The boys slept soundly between two
excellent Mission blankets in a corner of the hut,
whose walls and floors had been well swept with Mission
brooms. Anastacio, despite his contempt for the
trammels of civilisation, had developed an aristocratic
taste or two. He slept by the door, but when
the boys awoke he was not there. The pueblo, but
for two sentinels standing before the door, was apparently
deserted. The sun was looking over the highest
peak, suffusing the black aisles of the forest with
a rosy glow, reddening the snow on hut and level and
rocky heights. There was not a sound except the
faint murmur of the treetops.
“Where is the world?”
asked Roldan. “Are there ranches, with cavalcades
and bull-fights, lazy caballeros lying in hammocks
smoking cigarritos, or dancing the night through with
silly girls? Dios de mi alma! I feel as
if I did not care.”
“Caramba!” exclaimed Adan,
“I am famished. Do you suppose they have
left us anything to eat?”
“I suppose there is nothing
to do but ask one of these dogs to be good enough
to give us breakfast—no, not ask. I
could starve, but not beg of an Indian.”
He beckoned haughtily to one of the
sentinels, who approached and saluted respectfully.
“Breakfast,” said the
young don, curtly. “We wish to eat at once.”
The Indian went over to a large stone
oven and took out four meal cakes, which he carried
to the boys, then fetched them fruit and wine.
“Where is Anastacio and the
others?” asked Roldan, breakfast over.
“In the temascal.”
Roldan sprang to his feet. “Do
you hear that, Adan?” he cried. “We
have always wanted to see Indians in temascal.”
To the sentinel, “Take us there at once.”
The Indian scowled. “But
for you, senor, we, too, are in the temascal.”
“Take us to the temascal,”
said Roldan, peremptorily, and the savage, in whom
servility had been planted by civilisation, yielded
to the will of the aristocrat. He bent his shoulders
and said: “Bueno; come!”
The boys followed him through the
brush, the sweet-scented chaparral on which the honey-dew
still lingered, to another and smaller clearing.
Here were several long rows of earthen huts, three
or four feet high, out of which smoke poured through
an aperture in the roof of each. Near by was
a broad creek to which the bank sloped gently from
the clearing. The creek, some three feet deep,
murmured over coloured stones and sprouting trees.
The long fine strands of the ice grass trailed far
over the water, motionless. Huge bunches of maidenhair,
delicate as green lace, clung to the steep bluffs
on the opposite side. Forests of ferns grew close
to the water’s edge. Down through a rift
in the cliffs tumbled a mountain stream over its rocky
bed.
“Are they stewing in those things?” asked
Roldan.
The Indian nodded. Roldan, followed
closely by Adan, approached one of the temascals and
opened the door cautiously. At first they could
see nothing, so dense was the smoke; but when much
had rushed out through the new opening, they saw two
prostrate figures, sweating from every pore.
Their eyes were closed, they breathed stertorously.
The expression on their heavy faces was beatific.
“Caramba!” exclaimed Adan,
as Roldan closed the door, “I am glad they like
it. What a lot of trouble to get clean.”
“As they never take a bath,
they couldn’t get clean any other way; and besides
it rests them after any great exertion—Mission
raiding, for instance—and they also fancy
it drags every humour out through the pores of the
skin. They’ll be coming out soon. Let
us go down to the creek and wait.”
The smoke was ascending upward in
straight columns through the still air, scarcely clouding
the brilliant morning, not a wreath wandering into
the aisles of the forest. The sun climbed higher,
melting the light fall of snow, its rays dancing among
the silver ripples of the water, vivifying the many
greens about the creek.
The boys amused themselves flinging
pebbles at the darting trout and discussing chances
of escape.
“We must not fly too soon,”
said Roldan, “or we shall run into the soldiers.
Of course they are scouring the country after these
robbers.”
“This is a good place to hide
in until the Mission food gives out; but I’d
prefer even the barracks to living on acorns—Ay,
look!”
The door of one of the temascals had
opened. A limp figure tottered forth and down
to the bank. He almost fell into the creek, but
had sufficient wit uncooked to rest his head on a
projecting stone. Presently came another, then
another, and another, until the bright rocks were
covered with dusky forms, the heads bobbing just above
the surface, supported on stump or stone. The
boys barely recognised Anastacio. Where was that
commanding presence, that haughty mien? Bowed
like an old man, blind from smoke, with simmering brain,
he reeled into the water with as little dignity as
his creatures.
But in less than an hour all had sprung
forth briskly, danced about in the sun to dry, and
started on a run for the pueblo. Roldan and Adan
followed close, knowing that a feast alone would satisfy
appetite after the temascal. And in a little
time the smell of roast meat pervaded the morning,
great cakes were roasting. The boys were invited
to eat apart with Anastacio. At the conclusion
of the meal the host, who had not spoken, solemnly
poured out three glasses of fire-water. He swallowed
his at a gulp. The boys sipped a few drops, winking
rapidly. Then Roldan thought it time to speak:
his chief was visibly thawed.
“What are you keeping us for?” he asked.
“Ransom.” Anastacio
lit a cigarrito—one of the padre’s—and
lay back on a bearskin.
“Do you know why we ran away?
To escape the conscription. If you give us up,
all our adventures, our dangers, our escapes, will
be as nothing, and we shall be punished besides.”
Anastacio moved his eyes to Roldan’s
with a flash of interest.
“Good! I hate the government.
You shall stay here until the time of conscription
is over. Then I will get a big sack of Mexican
dollars, a herd of cattle, a caponara of horses, and
much tobacco and whiskey. Who are your fathers?”
Roldan explained.
Anastacio flushed under his thick
skin. “Good. I will double the ransom—and
the guard.”
“The conscription will be over in a few weeks—”
“You could not go before.
We too must hide. Of course the soldiers are
behind. I have many scouts watching. Now
go to sleep.”
The following week was clear and bright,
but very cold. The boys, bred in the warm basin
of California, must have suffered had not Anastacio
ordered one of his minions to make them coat and boots
from the skin of the coyote. Every morning the
chief drilled his men with the tactics of a born commander
who had let no opportunity for observation escape him.
The military discipline of the pueblo was only relaxed
for three hours in the afternoon, during which time
the Indians were given full taste of the freedom they
coveted that they might battle for it the more passionately
when the time came. They gambled, slept, shot
game in the forest, exercised the horses, which were
in corral about a mile from the camp. The boys
shot deer with Anastacio, and wrestled in the plaza.
Occasionally the taciturn Indian unbent when sitting
by the great bonfire in the open at night, and told
wild tales of savage life before the padres came.
Roldan admired his splendid supple body and fearless
manhood, but the Indian was too sinister to inspire
affection. Adan was loudly bored. Roldan’s
ardent imagination sustained him.
At the end of the week the scouts
having failed to discover any sign of the enemy, Anastacio
determined to go down to the river in the valley for
a fortnight’s salmon fishing. He, too, was
bored. The fangs of civilisation are long and
tenacious.
It was on a brilliant winter’s
morning that Anastacio, his captives, and his five
hundred men wound their way down through the cold forest
on the mountain into the soft warm air of the valley.
There had been no rain for three weeks, and the river
was not more than half full; and it was very quiet.
They camped on the bank, well away from the scattered
groups of trees, that they might not lose a ray of
sunshine; and Roldan and Adan forgot that they were
under constant surveillance. There were no tents;
they slept in the open air, the boys in the centre
of a square of Indians. During the day they caught
many fine salmon, and salted what they did not eat,
to sell to the rancheros.
It was on the sixth night that Roldan,
who was wakeful, suddenly raised himself on his elbow
and listened intently. Far away, above the murmur
of the river, the audible slumbers of the camp, he
heard a low, precise, monotonous sound. He knew
what it meant. For a moment he hesitated.
The chances of escape seemed to grow less daily.
It was true that he was in no danger, that he would
eventually be restored to his parents—but
with his adventures cut short. He was fond of
his home, but it was always there, and he was keen
for variety: his life had been very uneventful.
On the other hand, if that advancing army conquered
the Indians, might not his and Adan’s captivity
be far more distasteful than it was at present?
He sprang up and called Anastacio. In a second
that warrior was on his feet and had leaped over his
alert sentinels into the square.
“What is it?” he demanded.
“Listen.”
Anastacio threw himself full length
and laid his ear to the ground. A moment later
he was erect again. He caught Roldan by one shoulder
and Adan by the other. By this time every Indian
in the camp was pressing about his chief.
“They are not two miles away,”
said Anastacio. “And the dawn will be here
in an hour. There are ten miles between us and
the mountains. I don’t wish to fight in
the open without knowing their numbers.”
Roldan danced up and down with sudden
excitement. “I have a plan,” he cried.
“You can trust me. I don’t want to
go back.”
Anastacio bent his keen malevolent
eyes close above the young Spaniard’s, then
loosened his hold.
“Bueno,” he said. “I trust
you.”
“The straw,” said Roldan. “Bring
it all here.”
Anastacio gave the order, and an immense
carreta of straw was trundled up.
“Now,” said Roldan, “gather
it into bunches the size of a man’s head and
tie each firmly. The tide is running toward the
enemy, and it is too dark to see clearly. Do
you understand, senor?”
Anastacio made a loud exclamation,
caught Roldan in his arms and kissed. him, much to
that haughty young gentleman’s disgust, then
tied the first bunch himself. Roldan, Adan, and
some forty of the quicker Indians rapidly manipulated
the straw, and in little more than ten minutes had
cast a hundred round compact bundles into the hurrying
tide. As they sailed away they certainly looked,
under the heavy shadow of the banks and the black-blue
of the sky, like an army of men swimming with the
desperate haste of terror, their heads alone above
water.
“Now!” cried Anastacio, “to the
mountains.”
They had brought only pack-horses.
There was nothing to do but run, and Anastacio, driving
his entire following ahead of him, sped to cover.
It was not twenty minutes before they heard a sharp
volley of musketry, and if their breath had not been
short they would have laughed aloud at the success
of Roldan’s strategy. The sky was turning
grey as they reached the straggling outposts of the
forest on the mountain. The firing had ceased.
Their ruse had doubtless been discovered.
“We will hide for twenty-four
hours and rest,” Anastacio said to Roldan, who
was the only person he condescended to hold converse
with, although he allowed Adan to sun himself in his
presence. “By that time, too, I shall know
their numbers. If they are many I’ll draw
them into the mountains and fire from ambush.
If few, they shall have open fight.”
“You will let us see it?”
asked Roldan, eagerly. “Of course I cannot
fight my own people; but I don’t want to be sent
to the pueblo, and I do want to see a fight.”
Anastacio hesitated. “Bueno,”
he said, “I owe you much. You give me the
word of the California don that unless I am killed
you will not run away?”
“I promise. There is nothing
else to do. That is to say, I promise not to
run away before this battle is over.”
“That is what I mean,”
said Anastacio, curtly. “Now we will sleep.”
He disposed his men in the forest
above a narrow, rocky canon into which the enemy would
hardly venture. Roldan volunteered to keep watch
with the two sentinels, and returned with them to
the outskirts of the forest. The enemy was marching
steadily across the valley. After a time they
halted, and lay down for a time. Early in the
afternoon they resumed march, then halted again within
a mile of the mountain, sending two scouts ahead.
By this time Anastacio had joined his sentinels, and
all four hid in the underforest between the great trees.
The scouts, keeping as much under
cover as was possible, crept up the lower spur of
the mountain, their glance describing a constant half-circle.
When they were within a few feet of the fugitives,
Anastacio raised his bow and discharged two arrows
in rapid succession. One buried itself in the
jugular of the foremost scout, and he huddled down
among the soft leaves without a cry. The other,
equally well aimed, entered the shoulder of the second
scout, where it quivered violently for a few seconds,
then was torn forth and flung to the ground with a
cry of defiance. The Californian, disregarding
his wound, raised himself to his full height and pointed
his pistol. But vaguely: the quiet, feathery
young redwoods told no tales. Then his eye fell
upon his dead brother. He turned and fled.
“They will not enter the forest,”
said Anastacio; “and when I am ready they will
fight, not before. Have you pencil and paper,
senor?”
Roldan produced a treasured note-book
that a relative had brought him from Boston.
“Write,” said the chief; and he dictated:—
Senor don CAPITAN,—At
noon to-morrow we fight in the valley near the eight
oak trees and the two madronos. Do you wish to
fight sooner you can come into the mountains.
It will be better for us. Anastacio.
He tore out the leaf, crawled down
the mountain as non-apparently as a python, and pinned
it high on an outstanding redwood, then returned and
told his sentinels to sleep, replacing them with others.