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CHAPTER 1. THE ARIZONA DESERT
One afternoon, far out on the sun-baked waste of sage, we made camp near a clump of
withered pinyon trees. The cold desert wind came down upon us with
the sudden darkness.
Even the Mormons, who were finding the trail for us across the drifting sands,
forgot to sing and pray at sundown. We huddled round the campfire, a tired and
silent little group.
When out of the lonely, melancholy night some wandering Navajos stole like shadows
to our fire, we hailed their advent with delight.
They were good-natured Indians, willing to barter a blanket or bracelet; and one of
them, a tall, gaunt fellow, with the bearing of a chief, could speak a little
English.
"How," said he, in a deep chest voice. "Hello, Noddlecoddy," greeted Jim Emmett,
the Mormon guide. "Ugh!" answered the Indian.
"Big paleface--Buffalo Jones---big chief-- buffalo man," introduced Emmett, indicating
Jones. "How."
The Navajo spoke with dignity, and extended a friendly hand.
"Jones big white chief--rope buffalo--tie up tight," continued Emmett, making motions
with his arm, as if he were whirling a lasso.
"No big--heap small buffalo," said the Indian, holding his hand level with his
knee, and smiling broadly. Jones, erect, rugged, brawny, stood in the
full light of the campfire.
He had a dark, bronzed, inscrutable face; a stern mouth and square jaw, keen eyes,
half-closed from years of searching the wide plains; and deep furrows wrinkling his
cheeks.
A strange stillness enfolded his feature the tranquility earned from a long life of
adventure. He held up both muscular hands to the
Navajo, and spread out his fingers.
"Rope buffalo--heap big buffalo--heap many- -one sun."
The Indian straightened up, but kept his friendly smile.
"Me big chief," went on Jones, "me go far north--Land of Little Sticks--Naza!
Naza! rope musk-ox; rope White Manitou of Great Slave Naza!
Naza!"
"Naza!" replied the Navajo, pointing to the North Star; "no--no."
"Yes me big paleface--me come long way toward setting sun--go cross Big Water--go
Buckskin--Siwash--chase cougar."
The cougar, or mountain lion, is a Navajo god and the Navajos hold him in as much
fear and reverence as do the Great Slave Indians the musk-ox.
"No kill cougar," continued Jones, as the Indian's bold features hardened.
"Run cougar horseback--run long way--dogs chase cougar long time--chase cougar up
tree!
Me big chief--me climb tree--climb high up- -lasso cougar--rope cougar--tie cougar all
tight." The Navajo's solemn face relaxed
"White man heap fun.
No." "Yes," cried Jones, extending his great
arms. "Me strong; me rope cougar--me tie cougar;
ride off wigwam, keep cougar alive."
"No," replied the savage vehemently. "Yes," protested Jones, nodding earnestly.
"No," answered the Navajo, louder, raising his dark head.
"Yes!" shouted Jones.
"BIG LIE!" the Indian thundered. Jones joined good-naturedly in the laugh at
his expense.
The Indian had crudely voiced a skepticism I had heard more delicately hinted in New
York, and singularly enough, which had strengthened on our way West, as we met
ranchers, prospectors and cowboys.
But those few men I had fortunately met, who really knew Jones, more than
overbalanced the doubt and ridicule cast upon him.
I recalled a scarred old veteran of the plains, who had talked to me in true
Western bluntness:
"Say, young feller, I heerd yer couldn't git acrost the Canyon fer the deep snow on
the north rim. Wal, ye're lucky.
Now, yer hit the trail fer New York, an' keep goin'!
Don't ever tackle the desert, 'specially with them Mormons.
They've got water on the brain, wusser 'n religion.
It's two hundred an' fifty miles from Flagstaff to Jones range, an' only two
drinks on the trail.
I know this hyar Buffalo Jones. I knowed him way back in the seventies,
when he was doin' them ropin' stunts thet made him famous as the preserver of the
American bison.
I know about that crazy trip of his'n to the Barren Lands, after musk-ox.
An' I reckon I kin guess what he'll do over there in the Siwash.
He'll rope cougars--sure he will--an' watch 'em jump.
Jones would rope the devil, an' tie him down if the lasso didn't burn.
Oh! he's hell on ropin' things.
An' he's wusser 'n hell on men, an' hosses, an' dogs."
All that my well-meaning friend suggested made me, of course, only the more eager to
go with Jones.
Where I had once been interested in the old buffalo hunter, I was now fascinated.
And now I was with him in the desert and seeing him as he was, a simple, quiet man,
who fitted the mountains and the silences, and the long reaches of distance.
"It does seem hard to believe--all this about Jones," remarked Judd, one of
Emmett's men. "How could a man have the strength and the
nerve?
And isn't it cruel to keep wild animals in captivity? it against God's word?"
Quick as speech could flow, Jones quoted: "And God said, 'Let us make man in our
image, and give him dominion over the fish of the sea, the fowls of the air, over all
the cattle, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth'!"
"Dominion--over all the beasts of the field!" repeated Jones, his big voice
rolling out.
He clenched his huge fists, and spread wide his long arms.
"Dominion! That was God's word!"
The power and intensity of him could be felt.
Then he relaxed, dropped his arms, and once more grew calm.
But he had shown a glimpse of the great, strange and absorbing passion of his life.
Once he had told me how, when a mere child, he had hazarded limb and neck to capture a
fox squirrel, how he had held on to the vicious little animal, though it bit his
hand through; how he had never learned to
play the games of boyhood; that when the youths of the little Illinois village were
at play, he roamed the prairies, or the rolling, wooded hills, or watched a gopher
hole.
That boy was father of the man: for sixty years an enduring passion for dominion over
wild animals had possessed him, and made his life an endless pursuit.
Our guests, the Navajos, departed early, and vanished silently in the gloom of the
desert.
We settled down again into a quiet that was broken only by the low chant-like song of a
praying Mormon.
Suddenly the hounds bristled, and old Moze, a surly and aggressive dog, rose and barked
at some real or imaginary desert prowler.
A sharp command from Jones made Moze crouch down, and the other hounds cowered close
together. "Better tie up the dogs," suggested Jones.
"Like as not coyotes run down here from the hills."
The hounds were my especial delight. But Jones regarded them with considerable
contempt.
When all was said, this was no small wonder, for that quintet of long-eared
canines would have tried the patience of a saint.
Old Moze was a Missouri hound that Jones had procured in that State of uncertain
qualities; and the dog had grown old over ***-trails.
He was black and white, grizzled and battlescarred; and if ever a dog had an
evil eye, Moze was that dog.
He had a way of wagging his tail--an indeterminate, equivocal sort of wag, as if
he realized his ugliness and knew he stood little chance of making friends, but was
still hopeful and willing.
As for me, the first time he manifested this evidence of a good heart under a rough
coat, he won me forever.
To tell of Moze's derelictions up to that time would take more space than would a
history of the whole trip; but the enumeration of several incidents will at
once stamp him as a dog of character, and
will establish the fact that even if his progenitors had never taken any blue
ribbons, they had at least bequeathed him fighting blood.
At Flagstaff we chained him in the yard of a livery stable.
Next morning we found him hanging by his chain on the other side of an eight-foot
fence.
We took him down, expecting to have the sorrowful duty of burying him; but Moze
shook himself, wagged his tail and then pitched into the livery stable dog.
As a matter of fact, fighting was his forte.
He whipped all of the dogs in Flagstaff; and when our blood hounds came on from
California, he put three of them hors de combat at once, and subdued the pup with a
savage growl.
His crowning feat, however, made even the stoical Jones open his mouth in amaze.
We had taken Moze to the El Tovar at the Grand Canyon, and finding it impossible to
get over to the north rim, we left him with one of Jones's men, called Rust, who was
working on the Canyon trail.
Rust's instructions were to bring Moze to Flagstaff in two weeks.
He brought the dog a little ahead time, and roared his appreciation of the relief it to
get the responsibility off his hands.
And he related many strange things, most striking of which was how Moze had broken
his chain and plunged into the raging Colorado River, and tried to swim it just
above the terrible Sockdolager Rapids.
Rust and his fellow-workmen watched the dog disappear in the yellow, wrestling,
turbulent whirl of waters, and had heard his knell in the booming roar of the falls.
Nothing but a fish could live in that current; nothing but a bird could scale
those perpendicular marble walls.
That night, however, when the men crossed on the tramway, Moze met them with a wag of
his tail. He had crossed the river, and he had come
back!
To the four reddish-brown, high-framed bloodhounds I had given the names of Don,
Tige, Jude and Ranger; and by dint of persuasion, had succeeded in establishing
some kind of family relation between them and Moze.
This night I tied up the bloodhounds, after bathing and salving their sore feet; and I
left Moze free, for he grew fretful and surly under restraint.
The Mormons, prone, dark, blanketed figures, lay on the sand.
Jones was crawling into his bed.
I walked a little way from the dying fire, and faced the north, where the desert
stretched, mysterious and illimitable. How solemn and still it was!
I drew in a great breath of the cold air, and thrilled with a nameless sensation.
Something was there, away to the northward; it called to me from out of the dark and
gloom; I was going to meet it.
I lay down to sleep with the great blue expanse open to my eyes.
The stars were very large, and wonderfully bright, yet they seemed so much farther off
than I had ever seen them.
The wind softly sifted the sand. I hearkened to the *** of the cowbells
on the hobbled horses.
The last thing I remembered was old Moze creeping close to my side, seeking the
warmth of my body. When I awakened, a long, pale line showed
out of the dun-colored clouds in the east.
It slowly lengthened, and tinged to red. Then the morning broke, and the slopes of
snow on the San Francisco peaks behind us glowed a delicate pink.
The Mormons were up and doing with the dawn.
They were stalwart men, rather silent, and all workers.
It was interesting to see them pack for the day's journey.
They traveled with wagons and mules, in the most primitive way, which Jones assured me
was exactly as their fathers had crossed the plains fifty years before, on the trail
to Utah.
All morning we made good time, and as we descended into the desert, the air became
warmer, the scrubby cedar growth began to fail, and the bunches of sage were few and
far between.
I turned often to gaze back at the San Francisco peaks.
The snowcapped tips glistened and grew higher, and stood out in startling relief.
Some one said they could be seen two hundred miles across the desert, and were a
landmark and a fascination to all travelers thitherward.
I never raised my eyes to the north that I did not draw my breath quickly and grow
chill with awe and bewilderment with the marvel of the desert.
The scaly red ground descended gradually; bare red knolls, like waves, rolled away
northward; black buttes reared their flat heads; long ranges of sand flowed between
them like streams, and all sloped away to
merge into gray, shadowy obscurity, into wild and desolate, dreamy and misty
nothingness. "Do you see those white sand dunes there,
more to the left?" asked Emmett.
"The Little Colorado runs in there. How far does it look to you?"
"Thirty miles, perhaps," I replied, adding ten miles to my estimate.
"It's seventy-five.
We'll get there day after to-morrow. If the snow in the mountains has begun to
melt, we'll have a time getting across." That afternoon, a hot wind blew in my face,
carrying fine sand that cut and blinded.
It filled my throat, sending me to the water cask till I was ashamed.
When I fell into my bed at night, I never turned.
The next day was hotter; the wind blew harder; the sand stung sharper.
About noon the following day, the horses whinnied, and the mules roused out of their
tardy gait.
"They smell water," said Emmett. And despite the heat, and the sand in my
nostrils, I smelled it, too. The dogs, poor foot-sore fellows, trotted
on ahead down the trail.
A few more miles of hot sand and gravel and red stone brought us around a low mesa to
the Little Colorado. It was a wide stream of swiftly running,
reddish-muddy water.
In the channel, cut by floods, little streams trickled and meandered in all
directions. The main part of the river ran in close to
the bank we were on.
The dogs lolled in the water; the horses and mules tried to run in, but were
restrained; the men drank, and bathed their faces.
According to my Flagstaff adviser, this was one of the two drinks I would get on the
desert, so I availed myself heartily of the opportunity.
The water was full of sand, but cold and gratefully thirst-quenching.
The Little Colorado seemed no more to me than a shallow creek; I heard nothing
sullen or menacing in its musical flow.
"Doesn't look bad, eh?" queried Emmett, who read my thought.
"You'd be surprised to learn how many men and Indians, horses, sheep and wagons are
buried under that quicksand."
The secret was out, and I wondered no more. At once the stream and wet bars of sand
took on a different color. I removed my boots, and waded out to a
little bar.
The sand seemed quite firm, but water oozed out around my feet; and when I stepped, the
whole bar shook like jelly.
I pushed my foot through the crust, and the cold, wet sand took hold, and tried to suck
me down. "How can you ford this stream with horses?"
I asked Emmett.
"We must take our chances," replied he. "We'll hitch two teams to one wagon, and
run the horses. I've forded here at worse stages than this.
Once a team got stuck, and I had to leave it; another time the water was high, and
washed me downstream." Emmett sent his son into the stream on a
mule.
The rider lashed his mount, and plunging, splashing, crossed at a pace near a gallop.
He returned in the same manner, and reported one bad place near the other side.
Jones and I got on the first wagon and tried to coax up the dogs, but they would
not come.
Emmett had to lash the four horses to start them; and other Mormons riding alongside,
yelled at them, and used their whips. The wagon bowled into the water with a
tremendous splash.
We were wet through before we had gone twenty feet.
The plunging horses were lost in yellow spray; the stream rushed through the
wheels; the Mormons yelled.
I wanted to see, but was lost in a veil of yellow mist.
Jones yelled in my ear, but I could not hear what he said.
Once the wagon wheels struck a stone or log, almost lurching us overboard.
A muddy splash blinded me. I cried out in my excitement, and punched
Jones in the back.
Next moment, the keen exhilaration of the ride gave way to horror.
We seemed to drag, and almost stop. Some one roared: "Horse down!"
One instant of painful suspense, in which imagination pictured another tragedy added
to the record of this deceitful river--a moment filled with intense feeling, and
sensation of splash, and yell, and fury of
action; then the three able horses dragged their comrade out of the quicksand.
He regained his feet, and plunged on.
Spurred by fear, the horses increased their efforts, and amid clouds of spray, galloped
the remaining distance to the other side. Jones looked disgusted.
Like all plainsmen, he hated water.
Emmett and his men calmly unhitched. No trace of alarm, or even of excitement
showed in their bronzed faces. "We made that fine and easy," remarked
Emmett.
So I sat down and wondered what Jones and Emmett, and these men would consider really
hazardous.
I began to have a feeling that I would find out; that experience for me was but in its
infancy; that far across the desert the something which had called me would show
hard, keen, perilous life.
And I began to think of reserve powers of fortitude and endurance.
The other wagons were brought across without mishap; but the dogs did not come
with them.
Jones called and called. The dogs howled and howled.
Finally I waded out over the wet bars and little streams to a point several hundred
yards nearer the dogs.
Moze was lying down, but the others were whining and howling in a state of great
perturbation. I called and called.
They answered, and even ran into the water, but did not start across.
"Hyah, Moze! hyah, you Indian!" I yelled, losing my patience.
"You've already swum the Big Colorado, and this is only a brook.
Come on!" This appeal evidently touched Moze, for he
barked, and plunged in.
He made the water fly, and when carried off his feet, breasted the current with energy
and power. He made shore almost even with me, and
wagged his tail.
Not to be outdone, Jude, Tige and Don followed suit, and first one and then
another was swept off his feet and carried downstream.
They landed below me.
This left Ranger, the pup, alone on the other shore.
Of all the pitiful yelps ever uttered by a frightened and lonely puppy, his were the
most forlorn I had ever heard.
Time after time he plunged in, and with many bitter howls of distress, went back.
I kept calling, and at last, hoping to make him come by a show of indifference, I
started away.
This broke his heart. Putting up his head, he let out a long,
melancholy wail, which for aught I knew might have been a prayer, and then
consigned himself to the yellow current.
Ranger swam like a boy learning. He seemed to be afraid to get wet.
His forefeet were continually pawing the air in front of his nose.
When he struck the swift place, he went downstream like a flash, but still kept
swimming valiantly. I tried to follow along the sand-bar, but
found it impossible.
I encouraged him by yelling. He drifted far below, stranded on an
island, crossed it, and plunged in again, to make shore almost out of my sight.
And when at last I got to dry sand, there was Ranger, wet and disheveled, but
consciously proud and happy.
After lunch we entered upon the seventy- mile stretch from the Little to the Big
Colorado.
Imagination had pictured the desert for me as a vast, sandy plain, flat and
monotonous.
Reality showed me desolate mountains gleaming bare in the sun, long lines of red
bluffs, white sand dunes, and hills of blue clay, areas of level ground--in all, a
many-hued, boundless world in itself,
wonderful and beautiful, fading all around into the purple haze of deceiving distance.
Thin, clear, sweet, dry, the desert air carried a languor, a dreaminess, tidings of
far-off things, and an enthralling promise.
The fragrance of flowers, the beauty and grace of women, the sweetness of music, the
mystery of life--all seemed to float on that promise.
It was the air breathed by the lotus- eaters, when they dreamed, and wandered no
more. Beyond the Little Colorado, we began to
climb again.
The sand was thick; the horses labored; the drivers shielded their faces.
The dogs began to limp and lag.
Ranger had to be taken into a wagon; and then, one by one, all of the other dogs
except Moze. He refused to ride, and trotted along with
his head down.
Far to the front the pink cliffs, the ragged mesas, the dark, volcanic spurs of
the Big Colorado stood up and beckoned us onward.
But they were a far hundred miles across the shifting sands, and baked day, and
ragged rocks.
Always in the rear rose the San Francisco peaks, cold and pure, startlingly clear and
close in the rare atmosphere.
We camped near another water hole, located in a deep, yellow-colored gorge, crumbling
to pieces, a ruin of rock, and silent as the grave.
In the bottom of the canyon was a pool of water, covered with green ***.
My thirst was effectually quenched by the mere sight of it.
I slept poorly, and lay for hours watching the great stars.
The silence was painfully oppressive.
If Jones had not begun to give a respectable imitation of the exhaust pipe
on a steamboat, I should have been compelled to shout aloud, or get up; but
this snoring would have dispelled anything.
The morning came gray and cheerless. I got up stiff and sore, with a tongue like
a rope. All day long we ran the gauntlet of the
hot, flying sand.
Night came again, a cold, windy night. I slept well until a mule stepped on my
bed, which was conducive to restlessness. At dawn, cold, gray clouds tried to blot
out the rosy east.
I could hardly get up. My lips were cracked; my tongue swollen to
twice its natural size; my eyes smarted and burned.
The barrels and kegs of water were exhausted.
Holes that had been dug in the dry sand of a dry streambed the night before in the
morning yielded a scant supply of muddy alkali water, which went to the horses.
Only twice that day did I rouse to anything resembling enthusiasm.
We came to a stretch of country showing the wonderful diversity of the desert land.
A long range of beautifully rounded clay stones bordered the trail.
So symmetrical were they that I imagined them works of sculptors.
Light blue, dark blue, clay blue, marine blue, cobalt blue--every shade of blue was
there, but no other color.
The other time that I awoke to sensations from without was when we came to the top of
a ridge. We had been passing through red-lands.
Jones called the place a strong, specific word which really was illustrative of the
heat amid those scaling red ridges. We came out where the red changed abruptly
to gray.
I seemed always to see things first, and I cried out: "Look! here are a red lake and
trees!"
"No, lad, not a lake," said old Jim, smiling at me; "that's what haunts the
desert traveler. It's only mirage!"
So I awoke to the realization of that illusive thing, the mirage, a beautiful
lie, false as stairs of sand. Far northward a clear rippling lake
sparkled in the sunshine.
Tall, stately trees, with waving green foliage, bordered the water.
For a long moment it lay there, smiling in the sun, a thing almost tangible; and then
it faded.
I felt a sense of actual loss. So real had been the illusion that I could
not believe I was not soon to drink and wade and dabble in the cool waters.
Disappointment was keen.
This is what maddens the prospector or sheep-herder lost in the desert.
Was it not a terrible thing to be dying of thirst, to see sparkling water, almost to
smell it and then realize suddenly that all was only a lying track of the desert, a
lure, a delusion?
I ceased to wonder at the Mormons, and their search for water, their talk of
water. But I had not realized its true
significance.
I had not known what water was. I had never appreciated it.
So it was my destiny to learn that water is the greatest thing on earth.
I hung over a three-foot hole in a dry stream-bed, and watched it ooze and seep
through the sand, and fill up--oh, so slowly; and I felt it loosen my parched
tongue, and steal through all my dry body with strength and life.
Water is said to constitute three fourths of the universe.
However that may be, on the desert it is the whole world, and all of life.
Two days passed by, all hot sand and wind and glare.
The Mormons sang no more at evening; Jones was silent; the dogs were limp as rags.
At Moncaupie Wash we ran into a sandstorm. The horses turned their backs to it, and
bowed their heads patiently.
The Mormons covered themselves. I wrapped a blanket round my head and hid
behind a sage bush. The wind, carrying the sand, made a strange
hollow roar.
All was enveloped in a weird yellow opacity.
The sand seeped through the sage bush and swept by with a soft, rustling sound, not
unlike the wind in the rye.
From time to time I raised a corner of my blanket and peeped out.
Where my feet had stretched was an enormous mound of sand.
I felt the blanket, weighted down, slowly settle over me.
Suddenly as it had come, the sandstorm passed.
It left a changed world for us.
The trail was covered; the wheels hub-deep in sand; the horses, walking sand dunes.
I could not close my teeth without grating harshly on sand.
We journeyed onward, and passed long lines of petrified trees, some a hundred feet in
length, lying as they had fallen, thousands of years before.
White ants crawled among the ruins.
Slowly climbing the sandy trail, we circled a great red bluff with jagged peaks, that
had seemed an interminable obstacle. A scant growth of cedar and sage again made
its appearance.
Here we halted to pass another night. Under a cedar I heard the plaintive,
piteous bleat of an animal.
I searched, and presently found a little black and white lamb, scarcely able to
stand. It came readily to me, and I carried it to
the wagon.
"That's a Navajo lamb," said Emmett. "It's lost.
There are Navajo Indians close by." "Away in the desert we heard its cry,"
quoted one of the Mormons.
Jones and I climbed the red mesa near camp to see the sunset.
All the western world was ablaze in golden glory.
Shafts of light shot toward the zenith, and bands of paler gold, tinging to rose,
circled away from the fiery, sinking globe.
Suddenly the sun sank, the gold changed to gray, then to purple, and shadows formed in
the deep gorge at our feet.
So sudden was the transformation that soon it was night, the solemn, impressive night
of the desert.
A stillness that seemed too sacred to break clasped the place; it was infinite; it held
the bygone ages, and eternity. More days, and miles, miles, miles!
The last day's ride to the Big Colorado was unforgettable.
We rode toward the head of a gigantic red cliff pocket, a veritable inferno,
immeasurably hot, glaring, awful.
It towered higher and higher above us.
When we reached a point of this red barrier, we heard the dull rumbling roar of
water, and we came out, at length, on a winding trail cut in the face of a blue
overhanging the Colorado River.
The first sight of most famous and much- heralded wonders of nature is often
disappointing; but never can this be said of the blood-hued Rio Colorado.
If it had beauty, it was beauty that appalled.
So riveted was my gaze that I could hardly turn it across the river, where Emmett
proudly pointed out his lonely home--an oasis set down amidst beetling red cliffs.
How grateful to the eye was the green of alfalfa and cottonwood!
Going round the bluff trail, the wheels had only a foot of room to spare; and the sheer
descent into the red, turbid, congested river was terrifying.
I saw the constricted rapids, where the Colorado took its plunge into the box-like
head of the Grand Canyon of Arizona; and the deep, reverberating boom of the river,
at flood height, was a fearful thing to hear.
I could not repress a shudder at the thought of crossing above that rapid.
The bronze walls widened as we proceeded, and we got down presently to a level, where
a long wire cable stretched across the river.
Under the cable ran a rope.
On the other side was an old scow moored to the bank.
"Are we going across in that?" I asked Emmett, pointing to the boat.
"We'll all be on the other side before dark," he replied cheerily.
I felt that I would rather start back alone over the desert than trust myself in such a
craft, on such a river.
And it was all because I had had experience with bad rivers, and thought I was a judge
of dangerous currents.
The Colorado slid with a menacing roar out of a giant split in the red wall, and
whirled, eddied, bulged on toward its confinement in the iron-ribbed canyon
below.
In answer to shots fired, Emmett's man appeared on the other side, and rode down
to the ferry landing.
Here he got into a skiff, and rowed laboriously upstream for a long distance
before he started across, and then swung into the current.
He swept down rapidly, and twice the skiff whirled, and completely turned round; but
he reached our bank safely.
Taking two men aboard he rowed upstream again, close to the shore, and returned to
the opposite side in much the same manner in which he had come over.
The three men pushed out the scow, and grasping the rope overhead, began to pull.
The big craft ran easily.
When the current struck it, the wire cable sagged, the water boiled and surged under
it, raising one end, and then the other. Nevertheless, five minutes were all that
were required to pull the boat over.
It was a rude, oblong affair, made of heavy planks loosely put together, and it leaked.
When Jones suggested that we get the agony over as quickly as possible, I was with
him, and we embarked together.
Jones said he did not like the looks of the tackle; and when I thought of his by no
means small mechanical skill, I had not added a cheerful idea to my consciousness.
The horses of the first team had to be dragged upon the scow, and once on, they
reared and plunged.
When we started, four men pulled the rope, and Emmett sat in the stern, with the
tackle guys in hand.
As the current hit us, he let out the guys, which maneuver caused the boat to swing
stern downstream. When it pointed obliquely, he made fast the
guys again.
I saw that this served two purposes: the current struck, slid alongside, and over
the stern, which mitigated the danger, and at the same time helped the boat across.
To look at the river was to court terror, but I had to look.
It was an infernal thing. It roared in hollow, sullen voice, as a
monster growling.
It had voice, this river, and one strangely changeful.
It moaned as if in pain--it whined, it cried.
Then at times it would seem strangely silent.
The current as complex and mutable as human life.
It boiled, beat and bulged.
The bulge itself was an incompressible thing, like a roaring lift of the waters
from submarine explosion. Then it would smooth out, and run like oil.
It shifted from one channel to another, rushed to the center of the river, then
swung close to one shore or the other. Again it swelled near the boat, in great,
boiling, hissing eddies.
"Look! See where it breaks through the mountain!"
yelled Jones in my ear.
I looked upstream to see the stupendous granite walls separated in a gigantic split
that must have been made by a terrible seismic disturbance; and from this gap
poured the dark, turgid, mystic flood.
I was in a cold sweat when we touched shore, and I jumped long before the boat
was properly moored. Emmett was wet to the waist where the water
had surged over him.
As he sat rearranging some tackle I remarked to him that of course he must be a
splendid swimmer, or he would not take such risks.
"No, I can't swim a stroke," he replied; "and it wouldn't be any use if I could.
Once in there a man's a goner." "You've had bad accidents here?"
I questioned.
"No, not bad. We only drowned two men last year.
You see, we had to tow the boat up the river, and row across, as then we hadn't
the wire.
Just above, on this side, the boat hit a stone, and the current washed over her,
taking off the team and two men." "Didn't you attempt to rescue them?"
I asked, after waiting a moment.
"No use. They never came up."
"Isn't the river high now?" I continued, shuddering as I glanced out at
the whirling logs and drifts.
"High, and coming up. If I don't get the other teams over to-day
I'll wait until she goes down.
At this season she rises and lowers every day or so, until June then comes the big
flood, and we don't cross for months."
I sat for three hours watching Emmett bring over the rest of his party, which he did
without accident, but at the expense of great effort.
And all the time in my ears dinned the roar, the boom, the rumble of this
singularly rapacious and purposeful river-- a river of silt, a red river of dark,
sinister meaning, a river with terrible
work to perform, a river which never gave up its dead.