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  • 1895
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those first samples. I am ready to stay here through the summer, but I vote we sew them up in deer-hide, and put two or three thicknesses of skin on them so as to prevent accidents. Two of us had best go with them to the fort and ask the Major to let us stow them away in his magazine, then, if we have to bolt, we sha’n’t be weighted down with them. Besides, we might not have time for packing them on the horses, and altogether it would be best to get them away at once, then come what might we should have proofs of the value of the mine.”

This proposal was cordially agreed to, and it was settled that on the following morning Harry himself should, with Hunting Dog and two pack-horses, start for the fort, following the same route they came, while the rest should set to work to construct a cradle, and troughs for leading the water to it.

CHAPTER XIV

AN INDIAN ATTACK

A couple of trees were felled in the middle of the clump in which they were still encamped. They were first roughly squared and then sawn into planks, the three men taking it by turns to use the saw. The question of shifting the camp up to the spot where they intended to work was discussed the night before Harry started, but it was agreed at last that it would be better to remain where they were.

“If Utes come, sure to find traces,” the chief said. “Many horses in valley make tracks as plain as noonday. Gold valley bad place for fight.”

“That is so,” Jerry agreed. “We should not have a show there. Even if we made a log-house, and it would be a dog-goned trouble to carry up the logs,–we might be shut up in it, and the red-skins would only have to lie round and shoot us down if we came out. I reckon we had best stay here after all, Harry. We could keep them outside the range of our rifles anyhow by day.”

“I don’t see that that would be much good to us, Jerry; for if they came by day they would not find us here. Still I don’t know that it ain’t best for us to stay here; it would give us a lot of trouble to build a place. I reckon two of us had better stay here all the day with the horses. If the red-skins come, they can fire a couple of shots, and we shall hear them up at the washing-place. The red-skins would be safe to draw off for a bit to talk it over before they attacked, as they would not know how many there were among the trees. That would give the rest time to come down.”

It took three days’ hard work to saw the planks and make the cradle, and troughs sufficiently long to lead the water down into it from the stream higher up. These were roughly but strongly made, the joints being smeared with clay to prevent the water from running through. A dam was then made to keep back the water above the spot where they intended to begin, which was about fifty yards below the quartz vein, and from this dam the trough was taken along on strong trestles to the cradle.

The horses were brought into the camp at daybreak every morning and tied up to the trees, and were let out again at nightfall. Tom remained in camp, the chief being with him. The latter, however, was, during the time Harry was away, twice absent for a day on hunting excursions lower down the valley, which was there thickly wooded. The first time, he returned with the hams and a considerable portion of the rest of the flesh of a bear. The second time, he brought up the carcass of a deer.

“How far does the valley run?” Tom asked.

“Valley last ten miles. Sides get steep and high, then canon begin.”

“That will run right down to the Colorado?”

The chief nodded. “Leaping Horse go no farther. Canon must go down to the river.”

“How far is it before the sides of the valley get too steep to climb?”

“Two miles from here. Men could climb another mile or two, horses not.”

“Is there much game down there, chief?”

The Seneca nodded.

“That is a comfort, we sha’n’t be likely to run out of fresh meat.”

The chief was very careful in choosing the wood for the fire, so that in the daytime no smoke should be seen rising from the trees. When the dead wood in the clump of trees was exhausted he rode down the valley each day, and returned in an hour with a large faggot fastened behind him on the horse. He always started before daybreak, so as to reduce the risk of being seen from the hills. On the sixth day the men began their work at the gravel. The bottle of mercury was emptied into the cradle, the bottom of which had been made with the greatest care, so as to prevent any loss from leakage. Two of the men brought up the gravel in buckets and pans, until the cradle was half full. Then water was let in, and the third man rocked the machine and kept on removing the coarse stuff that worked up to the top, while the others continued bringing up fresh gravel.

“Well, what luck?” Tom asked, when they returned in the evening.

“We have not cleaned up yet; we shall let it run for three or four days before we do. We are only on the surface yet, and the stuff wouldn’t pay for the trouble of washing out.”

On the eighth day after their departure Harry and Hunting Dog returned.

“Well, boys, it is all stowed away safely,” he said. “I know the Major well, and he let me have a big chest, which he locked up, after I had put the bags in, and had it stowed away in the magazine; so there is no fear of its being touched. Any signs of the red-skins?”

“Nary a sign. We have none of us been up the valley beyond this, so that unless they come right down here, they would find no trail. The horses are always driven down the valley at night.”

“How is the work going on, Jerry?”

“We began washing two days ago; to-morrow night we shall clean up. We all think it is going to turn out pretty good, for we have seen gold in the sand several times as we have carried it up in the pails.”

The next day Tom went up with the others, the Indians remaining in camp. Two men now worked at the cradle, while the other three brought up the sand and gravel. Towards evening they began the work of cleaning up. No more stuff was brought up to the machine, but the water was still run into it. As fast as the shaking brought the rough gravel to the top it was removed, until only a foot of sand remained at the bottom. The water was now stopped and the sand dug out, and carefully washed in the pans by hand. At the bottom of each pan there remained after all the sand had been removed a certain amount of gold-dust, the quantity increasing as the bottom was approached. The last two panfuls contained a considerable amount.

“It does not look much,” Tom said when the whole was collected together.

“It is heavy stuff, lad,” Harry replied. “What do you think there is, Jerry? About twelve ounces, I should fancy.”

“All that, Harry; nigher fourteen, I should think.”

The pan was now put at the bottom of the cradle, a plug pulled out, and the quicksilver run into it. A portion of this was poured on wash-leather, the ends of which were held up by the men so as to form a bag. Harry took the leather, and holding it over another pan twisted it round and round. As the pressure on the quicksilver increased it ran through the pores of the leather in tiny streams, until at last a lump of pasty metal remained. This was squeezed again and again, until not a single globule of quicksilver passed through the leather. The ball, which was of the consistency of half-dried mortar was then taken out, and the process repeated again and again until the whole of the quicksilver had been passed through the leather. Six lumps of amalgam about the size of small hens’ eggs remained.

“Is that good, uncle?” Tom asked.

“Very fair, lad; wonderfully good indeed, considering we have not got down far yet. I should say we shall get a pound and a half of gold out of it.”

“But how does the gold get into it, uncle?”

“There is what is called an affinity between quicksilver and gold. The moment gold touches quicksilver it is absorbed by it, just as a drop of water is taken up by a lump of salt. It thickens the quicksilver, and as it is squeezed through the leather the quicksilver is as it were strained out, and what remains behind becomes thicker and thicker, until, as you see, it is almost solid. It is no good to use more pressure, for if you do a certain amount of the gold would be squeezed through the leather. You see, as the stuff in the cradle is shaken, the gold being heavier than the sand finds its way down to the bottom, and every particle that comes in contact with the quicksilver is swallowed up by it.”

“And how do you get the quicksilver out of those lumps?”

“We put them in one of those clay crucibles you saw, with a pinch of borax, cover them up, and put them in a heap of glowing embers. That evaporates the quicksilver, and leaves the gold behind in the shape of a button.” This was done that evening, and when the buttons were placed in the scales they just turned the two-pound weight.

“Well, boys, that is good enough for anything,” Harry said. “That, with the dust, makes a pound a day, which is as good as the very best stuff in the early days of California.”

They worked steadily for the next seven weeks. Contrary to their expectations the gravel was but little richer lower down than they had found it at the end of the first wash-up, but continued about equally good, and the result averaged about a pound weight of gold a day. This was put into little bags of deer-skin, each containing five pounds’ weight, and these bags were distributed among the saddle-bags, so that in case of sudden disturbance there would be no risk of their being left behind. The Indians took it by turns to hunt; at other times they remained on guard in camp, Tom only staying when one of them was away. One day when the mining party stopped work, and sat down to eat some bread and cold meat,–which they had from the first brought up, so as to save them the loss of time entailed by going to the camp and back,–the report of a gun came upon their ears. All started to their feet and seized their rifles, and then stood listening intently. A minute later two more shots were heard at close intervals.

“Red-skins for sure!” Jerry exclaimed. “I thought as how our luck were too good to last.” They started at a run down the little valley, and only paused when they reached its mouth. Harry then advanced cautiously until he could obtain a view of the main valley. He paused for a minute and then rejoined his companions.

“There are fifty of them,” he said, “if there is one. They are Utes in their war-paint. They are a bit up the valley. I think if we make a rush we can get to the trees before they can cut us off.”

“We must try anyhow,” Sam Hicks said, “else they will get the two Indians and our horses and saddles and all. Just let us get breath for a moment, and then we will start.”

“Keep close together as you run,” Harry said, “and then if they do come up we can get back to back and make a fight of it.” After a short pause they started. They had not gone twenty yards when a loud yell proclaimed that the Indians had seen them. They had, however, but three hundred yards to run, while the Utes were double that distance from the clump.

When the miners were within fifty yards of the trees two rifle-shots rang out, and two of the Utes, who were somewhat ahead of the rest; fell from their horses, while the rest swerved off, seeing that there was no hope of cutting the party off. A few more yards and the miners were among the trees.

“So the Utes have found us out, chief,” Harry said as he joined Leaping Horse, who had just reloaded his ride.

“Must have tracked us. They are a war-party,” the Seneca replied. “Hunter must have found tracks and taken news back to the villages.”

“Well, we have got to fight for it, that is clear enough,” Harry said. “Anyhow, now they see there are seven of us they are not likely to attack until it gets dark, so we have time to think over what had best be done. We had just begun our meal when we heard your shot, and the best thing we can do is to have a good feed at once. We may be too busy later on.”

The chief said a word to the young Indian, and, leaving him on the watch, accompanied the others to the fire. They had scarcely sat down when Hunting Dog came up.

“More Utes,” he said briefly, pointing across the valley.

They at once went to the outer line of trees. On the brow of the rise opposite were a party of horsemen between twenty and thirty strong.

“That shows they have learnt all about our position,” Harry said. “Those fellows have been lying in wait somewhere over the hill to cut us off if we took to our horses on seeing the main body. Let us have a look the other side.”

Crossing the clump of trees, they saw on the brow there another party of Utes.

“I reckon they must have crossed that valley we were working in just after we got through,” Jerry said. “It is mighty lucky they did not come down on us while we were washing, for they could have wiped us all out before we had time to get hold of our guns. Well, Harry, we are in a pretty tight fix, with fifty of them up the valley and five-and-twenty or so on each side of us. We shall have to be dog-goned smart if we are to get out of this scrape.”

“Hand me your rifle, Tom,” his uncle said, “it carries farther than mine, and I will give those fellows a hint that they had best move off a bit.”

Steadying his piece against a tree, he took a careful aim and fired. One of the Indians swerved in his saddle, and then fell forward on the neck of his horse, which turned and galloped off with the rest.

“Now we will have our meal and take council, chief,” Harry said as he turned away. “If we have got to fight there is no occasion to fight hungry.”

The fire was made up; there was no need to be careful now. Strips of deer’s flesh were hung over it, and the meal was soon ready. But little was said while it was being eaten, then they all lighted their pipes and each put a pannikin of hot tea beside him.

“Now, chief,” Harry said, “have you arrived at any way out of this? It is worse than it was the last time we got caught in this valley.”

The chief shook his head. “No good fight here,” he said; “when night come they creep up all round.”

“Yes, I see that we have got to bolt, but the question is, how? If we were to ride they would ride us down, that is certain. Jerry and Tom might possibly get away, though that ain’t likely. Their critters are good, but nothing downright extraordinary, and the chances are that some of the Utes have got faster horses than theirs. As for the rest of us, they would have us before we had ridden an hour.”

“That ain’t to be thought of,” Jerry said. “It seems to me our best chance would be to leave the critters behind, and to crawl out the moment it gets dark, and try and get beyond them.”

“They will close in as soon as it gets dark, Jerry. They will know well enough that that is the time we shall be moving. I reckon we should not have a chance worth a cent of getting through. What do you say, chief?”

Leaping Horse nodded in assent.

“Well, then,” Sam Hicks said, “I vote we mount our horses and go right at them. I would rather do that and get rubbed out in a fair fight than lie here until they crawl up and finish us.”

No one answered, and for some minutes they smoked on without a word being spoken, then Harry said:

“There is only one chance for us that I can see, and that is to mount now and to ride right down the valley. The chief says that in some places it is not more than fifty yards wide, with steep cliffs on each side, and we could make a much better fight there, for they could only attack us in front. There would be nothing for them then but to dismount and close in upon us from tree to tree, and we could make a running fight of it until we come to the mouth of the canon. There must be places there, that we ought to be able to hold with our seven rifles against the lot of them.”

“Bully for you, Harry! I reckon that would give us a chance anyhow. That is, if we ain’t cut off before we get to the wood.”

“Let us have a look round and see what they are doing,” Harry said. “Ah! here comes Hunting Dog. He will tell us all about it.”

“Utes on hills all gone up and joined the others,” the young Indian said as he came up.

“It could not be better news!” Harry exclaimed. “I reckon they have moved away to tempt us to make a start for the fort, for they know if we go that way they will have us all, sure. They have not reckoned on our riding down the valley, for they will be sure we must have found out long ago that there ain’t any way out of it. Well, we had best lose no time. There is some meat ready, Hunting Dog, and you had best fill up while we get ready for a start.”

The blankets and buffalo rugs were wrapped up and strapped behind the saddles, as soon as these were placed behind the horses. They had only a small quantity of meat left, as the chief was going out hunting the next morning, but they fastened this, and eighty pounds of flour that still remained, on to one of the pack-horses. They filled their powder-horns from the keg, and each put three or four dozen bullets into his holsters, together with all the cartridges for their pistols; the rest of the ammunition was packed on another horse. When all was completed they mounted.

“We may get a couple of hundred yards more start before we are seen,” Harry said. “Anyhow, we have got five hundred yards, and may reckon on making the two miles to where the valley narrows before they catch us.”

The instant, however, they emerged from the wood, two loud yells were heard from Indians who had been left lying down on watch at the top of the slopes on either side. Sam, who was the worst shot of the party, had volunteered to lead the string of pack-horses, while Ben was ready to urge them on behind.

“You may want to stop some of the leading varmint, and I should not be much good at that game, so I will keep straight on without paying any attention to them.”

A loud answering yell rose from the Indians up the valley.

“We shall gain fifty yards or so before they are fairly in the saddle,” Harry said as they went off at the top of their speed, the horses seeming to know that the loud war-cry boded danger. They had gone half a mile before they looked round. The Indians were riding in a confused mass, and were some distance past the grove the miners had left, but they still appeared as far behind as they had been when they started. Another mile and the mass had broken up; the best-mounted Indians had left the rest some distance behind, and considerably decreased the gap between them and the fugitives. Another five minutes and the latter reached the wood, that began just where the valley narrowed and the cliffs rose almost perpendicularly on each side. As soon as they did so they leapt from their horses, and each posting himself behind a tree opened fire at their pursuers, the nearest of whom were but two hundred yards away. Four fell to the first seven shots; the others turned and galloped back to the main body, who halted at once.

“They won’t try a charge,” Harry said; “it isn’t in Indian nature to come across the open with the muzzles of seven rifles pointed at them. They will palaver now; they know they have got us in a trap, and they will wait till night. Now, chief, I reckon that you and I and Hunting Dog had best stay here, so that if they try, as they are pretty sure to do, to find out whether we are here still, we can give them a hint to keep off. The other four had better ride straight down the canon, and go on for a bit, to find out the best place for making a stand, and as soon as it is dark we will go forward and join them. There will be no occasion for us to hurry. I reckon the skunks will crawl up here soon after it is dark; but they won’t go much farther, for we might hide up somewhere and they might miss us. In the morning they will come down on foot, sheltering behind the trees as much as they can, till at last they locate us.”

The chief nodded his approval of the plan, and Tom and the three miners at once started, taking the pack-horses with them. On the way down they came upon a bear. Ben was about to fire, but Jerry said: “Best leave him alone, Ben; we are only three miles down, and these cliffs would echo the sound and the red-skins would hear it and know that some of us had gone down the valley, and might make a rush at once.” In an hour and a half they came down to a spot where the valley, after widening out a good bit, suddenly terminated, and the stream entered a deep canon in the face of the wall of rock that closed it in.

“I reckon all this part of the valley was a lake once,” Jerry said. “When it got pretty well full it began to run over where this canon is and gradually cut its way out down to the Colorado. I wonder how far it is to the river.”

They had gone but a hundred yards down the canon when they came to a place where a recent fall of rocks blocked it up. Through these the stream, which was but a small one, made its way.

“There is a grist of water comes down here when the snow melts in the spring,” Ben remarked. “You can see that the rocks are worn fifty feet up. Waal, I reckon this place is good enough for us, Jerry.”

“I reckon so, too,” the latter agreed. “It will be a job to get our horses over; but we have got to do it anyhow, if we have to carry them.” The animals, however, managed to scramble up the rocks that filled the canon to the height of some thirty feet. The distance between the rock walls was not more than this in width.

“We could hold this place for a year,” Ben said, “if they didn’t take to chucking rocks down from above.”

“Yes, that is the only danger,” Jerry agreed; “but the betting is they could not get nigh enough to the edge to look down. Still, they might do it if the ground is level above; anyhow, we should not show much at this depth, for it is pretty dark down here, and the rocks must be seven or eight hundred feet high.”

It was, indeed, but a narrow strip of sky that they saw as they looked up, and although still broad daylight in the valley they had left, it was almost dark at the bottom of the deep gorge, and became pitch dark as soon as the light above faded.

“The first job in the morning,” Jerry said, “will be to explore this place down below. I expect there are places where it widens out. If it does, and there are trees and anything like grass, the horses can get a bite of food; if not, they will mighty soon go under, that is if we don’t come upon any game, for if we don’t we sha’n’t be able to spare them flour.”

“It is almost a pity we did not leave them in the valley to take their chance,” Tom said.

“Don’t you make any mistake,” Jerry said. “In the first place they may come in useful to us yet, and even if we never get astride of them again they may come in mighty handy for food. I don’t say as we mayn’t get a bear if there are openings in the canon, or terraces where they can come down, but if there ain’t it is just horse-meat we have got to depend on. Look here, boys, it is ‘tarnal dark here; I can’t see my own hand. I vote we get a light. There is a lot of drift-wood jammed in among the stones where we climbed up, that will do to start a fire, and I saw a lot more just at the mouth of this gap. We know the red-skins ain’t near yet, so I vote we grope our way up and bring some down. It will be a first-rate thing, too, to make a bit of fire half-way between here and the mouth; that would put a stop to their crawling up, as they are like enough to try to do, to make out whereabouts we are. Of course we shall have to damp our own fire down if they come, else we should show up agin the light if we went up on the rock.”

The others agreed at once, for it was dull work sitting there in the black darkness. All had matches, and a piece of dry fir was soon found. This was lighted, and served as a torch with which to climb over the rocks. Jammed in between these on the upper side was a large quantity of drift-wood. This was pulled out, made into bundles, and carried over the rock barrier, and a fire was soon blazing there. Then taking a brand and two axes they went up to the mouth of the gorge, cut up the arms of some trees that had been brought down by the last floods and left there as the water sank. The greater part of these were taken down to their camping-place; the rest, with plenty of small wood to light them, were piled halfway between the barrier and the mouth of the canon, and were soon blazing brightly.

They were returning to their camping-place, when Ben exclaimed that he heard the sound of horses’ hoofs. All stopped to listen.

“There are not more than three of them,” Ben said, “and they are coming along at a canter. I don’t expect we shall hear anything of the red-skins until tomorrow morning.”

They heard the horses enter the canon, then Jerry shouted: “Are you all right, Harry?”

“Yes; the red-skins were all quiet when we came away. Why, where are you?” he shouted again when he came up to the fire.

“A hundred yards farther on I will show you a light.”

Two or three blazing brands were brought up. Harry and the Indians had dismounted at the first fire, and now led their horses up to the stone barrier.

“What on arth have you lit that other fire for, Jerry?” Harry asked as he stopped at the foot of the barrier.

“Because we shall sleep a dog-goned sight better with it there. As like as not they may send on two or three young warriors to scout. It is as black as a wolf’s mouth, and we might have sat listening all night, and then should not have heard them. But with that fire there they dare not come on, for they would know they could not pass it without getting a bullet in them.”

“Well, it is a very good idea, Jerry; I could not think what was up when I got there and did not see anybody. I see you have another fire over the other side. I could make it out clear enough as we came on.”

“It will burn down a bit presently,” Jerry said. “I should not try to get those horses up here now, Harry. It was a bad place to come up in daylight, and like enough they would break their legs if they tried it now. They will do just as well there as they would on this side, and you can get them over as soon as the day breaks.”

“I would rather get them over, Jerry; but I see it is a pretty rough place.”

Leaving the horses, Harry and the Indians climbed over the barrier, and were soon seated with the others round their fire, over which the meat was already frizzling.

“So the Indians kept quiet all the afternoon, Harry?”

“As quiet as is their nature. Two or three times some of them rode down, and galloped backwards and forwards in front of us to make out if we were there. Each time we let them fool about for a good long spell, and then when they got a bit careless sent them a ball or two to let them know we were still there. Hunting Dog went with the three horses half a mile down the valley soon after you had gone, so that they might not hear us ride off.

“As soon as it began to get dusk we started. We had to come pretty slow, for it got so dark under the trees we could not make out the trunks, and had to let the horses pick their own way. But we knew there was no hurry, for they would not follow till morning, though of course their scouts would creep up as soon as it was dark, and wouldn’t be long before they found out that we had left.”

“I reckon they will all come and camp in the wood and wait for daylight before they move, though I don’t say two or three scouts may not crawl down to try and find out where we are. They will move pretty slow, for they will have to pick their way, and will know well enough that if a twig cracks it will bring bullets among them. I reckon they won’t get here under four or five hours. It is sartin they won’t try to pass that fire above. As soon as they see us they will take word back to the others, and we shall have the whole lot down here by morning.”

“We shall have to get the horses over, the first thing. Two of us had best go down, as soon as it is light enough to ride without risking our necks, to see what the canon is like below.”

“Yes, that is most important, Jerry; there may be some break where the red-skins could get down, and so catch us between two fires.”

“I don’t care a red cent for the Utes,” Jerry said. “We can lick them out of their boots in this canon. What we have been thinking of, is whether there is some place where the horses can get enough to keep them alive while we are shut up here. If there is game, so much the better; if there ain’t, we have got to take to horseflesh.”

“How long do you suppose that the Indians are likely to wait when they find that they can’t get at us?” Tom asked.

“There ain’t no sort of saying,” his uncle replied. “I reckon no one ever found out yet how long a red-skin’s patience will last. Time ain’t nothing to them. They will follow up this canon both sides till they are sartin that there ain’t no place where a man can climb up. If there ain’t, they will just squat in that valley. Like enough they will send for their lodges and squaws and fix themselves there till winter comes, and even then they might not go. They have got wood and water. Some of them will hunt and bring in meat, which they will dry for the winter; and they are just as likely to stay here as to go up to their villages.”

A vigilant watch was kept up all night, two of them being always on guard at the top of the barrier. As soon as morning broke, the three horses were got over, and half an hour later Harry and Sam Hicks rode off down the canon, while the others took their places on guard, keeping themselves well behind the rocks, between which they looked out. They had not long to wait, for an Indian was seen to dart rapidly across the mouth of the canon. Two rifles cracked out, but the Indian’s appearance and disappearance was so sudden and quick that they had no reason to believe that they had hit him.

“They will know now that we are here, and are pretty wide awake,” Ben said. “You may be sure that he caught sight of these rocks.”

A minute or two later several rifles flashed from among the fallen stones at the mouth of the gorge.

“Keep your eyes open,” Jerry said, “and when you see the slightest movement, fire. But don’t do it unless you feel certain that you make out a head or a limb. We’ve got to show the Utes that it is sartin death to try and crawl up here.”

Almost immediately afterwards a head appeared above the stones, the chief’s rifle cracked, and at the same instant the head disappeared.

“Do you think you got him, chief?”

“Think so, not sure. Leaping Horse does not often miss his mark at two hundred yards.”

Almost directly afterwards Tom fired. An Indian sprang to his feet and bounded away.

“What did you fire at, Tom?”

“I think it was his arm and shoulder,” Tom replied. “I was not sure about it, but I certainly saw something move.”

“I fancy you must have hit him, or he would not have got up. Waal, now I reckon we are going to have quiet for a bit. They must have had a good look at the place while they were lying there, and must have seen that it air too strong for them. I don’t say they mayn’t come on again tonight–that they may do, but I think it air more likely they won’t try it. They would know that we should be on the watch, and with seven rifles and Colts we should account for a grist of them afore they got over. What do you say, chief?”

“Not come now,” the Indian said positively. “Send men first along top see if can get down. Not like come at night; the canons of the Colorado very bad medicine, red-skins no like come into them. If no way where we can get up, then Utes sit down to starve us.”

“That will be a longish job, chief. A horse a week will keep us for three months.”

“If no food for horse, horse die one week.”

“So they will, chief. We must wait till Harry comes back, then we shall know what our chances are.”

It was six hours before Harry and Sam returned. There was a shout of satisfaction from the men when they saw that they had on their saddles the hind-quarters of a bear.

“Waal, what is the news, Harry?”

“It ain’t altogether good, Ben. It goes down like this for about twelve miles, then it widens out sudden. It gets into a crumbly rock which has got worn away, and there is a place maybe about fifty yards wide and half a mile long, with sloping sides going up a long way, and then cliff all round. The bottom is all stones; there are a few tufts of coarse grass growing between them. On the slopes there are some bushes, and on a ledge high up we made out a bear. We had two or three shots at him, and at last brought him down. There may be more among the bushes; there was plenty of cover for them.”

“There was no place where there was a chance of getting up, Harry?”

“Nary a place. I don’t say as there may not be, but we couldn’t see one.” “But the bear must have got down.”

“No. He would come down here in the dry season looking for water-holes, and finding the place to his liking he must have concluded to settle there. It is just the place a bear would choose, for he might reckon pretty confident that there weren’t no chance of his being disturbed. Well, we went on beyond that, and two miles lower the canon opened again, and five minutes took us down on to the bank of the Colorado. There was no great room between the river and the cliff, but there were some good-sized trees there, and plenty of bush growing up some distance. We caught sight of another bear, but as we did not want him we left him alone.”

“Waal, let us have some b’ar-meat first of all,” Jerry said. “We finished our meat last night, and bread don’t make much of a meal, I reckon. Anyhow we can all do with another, and after we have done we will have a talk. We know what to expect now, and can figure it up better than we could before.”

CHAPTER XV

THE COLORADO

“Well, boys,” Harry Wade began after they had smoked for some time in silence, “we have got to look at this matter squarely. So far we have got out of a mighty tight place better than we expected. Yesterday it seemed to us that there weren’t much chance of our carrying our hair away, but now we are out of that scrape. But we are in another pretty nigh as bad, though there ain’t much chance of the red-skins getting at us.”

“That air so, Harry. We are in a pretty tight hole, you bet. They ain’t likely to get our scalps for some time, but there ain’t no denying that our chance of carrying them off is dog-goned small.”

“You bet there ain’t, Jerry,” Sam Hicks said. “Them pizon varmint will camp outside here; for they know they have got us in a trap. They mayn’t attack us at present, but we have got to watch night and day. Any dark night they may take it into their heads to come up, and there won’t be nothing to prevent them, for the rustling of the stream among the rocks would cover any little noise they might make. The first we should know of it would be the yell of the varmint at the foot of this barrier, and afore we could get to the top the two on guard would be tomahawked, and they would be down on us like a pack of wolves. I would a’most as soon put down my rifle and walk straight out now and let them shoot me, if I knew they would do it without any of their devilish tortures, as go on night after night, expecting to be woke up with their war-yell in my ears.

“Of course they will be always keeping a watch there at the mouth of the canon,–a couple of boys are enough for that,–for they will know that if we ride out on our horses we must go right up the valley, and it is a nasty place to gallop through in the dark; besides, some of them will no doubt be placed higher up to cut us off, and if we got through, which ain’t likely, they could ride us down in a few hours. If we crept out on foot and got fairly among the trees we should be no better off, for they would take up our trail in the morning and hunt us down. I tell you fairly, boys, I don’t see any way out of it. I reckon it will come to our having to ride out together, and to wipe out as many of the Utes as possible afore we go down. What do you say, chief?” “Leaping Horse agrees with his white brother, Straight Harry, whose mind he knows.”

“Waal, go on then, Harry,” Sam said. “I thought that you had made an end of it or I wouldn’t have opened out. I don’t see no way out of it at present, but if you do I am ready to fall in with it whatever it is.”

“I see but one way out of it, boys. It is a mighty risky thing, but it can’t be more risky than stopping here, and there is just a chance. I spoke to the chief last night, and he owned that it didn’t seem to him there was a chance in that or any other way. However, he said that if I went he would go with me. My proposal is this, that we take to the river and try and get through the canons.”

There was a deep silence among the men. The proposal took them by surprise. No man had ever accomplished the journey. Though two parties similarly attacked by Indians had attempted to raft down some of the canons higher up; one party perished to a man, one survivor of the other party escaped to tell the tale; but as to the canons below, through which they would have to pass, no man had ever explored them. The Indians regarded the river with deep awe, and believed the canons to be peopled with demons. The enterprise was so stupendous and the dangers to be met with so terrible, that ready as the western hunters were to encounter dangers, no one had ever attempted to investigate the windings and turnings of the river that for two thousand miles made its way through terrific precipices, and ran its course some three thousand feet below the surrounding country, until it emerged on to the plains of Mexico.

“That was why I was so anxious to reach the river,” Harry went on after a pause. “I wanted to see whether there were some trees, by which we could construct a raft, near its bank. Had there not been, I should have proposed to follow it up or down, as far as we could make our way, in hopes of lighting on some trees. However, as it is they are just handy for us. I don’t say as we shall get through, boys, but there is just a chance of it. I don’t see any other plan that would give us a show.”

Jerry was the first to speak.

“Waal, Harry, you can count me in. One might as well be drowned in a rapid or carried over a fall as killed, or, wuss, taken and tortured by the red-skins.”

“That is so, Jerry,” Sam Hicks agreed. While Ben said: “Waal, if we git through it will be something to talk about all our lives. In course there ain’t no taking the horses?”

“That is out of the question, Ben. We shall not have much time to spare, for the Utes may take it into their heads to attack us any night; and, besides, we have no means of making a big raft. We might tie two or three trunks together with the lariats and spike a few cross-pieces on them, we might even make two such rafts; that is the outside. They will carry us and our stores, but as for the horses, we must either leave them down in the hollow for the Indians to find, or put a bullet through their heads. I expect the latter will be the best thing for them, poor beasts.”

“No want trees,” the chief said. “Got horses’ skins; make canoes.”

“You are right, chief,” Harry exclaimed; “I never thought of that. That would be the very thing. Canoes will go down the rapids where the strongest rafts would be dashed to pieces, and if we come to a bad fall we can make a shift to carry them round.”

The others were no less pleased with the suggestion, and the doubtful expression of their faces as they assented to the scheme now changed to one of hopefulness, and they discussed the plan eagerly. It was agreed that not a moment should be lost in setting to work to carry it out, and that they should forthwith retreat to the mouth of the lower canon; for all entertained a secret misgiving that the Utes might make their attack that night, and felt that if that attack were made in earnest it would succeed. It was certain they would be able to find some point at which the lower gorge could be held; and at any rate a day would be gained, for at whatever hour of the night the Indians came up they would not venture farther until daybreak, and there would probably be a long palaver before they would enter the lower canon.

Tom had not spoken. He recognized the justice of Harry’s reasoning, but had difficulty in keeping his tears back at the thought of his horse being killed. For well-nigh a year it had carried him well; he had tended and cared for it; it would come to his call and rub its muzzle against his cheek. He thought that had he been alone he would have risked anything rather than part with it.

“Don’t you like the plan, Tom?” Harry said to him, as, having packed and saddled the horses, they rode together down the canon. “I don’t suppose the passage is so terrible after all.”

“I am not thinking of the passage at all, uncle,” Tom said almost indignantly; “it will be a grand piece of adventure; but I don’t like–I hate–the thought of my horse being killed. It is like killing a dear friend to save one’s self.”

“It is a wrench, lad,” Harry said kindly; “I can quite understand your feelings, and don’t like the thought myself. But I see that it has got to be done, and after all it will be better to kill the poor brutes than to let them fall into the hands of the Indians, who don’t know what mercy to their beasts means, and will ride them till they drop dead without the least compunction.”

“I know it is better, uncle, ever so much better–but it is horrible all the same. Anyhow, don’t ask me to do it, for I could not.”

“I will see to that, Tom. You shall be one of the guards of the canon. You would not be of much use in making the canoes, and you won’t have to know anything about it till you go down and get on board.”

Tom nodded his thanks; his heart was too full for him to speak, and he felt that if he said a word he should break down altogether. They rode rapidly along, passed through the little valley where the bear had been killed, without stopping, and went down the lower canon, carefully examining it to fix upon the most suitable point for defence. There had been no recent fall, and though at some points great boulders lay thickly, there was no one place that offered special facilities for defence.

“Look here, boys,” Harry said, reining up his horse at a point within two hundred yards of the lower end, “we can’t do better than fix ourselves here. An hour’s work will get up a wall that will puzzle the red-skins to get over, and there is the advantage that a shot fired here by the guard will bring our whole force up in a couple of minutes. I vote we ride the horses down to the river and let them pick up what they can, and then come back here and build the wall. It will be getting dark in an hour’s time, and we may as well finish that job at once. Ben and Sam, you may as well pick out a couple of young fir-trees and bring them down at once, then there will be no time lost. Five of us will be enough for the wall. Keep your eyes open. Likely enough there is a bear or two about, and it would be a great thing for us to lay in a stock of meat before we start.”

As soon as they issued from the gorge the horses were unsaddled and the stores taken off the pack-animals. As they were doing this Harry said a few words in a low tone to Sam. He then carefully examined the trees, and picked out two young firs. Sam and Ben took their axes, and the other five went up the gorge again, and were soon hard at work collecting boulders and piling them in a wall.

“There is a gun, uncle,” Tom exclaimed presently.

“Well, I hope they have got sight of a bear, we shall want a stock of meat badly.”

A dozen shots were fired, but Tom thought no more of it as he proceeded with his work. The bottom of the canon was but fifteen feet wide, and by the time it was dark they had a solid wall across it nearly six feet high, with places for them to stand on to fire over.

“Now then, Tom, you may as well take post here at once. I will send Sam or Ben up to watch with you. I don’t think there is a shadow of chance of their coming to-night, but there is never any answering for red-skins. I would leave Hunting Dog with you, but we shall want him to help make the framework for the canoes; the Indians are a deal handier than we are in making lashings. I will send your supper up here, lad, and your buffalo robes. Then you can take it by turns to watch and sleep. I reckon we shall be at work all night; we have got to get the job finished as quick as we can.”

A quarter of an hour later Sam Hicks came up.

“Have you got the trees down, Sam?”

“Lor’ bless you, it didn’t take a minute to do that. We got them down and split them up, then lit a fire and got the meat over it and the kettle, and mixed the dough.”

“Did you kill another bear? We heard you firing.”

“No; the critter was too high up, and I ain’t much good at shooting. Perhaps they will get sight of him tomorrow, and Harry and the chief will bring him down if he is within range of their shooting-irons. It is ‘tarnal dark up here.”

In twenty minutes two lights were seen approaching, and Harry and Hunting Dog came up carrying pine-wood torches. Each had a great faggot of wood fastened on his back, and Harry also carried the frying-pan, on which were a pile of meat and two great hunks of bread, while Hunting Dog brought two tin pannikins of hot tea.

“That will make it more cheerful for you,” Harry said, as he unfastened the rope that tied the faggot to his shoulders. “Now, Hunting Dog, get a good fire as soon as you can, and then come down again to us.”

The fire was soon blazing merrily, and Tom and Sam sat down to enjoy their meal.

“Don’t you think one of us ought to keep watch, Sam?”

“Not a bit of it,” Sam said. “The red-skins will never dare to enter that canon until after dark, and if they started now and made their way straight on, they would not be here for another three or four hours. I would bet my boots they don’t come at all tonight; even if they were not scared at us, they would be scared at coming near the river in the dark. No, we will just take our meal comfortable and smoke a pipe, and then I will take first watch and you shall take a sleep. We ain’t closed an eye since the night before last.”

Tom, indeed, was nearly asleep before he had finished his pipe, and felt that he really must get a nap. So saying to Sam, “Be sure and wake me in two hours,” he rolled himself in his robe and instantly fell asleep.

It seemed to him that he had only just gone off when Sam roused him. He leapt to his feet, however, rifle in hand. “Anything the matter, Sam?”

“Everything quiet,” the miner replied.

“What did you wake me for then? I have not been asleep five minutes.”

“According to my reckoning, mate, you have been asleep better’n five hours. It was about half-past eight when you went off, and I reckon it is two now, and will begin to get light in another hour. I would not have waked you till daybreak, but I found myself dropping off.”

“I am awfully sorry,” Tom began.

“Don’t you trouble, young un. By the time you have been as long in the West as I have you won’t think anything of two nights’ watch. Now you keep a sharp lookout. I don’t think there is much chance of their coming, but I don’t want to be woke up with a red-skin coming right down on the top of me.”

“I see you have let the fire out, Sam,” Tom said, with a little shiver.

“I put it out hours ago,” Sam said, as he prepared to lie down. “It would never have done to keep it all night, for a red-skin would see my head over the top of the wall, while I should not get a sight of him till he was within arm’s-length.”

Tom took up his post, and gazed earnestly into the darkness beyond the wall. He felt that his sense of vision would be of no use whatever, and therefore threw all his faculties into that of listening. Slight as was the chance of the Indians coming, he yet felt somewhat nervous, and it was a satisfaction to him to see beyond the mouth of the canon the glow of the fire, by which, as he knew, the others were hard at work.

In an hour the morning began to break, and as soon as he could see well up the canon he relighted the fire, jumping up to take a look over the wall every minute or so. It was not long before he saw his uncle approaching with a kettle.

“I saw your smoke, Tom, and guessed that you would be glad of a mug of hot tea. You have seen no signs of Indians, I suppose?”

“We have heard nothing, uncle. As to seeing, up to half an hour ago there was no possibility of making out anything. But I have not even been listening; Sam went on guard directly we had finished supper, and I asked him to call me in two hours, but he did not wake me until two o’clock.”

“He is a good fellow,” Harry said. “Well, don’t wake him now. I can’t leave you the kettle, for we have to keep boiling water going, but you can put his tin into the ashes and warm it up when he wakes. Here are a couple of pieces of bread.”

“Why do you have to keep the kettle boiling, uncle?”

“To bend the wood with. The piece we are working on is kept damp with boiling water. We hold it for a time over the fire, pouring a little water on as fast as it evaporates; that softens the wood, and we can bend it much more evenly than we could if we did it by force. Besides, when it is fastened into its position it remains, when it is dry, in that shape, and throws no strain on to anything.”

“Are you getting on well?”

“Capitally. We should have done both the frames by now, but we were obliged to make them very strong so as to resist the bumps they are sure to get against rocks. When they are finished you might almost let them drop off the top of a house, they will be so strong and elastic. If the Indians will but give us time we shall make a first-rate job of them.”

Three hours later Harry came up again with the kettle and some cooked meat. Sam had just woke up, and was quite angry with Tom for not rousing him before. “The others have been working all night,” he said, “and here have I been asleep for five hours; a nice sort of mate they will think me.”

“Well, but you were watching five hours, Sam; and I would a deal rather work all night than stand here for two hours in the dark, wondering all the time whether the Indians are crawling up, and expecting at any moment to hear a rush against the wall.”

“I am going to take your place, Sam, when you have finished your breakfast,” Harry said, as he came up. “If the Utes found out last night that we had gone, their scouts may be coming down before long. My rifle shoots a bit straighter than yours does.”

“It ain’t the rifle, Harry,” Sam said good-temperedly; “it is the eye that is wrong, not the shooting-iron. I never had much practice with these long guns, but when it comes to a six-shooter, I reckon I can do my share as well as most. But they won’t give me a chance with it.”

“I hope they won’t, Sam. I am sure they won’t as long as there is light, and I hope that before it gets dark they will conclude to leave us alone.”

A vigilant watch was kept now.

“I think I saw a head look out from that corner,” Tom exclaimed suddenly, two hours after Sam had left them.

“I am quite sure I did, Tom. We must wait until he shows himself a bit more. I reckon it is a good three hundred yards off, and a man’s head is a precious small mark at that distance. Stand a bit higher and lay your rifle on the wall. Don’t fire if he only puts his head out. They know we can shoot, so there is not any occasion to give them another lesson. I don’t hold to killing, unless you have got to do it. Let him have a good look at us.

“When he goes back and tells the tribe that there is a three hundred yards’ straight passage without shelter, and a strong wall across the end of it, and two white men with rifles ready to shoot, I reckon they will know a good deal better than to try to come up it, as long as there is light. Besides, they won’t think there is any occasion to hurry, for they won’t count on our taking to the river, and will know that we shall be keeping watch at night. So it may very well be that they will reckon on wearing us out, and that we may not hear of them for a week. There is the fellow’s head again!”

The head remained visible round the corner of the rock for two or three minutes.

“He knows all about it now, Tom. You won’t see any more of him to-day. I will go down and lend them a hand below.”

Tom asked no questions about the horses; he had thought of them a score of times as he stood on guard, and the thought had occurred to him that it was possible the shots he had heard while they were building the wall on the previous afternoon, had been the death shots of the horses. It did not occur to him when Sam was telling the story about the bear, that this was a got-up tale, but when he came to think it over, he thought it probable that it was so. Sam himself was not much of a shot, but Ben, although inferior to Harry or either of the two Indians, shot as well as Jerry, and would hardly have missed a bear three or four times running. Each time the thought of the horses occurred to him he resolutely put it aside, and concentrated his mind upon the probable perils of the passage down the canons and the wonderful gorges they would traverse, and the adventures and excitement they were sure to pass through. He thought how fortunate it was they had taken the precaution of sending their specimens of quartz back to the fort; for were they in the canoes, the fruits of the journey would be irrevocably lost were these to upset; for now the Indians had twice discovered the presence of whites in the valley they would be sure to watch it closely, and it would not be possible to go up to the mine again unless in strong force.

The day passed quietly. Harry brought up Tom’s meals, and late in the afternoon all hands came up, and the wall of stones was raised four feet, making it almost impregnable against a sudden attack. The two Indians took post there with Tom, and watched alternately all night. The Utes, however, remained perfectly quiet. They probably felt sure that the fugitives must sooner or later be forced to surrender, and were disinclined to face the loss that must occur before so strong a position, defended by seven men armed with rifles and revolvers, could be carried.

At three o’clock on the following afternoon Hunting Dog came up. “Tom go down and get dinner,” he said, “Hunting Dog will watch.”

Tom took his rifle and started down the canon.

“Come on, lad,” his uncle shouted. “We are pretty near ready for a start, and have all had our dinner; so be quick about it. We want to get well away from here before night.”

Tom went to the fire and ate his meal. As he sat down he saw that the stores, blankets, and robes had all been carried away. When he finished, his uncle led him down to the river. Two canoes were floating in the water, and the other men were standing beside them.

“There, Tom, what do you think of them?”

“They are splendid, uncle; it seems impossible that you can have built them in two days.”

“Five hands can do a lot of canoe-building in forty-eight hours’ work, Tom.”

The canoes were indeed models of strength if not of beauty. They were each about twenty feet long and five feet wide. Two strong pieces of pine two inches square ran along the top of each side, and one of the same width but an inch deeper formed the keel. The ribs, an inch wide and three-quarters of an inch thick, were placed at intervals of eighteen inches apart. The canoes were almost flat-bottomed. The ribs lay across the keel, which was cut away to allow them to lie flush in it, a strong nail being driven in at the point of junction–these being the only nails used in the boat’s construction. The ribs ran straight out to almost the full width of the canoe, and were then turned sharp up, the ends being lashed with thongs of hide to the upper stringers.

Outside the ribs were lashed longitudinal wattles of tough wood about an inch wide. They were placed an inch apart, extending over the bottom and halfway up the side. Over all was stretched the skin, five horses’ hides having been used for each boat. They were very strongly sewed together by a double row of thongs, the overlaps having, before being sewed, been smeared with melted fat. Cross-pieces of wood at the top kept the upper framework in its place. The hair of the skin was outward, the inner glistened with the fat that had been rubbed into it.

“They are strong indeed,” Tom said. “They ought to stand anything, uncle.”

“Yes, I think they would stand a blow against any rock if it hadn’t a cutting edge. They would just bound off as a basket would. Of course they are very heavy for canoes; but as they won’t have to carry more than the weight of four men each, they will draw little over a couple of inches or so of water.

“That is why we made them so wide. We could not get strength without weight; and as there is no saying what shallows there may be, and how close in some places rocks may come up to the surface, we were obliged to build them wide to get light draught. You see we have made ten paddles, so as to have a spare one or two in case of breakage. We have two spare hides, so that we shall have the means of repairing damages.”

Tom said nothing about the horses. Manufactured into a boat, as the skins were, there was not much to remind him of them; but he pressed his uncle’s hand and said, “Thank you very much, uncle; I don’t mind so much now, but I should not like to have seen them before.”

“That is all right, Tom; it was a case of necessity. Sam and Ben shot them directly we got here.”

The stores were all laid by the boats, being divided between them so that the cargoes were in all respects duplicates of each other. Before Tom came down some had already been placed in each boat, with a blanket thrown over them.

“You have got the gold, I suppose, uncle?”

“You may bet that we did not leave that behind. There is half in each boat, and the bags are lashed to the timbers, so that if there is an upset they cannot get lost.”

“How are we going?”

“We have settled that you and I and the two Indians shall go together, and the rest in the other boat. The Indians know nothing of canoeing, and won’t be of very much use. I know you were accustomed to boats, and I did some rowing when I was a young man. I wish we had a couple of Canadian Indians with us, or of half-breeds; they are up to this sort of work, and with one in the stern of each canoe it would be a much less risky business going down the rapids. However, no doubt we shall get handy with the paddles before long.”

When everything was ready Harry fired his rifle, and in a couple of minutes Hunting Dog came running down. The others had already taken their seats. He stepped into Harry’s boat, and they at once pushed off.

The river was running smoothly here, and Harry said, “Directly we get down a little way we will turn the boat’s head up stream and practise for a bit. It would never do to get down into rough water before we can use the paddles fairly.”

Tom sat in the bow of his boat, Hunting Dog was next to him, then came the chief, and Harry sat in the stern. A paddle is a much easier implement to manage for a beginner than is an oar, and it was not long before they found that they could propel the boats at a fair rate. In a short time they had passed the end of the shelf at the mouth of the canon, and the cliffs on that side rose as abruptly as they did on the other. The river was some eighty yards wide.

“We will turn here,” Harry said, “and paddle up. We sha’n’t do more than keep abreast of these rocks now, for the stream runs fast though it is so smooth.”

They found, indeed, that they had to work hard to hold their position.

“Now, Tom,” Harry sang out, “it is you and I do the steering, you know. When you want the head to go to the right you must work your paddle out from the boat, when you want to go to the left you must dip it in the water rather farther out and draw it towards the boat. Of course when you have got the paddle the other side you must do just the contrary. You must sing out right or left according as you see rocks ahead, and I shall steer with my paddle behind. I have a good deal more power over the boat than you have, and you must depend upon me for the steering, unless there is occasion for a smart swerve.”

At first the two boats shot backwards and forwards across the stream in a very erratic way, but after an hour’s practice the steersmen found the amount of force required. An hour later Harry thought that they were competent to make a start, and turning they shot rapidly past the cliffs. In a couple of miles there was a break in the rocks to the left.

“We will land there,” Harry said. “There are trees near the water and bushes farther up. We will make a camp there. There is no saying how far we may have to go before we get another opportunity. We have done with the Utes for good, and can get a sound night’s sleep. If you, chief, will start with Hunting Dog as soon as we land, we will get the things ashore and light the fire. Maybe you will be able to get a bear for us.”

They did not trouble to haul up the canoes, but fastened them by the head-ropes, which were made from lariats, to trees on the shore. Daylight was beginning to fade as they lighted the fire. No time was lost before mixing the dough, and it was in readiness by the time that there were sufficient glowing embers to stand the pot in. The kettle was filled and hung on a tripod over the fire. In a short time the Indians returned empty-handed.

“No find bear,” the chief said, “getting too dark to hunt. To-morrow morning try.”

Harry got up and went to the boats, and returned directly with a joint of meat. Tom looked up in surprise.

“It is not from yours, Tom,” Jerry said as he saw him looking at it. “We took the hind-quarters of the four pack-ponies, but left the others alone. It was no use bringing more, for it would not keep.”

“So it is horseflesh!” Tom rather shrank from the idea of eating it, and nothing would have induced him to touch it had he thought that it came from his own favourite. Some steaks were cut and placed in the frying-pan, while strips were hung over the fire for those who preferred the meat in that way. Tom felt strongly inclined to refuse altogether, but when he saw that the others took their meat as a matter of course, and proceeded to eat with a good appetite, he did not like to do so. He hesitated, however, before tasting it; but Harry said with a laugh, “Fire away, Tom. You can hardly tell it from beef, and they say that in Paris lots of horseflesh is sold as beef.”

Thus encouraged, Tom took a mouthful, and found it by no means bad, for from their long stay in the valley the animals were all in excellent condition, and he acknowledged to himself that he would not have known the flesh from beef.

“I call it mighty good for a change.” Terry said. “Out on the plains, where one can get buffalo, one would not take horse for choice, but as we have been eating deer and bear meat for about a year, horse-meat ain’t bad by no means. What! You won’t take another bit, Tom?”

“Not to-night, Jerry; next time I shall be all right. But it is my first trial, you know, and though I can’t say it is not good, it gives me a queer feeling, so I will stick to the bread.”

“Well, boys,” Harry said presently, “we have made a first-rate start, and have got out of a big scrape, easier than I ever looked for. We could not have got two better canoes for our work if we had had them brought special from Canada, and it seems to me that they ought to go down pretty near anywhere without much damage. We shall get real handy with our paddles in two or three days, and I hope we sha’n’t meet with any big rapids until we have got into the way of managing them well.”

“You bet, Harry, we have got out well,” said Jerry. “I tell you it looked downright ugly, and I wouldn’t have given a continental for our chances. As for the rapids, I guess we shall generally find rocks one side or the other where we can make our way along, and we can let down the canoes by the ropes. Anyhow, we need not get skeery over them. After getting out of that valley with our hair on, the thought of them does not trouble me a cent.”

CHAPTER XVI

AFLOAT IN CANOES

The two Indians were off long before daylight, and just as the others were having a wash at the edge of the river they heard the crack of a rifle some distance up the cliff.

“Bear!” Jerry exclaimed; “and I reckon they have got it, else we should have heard another shot directly afterwards. That will set us up in food for some time. Get the fire made up, Tom, you won’t have to eat horse steak for breakfast unless you like.”

The Indians returned half an hour later laden with as much bear-flesh as they could carry.

“I vote we stop here for two days,” Harry said. “We have got a lot of meat now, but it won’t keep for twenty-four hours in this heat, so I vote we cut it up and dry it as the Indians do buffalo-meat; it will keep any time. Besides, we deserve a couple of days’ rest, and we can practise paddling while the meat dries. We got on very well yesterday, but I do want us to get quite at home in the boats before we get to a bad bit.”

The proposal was agreed to, and as soon as breakfast was over the whole of the meat was cut up into thin slices and hung up on cords fastened from tree to tree.

“It ought to take three days to do it properly, and four is better,” Harry said. “Still, as we have cut it very thin, I should think two days in this hot sun ought to be enough.”

“Are there any fish in the river, uncle?”

“I have no doubt there are, Tom, grists of them, but we have got no hooks.”

“Jerry has got some, he told me he never travelled without them, and we caught a lot of fish with them up in the mountains just after we started before. I don’t know about line, but one might unravel one of the ropes.”

“I think you might do better than that, Tom. The next small animal we shoot we might make some lines from the gut. They needn’t be above five or six feet long. Beyond that we could cut a strip of thirty or forty feet long from one of the hides. However, we can do nothing at present in that way. Now let us get into the canoes and have a couple of hours’ paddling. After dinner we will have another good spell at the work.”

By evening there was a marked improvement in the paddling over that of the previous day, and after having had another day’s practice all felt confident that they should get on very well. By nightfall on the second day, the meat was found to be thoroughly dried, and was taken down and packed in bundles, and the next morning they started as soon as it was light. It was agreed that the boats should follow each other at a distance of a hundred yards, so that the leader could signal to the one behind if serious difficulties were made out ahead, and so enable it to row to the bank in time. Were both drawn together into the suck of a dangerous rapid they might find themselves without either boats or stores, whereas if only one of the boats was broken up, there would be the other to fall back upon. Harry’s boat was to take the lead on the first day, and Tom, as he knelt in the bows, felt his heart beat with excitement at the thought of the unknown that lay before them, and that they were about to make their way down passes probably unpenetrated by man. Passing between what had seemed to them the entrance to a narrow canon, they were surprised to rind the river widen out. On their right a great sweep of hills bent round like a vast amphitheatre, the resemblance being heightened by the ledges running in regular lines along it, the cliff being far from perpendicular.

“I should think one could climb up there,” Tom said, half-turning round to his uncle.

“It looks like it, Tom, but there is no saying; some of those steps may be a good deal steeper than they look. However, I have no doubt one could find places where it would be possible to climb if there were any use in doing so, but as we should only find ourselves up on bad lands we should gain nothing by it.”

“I don’t mean we should want to climb up now, uncle; but it seemed a sort of satisfaction to know that there are places where one could climb in case we got the boats smashed up.”

“If we had to make our way up, lad, it would be much better to go by one of the lateral canons like the one we came down by. I can see at least half a dozen of them going up there. We should certainly find water, and we might find game, but up on the plateau we should find neither one nor the other.”

On the left-hand bank of the river the cliffs fell still farther back in wide terraces, that rose one behind the other up to a perpendicular cliff half a mile back from the river. There was a shade of green here and there, and the chief pointed far up the hill and exclaimed “Deer!”

“That is good,” Harry said. “There are sure to be more of these places, and I should think we are not likely to starve anyhow. We can’t spare time to stop now; we want to have a long day’s paddle to see what it is going to be like, and we have got meat enough for the present. If we happen to see a deer within rifle-shot, so that we can get at him without much loss of time, we will stop, for after all fresh meat is better eating than dry.”

“I should think it would be, uncle,” Tom said. “From the look of the stuff I should think it would be quite as tough as shoe leather and as tasteless.”

“It needs a set of sharp teeth, Tom, but if you are hard set I have no doubt you will be able to get through it, and at any rate it constitutes the chief food of the Indians between the Missouri and the Rockies.”

For the next three hours they paddled along on the quiet surface of the river. The other canoe had drawn up, since it was evident that here at least there was no reason why they should keep apart.

“I didn’t expect we should find it as quiet as this, Harry,” Jerry Curtis said. “It is a regular water-party, and I should not mind how long I was at it if it were all like this.”

“We shall have rough water enough presently, Jerry, and I expect we shall look back on this as the pleasantest part of the trip. It seems to me that the hills close in more towards the end of this sweep. It has made a regular horseshoe.”

“I reckon it depends upon the nature of the rock,” Ben put in.

“That is it, you may be sure, Ben. Wherever it is soft rock, in time it crumbles away like this; where it is hard the weather don’t affect it much, and we get straight cliffs. I expect it is there we shall find the rapids worst. Well, we shall soon make a trial of them, I fancy. It looks like a wall ahead, but the road must go through somewhere.”

A quarter of an hour later Harry said: “You had better drop back now, Jerry, there is the gap right ahead. If you see me hold up my paddle you row ashore. When we come to a bad rapid we had better all get out, and make our way down on the rocks as far as we can, to see what it is like. It will never do to go at it blind. Of course we may find places where the water comes to the wall faces on both sides, and then there is nothing to do but to take our chance, but I don’t propose to run any risks that I can avoid.”

There was a perceptible increase in the rate of the current as they neared the gorge, and when they came within a short distance of it Harry gave the signal to the boat behind, and both canoes made for the shore. As they stepped out on to the rocks the chief pointed to a ledge far above them. “There will be time for Hunting Dog to shoot a deer,” he said, “while we go down to see canon.”

Tom in vain endeavoured to make out the object at which the Indian was pointing. Hunting Dog had evidently noticed it before landing, and upon Harry giving a nod of assent, started off with his rifle. The others waited until Jerry and his companions joined them, and then started along the rocks that had fallen at the foot of the cliffs. They were soon able to obtain a far better view of the gorge than they had done from the canoe. The river ran for a bit in a smooth glassy flood, but a short distance down, it began to form into waves, and beyond that they could see a mass of white foam and breakers. They made their way along the rocks for nearly two miles. It seemed well-nigh impossible to Tom that the boats could go down without being swamped, for the waves were eight or ten feet high, with steep sides capped with white. At last the gorge widened again, and although the cliff to the right rose perpendicularly, on the other side it became less steep, and seemed lower down to assume the same character as that above the gorge.

“It looks pretty bad,” Harry said, speaking for almost the first time since they had started, for the roar of the water against the rocks, echoed and re-echoed by the cliffs, rendered conversation an impossibility. “It looks bad, but as far as I can see there are no rocks that come up near the surface, and the canoes ought to go through the broken water safely enough.”

“It is an all-fired nasty-looking place,” Jerry said; “but I have heard men who had been in the north talk about rapids they had gone through, and from what they said about them they must have been worse than this. We have got to keep as near the side as we can; the waves ain’t as high there as they are in the middle, and we have got to keep the boat’s head straight, and to paddle all we know. If we do that, I reckon the canoes will go through.”

They retraced their steps up the gorge. Hunting Dog was standing by the boat with the dead deer at his feet. Jerry picked it up. “I had better take this, I reckon, Harry. You have got one man more than we have;” and he and his two companions went on to their boat.

“Now, what do you think, Tom?” his uncle said. “Can you trust your head to keep cool? It will need a lot of nerve, I can tell you, and if her head swerves in the slightest she will swing round, and over she will go, and it would want some tall swimming to get out of that race. You paddle as well as the chief,–better, I think,–but the chief’s nerves are like iron. He has not been practising steering as you have, but as there seem to be no rocks about, that won’t matter so much. I ought to be able to keep her straight, if you three paddle hard. It may need a turn of the paddle now and then in the bow, but that we can’t tell. So it shall be just as you like, lad. If you think your nerves can stand it you take your usual place, but if you have doubts about it, it were best to let the chief go there.”

“I think I could stand it, uncle, for I have been out in wherries in some precious rough seas at Spithead; but I think it would be best for the chief to take my place this time, and then I shall see how I feel.”

Harry said a few words to the chief in his own language, and Leaping Horse without a word stepped into the bow, while Tom took the seat behind him.

“We sha’n’t be long going down,” Harry said, “I reckon the stream is running ten miles an hour, and as we shall be paddling, it will take us through in ten minutes. We had all better sit farther aft, so as to take her bow right out of water. She will go through it ever so much easier so.”

They shifted their seats until daylight could be seen under the keel a foot from the bow.

“I think that is about the right trim,” Harry said. “Now paddle all.”

The boat shot off from the shore. A minute later it darted into the gorge, the Indian setting a long sweeping stroke. There were two or three long heaves, and then they dashed into the race. Tom held his breath at the first wall of water, but, buoyant and lightly laden as the canoe was, with fully a foot of free board, she rose like a feather over it, and darted down into the hollow beyond. Tom kept his eyes fixed on the back of the chief’s head, clinched his teeth tightly, and paddled away with all his strength. He felt that were he to look round he should turn giddy at the turmoil of water. Once or twice he was vaguely conscious of Harry’s shouts, “Keep her head inshore!” or “A little farther out!” but like a man rowing a race he heeded the words but little. His faculties were concentrated on his work, but he could see a slight swerve of the Indian’s body when he was obeying an order.

He was not conscious of any change of motion, either in the boat or in the water round, when Harry shouted, “Easy all!” and even then it was the chief’s ceasing to paddle rather than Harry’s shout which caused him to stop. Then he looked round and saw that the race was passed, and that the canoe was floating in comparatively quiet water.

“She is a daisy!” Harry shouted; “we could not do better if we had been all Canadian half-breeds, chief. Now, we had better set to and bale her out as quickly as we can.”

Tom now for the first time perceived that he was kneeling in water, and that the boat was nearly half-full.

Their tea pannikins had been laid by their sides in readiness, and Hunting Dog touched him and passed forward his tin and the chief’s, both of which had been swept aft. The Seneca at once began to throw out the water, but Tom for a minute or two was unable to follow his example. He felt as weak as a child. A nervous quivering ran through his body, and his hand trembled so that he could not grasp the handle of the tin.

“Feel bad, Tom?” his uncle asked cheerily from behind. “Brace up, lad; it was a pretty warm ten minutes, and I am not surprised you feel it. Now it is over I am a little shaky myself.”

“I shall be all right presently, uncle.” A look at the chief’s back did more to steady Tom’s nerves than his own efforts. While he himself was panting heavily, and was bathed in perspiration, the chief’s breath came so quietly that he could scarce see his shoulders rise and fall, as he baled out the water with perfect unconcern. With an effort the boy took hold of his dipper, and by the time the boat was empty his nerves were gaining their steadiness, though his breath still came quickly. As he laid down his tin he looked round.

“Heap water,” Hunting Dog said with a smile; “run like herd of buffalo.”

The other boat lay twenty yards behind them, and was also engaged in baling.

“All right now, Tom?”

“All right, uncle; but it is lucky you put the chief in the bows. I should have made a mess of it; for from the time we got into the waves it seemed nothing but confusion, and though I heard your voice I did not seem to understand what you said.”

“It was a trial to the nerves, Tom, but we shall all get accustomed to it before we get through. Well, thank God, we have made our first run safely. Now paddle on, we will stop at the first likely place and have a meal.”

A mile farther they saw a pile of drift-wood on the left bank, and Harry at once headed the canoe to it, and drawing the boat carefully alongside they got out. A minute later the other canoe joined them.

“Jee-hoshaphat, Harry!” Jerry exclaimed as he stepped out; “that was worse nor a cyclone. I would rather sit on the back of the worst kind of bucker than jump over those waves again. If we are going to have much of this I should say let us find our way back and ask the Utes to finish us off.”

“It was a rough bit, Jerry; but it might have been a deal worse if there had been rocks in the stream. All we had to do was to keep her straight and paddle.”

“And a pretty big all, too,” Jerry grumbled. “I felt skeered pretty nigh out of my wits, and the other two allow they were just as bad. If it hadn’t been for your boat ahead I reckon we should never have gone through it, but as long as you kept on straight, there didn’t seem any reason why we shouldn’t. I tell you I feel so shaky that if there were a grizzly twenty yards off I am blamed if I could keep the muzzle of my rifle on it.”

Tom had been feeling a good deal ashamed of his nervousness, and was much relieved at hearing that these seasoned men had felt somewhat the same as he had done.

“What do you say, boys,” Harry asked when breakfast had been cooked and eaten, “if we stop here for to-day? Likely enough we may get some game, and if not it won’t matter, for the deer will last us a couple of days.”

“You bet,” Ben Gulston said; “I think we have had enough of the water for to-day. I don’t feel quite sure now I ain’t going round and round, and I don’t think any of us will feel right till we have had a night’s sleep. Besides, all the rugs and blankets are wet and want spreading out in the sun for a bit, and the flour will want overhauling.”

“That settles it, Ben; let us get all the outfit out of the boats at once.”

After the things had been laid out to dry the two Indians went off in search of game; but none of the others felt any inclination to move, and they spent the rest of the day lying about smoking and dozing. The Indians brought back a big-horn, and the next morning the canoes dropped down the stream again. For some miles the river flowed quietly along a wide valley. At the end of that time it made an abrupt turn and entered the heart of the mountains. As before, Harry’s canoe went in advance. The canon was here a deep gloomy chasm, with almost perpendicular sides, and for some distance the river ran swiftly and smoothly, then white water was seen ahead, so the two boats rowed in to the rocks at the foot of the precipice, and the occupants proceeded to explore the pass ahead. It was of a different character to the last. Black rocks rose everywhere above the surface, and among these the river flowed with extraordinary force and rapidity, foaming and roaring.

All agreed that it was madness to think of descending here, and that a portage was necessary. The contents of the boats were lifted out, and then one of them was carried down over the rocks by the united strength of the party. They had gone half a mile when they came to a spot where they could go no farther, as the water rushed along against the rock wall itself. Some fifty yards further down they could see that the ledge again began.

“We must go and fetch the other boat,” Harry shouted above the din of the water, “and let them down one by one. There is no other way to do it.”

The second boat was brought down, and another journey was made to bring down the stores. The lariats were then tied together.

“Let us sit down and smoke a pipe before we do anything more,” Jerry said. “Three times up and down them rocks is worse nor thirty miles on a level.”

All were glad to adopt this suggestion, and for half an hour they sat watching the rushing waters. As they did so they discussed how they had better divide their forces, and agreed that Harry’s boat should, as before, go down first. Three men would be required to let the boat down, and it would need at least four to check the second boat when it came abreast of them. Although all felt certain that a single line of the plaited hide would be sufficient, they determined to use two lines to ensure themselves against risk.

“I should let them run out fast at first, Jerry, only keeping enough strain on them to keep her head well up stream. Begin to check her gradually, and let her down only inch by inch. When you see we are close to the rocks, hold her there while we get her alongside, and don’t leave go till we lift her from the water. Directly we are out, fasten the ropes to the bow of your canoe, then launch her carefully; and whatever you do, don’t let go of the rope. Launch her stern first close to the wall, then two get in and get well towards the stern, while the other holds the rope until the last moment. Then those two in the boat must begin to paddle as hard as they can, while the last man jumps in and snatches up his paddle. Keep her head close to the wall, for if the current catches it and takes her round she would capsize in a moment against those rocks. Paddle all you know; we shall haul in the rope as fast as you come down. When you come abreast two of us will check her, and the others will be on the rocks to catch hold of her side as she swings in.”

The first canoe was launched stern foremost, the four men took their seats in her and began to paddle against, the stream with all their strength, while Jerry and his companions let the lines run through their fingers. The boat glanced along by the side of the wall. The men above put on more and more strain, giving a turn of the ropes round a smooth water-worn rock they had before picked out as suitable for the purpose. The water surged against the bow of the canoe, lifting it higher and higher as the full strain of the rope came upon it. The chief was kneeling in the stern facing the rocks below, and as the canoe came abreast of them he brought her in alongside. Harry held up his paddle, the men above gave another turn of the ropes round the rock, and the canoe remained stationary. Hunting Dog sprang out on to the rocks, and taking hold of the blade of the chief’s paddle, brought the canoe in so close that the others were able to step ashore without difficulty. The baggage was taken out, and the canoe lifted from the water, turned upside down, and laid on the rocks.

Harry held up his hand to show that they were ready, having before he did so chosen a stone round which to wind the lariats. The other boat was then launched. Sam and Ben took their places astern and began to paddle against the stream. As they were in the back-water below the ledge of rock they were able to keep her stationary while Jerry took his place and got out his paddle. When all were ready, they paddled her out from the back-water. As soon as the current caught her she flew past the cliff like an arrow, although the three men were now paddling at the top of their speed. Harry and the chief pulled in the rope hand over hand, while Hunting Dog and Tom went a short way down the rocks.

“Don’t check her too suddenly, chief,” Harry shouted. “Let the rope run out easy at first and bring the strain on gradually.”

“The ropes will hold,” the chief said. “One stop buffalo in gallop, two stop boat.”

“Yes, but you would pull the head out of the canoe; chief, if you stopped her too suddenly.”

The chief nodded. He had not thought of that. In spite of the efforts of the oarsmen the canoe’s head was swerving across the stream just as she came abreast of them. A moment later she felt the check of the rope.

“Easy, chief, easy!” Harry shouted, as the water shot up high over the bow of the canoe. “Wait till she gets a bit lower or we shall capsize her.”

The check of the bow had caused the stern to swerve out, and when they again checked her she was several lengths below them with her head inclined to shore. More and more strain was put on the ropes, until they were as taut as iron bars. A moment later Tom and Hunting Dog seized two paddles held out to them, and the boat came gently in alongside.

“Gosh!” Ben exclaimed, as he stepped ashore, “it has taken as much out of me as working a windlass for a day. I am blamed if I did not think the hull boat was coming to pieces. I thought it was all over with us for sure, Harry; when she first felt the rope, the water came in right over the side.”

“It was touch and go, Ben; but there was a rock just outside you, and if we had not checked her a bit her head would have gone across it, and if it had, I would not have given a red cent for your lives.”

All day they toiled on foot, and by nightfall had made but four miles. Then they camped for the night among the rocks. The next four days were passed in similar labour. Two or three times they had to cross the torrent in order to get on to fallen rocks on the other side to that which they were following. These passages demanded the greatest caution. In each case there were rocks showing above water in the middle of the channel. One of these was chosen as most suited to their purpose, and by means of the ropes a canoe was sheered out to it. Its occupants then took their places on the rock, and in turn dropped the other boat down to the next suitable point, the process being repeated, step by step, until the opposite bank was reached.

At the end of the fourth day the geological formation changed. The rock was softer, and the stream had worn a more even path for itself, and they decided to take to the boats again. There was no occasion for paddling now, it was only when a swell on the surface marked some hidden danger below that a stroke or two of the paddle was needed to sweep them clear of it. For four hours they were carried along at the rate of fully twelve miles an hour, and at the end of that time they shot out from between the overhanging walls into a comparatively broad valley. With a shout of delight they headed the boats for shore, and leapt out on to a flat rock a few inches above the water.

“If we could go on at that pace right down we should not be long before we were out of the mountains,” Tom said.

“We could do with a bit slower, Tom; that is too fast to be pleasant. Just about half that would do–six miles an hour. Twelve hours a day would take us out of the canons in a fortnight or so. We might do that safely, but we could not calculate on having such good luck as we have had to-day, when going along at twelve miles an hour. The pace for the last four days has been just as much too slow as this is too fast. Four miles a day working from morning till night is heart-breaking. In spite of our run to-day, we cannot have made much over a hundred miles since we started. Well, there is one comfort, we are in no great hurry. We have got just the boats for the work, and so far as we can see, we are likely to find plenty of food. A job like this isn’t to be reckoned child’s play. So far I consider we have had good luck; I shall be well content if it averages as well all the way down. The fear is we may get to falls where we can neither carry nor let the boats down. In that case we should have to get out of the canon somewhere, pack as much flour as we could carry, and make our way across country, though how far we might have to travel there is no knowing. I hope it mayn’t come to that; but at any rate I would rather go through even worse places than that canon above than have to quit the boats.”

“Right you are, Harry,” Jerry agreed. “I would rather tote the canoe on my back all the way down to Mexico, than have to try and make my way over the bad lands to the hills. Besides, when we get a bit farther we shall be in the Navahoe country, and the Utes ain’t a sarcumstance to them. The Ute ain’t much of a fighter anyway. He will kill white men he finds up in his hills, ’cause he don’t want white men there, but he has to be five or six to one before he will attack him. The Navahoe kills the white man ’cause he is a white man, and ’cause he likes killing. He is a fighter, and don’t you forget it. If it had been Navahoes instead of Utes that had caught us up in the hills, you may bet your bottom dollar our scalps would be drying in their lodges now.”

“That is so, Jerry,” Ben put in. “Besides, the Navahoes and the Apaches have got no fear of white men. They have been raiding Mexico for hundreds of years, and man to man they can whip Mexikins out of their boots. I don’t say as they haven’t a considerable respect for western hunters; they have had a good many lessons that these can out-shoot them and out-fight them; still they ain’t scared of them as plain Indians are. They are a bad lot, look at them which way you will, and I don’t want to have to tramp across their country noways. It was pretty hard work carrying that boat along them rocks, but I would rather have to do so, right down to the plains, then get into a muss with the Navahoes.”

“How far does the Navahoe country come this way?”

“There ain’t no fence, Tom, I expect. They reckon as it’s their country just as far as they like to come. They don’t come up as far north as this, but where they ends and where the Utes begin no one knows but themselves; and I reckon it shifts according as the Navahoes are busy with the Mexicans in the south, or have got a quiet spell, and take it into their heads to hunt this way.”

For many days they continued their journey, sometimes floating quietly along a comparatively wide valley, sometimes carrying their boats past dangerous rapids, sometimes rushing along at great speed on the black, deep water, occasionally meeting with falls where everything had to be taken out of the canoes, and the boats themselves allowed to shoot over the falls with long ropes attached, by which they were drawn to shore lower down. It was seldom that they were without meat, as several big-horns and two bears were shot by the Indians. They had no doubt that they could have caught fish, but as a rule they were too tired when they arrived at their halting-place to do more than cook and eat their suppers before they lay down to rest.

“I reckon it won’t be very long before we come upon a Mexican village,” Harry said one day, after they had been six weeks on their downward course. “I have heard there is one above the Grand Canon.”

The scenery had varied greatly. In some of the valleys groves of trees bordered the river; sometimes not even a tuft of grass was to be seen. Occasionally the cliffs ran in an even line for many miles, showing that the country beyond was a level plateau, at other times rugged peaks and pinnacles resembling ruined castles, lighthouses, and churches could be seen. Frequently the cliffs rose three or four thousand feet in an almost unbroken line, but more often there were rounded terraces, where it would have been easy to ascend to the upper level. Everywhere the various strata were of different colours: soft grays and browns, orange, vermilion, purple, green, and yellow. They soon learned that when they passed through soft strata, the river ran quietly; where the rocks were hard there were falls and rapids; where the strata lay horizontal the stream ran smoothly, though often with great rapidity; where they dipped up stream there were dangerous rapids and falls.

Since the start the river had been largely swollen by the junctions of other streams, and was much wider and deeper than it had been where they embarked; and even where the rapids were fiercest they generally found comparatively quiet water close to the bank on one side or the other. Twice they had had upsets, both the boats having been capsized by striking upon rocks but an inch or two below the surface of the water. Little harm was done, for the guns and all other valuable articles were lashed to the sides of the boats, while strips of hide, zigzagged across the ends of the canoes at short distances apart, prevented the blankets and rugs and other bulky articles from dropping out when the boat capsized.

Since the river had become wider and the dangers less frequent, the boats always kept near each other. Upsets were therefore only the occasion for a hearty laugh; for it took but a few minutes to right the canoe, bale it out, and proceed on their way. Occasionally they had unpleasant visitors at their camp, and altogether they killed ten or twelve rattle-snakes. In some of the valleys they found the remains of the dwellings of a people far anterior to the present Indian races. Some of these ruins appeared to have been communal houses. At other points they saw cliff-dwellings in the face of the rock, with rough sculptures and hieroglyphics. The canons varied in length from ten to a hundred and fifty miles, the comparatively flat country between them varying equally in point of appearance and in the nature of the rocks. As they got lower they once or twice saw roughly-made rafts, composed of three or four logs of wood, showing where Indians had crossed the river. The journey so far had been much more pleasant than they had expected, for as the river grew wider the dangers were fewer and farther apart, and more easily avoided; and they looked forward to the descent of the Grand Canon, from which they knew they could not be far distant, without much fear that it would prove impracticable.

CHAPTER XVII

THE GRAND CANON

Passing from a short canon, the boats emerged into a valley with flat shores for some distance from the river. On the right was a wide side canon, which might afford a passage up into the hills. Half a mile lower down there were trees and signs of cultivation; and a light smoke rose among them. At this, the first sign of human life they had seen since they took to the boats, all hands paddled rapidly. They were approaching the shore, when Leaping Horse said to Harry: “No go close. Stop in river and see, perhaps bad Indians. Leaping Horse not like smoke.”

Harry called to the other canoe, and they bore out into the stream again. The chief stood up in the boat, and after gazing at the shore silently for a moment said:

“Village burnt. Burnt little time ago, post still burning.” As he resumed his seat Harry stood up in turn.

“That is so, chief. There have only been five or six huts; whether Indian or white, one can’t tell now.”

Just at this moment an Indian appeared on the bank. As his eye fell on the boats he started. A moment later he raised a war-yell.

“Navahoe,” the chief said. “Navahoe war-party come down, kill people and burn village. Must row hard.”

The yell had been answered from the wood, and in two or three minutes as many score of Indians appeared on the banks. They shouted to the boats to come to shore, and as no attention was paid, some of them at once opened fire. The river was about a quarter of a mile wide, and although the shots splashed round them the boats were not long in reaching the farther bank, but not unharmed, for Ben had dropped his paddle and fallen back in the boat.

“Is he badly hurt?” Harry asked anxiously, as the canoes drew alongside each other near the bank, and Sam turned round to look at his comrade.

“He has finished his journey,” Sam said in a hoarse voice. “He has gone down, and a better mate and a truer heart I never met. The ball has hit him in the middle of the forehead. It were to be, I guess, for it could only have been a chance shot at that distance.”

Exclamations of sorrow and fury broke from the others, and for a few minutes there was no thought of the Indians, whose bullets were still falling in the water, for the most part short of the boats. A sharp tap on the side of Harry’s canoe, followed by a jet of water, roused them.

“We mustn’t stop here,” Harry said, as Hunting Dog plugged the hole with a piece of dried meat, “or poor Ben won’t be the only one.”

“Let us have a shot first,” Jerry said. “Young Tom, do you take a shot with Plumb-centre. It is about four hundred and fifty yards as near as I can reckon, and she will carry pretty true that distance.”

“We will give them a shot all round,” Harry said, as he took up his rifle.

Six shots were discharged almost at the same moment. One of the Indians was seen to fall, the rest bounded away to a short distance from the bank. Then Hunting Dog at a word from the chief stepped into the other canoe. Keeping close under the bank they paddled down. The Indians had ceased firing, and had disappeared at a run.

“What are they up to now, chief?”

“Going down to mouth of canon, river sure to be narrow; get there before us.”

“Wait, Jerry,” Harry shouted to the other boat, which was some twenty yards ahead. “The chief thinks they have gone to cut us off at the head of the canon, which is likely enough. I don’t suppose it is fifty yards wide there, and they will riddle us if we try to get through in daylight. We had better stop and have a meal and talk it over.”

The boats were rowed ashore, and the men landed and proceeded to light a fire as unconcernedly as if no danger threatened them. Ben’s death had cast a heavy gloom over them, and but few words were spoken, until the meal was cooked and eaten.

“It is a dog-goned bad business,” Jerry said. “I don’t say at night as we mayn’t get past them without being hit, but to go rushing into one of those canons in the dark would be as bad as standing their fire, if not wuss. The question is–could we leave the boats and strike across?”

“We could not strike across this side anyhow,” Harry said. “There are no settlements west of the Colorado. We know nothing of the country, and it is a hundred to one we should all die of thirst even if we could carry enough grub to last us. If we land at all it must be on the other side, and then we could not reckon on striking a settlement short of two hundred miles, and two hundred miles across a country like this would be almost certain death.”

“As the Navahoes must have ridden down, Harry, there must be water. I reckon they came down that canon opposite.”

“Navahoe on track in morning,” the chief said quietly. “When they see we not go down river look for boat, find where we land and take up trail. Canon very plain road. Some go up there straight, take all our scalps.”

No one spoke for a moment or two. What the Seneca said was so evident to them that it was useless to argue. “Well, chief, what do you advise yourself?” Harry asked at length.

“Not possible go on foot, Harry. Country all rocks and canons; cannot get through, cannot get water. Trouble with Navahoes too. Only chance get down in boat to-night. Keep close under this bank; perhaps Indians not see us, night dark.”

“Do you think they can cross over to this side?”

“Yes, got canoe. Two canoes in village, Leaping Horse saw them on bank. When it gets dark, cross over.”

“We will get a start of them,” Harry said. “Directly it is dark we can be off too. The shore is everywhere higher than our heads as we sit in the canoes, and we can paddle in the shadow without being seen by them on the other side, while they won’t venture to cross till it is pitch dark. As the stream runs something like three miles an hour, I reckon that they are hardly likely to catch us. As for the rapids, they don’t often begin until you are some little distance in. At any rate we shall not have to go far, for the red-skins will not dare to enter the canon, so we can tie up till morning as soon as we are a short distance in. We have got to run the gauntlet of their fire, but after all that is better than taking our chances by leaving the boats. If we lie down when we get near them they may not see us at all; but if they do, a very few strokes will send us past them. At any rate there seems less risk in that plan than in any other.”

The others agreed.

“Now, boys, let us dig a grave,” he went on, as soon as the point was settled. “It is a sort of clay here and we can manage it, and it is not likely we shall find any place, when we are once in the canon, where we can do it.” They had neither picks nor shovels with them, for their mining tools had been left at the spot where they were at work, but with their axes and knives they dug a shallow grave, laid Ben’s body in it, covered it up, and then rolled a number of boulders over it.

Ben’s death affected Tom greatly. They had lived together and gone through many perils and risks for nearly a year, and none had shown more unflagging good-humour throughout than the man who had been killed. That the boats might upset and all might perish together, was a thought that