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Then the faces on the Emigrant Trail were as the faces on the populous
streets of cities. The trains of wagons were unbroken, one behind the
other, straight to the sunset. A cloud of dust moved with them, showed
their coming far away as they wheeled downward at Grand Island, hid
their departure as they doubled up for the fording of the Platte. All
the faces were set westward, all the eyes were strained to that distant
goal where the rivers flowed over golden beds and the flakes lay yellow
in the prospector's pan. The Indians watched them, cold at the heart, for the people in the
Great Father's Country were numerous as the sands of the sea, terrible
as an army with banners.
CHAPTER II The days were very hot. Brilliant, dewless mornings, blinding middays,
afternoons held breathless in the remorseless torrent of light. The
caravan crawled along the river's edge at a footspace, the early
shadows shooting far ahead of it, then dwindling to a blot beneath each
moving body, then slanting out behind. There was speech in the morning
which died as the day advanced, all thought sinking into torpor in the
monotonous glare. In the late afternoon the sun, slipping down the
sky, peered through each wagon's puckered canvas opening smiting the
drivers into lethargy. Propped against the roof supports, hats drawn
low over their brows they slept, the riders pacing on ahead stooped and
silent on their sweating horses. There was no sound but the creaking
of the wheels, and the low whisperings of the river into which, now and
then, an undermined length of sand dropped with a splash. But in the evening life returned. When the dusk stole out of the hill
rifts and the river flowed thick gold from bank to bank, when the
bluffs grew black against the sunset fires, the little party shook off
its apathy and animation revived. Coolness came with the twilight,
sharpening into coldness as the West burned from scarlet and gold to a
clear rose. The fire, a mound of buffalo chips into which glowing
tunnels wormed, was good. Overcoats and blankets were shaken out and
the fragrance of tobacco was on the air. The recrudescence of ideas
and the need to interchange them came on the wanderers. Hemmed in by
Nature's immensity, unconsciously oppressed by it, they felt the want
of each other, of speech, of sympathy, and crouched about the fire
telling anecdotes of their life "back home," that sounded trivial but
drew them closer in the bond of a nostalgic wistfulness. One night they heard a drum beat. It came out of the distance faint
but distinct, throbbing across the darkness like a frightened heart
terrified by its own loneliness. The hand of man was impelling it, an
unseen hand, only telling of its presence by the thin tattoo it sent
through the silence. Words died and they sat rigid in the sudden alarm
that comes upon men in the wilderness. The doctor clutched his
daughter's arm, Daddy John reached for his rifle. Then, abruptly as it
had come, it stopped and they broke into suggestions - emigrants on the
road beyond them, an Indian war drum on the opposite bank.
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