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<h2> CHAPTER XXXIII. WHAT THE FOOTSTEPS MEANT </h2>
<p>Careful listening convinced Fred that there were two red-skins groping
around in the darkness. After making himself certain on that point, he
reached his hand over, and, grasping the muscular arm of Mickey O'Rooney,
shook his companion quite vigorously.</p>
<p>Fred was afraid that, in waking, the Irishman would utter some
exclamation, or make such a noise that he would betray their location.
When, therefore, several shakings failed to arouse him, the boy easily
persuaded himself that it was best to leave him where he was for a time.</p>
<p>“I can tell when they come too close,” he reflected, “and then I will stir
him up.”</p>
<p>A few minutes later he found that he could hear the noise without placing
his ear against the blanket; so he lay flat on his face, resting the upper
part of his body upon his elbows, with his head thrown up. He peered off
in the gloom, in the direction whence the footsteps seemed to come,
looking with that earnest, piercing gaze, as if he expected to see the
forms of the dreaded Apaches become luminous and reveal themselves in the
black night around.</p>
<p>No ray of light relieved the Egyptian blackness. The camp-fire had been
allowed to die out completely, and no red ember, glowering like a demon's
eye, showed where it had been. The trained eye might have detected the
faintest suspicion of light near the opening overhead, but it was faint
indeed.</p>
<p>“They keep together,” added Fred to himself, as he distinguished the soft,
stealthy tread over the ground. “I should think they would separate, and
they would be the more likely to find the place between them; but they
want to be together when they run against Mickey, I guess.”</p>
<p>The shadowy footsteps were not regular. Occasionally they paused, and then
they hurried on again, and then they settled down into the stealthiest
kind of movement. The lad, it is true, had the newly found revolver, with
several of its chambers loaded, at his command. There was some doubt,
however, whether it could be relied upon, owing to the probable length of
time that had elapsed since the charges were placed there.</p>
<p>As a precaution, Mickey O'Rooney had placed new caps upon the tubes, but
had chosen to leave the charges themselves undisturbed. This beautiful
weapon the lad held grasped in his hand, determined to blaze away at the
prowling murderers the instant they should reveal themselves with
sufficient distinctness to make his shots certain.</p>
<p>An annoying delay followed. The Apaches seemed to know very nearly where
the right spot was, without being able to locate it definitely. The
footsteps were heard first in one direction and then they changed off to
another. The warriors acted precisely as if they knew the location of
their intended victims, but were seeking to find whether they were in the
right position to be easily attacked.</p>
<p>Thus matters remained for ten or fifteen minutes longer, during which the
lad held himself on the alert, and was no little puzzled to comprehend the
meaning for the course of their enemies.</p>
<p>“They daren't do anything, now that they know where we are. They're afraid
we're on the watch, and think if they wait a while longer, we will drop
off to sleep; but they will find—-”</p>
<p>A sudden light just then broke in upon young Munson. He was looking off in
the direction of the sound, when the phosphorescent gleam of a pair of
eyes shot out from the darkness upon him.</p>
<p>There was a greenish glare in the unexpected appearance that left no doubt
of their identity. Instead of Indians, as he had imagined at first, there
was some kind of a wild animal that was prowling about them. None of the
Apaches had entered the cave at all—only a single beast.</p>
<p>But where had he come from? By what means had he entered the cave?</p>
<p>These were very significant questions, of the greatest importance to the
two who were shut within the subterranean prison. Fred did not feel
himself competent to answer, so he reached over and shook Mickey harder
than ever, determined that he should arouse.</p>
<p>“Come, wake up, you sleepy head,” he called out. “There might a dozen
bears come down on you and eat you up, before you would open your eyes!
Come, Mickey, there is need of your waking!”</p>
<p>“Begorrah—but—there's more naad of me slaaping,” muttered the
Irishman, gradually recalling his senses. “I was in the midst of a
beautiful draam, in which there came two lovely females, that looked like
Bridget O'Flaherty and Molly McFizzle. Both were smiling in their winsome
way on me, and both were advancing to give me a swaat kiss, or a crack
over the head, I don't know which, when, just before they raiched me, you
sticks out your paw and gives me a big shake. Arrah, ye spalpeen, why did
ye do that?”</p>
<p>“Didn't you hear me say there was something in the cavern? I thought there
were a couple of Apaches at first, but I guess it is a wild animal.”</p>
<p>The Irishman was all attention on the instant, and he started bolt
upright.</p>
<p>“Whisht! what's that ye're saying? Will ye plaze say it over again?”</p>
<p>The lad hurriedly told him that an animal of some kind was lurking near
them. Mickey caught up his rifle, and demanded to know where he was. In
such darkness as enveloped them it was necessary that the eyes of the
beast should be at a certain angle in order to become visible to the two
watchers. Both heard his light footsteps, and knew where the eyes were
likely to be discerned.</p>
<p>“<i>There he is!</i>” exclaimed Fred, as he caught sight of the green,
phosphorescent glitter of the two orbs, which is peculiar to the eyes of
the feline species.</p>
<p>Mickey detected them at the same moment, and drew his rifle to his
shoulder. He kept the kneeling position, fearing that the target would
vanish if he should wait until he could rise. It is no easy thing for a
hunter to take aim when he is utterly unable to detect the slightest
portion of his weapon, and it was this fact which caused Mickey to delay
his firing. However, before he could make his aim any way satisfactory, a
bright thought struck him, and he lowered his gun, carefully letting the
hammer down upon the tube.</p>
<p>“Ain't you going to fire?” asked the lad, who could not understand the
delay.</p>
<p>“Whisht, now! would ye have me slay me best friend?”</p>
<p>“I don't understand you, Mickey.”</p>
<p>“S'pose I'd shot the baste, whatever he is, that would be the end of him;
but lave him alone, and he'll show us the way out.”</p>
<p>“How can he do that?”</p>
<p>“Don't you obsarve,” said the man, who haf got the theory all perfectly
arranged in his mind, “that that creature couldn't get into this cave
without coming in some way?”</p>
<p>There was no gainsaying such logic as that, but Fred knew that his friend
meant more than he said.</p>
<p>“Of course he couldn't get in here without having some way of doing it.
But suppose he took the same means as we did? How is that going to help
us?”</p>
<p>But the Irishman was certain that such could not be the case.</p>
<p>“There ain't any wild beasts as big fools as we was. Ye couldn't git 'em
to walk into such a hole, any more than ye could git an Irisman to gaze
calmly upon a head without hitting it. Ye can make up your mind that
there's some way leading into this cavern, which nobody knows anything
about, excepting this wild creature, and, if we let him alone, he'll go
out again, showing us the path.”</p>
<p>“I should think if he knew the route some of the Indians would learn it.”</p>
<p>“So anybody would think; but the crayther has not given 'em the chance—so
how can they larn it? If we play our cards right, me laddy, we're sure to
win.”</p>
<p>“What kind of an animal is it?”</p>
<p>They were all the time gazing at the point where the eyes were last seen,
but the beast was continually shifting its position, so that the orbs were
no longer visible. The faint tipping of his feet upon the gravely earth
was heard, and now and then the transient flash of his eyes, as he whisked
back and forth, was caught, but all vanished again almost as soon as seen.
All that could be learned was, that whatever the species of the animal, he
owned large eyes, and they were placed close together. Neither of the two
were sufficiently acquainted with the peculiarities of the different
animals of the West to identify them by any slight peculiarities.</p>
<p>“I don't think he can be an ilephant or a rhinoceros,” said Mickey,
reflectively, “because such crathurs don't grow in these parts. What about
his being a grizzly bear?”</p>
<p>“He can't be that,” said Fred, who had been given time to note the special
character of the footsteps before he awoke his companion. “He walks too
lightly.”</p>
<p>“What do you conclude him to be?”</p>
<p>“If there were such things as wild dogs, I would be sure he was one.”</p>
<p>“Then I have it; he must be a wolf.”</p>
<p>“I guess you're right. He acts just like one—trotting here and
there, while his eyes shine like we used to see them when we were camped
on the prairie, and they used to hang round the camp waiting for a chance
to get something to eat.”</p>
<p>“It's aisy to double him up,” said Mickey,who just then caught a glimpse
of the eyes again; “but if he'll show the way out of here, I'll make a vow
never to shoot another wolf, even if he tries to chaw me head off.”</p>
<p>“How are we going to discover the place?”</p>
<p>“Just foller him. He'll hang round a while, very likely all night, and
when he finds out there's nothing to make here, he'll trot off agin. All
we've got to do is to do the same, and he'll show the way out.”</p>
<p>“It don't look so easy to me,” said Fred, a few minutes later, while he
had been busily turning the scheme over in his mind. “If we only had the
daylight to see him, it wouldn't be so hard, but here he is right close to
us, and it is only now and then that we can tell where he is.”</p>
<p>“Yees are right, for it is n't likely that we can walk right straight out
by the way that he does; but we can larn from his movements pretty nearly
where the place is, and then we can take a torch and hunt for a day or
two, and I don't see how we can miss it.”</p>
<p>There seemed to be reason in this, although the lad could not feel as
sanguine as did his companion. The wolf, as he believed it to be, was
doubtless familiar with every turn of the cave, and, when he was ready to
go, was likely to vanish in a twinkling—skurrying away with a speed
that would defy pursuit. However, there was a promise, or a possibility,
at least, of success, and that certainly was something to be cheerful
over, even though the prospect was not brilliant, and Fred was resolved
that failure should not come through remissness of his.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<p>The continuation of this absorbing story is entitled “The Cave in the
Mountain.”</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/><br/></p>
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