<SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>
<h3> V </h3>
<p>"Do you want any more adventures?" asked Adan feebly, after a time.</p>
<p>"Not at present," said Roldan.</p>
<p>He raised himself stiffly. "Come," he said, "this will never do. We
shall both have rheumatism. We must have a fire at once."</p>
<p>Adan groaned pathetically, but got on his feet. They had found refuge
in the open; but a grove of trees was near, and in a quarter of an hour
they had piled a heap of branches and chaparral as high as an Indian
pyre, hunted up two pieces of flint, and sent sparks flying through the
dry mass.</p>
<p>The boys divested themselves of their dripping clothes and hung them
close to the fire, then raced up and down with what energy was left in
them to scotch the chill night air. Finally they paused breathless
before the pile, which was now roaring merrily.</p>
<p>"I should like to know what we are to have for supper," said Roldan.
"That Mission is twenty miles away, and I for one can't walk to it.
Climb up a tree and see if there is a light anywhere."</p>
<p>"Thanks, senor," said Adan, "when my clothes are dry."</p>
<p>"True, we must keep our skin. I have it!" He sprang on the back of the
mustang, who also had fallen upon reaching the shore but had risen to
nibble for supper, and stood on the tips of his feet. "I can see well,"
he announced. "But all the same I can see nothing. We must stay here."</p>
<p>He dismounted, and relieving the mustang of the heavy saddle, emptied
the bags. "The bread and sweets are soaked," he said, "not fit for a
pig to eat; but we can do something with the meat. Fetch some coals."</p>
<p>Adan with infinite difficulty managed to scrape a few coals apart from
the bonfire, and over this they scorched the meat. As they crouched on
the ground they looked like two little white savages, and they were
neither comfortable nor happy.</p>
<p>"We must keep this fire going all night," said Roldan, "or we shall be
eaten by bears, to say nothing of rattlesnakes—"</p>
<p>"Hist!" whispered Adan. "I hear one." Both boys sprang to their feet.</p>
<p>"Where?"</p>
<p>"Near the horse."</p>
<p>Roldan seized his pistol and ran in the direction indicated, keeping
his eyes on the ground. Suddenly he paused. Something just beyond the
light was growing into a series of graceful loops. A long neck slowly
lifted itself and two baleful eyes fixed upon Roldan. He raised his
pistol, and the rattler was beheaded as neatly as if it were stuffed
and dismembered with a pen knife. It shot out to full length, and the
clever marksman took it by its horny tail and dragged it to the fire.</p>
<p>"He didn't know that we'd have him for supper," said Adan, gleefully.
"Here, let us eat our steak and then I'll skin him."</p>
<p>The steak proved tough, and when it had been disposed of with many
grumblings, the rattlesnake was skinned and roasted, and proved very
delicate and edible.</p>
<p>"Now," said Roldan, "we must sleep." Their clothes being dry they
dressed; and after inspecting with a torch a circle of about two
hundred yards to see that there were no snake holes, they built a hasty
ring of chaparral, set fire to it that beasts and reptiles should keep
their distance, then lay down and slept. Roldan was always a light
sleeper, and with the fire on his mind awoke every few hours and
gathered fresh chaparral or roused the heavier Adan. Coyotes wailed in
the distance, and once as Roldan gathered brush he heard again the
deadly rattle. But they were not disturbed, and even the skies were
kind, for although clouds gathered, they passed.</p>
<p>They awoke in the morning, fresh and vigorous—but also hungry; and
there was little to eat.</p>
<p>"I don't think I should fancy rattlesnake for breakfast," said Roldan,
and Adan shuddered at the mere thought. They cooked a small piece of
meat, all that was left of their store, and it but whetted their
appetite.</p>
<p>"There's only one thing to do," said Roldan, "and that is to get to the
Mission as quickly as possible. Chocolate! Beans! possibly chicken!
Think of it. Come! Come!"</p>
<p>Adan scrambled to his feet and saddled the mustang. It was agreed that
they should ride him by turns, the other running at a brisk trot.</p>
<p>The sun was barely up when they started. A light mist lay on the
turbulent waters and puffed among the sweet-scented chaparral. Roldan
rode during the first hour, Adan running ahead, his glance darting from
right to left, but encountering eyes neither malignant nor savage.
Shortly after he mounted the horse the mist lifted and rolled back to
the ocean. They had left the chaparral some time before and now
discovered that they were in an open plain. In the distance were high
hills over which wound a white trail. Between these hills and the
travellers was a moving mass of something. Adan reined in suddenly.</p>
<p>"Roldan," he said, "are those horses? You have the longer sight."</p>
<p>Roldan made a funnel of his hand. "Surely, surely!" he cried. "What
luck! I hate walking. They are probably wild, but I never saw the
mustang I could not lasso."</p>
<p>"Yes, you can do the lassoing," said Adan, grimly. "My thumb nearly
went off last night, and is twice its size."</p>
<p>"Adan," said his friend, laying his hand on his comrade's knee. "I
haven't thanked you. I haven't mentioned it; but it is because—well—I
lay awake an hour last night trying to think of something to
say—and—and—thinking that I loved you better than my own brothers—"</p>
<p>"That will do, then," said Adan, gruffly. "We'll be kissing each other
in a minute as we did at the Hacienda Perez; and I think that we are
getting too big for that. I hear that American boys never kiss each
other."</p>
<p>"Don't they?" asked Roldan, pricking up his ears. "How I should like to
know some American boys. They must know so many things that we do not.
Who told you?"</p>
<p>"Antonio Scarpia has been in America, you know—in Boston. He came back
last month and rode over a few days ago for the night. I asked him many
questions. He says they never show any feeling except when they get
mad, and that they walk and row and play ball—with the feet,
caramba!—and run about in the snow. He says they would think we were
like girls with our fine clothes and our hammocks—"</p>
<p>"Girls!" cried Roldan, indignantly. "I'd like to see American or any
other boys do better with that bear than we did, or lasso a friend in
the midst of a boiling river as you did. And if they come here to laugh
at us they'll find one pair of fists that are not soft if they do have
lace ruffles over them. And I'd like to see them live all day on a
horse as we do."</p>
<p>"True, true, you are always right," said Adan, soothingly. "Ay, I think
those horses are coming this way. Better get up."</p>
<p>He moved back onto the anquera and Roldan sprang to his place and
unwound the lariat. Like all of its kind, it was a slender woven cord
about eighteen feet in length and made of tough strips of untanned
hide. It was an admirable weapon in skilled hands, but not to be
trifled with by the amateur. Many a careless Californian had lost a
finger or thumb, and more than one had owed it lockjaw.</p>
<p>The wild horses advanced rapidly for a time, but when they saw that the
brother to which curiosity had attracted them was apparently of an
eccentric build they suddenly paused and scattered. Roldan raised the
bridle and dashed in pursuit; but the others were unincumbered, fleet
of foot and terrified. They fled like the wind.</p>
<p>"Drop off!" commanded Roldan, reining in. "Quick! I WILL have one."</p>
<p>Adan slid to the ground and the mustang sprang lightly forward. Roldan
had singled out a well-built black, a little heavier than his mates and
consequently somewhat in their rear. The mustang, who had slept off his
fatigue, had no need of spur; he seemed to enter into the spirit of the
chase—possibly realised that if the chase failed he might have a
double load to carry. He dashed over the rough adobe plain, Roldan
holding the bridle high in his left hand, the coiled lasso in his
right. Adan waddled after, far in the rear. The other horses had fled
to the four winds, but the pursued, occasionally ducking his head and
kicking up his hind legs as if in contempt of the pretensions of mere
man, made straight for the hills. Being undisciplined, however, he got
over the ground clumsily, stumbled once or twice in the wide cracks of
the adobe soil, and finally stopped short for want of wind. He swung
about and glared defiantly at his pursuers out of injected eyes. He had
never seen a lasso before, possibly not a man; but his instinct told
him that the horse and rider behind him were not roving the plain in
his own aimless fashion. He stood pawing the ground and shaking his
great red nostrils. Suddenly to his surprise the part of the horse new
to him lifted itself, and a black coiling something, graceful and swift
as a rattlesnake, sprang through the air with a sharp audible rush. A
quarter of a moment later he neighed with rage and terror: his neck was
in a vice.</p>
<p>He gave a leap that nearly dragged Roldan from his saddle; but that
expert young gentleman had secured the lariat to the high pommel of his
saddle in a trice, and Don Jose Perez's mustang had thereafter to bear
the brunt of the strain.</p>
<p>The wild animal pulled and tugged and tore up the ground; but finding
that he but increased his own discomfort, he gradually subsided, and
when Roldan finally turned about and rode slowly toward Adan he
followed meekly enough.</p>
<p>When Adan saw the procession start in his direction he sat down on a
stone to rest, and when it reached him he obeyed orders and sprang on
the mustang's back as Roldan slipped off.</p>
<p>"That was well done, my friend," he said approvingly. "I could see it
all; but I thought my eyes would fly out of my head."</p>
<p>Roldan walked cautiously up to his prize and attempted to pat it gently
on the head. But it was some moments before he was able to touch the
beast, who was sulky, cross, and frightened. When he did he swiftly
loosened the lariat, and this procured him a meed of favour. The horse
then allowed himself to be patted all down the side and back, nor once
raised his hoof.</p>
<p>Suddenly Roldan sprang to his back, gripping the mane with his hands,
the flanks with his knees. But this was one liberty too much. The horse
stood on his hind legs, made as if to go over backward, then suddenly
stiffened all four legs and sprang up and down as automatically as if
worked by a spring. Roldan was now in his element. He had broken in
more than one bucking horse. He remained as immovable as a fly on the
top of a coach, only giving an occasional prick with his spur to madden
the animal and wear him out the sooner.</p>
<p>Roldan had cast the lariat from the animal's neck as soon as he
mounted, and it was well that he had, for his quarry made a sudden dash
and did not stop for half a mile,—when he paused on his forefeet,
waving his hind in the air.</p>
<p>But still Roldan kept his seat, Adan shouting: "Bravo! Bravo!" by way
of encouragement.</p>
<p>The battle lasted nearly an hour; then the mustang confessed himself
conquered, and the boys sought out the trail, from which they had
wandered far, and continued their journey.</p>
<p>"Caramba!" exclaimed Roldan, "but I am famished, not to say tired. If
it had been ten miles instead of twenty, it would not have been worth
while."</p>
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