Vanguards of the Plains eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 364 pages of information about Vanguards of the Plains.

Vanguards of the Plains eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 364 pages of information about Vanguards of the Plains.

I have never been afraid of storms and I can never understand why timid folk should speak of them as of a living, self-directing force bent purposely on human destruction.  I love the splendor of the lightning and the thunder’s peal.  From our earliest years, Beverly and Mat and I had watched the flood-waters of the Missouri sweep over the bottomlands, and we had heard the winds rave, and the cannonading of the angry heavens.  But this mad blast of the prairie storm was like nothing we had ever seen or heard before.  A yellow glare filled the sky, a half-illumined, evil glow, as if to hide what lay beyond it.  One breathed in fine sand, and tasted the desert dust.  Behind it, all copper-green, a broad, lurid band swept up toward the zenith.  Under its weird, unearthly light, the prairies, and everything upon them, took on a ghastly hue.  Then came the inky-black storm-cloud—­long, funnel-shaped, pendulous—­and in its deafening roar and the thick darkness that could be felt, and the awful sweep of its all-engulfing embrace, the senses failed and the very breath of life seemed beaten away.  The floods fell in streams, hot, then suddenly cold.  And then a fusillade of hail bombarded the flat prairies, defenseless beneath the munitions of the heavens.  But in all the wild, mad blackness, in the shriek and crash of maniac winds, in the swirl of many waters, and chill and fury of the threshing hail, the law of the trail failed not:  “Hold fast.”  And with our hands gripped in one another’s, we children kept the law.

Just at the moment when destruction seemed upon us, the long swinging cloud—­funnel lifted.  We heard it passing high above us.  Then it dropped against the face of old Pawnee Rock, that must have held the trail law through all the centuries of storms that have beaten against its bold, stern front.  One tremendous blast, one crashing boom, as if the foundations of the earth were broken loose, and the thing had left us far behind.

Daylight burst upon us in a moment, and the blue heavens smiled down on the clean-washed prairies.  No homes, no crops, no orchards were left in ruins in those days to mark the cyclone’s wrath on wilderness trails.  As the darkness lifted we gathered ourselves together to take hold of life again and to defend ourselves from our human enemy.

A shower of arrows from the top of the bluff might rain upon us at any moment, yelling warriors might rush upon us, or a ring of riders encircle us.  It was in times like this that I learned how quickly men can get the mastery.

Jondo and Esmond Clarenden did not delay a minute in protecting the camp and setting it in order, taking inventory of the lost and searching for the missing.  Three of our number, with one of the ponies, were missing.

Aunty Boone had crouched in a protected angle at the base of the bluff, and when we found her she was calmly smoking her pipe.

“Yo’ skeered of this little puff?” she queried.  “Yo’ bettah see a simoon on the desset, then.  This here—­just a racket.  What’s come of that little redskin?”

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Project Gutenberg
Vanguards of the Plains from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.