“Ate up a pair of boots!” exclaimed Aunt Maria, amazed and almost incredulous.
“Yes, by thunder!” insisted the captain, “grease, nails, ‘n’ all. An’ then went at the patent leather forepiece ’f his cap.”
“What privations!” said Aunt Maria, staring fit to burst her spectacles.
“Oh, that’s nothin’,” chuckled Glover. “I’ll tell ye suthin’ some time that ’ll astonish ye. But jess now I’m sleepy, ‘n’ I guess I’ll turn in.”
“Mr. Cluvver, it is your durn on card do-night,” interposed Meyer, the German sergeant, as the captain was about to roll himself in his blankets.
“So ’tis,” returned Glover in well feigned astonishment. “Don’t forgit a feller, do ye, Sergeant? How ’n the world do ye keep the ’count so straight? Oh, got a little book there, hey, with all our names down. Wal, that’s shipshape. You’d make a pooty good mate, Sergeant. When does my watch begin?”
“Right away. You’re always on the virst relief. You’ll fall in down there at the gorner of the vagon bark.”
“Wal—yes—s’pose I will,” sighed the skipper, as he rolled up his blankets and prepared for two hours’ sentry duty.
Let us look into the arrangements for the protection of the caravan. With Coronado’s consent Thurstane had divided the eighteen Indians and Mexicans, four soldiers, Texas Smith, and Glover, twenty-four men in all, into three equal squads, each composed of a sergeant, corporal, and six privates. Meyer was sergeant of one squad, the Irish veteran Kelly had another, and Texas Smith the third. Every night a detachment went on duty in three reliefs, each relief consisting of two men, who stood sentry for two hours, at the end of which time they were relieved by two others.
The six wagons were always parked in an oblong square, one at each end and two on each side; but in order to make the central space large enough for camping purposes, they were placed several feet apart; the gaps being closed with lariats, tied from wheel to wheel, to pen in the animals and keep out charges of Apache cavalry. On either flank of this enclosure, and twenty yards or so distant from it, paced a sentry. Every two hours, as we have said, they were relieved, and in the alternate hours the posts were visited by the sergeant or corporal of the guard, who took turns in attending to this service. The squad that came off duty in the morning was allowed during the day to take naps in the wagons, and was not put upon the harder camp labor, such as gathering firewood, going for water, etc.
The two ladies and the Indian women slept at night in the wagons, not only because the canvas tops protected them from wind and dew, but also because the wooden sides would shield them from arrows. The men who were not on guard lay under the vehicles so as to form a cordon around the mules. Thurstane and Coronado, the two chiefs of this armed migration, had their alternate nights of command, each when off duty sleeping in a special wagon known as “headquarters,” but holding himself ready to rise at once in case of an alarm.