<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>The Cave in the Mountain</h1>
<h3>A Sequel to <i>In the Pecos Country</i></h3>
<h4>by</h4>
<h2>Lieut. R. H. Jayne</h2>
<hr class="full" />
<h3><SPAN name="Ch_1" name="Ch_1">Chapter I.</SPAN></h3>
<h2>A Strange Guide.</h2>
<p>“Well, if he doesn’t beat any one I ever heard
of!”</p>
<p>Mickey O’Rooney and Fred Munson were stretched on the
Apache blanket, carefully watching the eyes of the wild beast
whenever they showed themselves, and had been talking in guarded
tones. The Irishman had been silent for several minutes, when the
lad asked him a question and received no answer. When the thing was
repeated several times, he crawled over to his friend, and, as he
expected, found him sound asleep.</p>
<p>This was not entirely involuntary upon the part of Mickey. He
had shown himself, on more than one occasion, to be a faithful
sentinel, when serious danger threatened; but he believed that
there was nothing to be feared on the present occasion, and, as he
was sorely in need of sleep, he concluded to indulge while the
opportunity was given him.</p>
<p>“Sleep away, old fellow,” said Fred. “You seem
to want it so bad that I won’t wake you up again.”</p>
<p>The boy’s curiosity having been thoroughly aroused, all
tendency to slumber upon his part had departed, and he determined
that if there was any way by which he could profit any by that
wolf, he would do it.</p>
<p>“He may hang around here for a day or two,” he
mused, as he heard the faint tappings upon the sand,
“thinking all the time that he’ll get a chance to make
a meal off of us. So he will, if we don’t keep a bright
look-out. It seems to me that he might be driven out.”</p>
<p>The more he reflected upon this suggestion of his own, the more
reasonable did it become. His plan was to drive out the wolf, to
compel him to show up, as a card player might say. Considering the
dread which all wild animals have of fire, the plan was simple, and
would have occurred to anyone.</p>
<p>“The camp-fire seems to be all out, but there must be some
embers under the ashes. Mickey threw down his torch somewhere near
here.”</p>
<p>Carefully raking off the ashes with a stick, he found plenty of
coals beneath. These were brought together, and some of the twigs
laid over, the heat causing them at once to burst into a crackling
flame. This speedily radiated enough light for his purpose, which
was simply to find one of those “fat” pieces of pine,
which make the best kind of torches. A few minutes search brought
forth the one he needed, and then, shoving his revolver down in his
belt, he was ready.</p>
<p>The light revealed the large beautiful Apache blanket, stretched
out upon the ground, while the Irishman lay half upon it and half
upon the earth, sleeping as soundly as if in his bed at home.
Beyond him and in every direction was the blackness of night. But,
looking to his right, he discovered the two eyes staring at him and
glowing like balls of fire.</p>
<p>The animal was evidently puzzled at the sight before him. Fred
dreaded a shot from the Indians above, and, as soon as he had his
torch ready and had taken all his bearings, he drew the ashes over
the spluttering flame. Save for the torch, all was again wrapped in
impenetrable gloom.</p>
<p>The glowing orbs were still discernible, and, holding the
smoking torch above his head, Fred began moving slowly toward them.
The animal did not stir until the lad was within twenty feet, when
the latter concluded that it would be a good thing for him, also,
to take a rest.</p>
<p>“Wonder if he’s been trained not to be afraid of
torches,” mused the little fellow. “I hope he
hasn’t, and I hope too there won’t be any trouble in
scaring him.”</p>
<p>The lad dreaded another possibility,—that his torch might
be suddenly extinguished. If that should go out, leaving them in
utter darkness, the wolf would immediately rise to a superior
plane, and speedily demonstrate who was master of the
situation.</p>
<p>Fred swung the torch several times around his head, until it was
fanned into a bright flame, after which he resumed his advance upon
his foe. At the very first step the beast vanished. He had wheeled
about and made off in a twinkling.</p>
<p>The lad pressed onward at the same deliberate gait, watching
carefully for the reappearance of the guiding orbs. It was not long
before they were observed a dozen yards or so further on. The wolf
was manifestly retreating. He had no fancy for that terrible torch
bearing down on him, and he was falling back by forced marches.
This being precisely what Fred desired, he was greatly
encouraged.</p>
<p>“He is making his way out, and after awhile he will reach
the place, and away he’ll go. If he’s a wolf or fox,
the hole may be so small that Mickey can’t squeeze through,
but I think I can follow one of the animals anywhere.”</p>
<p>After going some distance further, Fred noticed that the animal
was not proceeding in a straight line. He would appear on his
right, where he would stare at the advancing torch until it was
quite close, when he would scamper off to the left, and go through
the same performance.</p>
<p>“He knows the route better than I do, so I won’t try
to disturb him,” reflected the boy as he followed up his
advantage, with high hopes of discovering the secret which was so
important to himself and friend. “I won’t crowd him too
hard, either, for I may scare him off the track and
fail.”</p>
<p>The wolf was evidently a prey to curiosity—the same
propensity which has caused the death of many bipeds and
quadrupeds. The action of the torch puzzled him, no doubt. He had
seen fire before, and probably had been burnt—so he knew
enough to give it a wide berth; but it is doubtful whether he ever
saw a flaring torch held over the head of a boy and solemnly
bearing down upon him.</p>
<p>Fred’s absorbing interest in the whole affair made him
wholly unmindful of the distance he was traveling. He had already
advanced several hundred yards, and had no idea that he was so far
away from his slumbering friend. The fact was that the singular
cave was only one among a thousand similar ones found among the
wilds of the West and Southwest. Its breadth was not great, but the
distance which it ran back into the mountains was amazing.</p>
<p>The wolf was leading the lad a long distance from the camp, and,
what was more important (and which fact, unfortunately, Fred had
failed to notice), the route was anything but a direct one. It
could not have been more sinuous or winding. The course of the
cavern, in reality, was as winding as that of the ravine in which
he had effected his escape from the Apaches, and from which it
seemed he had irrevocably strayed. Had he attempted to make his
return, he would have found it impossible to rejoin Mickey
O’Rooney, unless the two should call and signal to each
other.</p>
<p>However, the attention of the lad was taken up so entirely with
the task he had laid hold of, and which seemed in such a fair way
of accomplishment, that he took no note of his danger. The wolf was
leading him forward as the <em>ignis fatuus</em> lures the wearied
traveler through swamps and thickets to renewed disappointment.</p>
<p>“He has some way of reaching the outer world which the
Indians haven’t been able to find. Of course not; for, if
they knew, they would have been in here long ago. They
wouldn’t stay fooling around that opening, where
they’re likely to get a shot from Mickey when they
ain’t expecting it. Now, if the wolf will only behave
himself, all will come out all right.”</p>
<p>Fearful of being caught with an extinguished torch, the lad kept
up the practice of swinging it rapidly round his head every few
minutes. When he ceased each performance, the flame was so bright
that he was able to penetrate the darkness much further upon every
hand.</p>
<p>On one or two of these occasions he caught a glimpse of the
creature as it bounded away into the darkness. In shape and action
it was so much like the mountain wolves which had besieged him some
nights before that all doubts were removed. He knew it was one of
those terrible animals beyond question.</p>
<p>“Wonder how it is he’s alone? It wasn’t long
after I saw that old fellow the other night, when there was about
fifty of them under the tree. One of them is enough for me, if he
doesn’t give us the slip. Maybe he has come in to find out
how the land lies, and is going back to report to the
rest.”</p>
<p>Fred could not help reflecting every few minutes on the terrible
situation in which he would be should his torch fail, and the other
bring a pack of ravenous creatures about him. They would make
exceedingly short work of a dozen like him.</p>
<p>“It seems good for hours yet,” he said as he held it
before him, and examined it for the twentieth time.</p>
<p>The stick was a piece of a limb about as thick as his arm, and
fully a yard in length. It felt as heavy as <em>lignum vitae</em>,
and, by looking at the end held in his hand and that which was
burning, it could be seen that it was literally surcharged with
resin—so much so that, after being cut, it had overflowed,
and was sticky on the outside. No doubt this, with others, had been
gathered for that express purpose, and there was no reason to doubt
its capacity.</p>
<p>As Fred advanced he caught occasional glimpses of the jagged
overhanging rocks, which in some places were wet, the water
dripping down upon him as he passed. The fact, too, that more than
once both sides of the cave were visible at the same time, told him
that the dimensions of their prison were altogether different from
what he had supposed.</p>
<p>“There must be an end of this somewhere,” he
muttered, beginning to suspect that he had gone quite a distance,
“and I’m getting tired of this tramping. I hope the
wolf hasn’t gone beyond the door he came in by, and I hope he
has nearly reached it, for it will take me some time before I can
find my way back to Mick.”</p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />