Colonel Briggs was nonplussed for
the moment. He had failed to scare the men whom
he meant to despoil of their property and some of the
mutterings behind him showed that he lacked the unanimous
support of his followers.
“Boys,” he said, looking
round in their faces; “you’ve heerd what
these strangers say to my mild requests. Since
they are too mean to trade, I leave it to you to say
whether we shall let up on ’em or make ’em
trade; which is it?”
“Trade! trade!” was the
response, given with such ardency that there seemed
to be no dissent, though there was.
“That hits me right; trade it
shall be; the first one of the strangers that kicks,
fill him full of holes.”
“And the first man that lays
a finger on my property,” said Captain Dawson,
in the same deliberate voice, “will be shot down
like a dog!”
The person whom Parson Brush had selected
a few minutes before for his first target and whom
he was watching closely, now did an extraordinary
thing. This individual was thin to emaciation.
His beard was scant and scraggly, and his large black
eyes gleamed like those of a wild animal. He
had a very long body, and sat so upright in his saddle,
with his Winchester resting across in front, that he
towered head and shoulders above his companions.
From the first, he fixed his penetrating eyes on Captain
Dawson and studied him closely. It was this persistent
intensity of gaze that attracted the notice of Brush,
who set him down as being even more malignant than
the leader of the disreputable party.
When a collision was impending, and
must have come the next second, the singular looking
man, grasping his revolver, raised his hand above
his head and called:
“Hold on a minute!”
His commanding voice and manner hushed
every one. From his place at the rear, he spurred
his mule straight toward the three men standing on
the ground.
“Keep off!” commanded
the parson; “if you come any nearer I’ll
shoot!”
The extraordinary looking individual
gave him no heed, but forced his mule in front of
Captain Dawson, upon whom he kept his eyes riveted.
“Don’t fire till I give
the word,” commanded the captain, who had become
suddenly interested in the tall, slim man.
Halting his mule directly before Dawson,
and with no more than a couple of yards separating
them, the stranger craned his head forward until his
chin was almost between the long ears of his animal.
He seemed to be trying to look the officer through,
while every other man watched the curious proceeding.
Suddenly the fellow resumed his upright
posture in the saddle, his manner showing that he
had solved the problem that perplexed him. Through
his thin, scattered beard, he was seen to be smiling.
“What’s your name?” he asked.
“Maurice Dawson.”
“Formerly captain of the Iowa
cavalry?”
“The same at your service.”
“Don’t you know me, captain?”
The officer thus appealed to took
a single step forward, and looked searchingly in the
face of the man that had thus addressed him.
“There is something familiar
in your looks and voice, but I am unable to place
you.”
“Did you ever hear of Corporal Bob Parker of
the Missouri?”
“Yes; you are he! I recognize you now!
I am glad to greet you.”
And shoving his Winchester under the
stump of his arm, Captain Dawson extended his hand
to his old comrade and shook it warmly, the two seeming
to forget the presence of every one else.
“Something in your face struck
me,” said the corporal, “but I wasn’t
sure. The last time I saw you, you had both arms.”
“Yes; I got rid of this one
at the very close of the war.”
“Things were pretty well mixed
up around Petersburg; I tried to get on your track,
but failed; I knew you meant to come to California,
and when we drifted here, I was hopeful of finding
you, but I didn’t think it would be in this
style.”
While speaking the corporal had retained
the hand of the captain, shaking it occasionally as
he spoke. He now gave it a final pressure and
dropped it.
“Captain, you and I went through
some pretty tough scrimmages and you were always dead
true and game; when we lost our colonel and major,
you took command and led the charge that day at Cold
Harbor; Grant or Sheridan couldn’t have done
better.”
“It was rather warm,”
smiled the captain, blushing at the compliment; “but,
corporal, it looks as if we are going to have something
of the kind here.”
Corporal Parker deliberately turned
to the wondering group behind him.
“Jim and Tom, you know what
we agreed on, if this should prove to be my old commander.
You two wore the gray, but you are true blue now.”
At this reminder, two of the company
without a word rode forward and placed themselves
beside the corporal.
“Now, we’ll face the other way.”
His suggestion was followed.
The three wheeled their animals around, so that their
riders, like the footmen, were in a line confronting
Colonel Briggs and his astonished company.
“Dress,” said the corporal,
looking down and moving his mule about until the alignment
would have drawn a compliment from a West Point cadet.
“Now, boys, are your shooting irons ready?”
“They gin’rally air,” was the significant
response of one of the men.
“All right, colonel,”
added the corporal making a military salute; “everything
being in readiness please let the skirmish proceed.”
Colonel Briggs emitted a forceful exclamation.
“What’s the meaning of all this?
I don’t understand it.”
“There are six on each side;
that evens matters; shall you start the music or do
you prefer to have the captain fire the opening gun?”
“But you haven’t told me what this means.”
“It means that Captain Dawson
and Corporal Bob Parker have drunk from the same canteen.”
It must be conceded that Colonel Briggs
had one merit; no one was quicker than he to grasp
a situation. So long as there were nine men on
one side and three on the other, the success of the
former was promising. He meant to crowd the defiant
miners to the wall and would have done so but for
the unprecedented turn of affairs. Now it was
six to six and he knew the mettle of the three recruits
that had joined the miners. Bob Parker was the
most terrific fighter in the whole company. He
was one of those men, occasionally seen, who was absolutely
without fear. He would have stood up alone and
fought the other eight. During that single week
in Sacramento, he gained the name of a terror and
caused a sigh of relief on the part of the authorities
when he left for the mountains.
The corporal always fired to kill,
and his skill with rifle and pistol was marvelous.
While talking with Colonel Briggs, he fixed his brilliant
black eyes on him, as if to intimate that he had selected
him for his pet antagonist. All this was
disconcerting.
In this crisis, when every nerve was
drawn tense and the question of life and death hung
on the passing of a breath, Colonel Briggs leaned
backward and elevating his chin in the way that had
become familiar, emitted one of his resounding laughs.
Then he abruptly snapped his jaws together like the
springing of a trap.
“Why, Bob, this puts a different
face on things,” he said cheerily; “if
the man’s a friend of yours, of course we can’t
quarrel with him.”
“I rather think not,” replied the corporal.
“I was in the army myself,”
added the colonel, “but didn’t stay long;
me and General Grant couldn’t agree as to how
the war should be run, and one night when no one was
around, I resigned and left.”
“Then you didn’t win your
title in the service,” remarked Captain Dawson,
who felt that he could afford to show good will, now
that the situation had taken so remarkable a turn.
“Scarcely; the boys think that
no officer lower than a colonel is fit to command
this crowd, so that’s how I got the handle.”
Captain Dawson could not forbear saying:
“I think it much more befitting
that a true and tried soldier, like Corporal Parker,
should be in your place.”
“It was offered to me,”
said the corporal, “but I refused it.”
“No; we agreed to make him a
full-fledged major-general, but he declined the honor
with some sarcastic remarks,” said the colonel;
“howsumever, boys, now that things have been
straightened out, do you intend to go with the captain
or with us?”
Corporal Parker addressed his two comrades.
“Wheel and salute!”
They faced their animals around, and,
taking the cue from the corporal, made an elaborate
military salutation to Captain Dawson and his companions.
Then they wheeled again and rode back to their former
places.
“With my best regards,”
added the colonel, also saluting, while the rest half-nodded
and grinned over the odd turn of affairs. Dawson,
Brush and Ruggles unbent sufficiently to respond, but
kept their places, side by side, and watched the curious
procession until it passed out of sight beyond a sweeping
curve in the canyon.
“I wonder if we are likely to
see any more of them,” said the parson; “they
are an ugly lot and badly want our horses.”
“Not badly enough to fight Corporal
Parker and his two friends. The corporal is the
bravest man I ever saw. I know he was disappointed
when the colonel was so quick in backing down.
He will go hungry for two or three days, for the sake
of a fight. It is he and not the colonel or any
one in the company that is spoiling for a row.”
“And I picked him out as the
first one to shoot,” grimly remarked Brush.
“The chances are ten to one
that he would have dropped you first, but it shows
how easily one may be mistaken.”
“I tell you,” said Ruggles
earnestly, “when that gang strikes New Constantinople,
there’ll be trouble.”
“There’s no doubt of it,”
commented Brush; “the forces will be about equal;
if the boys at home could have warning of what is coming,
they would make it so hot for Colonel Briggs and his
tramps that they would be glad to camp somewhere else.”
“That wouldn’t improve
matters, for of necessity there would be passing back
and forth, and there are some people at New Constantinople
who would welcome the change. That’s the
worst of it; a good deal of this evil seed will fall
on soil waiting for it.”
“We may be back in time to take
a hand in the business,” said the parson; “I
don’t know whether your friend, the corporal,
can be secured as an ally.”
“It is doubtful, for about the
only merits he has are his bravery and his loyalty
to his friends.”
“In my ’pinion the same
is considerable,” commented Ruggles.
“He would be a powerful friend
to Nellie, because she is a female and because she
is my daughter, but,” added the father with a
sigh, “I have my doubts whether I shall ever
take her to the settlement again.”
This announcement strangely affected
the two who heard it, for the dearest schemes which
they secretly nourished included the spending of their
days in the mining settlement. The hope of each
had flickered into life once more with the prospect
of recovering and punishing her abductor. They
knew that she would bitterly mourn his loss, and would
probably be inconsolable for a time, but the months
and years would bring forgetfulness and then who
should say what might come to pass?
“We thought,” remarked
Ruggles, as they resumed their seats, “that we
should have a weary wait for Vose, but it didn’t
prove so dull after all.”
The captain looked at his watch.
“He has been gone more than
an hour, and there’s no saying when he will
be back. He has his own way of managing this business,
and, though I concede his skill and superior knowledge
in this part of the world, it is hard to keep my patience
when I see the hours slipping away without bringing
any results.”
But the patience of the three men
was tried more sorely than ever before, and to a greater
extent than any one of them anticipated. Noon
came and passed and without bringing Vose Adams.
The party partook sparingly of their lunch, leaving
enough for their absent friend, but the lagging hours
wore away and they still waited. They said little
to one another, but the captain, unable to restrain
his restlessness, wandered down the canyon. The
two left behind watched him until he passed from view
in the direction taken by Colonel Briggs and his company.
A few minutes later, the report of his rifle came back
to them.
“I wonder if he’s
got into trouble,” exclaimed the parson, rising
to his feet and peering to their left, without seeing
everything to explain the sound that had reached them.
“I shouldn’t wonder,”
replied Ruggles; “everything is going wrong;
Vose wouldn’t stay away so long, unless he, too,
was in difficulty.”
“The captain may need us; he can’t be
far off.”
Gun in hand, the couple walked hurriedly
down the canyon, on the alert for Indians, for it
seemed more likely that if any danger threatened,
it was from them. To their relief, however, they
soon found their alarm groundless. The captain
was seen coming, apparently as well as ever.
“Nothing is wrong,” he
explained when they were within speaking distance;
“I saw an antelope among the rocks and took a
shot at him.”
“How near did you come to hitting him?”
“He made only a single jump
after he received my bullet; it’s a pity he
didn’t make a couple of them.”
“Why?”
“It would have brought him over
the outer rock and into the ravine; then we should
have had something for supper. Haven’t you
seen Adams yet?”
Instead of answering directly the
three looked toward the fissure in the side of the
canyon, and there, to their unspeakable relief, they
saw the man who had been absent for so many hours.
As is the rule at such times, their ill-humor deepened.
“Why didn’t you wait till
morning?” was the question of the captain.
“I was afraid I would have to
do so,” replied the guide, whose flushed face
and agitated manner proved that he brought important
news; “but I didn’t have to, and got away
in time to reach you afore night.”
“Not much before,” commented
the parson; “you must have had a remarkable
experience to detain you so long.”
“Rather, but I’m starving,
give me something to eat, while I talk.”
The lunch was produced, and he fell
to with avidity, but he saw they were in no mood for
frivolity, and he did not presume upon their indulgence.
“Wal, pards, after leaving you,
I picked my way as best I could up the gorge, which
runs back, with the bottom rising more or less all
the way, for ’bout two hundred yards when you
reach level ground. That is to say, the gorge
ends, but the ground is anything but level.”
“And they went all that distance
ahead of you with their animals?” asked Brush.
“That’s what they done;
the tracks of the horses were so plain there couldn’t
be any mistake ’bout it. At the top of the
gorge, the trail slanted off to the right, toward
a big pile of rocks, caves and gullies, where it didn’t
look as if a goat could travel. There was so
much stone that it was mighty hard to keep on the trail
and I lost it.”
“And didn’t you find it again?”
demanded the captain.
“Yes, but it took a good deal
of time; that’s one reason why I was gone so
long, but it wasn’t the only reason by a jug
full. When I struck it agin, it led straight
toward a high rocky place to the left, where I made
up my mind the two were hidin’.”
“That would imply that they
knew we were close behind them.”
“There can’t be any doubt
of that. What bothered me was to learn what they
had done with their horses, fur the prints that I followed
was made by the folks’ feet. I couldn’t
figger out what they had done with the animals, and
I spent some more time in trying to larn, but it was
no use.
“Bime by I struck better ground,
where the trail was so clear I could have trotted
over it.”
“Why didn’t you do it?” asked Ruggles.
Adams shook his head.
“It wouldn’t have done;
as I said they must have found out, purty early in
the day, that we was after them, for if they didn’t,
why did they turn off the reg’lar track?”
“Never mind asking questions,”
replied the captain; “go on with your story.”
“Wal, pards, by that time I
must have been a mile from here and it looked as if
I’d have to go that much further. I had
a good mind to come back after you, for time was important,
but when another rocky, walled-up place showed in
front of me, I was sartin I was close upon ’em.
Their horses couldn’t make their way through
such a spot, and I was sure I had ’em fast.”
“Why didn’t you come back
at once?” said the captain, “but, never
mind, go on with your account.”
“I thought it would be best
to find out just how they was fixed. At the same
time, it would never do to let ’em diskiver that
I was about. So I was powerful careful and crept
forward as if into an Injin camp. It wasn’t
long before I smelled burning wood. That told
me they had come to a stop, built a fire and didn’t
dream I was anywhere in the neighborhood.
“But I wasn’t through
with the bother yet; it took me another long time
to find where that fire was burnin’, but I hit
it at last. A little faint streak of smoke was
climbin’ from behind a ridge, among a growth
of pines. I begun creeping forward when I changed
my mind. I thought that if one of ’em happened
to be on the watch and see me, they would be off afore
I could git anywhere near ’em. So I worked
round to the other side to come upon ’em from
that. Then you see if they took the alarm, they’d
have to come back toward you or make another long
circuit. Anyway, I was sure of a chance to meet
’em.
“Wal, pards, I don’t want
to make a long story of what is a short one.
I got round to tother side, but it took me a good while,
and it’s hardly an hour ago that I catched my
first sight of their camp.”
“What passed between you and them?” asked
the captain.
“When I rested my eyes on the
little bundle of wood burnin’, there wasn’t
a man, woman or horse in sight.”
The listeners were dumbfounded for
the moment. After the waste of the greater part
of the day, they were no nearer seeing the fugitives
than before. In a voice, husky with passion,
Captain Dawson exclaimed:
“It will take hard work to convince
me that all this was not done on purpose by you.”
“What do you mean?” demanded
Vose, showing more anger than at any time since the
strange hunt had been begun.
“If you had spent a week trying
to fix things so as to help them get away from us,
you couldn’t have done any better than your own
account shows you to have done. The whole day
has been lost and we stand just as near success as
we did twenty-four hours ago.”
“You ought to have returned
to us as soon as you located them,” added Brush
in the effort to soothe the ruffled feelings of the
two.
“P’raps I didn’t
do the wisest thing,” replied Adams with unexpected
meekness; “but I ain’t the first person
in the world that has made a mistake. Howsumever,
there won’t be any more slips by me.”
His companions looked inquiringly at him.
“I don’t understand that
remark,” said the captain, “when you are
sure to blunder as long as you attempt to manage things.”
“That’s the p’int;
I resign from this time forward; I haven’t given
satisfaction and you may now do the work to suit yourselves.”
“It’s just as well,”
commented the captain, “for we can’t make
a greater mess of it than you.”
The story told by Vose Adams was a
singular one, but the most singular feature about
it was that it did not contain a grain of truth.
Every statement was a falsehood, deliberately intended
to deceive, and, seeing that he had succeeded in his
purpose, he was satisfied.