<h3><SPAN name="Ch_13" name="Ch_13">Chapter XIII.</SPAN></h3>
<h2>In the Nick of Time.</h2>
<p>Leaving his mustang in charge of Fred, the Irishman turned to
the right, and followed the stream into the rocks. The course was
so winding that he speedily disappeared from sight. The boy, who
was compelled to sit still and await his return, at perhaps the
most dangerous portion of the road, felt anything but comfortable
over the erratic proceeding of his friend. But, fortunately, the
latter had been gone but a short time when he reappeared, hurrying
forward as if somebody was at his heels.</p>
<p>“It’s all right,” he remarked, as he sprang
into the saddle, took up the reins, and started on. “I think
the Apaches are there, though I can’t be sartin; but I found
out what I wanted to l’arn.”</p>
<p>Then he explained that he followed up the stream to the place
where it came from beneath the rocks, which formed a part of the
wall of the cave, where a curious fact attracted his attention. In
its passage beneath the stone the tunnel widened and flattened, so
that, where it shot forth to the sunlight again, its width was some
twenty feet, and its depth only a few inches. The appearance it
presented was very much like that of the gates of a mill-pond when
they have been slightly raised to allow a discharge of water
beneath. Through the passage-way thus afforded no living person
could have forced his way; and, had Mickey O’Rooney attempted
it, nothing in the world could have saved him from drowning. The
Irishman himself realized it, and was thankful enough that he had
refrained from making the desperate attempt.</p>
<p>The two continued their sweeping gallop for several hours,
during which they did not catch a glimpse of Indians, but they were
alarmed by hearing the reports of guns at no great distance on the
right. The firing was irregular, sometimes several shots being
heard together, and then they were more of a dropping character.
This showed that a fight of some kind was going on, but as to its
precise nature they could only conjecture. It might be that a party
of Comanches and Apaches, or Kiowas, or hunters were enjoying a hot
time, but the two friends were glad to get out of the neighborhood
as speedily as possible. At noon they enjoyed the satisfaction of
knowing that they had made good and substantial progress on the way
home. There was an abundance of grass and water, and when the sun
was overhead they went into camp.</p>
<p>“I’m as hungry as a panther that has been fasting
for a month,” said Mickey, as he dismounted; “and I
haven’t got a mouthful of food lift. There ain’t any
use of a chap starving to death to accommodate anybody else, and I
don’t mane to do the same.”</p>
<p>Fred Munson’s hunger was scarcely less than his, but the
boy would have been willing to have undergone still more, rather
than incur the risk that was now inevitable. But Mickey saw nothing
to be gained by such a course and contended that they should give
their attention to the wants of their bodies, before they were
weakened by fasting and fatigue.</p>
<p>Mickey promised not to be absent long, and then started in
search of provender. Game was abundant in that part of the world,
and he was confident that much time would not be required to bring
down some toothsome dainty.</p>
<p>“He has an uncomfortable way of running off and leaving a
fellow alone,” muttered Fred, as he watched the vanishing
figure of his friend. “I haven’t anything but my
revolver, and only two shots left in that, and it seems to me that
this is about the worst place we could stop.”</p>
<p>The point where they camped was in the pass, which, at that
point, widened considerably. The right wall curved far inward in a
semi-circular shape, the opposite remaining the same, the gorge
looking as if an immense slice had been scooped out of its northern
boundary. The rocks on every hand ranged from a dozen to a hundred
feet in height, with numerous openings, through which a horseman
could easily pick his way. The tops were covered with vegetation,
the greater portion of which was vigorous and dense.</p>
<p>Fred found himself standing in an immense amphitheatre, as one
can imagine how the gladiators of Rome stood in the Coliseum, when
an audience of over a hundred thousand were seated and looking down
upon them. He could not but note the helpless situation a party of
men would be in if caught where he was.</p>
<p>“If a company of United States Cavalry should camp here,
and the Indians opened on them from the rocks above, they would
have to stand and be shot down, one after another, or else run the
gauntlet and be picked off in the same way.”</p>
<p>The appearance of the ground showed that the spot was a favorite
camping-site of the Indians. Fred, for a time, suspected that it
was the place where Lone Wolf and his band had spent the first
night out from New Boston; but an examination showed that it did
not correspond in many points. The remains of charred wood, of
bleaching bones and ashes proved that many a camp-fire had been
kindled. And, in all probability, every one of them had warmed the
shins and toasted the food of the red cut-throats of that
section.</p>
<p>The two mustangs were tethered near one side of the space where
there was grass and water, and the lad set about it to select a
proper place in which to build their camp-fire. There was no
trouble in determining this; but, when he started to gather wood,
he was surprised to discover that there was much less than he
supposed. The former tenants of the place had cleared it up pretty
thoroughly.</p>
<p>“There is plenty of wood over yonder,” he said to
himself, looking in the direction taken by Mickey O’Rooney;
“and where there is so much growing there must be some upon
the ground. I’ll go over and gather some, and have the fire
all ready when he comes back.”</p>
<p>It was quite a walk from where he stood to the side of the
semicircular widening of the pass, and as he went over it he was
surprised to find it greater than it appeared. When he picked his
way between the rocks, and began clambering among the trees and
vegetation, he concluded that he was fully two hundred yards from
where the mustangs were grazing.</p>
<p>However, he did not allow himself to lose any time in
speculation and wonderment, but set to work at once to gather wood
with which to kindle a fire in readiness for the return of Mickey.
There was enough around him to afford all he needed and he was
engaged in leisurely collecting an armful when he was startled by
the rattling of the leaves behind him.</p>
<p>The wood was dropped on the instant, and the alarmed lad wheeled
about to face his new danger. Instead of two or three Indians, as
he had anticipated, he saw an enormous grizzly bear, about a dozen
feet in the rear, coming directly toward him, with very little
doubt of his purpose.</p>
<p>Fred had no thought of anything of this character, and for a
time he was paralyzed with terror, unable to speak or stir. These
precious seconds were improved by the huge animal, which continued
lumbering heavily forward toward the boy. Bruin had his jaws apart
and his red tongue lolling out, while a guttural grunt was
occasionally heard, as if the beast was anticipating the crunching
of the tender flesh and bones of the lad.</p>
<p>Before the latter was within reach, however, he had recovered
his usual activity, and, with a bound and a yell of terror, Fred
started in the direction of the clearing, where he had left the
mustangs, and where he had intended to kindle the camp-fire. But
the enormous, bulky creature, although swinging along in his
awkward fashion, still made good speed, and gained so rapidly upon
the boy that he almost abandoned hope of escape.</p>
<p>At this critical moment Fred thought of his revolver, and he
whipped it out in a twinkling. Whirling about, he took quick aim
and discharged both barrels almost in the face of the brute. Then,
flinging the pistol against his leather nose, he turned back and
continued his flight at the utmost bent of his speed. Both bullets
struck the brute and wounded him, but not fatally, nor, indeed,
enough to check his advance.</p>
<div class="figure"><SPAN href="images/130_full.png" title=
"Whirling about he took quick aim." target="_blank"><ANTIMG src=
"images/130_small.png" alt="A man aims a gun at a bear." id="img130" name="img130" width="360" height="586" /></SPAN>
<p>WHIRLING ABOUT HE TOOK QUICK AIM.</p>
</div>
<p>The grizzly bear, as found in his native wilds, is killed with
extreme difficulty, and the only thing that seemed to affect the
monster in the present instance was the flash of the pistol in his
eyes. He paused, and, rearing on his hind legs, snorted, snuffed,
and pawed his nose as if the bullets were splinters which he was
seeking to displace. Then, with an angry growl, he dropped on all
fours and resumed his pursuit of the author of his confusion and
hurts. The wounds incensed the brute, and he plunged along at a
faster rate than before, gaining so rapidly that there could be no
doubt as to the result.</p>
<p>Being without any weapon at all, there seemed but one hope for
Fred, and that was to reach his mustang in time to mount and avail
himself of his speed. For a hundred feet or so he ran down a rapid
slope, between the trees and rocks, until he reached the camping
site, where he had a run of a couple of hundred yards across a
comparatively level plain to reach the point where his animal was
awaiting him.</p>
<p>In going down this wooded slope, the smaller size of the boy
gave him considerable advantage. Yet, so well did the grizzly
succeed that he reached the spot less than twenty feet in his rear,
and, heading directly for him, at once proceeded to decrease the
distance still further. This placed the question of escape by
superior speed upon the part of the lad as among the
impossibilities, and it began to look very much as if his race were
run.</p>
<p>At this juncture, as if all the fates had combined against him,
Fred, while glancing backward over his shoulder, stumbled and fell.
He sprang up as hastily as possible, but the loss of ground was
irreparable. As he looked back he saw that the colossal beast was
so close that it seemed that one sweep of his paw would smite the
terrified fugitive from the face of the earth.</p>
<p>It was a critical moment indeed, and the crack of the rifle from
the wood, which the pursuer and pursued had just left, was not a
breath of time too soon. Aimed by one who knew the vulnerable
points of such a creature, and by someone whose skill was
unsurpassed, the leaden messenger crashed its way through bone and
muscle to the seat of life. The brute, which was ready to fall upon
and devour the young fugitive, pitched heavily forward and rolled
upon the ground in the throes of death.</p>
<p>Fred did not realize his delivery until he had gone some
distance further and looked back and saw the black mass motionless
upon the ground. After some hesitation, he then turned and walked
distrustfully back to where it lay.</p>
<p>He found the beast stone-dead, a rill of blood from beneath the
fore-leg showing where some one’s bullet had done the
business. The lad recalled the sound of the gun which had reached
his ear.</p>
<p>“That was the best shot for me that Mickey ever
made,” he muttered, looking around for his friend.</p>
<p>But he was nowhere to be seen.</p>
<p>“Mickey must always have his fun,” added Fred after
failing to detect him. “Instead of coming out at once and
letting me know how he came to do it, he fires the lucky shot, and
then waits to see how I will act. My gracious! he is a
bouncer!”</p>
<p>This last remark was excited by the carcass, which he kicked,
and which shook like a mountainous mass of jelly; and as he passed
around it he gained a fair idea of the immense proportions of the
bear, in whose grasp he would have been as helpless as in that of a
royal Bengal tiger.</p>
<p>“Whew! but he came mighty close to me! When I fell down I
expected to feel his paws on me before I could get up. In a few
seconds more it would have been all up with me.”</p>
<p>Several minutes passed, and nothing was seen of the Irishman,
whereupon the lad concluded he might as well go back and gather the
wood, which would be needed at the camp-fire.</p>
<p>“I wonder if there’s any more of them,” he
muttered, as he began picking his way among the rocks. “If
there are, why Mickey must look out for me.”</p>
<p>He found the sticks just as he had thrown them down and he
proceeded to regather them, keeping a careful watch for another
dangerous visitor. All remained quiet, however, and, making his way
down the wooded slope into the open area, he looked back and found
that he was still alone. So it continued until he returned to where
the two mustangs were tethered. There he carefully adjusted the
sticks and prepared everything, after which he began to feel some
impatience at the non-appearance of his friend.</p>
<p>“He must see more fun in that kind of thing than I do.
There’s no telling what has become of those six Apaches we
left down in the cave. I feel sure that they’ve got above
ground again. It won’t take long for them to find their
mustangs, or some other horses, and they may be a mile away, and
there may be other parties close by. Halloa!”</p>
<p>Fred thought that he had no matches about his person; but he was
making a sort of aimless hunt when he found a solitary lucifer at
the bottom of his pocket. This he carefully struck against the rock
behind him, and in a few minutes the camp-fire was started and
burning merrily.</p>
<p>As he sat down to wait he looked toward the point where the
Irishman had vanished from sight. There he was, bearing on his
shoulders some choice sections of a young antelope he had shot,
although Fred recalled that he had not heard the report of his gun,
except when the grizzly was shot. As Mickey came along over the
same path taken by the boy, he was forced to make a detour around
the carcass of the bear. He paused to survey it, his whole manner
betraying great astonishment, as if he had never beheld anything of
the kind. He walked around the body several times, punched it with
his foot, and finally, grasping his twenty pounds of meat in his
right hand, approached the camp-fire.</p>
<p>Here he at once began the preparations for broiling it. The
antelope had been of goodly size and he had cut out the most
luscious portions, so as to avoid carrying back any waste material.
He had a great deal more than both could eat, it is true, but it
was a commendable custom with the Irishman to lay in a stock
against emergencies that were likely to arise.</p>
<p>While thus employed, it would have been impossible for Mickey to
hold his tongue.</p>
<p>“Begorrah, but it was queer, was the same, the way I came
to cotch this gintleman. I hunted him a little ways, when he made a
big jump, and I thought had got a long ways off, but when I came to
folly him, I found he had cornered himself among the rocks, where
there was no show of getting out, except by coming back on me. The
minute I showed mesilf, he made a rush for me arms, just as all the
purty gals in Tipperary used to do when I came along the street. An
antelope can’t do much, but I don’t care about their
coming down on me in that style, and so I pulled up and let drive.
He was right on me when I pulled trigger, and he made one big jump
that carried him clear over my head, and landed him stone dead on
the other side.”</p>
<p>“That was a good shot, but not as good as when you brought
down the grizzly bear at my heels.”</p>
<p>Mickey O’Rooney was particularly busy just then with his
culinary operations, and he stared at the lad with an expression of
comical amazement that made the young fellow laugh.</p>
<p>“Begorrah, why don’t ye talk sinse?” added
Mickey, impatiently. “I’ve heard Soot Simpson say that
if ye only put your shot in the right spot, ye don’t want but
one of ’em to trip the biggest grizzly that ever navigated. I
was going to obsarve that ye had been mighty lucky to send in your
two pistol-shots just where they settled the business, though I
s’pose the haythen was so close on ye whin ye fired that ye
almost shoved the weapon into his carcass.”</p>
<p>“I shot him, Mickey, before I fairly started to run, but
he didn’t mind it any more than if I spit in his face. It was
your own shot that did the business.”</p>
<p>“Me own shot!” repeated Mickey, still staring with
an astonished expression. “I never fired any shot at the
baste, and never saw him till a few minutes ago, when I was coming
this way.”</p>
<p>It was Fred Munson’s turn to be astonished, and he asked,
in his amazed, wondering way:</p>
<p>“Who, then, fired the shot that killed him? I
didn’t.”</p>
<p>“I thought ye did the same, for it was not
mesilf.”</p>
<p>The lad was more puzzled than ever. He saw that Mickey was in
earnest, and was telling him the truth, and each, in fact,
understood that <em>he</em> had been under a misapprehension as to
who had slain the grizzly bear.</p>
<p>“The beast was right on me,” continued Fred,
“and I didn’t think there was any chance for me, when I
heard the crack of a rifle from the bushes, and, looking back, saw
that the bear was down on the ground, making his last
kick.”</p>
<p>Mickey let the meat scorch, while he stopped to scratch his
head, as was his custom when he was in a mental fog.</p>
<p>“Begorrah, but that is queer, as me mither used to obsarve
when she found she had not been desaved by belaving what we childer
told her. There was somebody who was kind enough to knock over the
grizzly at the most convanient season for ye, and then he
doesn’t choose to send over his card wid his post-office
address on.”</p>
<p>“Who do you think it was, Mickey?”</p>
<p>“It must have been some red spalpeen that took pity on ye.
Who knows but it was Lone Wolf himself?”</p>
<p>Both looked about them in a scared, inquiring way, but could see
nothing of their unknown friend or enemy, as the case might be.</p>
<p>“I tell you, Mickey, that it makes me feel as if we ought
to get out of here.”</p>
<p>“Ye’re right, and we’ll just swally some of
this stuff, and then we’ll ’light out.”</p>
<p>He tossed the lad a goodly-sized piece of meat, which, if
anything, was overdone. Both ate more rapidly than was consistent
with hygiene, their eyes continually wandering over the rocks and
heights around them, in quest of their seemingly ever-present
enemies, the Apaches. It required but a few moments for them to,
complete their dinner. Mickey, in accordance with his custom,
carefully folded up what was left, and, taking a drink from the
stream which ran near at hand, they sprang upon the backs of their
mustangs, and headed westward in the direction of New Boston,
provided such a settlement was still in existence by the grace of
Lone Wolf, leader of the Apaches.</p>
<p>“Now,” said Mickey, whose spirits seemed to rise
when he found himself astride of his trusty mustang again,
“if we don’t have any bad luck, we ought to be out of
the mountains by dark.”</p>
<p>“And after that?”</p>
<p>“Then a good long ride across the prairie, and we’ll
be back again wid the folks.”</p>
<p>“How glad I am that father isn’t there, that he
staid at Fort Aubray, for when he comes along in a few weeks, he
won’t know anything about this trouble till I tell him the
whole story myself, and then it will be too late for him to
worry.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I’m glad it’s so, for it saams if I had
a spalpeen of a son off wid Lone Wolf, among the mountains,
I’d feel as bad as if he’d gone in swimming where the
water was over his head. And then it will be so nice to sit down
and tell the ould gintleman about it, and have him lambaste ye
’cause you wasn’t more respictful to Lone Wolf. All
them things are cheerful, and make the occasion very plisant.
Begorrah, I should like to know where that old redskin is, for Soot
Simpson tells me that he is the greatest redskin down in this part
of the world. He’s the spalpeen that robbed a government
train and made himself a big blanket out of the new greenbaeks that
he stole. Soot says that there isn’t room on his lodge-pole
for half the scalps that he has taken. Bad luck to the spalpeen, he
will peel the topknot from the head of a lovely woman, or swaat
child, such as I used to be, as quick as he would from the crown of
a man of my size. He’s an old riprobate, is the same, and
Soot says he can niver die resigned and at pace with all mankind
till he shoots him.”</p>
<p>“I’ll be very glad to keep out of his way, if
he’ll keep out of mine. I wonder why he didn’t kill me
when he had the chance, instead of keeping me so long.”</p>
<p>“I s’pose he meant to carry ye up where his little
spalpeens live, and turn ye over to them for their
amusement.”</p>
<p>“How could I amuse them?”</p>
<p>“There be a good many ways. They might have stuck little
wooden pegs in your hide, then set fire to ’em, and then
walked ye round for fireworks; or they might fill your ears with
powder, and tech it off, and then watched the iligant exprission of
your countenance. Or they might lave set ye to running up and down
between two rows of ’em, about eight or ten miles long, while
aich stood with a big shillalah in his hand, and banged ye over the
head with it as ye passed. There be a good many ways, according to
what Soot told me, but that’s enough to show ye that Lone
Wolf and his folks wouldn’t have been at a loss to find
delightful ways of giving the little childher the innocent sport
they must have.”</p>
<p>“I shouldn’t think they would, if that’s the
kind of fun they like,” replied the horrified boy.
“I’ve thanked the Lord hundreds of times that He helped
me get out of Lone Wolf’s clutches, and my dread is that he
may catch us before we can get out of the mountain. I don’t
believe we could find as good a chance as I did the other
night.”</p>
<p>“Ye’re right; that thing couldn’t happen
ag’in. Lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same
place; but we’ve got good horses, and if he don’t pin
us up in the pass, I think our chance is as good as could be
asked.”</p>
<p>“That’s what troubles me,” said Fred, who was
galloping at his side, and who kept continually glancing from the
tops of the rocks upon the right to the tops upon the left.
“You know there are Indians all over, and I wonder that some
of them haven’t seen us already. S’pose they do, and
they’re behind us, they can signal to somebody ahead, and the
first thing we know, they’ve got us shut in on both
sides.”</p>
<p>“That thing may happen,” replied Mickey, who did not
appear as apprehensive as his young friend; “but I have the
best of hope that the same won’t. I don’t think Lone
Wolf knows we’re anywhere around here, and before he can find
out, I also hope we shall be beyond his raich.”</p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />