The tale halted. To be defeated
is one thing; to be forced to confess defeat is another.
Uncle Bill determined on the bitterer alternative.
“He made a clean fight,”
declared Uncle Bill. “First he cussed me
out proper. Then he went for his gat and he beat
me to the draw. They ain’t no disgrace
to that. You’ll learn pretty soon that anybody
might get beaten sooner or later — if he
fights enough men. And my gun hung in the leather.
Before I got it on him he’d shot me clean through
the right shoulder — a placed shot, boys.
He wanted to land me there. It tumbled me off
my hoss. I rolled away and tried to get to my
gun that had fallen on the ground. He shot me
ag’in through the leg and stopped me.
“Then he got off his hoss and
fixed up the wounds. He done a good job, as you
seen. ‘Bill’ says he, ’you ain’t
dead; you’re worse’n dead. That right
arm of yours is going to be stiff the rest of your
days. You’re a one-armed man from now on,
and that one arm is the worst you got.’
“That was why he sent me home
alive. To make me live and keep hating him, the
same’s he’d lived and hated me. But
he made a mistake. Pete Reeve is a wise fox,
but he made one mistake. He forgot that I might
have somebody to send on his trail. He didn’t
know that I had two boys I’d raised so’s
they was each better with a gun nor me. He didn’t
dream of that, curse him! But when you, Harry,
or you, Joe, pump the lead into him, shoot him so’s
he’ll live long enough to know who killed him
and why!”
As he spoke, there was a quality in
his voice that seemed to find the boys in the darkness
and point each of them out. “Which of you
takes the trail?”
A little silence followed. Bull wondered at it.
“He’s gone by way of Johnstown,”
continued the wounded man. “If one of you
cuts across the summit toward Shantung he’s pretty
sure to cut in across Pete’s trail. Which
is goin’ to start? Well, you can match for
the chance! Because him that comes back with Pete
Reeve marked off the slate is a man!”
That chilly little silence made Bull’s
heart beat. To be called a man, to be praised
by stern Bill Campbell — surely these were
things to make anyone risk death!
“Is that the Pete Reeve,”
said Harry’s voice, “that shot up Mike
Rivers over the hill to the Tompkins place, about four
year back?”
“That’s him. Why?”
Again the silence. Then Bull
heard the old man cursing softly — meditatively,
one might almost have said.
“Cut across for Johnstown,”
said Joe softly, “in a storm like this?
They won’t be no trails left to find above the
timberline. It’d be sure death. Listen!”
There was a lull in the wind, and
in the breeze that was left, they could hear the whisper
of the snow crushing steadily against the window.
“It’s heavy fall, right enough,”
declared Harry.
“And this Pete Reeve — why, he’s
a gunfighter, Dad.”
“And what are you?” asked
the old man. “Ain’t I labored and
slaved all my life to make you handy with guns?
What for d’you think I wasted all them hours
showin’ you how to pull a trigger and where to
shoot and how to get a gun out of the leather?”
“To kill for meat,” suggested Harry.
“Meat, nothing! The kind
of meat I mean walks on two feet and fights back.”
“Maybe, if we started together — ”
ventured Joe.
His father broke in, “Boy, I
ain’t going to send out a pack of men to run
down Pete Reeve. He met me single and he fought
me clean, and he’s going to be pulled down by
no pack of yaller dogs! Go one of you alone or
else both of you stay here.”
He waited, but there was no response.
“Is this the way my blood is showin’ up
in my sons? Is this the result of all my trainin’?”
After that there was no more talk.
The long silence was not broken by even the sound
of breathing until someone began to snore. Then
Bull knew that the sleep of the night had settled
down.
He lay with his hands folded behind
his head, thinking. They were willing enough
to go together to do this difficult thing. But
had they not lifted together at the stump and failed
to do the thing which he had done single-handed?
That thought stuck in his memory and would not out.
And suppose he, Bull, were to accomplish this great
feat and return to the shack? Would not Bill
Campbell feel doubly repaid for the living he had
furnished for his nephew? More than once the grim
old man had cursed the luck that saddled him with a
stupid incubus. But the curses would turn to
compliments if Bull left this little man, this catlike
and dangerous fighter, this Pete Reeve, dead on the
trail.
Not that all this was clear in the
mind of Bull, but he felt something like a command
pushing him on that difficult south trail, through
the storm and the snow that would now be piling above
the timberline. He waited until there was no
noise but the snoring of the sleepers and the rush
and roar of the wind which continually set something
stirring in the room. These sounds served to
cover effectually any noises he made as he felt about
and made up his small pack. His old canvas coat,
his most treasured article of apparel, he took down
from the hook where it accumulated dust from month
to month. His ancient, secondhand cartridge belt
with the antiquated revolver he removed from another
hook — he had never been given enough ammunition
to become a shot of any quality — and he
pushed quickly into the night.
The moment he was through the door,
the storm caught him in the face a stinging blow,
and the rush of snow chilled his skin. That stinging
blow steadied to a blast. It was a tremendous,
heavy fall. The wind had scoured the drifts from
the clearing and was already banking them around the
little house. In the morning, as like as not,
the boys would have to dig their way out.
He went straight to the horse shed
for his snowshoes that hung on the wall there.
Ordinary snowshoes would not endure his ponderous weight,
and Uncle Bill Campbell had fashioned these himself,
heavy and uncomfortable articles, but capable of enduring
the strain.
Fumbling his way down behind the stalls,
Bill’s roan lashed out at him with savage heels;
but Maggie, the old draft horse, whinnied softly,
greeting that familiar heavy step. He tied the
snowshoes on his back and then stopped for a last
word to Maggie. She raised her head and dropped
it clumsily on his shoulder. She was among the
little, agile mountain ponies what he was among men,
and their bulk had rendered each of them more or less
helpless. There seemed to be a mute understanding
between them, and it was never more apparent than when
Maggie whinnied gently in his ear. He stroked
her big, bony head, a lump forming in his throat.
If the bullets of little Pete Reeve dropped him in
some far-off trail, the old-broken-down horse would
be the only living creature that would mourn for him.
Outside, the night and the storm swallowed
him at once. Before he had gone fifty feet the
house was out of sight. Then, entering the forest
of balsam firs, the force of the wind was lessened,
and he made good time up the first part of the grade.
There would probably be no use for the snowshoes in
this region of broken shrubbery before he came to
the timberline.
He swept on with a lengthening stride.
He knew this part of the country like a book, of course,
and he seldom stumbled, save when he came out into
a clearing and the wind smote at him from an unexpected
angle. In one of these clearings he stopped and
took stock of his position. Far away to the west
and the south, the head of Scalped Mountain was lost
in dim, rushing clouds. He must make for that
goal.
Progress became less easy almost at
once. The trees that grew in this elevated region
were not tall enough to act as wind breaks; they were
hardly more than shrubs a great deal of the time, and
merely served to force him into detours around dense
hedges. Sometimes, in a clearing, he found himself
staggering to the knees in a compacted drift of snow;
sometimes an immense sheet of snow was picked up by
the wind and flung in his face like a blanket.
Indeed the cold and the snow were
nothing compared with the wind. It was now reaching
the proportions of a westerly storm of the first magnitude.
Off the towering slopes above, it came with the chill
of the snow and with flying bits of sand, scooped
up from around the base of trees, or with a shower
of twigs. Many a time he had to throw up his
arms across his face before he leaned and thrust on
into the teeth of the blast.
But he was growing accustomed to seeing
through this veil of snow and thick darkness.
All things were dreamlike in dimness, of course, but
he could make out terrific cloud effects, as the clouds
gushed over the summit and down the slope a little
way like the smoke of enormous guns; and again a pyramid
of mist was like a false mountain before him, a mountain
that took on movement and rushed to overwhelm him,
only to melt away and become simply a shadow among
shadows above his head.
Once or twice before the dawn, he
rested, not from weariness perhaps, but from lack
of breath, turning his back to the west and bowing
his head. Walking into the wind it had become
positively difficult to draw breath!
Still it gained power incredibly.
Up the side of Scalped Mountain it was a steady weight
pressing against him rather than a wind. And now
and then, when the weight relaxed, he stumbled forward
on his knees. For there was now hardly any shelter.
He was approaching the timberline where trees stand
as high as a man and little higher.
Dawn found him at the edge of the
tree line. He flung himself on his face, his
head on his arms, to rest and wait until the treacherous
time of dawn should have passed. While the day
grew steadily his heart sank. He needed the rest,
but the cold bit into him while he lay extended, and
the peril of the summit would be before him for his
march of the day. The wind mourned over him as
if it anticipated his defeat. Never had there
been such wind, he thought. It screamed above
him. It dropped away in sudden lulls of more appalling
silence. Then, far off, he would hear a wave
of the storm begin, wash across a crest, thunder in
a canyon, and then break on the timberline with a prolonged
and mighty roaring. Those giant approaches made
him hold his breath, and when the wave of confusion
passed, he found himself often breathless.
Day came. He was on the very
verge of the line with a dense fence of stunted trees
just before him and the wilderness of snow beyond,
sloping up to the crest, outlined in white against
the solid gray sky. The Spartans of the forest
were around him — fir, pine, spruce, birch,
and trembling little aspens up there among the stoutest.
All were of one height, clean-shaven by the volleys
of the wind-driven sand and pebbles that clipped off
any treetop that aspired above the mass. In solid
numbers was their salvation, and they grew dense as
grass, two feet high on the battlefront. They
were carved by that wind, for all storms came here
out of the west, and the storm face of every tree was
denuded of branches. To the east the foliage streamed
away. Even in calm weather those trees spoke
of storm.
Bull Hunter sat up to put on his snowshoes.
It was a white world below him and above. Winter,
which a day before had vanished, now came back with
a rush off the summits, where its snows were still
piled. Again the heart of the big man quaked.
Down in the hollow, over that ridge, was the house
of the Campbells. They would be getting up now.
Joe would be making the fire, and Harry slicing the
bacon. It made a cheerful picture to Bull.
He could close his eyes and hear the fire snap and
see the stove steam with smoke through every fissure
before the draft caught in the chimney. From
the shed came the neigh of Maggie, calling softly
to him.
He shook his head with a groan, stood
up, and strode out of the timber into the summit lands.
It was a great desert. Never could it be construed
as a place for life. Even lichens were almost
out of place here, and what folly could lead a man
across the shifting snows? But to be called a
man, to be admired in silence, to be asked for opinions,
to be deferred to — this was a treasure worth
any price! He bowed himself to the wind again
and made for the summit with the peculiar stride which
a man must use with snowshoes.
He dared not slacken his efforts now.
The cold had been increasing, and to pause meant peril
of freezing. It was a highly electrified air,
and the result was a series of maddening mirages.
He stumbled over solid rocks where nothing seemed
to be in his way; and again what seemed a rock of
huge size was nothing at all. Bull discovered
that what seemed firm ground beneath him, as he started
to round a precipice, might after all be the effect
of the mirage.
Added to this was another difficulty.
As he wound slowly, about midday, up the last reach,
with the summit just above him, the wind carried masses
of cloud over the crest and into his face. He
walked alternately in a bewildering, driving fog and
then in an air made crazy with electricity. Again
and again, from one side or the other, he started
when the storm boomed and cannonaded down a ravine
and then belched out into the open. All this
time the babel of the winds overhead never ceased,
and the force of the storm cut up under him with such
violence that he was almost raised from the earth.
Then an unexpected barrier obtruded — a
literal mountain of ice was before him. The snow
of the recent fall had been whipped away, and the
surface of the mountain, here perilously steep, was
now sleek and solid with ice. Bull looked gloomily
toward the summit so close above him, and the ice
glimmered in the dull light. There was only one
way to make even the attempt. He sat down, took
off his snowshoes, strapped them to his back, and
began to work his way up the slope, battering out
each foothold with the head of his ax. It was
possible to ascend in this manner, but it would be
practically impossible to descend.
Once committed to this way, he had
either to go on to the summit, or else perish.
Working slowly, with little possible muscular exercise
to warm him, he began to grow chilled and the wind-driven
cold numbed his ears. But, more than that, the
wind was now a grim peril, for, from time to time,
it swerved and leaped on him heavily from the side.
Once, off balance, he looked back at the dazzling slope
below him. He would be a shapeless mass of flesh
long before he tumbled to the bottom.
Vaguely, as he hewed his footholds
and worked his way up, he yearned for the cleverness
of Harry or the wit of Joe. What an ally either
of them would be! That he was undertaking a task
from which either of them would have shrunk in horror
never occurred to him. Yonder, beyond the summit,
lay his destiny — Johnstown — and
this was the way toward it; it was a simple thing
to Bull. He could no more vary from his course
than a magnetic needle can vary from its pole.
Suddenly he came on a break in the
solid face of the ice. Above him was a narrow
rift through the ice to the gravel beneath; how it
was made, Bull could not guess. But he took advantage
of it. Presently he was striding on toward the
summit, beating his hands to restore the circulation
and gingerly rubbing his ears.
There was a magical change as he reached
the summit and sat down behind some rocks to regain
his breath and quiet his shaken nerves. The clouds
split apart in the zenith; the sun burst through; on
both sides the broad mountain billowed away to white
lowlands; the air was alive with little, brilliant
spots of electricity.
It cheered Bull Hunter vastly.
The gale, which was tumbling the clouds down the arch
of the sky and toward the east, was more mighty than
ever, but he put his head down to it confidently and
began the descent.