four brother, hain’t you?” Smirker went on.</p>
-
-<p>“I have, and he is.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you must be the son of old Major Mortimer?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am proud to say that I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, now if you <i>are</i>, what business you got walking
-about on top of the ground? That’s what I’d like to
-know. You had ought to be at the bottom of the lake
-that lies behind your father’s rancho. Sanders put you
-there, ’cause I seen him do it with my own eyes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know he did, and my body is there yet,” replied
-White-horse Fred.</p>
-
-<p>“Eh?” exclaimed Smirker, drawing away from the
-boy toward the trapper.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know that a Mortimer can’t be killed?”
-asked Fred, who, having recovered from the effects of his
-struggle with the robber, was his jolly, reckless self once
-more. “And have you not yet learned that the members
-of our family have the power of throwing the shield
-of their protection around their servants? It’s a fact.
-You remember old Juan, do you not? Dick Mortimer
-shot him twice with his own hands, and you knocked
-him on the head with the butt of your rifle; and then
-you both picked him up and threw him over a cliff,
-didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t no use in saying we didn’t,” replied
-Smirker. “But I was hired to help in that work.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, of course. Men always have some excuse for
-doing wrong. Well, that old fellow’s body may be at
-the bottom of that gorge now, but I don’t believe it is.
-There is something that looks wonderfully like him
-walking about above ground this very day. If you want
-to see it we can show it to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t put yourselves to no trouble,” whined
-Smirker. “Ask me all the questions you want to and
-turn me loose.”</p>
-
-<p>“The old chap walks around of nights, too,” continued
-White-horse Fred, in a tone of voice that made
-the cold chills creep all over his listener, “assisting his
-friends in every possible way and executing all sorts of
-vengeance on his enemies. How would you feel if you
-should wake up about midnight and see him coming toward
-you just this way?”</p>
-
-<p>Fred threw himself into a crouching posture, similar
-to that which Smirker had assumed a few minutes before,
-drew his head down between his shoulders, distorted
-his features, opened his eyes and mouth to their
-widest extent, spread out his fingers like the claws of a
-wild beast, and crept slowly toward the robber.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t!” cried Smirker.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re goin’ to take you right whar he was seed
-last,” said Silas, who believing that time enough had
-been wasted, thought it best to bring Fred’s pleasantries
-to an end; “and if you don’t tell us what we want to
-know we’ll show him to you as sure as you’re a hoss-thief.
-Put the saddles on the critters, Fred, while I tie
-this feller.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell you what you want to know now,” said
-Smirker, who continued to exhibit the most abject
-terror.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; but you see we want to take you to a place
-whar we can keep you safe till we find out whether or
-not you tell us the truth.”</p>
-
-<p>As Silas spoke he detached a halter from one of the
-bridles hanging on the wall, and with it securely bound
-the arms of his prisoner, who remonstrated earnestly
-against the proceeding, but never once thought of
-resistance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By the time this was done Fred had saddled the two
-horses in the stable, one of which was Snowdrop, and
-the other an animal belonging to Smirker, replaced the
-belt containing the revolver and knife about his waist,
-and also secured possession of the bag containing the
-nuggets and gold-dust. Silas then mounted Smirker’s
-horse, and bending down from his saddle and placing
-his arm about his prisoner, raised him to a seat behind
-him as easily as if he had been a child.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes more the trio were riding down the
-gully at a brisk trot. Silas and his young companion
-held their weapons ready for instant use, and kept a
-good lookout on all sides of them. If they chanced to
-meet any of the band of which their prisoner was a
-member, they might be called upon to fight for possession
-of him. But they accomplished the descent of the
-gorge, crossed the valley, and entered the woods on the
-opposite side without meeting any one, and finally found
-themselves in the vicinity of the rancho. Here they
-became very cautious in their movements, White-horse
-Fred leading the way at a slow walk, and frequently
-stopping to look about and listen. Presently he dismounted
-in a dense thicket, and having tied his nag to
-one of the bushes, seated himself on the ground, his
-example being followed by the trapper. For fully half
-an hour they and their prisoner sat motionless in their
-place of concealment, and at the end of that time Silas
-Roper’s quick ear caught the sound of a stealthy footfall.
-He communicated the fact to Fred in a whisper,
-and the latter was instantly on the alert. He crept away
-through the bushes, and presently came back again.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Dick,” said he, in a low tone; “and after
-Julian again I’ll warrant. Isn’t he persevering? He is
-coming down the hill. Do you think I could get ahead
-of him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you might if you’re right lively,” replied
-the guide. “But be careful of what you do. One mistake
-would spile everything.”</p>
-
-<p>The active Fred was out of sight almost before Silas
-had ceased speaking. Threading his way rapidly but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-noiselessly through the woods, he reached the bottom of
-a wide and deep ravine, which he crossed with a few
-swift bounds. Arriving at the base of a hill on the
-opposite side, he pushed aside a thick cluster of bushes,
-disclosing to view a dark opening, which seemed to extend
-far down into the regions below. Into this he
-dived like a squirrel going into his hole, and in a second
-more was out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>The bushes which concealed the opening had scarcely
-sprung back to their places when Richard Mortimer
-appeared in sight, moving down the ravine with slow
-and cautious steps, and pausing every few feet to look
-about him. When he reached the mouth of the cave
-he backed into the bushes, and concealing himself
-among them, stood for a long time listening and gazing
-up and down the ravine. Being satisfied at last that
-his movements were unobserved, he drew back into the
-opening, and hurried along a narrow passage-way, which
-led first to the store-room before spoken of, and thence
-through the hill to Reginald Mortimer’s rancho.</p>
-
-<p>“I am now going to make amends for the cowardice
-I exhibited last night,” soliloquized Richard Mortimer.
-“I am heartily ashamed of what I did, and I shall
-never again allow myself to be frightened from my purpose
-by so shallow an artifice. It couldn’t have been
-old Juan’s ghost I saw, for there are no such things.
-Neither could it have been the old man himself, for he
-was put out of the way long years ago, and as I was
-present when the deed was committed, and even assisted
-in it, I know that the work was thoroughly done. The
-apparition certainly looked exactly like him, and if it
-comes in my way to-night I am going to find out what
-it is. My Derringers are freshly loaded, and I will see
-what impression the bullets in them will make upon
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>The passage-way was as dark as midnight, but Richard
-Mortimer, being perfectly familiar with all its windings,
-walked rapidly through it, and turning an abrupt bend,
-found himself at the place where the passage opened
-into the store-room. Although he had braced his nerves,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-called all his courage to his aid, and was fully prepared
-to encounter something here, he could not repress the
-thrill of horror that ran through him, or the exclamation
-of astonishment that escaped his lips the moment
-he emerged from the passage-way.</p>
-
-<p>A pale green light, whose source was invisible, and
-through which objects could but be dimly seen as
-through a mist, was streaming through the cellar. To
-Richard Mortimer’s excited imagination it seemed to
-proceed from the bodies of two persons who were slowly
-approaching him from the opposite end of the apartment&mdash;one
-a very aged man, and the other a youth who
-looked remarkably like White-horse Fred. They were
-walking side by side, gazing into each other’s faces, and
-appeared to be conversing earnestly, for their hands
-were constantly employed in gesticulating, and their lips
-moved, although no sound came forth. The light,
-which gave a strange and unearthly appearance to their
-features, seemed to move as they moved; and, instead of
-diffusing itself about the room, was confined to a narrow
-space in the immediate vicinity of the figures. Richard
-Mortimer gazed, and as he gazed felt his courage oozing
-out at the ends of his fingers. His first impulse was to
-turn and take to his heels, but the weakness was only
-momentary. Recovering himself by a strong effort, he
-advanced boldly into the store-room, but its mysterious
-occupants took no notice of him. He drew one of his
-Derringers from his pocket, and leveled it at the old
-man’s breast.</p>
-
-<p>“I have just one bullet apiece for you, my friends,”
-said he, his voice trembling in spite of his efforts to
-control it, “and unless you stop that pantomime and
-speak to me, I will bring this farce to an end in a way
-that you probably have not expected.”</p>
-
-<p>He paused, but no answer was returned, nor was
-there the least change in the expression of the countenances
-of the two figures to show that his words had
-been heard. They continued to approach the place
-where he was standing, talking earnestly and gesticulating.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They were now quite near to him&mdash;so near that
-Richard Mortimer retreated a step or two, and as he did
-so his finger pressed the trigger. There was a bright
-flash, a stunning report, and when the smoke, which for
-a few seconds obscured his vision, cleared away so that
-he could see the effect of his shot, he dropped his empty
-weapon and staggered back as if he were about to fall.
-There stood the old man erect and unharmed, still talking
-with his companion, and neither of them seemed
-to have heard the report of the pistol.</p>
-
-<p>To draw the other and discharge it was but the work
-of an instant, but it had no visible effect upon the objects
-of his vengeance, who continued to advance, the
-light keeping pace with them, and their faces appearing
-to assume a more ghostly and unearthly look the nearer
-they approached.</p>
-
-<p>And now Richard Mortimer discovered something
-that had hitherto escaped his notice&mdash;a tiny stream of
-blood which was trickling down the old man’s temple,
-and two holes in the breast of his buckskin jacket.
-White-horse Fred was as wet as if he had just come out
-of the lake, and the water dripped from his garments as
-he moved along. The sight reminded Richard Mortimer
-of one memorable night when scenes of horror and
-bloodshed had been enacted at the rancho, and drove
-away every particle of his courage. With a wild shriek
-of terror he turned and fled like the wind.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXIII.<br />
-<span class="pch">JULIAN MAKES A DISCOVERY.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/do.jpg" width="80" height="82" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">OUR HERO rode away from the cabin which
-had been the scene of his recent thrilling
-adventure in an ecstasy of bewilderment
-and alarm. He could not find a satisfactory
-explanation for a single one of the strange incidents
-that had happened there&mdash;they were all shrouded in a
-mystery which he could not penetrate. Of one thing,
-however, he was certain, and that was that that gallant
-young fellow, whoever he was, who had so narrowly escaped
-death at Smirker’s hands, should not remain long
-a prisoner. He would have him out of that cabin if
-there was any way by which his release could be effected,
-and find out what he meant by claiming to be Julian
-Mortimer. Perhaps that “watchful friend,” who had
-addressed that note to him and visited his room the night
-before while he was asleep, could tell him what ought
-to be done under the circumstances, if he could only
-obtain an interview with him. This he would use his
-best endeavors to accomplish by returning at once to
-his uncle’s rancho, and remaining awake all night. If
-his mysterious friend should come into his room before
-morning he would be sure to see him.</p>
-
-<p>Julian’s new horse was quite as swift as Snowdrop,
-and showed the same willingness to go ahead. He flew
-down the rocky path at break-neck speed, the bay quietly
-following. For two hours he continued that mad gallop,
-and at the end of that time suddenly slackened his pace
-to a walk. This aroused Julian, who straightened up
-and looked about him, expecting to see his uncle’s
-rancho close before him; but not a building of any description
-was in sight. His horse was toiling up a steep
-mountain path, which led through a wilderness of trees<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-and rocks that Julian did not remember to have seen
-before. He knew that he had not passed that way in
-the morning. He had been so completely absorbed in
-his reflections that he had not thought of directing his
-steed, but trusted to the animal to carry him back to
-his uncle’s rancho. But now he remembered, with a
-thrill of terror, that he was not riding Snowdrop, but a
-horse belonging to a robber&mdash;one, too, which was in the
-habit of making frequent and perhaps daily journeys
-between certain points. The animal seemed to know
-where he was going, but Julian did not. He had not
-seen the valley since he left Smirker’s cabin, and that
-proved that the horse, without attracting his attention,
-had turned into another path, and was carrying him
-deeper into the mountains. But to what place? To another
-robber station beyond a doubt. Julian shuddered
-at the thought.</p>
-
-<p>To add to his alarm, night was rapidly coming on,
-the sky was overcast with clouds of inky blackness, the
-lightning was playing about the mountain tops, and the
-hoarse mutterings of a storm could be heard in the distance.
-What was to be done under such circumstances?
-He could never retrace his steps and find his way back
-to the valley in the dark. He knew by the experience
-he had already had with Snowdrop that the animals
-White-horse Fred rode, having become accustomed to a
-particular line of duty, objected to having their usual
-manner of proceeding interrupted; and if the nag on
-which he was now mounted should show the same disinclination
-to turn back that Snowdrop had exhibited
-to leave Smirker’s cabin, what could he do? He would
-be obliged to depend entirely on himself, and he would
-become hopelessly bewildered before he had gone a hundred
-yards. To camp beside the path and wait for daylight
-would be equally hazardous, for the crash of fallen
-timbers in the distance told him that the swiftly approaching
-storm was sweeping every movable thing before
-it. He must go on&mdash;he had no alternative.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s some consolation in knowing that I can’t
-get into a much worse scrape than that which I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-just got out of,” thought Julian. “If I don’t succeed
-in passing myself off as White-horse Fred, I will reveal
-myself and trust to luck. In that event the robbers will
-only make a prisoner of me, for I am worth too much
-to them to be harmed. Smirker said so, although I
-haven’t the least idea what he meant by it.”</p>
-
-<p>Having settled this point, Julian put spurs to his
-horse, which, having by this time gained the summit of
-the hill, set off at the top of his speed. The gloom of night
-settled rapidly over the mountains, growing more and
-more intense every instant, and finally even the nearest
-objects were shut out from his view, save when the occasional
-flashes of lightning burst from the thick blackness
-overhead. To increase his uneasiness, he became
-aware that the path over which he was being carried
-with all the speed his horse could command ran along
-the brink of a deep precipice. Trusting entirely to the
-white nag, and leaving the bay to take care of himself,
-Julian clung with a death-grip to the horn of his saddle,
-closing his eyes when the lightning illuminated the
-scene, that he might not see the dangers before him,
-and then when darkness once more settled over the
-mountains holding his breath in suspense, momentarily
-expecting to find himself whirling headlong to destruction.
-But the sure-footed animal, having carried the
-real White-horse Fred along that same chasm on many
-a night like this, was too familiar with the way to run
-into any dangers.</p>
-
-<p>Nearer and nearer came the storm, a roar like that of
-a thousand express trains filling the canyon behind him,
-the lightning flashing incessantly, the thunder booming
-and echoing among the cliffs like rapid discharges of
-heavy artillery, the crash of falling timber sounding
-louder and plainer every instant, and faster and faster flew
-the white horse with his terrified rider. He sped along
-like a bird on the wing, never once abating his speed even
-in the roughest and most difficult places, and finally, to
-Julian’s immense relief, carried him into a thickly
-wooded ravine, and after making several abrupt turns
-and plunging through a dense thicket of bushes, came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-to a sudden halt. On the instant the boy placed his
-hand to his mouth and gave a perfect imitation of
-White-horse Fred’s whistle.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay! ay!” came the response through the darkness,
-the voice sounding close at hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Whew!” panted Julian, drawing his handkerchief
-across his dripping forehead. “Wasn’t it lucky that I
-had my wits about me? I heard a window close, and a
-bolt rattle as it was pushed into its socket; and that
-proves that some one heard my approach and was on
-the lookout. If I hadn’t given the signal just as I did
-I might have been shot. Wouldn’t I give something to
-know what I have got to go through with now?”</p>
-
-<p>Julian could not see even the faintest outline of a
-house before him, but nevertheless there was one there.
-The sound of voices and the tramping of heavy feet on
-a stone floor came faintly to his ears, followed by the
-grating of bolts and locks; and presently a door swung
-open close at his side&mdash;so close that if he had thrust out
-his hand he could have touched it&mdash;a flood of light
-streamed out into the darkness, and a man with a lantern
-appeared on the threshold. Julian’s horse at once
-moved forward, carrying his rider into a stable similar
-to the one adjoining Smirker’s cabin, and the bay followed
-closely at his heels. Scarcely had they reached
-the shelter of the friendly roof when the storm burst
-forth in all its fury.</p>
-
-<p>Julian rolled off his horse rather than dismounted,
-and the hostler, after closing and fastening the door,
-held up his lantern and peered sharply into his face.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, boy!” he exclaimed in great amazement.</p>
-
-<p>“It is all up with me now,” thought Julian. “I am
-discovered at last.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir!” continued the man, after a pause. “I
-have seen something to-night I never expected to see in
-my life&mdash;White-horse Fred frightened.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you would be frightened if you were in my
-place,” returned Julian, greatly relieved.</p>
-
-<p>“The soldiers haven’t been after you, have they?”</p>
-
-<p>The boy replied in the negative.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s the storm, then. It’s awful, that’s a fact.
-I never heard such thunder or such a roaring of wind.
-You got here just in time, didn’t you? Listen to that
-rain. The water in the gullies will be breast high to a
-horse in five minutes. Where did this fellow come
-from?” asked the hostler, leading the bay into one of
-the stalls.</p>
-
-<p>“From Fort Stoughton. He was stolen from the
-major.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is this all you’ve got? Haven’t you brought any
-dust or nuggets?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. That was all Smirker had to give me.”</p>
-
-<p>“The fellows up there are getting lazy. They never
-send anything but horses lately. What do you know
-that is interesting or exciting?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing. Smirker told me to tell you that the captain’s
-cub had got back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glory!” exclaimed the man, looking over his shoulder
-at Julian, and bringing his horny palms together
-with a noise like the report of a pistol.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know what he meant by it,” added Julian,
-hoping that the man would finish the story Smirker had
-been relating to him when White-horse Fred arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course you don’t, but I do; and it is the best
-piece of news I ever heard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is a secret known only to a few of us whom
-the captain is willing to trust. But, of course, as you
-are a faithful member of the band, you will one day
-share in the benefits of it. I’d like to tell you, but I’m
-sworn to tell nobody. Your supper is waiting.”</p>
-
-<p>That was something Julian was glad to hear. Uncle
-Reginald had kept him in such a state of excitement
-that morning that he had eaten very little breakfast,
-and he was as hungry as a wolf. Fortunately there was
-but one door leading out of the stable beside the one at
-which he had come in, and he knew which way to go to
-find the living room of the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Being satisfied now that he could pass himself off anywhere
-for White-horse Fred, he boldly pushed open the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-door and found himself in the presence of two rough-looking
-men, who were stretched out on benches, with
-their saddles under their heads for pillows.</p>
-
-<p>At one end of the room was a table, made of unplaned
-boards, upon which was a goodly supply of corn-bread
-and bacon, a tin plate with a fork beside it, and a quart
-cup, which a villainous-looking Mexican, who entered
-from another door just as Julian came in from the stable,
-was filling with very black-looking coffee. The men
-on the benches greeted him with rude cordiality, the
-Mexican bowed to him, and Julian, assuming an air of
-carelessness and indifference that he was very far from
-feeling, threw his sombrero into one corner of the room
-and seated himself at the table.</p>
-
-<p>The nervousness and timidity he felt on first entering
-the room very soon began to wear away. The men,
-after making some coarse jests concerning his new
-clothes, entered into a lively conversation with him, and
-asked a multitude of questions about persons and places
-which Julian had never seen or heard of. From some
-remarks they let fall he found out why they were so inquisitive.
-They were obliged to remain in that cabin
-month in and month out, scarcely over stirring beyond
-the threshold; they never saw any new faces except
-those of the captain and the two agents who brought
-the stolen property there and took it away again; and
-they knew nothing of what was going on in the outside
-world except what their visitors told them. Julian
-gratified their curiosity by relating a very few things
-that had happened that day in Smirker’s cabin, and a
-good many things that had not happened. He repeated
-every word that had been told him about the “captain’s
-cub,” in the hope that the men would tell him the rest
-of the story, but in this he was disappointed. They
-expressed unbounded delight at the intelligence, but
-said, somewhat fiercely, that Smirker ought to have held
-his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>But little was said after this. The men having listened
-to all Julian had to tell them, rearranged their
-blankets and prepared to go to sleep; and the boy, being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-left to himself, gave his whole attention to the corn-bread
-and bacon. When he finished his supper and
-arose from the table, the robbers were both snoring
-lustily.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the next thing on the programme, I wonder?”
-soliloquized Julian, who, not knowing what else
-to do, walked about the room looking at the weapons
-which hung upon the wall. “I am afraid to make a
-move in any direction for fear I shall act so unlike
-White-horse Fred that somebody will suspect me. I’ll
-stroll around a little and see what sort of a place I have
-got into.”</p>
-
-<p>The Mexican who had served up the supper came in
-at this moment to clear away the dishes, and when he
-went out again, Julian walked to the door through
-which he disappeared, and stood there looking about
-him, and wondering if it would be safe to venture beyond
-it. It led into a long, narrow hall, at the opposite
-end of which was a second door that communicated
-with the kitchen. This door was open, and the sounds
-that issued from the room told him that the Mexican
-was engaged in washing the supper dishes.</p>
-
-<p>After a moment’s pause Julian kept slowly on, intending
-to take a peep into the kitchen; but when he
-had gone about half-way through the hall, he saw another
-door at his left hand, which he had not before
-noticed. It was open, and led into a room which presented
-a great contrast to the one Julian had just
-left.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/ill-203.jpg" width="400" height="229"
- alt=""
- title="" />
- <div class="caption"><p class="pc400">“<span class="smcap">He sat by the table, with his head resting upon his hand.</span>”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was nicely furnished, carpeted, provided with a
-comfortable bed, and there were ornaments on the mantel
-over the fire-place, and pictures hanging upon the
-walls. In the middle of the floor was a table with the
-remains of a supper upon it, and beside it sat a tall,
-military-looking gentleman dressed in a faded suit of
-black. He sat with his head resting upon his hand,
-and his eyes fastened upon the floor; and there was
-something in his face, which was turned partly toward
-him, that attracted the boy’s attention and excited his
-sympathy at once. He knew instinctively that the man
-was in trouble. A second glance showed him that he
-was a prisoner&mdash;that he was in double irons.</p>
-
-<p>Who was he, and what had he done to incur the displeasure
-of the robbers that they should keep him so
-closely confined? If Julian had been able to answer
-this question, and had known the full value of the discovery
-he had just made, he would have been astonished
-and excited beyond measure.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXIV.<br />
-<span class="pch">PEDRO MAKES ANOTHER.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dt.jpg" width="80" height="81" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">THE PRISONER raised his head with a weary,
-languid air when Julian stopped before his
-door, but no sooner did his eyes rest full upon
-the boy than his whole appearance changed
-as if by magic. The look of utter dejection faded
-from his face, and was succeeded by an expression in
-which excitement and hope were strangely blended.
-Placing his finger upon his lips with a warning gesture,
-he arose to his feet, and then Julian saw that he was
-even more securely confined than he had supposed, being
-chained to the floor.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner, who was considerably past the prime of
-life, was a man of very commanding appearance, and in
-his youthful days must have been a model of strength
-and agility; but now his frame was emaciated to the last
-degree, his cheeks were pale and sunken, and his eyes,
-which were fastened eagerly upon the boy, had a wild,
-defiant look in them.</p>
-
-<p>As he arose slowly and tremblingly to his feet, he
-beckoned to Julian impatiently, almost fiercely, to enter
-the room, at the same time drawing a letter from his
-pocket and tossing it toward him. It fell upon the carpet
-just inside the door, and Julian, filled with wonder,
-stepped forward and picked it up. An instant afterward
-he would have given everything he ever hoped to
-possess if he could have recalled the action.</p>
-
-<p>The rattling of dishes in the kitchen suddenly ceased,
-and the Mexican cook came into the hall, humming a
-tune and snapping his fingers as if he felt at peace with
-himself and all the world, and Julian knew, as well as
-if it had been told him, that he was coming into that
-room.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The anxiety and alarm he exhibited were fully shared
-by the prisoner, whose face was the color of ashes. He
-could not have been more fully alive to the dangers of
-the boy’s situation if he had been in the same peril
-himself. After looking all around the room, searching
-for some avenue of escape or place of concealment, he
-pointed with a quick movement behind the door, and
-sinking back into his chair rested his head upon his
-hand. Julian understood the gesture and was quick to
-obey it. He dodged behind the door like a flash of
-light, and a moment later the Mexican came into the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you finished your supper?” he demanded
-roughly.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” replied the prisoner. “Come in again in a
-few minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I want you to hurry up; do you understand
-that? I am not going to wait all night for those
-dishes.”</p>
-
-<p>The Mexican went out again and stood looking up
-and down the hall. Once he started toward the living-room,
-and the movement gave Julian new cause for
-alarm. What if he should go in there and discover his
-absence? What would the robbers do to him if they
-should find him concealed in the room with their prisoner?
-The fears these questions conjured up were
-speedily set at rest, however, for the man turned about
-and went into the kitchen again; and when the rattling
-of the dishes told Julian that he had resumed his work,
-he thrust the letter into his pocket, slipped from behind
-the door, and with noiseless steps retraced his way to
-the living-room. He arrived there just in time to
-escape danger from a new source, for the door of the
-stable opened and the hostler entered. He found the
-boy seated beside the table, with his arms folded and
-his head resting upon them. He had assumed this position
-in order to conceal his face, which he knew was as
-pale as that of the dead.</p>
-
-<p>“Wake up here, Fred!” cried the man, striking Julian
-on the shoulder with his open hand. “You’ve no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-business to go to sleep. You know it’s against orders
-for anybody except us four fellows to stay in this rancho
-all night. The storm is over, and you can start back
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Start back!” thought Julian, raising his head and
-rubbing his eyes as if he were very sleepy. “Must I
-ride along that dreadful chasm again to-night? Where
-will that horse take me? Back to Smirker’s, probably.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will have a pleasanter time going than you did
-coming,” continued the hostler. “The moon is shining
-brightly.”</p>
-
-<p>“Any messages?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“None that I think of. Be down again to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p>The boy, replying in the affirmative, accompanied the
-hostler to the stable, and in a few minutes more heard
-the heavy door locked behind him, and was flying along
-the zigzag path that led from the rancho to the chasm.</p>
-
-<p>The ride proved to be much more to his liking than
-the one he had taken a few hours before. The moon
-lighted up every object within the range of his vision,
-and he had a fair view of the dangers through which
-he had passed. The horse carried him along the chasm
-in safety, and when that was passed Julian threw the
-reins loose on the animal’s neck and gave himself up to
-his reflections. Of course the prisoner occupied all his
-thoughts. He pulled the letter from his pocket and
-looked at it on all sides. There was something written
-on it&mdash;probably the address of the person to whom it
-was to be delivered; but Julian, with the aid of no better
-light than that afforded by the moon, could not
-make it out. He had two prisoners to assist now, he
-told himself&mdash;Smirker’s captive and the old gentleman
-who had given him the letter. The former, as we
-know, was no longer in need of help; but the other
-was, and in Julian he had a friend worth having. He
-had others, too, shrewd, active, daring men, who had
-labored unceasingly for years to discover his whereabouts
-and effect his release, but without the least hope
-of success. Silas Roper would have given the best
-years of his life to have known what Julian knew.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It seemed to our hero that the ride would never come
-to an end. He made no attempt to guide his horse, but
-kept a good lookout on both sides in the hope of seeing
-some familiar landmark. He did not intend to be carried
-back to Smirker’s cabin if he could prevent it. An
-hour later he emerged from a deep ravine into a broad,
-level valley, and then he knew where he was. His
-horse showed a desire to carry him up a narrow path
-which led to a high hill beyond; but Julian insisted on
-having his own way, and by the help of his spurs soon
-induced the animal to yield to his guidance. The five
-miles that lay between him and his uncle’s rancho were
-quickly accomplished, and when Julian drew rein in
-front of the gate he felt as if a mountain had suddenly
-been removed from his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“I never expected to see this place again,” thought
-he, as he pounded upon the gate with the handle of his
-hunting-knife. “Uncle Reginald told me this morning
-that he wanted me to feel that I had a right to go
-and come when I pleased, and I guess he will think I
-haven’t been slow to take advantage of his permission.
-It must be long after midnight, but I can’t go to sleep,
-for I don’t want to miss seeing that watchful friend of
-mine, if he comes about.”</p>
-
-<p>The furious blows Julian showered upon the gate
-brought the dogs out in full chorus, and in a few minutes
-Pedro also appeared with his lantern. He must
-have known who it was demanding admittance, for he
-did not stop to look through the wicket, but opened the
-gate at once, and Julian rode in.</p>
-
-<p>“I am sorry to be obliged to disturb you at this hour,”
-said the boy, as he dismounted in front of the door of
-the rancho, “but I couldn’t help it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was up and waiting for you,” was the reply.
-“Your uncle has given me orders to hold myself in
-readiness to attend to you at any hour of the day or
-night; so you see&mdash;well&mdash;I&mdash;<i>Carrajo</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>The Mexican, who had taken Julian’s bridle from his
-hand, ceased speaking very suddenly, raised his lantern,
-and after surveying the horse all over, opened his eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-to their widest extent, and broke out into a volley of
-Spanish oaths and ejaculations indicative of the greatest
-astonishment. He had made an alarming discovery.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what is it?” asked Julian. “Do you see anything
-strange?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” answered the man hastily. “Take this lantern
-to light you to your room, and I will put your horse in
-the stable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is anything new going to happen, I wonder?”
-thought Julian, as he took the proffered lantern and
-made his way along the hall to the sleeping apartment.
-“Pedro has found something to surprise him, and I
-can’t imagine what it can be. I guess Uncle Reginald
-would be surprised, too, if he knew where I have been
-and what I have seen since he last saw me.”</p>
-
-<p>Never before had a room looked so cozy and comfortable,
-or a bed so inviting, as Julian’s did that night.
-He was almost exhausted by his long ride and the excitement
-through which he had passed, but he had a
-matter of importance before him, and he could not
-think of retiring. His first move was to light the
-candle that stood on the table and extinguish the lantern,
-and his second to draw his easy-chair beside the table
-and take the mysterious letter from his pocket. It was
-soiled and crumpled, and Julian thought it must have
-been written a long time, and that the gentleman had
-carried it constantly about his person, waiting for an
-opportunity to give it to some one. The words written
-on the outside were:</p>
-
-<p class="p1">“<i>To any good Christian into whose hands this letter
-may come.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class="p1">“That means me,” thought the boy. “That poor
-gentleman is in great trouble, I know, and I am Christian
-enough to help him out of it if I can.”</p>
-
-<p>He opened the letter, little dreaming what a surprise
-was in store for him, and looked at the signature to see
-who the writer was. He looked, and the blood went
-rushing back upon his heart, leaving his face ghastly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-pale. He rubbed his eyes, held the letter closer to the
-candle, and slowly read aloud the words:</p>
-
-
-<p class="p1">“Yours, in dire distress, <span class="smcap">Samuel Mortimer</span>,</p>
-<p class="pi4">“Late Major of the Army of the United States.”</p>
-
-<p class="p1">“It is from my father!” gasped Julian, sinking helplessly
-back into his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it? Then give it to me,” said a stern voice close
-at his elbow.</p>
-
-<p>A hand suddenly appeared from behind his chair, and
-clutching the letter, attempted to snatch it from his
-grasp, but the boy’s fingers closed upon it with a most
-determined grip. Thinking of the emigrant, he started
-up with a cry of alarm to find himself confronted by
-Uncle Reginald, whose face was as black as a thunder-cloud.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXV.<br />
-<span class="pch">HOW IT RESULTED.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dw.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">WHEN PEDRO took charge of Julian’s horse he
-did not lead him directly to the stable, but to
-the back part of the house, where he left him
-until he could run into the kitchen and procure
-another lantern. When he came out again he made
-a thorough examination of the animal, and having at
-last satisfied himself that he made no mistake, he ran
-into the house and pounded loudly upon the door of
-Uncle Reginald’s bed-room. The summons quickly
-brought that gentleman to his feet, and when the
-numerous bolts and locks had been undone, Pedro
-pushed open the door and entered without ceremony.
-The excitement and alarm depicted upon his features
-must have been contagious, for no sooner did Mr.
-Mortimer glance at his face than his own assumed a
-very anxious look.</p>
-
-<p>“Did Julian ride Snowdrop away this morning, or did
-I dream it?” asked Pedro, before he was fairly inside the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“You did not dream it,” was the reply. “He did.
-Why do you ask the question?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because here’s the very mischief to pay. I told you
-just how it would be if you turned that boy loose to run
-about the country like a wild colt. I shouldn’t be surprised
-if your little game was brought to an end in less
-than twenty-four hours.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” cried Uncle Reginald in alarm.
-“Speak out plainly.”</p>
-
-<p>“I mean that if Julian rode Snowdrop away he has
-brought Bob back&mdash;that’s what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p>Pedro’s employer was utterly confounded by this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-intelligence. His under jaw dropped down, and he
-looked at his companion without saying a word.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the truth?” continued the Mexican. “Now
-where did he leave Snowdrop, and where did he get
-Bob? Either at Smirker’s or at the <i>other place</i>; and if
-he has been <i>there</i>, it proves something.”</p>
-
-<p>“It does, indeed,” cried Reginald Mortimer, turning
-white to the lips. “It proves that some of my trusted
-men have turned against me; for he could never have
-gained admittance to either place except through
-treachery. I must talk to him, and see if he has learned
-anything he ought not to know.”</p>
-
-<p>Uncle Reginald threw on his clothes with all possible
-haste, and hurried along the hall to Julian’s room. The
-door opened when he turned the knob, and entering
-without attracting the boy’s attention, he found him in
-the act of reading a letter. When Uncle Reginald saw
-the letter all his worst suspicions were confirmed. He
-knew where Julian had been, and he knew, too, by
-whom the missive had been written, and what it contained.
-Approaching the boy’s chair with a cat-like
-tread, he leaned over his shoulder and made an attempt
-to take the paper out of his hand; but Julian detected
-the move in time to defeat it. He sprung to his feet,
-and for a moment the two stood holding the letter between
-them, and glaring at one another like wild beasts
-at bay. Uncle Reginald was astonished at the look of
-defiance and determination he saw in the eyes that were
-fastened upon him. It taught him something of the
-spirit of the youth with whom he had to deal.</p>
-
-<p>“Julian,” said he, in a tone of voice which he intended
-should frighten the boy into obedience to his commands,
-“I have a good deal to say to you; but, in the first place,
-give me that letter.”</p>
-
-<p>“I would as readily give you my life,” was the prompt
-reply.</p>
-
-<p>“Let go, I tell you,” said Uncle Reginald, in a still
-sterner voice, making a vain effort to unclasp the sinewy
-fingers that were closed upon the letter.</p>
-
-<p>“Let go yourself. It is from my father. I have
-more right to it than you have, and I will not let go.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I am your guardian, Julian, and have the right to
-control you, as you will quickly learn to your cost, if you
-do not obey me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care if you are the King of the Sandwich
-Islands, you shan’t have this letter. I don’t believe you
-are my guardian. You have done nothing but tell me
-one falsehood after another ever since I have been here.
-You said my father was dead, and he isn’t. He is alive,
-and I have seen him&mdash;seen him, too, in prison and
-chained to the floor. You say you are my uncle, and
-you are not. You have no more right to the name you
-bear than your Mexican servant has&mdash;not a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who told you all this?” asked Uncle Reginald,
-making a strong effort to keep back the tempest of passion
-which was almost ready to break forth.</p>
-
-<p>“Your man Smirker. I am going to have him
-arrested as soon as I can go to the fort. He killed a
-miner and stole his money; he told me so.”</p>
-
-<p>“He told you so!” repeated Reginald Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He mistook me for a rascally accomplice of
-his&mdash;White-horse Fred.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did Smirker introduce you into Hale’s rancho&mdash;I
-mean the place where you saw this prisoner?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. The horse he gave me in exchange for mine
-introduced me there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, go on. What else do you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know you had better let go this letter instantly;
-for if you don’t&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Julian finished the sentence by placing his hand upon
-the butt of his revolver; but before he could draw it
-from his belt Reginald Mortimer released his hold upon
-the letter, and bounding forward, seized the boy by the
-throat, and attempted to throw him to the floor.</p>
-
-<p>Julian was neither surprised nor frightened. He
-retained his presence of mind. His first thought was
-not of defense but of the letter; and having secured that
-by thrusting it into his bosom he was ready for the
-struggle. How the contest would have ended if he had
-been left to himself it is hard to tell; but help was close
-at hand. The hangings at the foot of the bed were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-thrust cautiously aside, and a pair of eyes appeared and
-looked into the room. They watched the combatants a
-moment and then disappeared, and shortly afterward
-the hangings were again raised and three figures sprung
-from behind them. The foremost was Silas Roper;
-close at his heels followed the strange horseman whom
-Julian had met at Smirker’s cabin; and the rear was
-brought up by the feeble old man, who, by simply
-walking across the cellar the night before, had saved
-our hero from being carried away captive by Richard
-Mortimer.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the door through which Uncle Reginald
-had entered was cautiously opened, and another
-head was thrust into the room. It was the head of
-Pedro, the Mexican, who, after just one glance at what
-was going on inside the apartment, drew back out of
-sight.</p>
-
-<p>“The jig is danced at last,” said he to himself, as he
-ran along the hall, “and those of us who are found in
-these parts in the morning will be called upon to settle
-with the fiddler. It is nothing more than I expected,
-but I know how to block this little game.”</p>
-
-<p>Pedro went straight to the stable, led out the horse
-Julian had brought there a short time before, and
-springing upon his back, rode off toward the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>Silas and his friends had come into that room on
-business, and their actions indicated that they were disposed
-to waste no time in carrying it out. The trapper
-walked straight up to Reginald Mortimer, and seizing
-him by the collar and tearing his hand from the boy’s
-throat, threw him at full length on the floor. Julian
-staggered to his feet as soon as he was relieved of the
-weight of his antagonist, to find a pair of strong arms
-clasped about his neck, and to hear himself addressed
-in terms of endearment, to which he listened like one
-in a dream. Then he felt himself forced into a chair,
-and knew that Silas came up and shook hands with
-him, and that he was followed by the feeble old man,
-who said something that was doubtless intended for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-welcome; but Julian’s mind was in such a whirl of
-excitement that he could not understand a word he
-uttered.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you, anyhow?” asked
-White-horse Fred, bringing his hand down upon Julian’s
-shoulder with a force that fairly made the
-boy’s teeth rattle. “Can’t you say you are glad to
-see me, or are you above owning a brother who belongs
-to a band of robbers?”</p>
-
-<p>“Let me collect my thoughts a little, and then I will
-talk to you,” replied Julian. “I can’t quite understand
-all this.”</p>
-
-<p>“And there’s another as much in the dark as you
-are,” said Fred, pointing to Reginald Mortimer. “You
-perhaps imagine you are dreaming, and I know he
-wishes he was, don’t you, captain? There are two of
-us here whom you never expected to see in the flesh
-again; are there not? Take your time, Julian, and
-think the matter over, and while you are about it I will
-look around and pack up a few articles that may be of
-use to you, for we are going to find new quarters for
-you now.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian settled back in a chair and gazed long and
-earnestly at all the persons in the room&mdash;at the old
-Mexican who stood at his side leaning upon his staff; at
-Silas, sitting upon the bed and smiling complacently at
-him as if he enjoyed his bewilderment; at Reginald
-Mortimer, lying bound and helpless on the floor, and
-who, like Julian, was almost overwhelmed with astonishment;
-and then at his brother, who was skipping
-about the room, overhauling the bureau, wardrobe and
-book-case, now and then depositing some articles which
-he took from them upon a blanket he had spread on
-the floor.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>My brother!</i>” said Julian aloud. “How strangely
-it sounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“Doesn’t it!” replied Fred, pausing in his work and
-looking over his shoulder at Julian. “But it is the
-truth. I don’t know what you think about it, but I am
-delighted to claim the relationship. A brother is something<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-worth having out here in this wilderness, I tell
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is your name?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Fred&mdash;White-horse Fred, if it suits you better&mdash;sworn
-agent for a band of outlaws and rascals of which
-our worthy uncle here is the acknowledged leader. Any
-objections to my company?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you are not dead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Do I look like it?”</p>
-
-<p>“And you are not <i>Julian</i> Mortimer?”</p>
-
-<p>“By no means. How could I be when you are that
-lucky individual?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then why did you tell Smirker so?”</p>
-
-<p>“To help you out of a scrape,” replied Fred, picking
-up the bundle he had made and throwing it over his
-shoulder. “But I say, Julian,” he added, a shade of
-anxiety overspreading his merry countenance, “of
-course you are not aware of the fact, but you have
-jeopardized the life of one who is very dear to both of
-us by getting into this fuss with Uncle Reginald.”</p>
-
-<p>“How?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, our father has been a prisoner in the hands of
-the band of which I am a member for eight years, and
-if anything happens to the captain&mdash;Uncle Reginald&mdash;his
-jailors have orders to shoot him as soon as word
-comes to their ears.”</p>
-
-<p>“The news is on the way to them now,” said the robber
-chief, with savage emphasis, “and he will be shot
-before daylight. Pedro is already on his road to the
-mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who sent him?” demanded White-horse Fred.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect he sent himself,” cried Julian, starting
-from his chair in great excitement. “I saw him put his
-head in at the door just as you came in. We must be
-off at once.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where will we go, and what shall we do?” asked
-Fred. “We don’t know where father is; if we did, we
-should have released him before this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I know where he is, and I have seen him.
-More than that, I’ve got a letter from him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Hold hard thar!” exclaimed Silas, as Julian drew
-the letter from his pocket, and moved nearer the candle.
-“Don’t read a word of it here, for thar’s no knowin’
-how many pairs of ears thar may be listenin’ to it.
-Come with us, an’ we will talk this matter over.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian had never seen three persons more excited
-than the trapper and his companions were over the announcement
-he had just made. It did not take the
-form of words, but showed itself in their countenances,
-and in their hurried, nervous actions. They
-prepared to leave the room at once. Silas raised the
-captive robber to his shoulder as if he had been a sack
-of flour, while the old Mexican skipped before him
-like a boy of sixteen, and held up the hangings which
-concealed the entrance to the secret passage-way.
-White-horse Fred, who had looked into the muzzle of
-Smirker’s revolver without flinching or even changing
-color, was pale enough now, and the hand with which
-he extended Julian’s sombrero to him now trembled
-like a leaf. They left the room without saying a word,
-and followed Silas, who led the way along the passage
-to the cellar, where they found a man with a lantern
-waiting for them. It was Romez, the hostler. He
-was greatly astonished to see the trapper carrying Reginald
-Mortimer on his shoulder, but without asking any
-questions he turned and mounted a ladder which rested
-against the wall of the cellar.</p>
-
-<p>While Julian was going up he had leisure to make an
-examination of the store-house. It was a natural cave
-in the mountain, and seemed to have no roof&mdash;at least
-there was none that could be seen. The wall against
-which the ladder was placed arose for the height of
-thirty feet, as smooth and perpendicular as if it had
-been fashioned by the hand of man, and terminated in
-a broad, level platform. When the parties stepped
-upon this platform they paused until Romez had drawn
-up the ladder, and then mounted to a second ledge of
-rock higher up the cavern. This ladder was also drawn
-up, and the journey resumed along a narrow, slippery
-path, that finally ended in a dark opening, which proved
-to be the mouth of a smaller cave.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The interior of this cavern presented a scene which
-filled Julian with astonishment. Almost the first object
-his eyes rested upon was Smirker’s burly form
-stretched out on a little pallet in one corner. He was
-securely bound, and did not look much now like the
-reckless desperado he had appeared when Julian first
-met him in his cabin. But the presence of this man did
-not occasion him so much astonishment as the sight of
-the gold that was scattered about the room. He saw it
-there in all shapes&mdash;in dust, nuggets, quartz and coin.
-It was stowed away in chests, tied up in little bags, and
-packed upon shelves and piled in corners as if it had
-been merchandise of some description. Julian had
-never dreamed that all the gold mines of California
-could produce as much of the precious metal as he saw
-collected in that one small room. The cave was also
-used as a receptacle for various odds and ends&mdash;rifles,
-revolvers, muskets, hunting-knives, saddles and bridles.
-As Julian glanced about him he told himself that he
-knew now what had become of some of the articles Uncle
-Reginald had missed from his rancho.</p>
-
-<p>“During your travels to-day did you hear Smirker or
-anybody else say anything about some hidden treasure
-which he hoped to handle some day?” asked White-horse
-Fred.</p>
-
-<p>Julian replied that he did.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, here it is. This is the cause of all our trouble.
-If it hadn’t been for these yellow boys we might have
-been a united, happy family to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t reckon it’ll be very long afore we’re all together
-agin like we used to be,” said Silas, as he deposited
-his prisoner upon the pallet beside the other. “If the
-major is where we can get at him we’ll have him out
-this very night. How did you find him, Julian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Smirker gave me a horse in exchange for mine that
-took me straight to his prison,” replied the boy. And
-then he went on to relate, in a few rapid words, how his
-curiosity had led him to walk about the rancho, and that
-while on his way to the kitchen he had found the prisoner.
-He described, too, how narrowly he had escaped<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-discovery by the Mexican when he came in to remove
-the supper dishes, and told what had passed between
-Uncle Reginald and himself prior to the arrival of Silas
-and his friends.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a lucky fellow, Julian,” said White-horse
-Fred, when he had finished his story. “I have been
-making regular daily journeys to that rancho for more
-than a year, and never saw or heard anything to lead me
-to suspect that affairs were not all right there. I used
-to wonder why there were four men at that station
-and only one, or at the most two, at the others, and
-have thought it strange that they should always be so
-particular to hurry me away. No matter how bad the
-weather was they wouldn’t let me stay all night. But
-what is to be done, Silas? Pedro has gone to the mountains
-to warn Hale and his crowd, and if he gets there
-before we do, the discovery Julian has made will be of
-no value to us.”</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tain’t wuth while to do anything in a hurry,” replied
-the trapper. “Let’s hear what’s in that letter.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian drew the letter from his pocket, and taking his
-stand near the lantern, began reading it aloud.</p>
-
-<p>We do not reproduce it because its contents have no
-bearing upon our story. It was just such a letter as any
-one of us would have tried to write had we been placed
-in Major Mortimer’s situation. It described some events
-that happened long years before, and which we shall
-presently hear from the lips of White-horse Fred, and
-pleaded for assistance in language that would have wrung
-tears of pity from any but a savage.</p>
-
-<p>Julian’s cheeks were wet long before he ceased reading,
-and once he stopped and turned toward the robber
-chief as if he had half a mind to take an ample revenge
-on him. The old Mexican wept like a child, and gave
-vent to his indignation by pounding on the floor with
-his staff; while Silas and White-horse Fred stood, with
-clinched hands and compressed lips, gazing at Julian
-with eyes that would grow dim in spite of them.</p>
-
-<p>A dead silence succeeded the reading of the letter,
-which was finally broken by the trapper, who, after a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-short consultation with the two boys, determined upon
-a plan of action. This he explained in a few words,
-and preparations were at once made to carry it into
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving the old Mexican to watch the prisoners, the
-rest of the party descended to the cellar and thence made
-their way into the stables. Julian mounted Snowdrop
-and Fred went in pursuit of her mate, but he was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Good luck attends us on all sides to-night!” said he
-gleefully. “Here were a dozen horses in the stable, and
-instead of taking a fresh one that blockhead Pedro selected
-an animal which has already traveled forty miles
-to-night. So much the better for us. We’ll overtake
-him before he has gone five miles.”</p>
-
-<p>The party mounted in haste, and galloping out of the
-gate directed their course down the valley.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXVI.<br />
-<span class="pch">FRED’S STORY.</span></h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dw.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">WHITE-HORSE FRED and his long-lost but
-now recovered brother were boys who were
-not much given to sentiment; but although
-they did not go into ecstasies over one another,
-they were none the less delighted at their reunion.
-They kept as close together as possible, and
-clung to each other’s hands as they galloped along, as if
-afraid that something might again come between them
-to separate them.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, old fellow,” said Fred at length, “it didn’t
-take you long to raise a row after you got here, did it.
-Uncle Reginald little dreamed, when he was working so
-hard to find you in order to further his own ends, how
-completely you would kick over his kettle of fish in less
-than twenty-four hours after your arrival. We’ll keep
-those white horses as long as we live, won’t we? They
-are the best friends we’ve ever had.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe that now,” replied Julian; “but I didn’t
-think so when they were roaming about among the
-mountains with me and carrying me to robber dens.
-But, Fred, you are not a horse-thief?”</p>
-
-<p>“I never stole a horse, or anything else, if that is what
-you mean; but I have been a member of the band for
-more than a year. I’ve had charge of a good many dollars’
-worth of stolen property first and last, and if I had
-happened to fall into the hands of the settlers while I
-had it in my possession, I’d have been gone up sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Fred, what made you do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I had an object in view&mdash;one that justified even
-worse things than that. It will not retard our speed in
-the least if we talk as we go along, so I will tell my
-story first&mdash;I know you are dying to hear it&mdash;and then
-I will listen to yours. Where shall I begin?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“At the beginning, of course. Tell me who I am,
-how I came to be an inmate of Jack Bowles’ cabin, and
-all about it. I have lived among mysteries for the last
-few weeks, and I want every one of them explained.”</p>
-
-<p>“And yet there isn’t a single mystery connected with
-your history, or mine, either,” replied White-horse
-Fred. “I can make everything plain to you in ten
-minutes. In the first place, that old rancho back there
-is our home. It was built by Grandfather Cordova, our
-mother’s father, who came out here in early times.
-When I tell you that it was intended as a fort as well as
-a dwelling, you will know how those secret passage-ways
-came to be there. Such a building was necessary in
-those days, for it was hardly safe for white men
-about&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Safe!” interrupted Julian. “It isn’t safe now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, things have changed wonderfully since that
-house was built, and even during my recollection. We
-call ourselves a quiet, orderly, well-disposed set of
-people; but when grandfather first came out here he
-saw some excitements, I tell you. He was a native
-of Mexico, and brought with him a small colony of his
-own people. The Indians were so troublesome that the
-government was obliged to keep a strong body of troops
-here, and father was one of their officers. He commanded
-the fort; and Silas, who was in more than one
-battle with him, says he was a fighter worth looking at.
-He had not been out here very long before he fell in
-love with and married our mother, Inez Cordova, threw
-up his commission, and went to digging gold and raising
-cattle. Everything went on smoothly until grandfather
-and mother died, and then the trouble began. In one
-night our family was completely broken up by a couple
-of adventurers, who ought certainly to have had some
-mercy on us if they had no affection for us, for they
-were our mother’s brother and cousin.</p>
-
-<p>“So far your story corresponds with the one Sanders
-told me,” said Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you remember anything about those happy
-days?” continued White-horse Fred. “I can, but then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-I am almost two years older than you are. I can remember
-that Juan&mdash;the old fellow who came into your
-room with us to-night&mdash;and his two boys, Romez and
-Antoine, were great favorites of mine. Juan was
-father’s <i>major domo</i>&mdash;he had charge of everything in the
-house. Romez was the hostler, and Antoine was the
-chief herdsman. They were life-long servants of our
-family, and they and a few others have since proved
-themselves as true as steel. When I became old enough
-to be trusted alone with a horse, I used to ride out to
-Antoine’s hut, which was located in the lower end of
-the valley, and spend weeks at a time with him, assisting
-in herding the cattle and learning to throw the
-lasso. Father would occasionally ride out there to see
-that I was all right, and now and then I would come
-home to spend a day with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can remember those visits,” observed Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“At that time, in spite of the gloom thrown over it
-by the death of our mother, which occurred when you
-were about three years old, our house was not the desolate
-place it is now. The officers of the fort used to
-visit there regularly to talk over army matters with
-father, eat Juan’s excellent dinners, and enjoy the
-splendid shooting the mountains afforded. Father did
-considerable trading with the trappers and friendly Indians;
-the house was always full, and there was always
-something interesting going on there. Somehow the
-story got abroad that father was immensely rich. Well,
-he was wealthy, but he didn’t have as much money as
-most people supposed he did.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much was he worth, anyhow?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps a couple of million, and the most of that
-once belonged to grandfather.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I heard Pedro tell Sanders that he had fifty
-millions stowed away somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, nonsense! Pedro has about as clear ideas of
-wealth as he has of the moon; and that’s something he
-knows nothing at all about. The story got wind from
-this simple circumstance: Father was one day walking
-up a little ravine a short distance from the house, prospecting,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-when he found a pretty good-sized nugget.
-The next day he picked up another, and a week or two
-afterward he found a third. He told some of the
-officers of it, and they spread it around. There were a
-few miners here then, and they at once crowded into
-the ravine and turned up every inch of it; but not another
-nugget was brought to light. That, however, did
-not serve to convince them that there was not a gold
-mine of wonderful richness hidden about there somewhere.
-They industriously circulated the report, and
-finally the story, together with the news of grandfather’s
-death and mother’s, reached the ears of a couple of men
-in San Francisco, who at once laid their plans to possess
-themselves of father’s wealth. They were Reginald
-and Richard Cordova, mother’s brother and cousin.</p>
-
-<p>“They were graceless scamps, those same fellows&mdash;professional
-gamblers, who had been cast off by grandfather
-on account of their profligate habits. As our
-parents had never mentioned their names, no one out
-here knew that there were such men in existence.
-They came to the mountains, and, as bad luck would
-have it, the first man whose acquaintance they made
-was Ned Sanders. They pumped him carefully, and
-found that he was just the fellow they wanted, for he
-knew a good deal about our family, and would do anything
-for money. They unfolded their plans to him,
-which were to murder father and his boys, and claiming
-to be his brothers, seize upon his property. Sanders
-entered heartily into their scheme, but he proposed a
-slight change of programme.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve got better idees nor them,’ said he. ‘The ole
-major’s got a heap of money laid up somewhar, but it
-ain’t a drop in the bucket to what we’d finger if we
-could only find that hidden gold mine of his’n. We’ll
-make way with the boys, ’cause they won’t be of no use
-to us; but we won’t harm the major. In course he
-won’t want to tell us whar the gold mine is, and we
-can’t scare him into it, nuther, ’cause he’s one of them
-kind of fellers that don’t scare wuth a cent; but we
-can force it out o’ him in another way. We’ll make a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-pris’ner of him, and shut him up away from his horses,
-an’ his hounds, an’ his cattle, an’ keep him shut up till
-he is willin’ to tell us what we want to know.’</p>
-
-<p>“Just see the heathenish ingenuity Sanders exhibited!”
-exclaimed White-horse Fred angrily. “Knowing
-full well that father could not be frightened into
-revealing his secret, he resolved to torture it out of him;
-and he decided, too, upon the only method that could
-by any possibility prove successful. Being a man of
-active habits, it would be but little short of death for
-him to be shut out from the world and deprived of occupation.
-Liberty and something to do were as necessary
-to his existence as the food he ate.</p>
-
-<p>“Sanders also told the plotters that Major Mortimer
-and his boys were not the only ones with whom they
-would have to deal. There were some firm friends of
-the family who must be got rid of, or they would make
-trouble. First, there was Silas Roper. During a battle
-with the Indians, father had saved his life at the risk of
-his own, and Silas was so grateful for it that he gave up
-hunting and trapping and turned herdsman in order
-that he might always be near father. It wouldn’t be a
-safe piece of business to attempt to harm the major or
-any of his family while Silas was about. And there was
-old Juan and half a dozen others, who had been employed
-in the family in grandfather’s life-time. They
-could never be induced to lend their aid to so villainous
-a scheme, and they must be killed. In order to cope
-with so many men&mdash;Silas was a small army in himself&mdash;it
-would be necessary to have more help, and this Sanders
-agreed to furnish.</p>
-
-<p>“The plan was thoroughly discussed, and a time set
-for carrying it into execution. When the night arrived,
-Sanders appeared with three choice spirits, named
-Smirker, Hale and Lutz. They began operations by
-effecting an entrance into the rancho through the cellar.
-Father was surprised in his bed, and bound hand and
-foot; three of the obnoxious Mexicans were murdered in
-their sleep; but old Juan, taking the alarm, fled from
-the house. He was seen, however, pursued, and overtaken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-on the brink of a deep gully, a short distance
-away. He was stabbed, shot twice, beaten on the head
-with the butt of a rifle, and finally thrown over the cliff;
-but he is to-night hale and hearty, in spite of his wounds
-and his ninety-five years.</p>
-
-<p>“The next in order was Silas Roper. They surrounded
-his cabin, broke open the door, and there their
-operations in that quarter ceased. The trapper, who
-says he always keeps himself in trim for a fight, assumed
-the offensive at once, and whipped out his assailants
-with an ease that must have astonished them. Lutz,
-who was the first to enter the cabin, was shot dead in
-his tracks; Reginald received a blow over the head that
-laid him aside for a week or two; Sanders got another,
-and so did Smirker; and Silas escaped without a scratch.</p>
-
-<p>“The next thing was to go back to the house after
-you and me. I remember as well how I felt when I
-awoke and found the outlaws in my room as if the incidents
-I am trying to describe had happened only
-yesterday. I remember, too, of seeing you jump out of
-bed, and draw a bee-line for the door. You got out,
-but Sanders ran after you and brought you back.”</p>
-
-<p>“That must have been what he referred to when he
-told me that he and I once ran a foot-race,” said Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“I can recall the thoughts that passed through my
-mind when Sanders and Smirker, accompanied by
-Richard, were taking us down to the lake to throw us in.
-I remember of falling through the air and sinking in the
-water, but beyond that all is blank to me. After I was
-thrown in, an idea suddenly occurred to Richard, and
-he concluded to make a change in his programme, and
-save you alive for some future emergency. A time
-might arrive when an heir to the hidden gold mine&mdash;in
-the existence of which he and his cousin firmly believed&mdash;would
-be a convenient thing to have about. There
-were a good many ways in which he might be used. So
-Richard, after seeing his cousin disposed of in some
-remote place where he would not be likely to be discovered,
-and giving Sanders some very minute instructions,
-took you and started off to Missouri.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“In the meantime, old Juan had recovered his consciousness.
-When he was thrown into the gorge he did
-not fall to the bottom, but lodged on a leaning tree about
-four feet below the brink of the cliff. When he came to
-himself he crawled down to the lake to bathe his
-wounds, but stopped just before he reached the bank,
-for he saw Richard and the two outlaws coming down
-with us. He saw them throw me into the water, and
-when they went away with you he jumped in and
-rescued me.</p>
-
-<p>“In the morning those of the servants who had not
-been molested, and who had slept soundly in spite of all
-the noise and confusion, awoke to find the rancho almost
-deserted. The owner and his family had disappeared,
-and some of their own number were lying dead in their
-beds. They went at once in search of the commanding
-officer of the fort, who came up, but could make nothing
-of our disappearance. At the end of a week or two,
-as nothing was seen or heard of us, he concluded that
-we also had been foully dealt with, and thought it high
-time that some one was put there to attend to things.
-He asked the servants if they knew whether or not
-father had any relatives near, and Sanders, who happened
-to be present, said he had heard him speak of two
-brothers, Reginald and Richard Mortimer, who were
-living in San Francisco. The officer decided to send a
-letter to them, and Sanders agreed to carry it. He
-made a great show of starting off, but rode only about
-five miles through the mountains to a miserable little
-hut where Reginald was waiting for him.</p>
-
-<p>“Two months afterward Uncle Reginald was acknowledged
-by the officers, the settlers, and the servants as the
-lawful master of the rancho, and father was languishing
-in the prison into which he had been thrown, with the
-assurance that he should never come out of it until he
-told where his wealth was concealed. He denied all
-knowledge of the gold mine, but said that he had some
-money stowed away in a safe place, and that he would
-die in confinement before he would tell where it was.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t Silas and Juan go to the commander of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-the fort and tell him what had happened?” asked
-Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“I was just coming to that. They met the next
-morning in our treasure-house, which you visited to-night,
-to talk the matter over. They had both seen
-enough to satisfy them that father had been carried away
-as a prisoner, and they had no difficulty in guessing at
-the object his captors had in view. If they told the
-commander of the fort he would send his cavalry scouting
-about among the mountains, and that would alarm
-the robbers, and perhaps lead them to murder father.
-The first thing to be done was to find out where he was
-confined, and it would be time enough to call in the
-help of the troops when that had been ascertained.
-But with all their efforts&mdash;and they did everything men
-could do&mdash;they failed to gain the slightest clew to his
-whereabouts. He had disappeared as completely as
-though he had never existed at all. They spent years in
-the search, but until you told them what you had seen
-to-night they knew no more about the matter than they
-did when father was first captured.</p>
-
-<p>“About four years ago I thought I was getting old
-enough and shrewd enough to take a part in the search
-myself; but Silas and Juan would not permit it. They
-said that as long as I kept out of sight everybody would
-believe me dead, but that if I showed my face I would
-be recognized at once, and Reginald would send some
-one after me who would make sure work of me. But at
-last I could endure the inactivity no longer; and once,
-when Silas was away in the mountains, I came out of the
-cave in which I had spent the best part of four years of
-my life, and began to look about to find something to
-do. Most of father’s servants were gone, and their
-places were supplied with new ones; but there were
-some of the old ones left, and among them were Romez,
-Antoine and Ithuriel. The latter had been promoted
-by Richard Mortimer, as he called himself, to the position
-of body-servant; Romez held his old position as
-hostler, and Antoine was still a herdsman. I lived with
-the latter for two years, assisting him in his duties, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-waiting impatiently for something to turn up. I was
-careful to keep out of sight of Reginald and Richard,
-but mingled freely with the rest of the people about the
-rancho, and even with the soldiers and settlers, and no
-one knew me. I paid regular nightly visits to old Juan,
-who lived in the cave where father’s money was hidden,
-and once while on my way there something happened
-that suggested to me a plan of action.</p>
-
-<p>“There are two passage-ways that lead to the cellar&mdash;one
-from the house and the other from the outside of
-the hill. I always went in through the latter, and I
-went very slowly and cautiously too, for fear of finding
-some one in there whom I did not care to see. One
-night I did find some persons there&mdash;Reginald and
-Richard, who were examining the walls of the cellar by
-the aid of a lantern. Old Juan said they used to spend
-a good deal of time there looking for the concealed
-treasure.</p>
-
-<p>“I was so surprised to see them that I did not think
-of retreat, and after I had time to collect my thoughts I
-did not feel any inclination to turn back. Although I
-had often seen the men at a distance, this was the first
-time since that memorable night that I had ever been so
-near to them, and I wanted to take a good look at them.
-Silas and Juan had often told me in the most emphatic
-language never to attempt to harm one of them, even if
-I got the opportunity&mdash;and knowing that they had
-father’s welfare at heart, and that they were wiser than
-myself, I had promised to obey. But I could not resist
-the temptation to draw my rifle to my shoulder and
-cover both their heads with the sight&mdash;they were standing
-closely together and squarely in line, so that one
-bullet would have passed through them both&mdash;telling
-myself the while how easily I could shoot them, and how
-richly they deserved it. While I stood in this position
-Reginald turned toward me. Finding that I was discovered,
-I did not lower my rifle, but kept it at my shoulder,
-determined that if he offered to molest me I would resist
-him to the best of my ability. But I soon found that I
-had nothing to fear. He stood for a moment gazing at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-me with eyes that seemed almost ready to start from
-their sockets, and said in a husky voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Merciful heavens! Dick, look there!”</p>
-
-<p>Dick looked, and one look was enough. He pronounced
-my name with a shriek, and dropping his
-lantern, fled from the cellar, closely followed by his
-cousin. At first I was greatly astonished at their behavior,
-but after thinking the matter over, I began to
-understand it. Reginald and Richard are very ignorant
-men, in spite of their fine flow of language, and of
-course they are superstitious. They believe in signs and
-omens, and apparitions, and knowing that they had put
-me at the bottom of the lake, they could not comprehend
-how I came to be standing there alive and unharmed.
-This, as I have said, suggested to me a plan
-of action. I knew all about those secret passage-ways,
-and I made use of them to keep those two guilty men
-in a constant state of alarm. I gave up herding cattle
-and spent all my time loitering about the house, listening
-to the conversations between Reginald and his followers,
-and showing myself whenever I saw an opportunity
-to frighten somebody. I tied a piece of thick
-green cloth over the bull’s-eye of a dark lantern, and
-carrying this in my hand I used to wander about the
-passage-ways of nights, uttering the most unearthly
-shrieks and howls. I paid regular visits to Reginald’s
-sleeping-room and Dick’s, and took possession of everything
-I could carry away, such as money, weapons,
-clothing and furniture. Old Juan undertook to watch
-the cellar. He showed himself every time Reginald,
-Richard, or Pedro went in there, and finally frightened
-Richard so badly that he left the house and went to live
-in a little cabin he built in the mountains.</p>
-
-<p>“One night I went into a room to see what I could
-pick up, and whom should I find there but Ned Sanders
-and an outlaw friend of his fast asleep in bed. I
-took possession of their weapons, carried them into the
-passage-way out of their reach, and then placing my
-lantern in one corner, and taking my stand in the middle
-of the room where the light would fall squarely on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-my face, began to groan awfully. I was not long in
-arousing them, and when their eyes were fairly open
-they were not long in leaving the room either. I never
-found an opportunity to appear to Sanders after that,
-for he shunned the rancho as if it had been a grizzly
-bear’s den.”</p>
-
-<p>“I spent a good many months in this way, and at
-last finding that I could learn nothing about father, I
-went to herding cattle again. In the meantime Uncle
-Reginald and Sanders had organized a band of robbers
-and horse-thieves; and this, as I afterward learned, was
-the occasion of a fierce quarrel between the cousins,
-who came to blows over it. Richard didn’t want anything
-to do with such an organization, believing that it
-would endanger the success of their plans, but Reginald
-carried his point. Richard never forgave his cousin for
-that, and being determined to be revenged upon him
-he has been working for the last two years to obtain
-possession of all father’s money, intending as soon as he
-gets it to decamp and leave Reginald in the lurch.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXVII.<br />
-FRED’S STORY, CONCLUDED.</h2>
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/db.jpg" width="80" height="82" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">“BELIEVING that some of the members of
-this band of robbers knew where father was,”
-continued White-horse Fred, “I watched for
-an opportunity to join it, and finally succeeded
-in my object. I became one of the runners, or
-couriers; that is, it was my duty to convey orders and
-the stolen property from one point to another. It was
-a subordinate position, although I ran just as much
-risk as Sanders, or any other member of the band who
-did the stealing, and I knew that as long as I held it I
-could not hope to learn much of the secret business of
-the organization; consequently I worked hard for promotion,
-and, if I am to believe what I have been told,
-I did some reckless things. At any rate, it wasn’t
-long before the name of White-horse Fred became
-pretty well known about here. I have been chased and
-shot at by soldiers and settlers more times than I can
-remember, and I have been in the fort when the officers
-were talking about me and laying plans for my capture.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t they recognize you?” asked Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t say that <i>I</i> was well known, did I? I said
-my <i>name</i> was. The officers didn’t know who I was&mdash;that’s
-the reason they didn’t recognize me. There were
-only five men who knew me by the name I bore&mdash;Smirker,
-and the four fellows at Hale’s rancho. No
-one dreamed that White-horse Fred and the apparition
-who kept Uncle Reginald’s rancho in such an uproar
-were one and the same person, and I had emphatic
-orders from Silas and Juan never to reveal myself.
-Everybody had heard of the queer doings at Uncle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-Reginald’s, and it was whispered about among the robbers
-that Fred Mortimer and old Juan had risen from
-their graves to torment their murderers. I was in
-hopes that we would soon frighten Reginald away; but
-he had come there after father’s money, and he was
-determined he would not go until he got it.</p>
-
-<p>“All this while&mdash;my story has now covered the space
-of more than seven years&mdash;Reginald was keeping father
-closely confined in some hidden prison, hoping to break
-his spirit and force him to tell where his money was
-concealed. But father remained firm, and Reginald
-became tired of waiting at last, and so did Sanders.
-The latter finally thought up another plan by which to
-obtain possession of the treasure, and when he had
-matured it he went to Reginald to talk it over.</p>
-
-<p>“Old Juan, who was always on the watch, saw him
-go into the rancho, and believing that he had some
-private business to transact that it might be well for
-him to overhear, he went into the passage-way, opened
-the secret door that led into Reginald’s sleeping-room,
-and set himself to listen. We afterward learned that
-there was another listener to that conversation, and it
-was Richard. He and Reginald were now at open
-enmity. He never made his appearance at the rancho
-in the day-time, but loitered about there of nights,
-searching everywhere for the money, and taking notes
-of all that was going on&mdash;and I ought to say right here
-that Richard and Sanders, who had hitherto been fast
-friends, had a falling out. Richard, for some reasons
-of his own, did not want his cousin to know that you
-were alive. Sanders and Smirker were the only ones
-beside himself who were acquainted with the secret,
-and as soon as they found out that he wanted it kept
-from Reginald’s knowledge they demanded yellow boys
-as the price of their silence. Richard supplied their
-wants as long as he could, but at last his funds were
-exhausted and he could obtain no more. Sanders had
-been expecting this, and having pumped Richard’s
-pockets dry, he deserted him and went over to Reginald.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Capen,’ said Sanders, when he and Reginald had
-locked themselves in the bed-room in which their private
-interviews were always held, ‘I’m gettin’ monstrous
-tired of waitin’ fur a sight o’ them big nuggets. The
-old major’s never goin’ to give in&mdash;he’ll die fust.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am afraid so,’ replied Reginald; ‘but what can
-I do more than I have done? It is a very easy thing to
-deprive a man of his liberty, but it’s quite a different
-matter to make him open his mouth when he’s determined
-he won’t. If we had only been smart enough to
-keep the boys alive, we could have worked on his feelings
-through them. But he knows they are dead, and
-that’s what makes him so desperate.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I know nary one of ’em hain’t dead,’ replied Sanders.
-‘I mean, you see&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes, I know what you mean. You mean that they
-are both dead, but that one of them has come back and
-walks around nights,’ said Reginald, looking all about
-the room as if he expected to see something frightful.
-‘But you haven’t seen the other&mdash;Julian&mdash;have you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No; but I know he’s alive. Oh, it’s a fact,’ added
-Sanders, seeing by the expression on Reginald’s face that
-he was hardly prepared to believe this. ‘He wasn’t
-never hurt at all. Fred was flung into the lake and
-drownded&mdash;an’ I don’t see why in creation he don’t stay
-thar&mdash;but Julian wasn’t.’</p>
-
-<p>“And with this preface, Sanders went on to tell what
-Richard had done with you, and why he had saved you
-alive. He said that from some remarks Richard had accidentally
-let fall he had learned pretty nearly where
-you could be found, and added that for a suitable consideration
-he would produce you.</p>
-
-<p>“‘An’ when we get him out here, capen, we’ll have
-two strings to our bow,’ continued Sanders. ‘I don’t go
-in very strong fur attemptin’ to work on the feelin’s of the
-major&mdash;leastways not till we have tried something else&mdash;’cause
-he’s awfully hard-headed, an’ when he onct makes
-up his mind to a thing he’s as sot as one of the Rocky
-Mountains. Thar’s one other man in the world who
-knows whar the nuggets is hid, an’ if we can get hold of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-him, I b’lieve we can make <i>him</i> open his mouth. It’s
-Silas Roper. You see, him an’ old Juan used to do
-purty much as they pleased here in the major’s time,
-an’ they knowed all about his private business matters.
-Juan would be the best one to work on, ’cause he hain’t
-got Silas’s grit, but he hain’t come back here in sich
-shape that we can manage him.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But we don’t know where Silas is,’ said Reginald.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Never mind. He’s about here somewhar, an I’ll
-bet a hoss onto it. An’ I’ll bet on another thing, too:
-As soon as Silas finds out that we’ve got Julian here
-he’ll come out of his hidin’-place, an’ we can captur’
-him. Understand my plan, don’t you?’</p>
-
-<p>“Reginald did understand it, and gave it his hearty
-approval. He spent an hour talking the matter over
-with Sanders, giving him some very minute instructions,
-so that there could be no possible chance for failure,
-and brought the interview to an end by telling him
-a long list of lies to be repeated to you, and furnishing
-him money to bear his expenses to the States.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have often wondered what object Sanders could
-have had in misrepresenting things as he did,” remarked
-Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell you. Reginald thought it very probable
-that you had been left in some thickly settled part of
-the country, and he was afraid that Sanders, if left to
-himself, might attempt to carry you away by force. By
-doing that he might have aroused the settlers and the
-officers of the law in the neighborhood, and thus defeated
-his plans. If he had once succeeded in getting
-you out on the prairie away from everybody, he would
-have thrown off his mask and appeared in his true character
-very quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Sanders started for the States that very night, and
-so did Richard. The latter was determined that if he
-could not possess father’s money nobody should, and he
-hoped to reach your hiding-place in advance of Sanders,
-and dispose of you so effectually that you never could be
-found. Old Juan told Silas about it when he came in
-from the mountains, and he also started for the States,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-intending to wait for you at St. Joe, and to take charge
-of you if Sanders brought you there. He succeeded in
-getting hold of you at last, and brought you to the
-mountains. Richard, finding himself outwitted, joined
-your train in disguise, hoping to find an opportunity to
-shoot you during the journey, while Sanders came on
-ahead and raised a band of Indians to attack the train.
-He had been promised $5,000 if he would deliver you
-into Reginald’s hands, and that money he was determined
-to have. Our affairs have been pretty well mixed
-up for the last eight years, but this night will see them
-straightened out again.”</p>
-
-<p>“I certainly hope so. But, Fred, why didn’t Silas,
-when he found me, tell me that he was a friend, and
-that he would assist me?”</p>
-
-<p>“He did tell you that. If he had told you more,
-would you have believed him? Hadn’t Sanders deceived
-you and made you suspicious of everybody? When you
-and Silas were sitting on the steps of the hotel in St.
-Joe, and he told you that he knew who you were, didn’t
-you jump up and run away from him? The old fellow
-isn’t much given to talking anyhow. He believes in
-actions rather than words. You know that he was captured
-by Sanders and some of his band on the night the
-train was attacked, and that he escaped from them the
-next morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“What would Reginald have done to him if he had
-been brought to the rancho?”</p>
-
-<p>“He would have tried to force him to tell where
-father’s money was hidden, and if he had refused, as he
-certainly would have done, that would have been the last
-of Silas. Then Reginald would have used you to frighten
-father, telling him that he had you in his power, and
-that if he didn’t tell where that money was he would do
-something dreadful to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was Reginald’s object in treating me so kindly?
-Why didn’t he keep me a close prisoner?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he wanted to make Silas Roper show himself,
-so that he could be captured. That could never be done
-by shutting you up. The best way was to give you full<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-swing, and allow you to roam about as much as you
-pleased, for then Silas would be sure to see you, and you
-would sooner or later get into the habit of meeting him
-regularly; and when that state of affairs had been
-brought about, it would be but little trouble for Sanders
-and some of his band to surprise and capture Silas. In
-order to make you contented and willing to stay with
-him, Reginald provided you with every comfort, and told
-you that story about your being the sole heir to the
-property. He thought that would serve as well as bolts
-and bars to keep you about the rancho, for no boy in
-full possession of his senses would be likely to run away
-while he believed that he had a million or two in
-prospect.</p>
-
-<p>“I was out riding my route on the night you arrived,
-but old Juan was on the watch as usual, and he knew
-when you were brought into the rancho. He frightened
-Richard, and made him abandon the idea of carrying
-you off to the mountains; and when you fell down in a
-swoon, he and Romez took you back to your room and
-put you to bed. It was Juan who wrote the note you
-received, and opened your windows the next morning
-before you awoke.”</p>
-
-<p>“I shall never forget how surprised I was to find that
-some one had been in there,” observed Julian.</p>
-
-<p>“When I visited Juan the next morning I found Silas
-with him. They told me what had happened the night
-before, adding that you had just gone out riding on
-Snowdrop. I was very much disappointed, for I had
-hoped to meet you as soon as you arrived. You see, to
-explain how you came by that mare, I make my home
-with Antoine, the herdsman. When I return from
-Hale’s I generally go there and leave my horse, and then
-set off to visit old Juan. Yesterday morning when I
-went home I found Snowdrop missing, and Antoine
-told me that Reginald had taken her. He gave her to
-you, and that one move on his part did us more good
-than eight years’ hard work has done.</p>
-
-<p>“I had an encouraging piece of news for Silas.
-Smirker had told me that he knew where father was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-confined, and the trapper and I, after talking the matter
-over, decided to arrest him, and force the secret from
-him. On the same day he told me this he communicated
-to me another piece of news, and that was that
-he had two holes to his burrow, and a way of escape to
-be made use of in case of an attack from the soldiers or
-settlers; and thinking that if we concluded to make a
-raid on him when Silas came home, it might be well
-enough to know where that other hole to his burrow
-was, I spent one whole day in looking for it. I discovered
-it at last, and when I came down through it and
-burst into his cabin, Smirker was so angry that he had
-half a mind to shoot me.”</p>
-
-<p>“He told me about that,” said Julian. “But did he
-never suspect your identity?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never until this morning; and then he did not
-suspect me at first, but you. He was one of those
-who threw me into the lake, and when he learned
-that I wouldn’t stay there, and that I had come back to
-Reginald’s rancho, and was cutting up dreadful shines,
-he became badly frightened. He often talked to me
-about it, and acknowledged that he was afraid that the
-“haunt,” as he called it, might take it into his head to
-visit his cabin. When he saw us together this morning,
-and found out that one of us was a Mortimer, he knew
-the other must be also, for he says we look exactly alike,
-and so does Silas. Hale and his crowd must also see a
-very strong resemblance, or else you never could have
-passed yourself off for me in that rancho, where they are
-constantly on the lookout for treachery. Smirker believed
-that you were White-horse Fred, and also that
-you were Fred Mortimer, and the discovery he thought
-he had made alarmed him greatly. He breathed much
-more freely after you had gone out, and so did I.</p>
-
-<p>“For myself I should have felt no fears, had it not
-been for one thing. I had with me a bag containing
-nuggets, dust and money, which I was to deliver to
-Smirker; if he searched me and found that bag in my
-pocket, he would know that I had deceived him&mdash;that I
-was the real White-horse Fred&mdash;and my life wouldn’t<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-be worth a moment’s purchase. I tried to dispose of
-the bag, but he detected me in the act, and the result
-was just what I expected. He called me a traitor, told
-me that my time had come, and was on the very point
-of making his words good when Silas appeared. He
-came down the secret passage-way that leads from the
-top of the cliff, and arrived just in time.</p>
-
-<p>“We tied Smirker, put him on a horse, and started
-to carry him to our cave. As it was rather early&mdash;we
-make it a point never to go in and out of the cellar
-during the day-time&mdash;we dismounted to wait until it
-should grow dark. While we were sitting in our place
-of concealment, Richard came down the ravine, and I
-knew that he was about to make another attempt to
-capture you. I hurried down the mountain, reached
-the cellar before him, held a short consultation with
-Juan, called Romez out of the stable to assist us, and
-by the time Richard arrived we had a nice little surprise
-in store for him. I poured a bucket of water over my
-head&mdash;that was to make me look as if I had just come
-out of the lake, you know&mdash;and Juan, who had on the
-same clothes he wore on the night he was thrown over
-the cliff, made himself hideous by putting a little red
-paint on his forehead. Romez perched himself upon
-the top of the cellar wall with my dark-lantern in his
-hand, which, by the aid of green cloth and a wide band
-of birch bark around the bull’s-eye, was so arranged
-that it would reflect only a narrow streak of green light;
-and when Richard came in Juan and I were walking
-across the cellar with the light shining full in our faces.
-He had come prepared for just such an emergency as
-this, and drawing his Derringers from his pocket, he
-fired them both at Juan; but finding that the old fellow
-didn’t fall as he expected he would, he threw down his
-weapons and took to his heels. I’ve got them now,”
-added White-horse Fred, drawing the Derringers from
-his boots. “I may have a chance to try them on Joe
-Hale to-night, and if I do he’ll <i>drop</i>. There are bullets
-in them this time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Were there no bullets in them before?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Not when they were fired at Juan. You see, Richard
-is too much of a gentleman to do anything for himself
-that he can make another do for him. He thinks Ithuriel,
-his servant, can be trusted to any extent, but, as it
-happens, he is one of the best friends we have, and it is
-through him that we have learned so much about
-Richard and his doings. Richard told him to load his
-Derringers very carefully, adding that he wanted them
-to shoot something that had appeared to him the night
-before. Ithuriel, knowing very well what that something
-was, charged the pistols heavily with powder, but
-put in no bullets. He came straight down to Juan, and
-told him what he had done, and so when Richard
-pointed his pistols at us, we were not afraid of them. I
-guess now I have told&mdash;&mdash; Halloo! There he is. Come
-on, Julian.”</p>
-
-<p>Fred, bringing his story to a sudden close, put spurs
-to his horse, and dashed away at the top of his speed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XXVIII.<br />
-<span class="pch">THE ATTACK ON THE RANCHO.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dj.jpg" width="80" height="83" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc10">JULIAN was not long in discovering the cause
-of his brother’s excitement. It was a white
-horse which was moving along the mountain
-path a short distance in advance. He ran
-heavily as if almost ready to drop with fatigue, and carried
-on his back a man dressed in Mexican costume.
-The horse was Bob, and his rider was Pedro.</p>
-
-<p>A race ensued at once. Bob was as fleet as the wind,
-but he was wearied with his night’s travel, and the pursuers,
-mounted on their fresh horses and led by Silas
-Roper, who coiled up his lasso as he went, gained
-rapidly. The white horse disappeared in a thickly
-wooded ravine; but Silas and his party soon came up
-with him standing motionless in the path, and Pedro
-was seen darting into the bushes which lined the base of
-the cliff. An order to halt, followed by the whistle of a
-lasso and the ominous click of three revolver locks,
-brought him to the path again, where he stood holding
-his hands above his head in token of surrender. Silas
-and Romez dismounted, bound the prisoner hand and
-foot, and after concealing him behind a log that lay at
-the base of the cliff, the party resumed its journey as if
-nothing had happened, Fred leading the white horse.
-As this incident had been confidently looked for, it
-brought no comments from any one except White-horse
-Fred, who said, as he resumed his place by his brother’s
-side:</p>
-
-<p>“If Pedro had had half the sense I have given him
-credit for, he would have known that an iron nag
-couldn’t stand sixty miles in a full gallop over such
-roads as these. I hope Bob will recover a little of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-wind before we reach Hale’s, for I want to use him then.
-When we caught sight of Pedro,” he added, “I was
-about to remark that I had finished what I had to say,
-and would listen to you. Now, tell me all about yourself.
-I know you have seen some exciting times.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian’s story was quite as interesting to Fred as the
-latter’s story had been to Julian. It took him fully
-half an hour to complete it, and by that time they were
-in the vicinity of Hale’s rancho. When they reached
-the chasm which had been such a terror to Julian, they
-dismounted, and after a short consultation had been
-held, and Fred had exchanged his red shirt and coarse
-trowsers for his brother’s natty Mexican suit, he placed
-himself at the head of the party, and conducted them
-on foot to Major Mortimer’s prison. As noiselessly as
-spirits they approached the building and drew up around
-the door. Not a whisper was uttered, for their plans
-had been thoroughly discussed, and each one knew just
-what he was expected to do.</p>
-
-<p>Having seen his companions stationed to his satisfaction,
-Fred crept back along the path again, and disappeared
-in the darkness. He was gone nearly half an
-hour, and then the sound of horse’s hoofs on the hard
-path told his impatient friends that he was returning.
-Louder and louder grew the clatter of the hoofs, and
-presently Julian knew that it had been heard by the
-robbers, for there was a movement in the cabin, and a
-small window beside the door, close under the eaves,
-was slowly and cautiously opened. In a few seconds
-the horse and his rider appeared dodging about among
-the thick bushes that grew on each side of the path,
-and drew up before the door. Fred’s whistle met with
-a prompt response.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay! ay!” exclaimed the man at the window.
-“What’s the matter now? Anything wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“I should say there was,” replied Fred in a voice
-that trembled with excitement. “The soldiers have
-sprung a trap and caught every soul of us in it except
-the captain and me. There isn’t a gentleman of the
-road left down our way&mdash;not one.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The robber expressed his surprise at this piece of
-news by a volley of oaths and exclamations that made
-Julian wonder.</p>
-
-<p>He opened the slide of a dark lantern, and allowing its
-rays to shine out of the window upon the young horseman,
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“How can that be possible? Things were all right
-this morning&mdash;the captain said so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you could see him now he would tell you
-that things are all wrong,” replied Fred.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is hiding at Smirker’s. He sent me down here
-with a note,” replied White-horse Fred, showing the
-letter that Julian had received from his father. “It’s
-an order, and an important one, too, I guess, for he told
-me to give it into the hands of no one but Joe Hale.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now I’ll be blessed if there isn’t something mighty
-queer about all this,” said the robber after a little reflection.
-“You had better come in and give an account of
-yourself.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am perfectly willing to do that. Open the door,
-and be quick about it too, for I am in a hurry to get
-through here. I tell you I am not going to stay in this
-country after what I have seen. I am off for ’Frisco
-this very night.”</p>
-
-<p>The robber was in no hurry to open the door. He
-thrust his lantern out of the window and took a good
-look at White-horse Fred and the animal on which he
-was mounted; but he could see nothing wrong about
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The horse, which was covered with foam, stood with
-his head down and his sides heaving plainly, very nearly
-exhausted. A single glance at him and at his rider’s
-pale face was enough to satisfy the robber that there
-was more truth in the boy’s story than he had at first
-believed.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you <i>have</i> seen some strange things, Fred,”
-said he. “You’re as white as a sheet.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy had nothing to say in reply, but told himself
-that any one would have shown some nervousness in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-circumstances. His father’s life depended upon the
-movements of that man who was leaning out of the
-window talking to him. If he opened the door all
-might be well; but if he carried on all the conversation
-through the window, and kept the door closed, their
-expedition would end in failure, and Major Mortimer
-would be a doomed man. It was no wonder that Fred’s
-face was pale.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of the horse and his rider went a
-long way toward allaying the robber’s suspicions; but
-ever on the lookout for treachery, he thought it best to
-examine the ground in front of the rancho before opening
-the door. He thrust his head and shoulders out of
-the window and held his lantern down beside the wall.
-There was some one there, but the robber was not
-allowed time to see who it was.</p>
-
-<p>Silas Roper was crouching close beside the door,
-directly under the window, and he knew by the sudden
-gleam of surprise and intelligence which shot across the
-man’s face that he had been discovered. Fred knew it
-too, and gave up all hope; but not so Silas. He was
-fully equal to the emergency. Crouching lower, for an
-instant, like a tiger gathering himself for a spring, he
-bounded into the air with the quickness of thought,
-and seizing the robber, pulled him bodily from the window
-to the ground, stifling his cry for help by a strong
-grasp on his throat.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind us,” whispered the trapper, as his companions
-sprung forward to assist in securing the prisoner.
-“I’ll take care of this fellow, an’ do you open
-that door while you’ve got the chance.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian saw the necessity of prompt action, and so did
-Romez. White-horse Fred had told his companions that
-there was but one man on guard at a time at Hale’s
-rancho, and now that he had been secured, the next
-thing was to make good their entry into the building
-before the other robbers were aroused.</p>
-
-<p>Romez took his stand under the window, and Julian,
-mounting upon his shoulders, dropped down on the
-inside of the stable. The locks and bolts with which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-the door was secured were quickly but noiselessly undone,
-and Silas and his two companions rushed in and followed
-Julian, who, with his revolver in one hand and
-the lantern in the other, led the way to the living-room.</p>
-
-<p>Hale and his companion were found fast asleep on the
-benches, and were pounced upon and secured by Silas
-and Romez before they had time to think of their
-weapons, which were lying close at hand.</p>
-
-<p>White-horse Fred, having seized an ax as he passed
-through the stable, kept close behind his brother, who
-led him straight to his father’s prison.</p>
-
-<p>“This is the door!” cried Julian, scarcely able to
-speak, so great was his excitement and delight&mdash;“down
-with it! Come here, Mexican!” he added, leveling his
-revolver at the cook, who, having been aroused by the
-noise, at that moment came out of the kitchen; “you’re
-a prisoner.”</p>
-
-<p>If the man was too sleepy to comprehend the fact just
-then, he became fully sensible of it a few seconds later,
-for Silas and Romez came bounding through the hall
-and seized and tied him in the twinkling of an eye.</p>
-
-<p>Fred, meanwhile, was showering furious blows upon
-the door, and when he had loosened the hinges, Silas
-placed his broad back against it and with one push sent
-it flying into the middle of the room. Fred and Julian
-rushed into the apartment side by side, expecting to
-find their father waiting with open arms to receive
-them, but stopped suddenly and recoiled with horror
-before the sight that met their gaze.</p>
-
-<p>The major was sitting limp and motionless in his
-chair, his chin resting on his breast, and his hands&mdash;which
-had been relieved of the irons, probably to allow
-him to retire to rest&mdash;hanging by his side. His face
-was paler now than when Julian saw it a few hours before,
-and at the sight of it he cried out in dismay that
-they had come too late.</p>
-
-<p>“No, we hain’t nuther!” exclaimed Silas, raising the
-insensible form of his beloved commander tenderly in
-his arms. “Thar ain’t nothing the matter with him&mdash;all
-he wants is air.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Silas carried the major into the living-room and laid
-him upon a pile of blankets which Fred and Julian had
-spread upon the floor. There he left him to the care of
-the boys while he and Romez proceeded to complete the
-work that had been so well begun. Their first care was
-to ransack the building and satisfy themselves that no
-one else was confined there, and their second to dispose
-of their prisoners so that they could be found again
-when wanted. They could not take the robbers with
-them when they returned to the valley, for they had
-other work to do, and must ride rapidly. It would not
-be safe to leave them in the rancho, for they might be
-discovered and released by some of their friends. They
-must be gagged to insure their silence, and hidden away
-in the woods where no one would ever think of looking
-for them.</p>
-
-<p>When they returned to the living-room after performing
-their work, they found the major standing
-erect and holding his boys clasped in his arms. Rough
-men that they were, they were touched by the sight.
-They remained respectfully apart, watching the happy
-group and listening to their conversation, now and then
-glancing at one another, and drawing their hands
-hastily across their eyes; but when they went up to
-greet the major they were the every-day Silas and
-Romez, as calm and indifferent, apparently, as they had
-been a few moments before while dealing with the
-horse-thieves.</p>
-
-<p>Romez took off his sombrero, and said, “How do!”
-in his imperfect English, while Silas gave the major a
-military salute, and informed him that he was powerful
-glad to feel his grip once more. The emotion was all
-exhibited by the rescued man, who clung to the faithful
-fellows who had labored so long and perseveringly for
-his release as if he never wanted to let them go again.</p>
-
-<p>The major’s unexpected restoration to his family and
-to liberty had a wonderful effect upon him. His buoyancy
-of spirits, his strength and energy, returned at
-once; and during the ride homeward, he led the way at
-such a rate of speed that continued conversation was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-quite out of the question. He rode the bay horse which
-Julian had brought from Smirker’s cabin, and which
-the boy regarded as his own special charge. He knew
-where the animal came from, and he hoped at no distant
-day to be able to restore him to his rightful owner.</p>
-
-<p>After crossing the valley the party made a wide circuit
-through the mountains on the opposite side, arriving
-just at daylight in front of a small cabin. The door was
-forced without ceremony, and one of the two men who
-were surprised in their beds was secured before he was
-fairly awake. The new prisoner was Richard Cordova,
-and his companion, who armed himself and joined the
-major’s party, was Ithuriel, his servant. In a little less
-than five hours Silas and his three companions had
-ridden more than fifty miles over rough mountain roads,
-captured eight desperate fellows, and that, too, without
-having once been called upon to use any weapon more
-formidable than the ax, with which White-horse Fred
-had cut down the door of his father’s prison. When
-Julian thought of it, he told himself that the trapper
-was indeed a man of action.</p>
-
-<p>The major and his party rode at once to the fort, and
-his appearance there among the officers, with several of
-whom he had once been intimately acquainted, produced
-a great commotion. The commander listened in
-amazement to his story, and acting upon the information
-which Silas was able to give him, at once dispatched
-his cavalry to the mountains in pursuit of the robbers
-who were yet at large. The history of the wrongs of the
-major and his family spread like wild-fire, and everybody
-who heard it was astonished and enraged. The trappers
-about the fort, and the sutlers and miners flew to
-arms to assist in hunting down the outlaws, and during
-the week following Julian and his brother found ample
-opportunity to gratify their love of excitement. The
-avengers did their work quickly and well, and the summary
-manner in which the captured desperadoes were
-disposed of served as a warning to other lawless spirits
-in that section for all time to come.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of a fortnight the fighting was all over,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>
-the excitement had somewhat abated, the settlers and
-miners had resumed their various avocations, and the
-major and his boys were once more in peaceable possession
-of their home, which soon began to wear its old
-familiar look again. The high stone wall which surrounded
-the rancho was leveled to the ground, and
-flowers planted where it stood. The officers of the fort
-visited there regularly as of old, and the rooms which
-had so long been silent and deserted echoed to the sound
-of laughter and music.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody looked upon Fred and his brother as
-heroes. The almost inexhaustible fund of stories the
-former had collected during his connection with the
-robber band, as well as the adventures he met with
-while in the performance of his perilous duties, were
-listened to with interest by all the visitors at the rancho,
-and none were more delighted with them than the officers
-who tried so hard to capture him. He and his
-brother for a few weeks led a life of quiet ease, for the
-keen and rational enjoyment of which they had been
-fully prepared by their recent perils and excitements.
-The time never hung heavily on their hands. They
-had much to talk about, and when weary of fighting
-their battles over again, there were their horses, hounds,
-guns and fishing-rods always at their command. We
-might relate many interesting incidents that happened
-in that valley before the boys bade good-by to their
-father and their mountain home to become students in
-an Eastern academy, but “A Brave Boy’s Struggles for
-Home and Fortune” are ended, and our story must end
-with them.</p>
-
-<p>The few who had remained faithful to their employer
-during his exile were not forgotten. The major
-and his boys showed them every kindness and attention
-in their power, and among all those who had claims
-upon their gratitude and esteem none commanded a
-larger share than Silas Roper, the guide.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="pc4">AN IDEA AND A FORTUNE.</h2>
-
-<hr class="d1" />
-
-<p class="pc mid"><span class="smcap">By Owen Hacket.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="d2" />
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dw.jpg" width="80" height="80" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc16">WITH their backs toward Placer Notch two
-young men of about twenty-one, burdened
-with prospectors’ kits, came silently down the
-trail. The well-worn way ran beside the
-murky stream that for the twenty-five years had run
-through the sluices of the Placer Notch Mining Company’s
-claim, which, singularly, included in their four acres the
-only paying claims that had ever been staked in
-McGowan’s Pass.</p>
-
-<p>As the young prospectors neared Sol Brunt’s supply
-depot at the foot of the pass, the latter broke the silence
-and said moodily:</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had known three months ago as much as I
-know now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Three months ago, Tom, we both knew what we had
-to expect; that was all talked over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s one thing to see hardship and failure at a distance,
-but it’s another thing to go through them. I didn’t
-know then, as I do now, what real hardship was. I thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-I did. Handy man on a farm seemed about as near slavery
-as we could find in a free country.”</p>
-
-<p>“Our experience is not unusual, Tom. We may succeed
-yet&mdash;we may not. I am going to stick it out another
-month and so are you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not so sure of that,” interrupted Tom.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes you will, if I know you, Tom, and I guess I do.
-You like to have your little growl now and then, and I’m
-glad you do; it makes me argue on the bright side, and
-to see the pleasant features and the hopeful prospects.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a pity hopes don’t sell in the market, Phil; you’d
-be pretty well off if they did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come, now! none of your sarcasm, old man. I tell
-you we are going to stick this for a month yet. We
-have no money, it is true; but we can work our way, and
-we are free and are seeing the world. That beats eighteen
-hours a day on farm work.”</p>
-
-<p>The trail here ran close to the edge of the stream and
-about a foot above it. Phil Gormley the hopeful, happened
-to step on a loose stone; it gave way and down went
-his right leg into the water.</p>
-
-<p>“I like that!” he exclaimed in vexation, as he pulled
-his foot out with much difficulty. He regarded his shoe
-with surprise on seeing it covered to the top with soft
-mud. He sat down on a log and squeezed the water out
-of his trousers leg, gazing all the while at the muddy
-shoe in a reverie that attracted Tom Danvers’ attention.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s up?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I was trying to account for such deep mud in the bed
-of a mountain stream. I am certain this mud is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-year’s deposit of the dirt that is separated from the gold
-in the sluices above at Placer Notch.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It simply flashes across me that this silt must be very
-rich in the waste gold that is washed out with the dirt
-from the sluices.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you thinking of staking out a mud claim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not quite as bad as that. A man might scoop mud
-out and wash it till doomsday without getting enough to
-keep his pipe alight from year to year. But just fancy
-how many millions must have passed down this stream!
-You heard what the miner said up in the Notch&mdash;twenty
-per cent of the gold product was washed away
-from the sluices. If they have panned out fifty million
-dollars there, that would make ten million swept away
-into the big river below, with more constantly going the
-same way.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all very well in theory, but what does it
-amount to any way? We can’t get hold of any of these
-millions.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, of course not. But this I do believe: if any one
-could afford to turn this stream into a reservoir and wait
-ten years he would have enough gold silt to tackle in a
-wholesale sort of way that would pay. It would be only
-a question of devising a cheap system of washing the
-silt from the gold more thoroughly than they do at the
-mines. I’d take the contract to invent the process, too.
-But come! We won’t waste any more time over it. No
-one is going to wait ten years to get his good money
-back.”</p>
-
-<p>They took up their journey again, and had not walked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-five minutes when a turn in the trail and the stream
-brought them in sight of the tidy establishment of Sol
-Brunt. Sol was one of those who came into the hills
-with the rush when gold was discovered, but had seen fit
-to find his fortune in trade while others tramped the hills
-for paying claims. Those who thus went into business
-invariably had a sure fortune before them. Sol’s place
-had grown up from a shanty store to a tidy house that
-in time had received additions, making it a very considerable
-establishment. The trail had been much used in
-the past, but besides what he made out of the casual
-traffic over it, he supplied all the Placer Notch wants by
-contract, and turned a pretty penny out of it, too.</p>
-
-<p>No man had ever come into sight of Sol Brunt’s while
-the sun was up and failed to find the Star Spangled
-Banner flying at the staff head.</p>
-
-<p>Sol’s tidy wife came out to meet the boys, closely followed
-by the trader himself.</p>
-
-<p>Phil was spokesman.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Brunt this is my partner, Tom Danvers;
-my name is Phil Gormley. We’ve been in the hills
-three months and haven’t found a grain, but we don’t
-give up just yet. We have no money between us, but
-we have been hoping you could give us enough work this
-week to pay for board and lodging and some stores to give
-us a lift to the next range.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, boys, I’m right glad to see you,” said Sol, and
-Mrs. Brunt looked at them with pitying eyes. “As to
-the lodging and the things, I’ll just take verbal acknowledgement
-of the debt when you leave. Young fellows
-who talk as you do usually get along and pay their debts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-too. As to the work, I want a little help on my hay
-this week, and I don’t mind reducing your little bill
-in that way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the thing for us,” exclaimed Tom Danvers.
-“You’ll find we’re experts in that line.”</p>
-
-<p>“So much the better then, my boy,” responded their
-genial host.</p>
-
-<p>The shadows were falling in the valley as the sun sank
-behind the mountain tops, and Mrs. Brunt went inside.
-Her reappearance was heralded by savory odors from the
-kitchen, and after a refreshing splash in cool water from
-a mountain rill the boys sat down with their hosts to a
-bountiful supper. Then chairs were brought to the
-doorway, where in the gloom they watched the rising
-and falling light of Sol’s pipe while he spun countless
-yarns of mining life which were, in truth, largely interspersed
-with mining death, mostly tragic in character.</p>
-
-<p>Before bidding the boys good night, Sol delicately
-offered to give them some advice, which the boys eagerly
-accepted.</p>
-
-<p>“I like pluck,” said Sol, “and I don’t want to discourage
-it; but I do hate to see it turned into an empty
-sluice. You’ve prospected all over the pass here and
-found nothing. Thousands have done the same before
-you. What is true of Placer Notch is pretty generally
-true of all the hills. In the early days the country
-swarmed with men, and almost every acre was gone over
-many times. What wasn’t found is not worth looking for.
-I don’t say the richest pay dirt ever discovered may not
-yet be turned up, but to waste your best years on a
-gamble is not the thing for boys with grit in them. Go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-into some business; it will pay you better if you have to
-start on three dollars a week; with a head and a backbone
-you may get to be of some account in a line where
-every minute sees something to be accomplished.”</p>
-
-<p>As the boys were preparing for bed, Tom remarked:</p>
-
-<p>“It looks like prospectors without a prospect.”</p>
-
-<p>“What Mr. Brunt said as to our chances is probably
-true, judging from our experience so far; but I wish to
-prove it to my own satisfaction before I accept it,” replied
-Phil. “Whatever my judgment may tell me, I
-can’t help feeling that there is rich pay earth <i>somewhere</i>
-in the hills.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I think you’d better stop right here and tackle
-the mud yonder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps I will when the month is up,” replied Phil
-good-naturedly. “Good night!”</p>
-
-<hr class="d1" />
-
-<p>“Good morning, Mrs. Brunt! We’ve had a splendid
-sleep and are ready to pitch in with the pitchfork,” exclaimed
-Phil the next morning when the boys came downstairs
-bright and early.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m glad to hear it,” responded Mrs. Brunt
-heartily. “You’ve been sleeping on the best mattress
-within fifty miles, and that accounts for it. Perhaps
-you’d like to look around a little before breakfast.
-You’ll find Mr. Brunt milking the cow down by the
-pond. Just follow the trail and you’ll find him.”</p>
-
-<p>The boys gladly acted on the suggestion, and sauntered
-over a rustic bridge that spanned the stream. The
-trail led them into a thick grove of firs filled with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-murmurs of the babbling waters, which here flowed over
-a sharp descent. A sudden turn in the path brought
-them to the edge of the grove where a splendid prospect
-burst upon their view.</p>
-
-<p>One feature of it made Phil Gormley stop and clutch
-Tom by the arm!</p>
-
-<p>The mountain pass widened suddenly at this point in
-the form of a semicircle on each side, while a quarter of
-a mile away the flanking mountains swept so close together
-again that there was only a very narrow outlet
-between two opposing spurs. A great basin was thus
-formed of over a quarter of a mile across&mdash;how deep,
-they could not tell, because a great sheet of still water
-filled the hollow. Beyond, from spur to spur, ran a
-chain of spile heads, which showed that man, not nature,
-had made this lake. Over the dam the water lazily
-trickled, forming the continuation of the stream they
-had followed from Placer Notch. It was not necessary
-for Tom to ask the cause of Phil’s agitation. Their
-conversation of the day before had flashed across him as
-the artificial lake burst into view. Just below them was
-Sol, seated on a rock and milking his single cow, in a
-strip of meadow that fringed the sheet of water.</p>
-
-<p>Phil’s face was flushed and his eyes were very bright, but
-he made a visible effort to calm himself as he approached.</p>
-
-<p>The boys and their host passed cordial morning
-greetings, and then Phil said carelessly:</p>
-
-<p>“Such a fine sheet of water is something of a surprise
-in such a spot. Did you build the dam, Mr. Brunt?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not I,” replied the storekeeper. “There’s a story to
-that. They say a mining inspector named John Martin,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-who took in Placer Notch on his circuit twenty-five
-years ago, saw this hollow when he first passed by
-and got the idea into his head that if he could trap
-the muddy water that ran off from the sluices and
-thus collect the tailings, in the course of time the
-mass of mud in the bottom would pan out rich from the
-gold that was constantly going to waste. He located
-this place in the land office, and had the dam built.
-Before he could take title he disappeared while on
-his rounds, and was never again heard of. I finally got
-the title myself, for it struck me that perhaps some day
-if the country around here grew up and there was any
-use for it, I could use the pond for water power: or I
-could drain it off and plant on the bottom, which ought
-to be the richest kind of soil. There’s thirty feet of
-mud on that bottom, I calculate.”</p>
-
-<p>“He must have had a tremendous job to build a dam
-that would make a pond over thirty feet deep,” commented
-Tom.</p>
-
-<p>“No; it wasn’t such a big job. Luck was with him
-and started the work. Just before Martin began, a
-landslide filled up the narrow space between the two
-mountains where they come together. You can see this
-from the other side of the dam. There wasn’t much left to
-be done; he drove some logs and did some filling in; the
-stream gradually filled up the hollow, and when the
-water rose as high as the dam it began to run off down
-the pass just as it used to, leaving a deposit on the bottom
-of the basin that has been rising ever since.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Mr. Brunt,” asked Phil indifferently, “haven’t
-you ever thought of following up the inspector’s idea
-of separating the gold that is in the bottom?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I can’t say I have&mdash;not seriously. There must be a
-great deal of the dust there, but the proportion is so
-small that I guess it wouldn’t be worth while to waste
-any money on such a scheme.”</p>
-
-<p>Hearing this, Tom cast a sly glance at Phil as if to
-say, “What did <i>I</i> tell you?” but he saw that Phil was
-driving at something and he had sense enough to say
-nothing.</p>
-
-<p>The milking was done, and they all went back to
-breakfast, where they were met by Mrs. Brunt, whose
-round face was all aglow from the labors of cooking.
-Then they went down to the strip of meadow again and
-made an onslaught on the hay-field, in which Tom, who
-tackled that part not yet mowed, cut such a swath as
-made old Sol stare. They finished early in the day, and
-as they turned back to the store the owner surveyed the
-stack he and Phil had built with the greatest satisfaction
-imaginable, remarking that the two had accomplished
-in less than a day what would have taken him the
-best part of a week.</p>
-
-<p>Phil had indeed worked hard during the day; he had
-thought hard also. Ideas had been chasing through his
-head in numbers. How rich in gold was the deposit?
-How could he test it? How could it be separated in bulk
-at a cost low enough to pay? Ah, that was the vital
-question of the whole matter! And yet if that were
-solved other questions would follow. How to promote or
-float the scheme? Whom to apply to? How to proportion
-the profits? Yes, Phil had been thinking very
-hard, indeed, and thinking to such purpose as to be fully
-prepared to talk to the point. The subject of the pay<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-bottom was not referred to again during the day; but when
-they had taken their places in the doorway, as on the previous
-evening, while the merry rattle of the plates and
-the “clink” of the knives and forks and spoons betokened
-dish washing in the kitchen, Phil began to speak his
-little piece.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to talk to you seriously, Mr. Brunt, about a
-matter that I have had in mind since yesterday. As we
-came down from the Notch I noticed the muddy bed of
-the stream, and remarked to Tom here, that I believed
-if that sediment could be coraled there would be
-money in it. I found this morning that another great
-mind&mdash;and Phil laughed at his own conceit&mdash;had run in
-the same channel, and had built twenty-five years ago
-what I had proposed yesterday as a good thing.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, Mr. Brunt, if I can show you that your idle
-pond is exceedingly valuable in gold, I want to know if
-you will share equally with me any profits that I may
-show you the way to get out of it?”</p>
-
-<p>Sol chuckled good-naturedly, but incredulously, and
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, aye, my boy! You can have half the profits
-and more too.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is agreed seriously?” persisted Phil.</p>
-
-<p>“All right, my boy&mdash;only understand I put up no
-money.”</p>
-
-<p>“That leads me right to the next point. Providing,
-as before, I could prove value here, a third man or syndicate,
-or something meaning capital, would have to be
-brought in. Speaking in a general way, will you agree
-to give the use of this bottom and your adjoining land on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-a basis of, say, one-third of the profits to each of the
-three concerned&mdash;you, for your mine; myself, for the
-process I <i>know</i> I can invent, and the third man for his
-money to float the enterprise.”</p>
-
-<p>Phil was conscious all the while that he was furnishing
-Mr. Brunt with more amusement than matter for earnest
-thought, but having obtained a really serious promise of
-the donation of land on the basis referred to&mdash;always
-providing of course, it could be proved by actual test
-that the gold could be separated at a profit&mdash;Phil took
-Sol inside, where in the lamplight he told all his ideas
-and schemes, his theory of the separating process and a
-score of other points, while Tom could only stare open
-mouthed and wonder where his chum had learned all this
-about stock companies and spiral wheels and hydraulics.</p>
-
-<p>By-and-by the dubious smile vanished from the face
-of Sol Brunt, and he not only listened seriously and admiringly
-to Phil, but also supplemented his proposals
-with suggestions, corrections and advice that his mature
-experience stamped as very valuable. But Sol’s part in
-the discussion was taken only on the hypothesis that the
-twenty per cent of waste gold that was doubtless in the
-silt could be got at, and it was arranged that the next
-day a test should begin by hand. If the test panned
-out, machinery would step in and do in one hour what
-manual labor would take days to accomplish; and, as
-Phil shrewdly pointed out, one of Sol’s own original
-ideas would supply by natural means one of the necessities
-for the mechanical process&mdash;power&mdash;which otherwise
-would be a huge item of running expenses.</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, next morning the boys sallied out, accompanied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-by Sol, to overlook their operations. They carried
-with them a barrel, buckets to carry the silt and a
-scale to weigh it. They set up a barrel and half filled
-it with water, then into it they dumped several bucketfuls
-of silt. With staves they stirred the mixture so
-violently that each particle of fine silt must have been
-separated from the others. When at last they stopped
-they were dripping with perspiration. They gave the
-muddy water a few minutes to partly settle and allow the
-grains of gold, if any there were, to make their way to
-the bottom of the barrel; then by tipping the barrel
-carefully the water was drained off, leaving only a few
-inches of residue at the bottom of which was a thin
-layer of mud&mdash;and gold?&mdash;that was the question. It was
-not time to answer yet. In went half a barrelful of water
-and more buckets of silt. This was agitated as before
-and the water again drawn off.</p>
-
-<p>When this had been repeated several times it was
-noticed that the layer of mud on the bottom was a foot
-deep. Thereupon two washings of this were had in the
-same way without adding new silt, until the deposit at
-the bottom had been partly drained off. Then more
-silt was stirred in, and so they labored nearly all day,
-until Sol called time, saying there was no use of wearing
-themselves out.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the work was continued until afternoon
-when they had at the bottom of the barrel the residue
-of about two hundred and fifty pounds of silt; in this
-residue, only some six inches thick, was to be found
-nearly every grain of gold that the successive lots of silt
-had contained. It was time for the test. They broke<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-the barrel, and carefully scraped and washed every grain
-of the muddy residue into the largest porcelain basin
-that Sol’s store contained, and in this more limited way
-made many successive washings until at last at the bottom
-of the white basin there gleamed nothing but a fine
-golden sand sparking in the sunlight. There <i>was</i> gold
-in the mud, that was certain. How much and in what
-proportion was the next question? They thoroughly
-dried the golden sediment and called Sol’s fine apothecary’s
-scales into requisition. The dust weighed just
-five penny-weights.</p>
-
-<p>Phil had no sooner ascertained the weight than he began
-figuring excitedly on a scrap of paper. This is
-what he was figuring on: “A layer of mud, quarter
-mile square and average thickness of thirty feet&mdash;how
-many tons of silt are there?”</p>
-
-<p>His recollection of tables of weights and measures was
-perfect and he could therefore calculate this approximately,
-as can any schoolboy. He figured about three
-hundred and sixty thousand tons. Then he calculated:
-“Five penny-weights of gold to about two hundred and
-fifty pounds of silt, makes, say forty dollars per ton
-and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Brunt,” said Phil, looking up and with difficulty
-restraining his excitement, “I figure there is at this moment
-in that pond nearly <span class="smcap">FIFTEEN MILLION DOLLARS’</span>
-worth of dust!”</p>
-
-<hr class="d1" />
-
-<p>Months had passed; Phil and Tom had come to Cheyenne
-City with a letter from Sol Brunt to the president<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-of the Placer Notch Mining Company&mdash;Mr. Van
-Amrandt&mdash;introducing Phil’s scheme and authorizing
-Phil to represent him in the preliminary discussion of
-the whole matter.</p>
-
-<p>Phil had impressed Mr. Van Amrandt most favorably
-as a young man whose youthful enthusiasm was held in
-check by a thoughtfulness and judgment beyond his
-years. But time had passed; the president had been
-very busy with other matters, or there had always been
-some other reason to keep things at a stand-still for a
-long while. Finally the president went so far as to have
-the superintendent of the “P. N.” mine go down to Sol’s
-place and assay a quantity of the silt. Phil and Tom
-had been enabled to bide a winter’s delay as far as actual
-needs went, through the kindness of the president who
-had given them both subordinate clerical positions in the
-company’s office; there Phil was looked upon rather
-suspiciously by his fellow clerks as a sort of upstart who,
-by some hook or crook, could procure long interviews
-with the president and engineer, and come out of their
-respective offices looking as if he had been discussing
-questions of tremendous importance, as, in fact, he
-had.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon in March the door of Mr. Van
-Amrandt’s private office opened and the president himself
-stood on the threshold with a paper in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, Gormley, come here, will you?” and he retired
-again to his desk.</p>
-
-<p>Phil rose and entered the private room.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut the door and sit down. I have here the report
-of Jasper who has been assaying up at Brunt’s “duck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-pond.” He reports forty-one dollars to the ton&mdash;a little
-better than your own estimate.”</p>
-
-<p>Phil’s heart beat away at a tremendous rate all this
-while, and when the result of the assay was announced
-it seemed to stop altogether. The president continued
-in a most matter-of-fact tone:</p>
-
-<p>“I have just told the engineer to go over those plans
-of yours which he has approved in a general way and,
-in connection with yourself, perfect the details of your
-device.”</p>
-
-<p>Phil seemed to hear this from a great distance, and
-Mr. Van Amrandt seemed to be far off and in a sort of
-mist. He could not move or speak or even think&mdash;he
-could only comprehend the joyful news.</p>
-
-<p>“By the time the designs are perfected I shall have
-procured the necessary appropriation from the directors
-for the machinery. They have terrible tales to tell of
-the weather up in the Notch it seems, Gormley; only
-last week there was a heavy fall of snow which the
-superintendent says is swelling the streams greatly as it
-melts. To return to the subject, though, I have just
-sent Jasper’s messenger back with a message to Brunt,
-asking him to come into town to sign a conveyance of
-his claim to the company; then we will issue the new
-stock to Brunt and yourself on the basis we spoke of
-last month.”</p>
-
-<p>By this time Phil had regained his self-possession.
-He rose and began:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Van Amrandt, I thank you very&mdash;&mdash;” when
-the door opened and Sol Brunt appeared on the threshold.
-He advanced dejectedly and said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The dam burst yesterday! Twenty streams from
-the sides of the hollow are tearing into the basin, and
-what silt is left by to-morrow I will sell you for a ten
-dollar note!”</p>
-
-<p>The clerks outside were startled by the sound of a heavy
-fall.</p>
-
-<p>Phil Gormley had given way under the blow.</p>
-
-<hr class="d1" />
-
-<p>A fortune lost! you will say. Yes; part of the fourteen
-millions was washed away, part was covered by the
-debris of land slides which the unusual freshet of that
-spring caused. What remained amounted to nothing in
-comparison. That was five years ago. The Placer
-Notch Mining Company has been reorganized since&mdash;just
-a few weeks ago, in fact, and this whole matter was only
-brought back to my mind at this time by the receipt of a
-letter from a friend of mine, who announced that he has
-just been put in on the reorganization as secretary of the
-company. I refer, of course, to Phil Gormley. He lost
-his lucky fortune, but he is working out a better one, because
-it is coming slowly and with honest difficulty. But
-it was his idea of working the “duck pond” that planted
-this slow-growing tree of fortune, for it was that which
-took him to the company’s office.</p>
-
-<p>Out here on my quiet farm I do not hear many
-echoes from the busy outside world, but none could give
-me greater pleasure than does such news of my dear
-friend Phil&mdash;for I am no other than Doubting Thomas
-Danvers.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="pc4">THE GRANTHAM DIAMONDS</h2>
-
-<hr class="d1" />
-
-<p class="pc mid"><span class="smcap">By Russell Stockton.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="d2" />
-
-<div>
- <img class="dc1" src="images/dh.jpg" width="80" height="79" alt=""/>
-</div>
-<p class="dc13">HOW it did snow, to be sure! The flakes, and
-very small ones they were, came down in
-slanting drives or bewildering spirals, to be
-taken up again from the earth in fierce gusts
-and whisked along in blinding drifts.</p>
-
-<p>John, the austere-looking butler, was putting the
-finishing touches on a tempting spread in the dining-room
-of the Grantham mansion. There was a salad and a
-dish of nuts; there was a generous plate of cake and a
-heaping pile of gorgeous red apples; but it would never
-do not to have something hot on such a cold night as
-this, so, alongside of a silver chafing dish was a fine
-English cheese and two eggs, which of course meant
-rarebits, and a tea urn with six dainty and varied tea
-cups and saucers, which of course meant girls.</p>
-
-<p>The antique hall clock blinked like an old man at the
-dancing flames in the great fire-place and slowly sounded
-eight o’clock. Almost at once there came the merry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-jingle of sleigh bells, then a few shrill shrieks, a ring,
-and then a fierce stamping of small feet on the veranda.</p>
-
-<p>Almost before John’s dignity could carry him to the
-hall door, Miss Maud Grantham ran swiftly down the
-stairs, followed, partly on the stairs, but mainly on the
-bannisters, by little Bobbie Grantham. Four rosy and
-very pretty faces came in with the snow gust at the door;
-there was much embracing and such a chattering,
-Maud failed to get a word in edgeways, and so resorted to
-the exorcism of holding aloft the yellow sheet of paper
-she held in her hand so that every eye could see it. The
-effect was instantaneous: a hush fell on the quartet at
-the sight of that dreadful messenger&mdash;a telegram.</p>
-
-<p>“Now don’t be afraid, girls! It’s nothing very
-terrible,” and she handed the sheet to Sadie Stillwell,
-who read aloud:</p>
-
-<p class="pr4 p1">“<span class="smcap">Hudson</span>, N. Y., Nov. 28, 1891.</p>
-
-<p>“To C. V. Grantham, Yonkers, N. Y.&mdash;Train stalled.
-Don’t expect us till morning.</p>
-
-<p class="pr4"><span class="smcap">Wes.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class="p1">If the girls looked relieved for a moment they certainly
-showed regret the next, especially Minnie Trumbull;
-but she said nothing. Ella Bromley, on the contrary,
-exclaimed in great vexation:</p>
-
-<p>“What a shame! For two whole days I’ve been
-promising myself <i>such</i> a time teasing that scamp Dick
-almost to death. I think it’s too bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” replied Sadie; “you will have four
-days in which to work out your horrible purpose. Why,
-is not slow torture better than killing him off in one
-night?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, girls! How can you stand there joking,”
-spoke up Grace Waldron, “while those poor boys are
-slowly freezing to death in the middle of a snow bank?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nonsense!” replied Maud. “Where there’s a telegraph
-office there must be a station and a stove. It is
-too bad, indeed, that Wes and Dick must miss the little
-surprise party. But come along! I’ve done everything
-to help out for a jolly time. There’s the supper&mdash;I’ve
-had that all fixed, and I’ve told John we wouldn’t want
-him, so he’s gone off to bed, I suppose. Then mamma and
-papa have gone to the Bruces’ <i>musicale</i>, so there isn’t a
-soul in the house to disturb. Isn’t that just delightful?”</p>
-
-<p>With a deafening din of joyous exclamations they
-followed Maud Grantham into the music room, and
-there all the evening they played games, and gossiped,
-and danced and sang, totally unsuspicious of the grave
-proceedings that were taking place within sound of
-their voices.</p>
-
-<p>While this festive event was in progress Wesley and
-Richard Grantham, the sons of a wealthy New York
-banker, were really speeding on toward their home by
-the Eastern express. About four o’clock in the afternoon
-they had run into a snow drift just after drawing
-away from the station at Hudson. Things had looked for
-a time as if they were to be held in that town over night:
-so, when the train had backed to the station they had
-sent the telegram to their father. But when they saw a
-crowd of laborers file off with spades and shovels toward
-the deep drift, they had followed and watched the work,
-done in the faint light of many lamps; and they had of
-course chafed and grumbled, as well they might at being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-delayed on the eve of a school holiday and almost at the
-threshold of their luxurious home, quite oblivious of
-the fortunate outcome of the delay.</p>
-
-<p>The fierce winds that had swept the drift in place had
-helped to clear it away, and by six o’clock, when it had
-long been dark, the laborers had shoveled it nearly all off.
-The train moved out and plunged into the shallow layer
-of snow that remained, sweeping it up into the air in
-great feathery plumes, and the obstruction was vanquished.</p>
-
-<p>“See that group, Dick! What a picture! Did you
-notice the beautiful effect of the tiny lights on the snow
-and how weird those grim Italians&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“How about a good hot cup of coffee and the burning
-logs in the fireplace&mdash;there’s a picture for you!” scoffed
-young Dick, who had not yet cultivated that eye for the
-picturesque that his elder brother affected, and little
-more was said during the remainder of the ride.</p>
-
-<p>It was about ten o’clock when they slowed up at
-Yonkers. The boys tumbled out of the train and halted
-to turn up coat collars and pull mufflers more closely
-around their throats.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a carriage in sight? Well, I like this! It would
-seem as if everything was contriving to keep us away from
-home on the eve of Thanksgiving,” growled Dick.</p>
-
-<p>“We can certainly appreciate our good home all the
-more. Perhaps we can give thanks more heartily for it
-to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, bother!” was Dick’s reply. He was an impatient
-youth, certainly. “Who’d expect a fellow to feel
-thankful when he had to climb a little St. Bernard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-in a storm like this. Here goes for footing it, if you’re
-ready!”</p>
-
-<p>They grasped their traps and plunged into the inky
-darkness, and in a moment were at the foot of the steep
-hill. The wind was cutting and the snow blinding.
-Even if they had not kept their heads well down against
-the blast they could not have seen an arm’s length before
-them&mdash;only a dimly white sheet under their feet.</p>
-
-<p>Dick, plunging ahead knee deep in the snow suddenly
-felt a terrific shock; for an instant he knew nothing;
-then he came to the realization that he was lying on his
-back in a snow bank with Wesley bending close over
-him and calling his name anxiously. He sat upright at
-once and confusedly asked:</p>
-
-<p>“What was that, Wes? I did not see a thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seemed to be a man running down the hill. After
-he collided with you he just brushed me. Look! there
-he is now!”</p>
-
-<p>Wes was pointing toward the station, where the
-train, for some reason delayed, was just beginning to
-move out. What Wes saw through the falling snow was
-the figure of a tall man dash into the circle of the
-station’s dim light and leap on the platform of the last
-car, just passing away. It all occurred in an instant and
-Dick looked too late to see the hurrying figure.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you recognize him, Wes?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, of course not. The snow blurs everything at
-such a distance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Worse luck! I wish he’d missed that train. I’d go
-right back and interview him&mdash;yes I would! I think
-I’m hurt, Wes; that fellow’s elbow or shoulder struck
-me over the eye.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Just a moment and I will light one of those fusees.
-It is fortunate I bought them from that ragged Italian&mdash;nothing
-else would hold an instant in this gale.”</p>
-
-<p>After some fumbling in pockets with gloved hands
-the box of vesuvians was found. Wesley struck one and
-by its sputtering light examined as best he could Dick’s
-eye. There was only a slight abrasion, apparently, but
-as Dick complained of a smarting in the eyeball a handkerchief
-was tied over the injured orb.</p>
-
-<p>“Now how are we ever to find our traps? They must
-have gone in every direction. Oh, I’d just like to&mdash;&mdash;”
-Dick shook his fist at the darkness in the direction of
-the departed train and then began to tramp around in
-the snow to find his things. First, Wesley put his foot
-into Dick’s hat which had rolled some distance off; then
-Dick kicked his bundle of canes and umbrellas and,
-lastly, he tumbled flat over his large hand satchel. He
-felt around it and then broke out again:</p>
-
-<p>“I <i>am</i> a stupid. I never strapped this confounded
-bag in the car and the lock has slipped. The thing is
-perfectly empty, Wes!”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us see what we can do with the aid of these
-fusees, Dick. They are a good example of ‘bread upon
-the waters,’ aren’t they.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hang it! I’m thinking of bread in a better place
-just now. Come! give me some of those things, too.
-If we don’t get along soon I shall freeze stiff.”</p>
-
-<p>They burned one after another of the vesuvians and
-gathered up all sorts of miscellaneous things in the way
-of clothing and boxes and little packages and what not,
-and at last they concluded it was useless to look further,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-as every inch of ground had been gone over for quite
-some distance. The things were jammed in pell mell
-and the bag was strapped this time: then they again
-began the ascent, cold to their very bones.</p>
-
-<p>It was a toilsome tramp up the hill in knee-deep snow,
-with sometimes a soft drift into which the travelers
-would plunge and flounder around till they could finally
-extricate themselves. But at last the warm lights of the
-brilliantly illuminated mansions on the Crescent began
-to light the way and cheer them on, and, in a very few
-minutes the great Grantham house came into sight,
-all dark excepting the music room. There the windows
-were a blaze of light, and, when the boys reached the
-terrace, the sound of a piano almost drowned in girlish
-laughter, vied with the whistling and wheezing of the
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>“Methinks there is a ‘sound of revelry by night,’”
-quoted Dick. “Wonder what’s up.”</p>
-
-<p>The boys tiptoed along the veranda and peeped in on
-the bright scene.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Scott, Wes! you’re in luck; there’s Minnie
-Trumbull at the piano,” and he nudged his elder brother
-in a knowing way; for Minnie, be it known, was a rather
-serious girl who read deep books, painted in water
-colors and played the piano brilliantly, and it was toward
-her that Wes usually gravitated when he was at home.</p>
-
-<p>“I am very sorry for you, Dick, for I see Ella Bromley
-there, dancing with our sister, and I know you are
-in for a quarrel;” at which Dick looked a little conscious,
-for when Dick was at home he wanted nothing better
-than to quarrel with Ella, just for the pleasure of making
-up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At this moment a shrill shriek pierced the air. One
-of the girls had discovered two faces glaring in at the
-window: one had a bandaged eye and “Tramps!” was
-the idea that for an instant filled every mind. But
-the boys pressed their faces closer to the glass; there
-was a general recognition and an impetuous rush to
-the hall door.</p>
-
-<p>Handshaking, questioning, explanation, a great pulling
-off of coats helped by willing hands&mdash;such a hearty
-welcome home made up for all their trials and misfortunes
-on the way.</p>
-
-<p>“Maud, if you’ll ring for John to carry these things
-upstairs, Dick and I will go to <i>our</i> rooms for a few
-minutes to get into presentable shape,” said Wes.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sorry, boys, but you’ll have to carry the things
-yourself, for I sent all the servants off to bed hours ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well! it seems we’ve got another climb, after all,
-Wes,” and the boys disappeared above.</p>
-
-<p>Just as every one was sitting down to the supper table
-Mr. and Mrs. Grantham came in and another round of
-loving greeting ensued. When the parents retired upstairs
-the fun around the supper-table became furious.
-At its height Mr. Grantham came to the threshold of
-the room and said:</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, I shall have to take you away for a few
-minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>The words were said pleasantly enough, but Sadie was
-sensitive enough to notice something in her father’s
-tone that placed her in dread. She followed the boys
-and asked fearfully:</p>
-
-<p>“What is the matter, father&mdash;something, I know!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Simply this: there has been a cunning thief in the
-house, and he seems to have taken off some of your
-mother’s jewels. Don’t alarm your friends, but let
-them go as soon as they wish to.”</p>
-
-<p>When the trio reached Mrs. Grantham’s bed-room a
-glance showed that something strange had been going
-on. The drawers of the bureau had been pulled out
-and rummaged; the escritoire had been treated in the
-same way. The shelves of the closets showed signs of
-confusion, and finally a cedar chest had been pried open.
-In this the robber had found Mrs. Grantham’s jewel case.
-Singularly enough he had left some of its contents behind,
-but he had taken the priceless necklace of large
-diamonds, the great solitaire earrings and two costly
-finger rings.</p>
-
-<p>“Dick go up to John’s room and ask him to dress
-and step down here,” directed the master.</p>
-
-<p>Dick departed, to return in a moment with the exciting
-news that John was not in his room and his bed
-was quite undisturbed. It was one of the butler’s
-nights on duty! Sadie, who arrived a few minutes later,
-having dismissed her friends, was sent to interrogate
-each of the female servants. They had seen nothing of
-the butler. Some of them had heard him go downstairs
-about nine o’clock, come back and go down
-again about ten: but they had thought nothing of
-that.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything points to John Simmons as the thief,”
-said Mr. Grantham. “But it is so difficult to realize a
-common burglar in this man, so dignified, so steady,
-so&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Wesley Grantham! didn’t you get some idea of that
-brute who ran over me?” interrupted Dick excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“No; only that he was very tall&mdash;just as John was. It
-is likely, I think, that it was he who was in such a
-hurry to catch the train for New York.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your eye seems to be very much inflamed, Richard,”
-said Mr. Grantham. “Go to your room and bathe it
-and then go right to bed. Wesley and I will go into the
-library and write out a description of this fellow to send
-to the chief of police early in the morning. Go now,
-my boy; nothing further can be done to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>Young Dick departed and Wesley sat down to write
-out a minute pen picture of John Simmons, butler. If
-their sight could have pierced the wall they would have
-seen Dick unpacking the disorderly hand satchel that
-had been burst open on the road. They would have
-seen him arranging its contents in and on his bureau.
-Among these things were several small boxes&mdash;one for his
-scarf pins and trinkets, another for his engraved cards,
-and so on. But one that came to his hands seemed to
-interest him particularly: the others he had indifferently
-put in their proper places&mdash;this one, about four inches
-long by three wide, covered with ivory white enameled
-paper, he examined thoughtfully, opened and&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“Are you quite through with your description of the
-thief?” asked Dick at the doorway. There was a singular
-gleam in his eyes, and he seemed to labor under
-some suppressed excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“All but the eyes. We can’t seem to decide whether
-they were gray or blue.”</p>
-
-<p>“The person who has those jewels has dark brown
-eyes&mdash;almost black,” answered Dick.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, my son, what a poor memory you have! John
-was fair and florid&mdash;the English complexion, with fairly
-light eyes. But put it down gray. It really doesn’t&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“But it is not John who has those diamonds,” insisted
-Dick. He would have liked to keep his discovery back
-longer to puzzle his auditors, but he simply couldn’t.
-He stepped to the library table, and, taking a hand from
-behind his back, placed a white enameled jeweler’s box
-on the cloth in the fierce glare of the lamp. His father
-looking at him in surprise, said under his breath.</p>
-
-<p>“What can be the matter with the boy?”</p>
-
-<p>Wesley mechanically opened the box and both he and
-his father jumped to their feet in surprise, for the sharp
-gleam of many diamonds dazzled their eyes!</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Grantham reached for the little box and pulled
-out, first, a necklace of twelve large pendant diamonds;
-to this hung one big solitaire diamond earring; the other
-lay in the box, and with it were a cluster diamond ring
-and another of rubies, sapphires and diamonds.</p>
-
-<p>“I do not understand,” said Mr. Grantham uncertainly;
-even the man of affairs was dazed by the sudden
-and peculiar entrance of these gems, supposed to be in
-the pocket of a thief in New York City.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you’re surprised. Fancy how I felt when I
-found them in my satchel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your satchel? Who could have put them there!”</p>
-
-<p>“I myself. This is the only explanation I can think
-of. It must have been the thief&mdash;John, supposedly&mdash;who
-was rushing to catch the train. Perhaps he saw
-the gleam of the head-light up the road from one of the
-upper windows. He may have bundled on his wraps,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-thrust the box into his overcoat pocket or somewhere
-and started out to sprint for the train.</p>
-
-<p>“When he struck my manly form the shock that heeled
-me over must have knocked this box out of his pocket
-or wherever it was, and I gathered it in with the things
-spilled out of my bag in the snow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you have found the solution Dick. Your
-injured eye is not a <i>very</i> large price for sixteen thousand
-dollars worth of gems,” was the comment of Wes.</p>
-
-<p>“Wonderful! wonderful!” exclaimed Mr. Grantham.
-“I must go at once and tell your mother. She is quite
-prostrated at this loss.” He started off, but Dick stopped
-him by calling:</p>
-
-<p>“Father! What reward did I hear you say you had
-offered for the finding of these shiners?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! ha!” laughed the banker. “I don’t think you
-heard me state the figure, Dick. But didn’t you say
-something about a sloop yacht the other day&mdash;eh?”</p>
-</div>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class="limit">
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote p4">
-<p class="pc large">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:</p>
-<p class="ptn">&mdash;Obvious print and punctuation errors were corrected.</p>
-<p class="ptn">&mdash;A Table of Contents was not in the original work; one has been produced and added by Transcriber.</p>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
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