In the Pecos Country / Lieutenant R. H. Jayne eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 205 pages of information about In the Pecos Country / Lieutenant R. H. Jayne.

In the Pecos Country / Lieutenant R. H. Jayne eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 205 pages of information about In the Pecos Country / Lieutenant R. H. Jayne.

When he was able to recall his scattered senses, he looked around him in the hope of gaining some idea of where he was; but he quickly saw that he was in a place where his eyes were of no service.  The darkness was as impenetrable as that which plagued Pharoah and his Egyptians.  Only when he looked upward was the blackness of darkness relieved.  Enough straggling rays worked their way through the bushes to give the opening a dim, misty appearance, such as is sometimes observed when that orb is rising in a cloud of fog and vapor; but in every other direction he might as well have been blind, for all the good his eyes did him.

One of the first things that struck the lad was the sound of the waterfall which he had heard so distinctly when stretched upon the earth.  It was somewhere near him—­so close, even, that he fancied he could feel the dampness from it, but the soft, rippling character showed that it did not amount to much.  It was a mere cascade, the water of which entered and passed out the cavern by some means which the boy could only surmise.

How extensive was this cave?

Had it any outlet other than that by which Fred had entered?  Was the flow even or irregular?  Were there pitfalls and abysses about him, making it too perilous to attempt to grope about in the gloom?

Having entered, how was he to make his way out again?

Such questions as these presented themselves to the boy, as he stood alone in a world of night, and endeavored to consider the situation calmly.  Stooping down, he felt of the soil.  It was of a cold, sandy nature, and so yielding that, when he struck it, he went below his ankles.

He stood for some time, debating whether he should remain where he was until the coming of day, in the hope of gaining additional light, or whether he should venture upon a little cautious exploration.  He finally decided upon the latter.

“When the elephant goes on a bridge, he feels of it with his trunk to see whether it is strong enough to bear him, and I’ll use my gun to do the same thing.”

This was no more than a simple precaution, and doubtless saved his life.  Grasping the stock firmly, he reached the muzzle forward, and “punched” the ground pretty thoroughly before venturing upon it, making sure that it was capable of bearing him safely forward into the darkness beyond.

Generally speaking, the ground of the cavern was tolerably even.  There were little irregularities here and there, but none of them were of a nature to interfere with walking, provided one could have enough light to see where he was going.

“If I only had a lantern, I could get round this neighborhood a good deal faster than this,” he said.  “It wouldn’t be anything more than fun to explore this cave, which may be as big as the mammoth one of Kentucky.”

Up to this time Fred had been moving almost directly away from the cascade which he had noticed.  The misty light over his head served somewhat as a guide, and he determined not to wander away from that, which would prevent his getting lost in the bowels of the earth.  The boy was quite confident that there was some easy way of getting out of the cave; for if there was none, except by the opening above, then he was in a Bastile, most surely.

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In the Pecos Country / Lieutenant R. H. Jayne from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.