THE FIGHT IN THE PASS
The three halted their horses and
stood for a minute or two on the very crest of the
pass. The fierce wind out of the northwest blew
directly in their faces and both riders and horses
alike were covered with snow. But Dick felt a
wonderful thrill as he gazed upon the vast white wilderness.
East and west, north and south he saw the driving
snow and the lofty peaks and ridges showing through
it, white themselves. The towns below and the
cabins that snuggled in the coves were completely
hidden. They could see no sign of human life
on slope or in valley.
“Looks as wild as the Rockies,”
said the sergeant tersely.
“But you won’t find any
Injuns here to ambush you,” said Red Blaze,
“though I don’t make any guarantee against
bushwhackers and guerillas, who’ll change sides
as often as two or three times a day, if it will suit
their convenience. They could hide in the woods
along the road an’ pick us off as easy as I’d
shoot a squirrel out of a tree. They’d
like to have our arms an’ our big coats.
I tell you what, friends, a mighty civil war like
ours gives a tremenjeous opportunity to bad men.
They’re all comin’ to the top.
Every rascal in the mountains an’ in the lowlands,
too, I guess, is out lookin’ for plunder an’
wuss.”
“You’re right, Red Blaze,”
said the sergeant with emphasis, “an’ it
won’t be stopped until the generals on both sides
begin to hang an’ shoot the plunderers an’
murderers.”
“But they can’t ketch
’em all,” said Red Blaze. “A
Yankee general with a hundred thousand men will be
out lookin’ for what? Not for a gang of
robbers, not by a jugful. He’ll be lookin’
for a rebel general with another hundred thousand
men, an’ the rebel general with a hundred thousand
men will be lookin’ for that Yankee general with
his hundred thousand. So there you are, an’
while they’re lookin’ for each other an’
then fightin’ each other to a standstill, the
robbers will be plunderin’ an’ murderin’.
But don’t you worry about bein’ ambushed.
I was jest tellin’ you what might happen, but
wouldn’t happen. We kin go down hill fast
now, and we’ll soon be in Hubbard, which is the
other side of all that fallin’ snow.”
The road down the mountain was also
better than the one by which they had ascended, and
as the horses with their calked shoes were swift of
foot they made rapid progress. As they descended,
the wind lowered fast and there was much less snow.
Red Blaze said it was probably not snowing in the
valley at all.
“See that shinin’ in the
sun,” he said. “That’s the
tin coverin’ on the steeple of the new church
in Hubbard. The sun strikes squar’ly on
it, an’ now I know I’m right ‘bout
it not snowin’ down thar. Wait ’til
we turn ‘roun’ this big rock. Yes,
thar’s Hubbard, layin’ out in the valley
without a drop of snow on her. It looks good,
don’t it, friends, with the smoke comin’
out of the chimneys. That little red house over
thar is the railroad an’ telegraph station, an’
we’ll go straight for it, ’cause we ain’t
got no time to waste.”
They emerged into the valley and rode
rapidly for the station. Farmers on the outskirts
and villagers looked wonderingly at them, but they
did not pause to answer questions. They galloped
their tired mounts straight for the little red building,
which was the station. Dick sprang first from
his horse, and leaving it to stand at the door, ran
inside. A telegraph instrument was clicking mournfully
in the corner. A hot stove was in another corner,
and sitting near it was a lad of about Dick’s
age, clad in mountain jeans, and lounging in an old
cane-bottomed chair. But Dick’s quick glance
saw that the boy was bright of face and keen of eye.
He promptly drew out his papers and said:
“I’m an aide from the
Northern regiment of Colonel Newcomb at Townsville.
Here are duplicate dispatches, one set for the President
of the United States and the other for the Secretary
of War. They tell of a successful fight that
we had last night with Southern troops, presumably
the cavalrymen of Turner Ashby. I wish you to
send them at once.”
“He’s speakin’ the
exact truth, Jim,” said Red Blaze, who had come
in behind Dick, “an’ I’ve brought
him an’ the sergeant here over the mountains
to tell about it.”
The boy sprang to his instrument.
But he stopped a moment to ask one question.
“Did you really beat ’em
off?” he asked as he looked up with shining eye.
“We certainly did,” replied Dick.
“I’ll send it faster than
I ever sent anything before,” said the boy.
“To think of me, Jim Johnson, sending a dispatch
to Abraham Lincoln, telling of a victory!”
“I reckon you’re right,
Jim, it’s your chance,” said Red Blaze.
Jim bent over the instrument which
now began to click steadily and fast.
“You’re to wait for answers,” said
Dick.
The boy nodded, but his shining eyes
remained bent over the instrument. Dick went
to the door, brushed off the snow, came back and sat
down by the stove. Sergeant Whitley, who had
tied the horses to hitching posts, came in, pulled
up an empty box and sat down by him. Red Blaze
slipped away unnoticed. But he came back very
soon, and men and women came with him, bringing food
and smoking coffee. There was enough for twenty.
Red Blaze had spread among the villagers,
every one of whom he knew, the news that the Union
arms had won a victory. Nor had it suffered
anything in the telling. Colonel Newcomb’s
regiment, by the most desperate feats of gallantry,
had beaten off at least ten thousand Southerners,
and the boy and the man in uniform, who were resting
by the fire in the station, had been the greatest
two heroes of a battle waged for a whole night.
Curious eyes gazed at Dick and the
sergeant as they sat there by the stove. Dick
himself, warm, relaxed, and the needs of his body satisfied,
felt like going to sleep. But he watched the
boy operator, who presently finished his two dispatches
and then lifted his head for the first time.
“They’ve gone straight
into Washington,” he said. “We ought
to get an answer soon.”
“We’ll wait here for it,” said Dick.
The three messengers were now thoroughly
warmed at the stove, they had eaten heartily of the
best the village could furnish, and a great feeling
of comfort pervaded them. While they were waiting
for the reply that they hoped would come from Washington,
Dick Mason and Sergeant Whitley went outside.
No snow was falling in the valley, but off on the
mountain crest they still saw the white veil, blown
by the wind.
Red Blaze joined them and was everywhere
their guide and herald. He ascribed to them such
deeds of skill and valor that they were compelled
to call him the best romancer they had met in a long
time.
“I suppose that if Mr. Warner
were here,” said the sergeant, “he would
reduce these statements to mathematics, ten per cent
fact an’ ninety per cent fancy.”
“Just about that,” said Dick.
Red Blaze came to them presently, bristling with news.
“A farmer from a hollow further
to the west,” he said, “has just come in,
an’ he says that a band of guerillas is ridin’
through the hills. ’Bout twenty of them,
he said, led by a big dark fellow, his face covered
with black beard. They’ve been liftin’
hosses an’ takin’ other things, but they’re
strangers in these parts. Tom Sykes, who was
held up by them an’ robbed of his hoss, says
that the rest of ’em called their leader Skelly.
Tom seemed to think that mebbe they came from somewhere
in the Kentucky mountains. They called themselves
a scoutin’ party of the Southern army.”
Dick started violently.
“Why, I know this man Skelly,”
he said. “He lives in the mountains to
the eastward of my home in Kentucky. He organized
a band at the beginning of the war, but over there
he said he was fightin’ for the North.”
“He’ll be fightin’
for his own hand,” said the sergeant sternly.
“But he can’t play double all the time.
That sort of thing will bring a man to the end of
a rope, with clear air under his feet.”
“I’m glad you’ve
told me this,” said Red Blaze. “Skelly
might have come ridin’ in here, claimin’
that he an’ his men was Northern troops, an’
then when we wasn’t suspectin’ might have
held up the whole town. I’ll warn ’em.
Thar ain’t a house here that hasn’t got
two or three rifles an’ shotguns in it, an’
with the farmers from the valley joinin’ in
Hubbard could wipe out the whole gang.”
“Tell them to be on guard all
the time, Red Blaze,” said Whitley with strong
emphasis. “In war you’ve got to watch,
watch, watch. Always know what the other fellow
is doin’, if you can.”
“Let’s go back to the
station,” said Dick. “Maybe we’ll
have an answer soon.”
They found the young operator hanging
over his instrument, his eyes still shining.
He had been in that position ever since they left
him, and Dick knew that his eagerness to get an answer
from Washington kept him there, mind and body waiting
for the tick of the key.
Dick, the sergeant, and Red Blaze
sat down by the stove again, and rested there quietly
for a quarter of an hour. Red Blaze was thinking
that it would be another cold ride back over the pass.
The sergeant, although he was not sleepy, closed
his eyes and saw again the vast rolling plains, the
herds of buffalo spreading to the horizon, and the
bands of Sioux and Cheyennes galloping down, their
great war bonnets making splashes of color against
the thin blue sky. Dick was thinking of Pendleton,
the peaceful little town in Kentucky that was his home,
and of his cousin, Harry Kenton. He did not know
now where Harry was, and he did not even know whether
he was dead or alive.
Dick sighed a little, and just at
that moment the telegraph key began to click.
“The answer is coming!”
exclaimed the young operator excitedly and then he
bent closer over the key to take it. The three
chairs straightened up, and they, too, bent toward
the key. The boy wrote rapidly, but the clicking
did not go on long. When it ceased he straightened
up with his finished message in his hand. His
face was flushed and his eyes still shining.
He folded the paper and handed it to Dick.
“It’s for you, Mr. Mason,” he said.
Dick unfolded it and read aloud:
“Colonel John D. Newcomb:
“Congratulations on your success
and fine management of your troops. Victory worth
much to us. Read dispatch to regiment and continue
westward to original destination.
A.
Lincoln.”
Dick’s face glowed, and the
sergeant’s teeth came together with a little
click of satisfaction.
“When I saw that it was to be
read to the regiment I thought it no harm to read
it to the rest of you,” said Dick, as he refolded
the precious dispatch and put it in his safest pocket.
“Now, sergeant, I think we ought to be off
at full speed.”
“Not a minute to waste,” said Sergeant
Whitley.
Their horses had been fed and were
rested well. The three bade farewell to the
young operator, then to almost all of Hubbard and proceeded
in a trot for the pass. They did not speak until
they were on the first slope, and then the sergeant,
looking up at the heights, asked:
“Shall we have snow again on
our return, Red Blaze? I hope not. It’s
important for us to get back to Townsville without
any waste of time.”
“I hate to bring bad news,”
replied Red Blaze, “but we’ll shore have
more snow. See them clouds, sailin’ up
an’ always sailin’ up from the southwest,
an’ see that white mist ‘roun’ the
highest peaks. That’s snow, an’
it’ll hit the pass just as it did when we was
comin’ over. But we’ve got this in
favor of ourselves an’ our hosses now: The
wind is on our backs.”
They rode hard now. Dick had
received the precious message from the President,
and it would be a proud moment for him when he put
it in the hands of the colonel. He did not wish
that moment to be delayed. Several times he patted
the pocket in which the paper lay.
As they ascended, the wind increased
in strength, but being on their backs now it seemed
to help them along. They were soon high up on
the slopes and then they naturally turned for a parting
look at Hubbard in its valley, a twin to that of Townsville.
It looked from afar neat and given up to peace, but
Dick knew that it had been stirred deeply by the visit
of his comrades and himself.
“It seems,” he said, “that
the war would pass by these little mountain nests.”
“But it don’t,”
said Red Blaze. “War, I guess, is like
a mad an’ kickin’ mule, hoofs lashin’
out everywhar, an’ you can’t tell what
they’re goin’ to hit. Boys, we’re
makin’ good time. That wind on our backs
fairly lifts us up the mountain side.”
Petty had all the easy familiarity
of the backwoods. He treated the boy and man
who rode with him as comrades of at least a year’s
standing, and they felt in return that he was one
of them, a man to be trusted. They retained all
the buoyancy which the receipt of the dispatch had
given them, and Dick, his heart beating high, scarcely
felt the wind and cold.
“In another quarter of an hour
we’ll be at the top,” said Petty.
Then he added after a moment’s pause: “If
I’m not mistook, we’ll have company.
See that path, leadin’ out of the west, an’
runnin’ along the slope. It comes into
the main road, two or three hundred yards further
on, an’ I think I can see the top of a horseman’s
head ridin’ in it. What do you say, sergeant?”
“I say that you are right, Red
Blaze. I plainly see the head of a big man,
wearing a fur cap, an’ there are others behind
him, ridin’ in single file. What’s
your opinion, Mr. Mason?”
“The same as yours and Red Blaze’s.
I, too, can see the big man with the fur cap on his
head and at least a dozen following behind. Do
you think it likely, Red Blaze, that they’ll
reach the main road before we pass the mouth of the
path?”
A sudden thought had leaped up in
Dick’s mind and it set his pulses to beating
hard. He remembered some earlier words of Red
Blaze’s.
“We’ll go by before they
reach the main road,” replied Red Blaze, “unless
they make their hosses travel a lot faster than they’re
travelin’ now.”
“Then suppose we whip up a little,” said
Dick.
Both Red Blaze and the sergeant gave him searching
glances.
“Do you mean—” began Whitley.
“Yes, I mean it. I know
it. The man in front wearing the fur cap is
Bill Skelly. He and his men made an attack upon
the home of my uncle, Colonel Kenton, who is a Southern
leader in Kentucky. He and his band were Northerners
there, but they will be Southerners here, if it suits
their purpose.”
“An’ it will shorely suit
their purpose to be Southerners now,” said Red
Blaze. “We three are ridin’ mighty
good hoss flesh. Me an’ the sergeant have
good rifles an’ pistols, you have good pistols,
an’ we all have good, big overcoats. This
is a lonely mountain side with war flyin’ all
about us. Easy’s the place an’ easy’s
the deed. That is if we’d let ’em,
which we ain’t goin’ to do.”
“Not by a long shot,”
said Sergeant Whitley, resting his rifle across the
pommel of his saddle. “They’ve got
to follow straight behind. The ground is too
rough for them to ride around an’ flank us.”
Dick said nothing, but his gauntleted
hand moved down to the butt of one of his pistols.
His heart throbbed, but he preserved the appearance
of coolness. He was fast becoming inured to
danger. Owing to the slope they could not increase
the speed of their horses greatly, but they were beyond
the mouth of the path before they were seen by Skelly
and his band. Then the big mountaineer uttered
a great shout and began to wave his hand at them.
“The road curves here a little
among the rocks,” said the sergeant, who unconsciously
took command. “Suppose we stop, sheltered
by the curve, and ask them what they want.”
“The very thing to do,” said Dick.
“Sass ’em, sergeant! Sass ’em!”
said Red Blaze.
They drew their horses back partially
in the shadow of the rocky curve, but the sergeant
was a little further forward than the others.
Dick saw Skelly and a score of men emerge into the
road and come rapidly toward them. They were
a wild-looking crew, mounted on tough mountain ponies,
all of them carrying loot, and all armed heavily.
The sergeant threw up his rifle, and
with a steady hand aimed straight at Skelly’s
heart.
“Halt!” he cried sharply, “and tell
me who you are!”
The whole crew seemed to reel back
except Skelly, who, though stopping his horse, remained
in the center of the road.
“What do you mean?” he
cried. “We’re peaceful travelers.
What business is it of yours who we are?”
“Judgin’ by your looks
you’re not peaceful travelers at all. Besides
these ain’t peaceful times an’ we take
the right to demand who you are. If you come
on another foot, I shoot.”
The sergeant’s tones were sharp with resolve.
“Your name!” he continued.
“Ramsdell, David Ramsdell,” replied the
leader of the band.
“That’s a lie,”
said Sergeant Whitley. “Your name is Bill
Skelly, an’ you’re a mountaineer from
Eastern Kentucky, claimin’ to belong first to
one side and then to the other as suits you.”
“Who says so?” exclaimed Skelly defiantly.
The sergeant beckoned Dick, who rode forward a little.
“I do,” said the boy in
a loud, clear voice. “My name is Dick Mason,
and I live at Pendleton in Kentucky. I saw you
more than once before the war, and I know that you
tried to burn down the house of Colonel Kenton there,
and kill him and his friends. I’m on the
other side, but I’m not for such things as that.”
Skelly distinctly saw Dick sitting
on his horse in the pass, and he knew him well.
Rage tore at his heart. Although on “the
other side” this boy, too, was a lowlander and
in a way a member of that vile Kenton brood.
He hated him, too, because he belonged to those who
had more of prosperity and education than himself.
But Skelly was a man of resource and not a coward.
“You’re right,”
he cried, “I’m Bill Skelly, an’ we
want your horses an’ arms. We need ’em
in our business. Now, just hop down an’
deliver. We’re twenty to three.”
“You come forward at your own
risk!” cried the sergeant, and Skelly, despite
the numbers at his back, wavered. He saw that
the man who held the rifle aimed at his heart had
nerves of steel, and he did not dare advance knowing
that he would be shot at once from the saddle.
A victory won by Skelly’s men with Skelly dead
was no victory at all to Skelly.
The guerilla reined back his horse,
and his men retreated with him. But the three
knew well that it was no withdrawal. The mountaineers
rode among some scrub that grew between the road and
the cliff; and Whitley exclaimed to his two comrades:
“Come boys, we must ride for
it! It’s our business to get back with
the dispatches to Colonel Newcomb as soon as possible,
an’ not let ourselves be delayed by this gang.”
“That is certainly true,”
said Dick. “Lead on, Mr. Petty, and we’ll
cross the mountain as fast as we can.”
Red Blaze started at once in a gallop,
and Dick and the sergeant followed swiftly after.
But Sergeant Whitley held his cocked rifle in hand
and he cast many backward glances. A great shout
came from Skelly and his band when they saw the three
take to flight, and the sergeant’s face grew
grimmer as the sound reached his ears.
“Keep right in the middle of
the road, boys,” he said. “We can’t
afford to have our horses slip. I’ll hang
back just a little and send in a bullet if they come
too near. This rifle of mine carries pretty far,
farther, I expect, than any of theirs.”
“I’m somethin’ on
the shoot myself,” said Red Blaze. “I
love peace, but it hurts my feelin’s if anybody
shoots at me. Them fellers are likely to do
it, an’ me havin’ a rifle in my hands I
won’t be able to stop the temptation to fire
back.”
As he spoke the raiders fired.
There was a crackling of rifles, little curls of
blue smoke rose in the pass, and bullets struck on
the frozen earth, while two made the snow fly from
bushes by the side of the road. The sergeant
raised his own rifle, longer of barrel than the average
army weapon, and pulled the trigger. He had aimed
at Skelly, but the leader swerved, and a man behind
him rolled off his horse. The others, although
slowing their speed a little, in order to be out of
the range of that deadly rifle, continued to come.
The pursuit at first seemed futile
to Dick, because they would soon descend into Townsville’s
valley, and the raiders could not follow them into
the midst of an entire regiment. But presently
he saw their plan. The pass now widened out with
a few hundred yards of level space on either side
of the road thickly covered with forest. The
branches of the trees were bare, but the undergrowth
was so dense that horsemen could he hidden in it.
Bands of the raiders darted into the woods both to
right and left, and he knew that advancing on a straight
line one or the other of the parties expected to catch
the fugitives who must follow the curves of the road.
The advantage of the pursuit was soon
shown as a shot from the right whistled by them.
Red Blaze, quick as lightning, fired at the flash
of the rifle.
“I don’t know whether
I hit him or not,” he said, judicially, “but
the chances are pow’ful good that I did.
Still it looks as if they meant to hang on an’
likely we kin soon expect shots from the other side,
too. Then if they know the country as well as
they ’pear to do they’ll have us clamped
in a vise.”
As he spoke his eyes twinkled cheerfully
out of his flaming countenance.
“You certainly seem to take it easy,”
said Dick.
“I take it easy, ‘cause
the jaws of that vise ain’t goin’ to clamp
down. Bein’ somewhat interested in a run
for your life you haven’t noticed how dark it’s
gettin’ up here on the heights an’ how
hard it’s snowin’. It’s comin’
down a lot thicker than it was when we crossed the
first time.”
It was true. Dick noticed now
that the snow was pouring down, and that all the peaks
and ridges were lost in the white whirlwind.
“I told you that I had been
a traveler,” said Red Blaze. “I’ve
been as far as fifty miles from Townsville, and I
know all the country in every direction, twenty miles
from it, inch by inch. Inside five minutes the
snowstorm will be on us full blast, an’ we won’t
be able to see more’n twenty yards away.
An’ that crowd that’s follerin’
won’t be able to see either. An’
me knowin’ the ground inch by inch I’ll
take you straight back to your regiment while they’ll
get lost in the storm.”
There was room now in the road for
the three to ride abreast, and they kept close together.
They heard once a shout behind them and saw the flash
of a firearm in the white hurricane, but no bullet
struck them, and they kept steadily on their course,
Red Blaze directing with the sure instinct that comes
of long use and habit.
Heavier and heavier grew the snow.
There was but little wind now, and it came straight
down. It seemed to Dick that the whole earth
was blotted out by the white fall. He and the
sergeant resigned themselves completely to the guidance
of Red Blaze, who never veered an inch from the right
path.
“If I didn’t know the
way my hoss would,” he said. “I’d
just give him his head an’ he’d take us
straight to his warm stable in Townsville, an’
the two bundles of oats that I mean to give him.
I reckon it was pretty smart of me, wasn’t
it, to order a snowstorm an’ have it come just
when it was needed.”
Again the cheerful eyes twinkled in the flaming face.
“You’re certainly a winner,” said
Dick, “and you win for us all.”
The snow was now so deep in the pass
that they could not proceed at great speed, but they
did the best they could, and, as Red Blaze said, their
best, although it might be somewhat slow, was certainly
better than that of Skelly and his men. Dick
believed in fact that the raiders had been compelled
to abandon the pursuit.
When they reached a lower level, where
the snow was far less dense, they stopped and listened.
The sergeant’s ears had been trained to uncommon
keenness by his life on the plains, and he could hear
nothing but the sigh of the falling snow. Nor
could Petty, who had fine ears himself.
They descended still further, and
made another stop. It was snowing here also,
but it was merely an ordinary fall, and they could
get a long view back up the pass. They saw nothing
there but earth and trees covered with snow.
Looking in the other direction they saw the sunshine
gleaming for a moment on a roof in Townsville.
“We’re all safe now,”
said Red Blaze, “an’ we’ll be with
the soldiers in another half hour. But just
you two remember that mebbe the next time I couldn’t
call up a snowstorm to cover us an’ save our
lives.”
“Once is enough,” said
Dick, “and, Mr. Petty, Sergeant Whitley and I
want to thank you.”
Mittened hands met buckskinned ones
in the strong grasp of friendship, and now, as they
rode on, the whole village emerged into sight.
There was the long train standing on the track, the
smoke rising in spires from the neat houses, and then
the figures of human beings.
The fall of snow was light in the
valley and as soon as they reached the levels the
three proceeded at a gallop. Dick saw Colonel
Newcomb standing by the train, and springing from
his horse he handed him the dispatch. The colonel
opened it, and as he read Dick saw the glow appear
upon his face.
“Fire up!” he said to
Canby, the engineer, who stood near. “We
start at once!”
The troops who were ready and waiting
were hurried into the coaches, and the engine whistled
for departure.