[The Life of Kit Carson by Edward S. Ellis]@TWC D-Link bookThe Life of Kit Carson CHAPTER XXIX 6/6
The couple could scarcely restrain their joy.
New life and activity thrilled their bodies, and they hurried on with the same elastic eagerness they felt at the beginning. In a short while they were challenged by sentinels, and making known their mission, were taken before Commodore Stockton.
That officer, with his usual promptness, sent a force of nearly two hundred men to the relief of General Kearney.
They took with them a piece of ordnance which for want of horses the men themselves were forced to draw. They advanced by forced marches to the endangered Americans, scarcely pausing night or day, until in sight of the Mexicans, who considering discretion the better part of valor, withdrew without exchanging a shot with the naval brigade. As may be supposed, the feet of Carson and Beale were in a frightful condition, when they reached San Diego.
The mountaineer, on that account, did not return with the reinforcements, but he described the course and location so minutely that no difficulty was experienced by the relieving force. Lieutenant Beale was a man of sturdy frame, accustomed to roughing it on the frontier, but the sufferings he underwent on that eventful night were such that he felt the effects for years afterward..
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