<h3><SPAN name="Ch_11" name="Ch_11">Chapter XI.</SPAN></h3>
<h2>Through the Mountains.</h2>
<p>The moon was high in the sky, and it was near midnight.
O’Rooney, who had taken upon himself the task of guiding the
mustang, continued him on up the ridge, directly toward the spot
where Fred had lain so long watching the action of the Apaches
gathered around the opening of the cave.</p>
<p>The mustang walked along quite obediently, seeming to feel the
load no more than if it was only one half as great. But those
animals are like their native masters—cunning and
treacherous, ready to take advantage of their riders whenever it
happens to come in their way.</p>
<p>“Which is the raison I cautions ye to be riddy for a
fall,” said Mickey, after referring to some of the
peculiarities of these steeds of the Southwest. “The minute
he gits it into his head that we ain’t paying attention,
he’ll rear up on his fore-feet, and walk along that way for
half a mile. Not having any saddle, we’ll have to slide over
his neck, unless I can brace me feet agin his ears, and ride along
standing straight up.”</p>
<p>The constant expectation of being flung over the head of a horse
is not the most comforting sensation that one can have, and the lad
clung fast to his friend in front, determined not to go, unless in
his company. Upon reaching the top of the ridge, the horse was
reined up for a few minutes, as Mickey, like the mariner at sea,
was desirous of taking an observation, so as to prevent himself
going astray.</p>
<p>“Can you remember how you were placed?” asked the
lad, after he had spent several minutes in the survey; “that
is, do you know which way to go for the horse you left eating
grass?”</p>
<p>“I was a little puzzled at first, as me father obsarved to
the school-teacher when he said I had been a good boy, but I see
how it is now. It must have been that I got a little turned round
when I was down in the basemint of these mountains, but I see how
it is now. Right yonder,” he added, pointing toward the
Northwest, “is where I left my hoss, and there is where I
hope I’ll find him again.”</p>
<p>“Is the road so that we can ride the mustang all the way
there, or must we walk?”</p>
<p>“I remember I come right along some kind of a path, made
by animals, after leaving the beast. I s’pose it’s the
route taken by the crathurs in going to the water, for
there’s a splendid spring right there, and the path that I
was just tilling you ’bout leads straight to it.”</p>
<p>“Then keep the horse from throwing us off, and we’re
all right. After we find your horse, Mickey, or don’t find
him, what are we to do, then?”</p>
<p>“Set sail for New Boston.”</p>
<p>“But we can’t ride through these mountains, if we
don’t find the pass.”</p>
<p>“And the same is what we’re going to do, barring
that it hasn’t been lost yet.”</p>
<p>“Are you sure you know the way to it from where you left
your horse? I’ve been hunting for it for hours, but
couldn’t any more tell where it was than the man in the moon.
What course would you have to take to reach it?”</p>
<p>“Right off yonder,” replied Mickey, pointing to the
left.</p>
<p>“And I was sure that it was here,” said Fred,
pointing his hand in nearly an opposite direction.</p>
<p>“Which the same is a good raison why you’re wrong.
When you git lost, and think you’re on the right way, ye may
be sure that ye’re wrong; and after figuring the whole thing
over, and getting sartin of the right coorse, all you’ve got
to do is not to take it, and ye’re sartin of saving
yerself.”</p>
<p>“Then, according to that, you ought not to take the route
which you have said is the right one.”</p>
<p>“I’m spaking for lost spalpeens like
yoursilf,” said Mickey, severely. “I haven’t been
lost since I parted company with Soot Simpson, and, begorrah, that
minds me that we ought to saa something of him. Just look around
and obsarve whether he is standing anywhere beckoning to
us.”</p>
<p>Both used their eyes to the extent of their ability, but were
unable to discover anything that bore a suspicious resemblance to a
man.</p>
<p>So far as they could judge, they were entirely alone in this
vast solitude.</p>
<p>“Do you expect to meet Sut very soon?”’</p>
<p>“Av coorse I do; why shouldn’t I?”</p>
<p>“But he went another way from you altogether after Lone
Wolf.”</p>
<p>“That’s just it. He wint another way, and wint
wrong, and he has been gone long ’nough to find out the
same.”</p>
<p>“When he will turn back and follow you?”</p>
<p>“As soon as he finds he’s wrong, he’ll go
right, and as I wint right, he’ll be on my heels.”</p>
<p>“But you know both of us have strayed a good deal off the
track, and we have traveled in many places, where we haven’t
made the slightest trail. How is he going to follow us
then?”</p>
<p>The Irishman gave utterance to a scornful exclamation.</p>
<p>“I’ve been with that Soot Simpson long enough to
learn something. I’ve saan some specimens of what he kin do.
Rocks don’t make no difference to him. When he gits on the
track of a wild bird, if it don’t take extra pains to dodge
and double, he’ll foller its trail through the air. Oh,
he’s there all the time, and the wonder with me is that he
hasn’t turned up before.”</p>
<p>“What would he have done had he come along and found us
both in the cave, and the Apaches watching?”</p>
<p>“He would have tracked that wolf back to his hole, come in
and fetched us out, and then slipped up behind the six, and tumbled
them all in like so many tenpins.”</p>
<p>“If he’s such a wonderful man as that, it’s a
pity we couldn’t have kept him with us all the time, and if
we do run against him, we can afford to stop thinking about
Apaches, as they will be of no account.”</p>
<p>“Yees are right; but the trouble is to find him, as the
man said when the British Government condemned John Mitchel, and
him thousands of miles away in Ameriky. This thramping about at
night in the mountains isn’t the aisiest way to diskiver a
man, and it’s him that will have to find us, instead of we
him. But we’ll keep it up.”</p>
<p>If the Apache mustang which they were riding meditated any
mischief, he seemed to be of the opinion that the occasion was not
the most suitable. He walked along with great docility and care,
picking his way with a skill that was wonderful. Several times they
approached places where it seemed impossible for an equine to go
forward, but the horse scarcely hesitated, toiling onward like an
Alpine chamois, until, at last, they drew up in a small valley,
through the middle of which ran a small stream, that sparkled
brightly in the moonlight.</p>
<p>“Here we are,” said Mickey. “here’s the
spot where I left my cratur a couple of days ago, and where I
don’t see him just now. Use your eyes a bit, and tell me
whether you obsarve him.”</p>
<p>Fred was scarcely less anxious than his friend to recover the
steed, for, recalling his experience in that line, he had good
reason to mistrust Indian horses. It would be very awkward, when
they should find a party of Apaches howling and rushing down upon
them, to have the animal turn calmly about and trot back to his
former friends, carrying his two riders into captivity, or leaving
them to shift for themselves.</p>
<p>Nothing could be seen of the creature, but there was a fringe of
wood on the opposite side where he might be concealed, and Mickey
slid off the blanket with the intention of hunting for him.</p>
<p>“Don’t let this spalpeen give ye the slip,” he
cautioned the lad, as he gave the lariat into his hand; “for
if mine is gone, this is the only one we have to depend on, and we
can’t spare him.”</p>
<p>Fred felt a little uncomfortable when he found himself alone and
astride of the fiery steed, which pricked up his ears as though he
meditated mischief; but the horse seemed to think better of it, and
continued so quiet that the young rider ventured to transfer his
attention from him to Mickey, who was moving across the open space
in the direction of the wood upon the opposite side.</p>
<p>The moonlight was so clear that he could be as plainly seen,
almost, as if it were midday. As he moved along, he brought his
rifle around to the front, so that he could use it at a
moment’s need, for he could not but see the probability that,
if his horse had been lately disturbed, it was likely that those
who did so were still in the vicinity, and no place was more likely
to be used for a covert than the same patch of timber which he was
approaching.</p>
<p>“Be the powers! but it looks a little pokerish!” he
said to himself, slowing his gait, and surveying the wood with no
little distrust. “There might be a dozen of the spalpeens
slaaping there wid one eye open, or all sitting up and expicting
me.”</p>
<p>He had proceeded so far however, that it was as dangerous to
turn back as it was to go on, for if any enemies were there, they
were so close at hand that they could easily capture or shoot him
before he could reach his horse. He was scarcely moving, and doing
his utmost to penetrate the deep shadow, when, beyond all question,
he heard a movement among the trees. He paused as if he had been
shot and cocked his rifle, looking toward the point from whence
came the noise.</p>
<p>“Aisy there, now,” he said in a solemn voice.
“I won’t stand any of your thricks. I’m savage,
and when I’m that way I’m dangerous, so if yees are
there spake out, or else come out like a man, and tell me your
name, be the token of which mine is Mickey O’Rooney from
Ireland.”</p>
<p>This characteristic summons produced no response, and, feeling
the peculiar peril of his exposed position, the Irishman determined
upon changing it and securing the shelter of a tree for himself. It
was not prudent to move directly toward the spot which gave forth
the rustling sound, as that would be likely to draw out a shot from
a foe if he desired to avoid a personal encounter. Accordingly, the
Irishman made what might be termed a flank movement by turning to
the right, running rapidly several paces and then diving in among
the trees, as though he were plunging into the water for a
bath.</p>
<p>The few minutes occupied in making this change were those which
Mickey felt were of great danger; for, if he should reach the wood
and find himself opposed to but a single man, or even two, the
situation would not be so uneven by any means. No shots were fired,
and he drew a great sigh of relief when he gained the desired
covert.</p>
<p>“Now I can dodge back and forth, and work me way up to
them,” he concluded; “and when they stick their heads
out from behind the trees, I’ll whack ’em for
’em, just as we used to do at Donnybrook when the fun
began.”</p>
<p>He waited where he was for some time, in the expectation that
his foe would reveal himself by an attempt to draw out. But if
there is any one thing which distinguishes a scout, whether white
or red, at such a time, it is his patience. It is like that of the
Esquimaux, who will sit for sixteen hours, without stirring, beside
an airhole in the ice, waiting for a seal to appear. Mickey
O’Rooney was not burdened with overmuch patience, and acted
upon the principle of Mohammed going to the mountain. He began
picking his way through the shadows and among the trees, determined
to keep forward until the mystery was solved.</p>
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