When they had satisfied their appetites
they made two large packages of dried meat and fruit,
tying them securely with straw to their right arms:
saddle-bags there were none.
“Not a horse,” whispered
Adan. “Do you think the soldiers have gone?”
“I think they are lost, and
as they did not stop to tie their horses when they
started after us, they won’t see them again until
they get back to camp. Come.”
Roldan peered cautiously into each
of the huts in turn; all were empty. Then the
boys started for the corral, which the soldiers would
not have passed either on their way to the pueblo
or in pursuit of the runaways. They found the
Indians in charge sound asleep in their hut, and did
not think it worth while to awaken them. The
two mustangs they led forth, vicious brutes at best,
were very restless from prolonged inactivity.
Roldan’s submitted to the saddle, but bolted
as soon as he felt a determined pair of legs about
his sides; and as our adventurer had neither whip
nor spurs, all he could do was to hang on and shout
to Adan to follow close. This was the only thing
that Adan’s mustang was willing to do, and the
boys were borne blindly on, down one path, up another,
plunging deeper into the black recesses of the forest
until they knew no more of their whereabouts than
if they had dropped from another sphere.
After many weary miles the mustangs
slackened, and the boys dismounted and cut two slender
but stinging whips. After that they rose once
more to the proud supremacy of man over brute.
But the situation was full of peril. They were
hopelessly lost, the redwoods were the home of the
grizzly and the panther, and they might come upon the
soldiers at any moment. But there was nothing
to do but to ride on, and at least they had horses
and food.
They descended whenever descent was
possible, for at the foot of the mountain lay the
open valley; but there were no trails; in all likelihood
they were where no man, red or white, had ever been
before; they had to force their way where the brush
was thinnest, and as often their flight was toward
loftier heights.
As the day wore on the temperature
fell, even in those forest depths where the sun had
not penetrated for a thousand years. The beauty
of the forest palled upon Roldan: those everlasting
aisles with their grey motionless columns, their green
sinister light, the delicate fern wood below, the
dense mat of branch and leaf so high above. The
redwoods oppress and terrify when they have man completely
at their mercy. They look as if they could speak
if they would, roar louder than the storms that have
never shaken them. But they know the value of
silence, and the silence of their inmost depths is
awful.
After many hours the boys rode out
upon a bare peak. But its outlook told them nothing.
Behind rose other peaks, below was the dense primeval
forest, rising and falling on other slopes. There
was no glimpse of valley anywhere. The sky was
heavy with the grey lurid clouds of concentrated storm.
“We will eat,” said Roldan, briefly; “but
not too much.”
They tethered the mustangs that the
beasts might eat of the abundant grass, and consumed
a small quantity of their store. Then they stretched
at full length on the ground to rest their weary bodies.
“Let us stay here the night,”
said Adan, with a cavernous yawn.
“It is hardly darker by night
than by day in the forest, but perhaps it is well
to rest.”
“I am one ache, no more,”
murmured Adan, and went to sleep.
Roldan pillowed his head on his arm
and for once followed lead. He awoke suddenly,
his face wet and stinging. White stars were whirling,
the ground was white, the forest was half obliterated.
He shook Adan and dragged him to his feet.
“We must get into the redwoods
at once,” he said. “We shall be buried
here.”
Adan gasped but cinched his saddle;
the boys sprang upon the now tractable mustangs and
plunged into the forest below. The brush was
thin, and they pushed their way downward as rapidly
as the steep descent would permit. Sometimes
the forest protected them from the storm, at others
the trees grew wide apart and the riders were exposed
to its pitiless rush. In these open spaces they
could see nothing, could only push blindly on, brushing
the stinging particles from their faces, their hands
and feet almost numb. The snow in the open was
already as high as the horses’ knees. There
was no wind, only that silent sweeping of the heavens.
In the depths the high branches of the redwoods groaned
ominously under the stiffening weight, like giants
in pain.
The forest thinned. The snow
had its will of the earth. There was no refuge
under the larger trees that still stood, like outposts,
here and there; the branches were too high above.
Once Adan suggested through his stiff lips and unruly
teeth that they turn back and take refuge in some
dense grove above; but Roldan shook his head peremptorily.
He had heard of the fearful storms of the Sierras;
they lasted for days, and the snow stood its ground
for weeks. Their only hope was the valley.
But they descended only to rise again:
in the white darkness of the storm they dared not
attempt to skirt the base of the peaks; they must
keep straight on, to the west, for there lay the valley.
Occasionally, where a grove of trees
stood close and the snow lay shallow, the boys got
off and wrestled, rousing the blood in their legs
and arms; then urged their mustangs to greater speed.
But the poor brutes were very weary, and the blood
in their veins was almost torpid. Once they stood
still and shook, whinnying pitifully. A huge grizzly,
so powdered as to be hardly distinguishable from the
drifts about him, floundered along to the right.
The boys crossed themselves and awaited their fate,
with the apathy of numb and despairing brains; but
the monster was evidently aiming for the warmth of
his home, and took no notice of the meal in four courses
standing in the middle of the path.
The night deepened. The snow
thickened and sped down with an audible rush, a sting
in each beautiful white bee. The boys nodded,
roused themselves, fell forward, their arms mechanically
stiffening about the horses’ necks. Once
they flung out their hands and feet with a smothered
shriek. A tongue of flame seemed to leap down
their throats and hiss through their veins, while
the world roared and heaved about them. Then
all sensation was over.