<SPAN name="chap21"></SPAN>
<h3> XXI </h3>
<p>The boys were once more adrift in the wilderness. It was with mixed
emotions that they said good-bye to the hospitable American and rode
forth to new experiences and dangers. They were now tried adventurers;
they knew their mettle; they also had a far more definite idea of what
danger and experience meant than when they had fled from home with the
light heart of ignorance. Roldan felt several years older, and Adan had
moments of reflection. Moreover, the fine point of novelty had worn
toward bluntness. Nevertheless, they felt no immediate desire to return
to leading strings, and were glad of an excuse to pursue their way
south. Los Angeles was a famous city, the rival of Monterey,—which
neither had seen,—and a fitting climax to an exciting volume. The
exact arrangement of that climax was compassed by the imagination of
neither.</p>
<p>For two miles they kept in line with the foot-hills, then rode rapidly
toward the valley, impatient for its warmth. So far, barring their
sojourn in the Sierras, they had been favoured with fine weather; but
winter was growing older every day, and the sky was thick and grey this
morning.</p>
<p>The Casa Ortega stood on the shores of a large lake. The banks were
thickly wooded. On its southern curve was a high mountain. As the boys
approached, a vaquero sprang upon a mustang and rode toward them
rapidly. Roldan recognised one of the men that had been at the rodeo.</p>
<p>"At your feet, senores," said the vaquero. "The Senor Don is away, and
all the family; but I am mayor domo, and in his absence I place the
house at your disposal."</p>
<p>"My father will reward you," said Roldan, graciously. "We would ask
that you give us dinner, a thick poncho each, for I fear that it will
rain before we reach Los Angeles, and that you will direct us which way
to go. The ponchos shall be replaced with fine new ones as soon as we
have returned home."</p>
<p>"Don Carlos would not hear of the return of the ponchos, senor. But
surely the senores will remain a few days, until the storm is over?"</p>
<p>"We dare not. But we will rest; and we have good appetites."</p>
<p>The mayor domo, still protesting, held the horses while the boys
dismounted, then showed them to two bedrooms and bade them rest while
dinner was preparing. "It will be an hour," he said. "I beg that the
senores will sleep."</p>
<p>The boys did sleep, and it was two hours before they were called. Then
they ate a steaming dinner, and forgot their fear of the priest: the
meagre diet of squirrel and rabbit of the past thirty-six hours had
lowered their spirits' temperature.</p>
<p>When they left the room the mayor domo awaited them with two thick
woollen ponchos—large squares of cloth with a slit in the middle for
the head.</p>
<p>"These will keep the rain out," he said, as he slipped them over the
boys' heads. "And there is food for two days in the saddle-bags, and
pistols in the holsters. Keep to the right of the lake, and enter the
mountains by the horse trail. It winds over the lower ridges. The
senores cannot lose themselves, for they should be on the other side
before dark—that mountain is the meeting of the two ranges and beyond
there are no more for many leagues. Then the senores must keep straight
on, straight on—never turning to the left, for that way lies the
terrible Mojave desert. By-and-by they will cross a river, and after
that Los Angeles is not far. Between the mountain and the river is an
hacienda, where they will find welcome for the night."</p>
<p>Roldan thanked him profusely, then said: "I have reasons for not
wishing ANY ONE to know that I have not returned to my father's house.
I beg that you will tell no one, not even a priest, that we have been
here, for three days at least."</p>
<p>"The senor's wishes shall be obeyed. The Senor Don returns not for a
week. No one shall know until then of the honour that has been done to
his house."</p>
<p>The boys rode rapidly through the wood over a broad road that had
evidently been traversed many times. The sky was leaden, but no rain
fell. Nor was there any wind. The lake could not have been smoother
were it frozen, although it reflected the grey above. Wild ducks and
snipe broke its monotony at times, now and again a jungle of tules. In
less than an hour the travellers were ascending the mountain by easy
grades, a black forest of pines about them. It was darker here, but the
road was clearly defined, and they talked gaily of adventures past and
to come. In Los Angeles they had many relatives, and they knew that a
royal welcome would be given them. They would see the gay life of which
they had heard so much from their brothers; and they magnanimously
resolved that after a week of it they would return to their anxious
parents.</p>
<p>"Ay!" exclaimed Adan, interrupting these pleasant anticipations, "it
rains at last."</p>
<p>A few drops fell; then the rain came with a rush. For some time the
wind had been rising; suddenly it seemed to leap upward to meet the
emptying clouds, then filled the pine-tops with a great roar, rattling
the hard branches, bending the slender trunks. The boys were on the
down grade, and there was no danger of losing the path, although the
rain had put out the sallow flame of the sun. They pricked their horses
and made the descent as rapidly as possible. But it was another hour
before they were on level ground once more. The rain was still falling
in torrents; the wind flung it in their eyes as fast as they dashed it
from their lashes. They could not see a yard ahead. The light of the
hacienda was nowhere visible. If its owner was away from home and his
house in darkness, then was their plight a sorry one indeed.</p>
<p>"There is only one thing to do," said Roldan, putting his hand
funnel-wise to Adan's ear. "We must keep due south until we come to the
river. Then, at least, we cannot go wrong."</p>
<p>"And that river we must cross!" said Adan, with a groan. "Dios de mi
alma!"</p>
<p>Roldan had great faith in his sense of locality, but in a blinding rain
on a black night with a mighty wind roaring inside one's very skull,
and whirling the heavy poncho about one's ears every few moments, it
was difficult to preserve any sense at all. They galloped on, however,
occasionally pausing to shout, straining their eyes into the darkness
on every side. But nothing came back to eye or ear. Apparently they had
the wilderness to themselves. There was no sign of even an Indian
pueblo.</p>
<p>It was during one of these halts that the boys ejaculated
simultaneously: "The river!"</p>
<p>"No," shouted Roldan, a moment later "it is only a creek."</p>
<p>"Are we lost?" demanded Adan; and even the loud tone had a note of
pained resignation in it.</p>
<p>"No; I think this must be what he meant. Some of the low people say
river for everything but the ocean. It is shallow, and we cannot turn
back. Come."</p>
<p>They rode along the bank until they came to an easy slope, then
crossed, and cantered on. In a very short time the storm was behind
them and the stars burst out, but there was no sign of habitation. They
kept on for an hour longer, hoping for a welcome twinkle below; but not
even a coyote crossed their path. As far as they could see in the
starlight they were on a plain of illimitable reach, bare but for low
shrubs whose kind they could not determine, although once Adan's coat
caught on a prickly surface. The atmosphere was warm and very dry.</p>
<p>Finally Roldan reined in.</p>
<p>"We must rest," he said, "and build a fire, or we shall be stiff
to-morrow. And it is long past the hour for supper."</p>
<p>"The sooner we eat and sleep and dry, the better for me," said Adan.</p>
<p>The boys dismounted and tied their horses to a palm, then looked about
for firewood. There was not a tree to be seen; they had not passed one
since they left the creek. Nor could they see any sign of flint with
which they might set fire to a clump of palms.</p>
<p>Adan, who had been on his knees, suddenly remarked: "There is not a
blade of grass, Roldan. What will the mustangs do?"</p>
<p>"They are eating the palm, perhaps that will do them until to-morrow.
But the poor things must be as hungry as twenty. Come, let us strip,
hang our things up, and run. The water is in my bones."</p>
<p>The boys peeled off the clinging steaming garments and ran up and down
until hunger sent them to the saddle bags. The mayor domo had provided
them abundantly, and once more they looked upon the world with hopeful
eyes.</p>
<p>"But we must sleep," said Roldan, "and it is not going to be easy for
mind or body—if there are rattlers about—with no fire. We must take
it in turns. It is warm; we do not need our clothes—ah!"—for Adan was
snoring.</p>
<p>Roldan was very tired but not sleepy. His brain, indeed, seemed
unusually alert, and he got up after a time and prowled about, pistol
in hand. He had been in solitudes before, solitude of plain and valley
and mountain; but there was something in his present surroundings that
reminded him of nothing he had heard of or seen. It was not only the
intense stillness, unbroken by so much as the flutter of a leaf, nor
even the vast expanse. The place seemed to possess a character of its
own, and its character was sinister and forbidding. Once or twice he
had been in the cemetery of the Mission near his father's rancho, and
the ugly feeling that he stood too close to death came back to him;
why, he could not define. There was no sign of a cross anywhere; but he
felt that he stood in a dead world, nevertheless. Once the ground
quivered beneath his feet, and the horrible idea occurred to him that
Southern California had been swallowed by an earthquake, and that only
this desolation was left.</p>
<p>He went back to his comrade, who slept soundly beside the horses, also
extended and breathing deeply. It was nearly morning when he woke Adan,
so little aptitude had his brain for sleep. But when Adan sat up he
fell asleep almost immediately, and when he awoke the sun was high.</p>
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