A Dreadful Night.
A HUNTER'S TALE RETOLD.
BY EDWIN LESTER ARNOLD.
(1857-1935)
ONLY
he who has been haunted by a dream, a black horror of
the night so real and terrible that many days of repugnance and
effort are needed to purge the mind of its ugly details, can
understand how a dream that was a fact a horrible waking
fantasy, grotesque and weird, a repetition in hard actuality of the
ingenious terrors of sleep clings to him who, with his faculties
about him and all his senses on the alert, has experienced it.
Some five years ago I was hunting in the south-west corner of
Colorado, where the great mountain spurs slope down in rocky
ravines and gullies from the inland ranges towards the green
plains along the course of the Rio San Juan. I had left my
camp, late one afternoon, in charge of my trusty comrade, Will
Hartland a braver or more faithful little fellow by the
way never
put foot into a Mexican stirrup and had wandered off alone into
the scrub. Some five or six miles from the tents I stalked and
wounded a prong-buck. He was so hard hit that I already smelt
venison in the supper pot, and followed the broad trail he had
left with the utmost eagerness. We crossed a couple of stony
ridges with their deep intervening hollows, and came at last into
a wild desolate gorge, full of loose rocks and bushes, and
ribboned with game tracks, but otherwise a most desolate and
God-forsaken place, where no man had been, or might come for
fifty years. Here I sighted my venison staggering down the
glen and dashed after it as fast as I could foot it, through the
bushy tangles, and the dry, slippery, summer grass. In a few
hundred yards the valley became a pass, and in a score more the
steep bare sides had drawn in until they were walls on either
hand, and the way trailed along the bottom of what was little
better than a knife-cleft in the hills. I was a good runner, and the
hunter blood was hot within me; my moccasins flashed through
the yellow herbage; my cheeks burnt with excitement; I dropped
my gun to be the freer the quarry was plunging along only
ten yards ahead and seemed a certain victim! In front was the
outing of that narrow ravine the long reaches of the silver San
Juan twining in countless threads through interminable leagues
of pasture
and forest beyond I saw it all like a beautiful picture
in the narrow black frame of the rocks; the evening wind blew
softly up the canon, and the sky was already gorgeous and livid
with the streaks of sunset! Another ten yards and we were
flying down the narrowest part of the defile, the beast-path
under our feet hardly a foot wide, and almost hidden by long,
wiry dead grass. Suddenly the wounded buck, now within my
grasp, staggered up on to its hind legs in a mad fit of terror,
just as, with a shout of triumph, I leapt up to it, and in half a
breathing space in less time than it takes to write, but too
late to stop my fatal rush I and the stag were reeling on the very
brink of a horrible funnel, a slippery yellow slope that had
opened suddenly before us, leading down to a cavernous mouth,
gaping, dark and dreadful in the heart of the earth. With a
shout louder than my yell of triumph, staring at that
horrible place, I threw up my hands and tried in vain to stop,
it was too late, I felt my feet slip from under me, and the horrible
attraction of that cruel trap drew me away, and in a second,
shouting and plunging, and clutching at the rotten herbage, I
was flying downwards. I caught a last glimpse of the San Juan
twining pearly-pink under the sunset through leagues of green
velvet verdure, and the blaze of the sky overhead crimson and
green and sapphire, and then I was spinning into darkness, horrible
Egyptian darkness, through which I fell for a giddy, senseless
moment or two, and then landed with a thud which ought to have
killed me but did not, bruised and nearly senseless, on a soft
quaggy mound of something that seemed to sink under my
weight like a feather bed.
So impossible does it seem to give an adequate idea in honest
black and white of what followed, that I am half inclined to leave
the task unattempted. Yet I will try, for my experiences were
so strange and terrible that they deserve telling however poorly.
My first sensation on recovering consciousness was that of an
overpowering smell, a sickly, deadly taint in the air that there was
no growing accustomed to, and which, after a few gasps, seemed
to have run its deadly venom into every corner of my frame,
and, turning my blood yellow, to have transformed my constitution
into keeping with its own accursed nature. It was a damp,
musty, charnel-house smell, stale and wicked, with the breath
of the slaughter-pit in it, an aroma of blood and corruption
infinitely discomforting. I sat up and glared about in the gloom,
and then I carefully felt my limbs up and down. All were safe
and sound, and I was unhurt, though as sore and bruised as though
my body had stood a long day's pummelling. Next I groped round
me in the pitchy dark, and soon touched the still warm body of
the dead buck I had shot, and on which indeed I was sitting.
Still feeling about, on the other side was something soft and
furry too; I touched and patted it, and in a minute recognised
with a start that my fingers were deep in the curly mane of a
bull bison. I pulled, and the curly mane came off in stinking
tufts, for that bull bison had been lying there six months or
more. All about me, wherever I felt, was cold, clammy fur and
hair and hoofs and bare ribs and bones mixed in dim confusion,
and as that wilderness of death unfolded itself in the darkness to
me, and the fetid close atmosphere mounted to my head, my
strong nerves began to tremble like harp-strings in a storm, and
my heart, that I had always thought terror-proof, to patter like a
girl's.
Plunging and slipping I got upon my feet, and then became
conscious of a dim circle of twilight far above, representing the
hole through which my luckless self had fallen. It was fading
in the twilight outside every moment, and was already so slightly
luminous that my hand, held in front of me, looked ghostly and
scarcely discernible. With a groan I began to explore slowly
round the walls of my prison, and with a heart that grew sicker
and sicker and sensations that you can imagine better than I
can describe, I traced the jagged but unbroken circle of a great
chamber in the underground, a hundred feet long, perhaps, by
fifty across a chamber with cruel, remorseless walls, that rose,
sloping gently inwards from an uneven, horrible floor of hides
and bones, to that narrow neck far overhead, where the stars
were already twinkling in a cloudless sky. By this time I was
fairly frightened, and alas! that it should be written, the cold.
perspiration of dread began to stand in beads upon my
forehead.
A fancy then seized me that someone might be within hearing
above. I shouted again and again, and listened acutely each
time as the echoes of my shout died away. I could have sworn
something like the clash of ghostly teeth on teeth, something
like the rattle of jaws in an ague fit, fell on the silence behind.
With beating heart, and an undescribable dread creeping over me,
I crouched down in the gloom and listened. There was water
dripping out in the dark, monotonous and dismal: and a sound
like the breath from many husky throats away in the distance of
the cavern came fitfully to my ears, though so uncertainly, that
at first I thought it might have been only the rustle of the wind
in the grass far overhead. It was cowardly to be scared at one's
own fancies, and again mustering all my resolution, I shouted
until the darkness rang, then listened eagerly with every
faculty on stretch, and again from the dim came that tremulous
gnashing of teeth, and that wavering, long-drawn breath, with
something infinitely woeful and pathetic in it. Then my hair
fairly stood on end, and in a minute my eyes were fixed with
breathless wonder in front of me, for out of the remotest gloom,
where the corruption of the floor was already beginning to glow
with pale blue wavering phosphorescent light as the night fell,
rose glimmering itself with that ghastly lustre something slim
and tall and tremulous, that was full of life and yet was not
quite of human form, and reared itself against the dark wall all
agleam until its top, set with hollow eyes, was nine or ten feet
from the ground, and oscillated and wavered, and seemed to feel
about as I had done, for an opening, and then on a sudden
collapsed in a writhing heap upon the ground, and I distinctly
heard the fall of its heavy body as it disappeared into the blue
inferno that burnt below!
Again that spectral thing rose laboriously, this time many
paces nearer to me, to twice the height of a man, and wavered
and tossed about, and then sank down like the fall of heavy
draperies, as though the energy that had lifted it suddenly
expired. Nearer and nearer it came, travelling round the circuit
of the walls in that strange way, and awed and bewildered, I
crept out into the open to let that dreadful thing go by. And
presently to my relief, it did travel away, still wavering and
writhing in silent, spectral discontent, and I breathed again.
As that luminous shadow faded into the remote, I shouted
once more for the pleasure it must have been of hearing my own
voice again there was that gnashing of teeth and the instant
afterwards such a hideous chorus of yells from the other side of
the cavern, such a commingled howl of lost spirits, such an
infernal moan of sorrow, and shame, and misery, rising and
falling on the stillness of the night, that, for an instant, lost to
everything but that dreadful sound, I leapt to my feet with the
stagnant blood cold as ice within me, my body pulseless for the
moment and mingled my mad shouting with the voices of those
unseen devils, till the cave thundered with that hideous chorus!
Then my manhood came back with a rush upon me, and
judgment and sense, and I recognized in the trembling echoes a
cry that I had often listened to in happier circumstances, and
knew that uproar came from the throats of wolves entrapped like
myself. But "were they alive?" I asked in fascinated wonder
how could they be in this horrible pit? and if they were not
picture oneself cornered in such a trap, with a pack of wolfish
spirits it would not bear thinking of! Already my fancy saw
constellations of fierce yellow eyes everywhere, and herds of
wicked grey backs racing to and fro in the shadows, and with a
tremulous hand I felt in my pocket for a match, and found I had
two and two only!
By this time the moon was up and a great disc of silver light,
broad and bright, was creeping down the walls of our prison,
but I would not wait for it. I struck the match with feverish
eagerness, and held it overhead. It burned brightly for a
moment, and I saw I was indeed in a natural crypt, with no
outlet anywhere but by the narrow neck above, and all chance
of reaching that was impossible, as the walls sloped inwards
everywhere as they rose to it. All the floor on every hand was
piled thigh deep with a ghastly tangle of animal remains in
every state of return to their native earth, from the bare bones
that would have crumbled at a touch, to the hide, still glossy
and sleek of the stag that had fallen in only a week or two
before. Such a carnage place I never saw, such furs, such
trophies, such heads and horns there were all around, as raised
the envy of my hunter spirit even in that emergency.
But what held me spell-bound and rooted my eyes into the
shadows was, twenty paces off, lying full stretch along the
glossy, undulating path which the incessant feet of new victims
had worn, month after month, over the hill and valley of dead
bodies along under the walls, was a splendid eighteen-foot
python he whose ghostly rambles and ineffectual attempts to
scale the walls had first scared me in that place of horrors. I
turned round, for the match was short, and scarcely noticing a
score or two of dejected rats, who squeaked and scrambled
amongst lesser snakes and strange reptiles, looked hard across
the cave. There, on their haunches, in a huddle against the far
wall, staring at me with dull gold eyes, were five of the biggest,
ugliest wolves ever mortal saw. I had often met wolves above
ground, but never any like those cavern ghouls. All the pluck
and grace and savage vigour of their kind had gone from them;
their bodies, gorged with carrion, were vast, swollen and hideous:
their shaggy fur was hanging in tatters from their red and
mangy skins, the saliva streamed from their jaws in yellow
ribbons, their blear eyes were drowsy and dull, their great throats,
as they opened them to howl in sad chorus at the handful of
purple night above, were dry and yellow, and there was about
them such an air of disgusting misery and woebegoneness, that,
with a shudder and a cry I could not suppress, I let the last
embers of the burning match fall to the ground.
How long I crouched in the darkness against the wall, with
those hideous serenaders grinding their foam-flecked teeth and
bemoaning our common fate in hideous unison, I do not know.
Nor have I space to tell the wild, horrible visions which filled
my mind for the next hour or two, but presently the wolves had
been silent for a time and the moonlight had come down off
the wall and was spread at my feet in a silver carpet, and as I
sullenly watched the completion of that arena of light, I was
aware that the brutes were moving. Very slowly they came
forward out of the darkness, led by the biggest and ugliest,
until they were all in the silver circle, gaunt, spectral, and vile,
every mangy tuft of loose hair upon their sore-marked backs
clear as daylight. Then those pot-bellied, phosphorescent
undertakers began the strangest movements, and after watching
them for a moment or two in fascinated wonder, I saw they had
come to me in their despair to solicit my companionship and
countenance, and I could not have believed it possible dumb
brutes could have made their meaning so clear as those poor
shaggy scoundrels did. They halted ten yards off, and with
humble heads sagged down and averted eyes, slowly wagged
their blood-matted tails. Then they came a few steps further
and whined and fawned, and then another pace, and lay down
upon their stomachs, putting their noses between their paws like
dogs who watch and doze, while they regarded me steadfastly
with sad, great eyes, forlorn and terrible.
Foot by foot, grey and silver in the moonlight, they advanced
with the offer of their dreadful friendship, until at last I was
fairly bewitched, and when the big wolf came forward till he
was reeking at my knees, a horrible epitome of corruption, and
licked my hand with his great burning tongue, I submitted to
the caress as readily as though he were my favourite hound, and
henceforth the pack seemed to think the compact was sealed,
and thrust their odious company upon me, trotting at my heels,
howling when I shouted, and nuzzling down to me, putting
their heavy paws upon my feet, and their great reeking jaws
upon my chest whenever in despair and weariness I tried to
snatch a moment's sleep.
But it would be impossible to go step by step through the
infinitely painful hours of that night. Not only was the place
full of spectral forms and strange cries, but presently legions of
unclean things of a hundred kinds, that had lived on those dead
beasts when they too were living, swarmed out in thousands and
assailed us, adding a new terror to inferno, ravaging us who still
kept body and soul together till our flesh seemed burning on our
bones.
There was no rest for man or brute: the light was a mockery
and the silence hideous! Round and round we pattered for
hours, I and the gaunt wolves, over the dim tracks worn by the
feet of disappointment and suffering; wading knee deep through
a wavering sea of steamy blue flame, that rose from the remains
and bespattered us from head to heel; stumbling and tripping
and groping, and cursing our fates, each in his separate tongue,
while the night waned, the dew fell clammy and cold into our
prison, and the great yellow stars looking down in turn upon
us from the free purple sky overhead, made a dim twilight in
our cell.
I was blundering and staggering round the walls for the
hundredth time, feeling about with my hands in the hopeless search
for some cleft or opening, when the grimmest thing of the whole
evening happened. In a lonely corner of the den, in a little
recess not searched before, pattering about in the dark, I suddenly
touched with my hand think with what an electric shock it
thrilled me the cloth-clad shoulder of a man. With a gasp
and a cry I leapt back, and stood trembling and staring into
the shadows, scarcely daring to breathe. Much as I had suffered
in that hideous place, nothing affected me half so much as with
all my nerves already stretched to their utmost dropping my
hand like that upon that dreadful shoulder. Heaven knows we
were all cowards down there, but for a minute I was the
biggest coward of any, and felt to the full those strange throes of
superstitious terror that I had often wondered before to hear
weaker men describe. Then I mustered my wavering spirit,
and with the gaunt wolves squatting in a luminous circle around
me, went into the recess again and put my hand once more upon
my grim companion. The coat upon him was dry and rough
with age, and beneath it I could tell by the touch there was
nothing but bare, rattling bones! I stood still, grimly waiting
for the flutter of my physical cowardice to subside, and then I
bethought me of that second match, and in a minute of keen
intensity, with such care as you may imagine, struck it against
the wall. It lit, and at my feet, in ragged miner garb, sitting
against the wall with his knees drawn up and his chin upon
them, was the skeleton of a man so bleached and dry that it
must have been like that for fifty years at least. At his side lay
his miner's pick and pannikin, an old dusty pocket bible, the
fragments of a grass hat, and a pair of heavy boots still neatly
side by side, just as the luckless fellow had placed those well-worn
things when he last put them by.
And overhead was something scratched upon a flat face of the
rock. Hastily I snatched a scrap of paper from my pocket, and,
lighting it at the expiring match, read on the stone:
|
"Monday,"
"Tuesday,"
'Wednesd,"
|
there was nothing but that and even the "Wednesday
unfinished, dying away in a shaky uncertain scrawl, that spoke
infinitely more plainly than many words would have done, of
the growing feebleness of the hand that traced it then all
was darkness again.
I crept back to my distant corner, and crouched like the dead
man against the wall, with my chin upon my knees, and kept
repeating to myself the horrible simplicity of that diary
"Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday!" "Poor, nameless Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday!' And this was to be my fate?" I
laughed bitterly, I would begin such another record with the
first streak of dawn, and in the meantime I would sleep,
whatever befell, and sleep I did, with those restless blue wolves
cantering round the well-worn paths of the charnel-house to
their own hideous music, the silent unknown away in the
distance, and the opal eyes of the great serpent staring at me.
like baleful planets, cold, sullen and cruel, from between the
dead man's feet.
It was a shout that woke me next morning, a clear ringing
shout, that thrilled me down to my innermost fibre, and jerked
me from dreadful dreams like a stone from a catapult. I
scrambled to my feet and saw from the bright pavement of light
about me that it was day above, and while I still staggered
and wandered stupidly, again came that shout. I stared up
overhead where the sunlight was making the neck of the trap a
disc of intolerable brightness and there, when my eyes grew
accustomed to that shine, was a round something that presently
resolved itself into the blessed face of my steadfast chum, Will
Hartland "Trusty Will" they called him on the plains.
There is no need to say more. With the help of the strong
cow-rope at his saddle-bow, and a round point of earth-embedded
rock as purchase, he had me out of that accursed hole in an
incredibly, ridiculously short space of time. And there I was
leaning on his shoulder, free again, in the first flush of as
glorious a morning as you could wish for, with the San Juan
away in the distance, still winding in a sapphire streak through
miles of emerald forests, a sweet blue sky above, and under foot
the earth, wet with morning mist, smelling like a wine cooler,
and every bent and twig gemmed with glittering prismatic
dewdrops. I sat down on a stone, and after a long pull at
Will's flask, told him something like the narrative I have just
told you. And when the tale was done I paused a minute, and
then said somewhat shyly: "And now I am going back, Will,
old man! Back for those poor devils down yonder, who haven't
a chance for their lives unless I do." Will, who had listened to
my narrative with horror and wonder flitting across his honest
brown face, started up at this as though he thought the night's
adventure had fairly turned my head. But he was a good
fellow, tender of heart under his Mexican jacket, and speedily
acknowledging that I was right, set to work to help me.
Down I went back into the pit, the very sight and shadow of
which now made me sick, and with the noose end of Will's lasso,
(he holding the other end above) set to work to secure those
poor beasts who whined, and crowded round my legs, in hideous
glee to have me back again amongst them. 'Twas easy work!
They were stupid and heavy, and seemed to have some idea of
my intentions. And thus I noosed them one at a time, and
whenever a wolf was fast, shouted to Will, who hauled away
with scant ceremony, and up the grey ghoul went into that
sunshine he had not seen for many weeks, spinning, and
struggling, and yelping, truly a wonderful sight. But nothing
would move the python! I followed him round and round,
trying all I knew to get his cruel cynical head through the
noose, and then, when he had refused it a dozen times, I grew
wroth, and cursing him in the name of the ancient Mother of
my kind, gathered up all the tortoises, lizards, and lesser beasts
I could find into my waist-band, and ascended into the sweet
outer air once more.
An hour or two afterwards, a heavy blasting charge fetched
from a neighbouring mine was dangling by a string just inside
the mouth of the detestable trap, with its fuse burning brightly.
A few minutes of suspense, a mighty crash, a cloud of white
smoke hanging over the green hill-top, and one of the most
treacherous places that ever marred the face of Nature's sweet
earth was a harmless heap of dust and tumbled stones.