The Edward S. Ellis Megapack
Page 58
Certainly there was nothing directly above him that would serve, and he passed his right hand to one side. Ah! he caught the sharp edge, after groping for a few seconds. Leaning over, he reached out as far as possible and found the projection extended indefinitely.
“It will do!” he muttered, with a thrill, and, without pausing to reflect upon the fearful risk of the thing, he swung himself along, sustained for an instant by his single hand; but the other was immediately alongside of it, and it was easy to hold himself like a pendulum swaying over the frightful abyss. But there was nothing upon which to rest his feet. He did not wish anything, and, swinging sideways, threw one leg over the ledge beside his hands, and, half-rolling over, raised himself securely for the time on his perch.
“Gracious!” he exclaimed, pausing from the effort; “if I had stopped to think, I shouldn’t have dared to try it. If this ledge had been smaller I shouldn’t have found room for my body, and there is no way of getting back to the stone on which I was standing. I must go on now, for I cannot go back.”
It was plain sailing for a few minutes. The flinty excrescences were as numerous as ever, and he never paused in his ascent until prudence whispered that it was wise to take another breathing spell. It was a source of infinite comfort to feel that when he thus checked himself he was not compelled to do so for lack of support.
There was no way of determining how far he had climbed, and he based his calculation on hope rather than knowledge. The roar of the canyon was notably fainter, and, when he looked aloft, the ribbon of starlit sky appeared nearer than at first. There could be no doubt that he was making his ascent at the most favorable point, for the height was much less than at most of the other places, and he believed this was the portion where Hank Hazletine had climbed from the bottom to the top of the gorge. Could he have been certain of the latter, all misgiving would have vanished.
Not a trace of his panic remained. If Motoza had returned to the cavern, and, discovering the flight of his prisoner, set out to follow him, there was little prospect of his success, for the fugitive had varied from a direct line, and the Sioux might pass within arm’s length without being aware of the fact.
There was one peril to which Fred was exposed, and it was fortunate it never entered his mind. Supposing Motoza was standing on the ledge at the bottom of the canyon and gazing upward, weapon in hand, it was quite probable that he would be able to locate the youth. This would be not because of any superiority of vision, but because of that patch of sky beyond, acting as a background for the climber. With his inky figure thrown in relief against the stars, his enemy could have picked him off as readily as if the sun were shining.
This possibility, we say, did not present itself to Fred Greenwood, and, more providential than all, Motoza was not in the canyon.
The slipping of one foot tore most of the sole from the stocking, and his foot had henceforth no protection against the craggy surface.
“I don’t mind the stocking,” grimly reflected the youth, “for there is another pair in camp and plenty of them at the ranch, but how it hurts!”
He would have been altogether lacking in the pluck he had displayed thus far had he been deterred by physical suffering from pushing his efforts to the utmost. He would have kept on through torture tenfold worse, and he showed himself no mercy.
Few people who have not been called upon to undertake such a work can form an idea of its exhausting nature. It would be hard to think of anyone better prepared than Fred Greenwood to stand the terrific draught upon his strength; but while a long way from the top, and while there was no lack of supports for his hands and feet, and in the face of his unshakable resolve, he was compelled to doubt his success. It seemed as if the dizzy height did not diminish. When he had climbed for a long time and stopped, panting and suffering, the stars appeared to be as far away as ever. He felt as if he ought to have been out of the ravine long before, but the opening looked to be as unattainable as at the beginning.
His whole experience was remarkable to that extent that it can be explained only on the ground that the intense mental strain prevented his seeing things as they were. He had subjected his muscles to such a tension that he was obliged to pause every few minutes and rest. One of his feet was scarified and bleeding, and the other only a little better. When he looked upward his heart sank, for a long distance still interposed between him and the ground above.
“I must have picked the place where the canyon is deepest,” was his despairing conclusion; “I feel hardly able to hang on, and would not dare do what I did further below.”
He now yielded to a curious whim. Instead of continually gazing at the sky, that he might measure the distance remaining to be traversed, he resolved not to look at it at all until he had climbed a long way. He hoped by doing this to discover such a marked decrease in the space that it would reanimate him for the remaining work.
Accordingly he closed his eyes, and, depending on the sense of feeling alone, which in truth was his reliance from the first, he toiled steadily upward. Sometimes he had to grope with his hands for a minute or two before daring to leave the support on which his feet rested, but one of his causes for astonishment and thankfulness was that such aids seemed never to be lacking.
He continued this blind progress until his wearied muscles refused to obey further. He must rest or he would drop to the bottom from exhaustion. He hooked his right arm over the point of a rock, sat upon a favoring projection below, and decided to wait until his strength was fully restored.
He could not resist the temptation to look up and learn how much yet remained to do.
Could he believe his senses? He was within a dozen feet of the top!
He gasped with amazement, grew faint, and then was thrilled with hope. He even broke into a cheer, for the knowledge was like nectar to the traveller perishing of thirst in the desert—it was life itself.
All pain, all suffering, all fatigue were forgotten in the blissful knowledge. He bent to his work with redoubled vigor. If the supports continued, his stupendous task was virtually ended.
And they did continue. Not once did the eagerly-feeling hands fail to grasp a projection of some form which could be made to serve his purpose. Up, up he went, until the clear, cool air fanned his temples, when, with a last effort, he drew himself from the canyon, and, plunging forward on his face, fainted dead away.
He lay in a semi-conscious condition for nearly an hour. Then, when his senses slowly returned, he raised himself to a sitting position and looked around. It was too early for the moon, and the gloom prevented his seeing more than a few paces in any direction.
But how the pain racked him! It seemed as if every bone was aching and every muscle sore. The feet had been wholly worn from each stocking, and his own feet were torn and bleeding. He had preserved his shoes, but when he came to put them on he groaned with anguish. His feet were so swollen that it was torture to cover them, and he could not tie the strings; but they must be protected, and he did not rise until they were thus armored.
He was without any weapons, but the torment of his wounds drove that fact from his mind. All that he wanted now was to get away from the spot where he could not help believing he was still in danger of recapture. But when he stood erect and the agony shot through his frame, he asked himself whether it was possible to travel to the plateau without help; and yet the effort must be made.
He had a general knowledge of his situation, and, bracing himself for the effort, he began the work. It was torture from the first, but after taking a few steps his system partly accommodated itself to the requirement and he progressed better than he anticipated. He was still on the wrong side of the canyon, which it was necessary to leave before rejoining his friends. He was wise enough to distrust his own capacity after the fearful strain, and did not make the attempt until he found a place where the width was hardly one-half of the extent leaped by him and Jack Dudley. As it was, the jump, into which he put all his vigor, landed him just clear of the edg
e, a fact which did much to lessen the sharp suffering caused by alighting on his feet.
He yearned to sit down and rest, but was restrained by the certainty that it would make his anguish more intense when he resumed his tramp toward camp. Furthermore, as he believed himself nearing safety, his impatience deepened and kept him at work when he should have ceased.
As he painfully trudged along, his thoughts reverted to his climb up the side of the canyon and he shuddered; for, now that it was over, he could not comprehend how he dared ever make the effort. Not for the world would he repeat it, even by daylight.
“Heaven brought me safely through,” was his grateful thought.
But as he drew near the plateau his musings turned thither. He had counted upon finding Jack Dudley and the guide there; but they might be miles away, and he would not see them for days. He knew he needed attention from his friends and could not sustain himself much longer. If he should be unable to find them—
But all these gloomy forebodings were scattered a few minutes later by the glimmer of the camp-fire on the other side of the plateau. One of his friends at least must be there, and providentially it proved that both were present.
CHAPTER XXI.
HOW IT ALL ENDED.
At last the clothing of Jack Dudley was dried, and he felt thoroughly comfortable in body. While he was employed in the pleasant task, Hank Hazletine went away in quest of food. It took time and hard work to find it, but his remarkable skill as a hunter enabled him to do so, and when he returned he brought enough venison to serve for the evening and morning meal. No professor of the culinary art could have prepared the meat more excellently than he over the bed of live coals. The odor was so appetizing that the youth was in misery because of his impatience, but the guide would not let him touch a mouthful until the food was done “to the queen’s taste.” Then they had their feast.
And yet the two were oppressed by thoughts of the absent one. The attempts of his friends during the day to help or to get trace of Fred Greenwood had been brought to naught, and it looked as if they would have to consent to the humiliating terms of Tozer and Motoza, with strong probability that the missing youth was never again to be seen alive.
“I think, Hank,” said Jack, when the cowman had lit his pipe, “that we should run no more risks.”
“How can we help it?”
“When you meet Tozer tomorrow morning by appointment, tell him the price he asks will be paid, but everything must be square and above board.”
The guide looked at his companion a moment in silence. Then he said:
“If you’ll turn the matter over in your mind, younker, you’ll see that this bus’ness can’t be put through without giving the scamps the chance to swindle us the worst sort of way. They won’t give up the boy on our promise to pay ’em the money and no questions asked, for they don’t b’leve we’ll do it; so we’ve got to give ’em the money and trust to their honor to keep their part. Trust to their honor,” repeated Hank, with all the scorn he could throw into voice and manner; “as if they knowed what it means.”
“I know from what you have said that Tozer and Motoza are cunning, but—”
In order to receive all the warmth possible, Jack Dudley was sitting within the cavern and facing outward, while his companion faced him, with his back toward the plateau and mountains beyond. Jack suddenly broke off his remark, for in the gloom behind the cowman he saw something move. That something quickly took the form of a white-faced, exhausted youth trudging painfully forward and ready to sink to the ground with weakness.
“Heavens! can it be?” gasped Jack, half-rising to his feet and staring across the camp-fire. The next moment, and while Hazletine was looking in the same direction, as astounded as the youth, the elder made one bound and was at the side of Fred Greenwood, whom he caught in his arms as he sagged downward in a state of utter collapse.
In the course of the following hour everything was made clear. Under the tender ministrations of Jack Dudley and Hank Hazletine the returned wanderer recovered to a great degree his strength, and to the fullest degree his naturally buoyant spirits. The faint odor of the broiling meat which lingered in the air awoke his ravenous appetite, but knowing how long he had been without food, the cowman would not permit him to eat more than a tithe of what he craved. After a time he gave him more, until his appetite was fairly well satisfied.
“Jack,” said Fred, with something of his old waggishness, as he looked across the fire into the face of his comrade, “let’s go home.”
“You forget that we have a month’s vacation, and it is hardly half gone. We can stay another week and then be sure of being back to school in time. You lamented more than I because we could not have a longer play-spell. Your sentiments have changed.”
The younger lad pointed to his feet.
“There’s the reason. If I were like you I shouldn’t think of leaving this delightful country until the last day; but I shall need all the vacation to get on my feet again. Do you comprehend?”
“Yes; your demonstration is logical. True, you have lost your rifle and pistol, the same as myself, but we could get others at the ranch, and no doubt meet with plenty more enjoyable adventures, but not as you are. I shall be very willing to start home with you tomorrow morning. What do you think of it, Hank?”
“I’m blamed sorry this bus’ness has to wind up as it does, but there’s no help fur it, and we’ll leave fur the ranch after breakfast.”
“Will you keep your appointment with Tozer?”
“I’ve been thinking of that; yes, I’ll meet him.”
There was a peculiar intonation in these words that caused both boys to look into that bearded face, but they could not be sure of his meaning.
It was Fred who spoke:
“Hank, there is one matter as to which I cannot feel certain; I want your opinion of it.”
“Wal, I’m listening.”
“After Motoza forced me into the cavern at the side of the canyon he went off and has not returned yet, unless he did so after I left. Now, why didn’t he go back?”
“Why should he go back? He felt sartin there was no way fur you to git out, and if I’d been told that your only chance was to climb the wall I’d ’greed with him, though you struck the spot where I done it myself.”
“He must have known I hadn’t a mouthful of food?”
“He couldn’t help knowing it.”
“The question in my mind is this: what he said to me, as well as what you have told, proves that he understood the whole scheme of my being ransomed. Tozer must have known where I was; he knew that to bring the ransom business to a head would require several days, even with the use of the telegraph; they expected me to stay in the cavern all the time. How long would they have left me there without bringing me anything to eat?”
“They’d never brought you anything.”
“Then when the time came to surrender me to my friends I should have been dead.”
The cowman nodded his head.
“There ain’t no doubt of that.”
“And they couldn’t have carried out their part of the agreement.”
“Which the same they knowed.”
“But it seems unreasonable. It would have placed both in peril, from which I cannot see how it was possible for them to escape. If they gave me up after receiving the money they would be safe against punishment. Why, then, should they place themselves in such great danger when they had nothing to gain and all to lose by doing so? That is what I can’t understand, and I am sure my brain has become clearer.”
It was the same view of the question that had puzzled Jack Dudley, and the two boys listened with interest to the explanation of the veteran.
“Tozer of himself would turn you over sound in limb and body; but, since it was the Sioux who done all the work, as you have showed us, Bill had to make a sort of compromise with the villain, and that compromise was that you should be left with Motoza till the hour come fur you to be produced. That was t
he price Bill had to pay Motoza fur what he done. It wasn’t Tozer, but the Sioux, that was fixing things so as to starve you to death.”
The cowman spoke with a deliberation and seriousness that left no doubt he believed every word uttered, and the boys were convinced he was right.
“Bill is as mean as they make ’em,” added Hazletine, “but he’d rather grab a pile of money than kill a chap he don’t like. It’s t’other way with the Sioux. He likes money well ’nough, fur he knows it’ll buy firewater, but the sweetest enjoyment he can have is to revenge himself on a person he hates, and from what I’ve heard he hates you as hard as he knows how.”
“There is no doubt of that,” said Jack; “I shall never forget the expression of his face when Fred made him give up my rifle.”
Fred was thoughtful a moment, and then asked:
“Hank, what do you mean to do about Tozer?”
“Wal, until I larned your story I was fixed to shoot him on sight.”
“But what of the agreement you would have to make before he gave me up?”
“I’d kept that the same as the other folks, but it wouldn’t be long afore I’d git a chance to pick a quarrel with him over other matters, and then it would be him or me; and,” added the cowman, with a grim smile, “I don’t think it would be me.”
“Do you still hold to that resolve?”
“I can’t say that I do. I don’t see that Bill meant any hurt except to make some money out of you, and he couldn’t help taking chances on that. If he could have had his way he’d turned you over to us as well as when you left; so I think I’ll wait to see what his next trick is to be afore I draw a bead on him. I’ll take another plan—I’ll give him the laugh.”
“Give him the laugh!” repeated the wondering Jack Dudley; “what do you mean by that?”
“I’ll meet him here to-morrer morning, and, after we’ve talked a while, let him see you or know how things stand, and then I’ll just laugh at him till I drop to the ground and roll over on my back. Won’t he feel cheap?”