Part 29 (1/2)
”That's just the way I look at it, Mr. Reed. Sergeant Whitley here is a specialist in rattlesnakes. He used to hunt down and kill the big bloated ones on the plains, and even the snow won't keep him from tracing 'em to their dens here in the mountains.”
Reed, after the custom of his kind, looked the sergeant up and down with a frank stare.
”'Pears to be a good man,” he said, ”hefty in build an' quick in the eye. Glad to know you, Mr. Whitley. You an' me may take part in a shootin' bee together an' this old long-barreled firearm uv mine kin give a good account uv herself.”
He patted his rifle affectionately, a weapon of ancient type, with a long slender barrel of blue steel, and a heavy carved stock. It was just such a rifle as the frontiersmen used. d.i.c.k's mind, in an instant, traveled back into the wilderness and he was once more with the great hunters and scouts who fought for the fair land of Kain-tuck-ee. His imagination was so vivid that it required only a touch to stir it into life, and the aspect of the mountains, wild and lonely and clothed in snow, heightened the illusion.
”I s'pose from what you tell us that you'll have the chance to use it, Mr. Reed,” said the sergeant.
”I reckon so,” replied the mountaineer emphatically. ”'Bout five miles up this pa.s.s you'll come to a cove in which Jim Johnson's house stood. Some uv them gorillers attacked it, three nights ago. Jim held 'em off with his double-barreled shotgun, 'til his wife an' children could git out the back way. Then he skedaddled hisself. They plundered the house uv everythin' wuth carryin' off an' then they burned it plum' to the groun'. Jim an' his people near froze to death on the mounting, but they got at last to the cabin uv some uv their kin, whar they are now. Then they've carried off all the hosses an' cattle they kin find in the valleys an' besides robbin' everybody they've shot some good men. Thar is sh.o.r.ely a good dose uv lead comin' to every feller in that band.”
The mountaineer's face for a moment contracted violently. d.i.c.k saw that he was fairly burning for revenge. Among his people the code of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth still prevailed, unquestioned, and there would be no pity for the guerrilla who might come under the muzzle of his rifle. But his feelings were shown only for the moment. In another instant, he was a stoic like the Indians whom he had displaced. After a little silence he added:
”That man Slade, who is the brains uv the outfit, is plum' devil. So fur ez his doin's in these mountings are concerned he ain't human at all. He hez no mercy fur nuthin' at no time.”
His words found an echo in d.i.c.k's own mind. He remembered how venomously Slade had hunted for his own life in the Southern marshes, and chance, since then, had brought them into opposition more than once. Just as Harry had felt that there was a long contest between Shepard and himself, d.i.c.k felt that Slade and he were now to be pitted in a long and mortal combat. But Shepard was a patriot, while Slade was a demon, if ever a man was. If he were to have a particular enemy he was willing that it should be Slade, as he could see in him no redeeming quality that would cause him to stay his hand, if his own chance came.
”Have you any idea where the guerrillas are camped now?” asked Colonel Winchester.
”When we last heard uv 'em they wuz in Burton's Cove,” replied the mountaineer, ”though uv course they may hev moved sence then. Still, the snow may hev held 'em. It's a-layin' right deep on the mountings, an' even the gorillers ain't so anxious to plough thar way through it.”
”How long will it take us to reach Burton's Cove?”
”It's jest ez the weather sez, colonel. Ef the snow holds off we might make it tomorrow afore dark, but ef the snow makes up its mind to come tumblin' down ag'in, it's the day after that, fur sh.o.r.e.”
”At any rate, another fall of snow is no harder for us than it is for them,” said the colonel, who showed the spirit of a true leader. ”Now, Mr. Reed, do you think we can find anybody on this road who will tell us where the band has gone?”
”It ain't much uv a road an' thar ain't many people to ride on it in the best uv times, so I reckon our chance uv meetin' a traveler who knows much is jest about ez good as our chance uv findin' a peck uv gold in the next snowdrift.”
”Which means there's no chance at all.”
”I reckon that's 'bout the size uv it. But, colonel, we don't hev to look to the road fur the word.”
”What do you mean?”
”We'll turn our eyes upward, to the mounting heights. Some uv us who are jest bound to save the Union are settin' up on top uv high ridges, whar that p'ison band can't go, waitin' to tell us whar we ought to go. They've got some home-made flags, an' they'll wave 'em to me.”
”Mr. Reed, you're a man of foresight and perception.”
”Foresight? I know what that is. It's the opposite uv hindsight, but I ain't made the acquaintance uv perception.”
”Perception is what you see after you think, and I know that you're a man who thinks.”
”Thank you, colonel, but I reckon that in sech a war ez this a man hez jest got to set right plum' down, an' think sometimes. It's naterally forced upon him. Them that starts a war mebbe don't do much thinkin', but them that fights it hev to do a power uv it.”
”Your logic is sound, Mr. Reed.”
”I hev a pow'ful good eye, colonel, an' I think I see a man on top uv that high ridge to the right. But my eye ain't ez good ez your gla.s.ses, an' would you min' takin' a look through 'em? Foller a line from that little bunch of cedars to the crest.”
”Yes, it's a man. I can see him quite plainly. He has a big, gray shawl like your own, wrapped around his shoulders. Perhaps he's one of your friends.”