THE TELEGRAPH STATION
The darkness to the north was suddenly
split apart by a solid sheet of flame. Dick
by the light saw many men on horseback and others on
foot, bridle rein over arm. It was well for
the seven hundred boys that they had pressed themselves
against the solid earth. A sheet of bullets
swept toward them. Most passed over their heads,
but many struck upon bones and flesh, and cries of
pain rose from the lines of men lying along the railroad
track.
The seven hundred pulled trigger and
fired at the flash. They fired so well that
Dick could hear Southern horses neighing with pain,
and struggling in the darkness. He felt sure
that many men, too, had been hit. At least no
charge came. The seven hundred shouted with
exultation and, leaping to their feet, prepared to
fire a second volley. But the swift command of
their officers quickly put them down again.
“Don’t forget the other
Confederate column to the south of us,” whispered
Whitley. “They did not fire at first for
fear their bullets would pass over our heads and strike
their own comrades. For the same reason they
must have dropped back a little in order to avoid the
fire of their friends. Their volley will come
from an angle about midway between our left and rear.”
Just as he spoke the last words the
rifles flashed at the surmised angle and again the
bullets beat among the young troops or swept over their
heads. A soldier was killed only a few feet from
Dick. The boy picked up his rifle and ammunition
and began to fire whenever be saw the flash of an
opposing weapon. But the fire of both Confederate
columns ceased in a minute or two, and not a shot
nor the sound of a single order came out of the darkness.
But Dick with his ear to the soft earth, could hear
the crush of hoofs in the mud, and with a peculiar
ability to discern whence sound came he knew that
the force on the left and rear was crossing the railroad
track in order to join their comrades on the north.
He whispered his knowledge to Whitley, who whispered
back:
“It’s the natural thing
for them to do. They could not afford to fight
on in the darkness with two separate forces.
The two columns would soon be firing into each other.”
Colonel Newcomb now gave an order
for the men to rise and follow the railroad track,
but also to fire at the flash of the rifles whenever
a volley was poured upon them. He must not only
beat off the Southern attack, but also continue the
journey to those points in the west where they were
needed so sorely. Some of his men had been killed,
and he was compelled to leave their bodies where they
had fallen. Others were wounded, but without
exception they were helped along by their comrades.
Warner also had secured a rifle, with
which he fired occasionally, but he and Dick, despite
the darkness, kept near to Colonel Newcomb in order
that they might deliver any orders that he should choose
to give. Sergeant Whitley was close to them.
Dick presently heard the rush of water.
“What is that?” he exclaimed.
“It’s the little river
that runs down the valley,” replied Warner.
“There’s a slope here and it comes like
a torrent. A bridge or rather trestle is only
a little further, and we’ve got to walk the ties,
if we reach the other side. They’ll make
their heaviest rush there, I suppose, as beyond a
doubt they are thoroughly acquainted with the ground.”
The Northern troops left the track
which here ran along an embankment several feet high,
and took shelter on its southern side. They now
had an advantage for a while, as they fired from a
breastwork upon their foes, who were in the open.
But the darkness, lit only by the flashes of the
rifles, kept the fire of both sides from being very
destructive, the bullets being sent mainly at random.
Dick dimly saw the trestle work ahead
of them, and the roaring of the little river increased.
He did not know how deep the water was, but he was
sure that it could not be above his waist as it was
a small stream. An idea occurred to him and he
promptly communicated it to Colonel Newcomb.
“Suppose, sir,” he said,
“that we ford the river just below the trestle.
It will deceive them and we’ll be half way across
before they suspect the change.”
“A good plan, Mr. Mason,”
said Colonel Newcomb. “We’ll try
it.”
Word was quickly passed along the
line that they should turn to the left as they approached
the trestle, march swiftly down the slope, and dash
into the stream. As fast as they reached the
other side of the ford the men should form upon the
bank there, and with their rifles cover the passage
of their comrades.
The skeleton work of the trestle now
rose more clearly into view. The rain had almost
ceased and faint rays of moonlight showed through
the rifts where the clouds had broken apart.
The boys distinctly heard the gurgling rush of waters,
and they also saw the clear, bluish surface of the
mountain stream. The same quickening of light
disclosed the Southern force on their right flank
and rear, only four or five hundred yards away.
Dick’s hasty glance backward lingered for a
moment on a powerful man on a white horse just in
advance of the Southern column. He saw this man
raise his hand and then command the men to fire.
He and twenty others under the impulse of excitement
shouted to the regiment to drop down, and the Northern
lads did so.
Most of the volley passed over their
heads. Rising they sent back a return discharge,
and then the head of the columns rushed into the stream.
Dick felt swift water whirling about him and tugging
at his body, but it rose no higher than his waist,
although foam and spray were dashed into his face.
He heard all around him the splashing of his comrades,
and their murmurs of satisfaction. They realized
now that they were not only able to retreat before
a much superior force, but this same stream, when
crossed, would form a barrier behind which they could
fight two to one.
The Confederate leader, whoever he
might be, and Dick had no doubt that he was the redoubtable
Turner Ashby, also appreciated the full facts and
he drove his whole force straight at the regiment.
It was well for the young troops that part of them
were already across, and, under the skillful leadership
of Colonel Newcomb, Major Hertford, and three or four
old, regular army sergeants, of whom the best was Whitley,
were already forming in line of battle.
“Kneel,” shouted the colonel,
“and fire over the heads of your comrades at
the enemy!”
The light was still growing brighter.
The rain came only in slight flurries. The
clouds were trooping off toward the northeast, and
the moon was out. Dick clearly saw the black
mass of the Southern horsemen wheeling down upon them.
At least three hundred of the regiment were now upon
the bank, and, with fairly steady aim, they poured
a heavy volley into the massed ranks of their foe.
Dick saw horses fall while others dashed away riderless.
But the Southern line wavered only for a moment and
then came on again with many shouts. There were
also dismounted men on either flank who knelt and
maintained a heavy fire upon the defenders.
The lads in blue were suffering many
wounds, but a line of trees and underbrush on the
western shore helped them. Lying there partly
protected they loaded and pulled trigger as fast as
they could, while the rest of their comrades emerged
dripping from the stream to join them. The Confederates,
brave as they were, had no choice but to give ground
against such strong defense, and the miner colonel,
despite his reserve and his middle years, gave vent
to his exultation.
“We can hold this line forever!”
he exclaimed to his aides. “It’s
one thing to charge us in the open, but it’s
quite another to get at us across a deep and rushing
stream. Major Hertford, take part of the men
to the other side of the railroad track and drive back
any attempt at a crossing there. Lieutenant
Mason, you and Lieutenant Warner go ahead and see
what has become of the train. You can get back
here in plenty time for more fighting.”
Dick and Warner hurried forward, following
the line of the railroad. Their blood was up
and they did not like to leave the defense of the
river, but orders must be obeyed. As they ran
down the railroad track a man came forward swinging
a lantern, and they saw the tall gaunt figure of Canby,
the chief engineer. Behind him the train stretched
away in the darkness.
“I guess that our men have forded
the river and are holding the bank,” said Canby.
“Do they need the train crew back there to help?”
He spoke with husky eagerness.
Dick knew that he was longing to be in the middle
of the fight, but that his duty kept him with the train.
“No,” he replied.
“The river bank, and the road along its shore
give us a great position for defense, and I know we
can hold it. Colonel Newcomb did not say so,
but perhaps you’d better bring the train back
nearer us. It’s not our object to stay
in this valley and fight, but to go into the west.
Is all clear ahead?”
“No enemy is there. Some
of the brakemen have gone on a mile or two and they
say the track hasn’t been touched. You
tell Colonel Newcomb that I’m bringing the train
right down to the battle line.”
Dick and Warner returned quickly to
Colonel Newcomb, who appreciated Canby’s courage
and presence of mind. As the train approached
the four cannon were unloaded from the trucks, and
swept the further shore with shell and shrapnel.
After a scattered fire the Southern force withdrew
some distance, where it halted, apparently undecided.
The clouds rolled up again, the feeble moon disappeared,
and the river sank into the dark.
“May I make a suggestion, Colonel
Newcomb?” said Major Hertford.
“Certainly.”
“The enemy will probably seek
an undefended ford much higher up, cross under cover
of the new darkness and attack us in heavy force on
the flank. Suppose we get aboard the train at
once, cannon and all, and leave them far behind.”
“Excellent. If the darkness
covers their movements it also covers ours. Load
the train as fast as possible and see that no wounded
are left behind.”
He gave rapid orders to all his officers
and aides, and in fifteen minutes the troops were
aboard the train again, the cannon were lifted upon
the trucks, Canby and his assistants had all steam
up, and the train with its usual rattle and roar resumed
its flight into the west.
Dick and Warner were in the first
coach near Colonel Newcomb, ready for any commands
that he might give. Both had come through the
defense of the ford without injury, although a bullet
had gone through Dick’s coat without touching
the skin. Sergeant Whitley, too, was unharmed,
but the regiment had suffered. More than twenty
dead were left in the valley for the enemy to bury.
Despite all the commands and efforts
of the officers there was much excited talk in the
train. Boys were binding up wounds of other boys
and were condoling with them. But on the whole
they were exultant. Youth did not realize the
loss of those who had been with them so little.
Scattered exclamations came to Dick:
“We beat ’em off that time, an’
we can do it again.”
“Lucky though we had that little
river before us. Guess they’d have rode
us right down with their horses if it hadn’t
been for the stream an’ its banks.”
“Ouch, don’t draw that
bandage so tight on my arm. It ain’t nothin’
but a flesh wound.”
“I hate a battle in the dark.
Give me the good sunshine, where you can see what’s
goin’ on. My God, that you Bill!
I’m tremendous glad to see you! I thought
you was lyin’ still, back there in the grass!”
Dick said nothing. He was in
a seat next to the window, and his face was pressed
against the rain-marked pane. The rifle that
he had picked up and used so well was still clutched,
grimed with smoke, in his hands. The train had
not yet got up speed. He caught glimpses of the
river behind which they had fought, and which had
served them so well as a barrier. In fact, he
knew that it had saved them. But they had beaten
off the enemy! The pulses in his temples still
throbbed from exertion and excitement, but his heart
beat exultantly. The bitterness of Bull Run
was deep and it had lasted long, but here they were
the victors.
The speed of the train increased and
Dick knew that they were safe from further attack.
They were still running among mountains, clad heavily
in forest, but a meeting with a second Southern force
was beyond probability. The first had made a
quick raid on information supplied by spies in Washington,
but it had failed and the way was now clear.
Ample food was served somewhat late
to the whole regiment, the last wounds were bound
up, and Dick, having put aside the rifle, fell asleep
at last. His head lay against the window and
he slept heavily all through the night. Warner
in the next seat slept in the same way. But the
wise old sergeant just across the aisle remained awake
much longer. He was summing up and he concluded
that the seven hundred lads had done well. They
were raw, but they were being whipped into shape.
He smiled a little grimly as the unspoken
words, “whipped into shape,” rose to his
lips. The veteran of many an Indian battle foresaw
something vastly greater than anything that had occurred
on the plains. “Whipped into shape!”
Why, in the mighty war that was gathering along a
front of two thousand miles no soldier could escape
being whipped into shape, or being whipped out of
it.
But the sergeant’s own eyes
closed after a while, and he, too, slept the sleep
of utter mental and physical exhaustion. The
train rumbled on, the faithful Canby in the first
engine aware of his great responsibility and equal
to it. Not a wink of sleep for him that night.
The darkness had lightened somewhat more. The
black of the skies had turned to a dusky blue, and
the bolder stars were out. He could always see
the shining rails three or four hundred yards ahead,
and he sent his train steadily forward at full speed,
winding among the gorges and rattling over the trestles.
The silent mountains gave back every sound in dying
echoes, but Canby paid no heed to them. His eyes
were always on the track ahead, and he, too, was exultant.
He had brought the regiment through, and while it
was on the train his responsibility was not inferior
to that of Colonel Newcomb.
When Dick awoke, bright light was
pouring in at the car windows, but the car was cold
and his body was stiff and sore. His military
overcoat had been thrown over him in the night and
Warner had been covered in the same way. They
did not know that Sergeant Whitley had done that thoughtful
act.
Dick stretched himself and drew deep
breaths. Warm youth soon sent the blood flowing
in a full tide through his veins, and the stiffness
and soreness departed. He saw through the window
that they were still running among the mountains,
but they did not seem to be so high here as they were
at the river by which they had fought in the night.
He knew from his geography and his calculation of
time that they must be far into that part of Virginia
which is now West Virginia.
There was no rain now, at least where
the train was running, but the sun had risen on a
cold world. Far up on the higher peaks he saw
a fine white mist which he believed to be falling
snow. Obviously it was winter here and putting
on the big military coat he drew it tightly about
him. Others in the coach were waking up and some
of them, grown feverish with their wounds, were moving
restlessly on their seats, where they lay protected
by the blankets of their fellows.
Dick now and then saw a cabin nestling
in the lee of a hill, with the blue smoke rising from
its chimney into the clear, wintry air, and small
and poor as they were they gave him a singular sense
of peace and comfort. His mind felt for a few
moments a strong reaction from war and its terrors,
but the impulse and the strong purpose that bore him
on soon came back.
The train rushed through a pass and
entered a sheltered valley a mile or two wide and
eight or ten miles long. A large creek ran through
it, and the train stopped at a village on its banks.
The whole population of the village and all the farmers
of the valley were there to meet them. It was
a Union valley and by some system of mountain telegraphy,
although there were no telegraph wires, news of the
battle at the ford had preceded the train.
“Come, lads,” said Colonel
Newcomb to his staff. “Out with you!
We’re among friends here!”
Dick and Warner were glad enough to
leave the train. The air, cold as it was, was
like the breath of heaven on their faces, and the cheers
of the people were like the trump of fame in their
ears. Pretty girls with their faces in red hoods
or red comforters were there with food and smoking
coffee. Medicines for the wounded, as much as
the village could supply, had been brought to the
train, and places were already made for those hurt
too badly to go on with the expedition.
The whole cheerful scene, with its
life and movement, the sight of new faces and the
sound of many voices, had a wonderful effect upon young
Dick Mason. He had a marvellously sensitive temperament,
a direct inheritance from his famous border ancestor,
Paul Cotter. Things were always vivid to him.
Either they glowed with color, or they were hueless
and dead. This morning the long strain of the
night and its battle was relaxed completely.
The grass in the valley was brown with frost, and
the trees were shorn of their leaves by the winter
winds, but to Dick it was the finest village that
he had ever seen, and these were the friendliest people
in the world.
He drank a cup of hot coffee handed
to him by the stalwart wife of a farmer, and then,
when she insisted, drank another.
“You’re young to be fightin’,”
she said sympathetically.
“We all are,” said Dick
with a glance at the regiment, “but however we
may fight you’ll never find anybody attacking
a breakfast with more valor and spirit than we do.”
She looked at the long line of lads,
drinking coffee and eating ham, bacon, eggs, and hot
biscuits, and smiled.
“I reckon you tell the truth,
young feller,” she said, “but it’s
good to see ’em go at it.”
She passed on to help others, and
Dick, summoned by Colonel Newcomb, went into a little
railroad and telegraph station. The telegraph
wires had been cut behind them, but ten miles across
the mountains the spur of another railroad touched
a valley. The second railroad looped toward
the north, and it was absolutely sure that it was beyond
the reach of Southern raiders. Colonel Newcomb
wished to send a message to the Secretary of War and
the President, telling of the night’s events
and his triumphant passage through the ordeal.
These circumstances might make them wish to change
his orders, and at any rate the commander of the regiment
wished to be sure of what he was doing.
“You’re a Kentuckian and
a good horseman,” said Colonel Newcomb to Dick.
“The villagers have sent me a trusty man, one
Bill Petty, as a guide. Take Sergeant Whitley
and you three go to the station. I’ve already
written my dispatches, and I put them in your care.
Have them sent at once, and if necessary wait four
hours for an answer. If it comes, ride back
as fast as you can. The horses are ready and
I rely upon you.”
“Thank you, sir, I’ll
do my best,” said Dick, who deeply appreciated
the colonel’s confidence. He wasted no
time in words, but went at once to Sergeant Whitley,
who was ready in five minutes. Warner, who heard
of the mission, was disappointed because he was not
going too. But he was philosophical.
“I’ve made a close calculation,”
he said, “and I have demonstrated to my own
satisfaction that our opportunities are sixty per cent
energy and ability, twenty per cent manners, and twenty
per cent chance. In this case chance, which
made the Colonel better acquainted with you than with
me, was in your favor. We won’t discuss
the other eighty per cent, because this twenty is
enough. Besides it looks pretty cold on the
mountains, and its fine here in the village.
But luck with you, Dick.”
He gave his comrade’s hand a
strong grasp and walked away toward the little square
of the village, where the troops were encamped for
the present. Dick sprang upon a horse which
Bill Petty was holding for him. Whitley was already
up, and the three rode swiftly toward a blue line
which marked a cleft between two ridges. Dick
first observed their guide. Bill Petty was a
short but very stout man, clad in a suit of home-made
blue jeans, the trousers of which were thrust into
high boots with red tops. A heavy shawl of dark
red was wrapped around his shoulders, and beneath
his broad-brimmed hat a red woolen comforter covered
his ears, cheeks, and chin. His thick hair and
a thick beard clothing his entire face were a flaming
red. The whole effect of the man was somewhat
startling, but when he saw Dick looking at him in
curiosity his mouth opened wide in a grin of extreme
good nature.
“I guess you think I’m
right red,” he said. “Well, I am,
an’ as you see I always dress to suit my complexion.
Guess I’ll warm up the road some on a winter
day like this.”
“Would you mind my callin’
you Red Blaze?” asked Sergeant Whitley gravely.
“Not-a-tall! Not-a-tall!
I’d like it. I guess it’s sorter
pictorial an’ ’maginative like them knights
of old who had fancy names ‘cordin’ to
their qualities. People ‘round here are
pretty plain, an’ they’ve never called
me nothin’ but Bill. Red Blaze she is.”
“An’ Blaze for short.
Well, then, Blaze, what kind of a road is that we’re
goin’ to ride on?”
“Depends on the kind of weather
in which you ask the question. As it’s
the fust edge of winter here in the mountains, though
it ain’t quite come in the lowlands, an’
as it’s rained a lot in the last week, I reckon
you’ll find it bad. Mebbe our hosses will
go down in the road to thar knees, but I guess they
won’t sink up to thar bodies. They may
stumble an’ throw us, but as we’ll hit
in soft mud it ain’t likely to hurt us.
It may rain hard, ‘cause I see clouds heapin’
up thar in the west. An’ if it rains the
cold may then freeze a skim of ice over the road,
on which we could slip an’ break our necks, hosses
an’ all. Then thar are some cliffs close
to the road. If we was to slip on that thar
skim of ice which we’ve reckoned might come,
then mebbe we’d go over one of them cliffs and
drop down a hundred feet or so right swift. If
it was soft mud down below we might not get hurt mortal.
But it ain’t soft mud. We’d hit
right in the middle of sharp, hard rocks. An’
if a gang of rebel sharpshooters has wandered up here
they may see us an’ chase us ’way off
into the mountains, where we’d break our necks
fallin’ off the ridges or freeze to death or
starve to death.”
Whitley stared at him.
“Blaze,” he exclaimed, “what kind
of a man are you anyway?”
“Me? I’m the happiest
man in the valley. When people are low down they
come an’ talk to me to get cheered up.
I always lay the worst before you first an’
then shove it out of the way. None of them things
that I was conjurin’ up is goin’ to happen.
I was just tellin’ you of the things you was
goin’ to escape, and now you’ll feel good,
knowin’ what dangers you have passed before
they happened.”
Dick laughed. He liked this
intensely red man with his round face and twinkling
eyes. He saw, too, that the mountaineer was a
fine horseman, and as he carried a long slender-barreled
rifle over his shoulder, while a double-barreled pistol
was thrust in his belt, it was likely that he would
prove a formidable enemy to any who sought to stop
him.
“Perhaps your way is wise,”
said the boy. “You begin with the bad and
end with the good. What is the name of this place
to which we are going?”
“Hubbard. There was a
pioneer who fit the Injuns in here in early times.
I never heard that he got much, ’cept a town
named after him. But Hubbard is a right peart
little place, with a bank, two stores, three churches,
an’ nigh on to two hundred people. Are
you wrapped up well, Mr. Mason, ‘cause it’s
goin’ to be cold on the mountains?”
Dick wore heavy boots, and a long,
heavy military coat which fell below his knees and
which also had a high collar protecting his ears.
He was provided also with heavy buckskin gloves.
The sergeant was clad similarly.
“I think I’m clothed against
any amount of cold,” he replied.
“Well, you need to be,”
said Petty, “’cause the pass through which
we’re goin’ is at least fifteen hundred
feet above Townsville—that’s our
village—an’ I reckon it’s just
’bout as high over Hubbard. Them fifteen
hundred feet make a pow’ful difference in climate,
as you’ll soon find out. It’s not
only colder thar, but the winds are always blowin’
hard through the pass. Jest look back at Townsville.
Ain’t she fine an’ neat down thar in
the valley, beside that clear creek which higher up
in the mountains is full of the juiciest an’
sweetest trout that man ever stuck a tooth into.”
Dick saw that Petty was talkative,
but he did not mind. In fact, both he and Whitley
liked the man’s joyous and unbroken run of chatter.
He turned in his saddle and looked back, following
the stout man’s pointing finger. Townsville,
though but a little mountain town built mainly of
logs, was indeed a jewel, softened and with a silver
sheen thrown over it by the mountain air which was
misty that morning. He dimly saw the long black
line of the train standing on the track, and here
and there warm rings of smoke rose from the chimneys
and floated up into the heavens, where they were lost.
He thought he could detect little
figures moving beside the train and he knew that they
must be those of his comrades. He felt for a
moment a sense of loneliness. He had not known
these lads long, but the battle had bound them firmly
together. They had been comrades in danger and
that made them comrades as long as they lived.
“Greatest town in the world,”
said Petty, waving toward it a huge hand, encased
in a thick yarn glove. “I’ve traveled
from it as much as fifty miles in every direction,
north, south, east, an’ west, an’ I ain’t
never seed its match. I reckon I’m somethin’
of a traveler, but every time I come back to Townsville,
I think all the more of it, seein’ how much
better it is than anything else.”
Dick glanced at the mountaineer, and
saw that there could be no doubt of his sincerity.
“You’re a lucky man, Mr.
Petty,” he said, “to live in the finest
place in the world.”
“Yes, if I don’t get drug
off to the war. I’m not hankerin’
for fightin’ an’ I don’t know much
what the war’s about though I’m for the
Union, fust to last, an’ that’s the way
most of the people ’bout here feel. Turn
your heads ag’in, friends, an’ take another
look at Townsville.”
Dick and Whitley glanced back and
saw only the blank gray wall of the mountain.
Petty laughed. He was the finest laugher that
Dick had ever heard. The laugh did not merely
come from the mouth, it was also exuded, pouring out
through every pore. It was rolling, unctuous,
and so strong that Petty not only shook with it, but
his horse seemed to shake also. It was mellow,
too, with an organ note that comes of a mighty lung
and throat, and of pure air breathed all the year
around.
“Thought I’d git the joke
on you,” he said, when he stopped laughing.
“The road’s been slantin’ into the
mountains, without you knowin’ it, and Townsville
is cut off by the cliffs. You’ll find it
gettin’ wilder now ’till we start down
the slope on the other side. Lucky our hosses
are strong, ’cause the mud is deeper than I thought
it would be.”
It was not really a road that they
were following, merely a path, and the going was painful.
Under Petty’s instructions they stopped their
mounts now and then for a rest, and a mile further
on they began to feel a rising wind.
“It’s the wind that I
told you of,” said Petty. “It’s
sucked through six or seven miles of pass, an’
it will blow straight in our faces all the way.
As we’ll be goin’ up for a long distance
you’ll find it growin’ colder, too.
But you’ve got to remember that after you pass
them cold winds an’ go down the slope you’ll
strike another warm little valley, the one in which
Hubbard is layin’ so neat an’ so snug.”
Dick had already noticed the increasing
coldness and so had the sergeant. Whitley, from
his long experience on the plains, had the keenest
kind of an eye for climatic changes. He noticed
with some apprehension that the higher peaks were
clothed in thick, cold fog, but he said nothing to
the brave boy whom he had grown to love like a son.
But both he and Dick drew their heavy coats closer
and were thankful for the buckskin gloves, without
which their hands would have stiffened on the reins.
Now they rode in silence with their
heads bent well forward, because the wind was becoming
fiercer and fiercer. Over the peaks the fogs
were growing thicker and darker and after a while
the sharp edge of the wind was wet with rain.
It stung their faces, and they drew their hat brims
lower and their coat collars higher to protect themselves
from such a cutting blast.
“Told you we might have trouble,”
called Petty, cheerfully, “but if you ride right
on through trouble you’ll leave trouble behind.
Nor this ain’t nothin’ either to what
we kin expect before we git to the top of the pass.
Cur’us what a pow’ful lot human bein’s
kin stand when they make up their minds to it.”
“Are the horses well shod?” asked Whitley.
“Best shod in the world, ’cause
I done it myself. That’s my trade, blacksmith,
an’ I’m a good one if I do say it.
I heard before we started that you had been a soldier
in the west. I s’pose that you had to
look mighty close to your hosses then. A man
couldn’t afford to be ridin’ a hoss made
lame by bad shoein’ when ten thousand yellin’
Sioux or Blackfeet was after him.”
“No, you couldn’t,”
replied the sergeant. “Out there you had
to watch every detail. That’s one of the
things that fightin’ Indians taught. You
had to be watchin’ all the time an’ I reckon
the trainin’ will be of value in this war.
Are we mighty near to the top of the pass, Mr. Petty?”
“Got two or three miles yet.
The slope is steeper on the other side. We rise
a lot more before we hit the top.”
The wind grew stronger with every
rod they ascended, and the horses began to pant with
their severe exertions. At Petty’s suggestion
the three riders dismounted and walked for a while,
leading their horses. The rain turned to a fine
hail and stung their faces. Had it not been
for his two good comrades Dick would have found his
situation inexpressibly lonely and dreary. The
heavy fog now enveloped all the peaks and ridges and
filled every valley and chasm. He could see only
fifteen or twenty yards ahead along the muddy path,
and the fine hail which gave every promise of becoming
a storm of sleet stung continually. The wind
confined in the narrow gorge also uttered a hideous
shrieking and moaning.
“Tests your nerve!” shouted
Petty to Dick. “There are hard things
besides battles to stand, an’ this is goin’
to be one of the hard ones, but if you go through
it all right you kin go through any number of the
same kind all right, too. Likely the sleet will
be so thick that it will make a sheet of slippery
ice for us comin’ back. Now, hosses that
ain’t got calks on thar shoes are pretty shore
to slip an’ fall, breakin’ a leg or two,
an’ mebbe breakin’ the necks of thar riders.”
Dick looked at him with some amazement.
Despite his announcement of dire disaster the man’s
eyes twinkled merrily and the round, red outline of
his bushy head in the scarlet comforter made a cheerful
blaze.
“It’s jest as I told you,”
said Petty, meeting the boy’s look. “Without
calks on thar shoes our hosses are pretty shore to
slip on the ice and break theirselves up, or fall
down a cliff an’ break themselves up more.”
“Then why in thunder, Blaze,”
exclaimed Whitley, “did we start without calks
on the shoes of our horses?”
Red Blaze broke into a deep mellow
laugh, starting from the bottom of his diaphragm,
swelling as it passed through his chest, swelling again
as it passed through throat and mouth, and bursting
upon the open air in a mighty diapason that rose cheerfully
above the shrieking and moaning of the wind.
“We didn’t start without
em,” he replied. “The twelve feet
of these three hosses have on ’em the finest
calked shoes in all these mountains. I put ’em
on myself, beginnin’ the job this mornin’
before you was awake, your colonel, on the advice
of the people of Townsville who know me as one of
its leadin’ an’ trusted citizens, havin’
selected me as the guide of this trip. I was
jest tellin’ you what would happen to you if
I didn’t justify the confidence of the people
of Townsville.”
“I allow, Red Blaze,”
said the sergeant with confidence, “that you
ain’t no fool, an’ that you’re lookin’
out for our best interests. Lead on.”
Red Blaze’s mellow and pleased
laugh rose once more above the whistling of the wind.
“You kin ride ag’in now,
boys,” he said. “The hosses are pretty
well rested.”
They resumed the saddle gladly and
now mounted toward the crest of the pass. The
sleet turned to snow, which was a relief to their faces,
and Dick, with the constant beating of wind and snow,
began to feel a certain physical exhilaration.
He realized the truth of Red Blaze’s assertion
that if you stiffen your back and push your way through
troubles you leave troubles behind.
They rode now in silence for quite
a while, and then Red Blaze suddenly announced:
“We’re at the top, boys.”