For some moments profound silence
and darkness had accompanied a Sierran stage-coach
towards the summit. The huge, dim bulk of the
vehicle, swaying noiselessly on its straps, glided
onward and upward as if obeying some mysterious impulse
from behind, so faint and indefinite appeared its
relation to the viewless and silent horses ahead.
The shadowy trunks of tall trees that seemed to approach
the coach windows, look in, and then move hurriedly
away, were the only distinguishable objects.
Yet even these were so vague and unreal that they might
have been the mere phantoms of some dream of the half-sleeping
passengers; for the thickly-strewn needles of the
pine, that choked the way and deadened all sound,
yielded under the silently-crushing wheels a faint
soporific odor that seemed to benumb their senses,
already slipping back into unconsciousness during
the long ascent. Suddenly the stage stopped.
Three of the four passengers inside
struggled at once into upright wakefulness. The
fourth passenger, John Hale, had not been sleeping,
and turned impatiently towards the window. It
seemed to him that two of the moving trees had suddenly
become motionless outside. One of them moved
again, and the door opened quickly but quietly, as
of itself.
“Git down,” said a voice in the darkness.
All the passengers except Hale started.
The man next to him moved his right hand suddenly
behind him, but as quickly stopped. One of the
motionless trees had apparently closed upon the vehicle,
and what had seemed to be a bough projecting from
it at right angles changed slowly into the faintly
shining double-barrels of a gun at the window.
“Drop that!” said the voice.
The man who had moved uttered a short
laugh, and returned his hand empty to his knees.
The two others perceptibly shrugged their shoulders
as over a game that was lost. The remaining passenger,
John Hale, fearless by nature, inexperienced by habit,
awaking suddenly to the truth, conceived desperate
resistance. But without his making a gesture this
was instinctively felt by the others; the muzzle of
the gun turned spontaneously on him, and he was vaguely
conscious of a certain contempt and impatience of
him in his companions.
“Git down,” repeated the voice imperatively.
The three passengers descended.
Hale, furious, alert, but helpless of any opportunity,
followed. He was surprised to find the stage-driver
and express messenger standing beside him; he had
not heard them dismount. He instinctively looked
towards the horses. He could see nothing.
“Hold up your hands!”
One of the passengers had already
lifted his, in a weary, perfunctory way. The
others did the same reluctantly and awkwardly, but
apparently more from the consciousness of the ludicrousness
of their attitude than from any sense of danger.
The rays of a bull’s-eye lantern, deftly managed
by invisible hands, while it left the intruders in
shadow, completely illuminated the faces and figures
of the passengers. In spite of the majestic obscurity
and silence of surrounding nature, the group of humanity
thus illuminated was more farcical than dramatic.
A scrap of newspaper, part of a sandwich, and an orange
peel that had fallen from the floor of the coach,
brought into equal prominence by the searching light,
completed the absurdity.
“There’s a man here with
a package of greenbacks,” said the voice, with
an official coolness that lent a certain suggestion
of Custom House inspection to the transaction; “who
is it?” The passengers looked at each other,
and their glance finally settled on Hale.
“It’s not him,”
continued the voice, with a slight tinge of contempt
on the emphasis. “You’ll save time
and searching, gentlemen, if you’ll tote it
out. If we’ve got to go through every one
of you we’ll try to make it pay.”
The significant threat was not unheeded.
The passenger who had first moved when the stage stopped
put his hand to his breast.
“T’other pocket first, if you please,”
said the voice.
The man laughed, drew a pistol from
his hip pocket, and, under the strong light of the
lantern, laid it on a spot in the road indicated by
the voice. A thick envelope, taken from his breast
pocket, was laid beside it. “I told the
d d fools that gave it to me, instead of
sending it by express, it would be at their own risk,”
he said apologetically.
“As it’s going with the
express now it’s all the same,” said the
inevitable humorist of the occasion, pointing to the
despoiled express treasure-box already in the road.
The intention and deliberation of
the outrage was plain enough to Hale’s inexperience
now. Yet he could not understand the cool acquiescence
of his fellow-passengers, and was furious. His
reflections were interrupted by a voice which seemed
to come from a greater distance. He fancied it
was even softer in tone, as if a certain austerity
was relaxed.
“Step in as quick as you like,
gentlemen. You’ve five minutes to wait,
Bill.”
The passengers reentered the coach;
the driver and express messenger hurriedly climbed
to their places. Hale would have spoken, but an
impatient gesture from his companions stopped him.
They were evidently listening for something; he listened
too.
Yet the silence remained unbroken.
It seemed incredible that there should be no indication
near or far of that forceful presence which a moment
ago had been so dominant. No rustle in the wayside
“brush,” nor echo from the rocky canyon
below, betrayed a sound of their flight. A faint
breeze stirred the tall tips of the pines, a cone dropped
on the stage roof, one of the invisible horses that
seemed to be listening too moved slightly in his harness.
But this only appeared to accentuate the profound
stillness. The moments were growing interminable,
when the voice, so near as to startle Hale, broke
once more from the surrounding obscurity.
“Good-night!”
It was the signal that they were free.
The driver’s whip cracked like a pistol shot,
the horses sprang furiously forward, the huge vehicle
lurched ahead, and then bounded violently after them.
When Hale could make his voice heard in the confusion a
confusion which seemed greater from the colorless
intensity of their last few moments’ experience he
said hurriedly, “Then that fellow was there all
the time?”
“I reckon,” returned his
companion, “he stopped five minutes to cover
the driver with his double-barrel, until the two other
men got off with the treasure.”
“The two others!”
gasped Hale. “Then there were only three
men, and we six.”
The man shrugged his shoulders.
The passenger who had given up the greenbacks drawled,
with a slow, irritating tolerance, “I reckon
you’re a stranger here?”
“I am to this sort
of thing, certainly, though I live a dozen miles from
here, at Eagle’s Court,” returned Hale
scornfully.
“Then you’re the chap
that’s doin’ that fancy ranchin’
over at Eagle’s,” continued the man lazily.
“Whatever I’m doing at
Eagle’s Court, I’m not ashamed of it,”
said Hale tartly; “and that’s more than
I can say of what I’ve done or haven’t
done to-night. I’ve been one
of six men over-awed and robbed by three.”
“As to the over-awin’,
ez you call it mebbee you know more about
it than us. As to the robbin’ ez
far as I kin remember, you haven’t onloaded
much. Ef you’re talkin’ about what
oughter have been done, I’ll tell you what
could have happened. P’r’aps
ye noticed that when he pulled up I made a kind of
grab for my wepping behind me?”
“I did; and you wern’t quick enough,”
said Hale shortly.
“I wasn’t quick enough,
and that saved you. For ef I got that pistol
out and in sight o’ that man that held the gun ”
“Well,” said Hale impatiently, “he’d
have hesitated.”
“He’d hev blown you
with both barrels outer the window, and that before
I’d got a half-cock on my revolver.”
“But that would have been only
one man gone, and there would have been five of you
left,” said Hale haughtily.
“That might have been, ef you’d
contracted to take the hull charge of two handfuls
of buck-shot and slugs; but ez one eighth o’
that amount would have done your business, and yet
left enough to have gone round, promiskiss, and satisfied
the other passengers, it wouldn’t do to kalkilate
upon.”
“But the express messenger and
the driver were armed,” continued Hale.
“They were armed, but not fixed;
that makes all the difference.”
“I don’t understand.”
“I reckon you know what a duel is?”
“Yes.”
“Well, the chances agin us
was about the same as you’d have ef you was
put up agin another chap who was allowed to draw a
bead on you, and the signal to fire was your
DRAWIN’ your weapon. You may be
a stranger to this sort o’ thing, and p’r’aps
you never fought a duel, but even then you wouldn’t
go foolin’ your life away on any such chances.”
Something in the man’s manner,
as in a certain sly amusement the other passengers
appeared to extract from the conversation, impressed
Hale, already beginning to be conscious of the ludicrous
insufficiency of his own grievance beside that of
his interlocutor.
“Then you mean to say this thing
is inevitable,” said he bitterly, but less aggressively.
“Ez long ez they hunt you;
when you hunt them you’ve got the advantage,
allus provided you know how to get at them ez
well as they know how to get at you. This yer
coach is bound to go regular, and on certain days.
They ain’t. By the time the sheriff
gets out his posse they’ve skedaddled, and the
leader, like as not, is takin’ his quiet cocktail
at the Bank Exchange, or mebbe losin’ his earnings
to the sheriff over draw poker, in Sacramento.
You see you can’t prove anything agin them unless
you take them ‘on the fly.’ It may
be a part of Joaquim Murietta’s band, though
I wouldn’t swear to it.”
“The leader might have been
Gentleman George, from up-country,” interposed
a passenger. “He seemed to throw in a few
fancy touches, particlerly in that ‘Good night.’
Sorter chucked a little sentiment in it. Didn’t
seem to be the same thing ez, ‘Git, yer d d
suckers,’ on the other line.”
“Whoever he was, he knew the
road and the men who travelled on it. Like ez
not, he went over the line beside the driver on the
box on the down trip, and took stock of everything.
He even knew I had those greenbacks; though they were
handed to me in the bank at Sacramento. He must
have been hanging ’round there.”
For some moments Hale remained silent.
He was a civic-bred man, with an intense love of law
and order; the kind of man who is the first to take
that law and order into his own hands when he does
not find it existing to please him. He had a
Bostonian’s respect for respectability, tradition,
and propriety, but was willing to face irregularity
and impropriety to create order elsewhere. He
was fond of Nature with these limitations, never quite
trusting her unguided instincts, and finding her as
an instructress greatly inferior to Harvard University,
though possibly not to Cornell. With dauntless
enterprise and energy he had built and stocked a charming
cottage farm in a nook in the Sierras, whence he opposed,
like the lesser Englishman that he was, his own tastes
to those of the alien West. In the present instance
he felt it incumbent upon him not only to assert his
principles, but to act upon them with his usual energy.
How far he was impelled by the half-contemptuous passiveness
of his companions it would be difficult to say.
“What is to prevent the pursuit
of them at once?” he asked suddenly. “We
are a few miles from the station, where horses can
be procured.”
“Who’s to do it?”
replied the other lazily. “The stage company
will lodge the complaint with the authorities, but
it will take two days to get the county officers out,
and it’s nobody else’s funeral.”
“I will go for one,” said
Hale quietly. “I have a horse waiting for
me at the station, and can start at once.”
There was an instant of silence.
The stage-coach had left the obscurity of the forest,
and by the stronger light Hale could perceive that
his companion was examining him with two colorless,
lazy eyes. Presently he said, meeting Hale’s
clear glance, but rather as if yielding to a careless
reflection,
“It might be done with
four men. We oughter raise one man at the station.”
He paused. “I don’t know ez I’d
mind taking a hand myself,” he added, stretching
out his legs with a slight yawn.
“Ye can count me in, if
you’re goin’, Kernel. I reckon I’m
talkin’ to Kernel Clinch,” said the passenger
beside Hale with sudden alacrity. “I’m
Rawlins, of Frisco. Heerd of ye afore, Kernel,
and kinder spotted you jist now from your talk.”
To Hale’s surprise the two men,
after awkwardly and perfunctorily grasping each other’s
hand, entered at once into a languid conversation
on the recent election at Fresno, without the slightest
further reference to the pursuit of the robbers.
It was not until the remaining and undenominated passenger
turned to Hale, and, regretting that he had immediate
business at the Summit, offered to accompany the party
if they would wait a couple of hours, that Colonel
Clinch briefly returned to the subject.
“Four men will do, and
ez we’ll hev to take horses from the station
we’ll hev to take the fourth man from there.”
With these words he resumed his uninteresting
conversation with the equally uninterested Rawlins,
and the undenominated passenger subsided into an admiring
and dreamy contemplation of them both. With all
his principle and really high-minded purpose, Hale
could not help feeling constrained and annoyed at
the sudden subordinate and auxiliary position to which
he, the projector of the enterprise, had been reduced.
It was true that he had never offered himself as their
leader; it was true that the principle he wished to
uphold and the effect he sought to obtain would be
equally demonstrated under another; it was true that
the execution of his own conception gravitated by
some occult impulse to the man who had not sought
it, and whom he had always regarded as an incapable.
But all this was so unlike precedent or tradition that,
after the fashion of conservative men, he was suspicious
of it, and only that his honor was now involved he
would have withdrawn from the enterprise. There
was still a chance of reasserting himself at the station,
where he was known, and where some authority might
be deputed to him.
But even this prospect failed.
The station, half hotel and half stable, contained
only the landlord, who was also express agent, and
the new volunteer who Clinch had suggested would be
found among the stable-men. The nearest justice
of the peace was ten miles away, and Hale had to abandon
even his hope of being sworn in as a deputy constable.
This introduction of a common and illiterate ostler
into the party on equal terms with himself did not
add to his satisfaction, and a remark from Rawlins
seemed to complete his embarrassment.
“Ye had a mighty narrer
escape down there just now,” said that gentleman
confidentially, as Hale buckled his saddle girths.
“I thought, as we were not supposed
to defend ourselves, there was no danger,” said
Hale scornfully.
“Oh, I don’t mean them road agents.
But him.”
“Who?”
“Kernel Clinch. You jist ez good as allowed
he hadn’t any grit.”
“Whatever I said, I suppose
I am responsible for it,” answered Hale haughtily.
“That’s what gits me,”
was the imperturbable reply. “He’s
the best shot in Southern California, and hez
let daylight through a dozen chaps afore now for half
what you said.”
“Indeed!”
“Howsummever,” continued
Rawlins philosophically, “ez he’s concluded
to go with ye instead of for ye, you’re
likely to hev your ideas on this matter carried out
up to the handle. He’ll make short work
of it, you bet. Ef, ez I suspect, the leader
is an airy young feller from Frisco, who hez
took to the road lately, Clinch hez got a personal
grudge agin him from a quarrel over draw poker.”
This was the last blow to Hale’s
ideal crusade. Here he was an honest,
respectable citizen engaged as simple accessory
to a lawless vendetta originating at a gambling table!
When the first shock was over that grim philosophy
which is the reaction of all imaginative and sensitive
natures came to his aid. He felt better; oddly
enough he began to be conscious that he was thinking
and acting like his companions. With this feeling
a vague sympathy, before absent, faintly showed itself
in their actions. The Sharpe’s rifle put
into his hands by the stable-man was accompanied by
a familiar word of suggestion as to an equal, which
he was ashamed to find flattered him. He was able
to continue the conversation with Rawlins more coolly.
“Then you suspect who is the leader?”
“Only on giniral principles.
There was a finer touch, so to speak, in this yer
robbery that wasn’t in the old-fashioned style.
Down in my country they hed crude ideas about them
things used to strip the passengers of
everything, includin’ their clothes. They
say that at the station hotels, when the coach came
in, the folks used to stand round with blankets to
wrap up the passengers so ez not to skeer the wimen.
Thar’s a story that the driver and express manager
drove up one day with only a copy of the Alty Californy
wrapped around ’em; but thin,” added Rawlins
grimly, “there was folks ez said the hull
story was only an advertisement got up for the Alty.”
“Time’s up.”
“Are you ready, gentlemen?” said Colonel
Clinch.
Hale started. He had forgotten
his wife and family at Eagle’s Court, ten miles
away. They would be alarmed at his absence, would
perhaps hear some exaggerated version of the stage
coach robbery, and fear the worst.
“Is there any way I could send
a line to Eagle’s Court before daybreak?”
he asked eagerly.
The station was already drained of
its spare men and horses. The undenominated passenger
stepped forward and offered to take it himself when
his business, which he would despatch as quickly as
possible, was concluded.
“That ain’t a bad idea,”
said Clinch reflectively, “for ef yer hurry
you’ll head ’em off in case they scent
us, and try to double back on the North Ridge.
They’ll fight shy of the trail if they see anybody
on it, and one man’s as good as a dozen.”
Hale could not help thinking that
he might have been that one man, and had his opportunity
for independent action but for his rash proposal,
but it was too late to withdraw now. He hastily
scribbled a few lines to his wife on a sheet of the
station paper, handed it to the man, and took his
place in the little cavalcade as it filed silently
down the road.
They had ridden in silence for nearly
an hour, and had passed the scene of the robbery by
a higher track. Morning had long ago advanced
its colors on the cold white peaks to their right,
and was taking possession of the spur where they rode.
“It looks like snow,” said Rawlins quietly.
Hale turned towards him in astonishment.
Nothing on earth or sky looked less likely. It
had been cold, but that might have been only a current
from the frozen peaks beyond, reaching the lower valley.
The ridge on which they had halted was still thick
with yellowish-green summer foliage, mingled with
the darker evergreen of pine and fir. Oven-like
canyons in the long flanks of the mountain seemed still
to glow with the heat of yesterday’s noon; the
breathless air yet trembled and quivered over stifling
gorges and passes in the granite rocks, while far at
their feet sixty miles of perpetual summer stretched
away over the winding American River, now and then
lost in a gossamer haze. It was scarcely ripe
October where they stood; they could see the plenitude
of August still lingering in the valleys.
“I’ve seen Thomson’s
Pass choked up with fifteen feet o’ snow earlier
than this,” said Rawlins, answering Hale’s
gaze; “and last September the passengers sledded
over the road we came last night, and all the time
Thomson, a mile lower down over the ridge in the hollow,
smoking his pipes under roses in his piazzy!
Mountains is mighty uncertain; they make their own
weather ez they want it. I reckon you ain’t
wintered here yet.”
Hale was obliged to admit that he
had only taken Eagle’s Court in the early spring.
“Oh, you’re all right
at Eagle’s when you’re there!
But it’s like Thomson’s it’s
the gettin’ there that Hallo!
What’s that?”
A shot, distant but distinct, had
rung through the keen air. It was followed by
another so alike as to seem an echo.
“That’s over yon, on the
North Ridge,” said the ostler, “about two
miles as the crow flies and five by the trail.
Somebody’s shootin’ b’ar.”
“Not with a shot gun,”
said Clinch, quickly wheeling his horse with a gesture
that electrified them. “It’s them,
and the’ve doubled on us! To the North
Ridge, gentlemen, and ride all you know!”
It needed no second challenge to completely
transform that quiet cavalcade. The wild man-hunting
instinct, inseparable to most humanity, rose at their
leader’s look and word. With an incoherent
and unintelligible cry, giving voice to the chase
like the commonest hound of their fields, the order-loving
Hale and the philosophical Rawlins wheeled with the
others, and in another instant the little band swept
out of sight in the forest.
An immense and immeasurable quiet
succeeded. The sunlight glistened silently on
cliff and scar, the vast distance below seemed to stretch
out and broaden into repose. It might have been
fancy, but over the sharp line of the North Ridge
a light smoke lifted as of an escaping soul.