HUNTED
Dick slept the whole night through,
which was a very good thing for him, because he needed
it, and because he could have made no progress in the
thick darkness through the marshy wilderness.
No human beings saw him, but the wild animals took
more than one look. Not all were little.
One big clumsy brute, wagging his head in a curious,
comic way, shuffled up from the edge of the swamp,
sniffed the strange human odor, and, still wagging
his comic head, came rather close to the sleeping boy.
Then the black bear decided to be afraid, and lumbered
back into the bushes.
An owl perched on a bough almost over
Dick’s head, but this was game far too large
for Mr. Owl’s beak and talons, and he soon flew
away in search of something nearer his size.
A raccoon on a bough stared with glowing eyes and
then slid out of sight.
Man, although he had just come, became
king of this swamp, king for the night. The
prowling beasts and birds of prey, after their first
look, gave Dick all the berth he needed, and he did
not awake until a bright sun was well above the edge
of the earth. Then he rose, shook himself, much
like an animal coming from its lair, and bathed his
face in a little stream which ran down the hill into
the swamp. It was swollen and painful from the
mosquito bites, but he resolved not to think of them,
and ate breakfast from the saddlebags, after which
he studied his map a little.
Baggage and rifle on shoulder, he
pursued a course south by east. There was a strong
breeze which gave him a rest from the dreaded insects,
and he pushed on with vigorous footsteps. The
country remained thoroughly wild, and he soon had
proof of it. Another deer, this time obviously
started up by himself, sprang from the canebrake and
darted away in the woods. He noted tracks of
bear and resolved some day when the war was over to
come there hunting.
His course led him again from firm
ground into a region of marshes and lagoons, which
he crossed with difficulty, arriving about an hour
before noon at a considerable river, one that would
require swimming unless he found a ford somewhere
near. He was very weary from the journey through
the marsh and, sitting on a log, he scraped from his
clothes a portion of the mud they had accumulated
on the way.
He was a good swimmer, but he had
his arms and ammunition to keep dry, and he did not
wish to trust himself afloat on the deep current.
Wading would be far better, and, when his strength
was restored, he walked up the bank in search of a
shallower place.
He came soon to a point, where the
cliff was rather high, although it was clothed in
dense forest here as elsewhere, and when he reached
the crest he heard a sound like the swishing of waters.
Alert and suspicious he sank down among the trees
and peered over the bank. Two men in a canoe
were paddling in a leisurely manner along the stream.
The men were in faded and worn Confederate
uniforms, and Dick saw their rifles lying in the bottom
of the boat. He also saw that they had strong,
resolute faces. They were almost opposite him
and they were closely scanning the forest on his side
of the river. He was glad that he had not tried
to swim the stream, and he was glad too that he had
kept so well under cover. The men in the canoe
were surely keen of eye, and they must be a patrol.
He sank closer to the earth and did
not stir. One of the watchers drew in his paddle
and took up his rifle, while the other propelled the
canoe very slowly. It seemed that they expected
something or somebody, and it suddenly occurred to
him that it might be he. He felt a little shiver
of apprehension. How could they know he was
coming? It was mysterious and alarming.
He waited for them to pass down the
river and out of sight, but at the curve they turned
and came back against the stream, the man with the
rifle in his hand still keenly watching the western
shore, where Dick lay hidden. Neither of them
spoke, and the only sound was the swishing of the
paddle. The hoot of an owl came from the depths
of the forest behind him and he knew that it was a
signal. The hair of his head lifted.
He felt the touch of the supernatural.
The invisible pursuer was behind him again, and the
silent soldiers held the crossing. The hoot of
the owl came again, a little nearer now. He
was tempted to rise and run, but his will held him
back from such folly. His unknown enemy could
pursue, because his boots left a deep trail in the
soft earth. That was why he had been able to
follow again in the morning.
He crept back some distance from the
river and then, rising, retreated cautiously up the
stream. He caught glimpses of the water twice
through the bushes, and each time the canoe was moving
up the river also, one man paddling and the other,
rifle on his arm, watching the western shore.
Dick had a feeling that he was trapped.
Colonel Winchester had been wise to make him wear
his uniform, because it was now certain that he was
going to be taken, and death had always been the punishment
of a captured spy. He put down the thought resolutely,
and began to run through the forest parallel with
the river. If it were only the firm hard ground
of the North he could hide his trail from the man
behind him, but here the soil was so soft that every
footstep left a deep mark. Yet he might find
fallen trees thrown down by hurricanes, and in a few
minutes he came to a mass of them. He ran deftly
from trunk to trunk, and then continued his flight
among the bushes. It broke his trail less than
a rod, but it might take his pursuer ten minutes to
recover it, and now ten minutes were precious.
The soil grew harder and he made better
speed, but when he looked through the foliage he saw
the canoe still opposite him. It was easy for
them, on the smooth surface of the river, to keep
pace with him, if such was their object. Furious
anger took hold of him. He knew that he must
soon become exhausted, while the men in the canoe would
scarcely feel weariness. Then came the idea.
The canoe was light and thin almost
like the birch bark Indian canoe of the north, and
he was a good marksman. It was a last chance,
but raising his rifle he fired the heavy bullet directly
at the bottom of the canoe. As the echo of the
first shot was dying he slipped in a cartridge and
sent a second at the same target. He did not
seek to kill the men, his object was the canoe, and
as he ran rapidly away he saw it fill with water and
sink, the two soldiers in the stream swimming toward
the western shore.
Dick laughed to himself. He
had won a triumph, although he did not yet know that
it would amount to anything. At any rate the
men could no longer glide up and down the river at
their leisure looking for him to come forth from the
forest.
He knew that the shots would bring
the single pursuer at full speed, and, as he had saved
some ounces of strength, he now ran at his utmost speed.
The river curved again and just beyond the curve it
seemed shallow to him. He plunged in at once,
and waded rapidly, holding his rifle, pistols and
saddlebags above his head. He was in dread lest
he receive a bullet in his back, but he made the farther
shore, ran into the dense undergrowth and sank down
dripping and panting.
He had made the crossing but he did
not forget to be ready. He rapidly reloaded
his rifle, and fastened the pistols at his belt.
Then he looked through the bushes at the river.
The two canoemen, water running from them in streams,
were on the other bank, though a little farther down
the stream. He believed that they were no longer
silent. He fondly imagined that they were cursing
hard, if not loud.
His relief was so great that, forgetting
his own bedraggled condition, he laughed. Then
he looked again to see what they were going to do.
A small man, his face shaded by the broad brim of a
hat, emerged from the woods and joined them.
Dick was too far away to see his face, even had it
been uncovered, but his figure looked familiar.
Nevertheless, although he tried hard, he could not
recall where he had seen him before. But, as
he carried a long-barreled rifle, Dick was sure that
this was his unknown pursuer. There had certainly
been collusion also between him and the men in the
boat, as the three began to talk earnestly, and to
point toward the woods on the other side.
Dick felt that he had avenged himself
upon the boatmen, but his rage rose high against the
little man under the broad-brimmed hat. It was
he who had followed him so long, and who had tried
ruthlessly to kill him. The lad’s rifle
was of the most improved make and a bullet would reach.
He was tempted to try it, but prudence came to his
rescue. Still lying close he watched them.
He felt sure that they would soon be hunting for
his footprints, but he resolved to stay in his covert,
until they began the crossing of the river, to which
his trail would lead when they found it.
He saw them cease talking and begin
searching among the woods. It might be at least
a half-hour before they found the trail and his strength
would be restored fully then. His sinking of
the canoe had been in reality a triumph, and so he
remained at ease, watching the ford.
He was quite sure that when his trail
was found the little man would be the one to find
it, and sure enough at the end of a half-hour the
weazened figure led down to the ford. Dick might
have shot one of them in the water, but he had no
desire to take life. It would serve no purpose,
and, refreshed and strengthened, he set out through
the forest toward Jackson.
He came to a brook soon, and, remembering
the old device of Indian times, he waded in it at
least a half-mile. When he left it he passed
through a stretch of wood, crossed an old cotton field
and entered the woods again. Then he sat down
and ate from his store, feeling that he had shaken
off his pursuers. Another examination of his
map followed. He had kept fixed in his mind
the point at which he was to find Hertford, and, being
a good judge of direction, he felt sure that he could
yet reach it.
The sun, now high and warm, had dried
his clothing, and, after the food, he was ready for
another long march. He struck into a path and
walked along it, coming soon to a house which stood
back a little distance from a road into which the
path merged. A man and two women standing on
the porch stared at him curiously, but he pretended
to take no notice. After long exposure to weather,
blue uniforms did not differ much from gray, and his
own was now covered with mud. He could readily
pass as a soldier of the Confederacy unless they chose
to ask too many questions.
“From General Pemberton’s
army?” called the man, when he was opposite the
house.
Dick nodded and stepped a little faster.
“Won’t you stop for a bite and fresh water
with friends of the cause?”
“Thanks, but important dispatches.
Must hurry.” They repeated the invitation.
He shook his head, and went on. He did not look
back, but he was sure that they stared at him as long
as he was in sight. Then, for safety’s
sake, he left the road and entered the wood once more.
He had now come to country comparatively
free from swamp and marsh, and pursued his way through
a great forest, beautiful with live oaks and magnolias.
In the afternoon he took a long rest by the side of
a clear spring, where he drew further upon the store
of food in his saddlebags, which he calculated held
enough for another day. After that he would
have to forage upon the country.
He would sleep the second night in
the forest, his blanket being sufficient protection,
unless rain came, which he would have to endure as
best he could. Another look at his map and he
believed that on the following afternoon he could
reach Hertford.
He took the remaining food from his
saddlebags, wrapped it in his blanket, and strapped
the pack on his back. Then, in order to lighten
his burden, he hung the saddlebags on the bough of
a tree and abandoned them, after which he pressed
forward through the woods with renewed speed.
He came at times to the edge of the
forest and saw houses in the fields, but he always
turned back among the trees. He could find only
enemies here, and he knew that it was his plan to
avoid all human beings. Precept and example are
of great power and he recalled again much that he
had heard of his famous ancestor, Paul Cotter.
He had been compelled to fight often for his life
and again to flee for it from an enemy who reserved
torture and death for the captured. Dick felt
that he must do as well, and the feeling increased
his vigor and courage.
A little later he heard a note, low,
faint and musical. It was behind him, but he
was sure at first that it was made by negroes singing.
It was a pleasing sound. The negro had a great
capacity for happiness, and Dick as a young lad had
played with and liked the young colored lads of his
age.
But as he walked on he heard the low,
musical note once more and, as before, directly behind
him. It seemed a little nearer. He paused
and listened. It came again, always nearer and
nearer, and now it did not seem as musical as before.
There was a sinister thread in that flowing note,
and suddenly Dick remembered.
He was a daring horseman and with
his uncle and cousin and others at Pendleton he had
often ridden after the fox. It was the note of
the hounds, but of bloodhounds, and this time they
were following him. From the first he had not
the slightest doubt of it. Somebody, some traitor
in the Union camp, knew the nature of his errand, and
was hanging on to the pursuit like death.
Dick knew it was the little man whom
he had seen by the river, and perhaps the canoemen
were with him—he would certainly have comrades,
or his own danger would be too great—and
they had probably obtained the bloodhounds at a farmhouse.
Nearly everybody in Mississippi kept hounds.
The long whining note came again and
much nearer. Now all music was gone from it
for Dick. It was ferocious, like the howl of
the wolf seeking prey, and he could not restrain a
shudder. His danger had returned with twofold
force, because the hounds would unerringly lead his
pursuers through the forest as fast as they could
follow.
He did not yet despair. A new
resolution was drawn from the depths of his courage.
He did not forget that he was a good marksman and
he had both rifle and pistols. He tried to calculate
from that whining, ferocious note how many hounds
were pursuing, and he believed they were not many.
Now he prepared for battle, and, as he ran, he kept
his eye on the ground in order that he might choose
his own field.
He saw it presently, a mass of fallen
timber thrown together by a great storm, and he took
his place on the highest log, out of reach of a leaping
hound. Then, lying almost flat on the log and
with his rifle ready, he waited, his heart beating
hard with anger that he should be pursued thus like
an animal.
The howling of the hounds grew more
ferocious, and it was tinged with joy. The trail
had suddenly grown very hot, and they knew that the
quarry was just before them. Dick caught a good
view of a long, lean, racing figure bounding among
the trees, and he fired straight at a spot between
the blazing eyes. The hound fell without a sound,
and with equal ease he slew the second. The
third and last drew back, although the lad heard the
distant halloo of men seeking to drive him on.
Dick sprang from his log and ran through
the forest again. He knew that the lone hound
after his first recoil would follow, but he had his
reloaded rifle and he had proved that he knew how to
shoot. It would please him for the hound to
come within range.
When he took to renewed flight the
hound again whined ferociously and Dick glanced back
now and then seeking a shot. Once he caught a
glimpse of two or three dusky figures some distance
behind the hound, urging him on, and his heart throbbed
with increased rage. If they presented an equal
target he would fire at them rather than the hound.
He could run no longer, and his gait
sank to a walk. His very exhaustion brought
him his opportunity, as the animal came rapidly within
range, and Dick finished him with a single lucky shot.
Then, making an extreme effort, he fled on a long
time, and, while he was fleeing, he saw the sun set
and the night come.
The strain upon him had been so great
that his nerves and brain were unsteady. Although
the forest was black with night he saw it through a
blood-red mist. Something in him was about to
burst, and when he saw a human figure rising up before
him it broke and he fell.
Dick was unconscious a long time.
But when he awoke he found himself wrapped in a blanket,
while another was doubled under his head. It
was pitchy dark, but he beheld the outline of a human
figure, sitting by his side. He strove to rise,
but a powerful hand on his shoulder pushed him back,
though gently, and a low voice said:
“Stay still, Mr. Mason. We mustn’t
make any sound now!”
Dick recognized in dim wonder the
voice of Sergeant Daniel Whitley. How he had
come there at such a time, and what he was doing now
was past all guessing, but Sergeant Whitley was a
most competent man. He knew more than most generals,
and he was filled with the lore of the woods.
He would trust him. He let his head sink back
on the folded blanket, and his heavy eyes closed again.
When Dick roused from his stupor the
sergeant was still by his side, and, as his eyes grew
used to the darkness, he noticed that Whitley was really
kneeling rather than sitting, crouched to meet danger,
his finger on the trigger of a rifle. Dick’s
brain cleared and he sat up.
“What is it, Sergeant?” he whispered.
“I see you’re all right
now, Mr. Mason,” the sergeant whispered back,
“but be sure you don’t stir.”
“Is it the Johnnies?”
“Lean over a little and look down into that
dip.”
Dick did so, and saw four men hunting
among the trees, and the one who seemed to be their
leader was the little weazened fellow, with the great,
flap-brimmed hat.
“They’re looking for your
trail,” whispered the sergeant, “but they
won’t find it. It’s too dark, even
for a Sioux Indian, and I’ve seen them do some
wonderful things in trailing.”
“I seem to have met you in time, Sergeant.”
“So you did, sir, but more of
that later. Perhaps you’d better lie down
again, as you’re weak yet. I’ll tell
you all they do.”
“I’ll take your advice,
Sergeant, but am I sound and whole? I felt something
in me break, and then the earth rose up and hit me
in the face.”
“I reckon it was just the last
ounce of breath going out of you with a pop.
They’re hunting hard, Mr. Mason, but they can’t
pick up the trace of a footstep. Slade must
be mad clean through.”
“Slade! Slade! Who’s Slade?”
“Slade is a spy partly, and
an outlaw mostly, ’cause he often works on his
own hook. He’s the weazened little fellow
with so much hat-brim, and he’s about twenty
different kinds of a demon. You’ve plenty
of reason to fear him, and it’s lucky we’ve
met.”
“It’s more than luck for
me, Sergeant. It’s salvation. I believe
it wouldn’t have been half as hard on me if
somebody had been with me, and you’re the first
whom I would have chosen. Are they still in the
dip, Sergeant?”
“No, they’ve passed to
the slope on the right, and I think they’ll go
over the hill. We’re safe here so long
as we remain quiet; that is, safe for the time.
Slade will hang on as long as there’s a possible
chance to find us.”
“Sergeant, if they do happen
to stumble upon us in the dark I hope you’ll
promise to do one thing for me.”
“I’ll do anything I can, Mr. Mason.”
“Kill Slade first. That
little villain gives me the horrors. I believe
the soul of the last bloodhound I shot has been reincarnated
in him.”
“All right, Mr. Mason,”
returned the sergeant, placidly, “if we have
to fight I’ll make sure of Slade at once.
Is there anybody else you’d like specially
to have killed?”
“No thank you, Sergeant.
I don’t hate any of the others, and I suppose
they’d have dropped the chase long ago if it
hadn’t been for this fellow whom you call Slade.
Now, I think I’ll lie quiet, while you watch.”
“Very good, sir. I’ll
tell you everything I can see. They’re
passing over the hill out of sight, and if they return
I won’t fail to let you know.”
Sergeant Whitley, a man of vast physical
powers, hardened by the long service of forest and
plain, was not weary at all, and, in the dusk, he
looked down with sympathy and pity at the lad who had
closed his eyes. He divined the nature of the
ordeal through which he had gone. Dick’s
face, still badly swollen from the bites of the mosquitoes,
showed all the signs of utter exhaustion. The
sergeant could see, despite the darkness, that it
was almost the face of the dead, and he knew that happy
chance had brought him in the moment of Dick’s
greatest need.
He ceased to whisper, because Dick,
without intending it, had gone to sleep again.
Then the wary veteran scouted in a circle about their
refuge, but did not discover the presence of an enemy.
He sat down near the sleeping lad,
with his rifle between his knees, and watched the
moon come out. Owing to his wilderness experience
he had been chosen also to go on a scout toward Jackson,
though he preferred to make his on foot, and the sound
of Dick’s shots at the hounds had drawn him
to an observation which finally turned into a rescue.
After midnight the sergeant slept
a little while, but he never awakened Dick until it
was almost morning. Then he told him that he
would go with him on the mission to Hertford, and
Dick was very glad.
“What’s become of Slade and his men?”
asked Dick.
“I don’t know,”
replied the sergeant, “but as they lost the trail
in the night, it’s pretty likely they’re
far from here. At any rate they’re not
bothering us just now. How’re you feeling,
Mr. Mason?”
“Fine, except that my face still burns.”
“We’ll have to hold up
a Confederate house somewhere and get oil of pennyroyal.
That’ll cure you, but I guess you’ve learned
now, Mr. Mason, that mosquitoes in a southern swamp
are just about as deadly as bullets.”
“So they are, Sergeant, and
this is not my first experience. Luck has been
terribly against me this trip, but it turned when I
met you last night.”
“Yes, Mr. Mason. In this
case two rifles are better than one. We’re
prowling right through the heart of the Confederacy,
but I’m thinking we’ll make it.
We’ve got a great general now, and we mustn’t
fail to bring up Colonel Hertford and his cavalry.
I’ve an idea in my head that General Grant
is going to carry through big plans.”
“Then I think it’s time we were starting.”
“So do I, Mr. Mason, and now
will you take these crackers and smoked ham?
I’ve plenty in my knapsack. I learned on
the plains never to travel without a food supply.
If a soldier starves to death what use is he to his
army? And I reckon you need something to eat.
You were about tired out when I met you last night.”
“I surely was, Sergeant, but
I’m a new man this morning. You and I
together can’t fail.”
Dick, in truth, felt an enormous relief.
He and his young comrades had learned to trust Sergeant
Whitley implicitly, with his experience of forest
and plain and his infinite resource.
“Where do you figure we are, Sergeant?”
he asked.
“In the deep woods, Mr. Mason,
but we haven’t turned much from the line leading
you to the place where you were to meet Colonel Hertford.
You haven’t really lost time, and we’ll
start again straight ahead, but we’ve got to
look out for this fellow Slade, who’s as tricky
and merciless as they ever make ’em.”
“Tell me more about Slade, Sergeant.”
“I don’t know a lot, but
I heard of him from some of our scouts. He was
an overseer of a big plantation before the war.
From somewhere up North, I think, but now he’s
more of a rebel than the rebels themselves. Often
happens that way. But you’ve got to reckon
with him.”
“Glad I know that much.
He reminds me of a man I’ve seen, though I can’t
recall where or when. It’s enough, though,
to watch out for Slade. Come on, Sergeant, I’m
feeling so fine now that with your help I’m able
to fight a whole army.”
The two striding through the forest,
started toward the meeting place with Hertford.
Now that he had the powerful comradeship of Sergeant
Whitley, the wilderness became beautiful instead of
gloomy for Dick. The live oaks and magnolias
were magnificent, and there was a wild luxuriance
of vegetation. Birds of brilliant plumage darted
among the foliage, and squirrels chattered on the
boughs. He saw bear tracks again, and called
the sergeant’s attention to them.
“It would be nice to be hunting
them, instead of men,” said Whitley. “You
can find nice, black fellows down here, good to eat,
and it’s a deal safer to hunt them than it is
the grizzlies and silver-tips of the Rockies.”
They saw now much cleared land, mostly
cotton fields, and now and then a white man or a negro
working, but there was always enough forest for cover.
They waded the numerous brooks and creeks, allowing
their clothing to dry in the warm sun, as they marched,
and about two hours before sunrise the sergeant, wary
and always suspicious, suggested that they stop a
while.
“I’ve an idea,”
he said, “that Slade and his men are still following
us. Oh, he’s an ugly fellow, full of sin,
and if they’re not far behind us we ought to
know it.”
“Just as you say,” said
Dick, glad enough to shift the responsibility upon
such capable shoulders. “How would this
clump of bushes serve for a hiding place while we
wait?”
“Good enough. Indians
pursued, often ambush the pursuer, and as we’ve
two good men with two good rifles, Mr. Mason, we’ll
just see what this Slade is about.”
“When I last saw him,”
said Dick, “he had the two canoemen with him,
and perhaps they’ve picked up the owner of the
hounds.”
“That’s sure, and they’re
likely to be four. We’re only two, but
we’ve got the advantage of the ambush, and that’s
a big one. If you agree with me, Mr. Mason,
we’ll wait here for ’em. We were
sent out to take messages, not to fight, but since
these fellows hang on our trail we may get to Colonel
Hertford all the quicker because we do fight.”
“Your opinion’s mine too,
Sergeant. I’m not in love with battle,
but I wouldn’t mind taking a shot or two at
these men. They’ve given me a lot of trouble.”
The sergeant smiled.
“That’s the way it goes,”
he said. “You don’t get mad at anybody
in particular in a big battle, but if two or three
fellows lay around in the woods popping away at you
you soon get so you lose any objections to killing,
and you draw a bead on ’em as soon as a chance
comes.”
“That’s the way I feel,
Sergeant. It isn’t Christian, but I suppose
it has some sort of excuse.”
“Of course it has. Drop
a little lower, Mr. Mason. I see the bushes out
there shaking.”
“And that’s the sign that
Slade and his men have come. Well, I’m
not sorry.”
Both Dick and the sergeant lay almost
flat with their heads raised a little, and their rifles
pushed forward. The bushes ceased to shake,
but Dick had no doubt their pursuers were before them.
They had probably divined, too, that the quarry was
at bay and was dangerous. Evidently the sergeant
had been correct when he said Slade was full of craft
and cunning.
While they waited the spirit of Dick’s
famous ancestor descended upon him in a yet greater
measure. Their pursuers were not Indians, but
this was the deep wilderness and they were merely
on a skirt of the great war. Many of the border
conditions were reproduced, and they were to fight
as borderers fought.
“What do you think they’re doing?”
Dick whispered.
“Feeling around for us.
Slade won’t take any more risk than he has to.
Did you see those two birds fly away from that bough,
sudden-like? I think one of the men has just
crept under it. But the fellow who exposes himself
first won’t be Slade.”
Dick’s inherited instinct was
strong, and he watched not only in front, but to right
and left also. He knew that cunning men would
seek to flank and surprise them, and he noticed that
the sergeant also watched in a wide circle.
He still drew tremendous comfort from the presence
of the skillful veteran, feeling that his aid would
make the repulse of Slade a certainty.
A rifle cracked suddenly in the bushes
to their right, and then another by his side cracked
so suddenly that only a second came between.
Dick heard a bullet whistle over their heads, but
he believed that the one from his comrade’s
rifle had struck true.
“I’ve no way of telling
just now,” said the sergeant, calmly, “but
I don’t believe that fellow will bother any
more. If we can wing another they’re likely
to let us alone and we can go on. They must know
by the trail that we’re now two instead of one,
and that their danger has doubled.”
Dick had felt that the danger to their
pursuers had more than doubled. He had an immense
admiration for the sergeant, who was surely showing
himself a host. The man, trained so long in border
war, was thoroughly in his element. His thick,
powerful figure was drawn up in the fashion of a panther
about to spring. Bulky as he was he showed ease
and grace, and wary eyes, capable of reading every
sign, continually scanned the thickets.
“They know just where we are,
of course,” whispered the sergeant, “but
if we stay close they’ll never get a good shot
at us.”
Dick caught sight of a head among
some bushes and fired. The head dropped back
so quickly that he could not tell whether or not his
bullet sped true. After a long wait the sergeant
suggested that they creep away.
“I think they’ve had enough,”
he said. “They’ve certainly lost
one man, and maybe two. Slade won’t care
to risk much more.”
Dick was glad to go and, following
the sergeant’s lead, he crawled four or five
hundred yards, a most painful but necessary operation.
Then they stood up, and made good time through the
forest. Both would have been willing to stay
and fight it out with Slade and what force he had left,
but their mission was calling them, and forward they
went.
“Do you think they’ll follow us?”
asked Dick.
“I reckon they’ve had
enough. They may try to curve ahead of us and
give warning, but the salute from the muzzles of our
rifles has been too warm for any more direct pursuit.
Besides, we’re going to have a summer storm
soon, and like as not they’ll be hunting shelter.”
Dick, in the excitement of battle
and flight, had not noticed the darkening skies and
the rising wind. Clouds, heavy and menacing,
already shrouded the whole west. Low thunder
was heard far in the distance.
“It’s going to be a whopper,”
said the sergeant, “something like those big
storms they have out on the plains. We must find
shelter somewhere, Mr. Mason, or it will leave us
so bedraggled and worn out that for a long time we
won’t be able to move on.”
Dick agreed with him entirely, but
neither yet knew where the shelter was to be found.
They hurried on, looking hopefully for a place.
Meanwhile the storm, its van a continual blaze of
lightning and roar of thunder, rolled up fast from
the southwest. Then the lightning ceased for
a while and the skies were almost dark. Dick
knew that the rain would come soon, and, as he looked
eagerly for shelter, he saw a clearing in which stood
a small building of logs.
“A cornfield, Sergeant,”
he exclaimed, “and that I take it is a crib.”
“A crib that will soon house
more than corn,” said the sergeant. “Two
good Union soldiers are about to stop there.
It’s likely the farmer’s house itself
is just beyond that line of trees, but he won’t
be coming out to this crib to-night.”
“Not likely. Too much
darkness and rain. Hurry, Sergeant, I can hear
already the rush of the rain in the forest.”
They ran across the field, burst open
the door of the crib, leaped in and banged the door
shut again, just as the van of the rain beat upon it
with an angry rush.
Save for a crack or two they had no
light, but they stood upon a dry floor covered deep
with corn shucks, and heard the rain sweep and roar
upon the roof. On one side was a heap of husked
corn which they quickly piled against the door in
order to hold it before the assaults of the wind,
and then they sought warm places among the shucks.
It was a small crib, and the rain
drove in at the cracks, but it furnished abundant
shelter for its two new guests. Dick had never
been in a finer hotel. He lay warm and dry in
a great heap of shucks, and heard the wind and rain
beat vainly upon walls and roof and the thunder rumble
as it moved off toward the east. He felt to the
full the power of contrast.
“Fine in here, isn’t it, Sergeant?”
he said.
“Fine as silk,” replied
the sergeant from his own heap of shucks. “We
played in big luck to find this place, ’cause
I think it’s going to rain hard all night.”
“Let it. It can’t
get me. Sergeant, I’ve always known that
corn is our chief staple, but I never knew before
that the shucks, which so neatly enclose the grains
and cob, were such articles of luxury. I’m
lying upon the most magnificent bed in the United
States, and it’s composed wholly of shucks.”
“It’s no finer than mine, Mr. Mason.”
“That’s so. Yours
is just like mine, and, of course, it’s an exception.
Now, I wish to say, Sergeant, the rain upon the roof
is so soothing that I’m likely to go to sleep
before I know it.”
“Go ahead, Mr. Mason, and it’s
more’n likely I’ll follow. All trails
will be destroyed by the storm and nobody will think
of looking here for us to-night.”
Both soon slept soundly, and all through
the night the rain beat upon the roof.