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"But how do you work it? What can you do with that?"
"That, my boy," answered the older man, "is one of the very many things you will learn while you are in and about the Grand Canyon."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "HOW IN THE WORLD AM I GOING TO GET UP THERE?"
A query for the topographer, which must be answered; a sample of rough country work.
_Photograph by U.S.G.S._]
CHAPTER VI
A LONE HAND AGAINST HUNGER
Early the next morning quite a large group of tourists gathered to see the Survey party set out, it having become known that it was to make use of the old Cameron trail and endeavor to climb the other side of the Canyon. Some, who had been part of the way down the trail, were politely incredulous as to the possibility of the feat, others took an especial pleasure in prophesying disaster, and a few expressed a wish that they might accompany the party "to see how it was done."
To these various people Ma.s.seth paid no heed. Indeed he scarcely responded to questions, returning but the briefest replies, except once, when an old lady, quiet and gentle in manner, came up and laid her hand on his arm.
"You will pardon an old lady," she said, "but I should not like to think of your going down there, unless you can a.s.sure me that it is really safe."
The topographer turned to her immediately, raising his cap and smiling:
"I have been over the trail before," he said, "and indeed I have been in many worse places than this part of the Canyon, so you really need feel no alarm. It is very kind of you to be solicitous of our well-being, and I shall take your expressed interest as a happy omen for the journey."
This little speech, overheard by Roger as he came up with the head packer to say that everything was ready, gave him a quick insight into the intense graceful courtesy, which was so strong a characteristic of the man who was to be his chief for a couple of months to come. A few sentences between Ma.s.seth and the chief packer were followed by the words, spoken in a sharp tone of command, markedly different from the suavity of a moment before:
"You may start, then!"
Roger waited for instructions.
"Doughty," said the leader, "you will ride in the rear with Black, and you will do well to let him teach you how to handle the animals in rough spots. I shall go ahead, of course."
"Very well, sir," answered Roger, and cantered off to the pack train, where the a.s.sistant topographer was helping the second packer to get the mules started. The head packer had gone as far as the brink of the Canyon with the chief and there waited to deploy the animals on the trail in good order and to scrutinize every pack as it pa.s.sed him, to make sure that none should become loose and slip.
The boy chatted freely with Black as they paced along behind the last of the mules, and he found his companion well-informed, as Ma.s.seth had said, but except on matters of the trail, somewhat non-communicative. In brief remarks, however, he explained to the boy many of the troubles he must expect to encounter and the best manner of meeting them, and his curt references to the lie of the land struck Roger as being of immense value. He pointed out certain striking landmarks as features of the landscape which were to be ignored, because, from any point of view, they would appear entirely different; and certain other eminences, perhaps not even as noticeable as the former, which he must remember, since, by reason of their conformation they would always appear the same and thus could be taken as absolute and certain guides.
But as soon as the trail fell over the edge there was no more speaking.
Fell over the edge, Roger thought, was almost the only way to describe the road, which was precipitous and winding beyond belief. There was a supposition that the way had been made smooth for mules, but it did not seem to the lad that any four-footed animal short of a goat could keep his footing. The long line of mules treading easily in front, however, was evidence that he need not fear, so warily keeping an eye on his mule lest his mount should stumble, he preceded the a.s.sistant, following immediately after the last pack mule.
For several hundred feet the trail went down in this rough fashion, then suddenly turned sharply to the left along one of the broad terraces of rock, whereof Ma.s.seth had spoken to the boy before. After a quarter of a mile of easy going, the party came to a slope of loose shale, almost filling up the terrace. The pack mules picked their way over this without any apparent demur, but Black called out:
"Guess you'd better get off!"
Roger slipped from his saddle, and going to the mule's head started to walk beside it.
"Go in front, you chump," called the other. "If the trail's none too wide for one, how do you suppose two can go abreast?"
"But I can't help him then!" protested Roger.
This speech was greeted with a hoa.r.s.e chuckle.
"Any old time a mule needs a tenderfoot to teach him where to put his feet," he said, "I want to have a front seat to watch it. Don't you ever worry about that, I guess he can walk anywhere that you can, but on a shelving bank a rider makes a beast topheavy."
Down they went into the chasm, climbing over heaps of fallen rock, pitching down slopes which seemed almost perpendicular to the boy, and as they descended the sun rose higher and the air seemed to become less tenuous and almost visible. Roger had been expecting the wonderful radiance of the valley to become tenfold richer under the noonday sun, and was surprised to note all the color fade out of the rocks and the air become as it were so solid as to refract the light of the sun. The whole atmosphere seemed to be glowing with a metallic l.u.s.ter which was most confusing, because of the way in which it changed the whole environment. Lines of strata became distorted and even disappeared, the b.u.t.tes appeared to flatten, the minor shadows to diminish and the darker shades to turn an inky black, till, when the halt was made at noon, the boy realized that he could not have made his way back one mile by reason of the chaotic look of the abyss under the direct light of the noonday sun.
After the march had been resumed and the afternoon was drawing to a close, however, the true witchery of the scene struck deep into Roger's mind. As the evening clouds began to gather and the twilight shadows deepened, the t.i.tanic temples and cloisters seemed to awake and stretch themselves to meet the expected vesper. Little by little the atmosphere lost its density and the rocks behind began to glow, the colossal b.u.t.tes a.s.sumed their due proportions; while a thousand bizarre forms, that had not been observable in the intense light of day, thrust themselves forward into an uncouth prominence. Then the sun disappeared from the view of the travelers, though still shining on the rocks above. Black cantered up beside the boy.
"Now watch," he said: "here's where you see the greatest display of color in the whole world."
"But how can it be brighter than it is now?" queried Roger, on whom the bold and striking scene was creating a profound impression.
"The best is yet to come," answered his companion, "and look, it begins now!"
For the first time since morning Roger was able to look upwards without being blinded by the sunlight. The sloping rays now fell full upon the upper part of the Canyon, at the crest of which a vivid yellow cut athwart the transparent blue of the sky and underneath its pallid brilliancy ran a soft belt of pale rose. The deep vibrating red of the body of the Canyon seemed to pulse with life as a faint blue haze began to gather in the dusk, changing second by second into the countless differing hues of crimson lakes and ruby violets, deepening as the hastening twilight pa.s.sed. Strange and metallic gleams of burnished bronze and green gloomed from the intervening lines, all yielding place little by little to the veil of azure mist. And beneath all, the glowing red, now changed to imperial purple, as though the world were bathed in a regal radiance at the crowning of a universe's king.
It was not until the dark had really come and the stars were shining brightly that the boy awakened to the consciousness of a trail and felt that he could speak. He turned to the a.s.sistant.
"And that's been going on every day for years!" he said, struck by the wastefulness of such a sight to so few eyes.
"For thousands upon thousands of years that went on before any man saw it," replied Black, smiling slightly, "and it will go on when the present civilizations are deemed but musty antiquities."
The night was well advanced when the party reached the crest of the Canyon on the north side. The journey, as Ma.s.seth had said, was one devoid of special risk because of the numbers of the party and the known trail, though, in truth, it needed a keen eye at times to discern that such apparently impa.s.sable ground was intended for a trail. The top reached, however, a hasty camp pitched, the packs and saddles taken off, the mules and the animals hobbled to graze on the rich herbage of the Kaibab plateau, Roger sank to sleep without loss of time, and it seemed to him hardly ten minutes before the cook aroused him for the camp breakfast.
"You know something about the work of a rodman, and of the handling of the tape?" asked Ma.s.seth, after breakfast, referring to the 300-foot steel tape used in measuring distances in wooded areas.
"Yes, indeed, Mr. Ma.s.seth."
"Of course you realize that the tape is generally impracticable in such a country as this, and that all the work must be done by the computing of angles with continual astronomical verification. As topographic aid you can learn as much as you are able of the use of instruments, at such times as you are not carrying out levels." And Ma.s.seth, questioning closely, elicited the mathematical ability of the lad. The boy had always hated arithmetic and its kindred studies, not realizing the value of the higher branches, but with the incentive before him, he found his chief's teaching markedly interesting.
The next day a semi-permanent camp was pitched, and there the supplies were kept. The head packer, who became a teamster as soon as things were settled, immediately left for the village of Kanab in Utah, over a hundred miles away, where a heavy wagon was in waiting, and whence the provisions were to be drawn for the party during the two months it should be on the north side of the Canyon. As it was a three days'
journey there and the same returning, the teamster was a busy man, having but one day comparatively free and camping on the trail five nights out of seven.
Roger, of course, went out with the other men every day, scaling points picked out for him by the chief as places he desired occupied, measuring from the rod elevated by the boy, who then, at a signal, was ordered to go to the next point scheduled. To a boy as fond of climbing as was Roger, for a day or two this was good fun, but the novelty soon pa.s.sed by and he did his day's work with a persistent regularity, which, though it brought forth the results required, was lacking in the adventurous.
In short, the continuity of risky work became monotonous.
It was due to this cause, perhaps, that one afternoon, when this sort of thing had been proceeding for several weeks, Roger, pa.s.sing from one outjutting piece of rock to another, but a few feet away, jumped carelessly, twisted his ankle beneath him and fell, spraining his wrist.
Despite the sprain, however, he reached the point to which he had been sent, and then, instead of going on, returned to the topographer.
"What's the matter?" called Ma.s.seth, who had seen him fall, as soon as he came in hearing. "Did you hurt yourself?"
"Sprained my wrist, I think, Mr. Ma.s.seth," answered the boy. "Beastly sorry, but I'm afraid I'll have to lay off for the rest of the afternoon."
[Ill.u.s.tration: A HARD POINT TO MEASURE.