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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67142 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67142)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lost with Lieutenant Pike, by Edwin L.
-Sabin
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Lost with Lieutenant Pike
- How from the Pawnee Village the boy named Scar Head marched with
- the young American Chief clear into the Snowy Mountains; how in
- the dead of winter they searched for the Lost River and thought
- that they had found it; and how the Spanish Soldiery came upon
- them and took them down to Santa Fé of New Mexico, where another
- surprise awaited them
-
-Author: Edwin L. Sabin
-
-Illustrator: Charles H. Stephens
-
-Release Date: January 10, 2022 [eBook #67142]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST WITH LIEUTENANT
-PIKE ***
-
-
-
-
-
- LOST WITH
- LIEUTENANT PIKE
-
- SECOND IMPRESSION
-
-
-
-
-_The American Trail Blazers_
-
-“THE STORY GRIPS AND THE HISTORY STICKS”
-
-These books present in the form of vivid and fascinating fiction, the
-early and adventurous phases of American history. Each volume deals
-with the life and adventures of one of the great men who made that
-history, or with some one great event in which, perhaps, several heroic
-characters were involved. The stories, though based upon accurate
-historical fact, are rich in color, full of dramatic action, and appeal
-to the imagination of the red-blooded man or boy.
-
-Each volume illustrated in color and black and white
-
- 12mo. Cloth.
-
-
- LOST WITH LIEUTENANT PIKE
- GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES
- OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK
- WITH CARSON AND FREMONT
- DANIEL BOONE: BACKWOODSMAN
- BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL
- CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH
- DAVID CROCKETT: SCOUT
- ON THE PLAINS WITH CUSTER
- GOLD SEEKERS OF ’49
- WITH SAM HOUSTON IN TEXAS
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “IT’S THE WRONG PEAK, MEN――YES, THE WRONG PEAK”]
-
-
-
-
- LOST WITH
- LIEUTENANT PIKE
-
- HOW FROM THE PAWNEE VILLAGE THE BOY NAMED SCAR
- HEAD MARCHED WITH THE YOUNG AMERICAN CHIEF CLEAR
- INTO THE SNOWY MOUNTAINS; HOW IN THE DEAD OF WINTER
- THEY SEARCHED FOR THE LOST RIVER AND THOUGHT THAT
- THEY HAD FOUND IT; AND HOW THE SPANISH SOLDIERY
- CAME UPON THEM AND TOOK THEM DOWN TO SANTA FÉ OF
- NEW MEXICO, WHERE ANOTHER SURPRISE AWAITED THEM
-
- BY
-
- EDWIN L. SABIN
-
- AUTHOR OF “GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES,”
- “OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK,”
- “BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL,” ETC.
-
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY_
- CHARLES H. STEPHENS
- _PORTRAIT AND A MAP_
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- PHILADELPHIA & LONDON
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1919, J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
-
-
- PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- AT THE WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS
- PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- TO THOSE
- COUNTLESS OTHER AMERICANS
-
- WHO IN 1917 AND 1918 BRAVELY FOLLOWED, LIKE YOUNG
- LIEUTENANT PIKE, THE TRAIL OF HONOR, FLAG AND DUTY
-
-
-
-
- I. Always preserve your honor free from blemish.
-
- II. Be ready at all times to die for your country.
-
-
- General Pike’s rules for his little son.
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-This story takes the adventure trail of that young soldier-explorer
-Zebulon Montgomery Pike, who was lost in the mountains of southern
-Colorado one hundred years ago. Another story in the Trail Blazers
-Series has told of Captains Lewis and Clark, who explored the
-northwestern part of the new Louisiana Territory. They, also, were
-young. Captain Lewis had just turned thirty. But Lieutenant and Captain
-Zebulon Pike was younger yet. He was only twenty-seven when, while
-Lewis and Clark were still out, he was sent to lead a handful of men
-into the unknown Southwest.
-
-The vast Province of Louisiana, bought by the United States from France
-three years before, for $15,000,000, was thought by the United States
-to extend, in the north, from the Mississippi River to the Rocky
-Mountains; in the south it tapered off to the Gulf of Mexico at New
-Orleans.
-
-The southwestern boundary was uncertain. The United States claimed
-clear to the lower Rio Grande River, across Texas; Spain, which had
-owned Louisiana Territory before the United States bought it from
-France, claimed north even to the Missouri River. Some said that the
-Arkansas River of southern Colorado should be the boundary, there; some
-said the Red River, further south――which was confused with the Canadian
-River. And when Lieutenant Pike was started out, the United States
-soldiers and the Spanish soldiers of Mexico faced each other across the
-Sabine River of the western border of Louisiana State.
-
-So the trail of young Pike and his handful of men pointed into a
-debated land. If the Indians did not get them, the Spanish might. He
-had been instructed not to offend the Spanish, and to keep away from
-their settlements of New Mexico; but he was resolved to stand his
-ground when he deemed that he was in the right, and to defend the Flag.
-The Spanish had sent six hundred soldiers, with over two thousand
-horses and mules, to look for him. He would certainly have fought them
-all, with his twenty men, had they tried to stop him anywhere outside
-of New Mexico.
-
-No braver soldiers ever marched than Lieutenant Pike and his little
-platoon. They lost their way; they struggled with cold below zero and
-snow to their waists, in the bleak high mountains. They had left home
-with only summer clothing; they were ragged and lean, and their feet
-froze until the bones came out. They went days at a time without food.
-And they were utterly lost, in a winter country; alone, one thousand
-miles from home.
-
-But only once did a single man complain aloud. Their wonderful leader
-sternly silenced him, by reminding him that they all were sharing and
-suffering alike.
-
-When their lieutenant had been gone from them two days, seeking meat
-to relieve a famine, at his return he writes in his journal: “On the
-countenances of the men was not a frown, nor was there a desponding
-eye; all seemed happy to hail their officer and companions; yet not a
-mouthful had they eaten for four days.” Indeed, they were planning to
-send out and rescue _him_.
-
-It was this same spirit which made the American soldiers in France
-press forward, ever forward, and yield not an inch of ground.
-
-Lieutenant Pike was an officer to love as well as to respect. He asked
-no favors; only obedience, and willingness to endure what he had to
-endure. He never spared himself. While others might stay in camp, he it
-was that went out into the cold and snow, hunting for meat. He made it
-plain that his honor, his country and his duty were more to him than
-his life. These were the three ideals that inspired him to go on when
-he might have been excused for camping in safety and giving up his
-search for the Red River.
-
-The name of Pike lives in history. We have a famous mountain
-named for him, and we know that he died――“killed in action”――as a
-brigadier-general, aged thirty-four. The names of his brave men have
-vanished. What became of John Sparks, Pat Smith, Jacob Carter, and the
-rest, we do not know. We do not know that the Government even rescued
-from the Spaniards those whom their lieutenant had been obliged to
-leave. We do not know that any of them received gifts of land and extra
-pay, such as the Lewis and Clark men received. But heroes they were,
-every one, who did not fail their leader nor their flag.
-
-So their company roll is printed in this book, that they also may live
-again.
-
- THE AUTHOR
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. THE COMING OF THE SPANIARDS 19
- II. THE COMING OF THE AMERICANS 36
- III. THE PAWNEES ARE OF TWO MINDS 52
- IV. ON THE TRAIL OF THE SPANIARDS 70
- V. THE CHASE OF THE BIG ELK 85
- VI. LIEUTENANT WILKINSON SAYS GOOD-BY 99
- VII. “THE MOUNTAINS! THE MOUNTAINS!” 112
- VIII. BAD HEARTS IN THE WAY 127
- IX. A TRY AT THE “GRAND PEAK” 139
- X. ONWARD INTO WINTER 156
- XI. SEEKING THE LOST RIVER 167
- XII. IS IT FOUND AT LAST? 176
- XIII. MEAT FOR THE CAMP 187
- XIV. A TRAIL OF SURPRISES 200
- XV. NOT YET DEFEATED 225
- XVI. BLOCKED BY THE GREAT WHITE MOUNTAINS 237
- XVII. THE FORT IN THE WILDERNESS 250
- XVIII. VISITORS FROM THE SOUTH 261
- XIX. IN THE HANDS OF THE SPANIARDS 275
- XX. STUB REACHES END O’ TRAIL 289
- XXI. GOOD-BY TO LIEUTENANT PIKE 306
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- “It’s the Wrong Peak, Men――Yes, the Wrong Peak”
- _Frontispiece_
-
- Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike 15
-
- “I Bring You the American Flag” 55
-
- Whang! It Buried Itself Almost Out of Sight Behind the
- Elk Chief’s Ribs 97
-
- But Stub Never Felt the Final Crash 203
-
- “In My Proper Character, Sir: An Officer of the United
- States Army” 298
-
-
-MAP
-
- The Trail of Lieutenant Pike 19
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: LIEUTENANT ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE
-
-From the First Edition of His “Expeditions” Philadelphia, 1810]
-
-
-
-
-BRIGADIER-GENERAL ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE
-
-A noble young American soldier and explorer, whose guiding purpose was:
-Honor, Country, Duty.
-
-
-Born January 5, 1779, at Lamberton, near Trenton, New Jersey.
-
-His father was Captain Zebulon Pike, of the Fourth Continental
-Dragoons, in the War of the Revolution; later major in the
-Third and the First Regiments of Infantry, U. S. A., and brevet
-lieutenant-colonel.
-
-The boy Zebulon was brought up as a soldier.
-
-At fifteen he was a cadet in his father’s infantry regiment of the
-United States Third Sub-Legion.
-
-At twenty, or in March, 1799, he was commissioned second lieutenant in
-the Second Regiment of Infantry, U. S. A.
-
-Commissioned first lieutenant, November, the same year.
-
-Transferred to the First Infantry, of which his father was major, in
-April, 1802. In this regiment Meriwether Lewis, of the famous Lewis and
-Clark expedition to the mouth of the Columbia River, was then a captain.
-
-At the age of twenty-six, while Captains Lewis and Clark are exploring
-through the far northwest of the new Louisiana Territory purchase, he
-receives orders, July 30, 1805, from General James Wilkinson, Chief of
-the Army, to ascend the Mississippi River from St. Louis to its source.
-He is to report upon the country, the Indians and the fur trade of
-this, the eastern border of Upper Louisiana.
-
-Starts from St. Louis, August 9, 1805, with twenty enlisted men of the
-regular army, in a keel-boat seventy feet long, provisioned for four
-months. Suffers many hardships by storm, cold and hunger, but returns
-successful on the last day of April, 1806, after an absence of almost
-nine months.
-
-In less than two months, or on June 24, 1806, he is directed to ascend
-the Missouri and Osage Rivers, and restore forty-six Osage Indians,
-rescued by the Government from the Potawatomi Indians, to their people
-of the Osage towns in western Missouri. He is to make peace, by order
-of their American father, between the Osage and the Kansas nations. He
-is then to continue to the Pawnees of present northern Kansas, and ask
-them to help him on to make peace with the Comanches in the southwest
-on the borders of New Mexico. While with the Comanches he is to explore
-the head-waters of the Arkansas and Red (Canadian) Rivers, but he must
-avoid trespassing upon the Spanish territory of New Mexico. Spanish
-territory is supposed to extend south from the Red River, although the
-Spanish claim that it extends much farther north, even through Kansas.
-
-Again he leaves his family, and embarks, July 15, 1806, with First
-Lieutenant James B. Wilkinson, First Infantry, the son of General
-Wilkinson; Civilian Surgeon John H. Robinson, an interpreter, and
-eighteen enlisted men, in two boats. The majority of the enlisted men
-had been with him up the Mississippi.
-
-He visits the Osages, who welcome the return of their relatives, and
-agree to peace with the Kansas. The Pawnees try to stop him, by order
-of the Spanish, but he defies them. He fails to find the Comanches. His
-march by horse and foot takes him along the Arkansas River clear to the
-Rocky Mountains, where he sights the great Pike’s Peak (later named
-for him) of Colorado, and attempts to climb it. Searching for the head
-of the Red River, that he may follow down to the military posts of the
-United States frontier, he loses his way completely. In the bitter cold
-and deep snows of a terrible winter he crosses the front range of the
-Rockies, and builds a stockade upon a stream of the Upper Rio Grande
-River in the lower end of the San Luis Valley, southern Colorado.
-
-Here in mid-winter Spanish soldiers from Santa Fé come upon him and
-inform him that he is in Spanish territory. They take him down to
-Santa Fé, the capital of the Province of New Mexico. He is sent on
-down to the military headquarters at Chihuahua, Mexico. From there
-he is sent to the United States, and arrives at the American post of
-Natchitoches, western Louisiana, on July 1, 1807, after travels of a
-year.
-
-As the first Government explorer through far southwestern Louisiana
-Territory he brings back much valuable information upon the country and
-Indians, and upon the people, military forces and customs of Mexico.
-Captains Lewis and Clark have brought back also their information upon
-the far Northwest.
-
-Meanwhile, as a reward for his services, he had been promoted to
-captain, August 12, 1806.
-
-Commissioned major, in the Sixth U. S. Infantry, May, 1808.
-
-Commissioned lieutenant-colonel, Fourth U. S. Infantry, December, 1809.
-
-Commissioned colonel, Fifteenth U. S. Infantry, July, 1812.
-
-Appointed brigadier-general, adjutant-general and inspector-general, U.
-S. A., March, 1813.
-
-Killed in action, April 27, 1813, while commanding the assault by the
-American troops upon York, at Toronto, Canada. The retreating British
-garrison blew up a powder magazine, and a fragment of rock crushed his
-back. He died wrapped in the Flag, amidst victory, at the age of only
-thirty-four.
-
-
-THE PIKE PARTIES
-
-UP THE MISSISSIPPI (1805–1806)
-
- First Lieutenant Zebulon M. Pike, Commanding
-
- Pierre Rousseau, Interpreter
-
- Sergeant Henry Kennerman (reduced to the ranks)
-
- Corporals
- Samuel Bradley
- William E. Meek
-
- _Privates_
- Jeremiah Jackson
- John Boley
- Thomas Dougherty
- Solomon Huddleston
- Theodore Miller
- Alexander Roy
- Patrick Smith
- John Brown
- Jacob Carter
- David Whelply
- William Gordon
- John Mountjoy
- Hugh Menaugh
- John Sparks
- Freegift Stout
- David Owings
- Peter Branden
-
-
-INTO THE SOUTHWEST (1806–1807)
-
- First Lieutenant (and Captain) Zebulon M. Pike, Commanding
-
- First Lieutenant James B. Wilkinson (descended the Arkansas
- River)
-
- Civilian Volunteer, Doctor John H. Robinson (went through)
-
- Baroney Vasquez, Interpreter (went through)
-
- Sergeants
- Joseph Ballenger (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)
- William E. Meek (went through)
-
- Corporal Jeremiah Jackson (went through)
- Private John Brown (went through)
- Private Jacob Carter (went through)
- Private Thomas Dougherty (went through)
- Private William Gordon (went through)
- Private Theodore Miller (went through)
- Private Hugh Menaugh (went through)
- Private John Mountjoy (went through)
- Private Alexander Roy (went through)
- Private John Sparks (went through)
- Private Patrick Smith (went through)
- Private Freegift Stout (went through)
- Private John Boley (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)
- Private Samuel Bradley (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)
- Private Solomon Huddleston (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)
- Private John Wilson (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)
- Private Henry Kennerman (deserted)
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE TRAIL OF LIEUTENANT PIKE]
-
-
-
-
-LOST WITH LIEUTENANT PIKE
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-THE COMING OF THE SPANIARDS
-
-
-“Ai-ee! I see them!” panted Iskatappe, over his shoulder, and pointing
-to the west. “The Spanish!”
-
-“It may be running buffalo, or a big wind,” answered Skidi.
-
-“Shall we halt and wait?” proposed Letalesha.
-
-“No. It is they. It does not move fast enough for buffalo or wind. It
-is on this side of the river. We will cross the river and hide on the
-other side. Then we will be safe,” ordered Iskatappe.
-
-Boy Scar Head, at the rear, peered hard and he, too, sighted a dust
-cloud far westward, tinging the horizon above the rolling, sandy
-landscape.
-
-This was the Corn month, July, 1806. The four were travelling in single
-file at fast dog-trot down through the northern end of Texas where the
-Canadian River crosses. Iskatappe, or Rich Man, led. He was second
-chief of the nation. Skidi, or Wolf, came next. He was a warrior.
-Letalesha, or Old Knife, trotted third. He was a sub-chief. And at the
-rear there trotted Scar Head, who was not yet even a warrior, because
-he was just a boy; but some day he should be a warrior, and a chief, if
-he proved brave and smart.
-
-They were odd-looking Indians, clad in only moccasins and buffalo-robes.
-The three men had their heads closely shaven except for a short
-pompadour ridge like a rooster comb, ending in the scalp-lock. With a
-paste of buffalo tallow and red clay this scalp-lock was made to stand
-up stiff and curved forward in shape of a horn. By that sign, and by the
-sign of their travelling afoot, and by their tall stature and high
-cheek-bones, friends and enemies would have known them at once as
-Pawnees from a nation of fierce fighters.
-
-However, nobody would have taken Scar Head for a Pawnee. He did not
-wear the horn――he was not yet a warrior. He wore a red cloth band
-around his head, to keep his long brown hair out of his eyes. He was
-short and stocky, with a pug nose and with freckles showing through his
-darkly tanned skin. No, he did not appear to be a Pawnee, nor an Indian
-at all.
-
-Still, he ranked as a son of Charakterik, head chief of the Pawnee
-Republic nation. Chief Charakterik had sent him out on the warrior
-trail to get experience. He was called Scar Head by reason of the
-patch of white hair that grew over a queer, hot spot on his head. He
-felt like an Indian and acted like an Indian; but all he knew was that
-he had been traded by the mountain Utahs to the plains Pawnees, several
-years ago, and that Chief Charakterik had adopted him.
-
-The four had set out from the main Pawnee Republic village of round mud
-huts on the Republican River in present northern Kansas two weeks back.
-The Pawnees always started from home on foot, except when hunting game.
-They thought that they could take care of themselves better that way. A
-man on foot could hide in country where a man on horse might be seen.
-But they were expected to return on horseback, with other horses stolen
-or captured, for to win horses was the test of a Pawnee brave.
-
-Scar Head hoped to learn a great deal about horse-stealing, although
-this was not really a horse-stealing scout. Nevertheless――――
-
-“If we are not given horses by the Spaniards, we will get them
-elsewhere,” had said Rich Man.
-
-“Yes; we will get them from the Spaniards, anyway,” had replied Skidi.
-“They will have many horses, easy to steal. But in order to keep
-friendly with us, they will surely give us some, when they see we are
-poor and afoot.”
-
-The dust cloud was welcome. It was time that the Spaniards should be
-sighted――those Spanish soldiers who, according to the report received
-by Chief Charakterik, were marching from New Mexico into the Indian
-country, no one knew why. To find out was the business of the Iskatappe
-squad.
-
-The dust cloud hung in the air, moving slowly with the distant breeze.
-When finally the four reached the bank of the river, the cloud was much
-nearer.
-
-“We will cross, and watch them; and to-night we will go into their
-camp,” said Iskatappe.
-
-So they swam and waded the shallow river, and crawled out into a clump
-of willows, to wait until the strangers should pass.
-
-Soon, to the west they might see a column of mounted figures coming on,
-following the course of the river but staying back from it on account
-of the deep washes, or maybe from fear that their thirsty horses might
-bolt into quicksands.
-
-“They are many times ten,” murmured Skidi, counting by the fingers on
-his hands.
-
-“It is only an advance guard,” Letalesha said. “A bigger dust cloud is
-behind them.”
-
-And that was so. The advance guard of horsemen seemed to be scouting
-along the river, as if seeking a good trail to water for the others.
-Boy Scar Head strained his eyes to see as much as the warriors saw.
-Over the yellow desert shimmering with the hot air the riders steadily
-cantered, under several fluttering pennons borne on lances; and anybody
-might tell by the way they rode that they were warriors themselves.
-
-They were going to strike the river only a short distance below.
-Suddenly Skidi drew quick breath.
-
-“Apaches! Look! It will be a fight.”
-
-“Hi!” Iskatappe uttered. “Let nobody move. We are safe here, if we
-don’t move.”
-
-The scene had changed in a twinkling. A perfect swarm of Indians had
-burst from the very ground out there, and with shrill yells were racing
-to hem the Spanish between them and the river. How they had hidden
-themselves so well was remarkable, but it was an Indian trick and these
-were Apaches, who knew how to hide in the sand itself.
-
-They outnumbered the Spanish three to one. The Spanish leader rapidly
-formed his column――he rode a white horse, the horses of his men were
-dark. On charged the Apaches, whooping and brandishing their bows and
-lances, as if they did not intend to stop until they had ridden right
-over the enemy; when on a sudden the guns of the Spanish puffed white
-smoke. Instantly every Apache fell to hang on the side of his horse;
-and back and forth they all scurried, shooting with their bows. The
-arrow stems glinted in the sun like streaks of hail.
-
-“That is a good chief,” Iskatappe praised. “He knows how to fight.”
-
-For the Apache chief had ordered half his men to dismount, and turn
-their horses loose. The other half stayed in the saddle. They charged,
-with the footmen running behind; the Spanish horsemen charged to meet
-them; then the Apache horsemen separated to right and left and the
-footmen volleyed with arrows.
-
-This made the Spanish halt, to answer with guns. The Apache footmen
-darted back, behind their horsemen, and these charged again, to lure
-the Spanish on into bow-shot.
-
-Boy Scar Head quivered with excitement. It was the first real battle
-that he remembered to have seen. The others were tense, too, and
-staring eagerly.
-
-“With half that number of Pawnees I would eat those Spanish up,” Skidi
-boasted. “We all would take scalps and horses and be rich.”
-
-“Those Spanish have guns and much powder and lead,” replied Old Knife.
-“It is hard to fight guns with bows. But one big charge, and all would
-be over.”
-
-The battle slowly traveled. It was getting directly opposite, as the
-Apaches gradually gave ground and the Spanish took ground. Scarcely
-anybody appeared to have been hurt yet; there were no dead on the sand
-and all the wounded stayed in their saddles. The column in the distance
-was making a larger dust, as if hastening to the rescue.
-
-The Apaches no doubt knew this. Now on a sudden the noise quieted.
-The Apache chief had cantered forward from among his men, shaking his
-lance. He was a very heavy man, with a very long lance; upon his arm
-was a red shield. He rode a fine spotted horse.
-
-“The chiefs will fight, maybe,” quoth Letalesha. “That is the way to
-settle it.”
-
-The Apache chief spoke in a loud voice, holding his lance high; but the
-Spanish chief on the white horse waved him back and evidently said no.
-
-“The Spanish chief is a coward,” Skidi asserted. “He has a small heart.”
-
-“Why should he risk losing his scalp, when he is winning and he has
-enough men coming to burn the Apaches like dry grass?” argued the wise
-Old Knife.
-
-The Apache chief sat a moment, waiting; then he turned back for his
-own party. From the Spanish a great shout arose, that made him again
-turn, quickly.
-
-“Ai-ee! It will be a fight, man to man, after all!” Iskatappe exclaimed.
-
-A Spanish soldier had dashed past his chief, and was galloping into the
-clear, flourishing his sword. It was a challenge. The chief sped to
-meet him. They both crouched behind their round shields. A moment――and
-they came together. The Spanish horseman thrust his shield forward,
-to throw aside the chief’s lance point. But he did not catch it full.
-He only threw it higher, so that it glanced on and struck him in the
-throat――went straight through. He fell off, backward. Jerking the lance
-out, the Apache chief scoured by, in a half circle, with a whoop of
-victory.
-
-“Hi, yi!” Old Knife grunted. “There is blood and a scalp.”
-
-What a yell broke from the Apaches and the Spaniards both――a yell of
-triumph from the one, a yell of vengeance from the others! The Spanish
-charged, firing their guns, to save the scalp, and to kill. The Apaches
-scattered; their chief galloped hither-thither, urging them to stand,
-but they had no stomachs for more fighting at close quarters and the
-rest of the Spanish were spurring in.
-
-Presently all the Apaches, the footmen on horse again, tore away,
-making down the river. Without trying to pursue them the whole Spanish
-army gathered on the battlefield. They were too heavily clothed to
-overtake Indians.
-
-“They are as many as a herd of buffalo,” said Letalesha. “They are a
-large war party. Where are they going and what do they want?”
-
-“We shall find out from them at sundown,” Rich Man answered. “We will
-let them camp, first. They are blood hungry now, and very mad.”
-
-“It will be no trouble for us to get horses,” laughed Wolf. “Even a boy
-like Scar Head could steal some.”
-
-“Will you let me try?” Scar Head asked, hopefully.
-
-“You shall be a warrior and get horses,” Iskatappe promised, “unless
-they make us presents of them.”
-
-“The Apache chief was Big Thunder,” Old Knife declared. “I know him.
-Red is his medicine, and as long as he carries that red shield nothing
-can kill him.”
-
-“Perhaps the Spanish chief knew, too,” Wolf proposed. “Of course,
-nobody wishes to fight against medicine.”
-
-“The Spanish soldier’s medicine was very weak,” remarked Iskatappe.
-
-Thus they chatted, waiting and watching. Pretty soon the Spanish,
-also, moved on, down river. There were at least six hundred of them,
-all mounted, and twice that number of unsaddled horses and mules, some
-packed with supplies. To jingle of trappings and murmur of voices they
-proceeded, in a long column. Rich Man, Old Knife, Wolf and Boy Scar
-Head followed, by the other river bank, keeping out of sight in the
-brush and hollows.
-
-At sunset the Spanish halted to form camp, beside the river.
-
-“We had better go in before dark,” Rich Man directed. “Or they might
-shoot at us. We had better go in while their pots are full, for my
-belly is empty.”
-
-So they rose boldly from their covert under the bank of the river, and
-crossed for the Spanish camp, their buffalo-robes tightly about them.
-
-The camp was spread out in a circle over a wide area. Several chiefs’
-lodges had been set up, countless fires were smoking, horses whinnied,
-mules brayed, medicine pipes (horns) tooted, and a myriad of figures
-moved busily, getting water, going on herd, arranging the packs,
-marching to and fro as if in a dance, or clustering around the fires.
-
-These were the Spanish, were they, from the south? Scar Head had not
-supposed that so many could come so far, all together. The nation of
-the Spanish must be a great and powerful nation.
-
-A guard saw the Iskatappe file approaching. He shouted warning of them,
-and leveled his gun.
-
-Iskatappe lifted his hand in the peace sign.
-
-“Amigos――friends,” he called. He knew a little Spanish. So did most of
-the Pawnees――a little Spanish picked up from the Comanches and southern
-Utahs, and a little French picked up from the St. Louis traders who
-visited the Pawnee country.
-
-“Qué tiene――what do you want?” the guard demanded, stopping them
-with his gun. He was dressed in a blue cloth hunting-shirt with red
-trimmings, and leather wrappings upon his legs, and huge loose-topped
-leather moccasins reaching to his knees, and a broad-brimmed
-high-crowned hat with ribbons on it; and all his face was covered with
-bushy black hair. He was armed with a short-barreled gun, and a long
-knife in a scabbard. He certainly looked like a stout warrior.
-
-“El capitan,” Iskatappe replied, meaning that he wished to see the
-chief.
-
-Other Spanish soldiers came running. Their head warrior said: “Come,”
-and with the Iskatappe file stalking proudly after he led the way
-through the staring camp to the lodge of the chief.
-
-He was a black-eyed, dark-skinned, slim young war chief, splendidly
-clad in those same high, loose-topped shiny leather moccasins, and a
-bright red cloak flowing to his knees, and a hat turned up at one side
-and sparkling with gilt.
-
-Of course the first thing to do was to eat. Therefore, after shaking
-hands with the Spanish war chief, Rich Man, Old Knife and Wolf sat
-down; boy Scar Head sat down likewise. They were served with plenty of
-meat, from a pot.
-
-Gazing curiously about, Scar Head might see indeed that these Spanish
-were rich and powerful. Such quantities of horses and mules, of
-saddles, arms, supplies, and soldiers warmly dressed, and fiercely
-whiskered not only with hair on cheeks and chin, but sticking out like
-horns on either side of the nose! What did the Spanish wish?
-
-Having eaten, Iskatappe began to find out. The Spanish chief filled a
-pipe and passed it out; Rich Man, Old Knife and Wolf smoked each a few
-puffs, the Spanish chief smoked a few puffs, and Iskatappe spoke.
-
-“The Pawnee wish to know why their Spanish father is sending so many of
-his soldiers into the buffalo country.”
-
-“The great king who owns all this country is anxious to be friendly
-with his children,” responded the young war chief. “So he has sent me,
-his lieutenant, Don Facundo Melgares, with a guard, to march through,
-take his red children by the hand, give them presents, and make the
-chain of friendship stronger.”
-
-“That is good,” said Iskatappe. “The Pawnee Republic is very poor.
-But if my father is sending presents to the Pawnee, why are his men
-marching east instead of north? And why does he send so many soldiers
-with guns?”
-
-“We follow a long trail,” explained the war chief. “There are Indians
-of bad hearts toward everybody, like the Apaches; and the Apaches we
-will punish. The great king knows how to punish his enemies, as well as
-how to reward his friends. We are marching east because we go first to
-visit the Comanches. We bear gifts and friendship to the Comanches, to
-the Pawnees, and to the Kansas. And we march east to clean the country
-from the Americans who are stealing in. The great king will look after
-his own children. He wishes no foreigners to view the land. He will not
-permit the American traders to cheat the Indians. The American king
-pretends to have bought part of the country, but he has no rights here
-in the south, and the great king of Spain still owns all the lands
-beyond the Pawnees and the Kansas. Now word has come to the Spanish
-governor that the Americans are sending soldiers westward through
-Spanish country, to spy out the land. They are led by a chief named
-Pike. So we march ready for battle, to meet these Americans and either
-turn them back or take them prisoner.”
-
-“The Americans of Chief Pike will fight?” asked Iskatappe.
-
-The young war chief laughed, showing white teeth.
-
-“They cannot fight the soldiers of the great king. We are many and
-brave; the Americans are small. We can punish or reward. The Americans
-are weak and poor. Should there be war, we will eat them up. If they do
-not keep out of the country, there will be war. We shall warn them. The
-Indians would do very foolishly to help the Americans who have nothing,
-and are only greedy, seeking to steal the Indians’ hunting grounds.
-First a few will come, as spies; then more will come by the same trail,
-and with their guns kill all the buffalo.”
-
-“We know little about the Americans, but we see that the Spanish are
-many and strong,” Iskatappe replied. “I will take word back to the
-Pawnee, about this Pike.”
-
-“Who is your head chief?”
-
-“He is Charakterik――White Wolf.”
-
-“Where does he live?”
-
-“In his town of the Pawnee nation on the river of the Pawnee Republic.”
-
-“Tell him that after we have marched east and talked with the Comanches
-and cleaned the foreign traders from the country, we will march north
-and visit him at his town on the River Republican. If the American
-chief Mungo-Meri Pike comes there, the Pawnees must stop him; for the
-great king will be angry if the Americans are allowed to pass through.”
-
-“I will tell him,” Iskatappe promised. “It is best that we travel fast.
-We came down on foot, for we are very poor. If we have horses to ride
-back on, we shall travel faster.”
-
-“Bueno――good,” answered the Spanish chief. “Your father the great king
-of us all is generous to his children. You shall have horses, so that
-you may carry the news quickly.”
-
-This night the Iskatappe squad slept in the Spanish camp, and ate
-frequently. Rich Man explained to Old Knife and Wolf what had been said
-to him and not understood by them. Boy Scar Head listened. In the
-morning they were treated to a marching dance, in which the Spanish
-soldiers moved to the beat of drums. They were presented with a horse
-apiece; and after having shaken hands again they left, well satisfied.
-
-Once away from the river they rode fast; for Skidi had stolen three
-mules during the night while the guard was sleepy instead of watchful,
-and hidden the animals in a convenient place. But the Spanish did not
-pursue.
-
-“We will tell Charakterik that the Spanish are strong,” said Iskatappe.
-“They fought the Apaches; they have plenty of guns and horses. They
-will eat the Americans of that Pike.”
-
-“I think, myself, that the Pawnee will grow fatter by helping the
-Spanish father than by helping the strange American father,” declared
-Old Knife.
-
-“We have gained four horses and three mules,” Skidi chuckled. “All the
-whites are stupid. If the Americans come they will go back afoot; hey?”
-
-“What kind of men are the Americans?” Boy Scar Head ventured to ask,
-from the rear.
-
-“We are talking,” Letalesha rebuked. “When chiefs and warriors talk,
-boys keep silent.”
-
-So Scar Head got no information. All he knew was, that the Americans
-were a white nation living in the far east, beyond St. Louis where the
-French traders lived. But three Pawnees had been taken by the great
-trader Pierre Chouteau, to visit the American father in Wash’ton. When
-they returned, the Pawnees would know more about the Americans. And of
-course that Chief Pike was likely to appear if the Spanish did not stop
-him.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-THE COMING OF THE AMERICANS
-
-
-The Spanish came in about three weeks――three hundred of them, led by
-their young war chief whose name was Melgares. A brave sight they made
-as they rode with flags and drums and jingle of bridles and formed camp
-outside the Chief Charakterik town.
-
-Lieutenant Melgares held a council with the Republican Pawnees and the
-Grand Pawnees from the north. The Pawnee Loups, or Wolf Pawnees, did
-not send any chiefs, because they were at war with the other Pawnees.
-
-The Spanish chief said that he had met the Ietans or Comanches in the
-south and signed a treaty of peace with them. They had promised to
-help their Spanish father. But on the way north the Omahas had stolen
-many of his horses and mules, after another council; and by reason of
-these bad hearts he had come on with only a few of his men, in order to
-smooth the road between the great king and the great king’s children.
-
-He was too young to sit in grand council with the head chiefs of the
-Pawnees. In the spring a higher chief than he would come, to build
-a town near the Pawnee town, and live with the red people and teach
-them how to get rich, if they were good. Meanwhile they must watch out
-that the Americans (who were poor but greedy) did not sneak in, and
-cheat them of their lands and drive off the game. The American chief,
-Mungo-Meri Pike, was on the way, although he had not been found. If he
-arrived, he must be turned back. These were the orders of the king of
-the Spanish nation, who ruled all this country.
-
-Lieutenant Melgares gave Chief Charakterik and the head chief of the
-Grand Pawnees each a large, fine medal of silver to wear; and a paper
-signed by the governor of New Mexico, which made them head men under
-the king; and a Spanish flag, and four mules. He laid on the prairie
-other gifts, of crimson cloth and of tobacco and smaller medals; and
-again warning them that the great king would be very angry if the
-crafty Americans were permitted to pass, he rode away south, with all
-his men.
-
-Chief Charakterik hung the gay Spanish flag of red and yellow in front
-of the council lodge, as a sign for everybody to see. It was plain to
-him also that the Spanish nation was a powerful nation, to send so many
-soldiers so far, looking for the Americans.
-
-The Spanish soldiers had not been gone long when from the Osage towns
-in the southeast toward the Missouri River there ran the news that the
-Americans of Mungo-Meri Pike were coming indeed. They were bringing to
-the Osages almost fifty men and women whom the Potawatomis had captured
-last year, and who had been rescued by the American father. Two of the
-Pawnees who had been to Wash’ton visiting the American father were with
-them on the way home.
-
-“We will let them come this far, so as to get our brothers back,” said
-Chief Charakterik. “We will talk with them and see what kind of men
-they are, but they shall go no farther.”
-
-He sent Pawnee scouts down to the Osage towns, to watch the Americans.
-
-Now August, the squash month, had passed, and September, the month when
-the buffalo fatten, had opened. The Americans were reported to be at
-the Osage villages, where a welcome had greeted the Osages returned
-from the Potawatomis, and a great council had been held with the Pike
-men.
-
-They had traveled in boats up the Osage River from the Missouri, but
-were coming on across country to the Pawnees by horses.
-
-Only one American appeared, first, riding in with a
-Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton as his guide. This Pawnee young man
-had gone to visit the American father many moons ago, and here he was
-again, safe and sound and wearing good clothes. That spoke well for the
-Americans.
-
-He said that the other Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton was coming
-with the rest of the Americans. They were bringing several Osages to
-smoke with the Pawnees. They had sent word for the Kansas to meet
-them and smoke peace. The Americans were a pleasant people; they
-numbered thousands. This American with him was a medicine-man who
-cured diseases. The American chief, Pike, had given the Osages all the
-rescued captives and had asked nothing except peace and a chance to
-buy horses; he had presents for the Pawnees, too, and was going to the
-Comanches. His men were few although well armed.
-
-The next day, after having talked with the American medicine-man in the
-lodge, Chief Charakterik took sixty warriors and rode out to meet Chief
-Mungo-Meri Pike.
-
-Charakterik was gone three days, and came in without having sighted the
-Americans. But a Pawnee hunter reported that the Americans were farther
-to the southward; so Chief Charakterik sent out Frank (which was the
-American name of the Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton) and three other
-warriors, to find them.
-
-On the second morning two of the scouts galloped back into town.
-
-“The Pike Americans are nearing. They will be here before noon.”
-
-“Tell them to wait until I shall meet them and smoke with them,” Chief
-Charakterik ordered.
-
-All the warriors were arrayed, dressed in their best robes and
-blankets, and painted with the Pawnee colors of white, yellow, blue and
-black. Chief Charakterik wore his large Spanish medal and finest white
-buffalo-robe. Second Chief Iskatappe wore a red coat given him by his
-Spanish father.
-
-Three hundred warriors left the village, with the chiefs. Riding in
-their midst, as the son of a great chief Scar Head felt that the
-Pawnees need fear nobody.
-
-The Americans had halted about three miles out, just at the other side
-of a ridge. The Osages were sitting in front of them. Chief Charakterik
-shouted and waved his hand――the Pawnee warriors divided right and
-left and swooped down at dead run, yelling and firing their guns. The
-Americans stood firm, not afraid, as if they knew that this was only
-play. They were few, as said; scarcely more than the fingers on two
-hands.
-
-After the warriors had charged and had formed a circle, Chief
-Charakterik and Second Chief Iskatappe advanced on foot to shake hands
-with the American chief. This Mungo-Meri Pike was a young man, in a
-long hunting-shirt or coat of blue with brass buttons and high standing
-collar and lighter blue facings; on his head there was a three-cornered
-hat; a curved sword was at his side and leather moccasins reached to
-his knees. He was redder than the Spanish chief Melgares, and had no
-hair on his face.
-
-His men were armed with guns that ended in sharp-pointed knives, but
-their clothing was thin and poor――nothing like the rich clothing of the
-Spanish soldiers. They had a flag of red and white stripes and a starry
-blue square in one corner, but they were small in number; and all in
-all they did not cut much of a figure when compared with the Spanish.
-Certainly they were either brave or foolish, thought Boy Scar Head as
-he roundly stared, to dare the Spanish and the Indians in such fashion.
-
-The Osages knew how to act when in Pawnee country. Their chief stood
-up and offered Chief White Wolf a pipe. They smoked, as sign of peace.
-Then at a signal by White Wolf, he and Mungo-Meri Pike and the American
-second chief (also a young man) rode on for the village. An American
-head warrior on a white horse rode just behind, carrying the American
-flag. The Osages and the other Americans followed, while the Pawnee
-warriors raced back and forth alongside, whooping and showing off. It
-was great fun.
-
-When they all had crossed the ridge and were near the town, another
-halt was ordered, in order to smoke horses with the Osages. The four
-Osages sat down together; Chief Charakterik sat down in front of them,
-and lighted his pipe. Any Pawnee who wished to give horses to an Osage
-took the pipe and passed it to the Osage. Every time it was passed it
-meant a horse, until eight horses had been given. This was the Horse
-Smoke.
-
-The American second chief marched the soldiers on, to make camp
-up-river from the town. Chief Mungo-Meri Pike and his medicine-man
-stayed for a talk with White Wolf in his lodge. They were feasted to
-stewed corn and squash.
-
-The Osages also were feasted in the village. They had come on with the
-Americans to meet the Kansas at the Pawnee village and sit in peace
-council. Pretty Bird was their head chief.
-
-Everybody was curious to learn from the Osages and from the two
-Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton what kind of people these Americans
-were.
-
-“They live in a country wider than a week’s travel by horse,” Frank
-asserted. “You are never out of sight of their lodges.”
-
-“Their women have red cheeks, and their men are in number of the
-buffalo,” the other Pawnee asserted. “They have great guns that shoot a
-mile and speak twice.”
-
-“If they are so powerful and many, why do they send such a little
-company into this country, when the Spanish father sent half a thousand
-soldiers at once?” inquired Skidi. “These are spies.”
-
-“They brought us forty-six of our relatives, from the Potawatomi,” said
-an Osage. “They asked for horses to go on with, but we sold them few.
-Now by orders of the great father at Wash’ton we are to make peace with
-the Kansas. The great father wishes his red children to fight no more.”
-
-“It is all because there is talk of war between the Spanish and the
-Americans,” Frank wisely declared. “That we heard. The Americans wish
-to keep the Indians from the war trail, so that they can march in here
-and take the land.”
-
-“We do not want the Americans in here,” spoke Skidi. “Our Spanish
-father warned us against them. They are poor and stingy or they would
-have sent a large company and an old chief to treat with us. They will
-get no help from the Pawnee, and they must go back.”
-
-The American chief and his medicine-man stayed a long time in the
-Charakterik lodge. After a while Scar Head’s older brother came looking
-for him.
-
-“White Wolf says that you are to go on with the two Americans up to
-their camp and take a pony load of corn.”
-
-“How soon?”
-
-“Now. They are leaving. The pony is being packed.”
-
-So Scar Head hastened to the lodge. The two Americans were bidding
-Chief Charakterik goodby, and were about to mount their horses.
-The chief beckoned to Scar Head and pointed to the pony. Scar Head
-obediently scrambled atop the corn.
-
-“Do I come back to-night?” he asked.
-
-“You may stay till morning, and see what you can see. Do not talk; and
-be sure and bring back the pony.”
-
-This was quite an adventure――to ride to the American camp with the
-head chief and the medicine-man, and maybe spend the night there. Scar
-Head’s heart beat rapidly, but he did not show that he was either
-frightened or delighted, for he was Indian, and son of White Wolf.
-
-He guided his loaded pony in the rear of the two trotting horsemen.
-Outside the town Chief Mungo-Meri Pike reined in and dropped back
-beside him, with a smile.
-
-They eyed each other, although Scar Head did not smile. He was not
-ready to smile, and White Wolf had told him not to talk.
-
-The American chief had a clear pink and brown skin and a bright blue
-eye, with rather large nose and mouth, and stubborn chin. His manner
-was quick and commanding; anybody might see that he was a chief.
-
-“What is your name?” he asked, suddenly, in French.
-
-“Scar Head,” answered Scar Head, in Pawnee.
-
-Evidently the American chief did not understand Pawnee, for he looked a
-little puzzled.
-
-“Do you speak French?” he demanded.
-
-“Yes, little,” answered Scar Head.
-
-“You are not an Indian?”
-
-“Yes, Pawnee,” grunted Scar Head.
-
-“You don’t look like a Pawnee.”
-
-“Pawnee,” Scar Head insisted, as he had been ordered always to do, by
-Charakterik.
-
-“Who is your father?”
-
-“White Wolf.”
-
-“Who was your mother?”
-
-“Don’t know.”
-
-“Were you born here?”
-
-“Don’t know.”
-
-“Do you speak English?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“How old are you?”
-
-Scar Head held up the fingers of his two hands; that was as nearly as
-he could guess. It didn’t matter, anyway.
-
-The American chief hailed the medicine-man in the American language.
-Scar Head did not understand, but the words were: “Doctor, I don’t
-believe this is an Indian boy at all.”
-
-Now the medicine-man (he was a young man, with brown hair on his face)
-reined back to ride upon Scar Head’s other side. He spoke, in French.
-
-“Are you an Indian?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What nation?”
-
-“Pawnee.”
-
-“Where did the Pawnee get you?”
-
-“From Utahs.”
-
-“Chief Charakterik is not your father, then?”
-
-“Yes. My father.”
-
-“Your mother a Utah?”
-
-“Don’t know.”
-
-“How long has Charakterik been your father?” The medicine-man was smart.
-
-“Two year.”
-
-“I see. The Utahs probably traded him to the Pawnees, doctor,” spoke
-the chief Mungo-Meri Pike, across, in the language that Scar Head did
-not understand. “And Charakterik adopted him.”
-
-“The Utahs must have got him somewhere. He’s no Indian,” replied the
-medicine-man, in those strange words. “He’s not Spanish, either.” And
-he asked, in French, of Scar Head:
-
-“You speak Spanish?”
-
-“A little.”
-
-“You speak Utah?”
-
-Scar Head nodded. He was growing tired of these questionings.
-
-The medicine-man kept eyeing him.
-
-“Where did you get this?” And he tapped his own head, in sign of the
-patch of white hair.
-
-“My name,” answered Scar Head.
-
-“What made it?”
-
-“Don’t know.”
-
-“Did the Utahs capture you?”
-
-“Don’t know.”
-
-“Where were you before the Utahs had you?”
-
-“Don’t know.”
-
-“He may not be all Indian, but he’s enough Indian so he won’t tell what
-he doesn’t want to tell,” laughed the American chief, in the strange
-words.
-
-The medicine-man shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“I’d like to take him along with us and find out more about him. By the
-shape of his head he’s white blood.”
-
-The three jogged on in silence. Scar Head wondered what they had said,
-with those words, but he was glad to be let alone. White Wolf had
-forbidden him to talk with strangers. Nevertheless he glanced now and
-then at the two Americans. He felt more friendly toward them. They
-seemed kind.
-
-The American camp was not far. It had guards stationed, who saluted
-the American chief when he passed. At his lodge fire he halted; a head
-warrior took Scar Head’s pony, with the corn; other warriors took the
-two horses, to lead them away. The American second chief was here.
-While he and Chief Mungo-Meri Pike talked, Scar Head sat by the fire
-and looked around, to see what was going on.
-
-The camp had been placed upon a hill for protection. There were only
-four or five lodges, of canvas, besides the chief’s lodge. The American
-flag was flying from a pole. This American camp appeared poor――nothing.
-The soldiers, fifteen, wore shabby uniforms of sky blue; their coats
-were short and tight, their leggins thin, and several were mending
-their moccasins of heavy leather. They had only fifteen extra horses,
-to carry their baggage and the presents. There was a black dog. They
-talked and laughed much, as they busied themselves or waited around the
-two fires that they had built. The hair on their heads was of different
-colors――brown, and black, and red, and gray. So was the hair on their
-faces. They were quick, active warriors――good men, evidently. If the
-Pawnees fought them, it would be hot work before they all were wiped
-out.
-
-Maybe, thought Scar Head, they depended upon the medicine of their
-“doctor,” to help them.
-
-Another man, who could talk sign language and a little Pawnee, came and
-sat down beside him. He was the interpreter for Chief Pike.
-
-“You’re no Indian; you’re white,” he accused, of Scar Head.
-
-“Indian,” said Scar Head.
-
-“Where did you come from?”
-
-“Utahs.”
-
-“Where did they get you?”
-
-“Don’t know.”
-
-“Did White Wolf buy you from the Utahs?”
-
-“He is my father.”
-
-“You speak with crooked tongue,” the interpreter accused. “You are
-white. You are American. Who was your father?”
-
-“White Wolf is my father. I am Pawnee. I will talk no more,” said Scar
-Head. “Let me alone.”
-
-After that nobody bothered him, although they all eyed him. Why did
-they tell him that he was white? Did he wish to be white? Why should he
-be white, or American, when the Pawnee were a great people who could
-fight even the Padoucah――the Comanches or Ietans as they were called.
-And if one were white instead of red, it would be better to be Spanish,
-for the Spanish were rich and powerful, and their king owned the
-country.
-
-Yet――yet, Scar Head could not help but admit that these Americans
-bore themselves like warriors; this Pike must be a bold young
-chief, to come so far with so few men; and after all, perhaps the
-Americans might prove strong in medicine. The Osages and the two
-Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton spoke well of the nation.
-
-The medicine-man approached him and suddenly laid fingers upon his
-white patch, and pressed.
-
-“Does that hurt?”
-
-Scar Head tried not to wince, for hurt it did. He squirmed free.
-
-“No.”
-
-The medicine-man might be putting an evil spell upon him, to change
-him to white; but the medicine-man only smiled, and left him.
-
-Having eaten of meat and corn, Scar Head slept in the chief’s lodge,
-with the chief himself and the medicine-man whose title was “doctor.”
-When he awakened in the morning he was safe and sound still.
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-THE PAWNEES ARE OF TWO MINDS
-
-
-“The Kansas are coming! They come in peace, but make ready for them.”
-
-These were the words of the heralds shouting through the great town
-of the Pawnee Republic. Scar Head heard. He had returned this morning
-from the American camp with the interpreter (whose name was Baroney),
-and felt rather important as the other boys curiously questioned him.
-To Chief White Wolf he had only good to report of the Americans. They
-had treated him well, aside from bothering him with talk about himself;
-but he had told them little. The fact was, he did not know much that he
-could tell!
-
-Baroney had wished to trade for provisions and horses. Now it was
-afternoon, and new excitement arose. The Kansas were coming! A peace
-party of them had halted, out on the prairie, and had sent in one man
-to announce them. They had come by order of the American father, to
-smoke peace with the Osages.
-
-The Osages and the Kansas had long been bitter enemies; the Pawnees,
-too, had lost many scalps to the Kansas, although just at present there
-was no war between them.
-
-So Chief Charakterik directed that the Kansas be well received and
-feasted. Baroney the American interpreter took word up to the Pike camp
-that the Kansas were waiting.
-
-The two American chiefs exchanged visits with Chiefs White Wolf and
-Rich Man, and the Kansas chiefs. In a council held the next day the
-Kansas principal chief, Wah-on-son-gay, and his sub-chiefs, and
-the Osage principal chief, Shin-ga-wa-sa or Pretty Bird, and his
-sub-chiefs, agreed upon paper that the nations of the Kansas and the
-Osage should be friends, according to the wish of their American father.
-
-Wolf, the Pawnee, laughed.
-
-“It will last only until spring,” he said. “Nobody can trust the
-Kansas; and as for those Osage, they are getting to be a nation of
-squaws. One-half their face is red, the other half is white. We Pawnee
-are all red. We are not afraid of the Kansas, and we shall not help
-the Americans. They are a small people of small hearts, as the Spanish
-chief said.”
-
-This might appear to be the truth. Chief Charakterik was of the same
-opinion. He and Second Chief Iskatappe and two sub-chiefs had been
-invited to a feast by the American chiefs. When they returned they
-were scornful, although White Wolf had been given a gun with two
-barrels, an arm band, and other things, and the other chiefs also had
-been rewarded.
-
-Scar Head heard Rich Man tell about it.
-
-“Charakterik wore his large medal given him by the young Spanish chief.
-They did not ask him to take it off. They offered me a little American
-medal. ‘What shall I do with that?’ I asked. ‘It is not a medal for a
-chief. Those two young warriors who have been to Wash’ton were given
-bigger medals than this. Let the American father send me a chief’s
-medal, for I can get Spanish medals. I am not a boy.’ Yes,” continued
-Iskatappe, “the American nation must be very mean and stingy. They
-send a young man and a few soldiers, with little medals and a few poor
-presents, to talk with the great Pawnee nation. But the Spanish asked
-us to wait until next spring, when they will send us a principal chief
-and many more soldiers, to live near us and treat with us in honorable
-fashion.”
-
-The council with the Americans had been set for the next day. The two
-American chiefs, and Baroney the interpreter, and the “doctor,” and a
-guard of soldiers, rode down. Chief Charakterik assembled four hundred
-warriors. The council lodge was crowded, and a throng of women and
-boys and girls pressed around, outside, to peer and listen. Scar Head
-managed to squeeze inside, to a place where he might see and hear. The
-Osages and the Kansas were inside, too.
-
-After the pipe had been passed around among the chiefs, Mungo-Meri Pike
-stood, to speak. He threw off his red-lined blue cloak, and stood slim
-and straight――a handsome young man.
-
-Baroney translated for him, in Pawnee and sign language.
-
-“The great American father of us all, at Wash’ton, has sent me,” he
-said. “He is now your father. You have no Spanish father. Not long
-ago the Spanish gave up all this country, from the big river to the
-mountains. The Americans have bought it. The Spanish have no rights
-here, any more. Now your American father has sent me to visit among his
-red children, to tell them that his heart is good toward them, and that
-he wishes peace. I am to take back word of them, and of the country, so
-that he may know. I am surprised to see that you are flying the Spanish
-flag at the lodge door. I bring you the American flag, to take its
-place. You cannot have two fathers and two flags. I have also brought
-you gifts. They are here. I ask you to accept them, as a small token
-from your American father. I should like your answer.” And he sat down.
-
-[Illustration: “I BRING YOU THE AMERICAN FLAG”]
-
-Chief Charakterik dropped his buffalo-robe from his shoulders, to stand
-and speak.
-
-“We hear your words,” he said. “We thank you for the presents. We wish
-to ask where you are going from here?”
-
-“We are going on, to explore the country and to smoke peace with the
-Ietans,” replied Chief Pike.
-
-“We knew that you were coming,” spoke White Wolf. “The Spanish chief
-who was here said that you were coming. He said that the Americans were
-a small nation but greedy, and that soon they would stretch out even
-to the Pawnee, and claim the country. Now we see how truly the Spanish
-chief saw ahead, for here you are. We do not wish you to go on. We
-turned the Spanish back, until they should come again to live with us.
-We will turn you back. It is impossible for you to go on. You are few
-and you do not know the country. The Padoucah (Comanches) are many and
-powerful. They are our enemies and the friends of the Spanish and will
-kill you all. You must go back by the road that you came on.”
-
-The young Chief Mungo-Meri Pike stood up straighter still, and answered
-with ringing voice.
-
-“I have been sent out by our great father to travel through his
-country, to visit his red children, and talk peace. You have seen how
-I have brought the Osages and the Kansas together. I wish my road to
-be smooth, with a blue sky over my head. I have not seen any blood in
-the trail. But the warriors of the American father are not women, to be
-turned back by words. If the Pawnee wish to try to stop me, they may
-try. We are men, well armed, and will take many lives in exchange for
-our own. Then the great father will send other warriors, to gather our
-bones and to avenge our deaths, and our spirits will hear war-songs
-sung in praise of our deeds. We shall go on. I ask you for horses, and
-somebody who speaks Comanche, to help us; and I ask you to take down
-the Spanish flag and hoist the flag of your American father, instead.”
-
-That was a defiant speech, and Scar Head thrilled. Surely, the American
-chief was a man.
-
-Iskatappe arose.
-
-“We do not want peace with the Padoucah,” he said. “They have killed
-six of our young men. We must have scalps in payment, so that the young
-men’s relatives can wash the mourning paint from their faces and be
-happy. It would be foolish for us to send anybody with you or to give
-you horses. We have been satisfied with our Spanish father. We do not
-wish so many fathers.”
-
-He sat down.
-
-“That is true,” Chief Pike retorted. “You do not wish many fathers.
-Now you have only the one great father. He is your American father.
-You have not answered me about the flag. I still see the Spanish flag
-flying at your door. I think you ought to lower that flag and put up
-this American flag, for I have told you that the Spanish do not rule
-this land any more. You cannot be children of two fathers, and speak
-with two tongues. I wish an answer.”
-
-Nobody said anything for a long time. The American chiefs sat there,
-gazing straight in front of them, and waiting. The blue eyes of
-Mungo-Meri Pike seemed to search all hearts. Was it to be peace or war?
-Then old Sleeping Bear, the head councillor of the Pawnee Republic, got
-up, without a word, and went to the doorway, and took down the Spanish
-flag from its staff, and brought it to Chief Pike. Chief Pike handed
-him the American flag, of red and white stripes like the sunset and the
-starry sky in one corner. Old Sleeping Bear carried it and fastened it
-to the staff.
-
-The Osages and the Kansas grunted “Good,” because they already had
-accepted the American father; but the Pawnees hung their heads and
-looked glum. When the Spanish came back and found their great king’s
-flag gone, what would they say?
-
-Chief Pike saw the downcast faces, and read the thoughts behind them.
-His heart was big, after all, and he did not wish to shame the Pawnee
-nation, for he uttered, quickly:
-
-“You have shown me that you are of good mind toward your father in
-Wash’ton. I do not seek to make trouble between you and the Spanish.
-We will attend to the Spanish. Should there be war between the white
-people, the wish of your American father is that his red children stay
-by their own fires and not take part. In case that the Spanish come
-and demand their flag, here it is. I give it to you. I ask that you do
-not put it up while I am with you, but that you keep the American flag
-flying.”
-
-“We thank you. We will do as you say,” White Wolf responded; and every
-face had brightened. “In return, we beg you not to go on. You will
-lose your way. It will soon be winter, and you have no winter clothes,
-I see. The Spanish will capture you. If they do not capture you, the
-Padoucah will kill you. It will be pitiful.”
-
-Soon after this the council broke up. Chief Mungo-Meri Pike was still
-determined; he had not been frightened by the words. His men tried to
-buy horses, but Chief White Wolf had the orders spread that no horses
-were to be supplied to the Americans. When some of the Pawnees went
-to the American camp, to trade, Skidi and two other “dog soldiers” or
-police followed them and drove them home with whips of buffalo-hide.
-
-Iskatappe only waited for other orders, to muster the warriors and
-capture the camp.
-
-“It can be done,” he said. “We doubtless shall lose many men, for I
-think the Americans are hard fighters. We might do better to attack
-them on the march.”
-
-Some of the older men were against fighting.
-
-“We should not pull hot fat out of the fire with our fingers, for the
-Spanish,” they said. “Let the Spanish stop the Americans, if they can.
-We will stay at home and put up the flag of the stronger nation.”
-
-Meanwhile the young warriors liked to gallop near the American camp and
-shake their lances and guns at it. The American warriors laughed and
-shouted.
-
-For the next few days Boy Scar Head was all eyes and ears. The
-Americans kept close in camp and were very watchful. Only Baroney the
-interpreter rode back and forth, looking for horses. Chief Charakterik
-seemed much troubled. He had not counted upon the Americans being
-so stubborn. He sent the Kansas home. They had promised to guide the
-Americans; but he gave Wah-on-son-ga a gun and two horses, and told him
-that the Padoucahs would certainly kill everybody; so Wah-on-son-ga
-took his men home.
-
-Frank, the Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton, stole the wife of an
-Osage and ran away with her. This made the Osages angry; and now the
-Americans were getting angry, too.
-
-They had found only three or four horses. Then――
-
-“The Americans are going to march to-morrow!”
-
-That was the word from the warriors who spied upon the camp. Chief Pike
-rode down, unafraid, with Baroney, to White Wolf’s lodge. Scar Head hid
-in a corner, to hear what was said. He liked the crisp voice and the
-handsome face of this young Mungo-Meri Pike. Maybe he would never see
-him again.
-
-“Why have you told the Kansas to go home, and made them break their
-promise to me?” demanded Chief Pike, of White Wolf.
-
-“The hearts of the Kansas failed them. They decided they would only
-be throwing their lives away, to go with such a small party into the
-country of the Padoucah,” answered White Wolf.
-
-“You frightened them with your stories,” Chief Pike accused. “That
-was not right. I have come from your father, to make peace among his
-red children. Why do you forbid your men to trade us horses? You have
-plenty. Why do you not lend us a man who speaks the Ietan tongue, to
-help us?”
-
-“If, as you say, we all are children of the American father, then we do
-not wish our brothers to give up their lives,” White Wolf said. “But we
-do not know. The Spanish claim this country, too. They are coming back
-next spring. We promised them not to let you march through. You can
-come next spring and talk with them.”
-
-“No!” thundered Chief Pike. “We are going to march on. We are Americans
-and will go where we are ordered by the great father. The Osages have
-given us five of their horses. They have shown a good heart. I will
-speak well of them, to their father.”
-
-“They gave you their poor horses, because they got better ones from
-us,” replied White Wolf.
-
-“If the Pawnee try to stop us, it will cost them at least one hundred
-warriors,” Chief Pike asserted. “You will have to kill every one of
-us, and we will die fighting. Then the American nation will send such
-an army that the very name Pawnee will be forgotten.” He arose, and
-his flashing blue eyes marked Boy Scar Head huddled upon a roll of
-buffalo-robes. “Who is that boy?” he asked.
-
-“He is my son,” Charakterik answered.
-
-“He cannot be your son,” reproved Chief Pike. “He is white, you are
-red. I think he is an American. Where did you get him?”
-
-“He is my son. I have adopted him,” White Wolf insisted. “I got him
-from the Utahs.”
-
-“Where are his parents?”
-
-“I am his parent. I do not know anything more.”
-
-“You must give him up. He is not an Indian,” said Chief Pike.
-
-“He is a Pawnee. Why should I give him up?” argued Charakterik.
-
-“Because the great father wishes all captives to be given up. The
-Potawatomi had many captives from the Osage. They have been given up.
-There cannot be good feeling between people when they hold captives
-from each other. I ask you to send this boy down river. Two French
-traders are in your town now. You can send the boy with them.”
-
-“I will think upon what you say,” White Wolf replied.
-
-So Chief Pike left.
-
-“Why did you come in here to listen?” scolded White Wolf, of Scar Head.
-“You are making me trouble. Do you want to be sent away with those
-traders?”
-
-“No,” Scar Head admitted. For the two French traders were dark, dirty
-little men, not at all like the Americans. He preferred the Pawnees to
-those traders. But if he were an American, himself――――? An American the
-same as the Pike Americans! That sounded good.
-
-He could see that White Wolf was troubled; and the rest of the day he
-kept out of sight. Early in the morning the two French traders went
-away, but he had not been sent for. Chief Charakterik probably had
-matters of more importance to think about.
-
-The Americans were breaking camp. The Pawnee young men, urged by
-Iskatappe and Skidi, were painting for battle, while the women filled
-the quivers and sharpened the lance points, and cleaned the guns afresh.
-
-The sun mounted higher. A close watch was kept upon the American camp,
-plain in view up the Republican River. Shortly after noon the cry
-welled:
-
-“They are coming! Shall we let them pass?”
-
-“No! Kill them!”
-
-“See where they are going, first.”
-
-“Wait till they are in the village.”
-
-Nobody knew exactly what to do. The Americans were marching down, their
-horses together, their ranks formed, their guns ready; and they looked
-small beside the four hundred and more warriors of the Pawnees. It was
-a brave act.
-
-“They are not striking the village. They are going around,” Rich Man
-shouted. “We shall have to fight them in the open. That is bad.”
-
-The young warriors like Skidi ran to and fro, handling their bows and
-lances and guns. They waited for orders from White Wolf; but White Wolf
-only stood at the door of his lodge, with his arms folded, and said
-nothing as he watched the American column.
-
-Mungo-Meri Pike was smart. He acted like a war chief. He was marching
-around, far enough out so that if he were attacked the Pawnees could
-not hide behind their mud houses. Now to charge on those well-armed
-Americans, in the open, would cost many lives; and no Pawnee wished to
-be the first to fall.
-
-The Americans had come opposite, and no gun had yet been fired, when
-on a sudden Chief Pike left them. With Baroney and one soldier he
-galloped across, for the village. That was a bold deed, but he did
-not seem to fear. He paid no attention to the warriors who scowled at
-him. He made way through them straight to Chief Charakterik. He spoke
-loudly, so that all about might hear.
-
-“I have come to say good-by. I hope that when we come again we will
-find the great father’s flag still flying.”
-
-“You had better go quickly,” White Wolf replied. “The Spanish will be
-angry with us, and my young men are hard to hold.”
-
-“We are going,” Chief Pike assured. “We are going, as we said we would.
-If your young men mean to stop us, let them try. Two of our horses were
-stolen from us this morning. They were Pawnee horses. One was returned
-to us by your men. The other is missing. I am sure that the Pawnee do
-not sell us horses at a high price, so as to steal them. That is not
-honest. If you are a chief you will get the horse back for us, or the
-Pawnee will have a bad name for crooked tongues. So I will leave one of
-my men, who will receive the horse and bring it on. He will wait till
-the sun is overhead, to-morrow.”
-
-“I will see what I can do,” White Wolf answered. “The horse may have
-only strayed. A present might find him again.”
-
-“The horse is ours,” reproved Chief Pike. “I shall not buy it twice.
-If the Pawnees are honest and wish to be friends with their American
-brothers, they will return the horse to me. I shall expect it,
-to-morrow. Adios.”
-
-“Adios,” grunted White Wolf, wrapping his robe about him.
-
-Chief Pike and Baroney the interpreter galloped for the column. They
-left the soldier. Now he was one American among all the Pawnees, but he
-did not act afraid, either.
-
-He sat his horse and gazed about him with a smile. He was a stout,
-chunky man, in stained blue clothes. His face was partly covered with
-red hair, and the hair on his head, under his slouched black hat, was
-red, too. He carried a long-barreled heavy gun in the hollow of one arm.
-
-“Get down,” signed White Wolf. “Come into my lodge.” And he waved the
-crowding warriors back.
-
-The red-haired soldier got down and entered the lodge. Here he was
-safe. Everything of his was safe as long as he was a guest of a lodge.
-Scar Head slipped in after him, but White Wolf stayed outside.
-
-“The American chief has lost a horse,” he announced. “The horse must be
-brought back, or we shall have a bad name with our American father.”
-
-“If the American chief has lost a horse, let him promise a present and
-maybe it will be found,” answered Skidi.
-
-“That is no way to talk,” Charakterik rebuked. “I want the horse
-brought to me; then we will see about the present.”
-
-“The present is here already,” laughed Skidi. “It is in your lodge. The
-American chief would have done better to lose all his horses and say
-nothing, for a red scalp is big medicine.”
-
-And all the warriors laughed.
-
-Inside the lodge the American soldier grinned at Scar Head. Scar Head
-grinned back.
-
-“Hello,” said the soldier.
-
-Scar Head had heard that word several times. Now he blurted it, himself.
-
-“H’lo.”
-
-This was the end of the conversation, but Scar Head did a lot of
-thinking. He well knew where the horse was. Skidi had stolen it and
-hidden it out, and boasted of his feat. Now Skidi was talking of
-keeping the red-hair. That did not seem right. The Americans were
-brave. If somebody――a boy――should go out and bring the horse in, then
-Skidi might not dare to claim it, and White Wolf would send it and the
-red-hair on to Pike, and there would be no more trouble. Yes, being an
-American, himself (as they had said), Scar Head decided that he ought
-to help the other Americans.
-
-He would get the horse.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-ON THE TRAIL OF THE SPANIARDS
-
-
-Early in the morning, before yet even the squaws were stirring, Scar
-Head slipped out to get the horse. He found it picketed near the river,
-just where Skidi had cleverly concealed it. He led it in and tied it
-short, before the lodge door. Then he crept back to bed again. It would
-be safe, for nobody would dare remove it from the limits of the chiefs
-lodge.
-
-The squaws were up first, of course, to start the fires and prepare the
-breakfasts. Charakterik’s two wives, an old one and a young one, arose
-and went outside. Lying quiet Scar Head heard them talking.
-
-“Someone has brought a horse,” said the young squaw. “It is a Pawnee
-horse.”
-
-“That is queer,” said the old squaw. “Who is making White Wolf such a
-present? This must be the horse that was stolen from the Americans. The
-thief has changed his heart, and grown afraid.”
-
-“Or else it is a marriage gift,” giggled the young squaw. “Someone is
-looking for a wife in our lodge.”
-
-“Who is there, to be married?” the old squaw demanded.
-
-“We are the only women, so it must be that someone is in love with me,”
-the young squaw giggled again.
-
-“You!” scoffed the old squaw. “Who would look at you? You are not worth
-a horse. No; the horse offering is made for me.”
-
-And they both laughed. They knew better than to rouse Charakterik and
-tell him. Their business was to get the breakfast, and let him discover
-the horse, himself.
-
-White Wolf and the American soldier were still snoozing upon their
-buffalo-robe couches. Pretty soon Scar Head could wait no longer.
-He went outside, yawning and rubbing his eyes, and pretended to be
-surprised by the horse.
-
-“Whose horse is that?” he queried.
-
-“Ask it, and maybe you will know more than we do.”
-
-“Who brought it?”
-
-“That is none of our affair; nor of yours, either. It was here when we
-came out.”
-
-“It had not been here very long,” added the young squaw, to the elder.
-“See? The ground is only little trampled.”
-
-“If you want to know where it came from,” continued the old squaw,
-to Scar Head, “you should trail it back, instead of asking silly
-questions.”
-
-“Yes, and get into trouble. A gift is a gift, and not to be doubted,”
-the young squaw added.
-
-At this, Scar Head ran off, to the river, for his morning swim. When he
-returned, Chief Charakterik and the American soldier were up and out,
-too, and surveying the horse.
-
-“Do you know where this horse came from?” White Wolf questioned, of his
-wives.
-
-“No. It was here. That is all.”
-
-“The man who stole the horse from the Americans has returned it,”
-declared White Wolf. “Good. Is this the horse you are waiting for?” he
-asked, of the soldier.
-
-The soldier did not understand the words, but he understood the
-gesture. Now he smiled and replied in his own language――which nobody
-else understood. But he nodded and pointed to the horse and in the
-direction of the Americans; and they all understood that.
-
-“After you have eaten, you may take the horse and go your way,” White
-Wolf bade, well satisfied.
-
-So the matter seemed to be settled; but somehow, Scar Head did not
-feel quite happy. The matter was settled too easily. In a few minutes
-the soldier would go; then all the Americans would be gone, and he
-himself would have lost them. In fact, he didn’t seem to be getting
-much out of his scheme, except that he may have saved the soldier’s
-scalp. Skidi would be angry, too, when he found out that the horse and
-soldier both had gone. Somebody would suffer――and Scar Head rather
-foresaw who that somebody might be! Skidi could make things very
-uncomfortable.
-
-But before they were done eating, here came Skidi and several others,
-of the men, all furious.
-
-“There is the horse,” exclaimed Skidi. “And there is the red-haired
-white man. We are in time.”
-
-“What is all this shouting about?” reproved White Wolf. “This is no way
-to come to a chief’s lodge.”
-
-“We come for a horse that has been stolen by that white man,” Skidi
-boldly retorted. “There it is. We claim it.”
-
-“No. The horse belongs to the American chief. His soldier is here to
-get it. We talked about that yesterday. I will talk no more.”
-
-“I will talk, for I am a man,” answered Skidi. “You let the white man
-eat at your fire and sleep in your lodge, and during the night he
-steals a horse. Are you a chief, that you close your eyes to such
-things? We ask for our horse, or else a large present.”
-
-“Whose horse is it?”
-
-“It is a Pawnee horse, and that is enough.”
-
-“The horse was not here last night, but it was here early this
-morning,” announced White Wolf. “The American did not go out and get
-it. I am sure of that. If he did, why should he have brought it here,
-if he had stolen it? He could have easily made off with it, and others.
-No; the thief who took the horse from the Americans has returned it, as
-is right. Let the man who claims to own the horse come forward. But I
-think there is nothing more to be said.”
-
-The soldier was sitting, in his stained blue clothes, and gazing around
-with a good-natured smile on his hairy face; but Scar Head could see
-that he was thinking fast, and ready to spring for the lodge and his
-gun.
-
-“Are you going to send him away with the horse?”
-
-“Who owns the horse?” White Wolf replied. “Why was it left at my lodge
-door if not for the American to take with him? Somebody had bad dreams,
-and went and got the horse, so that he might sleep.”
-
-“In that case, the man deserves a present,” Skidi declared. “Let a
-present be given in exchange for the horse and the American may go.”
-
-“To whom shall the present be given?” White Wolf inquired.
-
-“I will take the present, and give it to the man who owns the horse,”
-said Skidi. “But of course if he has done this good deed he may wish to
-be secret about it, and if he is accused of having done an evil deed in
-the first place, he does not wish to be pointed at as a thief.”
-
-“The American chief sent no present. He only asked for a horse that had
-been taken from him. Here it is, left on the prairie at my door, and I
-give it back to him.”
-
-With that, Chief Charakterik stood and folded his robe around him, as
-sign that he was done. The soldier rose, also.
-
-But the squad led by Skidi murmured angrily. Somebody reached to grasp
-the horse’s neck rope――
-
-“No. Let him take it. He will not go far.”
-
-“There will be a red scalp, for a dance, to-night.”
-
-“The Americans will think the Pawnee are cowards, if all they need do
-is ask for a horse and get it.”
-
-“You talk like children,” White Wolf reproved. “Who among you claims
-the horse? Nobody. Why was it left at my door, if not for me? Or did
-it come of itself? It is mine and I can do with it as I please.”
-
-“But the present! You will shame all the town if you, a great chief,
-yield this way to the Americans. There is no proof that they have lost
-a horse, and why should you give one up to them, for nothing? You have
-no right to give the horse away until you find out why it was left at
-your lodge. You should wait and find out. People do not leave horses
-at lodges without expecting something in return. I may have left the
-horse, myself; and I might look for a present. Where is the present?”
-
-Thus Skidi cunningly argued.
-
-“Yes, where is the present?” they all demanded. “You need not make it,
-yourself. You can ask it from the Americans. Or tell the soldier to go;
-and if he doesn’t like to go alone, we will help him on his way.”
-
-Scar Head suddenly spoke up.
-
-“The American can have the horse, White Wolf. I brought it, and I want
-no present.”
-
-Everybody gaped. White Wolf turned on him severely.
-
-“You? You are a boy. Why do you say the American can have the horse? If
-you brought it, where did you get it?”
-
-“I found it.”
-
-“Whose horse is it?”
-
-“It belongs to the American chief. It is the one he lost.”
-
-“How do you know?”
-
-“I know,” said Scar Head. “It was hidden, but I went and got it.”
-
-“You lie! You are a meddler!” Skidi stormed, furious. “Wait till I lay
-my hands on you.”
-
-“I do not lie. I brought the horse, and I can show where I found it,”
-Scar Head answered.
-
-“That is boy’s talk,” appealed Skidi. “Look at him! He is no Pawnee,
-as everybody knows. He is not even an Indian. Who can believe what he
-says? Are warriors to be ruled by a boy? I demand a council, on this
-horse――and I will attend to that piece of impudence when I catch him
-away from the lodge.”
-
-Chief Charakterik hesitated. Attracted by the loud voice of Skidi the
-village was gathering; Iskatappe had come, and Old Knife, and other
-leading men who were unfriendly to the Americans; and Scar Head felt
-small. Now Skidi had called for a council; and between the council and
-Skidi the red-haired soldier and he himself were likely to fare rather
-badly. Charakterik, too, looked angry. Only the soldier stood smiling,
-backed against the lodge doorway, his gun in his hands.
-
-But right in the midst of the crisis, somebody else arrived. It was
-Baroney, the interpreter for Chief Pike.
-
-“Go into the lodge,” ordered White Wolf, to Scar Head. “You have made
-bad work. I will talk with you later.”
-
-Scar Head went in, disgraced. Outside, the voices continued, with White
-Wolf, and Skidi, and Baroney doing most of the speaking, and Rich Man
-and Letalesha adding remarks.
-
-After a short time they all quit. White Wolf entered, with Baroney and
-the soldier.
-
-“You are going away,” he said. “You may get your yellow pony and make
-ready.”
-
-“Where am I going?”
-
-“With these two men, to the American camp. The horse matter is settled.
-The American chief has sent a present, for the horse. Everybody is
-satisfied. But you did a wrong thing, when you interfered in men’s
-affairs. Why did you do that?”
-
-“I like the Americans,” Scar Head stammered.
-
-“Yes,” replied White Wolf. “What Skidi said is true. You are not red,
-you are white, and they all know it. You can never be an Indian. Now
-you have lost friends. The Pawnee will always look at you sideways,
-and Skidi is likely to harm you. So I give you to the American chief,
-to be rid of you before you are hurt. He asked me to send you away. If
-I keep you it may mean trouble for me also. Get your horse. These two
-men are waiting.”
-
-His brain in a whirl, Scar Head hastened out, for his yellow pony. As
-he passed through the village, there were scowls and jeers, because now
-nobody respected him as the chief’s son; but he did not care. He was an
-American, and these Pawnees were no longer his people. So he tried to
-walk fast, like an American, and pay no attention to the black looks
-and the slurs.
-
-He rode back, on his pony. The two men were waiting, on their horses,
-with the other horse in tow. White Wolf’s lodge received him kindly.
-His brother, White Wolf’s real son, handed him a horn bow and
-otter-skin quiver of arrows.
-
-“They are for you. Do not forget your brother.”
-
-The old squaw put new beaded moccasins upon his feet.
-
-“They are for you. Do not forget your mother.”
-
-The young squaw clasped a silver bracelet upon his wrist.
-
-“It is for you. Do not forget your sister.”
-
-White Wolf threw a white-tanned robe, soft and warm, from a young
-buffalo-cow, over his shoulders.
-
-“Do not forget your father. You did wrong, but your heart was good.
-Remember that you have been a chief’s son. Always bear yourself like a
-warrior. To a warrior, heat and cold and thirst and hunger are nothing.
-A brave man lives, while a coward dies. Now go.”
-
-“Come,” said Baroney. The stocky soldier smiled brightly.
-
-With never a backward glance they galloped out of the town, into the
-south and on.
-
-Baroney began to lead. With the horse in tow, the soldier slackened, to
-ride alongside Scar Head. He grinned, and spoke.
-
-“Hello,” he said, again.
-
-“H’lo,” responded Scar Head.
-
-The soldier rubbed his nose, as if figuring upon what to say next.
-
-“American, you?” he queried.
-
-Scar Head caught the word, and nodded. The soldier spoke farther, with
-another question.
-
-“He asks your name,” called back Baroney. “I will tell him. His name is
-Sparks. He is a good man. They are all good men. You will be happy with
-the Americans.”
-
-“Sparks!” That was a simple name and a good one, because it fitted.
-Fire might be his medicine; the stiff bright hairs of his face were the
-red sparks, shooting out.
-
-The American chief had camped at only a short distance from the
-Pawnee town, waiting on peace or war. There were shouts of welcome,
-for Baroney and Sparks, and many curious gazes for Scar Head. He rode
-proudly, on his yellow pony, with his warrior’s bow and arrows, his
-chief-beaded moccasins, his bracelet and his white cow-robe. He was no
-longer afraid of the Americans. Baroney took him on to Chief Pike, who
-was standing beside his saddled horse.
-
-The camp lodges had been struck, the Americans were ready to march.
-
-Baroney explained to the young chief. Chief Pike listened――he nodded,
-and spoke, and with a smile reached to shake Scar Head’s hand. The
-medicine man also spoke, and smiled, and shook hands. The young second
-chief came and did the same. Then they got on their horses.
-
-“It is well,” said Baroney to Scar Head. “You will ride in front, with
-the chiefs.”
-
-“Where do we go?”
-
-“We go to the mountains, and to find the Ietans.”
-
-Scar Head said nothing, to that. It was a long way, and the danger way,
-but he was with braves who seemed to feel no fears. They appeared to
-know what they were about.
-
-Chief Pike shouted a command and led out. The second chief repeated
-the command, and turned in his saddle to see that it was obeyed; then
-he galloped to the fore. The two chiefs rode first, side by side.
-Baroney signed, and Scar Head found himself between Baroney and the
-medicine-man. Four Osages, still――Chief Pretty Bird, two warriors and a
-woman――followed. The American warriors trudged after, two by two, in a
-column, with the extra horses bearing packs.
-
-The warriors numbered eighteen. It was a small party, for a great
-nation, when one remembered that the Spanish had sent several hundred
-and that the Padoucahs or Ietans (the Comanches) numbered thousands.
-The Osages of course need not be counted. The Pawnees thought little of
-Osages――a poor and miserable people.
-
-The Spanish had left a very broad, plain trail. The Americans were
-following it, although it was an old trail and the Spanish chief had
-been gone several weeks. It stretched straight southward, toward the
-Kansas country, and the Padoucah and the Spanish country, beyond. If
-the young chief Pike followed far enough, in that direction, he would
-have need of all his medicine to get out again. But perhaps he would
-turn west, in time, and aim for the unknown mountains, many days’
-journey――although what he expected to find there, nobody might say.
-
-It was the home of the Utahs, who warred upon plains people and were
-friendly to only the Spanish.
-
-He was a bold man, this young Chief Pike.
-
-The march southward continued all day, pursuing the trail, until when
-the sun was getting low and the shadows long a place was reached where
-the Spanish had camped.
-
-Chief Pike examined the signs. The Spanish of Chief Melgares had
-camped in a circle. There were fifty-nine burnt spots, from campfires.
-Allowing six warriors to each fire, that counted up over three hundred
-and fifty. The grasses had been eaten off by the horses.
-
-Chief Pike led his eighteen warriors on a little distance, and ordered
-camp for the night beside a fork of the river of the Kansas. Scar Head
-was well treated; the American medicine man or “doctor” eyed him a
-great deal, but did him no harm; the warrior Sparks grinned at him, and
-beckoned to him, but he did not go. It was a cheerful camp, with the
-men singing and joking in their strange language.
-
-He ate at the fire of the two chiefs and the medicine-man. They and
-Baroney the interpreter talked together. Soon after dark everybody
-went to bed, except the guards, and except Chief Pike, who sat up,
-in his lodge, making black marks on white leaves, by the fire of a
-sputtering white stick!
-
-Scar Head rolled in his buffalo robe, at one side of the lodge; the
-couch for the medicine-man (who was already on it) and for the chief,
-was at the other side. He stayed awake as long as he could, watching
-lest the medicine-man should try to feel of the spot on his head,
-again; but he was tired, and before the chief had finished making
-marks, he fell asleep.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-THE CHASE OF THE BIG ELK
-
-
-Bang!
-
-One of the American guards, stationed on a little rise, had fired his
-gun, as an alarm signal.
-
-It was noon, of the second day, and Chief Pike had halted his men to
-eat, and graze the horses. At the signal, everybody looked.
-
-“Injuns!” cried the Americans, while the guard pointed and called.
-
-Scar Head likewise looked.
-
-“Pawnee,” he said. He knew them instantly, although they were still far
-off.
-
-Chief Pike and the young sub-chief shouted orders. The soldiers seized
-their guns and formed to protect the horses; the guards came running
-in. Scar Head strung his bow and plucked a good arrow from his quiver.
-The “doctor” or medicine-man, standing with gun in hand, smiled and
-asked him a question, in French.
-
-“What are you doing? Making ready to fight?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Good,” praised the medicine-man. “You will fight for the Americans?”
-
-“I am American,” asserted Scar Head. “American. No Pawnee.”
-
-The medicine-man laughed, but he seemed pleased.
-
-There were many of the Pawnees――fully three hundred. They approached
-swiftly, across the rolling prairie, from the north. They were
-horseback, but they acted like a war party――all were warriors, with
-guns and bows and lances. What did they want? Even Scar Head could not
-guess. Had Charakterik decided to let the Americans be attacked? That
-was foolish. The Americans were ready, and would fight hard.
-
-Or, perhaps Iskatappe and Skidi and other hot-hearts had planned this
-without permission, and were determined to see what they might do.
-
-The Americans stood in a half circle, facing the Pawnees, their horses
-tied short, behind them. Chief Pike stood in front of the center, his
-sword in his hand. His sub-chief was at one end and the medicine-man at
-the other end. Scar Head fitted his arrow upon his bow, twitched his
-quiver around so that he might reach it more easily, and ran closer to
-the medicine-man’s end, where he could shoot better. The soldier Sparks
-was here, too.
-
-Iskatappe led the Pawnees. They were nearing fast. Yes, Skidi was among
-them. Scar Head decided to loose his arrows upon Skidi, who had called
-him a liar and who was the mischief-maker. Now Chief Pike uttered a
-sharp command, and the gun-locks of the few Americans all clicked; he
-uttered another command, and the guns of the few Americans all rose to
-a level line. Scar Head lifted his bow and bent it, pointing his arrow
-upward, his eyes measuring the distance to Skidi.
-
-But on a sudden the Pawnees stopped short, so that their ponies’
-forehoofs ploughed the sod, and Iskatappe and another chief rode
-forward more slowly, with the peace sign.
-
-Chief Pike barked a command, so that the Americans’ guns were lowered.
-Baroney went out and joined him, and they two met Iskatappe and the
-other chief.
-
-After all, Iskatappe only gave Chief Pike a piece of meat. They rode in
-together, and the Pawnees came on, and the Americans let them.
-
-“No war,” smiled the medicine-man, over his shoulder, at Scar Head.
-
-“Maybe,” grunted Scar Head, but he was suspicious. When the Pawnees
-acted this way, they were of two minds. The Americans would do well to
-watch out. They did watch, but it was hard to keep so many Pawnees at a
-distance. They edged about, smiling and alert for chances.
-
-“Hello, little sneak,” greeted Skidi, of Scar Head.
-
-“Hello, thief,” Scar Head boldly answered. “You are the sneak. You give
-with one hand and take back with the other.”
-
-“You talk big,” sneered Skidi. “Once you were a chief’s son; now you
-are nothing. When I catch you, some day, you will be less than nothing.”
-
-“Why don’t you catch me now?” Scar Head retorted. “I am with the
-Americans. I am not afraid of you.”
-
-“You are not worth the trouble. We are hunting meat. The Padoucah can
-have you and those Osages. They and the Spanish will eat you all, for
-us, and save us the bother. If we did not believe that, we would never
-have let the Americans come even this far.”
-
-It appeared to be true that the Pawnees were hunting, and not bent upon
-war. Iskatappe had brought Chief Pike a present of bear meat, to wipe
-out the memory of the horse-theft, he said. But the Americans stood
-ready, trying to see what the Pawnees really were up to――and Scar Head
-kept his eye upon the crafty Skidi.
-
-Pretty soon Chief Pike and Iskatappe shook hands again. The Pawnees
-were to ride one way, the Americans another. Scar Head was just in
-time. As the Americans started, he brushed against the medicine-man,
-so as to warn, with his French words:
-
-“Knife. No knife.”
-
-The medicine-man instantly felt of the knife scabbard on his saddle.
-It was empty, as Scar Head well knew, for he had seen the clever Skidi
-steal the knife out. Now the “doctor” exclaimed, and spoke quickly to
-Chief Pike. They both reined aside, so did Baroney the interpreter――
-
-“Come,” beckoned the medicine-man, to Scar Head; and while the column
-went on with the second chief, they turned back to the Pawnees.
-
-“We have come for a knife that is lost,” announced Chief Pike, to
-Iskatappe, with Baroney talking for him in bad Pawnee.
-
-“We know nothing about any knife,” asserted Rich Man, stiffly.
-
-“A knife is missing from this man’s saddle,” Chief Pike insisted. “I
-ask you to get it for me.”
-
-“You grow angry about a very small thing,” Iskatappe replied. “What
-is one knife to you? Besides, you say it is lost. Very well; then you
-should find it. We know nothing about it.”
-
-Chief Pike flushed, angry indeed. His blue eyes looked hot.
-
-“Whether or not it is a small thing, we Americans are not men who can
-be robbed. The knife may seem of little value, but it is ours. I am
-here to get it from you.”
-
-“That is strong talk,” Iskatappe answered. “I have no knife of yours.
-Where is your knife?”
-
-“Who has it?” the medicine-man asked, in quick low voice, of Scar Head.
-
-“Skidi,” whispered Scar Head.
-
-The medicine-man pushed forward to Baroney, and spoke with him.
-
-“This man says your warrior named Skidi has his knife,” said Baroney,
-to Iskatappe.
-
-“We will see,” replied Iskatappe. He called Skidi, and told him to
-throw back his robe; and sure enough, there was the knife.
-
-“I did not know that it was that man’s knife,” Skidi defended. “I found
-it on the trail. Now it is mine. If I give it up, I must have another
-to take its place.”
-
-“Your warrior lies,” Chief Pike flatly retorted, to Iskatappe. “He
-stole the knife. Otherwise, how did we know that he had it?”
-
-Matters looked bad. The Pawnees were surrounding thicker and thicker,
-and the other Americans had gone on. But Chief Pike gave no sign that
-he was afraid; neither did the medicine-man. Only Baroney acted uneasy,
-and Scar Head’s heart beat rapidly.
-
-“What the American chief says, sounds true,” remarked Iskatappe, while
-Skidi glared and his friends jostled and murmured. “But maybe Skidi is
-right, too. He should have another knife.”
-
-“We are not here to trade knives. When an honest man finds what belongs
-to another, he returns it,” Chief Pike replied.
-
-“Much time is being wasted over a matter of no account,” growled
-Iskatappe. “Here is your knife,” and he plucked it from Skidi’s waist.
-“I am not stingy, so I give him one to take its place.” And so he did.
-
-Chief Pike passed the knife to the medicine-man. The medicine-man was
-wise. He immediately passed it back to Iskatappe.
-
-“It is now yours. Keep it. By this you see that we did not come for the
-knife; we came for justice.”
-
-“You show us that your hearts are good, after all,” Rich Man granted.
-“I think you have done well.”
-
-The faces of the Pawnees cleared, even Skidi seemed satisfied, and
-after shaking hands once more Chief Pike led out for the column and
-left the Pawnees to go their way also.
-
-The Americans under the second chief were a long way ahead. Chief Pike
-acted as if in no hurry. He and the medicine-man cantered easily and
-chatted and laughed like brothers; Scar Head and Baroney cantered
-together, behind them.
-
-“Our scalps were loose, back there,” uttered Baroney.
-
-“Yes,” said Scar Head. “I smelled blood.”
-
-“You are no Pawnee. They would scalp you, too. Were you afraid?”
-
-“No. No one is afraid, with Chief Pike.”
-
-Baroney laughed. He was a small, dark, black-bearded man who spoke
-about as much Pawnee as Scar Head spoke French, but was good at the
-sign language; so by using all three means, with now and then a word of
-Spanish, he got along.
-
-They had ridden about a mile, and were slowly overtaking the American
-column, when another band of figures came charging. The medicine-man
-sighted them, the first, for he pointed――and they indeed looked, at a
-distance, to be more Indians, issuing from ambush in a river bottom on
-the left and launching themselves to cut off the Chief Pike squad.
-
-Scar Head himself read them with one keen stare.
-
-“Elk,” he grunted, in Pawnee, and stiffened with the hunt feeling.
-
-Baroney called, excitedly; but Chief Pike had read, too. He shouted,
-turned his horse and shook his reins and flourished his gun, and away
-he dashed, to meet the elk. In a flash Scar Head clapped his heels
-against his pony’s ribs, and tore after. The medicine-man and Baroney
-tore, too, on a course of their own.
-
-The yellow pony was a fast pony, well trained. He had been stolen from
-the Comanches, whose horses were the best. Scar Head rode light――a boy
-in only a buffalo robe. The American horses all were poor horses, even
-those traded for with the Pawnees, and Chief Pike, in his clothes,
-weighed twice as much, on the saddle, as Scar Head.
-
-The yellow pony over-hauled the Chief Pike horse――crept up, from
-tail to stirrup, from stirrup to neck, from neck to nose. Scar Head,
-his moccasined feet thrust into thong loops, clung close. Chief Pike
-glanced aside at him, with blue eyes glowing, and smiled.
-
-“Good meat,” he said, in French. “We two hunt.”
-
-“Kill,” answered Scar Head.
-
-“Can you kill?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What with?”
-
-“This.” And Scar Head shook his strung bow.
-
-Chief Pike laughed.
-
-“They are large; you are small. With a gun――yes. With a bow――I think
-not.”
-
-“You will see,” Scar Head promised. His heart was filled with the
-desire to prove himself to Chief Pike. But he had never killed an
-elk――nothing larger than a badger; he only knew that it might be done.
-
-They raced. The elk were foolish things, and appeared to be thinking
-more of some danger behind than the danger before. No――now Baroney and
-the medicine-man had frightened them afresh, for they had swerved, they
-paralleled the trail, and were scouring on to gain the open.
-
-Good riding might head them.
-
-The yellow pony knew. He ran like a deer, himself. Chief Pike’s horse
-lengthened bravely.
-
-“Hi! Hi!” Scar Head urged.
-
-“Hurrah!” cheered the chief.
-
-They were veering in. The band of elk were led by a splendid buck,
-whose horns branched like a tree. The elk chief ran with his nose out
-and his horns laid upon his neck, but now and again he shook his head,
-and his horns tossed.
-
-Baroney and the medicine-man were trying to close in, on the rear
-flank――the medicine-man had shot. Scar Head belabored his pony harder.
-The wind whistled in his ears, his white robe had dropped about his
-thighs, he rode with his legs and notched an arrow upon his bow-string.
-His eyes were upon the elk chief, and he almost lost sight of Chief
-Pike, although he knew that Pike was thudding close beside him.
-
-The reports of the medicine-man and Baroney guns sounded, driving the
-elk before them. The elk chief saw the two enemies cutting him off
-before. He recoiled sharply, to turn, but the herd forced him on; they
-all bunched, confused. This was the chance, and in charged Scar Head,
-on his yellow pony.
-
-“Le grand cerf (The large stag)!” Chief Pike gasped.
-
-“Oui (yes)!” answered Scar Head.
-
-The herd broke. On bolted the stag, tossing his great horns. After
-him pelted Scar Head and Chief Pike. It was another chase. But, see!
-The Pawnees were coming, from before. The chase was leading straight
-for them, they had seen, and fifty or sixty of their best hunters had
-galloped in a long line, for a surround.
-
-The stag saw, too. Or else he smelled. He turned at right angles, to
-escape the net. A minute or two more, and the yellow pony was at his
-straining haunches, and Scar Head was leaning forward with bow bent to
-the arrow’s head.
-
-“Look out! Look out!” Chief Pike shouted.
-
-With a mighty leap the stag sprang aside, whirled, and charged the
-yellow pony. His bristling horns were down, his eyes shone greenly.
-Around whirled the yellow pony, also, and scrambled for safety. Scar
-Head, clinging and urging, gazed backward and laughed to show that
-he was not afraid. Chief Pike, his pistol held high, pursued, to the
-rescue.
-
-But the elk chief changed heart. The yellow pony nimbly dodged, and he
-went on. Scar Head closed in on him once more. Chief Pike was coming;
-the arrow should be sped now or never.
-
-The elk chief was spattered with froth from shoulder to haunch; his
-great horns, polished at the tips but still ragged with their velvet,
-lay flat, reaching to his back. Scar Head forged on farther and
-farther, his bow arched from arrow notch to arrow point; he leaned,
-aimed quickly, and loosed. It was a warrior’s bow, and the recoil
-jarred his whole arm, but the arrow had sunk to its feathers in the
-right spot, just behind the elk’s fore shoulder.
-
-“Hi!” cheered Scar Head. He whipped another arrow from his quiver;
-without slackening speed he fitted it to the bow.
-
-The elk chief had given a tremendous bound; for a moment it seemed as
-though he would get away yet. On thudded the yellow pony, in the rear
-at the other side on thudded Chief Pike, ready to use his pistol.
-
-Before, the Pawnees were yelling. Scar Head feared that he was going to
-lose his kill to them, or to Chief Pike. That would never do. He kicked
-his pony fiercely. Ha! The old chief was failing, as the arrow point
-worked. The pony drew up on him. Now another arrow. Whang! It buried
-itself almost out of sight behind the elk chief’s ribs.
-
-[Illustration: WHANG! IT BURIED ITSELF ALMOST OUT OF SIGHT BEHIND THE
-ELK CHIEF’S RIBS]
-
-The elk chief bounded high, screamed, turned blindly, and with one more
-bound crashed headlong to the ground. The yellow pony leaped right
-across him as he struggled to rise. But he rose only half way, still
-screaming with rage. Then, just as Chief Pike arrived, and Scar Head,
-twisting the yellow pony, leveled a third arrow, he collapsed, gushing
-blood from his mouth, and quivered and died.
-
-Scar Head yelled the scalp halloo. He had killed the elk chief, a
-mighty animal indeed.
-
-Chief Pike, out of breath, swung his hat and cheered, too. He got off
-his horse, and walked around the elk, examining it. He examined the
-arrow wounds, with the reddened feather tips just showing.
-
-“That was well done,” he said.
-
-Scar Head sat happy, breathing fast. The scar under his white mark
-throbbed and burned, as it always did when he worked hard or played
-hard, but he was happy. His heart glowed at the praise by Chief Pike.
-He felt like a man.
-
-“Yours,” he panted. “I kill. You keep.”
-
-“It is much meat,” replied Chief Pike.
-
-Baroney and the medicine-man were chasing hither-thither. The Pawnees
-were killing. Chief Pike galloped away to see. But he would see no
-arrows buried deeper than these.
-
-After the hunt was over, the Pawnees cut up their animals, and the Pike
-party cut up the big elk. With Scar Head riding proudly, they four
-caught the column under the second chief. The camp feasted, this night,
-upon a spot where the Spanish also had camped. There was only one alarm
-call, from the guard, on account of two Pawnees who came in by mistake.
-They had not eaten for three days and thought that this was a camp of
-their own people.
-
-Chief Pike sent them out again, with food for a sick comrade. He was
-kind as well as brave.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-LIEUTENANT WILKINSON SAYS GOOD-BY
-
-
-“Chief Pike asks you to go back with one man and find John Sparks.”
-
-These were the words of Baroney, to Scar Head, who was just finishing
-breakfast so as to be ready to march.
-
-A number of days had passed since the elk hunt, and several things had
-happened. Although the Americans were brave, the Great Spirit seemed
-to be angry with them for marching through the country. He gave them
-hungry camps, without wood and water. He sent rain on them, and made
-them sick. Chief Pretty Bird and another Osage man had left. They
-said that they wanted better hunting――but it was plain that they were
-afraid. And on the same day the Spanish trail had been blotted out by
-buffalo hoofs, and the Americans had lost it.
-
-By the talk, this was bad. According to what Scar Head understood,
-Chief Pike depended upon the Spanish trail to guide him by the best
-road into the south and to the Comanches. The Spanish knew this country
-better than the Americans did.
-
-The rain kept falling, and the men straggled. Yesterday afternoon the
-warrior Sparks had dropped behind. He had pains in his joints, which
-the medicine-man had not been able to cure: “rheumatism.” He could not
-ride a horse and he could scarcely walk, using his gun as a crutch.
-Last night he had not come into camp. The Spanish trail was lost,
-again; and Sparks was lost, too.
-
-Scar Head was glad to go back and look for him. He liked Sparks. He
-liked all the men and was getting to know them by their names: queer
-names. Each man had two――one for each other and one for the chiefs.
-There was “Jake” and “Carter”; the same man. And “Jerry” and “Jackson”;
-and “Tom” and “Dougherty”; and “John” and “Brown”; and “Hugh” and
-“Menaugh”; and “Bill” and “Meek”; and “Joe” and “Ballenger”; and
-the others. The last two were head warriors, called “sergeant.” The
-medicine-man’s names were “John” and “Doctor Robinson.” The second
-chief’s names were “the left’nant” and “Lieutenant Wilkinson.” Chief
-Pike was “the cap’n” and “Lieutenant Pike.”
-
-The warriors spoke only American, but they knew Indian ways. The
-most of them, Baroney said, had been on a long journey before with
-Lieutenant Pike, far into the north up a great river, into the country
-of the Sioux.
-
-The medicine-man, Doctor Robinson, was popular, but he was not a
-chief. The men did not seem to fear him. He rode well and shot well.
-Lieutenant Pike and he rode and hunted together, while the second
-chief, Lieutenant Wilkinson, stayed with the men. Scar Head also had
-grown not to fear the medicine-man, who frequently asked him about his
-white spot and where he had come from, to the Utahs and Pawnees, and
-tried to teach him American words.
-
-Some of the American words were hard and some easy. On some days they
-were harder than on other days; and again Scar Head suddenly spoke
-words that he didn’t know at all――they arrived to him of themselves.
-That was odd. He was getting to be an American; he felt as though he
-had been an American in his heart all the time, but that his heart had
-been shut up. The times when his spot throbbed and burned were the
-times when he knew the fewest words.
-
-The men had given him a new name. His Pawnee name was not good enough
-for them. The new name was “Stub.” John Sparks had told him of it,
-first, by saying it.
-
-“Hello, Stub? How goes it, Stub?”
-
-And the other men laughed and repeated:
-
-“Here, Stub.”
-
-“Hello, Stub!”
-
-“You’re the boy, Stub.”
-
-“What is ‘Stub’?” he asked, of the medicine-man, Doctor Robinson.
-
-“It is ‘short,’ ‘cut off,’ coupé,” carefully explained the
-medicine-man. “They like you. It is a good name, because you are small.”
-
-“American?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Sure, an’ we mane no harm, doctor, sir,” called “Tom,” whose other
-name was Dougherty. “If sawed-off he is, a rale little man he is, too.”
-
-And while Scar Head (whose other name was now “Stub,” in American
-language) did not understand all those words, he knew that they were
-kindly spoken. So his name pleased him.
-
-John Brown was the man who rode with him to look for Sparks. They took
-the back trail and rode for a long time. Everything was wet from the
-rains. Sparks must have spent a miserable night, alone on the prairie,
-without food or fire. Finally they saw him, far ahead, hobbling slowly,
-trying to catch up with the march.
-
-He grinned when they met him, and shouted cheerfully, although he made
-faces.
-
-“Mornin’ to ye, boys. ’Rah for Stub!”
-
-“H’lo, John. No walk; ride. My pony.” And Stub sprang off.
-
-“Can you ride, John?” asked John Brown.
-
-“Sure, I’ll try. At this rate I dunno whether I’m goin’ or comin’.
-You’ll all be to the mountains an’ back ag’in before I ever ketch up.
-Hey, Stub?”
-
-But Stub might only smile.
-
-With many grunts and awkward movements John Sparks climbed aboard the
-yellow pony. It was near noon when they brought him into the camp.
-
-Lieutenant Pike and Doctor Robinson had been hunting for the Spanish
-trail, again, but had not found it. There was talk of a large river,
-the Arkansaw, somewhere southward yet. The Americans were anxious to
-reach the river, which would guide them; but they had lost the trail to
-it.
-
-After eating, they made another march. When the sun was low, Lieutenant
-Pike pointed to some trees a long way ahead and told Lieutenant
-Wilkinson to march the men to that place. He beckoned to Stub.
-
-“Come with me?” he asked.
-
-Stub nodded. He and Lieutenant Pike and Doctor the medicine-man went
-off by themselves, scouting up a creek. Lieutenant Pike was still
-looking for the Spanish trail.
-
-They all looked and looked, but did not cross it. The lieutenant
-sighted some buffalo; he and the medicine-man gave chase, and before
-Stub reached them they had killed two. That was good. They took the
-tongues, and left a coat on the carcasses, to keep the wolves away;
-but when the three rode hard, to get to camp before dark, there was
-no camp. The Lieutenant Wilkinson men had not gone to the trees. Now
-everybody was lost!
-
-After searching about and speaking angrily, Lieutenant Pike ordered
-camp. It was lucky that they had taken the buffalo tongues, because now
-they might make a fire and cook the tongues.
-
-What had become of the Lieutenant Wilkinson men seemed very queer.
-Early in the morning Lieutenant Pike led up the creek, from the trees,
-and did not find them. The three arrived at the spot where the two
-buffalo carcasses were lying. The wolves were eating the carcasses,
-in spite of the coat, but there were marrow bones left. Next, the
-lieutenant led down the creek. Not even the smoke of any campfires
-might be seen, and there were no pony tracks or footprints.
-
-Stub used all his eyes, but discovered nothing. At night the lieutenant
-and the doctor were much worried.
-
-“Injuns, mebbe?” Stub asked.
-
-Lieutenant Pike nodded gravely.
-
-“I fear so. We will hunt more to-morrow.”
-
-That night it rained, and in the morning was still raining, cold. But
-they had had plenty to eat. This day they rode and rode, up the creek
-again, in the rain.
-
-“It is bad,” said the doctor. “A long way from home. Only four shots
-left. No trail, no men, nada (nothing). Indian country. We look one
-more day; then we find the river Arkansaw.”
-
-“Go to ’Nited States?” Stub queried.
-
-“Cannot tell. The Great Father sent us out. We are men; we hate to go
-back.”
-
-“Mebbe they there, on Arkansaw. Injuns chase ’em.”
-
-“Maybe. But it is bad. Maybe Injuns chase us, next.”
-
-“We fight,” declared Stub.
-
-And the doctor laughed.
-
-“You’re all right. We’ll do our best, eh?”
-
-Stub had ten arrows; the lieutenant and the medicine-man each had four
-loads for their guns. That was not much, in a fight.
-
-Early in the morning they again rode, searching up the creek, with
-their eyes scanning before and behind and right and left. When the sun
-was halfway to noon, they saw two horsemen, coming from the south.
-Indians? No! White men――soldiers!
-
-Lieutenant Pike cried gladly, and fired his gun, in signal. His face
-had been dark and stern; now it lighted up, and they all galloped for
-the two men. Lieutenant Wilkinson was only three miles south, on the
-Arkansaw.
-
-“What! The Arkansaw?” Lieutenant Pike repeated.
-
-“Yes, sir. It is right close.”
-
-“Have you found the Spanish trail?”
-
-“No, sir. But we found the river.”
-
-The two soldiers guided. When they drew near where the river was,
-Lieutenant Wilkinson galloped out. By the way in which he shook hands
-with his chief and with the doctor, he, too, had been worried.
-
-“Sure, we thought you were lost or scalped,” said John Sparks, to Stub,
-in camp.
-
-“No lost; you lost,” answered Stub.
-
-“Well, depends on how you look at it,” agreed John Sparks, scratching
-his red hair.
-
-The river was a wide river, flowing between cottonwood trees. The
-country was flat, and the trees had hidden the size of the river. The
-men began to look for trees to make boats of. Did this mean that Chief
-Pike was going to travel on by boat? Baroney explained.
-
-“Lieutenant Wilkinson travels down river by boat. The captain takes men
-and marches to the Comanches.”
-
-“Lieutenant Wilkinson, how far?” Stub asked.
-
-“Very far, to the American forts at the mouth of the river, and to
-report to the American father.”
-
-“Captain Pike, how far?”
-
-Baroney shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Who knows?”
-
-Stub made up his mind what _he_ was going to do.
-
-Lieutenant Pike moved the camp to the other side of the river, where
-the best boat-trees grew. The river was rising fast, from the rains,
-and everybody had to swim and arrived very wet. Rain fell almost all
-the time, but it was a good camp, with plenty of wood and meat.
-
-While the men under Lieutenant Wilkinson cut down trees Chief Pike and
-the doctor medicine-man scouted up and down the river, hunting meat and
-the Spanish trail. There were buffalo and antelope, but there was no
-Spanish trail.
-
-Lieutenant Pike grew curious about the wish-ton-wish, or prairie dogs.
-He found a large town of them, where the rattle-snakes and the tortoise
-lived, too. He and the doctor shot them, to eat, and they were good――as
-Stub well knew. It took true shooting, because unless a wish-ton-wish
-is killed dead, he crawls into his hole.
-
-The wish-ton-wish is among the smartest of animals. He digs his hole
-cunningly. The lieutenant and the doctor tried to fill one hole with
-water, and get the wish-ton-wish that way. Stub said, “No use”――he and
-the Pawnee boys had tried it often. And the men found out that this was
-true, for they spent a long time and poured in one hundred and forty
-kettles of water, and it all disappeared but no wish-ton-wish came out.
-
-Still, the towns were interesting places, where the dogs sat up
-straight with their hands across their stomachs, and held councils,
-like people, and whistled “Wish-ton-wish (Look out)!” whenever an enemy
-was sighted.
-
-A great deal of buffalo-meat was dried, for Lieutenant Wilkinson to
-take. Making the boats required several days. The trees were too small
-and soft. When one boat had at last been hollowed the men started to
-build another out of buffalo and elk hides, stretched over a frame.
-
-On the night before Lieutenant Wilkinson was to leave, Chief Pike the
-captain said to Stub:
-
-“Come here. Listen.”
-
-“What?”
-
-“To-morrow you go with Lieutenant Wilkinson.”
-
-“No,” answered Stub. He had been afraid of that.
-
-“Yes. You go with him, to the United States. That is best.”
-
-“No.” And Stub shook his head.
-
-“Why not?”
-
-“No go. Stay with you.”
-
-“Don’t you want to be an American, and see the towns of the Great
-Father?”
-
-“Be an American here,” answered Stub.
-
-“We do not stay here. We go on, a long way, up the river, to the
-mountains.”
-
-“Yes,” said Stub.
-
-“You will be cold.”
-
-“Don’t care.”
-
-“You will be hungry.”
-
-“Don’t care.”
-
-“We may all die.”
-
-“Don’t care.”
-
-“The Osage were afraid. The Pawnee were afraid. You are not afraid?”
-
-“No. No Osage, no Pawnee; American. March, hunt, fight, stay with you,”
-Stub appealed, eagerly.
-
-The doctor medicine-man laughed, and clapped him on the shoulder.
-
-“Good. Let him come, lieutenant.”
-
-“He may come,” replied the lieutenant. And Stub’s heart beat gladly.
-
-Baroney and John Sparks and Tom Dougherty and John Brown and others of
-his friends were coming, too. Had he been sent away with Lieutenant
-Wilkinson, in the boat, for the United States, he would have run off at
-his first chance and followed the Pike trail.
-
-Right after breakfast in the morning camp was broken. It had been a
-very cold night, with snow, and ice floated thickly down the swollen
-river. But by help of the Wilkinson boats Lieutenant Pike moved his men
-and baggage across the river again, to the north side which everybody
-said was the American side. The men worked hard, to load the boats and
-swim the horses, in the slush and ice. Then Lieutenant Wilkinson made
-ready to start.
-
-He took with him, in his two boats, one of the head soldiers, Sergeant
-Joe Ballenger; the soldiers John Boley, Sam Bradley, Sol Huddleston,
-and John Wilson; the Osage man and woman who had come this far, and
-corn and meat for twenty-one days.
-
-Head soldier Sergeant Bill Meek marched the Pike men up-river, but
-Stub stayed with Lieutenant Pike, the doctor, and Baroney, to see the
-Wilkinson men leave. He had no fear of being put aboard, now, for Chief
-Pike always spoke the truth.
-
-Lieutenant Wilkinson shook hands all ’round, stepped into the boat,
-made of four buffalo hides and two elk hides, and with his crew pushed
-off, after the other boat. The floating ice did not matter.
-
-Lieutenant Pike watched them out of sight, in a bend. Then he turned
-his horse toward the west.
-
-“Come,” he said.
-
-He and Doctor Robinson led; Baroney and Stub followed.
-
-“Now to the mountains,” cheered Baroney. “Huzzah!”
-
-“Huzzah!” Stub echoed.
-
-The mountains were far, through Comanche country, maybe through Spanish
-country, perhaps into Utah country; and after that, what? Nobody had
-said. Winter was here, as if the Great Spirit were still angry. The
-men had shivered, this morning, in their thin clothes; but nobody had
-seemed to care. Young Chief Wilkinson, with a few men, was going one
-way, on an unknown trail; young Chief Pike, with the rest of the men,
-was going the other way, on another unknown trail. So, huzzah! To be an
-American one must be brave.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-“THE MOUNTAINS! THE MOUNTAINS!”
-
-
-The Spanish trail again! They struck it toward evening of the day after
-Lieutenant Wilkinson had left――and they struck it just in time, too.
-Snow was falling once more, and dusk was at hand.
-
-The trail came in from the north, and crossed the river. Lieutenant
-Pike ordered camp made. Then he and the doctor forded the river,
-through the floating ice, to see where the trail went on the other side.
-
-They returned in the dark. They had lost the trail, among the buffalo
-tracks, but were going to try again in the morning.
-
-“We’ll have to take Stub, and use his eyes, too,” said the doctor.
-
-This was another cold night. The snow had quit, after falling two
-inches deep. The horses groaned, where they were picketed to graze;
-before rolling themselves in their blankets and buffalo robes, on the
-ground, the men huddled about their fires. There were now thirteen
-soldiers, and Chief Pike, the doctor, Baroney and Stub.
-
-“Heap winter, b’gorry; eh?” spoke Pat Smith, to Stub, and holding his
-hands to the blaze.
-
-Stub gravely nodded.
-
-“Winter come soon,” he answered.
-
-“An’ aren’t ye cold, boy?” queried John Sparks. “In only your skin an’
-a buff’lo robe?”
-
-“No cold,” Stub asserted. That was all the Pawnees wore. He was used to
-it.
-
-The day dawned clear. After eating, Sergeant Meek marched the men up
-along the river. With Lieutenant Pike and the doctor, Stub crossed to
-help find the Spanish trail. They had to break a way through the ice.
-The ice cut the horses’ legs, the stinging water splashed high, soaking
-moccasins and drenching the lieutenant and the doctor above the knees.
-The lieutenant wore thin blue cotton leggins――a sort of trousers called
-overalls; now these clung to him tightly.
-
-Stub rather preferred his own skin, for it shed water.
-
-The Spanish had camped over here. There were lots of horse sign showing
-through the snow, in a space of more than a mile. The Spanish seemed to
-have grown in numbers. It was an old camp, and the trail out of it had
-been flattened by buffalo tracks, and by the snows and rains. So they
-three――Lieutenant Pike, the doctor, and Stub――made circles, as they
-rode up river, to cut the trail farther on.
-
-They did not find it until noon. But they found something else: Indian
-signs which were not older than three days. A party of warriors were
-ahead. Stub picked up a worn moccasin: “Pawnee――Grand Pawnee,” he
-announced, when he handed it to the lieutenant “War party. All on foot.
-Mebbe so many.” And he opened and shut his fingers five times.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor examined the moccasin. After that they
-rode more rapidly, as if anxious to get to their soldiers.
-
-The soldiers also had crossed the river, on account of bad travel, and
-were camped on this, the south side. In the morning they all marched
-by the Spanish trail, along the river, into the west, over a country
-covered with salt. There were more Indian signs. It looked as though
-twenty warriors had been marching in the same direction only a short
-time before; and fresh horse tracks pointed down river.
-
-Whether the Indians were the same Pawnees or not, was hard to tell. But
-the horse tracks looked to be wild-horse tracks.
-
-“Sure, wouldn’t it be fun to ketch a few o’ them wild hosses, Stub,
-lad?” proposed John Sparks, in camp. “We need ’em. Would ye know how?”
-
-“Chase ’em; with rope. Chase ’em all day, make tired, mebbe no ketch
-’em,” Stub answered.
-
-“Or if ye shoot one jest right, through the nape o’ the neck an’ graze
-the nerve there, ye’ll down him like as if lightning struck him an’ he
-won’t be hurt,” asserted Hugh Menaugh.
-
-“Yes, but it takes mighty fine shootin’,” said soldier Bill Gordon.
-“You’re like to kill him, or miss him complete.”
-
-The wild horses were sighted the next evening, from camp on an island
-where there was wood and shelter. The lieutenant and the doctor and
-Baroney had come in with two antelope that they had killed among their
-own horses, while they themselves were lying on the ground and resting.
-They might have killed more, but they did not need the meat. Now while
-spying on the country around, through his long glass, the lieutenant
-saw a bunch of moving figures out there on the prairie, north of the
-river.
-
-Indians? No――wild horses, more than one hundred! Good! Out he went, and
-the doctor, and Baroney, and Stub followed, to get a nearer view.
-
-They were of many colors, those wild horses――blacks and browns and
-greys and spotted. They waited with heads high, as curious as if
-they had never seen men before. Then they came charging, in a broad
-front, and their hoofs drummed like thunder. Only a short way off they
-stopped, to start and snort.
-
-“Ma foi, quelle beauté (My gracious, how beautiful)!” cried Baroney.
-
-“Try to crease that black, lieutenant,” the doctor proposed.
-
-The lieutenant rested his gun upon his empty saddle, took long aim, and
-fired. But he did not stun the black――he missed him entirely――he had
-not dared to draw fine enough.
-
-At that, around the wild horses wheeled, as if by command, and pelted
-off, to halt and gaze again.
-
-“To-morrow we’ll see if we can run some down,” said the lieutenant.
-“Shall we, Stub?”
-
-“Pawnee sometimes run all day. Mebbe ketch one, mebbe not. Too swift,
-have too much wind.”
-
-“Well, we can try,” laughed the doctor.
-
-The camp was excited, to-night, with the thought of catching wild
-horses. The men busied themselves tying nooses in their picket ropes.
-
-“But we haven’t a critter that could ketch a badger,” John Sparks
-complained; “unless it be the doctor’s black an’ that yaller pony o’
-Stub’s.”
-
-Stub doubted very much whether his yellow pony would amount to
-anything, in racing wild horses. The Pawnees always used two or three
-horses, each, so as to tire the wild horses out.
-
-However, the lieutenant was bound to try. In the morning he picked out
-the six best horses, which included the yellow pony, and appointed the
-riders. They were himself, the doctor, Baroney, soldier John Sparks,
-soldier Freegift Stout, and Stub. Only Baroney and Stub had seen wild
-horses chased before.
-
-All the camp, except the camp guards, followed. The wild horses were in
-about the same place, a mile distant. They waited, curious, pawing and
-snorting and speaking to the tame horses, until within short bow shot,
-or forty steps. On a sudden they wheeled.
-
-“After ’em!” the lieutenant shouted.
-
-“Hooray!”
-
-Ah, but that was sport! Stub’s yellow pony sprang to the fore; he
-was nimble and he carried light. No――another horse and rider forged
-alongside him. They were the medicine-man and his black; a good rider
-and a good horse.
-
-Stub hammered and yelled. “Hi! Hi! Hi!” The doctor lashed and yelled.
-Already they had gained the heels of the flying herd. The clods of
-earth thrown by the rapid hoofs bombarded them lustily. Baroney and
-soldier Sparks and soldier Stout, and even the lieutenant had been
-dropped behind.
-
-But working hard, they two never got quite far enough in, to cast the
-ropes. The wild horses were playing with them. After about two miles
-the yellow pony and the doctor’s horse began to wheeze and to tire;
-the wild band were running as strongly as ever――only romping along,
-biting and kicking at each other. Then as if to show what they really
-could do, led by their black stallion, they lengthened their strides,
-opened the gap wider and wider, and were away.
-
-The doctor hauled short.
-
-“No use, Stub,” he called.
-
-So Stub pulled down, and turned.
-
-“No use,” he agreed. “But heap fun.”
-
-“You bet!” pronounced the doctor, panting. “What do you say ‘heap’ fun
-for? That’s not American; that’s Injun. Americans say ‘much’ fun, or
-‘great’ fun.”
-
-“All right,” Stub admitted――for the doctor knew. “Heap chase wild
-horse, much fun.”
-
-“Oh, pshaw!” the doctor laughed. “If I could only get into that head
-of yours I’d take the ‘heaps’ out of it. How’s your white spot, these
-days? Burn any?”
-
-“Some days burn, some days no. Some days heavy, some days light.” And
-with that, Stub kept his distance. He wished that the doctor would quit
-talking about “getting into” his head. A medicine-man had dangerous
-power.
-
-The lieutenant and Baroney and the two soldiers had come as fast as
-they could. There was a great deal of laughing and joking as the doctor
-and Stub joined them, and all rode back for the main party, and camp.
-The lieutenant joked the least. He never did joke much, anyway; he was
-stern and quiet.
-
-“We’ll delay no more for wild horses, men,” he said. “Our Country
-expects something better of us than such child’s play at the
-impossible. Forward again, now. We will hunt only for food, in line of
-duty.”
-
-This afternoon they marched thirteen miles.
-
-The Spanish trail continued, up the river, and ever westward. It was a
-pity that some of the wild horses had not been caught, for the other
-horses were beginning to give out. The grass was short and thin, and
-eaten off by the buffalo, and at night the men cut cottonwood boughs
-for the horses to feed upon.
-
-This was a rich meat country, though. Buffalo were constantly in sight,
-by the thousand, many of them fat cows, and the hunters brought in
-humps and tongues. The Spanish had left camp signs――at one camp almost
-one hundred fires might be counted, meaning six hundred or seven
-hundred warriors. A whole Spanish army had been through here, but the
-lieutenant and his little army of sixteen marched on.
-
-There were several old camp-places of Indians. One showed Comanche
-signs; near by, the Spanish also had camped, as if making ready to meet
-the Comanches, and Baroney and the lieutenant thought that the Comanche
-range must be close at hand.
-
-But where were the mountains? How far were the mountains, now? The
-river was getting narrower and deeper, the country higher and rougher.
-Two horses became so weak that they could not carry their packs. The
-horses had been traveling, starved and foot-sore, under heavy loads
-more than twenty miles a day.
-
-John Sparks, who had been out hunting, returned with news.
-
-“I sighted an Injun hossback,” he reported. “He made off up a little
-ravine south of us. Don’t know whether he saw me or not.”
-
-Before night fresh moccasin tracks not over a few hours old were
-discovered. A large war party were somewhere just ahead. This night the
-camp guards were doubled, but nothing happened.
-
-In the morning the lieutenant took the doctor, John Sparks, and Stub
-for interpreter, and circled south, to find the lone horseman. Only his
-tracks were found; so they rode back again and the column marched on.
-
-Nothing special occurred today, but everybody kept sharp lookout. The
-country was lonely, broken by rocky spurs and uplifts, and the buffalo
-herds seemed to be less in number.
-
-The next day the lieutenant and the doctor led, as usual, with Baroney
-and Stub behind them, and the column of toiling men and horses under
-Sergeant Meek, following. The two weak horses had fallen down, to die,
-and another was barely able to walk.
-
-Lieutenant Pike frequently used his spy-glass, which made things ten
-miles off appear to be only a few steps. In the middle of the day he
-halted and leveled it long.
-
-“Sees something,” said Baroney, in French.
-
-In a moment the lieutenant galloped forward to the doctor, who had gone
-on, and they both looked. But they did not signal, and they did not
-come back; so what it was that they thought they saw, nobody knew. Stub
-and Baroney strained their eyes, seeking. Aha!
-
-“Smoke sign,” uttered Baroney.
-
-“Heap smoke. Big fire. Mebbe cloud,” Stub answered.
-
-From the little rise they could just descry, far, far to the northwest,
-a tiny tip of bluish color, jutting into the horizon there. It did not
-move, it did not swell nor waver. No smoke, then; cloud――the upper edge
-of a cloud. The lieutenant and the doctor had read it, and were riding
-on. In another minute it had sunk, swallowed by the land before.
-
-“N’importe (does not matter),” murmured Baroney. “Perhaps more snow, my
-gracious! But who cares?”
-
-In about two miles more, the lieutenant and the doctor halted again,
-on the top of a low hill that cut the way. They gazed, through
-the spy-glass, examining ahead. They did not leave the hill. They
-stayed――and the lieutenant waved his hat. He had seen something, for
-sure. Baroney and Stub were a quarter of a mile from him. The soldiers
-were a quarter of a mile farther.
-
-“Come! He signals,” rapped Baroney. Now he and Stub galloped, to find
-out. Behind, the soldiers’ column quickened pace, for the orders of
-Sergeant Meek might be heard, as he shouted them.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor were gazing once more, with eyes and
-spy-glass both.
-
-“What is it? The savages?” cried Baroney, as he and Stub raced in, up
-to the top of the flat hill.
-
-Or the Spanish? The Spanish trail had been lost, for the past day or
-two. Maybe the Spanish were encamped, and waiting. The lieutenant
-answered.
-
-“No. The mountains, my man! The mountains, at last!”
-
-“Hurrah!” cheered the doctor. “See them?”
-
-Baroney stared. Stub stared. It was the same bluish cloud, only larger
-and plainer. It jutted sharply――no, it sort of floated, but it did not
-move. It was fastened to the earth. And north from it there extended
-a long line of other clouds, lower, as far as one might see; while
-southward from it were still lower clouds, tapering off.
-
-“One big mountain! A giant! Ma foi, how big!” Baroney gasped.
-
-“All mountains. The Mexican mountains, on the edge of the United
-States,” announced the lieutenant. “Take the glass. Look――you and Stub.”
-
-Look they did. The spy-glass worked wonders. It brought the clouds
-much closer, and broke them. They were no longer clouds――they changed
-to mountains indeed. In the spy-glass they shimmered whitely. That
-was snow! Or white rocks! They were medicine mountains. And the big
-mountain, so high, so mysterious, so proud: a chief mountain.
-
-“You have been there?” asked the doctor, eagerly, of Stub. “With the
-Utahs?”
-
-“No.” And Stub shook his head. “Not there. No remember.”
-
-“Pshaw!” the doctor answered.
-
-The column came panting up. The doctor and the lieutenant again waved
-their hats.
-
-“The mountains, men! You see the Mexican mountains――the Great Stony
-Mountains. Three cheers, now, for the Mexican mountains!”
-
-Everybody cheered three times: “Hooray! Hooray! Hooray!” Only the
-horses stood with heads drooping; they did not care.
-
-“How far, would you think, cap’n?” Sergeant Meek queried.
-
-“We ought to reach their base day after to-morrow.”
-
-“Hooray!”
-
-But although they all marched ten more miles to-day, and more than
-eleven miles the next day, and more than twenty-three miles the next
-day, from camp on the third evening the big chief mountain and the
-lesser mountains seemed no nearer than before.
-
-“Sure, they’re marchin’ faster’n we are,” said John Sparks.
-
-“Spirit mountains,” Stub decided. “See ’em, no get ’em.”
-
-Another horse was about to die. There were fresh Indian signs, again.
-The Spanish trail had been found――it led onward, toward the mountains.
-The country was growing more bare, the air thinner and chillier.
-Through the spy-glass the mountains looked bare.
-
-When the next herd of buffalo were seen, the lieutenant ordered camp
-made, and sent hunters out to kill meat enough for several days. There
-might be no buffalo, farther on. It was a poor country. He himself did
-not hunt. He went up on a hill and drew pictures of the mountains, on a
-piece of paper.
-
-Stub did not hunt, either; he was almost out of arrows. He followed
-Lieutenant Pike to the hill, and watched him. But the pictures were
-only crooked lines, like Indian pictures.
-
-The lieutenant glanced aside at him, and smiled. His smile was sweet,
-when he did smile.
-
-“Would you like to climb that big blue mountain?” he asked.
-
-Stub had to think, a moment. The big blue mountain! Yes, big and blue
-it was――and white; and very far. The thunder spirit might live there.
-Winter lived there. Could anybody climb it? It never was out of sight,
-now, except at night (and it never was out of sight, for days and days
-afterward), but it seemed hard to reach.[A]
-
-[A] This was the celebrated Pike’s Peak, of Colorado, later named for
-Lieutenant Pike, first white man to tell about it.
-
-“Top?”
-
-“Yes, clear to the top,” smiled the lieutenant.
-
-Stub’s eyes widened; and he smiled also.
-
-“Sure. No afraid, with you.”
-
-“Good!” the lieutenant praised. “We’ll see.”
-
-The hunters killed seventeen buffalo, and wounded many more. When the
-best of the meat had been smoked, there were nine hundred pounds of it,
-and one hundred and thirty-six marrow-bones. The camp finished off the
-marrow-bones in one meal, as a feast before marching on to storm the
-big blue mountain.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-BAD HEARTS IN THE WAY
-
-
-“Des sauvages (Indians)!”
-
-Thus Baroney shouted, pointing, from where he had checked his horse on
-the edge of a little rise overlooking a dip in the trail.
-
-They all had been marching two more days, and had covered about forty
-more miles. This made seven days’ travel, counting the two days of meat
-camp, and eighty-five miles, since the Big Blue Mountain had first been
-sighted. Now it and the lesser mountains were much plainer.
-
-But here were the Indians, sure enough. The lieutenant had rather been
-expecting them. Yesterday the fresh tracks of the two men, again, had
-given warning. So the column were marching close together.
-
-The Indians, on foot, were running toward the column, from some trees
-on the river bank, at the right.
-
-“Close up, men,” the lieutenant ordered.
-
-“Close up, close up! Look to your priming!” ordered Sergeant Meek.
-
-And the lieutenant and the doctor, with Baroney and Stub ready to
-interpret for them, led for the Indians.
-
-“Pawnee, hein (hey)?” said Baroney.
-
-“No Republic Pawnee; Grand Pawnee. War party; no horses,” Stub
-explained. There was a difference between the Republic Pawnees and the
-Grand Pawnees.
-
-“Others yonder, lieutenant!” exclaimed the doctor.
-
-They looked. Another squad of the Indians were running down from a hill
-on the left. They carried flags on lances――the Grand Pawnee war colors.
-
-“Make a surround!” guessed Baroney.
-
-The lieutenant reined his horse, and drew his curved sword.
-
-“Company, halt! Watch sharp, men!”
-
-He glanced right and left, waiting to see if this was an attack.
-No――for, as the doctor suddenly said:
-
-“Those first fellows act friendly, lieutenant. They have no arms;
-they’re holding out empty hands.”
-
-“Forward!” ordered the lieutenant.
-
-In a minute more they met the Indians from the timber. These Pawnees
-did indeed act friendly――and all too friendly! They crowded in among
-the soldiers, shaking hands, putting their arms around the soldiers’
-necks, even trying to hug the lieutenant and the doctor and Baroney and
-the others who rode horseback.
-
-The lieutenant got off, good-naturedly; instantly a Pawnee leaped into
-the saddle and rode the horse away. The doctor and Baroney lost their
-horses, also; Stub (who knew what the Pawnees were up to) was almost
-dragged down, but he stuck fast.
-
-All was in confusion of laughter and jostling and pretended play.
-
-“No, no!” the lieutenant objected, growing angry; and half drew a
-pistol. The men were getting together, wresting their guns from the
-Pawnees’ hands and holding them high, to keep them free.
-
-More Pawnees, from the timber, had joined, with guns and bows and
-lances; and the Pawnees from the hillside had come in. They included
-two chiefs.
-
-The two chiefs issued orders, and the play stopped. The horses were
-returned. Then all went on to the trees by the river, for a talk.
-
-Here matters again looked bad. The warriors frolicked, in spite of the
-chiefs. They were Grand Pawnees――sixty: a war party out to plunder the
-Padoucahs. But they had not found any Padoucahs; so this seemed a good
-chance to plunder somebody else, instead of returning home empty-handed.
-
-The lieutenant’s face was red, as he angrily warded off the hands that
-clutched at his pistols and gun and horse’s bridle.
-
-“Stand firm, men!” he called. “Don’t let loose of a thing――don’t let
-them get behind us!”
-
-“Kape your distance, you red rascals!” rasped Tom Dougherty, as they
-hustled him about.
-
-“Steady! Steady!” Sergeant Meek cautioned.
-
-“By thunder, they’d like to strip us,” the doctor exclaimed.
-
-Even Stub objected vigorously, in Pawnee. The Grand Pawnees were indeed
-rascals.
-
-Guns were being cocked――click, click; several of the Pawnees, angry
-themselves, leveled bended bows. It was likely to be a fight between
-the sixteen Americans and the sixty Pawnees; and Stub sat alert, ready
-to pluck an arrow as quick as lightning.
-
-“Guard those packs, men!” the lieutenant kept shouting.
-
-But the two chiefs were working hard, shoving the warriors back,
-clearing a space. The head chief spoke to the lieutenant, and signed.
-
-“He says: ‘Let us talk,’” Baroney interpreted.
-
-“Very well. Tell him we will talk or we will fight,” replied the
-lieutenant. “We won’t be robbed. If it is peace, we will give him
-presents.”
-
-They all sat down in a ring, with the lieutenant and Baroney and the
-two chiefs in the center. The Americans sat under the American flag,
-the Pawnee warriors sat under the Grand Pawnee flags. The doctor,
-however, stood up, watching everything.
-
-The Pawnee head chief took out a pipe and tobacco, for a peace smoke.
-That looked good. But before filling the pipe, the two chiefs made
-speeches.
-
-“They ask what presents you will give them. They say they are poor,”
-Baroney translated. And that was what they had said.
-
-“Bring half a bale of tobacco, a dozen knives, and flints and steels
-enough for all, sergeant,” the lieutenant ordered.
-
-The head chief made another speech. He was refusing the presents. He
-asked for corn, powder and lead, blankets, kettles――all kinds of stuff.
-
-“Tell him that there are our presents. We have nothing else for him,”
-the lieutenant answered. “We are ready to smoke with him.”
-
-The chief did not lift the pipe. He and the other chief sat, with bad
-spirit showing in their eyes. The warriors commenced to hoot, and
-handle their guns and bows again.
-
-“He will not smoke such poor presents,” Baroney reported. “I think
-they mean trouble. A little tobacco, lieutenant; maybe a little tobacco
-and powder.”
-
-“You had best look out, lieutenant,” warned the doctor. “I don’t like
-their looks.”
-
-“Tell the chief he will get nothing else. He can take those presents or
-leave them,” bade the lieutenant, to Baroney.
-
-Baroney hated to do it, but he had to obey. The head chief scowled.
-Then he signed, and an old man lugged in a kettle of water, as a return
-present.
-
-Stub heard the Pawnee warriors talking scornfully.
-
-“See what manner of men these white men are, with their rags and their
-poor gifts,” they said. “They do not travel like the Spanish. They look
-like beggars.”
-
-But Stub well knew that although their horses were thin and sore, and
-they themselves were lean and tattered and almost barefoot, these
-Americans could fight.
-
-Now Chief Pike and the two Pawnee chiefs drank from the kettle of
-water, out of their hands, and smoked the pipe, and ate a little dried
-buffalo meat. Several Indians were called upon by the chief, to pass
-the knives and flints and steels around. Indians who were given the
-presents threw them upon the ground.
-
-The lieutenant shook hands with the chiefs, and rose.
-
-“All ready, doctor,” he called. “Pack your animals, sergeant, where
-necessary. We march.”
-
-The Pawnees sprang up, too, and crowded forward again.
-
-“They make a surround,” said Baroney.
-
-“Look out, lieutenant! They’re stealing your pistols――mine, too!” cried
-the doctor.
-
-The lieutenant leaped upon his horse just in time to rescue his
-pistols, hanging from the saddle. He was hemmed in. The soldiers were
-swearing and darting back and forth, grabbing at thieves and protecting
-the baggage also.
-
-Now the lieutenant had lost his hatchet. He exclaimed furiously.
-
-“Tell the chief my hatchet is gone.”
-
-The chief only said:
-
-“These are small matters for a great man.”
-
-He drew his buffalo robe high and turned his back.
-
-The lieutenant flushed, more angry still, and stiffened in his saddle.
-He meant business. Stub had seen him look this way before.
-
-“Leave the baggage and get your men to one side, sergeant. Quick!
-Be ready with your guns. That’s it. Baroney, tell the chief that the
-next warrior who touches our baggage or animals shall die instantly.
-Sergeant, at the first attempt, let the men shoot to kill.”
-
-The Pawnees understood. They saw the muskets half leveled, and the
-grim, determined faces behind. A warrior stretched out his hand,
-stealthily, to a pack――and John Spark’s muzzle covered him in a flash.
-He jumped back.
-
-“Go!” suddenly ordered the head chief. The Pawnees sullenly gathered
-their presents, and without another word filed away, the whole sixty.
-
-“See if we’ve lost anything, sergeant,” said the lieutenant.
-
-“One sword, one tomahawk, one axe, five canteens and some smaller stuff
-missing, sir,” was the report.
-
-The soldiers waited eagerly. They wished to follow and fight.
-
-“No matter,” gruffly answered the lieutenant. “We must save our lives
-for our work, my men. We have work to do. Forward, march.” He shrugged
-his shoulders, and added, to the doctor: “I feel as badly as they do.
-This is the first time I ever swallowed an insult to the Government and
-the uniform. But our number is too small to risk failure of our plans.
-Now for the mountains.”
-
-“By gar, once more my scalp was loose,” said Baroney, to Stub.
-
-“Yes. They had black hearts, those Grand Pawnee,” Stub gravely agreed.
-
-This day they marched seventeen miles, and the next day nineteen miles.
-In all they had come more than one hundred and twenty miles, their eyes
-upon the Big Blue Mountain, as the lieutenant called it. And at last
-they had just about overtaken it.
-
-From camp, here where the river split into two large forks, one out of
-the west, the other out of the south, the Big Blue Mountain looked to
-be quite near, up a small north fork.
-
-“Le Grand Mont,” Baroney called it. “The Grand Peak.” And the men
-called it that, too.
-
-“Sure, it can’t be more’n one day’s march now,” John Sparks declared,
-as from camp they eyed it again. “We can be there to-morrow at this
-time, with ease, in case those be the orders.”
-
-In the sunset the mountain loomed vast, its base blue, but its top
-pinkish white. After everything else was shrouded in dusk, its top
-still shone.
-
-“How high, d’ye think?” queried soldier Freegift Stout.
-
-“Thray miles higher’n we be; mebbe four,” guessed Pat Smith.
-
-“He’s a grand wan all right,” sighed Tom Dougherty. “Even a bur-rd wud
-nade an ixtra pair o’ wings to get atop him, I’m thinkin’.”
-
-“No mortal man, or nothing else on two legs could do it, I reckon,”
-said John Brown. “Unless that be the cap’n himself.”
-
-“American can,” Stub reminded, proudly.
-
-“You’re right, boy,” soldier Terry Miller approved. “Under orders an
-American would come pretty close to filling the job.”
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor had been gazing at the peak; it
-fascinated them, like it fascinated the men, and Stub. That night they
-talked together until late, planning for to-morrow. The lieutenant had
-decided to climb the mountain.
-
-He sent for Sergeant Meek. The sergeant stood before him and saluted.
-
-“I intend to take Doctor Robinson and two of the men, and this boy,
-to-morrow, and set out for the big mountain,” the lieutenant said. “The
-camp will be left in your charge.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied Sergeant Meek.
-
-“These reports of the journey to date I also leave, with my personal
-baggage. The mountain is only a short day’s march, but I have to
-consider that we may be cut off or meet with other accident. To-morrow
-morning I will lay out a stockade, here, for the protection of your
-party. You are to wait here one week, with due caution against
-surprises by the savages and the Spanish. Admit nobody except your own
-command into the stockade. If we do not return or you do not hear from
-us within the seven days, you are to take my papers and such baggage
-as may be necessary, and march down river by the safest direct course
-for the nearest American settlement or military post, as may be. At the
-American frontier you will leave your men under instructions to report
-at St. Louis, and you will press ahead at best speed and deliver my
-papers to General Wilkinson, the head of the Army, wherever he may be.
-In event of your disability, you will entrust the papers to Corporal
-Jackson――acquainting him in advance with what is expected of him. In
-the meantime, here or on the march, keep your men alert and together,
-and do not forget that our Country depends upon our performing our duty
-without regard to our own interests.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied the sergeant. He gulped――the ragged, weather-worn
-soldier. “Excuse me, sir――’tis only a day’s march yonder, you say?
-You’ll be coming back, sir?”
-
-“If within human possibility, sergeant. But I must climb that mountain
-to its highest point, in order to make certain of our position and
-ascertain the trend of the various streams. We are near the sources of
-the Arkansaw, as is evident. Our instructions are to find the heads of
-the Arkansaw and the Red River, on our way to the Comanches.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” replied the sergeant.
-
-“That is all. Good-night.”
-
-“Good-night, sir. I make bold to wish you good luck, sir. I wish I
-might be going with you, sir.”
-
-“Thank you, sergeant.”
-
-The lieutenant sat up late, writing. In his buffalo-robe, Stub dreamed
-of to-morrow, and the Grand Peak. He had understood only part of the
-lieutenant’s long speech; but it was enough to understand that he was
-to be taken.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-A TRY AT THE “GRAND PEAK”
-
-
-Early in the morning the lieutenant set the men at work cutting down
-fourteen trees, for stockade logs. A stockade was a fort. This fort was
-to be only a pen, open on the river and five feet high on the three
-other sides.
-
-Soldiers John Brown and Terry Miller were the men chosen. That made
-a party of five. They all took only a blanket or robe apiece, and a
-little dried meat, besides their guns and Stub’s bow and arrows. They
-started horseback at one o’clock, to cross the river and travel up the
-north fork, for the Grand Peak.
-
-The men paused long enough to give three cheers, and wave their caps.
-
-“Bon voyage (Good journey),” Baroney called.
-
-“Good luck to yez.”
-
-“We’ll be lookin’ for you back.”
-
-“When ye get to the top, be lightin’ us a bonfire, Terry.”
-
-The lieutenant raised his hat, in reply. The doctor waved, the two
-soldiers and Stub waved. And the five splashed through the ice-cold
-water and left the eleven men under Sergeant Meek to build the fort.[B]
-
-[B] The fort was near present Pueblo, Colorado. Lieutenant Pike’s squad
-marched up the west side of Fountain Creek.
-
-According to the doctor, this was the twenty-fourth day of the month
-named November. By the morning light the Grand Peak, glistening white,
-had looked to be nearer than ever. The lieutenant was certain that a
-half-day’s march would bring them to its base; to-morrow they would
-climb it, and would be back in camp on the third day.
-
-Mile after mile they hastened, their eyes scanning the distance before.
-The route up along the small fork was gravelly and bare, except for
-clumps of sage brush, and the willows bordering the stream. In places
-they had to cross deep washes cut by the rains. Not a living thing was
-sighted, save rabbits and prairie-dogs and a few antelope. And the
-Grand Peak and the line of lesser peaks――some white, some steel-gray,
-waited.
-
-The sun sank low and lower, over their southern end. The Grand Peak
-grew bluer and colder, and the other mountains darkened.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor led. They always rode together. Stub and
-soldiers Miller and Brown followed close behind. After a while they all
-quit the stream, to strike westward, on a trail more direct.
-
-Soldier Miller scratched his head, on which the hair was long.
-
-“It’s a queer thing, John,” he said. “There it is, that peak――and there
-it’s been for more’n a hundred miles, with us a-making for it and never
-reaching it.”
-
-“We’ll not reach it this day, that’s sure, lad,” answered John. “We’ve
-covered ten miles, and you’d think we’d been standin’ still!”
-
-In two miles more the sun had set. The shadows of the mountains seemed
-to extend out over the plain and turn it dark and cold. Stub pulled his
-robe closer around his neck. Now the Grand Peak had changed to deep
-purple――it had pulled its own robe up, for the night.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor suddenly veered aside, to a single low
-cedar, the only tree of the kind, around. There they halted and swung
-from their saddles.
-
-“We’ll make camp, men,” the lieutenant ordered. “The base of the
-mountain evidently is farther than we had figured. But we’ll reach it
-to-morrow morning, easily, and doubtless the top also, before night.”
-
-This was a cold camp――very cold with the breath from the mountains.
-They had dried buffalo-meat to chew on, but no water except that in the
-canteens, and the lieutenant wished to save on water, for the climb.
-
-He started them out again early, before sunrise. They headed for the
-Grand Peak. The horses were stiff, from the night, and thirsty, and
-moved slowly at first. Presently the sun rose. The Grand Peak flashed
-white in its beams, and assuredly was near. The foothills at its base
-were dark green: trees.
-
-And there they stayed, the peak and the foothills, all day! Stub’s eyes
-ached with gazing. Soldier Brown grumbled a little.
-
-“It’s a wild-goose chase. I’ve said that no man will ever climb yon
-peak. We’ll wear out ourselves and our hosses for nothin’. Even if we
-ever reach the foot of it, look what’s ahead of us.”
-
-“You may be sure the cap’n’ll climb it, whether or no,” retorted
-soldier Miller. “He’s set out to do it, and do it he will.”
-
-“Oh, well; we’re gettin’ into a more likely country, anyhow,” John
-granted. “The sign is better――that’s one comfort.”
-
-This was true. They were entering among low hills, covered with cedars
-and pines. Up and down, up and down, and winding over and through,
-they hopefully pushed on――and from each rise they might see the long
-dark-green slope of the Grand Peak more plainly. What a tremendous
-huge fellow he was, as he towered, shadow-flecked, into the floating
-clouds! The clouds veiled his top; he pierced them, and thus he sat
-gazing above the world.
-
-“Gosh!” murmured John Brown. “He’s a neck-cracker.”
-
-Toward evening the lieutenant and doctor, in advance and just crossing
-another of the many rolling hills, shouted back, and waved.
-
-“Almost there, men!”
-
-When the three others toiled up to the same place, they saw. A shallow
-valley lay before; at the farther edge the timbered slope of the Grand
-Peak commenced.
-
-Hurrah!
-
-Several buffalo were feeding, below. The lieutenant and the doctor made
-a dash for them――cleverly headed them off, shot rapidly, and downed two.
-
-“Fresh hump for supper,” cheered Terry. “I could eat a whole one,
-myself.”
-
-“Sure, I could drink a river dry, first,” wheezed John. “Do you mind
-that we’ve struck no water since mornin’?”
-
-“Water there,” Stub hazarded, pointing at a line of lighter green near
-the foot of the mountain.
-
-They arrived below in time to help butcher the buffalo while the
-lieutenant and the doctor rode on looking for a good camping place. It
-was too late to do anything more this day.
-
-A good camp spot was found on a little creek of ice cold water from
-several springs flowing out of the mountain’s base.
-
-“Here we are at last, lads,” the lieutenant welcomed, as they brought
-the meat in. “We’ve wood, meat and water, and to-morrow we’ll climb to
-the top. Success awaits us.”
-
-“It’s been a long pull, eh?” laughed the doctor. “How about you, Stub?
-Are you game? I mean, are you ready to try?”
-
-“I go,” Stub announced.
-
-“With the cap’n’s permission we’ll all go, sir,” added soldier Miller.
-“’Twill be a view worth the seeing, up yonder above the clouds.”
-
-“No tellin’ what we’ll find, I reckon,” put in John Brown.
-
-“Whatever happens, we’ll be content in the knowledge that we’re losing
-no opportunity,” the lieutenant declared. “When we stand up there, on
-what may prove to be the uttermost southwestern border of the United
-States, we will have extended the authority of the Flag into a region
-doubtless never before penetrated by man.”
-
-“And procured considerable geographic information,” said the doctor.
-
-“Yes, sir. The Government will be enabled to revise its atlases with
-accuracy, according to our new data as to the course of certain
-rivers, and the National boundary between the United States and the
-Mexican territory westward. And we may perceive a route that will take
-us directly from the Arkansaw to the head of the Red River and the
-Comanche country.”
-
-The long slope of the mountain rose dark and brooding right above them.
-They were so close in that from the campfire they could not see the
-top, but they felt the snow whitely waiting, up toward the black sky
-beyond the million stiffly marshalled, sighing pines.
-
-Yes, cold it was, even here at the base; much colder than last night,
-out on the plain. In spite of the fire, their coverings were all too
-thin. At breakfast, before sun-up in the morning, the lieutenant’s
-instrument by which he read the cold said nine degrees above freezing.
-In his moccasins, made from a piece of his buffalo-robe, Stub’s feet
-tingled. Several days back John Sparks had given him an old pair of
-cotton trousers, cut off at the knees, but these did not seem to amount
-to much, here. Still, Terry Miller and John Brown had nothing better,
-and their bare toes peeped through the holes in their shoes.
-
-“We’ll leave the camp as it is,” the lieutenant briskly ordered. “We’ll
-be back by night, so we’ll not need our blankets or meat. See that the
-horses are well staked, Miller, where they’ll be able to drink and
-forage during the day.”
-
-Doctor Robinson had gone outside for a minute. They heard his gun. He
-came in, packing a partly dressed deer.
-
-“It’s a new kind, lieutenant,” he panted.
-
-“Good. We’ll hang up the hide, to inspect later.”
-
-The new kind of deer――a large deer with ears like mule ears――was
-quickly butchered. They hung its hide and the best of the meat upon a
-tree, until their return at evening.
-
-“Forward march, to the top, men,” the lieutenant bade. “Take only your
-guns and ammunition. Never mind the canteens. We’ll find plenty of
-water, I’m sure. All ready, doctor?”
-
-“All ready.”
-
-With the lieutenant in the lead and Stub bringing up the rear, they
-attacked the timbered slope. Puff, puff! Wheeze, wheeze! The pine
-needles underfoot and the frosty soil were slippery. Clouds veiled the
-sky, the timber depths were dark and cold, but presently they all were
-sweating. Gulches and draws cut the way, so that by sliding down in
-and clambering out, or else making circuits they lost much time. The
-mountain fought them with cliffs and canyons, too, and sometimes they
-could scarcely make distance on hands and knees. Now and then they had
-to halt, to rest and catch breath.
-
-Once or twice they jumped the new species of deer, from sudden coverts;
-there were many large birds, that rose with loud whirr. “Pheasants,”
-the doctor and lieutenant called them. And twice, in the early morning,
-they saw buffalo feeding――a smaller buffalo than those upon the plains.
-
-But they did not stop to hunt any of these.
-
-About mid-morning they paused to rest again, and gaze behind from an
-open rocky knoll. The sun had burst forth.
-
-“A fine day after all,” panted the lieutenant.
-
-“Yes, sir, up here. But look below. Ain’t that a snowstorm, sir?”
-wheezed Terry Miller. The feet of him and of John Brown, where seen
-through their worn-out shoes, were bruised and bleeding. Stub’s
-moccasins were shredded and soaked. The feet of the lieutenant and the
-doctor were in no better shape.
-
-Now when they gazed backward and down, they looked upon a layer of dull
-cloud. With occasional break, the cloud rested over all the country at
-the mountain’s base――and through the breaks might be seen the spume of
-falling snow!
-
-“We’ve come some way, eh?” remarked the doctor. “Thank fortune, we’re
-above the storm. We ought to be near the top.”
-
-But peer as they might, they could not see the top. The timber and the
-rocks extended on and on and on.
-
-“A pair o’ stockin’s would feel mighty good, on this kind of a trip,”
-muttered John Brown. “’Tain’t what you’d call a barefoot trail, in
-winter.”
-
-They rested a minute, the men leaning upon their muskets. Then――――
-
-“Come, boys,” the lieutenant urged impatiently. “One more stint and
-we’ll make it. Forget your feet. Think only of the top.”
-
-They climbed, breathing short and fast while they clambered and
-slipped. At noon they still had not reached the top; several times the
-top seemed at hand, but when they glimpsed it, shining white, it always
-was across another ridge, and higher.
-
-Stub’s ears rang, his heart drummed, his feet weighed like lead. The
-two soldiers staggered and stumbled. The snowstorm below appeared far.
-But the lieutenant and the doctor knew no quitting.
-
-“We’ll not reach it, this day,” gasped John Brown. “’Tis the same old
-story. Marchin’, and marchin’, and never gettin’ there.”
-
-“Anyhow, we’ll reach it to-morrow,” Terry replied.
-
-The sun sank; the air grew very cold. Up here there was nothing moving
-but themselves; the deer and the pheasants and the squirrels had gone
-to bed. The pines were soughing mournfully in an evening breeze.
-
-The lieutenant came to a stop before a reddish cliff which overhung and
-formed a shallow cave.
-
-“We’ve done enough for one day,” he panted. Even he looked tired out.
-“I think we’ll gain the top shortly in the morning. We’re into snow,
-and the trees are thinning; the top cannot be far. We’ll take advantage
-of this cave, for the night. It’s a shelter, at least.”
-
-“That’s one piece of luck,” the doctor laughed.
-
-“We’ll bunk together, so as to keep warm,” announced the lieutenant.
-“We’ll waive question of rank――we’re all men, serving our Flag.”
-
-He made no mention of the fact that they were tired, hungry and thirsty
-after a long day’s climb, and that they did not have blankets or food
-or water. He seemed to think that if he could stand it, they should
-stand it, too, for the sake of duty. That was his style――that was one
-reason the men loved him. He never asked them to do more than he did,
-and he never took his ease even when he might, as commander.
-
-But this proved to be a miserable night. The fire at the mouth of the
-cave smudged and smouldered. The rock bed was hard and cold. There was
-nothing to eat, nothing to drink, nothing to see; all around stretched
-the slope of the mountain, black and white and silent and lifeless――and
-cold, cold, cold.
-
-Nobody slept much, as they all lay huddled close to each other for
-mutual warmth. They only dozed shiveringly, afraid to move for fear of
-losing what little warmth they were making.
-
-It seemed to Stub that he had just dropped off, at last, when he was
-aroused.
-
-The lieutenant was standing outside the cave. Daylight had come.
-
-“Up, men,” the lieutenant cried. “See this view! Oh, doctor! Be quick.
-It’s glorious.”
-
-They piled out, with sundry grunts and groans over muscles stiffened by
-yesterday’s work and by the hard bed. The lieutenant had spoken truly.
-The sky overhead was flushed rosily with sunrise――a clear day, here;
-but the storm still raged down below. The clouds there extended, level,
-in a thick layer of drab and white and pink, closing off the plains
-world from the mountain world.
-
-“And yonder is the top, boys.” The lieutenant pointed. “It’s nearer
-than we thought. Let’s try for it now, and get back to camp and our
-supplies before dark.”
-
-He struck out and upward; in single file they followed, trudging
-through the brittle snow, and weaving among the pines. The final white
-ridge which their eyes had been marking during most of yesterday loomed
-large and plain above.
-
-The snow gradually deepened. Its surface bore not a trace of foot or
-paw or hoof. Soon it was to their knees, soon thigh high; but they were
-out from the trees and upon the bald space which formed the top.
-
-Only a few more steps, now, through snow waist high, with rocks and
-gravel underfoot. Whew! Now for it! Hooray! The lieutenant was there
-first, to halt, and gaze about.
-
-“Is that it, lieutenant?” puffed the doctor, anxiously.
-
-Terry Miller huskily cheered, stumbled, but forged ahead.
-
-The lieutenant stood, fixedly peering beyond.
-
-“What!” uttered the doctor, arrived.
-
-“It’s the wrong peak, men,” quietly said the lieutenant, his voice flat
-in the thin air. “Yes, the wrong peak.”
-
-The others floundered to him and the doctor, to gaze also. They all
-leaned heavily upon their guns. Stub’s legs trembled; he had nothing
-upon which to lean; but he stared, wide-eyed, his heart thumping.
-
-It was the top. On the other side the mountain fell away, in a long,
-long snowy timbered slope, down into a deep, broad valley of dark
-pines; and at the farther edge of the valley there arose a mountain
-again――a snow-capped, much higher mountain: the Grand Peak itself![C]
-
-[C] They had climbed Cheyenne Mountain, height 9,407 feet, south of
-Pike’s Peak, which is 14,109 feet in height.
-
-“And all our climb’s for nothin’, you say, sir?” wheezed John Brown.
-“We’re not on the Grand Peak at all?”
-
-“No. But our climb had not been for naught. We’ve done our best, as
-soldiers.” The lieutenant’s tone was dull and disappointed.
-
-“I don’t see how we made the mistake,” the doctor proffered. “We
-thought that we were at the true base.”
-
-“We had no means of telling otherwise, doctor. This mountain looked to
-be a part of that other; but that other is separate, and twice as high.
-I judge it’s fully fifteen miles distant, now.”
-
-“Shall we try for it, sir?” Terry Miller asked. “The day’s young, sir.”
-
-The lieutenant shook his head decisively.
-
-“Not this trip, Miller. ’Twould take a whole day to reach its base.
-You and Brown have no stockings, we none of us have proper clothing――no
-blankets, no provisions, and there’s little prospect of game. We’ve
-come so far, and taxed our strength to the limit. Comparing the height
-of that mountain with this, I believe that no human being can climb
-the Grand Peak and survive. It is a region of eternal snow, barred to
-all vestige of life. We’ll go back while we can. We have performed our
-duty, and we can see nothing from up here by reason of the cloud bank.”
-
-He looked at his thermometer.
-
-“Four degrees below zero.” Zero was the freezing-point.
-
-He glanced sharply about.
-
-“We must make haste. The storm is rising on us.”
-
-And even as he spoke the air turned raw and cloud wreaths began to
-float around them. So they back-tracked as fast as they could, and
-guided by a convenient ravine followed it down with such speed that
-they reached their camp at the base before dark, but in a snowstorm.
-
-“Well,” sighed John Brown. “The horses are safe, but the birds and
-beasts have eaten our deer and everything else.”
-
-The lieutenant shot a pheasant; of their meat there was left only two
-deer-ribs; and they drank and ate.
-
-“Rather limited rations, for five hungry persons after a two-days’
-fast,” the doctor joked.
-
-“We have our blankets, and we are safe, sir,” the lieutenant answered.
-“Such a matter as diet should not enter into the calculations of men
-who explore the wilderness. They must expect only what they will get.”
-
-“The little cap’n’s a man o’ iron; he’s not flesh and blood,” Terry
-murmured, to John and Stub. “But I reckon he’d not refuse a bit more
-rib, himself.”
-
-“With him, when your belt’s at the last hole, why, cut another,” said
-John.
-
-However, safe they were, although still very hungry. In the morning
-they rode down the creek, constantly getting lower and finding less
-snow. Just after noon the men shot two buffalo. That made a full
-feast――the first square meal in three days. So to-night they camped
-more comfortably under some shelving rock, outside the hills.
-
-The place seemed to be a favorite camp ground for Indians, also. The
-valley was strewn with their horse sign, and with broken lodge-poles
-and old lodge-pins. The lieutenant thought that these had been Ietan
-or Comanche camps, and was much interested.
-
-The next afternoon they sighted the stockade; they were almost home.
-
-“The flag’s still flying. Thank God, the party’s all right,” exclaimed
-the lieutenant. “Give them a cheer, boys, when we arrive. We return
-disappointed, but not defeated, and far from conquered.”
-
-The hoarse cheer was answered. The soldiers――Sergeant Meek, Corporal
-Jerry Jackson, Freegift Stout, Alex Roy, and all――trooped out, to stand
-in line and present arms as the lieutenant, leading, rode through the
-gate. He saluted them like an officer again, and smiled wanly as if
-glad to be back.
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-ONWARD INTO WINTER
-
-
-“So yez didn’t climb the Grand Peak, after all,” Tom Dougherty once
-more queried.
-
-“We climbed far enough. As I told you before, nothin’ on two legs or on
-twice two legs will ever climb that Grand Peak,” John Brown answered.
-“Only an eagle can fly there. We were above the clouds, with naught to
-eat and little to breathe; and yon was the Grand Peak itself, as high
-again.”
-
-The men were wearied, but not yet wearied of hearing about the try for
-the Grand Peak.
-
-“You’re right. It’s beyond the reach o’ lungs and legs,” said Sergeant
-Meek. “For the cap’n and the doctor measured it to-day with their
-instruments, from a good sight of it. Ten thousand, five hundred and
-eighty-one feet above ground they make it out to be, or a good two
-miles into the air. And allowing for the fact that we’re nigh eight
-thousand feet up, right where we be, though you might not think it,
-that peak rises more’n eighteen thousand feet above sea level. The
-cap’n says it’s close to being the highest mountain in the world.”[D]
-
-[D] The Lieutenant’s measurement was wrong only about 1,000 feet. The
-height of the plain where they had been camping was some 4,500 feet,
-and Pike’s Peak rises 9,600 feet above.
-
-Corporal Jerry Jackson came in, from changing guard, and stood warming
-himself by the fire.
-
-“By jiminy, those hosses are being eaten alive,” he said. “I do pity
-’em. I’d hate to be a hoss, on a trip like this.”
-
-“Yes; a man can understand an’ grin an’ bear it; but a hoss hasn’t any
-sense o’ the why an’ wherefore.”
-
-“Those pesky magpies are still at ’em, are they?” asked the sergeant.
-
-“A man to a hoss couldn’t keep the things off with a club.”
-
-“They even try to take the meat out a fellow’s hands,” quoth Freegift
-Stout.
-
-For the hungry magpies――bold birds of black-and-white, with long
-tails――hovered over the unsaddled and unpacked horses, lighted and
-pecked their raw backs until the blood flowed afresh. The horses, poor
-weak, thin creatures, kicked and whinneyed in vain. The magpies stuck
-fast and rode upon them, pecking. And as Freegift declared, swooped at
-the men also and grabbed for the meat in their hands.
-
-“Have Roy and Gordon come in sight yet?” Sergeant Meek asked.
-
-“We thought we could see ’em away out,” replied Corporal Jerry.
-
-“I don’t wish ’em frozen feet. We’ve got enough of such in camp.”
-
-“Yes, and one pair too many, speaking for myself,” groaned Jake Carter.
-
-This was the fourth day since leaving the stockade, and a bitter cold
-day, albeit warmer, according to the lieutenant’s instrument, than
-yesterday. The thermometer stood at only three degrees below freezing;
-yesterday it had been at seventeen below.
-
-The lieutenant had marched them out of the stockade, in a heavy
-snowstorm, on the morning after the return from the climb. The route
-was westward, again, up the south side of the Arkansaw. Just why he was
-so impatient to go on, snow or no snow, none of the men knew. Maybe he
-was in hopes of finding the Ietans or Comanches, yet; but Stub himself
-was quite certain that the Ietans wintered farther south. Or if he
-wished to discover the head of the Arkansaw and of the Red River, then
-the men wondered why he didn’t build warm quarters, and lay in meat,
-and make fur clothing, so as to explore safely.
-
-“Sure, sometimes I think that what he’s aimin’ at is to foller this
-here Spanish trail cl’ar into New Mexico, an’ fetch up, with all of us,
-at Santy Fe, even as prisoners to them Spanish,” John Sparks hazarded.
-“We can swear we made a mistake, not knowin’ the country; an’ when we
-get back home again we’ll have a nice lot o’ news about them people an’
-the trail in, for the Government.”
-
-“That’ll do,” Sergeant Meek rebuked. “’Tis for him to lead and for us
-to follow; and he’ll do the thinking.”
-
-They had marched fifteen miles, the first day, through the storm, with
-all on foot because the horses were getting unable to carry anything
-but the packs. In fact, for some days past it had been more comfortable
-to walk than to ride.
-
-All that night it had snowed, and was still snowing in the morning. The
-men had slept under one blanket or robe apiece, in the snow. The little
-tent for the lieutenant and the doctor and Stub sagged with the weight.
-
-“My gracious, but this is hard on the horses,” Baroney said. “They paw
-and paw, to find one mouthful――and on their backs the ravens take many
-mouthfuls.”
-
-This day there was no marching. The men had all they could do to keep
-the fires going, and not freeze. John Sparks, who was a hunter, went
-out, but saw nothing. By evening the snow was a foot deep on the
-level――pretty tough for bare feet exposed in gaping shoes, and even for
-damp moccasins.
-
-During the bitter night the sky cleared. It was to be the seventeen-below
-morning. On the march one old buffalo bull was sighted, across the
-river. John Sparks and Hugh Menaugh mounted and went after him. They had
-to swim their horses through the ice-covered current, but they got the
-bull. Then, only two miles farther, everybody was ordered to cross,
-because a steep ridge barred the way.
-
-In wading and breaking the ice, all were drenched waist high, and their
-wet clothing froze instantly. The lieutenant was wearing only thin
-cotton overalls, like most of the men, but he seemed not to feel the
-cold. He sent back help for John and Hugh, and set the other men at
-work building a fire. When John and Hugh arrived, with the meat, their
-feet had been frozen and they had to be lifted from their horses.
-
-After they had been thawed out by snow and rubbing, and clothes had
-been partially dried, the march was continued, over a very rough, hilly
-country, up the north side of the swiftly flowing river. Then one of
-the pack-horses, driven crazy by the magpies and by hunger, ran off,
-back down the trail.
-
-Jake Carter, Terry Miller and Pat Smith had pursued him on foot. By
-dusk, when camp was made at the end of thirteen miles, they were not in
-sight. The lieutenant grew worried.
-
-“It’s foolhardy for them to try to stay out all night, with no food or
-blankets,” he said; and the doctor nodded gravely.
-
-“They’re likely to perish, on that open prairie,” he agreed. “But
-what’s to be done? To search for them would be a fruitless risk,
-lieutenant.”
-
-The lieutenant sat up late, waiting for word from them. This morning
-they had appeared, Jake Carter with his feet, also, frozen. It had been
-a terrible night, for them. They had found the horse, but could not
-bring him in.
-
-So the lieutenant had directed Alex Roy and William Gordon to ride
-and get the horse (which was almost frozen, itself, the other men had
-reported); and he and the doctor, with Stub and John Sparks, went out
-to scout. The lieutenant and the doctor measured the height of the
-Grand Peak, from a distance; they and John killed two buffalo-bulls,
-for moccasins for the camp, and took after a cow but didn’t get it.
-
-The gritty John Sparks stayed, to kill a cow if he might; the other
-three returned to camp with the bull hides.
-
-Now the men, with numbed fingers, were busy making moccasins, around
-the fire, and not envying John the buffalo-hunter.
-
-Alex Roy and Bill Gordon came in, with the strayed horse in tow, but
-at dusk John had not appeared.
-
-“He’s still after his cow, and won’t quit till he fetches meat. That’s
-him! Well, he has a buffalo-robe and his flint and steel, so we’ll see
-him in the morning.”
-
-They didn’t worry about John. He was a good hunter and could take care
-of himself.
-
-The lieutenant had decided not to wait for him, but to pick him up on
-the way. The next morning, which was the fifth morning, he broke camp
-at five o’clock, long before daylight; and sure enough, before they had
-marched far they found John. He rode in on them, with a load of cow
-meat. To-day they marched twenty miles, afoot and ahorse; killed two
-more buffalo and six wild turkeys; and what with the new moccasins and
-plenty of meat they thought themselves well fixed.
-
-The country steadily grew rougher and the march led higher, but the
-soil was gravelly and the snow less than below. Pretty soon the Spanish
-trail was lost again. From camp everybody went out, searching for it,
-on both sides of the river.
-
-“Come along wid us, lad,” invited Tom Dougherty, of Stub; and afoot
-Stub ascended the south side of the river with Tom, and John Sparks,
-and John Mountjoy. It was a good squad. Tom was scarcely more than a
-boy, himself: a young warrior of twenty years.
-
-Presently they struck a broad horse-trail, pointing up-river.
-
-“We’ll see where it goes to,” said John Sparks. They followed it as
-rapidly as they could. The river flowed down shallow and rippling and
-ice-bordered, among reddish, bare, rounded hills sprinkled with cedar
-and with snow patches. Far northward they saw, every now and then, the
-glistening Grand Peak. It was hard to lose this Grand Peak.
-
-About noon they emerged from the long valley of the river into a
-broadening, with snow peaks shimmering in the distances, and a line of
-high flat-topped hills crossing the route before.
-
-“Hist! There be Injuns or them Spanish, likely!” Tom warned, pointing
-ahead.
-
-They halted and peered.
-
-“No. I take it they’re some of our own men,” said John Mountjoy.
-
-“What do ye say, Stub?” John Sparks queried.
-
-Stub nodded. His eyes were true eyes.
-
-“No Injuns. Our men,” he asserted.
-
-So they went on, toward the flat-topped hills, and met the parties of
-Sergeant Meek and Baroney.
-
-“Hello to you,” John Sparks greeted “What luck?”
-
-“There’s no good your going much further up this side,” answered
-Sergeant Meek. “The trail ends, and you’ll get nowhere.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“You see where those flat-tops lie? The river comes out the mountains
-there, and comes a-whooping. We followed it up, till the valley got
-narrower and narrower; and right soon the river was nothing but a brook
-in width, boiling out something tremendous from betwixt cliffs half
-a mile high, leaving no space for man or beast. Nothing gets through
-there, except the water. We’re thinking the trail must cross the river
-this side the gap, and turn off north’ard to round it.”[E]
-
-[E] They had met near where present Canyon City, Colorado, is located,
-on the Upper Arkansas River at the mouth of the famous Grand Canyon of
-the Arkansas. The gap between the cliffs was the Royal Gorge, in the
-Canyon.
-
-“Yes, it doesn’t tackle that gap, anyhow,” the men all declared.
-
-“Suppose we might as well ford at a good spot, an’ scout about a bit,”
-proffered John Sparks.
-
-So ford they all did, wading and splashing through, and slipping on
-the rounded stones of the bottom. The trail was found indeed, farther
-up, on the north side, where it left the river and bore northwestward
-through a dry valley or bottom, as if seeking a pass.
-
-“Now, whether to call this the trail o’ the Spaniards, ag’in, or
-an Injun trail, I dunno,” mused John Sparks, as they all grouped,
-examining.
-
-“It’s a hoss trail, plain enough,” uttered Bill Gordon.
-
-“’Tis hard to read, that’s a fact,” Sergeant Meek said. “But it leads
-somewheres, and like as not to the Red River that the cap’n’s looking
-for, in Comanche country. Anyhow, we’ve done all we can, for to-day;
-and it’s time we went back down and reported.”
-
-“Sure, he’ll have no excuse for takin’ us through betwixt them high
-cliffs,” declared Alex Roy. “We’d be drowneded, hosses an’ all. ’Tis a
-tough-lookin’ hole, with no end in sight, an’ the rocks covered with
-ice.”
-
-“Come on, boys,” bade the sergeant, “or we’ll be late for supper.”
-
-They turned and marched back, down river, to camp. This evening the
-lieutenant talked the report over with the doctor. They decided to
-proceed up the river, to the dry valley, and follow the trail.
-
-The dry valley, below where the river gushed out of the break in the
-cliff barrier, was reached in one day’s march. Camp was made in it
-at night-fall. This, according to the doctor, was the evening of the
-tenth day of December. The horses were watered with melted snow, and
-given one pint of precious corn, each, brought this far from the Osage
-and the Republican Pawnee towns. For the camp there was plenty of deer
-meat, killed on the way, and one buffalo. It was to be the last big
-meal, through some days.
-
-The Spanish trail had been weak, upon entering the valley. The
-lieutenant had rather feared that the sign was only that of a small
-scouting party. But farther in it had strengthened. Now at the camp it
-appeared to be a fairly well-trodden road, leading on northwest and
-probably over the next range of hills.
-
-“The road to the Red River――hooray!” cheered Tom Dougherty. “Then down
-the Red River we’ll go, out o’ this cruel cowld, an’ belike we’ll be to
-Natchitoches an’ the blessed war-rmth o’ Louisiany long before spring.”
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-SEEKING THE LOST RIVER
-
-
-“It’s no use to march farther on this line, doctor.”
-
-Doctor Robinson answered promptly.
-
-“I think you’re right, lieutenant. We’re getting nowhere, only deeper
-into the mountains. Men and horses are about at the end of their
-strength. There seems to be nothing ahead, except more cold, hunger and
-blind scrambling.”
-
-“The men are brave fellows,” said the lieutenant. “That human beings,
-half fed and near naked, should be called upon to endure such marches
-and camps, amidst snow and zero weather, is almost more than can be
-expected from even soldiers. Their pay is a pittance, they don’t know
-where they’re going, they were not prepared for winter, yet I’ve heard
-not a word of complaint. When we return to the United States, the
-Government surely will reward them.”
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor, with Stub, were standing upon a high
-ridge some distance from camp. A week had passed since they all had
-entered the dry valley, to follow the trail north from the Arkansaw,
-on the search for the head of the Red River.
-
-But instead of rounding the gap in the cliffs, the trail had led away,
-and away, ever northward, into the midst of the snow-caps. Presently,
-or after a couple of days, it had come out at the bank of another
-river, frozen over, forty paces wide, and flowing, as the lieutenant
-discovered, _northeast_!
-
-That was a disappointment and a surprise. He and the doctor plainly
-were puzzled. The river was wrong. To be the Red River it should have
-flowed southeast. The lieutenant decided that this river must be the
-Platte River――or the beginnings of it, for the great Platte River
-was known to flow mainly through the plains, far north of the Pawnee
-country, and hundreds of miles distant.
-
-The snowy mountains had closed around. They rose high and white
-and coldly silent. There appeared to be no way out, except by the
-back trail to the Arkansaw again, or by following this new river
-down-stream, but where?[F]
-
-[F] If this stream was the South Platte River, as the Lieutenant
-thought, then they had entered into the western part of Central
-Colorado’s great South Park; very far indeed from any Red River.
-
-The trail was continuing, up along this frozen river that wound through
-a series of snowy valleys between steep wooded hills. They all marched
-upon it. It evidently was going somewhere, perhaps to a better country,
-perhaps still to the head of the Red River and the circuit south for
-the lower regions of New Mexico. At least, the Spanish had some goal in
-view.
-
-Next, they had come to a large camp, the largest yet, and only a few
-weeks old. But it had been an Indian camp. There were the circles where
-lodges――many lodges――had stood, the ashes in the center of each, and
-sign of fully one thousand horses.
-
-“Utah,” declared Baroney, examining a cast-off moccasin.
-
-Stub agreed. Moccasins differed, and these were Utah moccasins, by the
-cut.
-
-“Sure, then we’re not follerin’ the Spanish, or even the Comanches,”
-John Sparks groaned, doubled over with rheumatism. The men all were
-pretty badly crippled by frost and chilblains and rheumatism, and
-their belts were small around their stomachs. “Weren’t ye ever in this
-country before, boy? The Utahs had ye, once, you say.”
-
-Stub did not know.
-
-“No remember. Big country, John. Mebbe here, mebbe somewhere.”
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor had asked him the same question; but he
-was as puzzled as they. He might have been hereabouts in summer; it
-was very different in winter. His head hurt, too. So he could not help
-them.
-
-From the old camp, which seemed to have been a hunting camp, a regular
-village, and extended six miles long and two miles wide, covering the
-valley bottom, a trail led out, up stream again. In killing two buffalo
-(the first fresh meat since leaving the Arkansaw) another gun had
-burst――the third in the march. Its muzzle had got stopped with snow,
-and its barrel was very brittle from the frost.
-
-John Sparks cut the burst end off, so that the gun might be used. Hugh
-Menaugh had no gun at all, and was marching with the lieutenant’s sword
-and pistols.
-
-The trail westward was not made by the Spanish. The Spanish trail (if
-there had been any Spanish trail) was swallowed up, in the big camp.
-But the trail out was better than none at all. It led through still
-more old camping places, where there were empty corn-cribs. There were
-no old cornfields, though, and this set the men to wondering whether
-these Indians might not have got corn from the Spaniards, after all.
-
-Then, on a sudden, the trail quit. It left them stranded, amidst the
-mountains. That had occurred this morning. The lieutenant had sent out
-searching parties. He then had taken the doctor and Stub, and climbed
-to the top of the high ridge, to spy out the country lying around.
-
-“The men should be rewarded the same as the Lewis and Clark men will be
-rewarded――with money and land,” now the doctor said.
-
-“A more heroic little band never wore the United States uniform,” the
-lieutenant declared.
-
-The doctor laughed.
-
-“They’re not wearing that, these days, lieutenant. No one would take
-you and them for soldiers.”
-
-Very true. About the last trace of the blue uniforms had vanished.
-Only the lieutenant still had blue trousers, of thin cloth, for
-wearing on the march. His chief’s uniform, of bright shoulder-pieces
-and shining buttons, he kept in a trunk, until he should meet the
-Spaniards or the Comanches. From his red-lined cloak he had cut a cap,
-and sewed fox-skin to it, for the inside; the rest of the cloak had
-gone into socks and mittens, for himself and Stub. On his feet were
-buffalo-hide moccasins, on his body a capote or blanket-coat; and up to
-his knees his legs were wrapped in deer-hide. He looked like a chief,
-nevertheless.
-
-All this was little enough, for day and night wear in cold and storm.
-The doctor had less. To be sure, he had made himself a fur cap, of
-rabbit-skin, and a deer-hide coat and mittens――but buckskin, without
-much under it, is cold stuff, as everybody knows. His trousers were
-torn so that they showed his own skin. His feet were clad in socks cut
-from a piece of blanket, and in the hide moccasins which did not fit
-and had to be tied on with thongs.
-
-The men, and Stub, had been put to all kinds of shifts. Some wore
-coats cut, like the doctor’s socks, from the gray, threadbare army
-blankets――and socks to match. Some wore coats of leather――poorly
-tanned hides that they had saved. Some wore even leather trousers like
-leggins. All wore buffalo hide moccasins, but not a one had a hat
-or cap. Their long hair protected their heads, and their faces were
-covered with shaggy, bristling beards――except Tom Dougherty, whose
-beard was only a stubble in patches. The other men poked a great deal
-of fun at young Tom.
-
-As for Stub, his beautiful robe had long ago been turned into moccasins
-and leggins; and he tried to be comfortable in these, and a shirt from
-a left-over piece of John Sparks’ gray blanket, and socks and mittens
-from the lieutenant’s red-lined cloak. He did not need a cap.
-
-Of course, the blankets and hides that had been used were needed for
-coverings, at night; but in such cold weather it was almost impossible
-to strip other hides and dress them. They were like boards, especially
-the buffalo hides. And deer were scarce.
-
-From the high ridge where he and the lieutenant and the doctor stood
-the view was wide and wonderful, although not cheering. Mountains,
-mountains, mountains, their sides and tips shining white with snow,
-their bases, where seen, dark with wooded hills, the pine branches
-heavily laden by winter.
-
-Far in the east and the southeast the mountains seemed to form a line
-with every gap stopped.
-
-“Isn’t that our Grand Peak, away yonder?” asked the doctor, pointing.
-“If so, I judge it’s a hundred miles, as the bird flies.”
-
-“And unreachable from here, except by a bird, sir. We’re shut off from
-it, completely. Besides, our road does not lie in that direction.
-Our duty as explorers demand that we do not give up so easily.” And
-the lieutenant turned his glasses, so as to sweep the north and the
-northwest.
-
-On the north were lofty hills, pine covered, breaking the nearer view;
-and snow mountains grouped behind them. The frozen river, marked by
-willows, stretched onward, in crooked bed, through the valley, now
-broad, now narrowed, into the northwest, soon to be closed upon by the
-hills and mountains there.
-
-In all the great expanse nothing moved; even the other exploring
-parties were out of sight. It was a dead country.
-
-The lieutenant shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Not very promising, eh?” the doctor queried anxiously.
-
-“It does not promise success. Our course up this river should be
-abandoned. We are constantly making farther and farther northward,
-separated from the Red River by the mountains; game is getting less,
-the trail is unreliable, and we shall depend upon it no longer.”
-
-He gazed southward. The hills rose to mountains here also. He used his
-spy-glass intently. He handed it to the doctor.
-
-“You’ll see a great white mountain range, appearing through a gap
-almost directly south.”
-
-“Yes, sir. A thundering way off.”
-
-“It seems to be the end of a long chain extending westward from it.
-That chain, I believe, is the divide draining on this side into the
-Platte, on the other side into the Red River. We’re on the wrong side.
-We should march southwest, to cross the nearer portion of the chain,
-and eventually come out upon the head of the Red River. At all events,
-we’ll try it, while we can. But our march through here has not been
-wasted, for our Country. We can lay down on our map the sources of the
-Platte, which no one has supposed to be located at such a distance
-from the plains.”
-
-They all took another look, scanning the region south and southwest.
-With his own eyes Stub might descry the landmark of the Great White
-Mountains. The air was very clear, the sun rested just right, and
-through the gap there the tops of the mountains, sharp cut and
-triangular, stood out plainly amidst the other, lesser peaks. That
-called for a long, long journey.
-
-They went back to camp. The other parties came in, and reported nothing
-but an old Indian camp, farther up. They had seen no game.
-
-“An’ what nixt, then, I wonder?” Pat Smith remarked, at the fire. “Do
-we kape goin’, wid no end. Sure, the Red River can’t lay hereabouts.
-We’ll be nearer comin’ to Canady.”
-
-“No keep going,” Stub proudly announced. “The cap’n say turn ’round,
-for south. Big ridge there; big white mountains; Red River other side.”
-
-“South’ard? Hooray! That’s a good word. It puts heart into us; hey,
-lads? We’ll be gettin’ out o’ this trap where even the Injuns don’t
-dare bide in winter, an’ we’ll be findin’ the Red River, after all.”
-
-Stub’s news cheered the men greatly. It took only a little to encourage
-them.
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-IS IT FOUND AT LAST?
-
-
-“The Red River, men! Three cheers! We think we’ve found it at last!”
-
-It was the evening of the second day’s march into the southwest. The
-doctor and the lieutenant had gone out from camp, to survey about, as
-usual. The first line of mountains had been crossed and already every
-eye was eager and every heart was keen for the traces of the shifty Red
-River.
-
-Matters looked promising, too. Noon camp to-day had been made at a
-little spring, the unfrozen waters of which flowed trickling and formed
-a small stream wending southeast for the bottom of the valley.
-
-“The beginnings of the Red River――do you reckon it might be the
-beginnings of the Red River, cap’n?” the men queried.
-
-But the lieutenant smiled and shook his head.
-
-“I wouldn’t dare say so, lads, and disappoint you. We may be a long way
-yet from the real Red River.”
-
-Still, some of the men did not believe him, until they had left the
-valley and the spring behind, and in a narrow pass of the next ridge
-had come upon another spring and another stream, larger. Among so many
-springs and streams, who might tell which was the source of the Red
-River?
-
-They followed the stream part way through the pass, and encamped
-there in a snowstorm. The snow, sifting thickly, shut off the view
-before; it was glum weather for a hungry camp; the men crouched close,
-snow-covered, around the fire, or moved hobbling, at their various
-jobs; the gaunt, sore-backed horses cropped desperately, pawing into
-the snow, or hunched, coughing and groaning, in the scant shelter of
-the low cedars and spruces.
-
-The horses of the lieutenant and the doctor, and Stub’s yellow pony,
-had been turned into pack animals, to lessen the loads of the other
-animals. Everybody was marching on foot.
-
-“Did you say that the cap’n an’ the doctor thought likely we’d have to
-go cl’ar back south’ard, fur as the Great White Mountains yonder, so’s
-to strike the river?” John Sparks asked, of Stub.
-
-“Mebbe there, mebbe sooner,” Stub nodded.
-
-“If we ketch ’em, I hope he won’t be axin’ us to climb ’em,” spoke John
-Brown.
-
-“Got to ketch ’em, first,” laughed somebody.
-
-“We might as well be chasing a mountain as a river,” said Terry Miller.
-
-“Oui,” agreed Baroney. “Ma foi, the mountains are there, in sight; but
-the river――it’s nowhere.”
-
-“Never mind, never mind, lads,” Sergeant Meek put in. “Not a man of us
-works as hard as him and the doctor; they’re always breaking the trail,
-and they’re always out whilst we’re resting a bit. Look at ’em now,
-scouting in the snow without a bite to eat. Sure, we ought to be proud
-to keep a stiff upper lip and follow ’em as fur as they’ll go, whether
-that’s to Canady or Mexico or the Pacific Ocean. Ain’t we soldiers?”
-
-“We’ll follow. You bet we will,” the men chorused. “There’s no harm
-meant in our talk, but we got to talk about somethin’ besides our feet
-an’ our bellies.”
-
-Now here came the lieutenant and the doctor――trudging fast, panting,
-snowy, their beards plastered white, but their thin faces lighted with
-smiles. The doctor gleefully flourished his fur cap, and hailed them.
-
-“The Red River, men! Three cheers! We think we’ve found it at last!”
-
-“Hooray! Hooray! Hooray!” The steep sides of the narrow pass echoed,
-and the miserable horses half pricked their ears, dumbly questioning.
-
-The two came directly to the fire. They were out of breath. The circle
-respectfully opened for them.
-
-“Did we hear right? Is it true, then, sir? Ye found the Red River?”
-eagerly inquired Sergeant Meek, of the lieutenant.
-
-“Yes, sergeant.” And the lieutenant beat his red cap and stamped, to
-dislodge some of his snow. “That is, the signs are the most hopeful
-for many a day, and we all have good reason to be inspired of success.
-Listen, men. The facts are these: Doctor Robinson and I advanced about
-four miles, out of this defile and into a prairie that lies beyond.
-There we discovered a fine stream, with all the characteristics of a
-river. It is some twenty-five yards wide, very swift, in a clearly
-marked rocky channel, and the general direction of its flow is
-southeast.”
-
-“Hooray!”
-
-“The creek we are now encamped beside evidently joins it. This is all
-I have to say at present. To-morrow, or as soon as marching conditions
-warrant, we will proceed, examine the ground more thoroughly, and
-demonstrate whether or not we may consider ourselves actually at the
-source of the Red River.”
-
-“News like that takes the chill off the air,” laughed Freegift Stout,
-when the lieutenant and the doctor had gone into their tent, for a
-rubdown.
-
-“B’gorry, we been tellin’ ’em that the Red River was surely
-hereabouts,” asserted Tom Dougherty. “Wan spring, an’ then another, an’
-then a crick, an’ then the river itself――an’ nixt, out o’ the mountains
-we’ll be an’ wid iv’ry mile gettin’ closer to war-rmth an’ people.”
-
-“What do you want o’ people?” Corporal Jerry demanded. “They may be the
-Spanish, or the Pawnees again, or worse.”
-
-“Come wan, come all,” Tom retorted. “Sure, I wouldn’t object to a bit
-of a fight, for a change, man to man. But fightin’ these mountains is
-up-hill work.” And he laughed at his joke.
-
-“Well, I hope with all my heart the cap’n’s struck the right trail,”
-said Sergeant Meek. “And he’s pretty certain, or he wouldn’t have
-said so much. He’s no man to make a brag, as you know. For the first
-time since we entered the mountains he’s looking sort o’ content. He
-deserves a turn o’ luck. ’Tis always of his country he’s thinking, and
-of us, and never of himself; and though in matter of muscle he’s the
-smallest man amongst us, he picks the hardest jobs.”
-
-In the morning the snow was falling faster than ever. They all were
-anxious to reach the river, but the pass was so clogged with drifts
-and their horses were so weak that the march took them only out to the
-edge of the bottom-land.
-
-It was the fifth day without sight of game. The lieutenant ordered a
-hunt, before dark; but not even a rabbit was found. There was nothing
-but snow, snow, snow.
-
-“My belt’s twice around me already, an’ is startin’ on the third lap,”
-declared Alex Roy.
-
-However, the horses were in luck, at last――and they needed it. John
-Sparks and Tom Dougherty reported a fine big patch of long grass down
-near the river. In the morning the lieutenant sent Baroney and Stub,
-with the wretched animals, to set them to grazing and herd them――and a
-long cold task this proved to be.
-
-Still, as Baroney said, as he and Stub trudged about or squatted with
-their backs to the squalls:
-
-“If we cannot eat, ourselves, it is a great pleasure to watch the
-horses eat; hein?”
-
-Late in the afternoon Corporal Jerry Jackson came down.
-
-“You’re to fetch the horses in with you, at dusk,” he said. “Never a
-trace of game, all day, so we’ll pull out in the mornin’.”
-
-“Down the Red River, mebbe, Jerry?” Stub asked.
-
-“I dunno, but somewhere. The cap’n knows――an’ he knows we’re on short
-rations of only a few mouthfuls to a man.”
-
-The doctor and Baroney were to start out early, down river, hunting.
-The lieutenant and two or three men were to explore up stream and see
-where the river began, if they could. The rest of the men were to march
-down river with the baggage, until they killed enough game so that they
-might camp and wait.
-
-“Miller and Mountjoy, ’tis you with the cap’n,” ordered Sergeant Meek.
-
-“I go, too, Bill?” pleaded Stub.
-
-“Sure, that’s for him to say. I’ve only my orders, lad,” Sergeant Bill
-answered.
-
-So Stub appealed to Lieutenant Pike himself.
-
-“I go with you, please?”
-
-But the lieutenant gravely shook his head.
-
-“Not this time, my boy. You’d best go down river with the others, where
-there’s more chance of finding game. Up stream it’s a rough country,
-and the three of us are likely to be hard put for meat. We’ll only
-explore for a day or two; you stay with the party.”
-
-As anybody might have foretold, the lieutenant again had taken the
-heaviest work.
-
-“I go with the doctor, then, please,” Stub proposed. “Down river.”
-
-“He and Baroney will be hunting. You have no weapon. But you can do
-your duty like a soldier by tending the horses.”
-
-Stub mournfully thought upon his bow, broken several days ago. Hugh
-Menaugh spoke up, saluting.
-
-“Beggin’ your pardon, cap’n――he’s a plucky lad an’ if you say for him
-to go wid the doctor he can have one o’ the pistols you loaned to me.
-Belike he’ll fare as well wid the doctor as wid us, an’ mebbe bring him
-luck. An’ we’ve all been boys, ourselves, oneasy for doin’ things.”
-
-“You’ve a kind heart, my man,” answered the lieutenant, smiling. “If
-the doctor is agreeable to having his company, all right. You may
-settle it between you.”
-
-Settled it was, right speedily, for Doctor Robinson had a kind heart,
-too.
-
-“Here’s your pistol, then,” Hugh bade. “Wid wan load. Be sure ye get a
-buff’lo, now.”
-
-Stub nodded, and carefully stowed the long dragoon pistol in under his
-belt. The curved handle crossed his stomach.
-
-“I see him, I get him, Hugh.”
-
-He and the doctor and Baroney set out, first.
-
-“Down river; we’ll meet you down the Red River, Baroney, old hoss,”
-called the men. “Here’s wishin’ you fat meat, doctor, sir――an’ the same
-for the rest of us.”
-
-“I’ll follow the main trail in two days and catch up,” the lieutenant
-had promised. “But nobody is to wait for me until meat has been
-secured. Do your best, doctor. There are rations for only forty-eight
-hours.”
-
-It was another lean day. Although the three did do their best, scouting
-in advance from the river to the hills, and exploring the side draws,
-oftentimes waist deep in the snow, they stirred never a hoof nor paw,
-and rarely a feather. That was discouraging.
-
-Now and again they saw the main party, who had crossed the river and
-were toiling along, down the other flank of its winding course.
-
-“Not a thing sighted by us, and not a gunshot heard from those other
-fellows,” the doctor sighed, at evening. “Well, we’d better go over and
-join them, for camp, and try again in the morning.”
-
-They made for the fire that was twinkling, below and beyond; crossed
-the river upon the ice, and arrived.
-
-“Any luck, sir?” queried Sergeant Meek, of the doctor.
-
-“None to-day sergeant; but we have hopes for to-morrow.”
-
-“Yes, sir. The same here, sir.”
-
-“So ye didn’t fetch in a buffler with that big pistol?” John Sparks
-bantered, of Stub.
-
-“To-morrow,” answered weary Stub.
-
-“To-morrow is a grand time,” said Baroney. “If there wasn’t any
-to-morrow, I don’t know what we’d do.”
-
-The supper to-night was a scant meal, for all: just a few mouthfuls of
-dried meat and a handful of parched corn. In the morning the doctor
-decided briskly.
-
-“You’ve rations for only to-day, sergeant?”
-
-“Yes, sir; and scarce that, but we can make ’em do.”
-
-“I feel sure that Baroney and the boy and I will find game before
-night. If we do, we’ll come in with it. But you keep on, as Lieutenant
-Pike ordered, until you kill meat or until he joins you, and never mind
-our whereabouts. We’ll take care of ourselves somehow, and I don’t
-propose to come in unless loaded.”
-
-“You’ll likely stay out, in the hills, sir, you mean?”
-
-“That depends on the day’s luck,” smiled the doctor. “But even if we
-do, we’ll be no worse off than Lieutenant Pike and Miller and Mountjoy.
-We’re all rationed the same, and there’s little to choose between
-camping together and camping separately.”
-
-But even Stub felt the seriousness of it when again he followed
-the doctor and Baroney, for the second day’s hunt. If nothing was
-killed to-day, then to-morrow they would begin to starve; pretty
-soon they would be eating the horses, and next their moccasins, and
-without horses and moccasins they would die before getting out of the
-mountains.
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-MEAT FOR THE CAMP
-
-
-Buffalo!
-
-Stub stared hard. He scarcely could believe his bleared, aching eyes.
-Was it really true? Buffalo? Now what to do?
-
-This was early in the third morning after leaving the main camp. For
-two days he and the doctor and Baroney had been hunting, hunting, from
-dawn to dark; ranging up and down, among the hills and draws, and
-wading the snow, on only one small meal. In fact, they practically had
-had nothing at all to eat, in forty-eight hours. Through the two nights
-they had tended fire and shiveringly dozed, without blankets, in the
-best spot they might find, where they could secure a little protection
-from the biting wind.
-
-How they were going to keep on living if they discovered nothing to
-eat, this day, he did not know; Baroney did not know; the doctor
-hadn’t said. But they had told the sergeant not to expect them unless
-with good news; the other men probably were famishing, too, and they
-themselves might as well starve in one place as another.
-
-Full of aches and pains (and that was all!) they had passed a bad
-night, so that this morning they really had been glad to stagger up
-and out again, into the bleak whity-gray, even though they might be
-starting upon only another long day of fruitless tramping.
-
-Baroney groaned.
-
-“Ma foi! My legs move, my head thinks, but there is nothing between. I
-have no stomach.”
-
-“We’ll find meat to-day. Not only for ourselves but for the boys in
-camp, remember,” encouraged the doctor. “They’re likely depending on
-us, for we’ve heard no gunshots. We must separate and hunt widely.”
-
-They had trudged forth, before sun-up. They had crossed the first
-wooded ridge, to the next little valley.
-
-“Stub, you follow up, along the high ground on this side,” the doctor
-ordered. “Baroney will take the middle. I’ll take the farther side.
-Move slowly and all together, and we’ll surely start something. Head
-off anything that comes your way, Stub, and drive it down to us. Don’t
-waste the load in your pistol.”
-
-“Yes, I will drive,” answered Stub, patiently.
-
-He waited, shivering, until Baroney had halted in the bottom, and the
-doctor had toiled clear across to the other slope, and up. Then they
-three moved on together――one searching either flank, the third in
-between.
-
-The valley was not wide. Its bottom was level and open except for
-the snow-covered brush; its sides were dotted with cedars and pines.
-Keeping near the top of his side, so as to drive anything down hill,
-Stub hunted faithfully, hoping, too, that he would hear the doctor or
-Baroney shoot. His eyes scanned every foot before and to right and
-left, seeking tracks. Even a rabbit would be welcomed――yet he didn’t
-wish to spend his bullet on a rabbit.
-
-He saw nothing to make him draw his pistol. It weighed heavily and
-rasped his stomach and thigh as he plodded on.
-
-The sun was about to rise above the snowy ridges on the east. They had
-been hunting for an hour, at least, and had heard never a sound. Then
-he reached a place where his slope broke sharply into a side valley. A
-fellow always expected something, at such places. So he stole forward
-cautiously; he came to a ledge of rock, and peered down. What he saw
-instantly almost stopped his heart-beating, and dazed his eyes with
-sudden excitement.
-
-Buffalo! Really? Yes, yes――buffalo! He was not dreaming.
-
-It was more of a basin than a valley, in there: broadening to a snug
-cup protected by rim-rock, just back of the opening into the main
-valley, and thence tapering and climbing until it pinched out, on the
-ridge. A few leafless aspens (sign of water) and sprawly evergreens
-grew in the cup, and there was marsh grass, in weedy clumps. And the
-buffalo.
-
-Two――three, lying down and comfortable, like cattle, their legs under
-them. The snow was well trodden; they had been in here some time.
-
-Now what to do? He trembled, and thought his best. If he only might
-take the time to signal Baroney and the doctor. But even as he peered
-the sun flashed up, and the first beams streamed into the cup. One
-large bull suddenly stirred, and all at once was on his feet, swaying
-his shaggy head and sniffing the air. Was it the sun, or did the breeze
-tell him something? He may have scented the doctor, or Baroney, or
-Stub, or he might merely be thinking of breakfast and the day’s program.
-
-There! The second buffalo was out of bed, and imitating the first. The
-third seemed to be getting uneasy. Stub dared not delay, to signal. His
-eyes roved rapidly. He was too far, for pistol shooting. The buffalo
-might only start to graze――they might start to travel, warned by danger
-smell――and they were as likely to go one way as another. He must get
-down in behind them and drive them out where the doctor and Baroney
-would see them.
-
-He drew back, and crouching scurried on a half circuit, to slip into
-the basin, above them. He struck a little ravine, leading down. All his
-practice at scouting with the Pawnee boys stood him in good stead, now.
-He moved fast but silently, darting from spot to spot, stepping with
-care and listening for alarm sounds; and stealing more gently as he
-arrived at the bottom, where the ravine ended in a cedar and a shoulder
-of rock.
-
-The upper edge of the basin was just around that corner. He planned to
-step out, into sight. The buffalo would run in the other direction,
-and the doctor or Baroney might be able to head them, and kill one at
-least; then follow and maybe kill more.
-
-But first he drew his big pistol, on the slim chance of a sure shot,
-himself. Gradually he thrust his head beyond the cedar and the rock
-shoulder――and jerked back in a jiffy. A fourth buffalo was standing
-there almost within touch!
-
-Stub’s heart beat furiously, and he sank trembling, to think. He must
-look again; and he did, as gradually as a timid prairie-dog emerging
-from its burrow.
-
-Wah! It was a cow, turned broadside to him, half dozing as she bathed
-in the sunshine.
-
-Now he must steady down, and slide out a little farther, for a sure
-shot. He huddled back, once more to take breath. He examined his flint,
-and opened the pan, to stir the caked powder of the priming. Then
-with both hands he cocked the heavy hammer――click-click! The noise
-frightened him, and he hoped that it had not frightened the cow. Then
-he extended the pistol in front of him, and began to follow it by
-worming on, inch by inch, around the low-branching cedar.
-
-Hoorah! The cow was still there, but she had heard or smelled. Maybe
-she had heard the click-click. She had not moved; only, her head was
-up, and she was gazing with her head turned in the direction of the
-other buffalo.
-
-He’d better shoot as quickly as possible. Another inch, and another, he
-squirmed, for right position. Now! She was about fifteen paces――not so
-near as he had thought, but this was the best that he might do with any
-safety. So he leveled the long-barreled dragoon pistol, again with both
-hands; held breath until the muzzle seemed to be pointing directly in
-line with a spot just behind her fore shoulder――and while it slightly
-wavered there, he pressed the trigger.
-
-Bang! The pistol well-nigh jumped from his hands; a cloud of smoke had
-belched――and dimly seen through the smoke, by his watering eyes, the
-cow had given a great leap and had vanished.
-
-She had run the other way, down the basin. Up Stub leaped, and ran,
-too. The basin seemed to be still echoing with the report, but he heard
-the thud and clatter of hoofs, also, and a fear that he had missed her
-made his heart sick.
-
-He panted into full sight of the little basin just in time to see a
-half score――no, a dozen or more of the burly animals pelting through
-for the other end, to gain the open of the main valley. He’d had no
-idea that so many were in here. They’d been hidden from him, the most
-of them――lying in cosy beds where he’d not happened to look.
-
-Away they went, jostling and stringing out, bolting blindly. One, the
-last in the flight, loped painfully――fell farther and farther behind.
-It was his cow! He had hit her, and hit her hard. Hoorah! He darted for
-the spot where she had stood. He trailed her for a few steps, and the
-trampled snow was blotched red. Blood! Hoorah! He ran on, down through
-the basin, to see her again. Now Baroney or the doctor might get her,
-because she would grow weak.
-
-He wondered if they had heard him shoot. The basin was empty, all the
-buffalo had charged on into the valley――that was what he had wished
-them to do, and maybe he had killed one and signaled, besides. He
-hoped that the doctor would not be angry. Now if the buffalo only
-turned down toward Baroney――――!
-
-Hark! Another shot! Somebody out there had fired――Whang! He ran
-faster――to the mouth of the basin――into sight of the main valley――and
-again, hoorah!
-
-The fleeing buffalo had blundered against Baroney. He had been not
-far outside; he had shot one――it was down, in the snow; not the cow,
-either, for the cow was down, too――there were the two black spots,
-motionless, and the little herd were streaming across the valley, for
-the other slope, with Baroney lumbering after――and yonder, on the
-slope, the doctor was plunging toward the bottom, to get in a shot also.
-
-Could he do it? Yes! He ran quartering, stumbling and lunging; the
-leading buffalo sensed him, swerved, they all swerved; he knelt and
-aimed and fired, quickly――around wheeled the buffalo, again alarmed,
-and came pelting back for Stub’s side, as if to escape through their
-basin――but one lagged, wavered, halted, and suddenly collapsed. That
-made three!
-
-The remainder of the herd were coming straight for Stub. He had no load
-for his pistol; he could only dance and wave his arms and yell, to
-stop them. This he did. Once more they tacked; Baroney had lain flat,
-hoping; foolish things, they tacked almost for him――wait――wait――aha!
-His gun puffed smoke, the report echoed dully, a buffalo had jumped
-high and stiff-legged and Baroney was after him, loading on the run.
-Down pitched the buffalo. That made four!
-
-The doctor was running again, but the rest of the buffalo got away, up
-the valley. All right; they had left plenty of meat. Hoorah!
-
-Stub hastened forward, wild with joy. The doctor was coming. They met
-Baroney, where two carcasses――a bull and Stub’s cow――were lying close
-together.
-
-“Hurrah!” cheered the doctor.
-
-Baroney capered――“Hoozah! Hoozah!”
-
-“Four! One to me, two to you――that’s good. And what about this other?
-Who killed _her_?”
-
-“The boy. Oui! I think he killed her, with that pistol,” Baroney
-jabbered. “I hear one shot――bang! I do not know where. Then the buffalo
-come running out. And before I can shoot, I see this cow tumble down,
-and die. She has a hole in her――a bullet hole.”
-
-“Did you shoot her, Stub? With your pistol?”
-
-Stub nodded.
-
-“First I see three. Down on bottom. They act scared. I go to drive them
-out. She very close. I shoot her. She run, all run, I run. Then I hear
-shooting. Baroney get one, you get one, Baroney get ’nother. Now lots
-of meat. Hoorah!”
-
-“The meat! The meat!” cried Baroney, as if reminded of great hunger.
-Down he plumped, digging furiously with his knife and tearing with his
-fingers. He wrested out a strip of bloody flesh and began to chew it
-and suck it.
-
-Stub, seeing red, likewise fell to. All of a sudden he could not wait
-longer.
-
-“Here, doctor.” And Baroney, his beard stained wolfish, passed him a
-piece.
-
-But the doctor straightened up.
-
-“That’s enough. I must carry the news to the men. You two stay here and
-butcher what you can till horses come from the camp. It may be a matter
-of life or death for those other fellows. We ought to get this meat to
-them without delay.”
-
-And he was away, walking fast and running down through the valley, for
-the river beyond and the main party somewhere along it.
-
-“He’s one fine man,” gasped Baroney, gazing after. “We think only of
-our stomach, he thinks of those others.”
-
-They worked hard, cutting and hacking and hauling before the carcasses
-got cold and the hides stiff. With Baroney’s hatchet they cracked a
-marrow-bone apiece, so as to scoop out the fatty pith.
-
-Presently the sun was high and warming. Two men were coming afoot up
-the valley. They brought no horses――――
-
-“Miller and Mountjoy, hein?” Baroney said, eyeing them as they drew
-nearer. “Where is the lieutenant, I want to know?”
-
-Terry Miller and John Mountjoy they were; and they staggered and
-stumbled in their haste at sight of the meat.
-
-“Did you lose the lieutenant? What?”
-
-“No. He’s gone on for camp, with the doctor. He sent us in here to eat.
-Give us some meat, quick.”
-
-“Nothing but one turkey and a hare for the three of us, these four days
-past,” panted Terry, as he and John sucked and gobbled. “And in the
-last two days nothing at all.”
-
-“Go far?” Stub queried, eager to know.
-
-“Away up, twenty-five miles or two camps above where the rest o’ you
-left us. Up to where the river petered out to a brook betwixt the
-mountains. Then we turned back and traveled day and night with our
-clothes froze stiff on us, and our stomachs clean empty, to ketch
-the main camp. The cap’n was worrying more about the other men than
-himself.”
-
-“And sure, when we met the doctor, by chance, with news of this meat,
-the little cap’n told us to come in and eat, but he wouldn’t. He went
-on――him and the doctor――hungry as he was, to find the camp below,”
-mumbled John. “They’ll send hosses. How many did you kill? Four?”
-
-“Four,” assured Baroney. “Stub one, the doctor one, I myself had the
-fortune to kill two. Stub, he found them; but it was the good God who
-put them there, waiting for us.”
-
-“I suppose we might have a bit of a fire, and eat like Christians,
-whilst waiting?” Terry proposed wistfully.
-
-“The marrow is strong; we must not get sick,” Baroney wisely counseled.
-“Let us butcher, and be ready for the horses; and to-morrow we will all
-have a big Christmas dinner.”
-
-“To-morrow Christmas?” exclaimed John. “Right you are! Hooray for
-Christmas!”
-
-They cheered for Christmas; and with aching brain Stub puzzled over the
-new word.
-
-Toward the last of their butchering Corporal Jerry Jackson and Hugh
-Menaugh arrived with two horses. The camp was famished, the lieutenant
-and the doctor had toiled in, and now everybody there was waiting for
-the buffalo meat. The camp had been out of food for two days.
-
-“I told the doctor that the boy an’ his pistol would fetch him luck,”
-Hugh declared. “An’ it surely did. Faith, a fine little hunter you be,
-Stub, me lad.”
-
-They loaded the horses, at full speed, and made for the starving camp.
-It was a joyous place. John Sparks had come in with more good news――he
-had discovered another buffalo herd and had killed four, himself! Men
-and horses were out, to get the meat.
-
-Now with eight buffalo on hand, Christmas Eve was to be celebrated
-to-night, and Christmas Day to-morrow. They were American
-feasts――feasts for the Spanish and French and all white people, too,
-the doctor and Sergeant Bill said. Stub had heard the names before,
-somewhere; perhaps from the French traders. But he quit thinking and
-bothering. He was an American, they were his feasts now; Lieutenant
-Pike looked happy, and that was enough.
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-A TRAIL OF SURPRISES
-
-
-The lieutenant had explored the source of this Red River far enough. He
-was ready to march on down, for the plains and the United States post
-of Natchitoches above the mouth in Louisiana. Everybody was glad.
-
-The big meals of buffalo meat had made several of the men, and Stub
-also, quite ill; so that on the day after Christmas the march covered
-only seven miles. The tent was turned into a hospital, and the
-lieutenant and the doctor slept out in the snow.
-
-The Great White Mountains, far to the east, had been in sight from
-high ground; the river appeared to lead in that direction. But here at
-the lower end of the bottom-land other mountains closed in. The river
-coursed through, and everybody rather believed that by following it
-they all would come out, in two or three days, into the open.
-
-That proved to be a longer job than expected, and the toughest yet. The
-river, ice-bound but full of air-holes, sometimes broadened a little,
-and gave hope, but again was hemmed clear to its borders by tremendous
-precipices too steep to climb. The poor horses slipped and floundered
-upon the ice and rocks; in places they had to be unpacked and the loads
-were carried on by hand.
-
-Soon the lieutenant was ordering sledges built, to relieve the horses
-of the loads; men and horses both pulled them――and now and then sledge
-and horse broke through the ice and needs must be hauled out of the
-water.
-
-Twelve miles march, another of sixteen miles, five miles, eight miles,
-ten and three-quarter miles, about five miles――and the river still
-twisted, an icy trail, deep set among the cliffs and pinnacles and
-steep snowy slopes that offered no escape to better country.
-
-The horses were so crippled that some could scarcely walk; the men were
-getting well bruised, too; the dried buffalo meat had dwindled to a few
-mouthfuls apiece, and the only game were mountain sheep that kept out
-of range. The doctor and John Brown had been sent ahead, to hunt them
-and hang the carcasses beside the river, for the party to pick up on
-the way.
-
-From camp this evening the lieutenant and Baroney climbed out, to the
-top, in order to see ahead. They came down with good news.
-
-“We’ve sighted an open place, before,” said the lieutenant, gladly.
-“It’s not more than eight miles. Another day’s march, my men, and I
-think we’ll be into the prairie and at the end of all this scrambling
-and tumbling.”
-
-That gave great hope, although they were too tired to cheer.
-
-But on the morrow the river trail fought them harder than ever. Toward
-noon they had gained only a scant half mile. The horses had been
-falling again and again, the sledges had stuck fast on the rocks and in
-the holes, the ice and snow and rocks behind were blood-stained from
-the wounds of men and animals.
-
-Now they had come to a narrow spot, where a mass of broken rocks,
-forming a high bar, thrust itself out from the cliff, into the stream,
-and where the water was flowing over the ice itself. The horses balked
-and reared, while the men tugged and shoved.
-
-“Over the rocks,” the lieutenant ordered.
-
-That brought more trouble. Stub’s yellow pony, thin and scarred like
-the rest, was among those that still carried light packs. He was a
-stout, plucky pony――or had been. Here he lost heart, at last. His hoofs
-were sore, he was worn out. Terry Miller hauled at his neck-thong, Stub
-pushed at his braced haunches. The line was in a turmoil, while
-everybody worked; the canyon echoed to the shouts and blows and
-frenzied, frightened snorting.
-
-Suddenly the yellow pony’s neck-thong snapped; he recoiled threshing,
-head over heels, before Stub might dodge from him; and down they went,
-together, clear into the river. But Stub never felt the final crash. On
-his way he saw a burst of stars, then he plunged into night and kept
-right on plunging until he woke up.
-
-[Illustration: BUT STUB NEVER FELT THE FINAL CRASH]
-
-He had landed. No, he was still going. That is, the snow and cliffs at
-either side were moving, while he sat propped and bewildered, dizzily
-watching them.
-
-His head throbbed. He put his hand to it, and felt a bandage. But whose
-bowed back was that, just before? And what was that noise, of crunching
-and rasping? Ah! He was on a sledge――he was stowed in the baggage upon
-a sledge, and was being hauled――over the ice and snow――through the
-canyon――by――by――――
-
-Freegift Stout! For the man doing the hauling turned his face, and was
-Freegift Stout!
-
-Well, well! Freegift halted, and let the sled run on to him. He shouted
-also; they had rounded a curve and there was another loaded sled, and a
-man for it; and they, too, stopped.
-
-“Hello. Waked at last, have ye?” spoke Freegift, with a grin.
-
-“Yes, I guess so.” Stub found himself speaking in a surprisingly easy
-fashion. A prodigious amount of words and notions were whirling through
-his mind. “Where――where am I, anyhow?”
-
-“Ridin’ like a king, down the Red River.”
-
-“What for?”
-
-“So’s to get out an’ reach Natchitoches, like the rest of us.”
-
-Stub struggled to sit up farther. Ouch!
-
-“What’s your name?” he demanded. Then――“I know. It’s Freegift Stout.
-That other man’s Terry Miller. But what’s my name?”
-
-“Stub, I reckon.”
-
-“Yes; of course it is. That’s what they call me. But how did you know?
-How’d you know I’m ‘Stub’ for short? I’m Jack. That’s my regular
-name――Jack Pursley. I got captured by the Utahs, from my father; did
-the Pawnees have me, too? Wish I could remember. I do sort of remember.
-But I’m a white boy. I’m an American, from Kentucky. And my name’s Jack
-Pursley――Stub for short.”
-
-Freegift roundly stared, his mouth agape amidst his whiskers.
-
-“Hey! Come back here, Terry,” he called. And Terry Miller came back.
-
-“That crack on the head’s set him to talkin’ good English an’ turned
-him into a white lad, sure,” quoth Freegift. “Did you hear him? Ain’t
-that wonderful, though? His name’s Jack Pursley, if you please; an’ he
-answers to Stub, jest the same――an’ if that wasn’t a smart guess by
-John Sparks I’ll eat my hat when I get one.”
-
-“I’ll be darned,” Terry wheezed, blinking and rubbing his nose. “Jack
-Pursley, are you? Then where’s your dad?”
-
-“I don’t know. We were finding gold in the mountains, and the Indians
-stole me and hit me on the head――and I don’t remember everything after
-that.”
-
-“Sho’,” said Terry. “How long ago, say?”
-
-“What year is it now, please?”
-
-“We’ve jest turned into 1807.”
-
-“I guess that was three years ago, then.”
-
-“And whereabouts in the mountains?”
-
-“Near the head of the Platte River.”
-
-“For gosh’ sake!” Freegift blurted. “We all jest come from there’bouts.
-But you didn’t say nothin’, an’ we didn’t see no gold.”
-
-“I didn’t remember.”
-
-“Well, we won’t be goin’ back, though; not for all the gold in the
-’arth. Were you all alone up there?”
-
-“My father――he was there. Some other men had started, but they quit.
-Then we met the Indians, and they were friendly till they stole me.”
-
-“Did they kill your father?”
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-“That’s a tall story,” Freegift murmured, to Terry; and tapped his
-head. Evidently they didn’t believe it “Where do you think you are now,
-then?” he asked, of Stub.
-
-“I guess I’m with Lieutenant Pike. But where is he?”
-
-“Well, we’ll tell you. You see, that yaller hoss an’ you went down
-together. You got a crack on the head, an’ the hoss, he died. We had
-to shoot him. But we picked you up, because you seemed like worth
-savin’. The lieutenant put a bandage on you. Then he took the rest of
-the outfit up out the canyon. The hosses couldn’t go on――there wasn’t
-any footin’. But he left Terry an’ me to pack the dead hoss’s load an’
-some other stuff that he couldn’t carry, on a couple of sledges, an’ to
-fetch them an’ you on by river an’ meet him below. Understand?”
-
-Stub nodded. How his brain did whirl, trying to patch things together!
-It was as if he had wakened from a dream, and couldn’t yet separate
-the real from the maybe not.
-
-“We’d best be going on,” Terry Miller warned. “We’re to ketch the cap’n
-before night, and we’re short of grub.”
-
-So the sledges proceeded by the river trail, while Stub lay and
-pondered. By the pain now and then in his head, when the sledge jolted,
-he had struck his scar; but somehow he had a wonderful feeling of
-relief, there. He was a new boy.
-
-The trail continued as rough as ever. Most of the way the two men, John
-and Terry, had to pull for all they were worth; either tugging to get
-their sledges around open water by route of the narrow strips of shore,
-or else slipping and scurrying upon the snowy ice itself. Steep slopes
-and high cliffs shut the trail in, as before. The gaps on right and
-left were icy ravines and canyons that looked to be impassible.
-
-The main party were not sighted, nor any trace of them. Toward dusk,
-which gathered early, Terry, ahead, halted.
-
-“It beats the Dutch where the cap’n went to,” he complained. “He got
-out, and he hasn’t managed to get back in, I reckon. Now, what to do?”
-
-“Only thing to do is to camp an’ wait till mornin’,” answered Freegift.
-“An’ a powerful lonesome, hungry camp it’ll be. But that’s soldierin’.”
-
-“Well, the orders are to ketch him――or to join him farther down,
-wherever that may be,” said Terry. “But we can’t travel by night, in
-here. So we’ll have to camp, and foller out our orders to-morrow.”
-
-It was a lonesome camp, and a cold camp, and a hungry camp, here in the
-dark, frozen depths of the long and silent defile cut by the mysterious
-river. They munched a few mouthfuls apiece of dried meat; Stub slept
-the most comfortably, under a blanket upon the sledge; the two men laid
-underneath a single deer-hide, upon the snow.
-
-They all started on at daybreak. Stub was enough stronger so that he
-sprang off to lighten the load――even pushed――at the worst places.
-Indeed, his head was in first-class shape; the scar pained very little.
-And he had rather settled down to being Jack Pursley again. Only, he
-wished that he knew just where his father was. Dead? Or alive?
-
-It was slow going, to-day. The river seemed to be getting narrower.
-Where the current had overflowed and had frozen again, the surface
-was glary smooth; the craggy shore-line constantly jutted with sudden
-points and shoulders that forced the sledges out to the middle. The
-slopes were bare, save for a sprinkling of low bushes and solitary
-pines, clinging fast to the rocks. Ice glittered where the sun’s faint
-rays struck.
-
-This afternoon, having worked tremendously, they came out into the
-lieutenant’s prairie. At least, it might have been the prairie he had
-reported――a wide flat or bottom where the hills fell back and let the
-river breathe.
-
-“Hooray! Here’s the place to ketch him,” Freegift cheered. And he
-called: “See any sign o’ them, Terry?”
-
-“Nope.”
-
-They halted, to scan ahead. All the white expanse was lifeless.
-
-“I swan!” sighed Terry. “Never a sign, the whole day; and now, not a
-sign here. You’d think this’d be the spot they’d come in at, and wait
-for a fellow or else leave him word.”
-
-“Yes,” agreed Freegift, “I would that. Do you reckon they’re behind us,
-mebbe?”
-
-“How’s a man to tell, in such a country?” Terry retorted. “They’re
-likely tangled up, with half their hosses down, and the loads getting
-heavier and heavier. But where, who knows? We’ll go on a piece, to
-finish out the day. We may find ’em lower on, or sign from ’em. If not,
-we’ll have to camp again, and shiver out another night, with nothing
-to eat. Eh, Stub? At any rate, orders is orders, and we’re to keep
-travelling by river until we join ’em. If they’re behind, they’ll
-discover our tracks, like as not, and send ahead for us.”
-
-“Anyhow, we’re into open goin’. I’m blamed glad o’ that,” declared
-Freegift. “Hooray for the plains, and Natchitoches!”
-
-“Hooray if you like,” Terry answered back, puffing. “But ’tisn’t any
-turnpike, you can bet.”
-
-Apparently out of the mountains they were; nevertheless still hard put,
-for the river wound and wound, treacherous with boulders and air-holes,
-and the snow-covered banks were heavy with willows and brush and long
-grass.
-
-After about four miles Terry, in the lead, shouted unpleasant news.
-
-“We might as well quit. We’re running plumb into another set o’
-mountains. I can see where the river enters. This is only a pocket.”
-
-Freegift and Stub arrived, and gazed. The mountains closed in again,
-before; had crossed the trail, and were lined up, waiting. Jagged and
-gleaming in the low western sunlight, they barred the way.
-
-“There’s no end to ’em,” said Terry, ruefully. “Heigh-hum. ’Pears
-like the real prairies are a long stint yet. The cap’n will be sore
-disappointed, if he sees. I don’t think he’s struck here, though.
-Anyhow, we’ll have to camp――I’m clean tuckered; and to-morrow try
-once more, for orders is orders, and I’m right certain he’ll find us
-somewheres, or we’ll find him.”
-
-So they made camp. Freegift wandered out, looking for wood and for
-trails. He came in.
-
-“I see tracks, Terry. Two men have been along here――white men, I judge;
-travellin’ down river.”
-
-“Only two, you say?”
-
-“Yes. Fresh tracks, just the same.”
-
-They all looked, and found the fresh tracks of two men pointing
-eastward.
-
-“I tell you! Those are the doctor and Brown hunting,” Terry proposed.
-“Wish they’d left some meat. But we may ketch ’em to-morrow. Even
-tracks are a godsend.”
-
-They three had eaten nothing all day; there was nothing to eat,
-to-night. To Stub, matters looked rather desperate, again. Empty
-stomach and empty tracks and empty country, winter-bound, gave one
-a sort of a hopeless feeling. He and Freegift and Terry trudged and
-trudged and trudged, and hauled and shoved, and never got anywhere. For
-all they knew, they might be drawing farther and farther away from the
-lieutenant. But, as Terry said, “orders were orders.”
-
-“Well, if we ketch the doctor he’ll be mighty interested in that head
-o’ yourn,” Freegift asserted, to Stub. “He’s been wantin’ to open it
-up, I heard tell; but mebbe that yaller hoss saved him the trouble.”
-
-“He’ll not thank the hoss,” laughed Terry, grimly. “He’d like to have
-done the job himself! That’s the doctor of it.”
-
-Stub privately resolved to show the doctor that there was no need of
-the “job,” now. He felt fine, and he was Jack Pursley.
-
-Nothing occurred during the night; the false prairie of the big pocket
-remained uninvaded except by themselves. They lingered until about ten
-o’clock, hoping that the main party might come in.
-
-“No use,” sighed Freegift. “We may be losin’ time; like as not losin’
-the doctor. Our orders were, to travel by river till we joined the
-cap’n.”
-
-With one last survey the two men took up their tow-ropes and, Stub
-ready to lend a hand when needed, they plodded on.
-
-The tracks of the doctor and John Brown led to the gateway before.
-The space for the river lessened rapidly. Soon the sides were only
-prodigious cliffs, straight up and down where they faced upon the
-river, and hung with gigantic icicles and sheeted with ice masses. The
-river had dashed from one side to the other, so that the boulders were
-now spattered with frozen spray.
-
-The tracks of the doctor and John Brown had vanished; being free of
-foot, they might clamber as they thought best. But the sledges made a
-different proposition. Sometimes, in the more difficult spots amidst
-ice, rocks and water, two men and a boy scarcely could budge one.
-
-Higher and higher towered the cliffs, reddish where bare, and streaked
-with motionless waterfalls. The sky was only a seam. Far aloft, there
-was sunshine, and the snow even dripped; but down in here all was shade
-and cold. One’s voice sounded hollow, and echoes answered mockingly.
-
-The dusk commenced to gather before the shine had left the world above.
-Stub was just about tired out; the sweat had frozen on the clothes of
-the two men, and their beards also were stiff with frost.
-
-Now they had come to a stopping-place. There was space for only the
-river. It was crowded so closely and piled upon itself so deeply,
-and was obliged to flow so swiftly that no ice had formed upon it
-beyond its very edges. The cliffs rose abruptly on either side, not a
-pebble-toss apart, leaving no footway.
-
-The trail had ended.
-
-“I cry ‘Enough,’” Terry panted, as the three peered dismayed. “We
-can’t go on――and we can’t spend the night here, either. We’ll have to
-backtrack and find some way out.”
-
-“The doctor an’ Brown must ha’ got out somewheres,” Freegift argued.
-“They never passed here. Let’s search whilst there’s light. If we can
-fetch out we may yet sight ’em, or the cap’n. An’ failin’ better, we
-can camp again an’ bile that deer-hide for a tide-me-over. Some sort o’
-chawin’ we need bad.”
-
-“Biled deer-hide for supper, then,” Terry answered. “It’ll do to fool
-our stomicks with. But first we got to get out if we can.”
-
-They turned back, in the gloomy canyon whose walls seemed to be at
-least half a mile high, to seek a side passage up and out. Freegift was
-ahead. There were places where the walls had been sundered by gigantic
-cracks, piled with granite fragments. Freegift had crossed the river,
-on boulders and ice patches, to explore a crack opposite――and suddenly
-a shout hailed him.
-
-“Whoo-ee! Hello!”
-
-He gazed quickly amidst his clambering; waved his arm and shouted
-reply, and hastened over.
-
-“Somebody!” Terry exclaimed. He and Stub ran forward, stumbling. They
-rounded a shoulder, and joining Freegift saw the lieutenant. In the
-gloom they knew him by his red cap if by nothing else. He was alone,
-carrying his gun.
-
-“I’ve been looking for you men,” he greeted. “You passed us, somehow.”
-
-“Yes, sir,” Freegift admitted. “An’ we’ve been lookin’ for you, too,
-sir. We didn’t know whether you were before or behind.”
-
-“And begging your pardon, sir, we’re mighty glad to see you,” added
-Terry. “Are the men all behind, the same as yourself, sir?”
-
-“Part of them.” The lieutenant spoke crisply. “The doctor and Brown
-are still ahead, I think. I haven’t laid eyes on them. You three were
-next. The rest of the party is split. From the prairie back yonder I
-detached Baroney and two men to take the horses out, unpacked, and find
-a road for them. We have lost several animals by falls upon the rocks,
-and the others were unable to travel farther by river. The remaining
-eight men are coming on, two by two, each pair with a loaded sledge. I
-have preceded them, hoping to overtake you. The command is pretty well
-scattered out, but doing the best it can.” His tired eyes scanned Stub.
-“How are you, my brave lad?”
-
-“All right, sir. But my name’s Jack Pursley, now. That knock I got made
-me remember.”
-
-“What!”
-
-“You see, sir,” Freegift explained in haste, and rather as if
-apologizing for Stub’s answer, “when he come to after that rap on the
-head he was sort o’ bewildered like; an’ ever since then he’s been
-claimin’ that he’s a white boy, name o’ Pursley, from Kaintuck, an’
-was stole from his father, by the Injuns, up in that very Platte River
-country where we saw all them camp sign.”
-
-“Oh!” uttered the lieutenant. “You were there? How many of you? All
-white? Where’s your father? How long ago?”
-
-“About three years, I think,” Stub stammered. “Just we two, sir. We
-were hunting and trading on the plains, with some Kiowas and Comanches,
-and the Sioux drove us into the mountains. Then we joined the Utahs,
-and after a while they stole me. They hit me on the head and I forgot a
-lot of things――and I don’t know where my father is, sir.”
-
-“Hah! I thought we were the first white men there,” ejaculated the
-lieutenant. “The first Americans, at least. It’s a pity you didn’t come
-to before. You might have given us valuable information.”
-
-“He says they found gold in that Platte country, sir,” said Terry.
-
-“Yes? Pshaw! But no matter now. We’ll pursue that subject later. First,
-we must get out of this canyon. You discovered no passage beyond?”
-
-“No, sir. Never space to set a foot.”
-
-“Have you any food?”
-
-“Had none for two days, sir. We were thinking of biling a deer-hide for
-our supper.”
-
-“You’re no worse off than the others. The whole column is destitute
-again, but the men are struggling bravely, scattered as they may be.
-The doctor and Brown came this way. You haven’t sighted them?”
-
-“No, sir; only their tracks, back a piece.”
-
-“Then they got out, somehow. We must find their trail before dark, and
-follow it up top, where there’s game. Search well; our comrades behind
-are depending on us.”
-
-They searched on both sides of the canyon. Stub’s Indian-wise eyes made
-the discovery――a few scratches by hands and gun-stocks, in a narrow
-ravine whose slopes were ice sheeted. That was the place.
-
-They all hurried to the sledges, took what they might carry, and
-clawing, slipping, clinging, commenced to scale the ravine. It was
-a slow trail, and a danger trail, but it led them out, to a flat,
-cedar-strewn top, where daylight still lingered.
-
-“The doctor and Brown have been here,” panted the lieutenant. “Here are
-their tracks.”
-
-They followed the tracks a short distance, and brought up at camp sign.
-Evidently the doctor and Brown had stopped here, the night before; had
-killed a deer, too――but there was nothing save a few shreds of hide.
-
-“The birds and beasts have eaten whatever they may have left,” spoke
-the lieutenant. “Too bad, my lads. However, we’re out, and we’ll make
-shift some way. Fetch up another load, while I hunt.”
-
-Out he went, with his gun. They managed to bring up another load from
-the sledges. They heard a gunshot.
-
-“Hooray! Meat for supper, after all.”
-
-But when he returned in the darkness he was empty-handed.
-
-“I wounded a deer, and lost him,” he reported shortly; and he slightly
-staggered as he sank down for a moment. “We can do no more to-night.
-We’ll melt snow for drinking purposes; but the deer-hide is likely to
-make us ill, in our present condition. We’ll keep it, and to-morrow
-we’ll have better luck.”
-
-So with a fire and melted snow they passed the night. Nobody else
-arrived. The doctor and Brown seemed to be a day’s march ahead; Baroney
-and Hugh Menaugh and Bill Gordon were wandering with the horses through
-this broken high country; and the other eight were toiling as best they
-could, with the sledges, in separate pairs, seeking a way out also.
-
-The lieutenant started again, early in the morning, to find meat for
-breakfast. They went down into the canyon, to get the rest of the
-loads, and the sledges――and how they managed, with their legs so weary
-and their stomachs so empty, Stub scarcely knew.
-
-They heard the lieutenant shoot several times, in the distance; this
-helped them. He rarely missed. But he came into camp with nothing, and
-with his gun broken off at the breech――had wounded deer, had discovered
-that his gun was bent and shot crooked――then had fallen and disabled it
-completely.
-
-He was exhausted――so were the others; yet he did not give up. He rested
-only a minute. Then he grabbed up the gun that had been stowed among
-the baggage. It was only a double-barreled shotgun, but had to do.
-
-“I’ll try again, with this,” he said. “You can go no further; I see
-that. Keep good heart, my lads, and be sure that I’ll return at best
-speed with the very first meat I secure.”
-
-“Yes, sir. We’ll wait, sir. And good luck to ye,” answered Terry.
-
-Sitting numb and lax beside the baggage, they watched the lieutenant go
-stumbling and swerving among the cedars, until he had disappeared.
-
-“A great-hearted little officer,” Freegift remarked. “Myself, I
-couldn’t take another step. I’m clean petered out, at last. But
-him――away he goes, never askin’ a rest.”
-
-“And he’ll be back. You can depend on that,” put in Terry. “Yes. He’ll
-not be thinking of himself. He’s thinking mainly on his men. He’ll be
-back with the meat, before he eats a bite.”
-
-They heard nothing. The long day dragged; sometimes they dozed――they
-rarely moved and they rarely spoke; they only waited. Up here it was
-very quiet, with a few screaming jays fluttering through the low trees.
-Stub caught himself nodding and dreaming: saw strange objects, grasped
-at meat, and woke before he could eat. He wondered if Freegift and
-Terry saw the same.
-
-The sun set, the air grew colder.
-
-“Another night,” Freegift groaned. “He’s not comin’. Now what if he’s
-layin’ out somewheres, done up!”
-
-“If he’s still alive he’s on his feet, and seeking help for us,” Terry
-asserted. “He said to wait and he’d come. You can depend on him. Orders
-be orders. He found us, below, and he’ll find us here.”
-
-“We’ve got to suck deer-hide, then,” announced Freegift. “It may carry
-us over.”
-
-They managed to arouse themselves; half boiled strips of deer-hide in a
-kettle of snow-water, and chewed at the hairy, slimy stuff. But they
-couldn’t swallow it.
-
-“Oh, my!” Terry sighed. “’Tain’t soup nor meat, nor what I’d call
-soldiers’ fare at all. We had hard times before, up the Mississippi
-with the left’nant; but we didn’t set teeth to this. What’d I ever
-enlist for?”
-
-“The more I don’t know,” answered Freegift. “But stow one good meal in
-us an’ we’d enlist over again, to foller the cap’n on another trip.”
-
-Terry tried to grin.
-
-“I guess you’re right. But, oh my! Down the Red River, heading for
-white man’s country, is it? Then where are we? Nowhere at all, and like
-to stay.”
-
-Through the gnarled cedars beside the mighty canyon the shadows
-deepened. The mountain ridges and peaks, near and far, surrounding the
-lone flat, swiftly lost their daytime tints as the rising tide of night
-flowed higher and higher. And soon it was dark again.
-
-Now they must wait for another morning as well as for the lieutenant.
-
-They had already sickened of the deer-hide, and could not touch it
-again. So the morning was breakfastless. The sun had been up only a
-few minutes, and Stub was drowsing in a kind of stupor, when he heard
-Freegift exclaim:
-
-“He’s comin’, boys! Here comes the cap’n! Say! Don’t I see him――or not?”
-
-“There’s two of ’em!” cried Terry. “He’s found company. No! That ain’t
-the cap’n. It’s somebody else. But our men, anyhow.”
-
-Two men afoot were hastening in through the cedars, along the canyon
-rim. They carried packages――meat! They were Hugh Menaugh and Bill
-Gordon. Hooray!
-
-“Hello to you!”
-
-“Yes, we’re still here,” replied Terry. “And if you’ve fetched anything
-to eat, out with it quick. Where’s the cap’n? Did you see him?”
-
-Hugh and Bill busied themselves.
-
-“Yes, we met up with him last evenin’, below, down river. He hadn’t
-come back to you, ’cause he hadn’t killed anything. But Baroney and us
-were packin’ buffalo meat and deer meat both, and he sent us two out
-to find you first thing this mornin’, soon as ’twas light enough to
-s’arch. After you’ve fed, we’ll help you on to camp.”
-
-“Who else is there?”
-
-“Just the cap’n and Baroney, but they’re expectin’ the doctor and
-Brown. Them two are somewheres in the neighborhood. The cap’n fired a
-gun as signal to ’em. We’ll have to look for the other fellers.”
-
-“What kind of a camp, an’ whereabouts?” Freegift asked, as he and Terry
-and Stub greedily munched.
-
-“Oh, a good camp, in the open, not fur from the river.”
-
-Hugh and Bill acted oddly――with manner mysterious as if they were
-keeping something back. After the meal, Hugh opened up.
-
-“Now that you’ve eaten, guess I’ll tell you what’s happened,” he
-blurted. “You’ll know it, anyhow.”
-
-“Anybody dead? Not the cap’n!”
-
-“No. Nothing like that. But this ain’t the river.”
-
-“Ain’t the Red River?”
-
-“Nope.”
-
-The three stared, dazed.
-
-“What river might it be, then?” gasped Freegift.
-
-“The Arkansaw ag’in. An’ camp’s located on that very same spot in the
-dry valley where we struck north last December, scarce a month ago!”[G]
-
-[G] That was the remarkable and disappointing fact. From the heads of
-the Platte River they simply had passed southwestward to the head of
-the Arkansas, had fought their way down through the Grand Canyon of the
-Arkansas to the Royal Gorge, and crossing around this were completing a
-big circle to the Cañon City region again.
-
-“It’s certainly hard on the little cap’n,” Bill added. “Yesterday, his
-worst day of all, when near dead he made out and espied the landmarks,
-was his birthday, too.”
-
-“What’s the date?” Terry queried. “I’ve forgot.”
-
-“Fifth o’ January. To-day’s the sixth. It was December 10 when we
-camped yonder before.”
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-NOT YET DEFEATED
-
-
-Helped by Hugh Menaugh and Bill Gordon they might now travel on for the
-lieutenant’s camp. They had to cross several gulches and one or two
-ridges; then they came out into view of the dry valley, at the foot
-of which the Arkansaw issued from the mountains, to course eastward
-through the foothills and down to the plains far beyond.
-
-It was the same valley. They might see again the Grand Peak, distant in
-the north, and mark the line of the river, nearer in the south. From
-the ridges they had been enabled to sight the Great Snow Mountains,
-also in the south and much farther than the Grand Peak in the opposite
-direction. Yes, this was the Arkansaw, and the lieutenant had missed
-his guess by a wide margin.
-
-He was waiting at the camp. He greeted them kindly, but was haggard
-and seemed much cut up over the result of all his hard marches. No one
-could resist being sorry for him.
-
-The doctor and John Brown were here, too. They had brought in six deer,
-so that now there was plenty of meat on hand.
-
-It was two more days before the last of the men had straggled in.
-Meanwhile the doctor especially had been interested in the new “Jack
-Pursley,” otherwise Stub; had examined his head, and together with the
-lieutenant had asked him questions. But as Stub stuck to his story,
-they had to accept it; appeared rather to believe it――the doctor in
-particular.
-
-Considerable of their talk, between themselves, Stub did not
-understand. There was something about “removal of pressure,”
-“resumption of activity,” “clearing up of brain area,” and so forth,
-which really meant nothing to Stub, except that now he knew who he was
-and the spot under his scar no longer burned or weighed like lead.
-
-If he might only find his father, whose name, he remembered, was James,
-and if the lieutenant might find the Red River after all, then he would
-be perfectly happy.
-
-The lieutenant acted somewhat worried. He did not know quite what to
-do next. He did not like to waste time; but instead of having found
-the Red River, after a month of search which had lost him horses and
-crippled others and almost had lost him men also, here he was with
-nothing gained except a little information about the mountain country
-north.
-
-But he was not a man to shilly-shally. He and the doctor, and sometimes
-Baroney, talked earnestly together; on the day after the last of the
-squads had arrived, and when everybody had eaten well and had rested,
-he called a council.
-
-“I have decided to make another attempt, men,” he said. “We are
-soldiers, and our duty to our orders and our Flag demands that we do
-not admit defeat. The thought of defeat is unworthy of brave men. It
-is far better to die with honor, in the knowledge that we have done
-our utmost, than to live as cowards and weaklings. Fortune has been
-trying us out, but she will not find us lacking. We have explored to
-the north, and we know that the Red River does not lie there. That much
-has been accomplished, and not in vain, for we have made important
-discoveries and greatly extended the Government’s knowledge of the
-sources of the Platte and the Arkansaw Rivers. It will be impossible
-to travel onward with the horses. We have lost a number of them, and
-the remainder are unfit. So I propose to stay here a few days, in order
-to erect a block-house and gather meat. Then I shall leave the horses,
-and the useless baggage, with two men in charge; and with the rest of
-you shall strike southward to cross the next divide, in the vicinity of
-the Great White Mountains, where, I am positive, we shall emerge upon
-the head streams of the Red River. We have demonstrated the fact that
-the Red River can lie only in that direction. From there we will send
-back for the horses, which by that time will be recovered; and we will
-descend along the river to the civilization of our own people and the
-just reward, I trust, of a Country appreciative of your efforts.”
-
-Sergeant Meek faced the men and flourished his lean arm.
-
-“Three cheers for the cap’n and the Red River, boys! Hooray! Hooray!
-Hooray!”
-
-They all spent the next four days in building the block-house with
-logs, and in hunting. A good pasture was found, for the wretched
-horses. John Sparks made a new stock for the lieutenant’s broken gun.
-
-Baroney and Pat Smith were to stay here. Although a great deal of
-the baggage, including the lieutenant’s own trunk with his “chief’s”
-uniform, was left also, what with the ammunition and axes and spades,
-and the presents in case the Comanches or other Indians should be met,
-and the meat, the lieutenant and the doctor and the eleven men carried
-each seventy pounds, weighed out equally, and Stub himself had a pack.
-
-Followed by a good-luck cheer from Baroney and Pat, they marched out
-from the block-house on the morning of January 14, southward bound
-across the Arkansaw, to find the Red River down in the region of the
-Great White Mountains.
-
-The first day they marched thirteen miles; the doctor killed a deer.
-The second day they marched nineteen miles, up along a stream that
-opened a way for them to the mountains; the lieutenant and the doctor
-and John Sparks each killed a deer. On the third day they marched up
-the same stream, eighteen miles, in a snowstorm; and nobody killed
-anything. So to-night they pretty well finished their meat. Travelling
-afoot in winter was hungry work, and they could carry only a little at
-a time.
-
-On the fourth day they marched twenty-eight miles――and a bad day it
-proved to be. The Great White Mountains had been getting nearer,
-at this end――their upper end. They formed a tremendous snowy chain
-stretching northwest and southeast. The stream came down from them,
-and they were about to bar the trail. Upon the east there were lesser
-mountains. But no Red River flowed in this broad trough between the two
-ranges; its streams fed the Arkansaw River; therefore the Red River
-must lie upon the farther, or western side, of the Great White range.[H]
-
-[H] These Great White Mountains of Lieutenant Pike are the Sangre de
-Cristo Range of Southern Colorado. They extend from the Arkansas River
-above the Grand Canyon clear into New Mexico, and are a noble snowy
-range indeed. The early Spanish explorers from the south named them
-Sangre de Cristo, or Blood of Christ, because when first sighted they
-were bathed red in the reflection from a New Mexico sunset. And this
-frequently is their sunset coloring today. From the block-house beyond
-present Cañon City north of the Arkansas River the Pike men had marched
-south across the river, and probably had followed up Grape Creek, which
-descends from the east slope of the Sangre de Cristo――the Great White
-Mountains.
-
-The mountains seemed to rise from a bare prairie which grew no wood.
-The lieutenant had left the stream, so as to aim more directly for a
-low place in the range; but he was not to cross, to-day. The range was
-farther than it looked to be. The sun set――and here they were, in the
-cold open, without wood or water either, or a bite to eat.
-
-“There’s timber at the base of those first slopes,” he said. “We’ll
-have to push on, men, until we reach it. The night will be too cold for
-existing with no fires.”
-
-Suddenly they were barred by the creek, and needs must ford it through
-ice that broke under their moccasins. It was long after dark, and
-was stinging cold, when they arrived at the trees. The men stumbled
-wearily; Stub could not feel his feet at all. Nobody had complained,
-though――but when the fires had been built and they all started to thaw
-themselves out, the doctor found that nine pairs of feet had been
-frozen, among the men, with Stub’s pair to be included.
-
-He, and the lieutenant, Sergeant Meek and Terry Miller were the only
-ones to have escaped! John Sparks and young Tom Dougherty were the
-worst off. Their feet were solid white to their ankles. Hugh Menaugh
-and Jake Carter were badly off, too. The doctor did his best――everybody
-rubbed hard with snow, and several groaned from the pain; but there
-was nothing to eat and the thermometer dropped to more than eighteen
-degrees below zero or freezing.
-
-With cold, hunger and aching feet it was a hard night. The lieutenant
-sent Sergeant Meek and Terry out early in the morning, to hunt in one
-direction; he and the doctor made ready to hunt in another.
-
-“Do the best you can, lads,” they encouraged, as they set forth. “We’ve
-all been in tight places before, and have come out safely. Wait now in
-patience, and you shall have the first meat that’s killed.”
-
-It was another long day: a cold, bleak day for this open camp on the
-edge of the snow-laden pines and cedars, with the Great White Mountains
-overlooking, on the one hand, as far as eye might see, and the wide
-prairie bottoms stretching lone and lifeless on the other hand.
-
-Stub’s feet were swollen, puffy and tender, but he could walk. He and
-Corporal Jerry Jackson and Alex Roy managed to keep the fires going.
-John Sparks and Tom Dougherty lay suffering until the sweat stood on
-their foreheads. Their feet seemed to be turning black, and were alive
-with sharp pains.
-
-“Sure, we’re like never to walk ag’in, Tom,” John moaned. “Our
-country’ll owe us each a pair o’ feet.”
-
-“I know that, John. But what’ll we do wid those we have? That’s what’s
-botherin’ me. ’Tis cruel hard.”
-
-“’Tis harder on you than on me, lad,” John declared. “For you’re young.
-An’ still, I’d like to do a bit more marchin’, myself.”
-
-They heard never a sound from the hunters, all day. At dark the
-sergeant and Terry Miller came in, completely tuckered. They had not
-fired a shot; had seen no game, nor seen the lieutenant and the doctor,
-either.
-
-“We’ll have to pull our belts in another notch, boys,” quoth the
-sergeant. “And trust to them other two. Had they found meat, they’d be
-in. If they don’t come to-night, they’ll come to-morrow. ’Tis tough for
-you, here by the fire; but it’s tougher on them, out yonder somewheres
-in the cold, with their hearts aching at the thought of us waiting and
-depending on ’em. Jest the same, I’d rather be any one of us, in our
-moccasins as we are, than Henry Kennerman serving time in his boots.”
-
-Henry Kennerman was a soldier who had deserted on the way to the Osage
-towns.
-
-The next day was the fourth without food. It passed slowly. The feet of
-some of the men, like those of Stub, were much better; but John Sparks
-and young Tom could not stand, and Hugh Menaugh and Jake Carter could
-not walk.
-
-Toward evening the sergeant grew very uneasy; alarm settled over them
-all. No tidings of any kind had arrived from the lieutenant and Doctor
-Robinson.
-
-“We’ll wait, the night,” finally said Sergeant Meek. “In the morning
-’twill be up to us, for if we sit here longer we’ll be too weak to
-move. We’ll divide up, those of us who can walk. A part’ll have to
-search for them two men, for maybe they’re needing help worse’n we
-are, and ’tis the duty of a soldier never to abandon his officers.
-The rest’ll look for meat again. And we’ll none of us come in till we
-fetch either news or meat. Shame on us if we can’t turn to and help our
-officers and ourselves.”
-
-“You’re right. There’s nobody can blame the cap’n an’ the doctor.
-They’ve never spared themselves. We’ll all do our best, sergeant.”
-
-“Only lend me a pair o’ fate, any wan o’ yez whose heart’s too heavy
-for ’em, an’ I’ll look for the cap’n meself,” appealed Tom Dougherty.
-
-They kept up the fires and tried to sleep. The black, cold night
-deepened; overhead the steely stars spanned from prairie to dark
-slopes. The Great Bear of the sky, which contained the Pointers that
-told the time, drifted across, ranging on his nightly trail.
-
-Suddenly, at midnight, they heard a faint, breathless “Whoo-ee!” And
-while they listened, another.
-
-“’Tis the cap’n and the doctor!” the sergeant exclaimed. “Hooray! Give
-’em a yell, now, all together. Build up the fires.”
-
-They yelled. They were answered, through the darkness――and presently
-through the same darkness the lieutenant――and the doctor――came
-staggering in, bending low, to the fire-light.
-
-Meat!
-
-“Here you are, my lads!” the lieutenant panted. He dropped the load
-from his back, swayed, sank to his knees, and the sergeant sprang to
-catch him.
-
-“We’re all right, sir. We knew you’d be coming. You’re a welcome sight,
-sir, meat or no meat. We were getting anxious about you and the doctor,
-sir.”
-
-“I’ll tend to him, sergeant,” gasped the doctor. “You be helping the
-men with the meat. Don’t let ’em over-eat. There’s more, back where we
-killed.”
-
-The lieutenant had almost fainted. It was several minutes before he
-could speak again. He and the doctor had had a terrible two days. The
-doctor said that they had wounded a buffalo with three balls, the first
-evening, but it had made off. All that night they had sat up, among
-some rocks, nearly freezing to death while they waited for morning.
-Then they had sighted a herd of buffalo, at daybreak, and had crawled
-a mile through the snow――had shot eight times, wounded three, and the
-whole herd had escaped.
-
-That second day they had tramped until the lieutenant was about spent
-with hunger and lack of rest. Matters had looked very bad. But they
-both decided that they would rather die looking for game, than return
-and disappoint the men. Just at dusk, when they were aiming for a point
-of timber, there to spend another night, they saw a third herd of
-buffalo. The lieutenant managed to run and hide behind a cedar. When
-the buffalo were about to pass, he shot, and this time crippled one.
-The doctor ran, and with three more shots they killed the buffalo.
-Hurrah!
-
-Then they butchered it, without stopping to eat; and carrying as much
-as they could they had traveled for six hours, bringing the meat to the
-camp.
-
-“It’s a story hard to beat,” said Sergeant Meek, simply. “You may not
-be one of the army, yourself, sir; but as officer and man we’re proud
-to follow you――you and the cap’n, sir.”
-
-“The lieutenant and I wondered what you men were thinking, when we
-didn’t return,” the doctor proffered. “You had a right to expect us
-sooner? Did you plan to march on and try to save your lives?”
-
-“No, sir; not exactly that,” replied rugged Sergeant Meek. “We knew you
-hadn’t forgotten us, and there was no complaining. Seemed like we’d
-best search for you, and the same time find meat if we could; and that
-we’d ha’ done, the first thing in the morning, sir.”
-
-“Your plan, and the way with which you received us, do you all credit
-before the world,” spoke the lieutenant, who overheard. “As your
-comrades we thank you, men; and as your officer I am proud of you. My
-reports to General Wilkinson and the Secretary of War shall not omit
-the devotion to duty that has characterized your whole march.”
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-BLOCKED BY THE GREAT WHITE MOUNTAINS
-
-
-John Sparks and Tom Dougherty were to be left behind. That was the word.
-
-“What?”
-
-“Yes. The doctor says not a step shall they march, if they would save
-their feet; an’ poor Tom, he’s like to lose his, anyhow. An’ since they
-can’t march, no more can we carry ’em across the mountains without
-hosses. So here they stay till we can send an’ get ’em.”
-
-All the buffalo meat had been brought in. The lieutenant was preparing
-to march on, for the Red River. From the camp he had explored farther
-westward, to the very foot of the mountains, seeking a trail over; but
-the snow was four and five feet deep even there, the whole country
-above was white, and he gave the trail up.
-
-“We’ll have to march on south along this side, until we find a better
-place.”
-
-Now they made ready. John Sparks and Tom were fixed as comfortably as
-possible, with guns and ammunition, a lean-to for shelter, and the
-best buffalo-robes, and wood and meat. Their packs, and the packs of
-Hugh Menaugh and Jake Carter (who barely could hobble, using their
-muskets as crutches) were hidden under trees.
-
-Sturdy red-haired John and young Tom felt badly. So did everybody. The
-lieutenant’s voice broke, as he said:
-
-“We aren’t deserting you, my lads. Never think of that. As surely as we
-live we will send for you, the very first thing, as soon as we locate
-a desirable camping spot, to which to bring down the horses. That will
-not be long; we have only to cross these mountains. Rather than desert
-you, if I should be the last man alive in the party I would return,
-myself, and die with you. Whatever happens, meet it like soldiers,
-bearing in mind that you are suffering for your Country. It is far
-preferable to perish thus, in the wilderness, in discharge of duty,
-rather than to forfeit honor by evading hardships and toil like the
-disloyal Kennerman.”
-
-“Oh, sir! We’ll act the man, sir,” they replied. “We’ll keep a stiff
-upper lip, an’ be waitin’ for the hosses to come get us.”
-
-The lieutenant shook hands with them; the doctor shook hands with them.
-
-“Now take care of those feet,” he urged.
-
-Everybody shook hands with them.
-
-“Good-by, lads.”
-
-“Good-by to yez. God send yez safe to the Red River, an’ we’ll join yez
-there, all bound home together.”
-
-“For’d, march!” barked the lieutenant. His voice was husky. There were
-tears freezing on his cheeks.
-
-“For’d, men,” rasped old Sergeant Meek, and blew his nose violently.
-
-A number of the other men were sniffling and blowing, and Stub choked
-as he blindly trudged. Bluff Hugh Menaugh growled gently to himself,
-while he and Jake hobbled.
-
-As long as they could see the little camp and the two figures sitting
-they occasionally turned and waved; and John and Tom waved answer.
-
-“Well, we did our best for ’em,” sighed Corporal Jerry. “We took only
-one meal o’ meat. They have the rest. ’Twill get ’em through, like as
-not.”
-
-“Yes. Once across these mountains, to the Red River, and we’ll send for
-them and the hosses.”
-
-This evening the one meal of meat was eaten. A little snow fell. In
-the morning the lieutenant ordered Sergeant Meek to take the party on,
-while he and the doctor hunted. The day was dark and lowering. Then the
-storm set in again, snowing furiously. By noon the snow was knee high;
-they could not see ten feet around; Hugh and Jake were unable to move
-farther; the lieutenant and the doctor were still out――perhaps lost,
-like themselves.
-
-“’Tis no use, men. We’ll make for the nearest timber and camp there,”
-ordered Sergeant Meek.
-
-That was another miserably cold, hungry day, and a worse night.
-
-“How flesh and blood may be expected to stand more of this, I don’t
-know,” uttered John Brown.
-
-“And it’s not for you to ask,” the sergeant sternly rebuked. “If you’re
-so weak-hearted as to think them thoughts, keep ’em to yourself. Even
-the lad Stub――a mere boy that he is――speaks no such words. Shame on
-you――you a soldier!”
-
-John Brown muttered, but said no more.
-
-“Heaven help the cap’n an’ the doctor, again,” spoke Corporal Jerry,
-as they all huddled about their fire, and the wind howled and the snow
-hissed, and the drifts piled higher against their little bulwark of
-packs. “An’ if they don’t find us an’ we don’t find them, ’twill go
-hard with Sparks and Dougherty, too.”
-
-“If the storm clears, we’ll march on in the morning,” said Sergeant
-Meek. “We’ve had orders to meet ’em, on a piece yet, and that’s our
-duty.”
-
-The morning dawned gray and white, but the storm had ceased. They shook
-off the snow, reshouldered their packs, and guns in hand stiffly
-started. The snow was thigh high; the Great White Mountains looming
-in a long front without end on their right were whiter than ever; the
-bottoms and the more distant mountains on their left were white. It was
-snow, snow, snow, everywhere; the very dead of winter.
-
-Now (Good!) here came the lieutenant and the doctor, ploughing down
-a slope, their packs on their backs, but nothing else. Snowy and
-breathing hard, they arrived. The men, plodding, had seen; and having
-given up hope plodded on, saying not a word. Only Sergeant Meek
-greeted, saluting as best he might:
-
-“All well, cap’n. Good morning to you, sirs.”
-
-“No luck this time, sergeant,” wheezed the lieutenant, cheerily, but
-with face pinched and set. “We missed you, and spent the night together
-in the snow.”
-
-“Yes, sir. We couldn’t see, for the storm, sir, and had to camp in the
-nearest shelter.”
-
-“You did right, sergeant. The storm was so thick that I found even the
-compass of little help. The doctor and I became separated and were
-fearful that we had lost each other as well as the party. Halt the men.”
-
-“Squad, halt,” rasped the sergeant.
-
-The men waited, panting and coughing.
-
-“It’s evident there are no buffalo down in the open, lads,” spoke the
-lieutenant. “The doctor and I have sighted never a one nor any sign of
-one. The storm has driven them back and higher, into the timber. We’ll
-make in the same direction, and be crossing the mountains while seeking
-meat.”
-
-He and the doctor led off, heading westward, to climb the Great White
-Mountains. The route commenced to get more rolling――up and down, up
-and down, over the rounded foothills concealed by the snow. ’Twas
-leg-wearying, breath-taking work. The snow grew deeper. In the hollows
-it had gathered shoulders high; upon the slopes it was waist high. The
-little column was straggling. Stub, the smallest member, trying to
-tread in the broken trail, was at times almost buried.
-
-In an hour they all had covered a pitiful distance; to be sure, the
-prairie was somewhat below, but the real mountains seemed far above,
-and the silent timber still awaited, in a broad belt.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor had halted. They turned and began to
-plough back. The little column, steaming with the vapor from lungs and
-bodies, drew nearer to them.
-
-“The snow is too deep, here, lads,” the lieutenant called, as he and
-the doctor passed in front of the file. His voice was tired; anybody
-might have thought him discouraged――and little wonder. “We’ll have to
-keep lower down, and try elsewhere.”
-
-“To the famine country of the open bottoms,” he said. Were they never
-to get across these Great White Mountains, which faced them unending?
-Were they to die in the snow, just for the sake of hunting the Red
-River? John Brown, near the head of the column, broke restraint again
-and exclaimed roundly:
-
-“I say, it’s more than flesh an’ blood can bear, to march three days
-with not a mouthful of food, through snow three feet deep, an’ carry
-loads only fit for hosses!”
-
-Everybody heard. Sergeant Meek turned on him angrily. Had the
-lieutenant heard also? No? Yes! He had paused for an instant, as if to
-reply; then without another sign he had proceeded.
-
-“You’ll be called to answer for this, Brown,” warned the sergeant.
-
-John muttered to himself, and a silence fell upon the file. Stooped and
-unsteady under their own loads, the lieutenant and the doctor doggedly
-continued, breaking the trail on course obliquing for the lower
-country. The others followed, breathing hard.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor had struck down a shallow draw. Issuing
-from the end of it, they were out of sight. When the head of the
-column arrived at the same spot, there were only the two packs, and a
-message scrawled with a ramrod on the snow. Sergeant Meek read.
-
-“We see buffalo. Camp in nearest timber and wait. Z. M. P.”
-
-Every eye sprang to search the landscape. There! Far down, upon the
-prairie! Black dots――slowly moving across! Buffalo! And where were the
-hunters? Their tracks pointed onward from the two packs. See! They were
-running, crouched, down among the billowy swells, as if to head the
-animals off. It was a desperate chance.
-
-“The breeze is with us,” Sergeant Meek cried hopefully. “Quick! For
-that timber tip, yon, and keep out o’ sight. Trust the cap’n and the
-doctor to do their best. Let’s take no risk of spoiling their chance.”
-
-The column hustled, with strength renewed. The tip of timber was about
-a mile distant. The buffalo had disappeared behind a knoll of the
-prairie; the last seen of the lieutenant and the doctor, they were
-hastening――stumbling and falling and lunging again, to reach the same
-knoll. The doctor had forged ahead. He was stronger than the lieutenant.
-
-Then the scene was swallowed up by a dip in the trail to the timber.
-
-Next, a dully-sounding gunshot! But only one. The doctor probably had
-fired――perhaps at long distance. Had he landed――disabled, or only
-wounded, or missed? Nothing could yet be seen. The men, and Stub,
-their lungs almost bursting, shambled as fast as possible. Just as
-they emerged at the point of timber, other shots boomed: two, close
-together. Hooray! That meant business. They paused, puffing, to gaze.
-
-Again hooray! Down near the knoll a black spot blotched the snow. At
-one side of it there were other black spots, some still, some moving
-in and out. It was the herd, and seemed confused. Look! From the
-black spot, off by itself――a dead buffalo, that!――smoke puffs darted
-and spread. The buffalo herd surged a little, but did not run. The
-lieutenant and the doctor were lying behind the carcass and shooting.
-
-“One, anyway, lads!” cheered Sergeant Meek. “Maybe more. Off with your
-packs, now. Roy, Mountjoy, Stout, Brown, you cut wood; the rest of
-us’ll be clearing a space. There’ll be meat in camp before long, and
-we’ll have fires ready.”
-
-They all worked fast. No one now felt tired. The hunt down below
-sounded like a battle. The lieutenant and the doctor were firing again
-and again, as rapidly as they might load and aim. Toiling with ax and
-spade and hands, the column, making camp, scarcely paused to watch;
-but presently the firing ceased――the buffalo herd were lumbering away,
-at last, with one, two, three of them gradually dropping behind, to
-stagger, waver, and suddenly pitch, dead! Meat, and plenty of it!
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor were busy, butchering the carcass that
-had shielded them. They wasted no time. Here they came, loaded well.
-The fires were crackling and blazing, in readiness; and when they
-panted in, spent, bloody and triumphant, the camp cheered hoarsely.
-
-“Eat, boys,” gasped the lieutenant. “Fortune has favored us. There’s
-more meat below. But we’ll eat first.”
-
-Everybody hacked and tore at the red humps, and in a jiffy the strips
-from them were being thrust into the fire by ramrods; without waiting
-for more than a scorching and a warming through, the men devoured like
-wolves. With the meat juice daubing his chin and staining the men’s
-beards, Stub thought that never before had he tasted such sweetness. He
-forgot his other hungers.
-
-Whew! One by one the men drew back, to chew the last mouthfuls, and
-light pipes, contented. The meat all had vanished.
-
-“Send Brown to me, sergeant,” the lieutenant ordered. There was
-something _he_ had not forgotten.
-
-John Brown arose and shambled to where the lieutenant and the doctor
-were sitting. He looked sheepish and frightened. The lieutenant stood,
-to front him; did not acknowledge his salute, but scanned him sternly,
-his haggard eyes commencing to blaze bluely.
-
-“Brown, you this day presumed to make use of language that was
-seditious and mutinous; I then passed it over, pitying your situation
-and laying your conduct to your distress from hunger, rather than to
-desire to sow discontent amongst the party. Had I saved provisions for
-ourselves, whilst you were starving,” reproached the lieutenant; “had
-we been marching along light and at our ease, whilst you were weighed
-down with your burden, then you would have had some excuse for your
-remarks: but when we all were equally hungry, weary, worn, and charged
-with burdens which I believe my natural strength is less able to bear
-than any man’s in the party――when we are always foremost in breaking
-the road, reconnoitering and enduring the fatigues of the chase, it
-was the height of ingratitude in you to let an expression escape that
-showed discontent. Your ready compliance and firm perseverance I had
-reason to expect, as the leader of men who are my companions in misery
-and danger. But your duty as a soldier (the young lieutenant’s voice
-rang, and his eyes flashed) called on your obedience to your officer,
-and a suppression of such language. However, for this time I will
-pardon; but I assure you, should that ever be repeated, I will answer
-your ingratitude and punish your disobedience by instant death.”
-
-John Brown had shrunk and whitened.
-
-“Yes, sir,” he faltered. “Thank you, sir. I’ll remember. It shan’t
-happen again.”
-
-“You may go.” The lieutenant’s eyes left Brown’s face and traveled
-over the other men. “I take this opportunity,” he said, “likewise to
-express to you, soldiers, generally, my thanks for your obedience,
-perseverance, and ready contempt of every danger, which you have in
-common shown. And I assure you that nothing shall be lacking on my part
-to procure you the rewards of our Government and the gratitude of your
-countrymen.”
-
-“Three cheers for the cap’n, lads,” shouted Sergeant Meek. “Hooray,
-now! Hooray! Hooray!”
-
-“We’re with you to the end, sir!”
-
-“We’re not complainin’, sir. No more is Brown.”
-
-“You’re the leader, sir, and we’re proud to follow.”
-
-“Sure, you an’ the doctor do the hard work.”
-
-Thus they cried, bravely and huskily; for who could help loving this
-stanch little officer, who asked no favors of rank, except to lead,
-and who now stood before them, in his stained red fur-lined cap, his
-wet, torn blanket-coat, his bedraggled thin blue trousers and soaked,
-scuffed moccasins. He was all man.
-
-He raised his hand. His face had flushed, his eyes had softened
-moistly, and his lips quivered.
-
-“That will do, lads. We understand each other, and I’m sure Brown will
-not repeat his offense. For my part, I am determined that we shall not
-move again without a supply of food. That imperils our success, and is
-more than our duty would require of us.”
-
-“Still, we might have made good, hadn’t we left the bulk of our meat
-with Sparks and Dougherty, back yonder,” Freegift Stout remarked, to
-the others in his mess. “That’s what pinched us.”
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-THE FORT IN THE WILDERNESS
-
-
-Across the Great White Mountains at last!
-
-That had proved to be not such a hard trip, after all, although
-uncomfortable on account of the snow. First, the meat from the other
-buffalo (three) had been brought into camp――had been sliced and the
-strips hung on frames, to dry. There was a great quantity of it; more
-than could be carried on foot. So Hugh Menaugh, whose frozen feet still
-crippled him badly, was left to guard the extra amount, at this supply
-depot; and, loaded well, the twelve others marched on.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor led into the mountains. Now was the time
-to cross while the men had meat and felt strong. In spite of the snow
-three feet deep they made fourteen miles, following the low places; and
-at evening they were over――they had come upon a stream flowing west! It
-surely was a feeder of the Red River!
-
-Again they all cheered. But if they were over, they were not yet
-through, for ahead they could see only the same bald or timbered swells
-and ridges, snow-covered and still without end.
-
-Near noon, the next day, the lieutenant and the doctor, in the advance
-as usual, turned and gladly beckoned, and pointed before. They all
-hastened. The signs were good――the brush had been flattened or cut off,
-down a long draw, and the trees had been blazed and curiously painted
-with rude figures. It was an Indian pass.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor had gone on. When the others arrived at
-the spot, they saw.
-
-“We’re coming out, boys!”
-
-“We’ll be out before night!”
-
-A separate, distant range of mountains might be sighted, through the
-gap made by the blazed trail; and below, nearer, there was glimpse of
-the low country, bordered on this side by bare sandy foothills of these
-Great White Mountains themselves.
-
-At sunset they were down and into the open, between the timbered slopes
-and the rolling sand-hills. On the west, beyond the sand-hills there
-appeared to be a wide valley; and beyond the valley that other range of
-mountains.
-
-Camp had to be made soon, here at the base of the Great White
-Mountains. The lieutenant went out alone, to climb the sand-hills, for
-a view. They could see him, a small figure, toiling up and standing, to
-peer through his spy-glass. He came back in the dusk, but his face was
-aglow.
-
-“I have good news,” he announced. “We have won success. With the glass
-I can see from those sand-hills a larger river coursing from northwest
-to southeast through the valley beyond. There can be no doubt that it
-is the Red River.”
-
-They cheered and cheered, and ate with fine appetites. It was a happy
-night. As Sergeant Meek said:
-
-“Once there――and ’twon’t be long――we can send back for Menaugh, and
-poor Sparks and Dougherty, and Baroney and Smith and the hosses; and
-we’ll all be together again, ready for the march home.”
-
-The sand-hills were five miles wide, and looked to be about fifteen
-miles long. The river came down obliquely through the valley――which was
-indeed a broad bottom of prairie-land; so they cut across at an angle,
-and not until the second evening, after a day’s march of twenty-four
-miles, did they reach the bank of the river itself, January 30.
-
-It certainly was the Red River, issuing from the western mountains, and
-here turning more southwardly, in the middle of the valley.
-
-The valley was a wonderland. It lay flat, with little snow, full
-fifty miles wide and in length almost farther than eye might say.
-The mountains in the west were bald, snowy and grim. The Great White
-Mountains on the east appeared to end opposite in a huge, dazzling
-peak with three crests, but a lower range veered in, narrowing
-the valley in the south. Afar in the north, the valley was closed
-completely.
-
-The bottoms were dotted with herds of deer, browsing on the thick dried
-grasses. Many smaller streams joined the big river.
-
-“Aye, ’tis a hunters’ paradise, this,” sighed Freegift Stout. “We’re in
-a land o’ plenty. We can send back word that’ll gladden the hearts of
-the boys behind.”
-
-The lieutenant had decided to make a fortified camp, so as to have
-protection from the Indians and perhaps from the Spanish while the men
-behind were being sent for and boats were being built. He intended to
-descend the Red River by boat and horse, both.
-
-There was no timber at this spot. Some appeared lower along the river.
-They marched for it――eighteen miles. The larger trees were across the
-river; therefore the lieutenant led across, also, by way of the ice
-and several islands. Then they came to another river, that looked like
-a fork, entering from the west. About five miles from its mouth the
-lieutenant found a good place. The fort should be here.
-
-It was a small piece of level bottom, grown to cottonwood trees on
-the north side of this west fork. The fork was all open water, about
-thirty paces wide. Opposite, on the south side, there was a high,
-partly bare hill, out of gunshot.
-
-The next morning, which was February 1, the lieutenant staked a plan of
-the fort, on the ground. Axes rang, spades scraped, picks thudded. As
-soon as the fort was far enough along so that it would stand an attack,
-a party should be sent back across the Great Snowy Mountains to get the
-other men and the horses.
-
-“But what I’d like to know, is, what are we doin’ on this side the main
-river?” queried Corporal Jerry, that night.
-
-“To get at the big trees, and because ’tis the proper place for the
-fort,” answered Sergeant Meek.
-
-“Yes, maybe. But bein’ as this is the Red River, we’re on the Spanish
-side, ain’t we? From all I hear, the Red River’s the dividin’ line
-betwixt the United States an’ Mexico, an’ we’re across it into Mexican
-territory.”
-
-“That’s not for you or me to say, my boy,” Sergeant Meek retorted. “The
-cap’n has his orders, you can bet, and all we need do is to foller
-him. But sure, this is a fork, at the head-waters, and we’re on the
-north side the fork. In a bit more we’ll be starting on down, like as
-not keeping safe to our own side again. And meanwhile if the Spanish
-tackle us here, all the worse for ’em. Not the whole Spanish army could
-budge us from this fort when it’s done. I wouldn’t mind having a dust
-with ’em, for a change from shooting buff’lo and deer.”
-
-“You’re right. A dust at real fightin’ would serve to pass the time,
-sergeant,” the others cried. “Didn’t we foller ’em, an’ didn’t they
-lead us wrong?”
-
-“Or else we led ourselves wrong, mistaking Injun trail for white man
-trail. At any rate, here we are; and as soon as the ice breaks――which
-won’t be long――we’ll all be marching on, for home.”
-
-The fort was to be a strong one. Lieutenant Pike, who took great pride
-in it, explained the scheme, himself, to Stub.
-
-“Thirty-six feet square, inside, fronting upon the river, where the
-current is too deep to ford. Bastions (which were small block-houses)
-at the two rear corners, to cover the walls on three sides. The walls,
-six feet up, of large cottonwood logs two feet through. Smaller logs to
-be laid for another six feet. A ditch will be dug all around, inside,
-and sloped off toward the walls, for pickets to rest in. The pickets
-will be sharpened and will slant two and one-half feet over the top of
-the walls, like a fringe, so that nobody can climb in. All around,
-outside, there will be a deep ditch four feet wide, and filled with
-water. This is called a moat. We will cut a row of loopholes in the
-walls, eight feet up; the men will stand upon platforms, to shoot
-through. Our only entrance will be a hole, about the size of a man’s
-body, low down, on the river side; and to use it, everybody will have
-to crawl in or out on his stomach, and cross the big ditch by means of
-a plank. There will be no roof; this is what is called a stockade. But
-the men doubtless will construct shelters of brush.”
-
-“You’ll be a soldier yet,” the doctor laughed, to Stub, overhearing the
-explanation.
-
-“Entrenched here we need have no fear of one hundred Spanish troops,”
-the lieutenant remarked. “We could easily stand them off for a day or
-two; then by a sally at night either disperse them, or make our escape
-in the darkness, before our supplies were exhausted.”
-
-“And Indians?”
-
-“They would be less dangerous, unless they sent word to Santa Fe in
-the south. We would endeavor to treat with them, which is one of the
-purposes of the expedition.”
-
-Jake Carter and Alex Roy were not able to do much, on account of
-tender feet. The other men worked hard, building the stockade around
-the American flag that had been planted on a pole, in the center. The
-lieutenant and Doctor Robinson hunted and explored. Stub frequently
-went with them, to help bring in the meat.
-
-Once they discovered a group of springs, at the base of the hill south
-of the fork and opposite the stockade. These were warm springs, and
-strangely colored, brown and yellow. Their warm water was what kept the
-fork open, clear to the main river and for some distance down below the
-mouth of the fork.
-
-They discovered also a well-traveled trail up along an eastern branch
-of the main river, not far above the western fork. It was a horse
-trail. Camps beside it showed that soldiers――probably Spanish――had used
-it. So the Spanish came in here.
-
-The lieutenant and the doctor talked considerably of Santa Fe, the
-capital of New Mexico. It lay somewhere south. The lieutenant was
-anxious to know more about it, so as to make report upon it to the
-United States government. He could not leave the stockade, himself, but
-the doctor arranged to go.
-
-Evidently this had been the plan for some time. A trader by the name
-of William Morrison, in the United States, had sent goods there, three
-years ago, in charge of another man named Baptiste Lalande, to be sold.
-But Lalande had never come back with the money. Doctor Robinson had
-agreed with William Morrison to visit Santa Fe, if near there, and
-collect the money. This would be an excuse for spying around.
-
-At the end of the first week, when the stockade was partially finished,
-the doctor left for Santa Fe. He set out westward, up the south bank
-of the fork (which was the wrong direction, although none of them knew
-it), and promised to return with his report in a week or ten days.
-
-The men were not so certain about this. Sergeant Meek wagged his
-grizzled head dubiously.
-
-“Not to criticize a superior officer, but strikes me it’s a risky
-move. The doctor’s pure grit, all right enough, to head alone through
-a country full o’ Injun sign and Spanish sign to boot, and he’s like
-to run his foot into a wolf trap. For if he gets there, them Spanish
-will be curyus to know where he come from; and what’s to prevent their
-back-trailing him? Oh, well; there’s something afoot that we don’t
-understand. Our duty’s to obey orders, and if the lieutenant says for
-us all to go to Santy Fee, go we will. But we’ll not go there by any
-orders o’ the Spanish.”
-
-This evening Corporal Jerry Jackson was started out, to get John Sparks
-and Tom Dougherty, if he could, and also Hugh Menaugh, on the other
-side of the mountains. He took with him Freegift Stout, William Gordon,
-John Brown and John Mountjoy.
-
-That left in the stockade only the lieutenant, Sergeant Meek, Terry
-Miller, Jake Carter and Alex Roy (whose feet had been badly frozen),
-and Stub. They missed the doctor, and Corporal Jerry’s squad, but could
-get along for a few days.
-
-This was February 7. No word might be expected from the doctor or
-Corporal Jerry for at least a week. Nothing especial happened during
-the week. The men and Stub kept on laboring at the stockade, the
-lieutenant read in a French book a great deal, or hunted for deer,
-taking Stub as companion.
-
-By the sixteenth the walls of the stockade were about done, and the
-inside ditch, for the pickets, was being pecked out――a slow job in the
-frozen earth. Nine days had passed, and still there was no sign from
-the doctor or Corporal Jerry. This morning the lieutenant and Stub
-went out hunting again, down the main river. The lieutenant carried
-his favorite musket――the one whose grip had been mended. Stub wore a
-pistol, the mate to Hugh Menaugh’s, borrowed from the lieutenant.
-
-They had tramped about six miles, had just wounded a deer and were
-trailing it, when the lieutenant suddenly exclaimed:
-
-“Halt. Be quiet. Somebody’s coming.”
-
-Two strangers, horseback, were topping a rise, half a mile before and a
-little on the right or west.
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-VISITORS FROM THE SOUTH
-
-
-“Not wild Indians; Spanish, rather,” mused the lieutenant, as, standing
-motionless, he and Stub gazed. “Hah! They may be videttes (scouts) from
-a large party, or they may be hunters like ourselves. We’ll turn back,
-my boy; not from fear but to avoid trouble if possible.”
-
-So they turned back, in the direction of the stockade. Glancing behind,
-Stub saw the two horsemen descending the hill at a gallop.
-
-“They’re coming, lieutenant. They’ve seen us.”
-
-“The sound of our gun no doubt attracted them first. They seem to be
-alone. Very well. They must not be permitted to think that we’re afraid
-of them. Should they persist in coming on, we’ll face them.”
-
-The two horsemen did come on, flourishing their lances as if in a
-charge. They were closing the gap rapidly――were within gunshot, when
-the lieutenant barked the brisk order:
-
-“Now! Face about! We’ll show them the muzzles of our guns.”
-
-They turned, and leveled musket and pistol. The two horsemen instantly
-pulled their mounts short, whirled, and bending low scudded away. In a
-short distance they halted, and sat waiting.
-
-“We’ll advance on them,” quoth the lieutenant.
-
-But the first few steps sent the pair scurrying in retreat again.
-
-“All right,” said the lieutenant. “They respect our weapons and see we
-do not fear theirs. Maybe they’ll let us take our way.”
-
-However, when he and Stub proceeded on the trail for the stockade,
-on came the two horsemen in another charge. The lieutenant ordered
-a face-about――and away the two scampered, as before. This game was
-repeated several times. The stockade was not in sight, and the
-lieutenant was growing angry.
-
-“We’ll make an end to this, Stub.” His face had flushed. “I do not
-propose to be badgered. It is beneath the dignity of an American
-officer and soldier to be toyed with in such child’s play. Pay no
-further attention to them until we round that shoulder yonder. Then
-we’ll slip into a ravine there and see if we can’t lure them to close
-quarters that will bring them to account.”
-
-It was back-tickling work, to trudge on, never turning, with those
-lances threatening, closer and closer, behind. But the lieutenant gave
-no sign――until, when around the shoulder and for a moment out of sight
-by the pursuit, he sprang aside.
-
-“Quick, now!”
-
-They dived for cover and found it in a heap of large, brush-screened
-rocks. They waited, peering and listening. Pretty soon they might hear
-the hoofs of the horses. The two riders cantered into sight. They were
-quite near. One was black-bearded――wore a large ribboned hat and blue
-and red coat and leathern leggins, the same as Lieutenant Melgares’
-soldiers had worn. He was a Spanish dragoon. He carried a lance, a
-shield and short musketoon or escopeta hung at his saddle.
-
-The other was dark, without whiskers: an Indian. He wore a blue cotton
-shirt and leggins wrapped in white from moccasins to knees. His hair
-fell in two braids. He, also, carried a lance and shield.
-
-They saw nobody ahead of them, and began to move cautiously, craning,
-and checking their horses. Little by little they came on. Now they were
-within forty paces.
-
-“This will do,” the lieutenant whispered. “We have them. Lay down your
-pistol and stand up so they can see you’re unarmed. Then walk out.
-I’ll follow and cover them. If they show sign of harm, I’ll fire upon
-them instantly.”
-
-Stub bravely stood into full view and spread his empty hands. He was
-not afraid; not while Lieutenant Pike was backing him.
-
-The two horsemen were completely surprised. They reined in and sat
-poised and gawking, on the verge of flight. But the lieutenant’s gun
-muzzle held them fast, while Stub walked toward them, his hand up in
-the peace sign. The lieutenant called:
-
-“Amigos (Friends)! Americanos (Americans)!” And he must have beckoned,
-for the two timidly edged forward, ready to run or to fight. Evidently
-they would rather run.
-
-The lieutenant advanced also, and joined Stub.
-
-“Take your pistol. Here it is. We’ll talk with them. Do you know
-Spanish?”
-
-“I’ve forgotten,” Stub stammered.
-
-“We’ll manage with signs and the few words we do know. At the same time
-we must stand prepared to fire.”
-
-“Where are you from?” he queried sharply, in French.
-
-The dragoon seemed to understand.
-
-“From Santa Fe, señor.”
-
-“How far is Santa Fe?”
-
-“Three days as we come, señor.”
-
-“What are you doing here?”
-
-“We hunt.”
-
-They got off their horses, and led them in nearer; then they smiled
-friendly, and sat down and rolled themselves smokes. The lieutenant and
-Stub warily sat down, opposite. It was a little council. Stub eyed the
-Indian. He was a tame Indian――one of the house-building Indians from
-the south: a Pueblo.
-
-“What do you hunt?” asked Lieutenant Pike.
-
-“Game, señor. Do you hunt, also?”
-
-“We travel down the Red River, to the American fort of Natchitoches.”
-
-“Another stranger has arrived, in Santa Fe. His name is Robinson. He is
-an American. The governor received him well. He comes from your party?”
-
-“There is no such man in my party,” the lieutenant answered; which was
-true, now.
-
-Presently he arose. It was difficult talking by signs and short words.
-
-“A Díos, señores. A pleasant journey to you.”
-
-“One moment, señor,” begged the dragoon. “Where is your camp?”
-
-“It is far; we have several camps. So good-by.”
-
-He and Stub started on. But the dragoon and the Indian mounted their
-horses and followed. They were determined to find the camp.
-
-“They are spies,” said the lieutenant. “We cannot get rid of them
-without trouble, and I have orders to avoid trouble. We shall have to
-take them in.”
-
-So he and Stub waited, and it was just as well, for soon the regular
-trail up river to the stockade was reached; the two horsemen struck
-into it, and forged ahead, peering eagerly. The trail crossed the fork
-above the stockade――and the first thing the two horsemen knew they were
-stopped in short order by Alex Roy who was posted as sentinel.
-
-That astonished them again. They could just glimpse the stockade, they
-heard Alex challenge them, and saw his gun――and ducking and dodging
-they raced back, to the lieutenant.
-
-“Do not fear. Come,” he spoke.
-
-He led them on; they left their horses outside, and, still frightened,
-followed him and Stub through an opening in the stockade, which was
-being used until the ditch and the hole were ready.
-
-They stayed all that day. The men had orders to watch them, but not to
-talk with them. They stared about as much as they could. They asked
-several times where the Americans’ horses were, and how many men the
-lieutenant had. Lieutenant Pike said that these were only a part of
-his men, and that he had marched without horses, through the snow. He
-was going down the Red River, holding councils with the Indians on the
-borders of the United States. If the governor at Santa Fe would send
-somebody who spoke good French or English, he would explain everything.
-
-The dragoon and the Pueblo did not believe; and when they rode away in
-the morning they were as suspicious as ever. They said they would be
-in Santa Fe in two days with the lieutenant’s message to the governor,
-whose name was Don Joaquin del Real Alencaster. The lieutenant had
-given them a few presents, which appeared to please them. The Pueblo
-gave the lieutenant some deer meat, part of a goose, a sack of meal and
-pieces of flat, hard-baked bread.
-
-Everybody was glad to see them go, but――――
-
-“It’s an ill wind that brought ’em,” Sergeant Meek remarked. “Not
-blaming him or the cap’n, the doctor did it. To be sure the Spanish
-would set out to s’arch the country. Unless I’m mistaken, we’ll see
-more of ’em.”
-
-The lieutenant thought the same. He ordered that the work of finishing
-the stockade be rushed, and even lent a hand himself. He had no idea
-of leaving until Hugh, and John Sparks and Tom, across the mountains,
-and Baroney and Pat Smith, on the Arkansaw with the horses, had been
-brought in.
-
-It was high time that Corporal Jerry and party turned up. They had been
-gone a long while, and were needed. Five men and a boy were a small
-garrison. This evening Corporal Jerry, with John Brown, William Gordon
-and John Mountjoy, did arrive. After he had reported to the lieutenant,
-he told his story to the rest of them.
-
-“Yes, we found Hugh, but we had to cross in snow middle deep, to do it.
-He’s comin’ on with Freegift. They’ll be down to-morrow. We went back
-to Sparks an’ Dougherty, too.”
-
-“How are they?”
-
-“Bad off. Ah, boys, ’twould melt your hearts to see ’em. They sheer
-wept when we hailed ’em. They’ve got food enough yet, even after the
-near two months; but they can scarce walk a step. Their feet are gone,
-an’ they’ve hardly a finger between ’em. So we couldn’t move ’em; not
-through the snow of the passes. We did what we could to cheer ’em up,
-but when we left they acted like they never expected to see us again.
-Yes; an’ they sent over bones from their feet, for the cap’n, an’ made
-me promise to give ’em to him as a token an’ to beg him, by all that’s
-sacred, not to let the two of ’em die like beasts, alone in the wilds.
-When I gave him the bones an’ told him, he turned white an’ his eyes
-filled up. ‘They should know me better than that,’ said he. ‘Never
-would I abandon them. To restore them to their homes and their country
-again I’d carry the end of a litter, myself, through snow and mountains
-for months.’”
-
-“He’d do it,” asserted Sergeant Meek. “And so would any of us. Bones
-from their feet, is it? Who but a soldier would lose the smallest joint
-for such a pittance of pay, even to serve his country? Surely the
-Government won’t lose sight o’ men like poor John and Tom.”
-
-The lieutenant took prompt measures. The news from the back trail had
-affected him sorely. This same evening he approached the men who were
-sitting around the fire. They sprang up, to attention.
-
-“You have heard of the condition of Sparks and Dougherty,” he
-addressed. “They must be brought in at once, with all possible speed.”
-He paused, as if planning.
-
-Sergeant Meek saluted.
-
-“One man and myself will take the trip, sir, with your permission. Jest
-give us the word, sir.”
-
-“I’m with you, sergeant,” blurted Terry Miller.
-
-“None better,” accepted the sergeant. “We’ll go on back to the
-Arkansaw, cap’n, for the hosses. And with the hosses we’ll pick up
-John and Tom, and if they can’t ride we’ll sling ’em in litters.”
-
-Lieutenant Pike colored with pleasure.
-
-“That is handsome of you, sergeant; and of you, Miller. You will march
-as soon as Stout and Menaugh get in, and we can make the preparations.
-Your volunteering for a journey afoot of almost two hundred miles over
-two ranges of mountains waist deep in snow, at the risk of encountering
-savages, and soldiers of a nation that may not be friendly, is worthy
-of the uniform that you have worn.”
-
-“By your leave, sir, there are some others who’d be proud to share the
-honor with the sergeant and Terry,” spoke up Jake Carter, crippled
-though he was. “I’ll answer for my feet, sir. They’ll carry me, once I
-limber ’em up.”
-
-“Two will be enough. I’m sorry that I can’t spare more, my man. I see
-that if you all had your way you’d leave me without a garrison.”
-
-Sergeant Meek and Terry felt highly tickled at having got in ahead of
-the rest.
-
-The next morning Hugh and Freegift arrived all right. The other two
-were to start early on the morrow. Ten pounds of deer meat apiece was
-all that might be spared them; they said it was plenty――they had to
-travel light, anyway, and would hunt as they went.
-
-The lieutenant, with Corporal Jackson, John Mountjoy and William Gordon
-and Stub, walked with them for six miles, so that they might be shown
-a better pass for the horses, than the one used by the corporal. Jerry
-had reported that his pass was four feet deep with snow, during three
-days’ travel.
-
-After the sergeant and Terry had trudged on, the others killed a deer;
-Stub and Corporal Jerry were sent back with it, to the stockade, but
-the lieutenant took John and Bill with him, on a farther scout, down
-the east side of the main river.
-
-They were gone all day and the night. When they came in, the next
-afternoon, they said that they had discovered fresh signs of men and
-horses, south. The lieutenant called the garrison together and issued
-strict orders. The two spies had left five days ago; and if Santa Fe
-was only two days’ march distant, soldiers from there were likely to
-appear at any moment now.
-
-“We must especially watch out for Indians, my lads,” he directed. “The
-tribes hereabouts are doubtless under the influence of the Spanish
-government in New Mexico. When any strangers are sighted loitering
-about or passing, you are to retire unobserved, if possible. If they
-see you, you are not to run, however, nor permit them to approach you
-with the idea of disarming you or taking you prisoner. Should you be
-unable to evade them, you are to guard your liberty and bring them to
-the fort, where I will attend to them.”
-
-A sentry was posted all day on the top of a hill at the edge of the
-stockade prairie, from where he had a fine view up and down the fork
-and along the main river also. During the nights another sentry kept
-watch from one of the bastions or little block-houses on the land-side
-corners of the stockade.
-
-The stockade had been enclosed by the log walls, the pickets had been
-planted, and within a day or two the outside ditch would be ready for
-the water.
-
-On February 24 the lieutenant took Stub again upon another scout and
-hunt. The two spies had been gone seven days, and nothing had been
-heard from them. He was getting nervous while waiting for the sergeant
-and Terry to return with the horses, Baroney, Pat, and John and Tom.
-Meat was low; the men themselves had been too busy to hunt――but the
-water was in the ditch and everything was snug and shipshape.
-
-He and Stub were out two days, scouting eastward, to examine the
-traveled road along which the Spanish might come. They made a circle
-and arrived “home,” lugging the meat of three deer, about nine o’clock
-at night.
-
-Corporal Jerry greeted them, after the challenge of Freegift Stout, who
-was the guard in the bastion.
-
-“We were beginnin’ to be scared for you, sir,” he said. “We didn’t know
-but what the Injuns or the Spanish had taken you.”
-
-“All quiet here, corporal?”
-
-“Yes, sir; all quiet.”
-
-“That’s good. We’d have been back sooner, only we hunted farther than
-we intended, and had heavy loads to pack in. Now if the other men with
-the horses return in safety, we may all march on unmolested, through
-American territory.”
-
-But in the morning, while they were at breakfast, the musket of John
-Brown, on the hill, sounded――“Boom!” It was a signal: “Strangers in
-sight.” Corporal Jerry dropped his knife and bolted into a bastion, to
-look. Everybody paused, to learn the news.
-
-Back ran Corporal Jerry, to the lieutenant, who was standing at the
-entrance to his brush lean-to, buckling on his sword.
-
-“Two men are crossin’ the prairie for the fort, sir. Menaugh (Hugh was
-the sentinel pacing outside) is about to stop ’em.”
-
-“See what they have to say. And if there are no more, admit them,”
-ordered the lieutenant.
-
-Away ran Corporal Jerry, for already Hugh was calling for the corporal
-of the guard, while holding off the two strangers.
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-IN THE HANDS OF THE SPANIARDS
-
-
-In a few minutes the two strangers crawled through the hole. They were
-clad in blanket-coats and deer-hide trousers and fur caps; looked like
-French traders――and Frenchmen they proved to be, for the lieutenant
-called to them, in French, “Come here,” and he and they talked together
-in that language.
-
-Stub might catch only a word now and then; the men listened, puzzled,
-prepared to grasp their stacked guns.
-
-The lieutenant finished the conversation. The Frenchmen bowed politely
-again, he saluted them and spoke to his party.
-
-“These are two Frenchmen from Santa Fe, lads,” he said. “They inform
-me that the governor of New Mexico is fearful of an attack upon us by
-the Utah Indians, and has sent a detachment of fifty dragoons for our
-protection. The detachment is within two days’ march of us. You know
-your duty. I rely upon you to act in a manner that will reflect credit
-upon our Country.”
-
-Scarcely had he spoken when they all heard the sentinels outside
-hailing loudly, with “Halt! Who comes there? Corp’ral of the guar-rd!
-Post Number One!”
-
-Out dived Corporal Jerry, once more.
-
-“To arms! Man the works, men!” the lieutenant rapped.
-
-They grabbed guns and hustled for the platforms under the loopholes.
-There were more loopholes than men. Peeping through his, Stub might
-see out into the prairie before the stockade. From up the fork a large
-body of mounted soldiers had ridden into the edge of the clearing. John
-Brown, who had come in from his hill, and Hugh Menaugh were holding
-them back, Corporal Jerry was hastening to the scene.
-
-The lieutenant also had seen.
-
-“That is the company?” he demanded, of the two Frenchmen.
-
-“Oui, Monsieur Lieutenant.”
-
-“Tell the commander with my compliments to leave his men in the woods
-where he now is, and I will meet him on the prairie before the fort.”
-
-“Oui, oui.”
-
-Out went the two Frenchmen.
-
-“They look like a hundred,” remarked Jake Carter. “We’re only eight,
-and an officer an’ a boy. But what’s the difference?”
-
-“Sure, in case of a dust, Meek and Terry an’ the rest of ’em will be
-sorry to miss it,” replied soldier Mountjoy.
-
-“Hooray for a brush, if that’s the word. We’re equal to it, no matter
-how many they send ag’in us.”
-
-The men were keen for a fight. ’Twas a great thing, thought Stub, to
-be an American. But the Spanish soldiers, halted at the edge of the
-prairie within short gunshot, looked strong. About fifty, in one body,
-were the dragoons; fifty appeared to be a mixture――a part Indians. But
-all were well armed with short muskets, pistols, swords, lances and
-shields――some in one style, some in another.
-
-The lieutenant had left and was striding into the prairie, to meet two
-Spanish officers. He had taken only his sword, by his side. That would
-show his rank, for his clothes certainly did not. Nevertheless, the
-two Spanish officers, all in their heavy crimson cloaks, and decorated
-hats, and long boots, did not look any more gallant than he in his
-ragged blanket-coat, torn trousers, moccasins and fur-lined bedraggled
-makeshift cap.
-
-The three saluted, and talked for a short time. Beyond, at the timber,
-the horses pawed and snorted. Corporal Jerry and the two sentries
-stayed, vigilant. At the loopholes, inside the stockade, the five men
-and Stub peered, ready.
-
-Presently one of the Spanish officers shouted a command to the
-soldiers; they relaxed, at ease――some dismounted, to stretch their
-legs; he and the other officer followed Lieutenant Pike to the stockade.
-
-“No fight, hey?” uttered Alex Roy.
-
-“But no surrender, either, you can bet,” grunted Freegift. “The cap’n
-likely has something up his sleeve.”
-
-The lieutenant entered, through the hole; the two Spanish officers
-crawled in after――and an odd sight they made as they straightened
-up, to stare about them curiously. It was plain that they were much
-astonished by the completeness of the trap.
-
-The lieutenant led the two officers to his brush shelter. Stub heard
-his own name called――the lieutenant beckoned to him. So he jumped down
-and went over.
-
-“These two gentlemen of the Spanish army of New Mexico are to be my
-guests at breakfast, boy,” said the lieutenant. “I wish you to serve
-us. Bring out the best we have. The provisions given me by the Indian
-we met can now be put to good use.”
-
-It was fortunate indeed that the lieutenant had saved the meal, goose
-and pieces of bread particularly. They were a treat――although doubtless
-the Spanish soldiers were used to even that fare. At any rate, most of
-the stuff soon disappeared, washed down by water, after the table had
-been set, so to speak.
-
-The lieutenant and his guests chatted in French. When they had finished
-eating, and the two Spanish officers had wiped their moustaches with
-fine white handkerchiefs, the lieutenant said, crisply:
-
-“Have I the pleasure to understand that this is a friendly call upon me
-by his Majesty’s troops, at the instance of the New Mexico government?”
-
-The elder officer coughed. He answered politely:
-
-“Señor, the Governor of New Mexico, being informed that you have missed
-your route, has ordered me to offer you in his name mules, horses,
-money, or whatever you may need, for the purpose of conducting you to
-the head of the Red River. From Santa Fe that is eight days’ journey,
-before open to navigation. We have guides and know the routes.”
-
-“What! Missed my route, sir? Is not this the Red River?”
-
-“No, señor. This is the Rio Grande del Norte, of New Mexico. The Red
-River is many leagues to the southeast.”
-
-The lieutenant flushed red. His thin hands clinched, and he gazed
-bewildered.
-
-“Impossible. Why was I not told this by those two men ten days ago, and
-I would have withdrawn?”
-
-The officer twirled his moustache and shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“Quien sabe (Who knows), Señor Don Lieutenant? But I now have the honor
-to inform you, and am at your service.”
-
-The lieutenant recovered, and stepped outside a few paces.
-
-“Stout!”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Lower the flag and roll it up. It will not be hoisted again without my
-orders.”
-
-“Sir?” Freegift stammered. And――――
-
-“Oh, no, sir! Not that! Not haul down the flag! Let us keep it flyin’,
-sir. We can do it.”
-
-Those were the cries. The lieutenant lifted his hand.
-
-“Silence. I thank you, men. This is not surrender. I have no thought
-of surrender. But we are not upon the Red River. We are upon the Rio
-del Norte, in Mexican territory, and in courtesy to that government I
-am lowering the flag of my own free-will. By building this stockade we
-have unwittingly trespassed.”[I]
-
-[I] All the Rio Grande River which flows southward through south
-central Colorado into New Mexico was Spanish territory. The Lieutenant
-Pike party had crossed the Sangre de Cristo Range and had struck the
-Rio Grande near present Alamosa in the southern half of Colorado’s
-great San Luis Park or Valley. The largest of the White Mountains, on
-the east, was Sierra Blanca (“White Mountain” today), altitude 14,390
-feet, ranking third among the peaks of the Rockies. From the camp at
-the river the Pike men had travelled south, and built their stockade
-about five miles up the Conejos (Rabbits) River, which enters the Rio
-Grande from the west. Did he know this to be the Rio Grande del Norte,
-or did he really think it to be the Red River? Why did he stop in what
-was certainly Spanish territory? Did he wish to be captured? Or did he
-only take a chance? Historians have puzzled over this ever since.
-
-The men muttered; the two visiting officers sat uneasy; but Freegift
-lowered the flag, caught it in his arms, and with rather a black glance
-at the red cloaks folded it carefully.
-
-“By thunder, when we raise it ag’in, it’ll stay,” he grumbled, as he
-went to stow it away.
-
-“His Excellency Governor Alencaster requests the pleasure of a talk
-with you at Santa Fe, señor,” said the elder officer, with a smile, to
-the lieutenant. “He is desirous of entertaining you and learning the
-story of your journey. For your accommodation he has provided me with
-one hundred animals, to carry your baggage.”
-
-“I thank His Excellency, but it is impossible for me to accept the
-invitation,” replied Lieutenant Pike, seating himself again. “I can
-only send him my apologies for trespassing, by mistake, upon his
-domain. I will wait here merely until the return of my sergeant and the
-remainder of my company, and then withdraw at once to American soil. My
-orders forbid me entering into Spanish territory.”
-
-“His Excellency will be much distressed not to see you, señor,” the
-officer insisted. “I must beg of you to take advantage of our escort.
-Otherwise I cannot answer for your safety.”
-
-At this, the lieutenant straightened, and his eyes flashed.
-
-“My safety will be attended to, sir. I shall not move until the safety
-of my sergeant and party, some of whom may be suffering, is assured
-also. Do I understand that your intent is to use force to convey me to
-the governor?”
-
-The officer spread his hands and shook his head.
-
-“No, no, señor! Not in the least. But it is necessary that for the
-information of the governor-general the governor of New Mexico should
-receive from you personally an explanation of your presence within his
-frontier, that he may send in the proper report. If you wish to go
-with us now, very well; or if you wish to wait for the return of your
-other party, very well. But in that case we shall be obliged to obtain
-more provisions from Santa Fe, and dispatch a small number for that
-purpose.” Even Stub, who had been listening agog, and catching most
-of the words, knew that this meant reinforcements. “If you decide to
-march with us now,” the officer added, “I will leave here an Indian who
-speaks English, and a part of my dragoons, to greet your sergeant and
-escort him and his men to join you at Santa Fe.”
-
-The lieutenant bit his lip and fidgeted. He was of two minds; but one
-thing was certain: he could not get rid of these Spanish without a big
-fight. And the worst of that would be, that he was an invader and had
-broken the law.
-
-He did not hesitate long.
-
-“I shall not yield to force, sir,” he said. “We are American soldiers
-and prepared to defend ourselves, as you have seen. However, in
-consideration of your courteous attitude I am disposed to go with your
-escort to His Excellency, and give him the explanation that is due from
-one friendly nation to another. But I must leave two of my men here,
-to receive the sergeant and reassure him; otherwise, I promise you, he
-will not come on without a fight, except by direct orders from me.”
-
-“That is agreed, señor,” bowed the officer. “And we may consider the
-matter very happily settled. You have my respectful thanks.”
-
-The lieutenant’s eyes fell upon Stub.
-
-“Tell Stout to send Corporal Jackson in to me.” He spoke to the Spanish
-officer. “I will instruct my men to permit yours to approach, and would
-suggest that you inform your company we are willing to receive them as
-friends, if their actions so warrant.”
-
-“Thanks, señor.”
-
-Stub sought Freegift Stout.
-
-“The lieutenant says for you to tell Jerry to come in.”
-
-Freegift climbed down.
-
-“What’s it all about? Say! Is it true we’re not on the Red River yet,
-but on what they call the Rio del Norte? Sure, that’s not so.”
-
-“It’s what they say. The lieutenant believes it. And we’re going to
-Santa Fe.”
-
-“For what?”
-
-“The governor wants to talk with him.”
-
-“But not without a dust! Oh, no, now! Leave these good works, an’ go
-without a dust?”
-
-Stub nodded soberly. Freegift dared not delay longer. He went off
-muttering. The other men also murmured. The plan was not to their
-liking.
-
-Freegift returned with Corporal Jerry. The men trooped after him, to
-the lieutenant. Freegift acted as speaker. He saluted――――
-
-“What’s this? Why have you left your posts?” the lieutenant demanded.
-
-“Please, cap’n. Beggin your pardon, sir――but ’tain’t true, is it, that
-were layin’ down our arms an’ givin’ up to them Spanish, to march out,
-an’ no fight offered? Sure, sir, we’re only eight and a boy; but we’re
-behind good walls, an’ you’re the proper kind of an officer, an’
-’twould be no great job at all to hold them fellers off till we could
-slip away with colors flyin’. You can’t trust them fellers, sir. An’ if
-you’ll only give us the orders, sir, we’ll hand out a dose of Yankee
-Doodle; eh, boys?”
-
-“Yes, sir! We’re ready for a dust, cap’n, sir. We’d rather trust to our
-muskets than to those Spanish. We’re not afeared of ’em.”
-
-“That will do,” Lieutenant Pike answered, but not unkindly. “You’re
-brave lads. I know I can depend on you――and with you I’d like to test
-our defences at which you’ve worked so faithfully. But we are marching
-of our own free will, and shall retain our arms. My orders are to avoid
-a conflict with the Mexican forces, unless attacked. Since we are
-unfortunately in Spanish territory, it will be better if we proceed
-boldly to the New Mexican capital, at the invitation of the governor,
-rather than put ourselves in the wrong by resistance.”
-
-“Yes, sir. If you say so, sir,” they replied, with glum faces.
-
-“Corporal, you may draw the sentries in,” continued the lieutenant “The
-Spanish soldiers are to be allowed to move freely outside of the works.
-Some of the men may meet them, to treat them civilly, for I wish no
-sign of suspicion to be shown.”
-
-The two Spanish officers had gone to their troops. A great cheering
-arose, from that direction, as if the soldiery had been told that there
-would be no fighting, and were heartily glad.
-
-The Spanish flocked forward, into the prairie in front of the stockade.
-Freegift and several of the other men, and Stub, did sally out, curious
-to inspect their new friends. The Spanish soldiers were regular
-dragoons, fifty; and mounted militia, fifty――a mixture, these, of
-Spaniards and Mexicans and Indians.
-
-And they were kind and friendly, indeed. They brought food and blankets
-and insisted that the Americans accept. Freegift himself finally
-admitted:
-
-“Well, I’d still prefer a little dust, for the honor of the army
-an’ a proof that a half-froze American is as good a man as a dozen
-foreigners; but I don’t deny they’re treatin’ us mighty handsome, the
-same as brothers-at-arms. The colors of ’em are a bit peculiar, yet
-their hearts seem white.”
-
-Toward noon Corporal Jerry sought out all the garrison and called them
-together, inside.
-
-“Mountjoy, you an’ I are to stay here, with some of the Spanish, an’ a
-letter from the cap’n to hand to the sergeant when he comes. The rest
-of you are to get ready to march at once. So good luck to you――an’
-we’ll see you later.”
-
-“That you will,” they answered. “And be sure you fetch Sparks and
-Dougherty. They’re the ones who need all these fine fixin’s.”
-
-Horses were provided, as promised by the Spanish officer. Riding
-comfortably on these, and escorted by fifty of the dragoons and
-militia and the two officers (whose names were Lieutenant Don Ignatio
-Saltelo and Lieutenant Don Bartholomew Fernandez), after dinner they
-rode twelve miles westward up the fork to the Spanish camp. Now they
-numbered only Lieutenant Pike, Privates Freegift Stout, Alex Roy, Hugh
-Menaugh, William Gordon, Jacob Carter, John Brown, and Jack Pursley
-otherwise Stub. Corporal Jerry Jackson and Private John Mountjoy
-remained at the stockade, with the other fifty Spanish soldiers, to
-wait for Sergeant Meek, and Private Terry Miller, who were bringing in,
-across the mountains, John Sparks and Tom Dougherty (lacking feet and
-fingers), Baroney Vasquez and interpreter, Pat Smith, and the horses.
-
-Truly, the little American column had become much scattered.
-
-“Jinks! I’d like to be there at the reception and see the sergeant’s
-face,” Alex Roy chuckled. “’Specially when he learns we ain’t been on
-the Red River at all!”
-
-“It may seem like a joke, but it’s a rough one,” quoth William Gordon.
-“A look at the cap’n’s face is enough for me. To think, after all
-these months he’s never got anywhere. ’Twill be a great report that
-he’ll have to turn in, ’less he aims to l’arn something of the Spanish
-country. At any rate, we’ve hauled down our flag, and given up our fort
-and I’m sorry for him. He deserved better.”
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-STUB REACHES END O’ TRAIL
-
-
-“Santa Fe! The city of Santa Fe! Behold!”
-
-Those were the cries adown the delighted column. Here they were, at
-last; but this was the evening of the fifth day since leaving the camp,
-and the distance was more than one hundred and sixty miles. The two
-spies, who had said that Santa Fe was only two days’ journey from the
-stockade, had lied.
-
-The first stage of the trip had been very cold, in deep snow. Then, on
-the third day, or March 1, they had emerged into a country of warmth
-and grass and buds, at the first of the Mexican settlements――a little
-town named Aqua Caliente or Warm Springs. Hooray!
-
-They all, the Americans, viewed it curiously. The houses were low and
-one-story, of yellowish mud, with flat roofs; grouped close together so
-that they made an open square in the middle of the town and their rears
-formed a bare wall on the four sides.
-
-“’Tis like a big brick-kiln, by jinks,” remarked Freegift. “Now I
-wonder do they build this way for fear o’ the Injuns?”
-
-The people here numbered about five hundred――mainly Indians themselves,
-but tame Indians, Pueblos who lived in houses, with a mingling of
-Mexican blood. From the house-tops they welcomed the column; and
-thronging to meet it they brought out food and other gifts for the
-strangers. That night there was a dance, with the Americans as guests
-of honor.
-
-“If this is the way they treat prisoners,” the men grinned, “sure,
-though some of us can’t shake our feet yet, we’re agreeable to the good
-intentions.”
-
-The same treatment had occurred all the way down along the Rio Grande
-del Norte, through a succession of the flat mud villages. There had
-been feasting, dancing, and at every stop the old women and old men had
-taken the Americans into the houses and dressed their frozen feet.
-
-“This feet-washin’ and food-givin’ makes a feller think on Bible
-times,” William Gordon asserted. “The pity is, that we didn’t ketch up
-with that Spanish column that was lookin’ for us and gone right home
-with ’em for a friendly visit. They’d likely have put us on the Red
-River and have saved us our trouble.”
-
-“Well, we ain’t turned loose yet, remember,” counseled Hugh Menaugh.
-“From what I l’arn, the Melgares column didn’t aim to entertain us
-with anything more’n a fight. But now we’re nicely done, without
-fightin’.”
-
-“Yes, this here politeness may be only a little celebration,” Alex
-mused. “It’s cheap. For me, I’d prefer a dust or two, to keep us in
-trim.”
-
-There had been one bit of trouble, which had proved that the
-lieutenant, also, was not to be bamboozled. In the evening, at the
-village named San Juan, or St. John, the men and Stub were together in
-a large room assigned to them, when the lieutenant hastily entered. He
-had been dining at the priest’s house, with Lieutenant Bartholomew; but
-now a stranger accompanied him――a small, dark, sharp-faced man.
-
-The lieutenant seemed angry.
-
-“Shut the door and bar it,” he ordered, of John Brown. Then he turned
-on the stranger. “We will settle our matters here,” he rapped, in
-French; and explained, to the men: “This fellow is a spy, from the
-governor. He has been dogging me and asking questions in poor English
-all the way from the priest’s house. I have requested him to speak
-in his own language, which is French, but he understands English and
-would pretend that he is a prisoner to the Spanish――‘like ourselves,’
-he alleges. I have informed him that we have committed no crime, are
-not prisoners, and fear nothing. We are free Americans. As for you,”
-he continued, to the man, roundly, “I know you to be only a miserable
-spy, hired by the governor in hopes that you will win my sympathy and
-get me to betray secrets. I have nothing to reveal. But it is in my
-power to punish such scoundrels as you”――here the lieutenant drew his
-sword――“and if you now make the least resistance I will use the sabre
-that I have in my hand.”
-
-“Let us fix him, sir,” cried Hugh, Freegift, and the others. “We’ll pay
-him an’ save the governor the trouble.”
-
-They crowded forward. The dark man’s legs gave out under him and down
-he flopped, to his knees.
-
-“No, señores! For the love of God don’t kill me. I will confess all.”
-He was so frightened that his stammering English might scarcely be
-understood. “His Excellency the governor ordered me to ask many
-questions. That is true. And it is true that I am no prisoner. I am a
-resident of Santa Fe, and well treated. The governor said that if I
-pretended hatred of the country you would be glad of my help. I see now
-that you are honest men.”
-
-“What is your name?” the lieutenant demanded.
-
-“Baptiste Lelande, señor, at your service.”
-
-“You can be of no service to me save by getting out of my sight,”
-retorted the lieutenant, scornfully, and clapping his sword back into
-its sheath. “You are a thief, and doubtless depend upon the governor
-for your safety. Tell His Excellency that the next time he employs
-spies upon us he should choose those of more skill and sense, but that
-I question whether he can find any such, to do that kind of work. Now
-begone.”
-
-John Brown opened the door. The man scuttled out.
-
-“My lads,” spoke the lieutenant, when the door had been closed again,
-“this is the second time that I have been approached by spies, on
-the march. On the first occasion I assumed to yield, and contented
-the rascal by giving into his keeping a leaf or two copied from my
-journal――which in fact merely recounted the truth as to our number and
-our setting forth from the Missouri River. The fellow could not read,
-and is treasuring the paper, for the eyes of the governor. If I am to
-be plagued this way, I fear that my baggage or person may be searched,
-and my records obtained by our long toil be stolen. Accordingly I shall
-trust in you, knowing that you will not fail me. I have decided to
-distribute my important papers among you, that you may carry them on
-your persons, out of sight.”
-
-So he did.
-
-“They’ll be ready for you when you want ’em, cap’n, sir,” Freegift
-promised, as the men stowed the papers underneath their shirts. “If the
-Spanish want ’em, they’ll have to take our skins at the same time.”
-
-“That they will,” was the chorus.
-
-“To the boy here I consign the most important article of all,” pursued
-the lieutenant, “because he is the least likely to be molested. It is
-my journal of the whole trip. If that were lost, much of our labors
-would have been thrown away. I can rely on you to keep it safe, Stub?”
-
-“Yes, sir.” And Stub also stowed away his charge――a thin book with
-stained red covers, in which the lieutenant had so frequently written,
-at night.
-
-“We will arrive at Santa Fe to-morrow, lads,” the lieutenant had
-warned. “And if my baggage is subjected to a search by order of the
-governor, I shall feel safe regarding my papers.”
-
-Presently he left.
-
-“Lalande, the nincompoop was, was he?” remarked Jake Carter. “Well, he
-got his come-upments. But ain’t he the same that the doctor was lookin’
-for――the sly one who skipped off with a trader’s goods?”
-
-“So what more could be expected, than dirty work, from the likes!” Hugh
-proposed.
-
-The lieutenant fared so heartily at the priest’s house that this night
-he was ill. In the morning, which was that of March 3, they all had
-ridden on southward, led by him and by the pleasant Don Lieutenant
-Bartholomew. They had passed through several more villages, one
-resembling another; and in the sunset, after crossing a high mesa or
-flat tableland covered with cedars, at the edge they had emerged into
-view of Santa Fe, below.
-
-“Santa Fe! La ciudad muy grande (The great city)! Mira (See)!”
-
-Those were the urgent exclamations from the dragoons and militia.
-
-“‘Great city,’ they say?” Hugh uttered, to Stub. “Huh! Faith, it looks
-like a fleet o’ flatboats, left dry an’ waitin’ for a spring rise!”
-
-It was larger than the other villages or towns, and lay along both
-flanks of a creek. There were two churches, one with two round-topped
-steeples; but all the other buildings were low and flat-roofed and
-ugly, ranged upon three or four narrow crooked streets. At this side of
-the town there appeared to be the usual square, surrounded by the mud
-buildings. Yes, the two-steepled church fronted upon it.
-
-As they rode down from the mesa, by the road that they had been
-following, the town seemed to wake up. They could hear shouting, and
-might see people running afoot and galloping horseback, making for the
-square.
-
-A bevy of young men, gaily dressed, raced, ahorse, to meet the column.
-The whole town evidently knew that the Americans were coming. The
-square was filled with excited men, women and children, all chattering
-and staring.
-
-Lieutenant Bartholomew cleared the way through them, and halted in
-front of a very long, low building, with a porch supported on a row of
-posts made of small logs, and facing the square, opposite the church.
-He swung off. The dragoons and militia kept the crowd back.
-
-Lieutenant Pike, in his old clothes, swung off.
-
-“Dismount!” he called. “We are to enter here, lads. Bear yourselves
-boldly. We are American soldiers, and have nothing to fear.”
-
-He strode on, firm and erect, following the guidance of Lieutenant
-Bartholomew.
-
-“Keep together,” Freegift cautioned; and the men pushed after, trying
-not to limp, and to carry their army muskets easily. Stub brought
-up the tail of the little procession. He, too, was an American, and
-proud of it, no matter how they all looked, without hats, in rags and
-moccasins, the hair of heads and faces long.
-
-They entered the long-fronted building. The doorway was a full
-four feet thick. The interior was gloomy, lighted by small deep-set
-windows with dirty panes. There was a series of square, low-ceilinged
-rooms――“’Tis like a dungeon, eh?” Freegift flung back――but the earth
-floors were strewn with the pelts of buffalo, bear, panther, what-not.
-
-They were halted in a larger room, with barred windows and no outside
-door. Lieutenant Bartholomew bowed to Lieutenant Pike, and left.
-Against the walls there were several low couches, covered with furs and
-gay blankets, for seats. So they sat down, and the men stared about.
-
-“Whereabouts in here are we, I wonder,” John Brown proposed.
-
-“Did ye see them strings o’ tanned Injun ears hangin’ acrost the front
-winders!” remarked Hugh Menaugh.
-
-“Sure, we’d never find way out by ourselves,” declared Alex Roy. “It’s
-a crookeder trail than the one to the Red River.”
-
-The lieutenant briefly smiled; but he sat anxiously.
-
-Lieutenant Bartholomew suddenly returned; close behind him a large,
-heavy-set, swarthy, hard-faced man, of sharp black eyes, and dressed in
-a much decorated uniform. Lieutenant Pike hastily arose, at attention;
-they all rose.
-
-“His Excellency Don Joaquin del Real Alencaster, Governor of the
-Province of New Mexico,” Lieutenant Bartholomew announced. “I have the
-honor to present Lieutenant Don Mungo-Meri-Paike, of the American army.”
-
-Lieutenant Pike bowed; the governor bowed, and spoke at once, in French.
-
-“You command here?”
-
-“Yes, sir.” The lieutenant answered just as quickly.
-
-“Do you speak French?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“You come to reconnoiter our country, do you?”
-
-“I marched to reconnoiter our own,” replied Lieutenant Pike.
-
-“In what character are you?”
-
-“In my proper character, sir: an officer of the United States army.”
-
-[Illustration: “IN MY PROPER CHARACTER, SIR: AN OFFICER OF THE UNITED
-STATES ARMY”]
-
-“And the man Robinson――is he attached to your party?”
-
-“No.” The governor’s voice had been brusque, and the lieutenant was
-beginning to flush. But it was true that the doctor was only an
-independent volunteer.
-
-“Do you know him?”
-
-“Yes. He is from St. Louis.”
-
-“How many men have you?”
-
-“I had fifteen.” And this also was true, when counting the deserter
-Kennerman.
-
-“And this Robinson makes sixteen?” insisted the governor.
-
-“I have already told your Excellency that he does not belong to my
-party,” the lieutenant retorted. “I shall answer no more enquiries on
-the subject.”
-
-“When did you leave St. Louis?”
-
-“July 15.”
-
-“I think you marched in June.”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“Very well,” snapped the governor. “Return with Don Bartholomew to his
-house, and come here again at seven o’clock and bring your papers with
-you.”
-
-He shortly bowed, whirled on his heels and left. The lieutenant bit
-his lips, striving to hold his temper. Lieutenant Bartholomew appeared
-distressed.
-
-“A thousand apologies, Don Lieutenant,” he proffered. “His Excellency
-is in bad humor; but never mind. You are to be my guest. Your men will
-be quartered in the barracks. Please follow me.”
-
-They filed out, through the rooms, into daylight again.
-
-“A sergeant will show your men, señor. They are free to go where they
-please, in the city,” said Lieutenant Bartholomew. “My own house is at
-your service.”
-
-“Go with Lieutenant Bartholomew’s sergeant, lads,” Lieutenant Pike
-directed. “Guard your tongues and actions and remember your duty to
-your Government.”
-
-Beckoning with a flash of white teeth underneath his ferocious
-moustache the dragoon sergeant took them to the barracks. These were
-another long building on the right of the first building, fronting upon
-the west side of the square and protected by a wall with a court inside.
-
-At a sign from the sergeant they stacked their muskets and hung their
-pistols, in the court. Then they were led in to supper.
-
-“Sure, we’re goin’ to be comfortable,” Freegift uttered, glancing
-around as they ate. “The food is mighty warmin’――what you call the
-seasonin’? Pepper, ain’t it, same as we got, above? Yes.”
-
-“Did you hear what they call that other buildin’, where we were took
-first?” asked Jake Carter, of Stub.
-
-“The Palace of the Governors, the soldiers said.”
-
-“Palace!” Jake snorted. “It’s more like the keep of a bomb-proof fort.
-I’ve dreamed of palaces, but never such a one. There’s nothin’ for a
-governor to be so high and uppish about.”
-
-“The cap’n gave him tit for tat, all right,” asserted William Gordon.
-“We’ve got a verse or two of Yankee Doodle in us yet!”
-
-They finished supper and shoved back their cowhide benches.
-
-“We’re to go where we plaze, ain’t it?” queried Hugh. “So long as we
-keep bounds? Well, I’m for seein’ the town whilst I can.”
-
-“We’re with you, old hoss,” they cried, and trooped into the court.
-
-First thing, they found that their guns had vanished.
-
-Freegift scratched his shaggy head.
-
-“Now, a pretty trick. We’re disarmed. They come it over us proper, I
-say.”
-
-Spanish soldiers were passing to and fro. Some stared, some laughed,
-but nobody offered an explanation or seemed to understand the questions.
-
-“That wasn’t in the bargain, was it?” Alex Roy demanded. “The cap’n’ll
-have a word or two of the right kind ready, when he learns. Anyhow,
-we’ll soon find out whether we’re prisoners as well. Come on.”
-
-The gate at the entrance to the court was open. The guard there did not
-stop them. They had scarcely stepped out, to the square, when loitering
-soldiers and civilians, chatting with women enveloped in black shawls,
-welcomed them in Spanish and beckoned to them, and acted eager to show
-them around.
-
-“‘Buenas noches,’ is it? ‘Good evenin’ to ye,’” spoke Freegift. “I
-expect there’ll be no harm in loosenin’ up a bit. So fare as you like,
-boys, an’ have a care. I’m off. Who’s with me?”
-
-They trooped gaily away, escorted by their new Santa Fean friends.
-Stub stuck to Freegift, for a time; but every little while the men had
-to stop, and drink wine offered to them at the shops and even at the
-houses near by; so, tiring of this, he fell behind, to make the rounds
-on his own account and see what he chose to see.
-
-He was crossing the bare, hard-baked square, or plaza as they called
-it, to take another look at the strings of Indian ears festooned on
-the front of the Governor’s Palace, when through the gathering dusk
-somebody hailed him.
-
-“Hi! Muchacho! Aqui! (Hi! Boy! Here!)”
-
-It was Lieutenant Bartholomew, summoning him toward the barracks. The
-lieutenant met him.
-
-“Habla Español (You speak Spanish)?”
-
-“Very little,” Stub answered.
-
-“Bien (Good).” And the lieutenant continued eagerly. “Como se llama Ud.
-en Americano (What is your name in American)?”
-
-“Me llamo Jack Pursley (My name is Jack Pursley), señor.”
-
-“Si, si! Bien! Muy bien! (Yes, yes! Good! Very good!)” exclaimed the
-lieutenant. “Ven conmigo, pues (Come with me, then).”
-
-On he went, at such a pace that Stub, wondering, had hard work keeping
-up with him. They made a number of twists and turns through the
-crooked, darkened streets, and the lieutenant stopped before a door set
-in the mud wall of a house flush with the street itself. He opened, and
-entered――Stub on his heels. They passed down a narrow verandah, in a
-court, entered another door――――
-
-The room was lighted with two candles. It had no seats except a couple
-of blanket-covered couches against its wall; a colored picture or two
-of the saints hung on the bare walls. A man had sprung up. He was
-a tall, full-bearded man――an American even though his clothes were
-Spanish.
-
-He gazed upon Stub; Stub gaped at him.
-
-“It is the boy,” panted Lieutenant Bartholomew. “Bien?”
-
-“Jack!” shouted the man.
-
-“My dad!” Stub blurted.
-
-They charged each other, and hugged.
-
-“Good! Good!” exclaimed the lieutenant, dancing delighted. Several
-women rushed in, to peer and ask questions.
-
-“Boy, boy!” uttered Jack’s father, holding him off to look at him
-again. “I thought never to see you, after the Utes got you. They took
-you somewhere――I couldn’t find out; and finally they fetched me down to
-Santa Fe, and here I’ve been near two years, carpentering.”
-
-“Couldn’t you get away?”
-
-“No. They won’t let me. And now I’m mighty glad.”
-
-“Well, I’m here, too,” laughed Stub. “And I guess I’ll stay; but I’ll
-have to ask Lieutenant Pike.”
-
-“He’s gone to the palace, to talk with the governor again. You and I’ll
-talk with each other. I came especially to see him; thought maybe he
-might help me, and I hoped to talk with one of his kind. American blood
-is powerful scarce in Santa Fe. There’s only one simon-pure Yankee,
-except myself. He’s Sol Colly; used to be a sergeant in the army and
-was captured six years ago along with the rest of a party that invaded
-Texas. But he doesn’t live here. A Frenchman or two, here from the
-States, don’t count. My, my, it’s good to speak English and to hear it.
-As soon as the lieutenant learnt my name he remembered about you; but
-he couldn’t wait, so Don Bartholomew went to find you. Now you’ll go
-home with me, where we can be snug and private.”
-
-He spoke in Spanish to Lieutenant Bartholomew, who nodded.
-
-“Certainly, certainly, señor. Until to-morrow morning.”
-
-And Jack gladly marched home hand-in-hand with his father, James
-Pursley, of Kentucky, the discoverer of gold in Colorado, and the first
-American resident in Santa Fe.
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-GOOD-BY TO LIEUTENANT PIKE
-
-
-The lieutenant and men were to be sent clear to the city of Chihuahua,
-more than six hundred miles southward, where the commanding general of
-all Mexico had headquarters.
-
-An officer and two soldiers from Governor Alencaster had called for him
-again in the morning immediately after breakfast. He returned to the
-Lieutenant Bartholomew house fuming. Stub never before had seen him so
-angry.
-
-“I protested with all my power,” he related, to Lieutenant Bartholomew
-and Stub’s father. “I said that I should not go unless forced to by
-military strength. The governor agreed to give me a paper certifying
-to the fact that I march only as compelled to, but our detention as
-prisoners is a breach of faith. I consented to come to Santa Fe, for
-the purpose of explaining to him my accidental presence within his
-frontiers; and I have so explained. He has even read my papers and my
-commission. Now he orders us still further into the interior.”
-
-“You have my sympathy, señor,” proffered Lieutenant Bartholomew.
-
-“That’s the system here, sir,” added Stub’s father. “I am an American
-citizen, and was brought in by the Injuns, from outside territory; and
-I can’t leave without a permit. I’m close watched――but I’ve still got
-my old rifle; and give me two hours’ start and I’ll not ask for any
-other passport.”
-
-“When I reminded His Excellency that my unintentional trespass was
-not to be compared with his, when he dispatched five hundred troops
-far into the Pawnee country, well within the territory of the United
-States, he had no reply,” pursued Lieutenant Pike. “However, I am to
-dine with him this noon, and march soon thereafter, to meet an escort
-under that Lieutenant Melgares below.”
-
-“You will find Don Facundo Melgares to be a very pleasant gentleman,
-señor,” spoke Lieutenant Bartholomew.
-
-“He spent a great deal of time and money looking for me,” Lieutenant
-Pike grimly laughed. “He might as well have stayed here, for I should
-never have yielded to him, north of the Red River; not while I had
-a man left. I understand that Doctor Robinson, whom the governor
-mentioned, also has been sent south.”
-
-“That is possible, señor.”
-
-The lieutenant shrugged his shoulders.
-
-“And I suppose my sergeant and the other men will follow me.” He
-turned to Stub. “Come, boy; we’ll look up our party and order them to
-be ready. Their arms are to be restored to them, at least. We’re not
-to be driven like cattle. His Excellency has promised that, and we’ll
-march as soldiers.”
-
-“You take the boy to Chihuahua?” queried Lieutenant Bartholomew.
-
-“What?” Stub’s tall father demanded, with a start.
-
-Lieutenant Pike smiled.
-
-“No, sir. He remains here, where he belongs. I am only too happy to
-have reunited him and his father. His service with me ends――and it has
-been a greater service than you may imagine.”
-
-They hastened for the barracks. Midway, the lieutenant halted in covert
-of an old wall.
-
-“You have my journal?” he asked, guardedly.
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“Good! You may give it to me, now. Quick! There!” He swiftly tucked it
-away. “It is the only paper unknown to the governor, and I mean to keep
-it. Last night, when I considered that he was done with me, I heard
-that the men were drinking wine with the town people. So in case they
-should drink too much I sought them out and took the other papers from
-them. They’re faithful, but the wine might have made them careless. I
-stowed the papers in my trunk again (this was a little hand-trunk that
-the lieutenant had carried, with help, from the Arkansaw, as his only
-important baggage); then early this morning the governor unexpectedly
-sent for me and my trunk and I had no chance to open it privately. By
-trusting in him I was cleverly outwitted, but thanks to you I’ve saved
-my journal. Had I found you last night I would have taken it, to place
-it with the other papers.”
-
-So, thanks to a boy, the journal of Lieutenant Pike was saved to the
-world.
-
-“Can’t you get your trunk again?” Stub asked, as they hurried on.
-
-“It will go down to Chihuahua with me, but in charge of the officer of
-the escort, for the commanding general.”
-
-“Do the papers tell anything wrong?”
-
-“No, unless they are wrongly read. There are letters, and scientific
-notes upon the locations and distances; and maps. If the commanding
-general thinks we were spying out the country, he may try to keep
-everything. But the journal would be the greatest loss.”
-
-And truth to say, Lieutenant Pike never did get back any of the papers
-in the trunk.
-
-Freegift and John Brown were at the barracks; the other men were
-rambling about. John went to find them.
-
-“To Chihuahua is it, sir?” Freegift gasped. “Without our guns?”
-
-“You will get your guns.”
-
-“An’ don’t we wait for the sergeant an’ them others, sir?”
-
-“We’re not permitted. I’ll leave a note for Meek with this boy, here,
-telling him to keep up courage and follow us.”
-
-“But doesn’t the lad go, too, sir?”
-
-“No. He stays in Santa Fe.”
-
-“I’ve found my father, Freegift,” eagerly explained Stub. “He’s here.
-The Utahs brought him here. I’ve got to stay with him.”
-
-“Found your dad, eh? Well, well! An’ good! I want to know! That’s all
-right, then. We’ve been some worried over you, but sure we felt sartin
-you wouldn’t desert. Expect you’d rather have found your father than
-the Red River; hey?”
-
-“I don’t know,” Stub stammered. “I wish we’d found both.”
-
-His heart ached for Lieutenant Pike, who seemed to have found
-nothing――unless he really had intended to come here.
-
-“We soldiers must not complain; we will only rejoice in your good
-fortune, my lad,” answered the lieutenant. “All in all, we did not
-toil in vain, and we have done what we could. Have the men ready to
-march at twelve o’clock, Stout.” And turning on his heel he strode off.
-
-“A fine little man, an’ a smart one,” mused Freegift, gazing after.
-“We’ll go with him to Chihuahua――an’ to the ends o’ the earth, if need
-be.”
-
-The lieutenant left first, shortly after noon. He had dined with the
-governor; when he came out of the palace, into the public square,
-prepared to start, the governor’s coach was waiting, attached to six
-gaily harnessed mules. A detachment of dragoons also were waiting; so
-were Stub and his father, and old Sergeant Colly who had been captured,
-six years ago, in Spanish territory.
-
-They shook hands with the lieutenant.
-
-“Good-by. Good-by, sir.”
-
-“Good-by.” He held his head high, like an officer and a free American.
-He did not mind the stares of the town people. “Remember, you are
-Americans.”
-
-“Don’t forget us, sir, when you reach the States,” old Solomon Colly
-implored. “Don’t forget Sergeant Colly of the army, who made his only
-mistake when he was trapped by these Spanish. You’ll do what you can
-for us, sir?”
-
-“I’ll not forget; not while I have breath in my body,” promised the
-lieutenant, earnestly. “I will report you to the Government.”
-
-The governor had clumped out, in his uniform and jack-boots. Lieutenant
-Bartholomew, and Captain D’Almansa who was to command the escort
-southward, were with him. They all entered the splendid coach decorated
-with gilt.
-
-The door slammed. The servant climbed to the seat beside the
-driver――the sergeant in charge of the dragoons shouted an order, and
-away they went, mules and horses at a gallop.
-
-That was the last that Stub or anybody in Santa Fe ever saw of young
-Lieutenant Pike.
-
-Stub went to the barracks with his father and Solomon Colly, to watch
-the men off. They were about to go. He shook hands with them, too: with
-Freegift, and Alex Roy, and John Brown, and Hugh Menaugh, and William
-Gordon, and Jake Carter――that brave six, still limping from frozen feet.
-
-“Good luck to you, boy.”
-
-“Good luck.”
-
-“An’ never forget you’ve been a Pike man, on one o’ the toughest
-marches in history,” added Freegift. “Stick up for your country. You’ve
-l’arned never to say die――an’ that’s the American of it.”
-
-“Yes, sir. I know it.”
-
-“Ah, lads, but Sol and I wish we were going with you,” sighed his
-father. “But maybe you’ll be back again, by the thousand, and then
-we’ll see the flag floating.”
-
-“Maybe. There’ll be a time,” replied Freegift. “There’ll be a time when
-the flag’ll float over this very spot. But we won’t need any thousand.
-Five hundred of us under Cap’n Pike could take the whole country. An’
-now we know a way in.”
-
-“I’ve half a notion that the lieutenant wasn’t so sorry to be made
-prisoner, after all,” Stub’s father remarked to him, on the way
-home. “There’s something secret about this that he doesn’t tell. As
-that soldier friend of yours said, in case of war――and war over this
-borderland dispute is likely to break out any day――the army will know
-what’s ahead of it.”
-
-“They’ll let Lieutenant Pike go, won’t they?”
-
-His father chuckled.
-
-“They’ll have to. He’s not the kind of man they can keep. They can’t
-prove he’s a spy, for he’s in uniform (what there is of it), and his
-orders are plain to read.”
-
-This day was March 4. It was two weeks later, or March 18, when at last
-Lieutenant Saltelo brought in Sergeant Meek and Corporal Jerry Jackson,
-Terry Miller, John Mountjoy, poor John Sparks and Tom Dougherty,
-Baroney, Pat Smith and the few miserable horses and the main baggage.
-There was great rejoicing, again, in Santa Fe.
-
-Sergeant Meek was taken at once to Governor Alencaster, but ’twas safe
-to say that the governor would find out little from _him_. Stub sought
-the other men out, at the barracks. John Sparks and Tom were unable to
-walk; they had lost their feet, and the most of their fingers; Baroney
-and Pat, and, they said, the sergeant, too, were in bad shape, from the
-march through the snows, to the stockade; but they all welcomed Stub.
-
-“Where’s the cap’n?”
-
-“He’s gone to Chihuahua.”
-
-“And what are ye doin’ here, then? Did you run off from him? Say!”
-
-“No. He told me to stay. I found my father. We’re living here――till we
-can get away.”
-
-“You did? Found your father! Want to know! Hooray! And the cap’n and
-the rest to Chihuahua. So it’s to Chihuahua the same for us, no doubt.”
-
-“Faith, that’s proper,” declared Tom Dougherty. “We’ll not desert him.
-If it be prison for wan of us let it be prison for all of us. What’s
-left o’ me’ll stick to the cap’n. Sure, John an’ me are only poor
-cripples――whether we’ll be paid I don’t know; but all we want is to be
-with him, doin’ as we can. He’s had the hardest luck an’ he complained
-not wance.”
-
-When Sergeant Meek came, Stub gave him the note. The sergeant read it.
-
-“The cap’n says for us to keep our arms, and not lose the baggage.
-Yes, that’s the caper. Bear in mind, lads. We’re for Chihuahua in the
-morning.”
-
-They, also, were sent down to Chihuahua. Stub never saw any of them
-again, either. He heard, much later, that the lieutenant and six had
-safely reached Natchitoches; but from Chihuahua no word ever came back
-of Sergeant Meek, Corporal Jerry, Baroney the interpreter, Privates
-Sparks, Dougherty, Mountjoy, Miller, and Pat Smith, except that General
-Salcedo, the commander, had found them a hard lot to handle and had got
-them out of his province as quickly as he might.
-
-So probably they caught up with Lieutenant Pike somewhere in the United
-States; and as likely as not some of them were with him to support
-him when he fell, dying on the field of battle, away north in Canada,
-during the War of 1812.
-
-They all loved him.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
- ――Except for the frontispiece, illustrations have been moved to
- follow the text that they illustrate.
-
- ――Printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently
- corrected.
-
- ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
-
- ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lost with Lieutenant Pike, by Edwin L. Sabin</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Lost with Lieutenant Pike</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em;'>How from the Pawnee Village the boy named Scar Head marched with the young American Chief clear into the Snowy Mountains; how in the dead of winter they searched for the Lost River and thought that they had found it; and how the Spanish Soldiery came upon them and took them down to Santa Fé of New Mexico, where another surprise awaited them</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Edwin L. Sabin</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Illustrator: Charles H. Stephens</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 10, 2022 [eBook #67142]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST WITH LIEUTENANT PIKE ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="cover">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" title="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi halftitle">LOST WITH<br />
-LIEUTENANT PIKE</p>
-
-<p class="noic">SECOND IMPRESSION</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi adtitle"><i>The American Trail Blazers</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noic">“THE STORY GRIPS AND THE HISTORY STICKS”</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noi">These books present in the form of vivid and fascinating
-fiction, the early and adventurous phases of American
-history. Each volume deals with the life and adventures
-of one of the great men who made that history, or with
-some one great event in which, perhaps, several heroic
-characters were involved. The stories, though based upon
-accurate historical fact, are rich in color, full of dramatic
-action, and appeal to the imagination of the red-blooded
-man or boy.</p>
-
-<p class="noic">Each volume illustrated in color and black and white</p>
-
-<p class="noic">12mo.<span class="spblck4">&#160;</span>Cloth.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="p05 lsthang">LOST WITH LIEUTENANT PIKE</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">WITH CARSON AND FREMONT</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">DANIEL BOONE: BACKWOODSMAN</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">CAPTAIN JOHN SMITH</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">DAVID CROCKETT: SCOUT</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">ON THE PLAINS WITH CUSTER</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">GOLD SEEKERS OF ’49</li>
-
-<li class="p05 lsthang">WITH SAM HOUSTON IN TEXAS</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_frontis">
- <img src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_151">“IT’S THE WRONG PEAK, MEN—YES, THE WRONG PEAK”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<h1>LOST WITH<br />
-LIEUTENANT PIKE</h1>
-
-<div class="blockquot smfont">
-
-<p class="noi">HOW FROM THE PAWNEE VILLAGE THE BOY NAMED SCAR
-HEAD MARCHED WITH THE YOUNG AMERICAN CHIEF CLEAR
-INTO THE SNOWY MOUNTAINS; HOW IN THE DEAD OF WINTER
-THEY SEARCHED FOR THE LOST RIVER AND THOUGHT THAT
-THEY HAD FOUND IT; AND HOW THE SPANISH SOLDIERY
-CAME UPON THEM AND TOOK THEM DOWN TO SANTA FÉ OF
-NEW MEXICO, WHERE ANOTHER SURPRISE AWAITED THEM</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2 noic">BY<br />
-<span class="noi author">EDWIN L. SABIN</span></p>
-
-<p class="noi works">AUTHOR OF “GENERAL CROOK AND THE FIGHTING APACHES,”<br />
-“OPENING THE WEST WITH LEWIS AND CLARK,”<br />
-“BUFFALO BILL AND THE OVERLAND TRAIL,” ETC.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><i>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</i><br />
-<span class="noi author">CHARLES H. STEPHENS</span><br />
-<i>PORTRAIT AND A MAP</i></p>
-
-<div class="pad2">
-<div class="figcenter" id="logo">
- <img class="illowe6" src="images/logo.jpg" alt="logo" title="logo" />
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noic">PHILADELPHIA &amp; LONDON</p>
-
-<p class="noi adauthor">J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noic">COPYRIGHT, 1919, J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY</p>
-
-<p class="p6 noic">PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY<br />
-AT THE WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS<br />
-PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noic">TO THOSE<br />
-<span class="noi author">COUNTLESS OTHER AMERICANS</span></p>
-
-<p class="noi works">WHO IN 1917 AND 1918 BRAVELY FOLLOWED, LIKE YOUNG<br />
-LIEUTENANT PIKE, THE TRAIL OF HONOR, FLAG AND DUTY</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="noi ident">I. Always preserve your honor free from blemish.</p>
-
-<p class="noi">II. Be ready at all times to die for your country.</p>
-
-<p class="right">General Pike’s rules for his little son.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="FOREWORD">FOREWORD</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>This story takes the adventure trail of that young
-soldier-explorer Zebulon Montgomery Pike, who
-was lost in the mountains of southern Colorado one
-hundred years ago. Another story in the Trail
-Blazers Series has told of Captains Lewis and Clark,
-who explored the northwestern part of the new
-Louisiana Territory. They, also, were young.
-Captain Lewis had just turned thirty. But Lieutenant
-and Captain Zebulon Pike was younger yet. He
-was only twenty-seven when, while Lewis and Clark
-were still out, he was sent to lead a handful of men
-into the unknown Southwest.</p>
-
-<p>The vast Province of Louisiana, bought by the
-United States from France three years before, for
-$15,000,000, was thought by the United States to
-extend, in the north, from the Mississippi River to
-the Rocky Mountains; in the south it tapered off
-to the Gulf of Mexico at New Orleans.</p>
-
-<p>The southwestern boundary was uncertain. The
-United States claimed clear to the lower Rio Grande
-River, across Texas; Spain, which had owned
-Louisiana Territory before the United States bought
-it from France, claimed north even to the Missouri<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-River. Some said that the Arkansas River of southern
-Colorado should be the boundary, there; some
-said the Red River, further south—which was confused
-with the Canadian River. And when Lieutenant
-Pike was started out, the United States soldiers
-and the Spanish soldiers of Mexico faced each other
-across the Sabine River of the western border of
-Louisiana State.</p>
-
-<p>So the trail of young Pike and his handful of
-men pointed into a debated land. If the Indians
-did not get them, the Spanish might. He had been
-instructed not to offend the Spanish, and to keep
-away from their settlements of New Mexico; but
-he was resolved to stand his ground when he deemed
-that he was in the right, and to defend the Flag.
-The Spanish had sent six hundred soldiers, with
-over two thousand horses and mules, to look for him.
-He would certainly have fought them all, with his
-twenty men, had they tried to stop him anywhere
-outside of New Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>No braver soldiers ever marched than Lieutenant
-Pike and his little platoon. They lost their way;
-they struggled with cold below zero and snow to
-their waists, in the bleak high mountains. They had
-left home with only summer clothing; they were
-ragged and lean, and their feet froze until the bones
-came out. They went days at a time without food.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-And they were utterly lost, in a winter country;
-alone, one thousand miles from home.</p>
-
-<p>But only once did a single man complain aloud.
-Their wonderful leader sternly silenced him, by
-reminding him that they all were sharing and
-suffering alike.</p>
-
-<p>When their lieutenant had been gone from them
-two days, seeking meat to relieve a famine, at his
-return he writes in his journal: “On the countenances
-of the men was not a frown, nor was there
-a desponding eye; all seemed happy to hail their
-officer and companions; yet not a mouthful had they
-eaten for four days.” Indeed, they were planning
-to send out and rescue <em>him</em>.</p>
-
-<p>It was this same spirit which made the American
-soldiers in France press forward, ever forward, and
-yield not an inch of ground.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike was an officer to love as well
-as to respect. He asked no favors; only obedience,
-and willingness to endure what he had to endure.
-He never spared himself. While others might stay
-in camp, he it was that went out into the cold and
-snow, hunting for meat. He made it plain that his
-honor, his country and his duty were more to him
-than his life. These were the three ideals that inspired
-him to go on when he might have been excused<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-for camping in safety and giving up his search for
-the Red River.</p>
-
-<p>The name of Pike lives in history. We have a
-famous mountain named for him, and we know that
-he died—“killed in action”—as a brigadier-general,
-aged thirty-four. The names of his brave men have
-vanished. What became of John Sparks, Pat Smith,
-Jacob Carter, and the rest, we do not know. We
-do not know that the Government even rescued from
-the Spaniards those whom their lieutenant had been
-obliged to leave. We do not know that any of them
-received gifts of land and extra pay, such as the
-Lewis and Clark men received. But heroes they
-were, every one, who did not fail their leader nor
-their flag.</p>
-
-<p>So their company roll is printed in this book,
-that they also may live again.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">The Author</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<col style="width: 15%;" />
-<col style="width: 70%;" />
-<col style="width: 15%;" />
-<tr>
- <th class="smfontr">CHAPTER</th>
- <th class="tdl"></th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#I">The Coming of the Spaniards</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">19</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#II">The Coming of the Americans</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">36</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#III">The Pawnees are of Two Minds</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">52</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#IV">On the Trail of the Spaniards</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">70</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#V">The Chase of the Big Elk</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">85</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#VI">Lieutenant Wilkinson Says Good-by</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">99</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#VII">“The Mountains! The Mountains!”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">112</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#VIII">Bad Hearts in the Way</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">127</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#IX">A Try at the “Grand Peak”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">139</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#X">Onward Into Winter</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">156</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XI">Seeking the Lost River</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">167</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XII">Is It Found at Last?</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">176</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XIII">Meat for the Camp</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">187</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XIV">A Trail of Surprises</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">200</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XV">Not Yet Defeated</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">225</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XVI">Blocked by the Great White Mountains</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">237</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XVII">The Fort in the Wilderness</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">250</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XVIII">Visitors from the South</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">261</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XIX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XIX">In the Hands of the Spaniards</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">275</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XX.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XX">Stub Reaches End o’ Trail</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">289</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdrt">XXI.</td>
- <td class="tdl smcap"><a href="#XXI">Good-by to Lieutenant Pike</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">306</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Illustrations">
-<col style="width: 90%;" />
-<col style="width: 10%;" />
-<tr>
- <th>&#160;</th>
- <th class="smfontr">PAGE</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_frontis">“It’s the Wrong Peak, Men—Yes, the
-Wrong Peak”</a> <span class="spblck4 flright"><i>Frontispiece</i></span></td>
- <td class="tdrb"> </td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_015">Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">15</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_055">“I Bring You the American Flag”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">55</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_097">Whang! It Buried Itself Almost Out of Sight
-Behind the Elk Chief’s Ribs</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">97</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_203">But Stub Never Felt the Final Crash</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">203</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_298">“In My Proper Character, Sir: An Officer of
-the United States Army”</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">298</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc author" colspan="2">MAP</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl lsthang"><a href="#i_019map">The Trail of Lieutenant Pike</a></td>
- <td class="tdrb">19</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_015">
- <img src="images/i_015.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic">LIEUTENANT <a href="#Page_15">ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE</a></p>
-
- <p class="noic">From the First Edition of His “Expeditions”<br />
-Philadelphia, 1810</p>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">BRIGADIER-GENERAL<br />
-<a href="#i_015">ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A noble young American soldier and explorer,
-whose guiding purpose was: Honor, Country, Duty.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Born January 5, 1779, at Lamberton, near Trenton, New
-Jersey.</p>
-
-<p>His father was Captain Zebulon Pike, of the Fourth Continental
-Dragoons, in the War of the Revolution; later major in
-the Third and the First Regiments of Infantry, U. S. A., and
-brevet lieutenant-colonel.</p>
-
-<p>The boy Zebulon was brought up as a soldier.</p>
-
-<p>At fifteen he was a cadet in his father’s infantry regiment
-of the United States Third Sub-Legion.</p>
-
-<p>At twenty, or in March, 1799, he was commissioned second
-lieutenant in the Second Regiment of Infantry, U. S. A.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioned first lieutenant, November, the same year.</p>
-
-<p>Transferred to the First Infantry, of which his father was
-major, in April, 1802. In this regiment Meriwether Lewis, of
-the famous Lewis and Clark expedition to the mouth of the
-Columbia River, was then a captain.</p>
-
-<p>At the age of twenty-six, while Captains Lewis and Clark
-are exploring through the far northwest of the new Louisiana
-Territory purchase, he receives orders, July 30, 1805, from
-General James Wilkinson, Chief of the Army, to ascend the
-Mississippi River from St. Louis to its source. He is to report
-upon the country, the Indians and the fur trade of this, the
-eastern border of Upper Louisiana.</p>
-
-<p>Starts from St. Louis, August 9, 1805, with twenty enlisted
-men of the regular army, in a keel-boat seventy feet long,
-provisioned for four months. Suffers many hardships by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-storm, cold and hunger, but returns successful on the last day
-of April, 1806, after an absence of almost nine months.</p>
-
-<p>In less than two months, or on June 24, 1806, he is directed
-to ascend the Missouri and Osage Rivers, and restore forty-six
-Osage Indians, rescued by the Government from the Potawatomi
-Indians, to their people of the Osage towns in western
-Missouri. He is to make peace, by order of their American
-father, between the Osage and the Kansas nations. He is then
-to continue to the Pawnees of present northern Kansas, and ask
-them to help him on to make peace with the Comanches in the
-southwest on the borders of New Mexico. While with the Comanches
-he is to explore the head-waters of the Arkansas and
-Red (Canadian) Rivers, but he must avoid trespassing upon
-the Spanish territory of New Mexico. Spanish territory is
-supposed to extend south from the Red River, although the
-Spanish claim that it extends much farther north, even through
-Kansas.</p>
-
-<p>Again he leaves his family, and embarks, July 15, 1806, with
-First Lieutenant James B. Wilkinson, First Infantry, the son
-of General Wilkinson; Civilian Surgeon John H. Robinson, an
-interpreter, and eighteen enlisted men, in two boats. The majority
-of the enlisted men had been with him up the Mississippi.</p>
-
-<p>He visits the Osages, who welcome the return of their relatives,
-and agree to peace with the Kansas. The Pawnees try
-to stop him, by order of the Spanish, but he defies them. He
-fails to find the Comanches. His march by horse and foot
-takes him along the Arkansas River clear to the Rocky Mountains,
-where he sights the great Pike’s Peak (later named for
-him) of Colorado, and attempts to climb it. Searching for
-the head of the Red River, that he may follow down to the
-military posts of the United States frontier, he loses his way
-completely. In the bitter cold and deep snows of a terrible
-winter he crosses the front range of the Rockies, and builds a
-stockade upon a stream of the Upper Rio Grande River in the
-lower end of the San Luis Valley, southern Colorado.</p>
-
-<p>Here in mid-winter Spanish soldiers from Santa Fé come
-upon him and inform him that he is in Spanish territory. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-take him down to Santa Fé, the capital of the Province of New
-Mexico. He is sent on down to the military headquarters at
-Chihuahua, Mexico. From there he is sent to the United
-States, and arrives at the American post of Natchitoches,
-western Louisiana, on July 1, 1807, after travels of a year.</p>
-
-<p>As the first Government explorer through far southwestern
-Louisiana Territory he brings back much valuable information
-upon the country and Indians, and upon the people, military
-forces and customs of Mexico. Captains Lewis and Clark
-have brought back also their information upon the far Northwest.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, as a reward for his services, he had been promoted
-to captain, August 12, 1806.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioned major, in the Sixth U. S. Infantry, May, 1808.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioned lieutenant-colonel, Fourth U. S. Infantry,
-December, 1809.</p>
-
-<p>Commissioned colonel, Fifteenth U. S. Infantry, July, 1812.</p>
-
-<p>Appointed brigadier-general, adjutant-general and inspector-general,
-U. S. A., March, 1813.</p>
-
-<p>Killed in action, April 27, 1813, while commanding the assault
-by the American troops upon York, at Toronto, Canada.
-The retreating British garrison blew up a powder magazine,
-and a fragment of rock crushed his back. He died wrapped in
-the Flag, amidst victory, at the age of only thirty-four.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 noic">THE PIKE PARTIES</p>
-
-<p class="noic"><span class="smcap">Up the Mississippi</span> (1805–1806)</p>
-
-<ul class="nopad">
-<li class="hang">First Lieutenant Zebulon M. Pike, Commanding</li>
-
-<li class="hang">Pierre Rousseau, Interpreter</li>
-
-<li class="hang">Sergeant Henry Kennerman (reduced to the ranks)</li>
-
-<li class="p05 hang">Corporals</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Samuel Bradley</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">William E. Meek</li>
-
-<li class="p05 hang"><i>Privates</i></li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Jeremiah Jackson</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">John Boley</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Thomas Dougherty</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Solomon Huddleston</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Theodore Miller</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Alexander Roy</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Patrick Smith</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">John Brown<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Jacob Carter</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">David Whelply</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">William Gordon</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">John Mountjoy</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Hugh Menaugh</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">John Sparks</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Freegift Stout</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">David Owings</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Peter Branden</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="p2 noic"><span class="smcap">Into the Southwest</span> (1806–1807)</p>
-
-<ul class="nopad">
-<li class="hang">First Lieutenant (and Captain) Zebulon M. Pike, Commanding</li>
-
-<li class="hang">First Lieutenant James B. Wilkinson (descended the Arkansas
-River)</li>
-
-<li class="hang">Civilian Volunteer, Doctor John H. Robinson (went through)</li>
-
-<li class="hang">Baroney Vasquez, Interpreter (went through)</li>
-
-<li class="p05 hang">Sergeants</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">Joseph Ballenger (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)</li>
-<li class="ident4 lsthang">William E. Meek (went through)</li>
-
-<li class="p05 hang">Corporal Jeremiah Jackson (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private John Brown (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Jacob Carter (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Thomas Dougherty (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private William Gordon (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Theodore Miller (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Hugh Menaugh (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private John Mountjoy (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Alexander Roy (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private John Sparks (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Patrick Smith (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Freegift Stout (went through)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private John Boley (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Samuel Bradley (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Solomon Huddleston (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private John Wilson (accompanied Lieutenant Wilkinson)</li>
-<li class="hang">Private Henry Kennerman (deserted)</li>
-</ul>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_019map">
- <img src="images/i_019map.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic">THE TRAIL OF LIEUTENANT PIKE</p>
-
- <div class="noic x-ebookmaker-drop">
- [<a id="i_019maplrg" href="images/i_019map_lrg.jpg" rel="nofollow">click
-here for high resolution map</a>]
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span></p>
-
-<p class="noi title">LOST WITH<br />
-LIEUTENANT PIKE</p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="I">I<br />
-<small>THE COMING OF THE SPANIARDS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Ai-ee! I see them!” panted Iskatappe, over his
-shoulder, and pointing to the west. “The Spanish!”</p>
-
-<p>“It may be running buffalo, or a big wind,” answered
-Skidi.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we halt and wait?” proposed Letalesha.</p>
-
-<p>“No. It is they. It does not move fast enough
-for buffalo or wind. It is on this side of the river.
-We will cross the river and hide on the other side.
-Then we will be safe,” ordered Iskatappe.</p>
-
-<p>Boy Scar Head, at the rear, peered hard and he,
-too, sighted a dust cloud far westward, tinging the
-horizon above the rolling, sandy landscape.</p>
-
-<p>This was the Corn month, July, 1806. The
-four were travelling in single file at fast dog-trot
-down through the northern end of Texas where the
-Canadian River crosses. Iskatappe, or Rich Man,
-led. He was second chief of the nation. Skidi, or
-Wolf, came next. He was a warrior. Letalesha, or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-Old Knife, trotted third. He was a sub-chief. And
-at the rear there trotted Scar Head, who was not yet
-even a warrior, because he was just a boy; but
-some day he should be a warrior, and a chief, if he
-proved brave and smart.</p>
-
-<p>They were odd-looking Indians, clad in only
-moccasins and buffalo-robes. The three men had
-their heads closely shaven except for a short pompadour
-ridge like a rooster comb, ending in the scalp-lock.
-With a paste of buffalo tallow and red clay
-this scalp-lock was made to stand up stiff and curved
-forward in shape of a horn. By that sign, and by
-the sign of their travelling afoot, and by their tall
-stature and high cheek-bones, friends and enemies
-would have known them at once as Pawnees from
-a nation of fierce fighters.</p>
-
-<p>However, nobody would have taken Scar Head
-for a Pawnee. He did not wear the horn—he was
-not yet a warrior. He wore a red cloth band around
-his head, to keep his long brown hair out of his eyes.
-He was short and stocky, with a pug nose and with
-freckles showing through his darkly tanned skin.
-No, he did not appear to be a Pawnee, nor an Indian
-at all.</p>
-
-<p>Still, he ranked as a son of Charakterik, head
-chief of the Pawnee Republic nation. Chief Charakterik
-had sent him out on the warrior trail to get<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-experience. He was called Scar Head by reason of
-the patch of white hair that grew over a queer, hot
-spot on his head. He felt like an Indian and acted
-like an Indian; but all he knew was that he had been
-traded by the mountain Utahs to the plains Pawnees,
-several years ago, and that Chief Charakterik had
-adopted him.</p>
-
-<p>The four had set out from the main Pawnee
-Republic village of round mud huts on the Republican
-River in present northern Kansas two weeks back.
-The Pawnees always started from home on foot,
-except when hunting game. They thought that they
-could take care of themselves better that way. A
-man on foot could hide in country where a man on
-horse might be seen. But they were expected to
-return on horseback, with other horses stolen or captured,
-for to win horses was the test of a Pawnee
-brave.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head hoped to learn a great deal about
-horse-stealing, although this was not really a horse-stealing
-scout. Nevertheless——</p>
-
-<p>“If we are not given horses by the Spaniards,
-we will get them elsewhere,” had said Rich Man.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; we will get them from the Spaniards,
-anyway,” had replied Skidi. “They will have many
-horses, easy to steal. But in order to keep friendly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-with us, they will surely give us some, when they see
-we are poor and afoot.”</p>
-
-<p>The dust cloud was welcome. It was time that
-the Spaniards should be sighted—those Spanish
-soldiers who, according to the report received by
-Chief Charakterik, were marching from New
-Mexico into the Indian country, no one knew why.
-To find out was the business of the Iskatappe squad.</p>
-
-<p>The dust cloud hung in the air, moving slowly
-with the distant breeze. When finally the four
-reached the bank of the river, the cloud was much
-nearer.</p>
-
-<p>“We will cross, and watch them; and to-night
-we will go into their camp,” said Iskatappe.</p>
-
-<p>So they swam and waded the shallow river, and
-crawled out into a clump of willows, to wait until
-the strangers should pass.</p>
-
-<p>Soon, to the west they might see a column of
-mounted figures coming on, following the course of
-the river but staying back from it on account of the
-deep washes, or maybe from fear that their thirsty
-horses might bolt into quicksands.</p>
-
-<p>“They are many times ten,” murmured Skidi,
-counting by the fingers on his hands.</p>
-
-<p>“It is only an advance guard,” Letalesha said.
-“A bigger dust cloud is behind them.”</p>
-
-<p>And that was so. The advance guard of horsemen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-seemed to be scouting along the river, as if seeking
-a good trail to water for the others. Boy Scar
-Head strained his eyes to see as much as the warriors
-saw. Over the yellow desert shimmering with the
-hot air the riders steadily cantered, under several
-fluttering pennons borne on lances; and anybody
-might tell by the way they rode that they were warriors
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>They were going to strike the river only a short
-distance below. Suddenly Skidi drew quick breath.</p>
-
-<p>“Apaches! Look! It will be a fight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hi!” Iskatappe uttered. “Let nobody move.
-We are safe here, if we don’t move.”</p>
-
-<p>The scene had changed in a twinkling. A perfect
-swarm of Indians had burst from the very ground
-out there, and with shrill yells were racing to hem
-the Spanish between them and the river. How they
-had hidden themselves so well was remarkable, but
-it was an Indian trick and these were Apaches, who
-knew how to hide in the sand itself.</p>
-
-<p>They outnumbered the Spanish three to one.
-The Spanish leader rapidly formed his column—he
-rode a white horse, the horses of his men were dark.
-On charged the Apaches, whooping and brandishing
-their bows and lances, as if they did not intend to
-stop until they had ridden right over the enemy;
-when on a sudden the guns of the Spanish puffed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-white smoke. Instantly every Apache fell to hang
-on the side of his horse; and back and forth they
-all scurried, shooting with their bows. The arrow
-stems glinted in the sun like streaks of hail.</p>
-
-<p>“That is a good chief,” Iskatappe praised. “He
-knows how to fight.”</p>
-
-<p>For the Apache chief had ordered half his men
-to dismount, and turn their horses loose. The other
-half stayed in the saddle. They charged, with the
-footmen running behind; the Spanish horsemen
-charged to meet them; then the Apache horsemen
-separated to right and left and the footmen volleyed
-with arrows.</p>
-
-<p>This made the Spanish halt, to answer with guns.
-The Apache footmen darted back, behind their
-horsemen, and these charged again, to lure the
-Spanish on into bow-shot.</p>
-
-<p>Boy Scar Head quivered with excitement. It
-was the first real battle that he remembered to have
-seen. The others were tense, too, and staring
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“With half that number of Pawnees I would eat
-those Spanish up,” Skidi boasted. “We all would
-take scalps and horses and be rich.”</p>
-
-<p>“Those Spanish have guns and much powder
-and lead,” replied Old Knife. “It is hard to fight<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-guns with bows. But one big charge, and all would
-be over.”</p>
-
-<p>The battle slowly traveled. It was getting
-directly opposite, as the Apaches gradually gave
-ground and the Spanish took ground. Scarcely
-anybody appeared to have been hurt yet; there were
-no dead on the sand and all the wounded stayed
-in their saddles. The column in the distance was
-making a larger dust, as if hastening to the rescue.</p>
-
-<p>The Apaches no doubt knew this. Now on a
-sudden the noise quieted. The Apache chief had
-cantered forward from among his men, shaking his
-lance. He was a very heavy man, with a very long
-lance; upon his arm was a red shield. He rode a
-fine spotted horse.</p>
-
-<p>“The chiefs will fight, maybe,” quoth Letalesha.
-“That is the way to settle it.”</p>
-
-<p>The Apache chief spoke in a loud voice, holding
-his lance high; but the Spanish chief on the white
-horse waved him back and evidently said no.</p>
-
-<p>“The Spanish chief is a coward,” Skidi asserted.
-“He has a small heart.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should he risk losing his scalp, when he
-is winning and he has enough men coming to burn
-the Apaches like dry grass?” argued the wise Old
-Knife.</p>
-
-<p>The Apache chief sat a moment, waiting; then<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-he turned back for his own party. From the Spanish
-a great shout arose, that made him again turn,
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ai-ee! It will be a fight, man to man, after
-all!” Iskatappe exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>A Spanish soldier had dashed past his chief,
-and was galloping into the clear, flourishing his
-sword. It was a challenge. The chief sped to meet
-him. They both crouched behind their round shields.
-A moment—and they came together. The Spanish
-horseman thrust his shield forward, to throw aside
-the chief’s lance point. But he did not catch it full.
-He only threw it higher, so that it glanced on and
-struck him in the throat—went straight through.
-He fell off, backward. Jerking the lance out, the
-Apache chief scoured by, in a half circle, with a
-whoop of victory.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, yi!” Old Knife grunted. “There is blood
-and a scalp.”</p>
-
-<p>What a yell broke from the Apaches and the
-Spaniards both—a yell of triumph from the one, a
-yell of vengeance from the others! The Spanish
-charged, firing their guns, to save the scalp, and to
-kill. The Apaches scattered; their chief galloped
-hither-thither, urging them to stand, but they had
-no stomachs for more fighting at close quarters and
-the rest of the Spanish were spurring in.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span></p>
-
-<p>Presently all the Apaches, the footmen on horse
-again, tore away, making down the river. Without
-trying to pursue them the whole Spanish army gathered
-on the battlefield. They were too heavily
-clothed to overtake Indians.</p>
-
-<p>“They are as many as a herd of buffalo,” said
-Letalesha. “They are a large war party. Where
-are they going and what do they want?”</p>
-
-<p>“We shall find out from them at sundown,”
-Rich Man answered. “We will let them camp,
-first. They are blood hungry now, and very mad.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will be no trouble for us to get horses,”
-laughed Wolf. “Even a boy like Scar Head could
-steal some.”</p>
-
-<p>“Will you let me try?” Scar Head asked, hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>“You shall be a warrior and get horses,” Iskatappe
-promised, “unless they make us presents of
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Apache chief was Big Thunder,” Old
-Knife declared. “I know him. Red is his medicine,
-and as long as he carries that red shield nothing
-can kill him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps the Spanish chief knew, too,” Wolf
-proposed. “Of course, nobody wishes to fight
-against medicine.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The Spanish soldier’s medicine was very weak,”
-remarked Iskatappe.</p>
-
-<p>Thus they chatted, waiting and watching. Pretty
-soon the Spanish, also, moved on, down river.
-There were at least six hundred of them, all mounted,
-and twice that number of unsaddled horses and
-mules, some packed with supplies. To jingle of
-trappings and murmur of voices they proceeded, in
-a long column. Rich Man, Old Knife, Wolf and
-Boy Scar Head followed, by the other river bank,
-keeping out of sight in the brush and hollows.</p>
-
-<p>At sunset the Spanish halted to form camp,
-beside the river.</p>
-
-<p>“We had better go in before dark,” Rich Man
-directed. “Or they might shoot at us. We had
-better go in while their pots are full, for my belly
-is empty.”</p>
-
-<p>So they rose boldly from their covert under the
-bank of the river, and crossed for the Spanish camp,
-their buffalo-robes tightly about them.</p>
-
-<p>The camp was spread out in a circle over a wide
-area. Several chiefs’ lodges had been set up, countless
-fires were smoking, horses whinnied, mules
-brayed, medicine pipes (horns) tooted, and a myriad
-of figures moved busily, getting water, going on
-herd, arranging the packs, marching to and fro as
-if in a dance, or clustering around the fires.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p>These were the Spanish, were they, from the
-south? Scar Head had not supposed that so many
-could come so far, all together. The nation of the
-Spanish must be a great and powerful nation.</p>
-
-<p>A guard saw the Iskatappe file approaching. He
-shouted warning of them, and leveled his gun.</p>
-
-<p>Iskatappe lifted his hand in the peace sign.</p>
-
-<p>“Amigos—friends,” he called. He knew a little
-Spanish. So did most of the Pawnees—a little
-Spanish picked up from the Comanches and southern
-Utahs, and a little French picked up from the St.
-Louis traders who visited the Pawnee country.</p>
-
-<p>“Qué tiene—what do you want?” the guard
-demanded, stopping them with his gun. He was
-dressed in a blue cloth hunting-shirt with red trimmings,
-and leather wrappings upon his legs, and huge
-loose-topped leather moccasins reaching to his knees,
-and a broad-brimmed high-crowned hat with ribbons
-on it; and all his face was covered with bushy
-black hair. He was armed with a short-barreled gun,
-and a long knife in a scabbard. He certainly looked
-like a stout warrior.</p>
-
-<p>“El capitan,” Iskatappe replied, meaning that
-he wished to see the chief.</p>
-
-<p>Other Spanish soldiers came running. Their
-head warrior said: “Come,” and with the Iskatappe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-file stalking proudly after he led the way through the
-staring camp to the lodge of the chief.</p>
-
-<p>He was a black-eyed, dark-skinned, slim young
-war chief, splendidly clad in those same high, loose-topped
-shiny leather moccasins, and a bright red
-cloak flowing to his knees, and a hat turned up at
-one side and sparkling with gilt.</p>
-
-<p>Of course the first thing to do was to eat. Therefore,
-after shaking hands with the Spanish war
-chief, Rich Man, Old Knife and Wolf sat down;
-boy Scar Head sat down likewise. They were served
-with plenty of meat, from a pot.</p>
-
-<p>Gazing curiously about, Scar Head might see
-indeed that these Spanish were rich and powerful.
-Such quantities of horses and mules, of saddles,
-arms, supplies, and soldiers warmly dressed, and
-fiercely whiskered not only with hair on cheeks and
-chin, but sticking out like horns on either side of the
-nose! What did the Spanish wish?</p>
-
-<p>Having eaten, Iskatappe began to find out. The
-Spanish chief filled a pipe and passed it out; Rich
-Man, Old Knife and Wolf smoked each a few puffs,
-the Spanish chief smoked a few puffs, and Iskatappe
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“The Pawnee wish to know why their Spanish
-father is sending so many of his soldiers into the
-buffalo country.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The great king who owns all this country is
-anxious to be friendly with his children,” responded
-the young war chief. “So he has sent me, his lieutenant,
-Don Facundo Melgares, with a guard, to
-march through, take his red children by the hand,
-give them presents, and make the chain of friendship
-stronger.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is good,” said Iskatappe. “The Pawnee
-Republic is very poor. But if my father is sending
-presents to the Pawnee, why are his men marching
-east instead of north? And why does he send so
-many soldiers with guns?”</p>
-
-<p>“We follow a long trail,” explained the war
-chief. “There are Indians of bad hearts toward
-everybody, like the Apaches; and the Apaches we
-will punish. The great king knows how to punish
-his enemies, as well as how to reward his friends.
-We are marching east because we go first to visit the
-Comanches. We bear gifts and friendship to the
-Comanches, to the Pawnees, and to the Kansas.
-And we march east to clean the country from the
-Americans who are stealing in. The great king
-will look after his own children. He wishes no foreigners
-to view the land. He will not permit the
-American traders to cheat the Indians. The American
-king pretends to have bought part of the country,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-but he has no rights here in the south, and the
-great king of Spain still owns all the lands beyond
-the Pawnees and the Kansas. Now word has come
-to the Spanish governor that the Americans are
-sending soldiers westward through Spanish country,
-to spy out the land. They are led by a chief named
-Pike. So we march ready for battle, to meet these
-Americans and either turn them back or take them
-prisoner.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Americans of Chief Pike will fight?”
-asked Iskatappe.</p>
-
-<p>The young war chief laughed, showing white
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>“They cannot fight the soldiers of the great king.
-We are many and brave; the Americans are small.
-We can punish or reward. The Americans are weak
-and poor. Should there be war, we will eat them
-up. If they do not keep out of the country, there
-will be war. We shall warn them. The Indians
-would do very foolishly to help the Americans who
-have nothing, and are only greedy, seeking to steal
-the Indians’ hunting grounds. First a few will
-come, as spies; then more will come by the same
-trail, and with their guns kill all the buffalo.”</p>
-
-<p>“We know little about the Americans, but we
-see that the Spanish are many and strong,” Iskatappe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-replied. “I will take word back to the Pawnee,
-about this Pike.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is your head chief?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is Charakterik—White Wolf.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where does he live?”</p>
-
-<p>“In his town of the Pawnee nation on the river
-of the Pawnee Republic.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him that after we have marched east and
-talked with the Comanches and cleaned the foreign
-traders from the country, we will march north and
-visit him at his town on the River Republican. If
-the American chief Mungo-Meri Pike comes there,
-the Pawnees must stop him; for the great king will
-be angry if the Americans are allowed to pass
-through.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will tell him,” Iskatappe promised. “It is
-best that we travel fast. We came down on foot,
-for we are very poor. If we have horses to ride
-back on, we shall travel faster.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bueno—good,” answered the Spanish chief.
-“Your father the great king of us all is generous
-to his children. You shall have horses, so that
-you may carry the news quickly.”</p>
-
-<p>This night the Iskatappe squad slept in the Spanish
-camp, and ate frequently. Rich Man explained
-to Old Knife and Wolf what had been said to him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-and not understood by them. Boy Scar Head listened.
-In the morning they were treated to a marching
-dance, in which the Spanish soldiers moved to
-the beat of drums. They were presented with a
-horse apiece; and after having shaken hands again
-they left, well satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>Once away from the river they rode fast; for
-Skidi had stolen three mules during the night while
-the guard was sleepy instead of watchful, and hidden
-the animals in a convenient place. But the Spanish
-did not pursue.</p>
-
-<p>“We will tell Charakterik that the Spanish are
-strong,” said Iskatappe. “They fought the Apaches;
-they have plenty of guns and horses. They will eat
-the Americans of that Pike.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think, myself, that the Pawnee will grow
-fatter by helping the Spanish father than by helping
-the strange American father,” declared Old Knife.</p>
-
-<p>“We have gained four horses and three mules,”
-Skidi chuckled. “All the whites are stupid. If the
-Americans come they will go back afoot; hey?”</p>
-
-<p>“What kind of men are the Americans?” Boy
-Scar Head ventured to ask, from the rear.</p>
-
-<p>“We are talking,” Letalesha rebuked. “When
-chiefs and warriors talk, boys keep silent.”</p>
-
-<p>So Scar Head got no information. All he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-knew was, that the Americans were a white nation
-living in the far east, beyond St. Louis where the
-French traders lived. But three Pawnees had been
-taken by the great trader Pierre Chouteau, to visit
-the American father in Wash’ton. When they returned,
-the Pawnees would know more about the
-Americans. And of course that Chief Pike was
-likely to appear if the Spanish did not stop him.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="II">II<br />
-<small>THE COMING OF THE AMERICANS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Spanish came in about three weeks—three
-hundred of them, led by their young war chief whose
-name was Melgares. A brave sight they made as
-they rode with flags and drums and jingle of bridles
-and formed camp outside the Chief Charakterik
-town.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Melgares held a council with the
-Republican Pawnees and the Grand Pawnees from
-the north. The Pawnee Loups, or Wolf Pawnees,
-did not send any chiefs, because they were at war
-with the other Pawnees.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish chief said that he had met the
-Ietans or Comanches in the south and signed a treaty
-of peace with them. They had promised to help
-their Spanish father. But on the way north the
-Omahas had stolen many of his horses and mules,
-after another council; and by reason of these bad
-hearts he had come on with only a few of his men,
-in order to smooth the road between the great king
-and the great king’s children.</p>
-
-<p>He was too young to sit in grand council with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-the head chiefs of the Pawnees. In the spring a
-higher chief than he would come, to build a town
-near the Pawnee town, and live with the red people
-and teach them how to get rich, if they were good.
-Meanwhile they must watch out that the Americans
-(who were poor but greedy) did not sneak in, and
-cheat them of their lands and drive off the game.
-The American chief, Mungo-Meri Pike, was on the
-way, although he had not been found. If he arrived,
-he must be turned back. These were the orders of
-the king of the Spanish nation, who ruled all this
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Melgares gave Chief Charakterik and
-the head chief of the Grand Pawnees each a large,
-fine medal of silver to wear; and a paper signed by
-the governor of New Mexico, which made them head
-men under the king; and a Spanish flag, and four
-mules. He laid on the prairie other gifts, of crimson
-cloth and of tobacco and smaller medals; and again
-warning them that the great king would be very
-angry if the crafty Americans were permitted to
-pass, he rode away south, with all his men.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Charakterik hung the gay Spanish flag of
-red and yellow in front of the council lodge, as a sign
-for everybody to see. It was plain to him also that
-the Spanish nation was a powerful nation, to send so
-many soldiers so far, looking for the Americans.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Spanish soldiers had not been gone long
-when from the Osage towns in the southeast toward
-the Missouri River there ran the news that the
-Americans of Mungo-Meri Pike were coming indeed.
-They were bringing to the Osages almost fifty men
-and women whom the Potawatomis had captured
-last year, and who had been rescued by the American
-father. Two of the Pawnees who had been to
-Wash’ton visiting the American father were with
-them on the way home.</p>
-
-<p>“We will let them come this far, so as to get
-our brothers back,” said Chief Charakterik. “We
-will talk with them and see what kind of men they
-are, but they shall go no farther.”</p>
-
-<p>He sent Pawnee scouts down to the Osage towns,
-to watch the Americans.</p>
-
-<p>Now August, the squash month, had passed,
-and September, the month when the buffalo fatten,
-had opened. The Americans were reported to be
-at the Osage villages, where a welcome had greeted
-the Osages returned from the Potawatomis, and a
-great council had been held with the Pike men.</p>
-
-<p>They had traveled in boats up the Osage River
-from the Missouri, but were coming on across country
-to the Pawnees by horses.</p>
-
-<p>Only one American appeared, first, riding in
-with a Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton as his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-guide. This Pawnee young man had gone to visit
-the American father many moons ago, and here he
-was again, safe and sound and wearing good clothes.
-That spoke well for the Americans.</p>
-
-<p>He said that the other Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton
-was coming with the rest of the Americans.
-They were bringing several Osages to smoke
-with the Pawnees. They had sent word for the
-Kansas to meet them and smoke peace. The Americans
-were a pleasant people; they numbered thousands.
-This American with him was a medicine-man
-who cured diseases. The American chief, Pike, had
-given the Osages all the rescued captives and had
-asked nothing except peace and a chance to buy
-horses; he had presents for the Pawnees, too, and
-was going to the Comanches. His men were few
-although well armed.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, after having talked with the
-American medicine-man in the lodge, Chief Charakterik
-took sixty warriors and rode out to meet Chief
-Mungo-Meri Pike.</p>
-
-<p>Charakterik was gone three days, and came in
-without having sighted the Americans. But a Pawnee
-hunter reported that the Americans were farther
-to the southward; so Chief Charakterik sent out
-Frank (which was the American name of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton) and three other
-warriors, to find them.</p>
-
-<p>On the second morning two of the scouts galloped
-back into town.</p>
-
-<p>“The Pike Americans are nearing. They will
-be here before noon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell them to wait until I shall meet them and
-smoke with them,” Chief Charakterik ordered.</p>
-
-<p>All the warriors were arrayed, dressed in their
-best robes and blankets, and painted with the Pawnee
-colors of white, yellow, blue and black. Chief
-Charakterik wore his large Spanish medal and finest
-white buffalo-robe. Second Chief Iskatappe wore
-a red coat given him by his Spanish father.</p>
-
-<p>Three hundred warriors left the village, with the
-chiefs. Riding in their midst, as the son of a great
-chief Scar Head felt that the Pawnees need fear
-nobody.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans had halted about three miles out,
-just at the other side of a ridge. The Osages were
-sitting in front of them. Chief Charakterik shouted
-and waved his hand—the Pawnee warriors divided
-right and left and swooped down at dead run, yelling
-and firing their guns. The Americans stood firm,
-not afraid, as if they knew that this was only play.
-They were few, as said; scarcely more than the
-fingers on two hands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span></p>
-
-<p>After the warriors had charged and had formed
-a circle, Chief Charakterik and Second Chief Iskatappe
-advanced on foot to shake hands with the
-American chief. This Mungo-Meri Pike was a
-young man, in a long hunting-shirt or coat of blue
-with brass buttons and high standing collar and
-lighter blue facings; on his head there was a three-cornered
-hat; a curved sword was at his side and
-leather moccasins reached to his knees. He was
-redder than the Spanish chief Melgares, and had
-no hair on his face.</p>
-
-<p>His men were armed with guns that ended in
-sharp-pointed knives, but their clothing was thin
-and poor—nothing like the rich clothing of the
-Spanish soldiers. They had a flag of red and white
-stripes and a starry blue square in one corner, but
-they were small in number; and all in all they did not
-cut much of a figure when compared with the Spanish.
-Certainly they were either brave or foolish,
-thought Boy Scar Head as he roundly stared, to
-dare the Spanish and the Indians in such fashion.</p>
-
-<p>The Osages knew how to act when in Pawnee
-country. Their chief stood up and offered Chief
-White Wolf a pipe. They smoked, as sign of peace.
-Then at a signal by White Wolf, he and Mungo-Meri
-Pike and the American second chief (also a
-young man) rode on for the village. An American<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-head warrior on a white horse rode just behind,
-carrying the American flag. The Osages and the
-other Americans followed, while the Pawnee warriors
-raced back and forth alongside, whooping and
-showing off. It was great fun.</p>
-
-<p>When they all had crossed the ridge and were
-near the town, another halt was ordered, in order to
-smoke horses with the Osages. The four Osages
-sat down together; Chief Charakterik sat down in
-front of them, and lighted his pipe. Any Pawnee
-who wished to give horses to an Osage took the
-pipe and passed it to the Osage. Every time it was
-passed it meant a horse, until eight horses had been
-given. This was the Horse Smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The American second chief marched the soldiers
-on, to make camp up-river from the town. Chief
-Mungo-Meri Pike and his medicine-man stayed for
-a talk with White Wolf in his lodge. They were
-feasted to stewed corn and squash.</p>
-
-<p>The Osages also were feasted in the village.
-They had come on with the Americans to meet the
-Kansas at the Pawnee village and sit in peace council.
-Pretty Bird was their head chief.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody was curious to learn from the Osages
-and from the two Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton
-what kind of people these Americans were.</p>
-
-<p>“They live in a country wider than a week’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-travel by horse,” Frank asserted. “You are never
-out of sight of their lodges.”</p>
-
-<p>“Their women have red cheeks, and their men
-are in number of the buffalo,” the other Pawnee
-asserted. “They have great guns that shoot a mile
-and speak twice.”</p>
-
-<p>“If they are so powerful and many, why do
-they send such a little company into this country,
-when the Spanish father sent half a thousand soldiers
-at once?” inquired Skidi. “These are spies.”</p>
-
-<p>“They brought us forty-six of our relatives,
-from the Potawatomi,” said an Osage. “They asked
-for horses to go on with, but we sold them few.
-Now by orders of the great father at Wash’ton we
-are to make peace with the Kansas. The great father
-wishes his red children to fight no more.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is all because there is talk of war between the
-Spanish and the Americans,” Frank wisely declared.
-“That we heard. The Americans wish to keep the
-Indians from the war trail, so that they can march
-in here and take the land.”</p>
-
-<p>“We do not want the Americans in here,” spoke
-Skidi. “Our Spanish father warned us against them.
-They are poor and stingy or they would have sent
-a large company and an old chief to treat with us.
-They will get no help from the Pawnee, and they
-must go back.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<p>The American chief and his medicine-man stayed
-a long time in the Charakterik lodge. After a while
-Scar Head’s older brother came looking for him.</p>
-
-<p>“White Wolf says that you are to go on with
-the two Americans up to their camp and take a pony
-load of corn.”</p>
-
-<p>“How soon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now. They are leaving. The pony is being
-packed.”</p>
-
-<p>So Scar Head hastened to the lodge. The two
-Americans were bidding Chief Charakterik goodby,
-and were about to mount their horses. The chief
-beckoned to Scar Head and pointed to the pony.
-Scar Head obediently scrambled atop the corn.</p>
-
-<p>“Do I come back to-night?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“You may stay till morning, and see what you
-can see. Do not talk; and be sure and bring back
-the pony.”</p>
-
-<p>This was quite an adventure—to ride to the
-American camp with the head chief and the medicine-man,
-and maybe spend the night there. Scar Head’s
-heart beat rapidly, but he did not show that he was
-either frightened or delighted, for he was Indian,
-and son of White Wolf.</p>
-
-<p>He guided his loaded pony in the rear of the two
-trotting horsemen. Outside the town Chief Mungo-Meri<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-Pike reined in and dropped back beside him,
-with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>They eyed each other, although Scar Head did
-not smile. He was not ready to smile, and White
-Wolf had told him not to talk.</p>
-
-<p>The American chief had a clear pink and brown
-skin and a bright blue eye, with rather large nose
-and mouth, and stubborn chin. His manner was
-quick and commanding; anybody might see that he
-was a chief.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your name?” he asked, suddenly, in
-French.</p>
-
-<p>“Scar Head,” answered Scar Head, in Pawnee.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently the American chief did not understand
-Pawnee, for he looked a little puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you speak French?” he demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, little,” answered Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“You are not an Indian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, Pawnee,” grunted Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t look like a Pawnee.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pawnee,” Scar Head insisted, as he had been
-ordered always to do, by Charakterik.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“White Wolf.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who was your mother?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Were you born here?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you speak English?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“How old are you?”</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head held up the fingers of his two hands;
-that was as nearly as he could guess. It didn’t
-matter, anyway.</p>
-
-<p>The American chief hailed the medicine-man in
-the American language. Scar Head did not understand,
-but the words were: “Doctor, I don’t believe
-this is an Indian boy at all.”</p>
-
-<p>Now the medicine-man (he was a young man,
-with brown hair on his face) reined back to ride
-upon Scar Head’s other side. He spoke, in French.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you an Indian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What nation?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pawnee.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did the Pawnee get you?”</p>
-
-<p>“From Utahs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Chief Charakterik is not your father, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. My father.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your mother a Utah?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“How long has Charakterik been your father?”
-The medicine-man was smart.</p>
-
-<p>“Two year.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I see. The Utahs probably traded him to the
-Pawnees, doctor,” spoke the chief Mungo-Meri Pike,
-across, in the language that Scar Head did not understand.
-“And Charakterik adopted him.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Utahs must have got him somewhere.
-He’s no Indian,” replied the medicine-man, in those
-strange words. “He’s not Spanish, either.” And
-he asked, in French, of Scar Head:</p>
-
-<p>“You speak Spanish?”</p>
-
-<p>“A little.”</p>
-
-<p>“You speak Utah?”</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head nodded. He was growing tired of
-these questionings.</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man kept eyeing him.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you get this?” And he tapped
-his own head, in sign of the patch of white hair.</p>
-
-<p>“My name,” answered Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“What made it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did the Utahs capture you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where were you before the Utahs had you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“He may not be all Indian, but he’s enough
-Indian so he won’t tell what he doesn’t want to tell,”
-laughed the American chief, in the strange words.</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’d like to take him along with us and find
-out more about him. By the shape of his head
-he’s white blood.”</p>
-
-<p>The three jogged on in silence. Scar Head wondered
-what they had said, with those words, but he
-was glad to be let alone. White Wolf had forbidden
-him to talk with strangers. Nevertheless he
-glanced now and then at the two Americans. He
-felt more friendly toward them. They seemed kind.</p>
-
-<p>The American camp was not far. It had guards
-stationed, who saluted the American chief when he
-passed. At his lodge fire he halted; a head warrior
-took Scar Head’s pony, with the corn; other warriors
-took the two horses, to lead them away. The
-American second chief was here. While he and
-Chief Mungo-Meri Pike talked, Scar Head sat by
-the fire and looked around, to see what was going on.</p>
-
-<p>The camp had been placed upon a hill for protection.
-There were only four or five lodges, of
-canvas, besides the chief’s lodge. The American
-flag was flying from a pole. This American camp
-appeared poor—nothing. The soldiers, fifteen, wore
-shabby uniforms of sky blue; their coats were short
-and tight, their leggins thin, and several were
-mending their moccasins of heavy leather. They
-had only fifteen extra horses, to carry their baggage<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-and the presents. There was a black dog.
-They talked and laughed much, as they busied themselves
-or waited around the two fires that they had
-built. The hair on their heads was of different
-colors—brown, and black, and red, and gray. So
-was the hair on their faces. They were quick, active
-warriors—good men, evidently. If the Pawnees
-fought them, it would be hot work before they all
-were wiped out.</p>
-
-<p>Maybe, thought Scar Head, they depended upon
-the medicine of their “doctor,” to help them.</p>
-
-<p>Another man, who could talk sign language and
-a little Pawnee, came and sat down beside him.
-He was the interpreter for Chief Pike.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re no Indian; you’re white,” he accused,
-of Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“Indian,” said Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you come from?”</p>
-
-<p>“Utahs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did they get you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did White Wolf buy you from the Utahs?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is my father.”</p>
-
-<p>“You speak with crooked tongue,” the interpreter
-accused. “You are white. You are American.
-Who was your father?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p>“White Wolf is my father. I am Pawnee. I
-will talk no more,” said Scar Head. “Let me
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>After that nobody bothered him, although they
-all eyed him. Why did they tell him that he was
-white? Did he wish to be white? Why should he
-be white, or American, when the Pawnee were a
-great people who could fight even the Padoucah—the
-Comanches or Ietans as they were called. And
-if one were white instead of red, it would be better
-to be Spanish, for the Spanish were rich and powerful,
-and their king owned the country.</p>
-
-<p>Yet—yet, Scar Head could not help but admit
-that these Americans bore themselves like warriors;
-this Pike must be a bold young chief, to come so
-far with so few men; and after all, perhaps the
-Americans might prove strong in medicine. The
-Osages and the two Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton
-spoke well of the nation.</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man approached him and suddenly
-laid fingers upon his white patch, and pressed.</p>
-
-<p>“Does that hurt?”</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head tried not to wince, for hurt it did.
-He squirmed free.</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man might be putting an evil spell<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-upon him, to change him to white; but the medicine-man
-only smiled, and left him.</p>
-
-<p>Having eaten of meat and corn, Scar Head slept
-in the chief’s lodge, with the chief himself and the
-medicine-man whose title was “doctor.” When he
-awakened in the morning he was safe and sound still.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="III">III<br />
-<small>THE PAWNEES ARE OF TWO MINDS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“The Kansas are coming! They come in peace,
-but make ready for them.”</p>
-
-<p>These were the words of the heralds shouting
-through the great town of the Pawnee Republic.
-Scar Head heard. He had returned this morning
-from the American camp with the interpreter (whose
-name was Baroney), and felt rather important as
-the other boys curiously questioned him. To Chief
-White Wolf he had only good to report of the
-Americans. They had treated him well, aside from
-bothering him with talk about himself; but he had
-told them little. The fact was, he did not know
-much that he could tell!</p>
-
-<p>Baroney had wished to trade for provisions and
-horses. Now it was afternoon, and new excitement
-arose. The Kansas were coming! A peace party
-of them had halted, out on the prairie, and had sent
-in one man to announce them. They had come
-by order of the American father, to smoke peace
-with the Osages.</p>
-
-<p>The Osages and the Kansas had long been bitter<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-enemies; the Pawnees, too, had lost many scalps to
-the Kansas, although just at present there was no
-war between them.</p>
-
-<p>So Chief Charakterik directed that the Kansas
-be well received and feasted. Baroney the American
-interpreter took word up to the Pike camp that
-the Kansas were waiting.</p>
-
-<p>The two American chiefs exchanged visits with
-Chiefs White Wolf and Rich Man, and the Kansas
-chiefs. In a council held the next day the Kansas
-principal chief, Wah-on-son-gay, and his sub-chiefs,
-and the Osage principal chief, Shin-ga-wa-sa or
-Pretty Bird, and his sub-chiefs, agreed upon paper
-that the nations of the Kansas and the Osage should
-be friends, according to the wish of their American
-father.</p>
-
-<p>Wolf, the Pawnee, laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“It will last only until spring,” he said. “Nobody
-can trust the Kansas; and as for those Osage,
-they are getting to be a nation of squaws. One-half
-their face is red, the other half is white. We Pawnee
-are all red. We are not afraid of the Kansas, and
-we shall not help the Americans. They are a small
-people of small hearts, as the Spanish chief said.”</p>
-
-<p>This might appear to be the truth. Chief Charakterik
-was of the same opinion. He and Second
-Chief Iskatappe and two sub-chiefs had been invited<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-to a feast by the American chiefs. When they
-returned they were scornful, although White Wolf
-had been given a gun with two barrels, an arm band,
-and other things, and the other chiefs also had been
-rewarded.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head heard Rich Man tell about it.</p>
-
-<p>“Charakterik wore his large medal given him
-by the young Spanish chief. They did not ask him
-to take it off. They offered me a little American
-medal. ‘What shall I do with that?’ I asked. ‘It
-is not a medal for a chief. Those two young warriors
-who have been to Wash’ton were given bigger medals
-than this. Let the American father send me a
-chief’s medal, for I can get Spanish medals. I
-am not a boy.’ Yes,” continued Iskatappe, “the
-American nation must be very mean and stingy.
-They send a young man and a few soldiers, with
-little medals and a few poor presents, to talk with
-the great Pawnee nation. But the Spanish asked us
-to wait until next spring, when they will send us a
-principal chief and many more soldiers, to live near
-us and treat with us in honorable fashion.”</p>
-
-<p>The council with the Americans had been set
-for the next day. The two American chiefs, and
-Baroney the interpreter, and the “doctor,” and a
-guard of soldiers, rode down. Chief Charakterik
-assembled four hundred warriors. The council lodge<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-was crowded, and a throng of women and boys and
-girls pressed around, outside, to peer and listen.
-Scar Head managed to squeeze inside, to a place
-where he might see and hear. The Osages and the
-Kansas were inside, too.</p>
-
-<p>After the pipe had been passed around among
-the chiefs, Mungo-Meri Pike stood, to speak. He
-threw off his red-lined blue cloak, and stood slim
-and straight—a handsome young man.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney translated for him, in Pawnee and sign
-language.</p>
-
-<p>“The great American father of us all, at Wash’ton,
-has sent me,” he said. “He is now your father.
-You have no Spanish father. Not long ago the
-Spanish gave up all this country, from the big river
-to the mountains. The Americans have bought it.
-The Spanish have no rights here, any more. Now
-your American father has sent me to visit among
-his red children, to tell them that his heart is good
-toward them, and that he wishes peace. I am to
-take back word of them, and of the country, so that
-he may know. I am surprised to see that you are
-flying the Spanish flag at the lodge door. <a href="#i_055">I bring
-you the American flag</a>, to take its place. You cannot
-have two fathers and two flags. I have also
-brought you gifts. They are here. I ask you to
-accept them, as a small token from your American<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-father. I should like your answer.” And he sat
-down.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_055">
- <img src="images/i_055.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_55">“I BRING YOU THE AMERICAN FLAG”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Chief Charakterik dropped his buffalo-robe from
-his shoulders, to stand and speak.</p>
-
-<p>“We hear your words,” he said. “We thank
-you for the presents. We wish to ask where you
-are going from here?”</p>
-
-<p>“We are going on, to explore the country and
-to smoke peace with the Ietans,” replied Chief Pike.</p>
-
-<p>“We knew that you were coming,” spoke White
-Wolf. “The Spanish chief who was here said that
-you were coming. He said that the Americans were
-a small nation but greedy, and that soon they would
-stretch out even to the Pawnee, and claim the country.
-Now we see how truly the Spanish chief saw
-ahead, for here you are. We do not wish you to go
-on. We turned the Spanish back, until they should
-come again to live with us. We will turn you back.
-It is impossible for you to go on. You are few
-and you do not know the country. The Padoucah
-(Comanches) are many and powerful. They are
-our enemies and the friends of the Spanish and will
-kill you all. You must go back by the road that you
-came on.”</p>
-
-<p>The young Chief Mungo-Meri Pike stood up
-straighter still, and answered with ringing voice.</p>
-
-<p>“I have been sent out by our great father to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-travel through his country, to visit his red children,
-and talk peace. You have seen how I have
-brought the Osages and the Kansas together. I
-wish my road to be smooth, with a blue sky over my
-head. I have not seen any blood in the trail. But
-the warriors of the American father are not women,
-to be turned back by words. If the Pawnee wish to
-try to stop me, they may try. We are men, well
-armed, and will take many lives in exchange for
-our own. Then the great father will send other
-warriors, to gather our bones and to avenge our
-deaths, and our spirits will hear war-songs sung in
-praise of our deeds. We shall go on. I ask you
-for horses, and somebody who speaks Comanche,
-to help us; and I ask you to take down the Spanish
-flag and hoist the flag of your American father,
-instead.”</p>
-
-<p>That was a defiant speech, and Scar Head thrilled.
-Surely, the American chief was a man.</p>
-
-<p>Iskatappe arose.</p>
-
-<p>“We do not want peace with the Padoucah,” he
-said. “They have killed six of our young men.
-We must have scalps in payment, so that the young
-men’s relatives can wash the mourning paint from
-their faces and be happy. It would be foolish for
-us to send anybody with you or to give you horses.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-We have been satisfied with our Spanish father. We
-do not wish so many fathers.”</p>
-
-<p>He sat down.</p>
-
-<p>“That is true,” Chief Pike retorted. “You do
-not wish many fathers. Now you have only the one
-great father. He is your American father. You
-have not answered me about the flag. I still see the
-Spanish flag flying at your door. I think you ought
-to lower that flag and put up this American flag,
-for I have told you that the Spanish do not rule this
-land any more. You cannot be children of two
-fathers, and speak with two tongues. I wish an
-answer.”</p>
-
-<p>Nobody said anything for a long time. The
-American chiefs sat there, gazing straight in front
-of them, and waiting. The blue eyes of Mungo-Meri
-Pike seemed to search all hearts. Was it to be
-peace or war? Then old Sleeping Bear, the head
-councillor of the Pawnee Republic, got up, without
-a word, and went to the doorway, and took down
-the Spanish flag from its staff, and brought it to
-Chief Pike. Chief Pike handed him the American
-flag, of red and white stripes like the sunset and the
-starry sky in one corner. Old Sleeping Bear carried
-it and fastened it to the staff.</p>
-
-<p>The Osages and the Kansas grunted “Good,”
-because they already had accepted the American<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-father; but the Pawnees hung their heads and looked
-glum. When the Spanish came back and found
-their great king’s flag gone, what would they say?</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike saw the downcast faces, and read
-the thoughts behind them. His heart was big, after
-all, and he did not wish to shame the Pawnee nation,
-for he uttered, quickly:</p>
-
-<p>“You have shown me that you are of good mind
-toward your father in Wash’ton. I do not seek to
-make trouble between you and the Spanish. We
-will attend to the Spanish. Should there be war
-between the white people, the wish of your American
-father is that his red children stay by their own fires
-and not take part. In case that the Spanish come
-and demand their flag, here it is. I give it to you.
-I ask that you do not put it up while I am with you,
-but that you keep the American flag flying.”</p>
-
-<p>“We thank you. We will do as you say,” White
-Wolf responded; and every face had brightened.
-“In return, we beg you not to go on. You will
-lose your way. It will soon be winter, and you have
-no winter clothes, I see. The Spanish will capture
-you. If they do not capture you, the Padoucah
-will kill you. It will be pitiful.”</p>
-
-<p>Soon after this the council broke up. Chief
-Mungo-Meri Pike was still determined; he had not
-been frightened by the words. His men tried to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span>
-buy horses, but Chief White Wolf had the orders
-spread that no horses were to be supplied to the
-Americans. When some of the Pawnees went to the
-American camp, to trade, Skidi and two other “dog
-soldiers” or police followed them and drove them
-home with whips of buffalo-hide.</p>
-
-<p>Iskatappe only waited for other orders, to muster
-the warriors and capture the camp.</p>
-
-<p>“It can be done,” he said. “We doubtless shall
-lose many men, for I think the Americans are hard
-fighters. We might do better to attack them on the
-march.”</p>
-
-<p>Some of the older men were against fighting.</p>
-
-<p>“We should not pull hot fat out of the fire with
-our fingers, for the Spanish,” they said. “Let the
-Spanish stop the Americans, if they can. We will
-stay at home and put up the flag of the stronger
-nation.”</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the young warriors liked to gallop
-near the American camp and shake their lances and
-guns at it. The American warriors laughed and
-shouted.</p>
-
-<p>For the next few days Boy Scar Head was all
-eyes and ears. The Americans kept close in camp
-and were very watchful. Only Baroney the interpreter
-rode back and forth, looking for horses.
-Chief Charakterik seemed much troubled. He had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-not counted upon the Americans being so stubborn.
-He sent the Kansas home. They had promised to
-guide the Americans; but he gave Wah-on-son-ga a
-gun and two horses, and told him that the Padoucahs
-would certainly kill everybody; so Wah-on-son-ga
-took his men home.</p>
-
-<p>Frank, the Pawnee-who-had-been-to-Wash’ton,
-stole the wife of an Osage and ran away with her.
-This made the Osages angry; and now the Americans
-were getting angry, too.</p>
-
-<p>They had found only three or four horses.
-Then—</p>
-
-<p>“The Americans are going to march to-morrow!”</p>
-
-<p>That was the word from the warriors who spied
-upon the camp. Chief Pike rode down, unafraid,
-with Baroney, to White Wolf’s lodge. Scar Head
-hid in a corner, to hear what was said. He liked the
-crisp voice and the handsome face of this young
-Mungo-Meri Pike. Maybe he would never see him
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“Why have you told the Kansas to go home,
-and made them break their promise to me?” demanded
-Chief Pike, of White Wolf.</p>
-
-<p>“The hearts of the Kansas failed them. They
-decided they would only be throwing their lives<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-away, to go with such a small party into the country
-of the Padoucah,” answered White Wolf.</p>
-
-<p>“You frightened them with your stories,” Chief
-Pike accused. “That was not right. I have come
-from your father, to make peace among his red children.
-Why do you forbid your men to trade us
-horses? You have plenty. Why do you not lend
-us a man who speaks the Ietan tongue, to help us?”</p>
-
-<p>“If, as you say, we all are children of the American
-father, then we do not wish our brothers to give
-up their lives,” White Wolf said. “But we do not
-know. The Spanish claim this country, too. They
-are coming back next spring. We promised them
-not to let you march through. You can come next
-spring and talk with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” thundered Chief Pike. “We are going
-to march on. We are Americans and will go where
-we are ordered by the great father. The Osages
-have given us five of their horses. They have shown
-a good heart. I will speak well of them, to their
-father.”</p>
-
-<p>“They gave you their poor horses, because they
-got better ones from us,” replied White Wolf.</p>
-
-<p>“If the Pawnee try to stop us, it will cost them
-at least one hundred warriors,” Chief Pike asserted.
-“You will have to kill every one of us, and we will
-die fighting. Then the American nation will send<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-such an army that the very name Pawnee will be
-forgotten.” He arose, and his flashing blue eyes
-marked Boy Scar Head huddled upon a roll of
-buffalo-robes. “Who is that boy?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“He is my son,” Charakterik answered.</p>
-
-<p>“He cannot be your son,” reproved Chief Pike.
-“He is white, you are red. I think he is an American.
-Where did you get him?”</p>
-
-<p>“He is my son. I have adopted him,” White
-Wolf insisted. “I got him from the Utahs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are his parents?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am his parent. I do not know anything
-more.”</p>
-
-<p>“You must give him up. He is not an Indian,”
-said Chief Pike.</p>
-
-<p>“He is a Pawnee. Why should I give him up?”
-argued Charakterik.</p>
-
-<p>“Because the great father wishes all captives to
-be given up. The Potawatomi had many captives
-from the Osage. They have been given up. There
-cannot be good feeling between people when they
-hold captives from each other. I ask you to send this
-boy down river. Two French traders are in your
-town now. You can send the boy with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will think upon what you say,” White Wolf
-replied.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
-
-<p>So Chief Pike left.</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you come in here to listen?” scolded
-White Wolf, of Scar Head. “You are making me
-trouble. Do you want to be sent away with those
-traders?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” Scar Head admitted. For the two French
-traders were dark, dirty little men, not at all like the
-Americans. He preferred the Pawnees to those
-traders. But if he were an American, himself——?
-An American the same as the Pike Americans! That
-sounded good.</p>
-
-<p>He could see that White Wolf was troubled; and
-the rest of the day he kept out of sight. Early in
-the morning the two French traders went away, but
-he had not been sent for. Chief Charakterik probably
-had matters of more importance to think about.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans were breaking camp. The Pawnee
-young men, urged by Iskatappe and Skidi, were
-painting for battle, while the women filled the quivers
-and sharpened the lance points, and cleaned the guns
-afresh.</p>
-
-<p>The sun mounted higher. A close watch was
-kept upon the American camp, plain in view up the
-Republican River. Shortly after noon the cry
-welled:</p>
-
-<p>“They are coming! Shall we let them pass?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span></p>
-
-<p>“No! Kill them!”</p>
-
-<p>“See where they are going, first.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait till they are in the village.”</p>
-
-<p>Nobody knew exactly what to do. The Americans
-were marching down, their horses together,
-their ranks formed, their guns ready; and they
-looked small beside the four hundred and more
-warriors of the Pawnees. It was a brave act.</p>
-
-<p>“They are not striking the village. They are
-going around,” Rich Man shouted. “We shall have
-to fight them in the open. That is bad.”</p>
-
-<p>The young warriors like Skidi ran to and fro,
-handling their bows and lances and guns. They
-waited for orders from White Wolf; but White
-Wolf only stood at the door of his lodge, with his
-arms folded, and said nothing as he watched the
-American column.</p>
-
-<p>Mungo-Meri Pike was smart. He acted like a
-war chief. He was marching around, far enough
-out so that if he were attacked the Pawnees could
-not hide behind their mud houses. Now to charge
-on those well-armed Americans, in the open, would
-cost many lives; and no Pawnee wished to be the
-first to fall.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans had come opposite, and no gun
-had yet been fired, when on a sudden Chief Pike left<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-them. With Baroney and one soldier he galloped
-across, for the village. That was a bold deed, but he
-did not seem to fear. He paid no attention to the
-warriors who scowled at him. He made way
-through them straight to Chief Charakterik. He
-spoke loudly, so that all about might hear.</p>
-
-<p>“I have come to say good-by. I hope that when
-we come again we will find the great father’s flag
-still flying.”</p>
-
-<p>“You had better go quickly,” White Wolf replied.
-“The Spanish will be angry with us, and
-my young men are hard to hold.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are going,” Chief Pike assured. “We are
-going, as we said we would. If your young men
-mean to stop us, let them try. Two of our horses
-were stolen from us this morning. They were Pawnee
-horses. One was returned to us by your men.
-The other is missing. I am sure that the Pawnee
-do not sell us horses at a high price, so as to steal
-them. That is not honest. If you are a chief you
-will get the horse back for us, or the Pawnee will
-have a bad name for crooked tongues. So I will
-leave one of my men, who will receive the horse
-and bring it on. He will wait till the sun is overhead,
-to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will see what I can do,” White Wolf answered.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span>
-“The horse may have only strayed. A
-present might find him again.”</p>
-
-<p>“The horse is ours,” reproved Chief Pike. “I
-shall not buy it twice. If the Pawnees are honest
-and wish to be friends with their American brothers,
-they will return the horse to me. I shall expect it,
-to-morrow. Adios.”</p>
-
-<p>“Adios,” grunted White Wolf, wrapping his
-robe about him.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike and Baroney the interpreter galloped
-for the column. They left the soldier. Now he
-was one American among all the Pawnees, but he
-did not act afraid, either.</p>
-
-<p>He sat his horse and gazed about him with a
-smile. He was a stout, chunky man, in stained blue
-clothes. His face was partly covered with red hair,
-and the hair on his head, under his slouched black
-hat, was red, too. He carried a long-barreled heavy
-gun in the hollow of one arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Get down,” signed White Wolf. “Come into
-my lodge.” And he waved the crowding warriors
-back.</p>
-
-<p>The red-haired soldier got down and entered the
-lodge. Here he was safe. Everything of his was
-safe as long as he was a guest of a lodge. Scar
-Head slipped in after him, but White Wolf stayed
-outside.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The American chief has lost a horse,” he announced.
-“The horse must be brought back, or we
-shall have a bad name with our American father.”</p>
-
-<p>“If the American chief has lost a horse, let him
-promise a present and maybe it will be found,”
-answered Skidi.</p>
-
-<p>“That is no way to talk,” Charakterik rebuked.
-“I want the horse brought to me; then we will see
-about the present.”</p>
-
-<p>“The present is here already,” laughed Skidi.
-“It is in your lodge. The American chief would
-have done better to lose all his horses and say nothing,
-for a red scalp is big medicine.”</p>
-
-<p>And all the warriors laughed.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the lodge the American soldier grinned at
-Scar Head. Scar Head grinned back.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” said the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head had heard that word several times.
-Now he blurted it, himself.</p>
-
-<p>“H’lo.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the end of the conversation, but Scar
-Head did a lot of thinking. He well knew where
-the horse was. Skidi had stolen it and hidden it out,
-and boasted of his feat. Now Skidi was talking of
-keeping the red-hair. That did not seem right. The
-Americans were brave. If somebody—a boy—should<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-go out and bring the horse in, then Skidi
-might not dare to claim it, and White Wolf would
-send it and the red-hair on to Pike, and there would
-be no more trouble. Yes, being an American, himself
-(as they had said), Scar Head decided that he
-ought to help the other Americans.</p>
-
-<p>He would get the horse.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IV">IV<br />
-<small>ON THE TRAIL OF THE SPANIARDS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Early in the morning, before yet even the
-squaws were stirring, Scar Head slipped out to get
-the horse. He found it picketed near the river, just
-where Skidi had cleverly concealed it. He led it in
-and tied it short, before the lodge door. Then he
-crept back to bed again. It would be safe, for nobody
-would dare remove it from the limits of the
-chiefs lodge.</p>
-
-<p>The squaws were up first, of course, to start
-the fires and prepare the breakfasts. Charakterik’s
-two wives, an old one and a young one, arose and
-went outside. Lying quiet Scar Head heard them
-talking.</p>
-
-<p>“Someone has brought a horse,” said the young
-squaw. “It is a Pawnee horse.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is queer,” said the old squaw. “Who
-is making White Wolf such a present? This must
-be the horse that was stolen from the Americans.
-The thief has changed his heart, and grown afraid.”</p>
-
-<p>“Or else it is a marriage gift,” giggled the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-young squaw. “Someone is looking for a wife
-in our lodge.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is there, to be married?” the old squaw
-demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“We are the only women, so it must be that
-someone is in love with me,” the young squaw
-giggled again.</p>
-
-<p>“You!” scoffed the old squaw. “Who would
-look at you? You are not worth a horse. No; the
-horse offering is made for me.”</p>
-
-<p>And they both laughed. They knew better than
-to rouse Charakterik and tell him. Their business
-was to get the breakfast, and let him discover the
-horse, himself.</p>
-
-<p>White Wolf and the American soldier were still
-snoozing upon their buffalo-robe couches. Pretty
-soon Scar Head could wait no longer. He went
-outside, yawning and rubbing his eyes, and pretended
-to be surprised by the horse.</p>
-
-<p>“Whose horse is that?” he queried.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask it, and maybe you will know more than
-we do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who brought it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That is none of our affair; nor of yours, either.
-It was here when we came out.”</p>
-
-<p>“It had not been here very long,” added the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-young squaw, to the elder. “See? The ground is
-only little trampled.”</p>
-
-<p>“If you want to know where it came from,”
-continued the old squaw, to Scar Head, “you should
-trail it back, instead of asking silly questions.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and get into trouble. A gift is a gift, and
-not to be doubted,” the young squaw added.</p>
-
-<p>At this, Scar Head ran off, to the river, for his
-morning swim. When he returned, Chief Charakterik
-and the American soldier were up and out,
-too, and surveying the horse.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know where this horse came from?”
-White Wolf questioned, of his wives.</p>
-
-<p>“No. It was here. That is all.”</p>
-
-<p>“The man who stole the horse from the Americans
-has returned it,” declared White Wolf. “Good.
-Is this the horse you are waiting for?” he asked,
-of the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>The soldier did not understand the words, but
-he understood the gesture. Now he smiled and
-replied in his own language—which nobody else
-understood. But he nodded and pointed to the
-horse and in the direction of the Americans; and
-they all understood that.</p>
-
-<p>“After you have eaten, you may take the horse
-and go your way,” White Wolf bade, well satisfied.</p>
-
-<p>So the matter seemed to be settled; but somehow,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-Scar Head did not feel quite happy. The
-matter was settled too easily. In a few minutes
-the soldier would go; then all the Americans would
-be gone, and he himself would have lost them. In
-fact, he didn’t seem to be getting much out of his
-scheme, except that he may have saved the soldier’s
-scalp. Skidi would be angry, too, when he found
-out that the horse and soldier both had gone. Somebody
-would suffer—and Scar Head rather foresaw
-who that somebody might be! Skidi could make
-things very uncomfortable.</p>
-
-<p>But before they were done eating, here came
-Skidi and several others, of the men, all furious.</p>
-
-<p>“There is the horse,” exclaimed Skidi. “And
-there is the red-haired white man. We are in time.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is all this shouting about?” reproved
-White Wolf. “This is no way to come to a chief’s
-lodge.”</p>
-
-<p>“We come for a horse that has been stolen by
-that white man,” Skidi boldly retorted. “There
-it is. We claim it.”</p>
-
-<p>“No. The horse belongs to the American chief.
-His soldier is here to get it. We talked about that
-yesterday. I will talk no more.”</p>
-
-<p>“I will talk, for I am a man,” answered Skidi.
-“You let the white man eat at your fire and sleep
-in your lodge, and during the night he steals a horse.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-Are you a chief, that you close your eyes to such
-things? We ask for our horse, or else a large
-present.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whose horse is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is a Pawnee horse, and that is enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“The horse was not here last night, but it was
-here early this morning,” announced White Wolf.
-“The American did not go out and get it. I am
-sure of that. If he did, why should he have brought
-it here, if he had stolen it? He could have easily
-made off with it, and others. No; the thief who
-took the horse from the Americans has returned it,
-as is right. Let the man who claims to own the
-horse come forward. But I think there is nothing
-more to be said.”</p>
-
-<p>The soldier was sitting, in his stained blue clothes,
-and gazing around with a good-natured smile on his
-hairy face; but Scar Head could see that he was
-thinking fast, and ready to spring for the lodge
-and his gun.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to send him away with the
-horse?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who owns the horse?” White Wolf replied.
-“Why was it left at my lodge door if not for the
-American to take with him? Somebody had bad
-dreams, and went and got the horse, so that he
-might sleep.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span></p>
-
-<p>“In that case, the man deserves a present,”
-Skidi declared. “Let a present be given in exchange
-for the horse and the American may go.”</p>
-
-<p>“To whom shall the present be given?” White
-Wolf inquired.</p>
-
-<p>“I will take the present, and give it to the man
-who owns the horse,” said Skidi. “But of course if
-he has done this good deed he may wish to be
-secret about it, and if he is accused of having done
-an evil deed in the first place, he does not wish to
-be pointed at as a thief.”</p>
-
-<p>“The American chief sent no present. He only
-asked for a horse that had been taken from him.
-Here it is, left on the prairie at my door, and I give
-it back to him.”</p>
-
-<p>With that, Chief Charakterik stood and folded
-his robe around him, as sign that he was done. The
-soldier rose, also.</p>
-
-<p>But the squad led by Skidi murmured angrily.
-Somebody reached to grasp the horse’s neck rope—</p>
-
-<p>“No. Let him take it. He will not go far.”</p>
-
-<p>“There will be a red scalp, for a dance, to-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Americans will think the Pawnee are
-cowards, if all they need do is ask for a horse
-and get it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You talk like children,” White Wolf reproved.
-“Who among you claims the horse? Nobody. Why<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-was it left at my door, if not for me? Or did it come
-of itself? It is mine and I can do with it as I
-please.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the present! You will shame all the town
-if you, a great chief, yield this way to the Americans.
-There is no proof that they have lost a horse, and
-why should you give one up to them, for nothing?
-You have no right to give the horse away until you
-find out why it was left at your lodge. You should
-wait and find out. People do not leave horses at
-lodges without expecting something in return. I
-may have left the horse, myself; and I might look
-for a present. Where is the present?”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Skidi cunningly argued.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, where is the present?” they all demanded.
-“You need not make it, yourself. You can ask it
-from the Americans. Or tell the soldier to go; and
-if he doesn’t like to go alone, we will help him on
-his way.”</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head suddenly spoke up.</p>
-
-<p>“The American can have the horse, White Wolf.
-I brought it, and I want no present.”</p>
-
-<p>Everybody gaped. White Wolf turned on him
-severely.</p>
-
-<p>“You? You are a boy. Why do you say the
-American can have the horse? If you brought it,
-where did you get it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I found it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Whose horse is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It belongs to the American chief. It is the
-one he lost.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Scar Head. “It was hidden,
-but I went and got it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You lie! You are a meddler!” Skidi stormed,
-furious. “Wait till I lay my hands on you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do not lie. I brought the horse, and I can
-show where I found it,” Scar Head answered.</p>
-
-<p>“That is boy’s talk,” appealed Skidi. “Look at
-him! He is no Pawnee, as everybody knows. He
-is not even an Indian. Who can believe what he
-says? Are warriors to be ruled by a boy? I demand
-a council, on this horse—and I will attend to
-that piece of impudence when I catch him away
-from the lodge.”</p>
-
-<p>Chief Charakterik hesitated. Attracted by the
-loud voice of Skidi the village was gathering; Iskatappe
-had come, and Old Knife, and other leading
-men who were unfriendly to the Americans; and
-Scar Head felt small. Now Skidi had called for a
-council; and between the council and Skidi the red-haired
-soldier and he himself were likely to fare
-rather badly. Charakterik, too, looked angry. Only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-the soldier stood smiling, backed against the lodge
-doorway, his gun in his hands.</p>
-
-<p>But right in the midst of the crisis, somebody else
-arrived. It was Baroney, the interpreter for Chief
-Pike.</p>
-
-<p>“Go into the lodge,” ordered White Wolf, to
-Scar Head. “You have made bad work. I will
-talk with you later.”</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head went in, disgraced. Outside, the
-voices continued, with White Wolf, and Skidi, and
-Baroney doing most of the speaking, and Rich Man
-and Letalesha adding remarks.</p>
-
-<p>After a short time they all quit. White Wolf
-entered, with Baroney and the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>“You are going away,” he said. “You may get
-your yellow pony and make ready.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where am I going?”</p>
-
-<p>“With these two men, to the American camp.
-The horse matter is settled. The American chief
-has sent a present, for the horse. Everybody is satisfied.
-But you did a wrong thing, when you interfered
-in men’s affairs. Why did you do that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I like the Americans,” Scar Head stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied White Wolf. “What Skidi said
-is true. You are not red, you are white, and they all
-know it. You can never be an Indian. Now you
-have lost friends. The Pawnee will always look at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-you sideways, and Skidi is likely to harm you. So
-I give you to the American chief, to be rid of you
-before you are hurt. He asked me to send you away.
-If I keep you it may mean trouble for me also. Get
-your horse. These two men are waiting.”</p>
-
-<p>His brain in a whirl, Scar Head hastened out,
-for his yellow pony. As he passed through the village,
-there were scowls and jeers, because now nobody
-respected him as the chief’s son; but he did not
-care. He was an American, and these Pawnees
-were no longer his people. So he tried to walk fast,
-like an American, and pay no attention to the black
-looks and the slurs.</p>
-
-<p>He rode back, on his pony. The two men were
-waiting, on their horses, with the other horse in tow.
-White Wolf’s lodge received him kindly. His
-brother, White Wolf’s real son, handed him a horn
-bow and otter-skin quiver of arrows.</p>
-
-<p>“They are for you. Do not forget your
-brother.”</p>
-
-<p>The old squaw put new beaded moccasins upon
-his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“They are for you. Do not forget your
-mother.”</p>
-
-<p>The young squaw clasped a silver bracelet upon
-his wrist.</p>
-
-<p>“It is for you. Do not forget your sister.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span></p>
-
-<p>White Wolf threw a white-tanned robe, soft and
-warm, from a young buffalo-cow, over his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not forget your father. You did wrong,
-but your heart was good. Remember that you have
-been a chief’s son. Always bear yourself like a
-warrior. To a warrior, heat and cold and thirst
-and hunger are nothing. A brave man lives, while
-a coward dies. Now go.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” said Baroney. The stocky soldier
-smiled brightly.</p>
-
-<p>With never a backward glance they galloped out
-of the town, into the south and on.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney began to lead. With the horse in tow,
-the soldier slackened, to ride alongside Scar Head.
-He grinned, and spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello,” he said, again.</p>
-
-<p>“H’lo,” responded Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>The soldier rubbed his nose, as if figuring upon
-what to say next.</p>
-
-<p>“American, you?” he queried.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head caught the word, and nodded. The
-soldier spoke farther, with another question.</p>
-
-<p>“He asks your name,” called back Baroney. “I
-will tell him. His name is Sparks. He is a good
-man. They are all good men. You will be happy
-with the Americans.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sparks!” That was a simple name and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-good one, because it fitted. Fire might be his medicine;
-the stiff bright hairs of his face were the red
-sparks, shooting out.</p>
-
-<p>The American chief had camped at only a short
-distance from the Pawnee town, waiting on peace or
-war. There were shouts of welcome, for Baroney
-and Sparks, and many curious gazes for Scar Head.
-He rode proudly, on his yellow pony, with his warrior’s
-bow and arrows, his chief-beaded moccasins,
-his bracelet and his white cow-robe. He was no
-longer afraid of the Americans. Baroney took him
-on to Chief Pike, who was standing beside his
-saddled horse.</p>
-
-<p>The camp lodges had been struck, the Americans
-were ready to march.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney explained to the young chief. Chief
-Pike listened—he nodded, and spoke, and with a
-smile reached to shake Scar Head’s hand. The
-medicine man also spoke, and smiled, and shook
-hands. The young second chief came and did the
-same. Then they got on their horses.</p>
-
-<p>“It is well,” said Baroney to Scar Head. “You
-will ride in front, with the chiefs.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where do we go?”</p>
-
-<p>“We go to the mountains, and to find the Ietans.”</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head said nothing, to that. It was a long
-way, and the danger way, but he was with braves<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span>
-who seemed to feel no fears. They appeared to
-know what they were about.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike shouted a command and led out. The
-second chief repeated the command, and turned in
-his saddle to see that it was obeyed; then he galloped
-to the fore. The two chiefs rode first, side
-by side. Baroney signed, and Scar Head found
-himself between Baroney and the medicine-man.
-Four Osages, still—Chief Pretty Bird, two warriors
-and a woman—followed. The American warriors
-trudged after, two by two, in a column, with the
-extra horses bearing packs.</p>
-
-<p>The warriors numbered eighteen. It was a small
-party, for a great nation, when one remembered that
-the Spanish had sent several hundred and that the
-Padoucahs or Ietans (the Comanches) numbered
-thousands. The Osages of course need not be
-counted. The Pawnees thought little of Osages—a
-poor and miserable people.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish had left a very broad, plain trail.
-The Americans were following it, although it was an
-old trail and the Spanish chief had been gone several
-weeks. It stretched straight southward, toward the
-Kansas country, and the Padoucah and the Spanish
-country, beyond. If the young chief Pike followed
-far enough, in that direction, he would have need
-of all his medicine to get out again. But perhaps<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
-he would turn west, in time, and aim for the unknown
-mountains, many days’ journey—although what he
-expected to find there, nobody might say.</p>
-
-<p>It was the home of the Utahs, who warred upon
-plains people and were friendly to only the Spanish.</p>
-
-<p>He was a bold man, this young Chief Pike.</p>
-
-<p>The march southward continued all day, pursuing
-the trail, until when the sun was getting low
-and the shadows long a place was reached where the
-Spanish had camped.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike examined the signs. The Spanish of
-Chief Melgares had camped in a circle. There were
-fifty-nine burnt spots, from campfires. Allowing six
-warriors to each fire, that counted up over three
-hundred and fifty. The grasses had been eaten off
-by the horses.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike led his eighteen warriors on a little
-distance, and ordered camp for the night beside a
-fork of the river of the Kansas. Scar Head was
-well treated; the American medicine man or “doctor”
-eyed him a great deal, but did him no harm;
-the warrior Sparks grinned at him, and beckoned
-to him, but he did not go. It was a cheerful camp,
-with the men singing and joking in their strange
-language.</p>
-
-<p>He ate at the fire of the two chiefs and the medicine-man.
-They and Baroney the interpreter talked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-together. Soon after dark everybody went to bed,
-except the guards, and except Chief Pike, who sat
-up, in his lodge, making black marks on white leaves,
-by the fire of a sputtering white stick!</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head rolled in his buffalo robe, at one side
-of the lodge; the couch for the medicine-man (who
-was already on it) and for the chief, was at the
-other side. He stayed awake as long as he could,
-watching lest the medicine-man should try to feel
-of the spot on his head, again; but he was tired, and
-before the chief had finished making marks, he fell
-asleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="V">V<br />
-<small>THE CHASE OF THE BIG ELK</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Bang!</p>
-
-<p>One of the American guards, stationed on a little
-rise, had fired his gun, as an alarm signal.</p>
-
-<p>It was noon, of the second day, and Chief Pike
-had halted his men to eat, and graze the horses. At
-the signal, everybody looked.</p>
-
-<p>“Injuns!” cried the Americans, while the guard
-pointed and called.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head likewise looked.</p>
-
-<p>“Pawnee,” he said. He knew them instantly,
-although they were still far off.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike and the young sub-chief shouted
-orders. The soldiers seized their guns and formed
-to protect the horses; the guards came running in.
-Scar Head strung his bow and plucked a good arrow
-from his quiver. The “doctor” or medicine-man,
-standing with gun in hand, smiled and asked him a
-question, in French.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing? Making ready to fight?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good,” praised the medicine-man. “You will
-fight for the Americans?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am American,” asserted Scar Head. “American.
-No Pawnee.”</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man laughed, but he seemed
-pleased.</p>
-
-<p>There were many of the Pawnees—fully three
-hundred. They approached swiftly, across the rolling
-prairie, from the north. They were horseback,
-but they acted like a war party—all were warriors,
-with guns and bows and lances. What did they
-want? Even Scar Head could not guess. Had
-Charakterik decided to let the Americans be attacked?
-That was foolish. The Americans were ready, and
-would fight hard.</p>
-
-<p>Or, perhaps Iskatappe and Skidi and other hot-hearts
-had planned this without permission, and
-were determined to see what they might do.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans stood in a half circle, facing
-the Pawnees, their horses tied short, behind them.
-Chief Pike stood in front of the center, his sword
-in his hand. His sub-chief was at one end and
-the medicine-man at the other end. Scar Head fitted
-his arrow upon his bow, twitched his quiver around
-so that he might reach it more easily, and ran closer
-to the medicine-man’s end, where he could shoot
-better. The soldier Sparks was here, too.</p>
-
-<p>Iskatappe led the Pawnees. They were nearing
-fast. Yes, Skidi was among them. Scar Head decided<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span>
-to loose his arrows upon Skidi, who had called
-him a liar and who was the mischief-maker. Now
-Chief Pike uttered a sharp command, and the gun-locks
-of the few Americans all clicked; he uttered
-another command, and the guns of the few Americans
-all rose to a level line. Scar Head lifted his
-bow and bent it, pointing his arrow upward, his eyes
-measuring the distance to Skidi.</p>
-
-<p>But on a sudden the Pawnees stopped short, so
-that their ponies’ forehoofs ploughed the sod, and
-Iskatappe and another chief rode forward more
-slowly, with the peace sign.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike barked a command, so that the Americans’
-guns were lowered. Baroney went out and
-joined him, and they two met Iskatappe and the
-other chief.</p>
-
-<p>After all, Iskatappe only gave Chief Pike a piece
-of meat. They rode in together, and the Pawnees
-came on, and the Americans let them.</p>
-
-<p>“No war,” smiled the medicine-man, over his
-shoulder, at Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” grunted Scar Head, but he was suspicious.
-When the Pawnees acted this way, they
-were of two minds. The Americans would do well
-to watch out. They did watch, but it was hard to
-keep so many Pawnees at a distance. They edged
-about, smiling and alert for chances.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hello, little sneak,” greeted Skidi, of Scar
-Head.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, thief,” Scar Head boldly answered.
-“You are the sneak. You give with one hand and
-take back with the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“You talk big,” sneered Skidi. “Once you were
-a chief’s son; now you are nothing. When I catch
-you, some day, you will be less than nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you catch me now?” Scar Head
-retorted. “I am with the Americans. I am not
-afraid of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are not worth the trouble. We are hunting
-meat. The Padoucah can have you and those
-Osages. They and the Spanish will eat you all, for
-us, and save us the bother. If we did not believe
-that, we would never have let the Americans come
-even this far.”</p>
-
-<p>It appeared to be true that the Pawnees were
-hunting, and not bent upon war. Iskatappe had
-brought Chief Pike a present of bear meat, to wipe
-out the memory of the horse-theft, he said. But the
-Americans stood ready, trying to see what the Pawnees
-really were up to—and Scar Head kept his eye
-upon the crafty Skidi.</p>
-
-<p>Pretty soon Chief Pike and Iskatappe shook
-hands again. The Pawnees were to ride one way,
-the Americans another. Scar Head was just in time.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span>
-As the Americans started, he brushed against the
-medicine-man, so as to warn, with his French words:</p>
-
-<p>“Knife. No knife.”</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man instantly felt of the knife
-scabbard on his saddle. It was empty, as Scar Head
-well knew, for he had seen the clever Skidi steal
-the knife out. Now the “doctor” exclaimed, and
-spoke quickly to Chief Pike. They both reined aside,
-so did Baroney the interpreter—</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” beckoned the medicine-man, to Scar
-Head; and while the column went on with the second
-chief, they turned back to the Pawnees.</p>
-
-<p>“We have come for a knife that is lost,” announced
-Chief Pike, to Iskatappe, with Baroney talking
-for him in bad Pawnee.</p>
-
-<p>“We know nothing about any knife,” asserted
-Rich Man, stiffly.</p>
-
-<p>“A knife is missing from this man’s saddle,”
-Chief Pike insisted. “I ask you to get it for me.”</p>
-
-<p>“You grow angry about a very small thing,”
-Iskatappe replied. “What is one knife to you?
-Besides, you say it is lost. Very well; then you
-should find it. We know nothing about it.”</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike flushed, angry indeed. His blue eyes
-looked hot.</p>
-
-<p>“Whether or not it is a small thing, we Americans
-are not men who can be robbed. The knife may<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-seem of little value, but it is ours. I am here to get
-it from you.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is strong talk,” Iskatappe answered. “I
-have no knife of yours. Where is your knife?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who has it?” the medicine-man asked, in quick
-low voice, of Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“Skidi,” whispered Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man pushed forward to Baroney,
-and spoke with him.</p>
-
-<p>“This man says your warrior named Skidi has
-his knife,” said Baroney, to Iskatappe.</p>
-
-<p>“We will see,” replied Iskatappe. He called
-Skidi, and told him to throw back his robe; and
-sure enough, there was the knife.</p>
-
-<p>“I did not know that it was that man’s knife,”
-Skidi defended. “I found it on the trail. Now it is
-mine. If I give it up, I must have another to take
-its place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your warrior lies,” Chief Pike flatly retorted,
-to Iskatappe. “He stole the knife. Otherwise, how
-did we know that he had it?”</p>
-
-<p>Matters looked bad. The Pawnees were surrounding
-thicker and thicker, and the other Americans
-had gone on. But Chief Pike gave no sign
-that he was afraid; neither did the medicine-man.
-Only Baroney acted uneasy, and Scar Head’s heart
-beat rapidly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What the American chief says, sounds true,”
-remarked Iskatappe, while Skidi glared and his
-friends jostled and murmured. “But maybe Skidi
-is right, too. He should have another knife.”</p>
-
-<p>“We are not here to trade knives. When an
-honest man finds what belongs to another, he returns
-it,” Chief Pike replied.</p>
-
-<p>“Much time is being wasted over a matter of no
-account,” growled Iskatappe. “Here is your knife,”
-and he plucked it from Skidi’s waist. “I am not
-stingy, so I give him one to take its place.” And
-so he did.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike passed the knife to the medicine-man.
-The medicine-man was wise. He immediately passed
-it back to Iskatappe.</p>
-
-<p>“It is now yours. Keep it. By this you see that
-we did not come for the knife; we came for justice.”</p>
-
-<p>“You show us that your hearts are good, after
-all,” Rich Man granted. “I think you have done
-well.”</p>
-
-<p>The faces of the Pawnees cleared, even Skidi
-seemed satisfied, and after shaking hands once more
-Chief Pike led out for the column and left the Pawnees
-to go their way also.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans under the second chief were a
-long way ahead. Chief Pike acted as if in no hurry.
-He and the medicine-man cantered easily and chatted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span>
-and laughed like brothers; Scar Head and Baroney
-cantered together, behind them.</p>
-
-<p>“Our scalps were loose, back there,” uttered
-Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Scar Head. “I smelled blood.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are no Pawnee. They would scalp you,
-too. Were you afraid?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. No one is afraid, with Chief Pike.”</p>
-
-<p>Baroney laughed. He was a small, dark, black-bearded
-man who spoke about as much Pawnee as
-Scar Head spoke French, but was good at the sign
-language; so by using all three means, with now and
-then a word of Spanish, he got along.</p>
-
-<p>They had ridden about a mile, and were slowly
-overtaking the American column, when another band
-of figures came charging. The medicine-man sighted
-them, the first, for he pointed—and they indeed
-looked, at a distance, to be more Indians, issuing
-from ambush in a river bottom on the left and
-launching themselves to cut off the Chief Pike squad.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head himself read them with one keen stare.</p>
-
-<p>“Elk,” he grunted, in Pawnee, and stiffened
-with the hunt feeling.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney called, excitedly; but Chief Pike had
-read, too. He shouted, turned his horse and shook
-his reins and flourished his gun, and away he dashed,
-to meet the elk. In a flash Scar Head clapped his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-heels against his pony’s ribs, and tore after. The
-medicine-man and Baroney tore, too, on a course
-of their own.</p>
-
-<p>The yellow pony was a fast pony, well trained.
-He had been stolen from the Comanches, whose
-horses were the best. Scar Head rode light—a boy
-in only a buffalo robe. The American horses all
-were poor horses, even those traded for with the
-Pawnees, and Chief Pike, in his clothes, weighed
-twice as much, on the saddle, as Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>The yellow pony over-hauled the Chief Pike
-horse—crept up, from tail to stirrup, from stirrup
-to neck, from neck to nose. Scar Head, his moccasined
-feet thrust into thong loops, clung close.
-Chief Pike glanced aside at him, with blue eyes glowing,
-and smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“Good meat,” he said, in French. “We two
-hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kill,” answered Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you kill?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What with?”</p>
-
-<p>“This.” And Scar Head shook his strung bow.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“They are large; you are small. With a gun—yes.
-With a bow—I think not.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will see,” Scar Head promised. His heart<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-was filled with the desire to prove himself to Chief
-Pike. But he had never killed an elk—nothing
-larger than a badger; he only knew that it might
-be done.</p>
-
-<p>They raced. The elk were foolish things, and
-appeared to be thinking more of some danger behind
-than the danger before. No—now Baroney and
-the medicine-man had frightened them afresh, for
-they had swerved, they paralleled the trail, and were
-scouring on to gain the open.</p>
-
-<p>Good riding might head them.</p>
-
-<p>The yellow pony knew. He ran like a deer, himself.
-Chief Pike’s horse lengthened bravely.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! Hi!” Scar Head urged.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” cheered the chief.</p>
-
-<p>They were veering in. The band of elk were led
-by a splendid buck, whose horns branched like a tree.
-The elk chief ran with his nose out and his horns
-laid upon his neck, but now and again he shook his
-head, and his horns tossed.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney and the medicine-man were trying to
-close in, on the rear flank—the medicine-man had
-shot. Scar Head belabored his pony harder. The
-wind whistled in his ears, his white robe had dropped
-about his thighs, he rode with his legs and notched
-an arrow upon his bow-string. His eyes were upon
-the elk chief, and he almost lost sight of Chief Pike,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span>
-although he knew that Pike was thudding close
-beside him.</p>
-
-<p>The reports of the medicine-man and Baroney
-guns sounded, driving the elk before them. The elk
-chief saw the two enemies cutting him off before.
-He recoiled sharply, to turn, but the herd forced
-him on; they all bunched, confused. This was the
-chance, and in charged Scar Head, on his yellow
-pony.</p>
-
-<p>“Le grand cerf (The large stag)!” Chief Pike
-gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“Oui (yes)!” answered Scar Head.</p>
-
-<p>The herd broke. On bolted the stag, tossing his
-great horns. After him pelted Scar Head and Chief
-Pike. It was another chase. But, see! The Pawnees
-were coming, from before. The chase was
-leading straight for them, they had seen, and fifty
-or sixty of their best hunters had galloped in a long
-line, for a surround.</p>
-
-<p>The stag saw, too. Or else he smelled. He
-turned at right angles, to escape the net. A minute
-or two more, and the yellow pony was at his straining
-haunches, and Scar Head was leaning forward
-with bow bent to the arrow’s head.</p>
-
-<p>“Look out! Look out!” Chief Pike shouted.</p>
-
-<p>With a mighty leap the stag sprang aside,
-whirled, and charged the yellow pony. His bristling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-horns were down, his eyes shone greenly. Around
-whirled the yellow pony, also, and scrambled for
-safety. Scar Head, clinging and urging, gazed backward
-and laughed to show that he was not afraid.
-Chief Pike, his pistol held high, pursued, to the
-rescue.</p>
-
-<p>But the elk chief changed heart. The yellow
-pony nimbly dodged, and he went on. Scar Head
-closed in on him once more. Chief Pike was coming;
-the arrow should be sped now or never.</p>
-
-<p>The elk chief was spattered with froth from
-shoulder to haunch; his great horns, polished at the
-tips but still ragged with their velvet, lay flat, reaching
-to his back. Scar Head forged on farther and
-farther, his bow arched from arrow notch to arrow
-point; he leaned, aimed quickly, and loosed. It was
-a warrior’s bow, and the recoil jarred his whole
-arm, but the arrow had sunk to its feathers in the
-right spot, just behind the elk’s fore shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi!” cheered Scar Head. He whipped another
-arrow from his quiver; without slackening
-speed he fitted it to the bow.</p>
-
-<p>The elk chief had given a tremendous bound;
-for a moment it seemed as though he would get
-away yet. On thudded the yellow pony, in the rear
-at the other side on thudded Chief Pike, ready to
-use his pistol.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
-
-<p>Before, the Pawnees were yelling. Scar Head
-feared that he was going to lose his kill to them,
-or to Chief Pike. That would never do. He kicked
-his pony fiercely. Ha! The old chief was failing,
-as the arrow point worked. The pony drew up on
-him. Now another arrow. <a href="#i_097">Whang! It buried itself
-almost out of sight behind the elk chief’s ribs.</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_097">
- <img src="images/i_097.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_97">WHANG! IT BURIED ITSELF ALMOST OUT OF SIGHT BEHIND THE ELK
-CHIEF’S RIBS</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The elk chief bounded high, screamed, turned
-blindly, and with one more bound crashed headlong
-to the ground. The yellow pony leaped right across
-him as he struggled to rise. But he rose only half
-way, still screaming with rage. Then, just as Chief
-Pike arrived, and Scar Head, twisting the yellow
-pony, leveled a third arrow, he collapsed, gushing
-blood from his mouth, and quivered and died.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head yelled the scalp halloo. He had killed
-the elk chief, a mighty animal indeed.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike, out of breath, swung his hat and
-cheered, too. He got off his horse, and walked
-around the elk, examining it. He examined the
-arrow wounds, with the reddened feather tips just
-showing.</p>
-
-<p>“That was well done,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head sat happy, breathing fast. The scar
-under his white mark throbbed and burned, as it
-always did when he worked hard or played hard, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-he was happy. His heart glowed at the praise by
-Chief Pike. He felt like a man.</p>
-
-<p>“Yours,” he panted. “I kill. You keep.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is much meat,” replied Chief Pike.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney and the medicine-man were chasing
-hither-thither. The Pawnees were killing. Chief
-Pike galloped away to see. But he would see no
-arrows buried deeper than these.</p>
-
-<p>After the hunt was over, the Pawnees cut up
-their animals, and the Pike party cut up the big elk.
-With Scar Head riding proudly, they four caught
-the column under the second chief. The camp
-feasted, this night, upon a spot where the Spanish
-also had camped. There was only one alarm call,
-from the guard, on account of two Pawnees who
-came in by mistake. They had not eaten for three
-days and thought that this was a camp of their own
-people.</p>
-
-<p>Chief Pike sent them out again, with food for
-a sick comrade. He was kind as well as brave.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VI">VI<br />
-<small>LIEUTENANT WILKINSON SAYS GOOD-BY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Chief Pike asks you to go back with one man
-and find John Sparks.”</p>
-
-<p>These were the words of Baroney, to Scar Head,
-who was just finishing breakfast so as to be ready
-to march.</p>
-
-<p>A number of days had passed since the elk hunt,
-and several things had happened. Although the
-Americans were brave, the Great Spirit seemed to
-be angry with them for marching through the country.
-He gave them hungry camps, without wood
-and water. He sent rain on them, and made them
-sick. Chief Pretty Bird and another Osage man
-had left. They said that they wanted better hunting—but
-it was plain that they were afraid. And on
-the same day the Spanish trail had been blotted out
-by buffalo hoofs, and the Americans had lost it.</p>
-
-<p>By the talk, this was bad. According to what
-Scar Head understood, Chief Pike depended upon
-the Spanish trail to guide him by the best road
-into the south and to the Comanches. The Spanish
-knew this country better than the Americans did.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<p>The rain kept falling, and the men straggled.
-Yesterday afternoon the warrior Sparks had dropped
-behind. He had pains in his joints, which the medicine-man
-had not been able to cure: “rheumatism.”
-He could not ride a horse and he could scarcely
-walk, using his gun as a crutch. Last night he had
-not come into camp. The Spanish trail was lost,
-again; and Sparks was lost, too.</p>
-
-<p>Scar Head was glad to go back and look for him.
-He liked Sparks. He liked all the men and was
-getting to know them by their names: queer names.
-Each man had two—one for each other and one
-for the chiefs. There was “Jake” and “Carter”;
-the same man. And “Jerry” and “Jackson”; and
-“Tom” and “Dougherty”; and “John” and
-“Brown”; and “Hugh” and “Menaugh”; and
-“Bill” and “Meek”; and “Joe” and “Ballenger”;
-and the others. The last two were head warriors,
-called “sergeant.” The medicine-man’s names were
-“John” and “Doctor Robinson.” The second
-chief’s names were “the left’nant” and “Lieutenant
-Wilkinson.” Chief Pike was “the cap’n” and
-“Lieutenant Pike.”</p>
-
-<p>The warriors spoke only American, but they
-knew Indian ways. The most of them, Baroney said,
-had been on a long journey before with Lieutenant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-Pike, far into the north up a great river, into the
-country of the Sioux.</p>
-
-<p>The medicine-man, Doctor Robinson, was popular,
-but he was not a chief. The men did not seem
-to fear him. He rode well and shot well. Lieutenant
-Pike and he rode and hunted together, while the
-second chief, Lieutenant Wilkinson, stayed with the
-men. Scar Head also had grown not to fear the
-medicine-man, who frequently asked him about his
-white spot and where he had come from, to the
-Utahs and Pawnees, and tried to teach him American
-words.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the American words were hard and some
-easy. On some days they were harder than on other
-days; and again Scar Head suddenly spoke words
-that he didn’t know at all—they arrived to him of
-themselves. That was odd. He was getting to be
-an American; he felt as though he had been an
-American in his heart all the time, but that his heart
-had been shut up. The times when his spot throbbed
-and burned were the times when he knew the fewest
-words.</p>
-
-<p>The men had given him a new name. His Pawnee
-name was not good enough for them. The new name
-was “Stub.” John Sparks had told him of it, first,
-by saying it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Stub? How goes it, Stub?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span></p>
-
-<p>And the other men laughed and repeated:</p>
-
-<p>“Here, Stub.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hello, Stub!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the boy, Stub.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is ‘Stub’?” he asked, of the medicine-man,
-Doctor Robinson.</p>
-
-<p>“It is ‘short,’ ‘cut off,’ coupé,” carefully explained
-the medicine-man. “They like you. It is a
-good name, because you are small.”</p>
-
-<p>“American?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, an’ we mane no harm, doctor, sir,” called
-“Tom,” whose other name was Dougherty. “If
-sawed-off he is, a rale little man he is, too.”</p>
-
-<p>And while Scar Head (whose other name was
-now “Stub,” in American language) did not understand
-all those words, he knew that they were kindly
-spoken. So his name pleased him.</p>
-
-<p>John Brown was the man who rode with him
-to look for Sparks. They took the back trail and
-rode for a long time. Everything was wet from the
-rains. Sparks must have spent a miserable night,
-alone on the prairie, without food or fire. Finally
-they saw him, far ahead, hobbling slowly, trying to
-catch up with the march.</p>
-
-<p>He grinned when they met him, and shouted
-cheerfully, although he made faces.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Mornin’ to ye, boys. ’Rah for Stub!”</p>
-
-<p>“H’lo, John. No walk; ride. My pony.” And
-Stub sprang off.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you ride, John?” asked John Brown.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, I’ll try. At this rate I dunno whether
-I’m goin’ or comin’. You’ll all be to the mountains
-an’ back ag’in before I ever ketch up. Hey, Stub?”</p>
-
-<p>But Stub might only smile.</p>
-
-<p>With many grunts and awkward movements
-John Sparks climbed aboard the yellow pony. It
-was near noon when they brought him into the camp.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike and Doctor Robinson had been
-hunting for the Spanish trail, again, but had not
-found it. There was talk of a large river, the Arkansaw,
-somewhere southward yet. The Americans
-were anxious to reach the river, which would guide
-them; but they had lost the trail to it.</p>
-
-<p>After eating, they made another march. When
-the sun was low, Lieutenant Pike pointed to some
-trees a long way ahead and told Lieutenant Wilkinson
-to march the men to that place. He beckoned
-to Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Come with me?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Stub nodded. He and Lieutenant Pike and Doctor
-the medicine-man went off by themselves, scouting
-up a creek. Lieutenant Pike was still looking
-for the Spanish trail.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
-
-<p>They all looked and looked, but did not cross
-it. The lieutenant sighted some buffalo; he and the
-medicine-man gave chase, and before Stub reached
-them they had killed two. That was good. They
-took the tongues, and left a coat on the carcasses, to
-keep the wolves away; but when the three rode
-hard, to get to camp before dark, there was no camp.
-The Lieutenant Wilkinson men had not gone to the
-trees. Now everybody was lost!</p>
-
-<p>After searching about and speaking angrily,
-Lieutenant Pike ordered camp. It was lucky that
-they had taken the buffalo tongues, because now
-they might make a fire and cook the tongues.</p>
-
-<p>What had become of the Lieutenant Wilkinson
-men seemed very queer. Early in the morning
-Lieutenant Pike led up the creek, from the trees, and
-did not find them. The three arrived at the spot
-where the two buffalo carcasses were lying. The
-wolves were eating the carcasses, in spite of the
-coat, but there were marrow bones left. Next, the
-lieutenant led down the creek. Not even the smoke
-of any campfires might be seen, and there were no
-pony tracks or footprints.</p>
-
-<p>Stub used all his eyes, but discovered nothing.
-At night the lieutenant and the doctor were much
-worried.</p>
-
-<p>“Injuns, mebbe?” Stub asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike nodded gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“I fear so. We will hunt more to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>That night it rained, and in the morning was still
-raining, cold. But they had had plenty to eat. This
-day they rode and rode, up the creek again, in the
-rain.</p>
-
-<p>“It is bad,” said the doctor. “A long way from
-home. Only four shots left. No trail, no men,
-nada (nothing). Indian country. We look one
-more day; then we find the river Arkansaw.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go to ’Nited States?” Stub queried.</p>
-
-<p>“Cannot tell. The Great Father sent us out.
-We are men; we hate to go back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe they there, on Arkansaw. Injuns chase
-’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe. But it is bad. Maybe Injuns chase us,
-next.”</p>
-
-<p>“We fight,” declared Stub.</p>
-
-<p>And the doctor laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re all right. We’ll do our best, eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Stub had ten arrows; the lieutenant and the
-medicine-man each had four loads for their guns.
-That was not much, in a fight.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning they again rode, searching
-up the creek, with their eyes scanning before and
-behind and right and left. When the sun was halfway<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-to noon, they saw two horsemen, coming from
-the south. Indians? No! White men—soldiers!</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike cried gladly, and fired his gun,
-in signal. His face had been dark and stern; now
-it lighted up, and they all galloped for the two men.
-Lieutenant Wilkinson was only three miles south,
-on the Arkansaw.</p>
-
-<p>“What! The Arkansaw?” Lieutenant Pike
-repeated.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. It is right close.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you found the Spanish trail?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. But we found the river.”</p>
-
-<p>The two soldiers guided. When they drew near
-where the river was, Lieutenant Wilkinson galloped
-out. By the way in which he shook hands with his
-chief and with the doctor, he, too, had been worried.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, we thought you were lost or scalped,”
-said John Sparks, to Stub, in camp.</p>
-
-<p>“No lost; you lost,” answered Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, depends on how you look at it,” agreed
-John Sparks, scratching his red hair.</p>
-
-<p>The river was a wide river, flowing between cottonwood
-trees. The country was flat, and the trees
-had hidden the size of the river. The men began to
-look for trees to make boats of. Did this mean
-that Chief Pike was going to travel on by boat?
-Baroney explained.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Lieutenant Wilkinson travels down river by
-boat. The captain takes men and marches to the
-Comanches.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lieutenant Wilkinson, how far?” Stub asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Very far, to the American forts at the mouth
-of the river, and to report to the American father.”</p>
-
-<p>“Captain Pike, how far?”</p>
-
-<p>Baroney shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Who knows?”</p>
-
-<p>Stub made up his mind what <em>he</em> was going to do.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike moved the camp to the other
-side of the river, where the best boat-trees grew.
-The river was rising fast, from the rains, and everybody
-had to swim and arrived very wet. Rain fell
-almost all the time, but it was a good camp, with
-plenty of wood and meat.</p>
-
-<p>While the men under Lieutenant Wilkinson cut
-down trees Chief Pike and the doctor medicine-man
-scouted up and down the river, hunting meat and the
-Spanish trail. There were buffalo and antelope, but
-there was no Spanish trail.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike grew curious about the wish-ton-wish,
-or prairie dogs. He found a large town
-of them, where the rattle-snakes and the tortoise
-lived, too. He and the doctor shot them, to eat, and
-they were good—as Stub well knew. It took true<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-shooting, because unless a wish-ton-wish is killed
-dead, he crawls into his hole.</p>
-
-<p>The wish-ton-wish is among the smartest of animals.
-He digs his hole cunningly. The lieutenant
-and the doctor tried to fill one hole with water, and
-get the wish-ton-wish that way. Stub said, “No
-use”—he and the Pawnee boys had tried it often.
-And the men found out that this was true, for they
-spent a long time and poured in one hundred and
-forty kettles of water, and it all disappeared but no
-wish-ton-wish came out.</p>
-
-<p>Still, the towns were interesting places, where
-the dogs sat up straight with their hands across their
-stomachs, and held councils, like people, and whistled
-“Wish-ton-wish (Look out)!” whenever an enemy
-was sighted.</p>
-
-<p>A great deal of buffalo-meat was dried, for Lieutenant
-Wilkinson to take. Making the boats required
-several days. The trees were too small and soft.
-When one boat had at last been hollowed the men
-started to build another out of buffalo and elk hides,
-stretched over a frame.</p>
-
-<p>On the night before Lieutenant Wilkinson was to
-leave, Chief Pike the captain said to Stub:</p>
-
-<p>“Come here. Listen.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow you go with Lieutenant Wilkinson.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” answered Stub. He had been afraid of
-that.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. You go with him, to the United States.
-That is best.”</p>
-
-<p>“No.” And Stub shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?”</p>
-
-<p>“No go. Stay with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you want to be an American, and see
-the towns of the Great Father?”</p>
-
-<p>“Be an American here,” answered Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“We do not stay here. We go on, a long way,
-up the river, to the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“You will be cold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t care.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will be hungry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t care.”</p>
-
-<p>“We may all die.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t care.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Osage were afraid. The Pawnee were
-afraid. You are not afraid?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. No Osage, no Pawnee; American.
-March, hunt, fight, stay with you,” Stub appealed,
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span></p>
-
-<p>The doctor medicine-man laughed, and clapped
-him on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“Good. Let him come, lieutenant.”</p>
-
-<p>“He may come,” replied the lieutenant. And
-Stub’s heart beat gladly.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney and John Sparks and Tom Dougherty
-and John Brown and others of his friends were
-coming, too. Had he been sent away with Lieutenant
-Wilkinson, in the boat, for the United States,
-he would have run off at his first chance and followed
-the Pike trail.</p>
-
-<p>Right after breakfast in the morning camp was
-broken. It had been a very cold night, with snow,
-and ice floated thickly down the swollen river. But
-by help of the Wilkinson boats Lieutenant Pike
-moved his men and baggage across the river again,
-to the north side which everybody said was the
-American side. The men worked hard, to load
-the boats and swim the horses, in the slush and ice.
-Then Lieutenant Wilkinson made ready to start.</p>
-
-<p>He took with him, in his two boats, one of the
-head soldiers, Sergeant Joe Ballenger; the soldiers
-John Boley, Sam Bradley, Sol Huddleston, and John
-Wilson; the Osage man and woman who had come
-this far, and corn and meat for twenty-one days.</p>
-
-<p>Head soldier Sergeant Bill Meek marched the
-Pike men up-river, but Stub stayed with Lieutenant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-Pike, the doctor, and Baroney, to see the Wilkinson
-men leave. He had no fear of being put aboard, now,
-for Chief Pike always spoke the truth.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Wilkinson shook hands all ’round,
-stepped into the boat, made of four buffalo hides and
-two elk hides, and with his crew pushed off, after
-the other boat. The floating ice did not matter.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike watched them out of sight, in a
-bend. Then he turned his horse toward the west.</p>
-
-<p>“Come,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>He and Doctor Robinson led; Baroney and Stub
-followed.</p>
-
-<p>“Now to the mountains,” cheered Baroney.
-“Huzzah!”</p>
-
-<p>“Huzzah!” Stub echoed.</p>
-
-<p>The mountains were far, through Comanche
-country, maybe through Spanish country, perhaps
-into Utah country; and after that, what? Nobody
-had said. Winter was here, as if the Great Spirit
-were still angry. The men had shivered, this morning,
-in their thin clothes; but nobody had seemed to
-care. Young Chief Wilkinson, with a few men, was
-going one way, on an unknown trail; young Chief
-Pike, with the rest of the men, was going the other
-way, on another unknown trail. So, huzzah! To be
-an American one must be brave.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VII">VII<br />
-<small>“THE MOUNTAINS! THE MOUNTAINS!”</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The Spanish trail again! They struck it toward
-evening of the day after Lieutenant Wilkinson
-had left—and they struck it just in time, too. Snow
-was falling once more, and dusk was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>The trail came in from the north, and crossed the
-river. Lieutenant Pike ordered camp made. Then
-he and the doctor forded the river, through the floating
-ice, to see where the trail went on the other side.</p>
-
-<p>They returned in the dark. They had lost the
-trail, among the buffalo tracks, but were going to try
-again in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have to take Stub, and use his eyes, too,”
-said the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>This was another cold night. The snow had quit,
-after falling two inches deep. The horses groaned,
-where they were picketed to graze; before rolling
-themselves in their blankets and buffalo robes, on the
-ground, the men huddled about their fires. There
-were now thirteen soldiers, and Chief Pike, the doctor,
-Baroney and Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Heap winter, b’gorry; eh?” spoke Pat Smith,
-to Stub, and holding his hands to the blaze.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span></p>
-
-<p>Stub gravely nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Winter come soon,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ aren’t ye cold, boy?” queried John Sparks.
-“In only your skin an’ a buff’lo robe?”</p>
-
-<p>“No cold,” Stub asserted. That was all the
-Pawnees wore. He was used to it.</p>
-
-<p>The day dawned clear. After eating, Sergeant
-Meek marched the men up along the river. With
-Lieutenant Pike and the doctor, Stub crossed to
-help find the Spanish trail. They had to break a
-way through the ice. The ice cut the horses’ legs, the
-stinging water splashed high, soaking moccasins and
-drenching the lieutenant and the doctor above the
-knees. The lieutenant wore thin blue cotton leggins—a
-sort of trousers called overalls; now these
-clung to him tightly.</p>
-
-<p>Stub rather preferred his own skin, for it shed
-water.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish had camped over here. There were
-lots of horse sign showing through the snow, in a
-space of more than a mile. The Spanish seemed to
-have grown in numbers. It was an old camp, and
-the trail out of it had been flattened by buffalo tracks,
-and by the snows and rains. So they three—Lieutenant
-Pike, the doctor, and Stub—made circles, as
-they rode up river, to cut the trail farther on.</p>
-
-<p>They did not find it until noon. But they found<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-something else: Indian signs which were not older
-than three days. A party of warriors were ahead.
-Stub picked up a worn moccasin: “Pawnee—Grand
-Pawnee,” he announced, when he handed it to the
-lieutenant “War party. All on foot. Mebbe so
-many.” And he opened and shut his fingers five
-times.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor examined the
-moccasin. After that they rode more rapidly, as if
-anxious to get to their soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers also had crossed the river, on
-account of bad travel, and were camped on this, the
-south side. In the morning they all marched by the
-Spanish trail, along the river, into the west, over a
-country covered with salt. There were more Indian
-signs. It looked as though twenty warriors had been
-marching in the same direction only a short time
-before; and fresh horse tracks pointed down river.</p>
-
-<p>Whether the Indians were the same Pawnees or
-not, was hard to tell. But the horse tracks looked to
-be wild-horse tracks.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, wouldn’t it be fun to ketch a few o’ them
-wild hosses, Stub, lad?” proposed John Sparks, in
-camp. “We need ’em. Would ye know how?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chase ’em; with rope. Chase ’em all day, make
-tired, mebbe no ketch ’em,” Stub answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Or if ye shoot one jest right, through the nape<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-o’ the neck an’ graze the nerve there, ye’ll down him
-like as if lightning struck him an’ he won’t be hurt,”
-asserted Hugh Menaugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, but it takes mighty fine shootin’,” said
-soldier Bill Gordon. “You’re like to kill him, or
-miss him complete.”</p>
-
-<p>The wild horses were sighted the next evening,
-from camp on an island where there was wood and
-shelter. The lieutenant and the doctor and Baroney
-had come in with two antelope that they had killed
-among their own horses, while they themselves were
-lying on the ground and resting. They might have
-killed more, but they did not need the meat. Now
-while spying on the country around, through his
-long glass, the lieutenant saw a bunch of moving
-figures out there on the prairie, north of the river.</p>
-
-<p>Indians? No—wild horses, more than one hundred!
-Good! Out he went, and the doctor, and
-Baroney, and Stub followed, to get a nearer view.</p>
-
-<p>They were of many colors, those wild horses—blacks
-and browns and greys and spotted. They
-waited with heads high, as curious as if they had
-never seen men before. Then they came charging,
-in a broad front, and their hoofs drummed like
-thunder. Only a short way off they stopped, to
-start and snort.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ma foi, quelle beauté (My gracious, how beautiful)!”
-cried Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>“Try to crease that black, lieutenant,” the doctor
-proposed.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant rested his gun upon his empty saddle,
-took long aim, and fired. But he did not stun
-the black—he missed him entirely—he had not dared
-to draw fine enough.</p>
-
-<p>At that, around the wild horses wheeled, as if by
-command, and pelted off, to halt and gaze again.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow we’ll see if we can run some down,”
-said the lieutenant. “Shall we, Stub?”</p>
-
-<p>“Pawnee sometimes run all day. Mebbe ketch
-one, mebbe not. Too swift, have too much wind.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we can try,” laughed the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>The camp was excited, to-night, with the thought
-of catching wild horses. The men busied themselves
-tying nooses in their picket ropes.</p>
-
-<p>“But we haven’t a critter that could ketch a
-badger,” John Sparks complained; “unless it be the
-doctor’s black an’ that yaller pony o’ Stub’s.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub doubted very much whether his yellow pony
-would amount to anything, in racing wild horses.
-The Pawnees always used two or three horses, each,
-so as to tire the wild horses out.</p>
-
-<p>However, the lieutenant was bound to try. In
-the morning he picked out the six best horses, which<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-included the yellow pony, and appointed the riders.
-They were himself, the doctor, Baroney, soldier
-John Sparks, soldier Freegift Stout, and Stub. Only
-Baroney and Stub had seen wild horses chased
-before.</p>
-
-<p>All the camp, except the camp guards, followed.
-The wild horses were in about the same place, a mile
-distant. They waited, curious, pawing and snorting
-and speaking to the tame horses, until within short
-bow shot, or forty steps. On a sudden they wheeled.</p>
-
-<p>“After ’em!” the lieutenant shouted.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray!”</p>
-
-<p>Ah, but that was sport! Stub’s yellow pony
-sprang to the fore; he was nimble and he carried
-light. No—another horse and rider forged alongside
-him. They were the medicine-man and his
-black; a good rider and a good horse.</p>
-
-<p>Stub hammered and yelled. “Hi! Hi! Hi!”
-The doctor lashed and yelled. Already they had
-gained the heels of the flying herd. The clods of
-earth thrown by the rapid hoofs bombarded them
-lustily. Baroney and soldier Sparks and soldier
-Stout, and even the lieutenant had been dropped
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>But working hard, they two never got quite far
-enough in, to cast the ropes. The wild horses were
-playing with them. After about two miles the yellow<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-pony and the doctor’s horse began to wheeze
-and to tire; the wild band were running as strongly
-as ever—only romping along, biting and kicking
-at each other. Then as if to show what they really
-could do, led by their black stallion, they lengthened
-their strides, opened the gap wider and wider, and
-were away.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor hauled short.</p>
-
-<p>“No use, Stub,” he called.</p>
-
-<p>So Stub pulled down, and turned.</p>
-
-<p>“No use,” he agreed. “But heap fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!” pronounced the doctor, panting.
-“What do you say ‘heap’ fun for? That’s not
-American; that’s Injun. Americans say ‘much’ fun,
-or ‘great’ fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” Stub admitted—for the doctor
-knew. “Heap chase wild horse, much fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, pshaw!” the doctor laughed. “If I could
-only get into that head of yours I’d take the ‘heaps’
-out of it. How’s your white spot, these days? Burn
-any?”</p>
-
-<p>“Some days burn, some days no. Some days
-heavy, some days light.” And with that, Stub kept
-his distance. He wished that the doctor would quit
-talking about “getting into” his head. A medicine-man
-had dangerous power.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and Baroney and the two soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-had come as fast as they could. There was a great
-deal of laughing and joking as the doctor and Stub
-joined them, and all rode back for the main party,
-and camp. The lieutenant joked the least. He
-never did joke much, anyway; he was stern and
-quiet.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll delay no more for wild horses, men,” he
-said. “Our Country expects something better of
-us than such child’s play at the impossible. Forward
-again, now. We will hunt only for food, in line of
-duty.”</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon they marched thirteen miles.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish trail continued, up the river, and
-ever westward. It was a pity that some of the
-wild horses had not been caught, for the other horses
-were beginning to give out. The grass was short
-and thin, and eaten off by the buffalo, and at night
-the men cut cottonwood boughs for the horses to
-feed upon.</p>
-
-<p>This was a rich meat country, though. Buffalo
-were constantly in sight, by the thousand, many of
-them fat cows, and the hunters brought in humps
-and tongues. The Spanish had left camp signs—at
-one camp almost one hundred fires might be counted,
-meaning six hundred or seven hundred warriors. A
-whole Spanish army had been through here, but the
-lieutenant and his little army of sixteen marched on.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
-
-<p>There were several old camp-places of Indians.
-One showed Comanche signs; near by, the Spanish
-also had camped, as if making ready to meet the
-Comanches, and Baroney and the lieutenant thought
-that the Comanche range must be close at hand.</p>
-
-<p>But where were the mountains? How far were
-the mountains, now? The river was getting narrower
-and deeper, the country higher and rougher.
-Two horses became so weak that they could not
-carry their packs. The horses had been traveling,
-starved and foot-sore, under heavy loads more than
-twenty miles a day.</p>
-
-<p>John Sparks, who had been out hunting, returned
-with news.</p>
-
-<p>“I sighted an Injun hossback,” he reported.
-“He made off up a little ravine south of us. Don’t
-know whether he saw me or not.”</p>
-
-<p>Before night fresh moccasin tracks not over a
-few hours old were discovered. A large war party
-were somewhere just ahead. This night the camp
-guards were doubled, but nothing happened.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning the lieutenant took the doctor,
-John Sparks, and Stub for interpreter, and circled
-south, to find the lone horseman. Only his tracks
-were found; so they rode back again and the column
-marched on.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing special occurred today, but everybody<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-kept sharp lookout. The country was lonely, broken
-by rocky spurs and uplifts, and the buffalo herds
-seemed to be less in number.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the lieutenant and the doctor led,
-as usual, with Baroney and Stub behind them, and
-the column of toiling men and horses under Sergeant
-Meek, following. The two weak horses had fallen
-down, to die, and another was barely able to walk.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike frequently used his spy-glass,
-which made things ten miles off appear to be only a
-few steps. In the middle of the day he halted and
-leveled it long.</p>
-
-<p>“Sees something,” said Baroney, in French.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment the lieutenant galloped forward to
-the doctor, who had gone on, and they both looked.
-But they did not signal, and they did not come back;
-so what it was that they thought they saw, nobody
-knew. Stub and Baroney strained their eyes, seeking.
-Aha!</p>
-
-<p>“Smoke sign,” uttered Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>“Heap smoke. Big fire. Mebbe cloud,” Stub
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>From the little rise they could just descry, far,
-far to the northwest, a tiny tip of bluish color,
-jutting into the horizon there. It did not move, it
-did not swell nor waver. No smoke, then; cloud—the
-upper edge of a cloud. The lieutenant and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-doctor had read it, and were riding on. In another
-minute it had sunk, swallowed by the land before.</p>
-
-<p>“N’importe (does not matter),” murmured
-Baroney. “Perhaps more snow, my gracious! But
-who cares?”</p>
-
-<p>In about two miles more, the lieutenant and the
-doctor halted again, on the top of a low hill that
-cut the way. They gazed, through the spy-glass,
-examining ahead. They did not leave the hill.
-They stayed—and the lieutenant waved his hat. He
-had seen something, for sure. Baroney and Stub
-were a quarter of a mile from him. The soldiers
-were a quarter of a mile farther.</p>
-
-<p>“Come! He signals,” rapped Baroney. Now he
-and Stub galloped, to find out. Behind, the soldiers’
-column quickened pace, for the orders of Sergeant
-Meek might be heard, as he shouted them.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor were gazing once
-more, with eyes and spy-glass both.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it? The savages?” cried Baroney,
-as he and Stub raced in, up to the top of the flat hill.</p>
-
-<p>Or the Spanish? The Spanish trail had been
-lost, for the past day or two. Maybe the Spanish
-were encamped, and waiting. The lieutenant
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>“No. The mountains, my man! The mountains,
-at last!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” cheered the doctor. “See them?”</p>
-
-<p>Baroney stared. Stub stared. It was the same
-bluish cloud, only larger and plainer. It jutted
-sharply—no, it sort of floated, but it did not move.
-It was fastened to the earth. And north from it
-there extended a long line of other clouds, lower, as
-far as one might see; while southward from it were
-still lower clouds, tapering off.</p>
-
-<p>“One big mountain! A giant! Ma foi, how
-big!” Baroney gasped.</p>
-
-<p>“All mountains. The Mexican mountains, on
-the edge of the United States,” announced the lieutenant.
-“Take the glass. Look—you and Stub.”</p>
-
-<p>Look they did. The spy-glass worked wonders.
-It brought the clouds much closer, and broke them.
-They were no longer clouds—they changed to mountains
-indeed. In the spy-glass they shimmered
-whitely. That was snow! Or white rocks! They
-were medicine mountains. And the big mountain, so
-high, so mysterious, so proud: a chief mountain.</p>
-
-<p>“You have been there?” asked the doctor, eagerly,
-of Stub. “With the Utahs?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.” And Stub shook his head. “Not there.
-No remember.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pshaw!” the doctor answered.</p>
-
-<p>The column came panting up. The doctor and
-the lieutenant again waved their hats.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The mountains, men! You see the Mexican
-mountains—the Great Stony Mountains. Three
-cheers, now, for the Mexican mountains!”</p>
-
-<p>Everybody cheered three times: “Hooray!
-Hooray! Hooray!” Only the horses stood with
-heads drooping; they did not care.</p>
-
-<p>“How far, would you think, cap’n?” Sergeant
-Meek queried.</p>
-
-<p>“We ought to reach their base day after to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray!”</p>
-
-<p>But although they all marched ten more miles
-to-day, and more than eleven miles the next day,
-and more than twenty-three miles the next day,
-from camp on the third evening the big chief mountain
-and the lesser mountains seemed no nearer than
-before.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, they’re marchin’ faster’n we are,” said
-John Sparks.</p>
-
-<p>“Spirit mountains,” Stub decided. “See ’em,
-no get ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>Another horse was about to die. There were
-fresh Indian signs, again. The Spanish trail had
-been found—it led onward, toward the mountains.
-The country was growing more bare, the air thinner
-and chillier. Through the spy-glass the mountains
-looked bare.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span></p>
-
-<p>When the next herd of buffalo were seen, the
-lieutenant ordered camp made, and sent hunters out
-to kill meat enough for several days. There might
-be no buffalo, farther on. It was a poor country.
-He himself did not hunt. He went up on a hill and
-drew pictures of the mountains, on a piece of paper.</p>
-
-<p>Stub did not hunt, either; he was almost out
-of arrows. He followed Lieutenant Pike to the
-hill, and watched him. But the pictures were only
-crooked lines, like Indian pictures.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant glanced aside at him, and smiled.
-His smile was sweet, when he did smile.</p>
-
-<p>“Would you like to climb that big blue mountain?”
-he asked.</p>
-
-<p>Stub had to think, a moment. The big blue
-mountain! Yes, big and blue it was—and white;
-and very far. The thunder spirit might live there.
-Winter lived there. Could anybody climb it? It
-never was out of sight, now, except at night (and
-it never was out of sight, for days and days afterward),
-but it seemed hard to reach.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> This was the celebrated Pike’s Peak, of Colorado, later
-named for Lieutenant Pike, first white man to tell about it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Top?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, clear to the top,” smiled the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>Stub’s eyes widened; and he smiled also.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure. No afraid, with you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Good!” the lieutenant praised. “We’ll see.”</p>
-
-<p>The hunters killed seventeen buffalo, and
-wounded many more. When the best of the meat
-had been smoked, there were nine hundred pounds
-of it, and one hundred and thirty-six marrow-bones.
-The camp finished off the marrow-bones in one
-meal, as a feast before marching on to storm the
-big blue mountain.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="VIII">VIII<br />
-<small>BAD HEARTS IN THE WAY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Des sauvages (Indians)!”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Baroney shouted, pointing, from where he
-had checked his horse on the edge of a little rise
-overlooking a dip in the trail.</p>
-
-<p>They all had been marching two more days,
-and had covered about forty more miles. This
-made seven days’ travel, counting the two days of
-meat camp, and eighty-five miles, since the Big
-Blue Mountain had first been sighted. Now it and
-the lesser mountains were much plainer.</p>
-
-<p>But here were the Indians, sure enough. The
-lieutenant had rather been expecting them. Yesterday
-the fresh tracks of the two men, again, had
-given warning. So the column were marching close
-together.</p>
-
-<p>The Indians, on foot, were running toward the
-column, from some trees on the river bank, at the
-right.</p>
-
-<p>“Close up, men,” the lieutenant ordered.</p>
-
-<p>“Close up, close up! Look to your priming!”
-ordered Sergeant Meek.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span></p>
-
-<p>And the lieutenant and the doctor, with Baroney
-and Stub ready to interpret for them, led for the
-Indians.</p>
-
-<p>“Pawnee, hein (hey)?” said Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>“No Republic Pawnee; Grand Pawnee. War
-party; no horses,” Stub explained. There was a
-difference between the Republic Pawnees and the
-Grand Pawnees.</p>
-
-<p>“Others yonder, lieutenant!” exclaimed the
-doctor.</p>
-
-<p>They looked. Another squad of the Indians were
-running down from a hill on the left. They carried
-flags on lances—the Grand Pawnee war colors.</p>
-
-<p>“Make a surround!” guessed Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant reined his horse, and drew his
-curved sword.</p>
-
-<p>“Company, halt! Watch sharp, men!”</p>
-
-<p>He glanced right and left, waiting to see if this
-was an attack. No—for, as the doctor suddenly
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“Those first fellows act friendly, lieutenant.
-They have no arms; they’re holding out empty
-hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Forward!” ordered the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>In a minute more they met the Indians from the
-timber. These Pawnees did indeed act friendly—and
-all too friendly! They crowded in among the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-soldiers, shaking hands, putting their arms around
-the soldiers’ necks, even trying to hug the lieutenant
-and the doctor and Baroney and the others who
-rode horseback.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant got off, good-naturedly; instantly
-a Pawnee leaped into the saddle and rode the horse
-away. The doctor and Baroney lost their horses,
-also; Stub (who knew what the Pawnees were up
-to) was almost dragged down, but he stuck fast.</p>
-
-<p>All was in confusion of laughter and jostling
-and pretended play.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no!” the lieutenant objected, growing
-angry; and half drew a pistol. The men were getting
-together, wresting their guns from the Pawnees’
-hands and holding them high, to keep them free.</p>
-
-<p>More Pawnees, from the timber, had joined,
-with guns and bows and lances; and the Pawnees
-from the hillside had come in. They included two
-chiefs.</p>
-
-<p>The two chiefs issued orders, and the play
-stopped. The horses were returned. Then all went
-on to the trees by the river, for a talk.</p>
-
-<p>Here matters again looked bad. The warriors
-frolicked, in spite of the chiefs. They were Grand
-Pawnees—sixty: a war party out to plunder the
-Padoucahs. But they had not found any Padoucahs;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-so this seemed a good chance to plunder somebody
-else, instead of returning home empty-handed.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant’s face was red, as he angrily
-warded off the hands that clutched at his pistols and
-gun and horse’s bridle.</p>
-
-<p>“Stand firm, men!” he called. “Don’t let loose
-of a thing—don’t let them get behind us!”</p>
-
-<p>“Kape your distance, you red rascals!” rasped
-Tom Dougherty, as they hustled him about.</p>
-
-<p>“Steady! Steady!” Sergeant Meek cautioned.</p>
-
-<p>“By thunder, they’d like to strip us,” the doctor
-exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>Even Stub objected vigorously, in Pawnee. The
-Grand Pawnees were indeed rascals.</p>
-
-<p>Guns were being cocked—click, click; several of
-the Pawnees, angry themselves, leveled bended bows.
-It was likely to be a fight between the sixteen Americans
-and the sixty Pawnees; and Stub sat alert, ready
-to pluck an arrow as quick as lightning.</p>
-
-<p>“Guard those packs, men!” the lieutenant kept
-shouting.</p>
-
-<p>But the two chiefs were working hard, shoving
-the warriors back, clearing a space. The head chief
-spoke to the lieutenant, and signed.</p>
-
-<p>“He says: ‘Let us talk,’” Baroney interpreted.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well. Tell him we will talk or we will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-fight,” replied the lieutenant. “We won’t be robbed.
-If it is peace, we will give him presents.”</p>
-
-<p>They all sat down in a ring, with the lieutenant
-and Baroney and the two chiefs in the center. The
-Americans sat under the American flag, the Pawnee
-warriors sat under the Grand Pawnee flags. The
-doctor, however, stood up, watching everything.</p>
-
-<p>The Pawnee head chief took out a pipe and
-tobacco, for a peace smoke. That looked good. But
-before filling the pipe, the two chiefs made speeches.</p>
-
-<p>“They ask what presents you will give them.
-They say they are poor,” Baroney translated. And
-that was what they had said.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring half a bale of tobacco, a dozen knives,
-and flints and steels enough for all, sergeant,” the
-lieutenant ordered.</p>
-
-<p>The head chief made another speech. He was
-refusing the presents. He asked for corn, powder
-and lead, blankets, kettles—all kinds of stuff.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him that there are our presents. We have
-nothing else for him,” the lieutenant answered.
-“We are ready to smoke with him.”</p>
-
-<p>The chief did not lift the pipe. He and the other
-chief sat, with bad spirit showing in their eyes. The
-warriors commenced to hoot, and handle their guns
-and bows again.</p>
-
-<p>“He will not smoke such poor presents,” Baroney<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-reported. “I think they mean trouble. A little
-tobacco, lieutenant; maybe a little tobacco and
-powder.”</p>
-
-<p>“You had best look out, lieutenant,” warned
-the doctor. “I don’t like their looks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell the chief he will get nothing else. He can
-take those presents or leave them,” bade the lieutenant,
-to Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney hated to do it, but he had to obey. The
-head chief scowled. Then he signed, and an old
-man lugged in a kettle of water, as a return present.</p>
-
-<p>Stub heard the Pawnee warriors talking scornfully.</p>
-
-<p>“See what manner of men these white men are,
-with their rags and their poor gifts,” they said.
-“They do not travel like the Spanish. They look
-like beggars.”</p>
-
-<p>But Stub well knew that although their horses
-were thin and sore, and they themselves were lean
-and tattered and almost barefoot, these Americans
-could fight.</p>
-
-<p>Now Chief Pike and the two Pawnee chiefs
-drank from the kettle of water, out of their hands,
-and smoked the pipe, and ate a little dried buffalo
-meat. Several Indians were called upon by the chief,
-to pass the knives and flints and steels around. Indians<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-who were given the presents threw them upon
-the ground.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant shook hands with the chiefs, and
-rose.</p>
-
-<p>“All ready, doctor,” he called. “Pack your
-animals, sergeant, where necessary. We march.”</p>
-
-<p>The Pawnees sprang up, too, and crowded forward
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“They make a surround,” said Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>“Look out, lieutenant! They’re stealing your
-pistols—mine, too!” cried the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant leaped upon his horse just in time
-to rescue his pistols, hanging from the saddle. He
-was hemmed in. The soldiers were swearing and
-darting back and forth, grabbing at thieves and
-protecting the baggage also.</p>
-
-<p>Now the lieutenant had lost his hatchet. He
-exclaimed furiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell the chief my hatchet is gone.”</p>
-
-<p>The chief only said:</p>
-
-<p>“These are small matters for a great man.”</p>
-
-<p>He drew his buffalo robe high and turned his
-back.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant flushed, more angry still, and stiffened
-in his saddle. He meant business. Stub had
-seen him look this way before.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave the baggage and get your men to one<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-side, sergeant. Quick! Be ready with your guns.
-That’s it. Baroney, tell the chief that the next warrior
-who touches our baggage or animals shall die
-instantly. Sergeant, at the first attempt, let the
-men shoot to kill.”</p>
-
-<p>The Pawnees understood. They saw the muskets
-half leveled, and the grim, determined faces behind.
-A warrior stretched out his hand, stealthily, to a
-pack—and John Spark’s muzzle covered him in a
-flash. He jumped back.</p>
-
-<p>“Go!” suddenly ordered the head chief. The
-Pawnees sullenly gathered their presents, and without
-another word filed away, the whole sixty.</p>
-
-<p>“See if we’ve lost anything, sergeant,” said the
-lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>“One sword, one tomahawk, one axe, five canteens
-and some smaller stuff missing, sir,” was the
-report.</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers waited eagerly. They wished to follow
-and fight.</p>
-
-<p>“No matter,” gruffly answered the lieutenant.
-“We must save our lives for our work, my men. We
-have work to do. Forward, march.” He shrugged
-his shoulders, and added, to the doctor: “I feel as
-badly as they do. This is the first time I ever swallowed
-an insult to the Government and the uniform.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-But our number is too small to risk failure of our
-plans. Now for the mountains.”</p>
-
-<p>“By gar, once more my scalp was loose,” said
-Baroney, to Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. They had black hearts, those Grand
-Pawnee,” Stub gravely agreed.</p>
-
-<p>This day they marched seventeen miles, and the
-next day nineteen miles. In all they had come more
-than one hundred and twenty miles, their eyes upon
-the Big Blue Mountain, as the lieutenant called it.
-And at last they had just about overtaken it.</p>
-
-<p>From camp, here where the river split into two
-large forks, one out of the west, the other out of the
-south, the Big Blue Mountain looked to be quite
-near, up a small north fork.</p>
-
-<p>“Le Grand Mont,” Baroney called it. “The
-Grand Peak.” And the men called it that, too.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, it can’t be more’n one day’s march now,”
-John Sparks declared, as from camp they eyed it
-again. “We can be there to-morrow at this time,
-with ease, in case those be the orders.”</p>
-
-<p>In the sunset the mountain loomed vast, its base
-blue, but its top pinkish white. After everything
-else was shrouded in dusk, its top still shone.</p>
-
-<p>“How high, d’ye think?” queried soldier
-Freegift Stout.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Thray miles higher’n we be; mebbe four,”
-guessed Pat Smith.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a grand wan all right,” sighed Tom
-Dougherty. “Even a bur-rd wud nade an ixtra pair
-o’ wings to get atop him, I’m thinkin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“No mortal man, or nothing else on two legs
-could do it, I reckon,” said John Brown. “Unless
-that be the cap’n himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“American can,” Stub reminded, proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right, boy,” soldier Terry Miller approved.
-“Under orders an American would come
-pretty close to filling the job.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor had been gazing at
-the peak; it fascinated them, like it fascinated the
-men, and Stub. That night they talked together
-until late, planning for to-morrow. The lieutenant
-had decided to climb the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>He sent for Sergeant Meek. The sergeant stood
-before him and saluted.</p>
-
-<p>“I intend to take Doctor Robinson and two of
-the men, and this boy, to-morrow, and set out for
-the big mountain,” the lieutenant said. “The camp
-will be left in your charge.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied Sergeant Meek.</p>
-
-<p>“These reports of the journey to date I also
-leave, with my personal baggage. The mountain is
-only a short day’s march, but I have to consider that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-we may be cut off or meet with other accident. To-morrow
-morning I will lay out a stockade, here, for
-the protection of your party. You are to wait here
-one week, with due caution against surprises by the
-savages and the Spanish. Admit nobody except
-your own command into the stockade. If we do not
-return or you do not hear from us within the seven
-days, you are to take my papers and such baggage
-as may be necessary, and march down river by the
-safest direct course for the nearest American settlement
-or military post, as may be. At the American
-frontier you will leave your men under instructions
-to report at St. Louis, and you will press ahead at
-best speed and deliver my papers to General Wilkinson,
-the head of the Army, wherever he may be. In
-event of your disability, you will entrust the papers
-to Corporal Jackson—acquainting him in advance
-with what is expected of him. In the meantime, here
-or on the march, keep your men alert and together,
-and do not forget that our Country depends upon our
-performing our duty without regard to our own
-interests.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied the sergeant. He gulped—the
-ragged, weather-worn soldier. “Excuse me, sir—’tis
-only a day’s march yonder, you say? You’ll
-be coming back, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“If within human possibility, sergeant. But I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-must climb that mountain to its highest point, in
-order to make certain of our position and ascertain
-the trend of the various streams. We are near the
-sources of the Arkansaw, as is evident. Our instructions
-are to find the heads of the Arkansaw and the
-Red River, on our way to the Comanches.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” replied the sergeant.</p>
-
-<p>“That is all. Good-night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-night, sir. I make bold to wish you good
-luck, sir. I wish I might be going with you, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, sergeant.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant sat up late, writing. In his buffalo-robe,
-Stub dreamed of to-morrow, and the
-Grand Peak. He had understood only part of the
-lieutenant’s long speech; but it was enough to understand
-that he was to be taken.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IX">IX<br />
-<small>A TRY AT THE “GRAND PEAK”</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Early in the morning the lieutenant set the men
-at work cutting down fourteen trees, for stockade
-logs. A stockade was a fort. This fort was to be
-only a pen, open on the river and five feet high on
-the three other sides.</p>
-
-<p>Soldiers John Brown and Terry Miller were the
-men chosen. That made a party of five. They all
-took only a blanket or robe apiece, and a little dried
-meat, besides their guns and Stub’s bow and arrows.
-They started horseback at one o’clock, to cross the
-river and travel up the north fork, for the Grand
-Peak.</p>
-
-<p>The men paused long enough to give three cheers,
-and wave their caps.</p>
-
-<p>“Bon voyage (Good journey),” Baroney called.</p>
-
-<p>“Good luck to yez.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll be lookin’ for you back.”</p>
-
-<p>“When ye get to the top, be lightin’ us a bonfire,
-Terry.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant raised his hat, in reply. The
-doctor waved, the two soldiers and Stub waved.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-And the five splashed through the ice-cold water
-and left the eleven men under Sergeant Meek to
-build the fort.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[B]</a> The fort was near present Pueblo, Colorado. Lieutenant
-Pike’s squad marched up the west side of Fountain Creek.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>According to the doctor, this was the twenty-fourth
-day of the month named November. By the
-morning light the Grand Peak, glistening white,
-had looked to be nearer than ever. The lieutenant
-was certain that a half-day’s march would bring
-them to its base; to-morrow they would climb it,
-and would be back in camp on the third day.</p>
-
-<p>Mile after mile they hastened, their eyes scanning
-the distance before. The route up along the small
-fork was gravelly and bare, except for clumps of
-sage brush, and the willows bordering the stream.
-In places they had to cross deep washes cut by the
-rains. Not a living thing was sighted, save rabbits
-and prairie-dogs and a few antelope. And the
-Grand Peak and the line of lesser peaks—some white,
-some steel-gray, waited.</p>
-
-<p>The sun sank low and lower, over their southern
-end. The Grand Peak grew bluer and colder, and
-the other mountains darkened.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor led. They always
-rode together. Stub and soldiers Miller and Brown
-followed close behind. After a while they all quit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-the stream, to strike westward, on a trail more direct.</p>
-
-<p>Soldier Miller scratched his head, on which the
-hair was long.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a queer thing, John,” he said. “There it
-is, that peak—and there it’s been for more’n a hundred
-miles, with us a-making for it and never reaching
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll not reach it this day, that’s sure, lad,”
-answered John. “We’ve covered ten miles, and
-you’d think we’d been standin’ still!”</p>
-
-<p>In two miles more the sun had set. The shadows
-of the mountains seemed to extend out over the plain
-and turn it dark and cold. Stub pulled his robe
-closer around his neck. Now the Grand Peak had
-changed to deep purple—it had pulled its own robe
-up, for the night.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor suddenly veered
-aside, to a single low cedar, the only tree of the kind,
-around. There they halted and swung from their
-saddles.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll make camp, men,” the lieutenant ordered.
-“The base of the mountain evidently is farther than
-we had figured. But we’ll reach it to-morrow morning,
-easily, and doubtless the top also, before night.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a cold camp—very cold with the breath
-from the mountains. They had dried buffalo-meat
-to chew on, but no water except that in the canteens,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-and the lieutenant wished to save on water, for the
-climb.</p>
-
-<p>He started them out again early, before sunrise.
-They headed for the Grand Peak. The horses
-were stiff, from the night, and thirsty, and moved
-slowly at first. Presently the sun rose. The Grand
-Peak flashed white in its beams, and assuredly was
-near. The foothills at its base were dark green:
-trees.</p>
-
-<p>And there they stayed, the peak and the foothills,
-all day! Stub’s eyes ached with gazing. Soldier
-Brown grumbled a little.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a wild-goose chase. I’ve said that no man
-will ever climb yon peak. We’ll wear out ourselves
-and our hosses for nothin’. Even if we ever reach
-the foot of it, look what’s ahead of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may be sure the cap’n’ll climb it, whether
-or no,” retorted soldier Miller. “He’s set out to do
-it, and do it he will.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well; we’re gettin’ into a more likely country,
-anyhow,” John granted. “The sign is better—that’s
-one comfort.”</p>
-
-<p>This was true. They were entering among low
-hills, covered with cedars and pines. Up and down,
-up and down, and winding over and through, they
-hopefully pushed on—and from each rise they might
-see the long dark-green slope of the Grand Peak<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-more plainly. What a tremendous huge fellow he
-was, as he towered, shadow-flecked, into the floating
-clouds! The clouds veiled his top; he pierced them,
-and thus he sat gazing above the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Gosh!” murmured John Brown. “He’s a
-neck-cracker.”</p>
-
-<p>Toward evening the lieutenant and doctor, in
-advance and just crossing another of the many rolling
-hills, shouted back, and waved.</p>
-
-<p>“Almost there, men!”</p>
-
-<p>When the three others toiled up to the same
-place, they saw. A shallow valley lay before; at the
-farther edge the timbered slope of the Grand Peak
-commenced.</p>
-
-<p>Hurrah!</p>
-
-<p>Several buffalo were feeding, below. The lieutenant
-and the doctor made a dash for them—cleverly
-headed them off, shot rapidly, and downed two.</p>
-
-<p>“Fresh hump for supper,” cheered Terry. “I
-could eat a whole one, myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, I could drink a river dry, first,” wheezed
-John. “Do you mind that we’ve struck no water
-since mornin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Water there,” Stub hazarded, pointing at a
-line of lighter green near the foot of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p>They arrived below in time to help butcher the
-buffalo while the lieutenant and the doctor rode on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-looking for a good camping place. It was too late
-to do anything more this day.</p>
-
-<p>A good camp spot was found on a little creek of
-ice cold water from several springs flowing out of
-the mountain’s base.</p>
-
-<p>“Here we are at last, lads,” the lieutenant welcomed,
-as they brought the meat in. “We’ve wood,
-meat and water, and to-morrow we’ll climb to the
-top. Success awaits us.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s been a long pull, eh?” laughed the doctor.
-“How about you, Stub? Are you game? I mean,
-are you ready to try?”</p>
-
-<p>“I go,” Stub announced.</p>
-
-<p>“With the cap’n’s permission we’ll all go, sir,”
-added soldier Miller. “’Twill be a view worth the
-seeing, up yonder above the clouds.”</p>
-
-<p>“No tellin’ what we’ll find, I reckon,” put in
-John Brown.</p>
-
-<p>“Whatever happens, we’ll be content in the
-knowledge that we’re losing no opportunity,” the
-lieutenant declared. “When we stand up there, on
-what may prove to be the uttermost southwestern
-border of the United States, we will have extended
-the authority of the Flag into a region doubtless
-never before penetrated by man.”</p>
-
-<p>“And procured considerable geographic information,”
-said the doctor.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. The Government will be enabled to
-revise its atlases with accuracy, according to our
-new data as to the course of certain rivers, and the
-National boundary between the United States and
-the Mexican territory westward. And we may perceive
-a route that will take us directly from the
-Arkansaw to the head of the Red River and the
-Comanche country.”</p>
-
-<p>The long slope of the mountain rose dark and
-brooding right above them. They were so close in
-that from the campfire they could not see the top,
-but they felt the snow whitely waiting, up toward
-the black sky beyond the million stiffly marshalled,
-sighing pines.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, cold it was, even here at the base; much
-colder than last night, out on the plain. In spite of
-the fire, their coverings were all too thin. At breakfast,
-before sun-up in the morning, the lieutenant’s
-instrument by which he read the cold said nine degrees
-above freezing. In his moccasins, made from
-a piece of his buffalo-robe, Stub’s feet tingled. Several
-days back John Sparks had given him an old
-pair of cotton trousers, cut off at the knees, but
-these did not seem to amount to much, here. Still,
-Terry Miller and John Brown had nothing better,
-and their bare toes peeped through the holes in their
-shoes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We’ll leave the camp as it is,” the lieutenant
-briskly ordered. “We’ll be back by night, so we’ll
-not need our blankets or meat. See that the horses
-are well staked, Miller, where they’ll be able to drink
-and forage during the day.”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Robinson had gone outside for a minute.
-They heard his gun. He came in, packing a partly
-dressed deer.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a new kind, lieutenant,” he panted.</p>
-
-<p>“Good. We’ll hang up the hide, to inspect later.”</p>
-
-<p>The new kind of deer—a large deer with ears like
-mule ears—was quickly butchered. They hung its
-hide and the best of the meat upon a tree, until
-their return at evening.</p>
-
-<p>“Forward march, to the top, men,” the lieutenant
-bade. “Take only your guns and ammunition.
-Never mind the canteens. We’ll find plenty of water,
-I’m sure. All ready, doctor?”</p>
-
-<p>“All ready.”</p>
-
-<p>With the lieutenant in the lead and Stub bringing
-up the rear, they attacked the timbered slope. Puff,
-puff! Wheeze, wheeze! The pine needles underfoot
-and the frosty soil were slippery. Clouds veiled the
-sky, the timber depths were dark and cold, but presently
-they all were sweating. Gulches and draws cut
-the way, so that by sliding down in and clambering
-out, or else making circuits they lost much time.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-The mountain fought them with cliffs and canyons,
-too, and sometimes they could scarcely make distance
-on hands and knees. Now and then they had to
-halt, to rest and catch breath.</p>
-
-<p>Once or twice they jumped the new species of
-deer, from sudden coverts; there were many large
-birds, that rose with loud whirr. “Pheasants,” the
-doctor and lieutenant called them. And twice, in
-the early morning, they saw buffalo feeding—a
-smaller buffalo than those upon the plains.</p>
-
-<p>But they did not stop to hunt any of these.</p>
-
-<p>About mid-morning they paused to rest again,
-and gaze behind from an open rocky knoll. The sun
-had burst forth.</p>
-
-<p>“A fine day after all,” panted the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir, up here. But look below. Ain’t that
-a snowstorm, sir?” wheezed Terry Miller. The feet
-of him and of John Brown, where seen through their
-worn-out shoes, were bruised and bleeding. Stub’s
-moccasins were shredded and soaked. The feet of
-the lieutenant and the doctor were in no better shape.</p>
-
-<p>Now when they gazed backward and down, they
-looked upon a layer of dull cloud. With occasional
-break, the cloud rested over all the country at the
-mountain’s base—and through the breaks might be
-seen the spume of falling snow!</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve come some way, eh?” remarked the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-doctor. “Thank fortune, we’re above the storm.
-We ought to be near the top.”</p>
-
-<p>But peer as they might, they could not see the
-top. The timber and the rocks extended on and on
-and on.</p>
-
-<p>“A pair o’ stockin’s would feel mighty good, on
-this kind of a trip,” muttered John Brown. “’Tain’t
-what you’d call a barefoot trail, in winter.”</p>
-
-<p>They rested a minute, the men leaning upon
-their muskets. Then——</p>
-
-<p>“Come, boys,” the lieutenant urged impatiently.
-“One more stint and we’ll make it. Forget your
-feet. Think only of the top.”</p>
-
-<p>They climbed, breathing short and fast while
-they clambered and slipped. At noon they still had
-not reached the top; several times the top seemed at
-hand, but when they glimpsed it, shining white, it
-always was across another ridge, and higher.</p>
-
-<p>Stub’s ears rang, his heart drummed, his feet
-weighed like lead. The two soldiers staggered and
-stumbled. The snowstorm below appeared far. But
-the lieutenant and the doctor knew no quitting.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll not reach it, this day,” gasped John
-Brown. “’Tis the same old story. Marchin’, and
-marchin’, and never gettin’ there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow, we’ll reach it to-morrow,” Terry
-replied.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span></p>
-
-<p>The sun sank; the air grew very cold. Up here
-there was nothing moving but themselves; the deer
-and the pheasants and the squirrels had gone to bed.
-The pines were soughing mournfully in an evening
-breeze.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant came to a stop before a reddish
-cliff which overhung and formed a shallow cave.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve done enough for one day,” he panted.
-Even he looked tired out. “I think we’ll gain the
-top shortly in the morning. We’re into snow, and
-the trees are thinning; the top cannot be far. We’ll
-take advantage of this cave, for the night. It’s a
-shelter, at least.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s one piece of luck,” the doctor laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll bunk together, so as to keep warm,”
-announced the lieutenant. “We’ll waive question
-of rank—we’re all men, serving our Flag.”</p>
-
-<p>He made no mention of the fact that they were
-tired, hungry and thirsty after a long day’s climb,
-and that they did not have blankets or food or water.
-He seemed to think that if he could stand it, they
-should stand it, too, for the sake of duty. That was
-his style—that was one reason the men loved him.
-He never asked them to do more than he did, and
-he never took his ease even when he might, as
-commander.</p>
-
-<p>But this proved to be a miserable night. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span>
-fire at the mouth of the cave smudged and smouldered.
-The rock bed was hard and cold. There
-was nothing to eat, nothing to drink, nothing to
-see; all around stretched the slope of the mountain,
-black and white and silent and lifeless—and cold,
-cold, cold.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody slept much, as they all lay huddled close
-to each other for mutual warmth. They only dozed
-shiveringly, afraid to move for fear of losing what
-little warmth they were making.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to Stub that he had just dropped off,
-at last, when he was aroused.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant was standing outside the cave.
-Daylight had come.</p>
-
-<p>“Up, men,” the lieutenant cried. “See this
-view! Oh, doctor! Be quick. It’s glorious.”</p>
-
-<p>They piled out, with sundry grunts and groans
-over muscles stiffened by yesterday’s work and by
-the hard bed. The lieutenant had spoken truly. The
-sky overhead was flushed rosily with sunrise—a clear
-day, here; but the storm still raged down below.
-The clouds there extended, level, in a thick layer
-of drab and white and pink, closing off the plains
-world from the mountain world.</p>
-
-<p>“And yonder is the top, boys.” The lieutenant
-pointed. “It’s nearer than we thought. Let’s try<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-for it now, and get back to camp and our supplies
-before dark.”</p>
-
-<p>He struck out and upward; in single file they
-followed, trudging through the brittle snow, and
-weaving among the pines. The final white ridge
-which their eyes had been marking during most of
-yesterday loomed large and plain above.</p>
-
-<p>The snow gradually deepened. Its surface bore
-not a trace of foot or paw or hoof. Soon it was to
-their knees, soon thigh high; but they were out from
-the trees and upon the bald space which formed
-the top.</p>
-
-<p>Only a few more steps, now, through snow waist
-high, with rocks and gravel underfoot. Whew!
-Now for it! Hooray! The lieutenant was there
-first, to halt, and gaze about.</p>
-
-<p>“Is that it, lieutenant?” puffed the doctor,
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>Terry Miller huskily cheered, stumbled, but
-forged ahead.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant stood, fixedly peering beyond.</p>
-
-<p>“What!” uttered the doctor, arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“<a href="#i_frontis">It’s the wrong peak, men</a>,” quietly said the
-lieutenant, his voice flat in the thin air. “<a href="#i_frontis">Yes, the
-wrong peak.</a>”</p>
-
-<p>The others floundered to him and the doctor, to
-gaze also. They all leaned heavily upon their guns.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-Stub’s legs trembled; he had nothing upon which
-to lean; but he stared, wide-eyed, his heart thumping.</p>
-
-<p>It was the top. On the other side the mountain
-fell away, in a long, long snowy timbered slope, down
-into a deep, broad valley of dark pines; and at the
-farther edge of the valley there arose a mountain
-again—a snow-capped, much higher mountain: the
-Grand Peak itself!<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[C]</a> They had climbed Cheyenne Mountain, height 9,407 feet,
-south of Pike’s Peak, which is 14,109 feet in height.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“And all our climb’s for nothin’, you say, sir?”
-wheezed John Brown. “We’re not on the Grand
-Peak at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. But our climb had not been for naught.
-We’ve done our best, as soldiers.” The lieutenant’s
-tone was dull and disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t see how we made the mistake,” the doctor
-proffered. “We thought that we were at the true
-base.”</p>
-
-<p>“We had no means of telling otherwise, doctor.
-This mountain looked to be a part of that other;
-but that other is separate, and twice as high. I judge
-it’s fully fifteen miles distant, now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we try for it, sir?” Terry Miller asked.
-“The day’s young, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant shook his head decisively.</p>
-
-<p>“Not this trip, Miller. ’Twould take a whole<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-day to reach its base. You and Brown have no
-stockings, we none of us have proper clothing—no
-blankets, no provisions, and there’s little prospect of
-game. We’ve come so far, and taxed our strength
-to the limit. Comparing the height of that mountain
-with this, I believe that no human being can climb
-the Grand Peak and survive. It is a region of eternal
-snow, barred to all vestige of life. We’ll go back
-while we can. We have performed our duty, and
-we can see nothing from up here by reason of the
-cloud bank.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at his thermometer.</p>
-
-<p>“Four degrees below zero.” Zero was the freezing-point.</p>
-
-<p>He glanced sharply about.</p>
-
-<p>“We must make haste. The storm is rising
-on us.”</p>
-
-<p>And even as he spoke the air turned raw and
-cloud wreaths began to float around them. So they
-back-tracked as fast as they could, and guided by
-a convenient ravine followed it down with such
-speed that they reached their camp at the base before
-dark, but in a snowstorm.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” sighed John Brown. “The horses are
-safe, but the birds and beasts have eaten our deer
-and everything else.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant shot a pheasant; of their meat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-there was left only two deer-ribs; and they drank
-and ate.</p>
-
-<p>“Rather limited rations, for five hungry persons
-after a two-days’ fast,” the doctor joked.</p>
-
-<p>“We have our blankets, and we are safe, sir,”
-the lieutenant answered. “Such a matter as diet
-should not enter into the calculations of men who
-explore the wilderness. They must expect only
-what they will get.”</p>
-
-<p>“The little cap’n’s a man o’ iron; he’s not flesh
-and blood,” Terry murmured, to John and Stub.
-“But I reckon he’d not refuse a bit more rib,
-himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“With him, when your belt’s at the last hole,
-why, cut another,” said John.</p>
-
-<p>However, safe they were, although still very hungry.
-In the morning they rode down the creek, constantly
-getting lower and finding less snow. Just
-after noon the men shot two buffalo. That made a
-full feast—the first square meal in three days. So
-to-night they camped more comfortably under some
-shelving rock, outside the hills.</p>
-
-<p>The place seemed to be a favorite camp ground
-for Indians, also. The valley was strewn with their
-horse sign, and with broken lodge-poles and old
-lodge-pins. The lieutenant thought that these had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-been Ietan or Comanche camps, and was much
-interested.</p>
-
-<p>The next afternoon they sighted the stockade;
-they were almost home.</p>
-
-<p>“The flag’s still flying. Thank God, the party’s
-all right,” exclaimed the lieutenant. “Give them a
-cheer, boys, when we arrive. We return disappointed,
-but not defeated, and far from conquered.”</p>
-
-<p>The hoarse cheer was answered. The soldiers—Sergeant
-Meek, Corporal Jerry Jackson, Freegift
-Stout, Alex Roy, and all—trooped out, to stand in
-line and present arms as the lieutenant, leading, rode
-through the gate. He saluted them like an officer
-again, and smiled wanly as if glad to be back.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="X">X<br />
-<small>ONWARD INTO WINTER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“So yez didn’t climb the Grand Peak, after all,”
-Tom Dougherty once more queried.</p>
-
-<p>“We climbed far enough. As I told you before,
-nothin’ on two legs or on twice two legs will ever
-climb that Grand Peak,” John Brown answered.
-“Only an eagle can fly there. We were above the
-clouds, with naught to eat and little to breathe; and
-yon was the Grand Peak itself, as high again.”</p>
-
-<p>The men were wearied, but not yet wearied of
-hearing about the try for the Grand Peak.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right. It’s beyond the reach o’ lungs
-and legs,” said Sergeant Meek. “For the cap’n
-and the doctor measured it to-day with their instruments,
-from a good sight of it. Ten thousand, five
-hundred and eighty-one feet above ground they make
-it out to be, or a good two miles into the air. And
-allowing for the fact that we’re nigh eight thousand
-feet up, right where we be, though you might not
-think it, that peak rises more’n eighteen thousand feet
-above sea level. The cap’n says it’s close to being
-the highest mountain in the world.”<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[D]</a> The Lieutenant’s measurement was wrong only about
-1,000 feet. The height of the plain where they had been camping
-was some 4,500 feet, and Pike’s Peak rises 9,600 feet above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span></p>
-
-<p>Corporal Jerry Jackson came in, from changing
-guard, and stood warming himself by the fire.</p>
-
-<p>“By jiminy, those hosses are being eaten alive,”
-he said. “I do pity ’em. I’d hate to be a hoss,
-on a trip like this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; a man can understand an’ grin an’ bear
-it; but a hoss hasn’t any sense o’ the why an’ wherefore.”</p>
-
-<p>“Those pesky magpies are still at ’em, are they?”
-asked the sergeant.</p>
-
-<p>“A man to a hoss couldn’t keep the things off
-with a club.”</p>
-
-<p>“They even try to take the meat out a fellow’s
-hands,” quoth Freegift Stout.</p>
-
-<p>For the hungry magpies—bold birds of black-and-white,
-with long tails—hovered over the unsaddled
-and unpacked horses, lighted and pecked
-their raw backs until the blood flowed afresh. The
-horses, poor weak, thin creatures, kicked and whinneyed
-in vain. The magpies stuck fast and rode
-upon them, pecking. And as Freegift declared,
-swooped at the men also and grabbed for the meat
-in their hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Have Roy and Gordon come in sight yet?”
-Sergeant Meek asked.</p>
-
-<p>“We thought we could see ’em away out,” replied
-Corporal Jerry.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wish ’em frozen feet. We’ve got
-enough of such in camp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and one pair too many, speaking for myself,”
-groaned Jake Carter.</p>
-
-<p>This was the fourth day since leaving the stockade,
-and a bitter cold day, albeit warmer, according
-to the lieutenant’s instrument, than yesterday. The
-thermometer stood at only three degrees below
-freezing; yesterday it had been at seventeen below.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant had marched them out of the
-stockade, in a heavy snowstorm, on the morning
-after the return from the climb. The route was
-westward, again, up the south side of the Arkansaw.
-Just why he was so impatient to go on, snow or
-no snow, none of the men knew. Maybe he was in
-hopes of finding the Ietans or Comanches, yet; but
-Stub himself was quite certain that the Ietans wintered
-farther south. Or if he wished to discover
-the head of the Arkansaw and of the Red River,
-then the men wondered why he didn’t build warm
-quarters, and lay in meat, and make fur clothing,
-so as to explore safely.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, sometimes I think that what he’s aimin’
-at is to foller this here Spanish trail cl’ar into New
-Mexico, an’ fetch up, with all of us, at Santy Fe,
-even as prisoners to them Spanish,” John Sparks
-hazarded. “We can swear we made a mistake,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-not knowin’ the country; an’ when we get back home
-again we’ll have a nice lot o’ news about them people
-an’ the trail in, for the Government.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’ll do,” Sergeant Meek rebuked. “’Tis for
-him to lead and for us to follow; and he’ll do the
-thinking.”</p>
-
-<p>They had marched fifteen miles, the first day,
-through the storm, with all on foot because the
-horses were getting unable to carry anything but
-the packs. In fact, for some days past it had been
-more comfortable to walk than to ride.</p>
-
-<p>All that night it had snowed, and was still snowing
-in the morning. The men had slept under one
-blanket or robe apiece, in the snow. The little tent
-for the lieutenant and the doctor and Stub sagged
-with the weight.</p>
-
-<p>“My gracious, but this is hard on the horses,”
-Baroney said. “They paw and paw, to find one
-mouthful—and on their backs the ravens take many
-mouthfuls.”</p>
-
-<p>This day there was no marching. The men had
-all they could do to keep the fires going, and not
-freeze. John Sparks, who was a hunter, went out,
-but saw nothing. By evening the snow was a foot
-deep on the level—pretty tough for bare feet exposed
-in gaping shoes, and even for damp moccasins.</p>
-
-<p>During the bitter night the sky cleared. It was to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-be the seventeen-below morning. On the march one
-old buffalo bull was sighted, across the river. John
-Sparks and Hugh Menaugh mounted and went after
-him. They had to swim their horses through the
-ice-covered current, but they got the bull. Then,
-only two miles farther, everybody was ordered to
-cross, because a steep ridge barred the way.</p>
-
-<p>In wading and breaking the ice, all were drenched
-waist high, and their wet clothing froze instantly.
-The lieutenant was wearing only thin cotton overalls,
-like most of the men, but he seemed not to feel the
-cold. He sent back help for John and Hugh, and
-set the other men at work building a fire. When
-John and Hugh arrived, with the meat, their feet had
-been frozen and they had to be lifted from their
-horses.</p>
-
-<p>After they had been thawed out by snow and
-rubbing, and clothes had been partially dried, the
-march was continued, over a very rough, hilly country,
-up the north side of the swiftly flowing river.
-Then one of the pack-horses, driven crazy by the
-magpies and by hunger, ran off, back down the trail.</p>
-
-<p>Jake Carter, Terry Miller and Pat Smith had
-pursued him on foot. By dusk, when camp was
-made at the end of thirteen miles, they were not
-in sight. The lieutenant grew worried.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s foolhardy for them to try to stay out all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-night, with no food or blankets,” he said; and the
-doctor nodded gravely.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re likely to perish, on that open prairie,”
-he agreed. “But what’s to be done? To search for
-them would be a fruitless risk, lieutenant.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant sat up late, waiting for word from
-them. This morning they had appeared, Jake Carter
-with his feet, also, frozen. It had been a terrible
-night, for them. They had found the horse, but
-could not bring him in.</p>
-
-<p>So the lieutenant had directed Alex Roy and
-William Gordon to ride and get the horse (which
-was almost frozen, itself, the other men had reported);
-and he and the doctor, with Stub and
-John Sparks, went out to scout. The lieutenant and
-the doctor measured the height of the Grand Peak,
-from a distance; they and John killed two buffalo-bulls,
-for moccasins for the camp, and took after a
-cow but didn’t get it.</p>
-
-<p>The gritty John Sparks stayed, to kill a cow if
-he might; the other three returned to camp with the
-bull hides.</p>
-
-<p>Now the men, with numbed fingers, were busy
-making moccasins, around the fire, and not envying
-John the buffalo-hunter.</p>
-
-<p>Alex Roy and Bill Gordon came in, with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-strayed horse in tow, but at dusk John had not
-appeared.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s still after his cow, and won’t quit till he
-fetches meat. That’s him! Well, he has a buffalo-robe
-and his flint and steel, so we’ll see him in the
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>They didn’t worry about John. He was a good
-hunter and could take care of himself.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant had decided not to wait for him,
-but to pick him up on the way. The next morning,
-which was the fifth morning, he broke camp at five
-o’clock, long before daylight; and sure enough, before
-they had marched far they found John. He
-rode in on them, with a load of cow meat. To-day
-they marched twenty miles, afoot and ahorse; killed
-two more buffalo and six wild turkeys; and what with
-the new moccasins and plenty of meat they thought
-themselves well fixed.</p>
-
-<p>The country steadily grew rougher and the march
-led higher, but the soil was gravelly and the snow less
-than below. Pretty soon the Spanish trail was lost
-again. From camp everybody went out, searching
-for it, on both sides of the river.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along wid us, lad,” invited Tom
-Dougherty, of Stub; and afoot Stub ascended the
-south side of the river with Tom, and John Sparks,
-and John Mountjoy. It was a good squad. Tom was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-scarcely more than a boy, himself: a young warrior
-of twenty years.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they struck a broad horse-trail, pointing
-up-river.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll see where it goes to,” said John Sparks.
-They followed it as rapidly as they could. The river
-flowed down shallow and rippling and ice-bordered,
-among reddish, bare, rounded hills sprinkled with
-cedar and with snow patches. Far northward they
-saw, every now and then, the glistening Grand Peak.
-It was hard to lose this Grand Peak.</p>
-
-<p>About noon they emerged from the long valley
-of the river into a broadening, with snow peaks
-shimmering in the distances, and a line of high flat-topped
-hills crossing the route before.</p>
-
-<p>“Hist! There be Injuns or them Spanish,
-likely!” Tom warned, pointing ahead.</p>
-
-<p>They halted and peered.</p>
-
-<p>“No. I take it they’re some of our own men,”
-said John Mountjoy.</p>
-
-<p>“What do ye say, Stub?” John Sparks queried.</p>
-
-<p>Stub nodded. His eyes were true eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“No Injuns. Our men,” he asserted.</p>
-
-<p>So they went on, toward the flat-topped hills,
-and met the parties of Sergeant Meek and Baroney.</p>
-
-<p>“Hello to you,” John Sparks greeted “What
-luck?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span></p>
-
-<p>“There’s no good your going much further up
-this side,” answered Sergeant Meek. “The trail
-ends, and you’ll get nowhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“You see where those flat-tops lie? The river
-comes out the mountains there, and comes a-whooping.
-We followed it up, till the valley got narrower
-and narrower; and right soon the river was nothing
-but a brook in width, boiling out something tremendous
-from betwixt cliffs half a mile high, leaving
-no space for man or beast. Nothing gets through
-there, except the water. We’re thinking the trail
-must cross the river this side the gap, and turn off
-north’ard to round it.”<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[E]</a> They had met near where present Canyon City, Colorado,
-is located, on the Upper Arkansas River at the mouth of the
-famous Grand Canyon of the Arkansas. The gap between the
-cliffs was the Royal Gorge, in the Canyon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>“Yes, it doesn’t tackle that gap, anyhow,” the
-men all declared.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose we might as well ford at a good spot,
-an’ scout about a bit,” proffered John Sparks.</p>
-
-<p>So ford they all did, wading and splashing
-through, and slipping on the rounded stones of
-the bottom. The trail was found indeed, farther
-up, on the north side, where it left the river and
-bore northwestward through a dry valley or bottom,
-as if seeking a pass.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Now, whether to call this the trail o’ the
-Spaniards, ag’in, or an Injun trail, I dunno,” mused
-John Sparks, as they all grouped, examining.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a hoss trail, plain enough,” uttered Bill
-Gordon.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis hard to read, that’s a fact,” Sergeant Meek
-said. “But it leads somewheres, and like as not to
-the Red River that the cap’n’s looking for, in
-Comanche country. Anyhow, we’ve done all we can,
-for to-day; and it’s time we went back down and
-reported.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, he’ll have no excuse for takin’ us through
-betwixt them high cliffs,” declared Alex Roy.
-“We’d be drowneded, hosses an’ all. ’Tis a tough-lookin’
-hole, with no end in sight, an’ the rocks
-covered with ice.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on, boys,” bade the sergeant, “or we’ll
-be late for supper.”</p>
-
-<p>They turned and marched back, down river, to
-camp. This evening the lieutenant talked the report
-over with the doctor. They decided to proceed up
-the river, to the dry valley, and follow the trail.</p>
-
-<p>The dry valley, below where the river gushed out
-of the break in the cliff barrier, was reached in one
-day’s march. Camp was made in it at night-fall.
-This, according to the doctor, was the evening of
-the tenth day of December. The horses were watered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-with melted snow, and given one pint of precious
-corn, each, brought this far from the Osage and the
-Republican Pawnee towns. For the camp there was
-plenty of deer meat, killed on the way, and one buffalo.
-It was to be the last big meal, through some
-days.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish trail had been weak, upon entering
-the valley. The lieutenant had rather feared that the
-sign was only that of a small scouting party. But
-farther in it had strengthened. Now at the camp it
-appeared to be a fairly well-trodden road, leading
-on northwest and probably over the next range of
-hills.</p>
-
-<p>“The road to the Red River—hooray!” cheered
-Tom Dougherty. “Then down the Red River we’ll
-go, out o’ this cruel cowld, an’ belike we’ll be to
-Natchitoches an’ the blessed war-rmth o’ Louisiany
-long before spring.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XI">XI<br />
-<small>SEEKING THE LOST RIVER</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“It’s no use to march farther on this line,
-doctor.”</p>
-
-<p>Doctor Robinson answered promptly.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you’re right, lieutenant. We’re getting
-nowhere, only deeper into the mountains. Men and
-horses are about at the end of their strength. There
-seems to be nothing ahead, except more cold, hunger
-and blind scrambling.”</p>
-
-<p>“The men are brave fellows,” said the lieutenant.
-“That human beings, half fed and near naked,
-should be called upon to endure such marches and
-camps, amidst snow and zero weather, is almost more
-than can be expected from even soldiers. Their pay
-is a pittance, they don’t know where they’re going,
-they were not prepared for winter, yet I’ve heard not
-a word of complaint. When we return to the United
-States, the Government surely will reward them.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor, with Stub, were
-standing upon a high ridge some distance from
-camp. A week had passed since they all had entered
-the dry valley, to follow the trail north from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-Arkansaw, on the search for the head of the Red
-River.</p>
-
-<p>But instead of rounding the gap in the cliffs,
-the trail had led away, and away, ever northward,
-into the midst of the snow-caps. Presently, or after
-a couple of days, it had come out at the bank of
-another river, frozen over, forty paces wide, and
-flowing, as the lieutenant discovered, <em>northeast</em>!</p>
-
-<p>That was a disappointment and a surprise. He
-and the doctor plainly were puzzled. The river was
-wrong. To be the Red River it should have flowed
-southeast. The lieutenant decided that this river
-must be the Platte River—or the beginnings of it,
-for the great Platte River was known to flow mainly
-through the plains, far north of the Pawnee country,
-and hundreds of miles distant.</p>
-
-<p>The snowy mountains had closed around. They
-rose high and white and coldly silent. There appeared
-to be no way out, except by the back trail to
-the Arkansaw again, or by following this new river
-down-stream, but where?<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[F]</a> If this stream was the South Platte River, as the Lieutenant
-thought, then they had entered into the western part of
-Central Colorado’s great South Park; very far indeed from
-any Red River.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The trail was continuing, up along this frozen
-river that wound through a series of snowy valleys<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-between steep wooded hills. They all marched upon
-it. It evidently was going somewhere, perhaps to a
-better country, perhaps still to the head of the Red
-River and the circuit south for the lower regions of
-New Mexico. At least, the Spanish had some goal
-in view.</p>
-
-<p>Next, they had come to a large camp, the largest
-yet, and only a few weeks old. But it had been
-an Indian camp. There were the circles where lodges—many
-lodges—had stood, the ashes in the center of
-each, and sign of fully one thousand horses.</p>
-
-<p>“Utah,” declared Baroney, examining a cast-off
-moccasin.</p>
-
-<p>Stub agreed. Moccasins differed, and these were
-Utah moccasins, by the cut.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, then we’re not follerin’ the Spanish, or
-even the Comanches,” John Sparks groaned, doubled
-over with rheumatism. The men all were pretty
-badly crippled by frost and chilblains and rheumatism,
-and their belts were small around their stomachs.
-“Weren’t ye ever in this country before,
-boy? The Utahs had ye, once, you say.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub did not know.</p>
-
-<p>“No remember. Big country, John. Mebbe
-here, mebbe somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor had asked him the
-same question; but he was as puzzled as they. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-might have been hereabouts in summer; it was very
-different in winter. His head hurt, too. So he
-could not help them.</p>
-
-<p>From the old camp, which seemed to have been
-a hunting camp, a regular village, and extended six
-miles long and two miles wide, covering the valley
-bottom, a trail led out, up stream again. In killing
-two buffalo (the first fresh meat since leaving the
-Arkansaw) another gun had burst—the third in the
-march. Its muzzle had got stopped with snow, and
-its barrel was very brittle from the frost.</p>
-
-<p>John Sparks cut the burst end off, so that the
-gun might be used. Hugh Menaugh had no gun at
-all, and was marching with the lieutenant’s sword
-and pistols.</p>
-
-<p>The trail westward was not made by the Spanish.
-The Spanish trail (if there had been any
-Spanish trail) was swallowed up, in the big camp.
-But the trail out was better than none at all. It led
-through still more old camping places, where there
-were empty corn-cribs. There were no old cornfields,
-though, and this set the men to wondering
-whether these Indians might not have got corn from
-the Spaniards, after all.</p>
-
-<p>Then, on a sudden, the trail quit. It left them
-stranded, amidst the mountains. That had occurred
-this morning. The lieutenant had sent out searching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span>
-parties. He then had taken the doctor and Stub,
-and climbed to the top of the high ridge, to spy out
-the country lying around.</p>
-
-<p>“The men should be rewarded the same as the
-Lewis and Clark men will be rewarded—with money
-and land,” now the doctor said.</p>
-
-<p>“A more heroic little band never wore the United
-States uniform,” the lieutenant declared.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re not wearing that, these days, lieutenant.
-No one would take you and them for soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p>Very true. About the last trace of the blue uniforms
-had vanished. Only the lieutenant still had
-blue trousers, of thin cloth, for wearing on the
-march. His chief’s uniform, of bright shoulder-pieces
-and shining buttons, he kept in a trunk, until
-he should meet the Spaniards or the Comanches.
-From his red-lined cloak he had cut a cap, and sewed
-fox-skin to it, for the inside; the rest of the cloak
-had gone into socks and mittens, for himself and
-Stub. On his feet were buffalo-hide moccasins, on
-his body a capote or blanket-coat; and up to his
-knees his legs were wrapped in deer-hide. He looked
-like a chief, nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p>All this was little enough, for day and night
-wear in cold and storm. The doctor had less. To
-be sure, he had made himself a fur cap, of rabbit-skin,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span>
-and a deer-hide coat and mittens—but buckskin,
-without much under it, is cold stuff, as everybody
-knows. His trousers were torn so that they
-showed his own skin. His feet were clad in socks
-cut from a piece of blanket, and in the hide moccasins
-which did not fit and had to be tied on with thongs.</p>
-
-<p>The men, and Stub, had been put to all kinds of
-shifts. Some wore coats cut, like the doctor’s socks,
-from the gray, threadbare army blankets—and socks
-to match. Some wore coats of leather—poorly
-tanned hides that they had saved. Some wore even
-leather trousers like leggins. All wore buffalo hide
-moccasins, but not a one had a hat or cap. Their
-long hair protected their heads, and their faces were
-covered with shaggy, bristling beards—except Tom
-Dougherty, whose beard was only a stubble in
-patches. The other men poked a great deal of fun
-at young Tom.</p>
-
-<p>As for Stub, his beautiful robe had long ago been
-turned into moccasins and leggins; and he tried to
-be comfortable in these, and a shirt from a left-over
-piece of John Sparks’ gray blanket, and socks and
-mittens from the lieutenant’s red-lined cloak. He
-did not need a cap.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, the blankets and hides that had been
-used were needed for coverings, at night; but in
-such cold weather it was almost impossible to strip<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-other hides and dress them. They were like boards,
-especially the buffalo hides. And deer were scarce.</p>
-
-<p>From the high ridge where he and the lieutenant
-and the doctor stood the view was wide and wonderful,
-although not cheering. Mountains, mountains,
-mountains, their sides and tips shining white with
-snow, their bases, where seen, dark with wooded
-hills, the pine branches heavily laden by winter.</p>
-
-<p>Far in the east and the southeast the mountains
-seemed to form a line with every gap stopped.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t that our Grand Peak, away yonder?”
-asked the doctor, pointing. “If so, I judge it’s a
-hundred miles, as the bird flies.”</p>
-
-<p>“And unreachable from here, except by a bird,
-sir. We’re shut off from it, completely. Besides,
-our road does not lie in that direction. Our duty
-as explorers demand that we do not give up so
-easily.” And the lieutenant turned his glasses, so
-as to sweep the north and the northwest.</p>
-
-<p>On the north were lofty hills, pine covered,
-breaking the nearer view; and snow mountains
-grouped behind them. The frozen river, marked by
-willows, stretched onward, in crooked bed, through
-the valley, now broad, now narrowed, into the northwest,
-soon to be closed upon by the hills and mountains
-there.</p>
-
-<p>In all the great expanse nothing moved; even the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-other exploring parties were out of sight. It was a
-dead country.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“Not very promising, eh?” the doctor queried
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“It does not promise success. Our course up
-this river should be abandoned. We are constantly
-making farther and farther northward, separated
-from the Red River by the mountains; game is getting
-less, the trail is unreliable, and we shall depend
-upon it no longer.”</p>
-
-<p>He gazed southward. The hills rose to mountains
-here also. He used his spy-glass intently. He
-handed it to the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see a great white mountain range, appearing
-through a gap almost directly south.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. A thundering way off.”</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to be the end of a long chain extending
-westward from it. That chain, I believe, is the
-divide draining on this side into the Platte, on the
-other side into the Red River. We’re on the wrong
-side. We should march southwest, to cross the
-nearer portion of the chain, and eventually come out
-upon the head of the Red River. At all events, we’ll
-try it, while we can. But our march through here
-has not been wasted, for our Country. We can lay
-down on our map the sources of the Platte, which no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-one has supposed to be located at such a distance from
-the plains.”</p>
-
-<p>They all took another look, scanning the region
-south and southwest. With his own eyes Stub might
-descry the landmark of the Great White Mountains.
-The air was very clear, the sun rested just right,
-and through the gap there the tops of the mountains,
-sharp cut and triangular, stood out plainly amidst the
-other, lesser peaks. That called for a long, long
-journey.</p>
-
-<p>They went back to camp. The other parties
-came in, and reported nothing but an old Indian
-camp, farther up. They had seen no game.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ what nixt, then, I wonder?” Pat Smith
-remarked, at the fire. “Do we kape goin’, wid no
-end. Sure, the Red River can’t lay hereabouts.
-We’ll be nearer comin’ to Canady.”</p>
-
-<p>“No keep going,” Stub proudly announced.
-“The cap’n say turn ’round, for south. Big ridge
-there; big white mountains; Red River other side.”</p>
-
-<p>“South’ard? Hooray! That’s a good word.
-It puts heart into us; hey, lads? We’ll be gettin’
-out o’ this trap where even the Injuns don’t dare
-bide in winter, an’ we’ll be findin’ the Red River,
-after all.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub’s news cheered the men greatly. It took
-only a little to encourage them.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XII">XII<br />
-<small>IS IT FOUND AT LAST?</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“The Red River, men! Three cheers! We
-think we’ve found it at last!”</p>
-
-<p>It was the evening of the second day’s march
-into the southwest. The doctor and the lieutenant
-had gone out from camp, to survey about, as usual.
-The first line of mountains had been crossed and
-already every eye was eager and every heart was
-keen for the traces of the shifty Red River.</p>
-
-<p>Matters looked promising, too. Noon camp to-day
-had been made at a little spring, the unfrozen
-waters of which flowed trickling and formed a small
-stream wending southeast for the bottom of the
-valley.</p>
-
-<p>“The beginnings of the Red River—do you
-reckon it might be the beginnings of the Red River,
-cap’n?” the men queried.</p>
-
-<p>But the lieutenant smiled and shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t dare say so, lads, and disappoint
-you. We may be a long way yet from the real Red
-River.”</p>
-
-<p>Still, some of the men did not believe him, until<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-they had left the valley and the spring behind, and
-in a narrow pass of the next ridge had come upon
-another spring and another stream, larger. Among
-so many springs and streams, who might tell which
-was the source of the Red River?</p>
-
-<p>They followed the stream part way through the
-pass, and encamped there in a snowstorm. The
-snow, sifting thickly, shut off the view before; it was
-glum weather for a hungry camp; the men crouched
-close, snow-covered, around the fire, or moved hobbling,
-at their various jobs; the gaunt, sore-backed
-horses cropped desperately, pawing into the snow,
-or hunched, coughing and groaning, in the scant
-shelter of the low cedars and spruces.</p>
-
-<p>The horses of the lieutenant and the doctor, and
-Stub’s yellow pony, had been turned into pack animals,
-to lessen the loads of the other animals.
-Everybody was marching on foot.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you say that the cap’n an’ the doctor
-thought likely we’d have to go cl’ar back south’ard,
-fur as the Great White Mountains yonder, so’s to
-strike the river?” John Sparks asked, of Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe there, mebbe sooner,” Stub nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“If we ketch ’em, I hope he won’t be axin’ us
-to climb ’em,” spoke John Brown.</p>
-
-<p>“Got to ketch ’em, first,” laughed somebody.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
-
-<p>“We might as well be chasing a mountain as a
-river,” said Terry Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“Oui,” agreed Baroney. “Ma foi, the mountains
-are there, in sight; but the river—it’s nowhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind, never mind, lads,” Sergeant Meek
-put in. “Not a man of us works as hard as him and
-the doctor; they’re always breaking the trail, and
-they’re always out whilst we’re resting a bit. Look
-at ’em now, scouting in the snow without a bite to
-eat. Sure, we ought to be proud to keep a stiff
-upper lip and follow ’em as fur as they’ll go, whether
-that’s to Canady or Mexico or the Pacific Ocean.
-Ain’t we soldiers?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll follow. You bet we will,” the men
-chorused. “There’s no harm meant in our talk,
-but we got to talk about somethin’ besides our feet
-an’ our bellies.”</p>
-
-<p>Now here came the lieutenant and the doctor—trudging
-fast, panting, snowy, their beards plastered
-white, but their thin faces lighted with smiles. The
-doctor gleefully flourished his fur cap, and hailed
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“The Red River, men! Three cheers! We think
-we’ve found it at last!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray! Hooray! Hooray!” The steep
-sides of the narrow pass echoed, and the miserable
-horses half pricked their ears, dumbly questioning.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span></p>
-
-<p>The two came directly to the fire. They were
-out of breath. The circle respectfully opened for
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Did we hear right? Is it true, then, sir? Ye
-found the Red River?” eagerly inquired Sergeant
-Meek, of the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sergeant.” And the lieutenant beat his
-red cap and stamped, to dislodge some of his snow.
-“That is, the signs are the most hopeful for many
-a day, and we all have good reason to be inspired
-of success. Listen, men. The facts are these: Doctor
-Robinson and I advanced about four miles, out
-of this defile and into a prairie that lies beyond.
-There we discovered a fine stream, with all the characteristics
-of a river. It is some twenty-five yards
-wide, very swift, in a clearly marked rocky channel,
-and the general direction of its flow is southeast.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray!”</p>
-
-<p>“The creek we are now encamped beside evidently
-joins it. This is all I have to say at present.
-To-morrow, or as soon as marching conditions warrant,
-we will proceed, examine the ground more thoroughly,
-and demonstrate whether or not we may
-consider ourselves actually at the source of the Red
-River.”</p>
-
-<p>“News like that takes the chill off the air,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-laughed Freegift Stout, when the lieutenant and the
-doctor had gone into their tent, for a rubdown.</p>
-
-<p>“B’gorry, we been tellin’ ’em that the Red River
-was surely hereabouts,” asserted Tom Dougherty.
-“Wan spring, an’ then another, an’ then a crick, an’
-then the river itself—an’ nixt, out o’ the mountains
-we’ll be an’ wid iv’ry mile gettin’ closer to war-rmth
-an’ people.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you want o’ people?” Corporal Jerry
-demanded. “They may be the Spanish, or the Pawnees
-again, or worse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come wan, come all,” Tom retorted. “Sure,
-I wouldn’t object to a bit of a fight, for a change,
-man to man. But fightin’ these mountains is up-hill
-work.” And he laughed at his joke.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I hope with all my heart the cap’n’s
-struck the right trail,” said Sergeant Meek. “And
-he’s pretty certain, or he wouldn’t have said so much.
-He’s no man to make a brag, as you know. For the
-first time since we entered the mountains he’s looking
-sort o’ content. He deserves a turn o’ luck. ’Tis
-always of his country he’s thinking, and of us, and
-never of himself; and though in matter of muscle he’s
-the smallest man amongst us, he picks the hardest
-jobs.”</p>
-
-<p>In the morning the snow was falling faster than
-ever. They all were anxious to reach the river, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span>
-the pass was so clogged with drifts and their horses
-were so weak that the march took them only out to
-the edge of the bottom-land.</p>
-
-<p>It was the fifth day without sight of game. The
-lieutenant ordered a hunt, before dark; but not even
-a rabbit was found. There was nothing but snow,
-snow, snow.</p>
-
-<p>“My belt’s twice around me already, an’ is
-startin’ on the third lap,” declared Alex Roy.</p>
-
-<p>However, the horses were in luck, at last—and
-they needed it. John Sparks and Tom Dougherty
-reported a fine big patch of long grass down near
-the river. In the morning the lieutenant sent
-Baroney and Stub, with the wretched animals, to
-set them to grazing and herd them—and a long cold
-task this proved to be.</p>
-
-<p>Still, as Baroney said, as he and Stub trudged
-about or squatted with their backs to the squalls:</p>
-
-<p>“If we cannot eat, ourselves, it is a great pleasure
-to watch the horses eat; hein?”</p>
-
-<p>Late in the afternoon Corporal Jerry Jackson
-came down.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re to fetch the horses in with you, at dusk,”
-he said. “Never a trace of game, all day, so we’ll
-pull out in the mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Down the Red River, mebbe, Jerry?” Stub
-asked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I dunno, but somewhere. The cap’n knows—an’
-he knows we’re on short rations of only a few
-mouthfuls to a man.”</p>
-
-<p>The doctor and Baroney were to start out early,
-down river, hunting. The lieutenant and two or
-three men were to explore up stream and see where
-the river began, if they could. The rest of the men
-were to march down river with the baggage, until
-they killed enough game so that they might camp
-and wait.</p>
-
-<p>“Miller and Mountjoy, ’tis you with the cap’n,”
-ordered Sergeant Meek.</p>
-
-<p>“I go, too, Bill?” pleaded Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, that’s for him to say. I’ve only my
-orders, lad,” Sergeant Bill answered.</p>
-
-<p>So Stub appealed to Lieutenant Pike himself.</p>
-
-<p>“I go with you, please?”</p>
-
-<p>But the lieutenant gravely shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“Not this time, my boy. You’d best go down
-river with the others, where there’s more chance of
-finding game. Up stream it’s a rough country, and
-the three of us are likely to be hard put for meat.
-We’ll only explore for a day or two; you stay with
-the party.”</p>
-
-<p>As anybody might have foretold, the lieutenant
-again had taken the heaviest work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I go with the doctor, then, please,” Stub proposed.
-“Down river.”</p>
-
-<p>“He and Baroney will be hunting. You have
-no weapon. But you can do your duty like a soldier
-by tending the horses.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub mournfully thought upon his bow, broken
-several days ago. Hugh Menaugh spoke up, saluting.</p>
-
-<p>“Beggin’ your pardon, cap’n—he’s a plucky lad
-an’ if you say for him to go wid the doctor he can
-have one o’ the pistols you loaned to me. Belike he’ll
-fare as well wid the doctor as wid us, an’ mebbe
-bring him luck. An’ we’ve all been boys, ourselves,
-oneasy for doin’ things.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve a kind heart, my man,” answered the
-lieutenant, smiling. “If the doctor is agreeable to
-having his company, all right. You may settle it
-between you.”</p>
-
-<p>Settled it was, right speedily, for Doctor Robinson
-had a kind heart, too.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s your pistol, then,” Hugh bade. “Wid
-wan load. Be sure ye get a buff’lo, now.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub nodded, and carefully stowed the long dragoon
-pistol in under his belt. The curved handle
-crossed his stomach.</p>
-
-<p>“I see him, I get him, Hugh.”</p>
-
-<p>He and the doctor and Baroney set out, first.</p>
-
-<p>“Down river; we’ll meet you down the Red<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-River, Baroney, old hoss,” called the men. “Here’s
-wishin’ you fat meat, doctor, sir—an’ the same for
-the rest of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll follow the main trail in two days and catch
-up,” the lieutenant had promised. “But nobody
-is to wait for me until meat has been secured. Do
-your best, doctor. There are rations for only forty-eight
-hours.”</p>
-
-<p>It was another lean day. Although the three
-did do their best, scouting in advance from the river
-to the hills, and exploring the side draws, oftentimes
-waist deep in the snow, they stirred never a hoof nor
-paw, and rarely a feather. That was discouraging.</p>
-
-<p>Now and again they saw the main party, who had
-crossed the river and were toiling along, down the
-other flank of its winding course.</p>
-
-<p>“Not a thing sighted by us, and not a gunshot
-heard from those other fellows,” the doctor sighed,
-at evening. “Well, we’d better go over and join
-them, for camp, and try again in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>They made for the fire that was twinkling, below
-and beyond; crossed the river upon the ice, and
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>“Any luck, sir?” queried Sergeant Meek, of
-the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>“None to-day sergeant; but we have hopes for
-to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. The same here, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“So ye didn’t fetch in a buffler with that big
-pistol?” John Sparks bantered, of Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow,” answered weary Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow is a grand time,” said Baroney.
-“If there wasn’t any to-morrow, I don’t know what
-we’d do.”</p>
-
-<p>The supper to-night was a scant meal, for all:
-just a few mouthfuls of dried meat and a handful
-of parched corn. In the morning the doctor decided
-briskly.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve rations for only to-day, sergeant?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; and scarce that, but we can make ’em
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>“I feel sure that Baroney and the boy and I
-will find game before night. If we do, we’ll come
-in with it. But you keep on, as Lieutenant Pike
-ordered, until you kill meat or until he joins you,
-and never mind our whereabouts. We’ll take care of
-ourselves somehow, and I don’t propose to come in
-unless loaded.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll likely stay out, in the hills, sir, you
-mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“That depends on the day’s luck,” smiled the
-doctor. “But even if we do, we’ll be no worse
-off than Lieutenant Pike and Miller and Mountjoy.
-We’re all rationed the same, and there’s little to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-choose between camping together and camping
-separately.”</p>
-
-<p>But even Stub felt the seriousness of it when
-again he followed the doctor and Baroney, for the
-second day’s hunt. If nothing was killed to-day,
-then to-morrow they would begin to starve; pretty
-soon they would be eating the horses, and next their
-moccasins, and without horses and moccasins they
-would die before getting out of the mountains.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIII">XIII<br />
-<small>MEAT FOR THE CAMP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Buffalo!</p>
-
-<p>Stub stared hard. He scarcely could believe his
-bleared, aching eyes. Was it really true? Buffalo?
-Now what to do?</p>
-
-<p>This was early in the third morning after leaving
-the main camp. For two days he and the doctor
-and Baroney had been hunting, hunting, from dawn
-to dark; ranging up and down, among the hills and
-draws, and wading the snow, on only one small meal.
-In fact, they practically had had nothing at all to
-eat, in forty-eight hours. Through the two nights
-they had tended fire and shiveringly dozed, without
-blankets, in the best spot they might find, where they
-could secure a little protection from the biting wind.</p>
-
-<p>How they were going to keep on living if they
-discovered nothing to eat, this day, he did not know;
-Baroney did not know; the doctor hadn’t said. But
-they had told the sergeant not to expect them unless
-with good news; the other men probably were famishing,
-too, and they themselves might as well starve
-in one place as another.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span></p>
-
-<p>Full of aches and pains (and that was all!) they
-had passed a bad night, so that this morning they
-really had been glad to stagger up and out again, into
-the bleak whity-gray, even though they might be
-starting upon only another long day of fruitless
-tramping.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney groaned.</p>
-
-<p>“Ma foi! My legs move, my head thinks, but
-there is nothing between. I have no stomach.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll find meat to-day. Not only for ourselves
-but for the boys in camp, remember,” encouraged
-the doctor. “They’re likely depending on us, for
-we’ve heard no gunshots. We must separate and
-hunt widely.”</p>
-
-<p>They had trudged forth, before sun-up. They
-had crossed the first wooded ridge, to the next little
-valley.</p>
-
-<p>“Stub, you follow up, along the high ground
-on this side,” the doctor ordered. “Baroney will
-take the middle. I’ll take the farther side. Move
-slowly and all together, and we’ll surely start something.
-Head off anything that comes your way,
-Stub, and drive it down to us. Don’t waste the load
-in your pistol.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I will drive,” answered Stub, patiently.</p>
-
-<p>He waited, shivering, until Baroney had halted
-in the bottom, and the doctor had toiled clear across<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-to the other slope, and up. Then they three moved
-on together—one searching either flank, the third
-in between.</p>
-
-<p>The valley was not wide. Its bottom was level
-and open except for the snow-covered brush; its sides
-were dotted with cedars and pines. Keeping near
-the top of his side, so as to drive anything down hill,
-Stub hunted faithfully, hoping, too, that he would
-hear the doctor or Baroney shoot. His eyes scanned
-every foot before and to right and left, seeking
-tracks. Even a rabbit would be welcomed—yet he
-didn’t wish to spend his bullet on a rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>He saw nothing to make him draw his pistol. It
-weighed heavily and rasped his stomach and thigh
-as he plodded on.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was about to rise above the snowy ridges
-on the east. They had been hunting for an hour,
-at least, and had heard never a sound. Then he
-reached a place where his slope broke sharply into
-a side valley. A fellow always expected something,
-at such places. So he stole forward cautiously; he
-came to a ledge of rock, and peered down. What
-he saw instantly almost stopped his heart-beating,
-and dazed his eyes with sudden excitement.</p>
-
-<p>Buffalo! Really? Yes, yes—buffalo! He was
-not dreaming.</p>
-
-<p>It was more of a basin than a valley, in there:<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span>
-broadening to a snug cup protected by rim-rock,
-just back of the opening into the main valley, and
-thence tapering and climbing until it pinched out,
-on the ridge. A few leafless aspens (sign of water)
-and sprawly evergreens grew in the cup, and there
-was marsh grass, in weedy clumps. And the
-buffalo.</p>
-
-<p>Two—three, lying down and comfortable, like
-cattle, their legs under them. The snow was well
-trodden; they had been in here some time.</p>
-
-<p>Now what to do? He trembled, and thought
-his best. If he only might take the time to signal
-Baroney and the doctor. But even as he peered
-the sun flashed up, and the first beams streamed
-into the cup. One large bull suddenly stirred, and
-all at once was on his feet, swaying his shaggy
-head and sniffing the air. Was it the sun, or did
-the breeze tell him something? He may have scented
-the doctor, or Baroney, or Stub, or he might merely
-be thinking of breakfast and the day’s program.</p>
-
-<p>There! The second buffalo was out of bed, and
-imitating the first. The third seemed to be getting
-uneasy. Stub dared not delay, to signal. His eyes
-roved rapidly. He was too far, for pistol shooting.
-The buffalo might only start to graze—they might
-start to travel, warned by danger smell—and they
-were as likely to go one way as another. He must<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span>
-get down in behind them and drive them out where
-the doctor and Baroney would see them.</p>
-
-<p>He drew back, and crouching scurried on a half
-circuit, to slip into the basin, above them. He struck
-a little ravine, leading down. All his practice at
-scouting with the Pawnee boys stood him in good
-stead, now. He moved fast but silently, darting
-from spot to spot, stepping with care and listening
-for alarm sounds; and stealing more gently as he
-arrived at the bottom, where the ravine ended in a
-cedar and a shoulder of rock.</p>
-
-<p>The upper edge of the basin was just around
-that corner. He planned to step out, into sight. The
-buffalo would run in the other direction, and the
-doctor or Baroney might be able to head them, and
-kill one at least; then follow and maybe kill more.</p>
-
-<p>But first he drew his big pistol, on the slim
-chance of a sure shot, himself. Gradually he thrust
-his head beyond the cedar and the rock shoulder—and
-jerked back in a jiffy. A fourth buffalo was
-standing there almost within touch!</p>
-
-<p>Stub’s heart beat furiously, and he sank trembling,
-to think. He must look again; and he did,
-as gradually as a timid prairie-dog emerging from
-its burrow.</p>
-
-<p>Wah! It was a cow, turned broadside to him,
-half dozing as she bathed in the sunshine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now he must steady down, and slide out a little
-farther, for a sure shot. He huddled back, once
-more to take breath. He examined his flint, and
-opened the pan, to stir the caked powder of the
-priming. Then with both hands he cocked the heavy
-hammer—click-click! The noise frightened him,
-and he hoped that it had not frightened the cow.
-Then he extended the pistol in front of him, and
-began to follow it by worming on, inch by inch,
-around the low-branching cedar.</p>
-
-<p>Hoorah! The cow was still there, but she had
-heard or smelled. Maybe she had heard the click-click.
-She had not moved; only, her head was up,
-and she was gazing with her head turned in the
-direction of the other buffalo.</p>
-
-<p>He’d better shoot as quickly as possible. Another
-inch, and another, he squirmed, for right position.
-Now! She was about fifteen paces—not so
-near as he had thought, but this was the best that
-he might do with any safety. So he leveled the
-long-barreled dragoon pistol, again with both hands;
-held breath until the muzzle seemed to be pointing
-directly in line with a spot just behind her fore
-shoulder—and while it slightly wavered there, he
-pressed the trigger.</p>
-
-<p>Bang! The pistol well-nigh jumped from his
-hands; a cloud of smoke had belched—and dimly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-seen through the smoke, by his watering eyes, the
-cow had given a great leap and had vanished.</p>
-
-<p>She had run the other way, down the basin. Up
-Stub leaped, and ran, too. The basin seemed to be
-still echoing with the report, but he heard the thud
-and clatter of hoofs, also, and a fear that he had
-missed her made his heart sick.</p>
-
-<p>He panted into full sight of the little basin just
-in time to see a half score—no, a dozen or more of
-the burly animals pelting through for the other end,
-to gain the open of the main valley. He’d had no
-idea that so many were in here. They’d been hidden
-from him, the most of them—lying in cosy beds
-where he’d not happened to look.</p>
-
-<p>Away they went, jostling and stringing out, bolting
-blindly. One, the last in the flight, loped painfully—fell
-farther and farther behind. It was his
-cow! He had hit her, and hit her hard. Hoorah!
-He darted for the spot where she had stood. He
-trailed her for a few steps, and the trampled snow
-was blotched red. Blood! Hoorah! He ran on,
-down through the basin, to see her again. Now
-Baroney or the doctor might get her, because she
-would grow weak.</p>
-
-<p>He wondered if they had heard him shoot. The
-basin was empty, all the buffalo had charged on into
-the valley—that was what he had wished them to do,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span>
-and maybe he had killed one and signaled, besides.
-He hoped that the doctor would not be angry.
-Now if the buffalo only turned down toward
-Baroney——!</p>
-
-<p>Hark! Another shot! Somebody out there had
-fired—Whang! He ran faster—to the mouth of
-the basin—into sight of the main valley—and again,
-hoorah!</p>
-
-<p>The fleeing buffalo had blundered against
-Baroney. He had been not far outside; he had shot
-one—it was down, in the snow; not the cow, either,
-for the cow was down, too—there were the two
-black spots, motionless, and the little herd were
-streaming across the valley, for the other slope,
-with Baroney lumbering after—and yonder, on the
-slope, the doctor was plunging toward the bottom,
-to get in a shot also.</p>
-
-<p>Could he do it? Yes! He ran quartering, stumbling
-and lunging; the leading buffalo sensed him,
-swerved, they all swerved; he knelt and aimed and
-fired, quickly—around wheeled the buffalo, again
-alarmed, and came pelting back for Stub’s side, as
-if to escape through their basin—but one lagged,
-wavered, halted, and suddenly collapsed. That made
-three!</p>
-
-<p>The remainder of the herd were coming straight
-for Stub. He had no load for his pistol; he could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span>
-only dance and wave his arms and yell, to stop them.
-This he did. Once more they tacked; Baroney had
-lain flat, hoping; foolish things, they tacked almost
-for him—wait—wait—aha! His gun puffed smoke,
-the report echoed dully, a buffalo had jumped high
-and stiff-legged and Baroney was after him, loading
-on the run. Down pitched the buffalo. That made
-four!</p>
-
-<p>The doctor was running again, but the rest of the
-buffalo got away, up the valley. All right; they had
-left plenty of meat. Hoorah!</p>
-
-<p>Stub hastened forward, wild with joy. The
-doctor was coming. They met Baroney, where two
-carcasses—a bull and Stub’s cow—were lying close
-together.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurrah!” cheered the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney capered—“Hoozah! Hoozah!”</p>
-
-<p>“Four! One to me, two to you—that’s good.
-And what about this other? Who killed <em>her</em>?”</p>
-
-<p>“The boy. Oui! I think he killed her, with that
-pistol,” Baroney jabbered. “I hear one shot—bang!
-I do not know where. Then the buffalo come running
-out. And before I can shoot, I see this cow
-tumble down, and die. She has a hole in her—a
-bullet hole.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you shoot her, Stub? With your pistol?”</p>
-
-<p>Stub nodded.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span></p>
-
-<p>“First I see three. Down on bottom. They act
-scared. I go to drive them out. She very close.
-I shoot her. She run, all run, I run. Then I hear
-shooting. Baroney get one, you get one, Baroney get
-’nother. Now lots of meat. Hoorah!”</p>
-
-<p>“The meat! The meat!” cried Baroney, as if
-reminded of great hunger. Down he plumped, digging
-furiously with his knife and tearing with his
-fingers. He wrested out a strip of bloody flesh and
-began to chew it and suck it.</p>
-
-<p>Stub, seeing red, likewise fell to. All of a sudden
-he could not wait longer.</p>
-
-<p>“Here, doctor.” And Baroney, his beard stained
-wolfish, passed him a piece.</p>
-
-<p>But the doctor straightened up.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s enough. I must carry the news to the
-men. You two stay here and butcher what you can
-till horses come from the camp. It may be a matter
-of life or death for those other fellows. We ought
-to get this meat to them without delay.”</p>
-
-<p>And he was away, walking fast and running
-down through the valley, for the river beyond and
-the main party somewhere along it.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s one fine man,” gasped Baroney, gazing
-after. “We think only of our stomach, he thinks
-of those others.”</p>
-
-<p>They worked hard, cutting and hacking and hauling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-before the carcasses got cold and the hides stiff.
-With Baroney’s hatchet they cracked a marrow-bone
-apiece, so as to scoop out the fatty pith.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the sun was high and warming. Two
-men were coming afoot up the valley. They brought
-no horses——</p>
-
-<p>“Miller and Mountjoy, hein?” Baroney said,
-eyeing them as they drew nearer. “Where is the
-lieutenant, I want to know?”</p>
-
-<p>Terry Miller and John Mountjoy they were; and
-they staggered and stumbled in their haste at sight of
-the meat.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you lose the lieutenant? What?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. He’s gone on for camp, with the doctor.
-He sent us in here to eat. Give us some meat,
-quick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing but one turkey and a hare for the
-three of us, these four days past,” panted Terry, as
-he and John sucked and gobbled. “And in the last
-two days nothing at all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go far?” Stub queried, eager to know.</p>
-
-<p>“Away up, twenty-five miles or two camps above
-where the rest o’ you left us. Up to where the river
-petered out to a brook betwixt the mountains. Then
-we turned back and traveled day and night with our
-clothes froze stiff on us, and our stomachs clean
-empty, to ketch the main camp. The cap’n was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-worrying more about the other men than himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“And sure, when we met the doctor, by chance,
-with news of this meat, the little cap’n told us to
-come in and eat, but he wouldn’t. He went on—him
-and the doctor—hungry as he was, to find the camp
-below,” mumbled John. “They’ll send hosses. How
-many did you kill? Four?”</p>
-
-<p>“Four,” assured Baroney. “Stub one, the doctor
-one, I myself had the fortune to kill two. Stub,
-he found them; but it was the good God who put
-them there, waiting for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose we might have a bit of a fire, and
-eat like Christians, whilst waiting?” Terry proposed
-wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>“The marrow is strong; we must not get sick,”
-Baroney wisely counseled. “Let us butcher, and be
-ready for the horses; and to-morrow we will all
-have a big Christmas dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow Christmas?” exclaimed John.
-“Right you are! Hooray for Christmas!”</p>
-
-<p>They cheered for Christmas; and with aching
-brain Stub puzzled over the new word.</p>
-
-<p>Toward the last of their butchering Corporal
-Jerry Jackson and Hugh Menaugh arrived with two
-horses. The camp was famished, the lieutenant and
-the doctor had toiled in, and now everybody there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-was waiting for the buffalo meat. The camp had
-been out of food for two days.</p>
-
-<p>“I told the doctor that the boy an’ his pistol
-would fetch him luck,” Hugh declared. “An’ it
-surely did. Faith, a fine little hunter you be, Stub,
-me lad.”</p>
-
-<p>They loaded the horses, at full speed, and made
-for the starving camp. It was a joyous place. John
-Sparks had come in with more good news—he had
-discovered another buffalo herd and had killed four,
-himself! Men and horses were out, to get the meat.</p>
-
-<p>Now with eight buffalo on hand, Christmas Eve
-was to be celebrated to-night, and Christmas Day
-to-morrow. They were American feasts—feasts for
-the Spanish and French and all white people, too,
-the doctor and Sergeant Bill said. Stub had heard
-the names before, somewhere; perhaps from the
-French traders. But he quit thinking and bothering.
-He was an American, they were his feasts now;
-Lieutenant Pike looked happy, and that was enough.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIV">XIV<br />
-<small>A TRAIL OF SURPRISES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The lieutenant had explored the source of this
-Red River far enough. He was ready to march on
-down, for the plains and the United States post of
-Natchitoches above the mouth in Louisiana. Everybody
-was glad.</p>
-
-<p>The big meals of buffalo meat had made several
-of the men, and Stub also, quite ill; so that on the
-day after Christmas the march covered only seven
-miles. The tent was turned into a hospital, and the
-lieutenant and the doctor slept out in the snow.</p>
-
-<p>The Great White Mountains, far to the east, had
-been in sight from high ground; the river appeared
-to lead in that direction. But here at the lower
-end of the bottom-land other mountains closed in.
-The river coursed through, and everybody rather
-believed that by following it they all would come
-out, in two or three days, into the open.</p>
-
-<p>That proved to be a longer job than expected, and
-the toughest yet. The river, ice-bound but full of air-holes,
-sometimes broadened a little, and gave hope,
-but again was hemmed clear to its borders by tremendous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-precipices too steep to climb. The poor
-horses slipped and floundered upon the ice and
-rocks; in places they had to be unpacked and the
-loads were carried on by hand.</p>
-
-<p>Soon the lieutenant was ordering sledges built,
-to relieve the horses of the loads; men and horses
-both pulled them—and now and then sledge and
-horse broke through the ice and needs must be
-hauled out of the water.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve miles march, another of sixteen miles,
-five miles, eight miles, ten and three-quarter miles,
-about five miles—and the river still twisted, an icy
-trail, deep set among the cliffs and pinnacles and
-steep snowy slopes that offered no escape to better
-country.</p>
-
-<p>The horses were so crippled that some could
-scarcely walk; the men were getting well bruised,
-too; the dried buffalo meat had dwindled to a few
-mouthfuls apiece, and the only game were mountain
-sheep that kept out of range. The doctor and
-John Brown had been sent ahead, to hunt them and
-hang the carcasses beside the river, for the party to
-pick up on the way.</p>
-
-<p>From camp this evening the lieutenant and
-Baroney climbed out, to the top, in order to see
-ahead. They came down with good news.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve sighted an open place, before,” said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-the lieutenant, gladly. “It’s not more than eight
-miles. Another day’s march, my men, and I think
-we’ll be into the prairie and at the end of all this
-scrambling and tumbling.”</p>
-
-<p>That gave great hope, although they were too
-tired to cheer.</p>
-
-<p>But on the morrow the river trail fought them
-harder than ever. Toward noon they had gained
-only a scant half mile. The horses had been falling
-again and again, the sledges had stuck fast on the
-rocks and in the holes, the ice and snow and rocks
-behind were blood-stained from the wounds of men
-and animals.</p>
-
-<p>Now they had come to a narrow spot, where a
-mass of broken rocks, forming a high bar, thrust
-itself out from the cliff, into the stream, and where
-the water was flowing over the ice itself. The horses
-balked and reared, while the men tugged and shoved.</p>
-
-<p>“Over the rocks,” the lieutenant ordered.</p>
-
-<p>That brought more trouble. Stub’s yellow pony,
-thin and scarred like the rest, was among those that
-still carried light packs. He was a stout, plucky
-pony—or had been. Here he lost heart, at last.
-His hoofs were sore, he was worn out. Terry
-Miller hauled at his neck-thong, Stub pushed at his
-braced haunches. The line was in a turmoil, while<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-everybody worked; the canyon echoed to the shouts
-and blows and frenzied, frightened snorting.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the yellow pony’s neck-thong snapped;
-he recoiled threshing, head over heels, before Stub
-might dodge from him; and down they went, together,
-clear into the river. <a href="#i_203">But Stub never felt the
-final crash.</a> On his way he saw a burst of stars,
-then he plunged into night and kept right on plunging
-until he woke up.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_203">
- <img src="images/i_203.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_203">BUT STUB NEVER FELT THE FINAL CRASH</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He had landed. No, he was still going. That is,
-the snow and cliffs at either side were moving, while
-he sat propped and bewildered, dizzily watching
-them.</p>
-
-<p>His head throbbed. He put his hand to it, and
-felt a bandage. But whose bowed back was that,
-just before? And what was that noise, of crunching
-and rasping? Ah! He was on a sledge—he was
-stowed in the baggage upon a sledge, and was being
-hauled—over the ice and snow—through the canyon—by—by——</p>
-
-<p>Freegift Stout! For the man doing the hauling
-turned his face, and was Freegift Stout!</p>
-
-<p>Well, well! Freegift halted, and let the sled
-run on to him. He shouted also; they had rounded
-a curve and there was another loaded sled, and a
-man for it; and they, too, stopped.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hello. Waked at last, have ye?” spoke Freegift,
-with a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I guess so.” Stub found himself speaking
-in a surprisingly easy fashion. A prodigious
-amount of words and notions were whirling through
-his mind. “Where—where am I, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ridin’ like a king, down the Red River.”</p>
-
-<p>“What for?”</p>
-
-<p>“So’s to get out an’ reach Natchitoches, like the
-rest of us.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub struggled to sit up farther. Ouch!</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your name?” he demanded. Then—“I
-know. It’s Freegift Stout. That other man’s
-Terry Miller. But what’s my name?”</p>
-
-<p>“Stub, I reckon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes; of course it is. That’s what they call me.
-But how did you know? How’d you know I’m
-‘Stub’ for short? I’m Jack. That’s my regular
-name—Jack Pursley. I got captured by the Utahs,
-from my father; did the Pawnees have me, too?
-Wish I could remember. I do sort of remember.
-But I’m a white boy. I’m an American, from Kentucky.
-And my name’s Jack Pursley—Stub for
-short.”</p>
-
-<p>Freegift roundly stared, his mouth agape amidst
-his whiskers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Hey! Come back here, Terry,” he called.
-And Terry Miller came back.</p>
-
-<p>“That crack on the head’s set him to talkin’
-good English an’ turned him into a white lad, sure,”
-quoth Freegift. “Did you hear him? Ain’t that
-wonderful, though? His name’s Jack Pursley, if you
-please; an’ he answers to Stub, jest the same—an’ if
-that wasn’t a smart guess by John Sparks I’ll eat my
-hat when I get one.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be darned,” Terry wheezed, blinking and
-rubbing his nose. “Jack Pursley, are you? Then
-where’s your dad?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know. We were finding gold in the
-mountains, and the Indians stole me and hit me on
-the head—and I don’t remember everything after
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sho’,” said Terry. “How long ago, say?”</p>
-
-<p>“What year is it now, please?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve jest turned into 1807.”</p>
-
-<p>“I guess that was three years ago, then.”</p>
-
-<p>“And whereabouts in the mountains?”</p>
-
-<p>“Near the head of the Platte River.”</p>
-
-<p>“For gosh’ sake!” Freegift blurted. “We all
-jest come from there’bouts. But you didn’t say
-nothin’, an’ we didn’t see no gold.”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t remember.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we won’t be goin’ back, though; not for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-all the gold in the ’arth. Were you all alone up
-there?”</p>
-
-<p>“My father—he was there. Some other men
-had started, but they quit. Then we met the Indians,
-and they were friendly till they stole me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did they kill your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a tall story,” Freegift murmured, to
-Terry; and tapped his head. Evidently they didn’t
-believe it “Where do you think you are now,
-then?” he asked, of Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess I’m with Lieutenant Pike. But where
-is he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ll tell you. You see, that yaller hoss
-an’ you went down together. You got a crack on
-the head, an’ the hoss, he died. We had to shoot
-him. But we picked you up, because you seemed
-like worth savin’. The lieutenant put a bandage
-on you. Then he took the rest of the outfit up out
-the canyon. The hosses couldn’t go on—there wasn’t
-any footin’. But he left Terry an’ me to pack the
-dead hoss’s load an’ some other stuff that he couldn’t
-carry, on a couple of sledges, an’ to fetch them an’
-you on by river an’ meet him below. Understand?”</p>
-
-<p>Stub nodded. How his brain did whirl, trying
-to patch things together! It was as if he had wakened<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span>
-from a dream, and couldn’t yet separate the real
-from the maybe not.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d best be going on,” Terry Miller warned.
-“We’re to ketch the cap’n before night, and we’re
-short of grub.”</p>
-
-<p>So the sledges proceeded by the river trail, while
-Stub lay and pondered. By the pain now and then
-in his head, when the sledge jolted, he had struck
-his scar; but somehow he had a wonderful feeling
-of relief, there. He was a new boy.</p>
-
-<p>The trail continued as rough as ever. Most of
-the way the two men, John and Terry, had to pull
-for all they were worth; either tugging to get their
-sledges around open water by route of the narrow
-strips of shore, or else slipping and scurrying upon
-the snowy ice itself. Steep slopes and high cliffs shut
-the trail in, as before. The gaps on right and left
-were icy ravines and canyons that looked to be
-impassible.</p>
-
-<p>The main party were not sighted, nor any trace
-of them. Toward dusk, which gathered early, Terry,
-ahead, halted.</p>
-
-<p>“It beats the Dutch where the cap’n went to,”
-he complained. “He got out, and he hasn’t managed
-to get back in, I reckon. Now, what to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only thing to do is to camp an’ wait till
-mornin’,” answered Freegift. “An’ a powerful lonesome,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-hungry camp it’ll be. But that’s soldierin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, the orders are to ketch him—or to join
-him farther down, wherever that may be,” said
-Terry. “But we can’t travel by night, in here. So
-we’ll have to camp, and foller out our orders
-to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a lonesome camp, and a cold camp, and
-a hungry camp, here in the dark, frozen depths of
-the long and silent defile cut by the mysterious river.
-They munched a few mouthfuls apiece of dried meat;
-Stub slept the most comfortably, under a blanket
-upon the sledge; the two men laid underneath a
-single deer-hide, upon the snow.</p>
-
-<p>They all started on at daybreak. Stub was
-enough stronger so that he sprang off to lighten
-the load—even pushed—at the worst places. Indeed,
-his head was in first-class shape; the scar pained
-very little. And he had rather settled down to being
-Jack Pursley again. Only, he wished that he knew
-just where his father was. Dead? Or alive?</p>
-
-<p>It was slow going, to-day. The river seemed to
-be getting narrower. Where the current had overflowed
-and had frozen again, the surface was glary
-smooth; the craggy shore-line constantly jutted with
-sudden points and shoulders that forced the sledges
-out to the middle. The slopes were bare, save for
-a sprinkling of low bushes and solitary pines, clinging<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-fast to the rocks. Ice glittered where the sun’s
-faint rays struck.</p>
-
-<p>This afternoon, having worked tremendously,
-they came out into the lieutenant’s prairie. At least,
-it might have been the prairie he had reported—a
-wide flat or bottom where the hills fell back and let
-the river breathe.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray! Here’s the place to ketch him,”
-Freegift cheered. And he called: “See any sign
-o’ them, Terry?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope.”</p>
-
-<p>They halted, to scan ahead. All the white expanse
-was lifeless.</p>
-
-<p>“I swan!” sighed Terry. “Never a sign, the
-whole day; and now, not a sign here. You’d think
-this’d be the spot they’d come in at, and wait for a
-fellow or else leave him word.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” agreed Freegift, “I would that. Do you
-reckon they’re behind us, mebbe?”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s a man to tell, in such a country?” Terry
-retorted. “They’re likely tangled up, with half their
-hosses down, and the loads getting heavier and heavier.
-But where, who knows? We’ll go on a piece,
-to finish out the day. We may find ’em lower on,
-or sign from ’em. If not, we’ll have to camp again,
-and shiver out another night, with nothing to eat.
-Eh, Stub? At any rate, orders is orders, and we’re<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span>
-to keep travelling by river until we join ’em. If
-they’re behind, they’ll discover our tracks, like as
-not, and send ahead for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow, we’re into open goin’. I’m blamed
-glad o’ that,” declared Freegift. “Hooray for the
-plains, and Natchitoches!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray if you like,” Terry answered back, puffing.
-“But ’tisn’t any turnpike, you can bet.”</p>
-
-<p>Apparently out of the mountains they were;
-nevertheless still hard put, for the river wound and
-wound, treacherous with boulders and air-holes,
-and the snow-covered banks were heavy with willows
-and brush and long grass.</p>
-
-<p>After about four miles Terry, in the lead, shouted
-unpleasant news.</p>
-
-<p>“We might as well quit. We’re running plumb
-into another set o’ mountains. I can see where the
-river enters. This is only a pocket.”</p>
-
-<p>Freegift and Stub arrived, and gazed. The
-mountains closed in again, before; had crossed the
-trail, and were lined up, waiting. Jagged and gleaming
-in the low western sunlight, they barred the way.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no end to ’em,” said Terry, ruefully.
-“Heigh-hum. ’Pears like the real prairies are a long
-stint yet. The cap’n will be sore disappointed, if he
-sees. I don’t think he’s struck here, though. Anyhow,
-we’ll have to camp—I’m clean tuckered; and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-to-morrow try once more, for orders is orders, and
-I’m right certain he’ll find us somewheres, or we’ll
-find him.”</p>
-
-<p>So they made camp. Freegift wandered out,
-looking for wood and for trails. He came in.</p>
-
-<p>“I see tracks, Terry. Two men have been along
-here—white men, I judge; travellin’ down river.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only two, you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Fresh tracks, just the same.”</p>
-
-<p>They all looked, and found the fresh tracks of
-two men pointing eastward.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you! Those are the doctor and Brown
-hunting,” Terry proposed. “Wish they’d left some
-meat. But we may ketch ’em to-morrow. Even
-tracks are a godsend.”</p>
-
-<p>They three had eaten nothing all day; there
-was nothing to eat, to-night. To Stub, matters
-looked rather desperate, again. Empty stomach and
-empty tracks and empty country, winter-bound, gave
-one a sort of a hopeless feeling. He and Freegift
-and Terry trudged and trudged and trudged, and
-hauled and shoved, and never got anywhere. For all
-they knew, they might be drawing farther and farther
-away from the lieutenant. But, as Terry said,
-“orders were orders.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if we ketch the doctor he’ll be mighty interested
-in that head o’ yourn,” Freegift asserted, to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-Stub. “He’s been wantin’ to open it up, I heard
-tell; but mebbe that yaller hoss saved him the
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll not thank the hoss,” laughed Terry,
-grimly. “He’d like to have done the job himself!
-That’s the doctor of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub privately resolved to show the doctor that
-there was no need of the “job,” now. He felt fine,
-and he was Jack Pursley.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing occurred during the night; the false
-prairie of the big pocket remained uninvaded except
-by themselves. They lingered until about ten o’clock,
-hoping that the main party might come in.</p>
-
-<p>“No use,” sighed Freegift. “We may be losin’
-time; like as not losin’ the doctor. Our orders were,
-to travel by river till we joined the cap’n.”</p>
-
-<p>With one last survey the two men took up their
-tow-ropes and, Stub ready to lend a hand when
-needed, they plodded on.</p>
-
-<p>The tracks of the doctor and John Brown led to
-the gateway before. The space for the river lessened
-rapidly. Soon the sides were only prodigious cliffs,
-straight up and down where they faced upon the
-river, and hung with gigantic icicles and sheeted with
-ice masses. The river had dashed from one side to
-the other, so that the boulders were now spattered
-with frozen spray.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span></p>
-
-<p>The tracks of the doctor and John Brown had
-vanished; being free of foot, they might clamber as
-they thought best. But the sledges made a different
-proposition. Sometimes, in the more difficult spots
-amidst ice, rocks and water, two men and a boy
-scarcely could budge one.</p>
-
-<p>Higher and higher towered the cliffs, reddish
-where bare, and streaked with motionless waterfalls.
-The sky was only a seam. Far aloft, there was
-sunshine, and the snow even dripped; but down in
-here all was shade and cold. One’s voice sounded
-hollow, and echoes answered mockingly.</p>
-
-<p>The dusk commenced to gather before the shine
-had left the world above. Stub was just about tired
-out; the sweat had frozen on the clothes of the two
-men, and their beards also were stiff with frost.</p>
-
-<p>Now they had come to a stopping-place. There
-was space for only the river. It was crowded so
-closely and piled upon itself so deeply, and was
-obliged to flow so swiftly that no ice had formed
-upon it beyond its very edges. The cliffs rose
-abruptly on either side, not a pebble-toss apart,
-leaving no footway.</p>
-
-<p>The trail had ended.</p>
-
-<p>“I cry ‘Enough,’” Terry panted, as the three
-peered dismayed. “We can’t go on—and we can’t<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-spend the night here, either. We’ll have to backtrack
-and find some way out.”</p>
-
-<p>“The doctor an’ Brown must ha’ got out somewheres,”
-Freegift argued. “They never passed here.
-Let’s search whilst there’s light. If we can fetch
-out we may yet sight ’em, or the cap’n. An’ failin’
-better, we can camp again an’ bile that deer-hide for
-a tide-me-over. Some sort o’ chawin’ we need bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Biled deer-hide for supper, then,” Terry answered.
-“It’ll do to fool our stomicks with. But
-first we got to get out if we can.”</p>
-
-<p>They turned back, in the gloomy canyon whose
-walls seemed to be at least half a mile high, to seek
-a side passage up and out. Freegift was ahead.
-There were places where the walls had been sundered
-by gigantic cracks, piled with granite fragments.
-Freegift had crossed the river, on boulders and ice
-patches, to explore a crack opposite—and suddenly
-a shout hailed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Whoo-ee! Hello!”</p>
-
-<p>He gazed quickly amidst his clambering; waved
-his arm and shouted reply, and hastened over.</p>
-
-<p>“Somebody!” Terry exclaimed. He and Stub
-ran forward, stumbling. They rounded a shoulder,
-and joining Freegift saw the lieutenant. In the
-gloom they knew him by his red cap if by nothing
-else. He was alone, carrying his gun.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been looking for you men,” he greeted.
-“You passed us, somehow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” Freegift admitted. “An’ we’ve been
-lookin’ for you, too, sir. We didn’t know whether
-you were before or behind.”</p>
-
-<p>“And begging your pardon, sir, we’re mighty
-glad to see you,” added Terry. “Are the men all
-behind, the same as yourself, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“Part of them.” The lieutenant spoke crisply.
-“The doctor and Brown are still ahead, I think.
-I haven’t laid eyes on them. You three were next.
-The rest of the party is split. From the prairie
-back yonder I detached Baroney and two men to
-take the horses out, unpacked, and find a road for
-them. We have lost several animals by falls upon
-the rocks, and the others were unable to travel farther
-by river. The remaining eight men are coming
-on, two by two, each pair with a loaded sledge.
-I have preceded them, hoping to overtake you. The
-command is pretty well scattered out, but doing the
-best it can.” His tired eyes scanned Stub. “How
-are you, my brave lad?”</p>
-
-<p>“All right, sir. But my name’s Jack Pursley,
-now. That knock I got made me remember.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!”</p>
-
-<p>“You see, sir,” Freegift explained in haste, and
-rather as if apologizing for Stub’s answer, “when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-he come to after that rap on the head he was sort
-o’ bewildered like; an’ ever since then he’s been
-claimin’ that he’s a white boy, name o’ Pursley, from
-Kaintuck, an’ was stole from his father, by the
-Injuns, up in that very Platte River country where
-we saw all them camp sign.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh!” uttered the lieutenant. “You were
-there? How many of you? All white? Where’s
-your father? How long ago?”</p>
-
-<p>“About three years, I think,” Stub stammered.
-“Just we two, sir. We were hunting and trading
-on the plains, with some Kiowas and Comanches,
-and the Sioux drove us into the mountains. Then we
-joined the Utahs, and after a while they stole me.
-They hit me on the head and I forgot a lot of things—and
-I don’t know where my father is, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hah! I thought we were the first white men
-there,” ejaculated the lieutenant. “The first Americans,
-at least. It’s a pity you didn’t come to before.
-You might have given us valuable information.”</p>
-
-<p>“He says they found gold in that Platte country,
-sir,” said Terry.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes? Pshaw! But no matter now. We’ll pursue
-that subject later. First, we must get out of this
-canyon. You discovered no passage beyond?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. Never space to set a foot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you any food?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Had none for two days, sir. We were thinking
-of biling a deer-hide for our supper.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re no worse off than the others. The
-whole column is destitute again, but the men are
-struggling bravely, scattered as they may be. The
-doctor and Brown came this way. You haven’t
-sighted them?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; only their tracks, back a piece.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then they got out, somehow. We must find
-their trail before dark, and follow it up top, where
-there’s game. Search well; our comrades behind are
-depending on us.”</p>
-
-<p>They searched on both sides of the canyon.
-Stub’s Indian-wise eyes made the discovery—a few
-scratches by hands and gun-stocks, in a narrow
-ravine whose slopes were ice sheeted. That was
-the place.</p>
-
-<p>They all hurried to the sledges, took what they
-might carry, and clawing, slipping, clinging, commenced
-to scale the ravine. It was a slow trail, and
-a danger trail, but it led them out, to a flat, cedar-strewn
-top, where daylight still lingered.</p>
-
-<p>“The doctor and Brown have been here,” panted
-the lieutenant. “Here are their tracks.”</p>
-
-<p>They followed the tracks a short distance, and
-brought up at camp sign. Evidently the doctor and
-Brown had stopped here, the night before; had killed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-a deer, too—but there was nothing save a few shreds
-of hide.</p>
-
-<p>“The birds and beasts have eaten whatever they
-may have left,” spoke the lieutenant. “Too bad,
-my lads. However, we’re out, and we’ll make shift
-some way. Fetch up another load, while I hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>Out he went, with his gun. They managed to
-bring up another load from the sledges. They heard
-a gunshot.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray! Meat for supper, after all.”</p>
-
-<p>But when he returned in the darkness he was
-empty-handed.</p>
-
-<p>“I wounded a deer, and lost him,” he reported
-shortly; and he slightly staggered as he sank down
-for a moment. “We can do no more to-night.
-We’ll melt snow for drinking purposes; but the deer-hide
-is likely to make us ill, in our present condition.
-We’ll keep it, and to-morrow we’ll have better luck.”</p>
-
-<p>So with a fire and melted snow they passed the
-night. Nobody else arrived. The doctor and Brown
-seemed to be a day’s march ahead; Baroney and
-Hugh Menaugh and Bill Gordon were wandering
-with the horses through this broken high country;
-and the other eight were toiling as best they could,
-with the sledges, in separate pairs, seeking a way out
-also.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant started again, early in the morning,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-to find meat for breakfast. They went down
-into the canyon, to get the rest of the loads, and
-the sledges—and how they managed, with their legs
-so weary and their stomachs so empty, Stub scarcely
-knew.</p>
-
-<p>They heard the lieutenant shoot several times, in
-the distance; this helped them. He rarely missed.
-But he came into camp with nothing, and with his
-gun broken off at the breech—had wounded deer,
-had discovered that his gun was bent and shot
-crooked—then had fallen and disabled it completely.</p>
-
-<p>He was exhausted—so were the others; yet he
-did not give up. He rested only a minute. Then
-he grabbed up the gun that had been stowed among
-the baggage. It was only a double-barreled shotgun,
-but had to do.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll try again, with this,” he said. “You can go
-no further; I see that. Keep good heart, my lads,
-and be sure that I’ll return at best speed with the
-very first meat I secure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. We’ll wait, sir. And good luck
-to ye,” answered Terry.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting numb and lax beside the baggage, they
-watched the lieutenant go stumbling and swerving
-among the cedars, until he had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“A great-hearted little officer,” Freegift remarked.
-“Myself, I couldn’t take another step.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-I’m clean petered out, at last. But him—away he
-goes, never askin’ a rest.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he’ll be back. You can depend on that,”
-put in Terry. “Yes. He’ll not be thinking of himself.
-He’s thinking mainly on his men. He’ll be
-back with the meat, before he eats a bite.”</p>
-
-<p>They heard nothing. The long day dragged;
-sometimes they dozed—they rarely moved and they
-rarely spoke; they only waited. Up here it was very
-quiet, with a few screaming jays fluttering through
-the low trees. Stub caught himself nodding and
-dreaming: saw strange objects, grasped at meat, and
-woke before he could eat. He wondered if Freegift
-and Terry saw the same.</p>
-
-<p>The sun set, the air grew colder.</p>
-
-<p>“Another night,” Freegift groaned. “He’s not
-comin’. Now what if he’s layin’ out somewheres,
-done up!”</p>
-
-<p>“If he’s still alive he’s on his feet, and seeking
-help for us,” Terry asserted. “He said to wait and
-he’d come. You can depend on him. Orders be
-orders. He found us, below, and he’ll find us here.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve got to suck deer-hide, then,” announced
-Freegift. “It may carry us over.”</p>
-
-<p>They managed to arouse themselves; half boiled
-strips of deer-hide in a kettle of snow-water, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-chewed at the hairy, slimy stuff. But they couldn’t
-swallow it.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my!” Terry sighed. “’Tain’t soup nor
-meat, nor what I’d call soldiers’ fare at all. We had
-hard times before, up the Mississippi with the left’nant;
-but we didn’t set teeth to this. What’d I ever
-enlist for?”</p>
-
-<p>“The more I don’t know,” answered Freegift.
-“But stow one good meal in us an’ we’d enlist over
-again, to foller the cap’n on another trip.”</p>
-
-<p>Terry tried to grin.</p>
-
-<p>“I guess you’re right. But, oh my! Down the
-Red River, heading for white man’s country, is it?
-Then where are we? Nowhere at all, and like to
-stay.”</p>
-
-<p>Through the gnarled cedars beside the mighty
-canyon the shadows deepened. The mountain ridges
-and peaks, near and far, surrounding the lone flat,
-swiftly lost their daytime tints as the rising tide of
-night flowed higher and higher. And soon it was
-dark again.</p>
-
-<p>Now they must wait for another morning as
-well as for the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>They had already sickened of the deer-hide, and
-could not touch it again. So the morning was breakfastless.
-The sun had been up only a few minutes,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-and Stub was drowsing in a kind of stupor, when
-he heard Freegift exclaim:</p>
-
-<p>“He’s comin’, boys! Here comes the cap’n!
-Say! Don’t I see him—or not?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s two of ’em!” cried Terry. “He’s
-found company. No! That ain’t the cap’n. It’s
-somebody else. But our men, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>Two men afoot were hastening in through the
-cedars, along the canyon rim. They carried packages—meat!
-They were Hugh Menaugh and Bill
-Gordon. Hooray!</p>
-
-<p>“Hello to you!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we’re still here,” replied Terry. “And
-if you’ve fetched anything to eat, out with it quick.
-Where’s the cap’n? Did you see him?”</p>
-
-<p>Hugh and Bill busied themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we met up with him last evenin’, below,
-down river. He hadn’t come back to you, ’cause he
-hadn’t killed anything. But Baroney and us were
-packin’ buffalo meat and deer meat both, and he sent
-us two out to find you first thing this mornin’, soon
-as ’twas light enough to s’arch. After you’ve fed,
-we’ll help you on to camp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who else is there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the cap’n and Baroney, but they’re expectin’
-the doctor and Brown. Them two are somewheres
-in the neighborhood. The cap’n fired a gun<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-as signal to ’em. We’ll have to look for the other
-fellers.”</p>
-
-<p>“What kind of a camp, an’ whereabouts?” Freegift
-asked, as he and Terry and Stub greedily
-munched.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, a good camp, in the open, not fur from
-the river.”</p>
-
-<p>Hugh and Bill acted oddly—with manner mysterious
-as if they were keeping something back.
-After the meal, Hugh opened up.</p>
-
-<p>“Now that you’ve eaten, guess I’ll tell you what’s
-happened,” he blurted. “You’ll know it, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Anybody dead? Not the cap’n!”</p>
-
-<p>“No. Nothing like that. But this ain’t the
-river.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t the Red River?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope.”</p>
-
-<p>The three stared, dazed.</p>
-
-<p>“What river might it be, then?” gasped Freegift.</p>
-
-<p>“The Arkansaw ag’in. An’ camp’s located on
-that very same spot in the dry valley where we struck
-north last December, scarce a month ago!”<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[G]</a> That was the remarkable and disappointing fact. From
-the heads of the Platte River they simply had passed southwestward
-to the head of the Arkansas, had fought their way
-down through the Grand Canyon of the Arkansas to the Royal
-Gorge, and crossing around this were completing a big circle
-to the Cañon City region again.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s certainly hard on the little cap’n,” Bill
-added. “Yesterday, his worst day of all, when
-near dead he made out and espied the landmarks, was
-his birthday, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the date?” Terry queried. “I’ve
-forgot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fifth o’ January. To-day’s the sixth. It was
-December 10 when we camped yonder before.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XV">XV<br />
-<small>NOT YET DEFEATED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Helped by Hugh Menaugh and Bill Gordon they
-might now travel on for the lieutenant’s camp.
-They had to cross several gulches and one or two
-ridges; then they came out into view of the dry
-valley, at the foot of which the Arkansaw issued
-from the mountains, to course eastward through
-the foothills and down to the plains far beyond.</p>
-
-<p>It was the same valley. They might see again
-the Grand Peak, distant in the north, and mark the
-line of the river, nearer in the south. From the
-ridges they had been enabled to sight the Great
-Snow Mountains, also in the south and much farther
-than the Grand Peak in the opposite direction.
-Yes, this was the Arkansaw, and the lieutenant
-had missed his guess by a wide margin.</p>
-
-<p>He was waiting at the camp. He greeted them
-kindly, but was haggard and seemed much cut up
-over the result of all his hard marches. No one
-could resist being sorry for him.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor and John Brown were here, too.
-They had brought in six deer, so that now there was
-plenty of meat on hand.</p>
-
-<p>It was two more days before the last of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-men had straggled in. Meanwhile the doctor especially
-had been interested in the new “Jack Pursley,”
-otherwise Stub; had examined his head, and together
-with the lieutenant had asked him questions.
-But as Stub stuck to his story, they had to accept
-it; appeared rather to believe it—the doctor in
-particular.</p>
-
-<p>Considerable of their talk, between themselves,
-Stub did not understand. There was something
-about “removal of pressure,” “resumption of activity,”
-“clearing up of brain area,” and so forth, which
-really meant nothing to Stub, except that now he
-knew who he was and the spot under his scar no
-longer burned or weighed like lead.</p>
-
-<p>If he might only find his father, whose name,
-he remembered, was James, and if the lieutenant
-might find the Red River after all, then he would
-be perfectly happy.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant acted somewhat worried. He did
-not know quite what to do next. He did not like
-to waste time; but instead of having found the Red
-River, after a month of search which had lost him
-horses and crippled others and almost had lost him
-men also, here he was with nothing gained except
-a little information about the mountain country
-north.</p>
-
-<p>But he was not a man to shilly-shally. He and
-the doctor, and sometimes Baroney, talked earnestly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-together; on the day after the last of the squads
-had arrived, and when everybody had eaten well
-and had rested, he called a council.</p>
-
-<p>“I have decided to make another attempt, men,”
-he said. “We are soldiers, and our duty to our
-orders and our Flag demands that we do not admit
-defeat. The thought of defeat is unworthy of brave
-men. It is far better to die with honor, in the knowledge
-that we have done our utmost, than to live as
-cowards and weaklings. Fortune has been trying
-us out, but she will not find us lacking. We have
-explored to the north, and we know that the Red
-River does not lie there. That much has been
-accomplished, and not in vain, for we have made
-important discoveries and greatly extended the Government’s
-knowledge of the sources of the Platte
-and the Arkansaw Rivers. It will be impossible
-to travel onward with the horses. We have lost a
-number of them, and the remainder are unfit. So I
-propose to stay here a few days, in order to erect a
-block-house and gather meat. Then I shall leave
-the horses, and the useless baggage, with two men
-in charge; and with the rest of you shall strike southward
-to cross the next divide, in the vicinity of the
-Great White Mountains, where, I am positive, we
-shall emerge upon the head streams of the Red
-River. We have demonstrated the fact that the
-Red River can lie only in that direction. From there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-we will send back for the horses, which by that
-time will be recovered; and we will descend along
-the river to the civilization of our own people and
-the just reward, I trust, of a Country appreciative
-of your efforts.”</p>
-
-<p>Sergeant Meek faced the men and flourished
-his lean arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Three cheers for the cap’n and the Red River,
-boys! Hooray! Hooray! Hooray!”</p>
-
-<p>They all spent the next four days in building the
-block-house with logs, and in hunting. A good
-pasture was found, for the wretched horses. John
-Sparks made a new stock for the lieutenant’s broken
-gun.</p>
-
-<p>Baroney and Pat Smith were to stay here. Although
-a great deal of the baggage, including the
-lieutenant’s own trunk with his “chief’s” uniform,
-was left also, what with the ammunition and axes
-and spades, and the presents in case the Comanches
-or other Indians should be met, and the meat, the
-lieutenant and the doctor and the eleven men carried
-each seventy pounds, weighed out equally, and Stub
-himself had a pack.</p>
-
-<p>Followed by a good-luck cheer from Baroney
-and Pat, they marched out from the block-house on
-the morning of January 14, southward bound across<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-the Arkansaw, to find the Red River down in the
-region of the Great White Mountains.</p>
-
-<p>The first day they marched thirteen miles; the
-doctor killed a deer. The second day they marched
-nineteen miles, up along a stream that opened a
-way for them to the mountains; the lieutenant and
-the doctor and John Sparks each killed a deer. On
-the third day they marched up the same stream,
-eighteen miles, in a snowstorm; and nobody killed
-anything. So to-night they pretty well finished
-their meat. Travelling afoot in winter was hungry
-work, and they could carry only a little at a time.</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth day they marched twenty-eight
-miles—and a bad day it proved to be. The Great
-White Mountains had been getting nearer, at this
-end—their upper end. They formed a tremendous
-snowy chain stretching northwest and southeast.
-The stream came down from them, and they were
-about to bar the trail. Upon the east there were
-lesser mountains. But no Red River flowed in this
-broad trough between the two ranges; its streams
-fed the Arkansaw River; therefore the Red River
-must lie upon the farther, or western side, of the
-Great White range.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[H]</a> These Great White Mountains of Lieutenant Pike are
-the Sangre de Cristo Range of Southern Colorado. They
-extend from the Arkansas River above the Grand Canyon clear
-into New Mexico, and are a noble snowy range indeed. The
-early Spanish explorers from the south named them Sangre de
-Cristo, or Blood of Christ, because when first sighted they
-were bathed red in the reflection from a New Mexico sunset.
-And this frequently is their sunset coloring today. From the
-block-house beyond present Cañon City north of the Arkansas
-River the Pike men had marched south across the river, and
-probably had followed up Grape Creek, which descends from
-the east slope of the Sangre de Cristo—the Great White
-Mountains.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span></p>
-
-<p>The mountains seemed to rise from a bare prairie
-which grew no wood. The lieutenant had left the
-stream, so as to aim more directly for a low place
-in the range; but he was not to cross, to-day. The
-range was farther than it looked to be. The sun
-set—and here they were, in the cold open, without
-wood or water either, or a bite to eat.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s timber at the base of those first slopes,”
-he said. “We’ll have to push on, men, until we
-reach it. The night will be too cold for existing
-with no fires.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly they were barred by the creek, and
-needs must ford it through ice that broke under
-their moccasins. It was long after dark, and was
-stinging cold, when they arrived at the trees. The
-men stumbled wearily; Stub could not feel his feet at
-all. Nobody had complained, though—but when
-the fires had been built and they all started to thaw
-themselves out, the doctor found that nine pairs of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-feet had been frozen, among the men, with Stub’s
-pair to be included.</p>
-
-<p>He, and the lieutenant, Sergeant Meek and Terry
-Miller were the only ones to have escaped! John
-Sparks and young Tom Dougherty were the worst
-off. Their feet were solid white to their ankles.
-Hugh Menaugh and Jake Carter were badly off, too.
-The doctor did his best—everybody rubbed hard with
-snow, and several groaned from the pain; but there
-was nothing to eat and the thermometer dropped
-to more than eighteen degrees below zero or freezing.</p>
-
-<p>With cold, hunger and aching feet it was a hard
-night. The lieutenant sent Sergeant Meek and Terry
-out early in the morning, to hunt in one direction;
-he and the doctor made ready to hunt in another.</p>
-
-<p>“Do the best you can, lads,” they encouraged,
-as they set forth. “We’ve all been in tight places
-before, and have come out safely. Wait now in
-patience, and you shall have the first meat that’s
-killed.”</p>
-
-<p>It was another long day: a cold, bleak day for
-this open camp on the edge of the snow-laden pines
-and cedars, with the Great White Mountains overlooking,
-on the one hand, as far as eye might see,
-and the wide prairie bottoms stretching lone and
-lifeless on the other hand.</p>
-
-<p>Stub’s feet were swollen, puffy and tender, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-he could walk. He and Corporal Jerry Jackson and
-Alex Roy managed to keep the fires going. John
-Sparks and Tom Dougherty lay suffering until the
-sweat stood on their foreheads. Their feet seemed
-to be turning black, and were alive with sharp pains.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, we’re like never to walk ag’in, Tom,”
-John moaned. “Our country’ll owe us each a pair
-o’ feet.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know that, John. But what’ll we do wid
-those we have? That’s what’s botherin’ me. ’Tis
-cruel hard.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis harder on you than on me, lad,” John
-declared. “For you’re young. An’ still, I’d like
-to do a bit more marchin’, myself.”</p>
-
-<p>They heard never a sound from the hunters, all
-day. At dark the sergeant and Terry Miller came in,
-completely tuckered. They had not fired a shot;
-had seen no game, nor seen the lieutenant and the
-doctor, either.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have to pull our belts in another notch,
-boys,” quoth the sergeant. “And trust to them
-other two. Had they found meat, they’d be in.
-If they don’t come to-night, they’ll come to-morrow.
-’Tis tough for you, here by the fire; but it’s tougher
-on them, out yonder somewheres in the cold, with
-their hearts aching at the thought of us waiting and
-depending on ’em. Jest the same, I’d rather be any<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-one of us, in our moccasins as we are, than Henry
-Kennerman serving time in his boots.”</p>
-
-<p>Henry Kennerman was a soldier who had
-deserted on the way to the Osage towns.</p>
-
-<p>The next day was the fourth without food. It
-passed slowly. The feet of some of the men, like
-those of Stub, were much better; but John Sparks
-and young Tom could not stand, and Hugh Menaugh
-and Jake Carter could not walk.</p>
-
-<p>Toward evening the sergeant grew very uneasy;
-alarm settled over them all. No tidings of any kind
-had arrived from the lieutenant and Doctor
-Robinson.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll wait, the night,” finally said Sergeant
-Meek. “In the morning ’twill be up to us, for if we
-sit here longer we’ll be too weak to move. We’ll
-divide up, those of us who can walk. A part’ll have
-to search for them two men, for maybe they’re needing
-help worse’n we are, and ’tis the duty of a soldier
-never to abandon his officers. The rest’ll look for
-meat again. And we’ll none of us come in till we
-fetch either news or meat. Shame on us if we can’t
-turn to and help our officers and ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right. There’s nobody can blame the
-cap’n an’ the doctor. They’ve never spared themselves.
-We’ll all do our best, sergeant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only lend me a pair o’ fate, any wan o’ yez<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span>
-whose heart’s too heavy for ’em, an’ I’ll look for
-the cap’n meself,” appealed Tom Dougherty.</p>
-
-<p>They kept up the fires and tried to sleep. The
-black, cold night deepened; overhead the steely stars
-spanned from prairie to dark slopes. The Great
-Bear of the sky, which contained the Pointers that
-told the time, drifted across, ranging on his nightly
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, at midnight, they heard a faint, breathless
-“Whoo-ee!” And while they listened, another.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis the cap’n and the doctor!” the sergeant
-exclaimed. “Hooray! Give ’em a yell, now, all
-together. Build up the fires.”</p>
-
-<p>They yelled. They were answered, through the
-darkness—and presently through the same darkness
-the lieutenant—and the doctor—came staggering in,
-bending low, to the fire-light.</p>
-
-<p>Meat!</p>
-
-<p>“Here you are, my lads!” the lieutenant panted.
-He dropped the load from his back, swayed, sank
-to his knees, and the sergeant sprang to catch him.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re all right, sir. We knew you’d be coming.
-You’re a welcome sight, sir, meat or no meat. We
-were getting anxious about you and the doctor, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tend to him, sergeant,” gasped the doctor.
-“You be helping the men with the meat. Don’t let
-’em over-eat. There’s more, back where we killed.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span></p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant had almost fainted. It was several
-minutes before he could speak again. He and
-the doctor had had a terrible two days. The doctor
-said that they had wounded a buffalo with three
-balls, the first evening, but it had made off. All
-that night they had sat up, among some rocks, nearly
-freezing to death while they waited for morning.
-Then they had sighted a herd of buffalo, at daybreak,
-and had crawled a mile through the snow—had
-shot eight times, wounded three, and the whole
-herd had escaped.</p>
-
-<p>That second day they had tramped until the lieutenant
-was about spent with hunger and lack of rest.
-Matters had looked very bad. But they both decided
-that they would rather die looking for game, than
-return and disappoint the men. Just at dusk, when
-they were aiming for a point of timber, there to spend
-another night, they saw a third herd of buffalo. The
-lieutenant managed to run and hide behind a cedar.
-When the buffalo were about to pass, he shot, and
-this time crippled one. The doctor ran, and with
-three more shots they killed the buffalo. Hurrah!</p>
-
-<p>Then they butchered it, without stopping to eat;
-and carrying as much as they could they had traveled
-for six hours, bringing the meat to the camp.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a story hard to beat,” said Sergeant Meek,
-simply. “You may not be one of the army, yourself,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-sir; but as officer and man we’re proud to follow you—you
-and the cap’n, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“The lieutenant and I wondered what you men
-were thinking, when we didn’t return,” the doctor
-proffered. “You had a right to expect us sooner?
-Did you plan to march on and try to save your
-lives?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir; not exactly that,” replied rugged Sergeant
-Meek. “We knew you hadn’t forgotten us,
-and there was no complaining. Seemed like we’d
-best search for you, and the same time find meat if
-we could; and that we’d ha’ done, the first thing in
-the morning, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Your plan, and the way with which you received
-us, do you all credit before the world,” spoke
-the lieutenant, who overheard. “As your comrades
-we thank you, men; and as your officer I am proud
-of you. My reports to General Wilkinson and the
-Secretary of War shall not omit the devotion to duty
-that has characterized your whole march.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVI">XVI<br />
-<small>BLOCKED BY THE GREAT WHITE MOUNTAINS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>John Sparks and Tom Dougherty were to be
-left behind. That was the word.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. The doctor says not a step shall they
-march, if they would save their feet; an’ poor Tom,
-he’s like to lose his, anyhow. An’ since they can’t
-march, no more can we carry ’em across the mountains
-without hosses. So here they stay till we can
-send an’ get ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>All the buffalo meat had been brought in. The
-lieutenant was preparing to march on, for the Red
-River. From the camp he had explored farther
-westward, to the very foot of the mountains, seeking
-a trail over; but the snow was four and five feet deep
-even there, the whole country above was white, and
-he gave the trail up.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll have to march on south along this side,
-until we find a better place.”</p>
-
-<p>Now they made ready. John Sparks and Tom
-were fixed as comfortably as possible, with guns
-and ammunition, a lean-to for shelter, and the best<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-buffalo-robes, and wood and meat. Their packs,
-and the packs of Hugh Menaugh and Jake Carter
-(who barely could hobble, using their muskets as
-crutches) were hidden under trees.</p>
-
-<p>Sturdy red-haired John and young Tom felt
-badly. So did everybody. The lieutenant’s voice
-broke, as he said:</p>
-
-<p>“We aren’t deserting you, my lads. Never think
-of that. As surely as we live we will send for you,
-the very first thing, as soon as we locate a desirable
-camping spot, to which to bring down the horses.
-That will not be long; we have only to cross these
-mountains. Rather than desert you, if I should
-be the last man alive in the party I would return,
-myself, and die with you. Whatever happens, meet
-it like soldiers, bearing in mind that you are suffering
-for your Country. It is far preferable to perish
-thus, in the wilderness, in discharge of duty, rather
-than to forfeit honor by evading hardships and toil
-like the disloyal Kennerman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, sir! We’ll act the man, sir,” they replied.
-“We’ll keep a stiff upper lip, an’ be waitin’ for the
-hosses to come get us.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant shook hands with them; the doctor
-shook hands with them.</p>
-
-<p>“Now take care of those feet,” he urged.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody shook hands with them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Good-by, lads.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by to yez. God send yez safe to the Red
-River, an’ we’ll join yez there, all bound home
-together.”</p>
-
-<p>“For’d, march!” barked the lieutenant. His
-voice was husky. There were tears freezing on his
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“For’d, men,” rasped old Sergeant Meek, and
-blew his nose violently.</p>
-
-<p>A number of the other men were sniffling and
-blowing, and Stub choked as he blindly trudged.
-Bluff Hugh Menaugh growled gently to himself,
-while he and Jake hobbled.</p>
-
-<p>As long as they could see the little camp and the
-two figures sitting they occasionally turned and
-waved; and John and Tom waved answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we did our best for ’em,” sighed Corporal
-Jerry. “We took only one meal o’ meat. They
-have the rest. ’Twill get ’em through, like as not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. Once across these mountains, to the Red
-River, and we’ll send for them and the hosses.”</p>
-
-<p>This evening the one meal of meat was eaten.
-A little snow fell. In the morning the lieutenant
-ordered Sergeant Meek to take the party on, while
-he and the doctor hunted. The day was dark and
-lowering. Then the storm set in again, snowing
-furiously. By noon the snow was knee high; they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
-could not see ten feet around; Hugh and Jake were
-unable to move farther; the lieutenant and the doctor
-were still out—perhaps lost, like themselves.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis no use, men. We’ll make for the nearest
-timber and camp there,” ordered Sergeant Meek.</p>
-
-<p>That was another miserably cold, hungry day,
-and a worse night.</p>
-
-<p>“How flesh and blood may be expected to stand
-more of this, I don’t know,” uttered John Brown.</p>
-
-<p>“And it’s not for you to ask,” the sergeant
-sternly rebuked. “If you’re so weak-hearted as to
-think them thoughts, keep ’em to yourself. Even
-the lad Stub—a mere boy that he is—speaks no such
-words. Shame on you—you a soldier!”</p>
-
-<p>John Brown muttered, but said no more.</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven help the cap’n an’ the doctor, again,”
-spoke Corporal Jerry, as they all huddled about
-their fire, and the wind howled and the snow hissed,
-and the drifts piled higher against their little bulwark
-of packs. “An’ if they don’t find us an’ we don’t
-find them, ’twill go hard with Sparks and Dougherty,
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“If the storm clears, we’ll march on in the morning,”
-said Sergeant Meek. “We’ve had orders to
-meet ’em, on a piece yet, and that’s our duty.”</p>
-
-<p>The morning dawned gray and white, but the
-storm had ceased. They shook off the snow, reshouldered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-their packs, and guns in hand stiffly
-started. The snow was thigh high; the Great White
-Mountains looming in a long front without end on
-their right were whiter than ever; the bottoms and
-the more distant mountains on their left were white.
-It was snow, snow, snow, everywhere; the very dead
-of winter.</p>
-
-<p>Now (Good!) here came the lieutenant and the
-doctor, ploughing down a slope, their packs on their
-backs, but nothing else. Snowy and breathing hard,
-they arrived. The men, plodding, had seen; and
-having given up hope plodded on, saying not a word.
-Only Sergeant Meek greeted, saluting as best he
-might:</p>
-
-<p>“All well, cap’n. Good morning to you, sirs.”</p>
-
-<p>“No luck this time, sergeant,” wheezed the lieutenant,
-cheerily, but with face pinched and set. “We
-missed you, and spent the night together in the snow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. We couldn’t see, for the storm, sir,
-and had to camp in the nearest shelter.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did right, sergeant. The storm was so
-thick that I found even the compass of little help.
-The doctor and I became separated and were fearful
-that we had lost each other as well as the party.
-Halt the men.”</p>
-
-<p>“Squad, halt,” rasped the sergeant.</p>
-
-<p>The men waited, panting and coughing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It’s evident there are no buffalo down in the
-open, lads,” spoke the lieutenant. “The doctor and
-I have sighted never a one nor any sign of one.
-The storm has driven them back and higher, into the
-timber. We’ll make in the same direction, and be
-crossing the mountains while seeking meat.”</p>
-
-<p>He and the doctor led off, heading westward, to
-climb the Great White Mountains. The route commenced
-to get more rolling—up and down, up and
-down, over the rounded foothills concealed by the
-snow. ’Twas leg-wearying, breath-taking work.
-The snow grew deeper. In the hollows it had gathered
-shoulders high; upon the slopes it was waist
-high. The little column was straggling. Stub, the
-smallest member, trying to tread in the broken trail,
-was at times almost buried.</p>
-
-<p>In an hour they all had covered a pitiful distance;
-to be sure, the prairie was somewhat below,
-but the real mountains seemed far above, and the
-silent timber still awaited, in a broad belt.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor had halted. They
-turned and began to plough back. The little column,
-steaming with the vapor from lungs and bodies, drew
-nearer to them.</p>
-
-<p>“The snow is too deep, here, lads,” the lieutenant
-called, as he and the doctor passed in front of the
-file. His voice was tired; anybody might have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-thought him discouraged—and little wonder. “We’ll
-have to keep lower down, and try elsewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“To the famine country of the open bottoms,”
-he said. Were they never to get across these Great
-White Mountains, which faced them unending?
-Were they to die in the snow, just for the sake of
-hunting the Red River? John Brown, near the head
-of the column, broke restraint again and exclaimed
-roundly:</p>
-
-<p>“I say, it’s more than flesh an’ blood can bear,
-to march three days with not a mouthful of food,
-through snow three feet deep, an’ carry loads only
-fit for hosses!”</p>
-
-<p>Everybody heard. Sergeant Meek turned on him
-angrily. Had the lieutenant heard also? No? Yes!
-He had paused for an instant, as if to reply; then
-without another sign he had proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be called to answer for this, Brown,”
-warned the sergeant.</p>
-
-<p>John muttered to himself, and a silence fell upon
-the file. Stooped and unsteady under their own
-loads, the lieutenant and the doctor doggedly continued,
-breaking the trail on course obliquing for
-the lower country. The others followed, breathing
-hard.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor had struck down
-a shallow draw. Issuing from the end of it, they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-were out of sight. When the head of the column
-arrived at the same spot, there were only the two
-packs, and a message scrawled with a ramrod on
-the snow. Sergeant Meek read.</p>
-
-<p>“We see buffalo. Camp in nearest timber and
-wait. Z. M. P.”</p>
-
-<p>Every eye sprang to search the landscape. There!
-Far down, upon the prairie! Black dots—slowly
-moving across! Buffalo! And where were the
-hunters? Their tracks pointed onward from the
-two packs. See! They were running, crouched,
-down among the billowy swells, as if to head the
-animals off. It was a desperate chance.</p>
-
-<p>“The breeze is with us,” Sergeant Meek cried
-hopefully. “Quick! For that timber tip, yon,
-and keep out o’ sight. Trust the cap’n and the doctor
-to do their best. Let’s take no risk of spoiling
-their chance.”</p>
-
-<p>The column hustled, with strength renewed. The
-tip of timber was about a mile distant. The buffalo
-had disappeared behind a knoll of the prairie; the
-last seen of the lieutenant and the doctor, they
-were hastening—stumbling and falling and lunging
-again, to reach the same knoll. The doctor had
-forged ahead. He was stronger than the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>Then the scene was swallowed up by a dip in the
-trail to the timber.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span></p>
-
-<p>Next, a dully-sounding gunshot! But only one.
-The doctor probably had fired—perhaps at long distance.
-Had he landed—disabled, or only wounded,
-or missed? Nothing could yet be seen. The men,
-and Stub, their lungs almost bursting, shambled as
-fast as possible. Just as they emerged at the point
-of timber, other shots boomed: two, close together.
-Hooray! That meant business. They paused, puffing,
-to gaze.</p>
-
-<p>Again hooray! Down near the knoll a black spot
-blotched the snow. At one side of it there were
-other black spots, some still, some moving in and out.
-It was the herd, and seemed confused. Look! From
-the black spot, off by itself—a dead buffalo, that!—smoke
-puffs darted and spread. The buffalo herd
-surged a little, but did not run. The lieutenant and
-the doctor were lying behind the carcass and
-shooting.</p>
-
-<p>“One, anyway, lads!” cheered Sergeant Meek.
-“Maybe more. Off with your packs, now. Roy,
-Mountjoy, Stout, Brown, you cut wood; the rest
-of us’ll be clearing a space. There’ll be meat in camp
-before long, and we’ll have fires ready.”</p>
-
-<p>They all worked fast. No one now felt tired.
-The hunt down below sounded like a battle. The
-lieutenant and the doctor were firing again and again,
-as rapidly as they might load and aim. Toiling<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-with ax and spade and hands, the column, making
-camp, scarcely paused to watch; but presently the
-firing ceased—the buffalo herd were lumbering away,
-at last, with one, two, three of them gradually dropping
-behind, to stagger, waver, and suddenly pitch,
-dead! Meat, and plenty of it!</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor were busy, butchering
-the carcass that had shielded them. They wasted
-no time. Here they came, loaded well. The fires
-were crackling and blazing, in readiness; and when
-they panted in, spent, bloody and triumphant, the
-camp cheered hoarsely.</p>
-
-<p>“Eat, boys,” gasped the lieutenant. “Fortune
-has favored us. There’s more meat below. But
-we’ll eat first.”</p>
-
-<p>Everybody hacked and tore at the red humps,
-and in a jiffy the strips from them were being thrust
-into the fire by ramrods; without waiting for more
-than a scorching and a warming through, the men
-devoured like wolves. With the meat juice daubing
-his chin and staining the men’s beards, Stub thought
-that never before had he tasted such sweetness. He
-forgot his other hungers.</p>
-
-<p>Whew! One by one the men drew back, to chew
-the last mouthfuls, and light pipes, contented. The
-meat all had vanished.</p>
-
-<p>“Send Brown to me, sergeant,” the lieutenant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-ordered. There was something <em>he</em> had not forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>John Brown arose and shambled to where the
-lieutenant and the doctor were sitting. He looked
-sheepish and frightened. The lieutenant stood, to
-front him; did not acknowledge his salute, but
-scanned him sternly, his haggard eyes commencing
-to blaze bluely.</p>
-
-<p>“Brown, you this day presumed to make use of
-language that was seditious and mutinous; I then
-passed it over, pitying your situation and laying
-your conduct to your distress from hunger, rather
-than to desire to sow discontent amongst the party.
-Had I saved provisions for ourselves, whilst you
-were starving,” reproached the lieutenant; “had we
-been marching along light and at our ease, whilst you
-were weighed down with your burden, then you
-would have had some excuse for your remarks: but
-when we all were equally hungry, weary, worn, and
-charged with burdens which I believe my natural
-strength is less able to bear than any man’s in the
-party—when we are always foremost in breaking
-the road, reconnoitering and enduring the fatigues
-of the chase, it was the height of ingratitude in you
-to let an expression escape that showed discontent.
-Your ready compliance and firm perseverance I had
-reason to expect, as the leader of men who are my
-companions in misery and danger. But your duty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-as a soldier (the young lieutenant’s voice rang, and
-his eyes flashed) called on your obedience to your
-officer, and a suppression of such language. However,
-for this time I will pardon; but I assure you,
-should that ever be repeated, I will answer your ingratitude
-and punish your disobedience by instant
-death.”</p>
-
-<p>John Brown had shrunk and whitened.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” he faltered. “Thank you, sir. I’ll
-remember. It shan’t happen again.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may go.” The lieutenant’s eyes left
-Brown’s face and traveled over the other men. “I
-take this opportunity,” he said, “likewise to express
-to you, soldiers, generally, my thanks for your obedience,
-perseverance, and ready contempt of every
-danger, which you have in common shown. And
-I assure you that nothing shall be lacking on my
-part to procure you the rewards of our Government
-and the gratitude of your countrymen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Three cheers for the cap’n, lads,” shouted Sergeant
-Meek. “Hooray, now! Hooray! Hooray!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re with you to the end, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re not complainin’, sir. No more is
-Brown.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re the leader, sir, and we’re proud to
-follow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, you an’ the doctor do the hard work.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus they cried, bravely and huskily; for who
-could help loving this stanch little officer, who asked
-no favors of rank, except to lead, and who now
-stood before them, in his stained red fur-lined cap,
-his wet, torn blanket-coat, his bedraggled thin blue
-trousers and soaked, scuffed moccasins. He was all
-man.</p>
-
-<p>He raised his hand. His face had flushed, his
-eyes had softened moistly, and his lips quivered.</p>
-
-<p>“That will do, lads. We understand each other,
-and I’m sure Brown will not repeat his offense. For
-my part, I am determined that we shall not move
-again without a supply of food. That imperils our
-success, and is more than our duty would require
-of us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still, we might have made good, hadn’t we left
-the bulk of our meat with Sparks and Dougherty,
-back yonder,” Freegift Stout remarked, to the others
-in his mess. “That’s what pinched us.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVII">XVII<br />
-<small>THE FORT IN THE WILDERNESS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Across the Great White Mountains at last!</p>
-
-<p>That had proved to be not such a hard trip, after
-all, although uncomfortable on account of the snow.
-First, the meat from the other buffalo (three) had
-been brought into camp—had been sliced and the
-strips hung on frames, to dry. There was a great
-quantity of it; more than could be carried on foot.
-So Hugh Menaugh, whose frozen feet still crippled
-him badly, was left to guard the extra amount, at
-this supply depot; and, loaded well, the twelve others
-marched on.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor led into the mountains.
-Now was the time to cross while the men had
-meat and felt strong. In spite of the snow three
-feet deep they made fourteen miles, following the
-low places; and at evening they were over—they had
-come upon a stream flowing west! It surely was a
-feeder of the Red River!</p>
-
-<p>Again they all cheered. But if they were over,
-they were not yet through, for ahead they could see
-only the same bald or timbered swells and ridges,
-snow-covered and still without end.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span></p>
-
-<p>Near noon, the next day, the lieutenant and the
-doctor, in the advance as usual, turned and gladly
-beckoned, and pointed before. They all hastened.
-The signs were good—the brush had been flattened
-or cut off, down a long draw, and the trees had been
-blazed and curiously painted with rude figures. It
-was an Indian pass.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor had gone on.
-When the others arrived at the spot, they saw.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re coming out, boys!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll be out before night!”</p>
-
-<p>A separate, distant range of mountains might be
-sighted, through the gap made by the blazed trail;
-and below, nearer, there was glimpse of the low
-country, bordered on this side by bare sandy foothills
-of these Great White Mountains themselves.</p>
-
-<p>At sunset they were down and into the open,
-between the timbered slopes and the rolling sand-hills.
-On the west, beyond the sand-hills there appeared
-to be a wide valley; and beyond the valley
-that other range of mountains.</p>
-
-<p>Camp had to be made soon, here at the base of
-the Great White Mountains. The lieutenant went
-out alone, to climb the sand-hills, for a view. They
-could see him, a small figure, toiling up and standing,
-to peer through his spy-glass. He came back in the
-dusk, but his face was aglow.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I have good news,” he announced. “We have
-won success. With the glass I can see from those
-sand-hills a larger river coursing from northwest to
-southeast through the valley beyond. There can be
-no doubt that it is the Red River.”</p>
-
-<p>They cheered and cheered, and ate with fine appetites.
-It was a happy night. As Sergeant Meek
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“Once there—and ’twon’t be long—we can send
-back for Menaugh, and poor Sparks and Dougherty,
-and Baroney and Smith and the hosses; and we’ll all
-be together again, ready for the march home.”</p>
-
-<p>The sand-hills were five miles wide, and looked
-to be about fifteen miles long. The river came down
-obliquely through the valley—which was indeed a
-broad bottom of prairie-land; so they cut across at an
-angle, and not until the second evening, after a day’s
-march of twenty-four miles, did they reach the bank
-of the river itself, January 30.</p>
-
-<p>It certainly was the Red River, issuing from the
-western mountains, and here turning more southwardly,
-in the middle of the valley.</p>
-
-<p>The valley was a wonderland. It lay flat, with
-little snow, full fifty miles wide and in length almost
-farther than eye might say. The mountains in the
-west were bald, snowy and grim. The Great White
-Mountains on the east appeared to end opposite in a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span>
-huge, dazzling peak with three crests, but a lower
-range veered in, narrowing the valley in the south.
-Afar in the north, the valley was closed completely.</p>
-
-<p>The bottoms were dotted with herds of deer,
-browsing on the thick dried grasses. Many smaller
-streams joined the big river.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ’tis a hunters’ paradise, this,” sighed Freegift
-Stout. “We’re in a land o’ plenty. We can
-send back word that’ll gladden the hearts of the
-boys behind.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant had decided to make a fortified
-camp, so as to have protection from the Indians and
-perhaps from the Spanish while the men behind
-were being sent for and boats were being built. He
-intended to descend the Red River by boat and horse,
-both.</p>
-
-<p>There was no timber at this spot. Some appeared
-lower along the river. They marched for it—eighteen
-miles. The larger trees were across the river;
-therefore the lieutenant led across, also, by way of
-the ice and several islands. Then they came to
-another river, that looked like a fork, entering from
-the west. About five miles from its mouth the
-lieutenant found a good place. The fort should be
-here.</p>
-
-<p>It was a small piece of level bottom, grown to
-cottonwood trees on the north side of this west fork.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-The fork was all open water, about thirty paces wide.
-Opposite, on the south side, there was a high, partly
-bare hill, out of gunshot.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning, which was February 1, the
-lieutenant staked a plan of the fort, on the ground.
-Axes rang, spades scraped, picks thudded. As soon
-as the fort was far enough along so that it would
-stand an attack, a party should be sent back across
-the Great Snowy Mountains to get the other men
-and the horses.</p>
-
-<p>“But what I’d like to know, is, what are we
-doin’ on this side the main river?” queried Corporal
-Jerry, that night.</p>
-
-<p>“To get at the big trees, and because ’tis the
-proper place for the fort,” answered Sergeant Meek.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, maybe. But bein’ as this is the Red
-River, we’re on the Spanish side, ain’t we? From all
-I hear, the Red River’s the dividin’ line betwixt the
-United States an’ Mexico, an’ we’re across it into
-Mexican territory.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not for you or me to say, my boy,” Sergeant
-Meek retorted. “The cap’n has his orders,
-you can bet, and all we need do is to foller him. But
-sure, this is a fork, at the head-waters, and we’re
-on the north side the fork. In a bit more we’ll be
-starting on down, like as not keeping safe to our own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-side again. And meanwhile if the Spanish tackle
-us here, all the worse for ’em. Not the whole Spanish
-army could budge us from this fort when it’s
-done. I wouldn’t mind having a dust with ’em, for a
-change from shooting buff’lo and deer.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right. A dust at real fightin’ would
-serve to pass the time, sergeant,” the others cried.
-“Didn’t we foller ’em, an’ didn’t they lead us
-wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Or else we led ourselves wrong, mistaking
-Injun trail for white man trail. At any rate, here
-we are; and as soon as the ice breaks—which won’t
-be long—we’ll all be marching on, for home.”</p>
-
-<p>The fort was to be a strong one. Lieutenant
-Pike, who took great pride in it, explained the scheme,
-himself, to Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Thirty-six feet square, inside, fronting upon
-the river, where the current is too deep to ford.
-Bastions (which were small block-houses) at the two
-rear corners, to cover the walls on three sides. The
-walls, six feet up, of large cottonwood logs two feet
-through. Smaller logs to be laid for another six
-feet. A ditch will be dug all around, inside, and
-sloped off toward the walls, for pickets to rest in.
-The pickets will be sharpened and will slant two
-and one-half feet over the top of the walls, like a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-fringe, so that nobody can climb in. All around,
-outside, there will be a deep ditch four feet wide, and
-filled with water. This is called a moat. We will
-cut a row of loopholes in the walls, eight feet up; the
-men will stand upon platforms, to shoot through.
-Our only entrance will be a hole, about the size of a
-man’s body, low down, on the river side; and to use
-it, everybody will have to crawl in or out on his
-stomach, and cross the big ditch by means of a plank.
-There will be no roof; this is what is called a stockade.
-But the men doubtless will construct shelters
-of brush.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be a soldier yet,” the doctor laughed,
-to Stub, overhearing the explanation.</p>
-
-<p>“Entrenched here we need have no fear of one
-hundred Spanish troops,” the lieutenant remarked.
-“We could easily stand them off for a day or two;
-then by a sally at night either disperse them, or make
-our escape in the darkness, before our supplies were
-exhausted.”</p>
-
-<p>“And Indians?”</p>
-
-<p>“They would be less dangerous, unless they
-sent word to Santa Fe in the south. We would
-endeavor to treat with them, which is one of the
-purposes of the expedition.”</p>
-
-<p>Jake Carter and Alex Roy were not able to do<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-much, on account of tender feet. The other men
-worked hard, building the stockade around the
-American flag that had been planted on a pole, in the
-center. The lieutenant and Doctor Robinson hunted
-and explored. Stub frequently went with them, to
-help bring in the meat.</p>
-
-<p>Once they discovered a group of springs, at the
-base of the hill south of the fork and opposite the
-stockade. These were warm springs, and strangely
-colored, brown and yellow. Their warm water was
-what kept the fork open, clear to the main river
-and for some distance down below the mouth of the
-fork.</p>
-
-<p>They discovered also a well-traveled trail up
-along an eastern branch of the main river, not far
-above the western fork. It was a horse trail. Camps
-beside it showed that soldiers—probably Spanish—had
-used it. So the Spanish came in here.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and the doctor talked considerably
-of Santa Fe, the capital of New Mexico. It lay
-somewhere south. The lieutenant was anxious to
-know more about it, so as to make report upon it
-to the United States government. He could not
-leave the stockade, himself, but the doctor arranged
-to go.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently this had been the plan for some time.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-A trader by the name of William Morrison, in the
-United States, had sent goods there, three years
-ago, in charge of another man named Baptiste
-Lalande, to be sold. But Lalande had never come
-back with the money. Doctor Robinson had agreed
-with William Morrison to visit Santa Fe, if near
-there, and collect the money. This would be an
-excuse for spying around.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the first week, when the stockade
-was partially finished, the doctor left for Santa Fe.
-He set out westward, up the south bank of the fork
-(which was the wrong direction, although none of
-them knew it), and promised to return with his
-report in a week or ten days.</p>
-
-<p>The men were not so certain about this. Sergeant
-Meek wagged his grizzled head dubiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Not to criticize a superior officer, but strikes
-me it’s a risky move. The doctor’s pure grit, all
-right enough, to head alone through a country full
-o’ Injun sign and Spanish sign to boot, and he’s like
-to run his foot into a wolf trap. For if he gets
-there, them Spanish will be curyus to know where
-he come from; and what’s to prevent their back-trailing
-him? Oh, well; there’s something afoot that we
-don’t understand. Our duty’s to obey orders, and
-if the lieutenant says for us all to go to Santy Fee,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span>
-go we will. But we’ll not go there by any orders
-o’ the Spanish.”</p>
-
-<p>This evening Corporal Jerry Jackson was started
-out, to get John Sparks and Tom Dougherty, if he
-could, and also Hugh Menaugh, on the other side
-of the mountains. He took with him Freegift Stout,
-William Gordon, John Brown and John Mountjoy.</p>
-
-<p>That left in the stockade only the lieutenant,
-Sergeant Meek, Terry Miller, Jake Carter and Alex
-Roy (whose feet had been badly frozen), and Stub.
-They missed the doctor, and Corporal Jerry’s squad,
-but could get along for a few days.</p>
-
-<p>This was February 7. No word might be expected
-from the doctor or Corporal Jerry for at least
-a week. Nothing especial happened during the week.
-The men and Stub kept on laboring at the stockade,
-the lieutenant read in a French book a great deal,
-or hunted for deer, taking Stub as companion.</p>
-
-<p>By the sixteenth the walls of the stockade were
-about done, and the inside ditch, for the pickets,
-was being pecked out—a slow job in the frozen
-earth. Nine days had passed, and still there was
-no sign from the doctor or Corporal Jerry. This
-morning the lieutenant and Stub went out hunting
-again, down the main river. The lieutenant carried
-his favorite musket—the one whose grip had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span>
-mended. Stub wore a pistol, the mate to Hugh
-Menaugh’s, borrowed from the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>They had tramped about six miles, had just
-wounded a deer and were trailing it, when the lieutenant
-suddenly exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“Halt. Be quiet. Somebody’s coming.”</p>
-
-<p>Two strangers, horseback, were topping a rise,
-half a mile before and a little on the right or west.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XVIII">XVIII<br />
-<small>VISITORS FROM THE SOUTH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Not wild Indians; Spanish, rather,” mused the
-lieutenant, as, standing motionless, he and Stub
-gazed. “Hah! They may be videttes (scouts) from
-a large party, or they may be hunters like ourselves.
-We’ll turn back, my boy; not from fear but to avoid
-trouble if possible.”</p>
-
-<p>So they turned back, in the direction of the
-stockade. Glancing behind, Stub saw the two horsemen
-descending the hill at a gallop.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re coming, lieutenant. They’ve seen us.”</p>
-
-<p>“The sound of our gun no doubt attracted them
-first. They seem to be alone. Very well. They
-must not be permitted to think that we’re afraid of
-them. Should they persist in coming on, we’ll
-face them.”</p>
-
-<p>The two horsemen did come on, flourishing their
-lances as if in a charge. They were closing the gap
-rapidly—were within gunshot, when the lieutenant
-barked the brisk order:</p>
-
-<p>“Now! Face about! We’ll show them the muzzles
-of our guns.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span></p>
-
-<p>They turned, and leveled musket and pistol. The
-two horsemen instantly pulled their mounts short,
-whirled, and bending low scudded away. In a short
-distance they halted, and sat waiting.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll advance on them,” quoth the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>But the first few steps sent the pair scurrying
-in retreat again.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said the lieutenant. “They respect
-our weapons and see we do not fear theirs. Maybe
-they’ll let us take our way.”</p>
-
-<p>However, when he and Stub proceeded on the
-trail for the stockade, on came the two horsemen
-in another charge. The lieutenant ordered a face-about—and
-away the two scampered, as before.
-This game was repeated several times. The stockade
-was not in sight, and the lieutenant was growing
-angry.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll make an end to this, Stub.” His face
-had flushed. “I do not propose to be badgered. It
-is beneath the dignity of an American officer and
-soldier to be toyed with in such child’s play. Pay
-no further attention to them until we round that
-shoulder yonder. Then we’ll slip into a ravine there
-and see if we can’t lure them to close quarters that
-will bring them to account.”</p>
-
-<p>It was back-tickling work, to trudge on, never
-turning, with those lances threatening, closer and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-closer, behind. But the lieutenant gave no sign—until,
-when around the shoulder and for a moment
-out of sight by the pursuit, he sprang aside.</p>
-
-<p>“Quick, now!”</p>
-
-<p>They dived for cover and found it in a heap of
-large, brush-screened rocks. They waited, peering
-and listening. Pretty soon they might hear the
-hoofs of the horses. The two riders cantered into
-sight. They were quite near. One was black-bearded—wore
-a large ribboned hat and blue and red
-coat and leathern leggins, the same as Lieutenant
-Melgares’ soldiers had worn. He was a Spanish
-dragoon. He carried a lance, a shield and short
-musketoon or escopeta hung at his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>The other was dark, without whiskers: an Indian.
-He wore a blue cotton shirt and leggins
-wrapped in white from moccasins to knees. His
-hair fell in two braids. He, also, carried a lance and
-shield.</p>
-
-<p>They saw nobody ahead of them, and began to
-move cautiously, craning, and checking their horses.
-Little by little they came on. Now they were within
-forty paces.</p>
-
-<p>“This will do,” the lieutenant whispered. “We
-have them. Lay down your pistol and stand up
-so they can see you’re unarmed. Then walk out.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-I’ll follow and cover them. If they show sign of
-harm, I’ll fire upon them instantly.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub bravely stood into full view and spread
-his empty hands. He was not afraid; not while
-Lieutenant Pike was backing him.</p>
-
-<p>The two horsemen were completely surprised.
-They reined in and sat poised and gawking, on the
-verge of flight. But the lieutenant’s gun muzzle held
-them fast, while Stub walked toward them, his hand
-up in the peace sign. The lieutenant called:</p>
-
-<p>“Amigos (Friends)! Americanos (Americans)!”
-And he must have beckoned, for the two
-timidly edged forward, ready to run or to fight. Evidently
-they would rather run.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant advanced also, and joined Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Take your pistol. Here it is. We’ll talk with
-them. Do you know Spanish?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve forgotten,” Stub stammered.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll manage with signs and the few words
-we do know. At the same time we must stand prepared
-to fire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you from?” he queried sharply, in
-French.</p>
-
-<p>The dragoon seemed to understand.</p>
-
-<p>“From Santa Fe, señor.”</p>
-
-<p>“How far is Santa Fe?”</p>
-
-<p>“Three days as we come, señor.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span></p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing here?”</p>
-
-<p>“We hunt.”</p>
-
-<p>They got off their horses, and led them in nearer;
-then they smiled friendly, and sat down and rolled
-themselves smokes. The lieutenant and Stub warily
-sat down, opposite. It was a little council. Stub
-eyed the Indian. He was a tame Indian—one of the
-house-building Indians from the south: a Pueblo.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you hunt?” asked Lieutenant Pike.</p>
-
-<p>“Game, señor. Do you hunt, also?”</p>
-
-<p>“We travel down the Red River, to the American
-fort of Natchitoches.”</p>
-
-<p>“Another stranger has arrived, in Santa Fe.
-His name is Robinson. He is an American. The
-governor received him well. He comes from your
-party?”</p>
-
-<p>“There is no such man in my party,” the lieutenant
-answered; which was true, now.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he arose. It was difficult talking by
-signs and short words.</p>
-
-<p>“A Díos, señores. A pleasant journey to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“One moment, señor,” begged the dragoon.
-“Where is your camp?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is far; we have several camps. So good-by.”</p>
-
-<p>He and Stub started on. But the dragoon and
-the Indian mounted their horses and followed. They
-were determined to find the camp.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span></p>
-
-<p>“They are spies,” said the lieutenant. “We cannot
-get rid of them without trouble, and I have
-orders to avoid trouble. We shall have to take
-them in.”</p>
-
-<p>So he and Stub waited, and it was just as well,
-for soon the regular trail up river to the stockade
-was reached; the two horsemen struck into it, and
-forged ahead, peering eagerly. The trail crossed
-the fork above the stockade—and the first thing the
-two horsemen knew they were stopped in short order
-by Alex Roy who was posted as sentinel.</p>
-
-<p>That astonished them again. They could just
-glimpse the stockade, they heard Alex challenge
-them, and saw his gun—and ducking and dodging
-they raced back, to the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>“Do not fear. Come,” he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>He led them on; they left their horses outside,
-and, still frightened, followed him and Stub through
-an opening in the stockade, which was being used
-until the ditch and the hole were ready.</p>
-
-<p>They stayed all that day. The men had orders
-to watch them, but not to talk with them. They
-stared about as much as they could. They asked
-several times where the Americans’ horses were, and
-how many men the lieutenant had. Lieutenant Pike
-said that these were only a part of his men, and
-that he had marched without horses, through the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-snow. He was going down the Red River, holding
-councils with the Indians on the borders of the
-United States. If the governor at Santa Fe would
-send somebody who spoke good French or English,
-he would explain everything.</p>
-
-<p>The dragoon and the Pueblo did not believe;
-and when they rode away in the morning they were
-as suspicious as ever. They said they would be in
-Santa Fe in two days with the lieutenant’s message
-to the governor, whose name was Don Joaquin del
-Real Alencaster. The lieutenant had given them a
-few presents, which appeared to please them. The
-Pueblo gave the lieutenant some deer meat, part
-of a goose, a sack of meal and pieces of flat, hard-baked
-bread.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody was glad to see them go, but——</p>
-
-<p>“It’s an ill wind that brought ’em,” Sergeant
-Meek remarked. “Not blaming him or the cap’n,
-the doctor did it. To be sure the Spanish would
-set out to s’arch the country. Unless I’m mistaken,
-we’ll see more of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant thought the same. He ordered
-that the work of finishing the stockade be rushed,
-and even lent a hand himself. He had no idea
-of leaving until Hugh, and John Sparks and
-Tom, across the mountains, and Baroney and Pat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span>
-Smith, on the Arkansaw with the horses, had been
-brought in.</p>
-
-<p>It was high time that Corporal Jerry and party
-turned up. They had been gone a long while, and
-were needed. Five men and a boy were a small
-garrison. This evening Corporal Jerry, with John
-Brown, William Gordon and John Mountjoy, did
-arrive. After he had reported to the lieutenant, he
-told his story to the rest of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we found Hugh, but we had to cross in
-snow middle deep, to do it. He’s comin’ on with
-Freegift. They’ll be down to-morrow. We went
-back to Sparks an’ Dougherty, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“How are they?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bad off. Ah, boys, ’twould melt your hearts
-to see ’em. They sheer wept when we hailed ’em.
-They’ve got food enough yet, even after the near
-two months; but they can scarce walk a step. Their
-feet are gone, an’ they’ve hardly a finger between
-’em. So we couldn’t move ’em; not through the
-snow of the passes. We did what we could to cheer
-’em up, but when we left they acted like they never
-expected to see us again. Yes; an’ they sent over
-bones from their feet, for the cap’n, an’ made me
-promise to give ’em to him as a token an’ to beg
-him, by all that’s sacred, not to let the two of ’em
-die like beasts, alone in the wilds. When I gave<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span>
-him the bones an’ told him, he turned white an’ his
-eyes filled up. ‘They should know me better than
-that,’ said he. ‘Never would I abandon them. To
-restore them to their homes and their country again
-I’d carry the end of a litter, myself, through snow
-and mountains for months.’”</p>
-
-<p>“He’d do it,” asserted Sergeant Meek. “And
-so would any of us. Bones from their feet, is it?
-Who but a soldier would lose the smallest joint for
-such a pittance of pay, even to serve his country?
-Surely the Government won’t lose sight o’ men like
-poor John and Tom.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant took prompt measures. The news
-from the back trail had affected him sorely. This
-same evening he approached the men who were
-sitting around the fire. They sprang up, to attention.</p>
-
-<p>“You have heard of the condition of Sparks and
-Dougherty,” he addressed. “They must be brought
-in at once, with all possible speed.” He paused, as
-if planning.</p>
-
-<p>Sergeant Meek saluted.</p>
-
-<p>“One man and myself will take the trip, sir, with
-your permission. Jest give us the word, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m with you, sergeant,” blurted Terry Miller.</p>
-
-<p>“None better,” accepted the sergeant. “We’ll
-go on back to the Arkansaw, cap’n, for the hosses.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span>
-And with the hosses we’ll pick up John and Tom,
-and if they can’t ride we’ll sling ’em in litters.”</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike colored with pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>“That is handsome of you, sergeant; and of you,
-Miller. You will march as soon as Stout and
-Menaugh get in, and we can make the preparations.
-Your volunteering for a journey afoot of almost
-two hundred miles over two ranges of mountains
-waist deep in snow, at the risk of encountering savages,
-and soldiers of a nation that may not be
-friendly, is worthy of the uniform that you have
-worn.”</p>
-
-<p>“By your leave, sir, there are some others who’d
-be proud to share the honor with the sergeant and
-Terry,” spoke up Jake Carter, crippled though he
-was. “I’ll answer for my feet, sir. They’ll carry
-me, once I limber ’em up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two will be enough. I’m sorry that I can’t
-spare more, my man. I see that if you all had your
-way you’d leave me without a garrison.”</p>
-
-<p>Sergeant Meek and Terry felt highly tickled at
-having got in ahead of the rest.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Hugh and Freegift arrived
-all right. The other two were to start early on the
-morrow. Ten pounds of deer meat apiece was all
-that might be spared them; they said it was plenty—they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-had to travel light, anyway, and would hunt
-as they went.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant, with Corporal Jackson, John
-Mountjoy and William Gordon and Stub, walked
-with them for six miles, so that they might be shown
-a better pass for the horses, than the one used by
-the corporal. Jerry had reported that his pass was
-four feet deep with snow, during three days’ travel.</p>
-
-<p>After the sergeant and Terry had trudged on,
-the others killed a deer; Stub and Corporal Jerry
-were sent back with it, to the stockade, but the lieutenant
-took John and Bill with him, on a farther
-scout, down the east side of the main river.</p>
-
-<p>They were gone all day and the night. When
-they came in, the next afternoon, they said that they
-had discovered fresh signs of men and horses, south.
-The lieutenant called the garrison together and issued
-strict orders. The two spies had left five days ago;
-and if Santa Fe was only two days’ march distant,
-soldiers from there were likely to appear at any
-moment now.</p>
-
-<p>“We must especially watch out for Indians, my
-lads,” he directed. “The tribes hereabouts are
-doubtless under the influence of the Spanish government
-in New Mexico. When any strangers are
-sighted loitering about or passing, you are to retire
-unobserved, if possible. If they see you, you are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-not to run, however, nor permit them to approach
-you with the idea of disarming you or taking you
-prisoner. Should you be unable to evade them, you
-are to guard your liberty and bring them to the fort,
-where I will attend to them.”</p>
-
-<p>A sentry was posted all day on the top of a hill
-at the edge of the stockade prairie, from where he
-had a fine view up and down the fork and along the
-main river also. During the nights another sentry
-kept watch from one of the bastions or little block-houses
-on the land-side corners of the stockade.</p>
-
-<p>The stockade had been enclosed by the log walls,
-the pickets had been planted, and within a day or two
-the outside ditch would be ready for the water.</p>
-
-<p>On February 24 the lieutenant took Stub again
-upon another scout and hunt. The two spies had
-been gone seven days, and nothing had been heard
-from them. He was getting nervous while waiting
-for the sergeant and Terry to return with the horses,
-Baroney, Pat, and John and Tom. Meat was low;
-the men themselves had been too busy to hunt—but
-the water was in the ditch and everything was snug
-and shipshape.</p>
-
-<p>He and Stub were out two days, scouting eastward,
-to examine the traveled road along which the
-Spanish might come. They made a circle and arrived<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-“home,” lugging the meat of three deer, about nine
-o’clock at night.</p>
-
-<p>Corporal Jerry greeted them, after the challenge
-of Freegift Stout, who was the guard in the bastion.</p>
-
-<p>“We were beginnin’ to be scared for you, sir,”
-he said. “We didn’t know but what the Injuns or
-the Spanish had taken you.”</p>
-
-<p>“All quiet here, corporal?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; all quiet.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s good. We’d have been back sooner,
-only we hunted farther than we intended, and had
-heavy loads to pack in. Now if the other men with
-the horses return in safety, we may all march on
-unmolested, through American territory.”</p>
-
-<p>But in the morning, while they were at breakfast,
-the musket of John Brown, on the hill, sounded—“Boom!”
-It was a signal: “Strangers in sight.”
-Corporal Jerry dropped his knife and bolted into a
-bastion, to look. Everybody paused, to learn the
-news.</p>
-
-<p>Back ran Corporal Jerry, to the lieutenant, who
-was standing at the entrance to his brush lean-to,
-buckling on his sword.</p>
-
-<p>“Two men are crossin’ the prairie for the fort,
-sir. Menaugh (Hugh was the sentinel pacing outside)
-is about to stop ’em.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span></p>
-
-<p>“See what they have to say. And if there are
-no more, admit them,” ordered the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>Away ran Corporal Jerry, for already Hugh was
-calling for the corporal of the guard, while holding
-off the two strangers.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XIX">XIX<br />
-<small>IN THE HANDS OF THE SPANIARDS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In a few minutes the two strangers crawled
-through the hole. They were clad in blanket-coats and
-deer-hide trousers and fur caps; looked like French
-traders—and Frenchmen they proved to be, for the
-lieutenant called to them, in French, “Come here,”
-and he and they talked together in that language.</p>
-
-<p>Stub might catch only a word now and then;
-the men listened, puzzled, prepared to grasp their
-stacked guns.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant finished the conversation. The
-Frenchmen bowed politely again, he saluted them
-and spoke to his party.</p>
-
-<p>“These are two Frenchmen from Santa Fe,
-lads,” he said. “They inform me that the governor
-of New Mexico is fearful of an attack upon us by the
-Utah Indians, and has sent a detachment of fifty
-dragoons for our protection. The detachment is
-within two days’ march of us. You know your
-duty. I rely upon you to act in a manner that will
-reflect credit upon our Country.”</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had he spoken when they all heard
-the sentinels outside hailing loudly, with “Halt!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>
-Who comes there? Corp’ral of the guar-rd! Post
-Number One!”</p>
-
-<p>Out dived Corporal Jerry, once more.</p>
-
-<p>“To arms! Man the works, men!” the lieutenant
-rapped.</p>
-
-<p>They grabbed guns and hustled for the platforms
-under the loopholes. There were more loopholes
-than men. Peeping through his, Stub might
-see out into the prairie before the stockade. From
-up the fork a large body of mounted soldiers had
-ridden into the edge of the clearing. John Brown,
-who had come in from his hill, and Hugh Menaugh
-were holding them back, Corporal Jerry was hastening
-to the scene.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant also had seen.</p>
-
-<p>“That is the company?” he demanded, of the
-two Frenchmen.</p>
-
-<p>“Oui, Monsieur Lieutenant.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell the commander with my compliments to
-leave his men in the woods where he now is, and I
-will meet him on the prairie before the fort.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oui, oui.”</p>
-
-<p>Out went the two Frenchmen.</p>
-
-<p>“They look like a hundred,” remarked Jake
-Carter. “We’re only eight, and an officer an’ a
-boy. But what’s the difference?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, in case of a dust, Meek and Terry an’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>
-the rest of ’em will be sorry to miss it,” replied soldier
-Mountjoy.</p>
-
-<p>“Hooray for a brush, if that’s the word. We’re
-equal to it, no matter how many they send ag’in us.”</p>
-
-<p>The men were keen for a fight. ’Twas a great
-thing, thought Stub, to be an American. But the
-Spanish soldiers, halted at the edge of the prairie
-within short gunshot, looked strong. About fifty, in
-one body, were the dragoons; fifty appeared to be a
-mixture—a part Indians. But all were well armed
-with short muskets, pistols, swords, lances and
-shields—some in one style, some in another.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant had left and was striding into the
-prairie, to meet two Spanish officers. He had taken
-only his sword, by his side. That would show his
-rank, for his clothes certainly did not. Nevertheless,
-the two Spanish officers, all in their heavy crimson
-cloaks, and decorated hats, and long boots, did not
-look any more gallant than he in his ragged blanket-coat,
-torn trousers, moccasins and fur-lined bedraggled
-makeshift cap.</p>
-
-<p>The three saluted, and talked for a short time.
-Beyond, at the timber, the horses pawed and snorted.
-Corporal Jerry and the two sentries stayed, vigilant.
-At the loopholes, inside the stockade, the five
-men and Stub peered, ready.</p>
-
-<p>Presently one of the Spanish officers shouted a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>
-command to the soldiers; they relaxed, at ease—some
-dismounted, to stretch their legs; he and the other
-officer followed Lieutenant Pike to the stockade.</p>
-
-<p>“No fight, hey?” uttered Alex Roy.</p>
-
-<p>“But no surrender, either, you can bet,” grunted
-Freegift. “The cap’n likely has something up his
-sleeve.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant entered, through the hole; the two
-Spanish officers crawled in after—and an odd sight
-they made as they straightened up, to stare about
-them curiously. It was plain that they were much
-astonished by the completeness of the trap.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant led the two officers to his brush
-shelter. Stub heard his own name called—the lieutenant
-beckoned to him. So he jumped down and
-went over.</p>
-
-<p>“These two gentlemen of the Spanish army of
-New Mexico are to be my guests at breakfast, boy,”
-said the lieutenant. “I wish you to serve us. Bring
-out the best we have. The provisions given me by
-the Indian we met can now be put to good use.”</p>
-
-<p>It was fortunate indeed that the lieutenant had
-saved the meal, goose and pieces of bread particularly.
-They were a treat—although doubtless the
-Spanish soldiers were used to even that fare. At
-any rate, most of the stuff soon disappeared, washed
-down by water, after the table had been set, so to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span></p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant and his guests chatted in French.
-When they had finished eating, and the two Spanish
-officers had wiped their moustaches with fine white
-handkerchiefs, the lieutenant said, crisply:</p>
-
-<p>“Have I the pleasure to understand that this
-is a friendly call upon me by his Majesty’s troops, at
-the instance of the New Mexico government?”</p>
-
-<p>The elder officer coughed. He answered politely:</p>
-
-<p>“Señor, the Governor of New Mexico, being
-informed that you have missed your route, has
-ordered me to offer you in his name mules, horses,
-money, or whatever you may need, for the purpose of
-conducting you to the head of the Red River. From
-Santa Fe that is eight days’ journey, before open
-to navigation. We have guides and know the
-routes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What! Missed my route, sir? Is not this the
-Red River?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, señor. This is the Rio Grande del Norte,
-of New Mexico. The Red River is many leagues to
-the southeast.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant flushed red. His thin hands
-clinched, and he gazed bewildered.</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible. Why was I not told this by those
-two men ten days ago, and I would have withdrawn?”</p>
-
-<p>The officer twirled his moustache and shrugged
-his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Quien sabe (Who knows), Señor Don Lieutenant?
-But I now have the honor to inform you, and
-am at your service.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant recovered, and stepped outside a
-few paces.</p>
-
-<p>“Stout!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lower the flag and roll it up. It will not be
-hoisted again without my orders.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?” Freegift stammered. And——</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no, sir! Not that! Not haul down the
-flag! Let us keep it flyin’, sir. We can do it.”</p>
-
-<p>Those were the cries. The lieutenant lifted his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Silence. I thank you, men. This is not surrender.
-I have no thought of surrender. But we
-are not upon the Red River. We are upon the Rio
-del Norte, in Mexican territory, and in courtesy to
-that government I am lowering the flag of my own
-free-will. By building this stockade we have unwittingly
-trespassed.”<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="noi"><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[I]</a> All the Rio Grande River which flows southward through
-south central Colorado into New Mexico was Spanish territory.
-The Lieutenant Pike party had crossed the Sangre de
-Cristo Range and had struck the Rio Grande near present
-Alamosa in the southern half of Colorado’s great San Luis
-Park or Valley. The largest of the White Mountains, on the
-east, was Sierra Blanca (“White Mountain” today), altitude
-14,390 feet, ranking third among the peaks of the Rockies.
-From the camp at the river the Pike men had travelled south,
-and built their stockade about five miles up the Conejos
-(Rabbits) River, which enters the Rio Grande from the west.
-Did he know this to be the Rio Grande del Norte, or did he
-really think it to be the Red River? Why did he stop in what
-was certainly Spanish territory? Did he wish to be captured?
-Or did he only take a chance? Historians have puzzled over
-this ever since.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span></p>
-
-<p>The men muttered; the two visiting officers sat
-uneasy; but Freegift lowered the flag, caught it in his
-arms, and with rather a black glance at the red
-cloaks folded it carefully.</p>
-
-<p>“By thunder, when we raise it ag’in, it’ll stay,”
-he grumbled, as he went to stow it away.</p>
-
-<p>“His Excellency Governor Alencaster requests
-the pleasure of a talk with you at Santa Fe, señor,”
-said the elder officer, with a smile, to the lieutenant.
-“He is desirous of entertaining you and learning
-the story of your journey. For your accommodation
-he has provided me with one hundred animals, to
-carry your baggage.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thank His Excellency, but it is impossible for
-me to accept the invitation,” replied Lieutenant Pike,
-seating himself again. “I can only send him my
-apologies for trespassing, by mistake, upon his domain.
-I will wait here merely until the return of
-my sergeant and the remainder of my company, and
-then withdraw at once to American soil. My orders
-forbid me entering into Spanish territory.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span></p>
-
-<p>“His Excellency will be much distressed not
-to see you, señor,” the officer insisted. “I must
-beg of you to take advantage of our escort. Otherwise
-I cannot answer for your safety.”</p>
-
-<p>At this, the lieutenant straightened, and his eyes
-flashed.</p>
-
-<p>“My safety will be attended to, sir. I shall not
-move until the safety of my sergeant and party, some
-of whom may be suffering, is assured also. Do I
-understand that your intent is to use force to convey
-me to the governor?”</p>
-
-<p>The officer spread his hands and shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>“No, no, señor! Not in the least. But it is
-necessary that for the information of the governor-general
-the governor of New Mexico should receive
-from you personally an explanation of your presence
-within his frontier, that he may send in the proper
-report. If you wish to go with us now, very well;
-or if you wish to wait for the return of your other
-party, very well. But in that case we shall be obliged
-to obtain more provisions from Santa Fe, and dispatch
-a small number for that purpose.” Even Stub,
-who had been listening agog, and catching most of
-the words, knew that this meant reinforcements.
-“If you decide to march with us now,” the officer
-added, “I will leave here an Indian who speaks English,
-and a part of my dragoons, to greet your<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span>
-sergeant and escort him and his men to join you at
-Santa Fe.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant bit his lip and fidgeted. He was
-of two minds; but one thing was certain: he could
-not get rid of these Spanish without a big fight. And
-the worst of that would be, that he was an invader
-and had broken the law.</p>
-
-<p>He did not hesitate long.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall not yield to force, sir,” he said. “We
-are American soldiers and prepared to defend ourselves,
-as you have seen. However, in consideration
-of your courteous attitude I am disposed to go with
-your escort to His Excellency, and give him the
-explanation that is due from one friendly nation to
-another. But I must leave two of my men here, to
-receive the sergeant and reassure him; otherwise, I
-promise you, he will not come on without a fight,
-except by direct orders from me.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is agreed, señor,” bowed the officer. “And
-we may consider the matter very happily settled.
-You have my respectful thanks.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant’s eyes fell upon Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell Stout to send Corporal Jackson in to me.”
-He spoke to the Spanish officer. “I will instruct my
-men to permit yours to approach, and would suggest
-that you inform your company we are willing to
-receive them as friends, if their actions so warrant.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Thanks, señor.”</p>
-
-<p>Stub sought Freegift Stout.</p>
-
-<p>“The lieutenant says for you to tell Jerry to
-come in.”</p>
-
-<p>Freegift climbed down.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s it all about? Say! Is it true we’re not
-on the Red River yet, but on what they call the Rio
-del Norte? Sure, that’s not so.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s what they say. The lieutenant believes it.
-And we’re going to Santa Fe.”</p>
-
-<p>“For what?”</p>
-
-<p>“The governor wants to talk with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“But not without a dust! Oh, no, now! Leave
-these good works, an’ go without a dust?”</p>
-
-<p>Stub nodded soberly. Freegift dared not delay
-longer. He went off muttering. The other men also
-murmured. The plan was not to their liking.</p>
-
-<p>Freegift returned with Corporal Jerry. The men
-trooped after him, to the lieutenant. Freegift acted
-as speaker. He saluted——</p>
-
-<p>“What’s this? Why have you left your posts?”
-the lieutenant demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Please, cap’n. Beggin your pardon, sir—but
-’tain’t true, is it, that were layin’ down our arms an’
-givin’ up to them Spanish, to march out, an’ no
-fight offered? Sure, sir, we’re only eight and a boy;
-but we’re behind good walls, an’ you’re the proper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span>
-kind of an officer, an’ ’twould be no great job at all
-to hold them fellers off till we could slip away with
-colors flyin’. You can’t trust them fellers, sir. An’
-if you’ll only give us the orders, sir, we’ll hand out a
-dose of Yankee Doodle; eh, boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir! We’re ready for a dust, cap’n, sir.
-We’d rather trust to our muskets than to those
-Spanish. We’re not afeared of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“That will do,” Lieutenant Pike answered, but
-not unkindly. “You’re brave lads. I know I can
-depend on you—and with you I’d like to test our
-defences at which you’ve worked so faithfully. But
-we are marching of our own free will, and shall
-retain our arms. My orders are to avoid a conflict
-with the Mexican forces, unless attacked. Since we
-are unfortunately in Spanish territory, it will be better
-if we proceed boldly to the New Mexican capital,
-at the invitation of the governor, rather than put
-ourselves in the wrong by resistance.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. If you say so, sir,” they replied, with
-glum faces.</p>
-
-<p>“Corporal, you may draw the sentries in,” continued
-the lieutenant “The Spanish soldiers are
-to be allowed to move freely outside of the works.
-Some of the men may meet them, to treat them
-civilly, for I wish no sign of suspicion to be shown.”</p>
-
-<p>The two Spanish officers had gone to their troops.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span>
-A great cheering arose, from that direction, as if the
-soldiery had been told that there would be no fighting,
-and were heartily glad.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish flocked forward, into the prairie in
-front of the stockade. Freegift and several of the
-other men, and Stub, did sally out, curious to inspect
-their new friends. The Spanish soldiers were
-regular dragoons, fifty; and mounted militia, fifty—a
-mixture, these, of Spaniards and Mexicans and
-Indians.</p>
-
-<p>And they were kind and friendly, indeed. They
-brought food and blankets and insisted that the
-Americans accept. Freegift himself finally admitted:</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d still prefer a little dust, for the honor
-of the army an’ a proof that a half-froze American
-is as good a man as a dozen foreigners; but I don’t
-deny they’re treatin’ us mighty handsome, the same
-as brothers-at-arms. The colors of ’em are a bit
-peculiar, yet their hearts seem white.”</p>
-
-<p>Toward noon Corporal Jerry sought out all the
-garrison and called them together, inside.</p>
-
-<p>“Mountjoy, you an’ I are to stay here, with
-some of the Spanish, an’ a letter from the cap’n to
-hand to the sergeant when he comes. The rest of
-you are to get ready to march at once. So good luck
-to you—an’ we’ll see you later.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That you will,” they answered. “And be sure
-you fetch Sparks and Dougherty. They’re the ones
-who need all these fine fixin’s.”</p>
-
-<p>Horses were provided, as promised by the Spanish
-officer. Riding comfortably on these, and
-escorted by fifty of the dragoons and militia and
-the two officers (whose names were Lieutenant Don
-Ignatio Saltelo and Lieutenant Don Bartholomew
-Fernandez), after dinner they rode twelve miles
-westward up the fork to the Spanish camp. Now
-they numbered only Lieutenant Pike, Privates Freegift
-Stout, Alex Roy, Hugh Menaugh, William Gordon,
-Jacob Carter, John Brown, and Jack Pursley
-otherwise Stub. Corporal Jerry Jackson and Private
-John Mountjoy remained at the stockade, with the
-other fifty Spanish soldiers, to wait for Sergeant
-Meek, and Private Terry Miller, who were bringing
-in, across the mountains, John Sparks and Tom
-Dougherty (lacking feet and fingers), Baroney Vasquez
-and interpreter, Pat Smith, and the horses.</p>
-
-<p>Truly, the little American column had become
-much scattered.</p>
-
-<p>“Jinks! I’d like to be there at the reception
-and see the sergeant’s face,” Alex Roy chuckled.
-“’Specially when he learns we ain’t been on the Red
-River at all!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span></p>
-
-<p>“It may seem like a joke, but it’s a rough one,”
-quoth William Gordon. “A look at the cap’n’s face
-is enough for me. To think, after all these
-months he’s never got anywhere. ’Twill be a great
-report that he’ll have to turn in, ’less he aims to
-l’arn something of the Spanish country. At any
-rate, we’ve hauled down our flag, and given up
-our fort and I’m sorry for him. He deserved better.”</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XX">XX<br />
-<small>STUB REACHES END O’ TRAIL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>“Santa Fe! The city of Santa Fe! Behold!”</p>
-
-<p>Those were the cries adown the delighted column.
-Here they were, at last; but this was the evening of
-the fifth day since leaving the camp, and the distance
-was more than one hundred and sixty miles. The
-two spies, who had said that Santa Fe was only
-two days’ journey from the stockade, had lied.</p>
-
-<p>The first stage of the trip had been very cold,
-in deep snow. Then, on the third day, or March 1,
-they had emerged into a country of warmth and
-grass and buds, at the first of the Mexican settlements—a
-little town named Aqua Caliente or Warm
-Springs. Hooray!</p>
-
-<p>They all, the Americans, viewed it curiously.
-The houses were low and one-story, of yellowish
-mud, with flat roofs; grouped close together so that
-they made an open square in the middle of the town
-and their rears formed a bare wall on the four sides.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis like a big brick-kiln, by jinks,” remarked
-Freegift. “Now I wonder do they build this way
-for fear o’ the Injuns?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span></p>
-
-<p>The people here numbered about five hundred—mainly
-Indians themselves, but tame Indians, Pueblos
-who lived in houses, with a mingling of Mexican
-blood. From the house-tops they welcomed the column;
-and thronging to meet it they brought out
-food and other gifts for the strangers. That night
-there was a dance, with the Americans as guests of
-honor.</p>
-
-<p>“If this is the way they treat prisoners,” the men
-grinned, “sure, though some of us can’t shake our
-feet yet, we’re agreeable to the good intentions.”</p>
-
-<p>The same treatment had occurred all the way
-down along the Rio Grande del Norte, through a
-succession of the flat mud villages. There had been
-feasting, dancing, and at every stop the old women
-and old men had taken the Americans into the houses
-and dressed their frozen feet.</p>
-
-<p>“This feet-washin’ and food-givin’ makes a feller
-think on Bible times,” William Gordon asserted.
-“The pity is, that we didn’t ketch up with that Spanish
-column that was lookin’ for us and gone right
-home with ’em for a friendly visit. They’d likely
-have put us on the Red River and have saved us
-our trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we ain’t turned loose yet, remember,”
-counseled Hugh Menaugh. “From what I l’arn,
-the Melgares column didn’t aim to entertain us with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>
-anything more’n a fight. But now we’re nicely done,
-without fightin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, this here politeness may be only a little
-celebration,” Alex mused. “It’s cheap. For me, I’d
-prefer a dust or two, to keep us in trim.”</p>
-
-<p>There had been one bit of trouble, which had
-proved that the lieutenant, also, was not to be bamboozled.
-In the evening, at the village named San
-Juan, or St. John, the men and Stub were together
-in a large room assigned to them, when the lieutenant
-hastily entered. He had been dining at the priest’s
-house, with Lieutenant Bartholomew; but now a
-stranger accompanied him—a small, dark, sharp-faced
-man.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant seemed angry.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut the door and bar it,” he ordered, of John
-Brown. Then he turned on the stranger. “We
-will settle our matters here,” he rapped, in French;
-and explained, to the men: “This fellow is a spy,
-from the governor. He has been dogging me and
-asking questions in poor English all the way from
-the priest’s house. I have requested him to speak
-in his own language, which is French, but he understands
-English and would pretend that he is a
-prisoner to the Spanish—‘like ourselves,’ he alleges.
-I have informed him that we have committed no
-crime, are not prisoners, and fear nothing. We are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>
-free Americans. As for you,” he continued, to the
-man, roundly, “I know you to be only a miserable
-spy, hired by the governor in hopes that you will
-win my sympathy and get me to betray secrets. I
-have nothing to reveal. But it is in my power to
-punish such scoundrels as you”—here the lieutenant
-drew his sword—“and if you now make the least
-resistance I will use the sabre that I have in my hand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let us fix him, sir,” cried Hugh, Freegift, and
-the others. “We’ll pay him an’ save the governor
-the trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>They crowded forward. The dark man’s legs
-gave out under him and down he flopped, to his
-knees.</p>
-
-<p>“No, señores! For the love of God don’t kill me.
-I will confess all.” He was so frightened that his
-stammering English might scarcely be understood.
-“His Excellency the governor ordered me to ask
-many questions. That is true. And it is true that
-I am no prisoner. I am a resident of Santa Fe, and
-well treated. The governor said that if I pretended
-hatred of the country you would be glad of my
-help. I see now that you are honest men.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is your name?” the lieutenant demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“Baptiste Lelande, señor, at your service.”</p>
-
-<p>“You can be of no service to me save by getting
-out of my sight,” retorted the lieutenant, scornfully,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>
-and clapping his sword back into its sheath. “You
-are a thief, and doubtless depend upon the governor
-for your safety. Tell His Excellency that the next
-time he employs spies upon us he should choose
-those of more skill and sense, but that I question
-whether he can find any such, to do that kind of
-work. Now begone.”</p>
-
-<p>John Brown opened the door. The man scuttled
-out.</p>
-
-<p>“My lads,” spoke the lieutenant, when the door
-had been closed again, “this is the second time that
-I have been approached by spies, on the march. On
-the first occasion I assumed to yield, and contented
-the rascal by giving into his keeping a leaf or two
-copied from my journal—which in fact merely recounted
-the truth as to our number and our setting
-forth from the Missouri River. The fellow could
-not read, and is treasuring the paper, for the eyes of
-the governor. If I am to be plagued this way, I
-fear that my baggage or person may be searched, and
-my records obtained by our long toil be stolen. Accordingly
-I shall trust in you, knowing that you will
-not fail me. I have decided to distribute my important
-papers among you, that you may carry them
-on your persons, out of sight.”</p>
-
-<p>So he did.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll be ready for you when you want ’em,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>
-cap’n, sir,” Freegift promised, as the men stowed
-the papers underneath their shirts. “If the Spanish
-want ’em, they’ll have to take our skins at the same
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“That they will,” was the chorus.</p>
-
-<p>“To the boy here I consign the most important
-article of all,” pursued the lieutenant, “because he
-is the least likely to be molested. It is my journal
-of the whole trip. If that were lost, much of our
-labors would have been thrown away. I can rely
-on you to keep it safe, Stub?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” And Stub also stowed away his
-charge—a thin book with stained red covers, in which
-the lieutenant had so frequently written, at night.</p>
-
-<p>“We will arrive at Santa Fe to-morrow, lads,”
-the lieutenant had warned. “And if my baggage is
-subjected to a search by order of the governor, I
-shall feel safe regarding my papers.”</p>
-
-<p>Presently he left.</p>
-
-<p>“Lalande, the nincompoop was, was he?” remarked
-Jake Carter. “Well, he got his come-upments.
-But ain’t he the same that the doctor was
-lookin’ for—the sly one who skipped off with a
-trader’s goods?”</p>
-
-<p>“So what more could be expected, than dirty
-work, from the likes!” Hugh proposed.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant fared so heartily at the priest’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>
-house that this night he was ill. In the morning,
-which was that of March 3, they all had ridden on
-southward, led by him and by the pleasant Don
-Lieutenant Bartholomew. They had passed through
-several more villages, one resembling another; and in
-the sunset, after crossing a high mesa or flat tableland
-covered with cedars, at the edge they had
-emerged into view of Santa Fe, below.</p>
-
-<p>“Santa Fe! La ciudad muy grande (The great
-city)! Mira (See)!”</p>
-
-<p>Those were the urgent exclamations from the
-dragoons and militia.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Great city,’ they say?” Hugh uttered, to Stub.
-“Huh! Faith, it looks like a fleet o’ flatboats, left
-dry an’ waitin’ for a spring rise!”</p>
-
-<p>It was larger than the other villages or towns,
-and lay along both flanks of a creek. There were
-two churches, one with two round-topped steeples;
-but all the other buildings were low and flat-roofed
-and ugly, ranged upon three or four narrow crooked
-streets. At this side of the town there appeared to
-be the usual square, surrounded by the mud buildings.
-Yes, the two-steepled church fronted upon it.</p>
-
-<p>As they rode down from the mesa, by the road
-that they had been following, the town seemed to
-wake up. They could hear shouting, and might see<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>
-people running afoot and galloping horseback, making
-for the square.</p>
-
-<p>A bevy of young men, gaily dressed, raced,
-ahorse, to meet the column. The whole town evidently
-knew that the Americans were coming. The
-square was filled with excited men, women and children,
-all chattering and staring.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Bartholomew cleared the way through
-them, and halted in front of a very long, low building,
-with a porch supported on a row of posts made
-of small logs, and facing the square, opposite the
-church. He swung off. The dragoons and militia
-kept the crowd back.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike, in his old clothes, swung off.</p>
-
-<p>“Dismount!” he called. “We are to enter here,
-lads. Bear yourselves boldly. We are American
-soldiers, and have nothing to fear.”</p>
-
-<p>He strode on, firm and erect, following the guidance
-of Lieutenant Bartholomew.</p>
-
-<p>“Keep together,” Freegift cautioned; and the
-men pushed after, trying not to limp, and to carry
-their army muskets easily. Stub brought up the
-tail of the little procession. He, too, was an American,
-and proud of it, no matter how they all looked,
-without hats, in rags and moccasins, the hair of
-heads and faces long.</p>
-
-<p>They entered the long-fronted building. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>
-doorway was a full four feet thick. The interior
-was gloomy, lighted by small deep-set windows with
-dirty panes. There was a series of square, low-ceilinged
-rooms—“’Tis like a dungeon, eh?” Freegift
-flung back—but the earth floors were strewn with the
-pelts of buffalo, bear, panther, what-not.</p>
-
-<p>They were halted in a larger room, with barred
-windows and no outside door. Lieutenant Bartholomew
-bowed to Lieutenant Pike, and left. Against
-the walls there were several low couches, covered
-with furs and gay blankets, for seats. So they sat
-down, and the men stared about.</p>
-
-<p>“Whereabouts in here are we, I wonder,” John
-Brown proposed.</p>
-
-<p>“Did ye see them strings o’ tanned Injun ears
-hangin’ acrost the front winders!” remarked Hugh
-Menaugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, we’d never find way out by ourselves,”
-declared Alex Roy. “It’s a crookeder trail than
-the one to the Red River.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant briefly smiled; but he sat
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Bartholomew suddenly returned;
-close behind him a large, heavy-set, swarthy, hard-faced
-man, of sharp black eyes, and dressed in a
-much decorated uniform. Lieutenant Pike hastily
-arose, at attention; they all rose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span></p>
-
-<p>“His Excellency Don Joaquin del Real Alencaster,
-Governor of the Province of New Mexico,”
-Lieutenant Bartholomew announced. “I have the
-honor to present Lieutenant Don Mungo-Meri-Paike,
-of the American army.”</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike bowed; the governor bowed, and
-spoke at once, in French.</p>
-
-<p>“You command here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.” The lieutenant answered just as
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you speak French?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“You come to reconnoiter our country, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I marched to reconnoiter our own,” replied
-Lieutenant Pike.</p>
-
-<p>“In what character are you?”</p>
-
-<p><a href="#i_298">“In my proper character, sir: an officer of the
-United States army.”</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="i_298">
- <img src="images/i_298.jpg" alt="" title="" />
- <div class="caption">
- <p class="noic"><a href="#Page_298">“IN MY PROPER CHARACTER, SIR: AN OFFICER OF THE UNITED
-STATES ARMY”</a></p>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“And the man Robinson—is he attached to your
-party?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.” The governor’s voice had been brusque,
-and the lieutenant was beginning to flush. But it was
-true that the doctor was only an independent
-volunteer.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He is from St. Louis.”</p>
-
-<p>“How many men have you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span></p>
-
-<p>“I had fifteen.” And this also was true, when
-counting the deserter Kennerman.</p>
-
-<p>“And this Robinson makes sixteen?” insisted
-the governor.</p>
-
-<p>“I have already told your Excellency that he
-does not belong to my party,” the lieutenant retorted.
-“I shall answer no more enquiries on the
-subject.”</p>
-
-<p>“When did you leave St. Louis?”</p>
-
-<p>“July 15.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think you marched in June.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” snapped the governor. “Return
-with Don Bartholomew to his house, and come here
-again at seven o’clock and bring your papers with
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>He shortly bowed, whirled on his heels and left.
-The lieutenant bit his lips, striving to hold his temper.
-Lieutenant Bartholomew appeared distressed.</p>
-
-<p>“A thousand apologies, Don Lieutenant,” he
-proffered. “His Excellency is in bad humor; but
-never mind. You are to be my guest. Your men
-will be quartered in the barracks. Please follow me.”</p>
-
-<p>They filed out, through the rooms, into daylight
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“A sergeant will show your men, señor. They
-are free to go where they please, in the city,” said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>
-Lieutenant Bartholomew. “My own house is at
-your service.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go with Lieutenant Bartholomew’s sergeant,
-lads,” Lieutenant Pike directed. “Guard your
-tongues and actions and remember your duty to your
-Government.”</p>
-
-<p>Beckoning with a flash of white teeth underneath
-his ferocious moustache the dragoon sergeant took
-them to the barracks. These were another long
-building on the right of the first building, fronting
-upon the west side of the square and protected by a
-wall with a court inside.</p>
-
-<p>At a sign from the sergeant they stacked their
-muskets and hung their pistols, in the court. Then
-they were led in to supper.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure, we’re goin’ to be comfortable,” Freegift
-uttered, glancing around as they ate. “The food is
-mighty warmin’—what you call the seasonin’? Pepper,
-ain’t it, same as we got, above? Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you hear what they call that other buildin’,
-where we were took first?” asked Jake Carter, of
-Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“The Palace of the Governors, the soldiers said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Palace!” Jake snorted. “It’s more like the
-keep of a bomb-proof fort. I’ve dreamed of palaces,
-but never such a one. There’s nothin’ for a governor
-to be so high and uppish about.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span></p>
-
-<p>“The cap’n gave him tit for tat, all right,”
-asserted William Gordon. “We’ve got a verse or
-two of Yankee Doodle in us yet!”</p>
-
-<p>They finished supper and shoved back their cowhide
-benches.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re to go where we plaze, ain’t it?” queried
-Hugh. “So long as we keep bounds? Well, I’m
-for seein’ the town whilst I can.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re with you, old hoss,” they cried, and
-trooped into the court.</p>
-
-<p>First thing, they found that their guns had
-vanished.</p>
-
-<p>Freegift scratched his shaggy head.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, a pretty trick. We’re disarmed. They
-come it over us proper, I say.”</p>
-
-<p>Spanish soldiers were passing to and fro. Some
-stared, some laughed, but nobody offered an explanation
-or seemed to understand the questions.</p>
-
-<p>“That wasn’t in the bargain, was it?” Alex Roy
-demanded. “The cap’n’ll have a word or two of the
-right kind ready, when he learns. Anyhow, we’ll
-soon find out whether we’re prisoners as well.
-Come on.”</p>
-
-<p>The gate at the entrance to the court was open.
-The guard there did not stop them. They had
-scarcely stepped out, to the square, when loitering
-soldiers and civilians, chatting with women enveloped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>
-in black shawls, welcomed them in Spanish
-and beckoned to them, and acted eager to show them
-around.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Buenas noches,’ is it? ‘Good evenin’ to ye,’”
-spoke Freegift. “I expect there’ll be no harm in
-loosenin’ up a bit. So fare as you like, boys, an’
-have a care. I’m off. Who’s with me?”</p>
-
-<p>They trooped gaily away, escorted by their new
-Santa Fean friends. Stub stuck to Freegift, for a
-time; but every little while the men had to stop, and
-drink wine offered to them at the shops and even at
-the houses near by; so, tiring of this, he fell behind,
-to make the rounds on his own account and see what
-he chose to see.</p>
-
-<p>He was crossing the bare, hard-baked square,
-or plaza as they called it, to take another look at
-the strings of Indian ears festooned on the front of
-the Governor’s Palace, when through the gathering
-dusk somebody hailed him.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! Muchacho! Aqui! (Hi! Boy! Here!)”</p>
-
-<p>It was Lieutenant Bartholomew, summoning him
-toward the barracks. The lieutenant met him.</p>
-
-<p>“Habla Español (You speak Spanish)?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very little,” Stub answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Bien (Good).” And the lieutenant continued
-eagerly. “Como se llama Ud. en Americano (What
-is your name in American)?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span></p>
-
-<p>“Me llamo Jack Pursley (My name is Jack
-Pursley), señor.”</p>
-
-<p>“Si, si! Bien! Muy bien! (Yes, yes! Good!
-Very good!)” exclaimed the lieutenant. “Ven
-conmigo, pues (Come with me, then).”</p>
-
-<p>On he went, at such a pace that Stub, wondering,
-had hard work keeping up with him. They made a
-number of twists and turns through the crooked,
-darkened streets, and the lieutenant stopped before
-a door set in the mud wall of a house flush with
-the street itself. He opened, and entered—Stub on
-his heels. They passed down a narrow verandah, in
-a court, entered another door——</p>
-
-<p>The room was lighted with two candles. It had
-no seats except a couple of blanket-covered couches
-against its wall; a colored picture or two of the saints
-hung on the bare walls. A man had sprung up. He
-was a tall, full-bearded man—an American even
-though his clothes were Spanish.</p>
-
-<p>He gazed upon Stub; Stub gaped at him.</p>
-
-<p>“It is the boy,” panted Lieutenant Bartholomew.
-“Bien?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jack!” shouted the man.</p>
-
-<p>“My dad!” Stub blurted.</p>
-
-<p>They charged each other, and hugged.</p>
-
-<p>“Good! Good!” exclaimed the lieutenant, dancing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span>
-delighted. Several women rushed in, to peer
-and ask questions.</p>
-
-<p>“Boy, boy!” uttered Jack’s father, holding him
-off to look at him again. “I thought never to see
-you, after the Utes got you. They took you somewhere—I
-couldn’t find out; and finally they fetched
-me down to Santa Fe, and here I’ve been near two
-years, carpentering.”</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t you get away?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. They won’t let me. And now I’m mighty
-glad.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m here, too,” laughed Stub. “And I
-guess I’ll stay; but I’ll have to ask Lieutenant Pike.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone to the palace, to talk with the
-governor again. You and I’ll talk with each other.
-I came especially to see him; thought maybe he might
-help me, and I hoped to talk with one of his kind.
-American blood is powerful scarce in Santa Fe.
-There’s only one simon-pure Yankee, except myself.
-He’s Sol Colly; used to be a sergeant in the army
-and was captured six years ago along with the rest
-of a party that invaded Texas. But he doesn’t live
-here. A Frenchman or two, here from the States,
-don’t count. My, my, it’s good to speak English
-and to hear it. As soon as the lieutenant learnt
-my name he remembered about you; but he couldn’t
-wait, so Don Bartholomew went to find you. Now<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305"></a>[305]</span>
-you’ll go home with me, where we can be snug and
-private.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke in Spanish to Lieutenant Bartholomew,
-who nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, certainly, señor. Until to-morrow
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>And Jack gladly marched home hand-in-hand
-with his father, James Pursley, of Kentucky, the discoverer
-of gold in Colorado, and the first American
-resident in Santa Fe.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_306"></a>[306]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="XXI">XXI<br />
-<small>GOOD-BY TO LIEUTENANT PIKE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The lieutenant and men were to be sent clear
-to the city of Chihuahua, more than six hundred
-miles southward, where the commanding general
-of all Mexico had headquarters.</p>
-
-<p>An officer and two soldiers from Governor Alencaster
-had called for him again in the morning immediately
-after breakfast. He returned to the Lieutenant
-Bartholomew house fuming. Stub never before
-had seen him so angry.</p>
-
-<p>“I protested with all my power,” he related, to
-Lieutenant Bartholomew and Stub’s father. “I
-said that I should not go unless forced to by military
-strength. The governor agreed to give me a paper
-certifying to the fact that I march only as compelled
-to, but our detention as prisoners is a breach
-of faith. I consented to come to Santa Fe, for the
-purpose of explaining to him my accidental presence
-within his frontiers; and I have so explained.
-He has even read my papers and my commission.
-Now he orders us still further into the interior.”</p>
-
-<p>“You have my sympathy, señor,” proffered Lieutenant
-Bartholomew.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_307"></a>[307]</span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s the system here, sir,” added Stub’s
-father. “I am an American citizen, and was brought
-in by the Injuns, from outside territory; and I can’t
-leave without a permit. I’m close watched—but I’ve
-still got my old rifle; and give me two hours’ start
-and I’ll not ask for any other passport.”</p>
-
-<p>“When I reminded His Excellency that my unintentional
-trespass was not to be compared with his,
-when he dispatched five hundred troops far into
-the Pawnee country, well within the territory of
-the United States, he had no reply,” pursued Lieutenant
-Pike. “However, I am to dine with him this
-noon, and march soon thereafter, to meet an escort
-under that Lieutenant Melgares below.”</p>
-
-<p>“You will find Don Facundo Melgares to be a
-very pleasant gentleman, señor,” spoke Lieutenant
-Bartholomew.</p>
-
-<p>“He spent a great deal of time and money
-looking for me,” Lieutenant Pike grimly laughed.
-“He might as well have stayed here, for I should
-never have yielded to him, north of the Red River;
-not while I had a man left. I understand that
-Doctor Robinson, whom the governor mentioned,
-also has been sent south.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is possible, señor.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“And I suppose my sergeant and the other men<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_308"></a>[308]</span>
-will follow me.” He turned to Stub. “Come, boy;
-we’ll look up our party and order them to be ready.
-Their arms are to be restored to them, at least. We’re
-not to be driven like cattle. His Excellency has
-promised that, and we’ll march as soldiers.”</p>
-
-<p>“You take the boy to Chihuahua?” queried
-Lieutenant Bartholomew.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” Stub’s tall father demanded, with a
-start.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant Pike smiled.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir. He remains here, where he belongs.
-I am only too happy to have reunited him and his
-father. His service with me ends—and it has been
-a greater service than you may imagine.”</p>
-
-<p>They hastened for the barracks. Midway, the
-lieutenant halted in covert of an old wall.</p>
-
-<p>“You have my journal?” he asked, guardedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good! You may give it to me, now. Quick!
-There!” He swiftly tucked it away. “It is the
-only paper unknown to the governor, and I mean
-to keep it. Last night, when I considered that he
-was done with me, I heard that the men were drinking
-wine with the town people. So in case they
-should drink too much I sought them out and took
-the other papers from them. They’re faithful, but
-the wine might have made them careless. I stowed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_309"></a>[309]</span>
-the papers in my trunk again (this was a little hand-trunk
-that the lieutenant had carried, with help,
-from the Arkansaw, as his only important baggage);
-then early this morning the governor unexpectedly
-sent for me and my trunk and I had no chance to
-open it privately. By trusting in him I was cleverly
-outwitted, but thanks to you I’ve saved my journal.
-Had I found you last night I would have taken
-it, to place it with the other papers.”</p>
-
-<p>So, thanks to a boy, the journal of Lieutenant
-Pike was saved to the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t you get your trunk again?” Stub asked,
-as they hurried on.</p>
-
-<p>“It will go down to Chihuahua with me, but in
-charge of the officer of the escort, for the commanding
-general.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do the papers tell anything wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, unless they are wrongly read. There are
-letters, and scientific notes upon the locations and
-distances; and maps. If the commanding general
-thinks we were spying out the country, he may try
-to keep everything. But the journal would be the
-greatest loss.”</p>
-
-<p>And truth to say, Lieutenant Pike never did get
-back any of the papers in the trunk.</p>
-
-<p>Freegift and John Brown were at the barracks;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_310"></a>[310]</span>
-the other men were rambling about. John went to
-find them.</p>
-
-<p>“To Chihuahua is it, sir?” Freegift gasped.
-“Without our guns?”</p>
-
-<p>“You will get your guns.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ don’t we wait for the sergeant an’ them
-others, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re not permitted. I’ll leave a note for
-Meek with this boy, here, telling him to keep up
-courage and follow us.”</p>
-
-<p>“But doesn’t the lad go, too, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“No. He stays in Santa Fe.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve found my father, Freegift,” eagerly explained
-Stub. “He’s here. The Utahs brought him
-here. I’ve got to stay with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Found your dad, eh? Well, well! An’ good!
-I want to know! That’s all right, then. We’ve been
-some worried over you, but sure we felt sartin you
-wouldn’t desert. Expect you’d rather have found
-your father than the Red River; hey?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” Stub stammered. “I wish we’d
-found both.”</p>
-
-<p>His heart ached for Lieutenant Pike, who seemed
-to have found nothing—unless he really had intended
-to come here.</p>
-
-<p>“We soldiers must not complain; we will only
-rejoice in your good fortune, my lad,” answered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_311"></a>[311]</span>
-the lieutenant. “All in all, we did not toil in vain,
-and we have done what we could. Have the men
-ready to march at twelve o’clock, Stout.” And
-turning on his heel he strode off.</p>
-
-<p>“A fine little man, an’ a smart one,” mused
-Freegift, gazing after. “We’ll go with him to
-Chihuahua—an’ to the ends o’ the earth, if need be.”</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant left first, shortly after noon. He
-had dined with the governor; when he came out of
-the palace, into the public square, prepared to start,
-the governor’s coach was waiting, attached to six
-gaily harnessed mules. A detachment of dragoons
-also were waiting; so were Stub and his father, and
-old Sergeant Colly who had been captured, six years
-ago, in Spanish territory.</p>
-
-<p>They shook hands with the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by. Good-by, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good-by.” He held his head high, like an
-officer and a free American. He did not mind the
-stares of the town people. “Remember, you are
-Americans.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t forget us, sir, when you reach the States,”
-old Solomon Colly implored. “Don’t forget Sergeant
-Colly of the army, who made his only mistake
-when he was trapped by these Spanish. You’ll do
-what you can for us, sir?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll not forget; not while I have breath in my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_312"></a>[312]</span>
-body,” promised the lieutenant, earnestly. “I will
-report you to the Government.”</p>
-
-<p>The governor had clumped out, in his uniform
-and jack-boots. Lieutenant Bartholomew, and Captain
-D’Almansa who was to command the escort
-southward, were with him. They all entered the
-splendid coach decorated with gilt.</p>
-
-<p>The door slammed. The servant climbed to the
-seat beside the driver—the sergeant in charge of the
-dragoons shouted an order, and away they went,
-mules and horses at a gallop.</p>
-
-<p>That was the last that Stub or anybody in Santa
-Fe ever saw of young Lieutenant Pike.</p>
-
-<p>Stub went to the barracks with his father and
-Solomon Colly, to watch the men off. They were
-about to go. He shook hands with them, too: with
-Freegift, and Alex Roy, and John Brown, and Hugh
-Menaugh, and William Gordon, and Jake Carter—that
-brave six, still limping from frozen feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Good luck to you, boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good luck.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ never forget you’ve been a Pike man, on
-one o’ the toughest marches in history,” added Freegift.
-“Stick up for your country. You’ve l’arned
-never to say die—an’ that’s the American of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir. I know it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, lads, but Sol and I wish we were going<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_313"></a>[313]</span>
-with you,” sighed his father. “But maybe you’ll
-be back again, by the thousand, and then we’ll see
-the flag floating.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe. There’ll be a time,” replied Freegift.
-“There’ll be a time when the flag’ll float over this
-very spot. But we won’t need any thousand. Five
-hundred of us under Cap’n Pike could take the whole
-country. An’ now we know a way in.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve half a notion that the lieutenant wasn’t so
-sorry to be made prisoner, after all,” Stub’s father
-remarked to him, on the way home. “There’s something
-secret about this that he doesn’t tell. As that
-soldier friend of yours said, in case of war—and
-war over this borderland dispute is likely to break
-out any day—the army will know what’s ahead of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll let Lieutenant Pike go, won’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>His father chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll have to. He’s not the kind of man
-they can keep. They can’t prove he’s a spy, for he’s
-in uniform (what there is of it), and his orders are
-plain to read.”</p>
-
-<p>This day was March 4. It was two weeks later,
-or March 18, when at last Lieutenant Saltelo brought
-in Sergeant Meek and Corporal Jerry Jackson, Terry
-Miller, John Mountjoy, poor John Sparks and Tom
-Dougherty, Baroney, Pat Smith and the few miserable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_314"></a>[314]</span>
-horses and the main baggage. There was great
-rejoicing, again, in Santa Fe.</p>
-
-<p>Sergeant Meek was taken at once to Governor
-Alencaster, but ’twas safe to say that the governor
-would find out little from <em>him</em>. Stub sought the
-other men out, at the barracks. John Sparks and
-Tom were unable to walk; they had lost their feet,
-and the most of their fingers; Baroney and Pat, and,
-they said, the sergeant, too, were in bad shape, from
-the march through the snows, to the stockade; but
-they all welcomed Stub.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s the cap’n?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s gone to Chihuahua.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what are ye doin’ here, then? Did you
-run off from him? Say!”</p>
-
-<p>“No. He told me to stay. I found my father.
-We’re living here—till we can get away.”</p>
-
-<p>“You did? Found your father! Want to
-know! Hooray! And the cap’n and the rest to
-Chihuahua. So it’s to Chihuahua the same for us,
-no doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Faith, that’s proper,” declared Tom Dougherty.
-“We’ll not desert him. If it be prison for wan
-of us let it be prison for all of us. What’s left
-o’ me’ll stick to the cap’n. Sure, John an’ me are
-only poor cripples—whether we’ll be paid I don’t
-know; but all we want is to be with him, doin’ as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_315"></a>[315]</span>
-we can. He’s had the hardest luck an’ he complained
-not wance.”</p>
-
-<p>When Sergeant Meek came, Stub gave him the
-note. The sergeant read it.</p>
-
-<p>“The cap’n says for us to keep our arms, and not
-lose the baggage. Yes, that’s the caper. Bear in
-mind, lads. We’re for Chihuahua in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>They, also, were sent down to Chihuahua. Stub
-never saw any of them again, either. He heard, much
-later, that the lieutenant and six had safely reached
-Natchitoches; but from Chihuahua no word ever
-came back of Sergeant Meek, Corporal Jerry,
-Baroney the interpreter, Privates Sparks, Dougherty,
-Mountjoy, Miller, and Pat Smith, except that
-General Salcedo, the commander, had found them
-a hard lot to handle and had got them out of his
-province as quickly as he might.</p>
-
-<p>So probably they caught up with Lieutenant Pike
-somewhere in the United States; and as likely as not
-some of them were with him to support him when
-he fell, dying on the field of battle, away north in
-Canada, during the War of 1812.</p>
-
-<p>They all loved him.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="tnote">
-<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Except for the frontispiece, illustrations have been moved to
- follow the text that they illustrate, so the page number of the
- illustration may not match the page number in the Illustrations.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Printer’s, punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently
- corrected.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.</p>
-
-<p class="smfont">Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LOST WITH LIEUTENANT PIKE ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Updated editions will replace the previous one&#8212;the old editions will
-be renamed.
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright
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