PAGE 5
Who Was He?
by
“This be an onsartin ventur’, Henry,” cried the trapper, shouting to his comrade from the smoke that now made it impossible for the young man, even at only the boat’s length, to see his person. “This be an onsartin ventur’, and the Lord only knows how it will eend. Ye know the waters as well as I do; and ye know the p’ints where things must be did right. We’ll beat the smoke arter we make the fust dip and git out of the thickest of it in the fust half of the distance, onless somethin’ happens. Let her go with the current, boy, ontil yer sight comes to ye, for the current knows where it’s goin’, and that’s more than a mortal can tell in this infarnal smoke. Here we go, boy!” shouted the old man, as the boat balanced in its perilous flight on the sharp edge of the uppermost rift. “Here we go, boy!” he shouted out of the smoke and the rush of waters, “it’s hotter than Tophet where we be and it matters mighty leetle what meets us below.”
II
To those who have had no experience in running rapids, no adequate conception can be given touching what can with truth be called one of the most exciting experiences that man can pass through. The very velocity with which the flight is made is enough of itself to make the sensation startling. The skill which is required on the part of the boatman is of the finest order. Eye and hand and readiest wit must work in swift connection. Some who read these lines perhaps have–shall we say–enjoyed the sensation which we have always found impossible to describe in words? These, at least, will appreciate the difficulty of our task, and also the peril which surrounded the trapper and his companion.
The first flight down which the boat glanced was a long one. The river bed sloped away in a straight direction for nigh on to fifty rods, and at an angle so steep that the water, although the bottom was rough, fairly flattened itself as it ran; and the channel where the current was the deepest gave forth a serpentine sound as it whizzed downward. The smoke, which hung heavily over the stretch from shore to shore, was too dense for the eye to penetrate a yard. Amid the smoke sparks floated, and brands, crackling as they fell, plunged through it into the steaming water. Guidance of the frail craft was, as the trapper had predicted, out of the question; the two men could only keep their position as they went streaming downward. They kept their seats like statues, knowing well that their safety lay in allowing their light shell to follow, without the least interruption, the pressure of the swift current.
Half down the flight the volume of smoke was parted, by some freak of the wind, from shore to shore, and for a couple of rods they saw the water, the blazing banks, the fiery tree-tops and each other. The trapper turned his face, blackened and stained by the grimy cinders, toward his companion and gave one glance, in which humor and excitement were equally mingled. His mouth was open, but the words were lost in the roar of the flame and the rush of the water. He had barely time to toss a hand upward, as if by gesture he would make good the impossibility of speech, before face and hand alike faded from Herbert’s eyes as the boat plunged again into the smoke.
The next instant the boat launched down the final pitch of the declivity and shot far out into the smooth water that eddied in a huge circle in the pool below. The smoke was at this point less compact, for through it the blazing pines on either flamed partially into view.
“It’s the devil’s own work, boy, for sartin,” cried the trapper, “and the fool or the knave that started the fire oughter be toasted. I trust the pups will be reasonable and come down with the current. Has the fire touched ye anywhere?”