CHAPTER XXVII
The party in the tunnel had suffered dreadfully. The woodwork about the mouth of the excavation had caught fire, and to save their lives the miners had fought the flames with all their strength. Mrs. Goodwin and Willie had been carried back around a turn in the tunnel where the flames could not reach them, but they came very near suffocating. The mules and horses had become unruly, and in the stampede, when the fire was raging about them, two of the men had been badly kicked. Mrs. Goodwin had fainted and lay like one dead for hours. Little Willie was frightened into insensibility, and the men who were striving to save the woodwork at the opening of the tunnel got sadly burned about their hands and faces.
“It was well that you took to the water,” called out one of the men who was first to meet Mr. Sukolt when Bushy’s father came to investigate the condition of the people in the tunnel. “Just look at the fix we are in!”
Bushy hastened back and searched for Willie and his mamma. The men had placed them on a kind of shelf made of the walls of rock, and there they lay white and still, with Mr. Goodwin frantic beside them.
“Padre,” Bushy cried, “let me go back and hitch up one of the wagons.”
“The way is covered with fallen trees,” he said. “It would take all night to clear a road for a wagon. You must take Jip and bring Shanks’s medicine-bag and the roll of bandages, while we get something to eat and drink. What a blessing we are unhurt and able to help these poor fellows!” He threw off his coat and so did Tom and Shanks, and those who were most badly injured were soon resting on a temporary bed made for them out of the half-burned clothing in the wagons.
“We saved what you see by dipping blankets in the water and throwing them over the side exposed to the fire,” said one miner. “But I believe I shall die from the burns I got doing it,” and the poor fellow groaned aloud with pain.
“Oh, no, you won’t!” said Bushy, kneeling down close to him. “Shanks can cure everything, and when you get something to eat you will be all right.”
Shanks soon revived Mrs. Goodwin. Then he gave little Willie some medicine. “When he wakes up he will be all right,” said Shanks, in answer to Bushy’s anxious inquiry. Shanks had been thoughtful enough to bring a small medicine-box which answered their temporary needs, but Bushy was sent back to bring the large one.
“Hurry, child,” called Mr. Sukolt. “It will soon be dark, and we must do all we can before the light goes. Look out for the burning trees.”
“Here, Bushy, wait a minute!” called Tom, running after her. “Buckle on my revolver, and should any of the horses be tangled or broken loose, fire three times and I will come down. Perhaps I had better go along, anyway,” and he started with her.
“No, no, Tom,” insisted Bushy. “You make a big fire and get the supper started. Everybody is starved. And by the time you get ready for me to help you I’ll be back with the medicine-box. Why, I can put it in front of me on Jip and be here again in no time. Jip can go anywhere I can.”
So away she hurried down the path out of sight, on past the place where Willie fell over the cliff, then down to the lowland, where the wagons, mules, and horses had been left. No horses or mules were there. The spot was bare, and only the deep cuts in the ground made by the animals’ hoofs told that the place had ever been occupied.
“Rover,” called Bushy. “Rover, where are you?”
A joyous bark from the wagon, in which Rover had been chained ever since the fire had been discovered, announced that he was all right.
“Ah, I am not afraid with Rover and Tom’s revolver,” she said, advancing to the first wagon and climbing in.
Rover almost ate her up, he was so glad to see her. “Poor fellow,” she called, “did you try to keep the horses, or did you untie their halters?”
This gave Bushy a new idea. “I wonder if they did get away by themselves, after all.” She set Rover free; he was out of the wagon as quick as she was, then she began to examine carefully the imprints in the ground.
“That’s queer,” she finally exclaimed, kneeling to look more carefully at a man’s footprint. “Neither Padre, nor Tom, nor Shanks ever wore a boot like that. Rover, has anybody been here?” she cried, fairly shaking the dog off his feet in her anxiety to know.
“Bow-wow!” answered Rover as loud as he could, and then bounded off toward the creek and sniffed and howled on the bank.
“Horse-thieves, as sure as I live!” she said to herself; “and poor Rover was tied so he could not defend even Jip.
“I’ll just take a look about, so I can tell the Padre which way they have gone,” she thought, and ran after Rover and looked down the stream.
“They tried to follow the creek, Rover,” she screamed at last in delight; “but look, old fellow, they had to come out just below; there are the tracks! Come, let us see what they did afterward.” Her heart was almost broken to think Jip was stolen, too.
“What’s that, Rover?” She paused and listened. Rover’s nose went high in the air as it always did when he thought he understood. Bushy put her ear to the ground. “It’s only the falling branches, Rover. They are breaking all the time and burning, too, in some places.” Rover, every now and then, howled with fright and pain as he would step on some hot stick or brand. They managed to make their way to a sudden turning around a sharp rocky bend. The scene that they then witnessed was startling. There was a Mexican greaser, as the half-breeds are called, riding one of the mules and leading the other animals. Jip was ugly, and every few seconds would pull back and almost unseat the Mexican. They were going slowly, yet no doubt would get out of the burnt woods soon, and then there would be no hope of ever catching the horses or the thief.
“Rover, we must get the horses,” said Bushy, softly, shutting her mouth with a snap that meant she would fight for them if necessary.
“I am so far away now I don’t think Tom or any one at the tunnel would hear the three shots, and then I may need them myself, if the Mexican is mean. I’ll shoot him if he doesn’t give up Jip.”
Even in all this danger a smile came to her lips, and her eyes for a moment sparkled. “Sh! Rover, lie down; we will fix the Mexican.”
She dodged behind the huge bowlder that had so long kept the horse and horse-thief from her view, and gave a peculiar whistle. Jip pricked up his ears as if he thought he had heard something, then as if in doubt, trotted on with the rest of the horses. The path was now wide and quite clear of fallen trees, so that the Mexican was trying to make good headway.
“Now, Rover, watch!” said Bushy, and she gave the whistle three times, so loud and shrill that it seemed to pierce the very heart of both Jip and the thief. Jip gave a sudden bound backward and followed with a decided jump toward the place where Bushy lay hidden. The Mexican, with a curse, fell to the ground, and before he could drop the halter by which he had been leading Jip, he was dragged some distance.
With a soft chuckle Bushy grabbed Jip’s halter and sprang on his back and was down upon the Mexican horse-thief before he had well regained a standing position. Tottering and blinded, he looked up, expecting to be killed on the spot.
“Throw up your hands, sir!” called out Bushy in her childish voice. The man was so surprised that he merely gaped at her.
“Throw up your hands!” she cried again, and this time he looked into the muzzle of a revolver. “You were stealing my father’s horses, and the miners hang men for that. You must help me take them back to the tunnel. Where are your revolvers? Are you unarmed?”
“I lost everything while fighting with the fire. The belt broke and I have nothing, señorita,” was the bland answer. “I am badly burnt and”——
“But not too bad to stop you from stealing my father’s horses and my Jip,” interrupted Bushy. The stealing of Jip incensed her more than the taking of the other six animals.
“I will not shoot you so long as you behave. But I must take you and the horses back to the Padre. If you are burned, Shanks will doctor you. Padre never hangs people, so you need not be afraid; but now take up the halters of the animals and lead them back to the wagons. Take the two mules first; tie the others here so they won’t wander.”
Bushy kept the revolver pointed at the man’s head and never took her eyes off him. When he had the two mules ready to lead, she ordered him to go ahead. Slowly he advanced, and in cowardly fashion gazed back every few seconds into the muzzle of the revolver.
“I can shoot,” cried Bushy once, when she thought the man looked as if he were going to try and run. “I will drop you as sure as you live, if you try to get away.” The odd glitter in her eye advised the thief to obey, and he slowly led the mules to the end of the wagon and tied them securely. “Now,” said Bushy, “we will not go back for the horses, they can stay there until Tom goes after them; we will go to the tunnel where the men are.”
Bushy was growing a little bit frightened. The revolver began to shake in her hand. She realized that the Mexican might get the advantage of her, and now she wished she had fired the three shots for help.
“Go right up that path,” she said, indicating the way with the nod of her head. The man started, but began fumbling oddly about his flannel shirt for something.
“What’s the matter?” she asked in a very brave voice, though her heart was full of fear.
“I am burnt badly,” he answered. Then looking up he saw two men hastening down upon them. They were Tom and Shanks, who had started out to learn why Bushy delayed bringing the medicine-box. The Mexican’s eyes flashed wickedly, and, with a sudden, lightning movement, he turned and made a dash at Bushy, with a bright dagger in his uplifted hand.
Simultaneously with his yell of defiance came the report of a pistol, and the man fell headlong under Jip’s legs.
The instant Bushy realized her danger she had fired, and when she saw the man unable to get up her arm sank to her side, and the revolver fell to the ground.
Jip jumped to one side and gave a neigh of recognition as Tom and Shanks ran breathlessly toward him.
No word was spoken until Bushy was held safely in Shanks’s arms. Then Tom stepped over to the writhing Mexican, and asked, in a trembling voice, though he tried not to show his agitation: “What was the row, Bushy?”
“He is a horse-thief, Tom,” she answered, raising herself out of Shanks’s embrace long enough to take a good square look at the man. “He had stolen every one of the horses and was driving them down stream. Oh, Shanks, wasn’t it awful to have to shoot him! But he rushed at me, did you see?” Bushy buried her face in Shanks’s buckskin blouse, and Rover took it upon himself to guard the wounded man, and snap and snarl at his every move.
Three shots soon brought Mr. Sukolt and one of the miners to the scene. It was another long hour before they all got back to the tunnel again, and it was two days before everything was in condition to proceed on their journey. Mr. Goodwin and his family remained at Silver City.
THE INSTANT BUSHY REALIZED HER DANGER, SHE FIRED.