09 • CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN 1891 BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE Cornell University Library PS 1525.D509 1871 Overland :a novel /by J.W. De Forest 3 1924 022 112 571 Cornell University Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924022112571 J. W. De FOREST, (Author of "Overland," etc.) OYER LAN D. A NOVEL. BY J. W. DE FOREST, AUTHOR OF " KATE BEAUMONT," " MISS RAVENEL'S CONVERSION,'- &c. NEW YORK: SHELDOISr ^NID OOM:FA.lSrY, 677 BROADWAY, AND 214 & 216 MERCER ST. Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by SHELDON AND COMPANY, In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington. Steretoyped by Smith & McDougal, 82 Beekman Street, New York. OVERLAND. By J. W. De Forest, Author of "Kate Beaumont," etc. CHAPTER I. IN those days, Santa F6, New Mexico, was an undergrown, decrepit, out at- elbows ancient hidalgo of a town, with not a scintillation of prosperity or grandeur about it, except the name of capital. It was two hundred and seventy years old ; and it had less than five thou- sand inhabitants. It was the metropolis of a vast extent of country, not desti- tute of natural wealth ; and it consisted of a few narrow, irregular streets, lined by one-story houses built of sun-baked bricks. Owing to the fine climate, it was difficult to die there ; but owing to many things not fine, it was almost equally difficult to live. Even the fact that Santa F6 had been for a period under the fostering wings of the American eagle did not make it grow much. Westward-ho emigrants halted there to refit and buy cattle and provisions ; but always started resolutely on again, westward-hoing across the continent. Nobody seemed to want to stay in Santa F^, except the aforesaid less than five thousand inhabitants, who were able to endure the place because they had never seen any other, and wlio had become a part of its gray, dirty, lazy lifelessness and despondency. For a wonder, this old atom of a metropolis had lately had an increase of population, which was nearly as great a wonder as Sarah having a son when she was " well stricken in years." A couple of new-comers — not a man nor woman less than a couple — now stood on the flat roof of one of the largest of the sun- baked brick houses. By great good luck, moreover, these two were, I humbly trust, worthy of attention. The one was interesting because she was the hand- somest girl in Santa F6, and would have been considered a handsome girl any- where ; the other was interesting because she was a remarkable woman, and even, as IVIr. Jefferson Brick might have phrased it, " one of the most remarkable women in our country, sir." At least so she judged, and judged it too with very considerable confidence, being one of those persons who say, " If I know myself, and I think I do." The beauty was of a mixed type. She combined the blonde and the brunette fashions of loveliness. You might guess at the first glance that she had in her the blood of both the Teutonic and the Latin races. While her skin was clear 4 OVERLAND. and rosy, and her curling hair was of a light and bright chestnut, her long, shad- owy eyelashes were almost black, and her eyes were of a deep hazel, nearly albed to blackness. Her form had the height of the usual American girl, and the round plumpness of the usual Spanish girl. Even in her bearing and expres- sion you could discover more or less of this union of different races. There was shyness and frankness ; there was mistrust and confidence ; there was sentimen- tality and gayety. In short, Clara Munoz Garcia Van Diemen was a handsome and interesting young lady. Now for the remarkable woman. Sturdy and prominent old character, obvi- ously. Forty-seven years old, or thereabouts ; lots of curling iron-gray hair twisted about her round forehead ; a few wrinkles, and not all of the newest Round face, round and earnest eyes, short, self-confident nose, chin sticking out in search of its own way, mouth trembling with unuttered ideas. Good figure — what Lord Dundreary would call " dem robust," but not so sumptuous as to be merely ornamental ; tolerably convenient figure to get about in. Walks up and down, man-fashion, with her hands behind her back — also man-fashion. Such is Mrs. Maria Stanley, the sister of Clara Van Diemen's father, and best known to Clara as Aunt Maria. "And so this is Santa F^?" said Aunt Maria, rolling her spectacles over the little wilted city. " Founded in 1581 ; two hundred and seventy years old. Well, if this is all that man can do in that time, he had better leave colonization to woman." Clara smiled with an innocent air of half wonder and half amusement, such as you may see on the face of a child when it is shown some new and rather awe-striking marvel of the universe, whether a jack-in-a-box or a comet. She had only known Aunt Maria for the last four years, and she had not yet got used to her rough-and-ready mannish ways, nor learned to see any sense in her phi- Josophizings. Looking upon her as a comical character, and supposing that she talked mainly for the fun of the thing, she was disposed to laugh at her doings and sayings, though mostly meant in solemn earnest. " But about your affairs, my child," continued Aunt Maria, suddenly gripping a fresh subject after her quick and startling fashion. " I don't understand them. How is it possible ? Here is a great fortune gone ; gone in a moment ; gone incomprehensibly. What does it mean ? Some rascality here. Some man at the bottom of this." " I presume my relative, Garcia, must be right," commenced Clara. " No, he isn't," interrupted Aunt Maria. " He is wrong. Of course he's wrong. I never knew a man yet but what he was wrong." " You make me laugh in spite of my troubles,'' said Clara, laughing, however, only through her eyes, which had great faculties for sparkling out meanings. " But see here," she added, turning grave again, and putting up her hand to ask attention. " Mr. Garcia tells a straight story, and gives reasons enough. There was the war," and here she began to count on her fingers. " That destroyed a great deal. I know when my father could scarcely send on money to pay my bills in New York. And then there was the signature for Senor Pedraez. And then there were the Apaches who burnt the hacienda and drove cff the cattle. And then he " Her voice faltered and she stopped ; she could not say, " He died." " My poor, dear child ! " sighed Aunt Maria, walking up to the girl and ca- ressing her with a tenderness which was all womanly. " That seems enough," continued Clara, when she could speak again. " 1 OVERLAND. 5 suppose that what Garcia and the lawyers tell us is true. I suppose I am not worth a thousand dollars." ■' Will a thousand dollars support you here ? " " I don't know. I don't think it will."- "Then if I can't set this thing straight, if I can't make somebody disgorge your property, I must take you back with me." " Oh ! if you would ! " implored Clara, all the tender helplessness of Spanish girlhood appealing from her eyes. " Of course I will," said Aunt Maria, with a benevolent energy which was almost terrific. " I would try to do something. I don't know. Couldn't I teach Spanish ? " "You shan't" decided Aunt Maria. " Yes, you shall. You shall be profes- sor of foreign languages in a Female College which I mean to have founded." Clara stared with astonishment, and then burst into a hearty fit of laughter, the two finishing the drying of her tears. She was so far from wishing to be a strong-minded person of either gender, that she did not comprehend that her aunt could wish it for her, or could herself seriously claim to be one. The talk about a professorship was in her estimation the wayward, humorous whim of an eccentric who was fond of solemn joking. Mrs. Stanley, meanwhile, could not see why her utterance should not be taken in earnest, and opened her eyes at Clara's merriment. We must say a word or two concerning the past of this young lady. Twenty- five years previous a New Yorker named Augustus Van Diemen, the brother of that Maria Jane Van Diemen now known to the world as Mrs. Stanley, had mi- grated to California, set up in the hide business, and married by stealth the daughter of a wealthy Mexican named Pedro Muiioz. Mufioz got into a Span- ish Catholic rage at having a Yankee Protestant son-in-law, disowned and for- mally disinherited his child, and worried her husband into quitting the country. Van Diemen returned to the United States, but his wife soon became homesick for her native land, and, like a good husband as he was, he went once more to Mexico. This time he settled in Santa F^, where he accumulated a handsome fortune, lived in the best house in the city, and owned haciendas. Clara's mother dying when the girl was fourteen years old. Van Diemen felt free to give her, his only child, an American education, and sent her to New York, where she went through four years of schooling. During this period came the v.-ar between the United States and Mexico. Foreign residents were ill-treated ; Van Diemen was sometimes a prisoner, sometimes a fugitive ; in one way or an- other his fortune went to pieces. Four months previous to the opening of this story he died in a state little better than insolvency. Clara, returning to Santa Fd under the care of her energetic and affectionate relative, found that the del- ude of debt would cover town house and haciendas, leaving her barely a thou- sand dollars. She was handsome and accomplished, but she was an orphan and poor. The main chance with her seemed to lie in the likelihood that she would find a mother (or a father) in Aunt Maria. Yes, there was another sustaining possibility, and of a more poetic nature. There was a young American officer named Thurstane, a second lieutenant act- ing as quartermaster of the department, who had met her heretofore in New York, who had seemed delighted to welcome her to Santa Y€, and who now called on her nearly everv day. Might it not be that Lieutenant Thurstane would want to make her Mrs. Thurstane, and would have power granted him to induce her to consent to the arrangement ? Clara was sufficiently a woman, and 6 OVERLAND. sufficiently a Spanish woman especially, to believe in marriage. She did not mean particularly to be Mrs. Thurstane, but she did mean generally to be Mrs. Somebody. And why not Thurstane ? Well, that was for him to decide, at least to a considerable extent. In the mean time she did not love him ; she only disliked the thought of leaving him. While these two women had been talking and thinking, a lazy Indian servant had been lounging up the stairway. Arrived on the roof, he advanced to La Senorita Clara, and handed her a letter. The girl opened it, glanced through it with a flushing face, and cried out delightedly, " It is from my grandfather. How wonderful ' O holy Maria, thanks ! His heart has been softeried. He invites me to come and live with him in San Francisco. O Madre de Dios /'" Although Clara spoke English perfectly, and although she was in faith quite as much of a Protestant as a Catholic, yet in her moments of strong excitement she sometimes fell back into the language and ideas of her childhood. " Child, what are you jabbering about 'i " asked Aunt Maria. " There it is. See ! Pedro Muiioz ! It is his own signature. I have seen letters of his. Pedro Mufioz ! Read it. Oh ! you don't read Spanish." Then she translated the letter aloud. Aunt Maria listened with a firm and almost stern aspect, like one who sees some justice done, but not enough. " He doesn't beg your pardon," she said at the close of the reading. Clara, supposing that she was expected to laugh, and not seeing the point of the joke, stared in amazement. "But probably he is in a meeker mood now," continued Aunt Maria. " By this time it is to be hoped that he sees his past conduct in a proper light. The letter was written three months ago." " Three months ago," repeated Clara. " Yes, it has taken all that time to come. How long will it take me to go there ? How shall I go ? " " We will see," said Aunt Maria, with the air of one who holds the fates in her hand, and doesn't mean to open it till she gets ready. She was by no means satisfied as yet that this grandfather Mufioz was a proper person to be intrusted with the destinies of a young lady. In refusing to let his daughter select her own husband, he had shown a very squinting and incomplete perception of the rights of woman. " Old reprobate ! " thought Aunt Maria. " Probably he has got gouty with his vices, and wants to be nursed. I fancy I see him getting Clara without go- i»g on his sore marrow-bones and begging pardon of gods and women." " Of course I must go," continued Clara, unsuspicious of her aunt's reflections. " At all events he will support me. Besides, he is now the head of my family." " Head of the family ! " frowned Aunt Maria. " Because he is a man .? So much the more reason for his being the tail of it. My dear, you are your own head." " Ah— well. What is the use of all Ihat f " aske^ Clara, smiling away those views. " I have no money, and he has." "Well, we will see," persisted Aunt Maria. " I just told you so. We will see." The two women had scarcely left the roof of the house and got themselves down to the large, breezy, sparsely furnished parlor, ere the lazy, dawdling In- dian servant announced Lieutenant Thurstane. Lieutenant Ralph Thurstane was a tall, full-chested, finely-limbed gladiator of perhaps four and twenty. Broad forehead ; nose straight and high enough ; lower part of the face oval ; on the whole a good physiognomy. Cheek bones OVERLAND. 7 rather strongly marked ; a hint of Scandinavian ancestry supported by his name . Thurstane is evidently Thor's stone or altar ; forefathers priests of the god of thunder. His complexion was so reddened and darkened by sunburn that his untanned forehead looked unnaturally white and delicate. His yellow, one might almost call it golden hair, was wavy enough to be handsome. Eyes quite remarkable ; blue, but of a very dark blue, like the coloring which is sometimes given to steel ; so dark indeed that one's first impression was that they were black. Their natural expression seemed to be gentle, pathetic, and almost im- ploring ; but authority, responsibility, hardship, and danger had given them an ability to be stern. In his whole face, young as he was, there was already the look of the veteran, that calm reminiscence of 'trials endured, that preparedness for trials to come. In fine, taking figure, physiognomy, and demeanor together, he was attractive. He saluted the ladies as if they were his superior officers. It was a kindly address, but ceremonious ; it was almost humble, and yet it was self-respectful. " I have some great news," he presently said, in the full masculine tone of one who has done much drilling. " That is, it is great to me. I change sta- tion." " How is that ? " asked Clara eagerly. She was not troubled at the thought of losing a beau ; we must not be so hard upon her as to make that supposition ; but here was a trustworthy friend going away just when she wanted counsel and perhaps aid. " I have been promoted first lieutenant of Company I, Fifth Regiment, and I must join my company." " Promoted ! I am glad," said Clara. " You ought to be pleased," put in Aunt Maria, staring at the grave face of the young man with no approving expression. " I thought men were always pleased with such things.'' " So I am," returned Thurstane. " Of course I am pleased with the step. But I must leave Santa F6. And I have found Santa F6 very pleasant." There was so much meaning obvious in these last words that Clara's face colored like a sunset. "I thought soldiers never indulged in such feelings," continued the unmolli- fied Aunt Maria. " Soldiers are but men," observed Thurstane, flushing through his sunburn. "And men are weak creatures." Thurstane grew still redder. This old lady (old in his young eyes) was al- ways at him about his manship, as if it were a crime and disgrace. He wanted to give her one, but out of respect for Clara he did not, and merely moved un- easily in his seat, as men are apt to do when they are set do'Wn hard. " How soon must you go ? Where ? " demanded Clara. " As soon as I can close my accounts here and turn over ray stores to my successor. Company I is at Fort Yuma on the Colorado. It is the first post in California." " California ! " And Clara could not help brightening up in cheeks and eyes with fine tints and flashes. " Why, I am going to California." " We will see," said Aunt Maria, still holding the fates in her fist. Then came the story of Grandfather Mufloz's letter, with a hint or two con- cerning the decay of the Van Diemen fortune, for Clara was not worldly wise enough to hide her poverty. Thurstane's face turned as red with pleasure as if it had been dipped in the 8 OVERLAND. sun. If this young lady was going to California, he might perhaps be hei knight-errant across the desert, guard her from privations and hardships, and crown himself with her smiles. If she was poor, he might — well, he would not speculate upon that; it was too dizzying. We must say a word as to his history in order to show .yhy he was so shy and sensitive. He had been through West Point, confined himself while there closely to his studies, gone very soon into active service, and so seen little society. The discipline of the Academy and three years in the regular army had ground into him the soldier's respect for superiors. He revered his field officers ; he received a communication from the War Department as a sort of superhuman revelation ; he would have blown himself sky-high at the command of General Scott. This habit of subordination, coupled with a natural fund of reverence, led him to feel that many persons were better than himself, and to be humble in their presence. All women were his superior officers, and the highest in rank was Clara Van Diemen. Well, hurrah ! he was to march under her to California ! and the thought made him half wild. He would protect her ; he would- kill all the Indians in the desert for her sake ; he would feed her on his own blood, if necessary. As he considered these proper and feasible projects, the audacious thought which he had just tried to expel from his mind forced its way back into it. If the Van Diemen estate were insolvent, if this semi-divine Clara were as poor as himself, there was a call on him to double his devotion to her, and there was a hope that his worship might some day be rewarded. How he would slave and serve for her ; how he would earn promotion for her sake; how he would fight her battle in life ! But would she let him do it? Ah, it seemed too much to hope. Poor though she was, she was still a heaven or so above him ; she was so beautiful and had so many perfections ! Oh, the purity, the self-abnegation, the humility of love ! It makes a man scarcely lower than the angels, and quite superior to not a few reverenced saints- CHAPTER II. " I MUST say," observed Thurstane — " I beg your pardon for advising — but 1 think you had better accept your grandfather's invitation.'' He said it with a pang at his heart, for if this adorable girl went to her grand- father, the old fellow would be sure to love her and leave her his property, in which case there 'would be no chance for a proud and poor lieutenant. He gave his advice under a grim sense that it was his duty to give it, because the following of it would be best for Miss Van Diemen. " So I think," nodded Clara, fortified by this opinion to resist Aunt Maria, and the more fortified because it was the opinion of a man. After a certain amount of discussion the elder lady was persuaded to loosen her mighty grip and give the destinies a little liberty. " Well, it may be best," she said, pursing her mouth as if she tasted the bit- ter of some half-suspected and disagreeable future. " I don't know. I won't undertake positively to decide. But, if you do go," and here she became au- thentic and despotic — "if you do go, I shall go with you and see you safe there." " Oh ! will you ? " exclaimed Clara, all Spanish and all emotion in an in- stant. " How sweet and good and beautiful of you ! You are my guardian an- , gel. Do you know ? I thought you would offer to go. I said to myself, She came on to Santa F^ for my sake, and she will go to California. But oh, it is too much for me to ask. How shall I ever pay you ? " OVERLAND. 9 " I will pay myself," returned Aunt Maria. "I have plans for California." It was as if she had said, " Go to, we will make California in our own image." The young lady was satisfied. Her strong-minded relative was a mighty mys- tery to her, just as men were mighty mysteries. Whatever she or they said could be done and should be done, why of course it would be done, and that shortly. By the time that Aunt Maria had announced her decision, another visitoi was on the point of entrance. Carlos Maria Munoz Garcia de Coronado was a nephew of Manuel Garcia, who was a cousin of Clara's grandfather ; only, as Garcia was merely his uncle by marriage, Coronado and Clara were not related by blood, though calling each other cousin. He was a man of medium stature, slender in build, agile and graceful, in movement, complexion very dark, features high and aristocratic, short black hair and small black moustache, eyes black also, but veiled and dusky. He was about twenty-eight, but he seemed at least four years older, partly because of a deep wrinkle which slashed down each cheek, and partly because he was so perfectly self-possessed and elaborately courteous. His intellect was apparently as alert and adroit as his physical action. A few words from Clara enabled him to seize the situation. " Go at once," he decided without a moment's hesitation. " My dear cousin, it will be the happy turning point of your fortunes. I fancy you already inherit- ing the hoards, city lots, haciendas, mines, and cattle of our excellent relative Munoz — long may he live to enjoy them ! Certainly. Don't whisper an objes- tion. Munoz owes you that reparation. His conduct has been — we will not describe it — we will hope that he means to make amends for it. Unquestionably be will. My dear cousin, nothing can resist you. You will enchant your grand- father. It will all end, like the tales of the Arabian Nights, in your living in a palace. How delightful to think of this long family quarrel at last coming to a close ! But how do you go ? " " If Miss Van Diemen goes overland, I can do something toward protecting her and making her comfortable," suggested Thurstane. " I am ordered to Fort Yuma." Coronado glanced at the young officer, noted the guilty blush which peeped out of his tanned cheek, and came to a decision on the instant. " Overland ! " he exclaimed, lifting both his hands. " Take her overland ! My God ! my God 1 " Thurstane reddened at the insinuation that he had given bad advice to Miss Van Diemen; but though he wanted to fight the Mexican, he controlled him- self, and did not even argue. Like all sensitive and at the same time self-re- spectful persons, he was exceedingly considerate of the feelings of others, and was a very lamb in conversation. " It is a desert," continued Coronado in a kind of scream of horror. " It is a waterless desert, without a blade of grass, and haunted from end to end by Apaches. My little cousin would die of thirst and hunger. She would be hunted and scalped. O my God ! overland ! " " Emigrant parties are going all the while," ventured Thurstane, very angry at such extravagant opposition, but merely looking a little stiff. "Certainly. You are right, Lieutenant," bowed Coronado. "They do go. But how many perish on the way ? They march between the unburied and with- ered corpses of their predecessors. And what a journey for a woman — for a lady accustomed to luxury — for my little cousin ! I beg your pardon, my dear Lieutenant Thurstane, for disagreeing with you. My advice is— the isthmus." 10 OVERLAND. " I have, of course, nothing to say," admitted the officer, returning Corona- do's bow. " The family must decide." "Certainly, the isthmus, the steamers," went on the fluent Mexican. "You sail to Panama. You have an easy and safe land trip of a few days. Then steamers again. PofiF! you are there. By all means, the isthmus." We must allot a few more words of description to this Don Carlos Coronado. Let no one expect a stage Spaniard, with the air of a matador or a guerrillero, who wears only picturesque and outlandish costumes, and speaks only magnilo- quent Castilian. Coronado was dressed, on this spring morning, precisely as American dandies then dressed for summer promenades on Broadway. His hat was a fine panama with a broad black ribbon ; his frock-coat was of thin cloth, plain, dark, and altogether civilized ; his light trousers were cut gaiter-fashion, and strapped under the instep ; his small boots were patent-leather, and of the ordinary type. There was nothing poetic about his attire except a reasonably wide Byron collar and a rather dashing crimson neck-tie, well suited to his dark complexion. His manner was sometimes excitable, as we have seen above ; but usually he was hke what gentlemen with us desire to be. Perhaps he bowed lower and smiled oftener and gestured more gracefully than Americans are apt to do. But there was in general nothing Oriental about him, no assumption of barbaric pompousness, no extravagance of bearing. His prevailing deportment was calm, grave, and deliciously courteous. If you had met him, no matter how or where, you would probably have been pleased with him. He would have made conver- sation for you, and put you at ease in a moment ; you would have believed that he liked you, and you would therefore have been disposed to like him. In short, he was agreeable to most people, and to some people fascinating. And then his English ! It was wonderful to hear him talk it. No American could say that he spoke better English than Coronado, and no American surely ever spoke it so fluently. It rolled off his lips in a torrent, undefiled by a mis- pronunciation or a foreign idiom. And yet he had begun to learn the language after reaching the age of manhood, and had acquired it mainly during three years of exile and teaching of Spanish in the United States. His linguistic clever- ness was a fair specimen of his general quickness of intellect. Mrs. Stanley had liked him at first sight — that is, liked him for a man. He knew it ; he had seen that she was a person worth conciliating ; he had addressed himself to her, let off his bows at her, made her the centre of conversation. In ten minutes from the entrance of Coronado Mrs. Stanley was of opinion that Clara ought to go to California by way of the isthmus, although she had pre- viously taken the overland route for granted. In another ten minutes the matter was settled : the ladies were to go by way of New Orleans, Panama, and the Pacific. Shortly afterward, Coronado and Thurstane took their leave ; the Mexican affable, sociable, smiling, smoking ; the American civil, but taciturn and grave. " Aha ! I have disappointed the young gentleman," thought Coronado as they parted, the one going to his quartermaster's office and the other to Garcia's house. Coronado, although he had spent great part of his life in courting women, was a bachelor. He had been engaged once in New Mexico and two or three times in New York, but had always, as he could tell you with a smile, been disappointed. He now lived with his uncle, that Seflor Manuel Garcia whom Clara has men- tioned, a trader with California, an owner of vast estates and much cattle, and OVERLAND. H reputed to be one of the richest -men in New Mexico. The two often quarrelled, and the elder had once turned the younger out of doors, so lively were their dis- positions. But as Garcia had lost one by one all his children, he had at last taken his nephew into permanent favor, and would, it was said, leave him his property. The house, a hollow square built oi adobe bricks in one story, covered a vast deal of ground, had spacious rooms and a court big enough to bivouac a regiment. It was, in fact, not only a dwelling, but a magazine where Garcia stored his mer- chandise, and a caravansary where he parked his wagons. As Coronado lounged into the main doorway he was run against by a short, pursy old gentleman who was rushing out. "Ah! there you are !" exclaimed the old gentleman, in Spanish. "Oyou pig ! you dog ! you never are here. O Madre de Dios ! how I have needed you ! There is no time to lose. Enter at once." A dyspeptic, worn with work and anxieties, his nervous system shattered, Garcia was subject to fits of petulance which were ludicrous. In these rages he called everybody who would bear it pigs, dogs, and other more unsavory nick- names. Coronado bore it because thus he got his living, and got it without much labor. " I want you," gasped Garcia, seizing the young man by the arm and drag- ging him into a private room. "I want to speak to you in confidence — in confi- dence, mind you, in confidence — about Mufioz." " I have heard of it," said Coronado, as the old man stopped to catch his breath. " Heard of it ! " exclaimed Garcia, in such consternation that he turned yel- low, which was his way of turning pale. " Has the news got here ? O Madre de Dios ! " "Yes, I was at our little cousin's this evening. It is an ugly affair." "And she knows it 1 " groaned the old man. " O Madre de Dios ! " "She told me of it. She is going there. I did the best I could, She was about to go overland, in charge of the American, Thurstane. I broke that up. I persuaded her to go by the isthmus." " It is of little use," said Garcia, his eyes filmy with despair, as if he were dying. " She will get there. The property will be hers." " Not necessarily. He has simply invited her to live with him. She may not suit." " How } " demanded Garcia, open-eyed and open-mouthed with anxiety. " He has simply invited her to live with him," repeated Coronado. " I saw the letter." " What ! you don't know, then ? " " Know what ? " " Mufioz is dead." Coronado threw out, first a stare of surprise, and then a shout of laughter. "And here they have just got a letter from him," he said presently; "and I have been persuading her to go to him by the isthmus ! " " May the journey take her to him ! " muttered Garcia. " How old was this letter ? " "Nearly three months. It came by sea, first to New York, and then here." " My news is a month later. It came overland by special. messenger. Lis- ten to me, Carlos. This affair is worse than you know. Do you know what 12 OVERLAND. Munoz has done ? Oh, the pig ! the dog ! the villainous pig ! He has left ev- erything to his granddaughter." Coronado, dumb with astonishment and dismay, mechanically slapped his bo»t with his cane and stared at Garcia. " I am ruined," cried the old man. " The pig of hell has ruined me. He has left me, his cousin, his only male relative, to ruin. Not a doubloon to save me.' " Is there no chance ? " asked Coronado, after a long silence. " None ! Oh — yes— one. A little one, a miserable little one. If she dies without issue and without a will, I am heir. And you, Carlos" (changing here to a wheedling tone), "you are mine." The look which accompanied these last words was a terrible mingling of cun- ning, cruelty, hope, and despair. Coronado glanced at Garcia with a shocking comprehension, and immediate- ly dropped his dusky eyes upon the floor. " You know I have made my will," resumed the old man, " and left you every- thing." " Which is nothing," returned Coronado, aware that his uncle was insolvent in reality, and that his estate when settled would not show the residuum of a dollar. " If the fortune of Mufioz comes to me, I shall be very rich." " When you get it." " Listen to me, Carlos. Is there no way of getting it ? " As the two men stared at each other they were horrible. The uncle was al- ways horrible ; he was one of the very ugliest of Spaniards ; he was a brutal car- icature of the national type. He had a low forehead, round face, bulbous nose, shaking fat cheeks, insignificant chin, and only one eye, a black and sleepy orb, which seemed to crawl like a snake. His exceedingly dark skin was made dark- er by a singular bluish tinge which resulted from heavy doses of nitrate of silver, taken as a remedy for epilepsy. His face was, moreover, mottled with dusky spots, so that he reminded the spectator of a frog or a toad. Just now he looked nothing less than poisonous ; the hungriest of cannibals would not have dared eat him. " I am ruined," he went on groaning. " The war, the Yankees, the Apaches, the devil — I am completely ruined. In another year I shall be sold out. Then, my dear Carlos, you will have no home." " Sangre de Dios T'' growled Coronado. "Do you want to drive me to the devil ? " O God ! to force an old man to such an extremity ! " continued Garcia. " It is more than an old man is fitted to strive with. An old man — an old, sick, worn-out man ! " " You are sure about the will ? " demanded the nephew. " I have a copy of it," said Garcia, eagerly. " Here it is. Read it. O Madre de Dios ! there is no doubt about it. I can trust my lawyer. It all goes to her. It only comes to me if she dies childless and intestate." " This is a horrible dilemma to force us info," observed Coronado, after he had read the paper. " So it is," assented Garcia, looking at him with indescribable anxiety. " So it is ; so it is. What is to be done ? " " Supjjose I should marry her ?" The old man's countenance fell ; he wanted to call his nephew a pig, a dog OVERLAND. 13 and everything else that is villainous ; but he restrained himself and merely whimpered, " It would be better than nothing. You could help me " "There is little chance of it," said Coronado, seeing that the proposition was not approved. " She likes the American lieutenant much, and does not like me at all." " Then " began Garcia, and stopped there, trembling all over. "Then what?" The venomous old toad made a supreme eifort and whispered, " Suppose she should die ? " Coronado wheeled about, walked two or three times up and down the room, returned to where Garcia sat quivering, and murmured, " It must be done quickly." " Yes, yes," gasped the old man. " She must — it must be childless and in- testate." " She must go off in some nat-ural way," continued the nephew. The uncle looked up with a vague hope in his one dusky and filmy eye. " Perhaps the isthmus will do it for her." Again the old man turned to an image of despair, as he mumbled, " O Madre de Dios ! no, no. The isthmus is nothing." "Is the overland route more dangerous ?" asked Coronado. " It might be made more dangerous. One gets lost in the desert. There are Apaches." " It is a horrible business," growled Coronado, shaking his head and biting his lips. " Oh, horrible, horrible ! " groaned Garcia. " Munoz was a pig, and a dog, and a toad, and a snake." " You old coward ! can't you speak out ? " hissed Coronado, losing his pa- tience. " Do you want me both to devise and execute, while you take the purses .■■ Tell me at once what your plan is." " The overland route," whispered Garcia, shaking from head to foot. " You go with her. I pay — I pay everything. You shall have men, horses, mules, wagons, all you want." " I shall want money, too. I shall need, perhaps, two thousand dollars. Apaches." " Yes, yes," assented Garcia. " The Apaches make an attack. You shall have money. I can raise it ; I will." " How soon will you have a train ready ? " " Immediately. Any day you want. You must start at once. She must not know of the will. She might remain here, and let the estate be settled for her, and draw on it. She might go back to New York. Anybody would lend her money." "Yes, events hurry us," muttered Coronado. " Well, get your cursed train ready. I will induce her to take it. I must unsay now all that I said in favor of the isthmus." "Do be judicious," implored Garcia. "With judgment, with judgment. Lost on the plains. Stolen by Apaches. No killing. No scandals. O my God, how I hate scandals and uproars ! I am an old man, Carlos. With judg- ment, with judgment." " I comprehend," responded Coronado, adding a long string of Spanish curses, most of them meant for his uncle. 14 OVERLAND. CHAPTER III. That very day Coronado made a second call on Clara and her Aunt Maria, to retract, contradict, and disprove all that he had said in favor of the isthmus and against the overland route. Although his visit was timed early in the evening, he found Lieutenant Thurstane already with the ladies. Instead of scowling at him, or crouching in conscious guilt before him, he made a cordial rush for his hand, smiled sweetly in his face, and offered him incense of gratitude. "My dear Lieutenant, you are perfectly right," he said, in his fluent English. "The journey by the isthmus is not to be thought of. I have just seen a friend who has made it. Poisonous serpents in myriads. The most deadly climate in the world. Nearly everybody had the vomito; one-fifth died of it. You eat a little fruit; down you go on your back — dead in four hours. Then there. are constant fights between the emigrants and the sullen, ferocious Indians of the isthmus. My poor friend never slept with his revolver out of his hand. I said to him, " My dear fellow, it is cruel to rejoice in your misfortunes, but I am heartily glad that I have heard of them. You have saved the life of the most remarkable woman that I ever knew, and of a cousin of mine who is the star of her sex." Here Coronado made one bow to Mrs. Stanley and another to Clara, at the same time kissing his sallow hand enthusiastically to all creation. Aunt Maria tried to look stern at the compliment, but eventually thawed into a smile over it. Clara acknowledged it with a little wave of the hand, as if, coming from Corona- do, it meant nothing more than good-morning, which indeed was just about his measure of it. " Moreover," continued the Mexican, "overland route? Why, it is overland route both ways. If you go by the isthmus, you must traverse all Texas and Lou- isiana, at the very least. You might as well go at once to San Diego. In short, the route by the isthmus is not to be thought of." "And what of the overland route ?" asked Mrs. Stanley. "The overland route is the other" laughed Coronado. "Yes, I know. We must take it, I suppose. But what is the last news about it ? You spoke this morning of Indians, I beheve. Not that I suppose they are very formidable." "The overland route does not lead directly through paradise, my dear Mrs. Stanley," admitted Coronado with insinuating candor. "But it is not as bad as has been represented. I have never tried it. I must rely upon the report of others. Well, on learning that the isthmus would not do for you, I rushed off immediately to inquire about the overland. I questioned Garcia's teamsters. I catechized some newly-arrived travellers. I pumped dry every source of in- formation. The result is that the overland route will do. No sufferino-; ab- solutely none ; not a bit. And no danger worth mentioning. The Apaches are under a cloud. Our American conquerors and fellow-citizens" (here he gently patted Thurstane on the shoulder-strap), "our Romans of the nineteenth century, they tranquillize the Apaches. A child might walk from here to Fort Yuma without risking its little scalp." All this was said in the most light-hearted and airy manner conceivable. Coronado waved and floated on zephyrs of fancy and fluency. A butterfly or a humming-bird could not have talked more cheerily about flying over a parterre of flowers than he about traversing the North American desert. And, with all OVERLAND. 15 tliis frivolous, imponderable grace, what an accent of verity he had ! He spoke of the teamsters as if he had actually conversed with them, and of the overland route as if he had been studiously gathering information concerning it. " I believe that what you say about the Apaches is true," observed Thurstane, a bit awkwardly. Coronado smiled, tossed him a little bow, and murmured in the most cordial, genial way, " And the rest ? " " I beg pardon," said the Lieutenant, reddening. " I didn't mean to cast doubt upon any of your statements, sir." Thurstane had the army tone ; he meant to be punctiliously polite ; perhaps he was a little stiflf in his politeness. But he was young, had had small practice in society, was somewhat hampered by modesty, and so sometimes made a blun- der. Such things annoyed him excessively; a breach of etiquette seemed some- thing like a breach of orders ; hadn't meant to charge Coronado with drawing the long bow ; couldn't help coloring about it. Didn't think much of Coronado, but stood somewhat in awe of him, as being four years older in time and a dozen years older in the ways of the world. " I only meant to say,'' he continued, " that I have information concerning the Apaches which coincides with yours, sir. They are quiet, at least for the present. Indeed, I understand that Red Sleeve, or Manga Colorada, as you call him, is coming in with his band to make a treaty." " Admirable ! " cried Coronado. " Why not hire him to guarantee our safety ? Set a thief to catch a thief. Why does not your Government do that sort of thing ? Let the Apaches protect the emigrants, and the United States pay the Apaches. They would be the cheapest military force possible. That is the way the Turks manage the desert Arabs." " Mr. Coronado, you ought to be Governor of New Mexico," said Aunt Maria, stricken with admiration at this project. Thurstane looked at the two as if he considered them a couple of fools, each bigger than the other. Coronado advanced to Mrs. Stanley, took her hand, bowed over it, and murmured, " Let me have your influence at Washington, my dear Madame." The remarkable woman squirmed a little, fearing lest he should kiss her fingers, but nevertheless gave him a gracious smile. "It strikes me, however," she said, "that the isthmus route is better. We know by experience that the journey from here to Bent's Fort is safe and easy. From there down the Arkansas and Missouri to St. Louis it is mostly water car- riage ; and from St. Louis you can sail anywhere." Coronado was alarmed. He must put a stopper on this project. He called up all his resources. " My dear Mrs. Stanley, allow me. Remember that emigrants move west- ward, and not eastward. Coming from Bent's Fort you had protection and com- pany ; but going towards it would be different. And then think what you would lose. The great American desert, as it is absurdly styled, is one of the most in- teresting regions on earth. Mrs. Stanley, did you ever hear of the Casas Grandes, the Casas de Montezuma, the ruined cities of New Mexico ? In this so-called desert there was once an immense population. There was a civilization which jose, flourished, decayed, and disappeared without a historian. Nothing remains of it but the walls of its fortresses and palaces. Those you will see. They are wonderful. They are worth ten times the labor and danger which we shall en- counter. Buildings eight hundred feet long by two hundred and fifty feet deep, Mrs. Stanley. The resting-places and wayside strongholds of the Aztecs oa 16 OVERLAND. their route from the frozen North to found the Empire of the Montezumas ! This whole region is strewn, and cumbered, and' glorified with ruins. If we should go by the way of the San Juan " " The San Juan ! " protested Thurstane. "yNobody goes by the way of the San Juan." Coronado stopped, bowed, smiled, waited to see if Thurstane had finished, and then proceeded. "Along the San Juan every hilltop is crowned with these monuments of an- tiquity. It is like the castled Rhine. Ruins looking in the faces of ruins. It is a tragedy in stone. It is like Niobe and her daughters. Moreover, if we take this route we shall pass the Moquis. The independent Moquis are a fragment of the ancient ruling race of New Mexico. They live in stone-built cities on lofty eminences. They weave blankets of exquisite patterns and colors, and produce a species of pottery which almost deserves the name of porcelain." "Really, you ought to write all this,'' exclaimed Aunt Maria, her imagination fired to a white heat. " I ought," said Coronado, impressively. " I owe it to these people to cele- brate them in history. I owe them that much because of the name I bear. Did 310U ever hear of Coronado, the conqueror of New Mexico, the stormer of the seven cities of Cibola ? It was he who gave the final shock to this antique civil- ization. He was the Cprtes of this portion of the continent. I bear his name, and his blood runs in my veins.'' He held down his head as if he were painfully oppressed by the sense of his crimes and responsibilities as a descendant of the waster of aboriginal New Mexico. Mrs. Stanley, delighted with his emotion, slily grasped and pressed his hand. "Oh, man! man!" she groaned. "What evils has that creature man wrought in this beautiful world ! Ah, Mr. Coronado, it would have been a very different planet had woman had her rightful share in the management of its aflFajrs." " Undoubtedly," sighed Coronado. He had already obtained an insight into this remarkable person's views on the woman question, the superiority of her own sex, the stolidity and infamy of the other. It was worth his while to humor her on this point, for the sake of gaining an influence over her, and so over Clara. Cheered by tha success of his history, he now launched into pure poetry. " Woman has done something," he said. " There is every reason to believe that the cities of the San Juan were ruled by queens, and that some of them were inhabited by a race of Amazons." " Is it possible ? " exclaimed Aunt Maria, flushing and rustling with interest. " It is the opinion of the best antiquarians. It is my opinion. Nothino- else can account for the exquisite earthenware which is found there. Women, you are aware, far surpass men in the arts of beauty. Moreover, the inscriptions on hieroglyphic rocks in these abandoned cities evidently refer to Amazons. There you see them doing the work of men— carrying on war, ruling conquered regions, founding cities. It is a picture of a golden age, Mrs. Stanley." Aunt Maria meant to go by way of the San Juan, if she had to scalp Apdfches herself in doing it. " Lieutenant Thurstane, what do you say ? " she asked, turning her sparkling eyes upon the officer. " I must confess that I never heard of all these things," replied Thurstane, with an air which added, " And I don't believe in most of them." OVERLAND. jy "As for the San Juan route," he continued, "it is two hundred miles at least out of our way. The country is a desert and almost unexplored. I don^t fancy the plan— I beg your pardon, Mr. Coroiiado— but I don't fancy it at all." Aunt Maria despised him and almost hated him for his stupid, practical, un- poetic common sense. " I must say that I quite fancy the San Juan route," she responded, with proper firmness. " 1 venture to agree with you," said Coronado, as meekly as if her fancy were not of his own making. "Only a hundred miles off the straight line (begging your pardon, my dear Lieutenant), and through a country which is naturally (er- tile — witness the immense population which it once supported. As for its being unexplored, I have explored it myself; and I shall go with you." " Shall you ! " cried Aunt Maria, as if that made all safe and delif^htful. "Yes. My excellent Uncle Garcia (good, kind-hearted old man) takes the strongest interest in this affair. He is resolved that his charming little relative here. La Senorila Clara, shall cross the coutiuent in safety and comfort. He offers a special wagon train for the purpose, and insists that I shall accompany it. Of course I am only too delighted to obey him." " Garcia is very good, and so are you, Coronado," said Clara, very thankful and profoundly astonished. " How can I ever repay you both ? I shall always be your debtor." " My dear cousin ! " protested Coronado, bowing and smiling. " Well, it is settled. We will start as soon as may be. The train will be ready in a day or two." " I have no money," stammered Clara. "The estate is not settled." " Our good old Garcia has thought of everything. He will advance you what you want, and take your draft on the executors." " Your uncle is one of nature's noblemen," affirmed Aunt Maria. " I must call on him and thank him for his goodness and generosity." " Oh, never ! " said Coronado. " He only waits your permission to visit you and pay you his humble respects. Absence has prevented him from attending to that delightful duty heretofore. He has but just returned from Albuquerque." "Tell him I shall be glad to see him," smiled Aunt Maria. " But what does he say of the San Juan route ? " "He advises it. He has been in the overland trade for thirty years. He is tenderly interested in his relative Clara ; and he advises her to go by way ■ of the San Juan." " Then so it shall be," declared Aunt Maria. "And how do you go, Lieutenant ?" asked Coronado, turning to Thurstane. " I had thought of travelling with you," was the answer, delivered with a grave and troubled air, as if now he must give up his project. Coronado was delighted. He had urged the northern and circuitous route mainly to get rid of the officer, taking it for granted that the latter must join his new command as soon as possible. He did not want him courting Clara all across the continent ; and he did not want him saving her from being lost, if it should become necessary to lose her. " I earnestly hope that we shall not be deprived of your company," he said. Thurstane, in profound thought, simply bowed his acknowledgments. A few minutes later, as he rose to return to his quarters, he said, with an air of solemn resolution, " If I can possibly go with you, I luilV All the next day and evening Coronado was in and out of the Van Diemen 18 OVERLAND. house. Had there been a mail for the ladies, he wouid have brought it to them ; had it contained a letter from California, he would have abstracted and burnt it. He helped them pack for the journey; he made an inventory of the furniture and found storeroom for it ; he vifas a valet and a spy in one. IVIeantime Garcia hurried up his train, and hired suitable muleteers for the animals and suitable assassins for the travellers. Thurstane was also busy, working all day and half of the night over his government accounts, so that he might if possible get off with Clara. Coronado thought of making interest with the post-commandant to have Thurstane kept a few days in Santa F6. But the post-commandant was a grim and taciturn old major, who looked him through and through with a pair of icy gray eyes, and returned brief answers to his musical commonplaces. Coronado did not see how he could humbug him, and concluded not to try it. The at- tempt might excite suspicion ; the major might say, " How is this your business ? " So, after a Kttle unimportant tattle, Coronado made his best bow to the old fel- low, and hurried off to oversee his so-called cousin. In the evening he brought Garcia to call on the ladies. Aunt Maria was rather surprised and shocked to see such an excellent man look so much like an infamous scoundrel. " But good people are always plain," she reasoned ; and so she was as cordial to him as one can be in English to a saint who understands nothing but Spanish. Garcia, instructed by Coronado, could not bow low enough nor smile greasily enough at Aunt IVIaria. His dull commonplaces, moreover, were translated by his nephew into flowering compliments for the lady herself, and enthusiastic professions of faith in the superior inteUigence and moral worth of all women. So the two got along famously, although neither ever knew what the other had really said. When Clara appeared, Garcia bowed humbly without lifting his eyes to her face, and received her kiss without returning it, as one might receive the kiss of a corpse. " Contemptible coward ! " thought Coronado. Then, turning to Mrs. Stanley, he whispered, " My uncle is almost broken down with this parting." " Excellent creature ! " murmured Aunt Maria, sur-feying the oH toad with warm sympathy. " What a pity he has lost one eye ! It quite injures the benev- olent expression of his face." Although Garcia was very distantly connected with Clara, she gave him the title of uncle. " How is this, my uncle ? " she said, gaily. "You 'send your merchandise trains through Bernalillo, and you send me through Santa Anna and Rio Arriba." Garcia, cowed and confounded, made no reply that was comprehensible. "It is a newly discovered route," put in Coronado, "lately found to be easier and safer than the old one. Two hundred and fifty years in learning the fact, Mrs. Stanley ! Just as we were two hundred and fifty years without dis- covering the gold of California." "Ah!" said Clara. Absent since her childhood from New Mexico, she knew little about its geography, and could be easily deceived. After a while Thurstane entered, out of breath and red with haste. He had stolen ten minutes from his accounts and stores to bring Miss Van Diemen a piece of information which was to him important and distressing. " I fear that I shall not be able to go with you," he said. " I have received orders to wait for a sergeant and three recruits who have been assigned to my company. The messenger reports that they are on the march from Fort Bent OVERLAND. 19 with an emigrant train, and will not be here for a week. It annoys me horribly, Miss Van Diemen. I thought I saw my way clear to be of your party. I as- sure you I earnestly desired it. This route— I am afraid of it— I wanted to be with you." " To protect me .? " queried Clara, her face lighting up with a grateful smile, so innocent and frank was she. Then she turned grave again, and added, " I am sorry." Thankful for these last words, but nevertheless quite miserable, the youngster worshipped her and trembled for her. This conversation had been carried on in a quiet tone, so that the others of the party had not overheard it, not even the watchful Coronado. " It is too unfortunate," said Clara, turning to them. " Lieutenant Thurstane cannot go with us." Garcia and Coronado exchanged a look which said, " Thank — the devil ! " CHAPTER IV. The next day brought news of an obstacle to the march of the wagon train through Santa Anna and Rio Arriba. It was reported that the audacious and savage Apache chieftain, Manga Col- orada, or Red Sleeve, under pretence of wanting to make a treaty with the Ameri- cans, had approached within sixty miles of Santa F6 to the west, and camped there, on the route to the San Juan country, not making treaties at all, but sim- ply making hot beefsteaks out of Mexican cattle and cold carcasses out of Mexi- can rancheros. " We shall have to get those fellows off that trail and put them across the Bernalillo route," said Coronado to Garcia. "The pigs! the dogS ! the wicked beasts! the devils!" barked the old man, dancing about the room in a rage. After a while he dropped breathless into a chair and looked eagerly at his nephew for help. " It will cost at least another thousand," observed the younger man. " You have had two thousand," shuddered Garcia. " You were to do the whole accursed job with that." " I did not count on Manga Colorada. Besides, I have given a thousand to our little cousin. I must keep a thousand to meet the chances that may come. There are men to be bribed." Garcia groaned, hesitated, decided, went to some hoard which he had put aside for great needs, counted out a hundred American eagles, toyed with them, wept over them, and brought them to Coronado. " Will that do ?" he asked. " It must do. There is no more." " I will try with that," said the nephew. " Now let me have a few good men and your best horses. I want to see them all before I trust myself with them." Coronado felt himself in a position to dictate, and it was curious to see how quick he put on magisterial airs,; he was one of those who enjoy authority, though little and brief. " Accursed beast ! " thought Garcia, who did not dare just now to break out with his " pig, dog," etc. " He wants me to pay everything. The thousand ouo-ht to be enough for men and horses and all. Why not poison the girl at once, and save all this money? If he had the spirit of a man ! O Madre de Dios ! Madre de Dios ! What extremities ! what extremities ! " 20 OVERLAND. But Garcia was like a good many of us ; his thoughts were worse than his deeds and words. While he was cogitating thus savagely, he was saying aloud, " My son, my dear Carlos, come and choose for yourself" Turning into the court of the house, they strolled through a medley of wag- ons, m«les, horses, merchandise, muleteers, teamsters, idlers, white men and Indians. Coronado soon picked out a couple of rancheros whom he knew as capital riders, fair marksmen, faithful and intelligent. Next his eye fell upon a man in Mexican clothing, almost as dark and dirty too as the ordinary Mexican, but whose height, size, insolence of carriage, and ferocity of expression marked him as of another and more pugnacious, more imperial race. " You are an American," said Coronado, in his civil manner, for he had two manners as opposite as the poles. " I be," replied the stranger, staring at Coronado as a Lombard or Prankish warrior might have stared at an effeminate and diminutive Roman. " May I ask what your name is ? " " Some folks call me Texas Smith." Coronado shifted uneasily on his feet, as a man might shift in presence of a tiger, who, as he feared, was insufficiently chained. He was face to face with a fellow who was as much the terror of the table-land, from the borders of Texas t-o California, as if he had been an Apache chief. This noted desperado, although not more than twenty-six or seven years old, had the horrible fame of a score of murders. His appearance mated well with his frightful history and reputation. His intensely black eyes, blacker even than the eyes of Coronado, had a stare of absolutely indescribable ferocity. It was more ferocious than the merely brutal glare of a tiger; it was an intentional malignity, super-beastly and sub-human. They were eyes which no other man ever looked into and afterward forgot. His sunburnt, sallow, haggard, ghastly face, stained early and for life with the corpse-like coloring of malarious fevers, was a fit setting for such optics. Although it was nearly oval in contour, and although the features were or had been fairly regular, yet it was so marked by hard, and one might almost say fleshless muscles, and so brutalized by long in- dulgence in savage passions, that it struck you as frightfully ugly. A large dull- red scar on the right jaw and another across the left cheek added the final touches to this countenance of a cougar. " He is my man," whispered Garcia to Coronado. " I have hired him for the great adventure. Sixty piastres a month. Why not take him with you to- day ? " Coronado gave another glance at the gladiator and meditated. Should he trust this beast of a Texan to guard him against those other beasts, the Apaches ? Well, he could die but once ; this whole affair was detestably risky ; he must not lose time in shuddering over the first steps. " Mr. Smith," he said, " very glad to know that you are with us. Can you start in an hour for the camp of Manga Colorada ? Sixty miles there. We must be back by to-morrow night. It would be best not to say where we are going." Texas Smith nodded, turned abruptly on the huge heels of his Mexican boots, stalked to where his horse was fastened, and began to saddle him. " My dear uncle, why didn't you hire the devil ?" whispered Coronado as ke stared after the cutthroat. " Get yourself ready, my nephew," was Garcia's reply. " I will see to the men and horses.' OVERLAND. 21 In an hour the expedition was ofF at full gallop. Coronado had laid aside his American dandy raiment, and was in the fnll costume of a Mexican of the provinces — broad-brimmed hat of white straw, blue broadcloth jacket adorned with numerous small silver buttons, velvet vest of similar splendor, blue trousers slashed from the knee downwards and gay with buttons, high, loose embroidered boots of crimson leather, long steel spurs jingling and shining. The change be- came him ; he seemed a larger and handsomer man for it ; he looked the cabal- lero and almost the hidalgo. Three hours took the party thirty miles to a hacienda of Garcia's, where they changed horses, leaving their first mounting for the return. After half an hour for dinner, they pushed on again, always at a gallop, the hoofs clattering over the hard, yellow, sunbaked earth, or dashing recklessly along smooth sheets of rock, or through fields of loose, slippery stones. Rare halts to breathe the ani- mals ; then the steady, tearing gallop again ; no walking or other leisurely gait. Coronado led the way and hastened the pace. There was no tiring him ; his thin, sinewy, sun-hardened frame could bear enormous fatigue ; moreover, the saddle was so familiar to him that he almost reposed in it. If he had needed physical support, he would have found it in his mental energy. He was capa- ble of that executive furor, that intense passion of exertion, which the man of Latin race can exhibit when he has once fairly set himself to an enterprise. He was of the breed which in nobler days had produced Gonsalvo, Cortes, Pizarro, and Darien. These riders had set out at ten o'clock in the morning ; at five in the after- noon they drew bridle in sight of the Apache encampment. They were on the brow of a stony hill : a pile of bare, gray, glaring, treeless, herbless layers of rock ; a pyramid truncated near its base, but still of majestic altitude ; one of the pyramids of nature in that region ; in short, a butte. Below them lay a val- ley of six or eight miles in length by one or two in breadth, through the centre of which a rivulet had drawn a paradise of verdure. In the middle of the valley, at the head of a bend in the rivulet, was a camp pf human brutes. It was a bivouac rather than a camp. The large tents of bison hide used by the northern Indians are unknown to the Apaches ; they have not the bison, and they have less need of shelter in winter. What Coronado saw at this distance was, a few huts of branches, a strolling of many horses, and some scattered riders. Texas Smith gave him a glance of inquiry which said, " Shall we go ahead — or fire ? " Coronado spurred his horse down the rough, disjointed, slippery declivity, and the others followed. They were soon perceived ; the Apache swarm was instantly in a buzz ; horses were saddled and mounted, or mounted without sad- dling ; there was a consultation, and then a wild dash toward the travellers. As the two parties neared each other at a gallop, Coronado rode to the front of his squad, waving his sombrero. An Indian who wore the dress of a Mexican ca- ballero, jacket, loose trousers, hat, and boots, spurred in like manner to the front, gestured to his followers to halt, brought his horse to a walk, and slowly ap- proached the white man. Coronado made a sign to show that his pistols were in his holsters ; and the Apache responded by dropping his lance and slinging his bow over his shoulder. The two met midway between the two squads of staring, silent horsemen. " Is it Manga Colorada ?" asked the Mexican, in Spanish. " Manga Colorada," replied the Apache, his long, dark, haggard, savage face lighting up for a moment with a smile of gratified vanity. " I come in peace, then," said Coronado. " I want your help ; I will pay for it.* 22 OVERLAND In our account of this interview we shall translate the broken Spanish of the Indian into ordinary English. "Manga Colorada will help," he said, "if the pay is good." Even during this short dialogue the Apaches had with difGculty restrained their curiosity ; and their little wiry horses were now caracoling, rearing, and plunging in plose proximity to the two speakers. " We will talk of this by ourselves," said Coronado. " Let us go to your camp." The conjoint movement of the leaders toward the Indian bivouac was a sig- nal for their followers to mingle and exchange greetings. The adventurers were enveloped and very nearly ridden down by over two hundred prancing, scream- ing horsemen, shouting to their visitors in their own guttural tongue or in broken Spanish, and enforcing their wild speech with vehement gestures. It was a pandemonium which horribly frightened the Mexican rancheros, and made Coro- nado's dark cheek turn to an ashy yellow. The civilized imagination can hardly conceive such a tableau of savagery as that presented by these Arabs of the great American desert. Arabs ! The similitude is a calumny on the descendants of Ishmael ; the fiercest Bedouin are refined and mild compared with the Apaches. Even the brutal and criminal classes of civilization, the pugilists, roughs, burglars, and pickpockets of our large cities, the men whose daily life is rebellion against conscience, command- ment, and justice, offer a gentler and nobler type of character and expression than these "children of nature." There was hardly a face among that gang of wild riders which did not outdo the face of Texas Smith in degraded ferocity. Almost every man and boy was obviously a liar, a thief, and a murderer. The air of beastly cruelty was made even more hateful by an air of beastly cunning. Taking color, brutality, grotesqueness, and filth together, it seemed as if here were a mob of those malignant and ill-favored devils whom Dante has described and the art of his age has painted and sculptured. It' is possible, by the way, that this appearance of moral ugliness was due in part to the physical ugliness of features, which were nearly without exception coarse, irregular, exaggerated, grotesque, and in some cases more like hideous masks than like faces. Ferocity of expression was further enhanced by poverty and squalor. The mass of this fierce cavalry was wretchedly clothed and disgustingly dirty. Even the showy Mexican costume of Manga Colorada was ripped, frayed, stained with grease and perspiration, and not free from sombre spots which looked like blood. Every one wore the breech-cloth, in some cases nicely fitted and sewed, in others nothing but a shapeless piece of deerskin tied on anyhow. There were a few, either minor chiefs, or leading braves, or professional dandies (for this class ex- ists among the Indians), who sported something like a full Apache costume, consisting of a helmet-shaped cap with a plume of feathers, a blanket or serape flying loose from the shoulders, a shirt and breech-cloth, and a pair of long boots, made large and loose in the Mexican style and showy with dyeing and embroi- dery. These boots, very necessary to men who must ride through thorns and bushes, were either drawn up so as to cover the thighs or turned over from the knee downward, like the leg-covering of Rupert's cavaliers. Many heads were bare, or merely shielded by wreaths of grasses and leaves, the greenery contrast- ing fantastically with the unkempt hair and fierce faces, but producing at a dis- tance an effect which was not without sylvan grace. The only weapons were iron-tipped lances eight or nine feet long, thick and OVERLAND. 23 strong bows of three or three and a half feet, and quivers of arrows slung across the thigh or over the shoulder. The Apaches make little use of firearms, being too lazy or too stupid to keep them in order, and finding it difficult to get ammu- nition. But so long as they have to fight only the unwarlike Mexicans, they are none the worse for this lack. The Mexicans fly at the first yell ; the Apaches ride after them and lance them in the back ; clumsy escopetos drop loaded from the hands of dying cowards. Such are the battles of New Mexico. It is only when these red-skinned Tartars meet Americans or such high-spirited Indians as the Opates that they have to recoil before gunpowder.* The fact that Coronado dared ride into this camp of thieving assassins shows what risks he could force himself to run when he thought it necessary. He was not physically a very brave man ; he had no pugnacity and no adventurous love of danger for its own sake ; but when he was resblved on an enterprise, he could go through with it. There was a rest of several hours. The rancheros fed the horses on corn which they had brought in small sacks. Texas Smith kept watch, suffered no Apache to touch him, had his pistols always cocked, and stood ready to sell life at the highest price. Coronado walked deliberately to a retired spot with Manga Colorada, Delgadito, and two other chiefs, and made known his propositions. What he desired was that the Apaches should quit their present post imme- diately, perform a forced march of a hundred and forty miles or so to the south- west, place themselves across the overland trail through Bernalillo, and do some- thing to alarm people. No great harm ; he did not want men murdered nor houses burned ; they might eat a few cattle, if they were hungry : there were plenty of cattle, and Apaches must live. And if they should yell at a train or so and stampede the loose mules, he had no objection. But no slaughtering; he wanted them to be merciful : just make a pretence of harrying in Bernalillo ; nothing more. The chiefs turned their ill-favored countenances on each other, and talked for a while in their own language. Then, looking at Coronado, they grunted, nodded, and sat in silence, waiting for his terms. " Send that boy away," said the Mexican, pointing to a youth of twelve or fourteen, better dressed than most Apache urchins, who had joined the little circle. " It is my son," replied Manga Colorada. " He is karning to be a chief." The boy stood upright, facing the group with dignity, a handsomer youth than is often seen among his people. Coronado, who had something of the ar- tist in him, was so interested in noting the lad's regular features and tragic firm- ness of expression, that for a moment he forgot his projects. Manga Colorada, mistaking the cause of his silence, encouraged him to proceed. " My son does not speak Spanish," he said. " He will not understand." " You know what money is ? " inquired'the Mexican. " Yes, we know," grunted the chief. " You can buy clothes and arms with it in the villages, and aguardiente.' Another grunt of assent and satisfaction. "Three hundred piastres," said Coronado. The chiefs consulted in their own tongue, and then replied, " The way is long. " How much ? " Manga Colorada held up five fingers. " Five hundred .? ' A unanimous grunt. " It is all I have," said Coronado. The chiefs made no reply. * * Since those times the Apaches have learned to use firearms. •24 OVERLAND. Coronado rose, walked to his horse, took two small packages out of his sad- dle-bags and slipped them slily into his boots, and then carried the bags to where the chiefs sat in council. There he held them up and rolled out five rouleaux, each containing a hundred Mexican dollars. The Indians tore open the enve- lopes, stared at the broad pieces, fingered them, jingled them together, and ut- tered grunts of amazement and joy. Probably they had never before seen so much money, at least not in their own possession. Coronado was hardly less content ; for while he had received a thousand dollars to bring about this under- standing, he had risked but seven hundred with him, and of these he had saved two hundred. Four hours later the camp had vanished, and the Indians were on their way toward the southwest, the moonlight showing their irregular column of march, and glinting faintly from the heads of their lances. At nine or ten in the evening, when every Apache had disappeared, and the clatter of ponies had gone far away into the quiet night, Coronado lay down to rest. He would have started homeward, but the country was a complete desert, the trail led here and there over vast sheets of trackless rock, and he feared that he might lose his way. Texas Smith and one of the rancheros had ridden after the Apaches to see whether they kept the direction whith had been agreed upon. One ranchero was slumbering already, and the third crouched as sentinel. Coronado could not sleep at once. He thought over his enterprise, cross- examined his chances of success, studied the invisible courses of the future. Leave Clara on the plains, to be butchered by Indians, or to die of starvation ? He hardly considered the idea ; it was horrible and repulsive ; better marry her. If necessary, force her into a marriage; he could bring it about somehow; she would be much in his power. Well, he had^got rid of Thurstane ; that was a great obstacle removed. Probably, that fellow being out of sight, he, Coronado, could soon eclipse him in the girl's estimation. There would be no" need of vio- lence ; all would go easily and end in prosperity. Garcia would be furious at the marriage, but Garcia was a fool to expect any other result. However, here he was, just at the Ijeginning of things, and by no means safe from danger. He had two hundred dollars in his boot-legs. Had his rancheros suspected it ? Would they murder him for the money ? He hoped not ; he just faintly hoped not; for he was becoming very sleepy; he was asleep. He was awakened by a noise, or perhaps it was a touch, he scarcely knew what. He struggled as fiercely and vainly as one who fights against a nightmare. A dark form was over him, a hard knee was on his breast, hard knuckles were at his throat, an arm was raised to strike, a weapon was gleaming. On the threshold of his enterprise, after he had taken its first hazardous step with safety and success, Coronado found himself at the point of death. CHAPTER V. When Coronado regained a portion of the senses which had been throttled out of him, he discovered Texas Smith standing by his side, and two dead men lying near, all rather vaguely seen at first through his dizziness and the moon- light. "What does this mean ?" he gasped, getting on his hands and knees, and then on his feet. " Who has been assassinating ? " The borderer, who, instead of helping his employer to- rise, was coolly re- OVERLAND. 25 loading his rifle, did not immediately reply. As the shaken and somewhat un- manned Coronado looked at him, he was afraid of him. The moonlight made Smith's sallow, disfigured face so much more ghastly than usual, that he had the air of a ghoul or vampyre. And when, after carefully capping his piece, he drawled forth the word " Patchies," his harsh, croaking voice had an unwhole- some, unhuman sound, as if it were indeed the utterance of a feeder upon corpses. "Apaches!" said Coronado. "What! after I had made a treaty with them ?" "This un is a 'Patchie," remarked Texas, giving the nearest body a shove with his boot. " Thar was two of 'em. They knifed one of your men. T'other cleared, he did. I was comin' in afoot. I had a notion of suthin' goin' on, 'n' left the critters out thar, with the rancheros, 'n' stole in. Got in just in time to pop the cuss that had you. T'other un vamosed." " Oh, the villains ! " shrieked Coronado, excited at the thought of his narrow escape. " This is the way they keep their treaties." "Mought be these a'n't the same," observed Texas. " Some 'Patchies is wild, 'n' live separate, like bachelor beavers." Coronado stooped and examined the dead Indian. He was a miserable ob- ject, naked, except a ragged, filthy breech-clout, his figure gaunt, and his legs absolutely scaly with dirt, starvation, and hard living of all sorts. He might well be one of those outcasts who are in disfavor with their savage brethren, lead a precarious existence outside of the tribal organization, and are to the Apaches what the Texas Smiths are to decent Americans. " One of the bachelor-beaver sort, you bet," continued Texas. " Don't run with the rest of the crowd." "And there's that infernal coward of a ranchero," cried Coronado, as the runaway sentry sneaked back to the group. "You cursed poltroon, why didn't you give the alarm ? Why didn't you fight ? " He struck the man, pulled his long hair, threw him down, kicked him, and spat on him. Texas Smith looked on with an approving grin, and suggested, " Better shute the dam cuss." But Coronado was not bloodthirsty ; having vented his spite, he let the fel- low go. " You saved my life," he said to Texas. " When we get back yon shall be paid for it." At the moment he intended to present him with the two hundred dollars which were cumbering his boots. But by the time they had reached Garcia's hacienda on the way back to Sante F6, his gratitude had fallen ofi" seventy-five per cent, and he thought fifty enough. Even that diminished his profits on tie expedition to four hundred and fifty dollars. And Coronado, although extrava- gant, was not generous ; he liked to spend money, but he hated to give it or pay it. During the four days which immediately followed his safe return to Santa F^, he and Garcia were in a worry of anxiety. Would Manga Colorada fulfil his contract and cast a shadow of peril over the Bernalillo route ? Would letters or messeno'ers arrive from California, informing Clara of the death and will of M,u- fioz ? Everything happened as they wished ; repjjrts came that the Apaches were raiding in Bernalillo ; the girl received no news concerning her grandfather, Coronado, smiling with success and hope, met Thurstane at the Van Diemen house in the presence of Clara and Aunt Maria, and blandly triumphed over him. " How now about your safe road through the southern counties ? " he said, "Apaches !" " So I hear," replied the young oflScer soberly. " It is horribly unlucky." 23 OVERLAND. t " We start to-morrow," added Coronado. " To-morrow ! " replied Thurstane, with a look of dismay. " I hope you will be with us," said Coronado. "Everything goes wrong," exclaimed the annoyed lieutenant. "Here are some of my stores damaged, and I have had to ask for a board of survey. I couldn't possibly leave for two days yet, even if my recruits should arrive." " How very unfortunate ! " groaned Coronado. " My dear fellow, we had counted on you." " Lieutenan.t Thurstane, can't you overtake us .''" inquired Clara. Thurstane wanted to kneel down and thank her, while Coronado wanted to throw something at her. " I will try," promised the officer, his fine, frank, manly face brightening with pleasure. " If the thing can be done, it will be done." Coronado, while hoping that he would be ordered by the southern route, or that he would somehow break his neck, had the superfine brass to say, " Don't fail us. Lieutenant." In spite of the managements of the Mexican to keep Clara and Thurstane apart, the latter succeeded in getting an aside with the young lady. " So you take the northern trail ? " he said, with a seriousness which gave his blue-black eyes an expression of almost painful pathos. Those eyes were trai- tors ; however discreet the rest of his face might be, they revealed his feehngs ; they were altogether too pathetic to be in the head of a man and an ofiicer. " But you will overtake us,'' Clara replied, out of a charming faith that with men all things are possible. " Yes," he said, almost fiercely. " Besides, Coronado knows," she added, still trusting in the male being. "He says this is the surest road." Thurstane did not believe it, but he did not want to alarm her when alarm- was useless, and he made no comment. " I have a great mind to resign," he presently broke out. Clara colored ; she did not fully understand him, but she guessed that all this emotion was somehow on her account ; and a surprised, warm Spanish heart beat at once its alarm. " It would be of no use," he immediately added. " I couldn't get away until my resignation had been accepted. I must bear this as well as I can." The young lady began to like him better than ever before, and yet she began to draw gently away from him, frightened by a consciousness of her liking. " I beg your pardon, Miss Van Diemen," said Thurstane, in an inexplicable confusion. " Tliere is no need," replied Clara, equally confused. " Well," he resumed, after a struggle to regain his self-control, " I will do my utmost to overtake you." " We shall be very glad," returned Clara, with a singular mixture of con- sciousness and artlessness. There was an exquisite innocence and almost childish simplicity in this girl of eighteen. It was, so to speak, not quite civilized ; it was not in the style of American young ladies ; our officer had never, at home, observed anything like it ; and, of course — O yes, of course, it fascinated him. The truth is, he was so far gone in loving her that he would have been charmed by her ways no matter what they might have been. On the very morning after the above dialogue Garcia's train started for Rio OVERLAND. 21 Arriba, taking with it a girl who had been singled out for a marriage which she did not guess, or for a death whose horrors were beyond her wildest fears. The train consisted of six long and heavy covered vehicles, not dissimilar in size, strength, and build to army wagons. Garcia had thought that two would suffice ; six wagons, with their mules, etc., were a small fortune : what if the Apaches should take them ? But Coronado had replied : " Nobody sends a train ot two wagons ; do you want to rouse suspicion ? " So there were six ; and each had a driver and a muleteer, making twelve hired men thus far. On horseback, there were six Mexicans, nominally cattle- drivers going to California, but really guards for the expedition — -the most cour- ageous bullies that could be picked up in Santa F^, each armed with pistols and a rifle. Finally, there were Coronado and his terrible henchman, Texas Smith, witli their rifles and revolvers. Old Garcia perspired with anguish as he looked over his caravan, and figured up the cost in his head. Thurstane, wretched at heart, but with a cheering smile on his lips, came to bid the ladies farewell. " What do you think of this ? " Aunt Maria called to him from her seat in o-ne of the covered wagons. "We are going a thousand miles through deserts and savages. You men suppose that women have no courage. I call this heroism." " Certainly,'' nodded the young fellow, not thinking of her at all, unless it was that she was next door to an idiot. Although his mind was so full of Clara that it did not seem as if he could re- ceive an impression from any other human being, his attention was for a mp- ment arrested by a countenance which struck him as being more ferocious than he had ever seen before except on the shoulders of an Apache. A tall man in Mexican costume, with a scar on his chin and another on his cheek, was glaring at him with two intensely black and savage eyes. It was Texas Smith, taking the measure of Thurstane's fighting power and disposition. A hint from Coro- nado had warned the borderer that here was a person whom it might be neces- sary some day to get rid of The officer responded to this ferocious gaze with a grim, imperious stare, such as one is apt to acquire amid the responsibilities and dano-ers of army life. It was hke a wolf and a mastiff surveying each other. Thurstane advanced to Clara, helped her into her saddle, and held her hand while he urged her to be careful of herself, never to wander from the train, never to be alone, etc. The girl turned a little pale ; it was not exactly because of his anxious manner ; it was because of the eloquence that there is in a word of parting. At the moment she felt so alone in the world, in such womanish need of sympathy, that had he whispered to her, " Be my wife," she might have reached out her hands to him. But Thurstane was far from guessing that an an- gel could have such weak impulses ; and he no more thought of proposing to hsr thus abruptly than of ascending ofi'-hand into heaven. Coronado observed the scene, and guessing how perilous the moment was, pushed forward his uncle to say good-by to Clara. The old scoundrel kissed her hand ; he did not dare to lift his one eye to her face ; he kissed her hand and bowed himself out of reach. " Farewell, Mr. Garcia," called Aunt Maria. " Poor, excellent old creature ! What a pity he can't understand English ! I should so like to say something nice to him. Farewell, Mr. Garcia." Garcia kissed his fat fingers to her, took oflfhis sombrero, waved it, bowed a dozen times, and smiled hke a scared devil. Then, with other good-bys, deliv- ered right and left, from everybody to everybody, the train rumbled away. 28 OVERLAND. Thurstane was about to accompany it out of the town when his clerk came to tell him that the board of survey required his immediate presence. Cursing his hard fate, and wishing himself anything but an officer in the army, he waved a last farewell to Clara, and turned his back on her, perhaps forever. Santa ¥6 is situated on the great central plateau of North America, seven thousand feet above the level of the sea. Around it spreads an arid plain, slop- ing slightly where it approaches the Rio Grande, and bordered by mountains which toward the south are of moderate height, while toward the north they riss into fine peaks, glorious with eternal snow. Although the city is in the latitude of Albemarle Sound, North Carolina, lis elevation and its neighborhood to Alpine ranges give it a climate which is in the main cool, equable, and healthy. The expedition moved across the plain in a southwesterly direction. Coro- nado's intention was to cross the Rio Grande at Pena Blanca, skirt the southern edge of the Jemez Mountains, reach San Isidoro, and then march northward toward the San Juan region. The wagons were well fitted out with mules, and as Garcia had not chosen to send much merchandise by this risky route, they were light, so that the rate of progress was unusually rapid. We cannot trouble ourselves with the minor incidents of the journey. Taking it for granted that the Rio Grande was passed, that halts were made, meals cooked and eaten, nights passed in sleep, days in pleasant and picturesque travelling, we will leap into the desert land beyond San Isidoro. The train was now seventy-five miles from Santa F^. Coronado had so pushed the pace that he had made this distance in the rather remarkable time of three days. Of course his object in thus hurrying was to get so far ahead of Thurstane that the latter would not try to overtake him, or would get lost in at- tempting it. Meanwhile he had not forgotten Garcia's little plan, and he had even better remembered his own. The time might come when he would be driven to iose Clara ; it was very shocking to think of, however, and so for the present he did not think of it ; on the contrary, he worked hard (much as he hated work) at courting her. It is strange that so many men who are morally in a state of decomposition should be, or at least can be, sweet and charming in manner. During these three days Coronado was delightful ; and not merely in this, that he watched over Clara's comfort, rode a great deal by her side, gathered wild flowers for her, talked much and agreeably; but also in that he poured oil over his whole conduct, and was good to everybody. Although his natural disposition was to be domineering to inferiors and irascible under the small provocations of life, he now gave his orders in a gentle tone, never stormed at the drivers for their blunders, made light of the bad cooking, and was in short a model for travellers, lovers, and husbands. Few human beings have so much self-control as Coro- nado, and so little. So long as it was policy to be sweet, he could generally be a very honeycomb ; but once a certain limit of patience passed, he was like a swarm of angry bees ; he became blind, mad, and poisonous with passion. " Mr. Coronado, you are a wonder," proclaimed the admiring Aunt Maria. " You are the only man I ever knew that was patient." " I catch a grace from those who have it abundantly and to spare," said Cor- onado, taking off his hat and waving it at the two ladies. " Ah, yes, we women know how to be patient," smiled Aunt Maria. " I think we are born so. But, more than that, we learn it. Moreover, our phy- sical nature teaches us. We have lessons of pain and weakness that men know OVERLAND. 29 nothing of. The great, healthy savages ! If they had our troubles, they might have some of our virtues." " I refuse to believe it," cried Coronado. " Man acquire woman's worth ? Never ! The nature of the beast is inferior. He is not fashioned to become an angel." " How, charmingly candid and humble ! " thought Aunt Maria. "How dif- ferent from that sulky, proud Thurstane, who never says anything of the sort, and never thinks it either, I'll be bound." All ftiis sort of talk passed over Clara as a desert wind passes over an oasis, bringing no pleasant songs of birds, and sowing no fruitful seed. She had her born ideas as to men and women, and she was seemingly incapable of receiving any others. In her mind men were strong and brave, and women weak and timorous ; she believed that the first were good to hold on to, and that the last were good to hold on ; all this she held by birthright, without ever reasoning upon it or caring to prove it. Coronado, on his part, hooted in his soul at Mrs. Stanley's whimsies, and half supposed her to be of unsound mind. Nor would he have said what he did about the vast superiority of the female sex, had he supposed that Clara would attach the least weight to it. He knew that the girl looked upon his extravagant declarations as merely so many compliments paid to her eccentric relative, equivalent to bowings and scrapings and flourishes of the sombrero. Botli Spaniards, they instinctively comprehended each other, at least in the surface matters of intercourse. Meanwhile the American strong-minded female under- stood herself, it is to be charitably hoped, but understood herself alone. Coronado did not hurry his courtship, for he believed that he had a clear field before him, and he was too sagacious to startle Clara by overmuch energy. Meantime he began to be conscious that an influence from her was reaching his spirit. He had hitherto considered her a child ; one day he suddenly recognized her as a woman. Now a woman, a beautiful woman especially, alone with one in the desert, is very mighty. Matches are made in trains overland as easily and quickly as on sea voyages or at quiet summer resorts. Coronado began — only moderately as yet — to fall in love. But an ugly incident came to disturb his opening dream of affection, happi- ness, wealth, and success. Toward the close of his fourth day's march, after he had got well into the unsettled region beyond San Isidoro, he discovered, several miles behind the train, a party of five horsemen. He was on one sum- mit and they on another, with a deep, stony valley intervening. Without a mo- ment's hesitation, he galloped down a long slope, rejoined the creeping wagons, hurried them forward a mile or so, and turned into a ravine for the night's halt. Whether the cavaliers were Indians or Thurstane and his four recruits he had been unable to make out. They had npt seen the train ; the nature of the ground had prevented that. It was now pagt sundown, and darkness coming on rapidly. Whispering something about Apaches, he gave orders to lie close and light no fires for a while, trusting that the pursuers would pass his hiding place. For a moment he thought of sending Texas Smith to ambush the party, and shoot Thurstane if he should be in it, pleading afterwards that the men looked, in the darkness, like Apaches. But no ; this was an extreme measure ; he re- volted against it a little. Moreover, there was danger of retribution : settlements not so far off; soldiers still nearer. So he lay quiet, chewing a bit of grass to allay his nervousness, and talking stronger love to Clara than he had yet thought needful or wise. 30 CHAPTER VI. Lieutenant Thurstane passed the mouth of the ravine in the dusk of twih'ght, without guessing that it contained Clara Van Diemen and her perils. He had with him Sergeant Weber of .his own company, just returned from recruiting service at St. Louis, and three recruits for the company, KeJIy, Shu- bert, and Sweeny. Weber, a sunburnt German, with sandy eyelashes, blue eyes, and a scar on his cheek, had been a soldier from his eighteenth to his thirtieth year, and wore the serious, patient, much-enduring air peculiar to veterans. Kelly, an Irish- man, also about thirty, slender in form and somewhat haggard in face, with the same quiet, contained, seasoned look to him, the same reminiscence of unavoida- ble sufferings silently borne, was also an old infantry man, having served in both the British and American armies. Shubert was an American lad, who had got tired of clerking it in an apothecary's shop, and had enlisted from a desire for adventure, as you might guess from his larkish countenance. Sweeny was a di- minutive Paddy, hardly regulation height for the army, as light and lively as a monkey, and with much the air of one. Thurstane had obtained orders from the post commandant to lead his party by the northern route, on condition that he would investigate and report as to its practicability for military and other transit. He had also been allowed to draw by requisition fifty days' rations, a box of ammunition, and four mules. Starting thirty-six hours after Coronado, he made in two days and a half the dis- tance which the train had accomplished in four. Now he had overtaken his quarry, and in the obscurity had passed it. But Sergeant Weber was an old hand on the Plains, and notwithstanding the darkness and the generally stony nature of the ground, he presently discovered that the fresh trail of the wagons was missing. Thurstane tried to retrace his steps, but starless night had already fallen thick around him, and before long he had to come to a halt. He was opposite the mouth of the ravine ; he was with- in five hundred yards of Clara, and raging because he could not find her. Sud- denly Coronado's cooking fires flickered through the gloom ; in five minutes the two parties were together. It was a joyous meeting to Thurstane and a disgusting one to Coronado. Nevertheless the latter rushed at the officer, grasped him by both hands, and shouted, "All hail. Lieutenant! So, there you are at last! My dear fellow, what a pleasure ! " "Yes, indeed, by Jove ! " returned the young fellow, unusually boisterous in his joy, and shaking hands with everybody, not rejecting even muleteers. And then what throbbing, what adoration, what supernal delight, in the moment when he faced Clara OVERLAND. 81 In the morning the journey recommenced. As neither Thurstane nor Coro- nado had now any cause for hurry, the pace was moderate. The soldiers marched on foot, in order to leave the government mules no other load than the rations and ammunition, and so enable them to recover from their sharp push of over eighty miles. The party now consisted of twenty-five men, for the most part pretty well armed. Of the other sex there were, besides Mrs. Stanley and Clara, a half-breed girl named Pepita, who served as lady's maid, and two Indian women from Garcia's hacienda, whose specialties were cooking and washing. In all thirty persons, a nomadic village. At the first halt Sergeant Weber approached Thurstane with a timorous air, saluted, and asked, " Leftenant, can we leafe our knabsacks in the vagons ? The gentleman has gifen us bermission." " The men ought to learn to carry their knapsacks," said Thurstane. " They will have to do it in serious service." " It is drue, Leftenant," replied Weber, saluting again and moving off with- out a sign of disappointment. " Let that man come back here," called Aunt Maria, who had overheard the dialogue. " Certainly they ■can put their loads in the wagons. I told Mr. CorO- nado to tell them so." Weber looked at her without moving a muscle, and without showing either wonder or amusement. Thurstane could not help grinning good-naturedly as he said, " I receive your orders, Mrs. Stanley. Weber, you can put the knap- sacks in the wagons." Weber saluted anew, gave Mrs. Stanley a glance of gratitude, and went about his pleasant business. An old soldier is not in general so strict a disci- plinarian as a young one. " What a brute that Lieutenant is ! " thought Aunt Maria. " Make those poor fellows carry those monstrous packs ? Nonsense and tyranny ! How dif- ferent from Mr. Coronado ! He fairly jumped at my idea." Thurstane stepped over to Coronado and said, " You are very kind to re- lieve my men at the expense of your animals. I am much obliged to you." " It is nothing," replied the Mexican, waving his hand graciously. " I am delighted to be of service, and to show myself a good citizen." In fact, he had been quite willing to favor the soldiers ; why not, so long as he could not get rid of them ? If the Apaches would lance them all, including Thurstane, he would rejoice ; but while that could not be, he might as well show himself civil and gain popularity. It was not Coronado's style to bark when there was no chance of biting. He was in serious thought the while. How should he rid himself of this rival, this obstacle in the way of his well-laid plans, this interloper into his carai- van ? Must he call upon Texas Smith to assassinate the fellow 1 It was a dis- 32 OVERLAND. agreeably brutal solution of the difficulty, and moreover it miglit lead to loud suspition and scandal, and finally it might be downright dangerous. There was such a thing as trial for murder and for conspiracy to effect murder. As to causing a United States ofiScer to vanish quietly, as might perhaps be done with an ordinary American emigrant, that was too good a thing to be hoped. He must wait ; he must have patience ; he must trust to the future ; perhaps some precipice would favor him ; perhaps the wild Indians. He offered his cigaritos to Thurstane, and they smoked tranquilly in company. " What route do you take from here ? " asked the officer. " Pass Washington, as you call it. Then the Moqui country. Then the San Juan.'' " There is no possible road down the San Juan and the Colorado." " If we find that to be so, we will sweep southward. I am, in a measure, ex- ploring. Garcia wants a route to Middle California." " I also have a sort of exploring leave. I shall take the liberty to keep along with you. It may be best for both." The announcement sounded like a threat of surveillance, and Coronado's dark cheek turned darker with angry blood. This stolid and intrusive brute was absolutely demanding his own death. After saying, with a forced smile, '■ You will be invaluable to us, Lieutenant," the Mexican lounged away to where Texas Smith was examining his firearms, and whispered, " Well, will you do it?" " I ain't afeared of him" muttered the borderer. " It's his clothes. I don't like to shute at jackets with them buttons. I mought git into big trouble. The army is a big thing." " Two hundred dollars," whispered Coronado. " You said that befo'," croaked Texas. " Go it some better.'' " Four hundred." " Stranger," said Texas, after debating his chances, "it's a big thing. But I'll do it for that." Coronado walked away, hurried up his muleteers, exchanged a word with Mrs. Stanley, and finally returned to Thurstane. His thin, dry, dusky fingers trembled a little, but he looked his man steadily in the face, while he tendered him another cigarito. " Who is your hunter ? " asked the officer. " I must say he is a devilish bad- looking fellow." " He is one of the best hunters Garcia ever had," replied the Mexican. " He is one of your own people. You ought to like him." Further journeying brought with it topographical adventures. The country into which they were penetrating is one of the most remarkable in the world for its physical peculiarities. Its scenery bears about the same relation to the scenery of earth in general, that a skeleton's head or a grotesque mask bears to tlie countenance of living humanity. In bo other portion of our planet is nature so unnatural, so fanciful and extravagant, and seemingly the production of caprice, as on the great central plateau of North America. They had left far behind the fertile valley of the Rio Grande, and had placed between it and them the barren, sullen piles of the Jemez mountains. No more long sweeps of grassy plain or slope ; they were amid the ddbris of rocks which hedge in the upper heights of the great plateau ; they were struggling through it like a forlorn hope through chevaux-de-frise. The morning sun came upon them over treeless ridges of sandstone, and disappeared at evening behind OVERLAND. S3 ridges equally naked and arid. The sides of these barren masses, seamed by the action of water in remote geologic ages, and never softened or smoothed by the gentle attrition of rain, were infinitely more wild and jagged in their details than ruins. It seemed as if the Titans had built here, and their works had been shattered by thunderbolts. Many heights were truncated mounds of rock, resembling gigantic platforms with ruinous side.s, such as are known in this Western land as mesas or buttes. They were Nature's enormous mockery of the most ambitious architecture of ni.in, the pyramids of Egypt and the platform of Baalbek. Terrace above ter- race of shattered wall ; escarpments which had been displaced as if by the ex- plosion of some incredible mine ; ramparts which were here high and regular, and there gaping in mighty fissures, or suddenly altogether lacking ; long sweeps of stairway, winding dizzily upwards, only to close in an impossible leap: there was no end to the fantastic outlines and the suggestions of destruction. Nor were the open spaces between these rocky mounds less remarkable. In one valley, the course of a river which vanished ages ago, the power of fire had left its monuments amid those of the power of water. The sedimentary rock of sand- stone, shales, and marl, not only showed veins of ignitible lignite, but it was pierced by the trap which had been shot up from earth's flaming recesses. Dikes of this volcanic stone crossed each other ,or ran in long parallels, presenting forms of fortifications, walls of buildings, ruined lines of aqueducts. The sand- stone and marl had been worn away by the departed river, and by the delicately sweeping, incessant, tireless wings of the afreets of the air, leaving the irOn-like trap in bold projection. Some of these dikes stretched long distances, with a nearly uniform height of four or five feet, closely resembling old field-walls of the solidest masonry. Others, not so extensive, but higher and pierced with holes, seemed to be frag- ments of ruined edifices, with broken windows and shattered portals. As the trap is columnar, and the columns are horizontal in their direction, the joints of the polygons show along the surface of the ramparts, causing them to look like the work of Cyclopean builders. The Indians and Mexicans of the expedition, deceived by the similarity between these freaks of creation and the results of hu- man workmanship, repeatedly called out, " Casas Grandes ! Casas de Monte- zuma ! " It would seem, indeed, as if the ancient peoples of this country, in order to arrive at the idea of a large architecture, had only to copy the grotesque rock- work of nature. Who knows but that sucli might have been the germinal idea of their constructions ? Mrs. Stanley was quite s&re of it. In fact, she was dis- posed to maintain that the trap walls were really human masonry, and the pro- duction of Montezuma, or of the Amazons invented by Coronado. " Those four-sided and six-sided stones look altogether too regular to be acci- dental," was her conclusion. Notwithstanding her belief in a superintending Deity, she had an idea that much of this world was made by hazard, or perhaps by the Old Harry. In one valley the ancient demon of water-force had excelled himself in en- chantments. The slopes of the alluvial soil were dotted with little buttes of mincled sandstone and shale, varying from five to twenty feet in height, many of them bearing a grotesque likeness to artificial objects. There were columns, there were haystacks, there were enormous bells, there were inverted jars, there were junk bottles, there were rustic seats. Most of these fantastic figures were surmounted bv a flat capital, the remnant of a layer of stone harder than the rest of the mass, and therefore less worn by the water erosion 34 OVERLAND. One fragment looked like a monstrous gymnastic club standing upright, with a broad button to secure the grip. Another was a mighty centre-table, fit for the halls of the Scandinavian gods, consisting of a solid prop or pedestal twelve feet high, svveUing out at the top into a leaf fifteen feet across. Another was a. stone hat, standing on its crown, with a brim two yards in diameter. Occasion- ally there was a figure which had lost its capital, and so looked like a broken pillar, a sugar loaf, a pear. ' Imbedded in these grotesques of sandstone were fossils of wood, of fresh-water shells, and of fishes. It was a land of extravagances and of wonders. The marvellous adventures of the " Arabian Nights " would have seemed natural in it. It reminded you after a vague fashion of the scenery suggested to the imagination by some of its details or those of the " Pilgrim's Progress." Sindbad the Sailor carrying the Old Man of the Sea; Giant Despair scowling from a make-believe window in a fictitious castle of eroded sandstone ; a roc with wings eighty feet long, poising on a giddy pinnacle to pounce upon an elephant ; pilgrim Christian advancing with sword and buckler against a demon guarding some rocky portal, would have excited no as- tonishment here. Of a sudden there came an adventure which gave opening for knight-errantry. As Thurstane, Coronado, and Texas Smith were riding a few hundred yards ahead of the caravan, and just emerging from what seemed an enormous court or public square, surrounded by ruined edifices of gigantic magnitude, they dis- covered a man running toward them in a style which reminded the Lieutenant of Timorous and Mistrust flying from the lions. Impossible to see what he was afraid of; there was a broad, yellow plain, dotted with monuments of sandstone ; no living thing visible but this man running. He was an American ; at least he had the clothes of one. As he approached, he appeared to be a lean, lank, narrow-shouldered, yellow-faced, yellow-haired creature, such as you might expect to find on Cape Cod or thereabouts. Hollow- chested as he was, he had a yell in him which was quite surprising. From the time, that he sighted the three horsemen he kept up a steady screech until he was safe under their noses. Then he fell flat and gasped for nearly a minute without speaking. His first words were, "That's pooty good sailin' for a man who ain't used to't." " Did you run all the way from Down East ? " asked Thurstane. "All the way from that bewt there— the one that looks most like a haystack." " Well, who the devil are you ?" "I'm Phineas Glover — Capm Phineas Glover — from Fair Haven, Connec- ticut. I'm goin' to Californy after gold. Got lost out of the caravan among the mountings. Was comin' along alone, 'n' run afoul of some Injuns. They're hidin' behind that bewt, 'n' they've got my mewl." " Indians ! How many are there ? " "Only three. 'N' I expect they a'nt the real wild kind, nuther. Sorter half Injun, half engineer, like what come round in the circuses. Didn't make much of 'n offer towards carvin' me. But I judged best to quit, the first boat that put off Ah, they're there yit, 'n' the mewl tew." "You'll find our train back there,'' said Thurstane. "You had better make for it. We'll recover your property." He dashed off at a full run for the butte, closely followed by Texas Smith and Coronado. The Mexican had the best horse, and he would soon have led the other two ; but his saddle-girth burst, and in spite of his skill in riding he was nearly thrown. Texas Smith pulled up to aid his employer, but only for an instantj as Coronado called, " Go on." OVERLAND. 35 The borderer now spurred after Thurstane, who had got a dozen rods the lead of him. Coronado rapidly examined his saddle-bags and then his pockets without finding the cord or strap which he needed. He swore a little at this, but not with any poignant emotion, for in the first place fighting was not a thing that he yearned for, and in the second place he hardly anticipated a combat. The robbers, he felt certain, were only vagrant rancheros, or the cowardly In- dians of some village, who would have neither the weapons nor the pluck to give battle. But suddenly an alarming suspicion crossed his mind. Would Texas Smith seize this chance to send a bullet tlirough Thurstane's head from behind ? Knowing the cutthroat's recklessness and his almost insane thirst for blood, he feared that this might happen. And there was the train in view ; the deed would probably be seen, and, if so, would be seen as murder ; and then would come pursuit of the assassin, with possibly his seizure and confession. It would not do ; no. it would not do here and now ; he must dash forward and prevent it. Swinging his saddle upon his horse's back, he vaulted into it without touch- ing pommel or stirrup, and set off at full speed to arrest the blow which he de- sired. Over the plain flew the fiery animal, Coronado balancing himself in his unsteady seat with marvellous ease and grace, his dark eyes steadily watching every movement of the bushwhacker. There were sheets of bare rock here and there ; there were loose slates and detached blocks of sandstone. The beast dashed across the first without slipping, and cleared the others without swerv- ing ; his rider bowed and swayed in the saddle without falling. Texas Smith was now within a few yards of Thurstane, and it could be seen that he had drawn his revolver. Coronado asked himself in horror whether the man had understood the words "Go on" as a command for murder. He was thinking very fast ; he was thinking as fast as he rode. Once a terrible temptation came upon him : he might let the fatal shot be fired ; then he might fire another. Thus he would get rid of Thurstane, and at the same time have the air of avenging him, while ridding himself of his dangerous bravo. But he rejected this plan almost as soon as he thought of it. He did not feel sure of bringing down Texas at the first fire, and if he did not, his own life was not worth a second's purchase. As for the fact that he had been lately saved from death by the bor- derer, that would not have checked Coronado's hand, even had he remembered it. He must dash on at full speed, and prevent a crime which would be a blunder. But already it was nearly too late, for the Texan was close upon the officer. Nothing could save the doomed man but Coronado's magnificent horse- manship. He seemed a part of his steed ; he shot- like a bird over the sheets and bowlders of rock; he was a wonder of speed and grace. Suddenly the outlaw's pistol rOse to a level, and Coronado uttered a shout of anxiety and horror. CHAPTER VII. At the shout which Coronado uttered on seeing Texas Smith's pistol aimed at Thurstane, the assassin turned his head, discovered the train, and, lowering his weapon, rode peacefully alongside of his intended victim. Captain Phin Glover's mule was found grazing behind the butte, in the midst of the gallant Captain's dishevelled baggage, while the robbers had vanished by a magic which seemed quite natural in this scenery of grotesque marvels. They 86 OVERLAND. had unquestionably seen or heard their pursuers ; but how had they got into the bowels of the earth to escape them ? Thurstane presently solved the mystery by pointing out three crouching figures on the flat cap of stone which surmounted the shales and marl of the butte. Bare feet and desperation of terror could alone explain how they had reached this impossible refuge. Texas Smith imniediately consoled himself for his disappointment as to Thurstane by shooting two of these wretches before his hand could be stayed. " They're nothin' but Injuns," he said, with a savage glare, when the Lieu- tenant struck aside his revolver and called him a murdering brute. The third skulker took advantage of the cessation of firing to tumble down from his perch and fly for his life. The indefatigable Smith broke away from Thurstane, dashed after the pitiful fugitive, leaned over him as he ran, and shot him dead. " I have a great mind to blow your brains out, you beast," roared the dis- gusted officer, who had followed closely. " I told you not to shoot that man." And here he swore heartily, for which we must endeavor to forgive him, seeing that he belonged to the army. Coronado interfered. " My dear Lieutenant I after all, they were robbers. They deserved punishment." And so on. Texas Smith looked less angry and more discomfited than might have been expected, considering his hardening life and ferocious nature. " Didn't s'p'ose you really keered much for the cuss," he said, glancing re- spectfully at the imperious and angry face of the young officer. " Well, never mind now," growled Thurstane. "It's done, and can't be un- done. But, by Jove, I do hate useless massacre. Fighting is another thing." Sheathing his fiiry, he rode off rapidly toward the wagons, followed in silence by the others. The three dead vagabonds (perhaps vagrants from the region of Abiquia) remained where they had fallen, one on the stony plain and two on the cap of the butte. The train, trending here toward the northwest, passed six hundred yards to the north of the scene of slaughter ; and when Clara and Mrs. Stanley asked what had happened, Coronado told them with perfect glibness that the robbers had got away. The rescued man, delighted at his escape and the recovery of his mule and luggage, returned thanks right and left, with a volubility which further acquaint- ance showed to be one of his characteristics. He was a profuse talker ; ran a stream every time .you looked at him ; it was like turning on a mill-race. " Yes, capm, out of Fair Haven," he said. " Been in the coastin' 'n' Wes' Injy trade. Had 'n unlucky time out las' few years. Had a schuner burnt in port, 'n' lost a brig at sea. Pooty much broke me up. Wife 'n' dahter gone into th' oyster-openin' business. Thought I'd try my han' at openin' gold mines in Californy. Jined a caravan at Fort Leavenworth, 'n' lost my reckonin's back here a ways " We must return to love matters. However amazing it may be that a man who has no conscience should nevertheless have a heart, such appears to have been the case with that abnormal creature Coronado. The desert had made him take a strong liking to Clara, and now that he had a rival at hand he be- came impassioned for her. He began to want to marry her, not alone for the sake of her great fortune, but also for her own sake. Her beauty unfolded and blossomed wonderfully before his ardent eyes ; for he was under that mighty glamour of the emotions which enables us to see beauty in its completeness ; he OVERLAND. 37 was favored with the greatest earthly second-sight which is vouchsafed to mortals. Only in a measure, however ; the money still counted for much with him. He had already decided what he would do with the Munoz fortune when he should get it. He would go to New York and lead a life of frugal extravagance, economical in comforts (as we understand them) and expensive in pleasures. New York, with its adjuncts of Saratoga and Newport, was to him what Paris is to many Americans. In his imagination it was the height of grandeur and hap- piness to have a box at the opera, to lounge in Broadway, and to dance at the hops of the Saratoga hotels. New Mexico ! he would turn his back on it ; he would never set eyes on its dull poverty again. As for Clara ? Well, of course she would share in his gayeties ; was not that enough for any reasonable woman ? But here was this stumbling-block of a Thurstane. In the presence of a handsome rival, who, moreover, had started first in the race, slow was far from being sure. Coronado had discovered, by long experience in flirtation and much intelligent meditation upon it, that, if a man wants to win a woman, he must getlier head full of him. He decided, therefore, that at the first chance he would give Clara distinctly to understand how ardently he was in love with her, and so set her to thinking especially of him, and of him alone. Meantime, he looked at her adoringly, insinuated compliments, performed little services, walked his horse much by her side, did his best in conversation, and in all ways tried to outshine the Lieutenant. He supposed that he did outshine him. - A man of thirty always believes that he appears to better advantage than a man of twenty-three or four. He trusts that he has more ideas, that he commits fewer absurdities, that he carries more weight of character than his juvenile rival. Coronado was far more fluent than Thurstane ; had a greater command over his moods and manners, and a larger fund of animal spirits ; knew more about such social trifles as women like to hear of; and was, in short, a more amusing prattler of small talk. There was a steady seriousness about the young officer — something of the earnest sentimentality of the great Teutonic race — which the mercurial Mexican did not understand nor appreciate, and which he did not imagine could be fascinating to a woman. Knowing well how magnetic passion is in its guise of Southern fervor, he did not know that it is also potent under the cloak of Northern solemnity. Unluckily for Coronado, Clara was half Teutonic, and could comprehend the tone of her father's race. Notwithstanding Thurstane's shyness and silences, she discovered his moral weight and gathered his unspoken meanings. There was more in this girl than appeared on the surface. Without any power of rea- soning concerning character, and without even a disposition to analyze it, she had an instinctive perception of it. While her talk was usually as simple as a child's, and her meditations on men and things were not a bit systematic or log- ical, her decisions and actions were generally just what they should be. Some one may wish to know whether she was clever enough to see through the character of Coronado. She was clever enough, but not corrupt enough. Very pure people cannot fully understand people who are very impure. It is probable that angels are considerably in the dark concerning the nature of the devil, and derive their disagreeable impression of him mainly from a considera- tion of his actions. Clara, limited to a narrow circle of good intentions and con- duct, might not divine the wide regions of wickedness through which roved the 38 OVERLAND. soul of Coronado, and must wait to see his works before she could fairly bring him to judgment. Of course she perceived that in various ways he was insincere. When he prattled compliments and expressions of devotion, whether to herself or to others, she made Spanish allowance. It was polite hyperbole ; it was about the same as saying good-morning ; it was a. cheerful way of talking that they had in Mexico; she knew thus much from her social experience. But while she cared little for his adulations, she tiid not because of them consider him a scoundrel, nor necessarily a hypocrite. Coronado found and improved opportunities to talk in asides with Clara. Thurstane, the modest, proud, manly youngster, who had no meannesses or trickeries by nature, and had learned none in his honorable profession, would not allow himself to break into these dialogues if they looked at all like confi- dences. The more he suspected that Coronado was courting Clara, the moie resolutely and grimly he said to himself, " Stand back ! " The girl should be perfectly free to choose between them ; she should be influenced by no compul- sions and no stratagems of his ; was he not "an officer and a gentleman" ? " By Jove 1 I am miserable for life," he thought when he suspected, as he sometimes did, that they two were in love. " I'll get myself killed in my next fight. I can't bear it. But I won't interfere. I'll do my duty as an honorable man. Of course she understands me." But just at this point Clara failed to understand him. It is asserted by some philosophers that women have less conscience about "cutting each other out," breaking up engagements, etc., than men have in such matters. Love-making and its results form such an all-important part of their existence, that they must occasionally allow success therein to overbear such vague, passionless ideas as principles, sentiments of honor, etc. It is, we fear, highly probable that if Clara had been in love with Ralph, and had seen her chance of empire threatened by a rival, she would have come out of that calm innocence which now seemed to enfold her whole nature, and would have done such things as girls may do to .avert catastrophes of the affections. She now thought to herself. If he cares for me, how can he keep away from me when he sees Coronado making eyes at me ? She was a little vexed with him for behaving so, and was consequently all the sweeter to his rival. This when Ralph would have risked his commission for a smile, and would have died to save her from a sorrow I Presently this slightly coquettish, yet very good and lovely little being — this seraph from one of Fra Angelica's pictures, endowed with a frailty or two of hu- manit}' — found herself the heroine of a trying scene. Coronado hastened it ; he judged her ready to fall into his net ; he managed the time and place for the capture. The train had been ascending for some hours, and had at last reached a broad plateau, a nearly even floor of sandstone, covered with a carpet of thm earth, the whole noble level bare to the eye at once, without a tiee or a thicket to give it detail. It was a scene of tranquillity and monotony ; no rains ever dis- turbed or remoulded the tabulated surface of soil ; there, as distinct as if made yesterday, were the tracks of a train which had passed a year before. " Shall we take a gallop ? " said Coronado. " No danger ot ambusnes here." Clara's eyes sparkled with youth's love of excitement, and the two horses sprang off at speed toward the centre of the plateau. After a glorious flight of five minutes, enjoyed for the most part in silence, as such swift delights usually are, they dropped into a walk two miles ahead of the wagons. OVERLAND. 39 " That wns magnificent," Clara of course said, her face flushed with pleasure and exercise. "You are wonderfully handsome," observed Coronado, with an air of think- ing aloud, which disguised the coarse directness of the flattery. In fact, he was so dazzled by her brilliant color, the sunlight in her disordered curls, and the joyous sparkling of her hazel eyes, that he spoke with an ingratiating honesty. Clara, who was in one of her unconscious and innocent moods, simply re- plied, " I suppose people are always handsome enough when they are happy." " Then I ought to be lovely," said Coronado. " I am happier than I ever was before." " Coronado, you look very well," observed Clara, turning her eyes on him with a grave expression which rather puzzled him. "This out-of-door life has done you good." " Then I don't look very well indoors ? " he smiled. " You know what I mean, Coronado. Your health has improved, and your face shows it." Fearing that she was not in an emotional condition to be bewildered and fas- cinated by a declaration of love, he queried whether he had not better put off' his enterprise until a more susceptible moment. Certainly, if he were without a rival ; but there was Thurstane, ready any and every day to propose ; it would not do to let Mm have the first word, and cause the first heart-beat. Coronado believed that to make sure of winning the race he must take the lead at the start. Yes, he would offer himself now; he would begin by talking her into a receptive state of mind ; that done, he would say with all his eloquence, " I love you." We must not suppose that the declaration would be a pure fib, or anything like it. The man had no conscience, and he was almost incomparably selfish, but he was capable of loving, and he did love. That is to say, he was inflamed b\' this girl's beauty and longed to possess it. It is a low species of affection, but it is capable of great violence in a man whose physical nature is ardent, and Coronado's blood could take a heat like lava. Alread}-, although he had not yet developed his full power of longing, he wanted Clara as he had never wanted any woman before. We can best describe his kind of sentiment by that hungry, car- nal word wanted. After riding in silent thought for a few rods, he said, "I have lost my good looks now, I suppose.'' " What do you mean, Coronado ? " " They depend on my happiness, and that is gone." " Coronado, you are playing riddles." "This table-land reminds me of my own life. Do you see that it has no verdure ? I have been just as barren of all true happiness. There has been no fruit or blossom of true affection for me to gather. You know that I lost my ex- cellent father and my sainted mother when I was a child. I was too young to miss them ; but for all that the bereavement was the same ; there was the less love for me. It seems as if there had been none." '' Garcia has been good to you — of late," suggested Clara, rather puzzled to fino consolation for a man whose misery was so new to her. Remembering what a scoundrel Garcia was, and what a villainous business Garcia had sent him upon, Coronado felt like smiling. He knew that the old man had no sentiments beyond egotism, and a family pride which mainly, if not en- tirely, sprang from it. Such a heart fts Garcia's, what a place to nestle in ! Such a creature as Coronado seeking comfort in such a breast as his uncle's was very much like a rattlesnake warming himself in a hole of a rock. 40 OVERLAND. "Ah, yes!" sighed Coronado. "Admirable old gentleman ! I should not have forgotten him. However, he is a solace which comes rather late. It is only two years since he perceived that he had done me injustice, and received me into favor. And his affection is somewhat cold. Garcia is an old man laden with affairs. Moreover, men in general have little sympathy with men. When we are saddened, we do not look to our own sex for cheer. We look to yours." Almost every woman responds promptly to a claim for pity. " I am sorry for you, Coronado," said Clara, in her artless way. " I am, truly." " You do not know, you cannot know, how you console me." Satisfied with the results of his experiment in boring for sympathy, he tried another, a dangerous one, it would seem, but very potent when it succeeds. " This lack of affection has had sad results. I have searched everywhere for it, only to meet with disappointment. In my desperation I have searched where I should not. I have demanded true love of people who had no true love to give. And for this error and wrong I have been terribly punished. The mere failure of hope and trust has been hard enough to bear. But that was not the half Shame, self-contempt, remorse have been an infinitely heavier burden. If any man was ever cured of trusting for happiness to a wicked world, it is Coro- nado." ' In spite of his words and his elaborately penitent expression, Clara only par- tially understood him. Some kind of evil life he was obviously confessing, but what kind she only guessed in the vaguest fashion. However, she comprehended enough to interest her warmly : here was a penitent sinner who had forsaken ways of wickedness ; here was a struggling soul which needed encouragement and tenderness. A woman loves to believe that she can bs potent over hearts, and especially that she can be potent for good. Clara fixed upon Coronado's face a gaze of compassion and benevolence which was almost superhuman. It should have shamed him into honesty; but he was capable of trying to deceive the saints and the Virgin; he merely decided that she was in a fit frame to accept him. "At last I have a faint hope of a sure and pure happiness," he said. " I have found one who I know can strengthen me and comfort me, if she will. I am seeking to be worthy of her. I am worthy of her so far as adoration can make me. I am ready to surrender my whole life — all that I am and that I can be — to her." Clara had begun to guess his meaning ; the quick blood was already flooding her cheek ; the light in her eyes was tremulous with agitation. " Clara, you must know what I mean," continued Coronado, suddenly reach- ing his hand toward her, as if to take her captive. "You are the only person I ever loved. I love you with all my soul. Can your heart ever respond to mine ? Can you ever bring yourself to be my wife ? " CHAPTER VIII. When Coronado proposed to Clara, she was for a moment stricken dumb with astonishment and with something like terror. Her first idea was that she must take him ; that the mere fact of a man ask- ing for her gave him a species of right over her ; that there was no such thing possible as answering. No. She sat looking at Coronado with a helpless, tim- . OVERLAND. 41 orous air, very much as a child looks at his father, when the father, switching his rattan, says, " Come with me." On recovering herself a little, her first words — uttered slowly, in a tone of surprise and of involuntary reproach— were, " Oh, Coronado ! I did not expect this." " Can't you answer me ? " he asked in a voice which was honestly tremulous with emotion. " Can't you say yes ? " " Oh, Coronado ! " repeated Clara, a good deal touched by his agitation. " Can't you ?" he pleaded. Repetitions, in such cases, are so natural and so potent. " Let me think, Coronado," she implored. " I can't answer you now. You have taken me so by surprise ! " " Every moment that you take to think is torture to me," he pleaded, as he continued to press her. Perhaps she was on the point of giving way before his insistence. Consider the advantages that he had over her in this struggle of wills for the mastery. He was older by ten years ; he possessed both the adroitness of self-command and the energy of passion ; he had a long experience in love matters, while she had none. He was the proclaimed heir of a man reputed wealthy, and could therefore, as she believed, support her handsomely. Since the death of her father she considered Garcia the head of her family in New iVIexico ; and Coro- nado had had the face to tell her that he made his offer with the approval of Garcia. Then she was under supposed obligations to him, and he was to be her protector across the desert. She was as it were reeling in her saddle, when a truly Spanish idea saved her. " Munoz ! " she exclaimed. " Coronado, you forget my grandfather. He should know of this." Although the man was unaccustoned to start, he drew back as if a ghost had confronted him ; and even when he recovered from his transitory emotion, he did not at first know how to answer her. It would not do to say, "Munoz is dead," and much less to add, "You are his heir." "We are Americans," he at last argued. "Spanish customs are dead and buried. Can't you speak for yourself on a matter which concerns you and me alone ? " " Coronado, I think it would not be right," she replied, holding firmly to her position. "It is probable that my grandfather would be better pleased to have this matter referred to him. I ought to consider him, and you must let me do so." " I submit," he bowed, seeing that there was no help for it, and deciding to make a grace of necessity. " It pains me, but I submit. Let me hope that you will not let this pass from your mind. Some day, when it is proper, I shall speak again." He was not wholly dissatisfied, for he trusted that henceforward her head would be full of him, and he had not much hoped to gain more in a first effort. " I shall always be proud and gratified at the compliment you have paid me," was her reply to his last request. " You deserve hiany such compliments," he said, gravely courteous and quite sincere. Then they cantered back in silence to meet the advancing train. Yes, Coronado was partly satisfied. He believed that he had gained a firmer 42 OVERLAND. footing among the girl's thoughts and emotions than had been gained by Thur- stane. In a degree he was right. No sensitive, and pure, and good girl can re- ceive her first offer without being much moved by it. The man who has placed himself at her feet will affect her strongly. She may begin to dread him, or be- gin to like him more than before; but she cannot remain utterly indifferent to him. The probability is that, unless subsequent events make him disagreeable to her, she will long accord him a measure of esteem and gratitude. For two or three days, while Clara was thinking much of Coronado, he gave her less than usual of his society. Believing that her mind was occupied with him, that she was wondering whether he were angr}', unhappy, etc., he remained a good deal apart, wrapped himself in sadness, and trusted that time would do much for him. Had there been no rival, the plan would have been a good one; but Ralph Thurstane being present, it was less successful. Ralph had already become more of a favorite than any one knew, even the )'0ung lady herself; and novv that he found chances for long talks and short gal- lops with her, he got on better than ever. He was just the kind of youngster a girl of eighteen would naturally like to have ride by her side. He was hand- some ; at any rate,. he was the handsomest man she had seen in the desert, and the desert was just then her sphere of society. You could see in his figure how strong he was, and in his face how brave he was. He was a good fellow, too ; " tendir and trew " as the Douglas of the ballad ; sincere, frank, thoroughly truth- ful and honorable. Every way he seemed to be that being that a woman most wants, a potential and devoted protector. Whenever Clara looked in his face her eyes said, without her knowledge, " I trust you." Now, as we have already stated, Thurstane's eyes were uncommonly fine and expressive. Of the very darkest blue that ever was seen in anybody's head, and shaded, moreover, by remarkably long chestnut lashes, they had the advantages . of both blue eyes and black ones, being as gentle as the one and as fervent as the other. Accordingly, a sort of optical conversation commenced between the two young people. Every time that Clara's glance said, "I trust you," Thur- stane's responded, " I will die for you." It was a perilous sort of dialogue, and liable to involve the two souls which looked out from these sparkling, transparent windows. Before long the Lieutenant's modest heart took courage, and his stammering tongue began to be loosed somewhat, so that he uttered things which frightened both him and Clara. Not that the remarks were audacious in them- selves, but he was' conscious of so much unexpressed meaning behind them, and she was so ready to giiess that there might be such a meaning ! It seems ridiculous that a fellow who could hold his head straight up before a storm of cannon shot, should be positively bashful. Yet so it was. The boy had been through West Point, to be sure ; but he had studied there, and not flirted ; the Academy had not in any way demoralized him. On the whole, in spite of swearing under gross provocation, and an inclination toward strictness in discipline, he answered pretty well for a Bayard. His bashfulness was such, at least in the presence of Clara, that he trembled to the tips of his fingers in merely making this remark: "Miss Van Diemen, this journey is the pleasantest thing in my whole life.'' Clara blushed until she dazzled him and seemed to burn herself. Neverthe- less she was favored with her usual childlike artlessness of speech, and answered, " I am glad you find it agreeable.'' Nothing more from Ralph for a minute ; he was recovering his breath and self-possession. OVERLAND. 43 "You cannot think liow much safer I feel because you and your men are with Hs," said Clara. Thurstane unconsciously gripped the handle of his sabre, with a feeling that he could and would massacre all the Indians of the desert, if it were necessary to preserve her from harm. " Yes, you may rely upon my men, too," he declared. " They have a sort of adoration for you." " Have they ? " asked Clara, with a frank smile of pleasure. " I wonder at it. I hardly notice them. I ought to, they seem so patient and trusty.'' "Ah, a lady ! " said Thurstane. "A good soldier will die any time for a lady." Then he wondered how she could have failed to guess that she must be wor-. shipped by these rough men for her beauty. "I have overheard them talking about you," he went on, gratified at being able to praise her to her face, though in the speech of others. "Little Sweeny says, in his Irish brogue, ' I can march twic't as fur for the seein' av her ! ' " "Oh! did he?" laughed Clara. "I must carry Sweeny's musket for him some time." " Don't, if you please," said Thurstane, the disciplinarian rising in him. "You would spoil him for the service." " Can't I send him a dish from our table ? " " That would just suit his case. He hasn't got broken to hard-tack yet." "Miss Van Diemen," was his next remark, "do you know what you are to do, if we are attacked ? " " I am to get into a wagon.'' " Into which wagon ? " " Into my aunt's." "Why into that one?" " So as to have all the ladies together." " When you have got into the wagon, what next ? " " Lie down on the floor to protect myself from the arrows." "Very good," laughed Thurstane. "You say your tactics well." This catechism had been put and recited every day since he had joined the train. The putting of it was one of the Lieutenant's duties and pleasures ; and, notwithstanding its prophecy of peril, Clara enjoyed it almost as much as he. Well, we have heard these two talk, and much in their usual fashion. Not great souls as yet : they may indeed become such some day ; but at present they are only mature in moral power and in capacity for mighty emotions. In- formation, mental development, and conversational ability hereafter. In one way or another two or three of these tete-^-tetes were brought about every day. Thurstane wanted them all the time ; would have been glad to make life one long dialogue with Miss Van Diemen ; found an aching void in every moment spent away from her. Clara, too, in spite of maidenly struggles with herself, began to be of this way of feeling. Wonderful place the Great American Desert for falling in love ! Coronado soon guessed, and with good reason, that the seed which he had sown in the girl's mind was being replaced by other germs, and that he had blundered in trusting that she would think of him while she was talking with Thurstane. The fear of losing her increased his passion for her, and made him hate his rival with correlative fervor. " Why don't you find a chance at that fellow?" he muttered to his bravo, Texas Smith. 44 OVERLAND. "How the h — 1 kin I do it ?" growled the bushwhacker, feeling that his in- telligence and courage were unjustly called in question. " He's allays around the train, an' his sojers allays handy. I hain't had nary chance." "Take him off on a hunt." " He ain't a gwine. I reckon he knows himself. I'm afeard to praise hunt- in' much to him ; he might get on my trail. Tell you these army chaps is resky. I never wanted to meddle with them kind o' close. You know I said so. I said so, fair an' square, I did." "You might manage it somehow, if you had the pluck." " Had the pluck ! " repeated Texas Smith. His sallow, haggard face turned dusky with rage, and his singularly black eyes flamed as if with hell-fire. A Malay, crazed with opium and ready to run amok, could not present a more sav- age spectacle than this man did as he swayed in his saddle, grinding his teeth, clutching his rifle, and glaring at Coronado. What chiefly infuriated him was that the insult should come from one whom he considered a "greaser," a man of inferior race. He, Texas Smith, an American, a white man, was treated as if he were an "Injun" or a "nigger." Coronado was thoroughly alarmed, and smoothed his ruffled feathers at once. " I beg your pardon," he said, promptly. " My dear Mr. Smith, I was en- tirely wrong. Of course I know that you have courage. Everybody knows it. Besides, I am under the greatest obligations to you. You saved my life. By heavens, I am horribly ashamed of my injustice." A minute or so of this fluent apologizing calmed the bushwhacker's rage and soothed his injured feelings. "But you oughter be keerful how you talk that way to a white man," he said. " No white man, if he's a gentleman, can stan' being told he hain't got no pluck." " Certainly," assented Coronado. " Weil, I have apologized. What more can I do ? " " Square, you're all right now," said the forgiving Texan, stretching out his bony, dirty hand and grasping Coronado's. " But don't say it agin. White men can't Stan' sech talk. Well, about this feller — I'll see, L'll see. Square, I'll try to do what's right." As Coronado rode away from this interview, he ground his teeth with rage and mortification, muttering, "A white man ! a white man ! So I am a black man. Yes, I am a greaser. Curse this whole race of English-speaking people ! " After a while he began to think to the purpose. He too must work ; he must not trust altogether to Texas Smith; the scoundrel might flinch, or might fail. Something must be done to separate Clara and Thurstane. What should it be? Here we are almost ashamed of Coronado. The trick that he hit upon was the stalest, the most threadbare, the most commonplace and vulgar that one can im- agine. It was altogether unworthy of such a clever and experienced conspira- tor. His idea was this : to get lost with Clara for one night ; in the morning to rejoin the train. Thurstane would be disgusted, and would unquestionably give up the girl entirely when Coronado should say to him, " It was a very unlucky accident, but I have done what a gentleman should, and we are engaged." This coarse, dastardly, and rather stupid stratagem he put into execution as quickly as possible. There were some dangers to be guarded against, as for in- stance Apaches, and the chance of getting lost in reality. " Have an eye upon me to-day," he suggested to Texas. " If I leave the train with any one, follow me and keep a lookout for Indians. Only stay out of sight." OVERLAND. 45 Now for an opportunity to lead Clara astray. The region was favorable ; tliey were in an arid land of ragged sandstone spurs and bultes ; it would be necessary to march until near sunset, in order to find water and pasturage. Con. sequently there was both time and scenery for his project. Late in the afternoon the train crossed a narrrow 7nesa or plateau, and approached a sublime terrace of rock which was the face of a second table-land. This terrace was cleft by several of those wonderful grooves which are known as cations, and which were wrought by that mighty water-force, the sculpturer of the American desert. In one place two of these openings were neighbors : the larger was the route and tlie smaller led nowhere. "Let the train pass on," suggested Coronado to Clara. "If you will ride with me up this little canon, you will find some of the most exquisite scenery imaginable. It rejoins the large one further on. There is no danger." Clara would have preferred not to go, or would have preferred to go with Thurstane. " My dear child, what do you mean ? " urged Aunt Maria, looking out of her wagon. "Mr. Coronado, I'll ride there with you myself." The result of the dialogue which ensued was that, after the train had entered the gorge of the larger canon, Coronado and Clara turned back and wandered up the smaller one, followed at a distance by Texas Smith. In twenty minutes they were separated from the wagons by a barrier of sandstone several hundred feet high, and culminating in a sharp ridge or frill of rocky points, not unlike tlie spiny back of a John Dory. The scenery, although nothing new to Clara, was such as would be considered in any other land amazing. Vast walls on either side, consisting mainly of yellow sandstone, were variegated with white, bluish, and green shales, with layers of gypsum of the party-colored marl series, with long lines of white limestone so soft as to be nearly earth, and with red and green foliated limestone mixed with blood-red shales. The two wanderers seemed to be amid the landscapes of a Christmas drama as they rode between these painted precipices toward a crimson sunset. It was a perfect solitude. There was not a breath of life besides their own in this gorgeous valley of desolation. The ragged, crumbling battlements, and the loftier points of harder rock, would not have furnished subsistence for a goat or a mouse. Color was everywhere and life nowhere: it was such a region as one might look for in the moon ; it did not seem to belong to an inhabited planet. Before they had ridden half an hour the sun went down suddenly behind ser- rated steeps, and almost immediately night hastened in with his obscurities. Texas Smith, riding hundreds of yards in the rear and concealing himself be- hind the turning points of the canon, was obliged to diminish his distance in order to keep them under his guard. Clara had repeatedly'expressed her doubts as to the road, and Coronado had as often asserted that they would soon see the train. At last the ravine became a gully, winding up a breast of shadowy moun- tain cumbered with loose rocks, and impassable to horses. " We are lost," confessed Coronado, and then proceeded to console her. The train could not be far off; their friends would undoubtedly seek them ; at all events, would not go on without them. They must bivouac there as well as might be, and in the morning rejoin the cararvan. He had been forethoughted enough to bring two blankets on his saddle, and he now .spread them out for her, insisting that she should try to sleep. Clara cried frankly and heartily, and begged him to lead her back through the caflon. No ; it could not be traversed by night, he asserted ; they would certainly break 46 OVERLAND. their necks among the bowlders. At last the girl suffered herself to be wrapped in the blankets, and made an endeavor to forget her wretchedness and vexation in slumber. Meantime, a few hundred yards down the ravine, a tragedy was on the verge of action. Thurstane, missing Coronado and Clara, and learning what direction they had taken, started with two of his soldiers to find them, and was now pick- ing his way on foot along the canon. Behind a detached rock at the base of one of the sandstone walls Texas Smith lay in ambush, aiming his rifle first at one and then at another of this stumbling trio, and cursing the starlight because it was so dim that he could not positively distinguish which was the officer. CHAPTER IX. For the second time within a week, Texas Smith found himself upon the brink of opportunity, without being able (as he had phrased it to Coronado) to do what was right. He levelled at Thurstane, and then it did not seem to be Thurstane ; he had a dead sure sight at Kelly, and then perceived that that was an error; he drev/ a bead on Shubert, and still lie hesitated. He could distinguish the Lieutenant's voice, but he could not fix upon the figure which uttered it. It ^vas exasperating. Never had an assassin been better ambuscaded. He was kneeling behind a little ridge of sandstone ; about a foot below its edge was an orifice made by the rains and winds of bygone centuries ; through this, as through an embrasure, he had thrust his rifle. Not a chance of being hit by a return shot, while after the enemy's fire bad been drawn he could fly down the ravine, probably without discovery and certainly without recognition. His horse was tethered below, behind another rock ; and he felt positive that these men had not come upon it. He could mount, drive their beasts before him into the plain, and then return to camp. No need of explaining his absence; he was the head hunter of the expedition ; it was his business to wander. All this was so easy to do, if lie could only take the first step. But he dared not fire lest he should merely kill a soldier, and so make an uproar and rouse suspicions without the slightest profit. It was not probable that Coronado would pay him for shooting the wrong man, and setting on foot a dangerous in- vestigation. So the desperado continued to peer through the dim night, cursing his stars and everybody's stars for not shining better, and seeing his opportunity slip rapidly away. After Thurstane and the others had passed, after the chance of murder had stalked by him like a ghost and vanished, he left his ambush, glided down the ravine to his horse, waked him' up with a vindictive kick, leaped into the saddle, and hastened to camp. To inquiries about the lost couple he re- plied in his sullen, brief way that he had not seen them ; and when urged to go to their rescue, he of course set off in the wrong direction and travelled but a short distance. Meantime Ralph had found the captives of the cafion. Clara, wrapped in her blankets, was lying at the foot of a rock, and crying while she pretended to sleep. Coronado, unable to make her talk, irritated by the faint sobs which he overheard, but stubbornly resolved on carrying out his stupid plot, had retired in a state of ill-humor unusual with him to another rock, and was consolin<» himself by .s'moking cigarito after cigarito. The two horses, tied together neck 20 OVERLAND. 47, and crupper, were fasting near by. As Coronado bad forgotten to bring food witli him, Clara was also fasting. Think of Apaches, and imagine the terror with which she caught the sounds of approach, the heavy, stumbling steps through the darkness. Then imigine the joy with which she recognized Thurstane's call and groped to meet him. In the dizziness of her delight, and amid the hiding veils of the obscurity, it did not seem wrong nor unnatural to fall against his arm and be supported by it for a moment. Ralph received this touch, this shock, as if it had been a ball; and' his nature bore the impress of it as long as if it had made a scar. In his whole previous life he had not felt such a thrill of emotion ; it was almost too powerful to be adequately described as d pleasure. Next came Coronado, as happy as a disappointed burglar whose cue it is to congratulate the rescuing policeman. " My dear Lieutenant I You are heaven's own messenger. You have saved us from a horrible night.' But it is prodigious ; it is incredible. You niust have come here by enchantment. How in God's name could you find your way up this fearful caflon ? " "The canon is perfectly passable on foot," replied the young officer, stiffly and angrily. " By Jove, sir ! 1 don t see v/hy you didn't make a start to get out. This is a pretty place to lodge Miss Van Diemen." Coronado took off his hat and made a bow of submission and regret, which was lost in the darkness. " I must say," Thurstane went on grumbling, "that, for a man who claims to know this country, your management has been very singular." ' Clara, fearful of a quarrel, slightly pressed his arm and checked this volcano with the weight of a feather. " We are not all like you, my dear Lieutenant," said Coronado, in a tone which might have been either apologetical or ironical. "You must make allowance for ordinary human nature." "I beg pardon," returned Thurstane, who was thinking now chiefly of that pressure on his arm. , " The truth is, I was alarmed for your safety. I can't help feeling responsibility on this expedition, although it is your train. My military education runs me into it, I suppose. Well, excuse my excitement. Miss Van Diemen, may I help you back through the gully ? " In leaning on him, being guided by him, being saved by hira, trusting in him, the girl found a pleasure which was irresistible, although it seemed audacious and almost sinful. Before the cafion was half traversed she felt as if she could go on witli him through the great dark valley of life, confiding in his strength and wisdom to lead her aright and make her happy. It was a temporary wave of emotion, but she remembered it long after it had passed. Around the fires, after a cup of hot coffee, amid the odors of a plentiful supper, recounting the evening's adventure to Mrs. Stanley, Coronado was at his best. How he rolled out the English language ! Our mother tongue hardly knew itself, it ran so fluently and sounded so magniloquently and lied so natu- rally. He praised everybody but himself; he praised Clara, Thurstane, and the two soldiers and the horses ; he even said a flattering word or two for Divine Providence. Clara especially, and the whole of her heroic, more than human sex, demanded his enthusiastic admiration. How she had borne the terrors of the night and the desert! "Ah, Mrs. Stanley ! only you women are capable of such efforts." Aunt Maria's Olympian head nodded, and her cheerful face, glowing with tea and the camp fires, confessed " Certainly ! " 43 OVERLAND. " What nonsense, Coronado ! " said Clara. " I was horribly frightened, and you know it." Aunt Maria frowned with surprise and denial. " Absurd, child ! You were not frightened at all. Of course you were not. Why, even if you had been slijrhtly timorou.s, you had your cousin to protect, you." "Ah, Mrs. Stanley, I am a poor knight-errant," said Coronado. "We Mexi- cans are no longer formidable. One man of your Anglo-Saxon blood is sup- posed to be a better defence than a dozen of us. We have been subdued ; we must submit to depreciation. I must confess, in fact, that I had my fears. I was greatly relieved on my cousin's account when I heard the voice of our military chieftain here." Then came more flattery for Ralph, with proper rations for the two privates. Those faithful soldiers — he must show his gratitude to them ; he had forgotten them in the basest manner. "Here, Pedronillo, take these cigaritos to privates Kelly and Shubert, with my compliments. Begging your permission, Lieuten- ant. Tha7ik you." " Pooty tonguey man, that Seenor," observed Captain Phineas Glover to Mrs. Stanley, when the Mexican went off to his blankets. " Yes ; a very agreeable and eloquent gentleman,'' replied the lady, wishing to correct the skipper's statement while seeming to assent to it. "Jess so," admitted Glover. " Ruther airy. Big talkin' man. Don't raise no sech our way." Captain Glover was not fully aware that he himself had the fame of possess- ing an imagination which was almost too much for tlie facts of this world. "S'pose it's in the breed," he continued. "Or likely the climate has suthin' to do with it : kinder thaws out the words 'n' sets the idees a-bilin'. Niggers is pooty much the same. Most niggers kin talk like a line runnin' out, 'n' tell lies 's fast 's our Fair Haven gals open oysters— a quart a minute." " Captain Glover, what do you mean?' frowned Aunt Maria. "Mr. Coro- nado is a friend of mine." " Oh, I was speakin' of niggers," returned the skipper promptly. " Forgot we begun about the Seenor. Sho ! niggers was what I was talkin' of. B' th' way, that puts me in mind 'f one I had for cook once. Jiminy ! how that man would cook ! He'd cook a slice of halibut so you wouldn't know it from beef- steak." " Dear me ! how did he do it ?' asked Aunt Maria, who had a fancy for kitchen mysteries. " Never could find out," said Glover, stepping adroitly out of his difficulty. " Don't s'pose that nigger would a let on how he did it for ten dollars." " I should think the receipt would be worth ten dollars," observed Aunt Maria thoughtfully. " Not 'xactly here," returned the captain, with one of his dried smiles, which had the air of having been used a great many times before. " Halibut too skurce. Wal, I was goin' to tell ye 'bout this nigger. He come to be the cook he was because he was a big eater. We was wrecked once, 'n' had to live three days on old shoes 'n' that sort 'f truck. Wal, this nigger was so darned raven-' ous he ate up a pair o' long boots in the time it took me to git down one 'f tha straps." " Ate up a pair of boots ! " exclaimed Aunt Maria, amazed and almost incred- ulous. "Yes, by thunder!" insisted the captain, "grease, nails, 'n' all. An' then went at the patent leather forepiece 'f his cap." OVERLAND. 49 "What privations !" said Aunt Maria, staring fit to burst her spectacles. "Oh, that's nothin'," chuckled Glover. "I'll tell ye suthin' some time that '11 astonish ye. But jess now I'm sleepy, 'n' I guess I'll turn in." "Mr. Cluvver, it is your durn on card do-night," interposed Meyer, the Ger- man sergeant, as the captain was about to roll himself in his blankets. " So 'tis, returned Glover in well feigned astonishment. " Don't forgit a fel- ler, do ye, Sergeant ? How 'n the world do ye keep the 'count so straight ? Oh, got a little book there, hey, with all our names down. Wal, that's shipshape. You'd make a pooty good mate. Sergeant. When does ray watch begin ? " " Right away. You're always on the virst relief. You'll fall in down there at the gorner of the vagon bark." "Wal — yes — s'pose I will," sighed the skipper, as he rolled up his blankets and prepared for two hours' sentry duty. Let us look into the arrangements for the protection of the caravan. With Coronado's consent Thurstane had divided the eighteen Indians and Mexicans, four soldiers, Texas Smith, and Glover, twenty-four men in all, into three equal squads, each composed of a sergeant, corporal, and six privates. Meyer was sergeant of one squad, the Irish veteran Kelly had another, and Texas Smith the third. Every night a detachment went on duty in three reliefs, each relief consisting of two men, who stood sentry for two hours, at the end of which time they were relieved by two others. The six wagons were always parked in an oblong square, one at each end and two on each side ; but in order to make the central space large enough for camping purposes, they were placed several feet apart ;the gaps being closed with lariats, tied from wheel to wheel, to pen in the animals and keep out charges of Apache cavalry. On either flank of this enclosure, and twenty yards or so distant from it, paced a sentry. Every two hours, as we have said, they were re- lieved, and in the alternate hours the posts were visited by the sergeant or cor- poral of the guard, who took turns in attending to this service. The squad that came off duty in the morning was allowed during the day to take naps in the wagons, and was not put upon the harder camp labor, such as gathering fire- . wood, going for water, etc. The two ladies and the Indian women slept at night in the wagons, not only because the canvas tops protected them from wind and dew, but also because the wooden sides would shield them from arrows. The men who were not on guard lay under the vehicles so as to form a cordon around the mules. Thur- stane and Coronado, the two chiefs of this armed migration, had their alternate nights of command, each when off duty sleeping in a special wagon known as "headquarters," but holding himself ready to rise at once in case of an alarm. The cooking fires were built away from the park, and outside the beats of the sentries. The object was twofold : first, to keep sparks from lighting on the wagon covers ; second, to hide the sentries from prowling archers. At night vou can see everything between yourself and a fire, but nothing beyond it. As long as the wood continued to blaze, the most adroit Indian skulker could not a^jproach the camp without exposing himself, while the guards and the garrisoa were veiled from his sight by a wall of darkness behind a dazzle of light. Such were the bivouac arrangements, intelligent, systematic, and military. Not only had our Lieutenant devised them, but he saw to it that they were kept in working order. He was zealously and faithfully seconded by his men, and es- pecially by his two veterans. There is no human machine more accurate and trustworthy tha,n an old soldier, who has had year on year of the discipline and 60 OVERLAND. drill of a regular service, and who has learned to carry out instructions to the letter. The arrangements for the march were equally thorough and judicious. Tex- as Smith, as the Nimrod of the party, claimed the right of going where he pleased ; but while he hunted, he of course served also as a scout to nose out danger. The six Mexicans, who were nominally cattle-drivers, but really Coro- nado's minor bravos, were never suffered to ride off in a body, and were ex- pected to keep on both sides of the train, some in advance and some in rear. The drivers and muleteers remained steadily with their wagons and animals" The four soldiers were also at hand, trudging close in front or in rear, accoutre- raents always on and muskets always loaded. In this fashion the expedition had already journeyed over two hundred and twenty miles. Following Colonel Washington's trail, it had crossed the ranges of mountainls immediately west of Abiquia, and, striking the Rio de Chaco, had tracked its course for some distance with the hope of reaching the San Juan. Stopped by a canon, a precipitous gully hundreds of feet deep, through which the Chaco ran like a chased devil, the wagons had turned westward, and then had been forced by impassable ridges and lack of water into a southwest direc- tion, at last gaining and crossing Pass Washington. It was now on the western side of the Sierra de Chusca, in the rude, barren country over which Fort Defiance stands sentry. Ever since the second day af- ter leaving San Isidoro it had been on the great western slope of the continent, where every drop of water tends toward the Pacific. The pilgrims would have had cause to rejoice could they have travelled as easily as the drops of water, and been as certain of their goal. But the rivers had made roads for themselves, and man had not yet had time to do Hkewise. The great central plateau of North America is a Mer de Glace in stone. It is a continent of rock, gullied by furious rivers ; plateau on plateau of sandstone, with sluiceways through which lakes have escaped ; the whole surface giganti- cally grotasque with the carvings of innumerable waters. What is remarkable in the scenery is, that its sublimity is an inversion of the sublimity of almost all other grand scenery. It is not so much the heights that are prodigious as the abysses. At certain points in the course of the Colorado of the West you can drop a plumb line six thousand feet before it will reach the bosom of the cur- rent ; and you can only gain the water level by turning backward for scores of miles and winding laboriously down some subsidiary canon, itself a chasm of awful grandeur. Our travellers were now amid wild labyrinths of ranges, and buttes, and ca- nons, which were not so much a portion of the great plateau as they were the lUbris that constituted its flanks. Although thousands of feet above the level of the sea, they still had thousands of feet to ascend before they could dominate the desert. Wild as the land was, it was thus far passable, while toward the .north lay the untraversable. What course should be taken ? Coronado, who had crimes to commit and to conceal, did not yet feel that he was far enough from the haunts of man. As soon as possible he must again venture a push northward. But not immediately. The mules were fagged with hard work, weak with want of sufficient pasture, and had suffered much from thirst. He resolved to continue westward to the pueblas of the Moquis, that interesting lace of agri- Cultural and partially civilized Indians, perhaps the representatives of the archi- tects of the Casas Grandes if not also descended from the mound-builders of the OVERLAND. 51 Mississippi valley. Having rested and refitted there, he might start anew for the San Juan. Thus far they had seen no Indians except the vagrants who had robbed Phin- eas Glover. But they might now expect to meet them; they were in a region which was the raiding ground of four great tribes : the Utes on the north, the Navajos on the west, the Apaches on the south, and the Comanches on the east. The peaceful and industrious Moquis, with their gay and warm blankets, their fields of corn and beans, and their flocks of sheep, are the quarry which attracts this ferocious cavalry of the desert, these Tartars and Bedouin of America. Thurstane took more pains than ever with the guard duty. Coronado, un- military though he was, and heartily as he abominated the Lieutenant, saw the wisdom of submitting to the latter's discipline, and made all his people submit. A practical-minded man, he preferred to owe the safety of his carcass to his rival rather than have it impaled on Apache lances. Occasionally, however, he made a suggestion. " It is very well, this night-watching," he once observed, "but what we have most to fear is the open daylight. These mounted Indians seldom attack in the darkness." Thurstane knew all this, but he did not say so ; for he was a wise, consider- ate commander already, and he had learned not to chill an informant. He looked at Coronado inquiringly, as if to say, What do you propose ? "Every cafion ought to be explored before we enter it," continued the Mexi- can. " It is a good hint,'.' said Ralph. " Suppose I keep two of your cattle- drivers constantly in advance. You had better instruct them yourself. Tell them to fire the moment they discover an ambush. I don't suppose they will hit any- body, but we want the warning." With two horsemen three or four hundred yards to the front, two more an equal distance in the rear, and, when the ground permitted, one on either flank, the train continued its journey. Every wagon-driver and muleteer had a weapon of some sort always at hand. The four soldiers marched a few rods in advance, for the ground behind had already been explored, while that ahead might con- tain enemies. The precautions were extraordinary ; but Thurstane constantly trembled for Clara. He would have thought a regiment hardly sufficient to guard such a treasure. " How timorous these men are," sniffed Aunt Maria, who, having seen no hostile Indians, did not believe there were any. "And it seems to me that sol- diers are more easily scared than anybody else," she added, casting a depreciat- ing glance at Thurstane, who was reconnoitring the landscape through his field glass. Clara believed in men, and especially in soldiers, and more particularly in lieutenants. Accordingly she replied, " I suppose they know the dangers and we don't." "Pshaw!" said Aunt Maria, an argument which carried great weight with her. " They don't know half what they claim to. It is a clever man who knows one-tenth of his own business." (She was right there.) "They don't know so much, I verily and solemnly believe, as the women whom they pretend to de- spise." This peaceful and cheering conversation was interrupted by a shot ringing out of a canon which opened into a range of rock some three hundred 5'ards ahead of the caravan. Immediately on the shot came a yell as of a hundred de- 52 OVERLAND. mons, a furious trampling of the feet of many horses, and a cloud of the Tartars of the American desert. In advance of the rush flew the two Mexican vedettes, screaming "Apaches ! Apaches ! ' CHAPTER X. When the Apache tornado burst out of the cafion upon the train, Thurstane's first thought was, " Clara ! " " Get off! " he shouted to her, seizing and holding her startled horse. " Into the wagon, quick ! Now lie down, both of you." He thundered all this out as sternly as if he were commanding troops. Be- cause he was a man, Clara obeyed him ; and notwithstanding he was a man, Mrs. Stanley obeyed him. Both were so bewildered with surprise and terror as to be in a kind of animal condition of spirit, knowing just enough to submit at once to the impulse of an imperious voice. The riderless horse, equally frightened and equally subordinate, was hurried to the rear of the leading wagon and handed over to a muleteer. By the time this work was done the foremost riders of the assailants were within two hundred yards of the head of the train, letting drive their arrows at the flying Mexican vedettes and uttering yells fit to raise the dead, while their com- rades behind, whooping also, stormed along under a trembling and flickering of lances. The little, lean, wiry horses were going at full speed, regardless of •mooth faces of rock and beds of loose stones. The blackguards were over a hundred in number, all lancers and archers of the first quality. The vedettes never pulled up until they were in rear of the hindermost wagon, while their countrymen on the flanks and rear made for the same poor shelter. The drivers were crouching almost under their seats, and the mule- teers were hiding behind their animals. Thus it was evident that the entire brunt of the opening struggle would fall upon Thurstane and his people ; that, if there was to be any resistance at all, these five men must commence it, and, for a while at least, "go it alone." The little squad of regulars, at this moment a few yards in front of the fore- most wagon, was drawn up in line and standing steady, precisely as if it were a company or a regiment. Sergeant Meyer was on the right, veteran Kelly on the left, the two recruits in the centre, the pieces at a shoulder, the bayonets fixed. As Thurstane rode up to this diminutive line of battle, Meyer was shouting forth his sharp and decisive orders. They were just the right orders ; excited as the young officer was, he comprehended that there was nothing to change ; moreover, he had already learned how men are disconcerted in battle by a multiplicity of directions. So he sat quietly on his horse, revolver in hand, his blue-black eyes staring angrily at the coming storm. " Kelly, reserfe your fire ! " yelled Meyer. " Recruits, ready — bresent— aim — aim low — -fire ! " Simultaneously with the report a horse in the leading group of charging sav- ages pitched headlong on his nose and rolled over, sending his rider straight forward into a rubble of loose shales, both lying as they fell, without movenaent. Half a dozen other animals either dropped on their haunches or sheered vio- lently to the right and left, going off in wild plunges and caracolings. By this one casualty the head of the attacking column was opened and its seemingly re- OVERLAND. 53 sistless impetus checked and dissipated, almost before Meyer could shout, " Re- cruits, load at will, load ! " A moment previous this tiery cavalry had looked irresistible. It seemed to have in it momentum, audacity, and dash enough to break a square of infantry or carry a battery of artillery. The horses fairly flew ; the riders had the air of centaurs, so firm and graceful was their seat ; the long lances were brandished as easily as if by the hands of footmen ; the bows were managed and the arrows sent with dazzling dexterity. It was a show of brilliant equestrianism, surpass- ing the feats of circus riders. But a single effective shot into the centre of the column had cleft it as a rock divides a torrent. It was like the breaking of a water-spout. The attack, however, had only commenced. The Indians who had swept off to right and left went scouring along the now motionless train, at a distance of sixty or eighty yards, rapidly enveloping it with their wild caperings, keeping in constant motion so as to evade gunshots, threatening with their lances or dis- charging arrows, and yelling incessantly. Their main object so far was un- doubtedly to frighten the mules into a stampede and thus separate the wagons. They were not assaulting ; they were watching for chances. " Keep your men together, Sergeant," said Thurstane. " I must get those Mexicans to work." He trotted deliberately to the other end of the train, ordering each driver as he passed to move up abreast of the leading wagon, directing the first to the right, the second to the left, and so on. The result of this movement would of course be to bring the train into a compact mass and render it more defensible. The Indians no sooner perceived the advance than they divined its object and made an effort to prevent it. Thurstane had scarcely reached the centre of the line of vehicles when a score or so of yelling horsemen made a caracoling, prancing charge upon him, accompanying it with a flight of arrows. Our young hero presented his revolver, but they apparently knew the short range of the weapon, and came plunging, curveting onward. Matters were growing serious, for an arrow already stuck in his saddle, and another had passed through his hat. Suddenly there was a bang, bang of firearms, and two of the savages went down. Meyer had observed the danger of his oflicer, and had ordered Kelly to fire, blazing away too himself. There was a headlong, hasty scramble to carry off the fallen warriors, and then the assailants swept back to a point beyond accu- rate musket shot. Thurstane reached the rear of the train unhurt, and found the six Mexican cattle-drivers there in a group, pointing their rifles at such In- dians as made a show of charging, but otherwise doing nothing which resembled fighting. They were obviously panic-stricken, one or t^o of them being of an ashy-yellow, their nearest possible approach to pallor. There, too, was Coro- nado, looking not exactly scared, but irresolute and helpless. " What does this mean ?" Thurstane stormed in Spanish. "Why don't you shoot the devils?" " We are reserving our fire," stammered Coronado, half alarmed, half ashamed. Thurstane swore briefly, energetically, and to the point. " Damned pretty fighting ! " he went on. " If we had reserved our fire, we should all have been lanced by this time. Let drive ! " The cattle-drivers carried short rifles, of the then United States regulation pattern, which old Garcia had somehow contrived to pick up during the war perhaps buying them of drunken soldiers. Supported by Thurstane's pugna- 54 OVERLAND. cious presence and hurried up by his vehement orders, they began to fire. They were shaky; didn't aim very viell; hardly aimed at all, in fact; blazed away at extraordinary elevations ; behaved as men do who have become demoral- ized. However, as the pieces had a range of several hundred yards, the small bullets hissed venomously over the heads of the Indians, and one of them, by pure accident, brought down a horse. There was an immediate scattering, a multi- tudinous glinting of hoofs through the light dust of the plain, and then a rally in prancing groups, at a safe distance. " Hurrah ! " shouted Thurstane, cheering the Mexicans. " That's very well. You see how easy it is. Now don't let them sneak up again ; and at the same time don't waste powder." Then turning to one who was near him, and who had just reloaded, he said in a calm, strong, encouraging tone — that voice of the thoroughly good officer which comes to the help of the shaken soldier like a reinforcement — " Now, my lad, steadily. Pick out your man ; take your time and aim sure. Do you see him.?" " Si, seiior," replied the herdsman. His coolness restored by this steady utterance and these plain, common-sense directions, he selected a warrior in helmet-shaped cap, blue shirt, and long boots, brought his rifle slowly to a level, took sight, and fired. The Indian bent forward, caught the mane of his plunging pony, hung there for a second or two, and then rolled to the ground, amid a yell of surprise and dismay from his comrades. There was a hasty rush to secure the body, and then another sweep backward of the loose array. " Good ! " called Thurstane, nodding and smiling at the successful marksman. " That is the way to do it. You are a match for half a dozen of them as long as you will keep cool." The besieged travellers could now look about quietly and see how matters stood with them. The six wagons were by this time drawn up in two ranks of three each, so as to form a compact mass. As the one which contained the ladies had been the leader and the others had formed on it to right and left, it was in the centre of the first rank, and consequently pretty well protected by its neighbors. The drivers and muleteers had recovered their self-possession, and were all sitting or standing at their posts, with their miscellaneous arms ready for action. Not a human being had been hit as yet, and only three of the mules wounded, none of them seriously. The Apaches were all around the train, but none of them nearer than two hundred yards, and doing nothing but canter about and shout to each other. "Where is Te.xas Smith ?" demanded Thurstane, missing that mighty hunt- er, and wondering if he were a coward and had taken refuge in a wagon. " He went off shutin' an hour ago," explained Phineas Glover. " Reckon he's astern somewhere." G'lover, by the way, had been useful. In the beginning of the affray he had brought his mule alongside of the headmost wagon, and there he had done really valuable service by blazing away alarmingly, though quite innocuously, at the gal- lopading enemy. " It's a bad lookout for Texas," observed the Lieutenant. " I shouldn't want to bet high on his getting back to us." Coronado looked gloomy, fearing lest his trusted assassin was lost, and not knowing wliere he could pick up such another. " And how are the ladies ? " asked Thurstane, turning to Glover. " Safe 's a bug in a rug," was the reply. " Seen to that little job myself. Not a bugger in the hull crew been nig;h 'em." OVERLAND. 55 Thurstane cantered around to the front of the wagon which contained the two women, and called, " How are you ?" At the sound of his voice there was a rustle inside, and Clara showed her face over the shoulder of the driver. " So you were not hurt .' " laughed the young officer. " Ah ! that's bully." With a smile which was almost a boast, she answered, " And I was not very frightened." At this, Aunt Maria struggled from between two rolls of bedding into a sit- ting posture and ejaculated, " Of course not ! " " Did they'hit you ? " asked Clara, looking eagerly at Thurstane. " How brave you are ! " he replied, admiring her so much that he did not notice her question. " But I do hope it is over," added the girl, poking her head out of the wagon. " Ah ! what is that ? " With this little cry of dismay she pointed at a group of savages who had gathered between the train and the mouth of the caiion ahead of it. " They are the enemy," said Thurstane. " We may have another little tussle with them. Now lie down and keep close." " Acquit yourselves like — men ! " exhorted Aunt Maria, dropping back into her stronghold among the bedding. Sergeant Meyer now approached Thurstane, touched his cap, and said, " Lef- tenant, here is brifate Sweeny who has not fired his beece once. 1 cannot make him fire." "How is that. Sweeny?" demanded the officer, putting on the proper grim- ness. " Why haven't you fired when you were ordered ? " Sweeny was a little wizened shaving of an Irishman. He was not only quite short, but very slender and very lean. He had a curious teetering gait, and he took ridiculously short steps in marching, as if he were a monkey who had not learned to feel at ease on his hind legs. His small, wilted, wrinkled face, and his expression of mingled simplicity and shrewdness, were also monkey-like. At Thurstane's reprimand he trotted close up to him with exactly the air of a circus Jocko who expects a whipping, but who hopes to escape it by grinning. "Why haven't you fired ?" repeated his commander. " Liftinint, I dasn't," answered Sweeny, in the rapid, jerking, almost inarticu- late jabber which was his usual speech. Now it is not an uncommon thing for recruits to dread to discharge their arms in battle. They have a vague idea that, if they bang away, they will at- tract the notice of some antagonist who will immediately single them out for retaliation. " Are you afraid anybody will hit you ? " asked Thurstane. " No, I ain't, Liftinint," jabbered Sweeny. " I ain't afeard av them niggers a bit. They may shoot their bow arreys at me all day if they want to. I'm afeard of me gun, Liftinint. I fired it wonst, an' it kicked me to blazes." " Come, come ! That won't do. Level it now. Pick out your man. Aim. Fire." Thus constrained. Sweeny brought his piece down to an inclination of forly- five degrees, shut his eyes, pulled trigger, and sent a ball clean over the most distant Apaches. The recoil staggered him, but he recovered himself without going over, and instantly roared out a horse-laugh. " Ho ! ho ! ho ! " he shouted. " That time I reckon I fetched won av 'em. 56 OVERLAND. " Sweeny," said Thurstane, " you must have hit either the sun or the moon, I don't know which." Sweeny looked discomfited ; the next breath he bethought himself of a sav- ing joke : '■ Liftinint, it 'ud sarve erry won av 'em right ; " then another neigh of laughter. " I ain't afeard av the ball," he hastened to asseverate ; " it's the kick av it that murthers me. Liftinint, why don't they put the britch to the other end av the gun.' They do in the owld counthry." " Load your beece," ordered Sergeant Meyer, "and go to your bost again, to the left of Shupert." The fact of Sweeny's opening fire did not cause a resumption of the close fighting. Quiet still continued, and the leaders of the expedition took advan- tage of it to discuss their situation, while the Indians gathered into little groups and seemed also to be holding council. " There are over a hundred warriors," said Thurstane. "Apaches," added one of the Mexican herdsmen. "What band?" " Manga Colorada or Delgadito." " I supposed they were in Bernalillo." " That was three weeks ago," put in Coronado. He was in profound thought. These fellows, who had agreed to harry Ber- nalilJo, and who had for a time carried out their bargain, why had they come to intercept him in the Moqui country, a hundred and twenty miles away ? Did they want to extort more money, or were they ignorant that this was his train ? And, supposing he should make himself known to them, would they spare him personally and such others as he might wish to save, while massacring the rest of the party ? It would be a bold step ; he could not at once decide upon it ; he was pondering it. We must do full justice to Coronado's coolness and readiness. This atro- cious idea had occurred to him the instant he heard the charging yell of the Apaches ; and it had done far more than any weakness of nerves to paralyze his fighting ability. He had thought, " Let them kill the Yankees ; then I will pro- claim myself and save herj then she will ba mine." And because of these thoughts he had stood irresolute, aiming without firing, and bidding his Mexi- cans do the same. The result was that six good shots and superb horsemen, who were capable of making a gallant fight under worthy leadership, had be- come demoralized, and, but for the advent of Thurstane, might have been mas- sacred like sheep. Now that three or four Apaches had fallen, Coronado had less hope of mak- ing his arrangement. He considered the matter carefully and judiciously, but at last he decided that he could not trust the vindictive devils, and he turned hia mind strenuously toward resistance. Although not pugnacious, he had plenty of the desperate courage of necessity, and his dusky black eyes were very reso- hite as he said to Thurstane, " Lieutenant, we trust to you." The young veteran had already made up his mind as to what must be done. " We will move on," he said. " We can't camp here, in an open plain, with- out grass or water. We must get into the canon so as to have our flanks pro- tected. I want the wagons to advance in double file so as to shorten the train. Two of my men in front and two in rear ; three of your herdsmen on one flank and three on the other ; Captain Glover alongside the ladies, and you and 1 everywhere ; that's the programme. If we are all steady, we can do it, sure." "They are collecting ahead to stop us," observed Coronado. OVERLAND. 57 "Good ! " said Thurstane. " All I want is to have them get in a heap. It IS this attacking on all sides which is dangerous. Suppose you give your driv- ers and muleteers a sharp lecture. Tell them they must fight if the Indians charge, and not skulk inside and under the wagons. Tell them we are going to shoot the first man who skulks. Pitch into them heavy. It's a devilish shame that a dozen tolerably well-armed men should be so helpless. It's enough to justify the old woman's contempt for our sex. Coronado rode from wagon to wagon, delivering his reproofs, threats, and instructions in the plainest kind of Spanish. At the signal to march, the drivers must file off two abreast, commencing on the right, and move at the fastest trot of the mules toward the cation. If any scoundrel skulked, quitted his post, or failed to fight, he would be pistolled instanter by him, Coronado sangre de Dios, etc. ! While he was addressing Aunt Maria's coachman, that level-headed lady called out, " Mr. Coronado, your very voice is cheering." "Mrs. Stanley, you are an example of heroism to our sex,'' replied the Mex- ican, with an ironical grin. " What a brave, noble, intelligent man ? " thought Aunt Maria. " If they were only all like him ! " This business took up five minutes. Coronado had just finished his round when a loud yell was rai.sed by the Apaches, and twenty or thirty of them started at full speed down the trail by which the caravan had come. Looking for the cause of this stampede, the emigrants beheld, nearly half a mile away, a single horseman rushing to encounter a score. It was Texas Smith, making an appa- rently hopeless rush to burst through the environment of Parthians and reach the train. " Shall we make a sally to save him ? " demanded Coronado, glancing at Thurstane. The officer hesitated ; to divide his small army would be perilous ; the Apaches would attack on all sides and with advantage. But the sight of one man so overmatched was too much for him, and with a great throb of chivalrous blood in his heart, he shouted, " Charge ! " CHAPTER XI. An hour before the attack Texas Smith had ridden off to stalk a deer ; but the animal being in good racing condition in consequence of the thin fare of this sterile region, the hunting bout had miscarried ; and our desperado was return- 58 OVERLAND. ing unladen toward the train when he heard the distant charging yell of the Apaches. Scattered over the plateau which he was traversing, there were a few thickets of mesquite, with here and there a fantastic butte of sandstone. By dodging from one of these covers to another, he arrived undiscovered at a point whence he could see the caravan and the curveting melee which surrounded it. He was nearly half a mile from his comrades and over a quarter of a mile from his near- est enemies. What should he do ? If he made a rush, he would probably be overpowered and either killed instantly or carried off for torture. If he waited until night for a chance to sneak into camp, the wandering redskins would be pretty apt to sur- prise him in the darkness, and there would be small chance indeed of escaping with his hair. It was a nasty situation ; but Texas, accustomed to perils, was as brave as he was wicked ; and he looked his darkling fate in the face with ad- mirable coolness and intelligence. His decision was to wait a favorable moment, and when it came, charge for life. When he perceived that the mass of the Indians had gathered on the trail between the wagons and the canon, he concluded that his chance had arrived ; and with teeth grimly set, rifle balanced across his saddle-bow, revolver shing to his wrist, he started in silence and at full speed on his almost hopeless rush. If you will cease to consider the man as a modern bushwhacker, and invest him temporarily with the character, ennobled by time, of a borderer of the Scottish marches, you will be able to feel some sympathy for him in his audacious enter- prise. He was mounted on an American horse, a half-blood gray, large-boned and powerful, who could probably have traversed the half-mile in a minute had there been no impediment, and who was able to floor with a single shock two or three of the little animals of the Apaches. He was a fine spectacle as he thundered alone across the plain, upright and easy in his seat, balancing his heavy rifle as if it were a rattan, his dark and cruel face settled for fight and his fierce black eyes blazing. Only a minute's ride, but that minute life or death. As he had expected, the Apaclies discovered him almost as soon as he left the cover of his butte, and all the outlying members of the horde swarmed toward him with a yell, brandishing their spears and getting ready their bows as they rode. It would clearly be im- possible for him to cut his way through thirty warriors unless he received as- sistance from the train. Would it come ? His evil conscience told him, without the least reason, that Thurstane would not help. But from Coronado, whose life he had saved and whose evil work he had undertaken to do — from this man, "greaser" as he was, he did expect a sally. If it did not come, and if he should escape by some rare chance, he, Texas Smith, would murder the Mexican the first time he found him alone, so help him God ! OVERLAND. 59 While he thought and cursed he flew. But liis goal was still five hundred yards away, and the nearest redskins were within two hundred yards, when he saw a rescuing charge shoot out from the wagons. Coronado led it. In this foxy nature the wolf was not wanting, and under strong impulse he could be somewhat of a Pizarro. He had no starts of humanity nor of real chivalry, but he had family pride and personal vanity, and he was capable of the fighting fury. When Thurstane had given the word to advance, Coronado had put himself for- ward gallantly. "Stay here," he said to the officer; "guard the train with your infantry. I am a caballero, and I will do a caballero's work," he added, rising proudly in his stirrups. "Come on, you villains ! " was his order to the six Mexicans. All abreast, spread out like a skirmish line, the seven horsemen clattered over the plain, making for the point where Texas Smith was about to plunge among the whirling and caracoling Apaches. Now came the crisis of the day. The moment the sixty or seventy Apaches near the mouth of the canon saw Coronado set out on his charge, they raised a yell of joy over the error of the emigrants in dividing their forces, and plunged straight at the wagons. In half a minute two wild, irregular, and yet desperate combats were raging. Texas Smith had begun his battle while Coronado was still a quarter of a mile away. Aiming his rifle at an Apache who was riding directly upon him, instead of dodging and wheeling in the usual fashion of these cautious fighters, he sent the audacious fellow out of his saddle with a bullet-hole through the lungs. But this was no salvation ; the dreaded long-range firearm was now empty ; the savages circled nearer and began to use their arrows. Texas let his rifle hang from the pommel and presented his revolver. But the bowshots were more than its match. It could not be trusted to do execution at forty yards, and at that distance the Indian shafts are deadly. Already several had hissed close by him, one had gashed the forehead of his horse, and another had pierced his clothing. All that Texas wanted, however, was time. If he could pass a half minute without a disabling wound, he would have help. He retreated a little, or rather he edged away toward the right, wheeling and curveting after the manner of the Apaches, in order to present an unsteady mark for their archery.' To keep them at a distance he fired one barrel of his revolver, though without effect. Meantime he dodged incessantly, now throwing himself forward and backward in the saddle, now hanging over the side of his horse and clinging to his neck. It was hard and perilous work, but he was gaining seconds, and every second was priceless. Notwithstanding his extreme peril, he calculated his chances with perfect coolness and with a sagacity which was admirable. But this intelligent savage had to do with savages as clever as himself The Apaches saw Coronado coming up on their rear, and they knew that they must make short vcork of the hunter, or must let him escape. While a score or so faced about to meet the Mexicans, a dozen charged with screeches and bran- dished lances upon the Texan. Now came a hand-to-hand struggle which looked as if it must end in the death of Smith and perhaps of several of his assailants. But cavalry fights are notoriously bloodless in comparison to their apparent fury ; the violent and perpetual movement of the combatants deranges aim and ren- ders most of the blows futile ; shots are fired at a yard distance without hitting, and strokes are delivered which only wound the air. One spear stuck in Smith's saddle; another pierced his jacket-sleeve and 60 OVERLAND. tore its way out; only one of the sharp, quickly-delivered points drew blood. He felt a slight pain in his side, and he found afterward that a lance-head had raked one of his ribs, tearing up the skin and scraping the bone for four or five inches. Meantime he shot a warrior through the head, sent another off with a hole in the shoulder, and fired one barrel without effect. He had but a single charge left (saving this for himself in the last extremity), when he burst through the prancing throng of screeching, thrusting ragamuffins, and reached the side of Coronado. Here another hurly-burly of rearing and plunging combat awaited him. Cor- onado, charging as an old Castilian hidalgo might have charged upon the Moors, had plunged directly into the midst of the Apaches who awaited him, giving them little time to use their arrows, and at first receiving no damage. The six rifles of his Mexicans sent two Apaches out of their saddles, and then came a capering, plunging joust of lances, both parties using the same weapon. Coro- nado alone had sabre and revolver ; and he handled them both with beautiful coolness and dexterity ; he rode, too, as well as the best of all these other cen- taurs. His superb horse whirled and reared under the guidance of a touch of the knees, while the rider plied firearm with one hand and sharply-ground blade with the other. Thurstane, an infantryman, and only a fair equestrian, would not have been half so effective in this combat of caballeros. Coronado's first bullet knocked a villainous-looking tatterdemalion clean into the happy hunting grounds. Then came a lance thrust ; he parried it with his sabre and plunged within range of the point ; there was a sharp, snake-like hiss of the light, curved blade ; down went Apache number two. At this rate, pro- viding there were no interruptions, he could finish the whole twenty. He went at his job with a handy adroitness which was almost scientific, it was so much like surgery, like dissection. His mind was- bent, with a sort of preternatural calmness and cleverness, upon the business of parrying lance thrusts, aiming his revolver, and delivering sabre cuts. It was a species of fighting intellection, at once prudent and destructive. It was not the headlong, reckless, pugnacious rage of the old Anglo-Saxon and Scandinavian berserker. It was the practical, ready, rational furor of the Latin race. Presently he saw that two of his rancheros had been lanced, and that there were but four left. A thrill of alarm, a commencement of panic, a desire to save himself at all hazards, crisped his heart and half paralyzed his energy. Remem- bering with perfect distinctness that four of his barrels were empty, he would perhaps have tried to retreat at the risk of being speared in the back, had he not at this critical moment been joined by Texas Smith. That instinctive, ferocious, and tireless fighter, while seeming to be merely circling and curveting among his assailants, contrived to recharge two barrels of his revolver, and was once more ready for business, Down went one Apache ; then the horse of another fell to reeling and crouching in a sickly way; then a charge of half a dozen broke to right aod left in irresolute prancings. At sight of this friendly work Coronado drew a fresh breath of courage, and executed his greatest feat yet of horsemanship and swordsmanship. Spurring after and then past one of the wheeling braves, he swept his sabre across the fellow's bare throat with a drawing stroke, and half detached the scowling, furious, frightened head from the body. There was a wide space of open ground before him immediately. The Apaches know nothing of sabre work ; not one of those present had ever before seen such a blow or such an effect ; they were not only panic-stricken, but hor- OVERLAND. 61 ror-stricken. For one moment, right between the staring antagonists, a bloody corpse sat upright on a rearing horse, with its head fallen on one shoulder and hanging by a gory muscle. The next moment it wilted, rolled downward with outstreched arms, and collapsed upon the gravel, an inert mass. Texas Smith uttered a loud scream of tigerish delight. He had never, in all his pugnacious and sanguinary life, looked upon anything so fascinating. It seemed to him as \i kis heaven — the savage Walhalla of his Saxon or Danish berserker race — were opened before him. In his ecstasy he waved his dirty, long fingers toward Coronado, and shouted, " Bully for you, old hoss ! " But he had self-possession enough, now that his hand was free for an instant from close battle, to reload his rifle and revolver. The four rancheros who still retained their saddles mechanically and hurriedly followed his example. The contest here was over ; the Apaches knew that bullets would soon be humming about their ears, and they dreaded them ; there was a retreat, and this retreat was a run of an eighth of a mile. " Hurrah for the waggins ! " shouted Texas, and dashed away toward the train. Coronado stared; his heart sank within him ; the train was surrounded by a mob of prancing savages ; there was more fighting to be done when he had already done his best. But not knowing where else to go, he followed his leader toward this new battle, loading his revolver as he rode, and wishing that he were in Santa F^, or anywhere in peace. We must go back a little. As already stated, the main body of the Apaches had perceived the error of the emigrants in separating, and had promptly availed themselves of it to charge upon the train. To attack it there were seventy fero- cious and skilful warriors ; to defend it there were twelve timorous muleteers and drivers, four soldiers, and Ralph. " Fall back ! " shouted the Lieutenant to his regulars when he saw the eques- trian avalanche coming. " Each man take a wagon and hold it." The order was obeyed in a hurry. The Apaches, heartened by what they supposed to be a panic, swarmed along at increased speed, and gave out their most diabolical screeches, hoping no doubt to scare men into helplessness, and beasts into a stampede. But the train was an immovable fortress, and the for- tress was well garrisoned. Although the mules winced and plunged a good deal, the drivers succeeded in holding them to their places, and the double column of carriages, three in each rank, preserved its formation. In every vehicle there was a muleteer, with hands free for fighting, bearing something or other in the shape of a firelock, and inspired with what courage there is in desperation. The four flankers, necessarily the most exposed to assault, had each a United States regular, with musket, bayonet, and forty rounds of buck and ball. In front of the phalanx, directly before the wagon which contained the two ladies, sat as brave an officer as there was in the American army. The Apaches had also committed their tactical blunder. They should all have followed Coronado, made sure of destroying him and his Mexicans, and then attacked the train. But either there was no sagacious military spirit among them or the love of plunder was too much for judgment and authority, and so down they came on the wagons. As the swarthy swarm approached, it spread out until it covered the front of the train and overlapped its flanks, ready to sweep completely around it and fasten upon any point which should seem feebly or timorously defended. The first man endangered was the lonely officer who sat his horse in front of the line of kicking and plunging mules. Fortunately for him, he now had a weapon of 62 OVERLAND. longer range than his revolver; he had remembered that in one of the wagons was stored a pecnliar rifle belonging to Coronado ; he had just had tipe to drag it out and strap its cartridge-box around his waist. He levelled at the centre of the clattering, yelling column. It fluctuated ; the warriors who were tliere did not lilce to be aimed at ; they began to zigzag, cara- cole, and diverge to right or left ; several hailed and commenced using their bows. At one of these archers, whose arrow already trembled on the string, Thurstane let fly. sending him out of the saddle. Then he felt a quick, sharp pain in his left arm, and perceived that a shaft had passed clean through it. There is this good thing about the arrow, that it has not weight enough to break bones, nor tearing power enough to necessarily paralyze muscle. Thur- stane could still manage a revolver with his wounded arm, while his right was good for almost any amount of slashing work. Letting the rifle drop and swing fiom the pommel, he met the charge of two grinning and scowling lancers. One thrust he parried with his sabre ; from the other he saved his neck by stooping ; but it drove through his coat collar, and nearly unseated him. For a moment our bleeding and hampered young gladiator seemed to be in a bad way. But he was strong; he braced himself in his stirrups, and he made use of both his hands. The Indian whose spear was still free caught a bullet through the shoulder, dropped his weapon, and circled away yelling. Then Thurstane plunged at the other, reared his tall horse over him, broke the lance-shaft with a violent twist, and swung his long cavalry sabre. It was in vain that the Apache crouched, spurred, and skedaddled ; he got away alive, but it was with a long bloody gash down his naked back ; the last seen of him he was going at full speed, holding by his pony's mane. The Lieutenant remained master of the whole front of the caravan. Meantime there was a busy popping along the flankers and through the hinder openings in the second line of wagons. The Indians skurried, wheeled, pranced, and yelled, let fly their arrows from a distance, dashed up here and there with their lances, and as quickly retreated before the threatening muzzles. The muleteers, encouraged by the presence of the soldiers, behaved with respectable firmness and blazed away rapidly, though not effectively. The regulars reserved their fire for close quarters, and then delivered it to bloody purpose. Around Sweeney, who garrisoned the left-hand wagon of the rearmost line, the fight was particularly noisy. The Apaches saw that he was little, and per- haps they saw that he was afraid of his gun. They went for him ; they were after him with their sharpest sticks ; they counted on Sweeney. The speck of a man sat on the front seat of the wagon, outside of the driver, and fully exposed to the tribulation. He was in a state of the highest Paddy excitement. He grinned and bounced like a caravan of monkeys. But he was not much scared ; he was mainly in a furious rage. Pointing his musket first at one and then at another, he returned 3'ell for yell, and was in fact abusive. "Oh, fire yer bow-arreys ! " he screamed. "Ye can't hit the side av a wag- gin. Ah, ye bloody, murtherin' nagers ! go 'way wid yer long poles. I'd fight a hundred av the loikes av ye wid ownly a shillelah." One audacious thrust of a lance he parried very dexterously with his bayonet, at the same time screeching defiantly and scornfully in the face of his hideous assailant. But this fellow's impudent approach was too much to be endured, and Sweeney proceeded at once to teach him to keep at a more civil distance. " Oh, ye pokm' blaggard ! " he shouted, and actually let drive with his mus- ket. The ball missed, but by pure blundering one of the buck-shot took effect OVERLAND 63 and the brave retreated out of the mel^e with a sensation as if his head had been split. Some time later he was discovered sitting up doggedly on a rock, while a comrade was trying to dig the buckshot out of his thick skull with an arrow- point. " I'll tache 'em to moind their bizniss," grinned Sweeney triumphantly, as he reloaded. "The nasty, hootin' nagers ! They've no rights near a white man, anyhow." On the whole, the attack lingered. The Apaches had done some damage. One driver had been lanced mortally. One muleteer had been shot through the heart with an arrow. Another arrow had scraped Shubert's ankle. Another, directed by the whimsical genius of accident, had gone clean through the droop- ing cartilage of Phineas Glover's long nose, as if to prepare him for the sporting of jewelled decorations. Two mules were dead, and several wounded. The sides of the wagons bristled with shafts, and their canvas tops were pierced with fine holes. But, on the other hand, the Apaches had lost a dozen horses, tliree or four warriors killed, and seven or eight wounded. Such was the condition of affairs around the train when Coronado, Texas Smith, and the four surviving herdsmen came storming back to it. CHAPTER XII. The Apaches were discouraged by the immovability of the train, and by the steady and deadly resistance of its defenders. From first to last some twenty- five or twenly-seven of their warriors had been hit, of whom probably one third were killed or mortally wounded. At the approach of Coronado those who were around the wagons swept away in a panic, and never paused in their flight until they were a good half mile dis- tant. They carried off, however, every man, whether dead or injured, except one alone. A few rods from the train lay a mere boy, certainly not over fifteen years old, his forehead gashed by a bullet, and life apparently extinct. There was nothing strange in the fact of so young a lad taking part in battle, for the military age among the Indians is from twelve to thirty-six, and one third of tlieir fighters are children. "What did they leave that fellow for?" said Coronado in surprise, riding up to the senseless figure. " I'll fix him," volunteered Texas Smith, dismounting and drawing his hunt- ing knife. " Reckon he hain't been squarely finished." "Stop !" ordered Coronado. " He is not an Apache. He is some pueblo Indian. See how much he is hurt." " Skull ain't broke," rephed Texas, fingering the wound as roughly as if it had been in the flesh of a beast. " Reckon he'll flop rOund. May do mischief, if we don't fix him.'' Anxious to stick his knife into the defenceless young throat, he nevertheless controlled his sentiments and looked up for instructions. Since the splendid decapitation which Coronado had performed, Texas respected him as he had never heretofore hoped to respect a " greaser." "Perhaps we can get information out of him," said Coronado. "Suppose you lay him in a wagon." Meanwhile preparations had been made for an advance. The four dead or badly wounded draft mules were disentangled from the harness, and their places supplied with the four army mules, whose packs were thrown into the wagoas. 64 OVERLAND. These animals, by the way, had escaped injury, partly because they had been tethered between the two lines of vehicles, and partly because they had been well covered by their loads, which were plentifully stuck with arrows. " We are ready to march," said Thurstane to Coronado. " I am sorry we can't try to recover your men back there." " No use," commented Texas Smith. " The Patchies have been at 'em. They're chuck full of spear holes by this time.'' Coronado shouted to the drivers to start. Commencing on the right, the wagons filed off two by two toward the mouth of the canon, while the Indians, gathered in a group half a mile away, looked on without a yell or a movement. The instant that the vehicle which contained the ladies had cleared itself of the others, Thurstane and Coronado rode alongside of it. " So ! you are safe ! " said the former. " By Heavens, if they had hurt you ! " " And you ? " asked Clara, very quickly and eagerly, while scanning him from head to foot. Coronado saw that look, anxious for Thurstane alone ; and, master of dis- simulation though he was, his face showed both pain and anger. "Ah — oh — oh dear ! " groaned Mrs. Stanley, as she made her appearance in the front of the vehicle. " Well ! this is rather more than I can bear. This is just as much as a woman can put up with. Dear me ! what is the matter with your arm, Lieutenant ? " " Just a pin prick," said Thurstane. Clara began to get out of the wagon, with the purpose of going to him, her eyes staring and her face pale. " Don't ! " he protested, motioning her back. " It is nothing." And, although the lacerated arm hurt him and was not easy to manage, he raised it over his head to show that the damage was trifling. " Do get in here and let us take care of you," begged Clara. " Certainly ! " echoed Aunt Maria, who was a compassionate woman at heart, and who only lacked somewhat in quickness of sympathy, perhaps by reason of her strong-minded notions. " I will when I need it," said Ralph, flattered and gratified. " The arm will do without dressing till we reach camp. There are other wounded. Everybody has fought. Mr. Coronado here has done deeds worthy of his ancestors.'' "Ah, Mr. Coronado!" smiled Aunt Maria, delighted that her favorite had distinguished himself. " Captain Glover, what's the matter with your nose ? " was the lady's next outcry. " Wal, it's been bored," replied Glover, tenderly fingering his sore proboscis. " It's been, so to speak, eyelet-holed. I'm glad I hadn't but one. The more noses a feller kerries in battle, the wuss for him. I hope the darned rip '11 heal up. I've no 'casion to hev a line rove through it 'n' be towed, that I know of" " How did it feel when it went through ? " asked Aunt Maria, full of curiosity and awe. " Felt 's though I'd got the 'dreadfullest influenzee thet ever snorted. Twitched 'n' tickled like all possessed." " Was it an arrow ? " inquired the still unsatisfied lady. " Reckon 'twas. Never see it. But it kinder whished, 'n' I felt the feathers. Darn 'em ! When I felt the feathers, tell ye I was 'bout half scairt. Hed 'n idee 'f th' angel 'f death, 'n' so on." OVERLAND. 65 Of course Aunt Maria and Clara wanted to do much nursing immediately . but there were no conveniences and there was no time ; and so benevolence was postponed. " So you are hurt ? " said Thurstane to Texas Smith, noticing his torn and bloody shirt. " It's jest a scrape," grunted the bushwhacker. " Mought 'a' been worse." " It was bad generalship trying to save you. We nearly paid high for it." " That's so. Cost four greasers, as 'twas. Well, I'm worth four greasers." " You're a devil of a fighter," continued the Lieutenant, surveying the fero- cious face and sullen air of the cutthroat with a soldier's admiration for what- ever expresses pugnacity. " Bet yer pile on it," returned Texas, calmly conscious of his character. " So be you." The savage black eyes and the imperious blue ones stared into each other without the least flinching and with something like friendliness. Coronado rode up to the pair and asked, "Is that boy alive yet ?" " It's about time for him to flop round," replied Texas indifferently. "Reckon you'll find him in the off hind wagon. I shoved him in thar.'' Coronado cantered to the off hind wagon, peeped through the rear opening of its canvas cover, discovered the youth lying on a pile of luggage, addressed him in Spanish, and learned his story. He belonged to a hacienda in Bernalillo, a hundred miles or more west of Santa F^. The Apaches had surprised the hacienda and plundered it, carrying him off because, having formerly been a cap- _ tive among them, he could speak their language, manage the bow, etc. For all this Coronado cared nothing ; he wanted to know why the band had left Bernalillo; also why it had attacked his train. The boy explained that the raiders had been driven off the southern route by a party of United States cav- alry, and'that, having lost a number of their braves in the fight, they had sworn vengeance on Americans. " Did you hear them say whose train this was .'"' demanded Coronado. " No, Sefior." " Do you think they knew?" "Sefior, I think not." " Whose band was this ? " " Manga Colorada's." "Where is Delgadito?" " Delgadito went the other side of the mountain. They were both going to fight the Moquis." " So we shall find Delgadito in the Moqui valley ? " " I think so, Sefior." After a moment of reflection Coronado added, " You will stay with us and take care of mules. I will do well by you." " Thanks, Sefior. Many thanks." Coronado rejoined Thurstane and told his news. The officer looked grave ; there might be another combat in store for the train; it might be an affair with both bands of the Apaches. " Well," he said, " we must keep our eyes open. Every one of us must do his very utmost. On the whole, I can't believe they can beat us." " Nombre de Dios ! " thought Coronado. " How will this accursed job end ? I wish I were out of it." They were now traversing the carion from which they had been so long de- 66 OVERLAND. barred. It was a peaceful solitude ; no life but their own stirred within its sand- stone ramparts ; and its windings soon carried them out of sight of their late as- sailants. For four hours they slowly threaded it, and when night came on they were still in it, miles away from their expected camping ground. No water and no grass ; the animals were drooping with hunger, and all suffered with thirst; the worst was that the hurts of the wounded could not be properly dressed. But progress through this labyrinth of stones in the darkness was impossible, and the weary, anxious, fevered travellers bivouacked as well as might be. Starting at dawn, they finished the canon in about an hour, traversed an un- even plateau which stretched beyond its final sinuous branch gullies, and found themselves on the brow of a lofty terrace, overlooking a sublime panorama. There was an immense valley, not smooth and verdurous, but a gigantic nest of savage buttes and crags and hills, only to be called a valley because it was en- closed by what seemed a continuous line of eminences. On the north and east rose long ranges and elevated table-lands ; on the west, the savage rolls and precipices of the Sierra del Carrizo ; and on the south, a more distant bordering of hazy mountains, closing to the southwest, a hundred miles away, in the noble snowy peaks of Monte San Francisco. With his field-glass, Thurstane examined one after another of the mesas and buttes which diversified this enormous depression. At last his attention settled on an isolated bluff or mound, with a flattened surface three or four miles in length, the whole mass of which seemed to be solid and barren rock. On this truncated pyramid he distinguished, or thought he distinguished, one or more of the pueblos of the Moquis. He could not be quite sure, because the distance was fifteen miles, and the walls of these villages are of the same stone with the' buttes upon which they stand. "There is our goal, if I am not mistaken," he said to Coronado. "When we get there we can rest." The train pushed onward, slowly descending the terrace, or rather the suc- cession of terraces. After reaching a more level region, and while winding be- tween stony hills of a depressing sterility, it came suddenly, at the bottom of a ravine, upon fresh green turf and thickets of willows, the environment of a small spring of clear water. There was a halt; all bands fell to digging a trench across the gully; when it had filled, the animals were allowed to drink; in an hour more they had closely cropped all the grass. Tliis was using up time per- ilously, but it had to be done, for the beasts were tottering. Moving again ; five miles more traversed ; another spring and patch of turf discovered ; a rough ravine through a low sandstone ridge threaded ; at last they were on one of the levels of the valley. Three of the Moqui towns were now about eight miles distant, and with his glass Thurstane could distinguish the horizontal lines of build ng. The trail made s.traight for the pueblos, but it was almost impassable to wagons, and progress was very slow. It was all the slower because of the weakness of the mules, which throughout all this hair- brained journey had been severely worked, and of late had been poorly fed. Presently the travellers turned the point of a naked ridge which projected laterally into the valley. There they came suddenly upon a wide-spread sweep of turf, contrasting so brilliantly with the bygone infertilities that it seemed to tliem a paradise, and stretching clear on to the bluff of the pueblos. There, too, with equal suddenness, they came upon peril. Just beyond the nose of the sandstone promontory there was a bivouc of half-naked, dark- skinned horsemen, recognizable at a glance as Apaches. It was undoubtedly the band of Delgadito. OVERLAND. 67 The camp was half a mile distant. The Indians, evidently surprised at the appearance of the train, were immediately in commotion. There was a rapid mounting, and in five minutes they were all on horseback, curveting in circles, and brandishing their lances, but without advancing. " Manga Colorada hasn't reached here yet," observed Thurstane. " That's so," assented Texas Smith. " They hain't heerd from the cuss, or they'd a bushwhacked us somewhar. Seein' he dasn't follow our trail, he had to make a big turn to git liere. But he'll be droppin' along, an' then we'll hev a fight. I reckon we'll hev one anyway. Them cusses ain't friendly. If they was, they'd a piled in helter-skelter to hev a talk an' ask fur whiskey." " We must keep them at a distance," said Thurstane. " You bet ! The first Injun that comes nigh us. I'll shute him. They mustn't be 'lowed to git among us. First you know you'd hear a yell, an' find yourself speared in the back. An' them that's speared riglit off is the lucky ones." " Not one of us must fall into their hands," muttered the officer, thinking of Clara. "Cap, that's so," returned Texas grimly. " Wlien I fight Injuns, I never empty my revolver. I keep one barl for myself. You'd better do the same. Furthermore, thar oughter be somebody detailed to shute the women folks when it comes to the last pinch. I say this as a friend." As a friend ! It was the utmost stretch of Texas Smith's humanity and sympathy. Obviously the fellow had a soft side to him. The fact is that he had taken a fancy to Thurstane since he had learned his fighting qualities, and would rather have done him a favor than murder him. At all events his hatred to " Injuns " was such that he wanted the lieutenant to kill a great many of them before his own turn came. " So you think we'll have a tough job of it ? " inferred Ralph. " Cap, we ain't so many as we was. An' if IManga Colorada comes up, thar'll be a pile of red-skins. It may be they'll outlast us ; an' so I say as a friend, save one shot ; save it for yourself, Cap.'' But the Apaches did not advance. They watched the train steadily ; they held a long consultation which evidently referred to it ; at last they seemed to decide that it was in too good order to fall an easy prey ; there was some wild caper- ing along its flanks, at a safe distance ; and then, little by little, the gang re- settled in its bivouac. It was like a swarm of hornets, which should sally out to reconnoitre an enemy, buzz about threateningly for a while, and sail back to their nest. The plain, usually dotted with flocks of sheep, was now a solitude. The Moquis had evidently withdrawn their woollj^ wealth either to the summit of the bluff, or to the partially sheltered pasturage around its base. The only ob- jects which varied the verdant level were scattered white rocks, probably gyp- sum or oxide of manganese, which glistened surprisingly in the sunliglit, re- minding one of pearls sown on a mantel of green velvet. But already the travel- lers could see the peach orchards of the Moquis, and the sides of the loTlybutte laid out in gardens supported by terrace-walis of dressed stone, the whole mass- surmounted by the solid ramparts of the pueblos. At this moment, while the train was .still a little over two miles from the foot of the bluff, and the Apache camp more than three miles to the rear, Texas Smith shouted, "The cusses hev got the news." It was true ; the foremost riders, or perhaps only the messengers, of Manga • Colorada had readied Delthe mules were weak, and the soil of the plain was a thin loam into which the wheels sank easily, so that the heavy wagons could not be hurried be- yond a trot, and before long were reduced to a walk. Thus, while the caravan was still half a mile from its city of refuge, the foremost hornets of Delgadito's swarm were already circling around it. The chief could not charge at once, however, for the warriors whom he had in hand numbered barely a score, and their horses, blown with a run of over five miles, were unfit for sharp fighting work. For a few minutes nothing happened, except that the caravan continued its silent, sullen retreat, while the pursuers cantered yelling around it at a safe distance. Not a shot was fired by the emi- grants ; not a brave dashed up to let fly his arrows. At last there were fifty Apaches ; then there was a hurried council ; then a furious rush. Evidently the savages were ashamed to let their enemies escape for lack of one audacious as- sault. This charge was led by a child. A boy not more than fourteen years of age, screaming like a little demon and discharging his arrows at full speed with wicked dexterity, rode at the head of this savage hourra of the Cossacks of the American desert. As the fierce child came on, Coronado saw him and recog- nized him with a mixture of wonder, dread, and hate. Here was the son of the false-hearted savage who had accepted his money, agreed to do his work, and then turned against him. Should he kill him ? It would open an account of blood between himself and the father. Never mind ; vengeance is sweet ; more- over, the youngster was dangerous. Coronado raised his revolver, steadied it across his left arm, took a calm aim, and fired. The handsome, headlong, terrible boy swayed forward, rolled slowly over the pommel of his saddle, and fell to the ground motionless. In the next moment there was a general rattle of firearms from the train, and the mass of the charging column broke up into squads which went oflfin aimless caracolings. Barring a short struggle by half a dozen braves to recover the young chiefs body, the contest was over ; and in two minutes more the Apaches were half a mile distant, looking on in sulky silence while the train crawled toward the pro- tecting bluff. " Hurrah ! " shouted Thurstane^ " That was quick work. Delgadito doesn't take his punishment well." " Reckon they see we had friends,'' observed Captain Glover. "Jest look at them critters pile down the mounting. Darned if they don't skip like nanny- goats." Down the huge steep slope, springing along rocky, sinuous paths, or over the walls of the terraces, came a hundred or a hundred and fifty men, running with a speed which, considering the nature of the footing, was marvellous. Before many in the train were aware of their approach, they were already among the wagons, rushing up to the travellers with outstretched hands, the most cordial, OVERLAND. 69 cheerful, kindly-eyed people that Thurstane had seen in New Mexico. Good features, too; that is, they were handsomer than the usual Indian type ; some even had physiognomies which reminded one of Italians. Their hair was fine and glossy for men of their race; and, stranger still, it bore an appearance of careful combing. Nearly all wore loose cotton trousers or drawers reaching to the knee, with a kind of blouse of woollen or cotton, and over the shoulders a gay woollen blanket tied around the waist. In view of their tidy raiment and their general air of cleanliness, it seemed a mistake to class them as Indians. These were the IVIoquis, a remnant of one of the semi-civilizations of America, perhaps a colony left behind by the Aztecs in their migrations, or possibly by the temple-builders of Yucatan. Impossible to converse with them. Not a person in the caravan- spoke the Moqui tongue, and not a IVIoqui spoke or understood a word of Spanish or Eng- lish. But it was evident from their faces and gestures that they .were enthusias- tically friendly, and that they had rushed down from their fastness to aid the em- igrants against the Apaches. There was even a little sally into the plain, the Moquis running a quarter of a mile with amazing agility, spreading out into a loose skirmishing line of battle, brandishing their bows and defying the enemy to battle. But this ended in nothing ; the Apaches sullenly cantered away ; the others soon checked their pursuit. Now came the question of encampment. To get the wagons up the bluff, eight hundred feet or so in height, along a path which had been cut in the rock or built up with stone, was obviously impossible. Would there be safety where they were, just at the base of the noble slope ? The Moquis assured them by signs that the plundering horse-Indians never came so near the pueblos. Camp then ; the wagons were parked as usual in a hollow square ; the half-starved an- imals were unharnessed and allowed to fly at the abundant grass ; the cramped and wearied travellers threw themselves on the ground with delight. " What a charming people these Monkeys are ! " said Aunt Maria, surveying the neat and smiling villagers with approval. " Moquis,'' Coronado corrected her, with a bow. " Oh, Mo-kies," repeated Aunt Maria, this time catching the sound exactly. " Well, I propose to see as much of them as possible. Why shouldn't the women and the wounded sleep in the city ? " " It is an excellent idea," assented Coronado, although he thought with dis- taste that this would bring Clara and Thurstane together, while he would be at a distance. " I suppose we shall get an idea from it of the ancient city of Mexico, as de- scribed by Prescott," continued the enthusiastic lady. "You will discover a few deviations in the ground plan," returned Coronado, for once ironical. Aunt Maria's suggestion with regard to the women and the wounded was adopted. The Moquis seemed to urge it ; so at least they were understood. Within a couple of hours after the halt a procession of the feebler folk com- menced climbing the bluff, accompanied by a crowd of the hospitable Indians. The winding and difficult path swarmed for a quarter of a mile with people in the gayest of blankets, some ascending with the strangers and some coming down to greet them. "■ I should think we were going up to the Temple of the Sun to be sacrified," said Clara, who had also read Prescott. '■ To be worshipped," ventured Thurstane, giving her a look which made her blush, the boldest look that he had yet ventured. 70 OVERLAND. The terraces, as we have stated, were faced with partially dressed ftone. They were in many places quite broad, and were cultivated everywhere with ad- mirable care, presenting long green lines of corn fields or of peach orchards. Half-way up the ascent was a platform of more than ordinary spaciousness which coiilained a large reservoir, built of chipped stone strongly cemented, and brim- ming with limpid water. From this cistern large earthen pipes led off in various directions to irrigate the terraces below. " It seems to me that we are discovering America," exclaimed Aunt Maria, her face scarlet with exercise and enthusiasm. Presently she asked, in full faith that she was approaching a metropolis, " What is the name of the city ? " '■This must be Tegua," replied Thurstane. " Tegua is the most eastern of the Moqui pueblos. There are three on this bluff. Mooshaneh and two others are on a butte to the west. Oraybe is further north.'' " What a powerful confederacy ! " said Aunt Maria. " The United States of the Moquis ! " After a breathless ascent of at least eight hundred feet, they reached the un- dulated, barren, rocky surface of a plateau. Here the whole population of Tegua had collected ; and for the first time the visitors saw Moqui women and chil- dren. Aunt Maria was particularly pleased with the specimens of her own sex ; she went into ecstasies over their gentle physiognomies and their well-combed, carefully braided, glossy hair; she admired their long gowns of black woollen, each with a yellow stripe around the waist and a border of the same at the bot- tom. " Such a sensible costume I " she said. " So much more rational and conve- nient than our fashionable fripperies ! " Another fact of great interest was that the Moquis were lighter cojaplexioned than Indians in general. And when she discovered a woman with fair skin, blue eves, and yellow hair — one of those albinos who are found among the in- habitants of the pueblos — she went into an excitement which was nothing less than ethnological. "These are white people," she cried, losing sight of all the brown faces. " They are some European race which colonized America long before that mod- era upstart, Columbus. They are undoubtedly the descendants of the North- men who built the old mill at Newport and sculptured the Dighton Rock." " There is a belief," said Thurstane, " that some of these pueblo people, par- ticularly those of Zuni, are Welsh. A Welsh prince named Maiioc, flying be- fore the Saxons, is said to have reached America. There are persons who hold that the descendants of his followers built the mounds in the Mississippi Valley, and that some of them became the white Mandans of the upper Missouri, and that others founded this old Mexican civilization. Of course it is all guess-work. There's nothing about it in the Regulations." " I consider it highly probable," asserted Aunt Maria, forgetting her Scandi- navian hypothesis. " I don't see how you can doubt that that flaxen-haired girl is a descendant of Medoc, Prince of Wales." " Mailoc," corrected Thurstane. " Well, Madoc then,'' replied Aunt Maria rather pettishly, for she was dread- fully tired, and moreover she didn't like Thurstane. A few minutes' walk brought them to the rampart which surrounded the pue- blo. Its foundation was a solid blind wall, fifteen feet or so in height, and built of hewn stone laid in clay cement. Above was a second wall, rising from the OVERLAND. 11 first as one terrace rises from another, and surmounted by a third, which was also in terrace fashion. The ground tier of this stair-lil