Document_Assignment_Unit_22
Document_Assignment_Unit_22
Department of Literature
Consternation was about the only word that fitted when Purdick had told the tale of the lost book.
What he had said was perfectly true. Though they were all three taking engineering courses in
college, no one of them knew enough about mineralogy as a science to do any practical
prospecting for metals without a text-book. Besides, there were the Government maps; lacking
them, they could never locate a claim, so as to be able to tell where it was situated, even if they
At the moment, none of them thought much of the loss of James Brock’s little sketch map of the
Golden Spider. Uncle Billy Starbuck’s evident conviction that the lost mine would never be found
unless it was by pure accident had its effect; and, anyway, the real business of the summer was to
be a search for the baser, though not less valuable, metals. And unless they could determine the
presence of these—as they couldn’t hope to without the help of the “Dana,” there was no use in
going on.
“Well,” said Dick, drawing a long breath, “that fixes us, good and plenty. I guess it’s us for a hike
back to Nophi, and a wait until we can wire for another copy of the book and another set of the
Survey maps.”
[36]
“It’s likely to be a good, long wait. That copy of the ‘Dana’ was the only one to be found in
Brewster—so the man that sold it to me said; and the maps will probably have to come from
Washington.”
It was here that little Purdick had his say.
“This crazy break is on me and nobody else,” he cut in. “I had no business to forget the book
when we were packing up last night. If you fellows will wait here for me, I’ll go back after it.”
“A lot of good that would do!” said Dick. “Those three hold-ups will be on the trail ahead of you,
and you can bet they won’t miss finding the book in daylight, if they did overlook it last night.”
“I know,” Purdick went on, “but it’s up to me to try it, just the same. I deserve all that’s coming to
me.”
At this, both of the others protested vigorously. There was little chance that the returning
desperadoes wouldn’t find the book as they passed the camp site; and Larry and Dick both urged,
with a good deal of truth, that Purdick was too “soft” to tackle the job; unfit, and too unused to
roughing it in the open. Purdick let them go on until they had talked themselves out, but he
“What you say is so true that it hurts,” he came back. “All the same, I’m going. I made the break,
and it’s my job to patch it up, if I can. All I want to know is whether you’ll wait for me here, or at
Dick and Larry exchanged glances. One of Purdick’s outstanding qualities—the one by which he
was best known in Old Sheddon—was a certain patient, gamey obstinacy that never knew when
it was beaten. They[37] knew that if he had made up his mind to do penance for his neglect by
I’d make up your pack. So we can split the blame.” Then to Dick: “Think you could navigate
“All right,” Larry went on; “I’ve got a scheme. As I told you, I soaked up good and plenty on
those Survey maps yesterday, and I believe I can find a shorter way back to the canyon than the
one the regular trail takes around that long loop at the head of the valley. Hustle us a quick bite of
breakfast, Purdy, and I’ll go along with you. There’s just about one chance in a hundred that we
Purdick demurred a little to this, still insisting that the fault was his and that he ought to pay the
penalty alone. But he did not let his objections delay things. The water was boiling, and with the
pot of coffee made, a few slices of bacon fried over the alcohol blaze, and a box of biscuits
opened, they bolted a hasty breakfast. With the draining of the coffee pot the plan of action was
outlined.
Since there was no feed for the burros on the barren pass, Larry’s suggestion that Dick go on
down the western slope with the pack animals had to be accepted, so it was arranged that he was
to push on, stopping to wait for[38] Larry and Purdick to catch up when he should reach the first
“We ought to be able to overtake you by to-night, or early to-morrow morning, at the latest,”
Larry said, “but if we don’t show up as soon as you think we ought to, don’t worry. We’ll do the
best we can, and we’re going to travel mighty light.” And to prove it he discarded shoulder pack,
rifle and ammunition, taking only a small camp axe for equipment, while Purdick took provisions
“There’s only one thing the matter with this lay-out of ours,” Dick said, as his companions were
preparing to leave him. “Suppose you don’t find the book where Purdy dropped it—what then?”
That was a sort of an impasse to give them pause, as the old writers used to say. If they shouldn’t
find the book, they would be worse off than ever. But Larry Donovan was of the breed of those
“We’ve got to take a chance on that;” he said quickly. “You can’t keep the jacks here all day with
nothing to eat; they’ve got to either go on or go back. We’ll be with you again by to-morrow
morning, book or no book. And then, if we haven’t got what we went after, we can decide what is
The start was made without more ado, but instead of taking the trail over which they had reached
the pass, Larry led the way around the sloping shoulder of the northern peak, kicking himself
footholds in the frozen[39] snow crust, and thereby taking long chances, as he well knew, of
“Step light and walk in my tracks, and for Pat’s sake don’t slip!” he called back to Purdick; but
the caution was hardly needed. Purdick still had a vivid mental picture of the freed horse of the
hold-ups whirling and slipping and shooting down to oblivion over the skating-rink surface of the
snow slope, and he was all claws to clutch and hang as he followed Larry around the steepest part
of the shoulder.
Past the steep shoulder they came out upon what the Alpine climbers called an arrêté; a ridge
sloping gently down and roughly paralleling the main range on their left and Lost Canyon on the
right and far below. This ridge was what Larry had been aiming for. Its rocky crest had been
blown clear of the winter snows; it was taking them in the right direction; there was good footing;
and the descent was rapid enough to let them take a dog-trot without cutting their wind too
severely.
“Don’t let me wear you out,” Larry cautioned; “but here’s where we’ve got to make time, if we’re
going to beat those plug-uglies back to our camp site in the canyon. Are you good for the dog-
trot?”
“Plenty good, so long as it’s down-hill,” panted the runner-up. “But I don’t see where we’re
making anything. We can never get down to the canyon off of this thing.”
From the top of the high ridge they could get occasional glimpses of the trail winding down the
deep valley to the canyon head, and one of these glimpses gave them a sight of the baffled hold-
ups making their way slowly[40] along the slippery path, two riding and one walking; mere black
dots they were, visible only because the dazzling white surroundings made them so.
“We’re breaking even with ’em!” said Larry, lengthening the stride of the dog-trot by
imperceptible degrees. “They’ve got a good mile of the snow trail to crawl over yet, and then
another mile of the slush and mud. I believe we’re going to make it, after all.”
“Yes; but we’re a mile above the canyon, and this ridge will never take us down to it!” Purdick
gasped out.
“Wait, and you’ll see,” was all Larry would say; but as he ran he was studying the lay of the land
harder than he had ever boned Math. in the college year which had just ended. Far down the ridge
little patches of dark green showed where a straggling vanguard of the firs had pushed its way a
full half-mile above the normal timber, and it was toward the scattering and stunted trees that he
“If you can manage to hold out until we get to those trees,” he called back to the lagging runner-
Little Purdick didn’t stop to think; he was putting the whole battery of mind and will upon the
business of keeping his legs waggling. Long before the tree patches were reached, those legs had
become base deserters from the animal kingdom and had gone over bodily to the vegetable.
Pumping for breath like a spent miler on a cinder path, Purdick could fancy that his legs were
mere blocks of wood hung in some mysterious manner to his body by hinges that were sadly in
need of oiling. But, just the[41] same, they continued to waggle. That was the main thing.
None the less, when the race for Larry’s goal was won, Purdick was done, finished, écrasé, as our
French friends would put it. Dropping down upon the snow crust, he could do nothing but gasp
and groan, not so much from sheer exhaustion as in bitterness of heart because he had such
“That’s right; take it easy,” said Larry, whipping the short-handled axe from his belt. “This next
shift is a one-man job.” And as he spoke he attacked first one and then another of the stunted
trees with the axe and hacked them down in a few handy blows. “There are the toboggans,” he
jerked out; “now for the brakes,” and in a few minutes more he had two smaller trees down and
trimmed to bare sticks with stubby branches left at the butts and the stubs sharpened to points.
“Great Peter!” he exclaimed; “do you mean that we’re going to slide down on those trees?”
Larry chuckled.
“You’re one fine little guesser, Purdy; I’ll say that much for you. I’ll bet you haven’t had a sled
ride since you were a little kid, but you’re going to have one now—the kind that you’ll talk about
after you get old and toothless and take your youngest grandchild on your knee to tell it what a
“But, for mercy’s sake, Larry!—it’s a mile down to that timber, and it looks like ten! When we hit
“I know; you’ll say there won’t be anything left of us.[42] But we’ll have to risk something if we
want to beat those fellows on the trail. It’s our only chance. And I’m betting largely upon these
brake sticks. You take the stick under your arm, so, and lean back hard on it if you find yourself
going too fast. The sun’s getting a little work in on the crust now, and I’m hoping that these
“I’m still game,” said Purdick, getting up like an old, old man and helping Larry to swing the cut-
down trees into position with the butts pointing down the steep slope. And then, as one who
knows he has to be slain and wishes to have it over with: “Let me go first, and you can come
“Nothing like it,” said Larry firmly. “I’ve done this thing before, and you haven’t. You watch me
go, and then do exactly as I do.” And with that, he straddled his tree, took the steering stick under
Little Purdick had held his breath so many times during the past twenty-four hours that he did it
now quite automatically. To his town-bred notion, Larry was simply committing suicide, or so it
seemed as the big bunch of evergreen, with Larry riding it, hurled itself down the first steep
declivity, utterly out of control—it appeared; and it was not until the tree and its rider were a
mere flying dot in the lower distance that Purdick could summon the nerve to mount his own
Of what happened to him in the next sixty seconds or so he never had a very clear picture. There
was no working up to speed; no interval in which to grow up to the crowding sensations of the
thing. With a slithering hiss the makeshift sled was off, and at the first downward dash the brake
stick caught in the crust, ripped a furrow[43] apparently a mile long, and was then torn out of his
grasp. With nothing to lean on, Purdick whirled over on his face and took a death grip on the
branches of the tree, burying his arms to the shoulders in the foliage. In the one brief glimpse he
had of the backward rushing steep he saw great slabs of the snow crust, torn up by the hooking
brake stick, following him down in a cataracting procession; the next thing he knew there was a
crash as if a blast had gone off under him, and Larry was stooping over him, laughing and trying
“Let go, you old cockleburr!” he chuckled. “You can’t take that tree with you where we’re going.
Purdick sat up and made a valiant effort to get once more in touch with things ordinary and
commonplace.
“S-say, Larry,” he whispered, “what was it that blew up and stopped me?”
“I guess you were the only thing that blew up. But it was that big pine you’re looking at that
stopped you. You hit it as square as if you were steering for it. Shake you up much?”
“No; I guess I’m all here yet,” said Purdick, rolling off his tree sled. “But believe me, Larry, that
Purdick shook his head. “You can’t prove anything by me. After I lost my stick I just shut my
“Not more than a couple of miles from our camp site[44] and a few hundred feet above the trail
—if I’ve kept my reckoning. But let’s be on our way. We are ahead of those rustlers now, and we
want to keep ahead. If we move right along, we may not have to do any more sprinting.”
“Here’s hoping,” said little Purdick, stifling a groan as he began once more to swing the
vegetable-kingdom legs. “That run on top of the ridge just about put me to sleep from the waist
down.”
“You’ll harden up, after we’ve been out a few days,” Larry predicted; and then he set a course
diagonally through the forest. In a very short time they came to the thawing zone, first slushy
snow and then mud, and springy morass, bad going that slowed them down in spite of all the care
they could take in picking their way. But this, too, was left behind in the course of time, and at
last they found themselves skirting the canyon on a high bench-like plateau thickly carpeted with
Here, where their hurrying footsteps made no sound, they could hear the riffle and splash of the
stream in the gorge below, and it was Purdick’s quick ear that presently detected other noises—
“Glory!” he exclaimed, closing up swiftly upon his file leader, “they’re coming! We lost so much
“How about those legs of yours?” said Larry over his shoulder.
“They’ll run—they’ve got to run!” gasped Purdick. “Pitch out, and I’ll try to keep you in sight.”
Luckily, this last race was a short one. A scant quarter[45] of a mile farther on they came to the
park-like opening where their camp had been pitched, and in another minute they were sliding
down to the little flat where they had built their fire and spread the beds of fir tips.
The lost book was there, lying on the ground at the roots of the big tree, just where it had fallen
from Purdick’s hands. If the night raiders had had a light of any sort, they could hardly have
helped seeing it. But they had probably meant to make their attack a surprise, for which the moon
was then giving sufficient light, and, finding the fire out and the camp deserted, had doubtless
Larry, being about two jumps ahead of Purdick, snatched up the book, and whirling quickly with
arms outspread, swept his slighter companion back into the shelter of the wood.
“They’re coming—they’re right here!” he hissed; and they had barely time to fling themselves
down under a low-growing tree when the three men appeared on the trail leading from the upper
From where they lay under the drooping branches of the friendly little tree the two boys could see
their late pursuers quite plainly. The cripple was riding one of the horses, with his crutch thrust
under the saddle leather. The one the cripple had called “Dowling” was riding the other horse,
At the halt the cripple barked a command at the one who was walking.
“Take a look at their camp and see if they’ve left anything worth swipin’, Bart,” he said; and the
big man[46] lounged up to the wood edge, kicked at the remains of the fire, turned the beds over
with an investigative foot, and even went so far as to stoop and look around under the low-
spreading branches of the nearer trees. As he did this, it was only Larry’s quick wit that saved
them from certain discovery. With a swift premonition of what the man was going to do, he
reached up and pulled one of the low-hanging branches of the little tree down so that its foliage
screened them perfectly. But for that, the peering robber must have seen them.
“Nothin’ doin’,” said the man gruffly as he straightened up; and a few seconds later the two riders
and their foot follower had gone on to disappear around a jutting cliff in the canyon.
“Gee, Larry, but that was a close one!” sighed little Purdick, after the clinking hoofbeats had died
away into silence. Then: “I guess I’ll have to have something done to my old heart. It makes
altogether too much noise when there’s anything due to happen. Why, if that big thief had been
listening half as sharply as he was looking, he could have heard it as plain as a trap-drum! What
do we do next?”
Larry glanced at his wrist watch. It was still only the middle of the forenoon.
“I was just thinking,” he said. “We’ll have to go back to the pass by the trail, and the middle of
the day is going to be the worst time to hit the snow. The wet pack will be as slippery as grease,
and we’ll be pretty sure to get snow-blind with the noon glare. Suppose we go back in the woods
a piece and bed down and catch up on a little of the sleep that we lost last night. How does that
strike you?”
[47]
“It strikes me right where I live,” said Purdick, yawning in the mere anticipation of a rest halt. “I
“Not the least in the world. What they’ll do if they really mean business—as I’m much afraid
they do—will be to go down to Nophi and outfit the same as we have for a trip over the range.
It’s perfectly plain that they believe they have a sure pointer on the whereabouts of the Golden
Spider through us, and, as I told Dick, I don’t believe we’ve seen the last of them. But that’s a
The hole-hunting was a short process. A few hundred yards above their former camping place
they found a little dell under the trees where the fallen needles of many seasons lay a foot deep.
There is no better wilderness bed when the fir needles are dry, and within a very few minutes
after they had stretched out on the fragrant, springy carpet, each with his locked hands under his
During his year in college, Larry had often said that he had an alarm clock in his head, proving
the assertion by his ability to wake up at any given hour in the night merely by fixing that hour in
his mind before going to sleep. Upon this day-nap occasion in the Lost Canyon wood he set the
alarm for three o’clock, and, true to his boast, it lacked but a few minutes of three when he sat up
and rubbed his eyes and looked around sleepily to try to make out where he was and how he
came to be there.
It all came back in a moment, and he reached over to shake Purdick, who was still sleeping like a
log.
[48]
Purdick came up with a snap. “Gee!” he yawned; “I sure did cork it orf in me ’ammick that time!
“Six hours solid. And I’m as hungry as a wolf. Let’s see what you’ve got in that haversack.”
The eatables were produced and they fell to like famished savages. Purdick had provided pretty
liberally, but what with the early breakfast, the hard travelling that had followed it, and the lapse
of time, they didn’t leave much of what Purdick had thought would suffice for at least two meals.
“It doesn’t make any difference,” said Larry, meaning the gorging which left only a couple of
bacon sandwiches for that possible second meal. “We’ll catch up with our supplies by late
supper-time, at the very worst, and I know you’d rather carry your share of the grub under your
“I sure would,” Purdick admitted. He had never before known what it was to have such a
gorgeous appetite as the mountain air was already giving him. “I see where we’re never going to
be able to stay out all summer without back-tracking to civilization for more eats every few
minutes.”
“I feel up to anything. As the fellow says in that old English stuff that the English Prof. made us
take for side-reading last winter: ‘Fate can not harm me—I have dined.’ Let’s get a move and
That was a simple way of stating it: “Let’s get a move and have it over with,” like swallowing a
dose of medicine.[49] But there were a good many wearisome moves to be made before they won
up to the final ascending loop in the snow trail, and they saw now—had been seeing ever since
they struck the snow path—how impossible it would have been to get the burros up the mountain
“I hope Dick didn’t have any trouble going down on the other side. I’ll bet it’s no one-man job to
get a packed burro out of a drift if it breaks through where there’s any depth.”
“I should say not,” Purdick agreed. “But I guess Dick made it all right. What I’m wondering is
how far he had to go before he could pull up and wait for us.”
“It won’t be long, now, before we’ll find out how far he had to go,” said Larry, and they went on
By the time they had topped the pass and had their first good look over into the mountain
wilderness beyond, the sun had gone behind the high-lifted crests of the Little Hophras. What
they saw between the two ranges was a roughly tumbled intervale which could hardly be called a
park because it was so cut up by spurs from the surrounding mountains. It was rather a series of
parks, some wooded and some bare, with a scattering of the great rounded hills known from
To their great comfort they saw that the snow did not extend nearly as far down the western slope
of their range as it did on the eastern; as a matter of fact, they[50] had gone scarcely a mile down
the descending trail before they were out of the snow belt altogether, and with only a narrow zone
of the stiffening slush and mud to cross before they came to good going again.
With the snow trail left behind, and no signs on it to indicate that Dick had had any trouble
negotiating it with the burros, they were expecting to overtake him at every turn in the
descending path. But the expectation seemed to be in no hurry to get itself fulfilled. Turn after
turn was made, and still there was nothing to show that Dick had passed that way.
By this time sunset was fully come, and though there was a fine afterglow on the peaks, the dusk
“I don’t like this,” said Larry, halting at last in a little grassy glade. “Dick had no reason to try to
make distance on us. And he wouldn’t go far enough from the trail so that he couldn’t watch for
Purdick had crossed to the farther side of the glade and was stirring something on the ground with
Larry joined him quickly and stooped to lay his hand on the ashes.
“They’re cold,” he announced. “But somebody has had a fire here within a few hours. If it was
Dick, why didn’t he stay here? And if it was somebody else——” The sentence was broken
because he was down on his hands and knees looking for tracks in the short-grass turf. It didn’t
take him long, poor as the fading light[51] was, to find tiny hoofprints in the soft soil. “It was
Dick’s fire,” he said definitely. “He has been here, and he built the fire—and when he went away
“It means just one of two things, Purdy: either Dick had some reason for leaving in a hurry, or
by the ashes. And Dick is too good a woodsman to go off and leave his camp-fire burning unless
Purdick was feeling in the haversack, which contained only the mineralogy book and two biscuit
sandwiches. What he said showed that he was still too much of a townsman to suspect that
“Gee!” he exclaimed. “I wish I hadn’t eaten so much over yonder in the canyon. Dick has
vanished with the grub, and it’s getting dark, and we’ve got just two sandwiches to chew on. I
“Wake up!” said Larry sharply. “We’ve got to find Dick, and do it now—not because we haven’t
enough grub for supper, but because it looks as if Dick is in trouble of some sort! Get down here
and help me to find out which way these burro tracks are pointing. Get busy, quick, before the