The Great Salt Lake Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 587 pages of information about The Great Salt Lake Trail.

The Great Salt Lake Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 587 pages of information about The Great Salt Lake Trail.
where he could easily feed on the mountain grass.  I then built a little fire, and broiling the chicken and seasoning it with salt and pepper, which I had obtained from my saddle-bags, I soon sat down to a “genuine square meal,” which I greatly relished.
After resting for a couple of hours, I remounted and resumed my upward trip to the mountain, having made up my mind to camp out that night rather than go back without a bear, which my friends knew I had gone out for.  As the days were growing short, night soon came on, and I looked around for a suitable camping-place.  While thus engaged, I scared up a flock of sage-hens, two of which I shot, intending to have one for supper and the other for breakfast.
By this time it was becoming quite dark and I rode down to one of the little mountain streams, where I found an open place in the timber suitable for a camp.  I dismounted, and, after unsaddling my horse and hitching him to a tree, I prepared to start a fire.  Just then I was startled by hearing a horse whinnying farther up the stream.  It was quite a surprise to me, and I immediately ran to my animal to keep him from answering as horses usually do in such cases.  I thought that the strange horse might belong to some roaming band of Indians, as I knew of no white men being in that portion of the country at that time.  I was certain that the owner of the strange horse could not be far distant, and I was very anxious to find out who my neighbour was, before letting him know that I was in his vicinity.  I therefore resaddled my horse, and leaving him tied so that I could easily reach him, I took my gun and started out on a scouting expedition up the stream.  I had gone about four hundred yards when, in a bend of the stream, I discovered ten or fifteen horses grazing.  On the opposite side of the creek a light was shining high up the mountain bank.  Approaching the mysterious spot as cautiously as possible, and when within a few yards of the light—­which I discovered came from a dugout in the mountain side—­I heard voices, and soon I was able to distinguish the words, as they proved to be in my own language.  Then I knew that the occupants of the dugout were white men.  Thinking that they might be a party of trappers, I boldly walked up to the door and knocked for admission.  The voices instantly ceased, and for a moment a deathlike silence reigned inside.  Then there seemed to follow a kind of hurried whispering—­a sort of consultation—­and then some one called out:—­

        “Who’s there?”

        “A friend and a white man,” I replied.

        The door opened, and a big ugly-looking fellow stepped forth
        and said:—­

        “Come in.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Great Salt Lake Trail from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.