How long Tolly Trevor remained in
a state of horrified surprise no one can tell, for
he was incapable of observation at the time, besides
being alone. On returning to consciousness he
found himself galloping towards the exploded fortress
at full speed, and did not draw rein till he approached
the bank of the rivulet. Reflecting that a thoroughbred
hunter could not clear the stream, even in daylight,
he tried to pull up, but his horse refused.
It had run away with him.
Although constitutionally brave, the
boy felt an unpleasant sensation of some sort as he
contemplated the inevitable crash that awaited him;
for, even if the horse should perceive his folly and
try to stop on reaching the bank, the tremendous pace
attained would render the attempt futile.
“Stop! won’t you?
Wo-o-o!” cried Tolly, straining at the reins
till the veins of his neck and forehead seemed about
to burst.
But the horse would neither “stop”
nor “wo-o-o!” It was otherwise,
however, with the pony. That amiable creature
had been trained well, and had learned obedience.
Blessed quality! Would that the human race-especially
its juvenile section-understood better the
value of that inestimable virtue! The pony began
to pull back at the sound of “wo!”
Its portion in childhood had probably been woe when
it refused to recognise the order. The result
was that poor Tolly’s right arm, over which
was thrown the pony’s rein, had to bear the strain
of conflicting opinions.
A bright idea struck his mind at this
moment. Bright ideas always do strike the mind
of genius at critical moments! He grasped both
the reins of his steed in his right hand, and took
a sudden turn of them round his wrist. Then
he turned about-not an instant too soon-looked
the pony straight in the face, and said “Wo!”
in a voice of command that was irresistible.
The pony stopped at once, stuck out its fore legs,
and was absolutely dragged a short way over the ground.
The strain on Tolly’s arm was awful, but the
arm was a stout one, though small. It stood
the strain, and the obstinate runaway was arrested
on the brink of destruction with an almost broken
jaw.
The boy slipped to the ground and
hastily fastened the steeds to a tree. Even in
that hour of supreme anxiety he could not help felicitating
himself on the successful application of pony docility
to horsey self-will.
But these and all other feelings of
humour and satisfaction were speedily put to flight
when, after crossing the remains of the plank bridge
with some difficulty, he stood before the hideous wreck
of his friend’s late home, where he had spent
so many glad hours listening to marvellous adventures
from Paul Bevan, or learning how to read and cipher,
as well as drinking in wisdom generally, from the Rose
of Oregon.
It was an awful collapse. A
yawning gulf had been driven into the earth, and the
hut-originally a solid structure-having
been hurled bodily skyward, shattered to atoms, and
inextricably mixed in its parts, had come down again
into the gulf as into a ready-made grave.
It would be vain to search for any
sort of letter, sign, or communication from his friends
among the debris. Tolly felt that at
once, yet he could not think of leaving without a search.
After one deep and prolonged sigh he threw off his
lethargy, and began a close inspection of the surroundings.
“You see,” he muttered
to himself, as he moved quickly yet stealthily about,
“they’d never have gone off without leavin’
some scrap of information for me, to tell me which
way they’d gone, even though they’d gone
off in a lightnin’ hurry. But p’raps
they didn’t. The reptiles may have comed
on ’em unawares, an’ left ’em no
time to do anything. Of course they can’t
have killed ’em. Nobody ever could catch
Paul Bevan asleep-no, not the sharpest
redskin in the land. That’s quite out o’
the question.”
Though out of the question, however,
the bare thought of such a catastrophe caused little
Trevor’s under lip to tremble, a mist to obscure
his vision, and a something-or-other to fill his throat,
which he had to swallow with a gulp. Moreover,
he went back to the ruined hut and began to pull about
the wreck with a fluttering heart, lest he should
come on some evidence that his friends had been murdered.
Then he went to the highest part of the rock to rest
a little, and consider what had best be done next.
While seated there, gazing on the
scene of silent desolation, which the pale moonlight
rendered more ghastly, the poor boy’s spirit
failed him a little. He buried his face in his
hands and burst into tears.
Soon this weakness, as he deemed it,
passed away. He dried his eyes, roughly, and
rose to resume his search, and it is more than probable
that he would ere long have bethought him of the cave
where Betty had left her note, if his attention had
not been suddenly arrested by a faint glimmer of ruddy
light in a distant part of the forest. The robbers
were stirring up their fires, and sending a tell-tale
glow into the sky.
“O-ho!” exclaimed Tolly Trevor.
He said nothing more, but there was
a depth of meaning in the tone and look accompanying
that “O-ho!” which baffles description.
Tightening his belt, he at once glided
down the slope, flitted across the rivulet, skimmed
over the open space, and melted into the forest after
the most approved method of Red Indian tactics.
The expedition from which he had just
returned having been peaceful, little Trevor carried
no warlike weapons-for the long bowie-knife
at his side, and the little hatchet stuck in his girdle,
were, so to speak, merely domestic implements, without
which he never moved abroad. But as war was
not his object, the want of rifle and revolver mattered
little. He soon reached the neighbourhood of
the robbers’ fire, and, when close enough to
render extreme caution necessary, threw himself flat
on the ground and advanced a la “snake-in-the-grass.”
Presently he came within earshot,
and listened attentively, though without much interest,
to a deal of boastful small talk with which the marauders
beguiled the time, while they fumigated their mouths
and noses preparatory to turning in for the night.
At last the name of Paul Bevan smote
his ear, causing it, metaphorically, to go on full
cock.
“I’m sartin sure,”
said one of the speakers, “that the old screw
has gone right away to Simpson’s Gully.”
“If I thought that, I’d
follow him up, and make a dash at the Gully itself,”
said Stalker, plucking a burning stick from the fire
to rekindle his pipe.
“If you did you’d get
wopped,” remarked Goff, with a touch of sarcasm,
for the lieutenant of the band was not so respectful
to his commander as a well-disciplined man should
be.
“What makes you think so?” demanded the
chief.
“The fact that the diggers are
a sight too many for us,” returned Goff.
“Why, we’d find ’em three to one,
if not four.”
“Well, that, coupled with the
uncertainty of his having gone to Simpson’s
Gully,” said the chief, “decides me to
make tracks down south to the big woods on the slopes
of the Sawback Hills. There are plenty of parties
travelling thereabouts with lots of gold, boys, and
difficulties enough in the way of hunting us out o’
the stronghold. I’ll leave you there for
a short time and make a private excursion to Simpson’s
Gully, to see if my enemy an’ the beautiful Betty
are there.”
“An’ get yourself shot
or stuck for your pains,” said Goff. “Do
you suppose that such a hulking, long-legged fellow
as you are, can creep into a camp like an or’nary
man without drawin’ attention?”
“Perhaps not,” returned
Stalker; “but are there not such things as disguises?
Have you not seen me with my shootin’-coat and
botanical box an’ blue spectacles, an’
my naturally sandy hair.”
“No, no, captain!” cried
Goff, with a laugh, “not sandy; say yellow, or
golden.”
“Well, golden, then, if you
will. You’ve seen it dyed black, haven’t
you?”
“Oh yes! I’ve seen
you in these humblin’ circumstances before now,”
returned the lieutenant, “and I must say your
own mother wouldn’t know you. But what’s
the use o’ runnin’ the risk, captain?”
“Because I owe Bevan a grudge!”
said the chief, sternly, “and mean to be revenged
on him. Besides, I want the sweet Betty for a
wife, and intend to have her, whether she will or
no. She’ll make a capital bandit’s
wife-after a little while, when she gets
used to the life. So now you know some of my
plans, and you shall see whether the hulking botanist
won’t carry all before him.”
“O-ho!” muttered the snake-in-the-grass,
very softly; and there was something so compound and
significant in the tone of that second “O-ho!”
soft though it was, that it not only baffles description,
but-really, you know, it would be an insult
to your understanding, good reader, to say more in
the way of explanation! There was also a heaving
of the snake’s shoulders, which, although unaccompanied
by sound, was eminently suggestive.
Feeling that he had by that time heard
quite enough, Tolly Trevor effected a masterly retreat,
and returned to the place where he had left the horses.
On the way he recalled with satisfaction the fact
that Paul Bevan had once pointed out to him the exact
direction of Simpson’s Gully at a time when
he meant to send him on an errand thither. “You’ve
on’y to go over there, lad,” Paul had
said, pointing towards the forest in rear of his hut,
“and hold on for two days straight as the crow
flies till you come to it. You can’t well
miss it.”
Tolly knew that there was also an
easier though longer route by the plains, but as he
was not sure of it he made up his mind to take to the
forest.
The boy was sufficiently trained in
woodcraft to feel pretty confident of finding his
way, for he knew the north side of trees by their bark,
and could find out the north star when the sky was
clear, besides possessing a sort of natural aptitude
for holding on in a straight line. He mounted
the obstinate horse, therefore, took the rein of the
obedient pony on his right arm, and, casting a last
look of profound regret on Bevan’s desolated
homestead, rode swiftly away. So eager was he
that he took no thought for the morrow. He knew
that the wallet slung at his saddle-bow contained
a small supply of food-as much, probably,
as would last three days with care. That was
enough to render Tolly Trevor the most independent
and careless youth in Oregon.
While these events were occurring
in the neighbourhood of Bevan’s Gully, three
red men, in all the glory of vermilion, charcoal, and
feathers, were stalking through the forest in the
vicinity of the spot where poor Tom Brixton had laid
him down to die. These children of the wilderness
stalked in single file-from habit we presume,
for there was ample space for them to have walked
abreast if so inclined. They seemed to be unsociable
beings, for they also stalked in solemn silence.
Suddenly the first savage came to
an abrupt pause, and said, “Ho!” the second
savage said, “He!” and the third said,
“Hi!” After which, for full a minute,
they stared at the ground in silent wonder and said
nothing. They had seen a footprint! It
did not by any means resemble that deep, well developed,
and very solitary footprint at which Robinson Crusoe
is wont to stare in nursery picture-books. No;
it was a print which was totally invisible to ordinary
eyes, and revealed itself to these children of the
woods in the form of a turned leaf and a cracked twig.
Such as it was, it revealed a track which the three
children followed up until they found Tom Brixton-or
his body-lying on the ground near to the
little spring.
Again these children said, “Ho!”
“He!” and “Hi!” respectively,
in varying tones according to their varied character.
Then they commenced a jabber, which we are quite
unable to translate, and turned Tom over on his back.
The motion awoke him, for he sat up and stared.
Even that effort proved too much for
him in his weak state, for he fell back and fainted.
The Indians proved to be men of promptitude.
They lifted the white man up; one got Tom’s
shoulders on his back, another put his legs over his
shoulders, and thus they stalked away with him.
When the first child of the wood grew tired, the
unburdened one stepped in to his relief; when the
second child grew tired, the first one went to his
aid; when all the children grew tired, they laid their
burden on the ground and sat down beside it.
Thus, by easy stages, was Tom Brixton conveyed away
from the spot where he had given himself up as hopelessly
lost.
Now, it could not have been more than
six hours after Tom had thus been borne away that
poor Tolly Trevor came upon the same scene. We
say “poor” advisedly, for he had not only
suffered the loss of much fragmentary clothing in
his passage through that tangled wood, but also most
of the food with which he had started, and a good deal
of skin from his shins, elbows, knuckles, and knees,
as well as the greater part of his patience.
Truly, he was in a pitiable plight, for the forest
had turned out to be almost impassable for horses,
and in his journey he had not only fallen off, and
been swept out of the saddle by overhanging branches
frequently, but had to swim swamps, cross torrents,
climb precipitous banks, and had stuck in quagmires
innumerable.
As for the horses-their
previous owner could not have recognised them.
It is true they were what is styled “all there,”
but there was an inexpressible droop of their heads
and tails, a weary languor in their eyes, and an abject
waggle about their knees which told of hope deferred
and spirit utterly gone. The pony was the better
of the two. Its sprightly glance of amiability
had changed into a gaze of humble resignation, whereas
the aspect of the obstinate horse was one of impotent
ill-nature. It would have bitten, perhaps, if
strength had permitted, but as to its running away-ha!
Well, Tolly Trevor approached-it
could hardly be said he rode up to- the
spring before mentioned, where he passed the footprints
in stupid blindness.
He dismounted, however, to drink and rest a while.
“Come on-you brute!”
he cried, almost savagely, dragging the horse to the
water.
The creature lowered its head and
gazed as though to say, “What liquid is that?”
As the pony, however, at once took
a long and hearty draught it also condescended to
drink, while Tolly followed suit. Afterwards
he left the animals to graze, and sat down under a
neighbouring tree to rest and swallow his last morsel
of food.
It was sad to see the way in which
the poor boy carefully shook out and gathered up the
few crumbs in his wallet so that not one of them should
be lost; and how slowly he ate them, as if to prolong
the sensation of being gratified! During the
two days which he had spent in the forest his face
had grown perceptibly thinner, and his strength had
certainly diminished. Even the reckless look
of defiant joviality, which was one of the boy’s
chief characteristics, had given place to a restless
anxiety that prevented his seeing humour in anything,
and induced a feeling of impatience when a joke chanced
irresistibly to bubble up in his mind. He was
once again reduced almost to the weeping point, but
his sensations were somewhat different for, when he
had stood gazing at the wreck of Bevan’s home,
the nether lip had trembled because of the sorrows
of friends, whereas now he was sorrowing because of
an exhausted nature, a weakened heart, and a sinking
spirit. But the spirit had not yet utterly given
way!
“Come!” he cried, starting
up. “This won’t do, Tolly.
Be a man! Why, only think-you have
got over two days and two nights. That was the
time allowed you by Paul, so your journey’s all
but done-must be. Of course those
brutes-forgive me, pony, that brute,
I mean-has made me go much slower than
if I had come on my own legs, but notwithstanding,
it cannot be-hallo! what’s that!”
The exclamation had reference to a
small dark object which lay a few yards from the spot
on which he sat. He ran and picked it up.
It was Tom Brixton’s cap-with his
name rudely written on the lining. Beside it
lay a piece of bark on which was pencil-writing.
With eager, anxious haste the boy
began to peruse it, but he was unaccustomed to read
handwriting, and when poor Tom had pencilled the lines
his hand was weak and his brain confused, so that the
characters were doubly difficult to decipher.
After much and prolonged effort the boy made out
the beginning. It ran thus:
“This is probably the last letter
that I, Tom Brixton, shall ever write. (I put
down my name now, in case I never finish it.) O dearest
mother!-”
Emotion had no doubt rendered the
hand less steady at this point, for here the words
were quite illegible-at least to little
Trevor-who finally gave up the attempt
in despair. The effect of this discovery, however,
was to send the young blood coursing wildly through
the veins, so that a great measure of strength returned,
as if by magic.
The boy’s first care was naturally
to look for traces of the lost man, and he set about
this with a dull fear at his heart, lest at any moment
he should come upon the dead body of his friend.
In a few minutes he discovered the track made by
the Indians, which led him to the spot near to the
spring where Tom had fallen. To his now fully-awakened
senses Trevor easily read the story, as far as signs
could tell it.
Brixton had been all but starved to
death. He had lain down under a tree to die-the
very tree under which he himself had so recently given
way to despair. While lying there he-Brixton-had
scrawled his last words on the bit of birch-bark.
Then he had tried to reach the spring, but had fainted
either before reaching it or after leaving. This
he knew, because the mark of Tom’s coat, part
of his waist-belt and the handle of his bowie-knife
were all impressed on the softish ground with sufficient
distinctness to be discerned by a sharp eye.
The moccasined footprints told of Indians having found
Brixton-still alive, for they would not
have taken the trouble to carry him off if he had been
dead. The various sizes of the moccasined feet
told that the party of Indians numbered three; and
the trail of the red men, with its occasional halting-places,
pointed out clearly the direction in which they had
gone. Happily this was also the direction in
which little Trevor was going.
Of course the boy did not read this
off as readily as we have written it all down.
It cost him upwards of an hour’s patient research;
but when at last he did arrive at the result of his
studies he wasted no time in idle speculation.
His first duty was to reach Simpson’s Gully,
discover his friend Paul Bevan, and deliver to him
the piece of birch-bark he had found, and the information
he had gleaned.
By the time Tolly had come to this
conclusion his horse and pony had obtained both rest
and nourishment enough to enable them to raise their
drooping heads and tails an inch or two, so that when
the boy mounted the former with some of his old dash
and energy, it shook its head, gave a short snort,
and went off at a fair trot.
Fortunately the ground improved just
beyond this point, opening out into park-like scenery,
which, in another mile or two, ran into level prairie
land. This Trevor knew from description was close
to the mountain range, in which lay the gully he was
in quest of. The hope which had begun to rise
increased, and communicating itself, probably by sympathetic
electricity, to the horse, produced a shuffling gallop,
which ere long brought them to a clump of wood.
On rounding this they came in sight of the longed-for
hills.
Before nightfall Simpson’s Gully
was reached, and little Trevor was directed to the
tent of Paul Bevan, who had arrived there only the
day before.
“It’s a strange story,
lad,” said Paul, after the boy had run rapidly
over the chief points of the news he had to give, to
which Betty, Fred, and Flinders sat listening with
eager interest.
“We must be off to search for
him without delay,” said Fred Westly, rising.
“It’s right ye are, sor,”
cried Flinders, springing up. “Off to-night
an’ not a moment to lose.”
“We’ll talk it over first,
boys,” said Paul. “Come with me.
I’ve a friend in the camp as’ll help
us.”
“Did you not bring the piece
of bark?” asked Betty of the boy, as the men
went out.
“Oh! I forgot. Of
course I did,” cried Trevor, drawing it from
his breast-pocket. “The truth is I’m
so knocked up that I scarce know what I’m about.”
“Lie down here on this deer-skin,
poor boy, and rest while I read it.”
Tolly Trevor flung himself on the
rude but welcome couch, and almost instantly fell
asleep, while Betty Bevan, spreading the piece of
birch-bark on her knee, began to spell out the words
and try to make sense of Tom Brixton’s last
epistle.