Roldan raised himself on his elbow
and looked about him. Adan was some quarter of
a mile away, approaching him, leading the mustangs.
Cleaving the horizon on four sides was a vast plain.
On it was not a tree, nor even a hut. Here and
there were clumps of palms and cacti, as stark as
if cut from pale green stone. At vast intervals
were short, isolated mountains, known in the vernacular
as “buttes.” On the ground was not
the withered remnant of a blade of grass; but there
were many fissures, and some of them were deep and
wide. Of the things that crawl and scamper and
fly there was no sign, not even a hole in the ground;
for even reptiles must have food to eat, and there
was nothing here to sustain man nor beast. The
fleckless sky was a deep, hot blue; a blood-red sun
toiled heavily toward the zenith.
“Adan!” shouted Roldan;
he was suddenly mad for sound of any sort. A
discouraged “Halloa!” came promptly back.
Roldan dressed himself rapidly.
His clothes were quite dry; indeed the very atmosphere
of this strange beautiful place was so dry that it
seemed to crumble in the nostrils. As he finished
dressing Adan reached him. The horses’
heads were hanging listlessly. Adan’s face
had lost its ruddy colour.
“Roldan,” he said, “where are we?”
“I know not,” said Roldan, setting his
lips.
“I left you to look for water,
and there are not even tarantulas in this accursed
place. There is no water, not a drop. Nor
a handful of stubble for the horses.”
“We must go back the way we
came, and start once more from the foot of the mountain.”
“Can you remember from which
point we entered this place? This soil might
be rock; there is not a hoof-print anywhere.”
“We should have gone south and
we came east. On the northwestern horizon is
something which looks like mountains—a long
range—almost buried in mist. There
is no sign of a range anywhere else; so the only thing
to do is to go back to them; they are our mountains;
I feel sure of that.”
“If the horses do not give out.
They are empty and choking, poor things. Well,
there is no reason we should not eat, and, thanks be
to that good mayor domo, we still have a bottle of
wine. But I would give something for a gourd
of water. However, we have not been girls yet,
and we will not begin now, my friend.”
The boys ate their breakfast, but
their spirits felt little lighter, even after a long
draught of wine. The awful quiet of the place,
broken only by an occasional whinny from the mustangs,
seemed to press hard about them, thickening the blood
in their veins. Roldan was filled with forebodings
he could not analyse, and strove to coax forth from
its remote brain-cell something that had wandered
in, he could not recall when nor where.
They saddled the mustangs, mounted,
and were about to make for the northwest when Adan
gave a hoarse gurgle, caught Roldan’s arm, pulled
him about, and pointed with shaking hand to the south.
“Dios de mi alma!” exclaimed
Roldan. “It is Los Angeles. We were
right, after all. But why were we never told
that it was so beautiful?”
On the southern horizon, half veiled
in pale blue mist, showed a stately city, with domes
and turrets and spires and many lofty cathedrals.
It was a white city; there were no red tiles to break
those pure and lovely lines, to blotch that radiant
whiteness; even the red sun withheld its angry shafts.
Roldan gazed, his lips parting, his
breath coming quickly. If his imagination had
ever attempted to picture heaven, its wildest flight
would have resembled but fallen short of that living
beauty before him. It was mystifying, exalting.
It was worth the dangers and discomforts of the past
month multiplied by twelve, just to have one moment’s
glimpse of such perfection. And it was Los Angeles!
A city of the Californias, built by Indian hands!
No wonder his family had been careful to leave its
wonders out of the table talk; had he known, he would
have been at its feet long since.
“It isn’t the wine?” asked Adan,
feebly.
“No. There must have been a fog before;
Los Angeles is near the sea.”
“Shall we start?”
“Yes, but slowly. The poor
mustangs! But it will not be long now. We
cannot be more than two leagues from there. See,
it grows plainer every moment; the fog must have been
very heavy.”
They cantered on slowly, the mustangs
responding automatically to the light prick of the
spur. The beautiful alluring city looked to be
floating in cloud; it smiled and beckoned, inciting
even the weary famished brutes to effort. But
at the end of an hour Roldan reined in with a puzzled
expression. “I do not understand,”
he said. “It seemed not two leagues away
when we started, and we have come that far and more,
and still it seems exactly the same distance beyond.”
“The atmosphere is so clear,”
suggested Adan. “But I wish we were there.
My mouth is parched, my tongue is dry—and
the horses, Roldan. Soon they will be as limp
as sails in a calm.”
“True, but we could easily walk
the distance now. We could return for them at
once with water and food.” But he was beginning
to feel vaguely uneasy once more. The odd sensation
of death, of a buried world, had returned. Could
it be that that fair city beyond was heaven? Surely,
he thought with unconscious humour, it was very un-Californian.
They passed the lonely buttes, the
parched beds of lakes, salt-coated. Still they
saw not a living thing; still the city seemed to recede
with the horizon, its sharp beautiful outlines unchanged.
For some time the horses had been trotting unevenly.
Gradually they relaxed into a dogged amble, their
heads down, their tongues out. Every now and again
they half paused, with quivering knees.
Adan’s was the first to collapse;
it fell to its knees, then rolled over, Adan scrambling
from under, unhurt.
Roldan also dismounted, and both boys,
without a word, unsaddled the poor brutes, thrust
the pistols into their belts and what was left of
the provisions into their pockets. They cast off
their ponchos, then once more turned their faces to
the south. But they did not advance. They
stood with distended eyes and suspended breath.
The city had disappeared.
Adan was the first to find speech.
“A fog?” he asked. “A rain storm?”
“There is neither. The
horizon is as blue and clear as it is on the north
and east and west. It is a miracle. Let me
think a moment.”
He sat down and took his head between
his hands. After a while he looked up. “For
hours I have been trying to remember something,”
he said. “Do you remember what that mayor
domo said to us?—Keep straight on, straight
on, never turning to the left, for that way lies the
terrible Mojave desert, I barely heard his last words
at the time; that is the reason I have had such a
time remembering. We are in the Mojave desert,
my friend.”
Adan, whose mouth was still wide open,
sat down and rolled his eyes from east to west.
“Caramba!” he ejaculated finally.
“I could say a good deal more
than Caramba. All that I have heard of this Mojave
comes back to me. There is no water on it, no
living thing but half choked cacti and stunted palms.
Men who are lost on it go mad and die of thirst—”
“Ay, yi, yi!”
“Si, senor. However, it
might be much worse. It is winter, not summer,—
when the heat kills in a day; we have food and a little
wine; we are young and very strong; we have not come
so many leagues that we cannot walk back. And
we have each other. Think, were we alone!”
“Yes, it might be worse,”
said Adan, “but all the same it might be six
or eight leagues to the northwest better. And
that city? What was it? Where has it gone?”
“I do not know.”
Privately he believed that it had been a glimpse of
heaven, and was disturbed lest it might have been a
portent of death. But his mind was too active,
his nature too independent to sit down under superstition.
If he died on the desert, it would not be through
lack of effort to get out of it.
He stood up, setting his lips.
“Come,” he said. “We gain nothing
by sitting here, and we are both fresh; we can walk
many leagues before night.”
“Do you know which way to go?” asked Adan.
Roldan swept the horizon with his
eyes. The buttes they had passed had displaced
the solitary landmark of the morning. There was
not a hoof-beat on the hard split ground. Roldan
shrugged his shoulders.
“We can at least follow the
sun. Los Angeles must be due west. Come.”
The sun was past the zenith and sloping
to the west. The boys turned their backs upon
it and trudged on, only pausing once for a half-hour
to divide the meagre remains of their store.
Evening came; the sun leaned his elbows on the horizon
in front of them, leered at the contracted visages
and blinking eyes resolutely facing him, then slid
leisurely down; and night came suddenly. The
boys flung themselves on the ground and slept.
They awoke consumed with hunger and
thirst. Their mouths and nostrils were coated
with the fine irritating dust of the desert, scarcely
visible but always felt. But their smarting eyes
were greeted by a refreshing sight: not a half-league
before them, directly in their course, was a lake,
a lake as blue as the metallic sky above, and lightly
fringed with palms and orange-trees. Beyond was
a forest of silver leaves—an olive orchard.
“A Mission!” exclaimed
Roldan, and even Adan sprang to his feet and marched
westward with some enthusiasm. But alas! although
they trudged with dogged persistence for fully a league,
striving to forget the gnawing at their vitals in
the exquisite prospect filling the eye, the lake seemed
to march ahead of them, in perfect time with their
weary feet. Suddenly the two boys paused and
faced each other.
“This accursed desert is bewitched,”
said Roldan. His face was white, but more with
anger than fear; for the first time in his life he
realised the helplessness of man when at the mercy
of nature, and he did not like the sensation.
He had a strong, and by this time, well developed
instinct to govern, to bend others to his will, and
he swore now that he would walk out of this desert
unharmed if only for the pleasure of cheating a force
mightier than himself. He turned and looked at
the sun.
“We have been going in a wrong
direction,” he said. “That lake has
been shifting gradually toward the southwest, and
taken us nearly a league out of our course. The
first thing we know we will be in Baja California,
where there is nothing but deserts, and they are all
on mountain tops. We must strike north again.
I am sure that last night we were due west of Los
Angeles.”
“But the lake? the Mission?”
“I do not believe there is any
lake. There are things you and I do not understand
in this world—although we are learning—and
I believe that this strange desert has the power to
make scenes like the theatres they who have travelled
tell us of. Be sure that lake will disappear like
the city.”
They turned north in order to get
in line with the sun; and out of the tail of their
eyes they saw the lake march with them. When they
finally turned to the west again it faced them once
more. They linked arms suddenly and trudged on,
hungry, parched, beset by superstitious fears, but
not forgetting to turn every half hour and glance at
the sun until he passed the meridian and pointed for
the west. And suddenly the lake seemed to slip
behind a wall.
“There is really something there
this time,” said Roldan, closing one eye and
curving his hand about the other. “It is
ugly enough to be real. It is no use to say how
far anything is in this place, but I should think
we would reach it before long.”
And long before they did reach it
they knew what it was—a thicket of cacti
some two miles long and of unknown depth. The
plants were eight or ten feet high, and the broad
thick leaves, spiked, as only the leaves of the cactus
are, looked to be welded together. But that was
from a distance. When the boys reached the thicket
they saw that the plants in reality were some feet
apart, although there appeared to be no end to them.
The boys sat down suddenly, their strength deserting
them. They threw their arms forward on their
knees and dropped their heads. For a half hour
or more they sat motionless, then Roldan looked up
and fixed his glassy eyes on the forbidding wall,
which at close proximity seemed to girt* the horizon.
“If we tried to go round it,”
he said, “there is no knowing where we should
find ourselves. We had better go straight ahead,
if possible. If it is too thick we can turn back.”
“At least we could not see this
horrible desert for a while,” said Adan.
“I am willing.”
“And, who knows? Los Angeles
may be just on the other side.”
Their utterance was thick. Their
veins felt as if packed with lead, not so much from
need of food as need of drink. But they stumbled
to their feet and entered the cactus forest.
They were obliged to pursue their way in single file;
the spikes were long, and many of the larger leaves
abutted so obstructively that they were obliged to
go down on their hands and knees and crawl. Nor
could they maintain a straight course, but zig-zagged
among the great plants as nature permitted. More
than once they heard the rip of silk, more than once
blood sprang through their skin. Their progress
was slow and fraught with peril, their only consolation
that the end must come sooner or later.
Night came suddenly. They were
near an open a few feet in circumference. They
lay down side by side, knowing that a step at night
might mean instant blindness.
The cactus never moves, not even in
a storm. There was not a breath of wind to-night.
The thick dull green plant-trees looked as solid as
stone, a petrified forest. The sky had never seemed
so high above, the stars so hard and bright.
Adan moistened his lips with his tongue.
“Do you feel that you can last another day?”
he asked.
“I expect to die of old age.”
“Well, if you do, it won’t
be the fault of the Mojave desert. You have courage,
and so have I; but this is worse than all—Do
you feel that?”
“I have felt it many times before,
to-day. It is said that parts of the Mojave shake
all the time.”
“We can swear to that.
Supposing a great shake came, how could we get out
of this?”
“We are as well here as anywhere.
Let us sleep, and rise with the sun.”
But although he spoke confidently,
almost contemptuously, he was possessed with a wild
desire to spring to his feet and fight his way out
of this terrible prison. He had seen a huge fish
flounder in a net, and looked on callously. He
should never witness such another sight without a
responsive thrill of horror. Were he paralysed
from crown to heel he could not be more helpless in
this thicket of needles. The vast unpeopled desert
had been bad enough, but it had been intoxicating
liberty to this. Tired as he was, he moved his
hands and feet constantly; supineness was impossible.
He wondered how men felt when in prison, and vowed
that when he held the law in his hands he would invent
some other way of punishment. For his part he
would rather be shot at once.
Being young and healthy, he fell asleep
after a time. When he awoke the sky was grey,
the stars had gone. He shook Adan.
“There is no sunrise to be seen
from this place,” he said, “but I am sure
of the direction now. I took note of that big
cactus ahead, last night—Hist!”
“Dios de mi alma!” whispered
Adan, his tongue rolling out. “In this
place! It is worse than earthquake.”
Nothing was to be seen from where
they stood, but from no great distance came the faint
hollow rattle which strikes terror to man in the wilderness.
The volume of sound was suddenly augmented: there
appeared to be a duet. Immediately it was supplemented
by a loud furious hissing; a moment later by a whirr
and impact.
“There are two, and they are
fighting,” whispered Adan, his eyes bulging.
Roldan advanced softly to an aperture
between two leaves of a cactus, then lifted his finger
to his shoulder and beckoned. Adan turned mechanically
in the opposite direction; but curiosity overcame him,
and he joined Roldan.
Between two plants not three feet
apart two rattlesnakes were engaged in mortal combat.
They coiled with incredible rapidity, flew at each
other with burning eyes and darting tongues, burying
a fang somewhere in the tense bristling armours.
The lashing tails struck the spiked surface of the
cactus and augmented their fury; occasionally they
whipped about, hissing deliriously, then returning
as swiftly to the only enemy in sight. They had
coiled and struck some four or five times, whipping
all over their narrow arena, when as if by common
consent, they retreated to extreme opposite points,
coiled as lightning strikes, and leapt at each other.
Even Roldan gave a hoarse cry of surprise, and as for
Adan, he fell into vocabulary: one serpent had
darted straight down the throat of the other.
For a moment there was a fearful lashing. The
choking serpent, with protruding eyes, like small
green coals, and jaws distended in agony, strove to
dislodge his suffocating enemy, and the other humped
his back and leapt backward in frantic efforts to reach
the air again. But suddenly their struggles ceased;
they flattened to the ground, only the tails moving
automatically. What was left looked like a monster
of some unknown species; a creature with no head, a
huge belly, and two tails.
“Caramba!” exclaimed Adan,
“I could not eat that even if we had anything
to cook it with. It looks like a mass of poison.”
“I should like to know where
that poison was last night. It may be a good
sign, however: as they are the first living things
we have seen, we may be near to the edge of the desert.”
Adan crossed himself.
“Come,” continued Roldan,
“let us move on, before hunger tempts us too
far.”
Once more they started on their tortuous
way. They walked very slowly, both from necessity
and inclination: the excitement of the fight over,
their physical necessities pressed heavily; they kept
as close together as they could, but rarely spoke:
they were too hungry. Both were oppressed by
the fear that at any minute they would come upon a
solid wall of cacti and be obliged to retrace their
steps, and both knew that might mean a stunning blow
to courage. At times the constant zig-zagging,
the unalterable, smooth, grey-green surface of the
cacti, made them halt dizzily, for both brain and
body were sick for want of food. But by degrees
the wood grew thinner and thinner; and when the sun
was half way between the zenith and the western horizon,
they left behind the last straggling outpost and found
themselves on the edge of a creek, the same doubtless
that they had crossed three nights before. They
gave each other a feeble simultaneous slap on the
back, gathered their energies, ran down the bank,
and took a long draught of the running water.
“I feel better,” said
Roldan, finally, “but hungrier than ever.
There are quail in that chaparral over there.
I’ll go after them, and do you hunt for flint
and build a fire.”
He crossed the creek and entered the
brush beyond. Almost simultaneously there was
a loud whirr of wings, and a large flock of quail rose
from the chaparral a few feet ahead of him. He
had only his pistols, but he was a good shot, and
he decapitated two of the birds in rapid succession.
Then he reloaded and killed a squirrel. When he
returned, Adan was on his knees, with his large cheeks
distended, coaxing a handful of dried leaves and twigs
into flame. It was a half hour before the pyre
was large enough for the sacrifice, but after that
the birds and squirrel, which meanwhile had been skinned
and washed in the creek, were but a short time singeing.
It was an ill-cooked meal, but when it was over Roldan
said solemnly,—
“I have eaten of all the delicious
dishes of the Californias, including many dulces,
but nothing ever tasted as good as this; no, not even
the first breakfast at Casa Encarnacion.”
“Nor to me,” said Adan,
emphatically, and he crossed himself.