Roldan’s way lay over his father’s
leagues until two hours after nightfall. As he
passed, every now and again, a herd of cattle, lounging
vaqueros called to him: “Ay, Don Roldan,
where do you go?” or, “The little senor
chooses a hot day for his ride.” But he
excited no curiosity. Like all Californians he
half lived in the saddle; and he was often seen riding
in the direction of Don Esteban Pardo’s rancho,
to spend a few days with his chosen friend.
As he approached the house he saw
the family sitting on the long verandah: the
pretty black-eyed girls in full white gowns, their
dark hair flowing to the floor, or braided loosely;
Don Esteban, a silk handkerchief knotted about his
head, reclining in a long chair beside his wife, a
stout woman, coffee-coloured with age, attired in a
dark silk gown flowered with roses. Indian servants
came and went with cooling drinks. Although it
was December, Winter had loitered and fallen into
deeper sleep than usual on her journey South this year.
Adan was leaning against a pillar,
moody and bored. He was the youngest of the boys.
His brothers, elegant caballeros, who spent most of
their time in the capital or on other ranches, were
kind to their younger brother, but not companionable.
Therefore, when Roldan galloped into sight, he gave
a shout of joy and ran down the road. Roldan drew
rein some distance from the house, that the conference,
which must take place immediately, might be unheard
by older ears.
“Listen, my friend,” he
said rapidly, interrupting Adan’s voluble hospitality.
“The soldiers are out for conscripts—”
“Ay, yi!—”
“Now listen, and don’t
talk until I am done. I will not be
drafted as if I had no will of my own, and rot in
a barrack while others enjoy life. Neither will
you if you have the spirit of a Pardo and are worthy
to be the friend of Roldan Castanada. So—I
fly. Do you understand?—and you go
with me. We will dodge these servants of a tyrant
government the length and breadth of the Californias.
When the danger is over for this year we will return—not
before. Now, you will ask me to go to my room
as soon as possible after you have given me some supper,
for I am tired and want sleep. You also will
take a nap. When all is quiet I shall call you
and we will start.”
Adan had listened to this harangue
with bulging eyes and tongue rolling over his teeth.
But Roldan never failed to carry the day. He was
a born leader. Adan’s was the will that
bent; but his talent for good comradeship and his
quiet self-respect saved him from servility.
In appearance he was in sharp contrast
to the slender Roldan, of the classic features and
fiery eyes. Short, roly-poly, with a broad, good-natured
face, his attire was also unmarked by the extreme elegance
which always characterised Roldan. In summer
he wore calico small-clothes, in winter unmatched
articles of velvet or cloth, and an old sombrero without
silver.
“Ay! yi!” he gasped.
“Ay, Roldan! Holy Mary! But you are
right. You always are. And so clever!
I will go. Sure, sure. Come now, or they
will think we conspire.”
Roldan dismounted, and was warmly
greeted by the family. The girls rose and courtesied,
blushing with the coquetry of their race. Roldan
cared little for girls at any time, and to-night was
doubly abstracted, his ear straining at every distant
hoof-beat. He retired as early as he politely
could, but not to sleep. Indeed, he became so
nervous that he could not wait until the family slept.
“Better to brave them, Adan,”
he said to his more phlegmatic friend, “than
that sergeant, should he get here before we leave.
Come, come, let us go.”
They dropped out of the window and
stole to the corral where the riding horses were kept.
It was surrounded by a high wall, and the gate was
barred with iron; but they managed to remove the bars
without noise, saddled fresh horses and led them forth
and onward for a half mile, then mounted and were
off like the wind.
They knew the country down the coast
on the beaten road, but they dared not follow this,
and struck inland. The air was now of an agreeable
warmth; the full moon was so low and brilliant that
Roldan called out he could count the bristling hairs
on a coyote’s back.
In less than two hours they were climbing
a mountain trail leading through a dense redwood forest.
In these depths the moon’s rays were scattered
into mere flecks dropping here and there through the
thick interlacing boughs of the giant trees.
Those boughs were a hundred feet and more above their
heads. About them was a dense underforest of young
redwoods, pines, and great ferns; and swarming over
all luxuriant and poisonous creepers.
They were silent for a time.
The redwood forests are very quiet and awesome.
At night one hears but the rush of the mountain torrent,
the cry of a panther or a coyote, the low sigh of
wind in the treetops.
“Ay, Roldan,” exclaimed
Adan, suddenly. “Think did we meet a bear?”
“We probably shall,” said
Roldan, coolly. “These forests have many
‘grizzlies,’ as the Americans call them.”
“But what should we do, Roldan?”
“Why, kill him, surely.”
“Have you ever seen one?”
“Never.”
“But it is said that they are
very large, my friend, larger than you or
I.”
“Perhaps. Keep quiet. I like to hear
the forest talk.”
“What strange fancies you have, Roldan.
A forest cannot talk.”
“Oh—hush.”
“Ay, yi, Roldan! Roldan!”
The horses were standing upright,
neighing pitifully. Adan gave a hoarse gurgle
and crossed himself.
“The adventures have begun,” said Roldan.
In a great swath of moonlight on a
ledge some yards above them, standing on his hind
legs and swinging his forepaws goodnaturedly, was an
immense grey bear. Suddenly he extended his arms
sociably, almost affectionately.
“We cannot retreat down that
steep trail,” said Roldan, rapidly. “He
could follow faster and the horses would fall.
To the left! in the brush, quick!—a bear
cannot run sideways on a mountain.”
The boys dug their spurs into the
trembling mustangs, who responded with a snort of
pain and plunged into the thicket. Only the bold
skill of the riders saved them from pitching sidewise
down the steep slope, despite the brush, for they
were unshod and their knees had weakened.
But the grizzly, alas! was still master
of the situation. In less than a moment the boys
saw him lumbering along above them. He evidently
had possession of a trail, more or less level.
“Dios de mi alma!” cried
Adan. “If he gets ahead of us he will come
down and meet us somewhere. We shall be lost—eaten
even as a cat eats a mouse, a coyote a chicken.”
“You will look well lining the
dark corridors of the bear, my friend. Your yellow
jacket with those large red roses, which would make
a bull sweat, would hang like tapestry in the houses
of Spain. Those hide boots, spotted with mud,
and the blood of the calf, would keep him from wanting
another meal for many a long day—”
“Ay, thou fearless one!
Why, it is said that if the grizzly even raises his
paw and slaps the face every feature is crushed out
of shape.”
“I should not be surprised.”
They plunged on, tearing their clothes
on the spiked brush and the thorns of the sweetbrier,
fragrant lilac petals falling in a shower about them,
great ferns trodden and rebounding. The air was
heavy with perfume and the pungent odour of redwood
and pine.
Roldan had passed Adan. Suddenly
his horse stumbled and would have gone headlong had
not his expert rider pulled him back on his haunches.
“What is it? What is it?”
cried Adan, who also had been obliged to pull in abruptly,
and who liked horses less when they stood on their
hind legs. “Is it the bear upon us?
But, no, I hear him—above and beyond.
What are you doing, my friend?”
Roldan had dismounted and was on his
hands and knees. In a half moment he stood erect.
“We are saved,” he said.
“Ay? What?”
“It is a hole, my friend—large
and deep and round. Did you put any meat in your
saddle-bags?”
“Ay, a good piece.”
“Raw?”
“Yes.”
“Give it to me—quick. Do not
unwrap it.”
Adan handed over the meat, then dismounted also.
“A bear-trap?” he asked.
“Yes, a natural one. Come this way, before
I unwrap the meat.”
The boys forced their way to the south
of the large hole, dragging the still terrified horses,
who were not disposed to respond to anything less
persuasive than the spur. Roldan approached the
edge of the excavation and shook the meat loose, flinging
the paper after it. As the smell of fresh beef
pervaded the air it was greeted by a growl like rising
thunder, and almost simultaneously the huge unwieldy
form of the bear hurled itself down through the brush.
The boys held their breath. Even Roldan felt
a singing in his ears. But the grizzly, without
pausing to ascertain his bearings, went down into
the hole at a leap. He made one mouthful of the
meat, then appeared to realise that he was in a trap.
With a roar that made the horses rear and neigh like
stricken things, he flung himself against the sides
of his prison, drew back and leaped clumsily, tore
up the earth, and galloped frantically to and fro.
But he was caught like a rat in a trap.
The boys laughed gleefully and remounted
their horses, which also seemed to appreciate the
situation, for they had quieted suddenly.
“Adios! Adios!” cried
Roldan, as they forced their way up to the trail the
bear had discovered. “You will make a fine
skeleton; we will come back and look at you some day.”
But it was not the last they were to see of Bruin
in the flesh.