<h3>CHAPTER XIII.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Escape from Indians--A discovery--Alone in the desert</i>.<br/>
<br/>
Dick Varley had spent so much of his boyhood<br/>
in sporting about among the waters of the rivers<br/>
and lakes near which he had been reared, and especially<br/>
during the last two years had spent so much of his<br/>
leisure time in rolling and diving with his dog Crusoe<br/>
in the lake of the Mustang Valley, that he had become<br/>
almost as expert in the water as a South Sea islander;<br/>
so that when he found himself whirling down the rapid<br/>
river, as already described, he was more impressed with<br/>
a feeling of gratitude to God for his escape from the<br/>
Indians than anxiety about getting ashore.<br/>
<br/>
He was not altogether blind or indifferent to the<br/>
danger into which he might be hurled if the channel of<br/>
the river should be found lower down to be broken with<br/>
rocks, or should a waterfall unexpectedly appear. After<br/>
floating down a sufficient distance to render pursuit<br/>
out of the question, he struck into the bank opposite to<br/>
that from which he had plunged, and clambering up<br/>
to the greensward above, stripped off the greater part<br/>
of his clothing and hung it on the branches of a bush to<br/>
dry. Then he sat down on the trunk of a fallen tree<br/>
to consider what course he had best pursue in his present<br/>
circumstances.<br/>
<br/>
These circumstances were by no means calculated to<br/>
inspire him with hope or comfort. He was in the<br/>
midst of an unknown wilderness, hundreds of miles<br/>
from any white man's settlement; surrounded by<br/>
savages; without food or blanket; his companions<br/>
gone, he knew not whither--perhaps taken and killed<br/>
by the Indians; his horse dead; and his dog, the most<br/>
trusty and loving of all his friends, lost to him, probably,<br/>
for ever! A more veteran heart might have<br/>
quailed in the midst of such accumulated evils; but<br/>
Dick Varley possessed a strong, young, and buoyant<br/>
constitution, which, united with a hopefulness of disposition<br/>
that almost nothing could overcome, enabled him<br/>
very quickly to cast aside the gloomy view of his case<br/>
and turn to its brighter aspects.<br/>
<br/>
He still grasped his good rifle, that was some comfort;<br/>
and as his eye fell upon it, he turned with anxiety to<br/>
examine into the condition of his powder-horn and the<br/>
few things that he had been fortunate enough to carry<br/>
away with him about his person.<br/>
<br/>
The horn in which western hunters carry their powder<br/>
is usually that of an ox. It is closed up at the large<br/>
end with a piece of hard wood fitted tightly into it, and<br/>
the small end is closed with a wooden peg or stopper.<br/>
It is therefore completely water-tight, and may be for<br/>
hours immersed without the powder getting wet, unless<br/>
the stopper should chance to be knocked out. Dick<br/>
found, to his great satisfaction, that the stopper was<br/>
fast and the powder perfectly dry. Moreover, he had by good fortune<br/>
filled<br/>
it full two days before from the<br/>
package that contained the general stock of ammunition,<br/>
so that there were only two or three charges out of it.<br/>
His percussion caps, however, were completely destroyed;<br/>
and even though they had not been, it would have mattered<br/>
little, for he did not possess more than half-a-dozen.<br/>
But this was not so great a misfortune as at first it<br/>
might seem, for he had the spare flint locks and the little<br/>
screw-driver necessary for fixing and unfixing them<br/>
stowed away in his shot pouch.<br/>
<br/>
To examine his supply of bullets was his next care,<br/>
and slowly he counted them out, one by one, to the<br/>
number of thirty. This was a pretty fair supply, and<br/>
with careful economy would last him many days. Having<br/>
relieved his mind on these all-important points,<br/>
he carefully examined every pouch and corner of his<br/>
dress to ascertain the exact amount and value of his<br/>
wealth.<br/>
<br/>
Besides the leather leggings, moccasins, deerskin hunting-shirt,<br/>
cap, and belt which composed his costume, he<br/>
had a short heavy hunting-knife, a piece of tinder, a<br/>
little tin pannikin, which he had been in the habit of<br/>
carrying at his belt, and a large cake of maple sugar.<br/>
This last is a species of sugar which is procured by the<br/>
Indians from the maple-tree. Several cakes of it had<br/>
been carried off from the Pawnee village, and Dick<br/>
usually carried one in the breast of his coat. Besides<br/>
these things, he found that the little Bible, for which<br/>
his mother had made a small inside breast-pocket, was<br/>
safe. Dick's heart smote him when he took it out and<br/>
undid the clasp, for he had not looked at it until that<br/>
day. It was firmly bound with a brass clasp, so that,<br/>
although the binding and the edges of the leaves were<br/>
soaked, the inside was quite dry. On opening the book<br/>
to see if it had been damaged, a small paper fell out.<br/>
Picking it up quickly, he unfolded it, and read, in his<br/>
mother's handwriting: "<i>Call upon me in the time of<br/>
trouble; and I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify<br/>
me. My son, give me thine heart</i>."<br/>
<br/>
Dick's eyes filled with tears while the sound, as it<br/>
were, of his mother's voice thus reached him unexpectedly<br/>
in that lonely wilderness. Like too many whose<br/>
hearts are young and gay, Dick had regarded religion, if<br/>
not as a gloomy, at least as not a cheerful thing. But<br/>
he felt the comfort of these words at that moment, and<br/>
he resolved seriously to peruse his mother's parting gift<br/>
in time to come.<br/>
<br/>
The sun was hot, and a warm breeze gently shook<br/>
the leaves, so that Dick's garments were soon dry. A<br/>
few minutes served to change the locks of his rifle, draw<br/>
the wet charges, dry out the barrels, and re-load. Then<br/>
throwing it across his shoulder, he entered the wood and<br/>
walked lightly away. And well he might, poor fellow,<br/>
for at that moment he felt light enough in person if not<br/>
in heart. His worldly goods were not such as to oppress<br/>
him; but the little note had turned his thoughts towards<br/>
home, and he felt comforted.<br/>
<br/>
Traversing the belt of woodland that marked the<br/>
course of the river, Dick soon emerged on the wide<br/>
prairie beyond, and here he paused in some uncertainty<br/>
as to how he should proceed.<br/>
<br/>
He was too good a backwoodsman, albeit so young, to<br/>
feel perplexed as to the points of the compass. He<br/>
knew pretty well what hour it was, so that the sun<br/>
showed him the general bearings of the country, and he<br/>
knew that when night came he could correct his course<br/>
by the pole star. Dick's knowledge of astronomy was<br/>
limited; he knew only one star by name, but that one<br/>
was an inestimable treasure of knowledge. His perplexity<br/>
was owing to his uncertainty as to the direction<br/>
in which his companions and their pursuers had gone;<br/>
for he had made up his mind to follow their trail if<br/>
possible, and render all the succour his single arm<br/>
might afford. To desert them, and make for the settlement,<br/>
he held, would be a faithless and cowardly<br/>
act.<br/>
<br/>
While they were together Joe Blunt had often talked<br/>
to him about the route he meant to pursue to the Rocky<br/>
Mountains, so that, if they had escaped the Indians, he<br/>
thought there might be some chance of finding them at<br/>
last. But, to set against this, there was the probability<br/>
that they had been taken and carried away in a totally<br/>
different direction; or they might have taken to the<br/>
river, as he had done, and gone farther down without<br/>
his observing them. Then, again, if they had escaped,<br/>
they would be sure to return and search the country<br/>
round for him, so that if he left the spot he might miss<br/>
them.<br/>
<br/>
"Oh for my dear pup Crusoe!" he exclaimed aloud<br/>
in this dilemma; but the faithful ear was shut now,<br/>
and the deep silence that followed his cry was so oppressive<br/>
that the young hunter sprang forward at a run<br/>
over the plain, as if to fly from solitude. He soon became<br/>
so absorbed, however, in his efforts to find the<br/>
trail of his companions, that he forgot all other considerations,<br/>
and ran straight forward for hours together<br/>
with his eyes eagerly fixed on the ground. At last he<br/>
felt so hungry, having tasted no food since supper-time<br/>
the previous evening, that he halted for the purpose of<br/>
eating a morsel of maple sugar. A line of bushes in<br/>
the distance indicated water, so he sped on again, and<br/>
was soon seated beneath a willow, drinking water from<br/>
the cool stream. No game was to be found here, but<br/>
there were several kinds of berries, among which wild<br/>
grapes and plums grew in abundance. With these and<br/>
some sugar he made a meal, though not a good one, for<br/>
the berries were quite green and intensely sour.<br/>
<br/>
All that day Dick Varley followed up the trail of his<br/>
companions, which he discovered at a ford in the river.<br/>
They had crossed, therefore, in safety, though still pursued;<br/>
so he ran on at a regular trot, and with a little<br/>
more hope than he had felt during the day. Towards<br/>
night, however, Dick's heart sank again, for he came<br/>
upon innumerable buffalo tracks, among which those of<br/>
the horses soon became mingled up, so that he lost them<br/>
altogether. Hoping to find them again more easily by<br/>
broad daylight, he went to the nearest clump of willows<br/>
he could find, and encamped for the night.<br/>
<br/>
Remembering the use formerly made of the tall willows,<br/>
he set to work to construct a covering to protect<br/>
him from the dew. As he had no blanket or buffalo<br/>
skin, he used leaves and grass instead, and found it a<br/>
better shelter than he had expected, especially when the<br/>
fire was lighted, and a pannikin of hot sugar and water<br/>
smoked at his feet; but as no game was to be found, he<br/>
was again compelled to sup off unripe berries. Before<br/>
lying down to rest he remembered his resolution, and<br/>
pulling out the little Bible, read a portion of it by the<br/>
fitful blaze of the fire, and felt great comfort in its blessed<br/>
words. It seemed to him like a friend with whom he<br/>
could converse in the midst of his loneliness.<br/>
<br/>
The plunge into the river having broken Dick's pipe<br/>
and destroyed his tobacco, he now felt the want of that<br/>
luxury very severely, and, never having wanted it before,<br/>
he was greatly surprised to find how much he had<br/>
become enslaved to the habit. It cost him more than<br/>
an hour's rest that night, the craving for his wonted<br/>
pipe.<br/>
<br/>
The sagacious reader will doubtless not fail here to<br/>
ask himself the question, whether it is wise in man to<br/>
create in himself an unnatural and totally unnecessary<br/>
appetite, which may, and often does, entail hours--ay,<br/>
sometimes months--of exceeding discomfort; but we<br/>
would not for a moment presume to suggest such a<br/>
question to him. We have a distinct objection to the<br/>
ordinary method of what is called "drawing a moral."<br/>
It is much better to leave wise men to do this for<br/>
themselves.<br/>
<br/>
Next morning Dick rose with the sun, and started<br/>
without breakfast, preferring to take his chance of finding<br/>
a bird or animal of some kind before long, to feeding<br/>
again on sour berries. He was disappointed, however,<br/>
in finding the tracks of his companions. The ground<br/>
here was hard and sandy, so that little or no impression<br/>
of a distinct kind was made on it; and as buffaloes<br/>
had traversed it in all directions, he was soon utterly<br/>
bewildered. He thought it possible that, by running<br/>
out for several miles in a straight line, and then taking<br/>
a wide circuit round, he might find the tracks emerging<br/>
from the confusion made by the buffaloes. But he was<br/>
again disappointed, for the buffalo tracks still continued,<br/>
and the ground became less capable of showing a footprint.<br/>
<br/>
Soon Dick began to feel so ill and weak from eating<br/>
such poor fare, that he gave up all hope of discovering<br/>
the tracks, and was compelled to push forward at his<br/>
utmost speed in order to reach a less barren district,<br/>
where he might procure fresh meat; but the farther he<br/>
advanced the worse and more sandy did the district<br/>
become. For several days he pushed on over this arid<br/>
waste without seeing bird or beast, and, to add to his<br/>
misery, he failed at last to find water. For a day and<br/>
a night he wandered about in a burning fever, and his<br/>
throat so parched that he was almost suffocated. Towards<br/>
the close of the second day he saw a slight line<br/>
of bushes away down in a hollow on his right. With<br/>
eager steps he staggered towards them, and, on drawing<br/>
near, beheld--blessed sight!--a stream of water glancing<br/>
in the beams of the setting sun.<br/>
<br/>
Dick tried to shout for joy, but his parched throat<br/>
refused to give utterance to the voice. It mattered<br/>
not. Exerting all his remaining strength he rushed<br/>
down the bank, dropped his rifle, and plunged headforemost<br/>
into the stream.<br/>
<br/>
The first mouthful sent a thrill of horror to his heart;<br/>
it was salt as brine!<br/>
<br/>
The poor youth's cup of bitterness was now full to<br/>
overflowing. Crawling out of the stream, he sank down<br/>
on the bank in a species of lethargic torpor, from which,<br/>
he awakened next morning in a raging fever. Delirium<br/>
soon rendered him insensible to his sufferings. The<br/>
sun rose like a ball of fire, and shone down with scorching<br/>
power on the arid plain. What mattered it to<br/>
Dick? He was far away in the shady groves of the<br/>
Mustang Valley, chasing the deer at times, but more<br/>
frequently cooling his limbs and sporting with Crusoe<br/>
in the bright blue lake. Now he was in his mother's<br/>
cottage, telling her how he had thought of her when<br/>
far away on the prairie, and what a bright, sweet word<br/>
it was she had whispered in his ear--so unexpectedly,<br/>
too. Anon he was scouring over the plains on horseback,<br/>
with the savages at his heels; and at such times<br/>
Dick would spring with almost supernatural strength<br/>
from the ground, and run madly over the burning plain;<br/>
but, as if by a species of fascination, he always returned<br/>
to the salt river, and sank exhausted by its side, or<br/>
plunged helplessly into its waters.<br/>
<br/>
These sudden immersions usually restored him for a<br/>
short time to reason, and he would crawl up the bank<br/>
and gnaw a morsel of the maple sugar; but he could not<br/>
eat much, for it was in a tough, compact cake, which<br/>
his jaws had not power to break. All that day and<br/>
the next night he lay on the banks of the salt stream,<br/>
or rushed wildly over the plain. It was about noon of<br/>
the second day after his attack that he crept slowly<br/>
out of the water, into which he had plunged a few<br/>
seconds before. His mind was restored, but he felt an<br/>
indescribable sensation of weakness, that seemed to him<br/>
to be the approach of death. Creeping towards the<br/>
place where his rifle lay, he fell exhausted beside it,<br/>
and laid his cheek on the Bible, which had fallen out<br/>
of his pocket there.<br/>
<br/>
While his eyes were closed in a dreamy sort of half-waking<br/>
slumber, he felt the rough, hairy coat of an animal<br/>
brush against his forehead. The idea of being torn<br/>
to pieces by wolves flashed instantly across his mind,<br/>
and with a shriek of terror he sprang up--to be almost<br/>
overwhelmed by the caresses of his faithful dog.<br/>
<br/>
Yes, there he was, bounding round his master, barking<br/>
and whining, and giving vent to every possible<br/>
expression of canine joy!<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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