It was three hours later that a mass
of loosened earth caved suddenly, carrying Adan with
it. A wild yell came back. It stopped abruptly,
the tag end of it shot forth like the quick last blast
from a trumpet.
“Hi, Adan!” called Roldan,
excitedly, peering down into the dark. “Are
you hurt?”
“I know not! I know not!
It is darker than a dungeon of a Mission.”
The voice was quite distinct. It came from no
great depth.
“Get out of the way,”
called Roldan. “I am coming.”
He waited a moment, then dropped, falling on a mass
of soft earth. Adan had prudently retreated a
few steps. He ran forward and helped Roldan to
his feet, just as Rafael came flying down.
“Now for the other end,”
said Roldan. “This air is not too good.
And that devil may return any moment.”
They ran down the tunnel. It
was wide and high, built for flying priests, should
the Mission be besieged and captured by savage tribes.
The air was close and heavy, but free from noxious
gases. Bats whirred past and rats scampered before
them. Roldan paused after a moment and lit his
lantern. Its thin ray leaped but a few feet ahead,
but would frighten away any wild beast of the forest
that might have wandered in.
The tunnel was straight. It also appeared to
be endless.
“We have walked twenty leagues,” groaned
Adan, at the end of an hour.
“Two,” said Roldan.
“Without doubt this tunnel ends at the mountains,
and they are four leagues from the Mission. But
you have taken longer walks than this, my friend.
Do you remember that night in the mountains?”
“I had forgotten it for one
blessed week. Rafael, to what have we brought
you? Your poor muscles are soft, where ours are
now as hard as a deserter’s from an American
barque—ay, yi!”
“If they have but the chance
to become soft once more after they too are hard!”
muttered Rafael, who was panting and lagging.
“That priest! that priest!”
“It is true,” said Roldan,
pausing abruptly. “You will not dare to
return home at present—nor we. It is
flight once more—to Los Angeles. We
will stay there—where he would not dare
touch us if he came—until he repents or
makes sure that we will have told if we intend to tell.
Will you come?”
“Will I? I would go to
Mexico if I could. I feel that there is not room
in the Californias for those hands and myself.”
“I will take care of you,”
said Roldan, proudly, anxious to rout the memory of
his recent humiliation. “But come.”
And Rafael, too weary and bewildered to resent the
authority of his erst-while rival, trudged obediently
in the rear.
“It grows colder,” said Adan, significantly.
“Yes,” said Roldan. “We near
the mountains.”
Adan stopped. “Is it the
mountains again?” he asked. “If it
is, then I, for one, prefer the priest.”
“The mountains never scared
you half as badly as the priest did,” said Roldan,
cruelly. “And to say nothing of the fact
that we need never get lost in the mountains again,
the embrace of a grizzly would be no harder and more
death-sure than one in the great arms of that fiend
that wears a cassock.”
“True. You are always right.
But promise that whatever happens you will not lead
us into the Sierras.”
“I promise,” said Roldan,
much flattered by this unconscious tribute to his
leadership.
“Do you think that priest is
really a devil?” asked Rafael, in an awestruck
voice.
“When a man has insulted you,
you do not know what you think of him,” said
Roldan, flushing hotly. “If he only were
not a priest I’d fight him, big as he is.
But at least I can outwit him. It consoles me
to think of his fury when he goes to the cave and
finds us gone.”
“We’d better get out of
this tunnel before we talk about having the best of
the priest,” said Adan. “Suppose he
returns to kill us himself—”
“He will not return until to-morrow.
Then he will have repented. He will promise to
let us go free if we keep his secret. But he will
not have that satisfaction, my friends. Yesterday
he had a friend in Roldan Castanada; I would have
done anything for him, gladly kept his secret.
But to-day he has an enemy that he will do well to
fear. A Spaniard never forgets an insult.”
“What shall you do?” asked Rafael, eagerly.
“Expose him?”
“No, I do nothing mean.
But I proclaim at Los Angeles that gold has been discovered
in the Californias, and in six days the hills will
swarm, and the priest in his cell will gnash his teeth.”
“Ay!” exclaimed Adan. “Do you
feel that?”
An icy blast swept down the tunnel,
roughening skin and shortening breath. A few
moments later the low rhythm as of distant water came
to their ears. Roldan and Adan recognised that
familiar music, and set their teeth.
“And I prayed that I might never
see another redwood,” muttered Adan, crossing
himself.
The tunnel stopped abruptly.
They stood before a mass of brushwood, piled thickly
to keep out wild beasts and delude the searching eye
of hostile Indians. Beyond, seen in patches,
was a dazzle of white.
“Snow, of course,” said Adan, with a groan.
The boys pulled the branches apart
without much difficulty: the priests had studied
facility of egress and had raised the barrier from
within. In a few moments the boys stood in the
sunlight; and the mountains hemmed them in.
Adan stamped his foot savagely on
the hard snow. “We are where we started
a week ago,” he said. “No more, no
less.”
“No,” said Roldan, who
also had felt demoralised for a moment. “The
priests were too clever for that. They would want
to get into the shelter of the mountains, no more.
I believe that from the top of that point above the
tunnel we can see the valley.”
“Well, we can at least look,”
said Rafael, who was bitterly weary and hungry, but
determined not to be outdone by these hardened adventurers.
The boys made their way up the declivity
as best they could through the heavy snowdrifts, pulling
themselves up by clutching at young trees and scrub.
They were thinly clad and very cold, and hunger was
loud of speech. When after a half-hour’s
weary climb, they reached the summit, they drew a
long sigh of relief, but their enthusiasm was too moderate
for words in present physical conditions. The
valley lay below. Far away, beyond leagues of
low hills and wide valleys something white reflected
the sun. It was the Mission.
“We have not a moment to rest,
unless we can find a safe hiding-place,” said
Roldan. “If he should return and find us
gone, he would follow at once.”
“Where shall we go?” asked
the others, who, however, felt a quickening of blood
and muscle at the thought that the priest might be
under their feet even then.
“How near is the next rancho, and whose is it?”
“A league beyond the Mission grant. It
is Don Juan Ortega’s.”
“Very well, we go there and ask for horses.”
The boys made their way rapidly down
the slope, which after all was only that of a foot-hill.
Beyond were other foot-hills, and they skirted among
them, finally entering a canon. It was as dark
and cold and damp as the last hour of the tunnel had
been, but the narrow river, roaring through its middle,
had caught all the snow, and there was scarce a fleck
on the narrow tilted banks. The hill opposite
was the last of the foot-hills; but how to reach it?
The current was very swift, and boys knew naught of
the art of swimming in that land of little water.
Suddenly Roldan raised his hand with
an exclamation of surprise and pointed to a ledge
overhanging the stream. A hut stood there, made
of sections of the redwood and pine. From its
chimney, smoke was curling upward.
The boys were too hungry to pause
and reflect upon the possibility of a savage inmate;
they scrambled up the bank and ran along the ledge
to the hut. The door was of hide. They knocked.
There was no response. They flung the door aside
and entered. No one was in the solitary room of
the hut, but over a fire in the deep chimney place
hung a large pot, in which something of agreeable
savour bubbled.
Roldan glanced about. “I’d
rather be invited,” he said doubtfully.
But Adan had gone straight for the
pot. He lifted it off the fire, fetched three
broken plates and battered knives and forks from a
shelf, and helped his friends and himself. Then
he piously crossed himself and fell to. It was
not in human necessities to withstand the fragrance
of that steaming mess of squirrel, and the boys had
disposed of the entire potful before they raised their
eyes again. When they did, Rafael, who sat opposite
the door, made a slight exclamation, and the others
turned about quickly. A man stood there.
He was quite unlike any one they had
ever seen. A tall lank man with rounded shoulders,
lean leather-like cheeks, a preternatural length of
jaw, drab hair and chin whiskers, and deeply-set china-blue
eyes, made up a type uncommon in the Californias,
that land of priest, soldier, caballero, and Indian.
He was clad in coyote skins, and carried a gun in
his hand, a brace of rabbits slung over one shoulder.
He did not speak for some seconds, and when he did,
it was to make a remark that was not understood.
He said: “Well, I’ll be durned!”
His expression was not forbidding,
and Roldan recovered himself at once. He stood
up and bowed profoundly.
“Senor,” he said, “I
beg that you will pardon us. We would have craved
your hospitality had you been here, but as it was,
our hunger overcame us: we have not eaten for
many hours. But I am Roldan Castanada of the
Rancho de los Palos Verdes, senor, and I beg that you
will one day let me repay your hospitality in the
house of my fathers.”
“Holy smoke!” exclaimed
the man, “all that high-falutin’ lingo
for a potful of squirril. But you’re welcome
enough. I don’t begrudge anybody sup.”
Then he broke into a laugh at the puzzled faces of
his guests, and translated his reply into very lame
Spanish. The boys, however, were delighted to
be so hospitably received, and grinned at him, warm,
replete, and sheltered.
The man began at once to skin a rabbit.
“Seein’ as how you haint left me nothin’,
I may as well turn to,” he said. “And
it ain’t every day I’m entertainin’
lords.”
The boys did not understand the words,
but they understood the act, and reddened.
“I myself will cook the rabbit
for you, senor,” said Adan.
“Well, you kin,” and the man nodded acquiescence.
“You are American, no?” asked Roldan.
“I am, you bet.”
“From Boston, I suppose?”
The man guffawed. “Boston
ought to hear that. She’d faint. No,
young ’un, I’m not from no such high-toned
place as Boston. I’m a Yank though, and
no mistake. Vermont.”
“Is that in America?”
“In Meriky? Something’s
wrong with your geography, young man. It’s
one of the U. S. and no slouch, neither.”
He spoke in a curious mixture of English
and of Spanish that he adapted as freely as he did
his native tongue. The boys stared at him, fascinated.
They thought him the most picturesque person they had
ever met.
“When did you come?” asked Roldan.
“I’ll answer any more
questions you’ve got when I’ve got this
yere rabbit inside of me. P’r’aps
as you’ve been hungry you know that it doesn’t
make the tongue ambitious that way. I’ll
have a pipe while it’s cookin’.”
He was shortly invisible under a rolling
grey cloud. The tobacco was the rank stuff used
by the Indians. The boys wanted to cough, but
would have choked rather than be impolite, and finally
stole out with a muttered remark about the scenery.
When they returned their host had
eaten his breakfast and smoked his second pipe.
“Come in,” he said heartily.
“Come right in and make yourselves ter home.
My name’s Jim Hill. I won’t ask yourn
as I wouldn’t remember them if I did. These
long-winded Spanish names are beyond me. Set.
Set. Boxes ain’t none too comfortable,
but it’s the best I’ve got.”
“Oh, this box is most comfortable,”
Roldan hastened to assure him. “And we
are very thankful to have anything to sit on at all,
senor. You could not guess the many terrible
adventures we have had in the last few weeks.”
“Indeed! Adventures?
I want ter know! You look as if hammocks was more
to your taste. Oh, no offence,” as Roldan’s
eyes flashed. “But you are fine looking
birds, and no mistake. Howsomever, we’ll
hear all about them presently. It’s polite
to answer questions first. You was asking me
a while back how I come here. I come over those
mountains, young man, and I don’t put in the
adjectives I applied to them in the process outer
respect to your youth. But they’d make a
man swear if he’d spent his life psalm singin’
before.”
“We know,” said Roldan,
grimly. “We’ve been in them.
What did you eat? And did you get lost?”
“I ate red ants mor’ ’n
once, and I usually was lost. When I arrived at
that Mission down yonder the amount of flesh I had
between my bones and my skin wouldn’t have filled
a thimble. But that priest—he’s
a great man if ever there was one—soon
fixed me up. I lived like a prince for a month,
and I could be there yet if I liked, but I’d
kinder got used to livin’ alone and I liked
it, so I come here. Besides, I found so much
prayin’ and bell ringin’ wearin’
on the nerves, to say nothin’ of too many Indians.
I ain’t got no earthly use for Indians.
Why priests or anybody else run after Indians beats
me. Where I was brought up ’t was the other
way. They’re after us with a scalpin’
knife, and if we’re after them at all it’s
with all the lead we kin git. If the murderin’
dirty beasts is willin’ to stay where they belong,
well, I for one believe in lettin’ ’em.”
“Do you—ah—like the priest,
Don Jim?”
“What? Well, that’s
better than ‘Don Himy,’ as they call me
down there. You bet I like the priest. He’s
a gentleman, and as square as they make ’em,
that is, with a poor devil like me; I guess he’s
one too much for your dons when he feels that way.
But he’s a man every inch of him, afraid of
nothin’ under God’s heaven, and as kind
and generous as a—as some women. What
he rots in this God-forsaken place for I can’t
make out.”
“What did you come to California for?”
“Well, that ain’t bad.
I come here, my son, because I was lookin’ for
a cold climate. My own was warm, accordin’
to my taste, and somehow Californy seemed as if it
ought to be fur enough away to be cool and nice.”
“It’s very hot in the valleys.”
“So it is. So it is. But as you see,
I prefer the mountains.”
“Do you often go to the Mission?”
“Every month or so I go down
and have a chin with Padre Osuna. It keeps my
Spanish in, and I shouldn’t like to lose sight
of him. I got word from him the other day that
he wanted to see me mighty particular, and I’m
wonderin’ what’s in the wind. Maybe
you heard him say.”
“No,” said Roldan; but he guessed.
“Now,” said Hill, “spin
your yarn. I’m just pinin’ to hear
those adventures.”
Roldan appreciated the sarcasm, but
was too secure in the wealth of the past month to
resent it. He began at the beginning and told
the story with his curious combination of reserve
and dramatic fire. As he had already told it
several times it ran glibly off his tongue and had
several inevitable embellishments. The man, whose
cold blue eyes had wandered at first, finally fixed
themselves on Roldan; and his whole face gradually
softened. When Roldan finished with his and Adan’s
rescue by Don Tiburcio’s vaquero, he held out
his hand and said solemnly,—
“Shake.”
Roldan allowed his hand to be gripped
by that hairy paw; he was too elated to resent it
as a familiarity.
“You’ve got pluck,”
continued Hill, “and I respect pluck mor’
’n anything else on earth. You’re
a man and a gentleman, and Californy’ll be proud
of you yet. Got any more?”
Roldan related the tale of Rafael’s
prowess with the bull, his own encounter with the
bear, and Adan’s timely interference. Hill
then shook the hands of the two other boys, and told
them that as long as he had a roof above his head
they could share it, and that he’d do anything
to help them but steal horses, so help him Bob.
Roldan then told the tale of the earthquake and stampede.
“Ugh!” exclaimed Hill,
with a shudder. “That’s one thing
I can’t abide— your earthquakes.
I tell you it’s enough to take the grit outen
a grizzly to hear the land sliden on the mountain
and the big redwoods that has got their roots about
the bed-rock come roarin’ down. When an
earthquake comes I go and stand in the middle of the
creek so as I can see what’s comin’ all
round. Once I was on the side of the mountain
when one of those shakes come and I slid down twenty
feet before I could stop myself. It’s just
the one thing that has happened to me that I can’t
help thinkin’ about. Well, what kin I do
for you? You’re welcome to stay here, but
this hut ain’t no great shakes for such as you.
Be you goin’ home, now that the conscription’s
over?”
“No!” said Roldan, emphatically,
“we are not. There are other reasons why
we must go to Los Angeles as quickly as we can.
Could you get us three horses?”
“I could get them from the priest—”
“No! no!”
“Why, what’s the row with
the priest? Got in his black books? I shouldn’t
like to do that myself.”
“You said just now that you
would do anything for us. Would you even hide
us from the priest if he came here?”
“I would. And I ain’t
the one to ask questions. If you don’t want
to see the priest, it’s not Jim Hill that will
assist him to find you. Been there myself.”
“Couldn’t you get us three
horses from my father’s corral—the
Rancho Encarnacion?” asked Rafael.
“I could, if you’d go
with me; but horse-stealing is just the one thing
I agreed not to do.”
“You might go with him, Rafael,”
said Roldan. “You would get there after
dark if you started now; and even if the vaqueros were
not asleep they would not call your father.”
“And I could send a message
to my parents,” said Rafael, eagerly. “Then
they would not worry. Yes, I will go. The
priest would not dare to harm me while I was with
the Senor Hill.”
“Oh, the two of us would be
a match for even him, if it came to that,” said
Hill. “Well, we’ll start right now,
there bein’ no call for delay. We’ll
have to foot it, as my mustang’s laid up.
If the priest should turn up here—which
ain’t likely—jest run up that ladder
inter the garret and pull it after yer. Well,
hasta luego, as they say in these parts. Make
yourselves ter home.”