There was more snow on this side,
and to travel through it he soon found that he must
put on the snowshoes again; but after that the descent
was actually restful compared with the labors of the
climb. Yonder was the dark streak of the timberline
again. Far down the valley he watched it curving
in and out along the mountainside like a water level.
Below was the darkness of the forest where other things
lived, and where Bull could live more easily, also.
Never had trees seemed such beautiful and friendly
things to him.
Once a thought stopped him completely.
He was in a new world. He was seeing everything
for the first time. On other days he had gone
out with others. Under their guidance, not trusted
to undertake an expedition by himself, he looked at
nothing until it was pointed out to him, heard nothing
that was not first called to his attention. He
had always wondered at the acuteness of the senses
of all other men. But now, looking on the mountains
for himself, he decided, with a start of the heart,
that they were beautiful—beautiful and terrible
at once, with the reality that he had never found in
his books. What leveled spear of a knight, in
the pages of romance, could equal the invisible thrust
of this wind?
He reached the timberline. Looking
back, he saw the summit, a brilliant line of white
against a blue sky. Again the heart of Bull Hunter
leaped. Here was a great treasure that he had
taken in with one grasp of the eyes and which he could
never lose!
He turned down the valley. Where
it swerved out into the lower plain, stood Johnstown,
and there he was to cross the flight of Pete Reeve,
if Pete were indeed flying. But it was incredible
that the man who had struck down Uncle Bill Campbell
should flee from any man or number of men.
He had reached the bottom of the narrow
valley. A dull noise came down to him from the
mountain in the lull of the wind. He looked up.
Far away, miles and miles, near the
summit of Scalped Mountain, a snaky form of mist was
twisting swiftly down. He looked curiously.
The thing grew, traveling with great speed that increased
with every moment. It increased—it
gained velocity—a snowslide!
He watched it in doubt. It was
twisting like a snake down the farther side of the
mountain, but, in his experience, slides were as treacherous
as serpents. Bull started hastily for a low cliff
that stood up from the floor of the valley, clear
of the trees.
He had not gone far when the wind
fell away to a whisper, and a dull roaring caught
his ear. He looked back over his shoulder in alarm.
A great wall of white was shooting down the mountainside.
The little slide of surface snow, which had twisted
across the surface of the old snows of the winter,
had been gaining in weight, in momentum, picking up
claws of shrubbery, teeth of stone, and eating through
layer after layer of the old snow, packed hard as
ice. Now it was a roaring mass with a front steadily
increasing in height, and far away in the rear it
tossed up a tail of snow dust, a flying mist that gave
Bull an impression of speed greater than the main
wall of the snow itself.
The noise grew amazingly, and coming
in range of the opposite wall of the valley, a low
and steadily increasing thunder poured into the ears
of Bull. It was a fascinating thing to watch,
and at this distance to the side he was quite safe.
But at the very moment that he reached this decision,
the front of the slide smashed with a noise like volleyed
canyon against the side of a hill, tossed immense arms
of white in the air, floundered, and then veered with
the speed of an express train rounding a curve and
rocked away down the slope straight for Bull.
Turned cold with dread, he saw it hit the timberline
with a great crashing, and the dark forms of the trees
were dashed up by the running mass of stones and then
swallowed in the boiling front of the slide.
He waited to see no more, but dashed
on for the saving cliff. Once his back was turned
it seemed that the slide gained speed. The immense
roaring literally leaped on him from behind, and in
the roar, his senses were drowned. He could feel
his knees weaken and buckle, but the cliff, now just
before him, gave him fresh strength. But was the
cliff high enough? He hurried up to higher ground
and flung himself prostrate. The front of the
slide was cutting down the heavily forested slope
as though the trees were blades of grass before a keen
scythe. The noise passed all description.
Once he thought the mass was changing
direction. It put out a massive arm to the left,
licked down five hundred trees at a gulp, and then,
smashing its fist into a hillside, flung back into
the valley floor, tossing the great trees in its top
and poured straight at him. He watched it in
one of those dazes during which one sees everything.
The whole body came like water down a chute, but one
part of the front wall spilled out ahead and then
another, and then the top, overtaking the rest, toppled
crashing to the bottom. And so it rushed out of
sight beneath the cliff. But would it wash over
the top?
The first answer was an impact that
shook the ground under him, and then he heard a noise
like a huge ripping explosion. A dozen lofty
geysers of snow streamed up into the air, dazzling
against the sun, misty at the edges of each column,
whose center was solid tons and tons of snow.
Old pines and spruces, their branches shaved away in
the tumult of the slide, were picked up and hurled
like javelins over the cliff; a shower of fragments
beat on the body of Bull; and then the main mass of
snow washed up over the edge of the cliff in a great
mound, and the slide was ended.
He crawled slowly back to his feet.
Far up the mountainside, beginning in a point, the
track of the slide swept down in a broadening scar,
black and raw, across forest and snow. Far down
the valley the last echoes of thunder were passing
away to a murmur, and the valley floor, beneath the
cliff, was a mass of snow and tree trunks.
Bull took off the snowshoes and climbed
along the valley wall until he could descend to the
clear floor beneath him. Then he headed down
toward Johnstown.
It was well past midday when he escaped
the slide; it was the beginning of night when, at
the conclusion of that first heroic march, he reached
Johnstown. With hunger his stomach cleaved to
his back, and his knees were weak with the labor.
Stamping through the snow to the hotel
he asked the idlers around the stove, “Has any
of you gents seen a man named Pete Reeve pass through
this town?”
They looked at him in amazement.
He had closed the door behind him, and now, with his
battered hat pushed high on his head, he seemed taller
than the entrance—taller and as wide, a
mountain of a man. The efforts of the march had
collected a continual frown on his forehead, and as
he peered about from face to face, no one for a moment
was able to answer, but each looked to his companion.
It was the proprietor who answered
finally. Talk was his commercial medium and staff
of life. “What sort of a looking man, captain?”
Bull blinked at him. He was not
used to honorary epithets such as this, and he searched
the face of the proprietor carefully to detect mockery.
To his surprise the other showed signs of what Bull
dimly recognized as fear. Fear of him—of
Bull Hunter!
“The way you look at me,”
said the other and laughed uneasily, “I figure
it’s pretty lucky that I ain’t this here
Pete Reeve. That so, boys?”
The boys joined in the laughter, but
they kept it subdued, their eyes upon the giant at
the door. He was leaning against the wall, and
the sight of his outspread hand was far from reassuring.
But Bull went on to describe his man.
“Not very big; hands like the claws of a bird’s;
iron-gray hair; quick ways.” That was Uncle
Bill’s description.
“Sure he’s been here,”
said the owner. “I recognized him right
off. He was through about dusk. He came
over the mountains and just got past the summit, he
said, before the storm hit. Lucky, eh?”
He looked at the battered coat of Bull. “Kind
of appears like you mightn’t of been so lucky?”
“Me?” asked Bull gently.
“Nope. I was at the timberline on the other
side about daybreak today.”
There was a sudden and chilly silence;
men looked at one another. Obviously no man could
have traveled that distance between dawn and dark,
but it was as well not to express disbelief to a man
who could tell a lie as big as his body.
“I got to eat,” said Bull.
The proprietor jumped out of his chair. “I
can fix you up, son.”
He led the way, Bull following with
his enormous strides, and, as the floor creaked under
him, the eyes of the others jerked after him, stride
by stride. It was beginning to seem possible that
this man had done what he said he had done. When
the door slammed behind him and his steps went creaking
through the room beyond, a mutter of a hum arose around
the stove.
As a matter of fact it was the beginning
of the great legend that was finally to bulk around
the name of the big man. And it was fitting that
the huge figure of Bull Hunter should have come upon
the attention of men in this way, descending out of
the storm and the mountains.
That he had done something historic
was far from the mind of Bull as he stalked into the
dining room.
“You sit right down here,”
his host was saying, placing a chair at the table.
Bull tried the chair with his hand.
It groaned and squeaked under the weight. “Chairs
don’t seem to be made for me,” he said
simply. “Besides I’m more used to
sitting on the floor.” He dropped to the
floor accordingly, with the effect of a small earthquake.
The proprietor stared, but he swallowed his astonishment.
“What you’d like to eat is something hearty,
I figure.”
“What you got?” said Bull.
“Well, Mrs. Jarney come in this
morning with a dozen fresh eggs. Got some prime
bacon, too, and some jerky and—”
“That dozen eggs,” said
Bull thoughtfully, “will start me, and then a
platter of bacon, and you might mix up a bowl of flapjacks.
You ain’t got a quart or so of canned milk,
partner?”
The proprietor could only nod, for
he dared not trust his voice. Fleeing to the
kitchen he repeated the prodigious order to his wife.
Then he circled by a back way and communicated the
tidings to the “boys” around the stove.
“A couple of dozen eggs, he
says to me, and a few pounds of beef and three or
four quarts of milk and a bowl of flapjacks and a platter
of bacon,” was the way the second version of
the historic order for food came to the idlers.
Half a dozen of the men risked the
cold and the wind to steal around to the side of the
house and peer through the window at the huge, bunched
figure that sat on the floor. They found him with
his chin dropped upon the burly fist and a frown on
his forehead, for Bull was thinking.
He would have been glad to have found
Pete Reeve in Johnstown and have the matter over with.
But, after all, it was beginning to occur to him that
it might not be wise to kill the man in the presence
of other people. They might attempt to correct
him with the assistance of a rope and a limb of a
tree. Somewhere he must cut in ahead of this
Reeve and start out at him if possible. As for
his ability to keep pace with a horse he had no doubt
that he could do it fairly well. More than once
he had gone out on foot, while Harry and Joe rode,
and he had pressed the little ponies, bearing their
riders slowly up and down the slopes, to keep pace
with him. On the level, of course, it was a different
matter, but in broken country he more than kept up.
“Have you got a grudge agin’
Reeve?” asked the host, as he brought in the
fried eggs.
“Maybe,” admitted Bull,
and instantly he began to attack the food.
The proprietor watched with a growing
awe. No chinook ever ate snow as this hungry
giant melted food to nothingness. He came back
with the first stack of flapjacks and bacon and more
questions. “But I’d think that a
gent like you’d be pretty careful about tangling
with Pete Reeve—him being so handy with
a gun and you such a tolerable big target.”
“I’ve figured that all
out,” said Bull calmly. “But they’s
so much of me to kill that I don’t figure one
bullet could do the work. Do you?”
The eyes of the proprietor grew large.
He swallowed, and before he could answer Bull continued
in the exposition of his theory. “Before
he shoots the next shot, maybe I can get my hands on
him.”
“You going to fight him bare hands agin’
a gun?”
“You see,” said Bull apologetically,
“I ain’t much good with a gun, but I feel
sort of curious about what would happen if I got my
grip on a man.”
And that was the foundation on which
another section of the Bull Hunter legend was built.