<h3>CHAPTER XXII.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Charlie's adventures with savages and bears</i>--<i>Trapping<br/>
life</i>.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
It is one thing to chase a horse; it is another thing<br/>
to catch it. Little consideration and less sagacity<br/>
are required to convince us of the truth of that fact.<br/>
<br/>
The reader may perhaps venture to think this rather<br/>
a trifling fact. We are not so sure of that. In this<br/>
world of fancies, to have <i>any</i> fact incontestably proved<br/>
and established is a comfort, and whatever is a source<br/>
of comfort to mankind is worthy of notice. Surely our<br/>
reader won't deny that! Perhaps he will, so we can<br/>
only console ourself with the remark that there are<br/>
people in this world who would deny <i>anything</i>--who<br/>
would deny that there was a nose on their face if you<br/>
said there was!<br/>
<br/>
Well, to return to the point, which was the chase of<br/>
a horse in the abstract; from which we will rapidly<br/>
diverge to the chase of Dick Varley's horse in particular.<br/>
This noble charger, having been ridden by savages until<br/>
all his old fire and blood and mettle were worked up<br/>
to a red heat, no sooner discovered that he was pursued<br/>
than he gave a snort of defiance, which he accompanied<br/>
with a frantic shake of his mane and a fling<br/>
of contempt in addition to a magnificent wave of<br/>
his tail. Then he thundered up the valley at a pace<br/>
which would speedily have left Joe Blunt and Henri<br/>
out of sight behind if--ay! that's the word, <i>if</i>! What<br/>
a word that <i>if</i> is! what a world of <i>if's</i> we live in!<br/>
There never was anything that wouldn't have been<br/>
something else <i>if</i> something hadn't intervened to prevent<br/>
it! Yes, we repeat Charlie would have left his<br/>
two friends miles and miles behind in what is called<br/>
"no time," <i>if</i> he had not run straight into a gorge<br/>
which was surrounded by inaccessible precipices, and<br/>
out of which there was no exit except by the entrance,<br/>
which was immediately barred by Henri, while Joe<br/>
advanced to catch the run-away.<br/>
<br/>
For two hours at least did Joe Blunt essay to catch<br/>
Charlie, and during that space of time he utterly failed<br/>
The horse seemed to have made up his mind for what<br/>
is vulgarly termed "a lark."<br/>
<br/>
"It won't do, Henri," said Joe, advancing towards<br/>
his companion, and wiping his forehead with the cuff<br/>
of his leathern coat; "I can't catch him. The wind's<br/>
a'most blowed out o' me body."<br/>
<br/>
"Dat am vexatiable," replied Henri, in a tone of<br/>
commiseration. "S'pose I wos make try?"<br/>
<br/>
"In that case I s'pose ye would fail. But go ahead,<br/>
an' do what ye can. I'll hold yer horse."<br/>
<br/>
So Henri began by a rush and a flourish of legs and<br/>
arms that nearly frightened the horse out of his wits.<br/>
For half-an-hour he went through all the complications<br/>
of running and twisting of which he was capable, without<br/>
success, when Joe Blunt suddenly uttered a stentorian<br/>
yell that rooted him to the spot on which he<br/>
stood.<br/>
<br/>
To account for this, we must explain that in the<br/>
heights of the Rocky Mountains vast accumulations of<br/>
snow take place among the crevices and gorges during<br/>
winter. Such of these masses as form on steep slopes<br/>
are loosened by occasional thaws, and are precipitated<br/>
in the form of avalanches into the valleys below, carrying<br/>
trees and stones along with them in their thundering<br/>
descent. In the gloomy gorge where Dick's<br/>
horse had taken refuge the precipices were so steep that<br/>
many avalanches had occurred, as was evident from the<br/>
mounds of heaped snow that lay at the foot of most of<br/>
them. Neither stones nor trees were carried down here,<br/>
however, for the cliffs were nearly perpendicular, and<br/>
the snow slipping over their edges had fallen on the<br/>
grass below. Such an avalanche was now about to take<br/>
place, and it was this that caused Joe to utter his cry<br/>
of alarm and warning.<br/>
<br/>
Henri and the horse were directly under the cliff over<br/>
which it was about to be hurled, the latter close to the<br/>
wall of rock, the other at some distance away from it.<br/>
<br/>
Joe cried again, "Back, Henri! back <i>vite</i>!" when<br/>
the mass <i>flowed over</i> and fell with a roar like prolonged<br/>
thunder. Henri sprang back in time to save his life,<br/>
though he was knocked down and almost stunned; but<br/>
poor Charlie was completely buried under the avalanche,<br/>
which now presented the appearance of a <i>hill</i> of snow.<br/>
<br/>
The instant Henri recovered sufficiently, Joe and he<br/>
mounted their horses and galloped back to the camp as<br/>
fast as possible.<br/>
<br/>
Meanwhile, another spectator stepped forward upon<br/>
the scene they had left, and surveyed the snow hill<br/>
with a critical eye. This was no less than a grizzly<br/>
bear, which had, unobserved, been a spectator, and which<br/>
immediately proceeded to dig into the mound, with the<br/>
purpose, no doubt, of disentombing the carcass of the<br/>
horse for purposes of his own.<br/>
<br/>
While he was thus actively engaged the two hunters<br/>
reached the camp, where they found that Pierre and his<br/>
party had just arrived. The men sent out in search of<br/>
them had scarcely advanced a mile when they found<br/>
them trudging back to the camp in a very disconsolate<br/>
manner. But all their sorrows were put to flight on<br/>
hearing of the curious way in which the horses had<br/>
been returned to them with interest.<br/>
<br/>
Scarcely had Dick Varley, however, congratulated<br/>
himself on the recovery of his gallant steed, when he<br/>
was thrown into despair by the sudden arrival of Joe<br/>
with the tidings of the catastrophe we have just related.<br/>
<br/>
Of course there was a general rush to the rescue.<br/>
Only a few men were ordered to remain to guard the<br/>
camp, while the remainder mounted their horses and<br/>
galloped towards the gorge where Charlie had been entombed.<br/>
On arriving, they found that Bruin had<br/>
worked with such laudable zeal that nothing but the<br/>
tip of his tail was seen sticking out of the hole which<br/>
he had dug. The hunters could not refrain from<br/>
laughing as they sprang to the ground, and standing in<br/>
a semicircle in front of the hole, prepared to fire. But<br/>
Crusoe resolved to have the honour of leading the<br/>
assault. He seized fast hold of Bruin's flank, and<br/>
caused his teeth to meet therein. Caleb backed out<br/>
at once and turned round, but before he could recover<br/>
from his surprise a dozen bullets pierced his heart and<br/>
brain.<br/>
<br/>
"Now, lads," cried Cameron, setting to work with a<br/>
large wooden shovel, "work like niggers. If there's<br/>
any life left in the horse, it'll soon be smothered out<br/>
unless we set him free."<br/>
<br/>
The men needed no urging, however. They worked<br/>
as if their lives depended on their exertions. Dick<br/>
Varley, in particular, laboured like a young Hercules,<br/>
and Henri hurled masses of snow about in a most surprising<br/>
manner. Crusoe, too, entered heartily into the<br/>
spirit of the work, and, scraping with his forepaws,<br/>
sent such a continuous shower of snow behind him that<br/>
he was speedily lost to view in a hole of his own excavating.<br/>
In the course of half-an-hour a cavern was<br/>
dug in the mound almost close up to the cliff, and the<br/>
men were beginning to look about for the crushed body<br/>
of Dick's steed, when an exclamation from Henri attracted<br/>
their attention.<br/>
<br/>
"Ha! mes ami, here am be one hole."<br/>
<br/>
The truth of this could not be doubted, for the<br/>
eccentric trapper had thrust his shovel through the<br/>
wall of snow into what appeared to be a cavern beyond,<br/>
and immediately followed up his remark by thrusting<br/>
in his head and shoulders. He drew them out in a few<br/>
seconds, with a look of intense amazement.<br/>
<br/>
"Voilà! Joe Blunt. Look in dere, and you shall see<br/>
fat you vill behold."<br/>
<br/>
"Why, it's the horse, I do b'lieve!" cried Joe. "Go<br/>
ahead, lads!"<br/>
<br/>
So saying, he resumed his shovelling vigorously, and<br/>
in a few minutes the hole was opened up sufficiently to<br/>
enable a man to enter. Dick sprang in, and there stood<br/>
Charlie close beside the cliff, looking as sedate and,<br/>
unconcerned as if all that had been going on had no<br/>
reference to him whatever.<br/>
<br/>
The cause of his safety was simple enough. The<br/>
precipice beside which he stood when the avalanche<br/>
occurred overhung its base at that point considerably,<br/>
so that when the snow descended a clear space of<br/>
several feet wide was left all along its base. Here<br/>
Charlie had remained in perfect comfort until his<br/>
friends dug him out.<br/>
<br/>
Congratulating themselves not a little on having saved<br/>
the charger and bagged a grizzly bear, the trappers remounted,<br/>
and returned to the camp.<br/>
<br/>
For some time after this nothing worthy of particular<br/>
note occurred. The trapping operations went on<br/>
prosperously and without interruption from the Indians,<br/>
who seemed to have left the locality altogether. During<br/>
this period, Dick, and Crusoe, and Charlie had many<br/>
excursions together, and the silver rifle full many a time<br/>
sent death to the heart of bear, and elk, and buffalo;<br/>
while, indirectly, it sent joy to the heart of man,<br/>
woman, and child in camp, in the shape of juicy steaks<br/>
and marrow-bones. Joe and Henri devoted themselves<br/>
almost exclusively to trapping beaver, in which pursuit<br/>
they were so successful that they speedily became<br/>
wealthy men, according to backwood notions of wealth.<br/>
<br/>
With the beaver that they caught they purchased from<br/>
Cameron's store powder and shot enough for a long<br/>
hunting expedition, and a couple of spare horses to<br/>
carry their packs. They also purchased a large assortment<br/>
of such goods and trinkets as would prove acceptable<br/>
to Indians, and supplied themselves with new<br/>
blankets, and a few pairs of strong moccasins, of which<br/>
they stood much in need.<br/>
<br/>
Thus they went on from day to day, until symptoms<br/>
of the approach of winter warned them that it was time<br/>
to return to the Mustang Valley. About this time an<br/>
event occurred which totally changed the aspect of<br/>
affairs in these remote valleys of the Rocky Mountains,<br/>
and precipitated the departure of our four friends, Dick,<br/>
Joe, Henri, and Crusoe. This was the sudden arrival of<br/>
a whole tribe of Indians. As their advent was somewhat<br/>
remarkable, we shall devote to it the commencement<br/>
of a new chapter.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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