Again ringing the bell, the same servant answers it.
"Go to the stables," commands his master, "or the corral, or wherever he may be, and tell Pedrillo I want him. Be quick about it!"
The man bows and disappears.
"It will take them--how many days to reach the Tenawas' town, and how many back to the Pecos?" soliloquises Uraga, pacing the floor, as he makes his calculations. "Three, four, five. No matter. If before them we can wait till they come. Pedrillo!"
Pedrillo has put in an appearance. He is an Indian of the tame sort, not greatly differing from the man Manuel, with a countenance quite as forbidding. But we have seen Pedrillo before; since he was one of the two muleteers who conducted the _atajo_ transporting the spoil from the caravan of the prairie traders.
"Pedrillo," directs the Colonel, "catch a couple of the best roadsters in the corral--one for yourself, the other for Jose. Have them saddled, and get yourselves ready for a journey of two weeks, or so. Make all haste with your preparations. When ready, come here, and report yourself."
The muleteer disappears, and Uraga continues to pace the floor, apparently yet busied with a mental measurement of time and distance.
At intervals he stops before the portrait on the wall, and for a second or two gazes at it. This seems to increase his impatience for the man's reappearance.
He has not a great while to wait. The scrip and staff of a New Mexican traveller of Pedrillo's kind is of no great bulk or complexity. It takes but a short time to prepare it. A few _tortillas_ and _frijoles_, a head or two of _chile Colorado_, half a dozen onions, and a bunch of _tasojo_--jerked beef. Having collected these comestibles, and filled his _xuaje_, or water gourd, Pedrillo reports himself ready for the road, or trail, or whatever sort of path, and on whatever errand, it may please his master to despatch him.
"You will go straight to the Tenawa town--Horned Lizard's--on the south branch of the Goo-al-pah. You can find your way to the place, Pedrillo.
You've been there before?"
The Indian nods an affirmative.
"Take this." Here Uraga hands him the sealed paper. "See you show it to no one you may chance to meet pa.s.sing out from the settlements. Give it to Barbato, or hand it to the Horned Lizard himself. He'll know who it's for. You are to ride night and day, as fast as the animals can carry you. When you've delivered it you needn't wait, but come back-- not here, but to the Alamo. You know the place--where we met the Tenawas some weeks ago. You will find me there. _Vaya_!"
On receiving these instructions Pedrillo vanishes from, the room; a strange sinister glance in his oblique Indian eyes telling that he knows himself to be once more--what he has often been--an emissary of evil.
Uraga takes another turn across the floor, then, seating himself by the table, seeks rest for his pa.s.sion-tossed soul by drinking deep of the _mescal_ of Tequila.
CHAPTER FORTY FIVE.
THE STAKED PLAIN.
The elevated table-land known as Llano Estacado is in length over three hundred miles, with an average width of sixty or seventy. It extends longitudinally between the former Spanish provinces of New Mexico and Texas; their respective capitals, Santa Fe and San Antonia de Bejar, being on the opposite side of it. In the days of vice-royal rule, a military road ran across it, connecting the two provincial centres, and mule trains of traders pa.s.sed to and fro between. As this road was only a trail, often obliterated by the drifting sands of the desert, tall stakes were set up at intervals to indicate the route. Hence the name "Llano Estacado"--literally, Staked Plain.
In those days Spain was a strong, enterprising nation, and her Mexican colonists could travel over most parts of their vast territory without fear of being a.s.saulted by the savages. At a later period, when Spanish power began to decline, all this became changed. Cities fell to ruin, settlements were deserted, mission establishments abandoned, and in the provinces of Northern Mexico white travellers had to be cautious in keeping to the most frequented roads, in some districts not daring even to venture beyond the walls of their haciendas or towns. Many of these were fortified against Indian attack, and are so to this day.
Under these circ.u.mstances the old Spanish trail across the Staked Plain fell into disuse; its landmarks became lost, and of late years only expeditions of the United States army have traversed it for purposes of exploration.
In physical aspect it bears resemblance to the table lands of Abyssinia and Southern Arabia, and at its northern end many outlying spurs and detached _mesas_ remind the traveller of the Abyssinian hills--known as _ambas_. A portion of this singular territory belongs to the great gypsum formation of the south-western prairies, perhaps the largest in the world; while a highly-coloured sandstone of various vivid hues, often ferruginous, forms a conspicuous feature in its cliffs. Along its eastern edge these present to the lower champaign of Texas a precipitous escarpment several hundred feet sheer, in long stretches, tending with an unbroken facade, in other places showing ragged, where cleft by canons, through which rush torrents, the heads of numerous Texan streams. Its surface is, for the most part, a dead horizontal level, sterile as the Sahara itself, in places smooth and hard as a macadamised road. Towards its southern end there is a group of _medanos_ (sandhills), covering a tract of several hundred square miles, the sand ever drifting about, as with _dunes_ on the seash.o.r.e. High up among their summits is a lakelet of pure drinking water, though not a drop can be found upon the plateau itself for scores of miles around. Sedge and lilies grow by this tarn so singularly situated.
Here and there the plain is indented by deep fissures (_barrancas_), apparently the work of water. Often the traveller comes upon them without sign or warning of their proximity, till, standing on the edge of a precipitous escarpment, he sees yawning below a chasm sunk several hundred feet into the earth. In its bed may be loose boulders piled in chaotic confusion, as if cast there by the hands of t.i.tans; also trunks of trees in a fossilised state such as those observed by Darwin on the eastern declivity of the Chilian Andres.
Nearly all the streams that head in the Staked Plain cut deep channels in their way to the outer world. These are often impa.s.sable, either transversely or along their course. Sometimes, however, their beds are worn out into little valleys, or "coves," in which a luxuriant vegetation finds shelter and congenial soil. There flourish the pecan, the hackberry, the black walnut, the wild china, with evergreen oaks, plums, and cl.u.s.tering grapevines; while in the sterile plain above are only seen those forms of the botanical world that truly indicate the desert--various species of cactaceae, agaves, and yuccas--the palmilla and lechuguilla, dwarf-cedars, and mezquites, artemisia, and the strong-smelling larrea, or "creosote plant."
Animals are rare upon the Llano Estacado, although the p.r.o.ng-horn antelope--true denizen of the desert--is there found, as also its enemy, the Mexican jackal, or coyote. To the rattlesnake and horned lizard (_agama_) it is a congenial home; and the singular snake-bird (_paisano_) may frequently be seen running over the arid waste, or skulking through the tortuous stems of the nopals. In the canons of the stream the grizzly bear makes his haunt, and in times not long gone by it was ascended and traversed by the unwieldy buffalo. The wild horse (_musteno_) still occasionally courses across it.
Of all the living things it is least frequented by man. Even the Indian rarely strays into its solitudes; and the white man, when necessitated to enter them, does so with fear and trembling, for he knows there is danger.
This is chiefly due to the absence of water; but there is also the chance of going astray--getting lost in the absence of landmarks. To be astray in a wilderness of any kind is a perilous predicament for the traveller--in one without water it is death.
After their affair with the Tenawas, the Texan Rangers directed their course towards the Llano Estacado. On starting, it was their intention to strike north, and get upon the main stream of the Canadian, then follow it up to the place where the prairie traders met their murderous doom. From the country of the Tenawa Comanches this would be the correct route, and was the same taken by these freebooters returning with the spoils of the caravan. But from the mouth of the Pecan Creek is one more direct, leading across a spur of the plateau itself, instead of turning its north-eastern extremity.
It was not known to the Rangers, though Cully remembered having heard something about it. But the Mexican renegade declared himself familiar with, and counselled taking it. There had been hesitation before acceding to his counsel. Of course, they could have no confidence in such a man, but rather suspicion of all he said or did. In guiding them across the Staked Plain he might have some sinister purpose--perhaps lead them into a trap.
After all, how could he? The tribe of savages with which he had been consorting was now so terribly chastised, so effectually crushed, it was not probable--scarce possible--they would be encountered again.
Certainly not for a season. For weeks there would be weeping and wailing in the tents of the Tenawas. If the renegade had any hope of being rescued from his present captivity, it could not be by them. He might have some thought of escape, taking the Rangers by the route he proposed to them. On this score they had no apprehension--not the slightest. Suspicious, they would keep close watch upon him; shoot him down like a dog at the first sign of his attempting to deceive them.
And, as Cully remembered having heard of this trail over the Staked Plain, it was most probable the Mexican had no other object than to bring them to the end of their journey in the shortest time and straightest course. All knew it would be a near cut, and this decided them in its favour.
After parting from Pecan Creek, with their faces set westward, they had a journey before them anything but easy or pleasant. On the contrary, one of the most difficult and irksome. For it lay across a sterile tract--the great gypsum bed of North-western Texas, on which abut the bluffs of the Llano Estacado. Mile after mile, league after league; no "land in sight," to use a prairie-man's phrase--nothing but level plain, smooth as a sleeping sea; but, unlike the last, without water--not a sheet to cheer their eyes, not a drop to quench the thirst, almost choking them. Only its resemblance, seen in the white mist always moving over these arid plains--the deluding, tantalising mirage. Lakes lay before them, their sh.o.r.es garlanded by green trees, their bosoms enamelled with islets smiling in all the verdure of spring--always before them, ever receding; the trees, as the water, never to be reached!
Water they do arrive at more than once--streams rushing in full flow across the barren waste. At sight they ride towards them rapidly.
Their horses need not to be spurred. The animals suffer as themselves, and rush on with outstretched necks, eager to a.s.suage their thirst.
They dip their muzzles, plunge in their heads till half-buried, only to draw out again and toss them aloft with snorts of disappointment shaking the water like spray from their nostrils. It is salt!
For days they have been thus journeying. They are wearied, worn down by fatigue, hungry; but more than all, tortured by the terrible thirst-- their horses as themselves. The animals have become reduced in flesh and strength; they look like skeletons staggering on, scarce able to carry their riders.
Where is the Mexican conducting them? He has brought them into a desert. Is the journey to end in their death? It looks like enough.
Some counsel killing him, and returning on their tracks. Not all; only a minority. The majority cry "Onward!" with a thought beyond present suffering. They must find the bones of Walt Wilder and bury them!
Brave men, true men, these Texan Rangers! Rough in outward appearance, often rude in behaviour, they have hearts gentle as children. Of all friends the most faithful, whether it be affection or pure _camaraderie_. In this case a comrade has been killed--cruelly murdered, and in a strange manner. Its very strangeness has maddened them the more, while sharpening their desire to have a last look at his remains, and give them Christian burial. Only the fainthearted talk of retreating; the others do not think of it, and these are more than the majority.
On, therefore, they ride across treeless, gra.s.sless tracks; along the banks of streams, of whose bitter, saline waters they cannot drink, but tantalising themselves and their animals. On, on!
Their perseverance is at length rewarded. Before their eyes looms up a line of elevated land, apparently the profile of a mountain.
But no; it cannot be that.
Trending horizontally, without curvature, against the sky, they know it is not a mountain, but a mesa--a table-land.
It is the Llano Estacado.
Drawing nearer, they get under the shadow of its beetling bluffs.
They see that these are rugged, with promontories projecting far out over the plain, forming what Spanish Americans, in their expressive phraseology, call _ceja_.
Into an embayment between two of the out-stretching spurs Barbato conducts them.
Joyously they ride into it, like ships long storm-tossed entering a haven of safety; for at the inner end of the concavity there is a cleft in the precipitous wall, reaching from base to summit, out of which issues a stream whose waters are sweet!
It is a branch of the Brazos River, along whose banks they have been some time travelling, lower down finding its waters bitter as gall.
That was in its course through the selenite. Now they have reached the sandstone it is clear as crystal, and to them sweeter than champagne.
"Up it lies our way," says the renegade guide, pointing to the portals of the canon through which the stream debouched from the table to the lower plain.
But for that night the Rangers care hot to travel further. There is no call for haste. They are _en route_ to bury the bones of a dead man, not to rescue one still living.