For a couple of hours young Chadmund
had difficulty in traveling. Despite the fact
that he was in a sort of valley, with towering peaks
and bluffs upon either hand, a great many boulders
and obstructions obtruded themselves in his path,
and he did some climbing, clambering, and jumping
that would have reflected no discredit upon a mountain
goat. The forenoon was about half gone, and he
was felicitating himself upon the excellent progress
he was making, when he was brought up all standing
by finding himself upon the bank of a mountain stream,
which crossed his route exactly at right angles, issuing
from the mountains on the left with a rush and roar
and pouring tumultuously forward with irresistible
power and velocity.
“I can’t wade that,”
said the lad, scratching his head in perplexity, “and
it won’t do to try and swim it. If I once
got in there it would be the last of me.”
There could be no doubt of that, for
the stream was fully twenty feet in width, very deep,
and sped forward like the volume of a river when suddenly
compressed into a mountain canyon. It was walled
in on either side by solid rock, the surface of the
water being a couple of yards below the level where
he stood.
“I wonder whether I can’t
go round it?” he said, after spending some time
in mental debate. “It can’t run all
the way through the mountain, but must start somewhere
not very far away.”
This was not a very plausible theory;
but as nothing was to be gained by standing still,
he started out upon his tour of exploration. Better
success followed than he expected. He had started
toward the head of the stream and had clambered along
less than a hundred yards, when he reached a place
where it was so narrow that he was confident of his
ability to leap across.
“Yes, I can do that,”
he said, approaching close to the edge and looking
over the boiling abyss to the solid rock upon the other
side. “But suppose I should miss my footing,
wouldn’t I catch it!”
It was a pretty good leap, but Ned
was active, strong and swift, and he had made many
a longer leap than the one before him. For a minute
longer he stood, measuring the distance with his eye.
Then going backward a few steps, he suddenly ran forward
with all the speed at his command, and, concentrating
all his strength, made such a leap that he cleared
the chasm by a couple of feet.
“There!” he exclaimed,
with some satisfaction, “if none of the streams
are broader than that, I’ll jump them all.”
Still full of hope and in the best
of spirits he pressed forward until the sun was at
the meridian and the heat became so oppressive that
he concluded to rest awhile. He was in a section
of country where, at certain seasons, the heat is
like that of the Desert of Sahara. There are
portions of Arizona and Lower California where the
fervor of the sun’s rays at noonday smite the
earth with the withering power of the sirocco.
At times, when Ned was down in the
lowest portions of the valley, the heat was almost
intolerable; and then, again, when he clambered to
the top of some elevation, and the cool breezes from
the upper regions fanned his cheeks, it was like a
draught of water to the fever-parched patient.
He had lain on the ground under the
protecting shadow of a rock but a short time when
his eye rested upon something which convinced him that
he was not the only one in the valley. Looking
dreamily off toward the west, up the valley, with
the mountains sloping down on the right and left,
he noticed what at first seemed a thin bluish cloud,
resting against the sky. Then he observed that
its form was a little out of the usual order, it being
column-shaped, tall, and like a shaft of almost invisible
vapor, thrown against the white background beyond.
“That ain’t a cloud,”
he suddenly exclaimed, starting to his feet and scrutinizing
it more closely. “It’s the smoke from
a camp fire and I’ve got to go right by it.”
There could be no doubt of the truth
of what he said, and he became deeply interested.
“I wonder whether they’re
Indians or white men? I suppose it’s most
likely they are Apaches, and they may be Lone Wolf
and his companions. I’ve got to keep a
sharp lookout and keep from running into them.
If they are white hunters, that I’ve heard are
sometimes in these mountains, it will be a lucky thing
for me.”
Somehow or other he became impressed
with the idea that the camp fire ahead of him was
that of friends instead of enemies that
the assistance which he so sorely needed was thus
placed within his reach. He had learned, long
before, that one is apt to miscalculate the distance
when placed as he was; but, making allowance for all
that, he was confident that the camp fire was not
more than a mile away. Yielding to a natural
curiosity to learn its meaning, he shortened the hour
which he had intended to devote to rest, and started
ahead again.
Once or twice it seemed to him that
he had dropped into some sort of trail, which he was
following. Here and there were traces showing
that the route had been traveled before. It seemed
to be one of those natural roads or passes which are
found at intervals in all great mountain chains, and
without which, many of of them for vast distances would
be literally impassable for man or animal.
The conviction that he was not the
pioneer over that section caused the young wanderer
some misgivings and suggested several discomforting
questions. If Apaches had used the trail already,
might not some of them be upon it? If some of
them were coming from the opposite direction, how
was he to avoid running into their arms? These
queries were not of the most cheerful character and
they served to tone down the enthusiasm which had
marked his start in the morning. They also caused
him to examine, more times than was really necessary,
the revolver which had already done him such good
service, and he went through a preliminary drill,
consisting of placing it inside his waistcoat, a couple
of buttons being left carelessly unfastened; next
thrusting his hand within, in an indifferent manner,
then instantly jerking out and pointing the weapon
at an imaginary foe in front of him. This maneuver
he repeated scores of times, narrowly escaping the
firing of the weapon, until he satisfied himself that
he could do it to perfection.
“Now, if Lone Wolf comes at
me alone, I think I can manage him. He won’t
suspect that I’ve any weapon, and so won’t
be prepared for it; but I hope he won’t show
himself,” he added the next minute. “If
there’s any way of avoiding him, I’ll
do it.”
However, he was bent upon solving
the mystery of the distant camp fire, which he still
hoped might belong to some party of white hunters,
who would take him under their protection and conduct
him safely over the wide and dangerous stretch of
territory which still intervened between him and his
destination.
In spite of the careful calculation
he had made, he soon learned that he had committed
an error. Although the tell-tale smoke at first
seemed scarcely a mile away, it was more than three
times that distance. The way being more obstructed
by rocks and the sinuous winding of the trail, he
saw the sun sinking low in the west and found that
he had still no little traveling to do.
“It can’t be that they
are shifting that camp fire all the time,” he
growled, as he clambered upon an elevation, and was
again disappointed to find it so far away. “Blamed
if it don’t look as if somebody was playing
a trick on me. I’ve heard of a jack-o’-lantern
bobbing around in that style, but nothing else.”
He finally concluded that the laws
of nature were not violated in this case, and with
renewed courage pressed ahead again. The sky was
clear and cloudless, the weather remained oppressively
warm, and poor Ned was so jaded that he felt scarcely
able to drag one foot after the other, but he was
stout-hearted, and, just as the sun dipped out of sight
behind the mountains, he found himself within a hundred
yards of the mysterious camp.