Thurstane had no great difficulty
in making a sort of let-me-alone-and-I’ll-let-you-alone
treaty with the embattled Hualpais.
After some minutes of dumb show they
came down from their stronghold and dispersed to their
dwellings. They seemed to be utterly without curiosity;
the warriors put aside their bows and lay down to sleep;
the old squaw hurried off to pick up her bundle of
fuel; even the papooses were silent and stupid.
It was a race lower than the Hottentots or the Australians.
Short, meagre, badly built, excessively ugly, they
were nearly naked, and their slight clothing was rags
of skins. Thurstane tried to buy food of them,
but either they had none to spare or his buttons seemed
to them of no value. Nor could he induce any
one to accompany him as a guide.
“Do ye think Godamighty made thim paple?”
inquired Sweeny.
“Reckon so,” replied Glover.
“I don’t belave it,”
said Sweeny. “He’d be in more rispactable
bizniss. It’s me opinyin the divil made
um for a joke on the rest av us.
An’ it’s me opinyin he made this whole
counthry for the same rayson.”
“The priest’ll tell ye God made all men,
Sweeny.”
“They ain’t min at all.
Thim crachurs ain’t min. They’re nagurs,
an’ a mighty poor kind at that. I hate
um. I wish they was all dead. I’ve
kilt some av um, an’ I’m goin’
to kill slathers more, God willin’. I belave
it’s part av the bizniss av white
min to finish off the nagurs.”
Profound and potent sentiment of race
antipathy! The contempt and hatred of white men
for yellow, red, brown, and black men has worked all
over earth, is working yet, and will work for ages.
It is a motive of that tremendous tragedy which Spencer
has entitled “the survival of the fittest,”
and Darwin, “natural selection.”
The party continued to ascend the
canon. At short intervals branch canons exhibited
arid and precipitous gorges, more and more gloomy with
twilight. It was impossible to choose between
one and another. The travellers could never see
three hundred yards in advance. To right and left
they were hemmed in by walls fifteen hundred feet
in height. Only one thing was certain: these
altitudes were gradually diminishing; and hence they
knew that they were mounting the plateau. At
last, four hours after leaving Diamond Creek, wearied
to the marrow with incessant toil, they halted by a
little spring, stretched themselves on a scrap of starveling
grass, and chewed their meagre, musty supper.
The scenery here was unearthly.
Barring the bit of turf and a few willows which had
got lost in the desert, there was not a tint of verdure.
To right and left rose two huge and steep slopes of
eroded and ragged rocks, tortured into every conceivable
form of jag, spire, pinnacle, and imagery. In
general the figures were grotesque; it seemed as if
the misshapen gods of India and of China and of barbarous
lands had gathered there; as if this were a place
of banishment and punishment for the fallen idols of
all idolâtries. Above this coliseum of monstrosities
rose a long line of sharp, jagged needles, like a
vast chevaux-de-frise, forbidding escape.
Still higher, lighted even yet by the setting sun,
towered five cones of vast proportions. Then
came cliffs capped by shatters of tableland, and then
the long, even, gleaming ledge of the final plateau.
Locked in this bedlam of crazed strata,
unable to see or guess a way out of it, the wanderers
fell asleep. There was no setting of guards; they
trusted to the desert as a sentinel.
At daylight the blind and wearisome
climbing recommenced. Occasionally they found
patches of thin turf and clumps of dwarf cedars struggling
with the rocky waste. These bits of greenery
were not the harbingers of a new empire of vegetation,
but the remnants of one whose glory had vanished ages
ago, swept away by a vandalism of waters. Gradually
the canon dwindled to a ravine, narrow, sinuous, walled
in by stony steeps or slopes, and interlocking continually
with other similar chasms. A creek, which followed
the chasm, appeared and disappeared at intervals of
a mile or so, as if horrified at the face of nature
and anxious to hide from it in subterranean recesses.
The travellers stumbled on until the
ravine became a gully and the gully a fissure.
They stepped out of it; they were on the rolling surface
of the tableland; they were half a mile above the
Colorado.
Here they halted, gave three cheers,
and then looked back upon the northern desert as men
look who have escaped an enemy. A gigantic panorama
of the country which they had traversed was unrolled
to their vision. In the foreground stretched
declining tablelands, intersected by numberless ravines,
and beyond these a lofty line of bluffs marked the
edge of the Great Canon of the Colorado. Through
one wide gap in these heights came a vision of endless
plateaux, their terraces towering one above another
until they were thousands of feet in the air, the horizontal
azure bands extending hundreds of miles northward,
until the deep blue faded into a lighter blue, and
that into the sapphire of the heavens.
“It looks a darned sight finer
than it is,” observed Glover.
“Bedad, ye may say that,”
added Sweeny. “It’s a big hippycrit
av a counthry. Ye’d think, to luk
at it, ye could ate it wid a spoon.”
Now came a rolling region, covered
with blue grass and dotted with groves of cedars,
the earth generally hard and smooth and the marching
easy. Striking southward, they reached a point
where the plateau culminated in a low ridge, and saw
before them a long gentle slope of ten miles, then
a system of rounded hills, and then mountains.
“Halt here,” said Thurstane.
“We must study our topography and fix on our
line of march.”
“You’ll hev to figger
it,” replied Glover. “I don’t
know nothin’ in this part o’ the world.”
“Ye ain’t called on to
know,” put in Sweeny. “The liftinant’ll
tell ye.”
“I think,” hesitated Thurstane,
“that we are about fifty miles north of Cactus
Pass, where we want to strike the trail.”
“And I’m putty nigh played out,”
groaned Glover.
“Och! you howld up yer
crazy head,” exhorted Sweeny. “It’ll
do ye iver so much good.”
“It’s easy talkin’,”
sighed the jaded and rheumatic skipper.
“It’s as aisy talkin’
right as talkin’ wrong,” retorted Sweeny.
“Ye’ve no call to grunt the curritch out
av yer betthers. Wait till the liftinant
says die.”
Thurstane was studying the landscape.
Which of those ranges was the Cerbat, which the Aztec,
and which the Pinaleva? He knew that, after leaving
Cactus Pass, the overland trail turns southward and
runs toward the mouth of the Gila, crossing the Colorado
hundreds of miles away. To the west of the pass,
therefore, he must not strike, under peril of starving
amid untracked plains and ranges. On the whole,
it seemed probable that the snow-capped line of summits
directly ahead of him was the Cerbat range, and that
he must follow it southward along the base of its
eastern slope.
“We will move on,” he
said. “Mr. Glover, we must reach those broken
hills before night in order to find water. Can
you do it?”
“Reckon I kin jest about do
it, ’s the feller said when he walked to his
own hangin’,” returned the suffering skipper.
The failing man marched so slowly
and needed so many halts that they were five hours
in reaching the hills. It was now nightfall; they
found a bright little spring in a grassy ravine; and
after a meagre supper, they tried to stifle their
hunger with sleep. Thurstane and Sweeny took turns
in watching, for smoke of fires had been seen on the
mountains, and, poor as they were, they could not
afford to be robbed. In the morning Glover seemed
refreshed, and started out with some vigor.
“Och! ye’ll go round the
worrld,” said Sweeny, encouragingly. “Bones
can march furder than fat anny day. Yer as tough
as me rations. Dried grizzly is nothin’
to ye.”
After threading hills for hours they
came out upon a wide, rolling basin prettily diversified
by low spurs of the encircling mountains and bluish
green with the long grasses known as pin and
grama. A few deer and antelopes, bounding
across the rockier places, were an aggravation to
starving men who could not follow them.
“Why don’t we catch some
o’ thim flyin’ crachurs?” demanded
Sweeny.
“We hain’t got no salt
to put on their tails,” explained Glover, grinning
more with pain than with his joke.
“I’d ate ’em widout
salt,” said Sweeny. “If the tails
was feathers, I’d ate ’em.”
“We must camp early, and try
our luck at hunting,” observed Thurstane.
“I go for campin’ airly,”
groaned the limping and tottering Glover.
“Och! yees ud like to shlape
an shnore an’ grunt and rowl over an’ shnore
agin the whole blissid time,” snapped Sweeny,
always angered by a word of discouragement. “Yees
ought to have a dozen o’ thim nagurs wid their
long poles to make a fither bed for yees an’
tuck up the blankets an’ spat the pilly.
Why didn’t ye shlape all ye wanted to whin yees
was in the boat?”
“Quietly, Sweeny,” remonstrated
Thurstane. “Mr. Glover marches with great
pain.”
“I’ve no objiction to
his marchin’ wid great pain or annyway Godamighty
lets him, if he won’t grunt about it.”
“But you must be civil, my man.”
“I ax yer pardon, Liftinant.
I don’t mane no harrum by blatherin’.
It’s a way we have in th’ ould counthry.
Mebbe it’s no good in th’ arrmy.”
“Let him yawp, Capm,”
interposed Glover. “It’s a way they
hev, as he says. Never see two Paddies together
but what they got to fightin’ or pokin’
fun at each other. Me an’ Sweeny won’t
quarrel. I take his clickatyclack for what it’s
worth by the cart-load. ’Twon’t hurt
me. Dunno but what it’s good for me.”
“Bedad, it’s betther for
ye nor yer own gruntin’,” added the irrepressible
Irishman.
By two in the afternoon they had made
perhaps fifteen miles, and reached the foot of the
mountain which they proposed to skirt. As Glover
was now fagged out, Thurstane decided to halt for
the night and try deer-stalking. A muddy water-hole,
surrounded by thickets of willows, indicated their
camping ground. The sick man was cached
in the dense foliage; his canteen was filled for him
and placed by his side; there could be no other nursing.
“If the nagurs kill ye, I’ll
revenge ye,” was Sweeny’s parting encouragement.
“I’ll git ye back yer scallup, if I have
to cut it out of um.”
Late in the evening the two hunters
returned empty. Sweeny, in spite of his hunger
and fatigue, boiled over with stories of the hairbreadth
escapes of the “antyloops” that he had
fired at. Thurstane also had seen game, but not
near enough for a shot.
“I didn’t look for such
bad luck,” said the weary and half-starved young
fellow, soberly. “No supper for any of us.
We must save our last ration to make to-morrow’s
march on.”
“It’s a poor way of atin’
two males in wan,” remarked Sweeny. “I
niver thought I’d come to wish I had me haversack
full o’ dried bear.”
The next day was a terrible one.
Already half famished, their only food for the twenty-four
hours was about four ounces apiece of bear meat, tough,
ill-scented, and innutritious. Glover was so weak
with hunger and his ailments that he had to be supported
most of the way by his two comrades. His temper,
and Sweeny’s also, gave out, and they snarled
at each other in good earnest, as men are apt to do
under protracted hardships. Thurstane stalked
on in silence, sustained by his youth and health,
and not less by his sense of responsibility. These
men were here through his doing; he must support them
and save them if possible; if not, he must show them
how to die bravely; for it had come to be a problem
of life and death. They could not expect to travel
two days longer without food. The time was approaching
when they would fall down with faintness, not to rise
again in this world.
In the morning their only provision
was one small bit of meat which Thurstane had saved
from his ration of the day before. This he handed
to Glover, saying with a firm eye and a cheerful smile,
“My dear fellow, here is your breakfast.”
The starving invalid looked at it
wistfully, and stammered, with a voice full of tears,
“I can’t eat when the rest of ye don’t.”
Sweeny, who had stared at the morsel
with hungry eyes, now broke out, “I tell ye,
ate it. The liftinant wants ye to.”
“Divide it fair,” answered
Glover, who could hardly restrain himself from sobbing.
“I won’t touch a bit
av it,” declared Sweeny. “It’s
the liftinant’s own grub.”
“We won’t divide it,”
said Thurstane. “I’ll put it in your
pocket, Glover. When you can’t take another
step without it, you must go at it.”
“Bedad, if ye don’t, we’ll
lave yees,” added Sweeny, digging his fists
into his empty stomach to relieve its gnawing.
Very slowly, the well men sustaining
the sick one, they marched over rolling hills until
about noon, accomplishing perhaps ten miles. They
were now on a slope looking southward; above them
the wind sighed through a large grove of cedars; a
little below was a copious spring of clear, sweet
water. There they halted, drinking and filling
their canteens, but not eating. The square inch
of bear meat was still in Glover’s pocket, but
he could not be got to taste it unless the others
would share.
“Capm, I feel’s though
Heaven’d strike me if I should eat your victuals,”
he whispered, his voice having failed him. “I
feel a sort o’ superstitious ’bout it.
I want to die with a clear conscience.”
But when they rose his strength gave
out entirely, and he dropped down fainting.
“Now ate yer mate,” said
Sweeny, in a passion of pity and anxiety. “Ate
yer mate an’ stand up to yer marchin’.”
Glover, however, could not eat, for
the fever of hunger had at last produced nausea, and
he pushed away the unsavory morsel when it was put
to his lips.
“Go ahead,” he whispered.
“No use all dyin’. Go ahead.”
And then he fainted outright.
“I think the trail can’t
be more than fifteen miles off,” said Thurstane,
when he had found that his comrade still breathed.
“One of us must push on to it and the other
stay with Glover. Sweeny, I can track the country
best. You must stay.”
For the first time in this long and
suffering and perilous journey Sweeny’s courage
failed him, and he looked as if he would like to shirk
his duty.
“My lad, it is necessary,”
continued the officer. “We can’t leave
this man so. You have your gun. You can
try to hunt. When he comes to, you must get him
along, following the course you see me take. If
I find help, I’ll save you. If not, I’ll
come back and die with you.”
Sitting down by the side of the insensible
Glover, Sweeny covered his face with two grimy hands
which trembled a little. It was not till his officer
had got some thirty feet away that he raised his head
and looked after him. Then he called, in his
usual quick, sharp, chattering way, “Liftinant,
is this soldierin’?”
“Yes, my lad,” replied
Thurstane with a sad, weary smile, thinking meantime
of hardships past, “this is soldiering.”
“Thin I’ll do me dooty
if I rot jest here,” declared the simple hero.
Thurstane came back, grasped Sweeny’s
hand in silence, turned away to hide his shaken face,
and commenced his anxious journey.
There were both terrible and beautiful
thoughts in his soul as he pushed on into the desert.
Would he find the trail? Would he encounter the
rare chance of traders or emigrants? Would there
be food and rest for him and rescue for his comrades?
Would he meet Clara? This last idea gave him
great courage; he struggled to keep it constantly in
his mind; he needed to lean upon it.
By the time that he had marched ten
miles he found that he was weaker than he had supposed.
Weeks of wretched food and three days of almost complete
starvation had taken the strength pretty much out of
his stalwart frame. His breath was short; he
stumbled over the slightest obstacles; occasionally
he could not see clear. From time to time it struck
him that he had been dreaming or else that his mind
was beginning to wander. Things that he remembered
and things that he hoped for seemed strangely present.
He spoke to people who were hundreds of miles away;
and, for the most part, he spoke to them pettishly
or with downright anger; for in the main he felt more
like a wretched, baited animal than a human being.
It was only when he called Clara to
mind that this evil spirit was exorcised, and he ceased
for a moment to resemble a hungry, jaded wolf.
Then he would be for a while all sweetness, because
he was for the while perfectly happy. In the
next instant, by some hateful and irresistible magic,
happiness and sweetness would be gone, and he could
not even remember them nor remember her.
Meantime he struggled to command himself
and pay attention to his route. He must do this,
because his starving comrades lay behind him, and he
must know how to lead men back to their rescue.
Well, here he was; there were hills to the left; there
was a mountain to the right; he would stop and fix
it all in his memory.
He sat down beside a rock, leaned
his back against it to steady his dizzy head, had
a sensation of struggling with something invincible,
and was gone.