Part 54 (1/2)
The sun was not yet up, but in the sky were bars of red that reached high above the mountains, and by this light he saw the watcher, face down upon the rocks, asleep. Nature, his G.o.d, had commanded, and he obeyed. Jess smiled, then noiselessly sat down to wait.
Noon came. The sheriff ate part of his lunch, lit his pipe, and settled back for a longer wait. He felt an infinite relief to see this strange man sleeping, for in his gruff make-up had grown a concern for the mountaineer approaching affection. Now he swore softly to himself that, even though Potter should come, he would let him pa.s.s rather than wake Dale.
But also during the morning his interest had been held by another thing.
Idly facing the east, his gaze wandering over the scarred k.n.o.bs or their wooded crests, he had gradually become aware of an occasional movement on a spur far up the side of Snarly. Squinting his eyes he could distinctly make out something, but whether it were man or beast he could not be sure. Certainly it moved more as a restless bear whose cub, doubtless unable to master the climb, whined somewhere below. He turned this over in his mind.
It was three o'clock when Dale stirred. The sheriff smiled as he watched Nature gradually remove her bandage from the sleeper, who now, instantly awake, sprang up in dismay.
”Gawd! What time is it?”
Jess held out his watch.
”I must a-slept eighteen hours,” the mountaineer gasped, as though such a thing were scarcely in the range of possibility.
”An' real glad I am, too, Dale! We ain't lost nothin' by it, an' it's done you a heap of good. Here's a bite to eat!”
Dale attacked it ravenously, then took a deep breath and stretched.
”I feel like a catamount! Come on, Jess--where'll we hunt?”
”I was jest thinkin'! Whilst you slept, I seen somethin' looked like a bar up on that-ar spur!”
Dale wheeled and watched the place for several minutes.
”I don't see nothin',” he said, at last.
”'Cause it ain't been over to our side yet, that's why! But it's thar, all right--or, leastwise, it was thar!”
”Jess,” the mountaineer spoke quickly, ”last spring I saw him there, too. Come on! Maybe--but I don't reckon it could be, if you thought it was a bear!”
”I don't neither; but thar ain't no tellin'! It's 'bout the only place we _ain't_ been! I'll tie the dawg heah, so's if it is a b'ar he won't git cut up none!”
After a hard two-hour climb they reached a ledge seeming to run on a level with the spur, followed it a few hundred feet and, cautiously parting the branches, looked out. There was still too much foliage to permit them to see, and they crept nearer; this time coming to the base of the spur itself. But Jess, who was slightly in advance, drew back and silently c.o.c.ked his rifle--an act which any mountaineer would rightfully interpret as a command for absolute silence. Together, now, they edged forward.
Barefooted, crawling aimlessly about on his hands and knees, wagging his head from side to side and mumbling, was Tusk--in truth, enough like a bear to excuse the sheriff's former uncertainty. He seemed to have no intimation of the watchers who had, in their surprise, advanced far enough to be in full view. Indeed, twice he crawled within ten feet of them, all the while wagging his head in a way that, were he able to see at all, must surely have disclosed them.
”Is he drunk?” Dale whispered, but Jess solemnly shook his head.
”Nope, he ain't drunk--leastways, that ain't the main trouble! He's plumb crazy with a fever, an' d.a.m.n nigh starved to death! Look at his face an' cracked lips! I don't know as we'd orter take 'im down to town, Dale;--maybe it's ketchin'!”
”Not take him! Not take him!” Dale cried in an angry voice. ”Well, _I_ ain't afraid of nothin' ketchin'! He won't get away from me again, I tell you!”
”Who said I was afeerd of ketchin' somethin'?” the sheriff answered, with a black frown. ”I was thinkin' of other folks! Didn't you never try thinkin' a leetle bit of other folks, jest to see how it 'ud feel, Dale?”
A deep growl from Tusk made them turn again. He was quite still now, and listening; while his eyes, seeing but not seeing, stared at them, and his brows puckered as though trying to call back some hazy memory.
”Good Lawd,” Jess whispered, ”look at his foot an' leg! It must be blood-pisen, or gang-green, or somethin' like that, Dale!--that, an' a burnin' fever, an' not any too much sense at best, poh devil! Why, he don't know whar he's at! Tusk,” the tender-hearted officer stepped out and called to him, ”we've come up to help you some!”
A spasm of terror crossed the unfortunate man's face; but then he gave a curious sort of laugh and began to crawl awkwardly toward the point of the spur.